WAR 03/15 to 03/21 ***The***Winds***of***WAR***

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://the-diplomat.com/flashpoints-blog/2012/03/19/china-carrier-preps-for-flight-ops/

China Carrier Preps for Flight Ops?
By David Axe
March 19, 2012
Comments 6

Photos posted to the Internet in China last week seem to confirm that the Chinese Navy has installed arrestor gear and other vital equipment on its refurbished Soviet-made aircraft carrier, the ex-Varyag. If genuine, the installations could represent a big step forward for the first-ever seaborne, fixed-wing aviation capability for the People's Liberation Army Navy.

One image appears to show a traditional four-wire arrangement on the aft flight deck of the roughly 1,000-foot-long carrier. Another depicts a small tractor of the type used to move aircraft around the deck.

The ex-Varyag, which was speculated to have been renamed the Shi Lang in Chinese service, underwent more than a decade of rework in Dalian shipyard following her acquisition from Russia in the late 1990s. She conducted her first sea trial in July and performed a second, brief, at-sea test in November. These tests didn't include fixed-wing aircraft. Indeed, much of the equipment necessary to support airplanes apparently had apparently not been installed.

In December, a Chinese government spokesman denied rumors that Russia had refused to sell China arresting gear. The ex-Varyag's deck equipment was being developed indigenously, the spokesman said.

The wires and the tractor should allow the ex-Varyag to begin flight trials with navalized J-15 fighters as early as this spring – assuming, of course, that other requisite gear has also been installed, including air-traffic-control radars, communications, aircraft fueling and repair facilities.

Even with all that equipment in place, it could take years for China to train aviators and deck crew to safely and efficiently launch, recover and maintain carrier-based aircraft. Coordinating ship and plane tactics could require additional years of trial and error.

A truly effective carrier capability is one of the Holy Grails of modern naval operations. China's progress toward that goal has been slow but steady.

Related Articles

* China’s Carrier: A New Lexington?
* Putting Eyes on China’s Carrier
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* China’s Realizes Carrier Dream
* China’s Starter Carrier No Shock
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=3547

Sunday March 18, 2012

IDF concerned Hezbollah may acquire chemical weapons

Israel Defense Forces assessments indicate the terrorist organization may get its hands on chemical weapons and advanced anti-aircraft systems • Northern Command officer: We will have to formulate a new response to attacks using such weapons.

Lilach Shoval


If Hezbollah acquires chemical weapons and advanced anti-aircraft systems, the Israel Defense Forces will have to recalibrate thier planned defenses to Hezbollah attacks, a senior Northern Command officer told Israel Hayom on Friday.

According to the officer, the IDF is concerned that more lethal and advanced weapons could be transferred from Syria to Hezbollah if the Syrian leadership finds itself in a desperate situation.

A senior defense official said last month that the transfer of chemical weapons from Syria to Hezbollah would be tantamount to a declaration of war, and added that Israel would not accept such a move and would take action to prevent it.

In the past, when Syria agreed to transfer an initial batch of M-600 long-range missiles to Hezbollah, the IDF considered a military strike to prevent the missiles from reaching the organization. Although the IDF decided not to carry out such a strike at that time, and Hezbollah reportedly received hundreds of those missiles -- which are capable of reaching Tel Aviv -- the IDF is now determined not to allow Hezbollah to obtain advanced anti-aircraft systems that would jeopardize its aerial supremacy over Lebanon.

IDF commanders are also concerned about recent reports of Hezbollah fighters undergoing training in Syria and Iran to operate anti-aircraft batteries.

“Hezbollah, with Iran’s help, is trying to prepare its next surprises,” the officer said.

Defense officials are also on alert for attempts by Hezbollah to attack Israelis abroad, which according to the officer could also elicit a significant response by Israel. “We will not ignore such an attack simply because it occurred outside Israel. An attack of that kind will obligate us to respond harshly,” the officer said.

In addition to Hezbollah’s continued stockpiling of weapons, defense officials believe that Syria has acquired SS-N-26 Yakhont supersonic cruise missiles from Russia, which could threaten Israeli ships during a military confrontation.

There have been reports in the past of advanced weapons transfers to Hezbollah and defense officials have been warning of additional transfers for some time.

In July 2011, the London Times reported that Syria sent Hezbollah two Scud D missiles, each with the ability to deliver a payload of one metric ton. Hezbollah has reportedly received eight more Scuds since the beginning of 2011. Each Scud D has a range of 700 kilometers, enabling Hezbollah to target any point in Israel and Jordan, as well as some parts of Turkey.

Last month, the Israel Defense organization’s website claimed that an unknown number of RPG-30 missiles may have been acquired by Hezbollah. The advanced missiles are said to be capable of penetrating armor protection systems, including the IDF Armored Corp’s Windbreaker anti-tank missile shield system, which is installed on all new IDF Merkava Mark IV tanks.
 
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Russia upgrades Syria-based electronic
station to warn Iran of US/Israeli attack


DEBKAfile Special Report
February 27, 2012, 11:09 AM (GMT+02:00)
http://www.debka.com/article/21774/

The Russians have upgraded their Jabal Al Harrah electronic and surveillance station south of Damascus opposite Israel’s Sea of Galilee, adding resources especially tailored to give Tehran early warning of an oncoming US or Israeli attack, debkafile’s US military sources report.


Before it was boosted by extra advanced technology and manpower, the station covered civilian and military movements in northern Israel up to Tel Aviv, northern Jordan and western Iraq. Today, its range extends to all parts of Israel and Jordan, the Gulf of Aqaba and northern Saudi Arabia.

Part two of Moscow’s project for extending the range of its Middle East ears and eyes consisted of upgrading the Russian-equipped Syrian radar stationed on Lebanon’s Mount Sannine and connecting it to the Jabal Al Harrah facility in Syria. Russian technicians have completed this project too. Russia is now able to additionally track US and Israeli naval and aerial movements in the Eastern Mediterranean up to and including Cyprus and Greece.

According to our sources, the Russian aircraft carrier Admiral Kutznetsov’s stay at the Syrian port of Tartus through most of January and up to mid-February had the special mission of keeping an eye out for any Israeli preparations for attacking Iran, Syria or Hizballah. It filled the gap left by the Russian station south of Damascus which was fully occupied with feeding data on Syrian opposition movements to Bashar Assad and watching out for signs of foreign intervention, military or covert, against his regime.

The Russian vessel meanwhile followed increased traffic of US drone over Syria keeping track of the Syrian arsenal of missiles with chemical, biological and nerve gas warheads.

Washington disclosed on Feb. 25 that the US State Department had sent out warnings to six countries, Israel, Turkey, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Iraq, to beware of these deadly weapons. It was not clear whether the warning referred to a possible Assad regime’s decision to use WMD against those nations or the danger of their transfer to terrorists embedded within those countries.

Moscow decided to boost its radar tracking and surveillance reach for Iran’s benefit in response to a complaint from Tehran that it could not longer count on Russia for a real-time alert on an incoming US or Israeli military strike, because those resources were stretched to the limit in support of the Assad regime.

After expanding and upgrading their range to meet Iranian needs by interconnecting the two stations and adding extra Russian manpower, Moscow ordered the Admiral Kutznetsov to depart Tartus on Feb. 13 and sail to home port at Severomorsk on the Kola Peninsula. The Russian stations in Syria and Lebanon were by then ready for their expanded missions.








