WAR 02/16/2013 to 02/22/2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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(46) 01/24/2013 to 01/30/2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-30-2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(47) 01/31/2013 to 02/07/2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-07-2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(48) 02/08/2013 to 02/15/2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-15-2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/officials-defend-hiring-egyptian-leaders-son-18501204

Egypt's Hard-Line Islamists Rally Against Protests

Comment
By SARAH EL DEEB Associated Press
CAIRO February 14, 2013 (AP)

Around 5,000 mostly hard-line Islamists are rallying in Egypt against a recent wave of anti-government protests that have killed around 70 people.

The latest cycle of clashes between protesters and police began three weeks ago on the second anniversary of the start of Egypt's uprising that ousted longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Friday's rally, organized by Gamaa Islamiya, is largely seen as a denunciation of those protests, which were staged by liberal activist groups against President Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood.

The rally is not expected to reach massive numbers because Egypt's most powerful Islamist parties are not officially participating.

The Muslim Brotherhood says it will only have a symbolic presence at the protest being held outside Cairo University while the more conservative Salafi parties have declined official participation.
 

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http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/0...uld-stop-iran-from-having-nuclear-bomb-if-it/

Top Iranian leader says no power could stop Iran from having nuclear bomb if it wanted it

Published February 16, 2013
Associated Press

TEHRAN, Iran – Iran's Supreme Leader says Iran is not seeking nuclear weapons, but that no power could stop Tehran's access to an atomic bomb if it intended to build it.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state matters in Iran, told a group of Iranians in his residence in Tehran that Iran backs the elimination of nuclear weapons.

His comments were posted Saturday on his website, khamenei.ir.

Iran has been highlighting a religious decree issued by Khamenei that bans nuclear weapons in an effort to back up its claim that Iran's nuclear program is only for peaceful purposes and medical research.

The U.S. and its allies fear that Iran might ultimately be able to develop a nuclear weapon.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/02/20132167823784815.html

Syria rebels claim northern airbase takeover
Fighters say they overran military base in Sfeira town near Aleppo international airport, amid reports of more fighting.
Last Modified: 16 Feb 2013 09:08

Syrian rebels have captured a military airbase in the north and geared up for a major battle against regime forces as the opposition says it refuses to accept President Bashar al-Assad in talks on the 23-month conflict.

The rebels on Friday said they overran the base in the town of Sfeira, east of Aleppo international airport, and captured a large stockpile of ammunition.

Activists reported intermittent clashes around the Aleppo airport itself as well as around Nayrab airbase and another military complex, as the two sides squared up for a major fight.

"The army shelled the area around Aleppo international airport and Nayrab air base on Friday morning, while rebels used home-made rockets to shell Nayrab," Rami Abdel Rahman, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said.

The Syrian army "is preparing a large-scale operation to take back control of Base 80", he said, referring to a military complex tasked with the security of both Nayrab and Aleppo airports.

Rebels seized the base on Wednesday after a battle that left at least 150 dead from both sides, among them senior army officers, according to the Observatory.

Assad role rejected

On the political front, the opposition Syrian National Coalition said it refused to accept Assad in any talks, as part of an eight-point "framework" it has drawn up for solutions to the conflict.

The group issued the framework after a meeting in Cairo to discuss a proposal by its chief, Mouaz al-Khatib, for peace talks with regime representatives, a move that ruffled feathers in the umbrella opposition group.

"Bashar Assad and security leadership who are responsible for the current destruction of the country are outside the political process and must be held accountable for their crimes," it said in a statement issued in English.

Meanwhile, Syrian government has written to the UN attacking Turkey's "destructive" role in the conflict, state media reported.

"Turkey supports and publicly justifies terrorist, destructive acts" against Syria, the foreign ministry wrote in letters addressed to both the UN Security Council and Ban Ki-moon, UN secretary-general.

"Turkey has turned its territory into camps used to house, train, finance and infiltrate armed terrorist groups, chief among them the al-Qaeda network and the al-Nusra Front."

Also on Friday, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it had stepped up aid operations across the shifting front lines in Syria to bring food and medical assistance to civilians in rebel-held areas.

ICRC aid workers reached opposition-held Houla in Homs province for the second time in two weeks on Thursday, delivering medical supplies with government consent after being shut out for three months.

"I've come back from Syria convinced that we must expand operations in coming weeks and months and that we can and must build on our increasing presence in the most delicate regions including those under opposition control," Pierre Kraehenbuehl, ICRC director of operations, announced in Geneva, Switzerland.

He later told Reuters news agency: "Our priority areas are Idlib and Aleppo in the north, where it is very unstable and fluid. Also the circle around Homs and Hama."

The ICRC has been aiding some 1.5 million Syrians, via the Syrian Arab Crescent, in a conflict that the UN says has left some 70,000 people dead.

The UN has also said the number of Syrians who have fled the country could hit 1.1 million by June.

Customs officers in Finland, meanwhile, said they had seized spare parts for tanks in a container en route from Russia to Syria on board a Finnish ship docked at Helsinki's Vuosaari port in January.

The European Union has banned all sales, delivery, transfers and exports of weapons to Syria.
 

Housecarl

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As if the Narco War wasn't enough......

For links see article source.....
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http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2013/01/201313014344451496.html

Zapatistas break silence to slam Mexico elite
New statements from the indigenous movement put rebels seeking "land, liberty, work and peace" back in the public eye.
Chris Arsenault Last Modified: 15 Feb 2013 14:40

After years of silence, secluded in their base communities in Mexico's impoverished south, indigenous Zapatista rebels have re-emerged with a series of public statements in recent weeks, attempting to reignite passions for their demands of "land, liberty, work and peace".

In December, 40,000 Zapatista supporters marched through villages in Chiapas, re-asserting their presence. In January and February, Subcomandate Marcos - the Zapatistas' pipe-smoking, non-indigenous spokesman and an international media darling - issued a series of communiques slamming the government of Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, a member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) which assumed power in December.

"Our pains won't be lessened by opening ourselves up to those that hurt all over the world," Marcos wrote in late January, rallying supporters. "We will resist. We will struggle. Maybe we'll die. But one, ten, one hundred times, we'll always win."

The group first made international headlines on January 1, 1994, when they captured six towns in Chiapas, Mexico's southernmost state and one of the country's poorest regions.

The Rand Corporation, a research group with links to the US military, said Chiapas is "characterised by tremendous age-old gaps between the wealthy and impoverished - kept wide by privileged landowners who ran feudal fiefdoms with private armies".

For nearly two decades, the Zapatistas have attempted to build a system of autonomous governance, emphasising indigenous dignity and collective agriculture. Indigenous members of the group could not be reached by Al Jazeera for comment, due in part to a lack of easy phone access.

'Community building'

The group had been quiet in recent years before the December rally and subsequent communiques. "They have been busy, building up their base as a social movement at the community level, even if they hadn't been in the media," Mark Berger, visiting professor of defence analysis at the US Naval Postgraduate School, told Al Jazeera. There are between 100,000 and 200,000 people living in communities which support the Zapatistas, he said.

In recent communiques, Marcos has described Mexico's government as a "zombie state" controlled by the elite, a statement which likely resonates among some sectors of the population in a country plagued by pervasive inequality and corruption.

In Depth

More from Mexico
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Mexico drug war
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Mexico

Previous attempts to unify Mexico's social movements, from independent trade unionists, to feminists, students, punks and other indigenous people, have been met with mixed results. The "Other Campaign", the last major outreach drive launched by the Zapatistas in 2006, was largely unsuccessful in building a national movement.

"The Other Campaign was very critical of electoral politics and it marked a fracture among the Mexican left," Alán Arias Marín, a political scientist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, told Al Jazeera. "Locally [in Chiapas] the movement still has support."

Return of the PRI

Meanwhile, though, Mexico has been consumed with other problems, especially drug-related violence. For the last 12 years, Mexico had been governed by the conservative National Action Party (PAN), led by Vicente Fox and later Felipe Calderon. The PAN had little interest in dealing with the Zapatistas or the broader issues faced by indigenous Mexicans. Today, the PAN is out of office in a development that could change dynamics for the Zapatistas.

The PRI, which ruled Mexico for 71 uninterrupted years before 2000, was in power when the Zapatistas first rebelled. The return of what Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa called the "perfect dictatorship" in an election last year marred by allegations of fraud could benefit the Zapatistas as they seek to rebuild alliances with social movements outside of Chiapas and reinvigorate their national presence.

"The same people who poured into the Zocalo [Mexico City's main square] to stop the government from imposing a strict military response to the rebellion [in 1994] are still there," Richard Stahler-Sholk, an author of the book Latin American Social Movements in the Twenty-First Century, told Al Jazeera. "The Mexican government has unleashed militarisation on the country, with the encouragement of the US government, in response to drug violence."

More than 70,000 people have died in drug-related mayhem since 2006 and the US has pledged more than $1.4bn in military aid to Mexico under the auspicies of fighting criminal cartels.

With carnage raging in parts of Mexico, activists calling for a new approach to the "War on Drugs", and an increasingly powerful student movement confronting the PRI, the Zapatistas have plenty of possible allies.

"I think there is a possibility that the Zapatistas and the student movement could well gain a lot more traction under a PRI-dominated political system," Berger said.

Pena Nieto could become a lightning rod for protests, reacquainting the Zapatistas with their historic foe, the PRI. During his tenure as governor of Mexico State, Nieto oversaw the violent police crackdown against demonstrators in the city of San Salvador Atenco in 2006. Two demonstrators were killed and a group of women say they were sexually terrorised by security forces as they protested the extension of an airport.

The student movement #yosoy132 formed after a group of undergraduates questioned Nieto about the attacks during his presidential campaign in 2012. Angered by reports of electoral fraud and the PRI's history of corruption, many students have been challenging the government.

'Net war'

"The Zapatistas are hoping, I think, that people will create the conditions of autonomy and self-sufficiency in their local areas; they want supporters to bring the ideas of the revolution home."

- Zapatista supporter

Mexico's youth are not alone in opposing the status quo.

"What began as a violent insurgency in an isolated region mutated into a nonviolent though no less disruptive social netwar that engaged the attention of activists from far and wide," the Rand Corporation noted in an analysis of the Zapatistas and the internet.

In mid-January, Anonymous, the diffuse internet activist movement, apparently launched a cyber-attack crashing the website of Mexico's defence ministry, claiming to be in solidarity with the Zapatistas.

According to some analysts, the Zapatistas - and their early use of the internet to draw support - were the precursor of a new type of diffuse social movement such as Occupy Wall Street, #yosoy132, and anti-globalisation protests.

But the tangible benefits of internet activism and the outside support it garners can be fleeting. "The Zapatistas were trendy, and numerous international initiatives supported them," Marín, the professor in Mexico City, said. But with the onset of the US-led war in Iraq, most NGOs started to have different concerns, he said, describing non-government organisations as "very fussy".

In recent communiques, Marcos said the Zapatistas would reappraise their relationships with various foreign and domestic partners. Aid groups, particularly some charities, have been criticised by the masked revolutionaries.

Revolutionary ideas

If the drug war and the thousands of corpses left in its wake helped push the Zapatistas off the international agenda, the return of the PRI might make it easier for them to reclaim a place in national debates.

In the past, the PRI was widely believed to broker deals between the cartels to ensure stability. "The government will stop trying to go to war with organised crime so much," Berger predicted of the new PRI administration. "That will allow more attention to other forms of politics."

It remains unclear if the Zapatistas will be able to capitalise on these potential changes, but their re-emergence in the public eye is being met with interest across Mexico and beyond.

"Recent communications are specifically directed at re-activating their national and international base," said one long-time supporter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity from Chiapas due to security concerns. "The Zapatistas are hoping, I think, that people will create the conditions of autonomy and self-sufficiency in their local areas; they want supporters to bring the ideas of the revolution home."

Follow Chris Arsenault on Twitter: @AJEchris
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
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http://www.firstpost.com/world/how-india-is-preparing-to-counter-the-china-threat-627754.html

How India is preparing to counter the China threat
Feb 16, 2013
By Rajeev Sharma

India is bolstering its defences vis-a-vis China in a big way and is set to spend at least $15 billion for China-specific military activities by 2017.

Though the scale of the Indian military preparation is grossly small compared to what China has already done with regard to India, it gives a sense of how much China has been dominating Indian military thinking and strategy over the past few years.

George Fernandes was the first Indian Defence Minister to have gone on record in describing China as India’s “potential enemy one.”

The then Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee had corroborated this articulation immediately in the wake of the May 1998 Pokharan-II nuclear tests by explaining to the world powers that the Indian move was in response to the threats posed by Chinese nuclear weapons.

Since then China has officially replaced Pakistan as India’s number one threat perception.

It is now a decade-and-a-half since India has been overtly preparing itself militarily to deal with the potential Chinese threat even though the two neighbours continue to intensify their bilateral engagement, which includes military-to-military contacts. India-China trade has been galloping with every passing year and the quantum is all set to reach a historic $100 billion mark very soon.

But then bilateral trade cannot be any insurance against military and foreign policy threats. Nothing can be a better reminder of this than China-Japan relations. Asia’s number one and two economies (India is the third) have had a robust bilateral trade totalling a whopping $ 300 billion per annum, but look at their political ties. The two Asian giants have virtually been at each other’s throats for years. There have even been serious projections of China and Japan being on the brink of a war over a host of issues.

India-China relations smack of China-Japan ties, though our relations with China are not rocked by war-like scenarios. The two Asian neighbours are currently engaged in a game of one-upmanship militarily and strategically. However, it is also a fact that India has not started this race unilaterally, but has been compelled by China to join it for larger national security considerations.

China started a massive military and infrastructure buildup along the Indian border years ago. India is only trying to play catch-up. Even now, when the Chinese threat has completely dominated all near-future plans of the Indian defence establishment, the Indian counter is neither as good nor as complete.

Nonetheless, the Indian tiger has started roaring to the perceived and projected threats from the Chinese dragon. Here is a brief account.

India is loosening its purse strings for beefing up its military muscle vis-a-vis China in an unprecedented manner. Gone are the days of the ignominious Indian defeat during the brief Sino-Indian war of 1962. For decades since then India had deliberately left its China border infrastructure neglected for fear that it would be exploited by the Chinese to their advantage.

The ongoing Indian activities along the 4,057-km-long China border tell a different tale. By 2020, India would be spending almost $5 billion laying a brand-new infrastructure of roads, railway tracks and airfields.

Moreover, the Indian Army has embarked on a super ambitious cash-rich plan worth $15 billion plan to bolster its China-specific military posture. The plan, which is still awaiting government nod, comprises two aspects: (i) a new mountain corps for deployment along the China border which will cost the nation $ 11.5 billion at the current price-level; and (ii) creation of three more brigades (two infantry and one armoured) at the cost of $ 3.5 billion.

The Indian government is likely to approve the plan any time later this year, but budget constraints are coming in the way for now. The Indian Army currently has 37 divisions, including 4 Rapid (Reorganised Army Plains Infantry Divisions), 18 infantry divisions, 10 mountain divisions, three armored divisions, and two artillery divisions.

The Indian Air Force has already taken strong deterrent steps by moving several squadrons of Su-30 fighters, and six of the first eight squadrons of its new Akash air defence missile systems, to the Chinese border. Way back in 2008, the IAF had stationed its frontline Sukhoi 30 MKI fighters at four bases in the north-east in Tezpur, Bagdogra, Chhabua and Hasimara.

Lately, the IAF has also reactivated its once dormant airbase at Nyoma in Ladakh, which enables IAF to carry out attack missions into Chinese territory in the event of war. Significantly, this was the place where the Indian military was humbled during the 1962 War as the Jawaharlal Nehru government strangely decided not to use the air force.

Though India has substantially beefed up its China-specific war muscle, it is still woefully short of what the Dragon has already done. While India is still measuring the length of its completed border roads in hundreds of kilometers, China already has a stupendous road network of 58,000 km of roads leading up to the Indian border.

The Chinese road infrastructure enables them to move as many as 30 divisions to the Indian border in double quick time. In contrast, India can barely manage one-thirds of the Chinese war effort at this point of time.

What makes the scenario even grimmer is the fact that China has five fully operational military airfields in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) and several more are coming up fast. This puts the Chinese way ahead of the Indians in military terms.

However, there is one fact that goes in favour of the Indians. China has never fought a war since 1962. The Chinese troops are not battle-tested. In contrast, Indian soldiers have fought two full-fledged wars with Pakistan (1965 and 1971) and a limited war in Kargil in 1999. Besides the Indian soldiers are in war-like theatres across the country for the past three decades continuously, thanks to numerous terrorist and insurgent activities.

The Chinese must be aware of that!

The writer is a New Delhi-based journalist-author and a strategic affairs analyst who can be reached at bhootnath004@yahoo.com.
 

Housecarl

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http://thetruthpursuit.com/world/world-feature/south-korea-and-japan-advocate-nuclear-weapons/11401

South Korea and Japan Advocate For Nuclear Weapons
Posted February 15, 2013, 8:24 pm
VOA | Steve Herman

SEOUL — North Korea's claim this week to have successfully conducted a third underground nuclear test is prompting some in South Korea and Japan to advocate possessing their own such weapons.

​​South Korean lawmaker Chung Mong-joon of the governing Saenuri (New Frontier) party made such a remark during a meeting of his colleagues from the National Assembly, comparing the situation with North Korea to “a gangster in the neighborhood buying a brand-new machine gun” and trying to defend oneself with merely a pebble.

Chung is no fringe politician. He is the country's wealthiest lawmaker through his controlling shares in the Hyundai Heavy Industries group.

The JoongAng Ilbo, major South Korean newspaper, terming North Korea's latest test an existential threat to Seoul, questions whether the country should arm itself with nuclear weapons and if the United States will ultimately protect it if Pyongyang were to threaten a nuclear attack.

A spokesman for the opposition Democratic United Party, Park Yong-jin, criticizes the ruling party for failing during the past it is not possible to solve the problem of North Korea's nuclear program with a South Korean nuclear armament.

Another option is reintroducing U.S. nuclear weapons onto the Korean peninsula.

But South Korea “is not considering bringing in tactical nuclear weapons right now because the priority is to make North Korea give up its nuclear armament,” says Defense Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok.

The nuclear debate is not limited to South Korea.