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Tehran steps into US-Israel Iran row
with threat of pre-emptive strike


DEBKAfile Special Report
February 21, 2012, 2:58 PM (GMT+02:00)
http://www.debka.com/article/21758/

Deputy Chief of Iran’s Armed Forces Gen. Mohammad Hejazi issued a new threat Tuesday, Feb. 21: “Our strategy now is that if we feel our enemies want to endanger Iran’s national interests… we will act without waiting for their actions.”

debkafile’s military sources report that an Iranian preemptive attack on Israel has been in the air for some weeks. It became realistic because the dragging out of the argument between Washington and Jerusalem over a military strike and the two government’s indecisiveness gave Tehran a golden opportunity to further its interests.


It bestowed on Iran the gift of entering into talks on its nuclear program with the six world powers (P5 plus 1) free of a military threat and therefore in a superior bargaining position. For openers, Tehran has already pocketed the Obama administration’s promise of permission to continue to enrich uranium up to 5 percent in any quantity and will be more than ready to lay down more demands.

Gen. Hejazi’s threat of a preemptive strike against Israel also serves the Islamic regime in its run-up to a general election on March 3. It aims to show the Iranian voter and Middle East public that Iran has successfully turned US and Israeli aggression against Iran against them and demonstrated they are no more than paper tigers incapable of carrying through on their rhetoric. The military initiative therefore stays in Iran’s hands.

In Tehran, the standard Israeli cliché of “We don’t’ advise anyone to test our resolve” has worn thin.

By letting two Iranian warships bearing arms for Assad pass Israel’s coast on its way to Tartus without interference, Israel encouraged Tehran to assume that, in the last reckoning, it will abstain from a unilateral strike to eradicate Iran’s nuclear facilities without Washington’s blessing.

The Netanyahu government’s resolve is expected to melt away under the bulldozer assault of one American emissary after another touching down at Ben-Gurion airport to corner them into backing down.

Once Israel lets its hands be tied, Tehran calculates, it will become progressively harder to break them loose, so that if Tehran does carry out a limited “preemptive” missile attack on the Jewish state, Jerusalem will again bow to Washington and let itself be coerced into not responding.

Thursday, Feb. 23, US National Director of Intelligence James Clapper arrives in Israel to tackle its military and intelligence chiefs on the question, after US National Defense Director Tom Donilon spent three days in fruitless discussions with government leaders Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak. Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the US Chiefs of Staff tried his hand at persuasion earlier this month. This cycle of pressure will peak with Netanyahu’s White House talks with President Obama on March 5.

The Iranians felt confident enough to safely deny requests from the team of IAEA inspectors who arrived in Tehran Monday for access suspect nuclear locations and meetings with scientists employed in their nuclear program.

Gen. Hejazi’s words were backed up by a four-day air defense exercise, dubbed Sarallah (God’s Revenge), in the south of the country. The Islamic Republic also took another initiative by cutting off oil exports to Britain and France and so turning the tables on the European Union’s oil embargo on Tehran.






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Israel threatens Iran, continues air strikes against Gaza

By Jean Shaoul
19 March 2012
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/mar2012/isra-m19.shtml

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has insisted that Israel would take action against Iran even if Washington objected.

Speaking to the Knesset last Wednesday, Netanyahu said that a key aim of his talks with US President Barack Obama had been to have Israel’s right to launch a military operation against Iran if it sees fit, acknowledged.


“This position was positively received in the United States, I would even say in the most profound way,” he said. “I believe that the first goal I set, to strengthen the recognition of Israel’s right to defend itself, I think that goal was achieved.”

“Israel has never left its fate in the hands of others, not even in the hands of our best friends,” he added.

He linked Iran to the ongoing attacks on Gaza by the Israel Defence Forces, claiming that the rocket attacks on Israel were carried out at the instigation of Iran. Netanyahu equated Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon with Iran. Israel would not allow Iran to use Gaza as a terrorist base, he said. Iran bore primary responsibility for the rocket attacks from the Gaza Strip: “Gaza is Iran.”

Netanyahu threatened further attacks on Gaza, The previous day, he had warned that a truce negotiated by Egypt would be short-lived if rocket fire on Israel resumed. In reality, it is Israel that has continued air strikes against Gaza in defiance of the ceasefire agreed March 13 with Hamas, the ruling group in Gaza, and Islamic Jihad, attacking a funeral procession east of Gaza City and bombing militants’ facilities in northern and southern Gaza.

Israel claimed that that its attacks on Gaza were in response to a mortar and six rockets that landed in southern Israel on Tuesday morning that were intercepted by Israel’s missile defence shield and injured no one. The authorities ramped up the tension and ordered the closure of schools on Thursday in Beersheba and other southern cities, after reopening them on Wednesday following a three day closure.

On Sunday, Israeli troops wounded a six-year-old Palestinian boy in the thigh when they opened fire east of the town of Rafah, in southern Gaza.

According to an Egyptian intelligence official, Cairo had brokered a “comprehensive and mutual” truce that included a pledge from Israel to “stop assassinations.”

Egypt had also tried—unsuccessfully—to get the Palestinians to withdraw from Sinai, and stop using it as a base from which to attack Israel. Israel cannot target Palestinian bases on Egyptian territory without breaking the 1979 Camp David Accords.

Cairo reportedly promised to increase the supply of fuel and electricity to Gaza, which remains blockaded by Egypt despite the ouster of Hosni Mubarak more than a year ago, if Hamas reined in the militants.



The ceasefire was aimed at preventing Israel’s most sustained attack on Gaza since Israel’s 2008-09 assault from escalating into an all out war. The conflict started on March 9 when Israeli drones targeted Zuhair al-Qaisi, the leader of the Popular Resistance Committees (PRC) and his military escort. Israel claimed that he had masterminded the attacks launched from Egypt’s Sinai desert that killed eight civilians and was planning another terrorist attack.

The assassinations provoked Palestinian militants from the PRC and Islamic Jihad into firing a barrage of rockets onto Israel’s southern towns that caused little damage and injured five people. Israeli citizens were never in serious danger as the newly installed Iron Dome batteries, supplied by Washington at a cost of $200 million, successfully intercepted most of the missiles aimed at major population centres.

Israel responded with helicopter gunships and aerial attacks that killed 25 Palestinians, including six civilians, some of them young boys, and injured 80 people, mainly civilians.

Few commentators in Israel or the region expect the deal to last. According to Israel, there was no signed document, guarantees or promises that it would stop assassinating Palestinian militants. Benny Gantz, the army Chief of Staff, said that the only commitment Israel gave was that “If the terrorists maintain the calm, we will do the same; if they fire, we will hit him. Everything depends on them.”

In a further indication of Israel’s aggressive intentions, the state petitioned the High Court of Justice to postpone evacuation of the largest outpost in the West Bank, Migron, until the end of 2015.

A petition by the State Prosecutor's Office states that a new settlement will be built two kilometers away. Settlers will continue to enjoy free housing on stolen Palestinian land, while the original illegal outpost remains intact. The operation, a precedent effectively nullifying international agreements to remove illegal settlements, will cost an estimated NIS 200 million ($53.2 million), or NIS 4 million ($1.06 million) per family, according to Peace Now.

Netanyahu’s warmongering follows Hamas’ abandonment of its more militant posture toward Israel and its open alignment with its original patrons, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, the dominant political party. It has agreed to form a national unity government with Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah faction, endorse the Western backed opposition movement in Syria and switch allegiance from its backers in Damascus and Tehran for the monarchies in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. It has abandoned its attacks on Israel and remained on the sidelines during the latest escalation in fighting.