Japan also concerned

Former four-term Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara, now a member of parliament, and co-leader of the Japan Restoration Party, has openly stated his country should have nuclear bombs to counter China, North Korea and Russia.

Japan's Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera during an interview with Reuters in Tokyo February 14, 2013.
​​In a VOA interview just hours after North Korea announced its latest nuclear test, Japanese defense minister Itsunori Onodera commented that his country's pacifist constitution restricts Tokyo “when it comes to having nuclear weapons” and thus strengthening the U.S.-Japan security alliance is the key response.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, however, is among those advocating revision of Article 9 of the constitution which prohibits Japan from maintaining a war potential.

Getting China's attention

Some international observers contend the pro-nuclear statements from Seoul and Tokyo are in part intended to get the attention of policy makers in Beijing.

“I'd really like to think that that's really what's happening is that their trying to make a political statement to try to get China interested in dealing with the problem,” says Carl Baker, director of programs at the Pacific Forum of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a bi-partisan U.S. think tank. “Ultimately the politicians in Seoul and Tokyo believe that the only way we're going to get North Korea really interested in not pursuing nuclear weapons further is by having China tell them to stop.”

Non-Proliferation Treaty

Baker, a former political and economic analyst for U.S. Forces Korea, cautions that any moves by South Korea or Japan to initiate a nuclear weapons program would not find approval in Washington.

“It'll be received very negatively because we have, of course, always ensured South Korea and Japan that we provide an extended deterrent capacity to them,” he says. “There is the Non-Proliferation Treaty which requires people who don't possess nuclear weapons to not possess nuclear weapons. For South Korea and Japan to basically disregard the treaty would be a very bad step.”

Both countries are protected under the U.S. nuclear umbrella and host thousands of American troops and several major military bases.

Despite that, South Korea and Japan in past decades appear to have considered clandestine nuclear weapons development.

Secret programs

A secret South Korean program under a “weapons exploration committee” during the dictatorship of the late President Park Chung-hee existed in the 1970s. His daughter, Park Geun-hye, is to be inaugurated as president February 25, succeeding Lee Myung-bak, who was limited to a single five-year term.

The International Atomic Energy Agency in 2004 concluded that South Korean scientists, in previous years, had produced a very small amount of fissile material that could have been placed in a weapon.

South Korea's government at the time contended it had not authorized the experiments.

Japan reportedly undertook, in the 1960s, a secret study on building nuclear weapons.

Prime Minister Tsutomu Hata in 1974 stated Japan certainly had such a scientific capability. In 2006, then foreign minister Taro Aso repeated that assertion and argued Article 9 did not prohibit Japan from having nuclear weapons for self defense.

Aso would later become a prime minister and is currently the deputy prime minister and finance minister.

Both South Korea and Japan each have dozens of commercial nuclear power plants - a potential source of ample fuel for such weapons.

South Korea wants revision of its atomic energy agreement with the United States to allow Seoul to reprocess spent fuel to use in future fast breeder reactors and reduce its stored nuclear waste. Washington has resisted altering the pact amid fears that the fuel could be used for nuclear weapons.

Talks on the agreement are expected to be held after the new Park administration takes office.

In Japan, a former overseer of the country's atomic energy program told VOA, on condition he not be named, that he has been approached by several influential lawmakers asking him how quickly the country, with its highly advanced technology, would be able to construct a viable nuclear weapon.

Officials in Tokyo and abroad have been quoted anonymously in the past as saying the answer to that question would be six months or less.


Youmi Kim in the VOA Seoul bureau contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...ea-tells-China-it-s-planning-new-nuclear-test


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http://www.nbcnews.com/id/50823920

Exclusive: North Korea tells China of preparations for fresh nuclear test

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A passenger walks past a television report on North Korea's nuclear test at a railway station in Seoul February 12, 2013. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
By Benjamin Kang Lim
updated 2/15/2013 12:23:15 PM ET

BEIJING (Reuters) - North Korea has told its key ally, China, that it is prepared to stage one or even two more nuclear tests this year in an effort to force the United States into diplomatic talks with Pyongyang, said a source with direct knowledge of the message.

Further tests could also be accompanied this year by another rocket launch, said the source who has direct access to the top levels of government in both Beijing and Pyongyang.

The isolated regime conducted its third nuclear test on Tuesday, drawing global condemnation and a stern warning from the United States that it was a threat and a provocation.

"It's all ready. A fourth and fifth nuclear test and a rocket launch could be conducted soon, possibly this year," the source said, adding that the fourth nuclear test would be much larger than the third at an equivalent of 10 kilotons of TNT.

The tests will be undertaken, the source said, unless Washington holds talks with North Korea and abandons its policy of what Pyongyang sees as attempts at regime change.

North Korea also reiterated its long-standing desire for the United States to sign a final peace agreement with it and establish diplomatic relations, he said. The North remains technically at war with both the United States and South Korea after the Korean war ended in 1953 with a truce.

Initial estimates of this week's test from South Korea's military put its yield at the equivalent of 6-7 kilotons, although a final assessment of yield and what material was used in the explosion may be weeks away.

North Korea's latest test, its third since 2006, prompted warnings from Washington and others that more sanctions would be imposed on the isolated state. The U.N. Security Council has only just tightened sanctions on Pyongyang after it launched a long-range rocket in December.

The North is banned under U.N. sanctions from developing missile or nuclear technology after its 2006 and 2009 nuclear tests.

North Korea worked to ready its nuclear test site, about 100 km (60 miles) from its border with China, throughout last year, according to commercially available satellite imagery. The images show that it may have already prepared for at least one more test, beyond Tuesday's subterranean explosion.

"Based on satellite imagery that showed there were the same activities in two tunnels, they have one tunnel left after the latest test," said Kune Y. Suh, a nuclear engineering professor at Seoul National University in South Korea.

Analysis of satellite imagery released on Friday by specialist North Korea website 38North showed activity at a rocket site that appeared to indicate it was being prepared for an upcoming launch (http://38north.org/2013/02/tonghae021413/).

NORTH 'NOT AFRAID' OF SANCTIONS

President Barack Obama pledged after this week's nuclear test "to lead the world in taking firm action in response to these threats" and diplomats at the U.N. Security Council have already started discussing potential new sanctions.

The North has said the test this week was a reaction to what it said was "U.S. hostility" following its December rocket launch. Critics say the rocket launch was aimed at developing technology for an intercontinental ballistic missile.

"(North) Korea is not afraid of (further) sanctions," the source said. "It is confident agricultural and economic reforms will boost grain harvests this year, reducing its food reliance on China."

North Korea's isolated and small economy has few links with the outside world apart from China, its major trading partner and sole influential diplomatic ally.

China signed up for sanctions after the 2006 and 2009 nuclear tests and for a U.N. Security Council resolution passed in January to condemn the latest rocket launch. However, Beijing has stopped short of abandoning all support for Pyongyang.

Sanctions have so far not discouraged North Korea from pursuing its nuclear ambitions, analysts said.

"It is like watching the same movie over and over again," said Lee Woo-young, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul.

"The idea that stronger sanctions make North Korea stop developing nuclear programs isn't effective in my view."

The source with ties to Beijing and Pyongyang said China would again support U.N. sanctions. He declined to comment on what level of sanctions Beijing would be willing to endorse.

"When China supported U.N. sanctions ... (North) Korea angrily called China a puppet of the United States," he said. "There will be new sanctions which will be harsh. China is likely to agree to it," he said, without elaborating.

He said however that Beijing would not cut food and fuel supplies to North Korea, a measure that it reportedly took after a previous nuclear test.

He said North Korea's actions were a distraction for China's leadership, which was concerned the escalations could inflame public opinion in China and hasten military build-ups in the region.

The source said that he saw little room for compromise under North Korea's youthful new leader, Kim Jong-un. The third Kim to rule North Korea is just 30 years old and took over from his father in December 2011.

He appears to have followed his father, Kim Jong-il, in the "military first" strategy that has pushed North Korea ever closer to a workable nuclear missile at the expense of economic development.

"He is much tougher than his father," the source said.

(Writing by David Chance; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Mark Bendeich)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2013.
 

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http://news.terra.com/japan-defense...050ea798579dc310VgnCLD2000000ec6eb0aRCRD.html


February 15, 2013•05:38 AM
Japan defense chief: could have pre-emptive strike ability in future

Japan has the right to develop the ability to make a pre-emptive strike against an imminent attack given a changing security environment although it has no plan to do so now, the defense minister said on Thursday, days after North Korea conducted a third nuclear test.

Any sign that Japan was moving to develop such a capability in response to North Korea's nuclear program could upset neighbors China and South Korea, which have reacted strongly in the past to suggestions it might do so.

"When an intention to attack Japan is evident, the threat is imminent, and there are no other options, Japan is allowed under the law to carry out strikes against enemy targets," Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera told Reuters in an interview.

"Given Japan's political environment and the peace-oriented diplomacy it has observed, this is not the time to make preparations (for building such capability).

"But we need to carefully observe the changing security environment in the region."

North Korea conducted its third nuclear test on Tuesday, drawing condemnation from the United States, Japan, Europe and the North's only major ally, China.

Onodera said Japan needed to strengthen its ballistic missile defense in view of the North Korean threat.

"Japan, the United States and South Korea managed to respond well to North Korea's missile launch on December 12. But North Korea is expected to boost various capabilities further. We need to improve corresponding capabilities as well."

But he declined to say whether it was more urgent than ever to lift a self-imposed ban on exercising the right of collective self-defense, or coming to the aid of an ally under attack.

Exercising that right is now prohibited under a long-standing interpretation of Japan's pacifist constitution but Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made clear he wants to lift the ban and a panel of advisers has begun discussing the topic.

URGING CHINA

Onodera called on China to join the United States, Japan and other countries in tightening sanctions against North Korea, noting that Pyongyang had gone ahead with the test on Tuesday in defiance of Beijing's urging not to.

"I think China is the one that is most concerned about the development ... From now on, it is necessary for us, including China, to seek effective steps, effective economic measures (against North Korea)."

Onodera urged China to work with Japan to set up hotline and other communications channels between Tokyo and Beijing to prevent any accidental clash over disputed East China Sea islets, while reiterating that the islands belonged to Japan.

Sino-Japanese ties cooled sharply after Japan's government in September nationalized three of the disputed islets, called the Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.

The island row has escalated to the point where both sides have scrambled fighter jets while patrol ships shadow each other, raising worries that an unintended collision or other incident could lead to a broader clash.

"There already is a preliminary agreement between Japan and China to set up a maritime communication mechanism," Onodera said.

"The mechanism would include annual meetings, specialists' meetings, hotlines between high-ranking people, and direct communications between ships and planes in the field. I would like to have final agreement reached as soon as possible."

Onodera said last week a Chinese frigate had locked its targeting radar on a Japanese destroyer on January 30 - a step that usually precedes the firing of weapons - but China insisted that its vessel used only ordinary surveillance radar.

He said in the interview that Japan has data to back up its assertion, but was cautious about disclosing the information.

"We have irrefutable data. But (disclosure) would also reveal our various capabilities. We would like to discuss (possible disclosure) within the government, while watching China's future steps."

(Editing by Linda Sieg and Robert Birsel)

(This Feb. 14 story was corrected to fix date of nuclear test to Tuesday from Monday in the eleventh paragraph)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...-weapons-as-North-Korea-says-Ban-Ki-Moon.html

Iran is taking same path to nuclear weapons as North Korea, says Ban Ki-Moon
Iran is using the same methods as North Korea to develop its nuclear capabilities, requiring "firm, decisive and effective" action by the Security Council, the United Nations secretary general has warned.
By Julian Ryall, in Tokyo and David Blair

9:26PM GMT 15 Feb 2013

Two days after North Korea carried out its third nuclear test, Ban Ki-Moon said Iran was on the same path towards the covert development of a nuclear weapon.

The Security Council is considering whether to tighten sanctions on North Korea after its latest nuclear test. The country's diplomats are understood to have told China, their only ally, that they will press on and conduct two more controlled explosions of nuclear weapons later this year.

China, exasperated by Pyongyang's behaviour, is understood to be prepared to support tougher sanctions against its neighbour.

In addition, EU foreign ministers meeting on Monday will agree new sanctions against North Korea ranging from financial measures to travel bans and asset freezes against individuals.

Mr Ban said that North Korea's example held lessons for how to deal with Iran's nuclear ambitions. "We should not give much more time to the Iranians, and we should not waste time," he told the Washington Post. "We have seen what happened with the DPRK [North Korea]. It ended up that they [were] secretly, quietly, without any obligations, without any pressure, making progress."

Related Articles

Iran's flight of fancy: image of new fighter jet 'faked'
12 Feb 2013

Kim Jong Un in first public appearance since nuclear test
15 Feb 2013

Mr Ban disclosed that when he visited Tehran last year, he told Iranian leaders directly that he disbelieved their assurances about the peaceful nature of their nuclear ambitions.

On Feb 26, Iran will hold direct talks with the world's six leading powers, including America, at a summit in Kazakhstan. It follows three rounds of negotiations last year. None made any progress.

Iran has defied six UN resolutions and continues to enrich uranium, a highly sensitive process that could be used to make fuel for power stations – which Tehran says is the only goal – or the fissile core of a nuclear weapon.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.

Pro-Syria state gunmen kidnap 300 in retaliation for abduction of 42 Shia Muslims, activist group says
- @AJEnglish

11 mins ago from blogs.aljazeera.com by editor

----------

Activist group says hundreds kidnapped in northwestern Syria

February 16, 2013 - 15:43

An activist group says pro-government gunmen have kidnapped more than 300 people in northwestern Syria in retaliation for the abduction of 42 Shia Muslims this week.

The Britain-based Syrian says the tit-for-tat kidnappings in predominantly Sunni Muslim Idlib province could trigger sectarian clashes in the area.

The Observatory said the 42 Shia, mainly women and children, were snatched on Thursday from a bus that was traveling from the Shia villages of Foua and Kfarya to the capital Damascus.

Observatory director Rami Abdul-Rahman said Saturday it was not clear who kidnapped the Shia.

The UN Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Zainab Hawa Bangura, called for the release of the women.

She said "allegations of abduction and rape of women and girls by armed groups have been received"

http://blogs.aljazeera.com/topic/syria/activist-group-says-hundreds-kidnapped-northwestern-syria
 

Mzkitty

I give up.

Quetta, Pakistan, market blast, February 2013


@AJELive tweeted:

UPDATE: #Quetta hospital sources tell @AJEnglish 36 killed in #Hazara town blast and more than 170 injured, many in critical condition


12 mins ago from twitter.com by editor

Pakistani Police say death toll from bomb blast in Quetta market has risen to 25 -
@AP

15 mins ago by editor

And 10 minutes ago:

ASMAT KHAN ‏@hsf_niaz

@AJELive @AJEnglish that is 50 killed and many r missing thr body parts thrown distant @alibomaye
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
More:


At least 47 killed and 200 injured in bomb blast in Quetta, Pakistan
- @AFP, @AJELive

2 mins ago by editor
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Aushpaz: @JohnKerry @secgen @KenRoth @amnesty @CNN "Large blast rips through #Quetta; 47 killed" http://t.co/3ZXcAnlm #Hazara #Pakistan #Genocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:03:45 AM


Breaking News.

QUETTA: At least 47 people were killed and more than 100 wounded Saturday when a large explosion shook Quetta, the capital of restive Balochistan province, police officials said.

The explosion occurred near a school at the busy Kirani road area of the city, located close to Hazara Town.

Rescue officials confirmed at least 47 people were killed in the blast, and that the number of casualties was feared to rise.

Police said it could not yet confirm the exact nature of the explosion.

However, according to unconfirmed reports, the blast occurred more than 100 kilograms of explosive material planted inside a rickshaw.

“It was a sectarian attack, the Shia community was the target,” said Wazir Khan Nasir, senior police officer in Quetta.

Provincial home secretary Akbar Hussain Durrani confirmed the incident and said the dead included women and children.

Emergency was imposed at all local hospitals.

A large contingent of security personnel, including police and FC forces, had cordoned off the area.

Nobody was being allowed to enter the cordoned area where the blast occurred, but reports said sporadic sounds of gunfire could constantly be heard from inside the off-limits area.

The Hazara Town area is dominated by the ethnic Hazaras, a large population of which belongs to the Shia community.

The Majlis-i-Wahdat-i-Muslimeen has called a strike on Sunday in protest of the blast.

http://dawn.com/2013/02/16/large-blast-hits-quetta-at-least-five-wounded/
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Muschelschloss: #Quetta in #Pakistan - #Bombe auf Marktplatz tötet mindestens 47 Menschen - Süddeutsche.de http://t.co/Hr2kBAwp
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:13:34 AM

http://www.sueddeutsche.de/politik/...-marktplatz-toetet-mehrere-menschen-1.1602078

Picture ^^^^^^^^^^

emranraza: RT @Aushpaz: Site of the #Hazara Town blast in #Quetta. 50+ people have died and casualties rising. v @mechidtv #Shia #Pakistan http://t.co/mvjfa76n
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:13:07 AM

https://twitter.com/Aushpaz/status/302797328736210944/photo/1

Picture ^^^^^^^^^

:eek:
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
SayemZA: RT @Aushpaz: Rescue workers at site of #Hazara Town blast #Quetta - via @HazaraGenocide #Pakistan #Shia http://t.co/rlIRWr9o
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:19:37 AM

https://twitter.com/Aushpaz/status/302783599357329409/photo/1

Baahirezaman: Human life in #Quetta and #Karachi is worthless. We are told that loud and clear again and again! #Hazara #ShiaGenocide #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:19:23 AM

jingoiztic: #Quetta death toll rises to 58... #Pakistan .. death to Govt & their sponsored TTP BLA ...
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:19:17 AM

SubatKhawaja: RT @Karachi_Post: Blast was so massive that surrounding structures including 60 shops have been completely destroyed #Quetta #Shiagenocide #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:23:31 AM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.

More: Sectarian bomb attack in Pakistan city of Quetta kills 47 people, police say -
@BBCNews

9 mins ago from www.bbc.co.uk by editor

---------

16 February 2013 Last updated at 10:16 ET


Pakistan: Many dead in bomb attack on Quetta market


At least 47 people have been killed and many others wounded in a bomb attack on a crowded market in the Pakistani city of Quetta, police say.