While Egypt’s military junta, which controls foreign policy, initially made some cosmetic gestures towards easing the blockade on Gaza, it has essentially continued Mubarak’s policy of policing Gaza on Tel Aviv’s behalf. But this support for Israel has led to friction with the dominant political forces, the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party and its Salafist allies in Egypt’s recently elected parliament. The Brotherhood has acceded to the Obama administration’s demands to rein in Hamas, the Palestinian offshoot of the Islamist group, so as not to disrupt its relations with Washington, arousing the anger of the Egyptian people and fomenting further unrest.

Last week, in a largely symbolic gesture aimed at defusing popular anger, the Islamist-dominated parliament voted unanimously to expel Tel Aviv’s ambassador in Cairo, recall Egypt’s ambassador in Israel, halt gas exports to Israel and revise Egypt’s nuclear power policy in the light of Israel’s nuclear arsenal.






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:siren::shkr::siren:
Iranian Advisors Joined By Russian Commandos

March 20, 2012
http://www.strategypage.com/qnd/syria/articles/20120320.aspx


In the last few weeks, rebellion related deaths have averaged over 500 a week. It appears that nearly 10,000 have died in a year of protests against the government, and increasingly violent government responses. The security forces have used artillery and tank gun fire against rebellious neighborhoods as well as indiscriminate fire against crowds and snipers (who are supposed to kill "leaders", but in practice shoot whoever they can.)


The government blames Saudi Arabia and Qatar for arming the rebels. Russia and Iran continue to arm the government despite Iraq recently announcing it would not allow Iran to ship weapons (by ground or air) through Iraq. Weapons shipments can still get in via Syrian ports. One Iranian cargo ship (described as a "supply ship"), escorted by an Iranian frigate recently visited Syria briefly, and then returned to Iran.

Russian weapons regularly arrive at the Syrian port of Tartus. Syria is a major customer for Russian weapons, with Iran apparently supplying most of the cash to pay for the stuff. The FSA (Free Syrian Army) claims that it is getting weapons and equipment from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab states via Jordan. Syria has long provided sanctuary for groups hostile to the Jordanian monarchy, and Jordan would like to see that arrangement terminated. The Gulf Arab states appear to be increasing their aid to the rebels.

The government has now shifted the blame for recent terror attacks from Syrian rebels to "foreign terrorists". The main suspect is al Qaeda from Iraq. Syria has provided sanctuary to these guys, and many like them, for decades. Syria knows better than anyone else in the region where the terrorists are and what their goals are. Many terror groups have fled Syria recently, rather than take sides. Other terror groups have joined the rebels, or the government.

Turkey and Gulf Arab states are pulling their diplomats out of Syria. Turkey is still willing to send troops into Syria, to establish a buffer zone on the Syrian side of the border to reduce violence against Syrians fleeing to Turkey, but only with UN approval. This is unlikely to happen as long as Russia keeps using its veto to block any UN moves against Syria. The Arab League is generally united against the Assads, but Russian support for Syria in the UN renders international support difficult. Few nations will make a military move without UN approval. The Syrian rebels are openly calling for foreign intervention, but are unlikely to get it.

One reason Western nations are reluctant to offer the kind of air support they supplied over Libya last year is because Syrian air defenses consist of a lot of modern missile systems and better trained crews. The only country trained and equipped to take out such defenses is the United States, which does not want to take the lead in any Syrian air operations. That was the deal in Libya, and the U.S. wants to keep it that way.

The security forces have shifted most of their attention from Homs to other places like Deir Ezzor in the east, Daraa on the Jordan border and Idib near the Turkish border. With the help of Iran and Russia, Syria has managed to keep out most official foreign support for the rebels. The government strategy now appears to hunt down and kill as many of the most active rebels as possible. This will demoralize the large number of Syrians who oppose the Assad dictatorship, and convince people to submit to a government they oppose.

Iranian advisors have pointed out how well this worked in Iran, where a large urban population, that opposed the religious dictatorship in Iraq, have been brutalized and terrorized into submission. Iran also advised that much be made of foreign agents (from Israel and the West, of course) stirring up the people. This gives rebellious Syrians a suitable excuse to accept a future amnesty and behave.

The Assads have a lot of support from leftist groups. Communist Parties in several countries back the Assads, as does the leftist PKK (Turkish separatist Kurd rebels). This PKK support has prevented anti-Assad Syrian Kurds from establishing bases in northern Iraq.

There are over 25,000 refugees in Lebanon and Syria. The 10,000 in Lebanon are having a hard time because Hezbollah (an Iran backed private army that controls southern Lebanon and most of the Syrian border) opposes any help for the refugees and uses its gunmen to search for any Syrian refugees who might be involved in fighting the Syrian government. Turkey is more tolerant, and allows the FSA to maintain camps.

March 19, 2012: In the capital (Damascus), several large explosions were heard before dawn, as well as extended periods of gunfire in the suburbs. Rebels inside Syria say that the FSA is still active, and that includes Assad strongholds like the capital.

A Russian ship arrived in Tartus, apparently carrying "counter-terrorism" troops. These are probably meant to help protect the hundreds of Russians in Tartus working on facilities for a Russian naval base.

March 18, 2012: In Aleppo, a bomb went off near the local secret police compound, killing two people. Another bomb destroyed a bridge outside the capital. Several more explosions were heard later at night in the capital.

March 17, 2012: In the capital, two car bombs went off and killed at least 27 people. The government blamed the rebels for this; the rebels said the government did it. Others say that al Qaeda and other Sunni terror groups in Syria are responsible. Hundreds of Islamic terrorists have moved from Iraq to Syria in the past few weeks.

The Syrian National Council (SNC) represents most of the Sunni Arab rebel groups. Now a new rebel coalition (still unnamed) will represent smaller, mainly non-Arab, groups. These include National Movement for Change, the Islamist Movement for the Fatherland (a moderate religious group), the Bloc for Liberation and Development (a tribal group), the Turkmen National Bloc, and the Kurdish Movement for a New Life. The new groups announced its presence while meeting in Turkey.


March 16, 2012: Responding to UN calls to halt attacks on civilians, the government offered to stop attacking Syrian civilians if the armed rebels gave up their weapons. The rebels refused to disarm themselves and said they did not trust the government.

March 15, 2012: The first anniversary of the uprising is noted by a pro-government rally in the capital.

March 14, 2012: Rebels are driven out of Idib (on the Turkish border).

March 13, 2012: Troops attacked and recaptured the town of Idib.

March 11, 2012: Syrian troops have been planting landmines along smuggling routes used by Syrians fleeing to Turkey.

March 9, 2012: Over a dozen Syrian Army officers (six of them generals) defected and entered Turkey.


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SWIFT reaction:
Iran 'will retaliate', closing Hormuz Strait


Published: 19 March, 2012, 15:56
http://rt.com/news/irans-shift-reaction-gulf-893/

Tehran’s threats to block the Strait of Hormuz in response to sanctions are not mere words, warned Iran’s senior spokesman on sanctions. As long as the West ignores international law to promote its interests, Iran will retaliate, he said.

*Closing the strait would be a response equal to the West’s unlawful severing of Iran from global commerce, believes Iran’s senior spokesman on Western sanctions and former intelligence minister Ali Falahian.


“I suggest that the West take seriously our threat to close the Strait of Hormuz,” he said on Sunday, as cited by the Israeli-based news website DEBKAfile.

It is not the first time Iran has threatened to cut the world off from sources of oil in the Persian Gulf, though this time Iran might not be bluffing. According to DEBKAfile’s military sources, Iran has sufficient military resources to block the strategic strait as well as paths to the region’s oil export terminals. Some 17 per cent of the world’s oil supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran is believed to be capable of mining the whole waterway within a relatively short amount of time.