Senior local police officer Wazir Khan Nasir told the AFP news agency that at least 200 people had been injured and the death toll could rise.

The bomb was detonated by remote-control in a Shia-dominated area of Quetta, he said.

He called it a sectarian attack: "The Shia community was the target."

Quetta is the capital of Balochistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan and has been plagued by a separatist rebellion as well as sectarian violence.

Last month, at least 92 people were killed in a bomb attack and 121 were wounded when suicide bombers blew themselves up at a crowded snooker club in a Shia-dominated area of Quetta.

The banned Sunni militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi said it carried out the 10 January attacks.

There is a little map showing where the place is here:


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21485731#TWEET607527
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
I was wondering why there weren't more pictures:


abbasspk: RT @shiitenews110: http://t.co/d0oPtQsY #Quetta #ShiaGenocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 10:50:08 AM


At least 48 Shia Muslims martyred in huge blast in Quetta

Saturday, 16 February 2013 13:50
Written by Shiitenews Reporter

Quetta BlastAt least 48 Shia Muslims including women and children were martyred and dozens of other Shiites were injured in a huge explosion in Hazara Town Quetta on Saturday evening.

This is first major Shia massacre since the imposition of Governor Rule in Baluchistan province. Majlis- e-Wahdat-e-Muslimeen has announced a shutter-down commercial strike on Sunday to mourn the massacre of innocent Shiites by the takfiri nasbi terrorists of outlawed Taliban/Sipah-e-Sahaba/Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.

The gory act of terrorist took place near Vegetable Market, Kirani Road, off Brewery Road (Hazara Town). Bodies and injured were rushed to the hospital. The personnel of army have reached the scene and hospital. They have disallowed others to take footages of martyrs and injured. Cell phone (Mobile) service has been jammed.

Shia parties and leaders have strongly condemned the massacre in Quetta and demanded of the government that an army operation be launched forthwith to eliminate the takfiri nasbi terrorists.

Allama Sajid Naqvi, Chief of Shia Ulema Council, has declared that genocide of Shia Muslims is a complete failure of the state institutions.

Mr. Haider, a spokesman for SUC Sindh, announced that Shia Muslims will stage a rally from Numaish Chowrangi to Sindh Chief Minister House in Karachi on Sunday afternoon. He has appealed to Shiites to reach Numaish Chowrangi at 3 p.m.

http://www.shiitenews.com/index.php...shia-muslims-martyred-in-huge-blast-in-quetta
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://debka.com/article/22769/Iran-points-finger-at-Israel-for-IRGC-general’s-death-vows-revenge

Iran points finger at Israel for IRGC general’s death, vows revenge
DEBKAfile Special Report February 15, 2013, 7:29 PM (GMT+02:00)
Tags: IRGC general targeted assassination Syria Iran Hizballah Bashar Assad
IRGC General Hassan Shateri


The depth of Iran’s loss by the death of senior Iranian Revolutionary Guards general Hassan Shateri aka Hossam Khosh-Nevis was signified by the rank of mourners at his funeral in Iran Thursday, Feb. 15. Among them were Iran’s Defense Minister Ahmed Wahidi, Foreign Minister, Ali Akbar Salehi and Al Qods Brigades commander Gen. Qassem Soleimani.

Gen. Shateri was in fact the live wire of the tremendous military effort Iran is investing in Syria for keeping President Bashar Assad in power, DEBKAfile’s Iran and Persian Gulf sources say. He acted additionally as the vital Iranian link in the military partnership between Assad and the Lebanese Hizballah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

Iran is reported by Gulf intelligence sources to have initially drawn a veil of secrecy over the time and place of his death for fear exposure would force a military confrontation with Israel. They reveal that Gen. Shateri was in fact killed two weeks ago Saturday, Jan. 30, in the course of the alleged Israeli air strike against a Syrian military complex and arms convoy destined for Hizballah in Lebanon.

Those sources claim that that the Iranian general and two aides who were driving in the same car were the real targets of that air strike.
After the event, Damascus reported two people killed and five injured, without identifying them or releasing their photos as would normally have been routine.

Targeted assassinations by foreign hands claimed by no one are not unusual Syria. In February 2008, Hizballah’s security chief Imad Mughniyeh, who carried out many of the same functions for Tehran as Gen. Shateri, was assassinated in Damascus. Eight months ago, in July 2012, a mysterious explosion wiped out half of Assad’s inner circle, targeting the men running the war against the Syrian uprising.

Tehran was taken aback this time by the precise foreknowledge of Shateri’s movements and the accuracy of the attack, which presumed deep intelligence penetration in Tehran and Beirut as well as Damascus. Now, the Iranians appear to have decided not to take this setback lying down after all. Israel is in their sights for payback – either directly or through their allies, Syria or Hizballah, which both suffered loss from the general’s death.

DEBKAfile has learned that the IRGC general was in the process of rapidly establishing a small guerrilla army of 5,000 Revolutionary Guardsmen and 5,000 Hizballlah operatives for strengthening the defensive ring around Assad’s governing institutions in Damascus and its outskirts, secure the main Syria-Lebanon road routes and keep them open to free military movement between the two countries.

For Tehran, an open highway between Syria and Lebanon is an overriding strategic goal in view of its determination to get Hizballah’s stock of sophisticated weapons out of Syrian stores and across to Lebanon whatever it takes - despite Israel’s reported action to frustrate the transfer.

In Tehran, the influential IRGC preacher, Hojjat-ol-Eslam Mehdi Ta’eb, declared Wednesday in a sermon that Syria’s importance to the Islamic Republic is greater even than the oil region of Khuzestan in southern Iran.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://debka.com/newsupdatepopup/3712/

« Breaking News »
Khamenei: No power can stop Tehran accessing an atomic bomb
DEBKAfile February 16, 2013, 11:59 AM (GMT+02:00)



Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei says Iran is not seeking nuclear weapons, but that no power could stop Tehran's access to an atomic bomb if it intended to build it, although Tehran backs the elimination of nuclear weapons. He said this to a group of Iranians Friday in a statement appearing on his website. DEBKAfile: His message is that Iran has procured all the necessary components for a bomb but will not take dictation from outsiders on when it build it.

Khamenei has been circulating a fatwa banning nuclear weapons to support Tehran’s claim that its nuclear program is purely peaceful.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://debka.com/newsupdatepopup/3706/

« Breaking News »
A 20,000-strong Russian emergency team at meteorite site
DEBKAfile February 16, 2013, 12:16 PM (GMT+02:00)



President Vladimir Putin has ordered a team of 20,000 emergency workers to set out for Cheyabinsk in the Ural Mountains 930 miles east of Moscow to carry out quick repairs of the damage caused by an exploding meteorite Friday morning. Russian Academy of Sciences experts report that the meteorite, weighing 10 tons, broke up some 30-50 kilometers above earth with a force equal to a small atom bomb. The number of injured people has meanwhile climbed to 1,200 – most suffering cuts and bruises from glass flying from shattered windows.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
BashaNazir: 'brother' Taliban again kill over 60, injure 200 including women and children, but we're told only way forward is negotiations. #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:25:23 AM

maniprm: Kill each other and blame World nations for mistreating you. #ShiaGenocide. #Quetta #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:24:32 AM

nijos2001: There are many children,women and young people amongst dead and injured in Kirani Road Blast.(Hospitals Sources) via (QNA) #Quetta #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:24:07 AM

XahraKaxmi: RT @zsyed_: And people said that Genocide is a big word, 100 dead bodies every month isnt enough ? #Pakistan #ShiaGenocide #Quetta
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:21:26 AM

Sun_Niee: At least 100 dead and over 130 injured in another terrorist attack in #Quetta Pakistan .
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:28:17 AM

azadtalk: RT @Aushpaz: For all cricket enthusiasts, #Pakistan team just scored a 100, #Quetta blast victims also expected to be 100! #Hazara #ShiaGenocide #Quetta
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:31:23 AM

alamiftikharalg: RT @SudheenKulkarni: How religious extremism is destroying #Pakistan. Yet another bomb blast in #Quetta. Kills 47 innocent people.
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:32:06 AM

hfarhan76: RT “@ScepticOptimist: Agha Murtaza Pooya on Such TV says #Saudi responsible for #ShiaGenocide in Pakistan. #HazaraTown #Quetta”
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:31:11 AM

No new pictures or videos due to info blackout mentioned above.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Aushpaz: RT @Karachi_Post: Pakistan is burning in religious fire right now #Quetta #Pakistan #Shiagenocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:37:13 AM

w_kashmir: #Pakistan RT “@Ibnebattuta: Heal Pakistan, before the devils within you take over completely ! #Quetta”
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:37:06 AM

GHRazz19: RT @23Bano: The tears i feel today,can be in Ur eyes tomorrow.Plz speak against #shiagenocide #hazaraTownBlast #Quetta #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:36:45 AM

23Bano: No Way Out Situation for #Hazara in #Quetta #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:35:08 AM

Catherndwpp: When #Pakistan President and PM fail to go to #Quetta to console the grieving, you can understand they are not fit to lead. #Shiagenocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:34:35 AM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Well, they're admitting to 60 so far, but other people say much more, and I wouldn't be shocked if it really is more than 100. And you know some of those severely injured in the hospital are going to die too.