Some regional players believe at this point a military confrontation in the Gulf is almost inevitable.

"We can see that the threat of an unfortunate flash of military confrontation is more possible rather than it is remote," said Oman’s foreign affairs minister, Yousuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah, as cited by Reuters.

With a massive international fleet already deployed in the region, the West seems ready to react and reopen the crucial waterway. At the moment, three US and one French nuclear aircraft carrier are present just outside Iranian waters. In addition to this, the West has several dozen minesweepers and mine hunting helicopters on patrol in the region.

Iran’s harsh reaction comes after the country was cut off from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT). On Saturday, scores of Iranian banks were blocked from doing international business, after SWIFT fell in line with the EU sanctions targeting Iran’s controversial nuclear program.

Meanwhile, Iran seems to be getting tired of Western criticism of its nuclear research, which it had always said is for purely civilian purposes. Iran has refused to make concessions, and the international community must accept the country’s nuclear program or incur “heavy losses,” senior lawmaker Alaeddin Boroujerdi said, as cited by the Jerusalem Post.

*Foes of Iran, represented by certain ‘interest groups,’ are now forcing the country into a corner – despite CIA and Israeli intelligence insisting that Iran is not developing nukes. That is according to political analyst and historian Peter Rushton, who spoke to RT.


“I think what we are seeing at the moment has been the culmination of a long-term effort by Iran’s enemies to force the Iranian government into a corner, to force them into a position where they are left with an invidious choice between having to steer a course between on the one hand seeming to be bullied and giving in and appearing weak, and on the other hand allowing themselves to be provoked and allowing themselves to be forced into a confrontational position,” Rushton said.


A recent anonymous announcement by American and Israeli intelligence officials saying that Iran is not gearing towards nuclear weapons was made in order to prevent certain ‘interest groups’ from abusing spy work for the sake of a political agenda, Rushton added.


“There is political-ideological agenda in Washington and Tel Aviv, to an extent in London as well, to willfully misinterpret intelligence, to spin intelligence in a direction that forces people on the path to war,” he said. “We saw it in Iraq where there were absolutely disastrous consequences from the intelligence process being abused and I think we are seeing it now here in Iran.”





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March 20, 2012

Calls for war with Iran driven by mainstream media

Robert Taylor
Sunset District Libertarian Examiner
http://www.examiner.com/sunset-dist...-for-war-with-iran-driven-by-mainstream-media

Over the weekend, Wired reported that the Navy began launching a “huge Iran surge” in the Persian Gulf, doubling its minesweeper craft and preparing to get much closer to Iran’s shores. With the combination of this gunboat diplomacy and recent U.S. sanctions placed on Iran, tensions are high between Washington and Tehran. As the U.S. and Iran inch closer and closer to war, the mainstream media has unfortunately helped increase this conflict with how it has recently covered U.S.-Iran relations.


The most telling aspect of how the media has contributed to the war fever in the U.S. is in the difference between what it does and doesn’treport. When covering Iran, the media tends to report almost verbatim what Pentagon officials and analysts tell them to. The threat from Iran is always “imminent;” war is “likely” and even “inevitable.” Iran’s “nuclear weapons program” is an assumed starting point for analysis, with debate differing on when and how, not if, to strike. There tends to be a fixation on Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, his denial of the Holocaust, his desire to “wipe Israel off the map,” and the supposed irrationality and even suicidal nature of the Iranian regime. Why, you can’t negotiate and bargain with a madman who wants to bring on an Islamic rapture!

What is more interesting and revealing, however, is what the mainstream media either fails to report or gives very little attention to. Other than a couple glaring recent exceptions in the New York Times and Los Angeles Times, the media doesn’t mention U.S. and Israeli intelligencereports that there is no evidence Iran has a nuclear weapons program. Iranian is often called a “state-sponsor of terror,” but the media has done virtually no reporting on the MEK — an opposition group inside Iran — that has committed acts of terrorism inside Iran and is financially backed by both the Israeli government and multiple, prominent U.S. politicians.

While implicitly labeling Iran a “threat,” the media fails to mention Iran’s military weakness or the fact that it is surrounded by dozens of U.S. military bases, the Navy’s Fifth fleet, and a nuclear-armed Israel. Why wouldn’t Iran want to acquire a nuclear bomb? Aren’t sanctions already an act of war? What would be the consequences of a U.S. strike? These are simple questions that an objective media should ask.

Current media coverage concerning Iran is becoming eerily similar to 2002-2003 before the U.S. invasion of Iraq. The rhetoric is similar — comparisons to Hitler, WMDs, existential threats, etc. False accusations and outright lies that are made by politicians and ambassadors simply go unchallenged. The only pictures one comes across inside Iran are nuclear scientists in white coats, not of the cities, infrastructure, and people that would be destroyed in a war. Like Iraq, Iran is viewed through the lens of its leaders, not through its people, history, or culture. Iranians don’t want war. Neither do Americans or Israelis.

The media are not the only ones to blame, of course. U.S. policy has been extremely belligerent and aggressive against Iran for decades. The U.S., Israel, and Iran are all in election year as well, which increases the saber-rattling on all sides.

Given American frustration with the economy, multiple wars already on its plate, and a fiscal mess on its hands, a war with Iran is the last thing the U.S. needs. But if war is avoided, it will be thanks to cooler heads prevailing in Washington despite a dangerously compliant and propaganda parroting press.


Continue reading on Examiner.com Calls for war with Iran driven by mainstream media - San Francisco Sunset District Libertarian | Examiner.com http://www.examiner.com/sunset-dist...iran-driven-by-mainstream-media#ixzz1pfJb9g4m



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US, Israeli military chiefs hold another face-to-face

The two generals met for the third time
in six months and discussed Iran and Syria


By Mitch GinsburgMarch 20, 2012, 3:11 pm
http://www.timesofisrael.com/us-israeli-armed-forces-chiefs-have-another-face-to-face/

The commanders of the American and Israeli armed forces met in Washington on Monday, discussing Iran and Syria predominantly.

“We spent much of our time today talking about growing concerns with Iran and Syria,” US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey wrote in a statement. “I’m glad we had the opportunity to discuss issues of importance to our two countries. Regular and candid dialogue is critical as we face common threats and challenges.”


This is the third meeting over the past six months between Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz and Gen. Dempsey, who came to Israel in late January. Their meetings have all been conducted under the looming shadow of Iran’s nuclear program and what, from an Israeli perspective, is a narrowing opportunity for military action.

Dempsey recently drew criticism for speaking of the regime in Tehran as rational. He explained his intent to PBS’s Charlie Rose on Saturday. “Rational meant to me that there is an evident pattern of behavior that this regime has followed since the Islamic Revolution that first and foremost expresses their intention to remain in power and to preserve the regime, and that based on that there are some things that we know they will respond to. That’s a rational actor.”

Dempsey, like his commander in chief, believes that sanctions — the increased torque of deprivation — along with the assembly of an international coalition, diplomatic pressure and military preparedness, will force the regime to choose between survival and the nuclear program and that, being rational, they may well opt for the former.

If not, as he told Rose, “all options are on the table.”

Dempsey, however, underscored the primary difference between Jerusalem and Washington. “We don’t disagree in terms of intent,” he said. “We disagree in terms of time.”

Israel, according to the former head of Military Intelligence, Maj. Gen. (res) Amos Yadlin, feels it must act before Iran attains the capacity to create a nuclear weapon. The United States, on account of its military’s size and strength, can wait until the very cusp of attainment. The gap between the two could be measured in years.






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The Challenge of Selling a War With Iran

By Micah Zenko
Mar 20 2012, 9:09 AM ET3
http://www.theatlantic.com/internat...-challenge-of-selling-a-war-with-iran/254780/

American public opinion and the advice of the U.S. intelligence community would make justifying attacks on Iran difficult.

The public debate on whether the United States and other countries are able to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon exhausted itself years ago. Yet, discussion about confrontation with Iran will persist until one of two things happens: Tehran provides sufficient transparency over its suspected nuclear weapons activities to meet the demands of the International Atomic Energy Agency


(IAEA), Tel Aviv, and Washington; or Israel and/or the United States attacks Iran's nuclear facilities. Unless the major players are bluffing and ultimately back down--which has happened before--one of these determining actions will likely take place within the next two years.

If President Obama--or any future occupant of the White House--does decide to attack Iran, there is an important prerequisite that has remained largely unexplored: How would the president sell the war to the American people?


The president wouldn't have to start from scratch. Iran has been demonized by the United States since the nascent Islamic Republic seized the U.S. embassy compound in Tehran and held fifty-two hostages from November 1979 to January 1981. Since then, polling has consistently demonstrated two strong beliefs: Americans do not like and are afraid of Iran. A recent Gallup poll found that 87 percent of Americans held an "unfavorable" opinion of Iran, a number that hasn't changed in decades. In addition, in a September 2011 survey asking, "Which country is the greatest threat to the United States?" 63 percent of respondents listed Iran first or second. (In June 2009, 79 percent of respondents believed Iran to be a "very serious" or "moderately serious" threat to the United States.)

Despite the polling numbers, Americans are largely split over a U.S. military attack on Iran (support ranges from 41 to 56 percent) and there is broad approval for stronger economic sanctions and diplomatic action. Interestingly, the action favored by most Americans (81 percent), "direct diplomatic talks between the United States and Iran," is not part of the Obama administration's strategy.

In addition to the lukewarm support among Americans for attacking Iran, President Obama or his successor would also have to tackle two problematic assessments from the U.S Intelligence Community (IC).

First, as Director of National Intelligence James Clapper has repeatedly reaffirmed since late January, "we don't believe they've actually made the decision to go ahead with a nuclear weapon." Just yesterday, James Risen reported in the New York Times that the IC continues to believe (based on an assessment first made in November 2007) that Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei halted his country's nuclear weapons activities in 2003.

This might be hard for many to grasp, since polling has found the American people disagree with the collective judgment of the 210,000 civilian and military employees and 30,000 private contractors comprising the IC. A recent poll found that 84 percent of Americans think Iran is developing nuclear weapons, while another from February 2010 concluded that 71 percent of Americans believe that Iran currently has nuclear weapons.

Second, Lieutenant General Ronald Burgess, chief of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) told the Senate Armed Services Committee in February that, despite all of Iran's threats, "it is unlikely to initiate or intentionally provoke a conflict or launch a preemptive attack." This assessment is undoubtedly difficult for some to reconcile with the rhetorical bluster of senior Iranian officials, including repeated threats to close the Strait of Hormuz if U.S. aircraft carriers entered the waterway.

In February, however, the USS Abraham Lincoln steamed through the strait without incident. In fact, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Jonathan Greenert told reporters that Iran's naval forces have not responded with increased activity, adding: "The Iranian navy has been unto itself professional and courteous." This confirms what U.S. Navy officials have told me in private conversations: for the past two decades, the U.S. and Iranian navies have carefully avoided direct confrontations, and routinely cooperate on a tactical level to rescue distressed ships or lost seafarers.

To build up support for a preemptive attack, the U.S. president could play to the widely-held conviction that Tehran is nearing--or crossed--the nuclear threshold, but he will also need to explain why the intelligence professionals, on the receiving end of over $75 billion in taxpayer funds, are wrong.

Presidents sell wars by offering a buffet of justifications in the hopes that citizens of varied beliefs and opinions will find something to sink their teeth into. If you are old enough, you may recall the multiple explications provided by senior officials for the use of military force in Iraq from 1991 to 2011, Bosnia from 1992 to 1995, Kosovo in 1999, or even in Libya last year; justifications included to protect civilians, overthrow regimes, send a "message" to other dictators, and repay European allies for support in Afghanistan.

The media circus surrounding the Iranian nuclear program has distorted the underlying rationale for any use of force. The United States must not attack Iran without clearly defined strategic objectives, a clear understanding of how attacking its suspected nuclear weapons facilities will advance those objectives, and a theory of victory for how those facilities could be destroyed at an acceptable level of cost. So far, both proponents of attacking Iran and the president have avoided addressing these three concerns with any clarity.






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U.K. urges tougher Syria sanctions,
Russia issues warning


By Alistair Lyon, Reuters
January 18, 2012
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/u...ions+Russia+issues+warning/6013500/story.html

BEIRUT - Britain called on Wednesday for harsher sanctions on Syria, where an Arab monitoring mission has failed to halt bloodshed in a 10-month-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.


But Russia underlined divisions at the United Nations, saying it would work with China to prevent the Security Council from approving any military intervention in Syria.



Damascus may let the monitors stay on after their mandate expires on Thursday, but Assad's foes say the Arab League peace effort has failed and the UN Security Council should step in.


Arab foreign ministers, due to consider their next step at the weekend, are split over how to handle Syria, as is the UN Security Council, which has failed to adopt any position.


British Prime Minister David Cameron accused Iran and Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah movement of helping to prop up Assad, whom he described as "a wretched tyrant."


"Britain needs to lead the way in making sure we tighten the sanctions, the travel bans, the asset freezes, on Syria," Cameron told parliament in London.


European Union governments are expected on Monday to expand the list of people and Syrian companies and institutions targeted by EU sanctions, diplomats said in Brussels.


An EU diplomat said 22 extra people would be affected by asset freezes and travel bans. EU companies would also be prohibited from doing business with about eight additional companies or institutions. Current EU sanctions target 30 entities and 86 Syrians.


RUSSIAN WARNING


But Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned the West against contemplating any kind of foreign intervention to end Assad's 10-month crackdown, which the United Nations says has killed more than 5,000 civilians.


"We will insist - and we have an understanding with our Chinese colleagues that this is our common position - that these fundamental points be retained in any decision that may be taken by the UN Security Council," he told a news conference.



"If somebody intends to use force . . . it will be on their conscience. They will not receive any authority from the Security Council," said Lavrov, who also emphasized that Moscow and Beijing oppose any sanctions against Syria.


Russia joined China in October to veto a Western-backed resolution against Assad's government, saying the domestic opposition shared blame for the violence and that it would have opened the door for military action like NATO's Libya operation.


Moscow submitted its own draft resolution last month and proposed a new version this week.


Syria is a leading buyer of Russian arms, and a Russian-operated ship carrying what a Cypriot official said was bullets arrived in Syria last week from St. Petersburg after being held up in Cyprus.


Washington said it had raised concerns about the ship with Russia, but Lavrov refused to give any explanation. "We don't consider it necessary to explain ourselves or justify ourselves, because we are not violating any international agreements or any Security Council resolutions," he said in Moscow.


SUDANESE DEFENCE


Hundreds of killings on both sides of the Syrian violence have been reported since the Arab League sent observers last month to see whether Damascus was respecting a peace plan. Critics say the observers have only provided Assad with diplomatic cover and more time to crush his opponents.


However, Sudan defended the mission which is led by one of its generals. "Day by day, they are achieving more and more," Foreign Minister Ali Ahmed Karti told Reuters.


"They began with a limited number of monitors, and gradually they began to expand throughout the areas where there are some problems, and they are doing fine," he said.