Update: Pakistani official: Death toll in Quetta blast jumps to 60, with 180 injured -
@AP

5 mins ago by editor

---------

haseebgml: RT @AlArabiya_Eng: #Pakistan: Death toll from bombing jumps to 60 http://t.co/CZphLwkn #alarabiya #Quetta
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:53:05 AM

NishapuriFC: RT @Jawadkhanbabai: #Quetta Balast kills 70(yet). more than 100 still severely injured. Complete security failure of completely failed state. #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:52:58 AM

dawn_com: Blast in #Quetta; banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claim responsibility | Latest-News | http://t.co/WlJQkF6Z http://t.co/8BbKxV15 #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:52:32 AM

zaarasikandar: RT @Darveshh: World 5th/6th (?) largest army - Men at Their Best, challenged by a few hundred LEJ terrorists in #Quetta, #Pakistan? #ShiaGenocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:52:24 AM

nijos2001: 2013 is the bloodiest year for #Quetta, just within 47 days ab 360 innocent people have been killed & over 500 injured. via (QNA) #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:50:10 AM

telecomistan: We extend our condolences to all the grieved families in #Quetta after the deadly blast that attacked #Hazara #Shia in #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:51:06 AM

zjaral: RT @mahnoor199: Common Pakistani's lose the right to live every single day while the leaders sleep in their bomb proof palaces.. #Quetta #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:45:53 AM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
HaiderZeeeshan: BREAKING: Pakistani official says death toll in #Quetta blast jumps to at least 73, with 180 injured #ShiaGenocide #QuettaBlast #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 11:59:17 AM
 

Be Well

may all be well
Islam needs to end. There is no way to "fix" it otherwise. If they have no infidels to kill, they'll kill the "wrong" kind of other mozlems.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Islam needs to end. There is no way to "fix" it otherwise. If they have no infidels to kill, they'll kill the "wrong" kind of other mozlems.

This is what they get for believing in death instead of life.

---------

Karachi_Post: People of Europe & other Secular countries should look at #Pakistan & thank lady luck that their societies are secular #Quetta #shiagenocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:04:46 PM

syed_farhan_1: Thousands of Muslims killed on the name of Islam #OnlyInPakistan #ShiaGenocide #QUETTA #Karachi #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:00:05 PM

SafeereAzadaran: #QUETTA: Many people are buried under rubble of two-storey building that collapsed after blast.
#Pakistan #ShiaGenocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:00:03 PM

munawarz: @secgen SOS call from #Quetta On humanitarian basis United Nation must intervene in #Pakistan to stop #ShiaGenocide state of pk has failed
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:00:01 PM

friend_news1: RT @beenasarwar CMH HOSPITAL #QUETTA CANT Blood required A- B- O- Plz pass it. 03218009209 #Pakistan v @Afrin_Abbas @TajHydar #ShiaGenocide
Saturday, February 16, 2013 1:59:59 PM

WRC_rd: Scores killed by bomb blast in #Shiite area near #Quetta - http://t.co/sBgo9Mgz #Pakistan #Persecution #Minorities
Saturday, February 16, 2013 1:58:10 PM

Short video of the picture I gave above:

http://www.news-republic.com/Web/ArticleWeb.aspx?regionid=3&articleid=6809234
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Changing channels, and I'm not even going to burden you with what else is going on there -- it's all too much:


Syrian state news agency says power outage plunges Damascus and southern Syria into darkness
- @AP

12 mins ago by editor

-----------

patrickdehahn: RT @NMSyria: Artillery strikes being launched on pitch-black southern neighborhoods in #Damascus.
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:05:50 PM

YallaSouriya: #Damascus Suburbs Yelda Regime artillery shelling the town... http://t.co/UWCGrBIG
Saturday, February 16, 2013 1:47:14 PM

GFDougie: @BreakingNews @AP Didn't #rebels take control of power plants in #Syria? Is this power outage in #Damascus/ southern Syria related?
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:02:00 PM

cindydintn: RT @Jbroks86: RT @BBCLinaSinjab Black out in #Damascus power shut down almost all over the city. Was planning to read a book :-(
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:08:38 PM

modteque: RT @NMSyria: Electrical blackout in nearly all of #Damascus right now.
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:08:29 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
jamilkabbara: Something weird happening in damascus !! #Damascus #Syria
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:26:07 PM


DavidPWatkins: RT @BBCLinaSinjab: As ever social life in #Damascus is what keeps us going within minutes friends nearby gather on candle light and laugh despite darkness
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:22:13 PM

Mathidiot: RT @SimaDiab: LCC saying electricity cut from majority of #Damascus neighborhoods. Blackouts very common these days in the capital. #Syria
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:28:37 PM

fsa_media_hub: #Damascus plunged into Darkness tonight "come on lets rob the place"
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:30:40 PM

SyrianSmurf: Apparently the power has been shut off in #Damascus...the guys at the Euphrates Dam shut it because the government didn't pay the bill :P
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:28:14 PM

Tesserae2: RT @Homsuptodate: #BreakingNews: #Syria: Power blackout in nearly all the southern region of Syria (#Damascus, #Daraa, #Sweida..) and some parts of #Homs
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:33:53 PM
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use......
http://www.worldcrunch.com/source-p...an-mahmoud-ahmadinejad/c7s10923/#.UR_jeGdLle5

Published on 2013-02-15 18:14:41
LE MONDE

Will Ahmadinejad Turn Out To Be The Lesser Of Iran's Evils?
By Gilles Paris
LE MONDE/Worldcrunch

PARIS - For the past eight years, the Western world has loved to hate Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Propelled onto the front of the political scene by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Iranian president declared, before being elected in 2005, that the Iranian people hadn’t participated in the revolution for democracy. Since then, Ahmadinejad hasn’t missed an opportunity to make pro-democracy Iranians miss his serene predecessor Mohammad Khatami (1997-2005).

It is true that during the eight years that Khatami was president, the Islamist Republic had a better image. He was not a revolutionary reformist, but he was convinced of the importance of a “Dialogue Among Civilizations,” a mixed-bag concept that was favorable to inter-faith and inter-cultural dialogue.

With Ahmadinejad and his hatred toward reformists, his messiah complex and pathological anti-Semitism, Iran had replaced an intellectual with a henchman. But at least now people knew where they stood.

Did the Western world get it all wrong? Was it blind to the point that it did not see that behind the apparatchik was hiding a sort of reincarnation of the legendary Iranian folktale hero – Kaveh the blacksmith? Kaveh, the redresser of wrongs (especially when it is he who is wronged) and defender of the public interest (as long as he has the same interest). Did the West underestimate the president’s ability to involuntarily lead his country to the fatal but effective end – implosion?

Ali Khamenei is Iran’s true leader, a theoretical incarnation of the “government of the doctrine” – Velayat al-Faqih, the foundation of the regime’s ideology. Khamenei is probably kicking himself today for throwing away a big chunk of his political clout by pledging his full support to Ahmadinejad in 2009, during his controversial – and clearly fixed – victory against former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Moussavi, an ex-apparatchik turned dissident (he has been under house arrest for almost two years).

The four years that followed the brutal repression of the Green movement, which took to the streets to contest the 2009 election results, allowed Ahmadinejad to gain independence from the Ayatollah, going from protégé to official scapegoat of the Islamic Republic.

The snubs, public humiliations and press campaigns should have ended his reign a long time ago, but they didn’t. Between the two opposing camps, issues are now settled in the heart of the institutions – for all to see. In what other totalitarian regime can you see – as was the case on Feb. 2 – a president, reading in front of a Parliament that hates him, the transcript of a compromising illegal phone tap of a high-ranking justice official, who is also the brother of the head of the Parliament, and who in passing is also close to Khamenei.

His Arab neighbors, who used to deal with sedition with bloody purges, must have been stunned.

Internecine wars

The balance of power is not really in favor of Ahmadinejad. Against him stand the Ayatollah, the powerful Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution and the Parliament. Faced with all this, Ahmadinejad has little chance of retaining power by installing one of his close allies as president during the next election, in June. The Guardian Council of the Constitution will probably exclude his allies from running, starting with his councilor and in-law, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei.

This internecine war has already had hugely damaging consequences. By continually criticizing the judiciary system and accusing it of corruption, by asking to visit the sinister Evine prison, where political prisoners – and now his friends – are held, Ahmadinejad has managed to convince the “silent majority” of the perversity of the revolution. This is the rural and popular electorate who worshipped him and carried him to power. On the other hand, Khamenei, by failing to reign in both sides of the conflict, risks losing his status and falling down from Supreme leader, to the level of mere faction leader.

As much as we delight in this spectacle and public airing of dirty laundry, the weakening of the regime will create a chain reaction of problems. First and foremost, there is a risk that Iranians will lose all interest in the presidential election. Faced with, on one hand the last remaining reformers, who are asking themselves if it is worth participating in the election, and on the other hand with Ahmadinejad’s cronies, Khamenei might be tempted to play it as close to the vest as possible, perhaps asking his Parliament to choose a president.

Read the article in the original language.