The appointment of Sudanese General Mohammed al-Dabi to lead the team alarmed rights activists, who say Khartoum committed atrocities in Sudan's Darfur region on the general's watch.


STRANGLED BODY


The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said security forces killed a civilian in a village in the northwestern province of Idlib on Wednesday and the body of a youth detained nearly two weeks ago turned up in Homs.


It said a soldier had been killed and five wounded in clashes between troops and army deserters in the Idlib village of Khaf Takharim. Three rebel soldiers were also wounded.


Syria's state news agency SANA said the strangled body of a veterinarian doctor was found in Homs bearing marks of torture four days after he was kidnapped by an "armed terrorist group."


The United Nations said on Dec. 13 that Assad's security forces had killed more than 5,000 people since the unrest erupted in mid-March. Nine days later, the government said "armed terrorist groups" had killed 2,000 security personnel.


Syria's Muslim Brotherhood said Iran, an ally of Assad, had contacted it to try to mediate a political solution to the uprising but the effort had been rebuffed.


A senior Muslim Brotherhood member, Melhem al-Droubi, told Reuters the group had seen no details of the Iranian offer made on Dec. 20 and it would not deal with Tehran unless it revoked its support for Assad.


"They (Iranian officials) asked about the possibility of the Brotherhood visiting Tehran, or Iran sending mediators to meet our leadership," said Droubi. "We didn't hear details about the offer and we didn't open an opportunity for them to discuss it."


The Arab peace plan required Syria to halt the bloodshed, withdraw troops from cities, free detainees, provide access for the monitors and the media and open talks with the opposition.


Qatar has proposed sending in Arab troops, an idea rejected by Syria and one likely to be resisted by its Arab allies.


A tenuous truce was holding on Wednesday in Zabadani, near the Lebanese border, where troops had been fighting anti-Assad rebels, residents said. But heavy machinegun fire and explosions rocked the troubled city of Homs, an opposition group said.


"As of now there is no shelling and no gunfire. It is quiet. But the army is still surrounding the area," said one Zabadani resident who gave her name as Rita.


Syrian forces backed by tanks attacked the hill resort on Friday in the biggest military offensive against insurgents since the Arab monitors began work on Dec. 26



Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/u...sues+warning/6013500/story.html#ixzz1pfNfLDGE



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OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
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U.K. urges tougher Syria sanctions,
Russia issues warning


By Alistair Lyon, Reuters
January 18, 2012
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/u...ions+Russia+issues+warning/6013500/story.html

BEIRUT - Britain called on Wednesday for harsher sanctions on Syria, where an Arab monitoring mission has failed to halt bloodshed in a 10-month-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.


But Russia underlined divisions at the United Nations, saying it would work with China to prevent the Security Council from approving any military intervention in Syria.



Damascus may let the monitors stay on after their mandate expires on Thursday, but Assad's foes say the Arab League peace effort has failed and the UN Security Council should step in.


Arab foreign ministers, due to consider their next step at the weekend, are split over how to handle Syria, as is the UN Security Council, which has failed to adopt any position.


British Prime Minister David Cameron accused Iran and Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah movement of helping to prop up Assad, whom he described as "a wretched tyrant."


"Britain needs to lead the way in making sure we tighten the sanctions, the travel bans, the asset freezes, on Syria," Cameron told parliament in London.


European Union governments are expected on Monday to expand the list of people and Syrian companies and institutions targeted by EU sanctions, diplomats said in Brussels.


An EU diplomat said 22 extra people would be affected by asset freezes and travel bans. EU companies would also be prohibited from doing business with about eight additional companies or institutions. Current EU sanctions target 30 entities and 86 Syrians.


RUSSIAN WARNING


But Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned the West against contemplating any kind of foreign intervention to end Assad's 10-month crackdown, which the United Nations says has killed more than 5,000 civilians.


"We will insist - and we have an understanding with our Chinese colleagues that this is our common position - that these fundamental points be retained in any decision that may be taken by the UN Security Council," he told a news conference.



"If somebody intends to use force . . . it will be on their conscience. They will not receive any authority from the Security Council," said Lavrov, who also emphasized that Moscow and Beijing oppose any sanctions against Syria.


Russia joined China in October to veto a Western-backed resolution against Assad's government, saying the domestic opposition shared blame for the violence and that it would have opened the door for military action like NATO's Libya operation.


Moscow submitted its own draft resolution last month and proposed a new version this week.


Syria is a leading buyer of Russian arms, and a Russian-operated ship carrying what a Cypriot official said was bullets arrived in Syria last week from St. Petersburg after being held up in Cyprus.


Washington said it had raised concerns about the ship with Russia, but Lavrov refused to give any explanation. "We don't consider it necessary to explain ourselves or justify ourselves, because we are not violating any international agreements or any Security Council resolutions," he said in Moscow.


SUDANESE DEFENCE


Hundreds of killings on both sides of the Syrian violence have been reported since the Arab League sent observers last month to see whether Damascus was respecting a peace plan. Critics say the observers have only provided Assad with diplomatic cover and more time to crush his opponents.


However, Sudan defended the mission which is led by one of its generals. "Day by day, they are achieving more and more," Foreign Minister Ali Ahmed Karti told Reuters.


"They began with a limited number of monitors, and gradually they began to expand throughout the areas where there are some problems, and they are doing fine," he said.


The appointment of Sudanese General Mohammed al-Dabi to lead the team alarmed rights activists, who say Khartoum committed atrocities in Sudan's Darfur region on the general's watch.


STRANGLED BODY


The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said security forces killed a civilian in a village in the northwestern province of Idlib on Wednesday and the body of a youth detained nearly two weeks ago turned up in Homs.


It said a soldier had been killed and five wounded in clashes between troops and army deserters in the Idlib village of Khaf Takharim. Three rebel soldiers were also wounded.


Syria's state news agency SANA said the strangled body of a veterinarian doctor was found in Homs bearing marks of torture four days after he was kidnapped by an "armed terrorist group."


The United Nations said on Dec. 13 that Assad's security forces had killed more than 5,000 people since the unrest erupted in mid-March. Nine days later, the government said "armed terrorist groups" had killed 2,000 security personnel.


Syria's Muslim Brotherhood said Iran, an ally of Assad, had contacted it to try to mediate a political solution to the uprising but the effort had been rebuffed.


A senior Muslim Brotherhood member, Melhem al-Droubi, told Reuters the group had seen no details of the Iranian offer made on Dec. 20 and it would not deal with Tehran unless it revoked its support for Assad.


"They (Iranian officials) asked about the possibility of the Brotherhood visiting Tehran, or Iran sending mediators to meet our leadership," said Droubi. "We didn't hear details about the offer and we didn't open an opportunity for them to discuss it."


The Arab peace plan required Syria to halt the bloodshed, withdraw troops from cities, free detainees, provide access for the monitors and the media and open talks with the opposition.


Qatar has proposed sending in Arab troops, an idea rejected by Syria and one likely to be resisted by its Arab allies.


A tenuous truce was holding on Wednesday in Zabadani, near the Lebanese border, where troops had been fighting anti-Assad rebels, residents said. But heavy machinegun fire and explosions rocked the troubled city of Homs, an opposition group said.


"As of now there is no shelling and no gunfire. It is quiet. But the army is still surrounding the area," said one Zabadani resident who gave her name as Rita.


Syrian forces backed by tanks attacked the hill resort on Friday in the biggest military offensive against insurgents since the Arab monitors began work on Dec. 26



Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/u...sues+warning/6013500/story.html#ixzz1pfNfLDGE



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Howdy, Dutch!