Photo by - www.kremlin.ru. / Google Maps

All rights reserved ©Worldcrunch - in partnership with LE MONDE

Crunched by: Daniel Shadmy
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
yawarkk: RT @battlehawk_: we humans have gone mad !! why everyone is on a killing spree?? why we want to kill each other? #Pakistan #Syria #Kashmir #Palestine #Quetta
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:52:17 PM

Ayz_Beirutyyy: I hear about #Syria every day, I see the #FSA getting closer and closer to #Damascus from the suburbs. The #SAA in Damascus are surrounded.
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:38:16 PM

They're all being very quiet now, not much being tweeted.......
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Back to Quetta:

nomi_awan: I dont think so somebody can protect us from talibanization, Govt is helpless, coming govt ll be helpless 2 #Shiagenocide #Quetta #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:54:54 PM

Darveshh: Chances are he won't ever. RT @Karachi_Post Army Chief Kayani has never uttered a word against #shiagenocide in #Pakistan #Quetta
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:53:46 PM

07khayamuddin: Another bomb blast in #Quetta...How many times...how many times #OHGOD have some mercy on us..have some mercy on #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:50:45 PM

Syedhassanr: Protest to Condemn the killing of Hazara Shia at Liberty Roundabout tomorrow 6pm, Please be there #Quetta #ShiaGenocie #Lahore #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:50:27 PM

ijayqureshi: RT @AylaMalikPTI: We remain vulnerable. There is no such thing as 100 percent security against terrorism. #Pakistan #Karachi #Quetta
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:49:43 PM

kashaziz: A govt that fails to protect its citizens has no moral and legal right to rule. Rise up against the tyrants. #Pakistan #Quetta #Karachi
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:44:45 PM

alisipl: RT @sameerft: Why do you need to kill poor folk in #Quetta to prove your love for Islam? Soul can never be purified by spilling innocent blood! #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:43:57 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Hazara_QUETTA: #ShiaGenocide #HazaraGenocide #Pakistan 200+ #SHIAHAZARAS r kiled, 40days ago "V" made history! Time is for REVOLUTION #Quetta #PAKISTAN.
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:08:30 PM

BalaachMarri: RT @naeemshamim: Pakistan Army is directly responsible for killing Hazara Shias in #Quetta ... #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:08:25 PM

faizanxabbas: RT @Karachi_Post: Maulana Fazul ur Rehman ,Ahmed Luhdvanhvi, Malik Ishaq & intelligence agencies are responsible for #Quetta blast #Shiagenocide #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:07:32 PM

atifahmads: RT @sudixitca: Crimes against humanity - RT @naeemshamim Pakistan Army is directly responsible for killing Hazara Shias in #Quetta ... #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:08:14 PM

SashaHussain7: RT @marykk23: So much injustice in #Pakistan #Allah take us out of this hell please (Ameen )#Quetta #weareallhazara #Shiagenocide #justice4Shahzeb
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:08:03 PM

CityCrimeNews: RT @faizanxabbas: Keep calm and wait for your turn! 64 died and 180 injured in Quetta and 13 died in Karachi today.. #Pakistan #Quetta #shia #terror
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:04:30 PM

_drirshad: RT @fawadrehman: At least a dozen people were burned to death by the blast. #Quetta #ShiaGenocide #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:03:18 PM

Bakhat_Nasr: RT @YusraSAskari: 800 to 1000 kilograms of explosives used in the blast on Kirani Road. #Quetta #Pakistan
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:12:47 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.

UN human rights chief said Syrian President Bashar al-Assad should be investigated for war crimes
- @AJELive

15 mins ago from blogs.aljazeera.com by editor

-------------


Syria Live Blog

Violence in Syria has escalated into what the Red Cross calls a civil war. The UN says more than 60,000 people have died since the uprising began in March 2011. The government of Bashar al-Assad, which is increasingly losing territory to rebel fighters, blames "terrorists" and "armed gangs" for the unrest, while the opposition and other nations have accused Assad's forces of crimes against humanity.
Syria 22 minutes ago

Reuters reports:

The United Nations human rights chief said on Saturday Syrian President Bashar al-Assad should be probed for war crimes and called for immediate action by the international community, including possible military intervention.

Navi Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights, repeated her call for the Syrian president to be referred to the International Criminal Court for the actions of his forces in the civil war which the U.N. says has left almost 70,000 dead in 22 months of fighting.

Asked if Assad should be investigated for war crimes, she told Britain's Channel 4 News: "He's not but he should be. This is my strong call that I made 18 months ago. Based on the evidence, I said crimes against humanity and Syria's war crimes are being committed by President Assad's forces, his security forces, and other groups allied to him," she said.

Syria about an hour ago

The Associated Press news agency reports:

Syria's state news agency says a power outage has plunged Damascus and southern Syria into darkness.

SANA quoted Electricity Minister Imad Khamis as saying that a problem with a high tension line had left the country's south without power.

The blackout affects Syria's capital, Damascus, and the southern provinces of Daraa and Sweida, which abut the Jordanian border.

An Associated Press reporter in Damascus reported dark streets across the capital since a fuel shortage makes it hard for residents to run backup generators.

Damascus and southern Syria was last hit by a major blackout on January 20.


http://blogs.aljazeera.com/liveblog/topic/syria-153
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
ranklin19788: RT @HalaJaber: #Damascus power fault fixed, power back black out over.
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:57:18 PM

Unknown7771: RT @NMSyria: Electricity back up in parts of #Damascus
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:44:49 PM

bobpulga: MT @dudi_cohen Just 4 hours after #Nasrallah threatens to shut down power plants in #Israel, #Damascus and south #Syria was in darkness !
Saturday, February 16, 2013 3:45:33 PM


And in Quetta, I read they got a C-130 from somewhere to transfer the most critically injured to a hospital in a larger city in Pakistan.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?423155-What-China-Learned-from-Soviet-Russia

For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thediplomat.com/china-power/xi-jinpings-soviet-lessons/

China’s Soviet Lessons
By David Cohen
February 16, 2013

The New York Times today has a story making out Xi Jinping as a hardliner in sheep's clothing – during the very trip during which he laid claim to the mantle of reform in Shenzhen, they write, he undercut this promise with an internal Party speech promising not to repeat the mistakes of Mikhail Gorbachev. Both the reporting and the analysis of this piece are based on a late January blog post by Chinese journalist Gao Yu– dramatically summed up by China Digital Times “Leaked Speech Shows Xi Jinping's Opposition to Reform” – but the New York Times was able to independently confirm the quotes. So far, I have not been able to find any more information about the speech in English or Chinese than was in the stories by Gao Yu and the Times.

The analysis, however, is dead wrong. We know a good deal about how the Chinese Communist Party remembers the Soviet Union: it is not as an object lesson in the virtues of hidebound Marxism. On the contrary, for the last 20 years the downfall of the Soviet Union has been a go-to cautionary tale for all varieties of Chinese political thinker, from hardliner to liberal. It has also been intensely studied by academics in the great redoubts of Chinese Marxist theory – the Party Schools and Academies of Social Sciences – and the lesson drawn is usually that the Chinese Communist Party must deal with corruption and other social problems before outside forces compel it to do so.

This field – the CCP's effort to put a posthumous diagnosis on the Soviet Union – is well surveyed in David Shambaugh’s 2009 book, China's Communist Party: Atrophy and Adaptation, which is necessary reading if you're trying to get your head around what reform might look like as conceived by Party leaders. Shambaugh's study revealed a lively debate within the Party's research organs, but one which seemed to be largely resolved by the middle of Hu Jintao's term, with a variety of official accounts that emphasized corruption and dogmatic thinking alongside Western influence and premature political reform. These studies, Shambaugh shows, formed a major part of the theoretical basis for Hu Jintao's failed plans to fight corruption by improving party discipline.

For Chinese analysts, Gorbachev's mistakes included ill-timed political reforms, but these come in a distant second to his party's failure to provide economic growth and good government. Li Jingjie, a Soviet expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences told Shambaugh that the Soviet Union collapsed because it failed to change:

“It was the CPSU (Communist Party of the Soviet Union) that collapsed first. CPSU leaders did not understand economics and they steadfastly avoided reform because they dogmatically believed in their model. The CPSU never renewed itself and did not adapt with the times… In seventy-plus years, there was no development of democratic politics. Once they began, under Gorbachev, they were too late and the reform strategy was erroneous – which was the precipitating cause of the collapse.”

In my experience, even young Chinese liberals are afraid of following in Russia's footsteps. The downfall of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union is remembered not as a victory for liberty but as a warning about having too much democracy too soon. What most Chinese people remember about Russia's democratic transition is that it lost huge amounts of territory and that many of its state assets were stolen by the new oligarch class – not an entirely false picture, especially for a country whose two largest provinces both have independence movements. More appealing are the histories of Korea and Taiwan, where established economic growth and expanding middle classes drove largely peaceful democratic transitions.

In this context, Xi's invocation of the USSR is something much less sinister: in a speech given to a Party audience, the USSR is a reminder of the reasons for reform and a chance to promise explicitly that Xi's reform plans will not destabilize the Party's hold on power – to which end, Xi evidently reiterated his commitment to the basic principles of Communism. To be sure, the speech rules out major democratic reforms such as ending censorship or creating a national army – but these are reforms no one has ever expected of an incoming president chosen by consensus of China's previous and former leaders.