Looks like the Russians are Hellbent on getting another warm water port. It's been a real pain to their plans, back to Ivan the Terrible, that they've coveted such a dream, making possible their becoming an ocean going nation... Still ain't Mother Russia, but it does get them closer... Some posit that the Russian Marines are there to protect the many Russian civilians there, but I'd suggest it's to protect their interests in, and around, their port facilities... It also gives them an excuse to get in-between the US and its Allies, versus Syria and Iran... Russia has never been one to shun the opportunity to stick their thumbs into others eyes or pies...

Thanks for the great reportage... Don't know what we'll do, when you, and others, pull the bug-out boogey... Guess it'll get very interesting in the dark, but not in a "good" way...

Take care, Pard...

OA, out...
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2017793964_iraq20.html

Originally published Monday, March 19, 2012 at 8:59 PM
* Comments (9)
U.S. suspects Iraq is allowing arms shipments to Syria

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki insists air shipments from Iran to Syria are "only carrying humanitarian goods, not weapons."

By McClatchy Newspapers

BAGHDAD — A diplomatic dispute over whether Iran is using Iraqi airspace to ship arms to the besieged regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad has highlighted differences between the Iraqi and U.S. governments over what should happen in Syria.

U.S. officials last week raised concerns with the Iraqis that a growing number of Iranian cargo flights crossing Iraq for Syria were carrying weapons.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki denied that, saying shipments were "only carrying humanitarian goods, not weapons."

Iraq's position on the Syrian uprising has been controversial. Iraq abstained on an Arab League motion to impose sanctions on Syria, and Maliki has said he opposes forcing Assad from power, something the United States has supported.

"The killing or removal of President Bashar in any way will end with civil war, and this civil war will lead to wider alliances in the region," Maliki said. "Because we are a country that suffered from civil war of a sectarian background, we fear for the future of Syria and the whole region."

On Saturday, Iraqi government spokesman Ali al Dabbagh said Iran had assured the Iraqi government that no weapons were being flown to Syria over Iraq.

The question of whether Iran is flying over Iraq to deliver weapons to Syria underscores the difficulties the United States faces in the region after the Obama administration's failure last year to win Iraqi agreement to let some U.S. troops remain in Iraq after a Dec. 31 withdrawal deadline that Washington agreed to in 2008.

U.S. officials had argued that a residual force was needed, in part, to patrol Iraq's skies. Iraq has no air force, though it has agreed to buy a fleet of U.S.-built combat aircraft.

How many Iranian flights have crossed over Iraq to Syria is a matter of debate.

A prominent Iraqi politician with personal knowledge of the issue said that "the Iranians have 34 flights a week to Syria from various Iranian airports," and all the flights use Iraqi airspace.

He said U.S. diplomats had complained to the Iraqi Foreign Ministry, but that "Maliki will have to agree (to the flights) because the Iranians will pressure him."

The politician noted that Iraq and Syria are major trading partners, and that with Turkey imposing a trade embargo on Syria, "Iraq is the lifeline to Syria now."

"If Iraq had not opened up this route, Turkey could have forced the flights to land there first for inspection of the planes," he said.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.voanews.com/english/news...nsion-Between-Ethiopia-Eritrea-143416866.html

March 19, 2012
Proxy War Stokes Tension Between Ethiopia, Eritrea
Peter Heinlein | Addis Ababa

Ethiopia's military strike against targets in Eritrea last week has opened a new phase on the proxy war the Horn of Africa neighbors have been waging for more than a decade. Attention is focused on a little-known rebel group that is alleged to have been involved in cross-border attacks.

Tension along the Eritrea-Ethiopia border rose late last week when Ethiopian forces struck what they said were military camps inside Eritrea.

Spokesman Shimeles Kemal justified the strikes as retaliation against a shadowy rebel group blamed for killing and kidnapping European tourists two months ago in Ethiopia's Afar region.

"The posts attacked had been used by the Eritrean government for training, as a military garrison for these subversive groups," he said.

Analysts say the incident is the first cross-border attack by the sides since they ended a two-year border war in 2000. That fighting killed as many as 80,000 people and ended inconclusively.

Eritrea described last week's military incursion as "flagrant aggression" designed to divert attention from Ethiopia's illegal occupation of Eritrean territories. A statement said Eritrea would not be drawn into war with its far bigger neighbor.

Ethiopia called the strike a "proportional response" against a proxy group that had been staging terrorist attacks with Eritrea's knowledge and approval.

Ethiopian Foreign Ministry spokesman Dina Mufti accused Eritrea of trying to mask its proxy war on Ethiopia through the use of imaginary rebel groups.

"They have tried to evade responsibility by blaming the act on some organization, dubious organization that is not significant, and that doesn't mean anything in that region," said Mufti. "They have tried to shift the blame to a bogus organization."

Little is known about the rebel group called the Afar Revolutionary Democratic Unity Front, or ARDUF. Analysts say the group occasionally attacks tourists on the slopes of Ethiopia's Erta Ale volcano, then seemingly disappears into the desert for years at a time.

Ethiopia says ARDUF is trained and financed by Eritrea. Eritrea says the rebels are a pretext for Ethiopian aggression.

E-mails the group sent to reporters during the past two months tell their side of a clash with Ethiopian troops in January that left five European tourists dead. The e-mails, written in fluent English, also tell of the rebels' attempts to free two other tourists they captured in the incident. The Europeans were released early this month.

Return e-mails to ARDUF, asking for more information, were not answered.

Horn of Africa analyst and former U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia David Shinn says it is impossible to know whether ARDUF is real or merely a tool in the proxy war.

"I've seen no proof of that," said Shinn. "That's just taking Ethiopia at its word. At the same time, it's certainly plausible. On the other side of the fence, one should point out that Ethiopia also has a record of being supportive of Eritreans who oppose the regime in Asmara."

Shinn notes that Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi stated in parliament last April that his government would actively support groups trying to overthrow Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki. Mr. Meles's comment came after Ethiopia accused Eritrea of trying to stage high-profile bomb attacks in Addis Ababa during an African Union summit. Eritrea strongly denied the charges.

The Reuters news agency and an Eritrean opposition website reported a second wave of Ethiopian strikes on Saturday near the town of Badme, the flash point of the war that erupted in 1998. The opposition site [awate.com] on Monday said Ethiopian forces were still occupying several villages on the Eritrean side of the disputed border.

Ethiopian officials strongly denied those reports, and officials in Addis Ababa said there had been no direct clashes between military forces of the two countries.

David Shinn recalls a similar cross-border incursion when he was U.S. envoy to Ethiopia in 1997. He says that incident was among those cited by Eritrea the following year when war broke out.

Related Articles

* Map showing Ethiopia and Eritrea
Ethiopia Military Aggression Diversionary Ploy, Says Eritrea

Information minister Ali Abdu says Ethiopia violated Eritrea’s sovereignty with military attack on Eritrean territory

* Ethiopia and Eritrea History: Decades of Unrest
* Ethiopia Attacks Military Base Inside Eritrea
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/20/business/use-of-conflict-minerals-gets-more-scrutiny.html?_r=1

Use of ‘Conflict Minerals’ Gets More Scrutiny From U.S.
March 19, 2012
By EDWARD WYATT
Comments 38

WASHINGTON — An iPhone can do a lot of things. But can it arm Congolese rebels?

That is the question being debated by a battalion of lobbyists from electronics makers, mining companies and international aid organizations that has descended on the Securities and Exchange Commission in recent months seeking to influence the drafting of a Dodd-Frank regulation that has nothing to do with the financial crisis.