For a Chinese leader, the Soviet analogy is an argument for the kind of incremental reforms that might actually take place within the current political system: serious efforts to rein in corruption, progress on encouraging consumption, or reversing the trend toward state domination of the Chinese economy. It's not glasnost but it would be an improvement.
 
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/17/w...-towns-in-freed-areas-of-mali.html?ref=africa

February 16, 2013
In Mali, the Peril of Guerrilla War Looms
By PETER TINTI and ADAM NOSSITER

17mali-articleInline.png


GAO, Mali — Aguissa Ag Badara, a former tour guide, now rides around the city on the back of a motorcycle looking for Islamist militants who may still be lurking about. He even wears a pin to advertise his mission. It reads, “Vigilance Brigade: Patrollers of Gao.”

“We said Mujao had infiltrated the population, but no one listened,” said Mr. Ag Badara, referring to the Islamist militants who attacked this strategic city last week. “We support the French, we support the Malian state and the African forces, but why are they only at the checkpoints and in their camps? The war is here in the streets.”

The battle for Mali is not over. Remnants of the militant forces that once controlled major towns have not simply burrowed into their rugged, mountain hideaways far to the north. They also appear to have taken refuge in smaller villages nearby, essentially pulling back to less-contested ground after the French-led intervention to oust them, residents and experts say.

That infiltration, in a string of neighboring villages along the Niger River, is what enabled last Sunday’s attack in the heart of Gao, a town of about 86,000 whose reconquest was a pivotal part of the French offensive last month. For hours, bullets flew as jihadists from around Gao pinned down French and Malian forces.

Control in the town itself has now been re-established, but Islamist fighters have blended imperceptibly with the local population around Gao. And much of that population, in the isolated villages, looks on them benevolently, say residents and experts who know the area well.

“The jihadists are still in the environs,” a Malian Army commander, Col. El Hajj Ag Gamou, said in a telephone interview from Gao. “They are certainly around. There are small caches of them, in hiding, 40, 80 miles from here.”

Their presence suggests potentially fertile ground for a sustained guerrilla conflict — something the French have said they are determined not to get enmeshed in. Though the lightning-quick French campaign in January succeeded in pushing the Islamists from major towns, it is far from clear how many fighters the French actually eliminated. Estimates of deaths, from both the French and the Malians, have been vague and inconsistent, and the jihadists are evidently still lurking in the shadows.

“These villages followed the jihadists when they first came to Gao,” said Oumar Moumouni, a schoolteacher in Gao who said he had lived for extended periods in the neighboring villages. “And the jihadists, they recruited many of the youth of Kadji and Gouzoureye,” he added, naming two of the villages.

“That’s the problem at Gao now; there are jihadists hiding in these villages,” Mr. Moumouni continued. “These are native jihadists. And the Malian military can’t tell the difference between them and the population,” he said.

Like others, he said he expected more attacks in Gao.

“These are villages that have pledged allegiance to the Mujao,” said Ousmane Maïga, another schoolteacher in Gao, referring to the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa. “They gave many of their sons over to it.”

“Barely three miles from Gao, there are villages where they are in hiding,” he continued. “After the first attacks” by the French, “I saw them on motorcycles, hiding among the thorn trees.”

Even in Gao itself, the jihadist fighters are thought to have faded into the populace. “The city is full of Mujao,” said Sadou Diallo, the mayor of Gao. “During the 10 months they were here, they benefited and integrated lots of youth. It is the 18-year-olds from Koranic schools, the talibé,” or disciples, “who believe that if they blow themselves up they go directly to paradise.”

The attack last Sunday began with a failed suicide bombing late the night before at an army checkpoint; a band of jihadists was spotted near the bomber. Some officials in Gao said the gunmen used the confusion of the bombing, in which the bomber blew himself up and wounded a Malian soldier, to enter the city; the army insisted the gunmen arrived by boat. In either case, the jihadists would not have traveled far.

“Most of them are natives of those villages,” said Kader Touré, who runs a radio station in Gao called Radio Annia. “We think they are being hidden by relatives, all along the river.”

For many years, these villages have practiced a strict form of Islam that is at odds with most of the looser practices in Gao itself, say experts and residents.

“There have been very conservative villages in that area for decades,” said Benjamin Soares, an expert on Islam and Mali at the African Studies Center in Leiden, the Netherlands. “Back to the 1940s in this region, there has been a broader movement to follow a more rigorous practice of Islam.”

That has made them particularly receptive to fleeing Mujao fighters, say residents of Gao, who characterize the villages as Wahhabi, after the conservative brand of Islam that originated in the Arabian Peninsula.

In Kadji, “a village I know well,” said Mr. Maïga, one of the teachers, “around 85 percent of the population have pledged allegiance to Wahhabism.” Mr. Maïga said he had ancestral roots in the area.

Mr. Touré, the director of Radio Annia, said, “Even before the arrival of the Islamists, they wanted to install a radical form of Shariah.” He added, “They have some extraordinary sets of rules governing daily conduct.”

“The imam is all-powerful,” he continued. “Everyone pledges allegiance to him. There is neither individual nor collective liberty. Women are veiled. This is radical Islam. An isolated life that has nothing to do with Mali.”

Others argued that local residents had joined the Islamists for personal gain or preservation, not out of religious conviction. One former fighter for Ansar Dine, another of the Islamist militant groups that seized northern Mali last year, said he had hoped to trade his militancy for a position in the Malian Army.

“I tried to join the Malian military many times but I failed the exam,” he said, speaking on the condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisals against his family.

“My goal was only to receive training so that I could join the Malian Army once they came back to the north,” he explained, referring to past rebellions in which rebels were integrated into the army as part of postconflict reconciliation.

Another detainee being held in Gao confirmed that he was a member of Mujao, but he contended that he was forced to join.

“I was captured by Mujao, and I became their translator in order to save myself,” said the prisoner, who was handcuffed to a metal bench, dressed in tattered clothes and spoke on the condition of anonymity as six Malian soldiers looked on. “I swear to God I never received money or carried a gun. They wanted me because I speak all of the local languages.”

For much of the past week, Gao has been calm. On Wednesday, troops found what appeared to be a bomb-making factory. But residents fear the current calm could be deceptive.

“There is a real threat weighing on Gao,” said Mr. Moumouni, the other teacher.

Peter Tinti reported from Gao, and Adam Nossiter from Dakar, Senegal.

Multimedia
Interactive Feature
Turmoil in the Sahara
Related

Mali: Explosives Cache Raises Fears (February 14, 2013)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/17/w...m-requesting-foreign-airstrikes.html?ref=asia

February 16, 2013
Karzai to Forbid Afghan Forces From Requesting Foreign Airstrikes
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — President Hamid Karzai said Saturday that he would issue a decree barring Afghan security forces from asking international troops to carry out airstrikes under “any circumstances.”

The announcement came amid anger over a joint Afghan-NATO operation last week that Afghan officials said killed 10 civilians, including women and children, in northeast Kunar Province.

“I will issue a decree tomorrow that no Afghan security forces, in any circumstances, in any circumstances, can ask for the foreigners’ planes for carrying out operations on our homes and villages,” Mr. Karzai said in a speech at the Afghan National Military Academy in Kabul.

Civilian deaths at the hands of foreign forces, particularly as a result of airstrikes, have been the cause of much conflict between Afghans and the international coalition, led by the United States, although it has devised measures to prevent them. But the Afghan military also relies heavily on air support to gain an advantage in the fight against Taliban militants and other insurgents.

Many analysts have expressed concern that the impending withdrawal of international combat forces by the end of 2014 will deprive government security forces of that crucial weapon.

President Obama said in his State of the Union address last week that he would withdraw about half of the 66,000 American troops in Afghanistan within a year.

According to Gen. John R. Allen, the former top commander of American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, the coalition can provide air support to troops on the ground anywhere in Afghanistan within 12 minutes of a request. General Allen said Afghan forces would have to get used to not having the same abilities in the future.

Jamie Graybeal, a spokesman for the coalition, declined to comment on Mr. Karzai’s remarks because alliance officials had not yet seen the decree.

Mr. Karzai said that General Allen’s successor, Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., told him that Afghanistan’s intelligence agency, the National Directorate of Security, had requested the airstrike late Tuesday in the Shigal district of Kunar Province, which borders Pakistan.

Local Afghan officials said that five boys, four women and one man were killed in the bombardment. Coalition officials said an investigation was under way. Four insurgents were also reported killed, but Mr. Karzai said that did not justify the loss of so many civilian lives.

Mr. Karzai said Afghan forces were ready to take over from foreign troops despite concerns about their abilities.

“We are happy that foreign forces are withdrawing from our country,” he said. “We are happy for all their help and assistance so far, but we don’t need foreign forces to defend our country. We want our Afghan forces to defend their homeland.”

However, a former Afghan officer, Gen. Amrullah Aman, expressed surprise over Mr. Karzai’s remarks, saying that international air power was essential since one of the main weaknesses of the Afghan military is the lack of a fully developed air force.

“In a country like Afghanistan, where you don’t have heavy artillery and you don’t have air forces to support soldiers on the ground, how will it be possible to defeat an enemy that knows the area well and can hide anywhere?” General Aman said. “There must be air support to help all those ground forces on the battlefield.”
 
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