Tacked onto the end of that encyclopedic digest of financial reform is an odd provision. It requires publicly traded companies whose products use certain minerals commonly mined in strife-torn areas of Central Africa to report to shareholders and the S.E.C. whether their mineral supply comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The measure is aimed at cutting off the brutal militia groups that have often taken over the mining and sale of so-called conflict minerals to finance their military aims. Just about every company affected by the law says they support it, but many business groups have also been pushing aggressively to put wiggle room in the restrictions, calling for lengthy phase-in periods, exemptions for minimal use of the minerals and loose definitions of what types of uses are covered.

Nearly every consumer product that includes electronic parts uses a derivative of one of the four minerals: columbite-tantalite, which when refined is used in palm-size cellphones and giant turbines; cassiterite, an important source of the tin used in coffee cans and circuit boards; wolframite, used to produce tungsten for light bulbs and machine tools; and gold, commonly used as an electronic conductor (and, of course, jewelry).

Given their broad application, the minerals have been a primary target of humanitarian groups concerned about genocide, sexual violence, child soldiers and other issues that have been common outgrowths of conflicts in Central Africa.

“We don’t think you need to have people being killed in order to have these metals in our cellphones,” said Corinna Gilfillan, who heads the United States office of Global Witness, which has worked on the issue for several years.

But manufacturers question the effectiveness — not to mention the practicality and expense — of tracing every scrap of refined metal back to its original hole in the ground.

“The challenge is that conflict minerals are a symptom,” said Rick Goss, vice president for environment and sustainability at the Information Technology Industry Council, a trade group. “The entrenched powers in these countries have plenty of other means to raise money. Simply cutting off one source of revenue to a warlord or military rulers is not going to stop the genocide.”

The Dodd-Frank law on conflict minerals is already having an effect in Eastern Congo, damping or halting production at many mines even before the disclosure regulations for companies are in place.

“It is causing, I would say, a sort of embargo on traders and diggers in Eastern Congo,” Serge Tshamala, an official at the Embassy of the Democratic Republic of Congo. “The longer it takes the S.E.C. to come up with guidelines, the worse it is for our people.” Mr. Tshamala and other Congo government officials met with the agency’s staff members in June, urging them to speed completion of the regulations.

The agency is moving slowly, however. The Dodd-Frank law set an April 2011 deadline for completion of the rules. After proposing regulations in December 2010, the agency took comments for 30 days, and received so many suggestions that it extended the period by a month.

After missing the April deadline, the agency in October conducted a roundtable for its commissioners to hear directly from manufacturers, mining companies, advocacy groups and institutional investors. This month, Mary L. Schapiro, the agency’s chairwoman, said the agency hoped to complete the process “in the next couple of months.”

The commission already has decided to include a phase-in period to allow companies time to build networks to trace their mineral supply. But an exemption for use of trace amounts of the metals is unlikely, Ms. Shapiro said.

As Bennett Freeman, a senior vice president for sustainability research and policy at Calvert Investments put it during the roundtable last year, a very small amount of gold is used as a conductor in a cellphone, “but when one takes into account the fact that there were 1.6 billion cellphones sold globally last year, that adds up to be a very significant volume of that particular metal.”

Still undecided — and the subject of more than 100 meetings between lobbyists and S.E.C. officials since the rule was proposed — is just how the commission will decide who is covered by the conflict minerals requirement. The law says that the minerals must be “necessary to the functionality or production of a product manufactured by” a company.

Simple as it seems, that definition gives rise to a tangle of questions. Is mining “manufacturing”? Is a coffee can made with tin “necessary to the functionality” of the coffee being sold?

The hair-splitting answers to those questions will be the basis on which the law could be challenged in court, and it is that prospect that accounts for much of the agency’s deliberate progress in fashioning the rules.

Administrative law requires an agency like the S.E.C. to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of rules. Last year, a federal appeals court cited insufficient cost-benefit research in striking down one of the agency’s new regulations, and S.E.C. insiders say that decision has the agency operating in perpetual fear of a repeat occurrence.

There is little agreement on what it will cost companies to comply. The agency estimates companies will have to spend $71 million to comply with its regulations. The National Association of Manufacturers estimates the regulations will cost $9 billion to $16 billion.

Whatever the answer, part of the burden would fall on a given company’s supply chain — companies, that is, that are very likely not to be covered by the regulation’s reporting requirements, which cover only publicly traded companies.

Irma Villarreal, chief securities counsel for Kraft Foods, said during the S.E.C. roundtable that Kraft produced 40,000 distinct products and used 100,000 suppliers, creating a Herculean task of auditing supply chains for conflict minerals.

Nonprofit groups that support the new regulation say a growing number of companies — Intel, Motorola and Hewlett-Packard among them, according to the Enough Project, a nongovernmental organization that works against genocide and crimes against humanity — have already made significant steps to inspect and adjust their supply lines to avoid tainted sources of conflict minerals.

“Our hope,” said Darren Fenwick, a senior manager of government affairs for the Enough Project, “is that the rule is strong enough that companies in industries that aren’t doing anything will start to feel the pressure in their supply chains.”
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/20/us-iraq-violence-idUSBRE82J06U20120320

Dozens of bombs kill at least 52 across Iraq

By Kareem Raheem and Aseel Kami

BAGHDAD | Tue Mar 20, 2012 2:23pm EDT

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - More than 30 bombs struck cities and towns across Iraq on Tuesday, killing at least 52 people and wounding about 250, despite a massive security clampdown ahead of next week's Arab League summit in Baghdad.

It was Iraq's bloodiest day in nearly a month, and the scale of the coordinated explosions in more than a dozen cities showed an apparent determination by insurgents to prove that the government cannot keep the country safe ahead of the summit.

Iraq is due to host the meeting for the first time in 20 years and the government is anxious to show it can maintain security following the withdrawal of U.S. troops in December.

"The goal of today's attacks was to present a negative image of the security situation in Iraq," government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told Reuters.

"Security efforts will be escalated to counteract terrorist groups' attacks and to fill loopholes used by them to infiltrate security, whether in Baghdad or other provinces."

Tuesday's deadliest incident occurred in the southern Shi'ite Muslim holy city of Kerbala, where twin explosions killed 13 people and wounded 48 during the morning rush hour, according to Jamal Mahdi, a Kerbala health department spokesman.

"The second explosion caused the biggest destruction. I saw body parts, fingers, hands thrown on the road," 23-year-old shop owner Murtadha Ali Kadhim told Reuters.

"The security forces are stupid because they always gather at the site of an explosion and then a second explosion occurs. They become a target."

Blasts also struck in the capital, in Baiji, Baquba, Daquq, Dibis, Dhuluiya, Kirkuk, Mosul, Samarra, Tuz Khurmato, Khalis and Dujail to the north, in Falluja and Ramadi to the west, and Hilla, Latifiya, Mahmudiya and Mussayab to the south. Police defused bombs in Baquba, Falluja and Mosul.

Most of the blasts targeted police checkpoints and patrols.

"This latest spate of attacks is very likely to have been co-ordinated by a large and well-organized group. It is likely an attempt to show the authorities that their security measures are insignificant," said John Drake, a senior risk consultant at AKE Group, which studies security in Iraq for corporate clients.

Army and police forces are frequently targeted in Iraq, where bombings and shootings still occur almost daily.

Al Qaeda's Iraq wing and allied Sunni Muslim insurgent groups say that despite the withdrawal of U.S. forces they will not lay down arms and will continue to battle the Shi'ite-led government.

They have claimed responsibility for nearly all the major attacks so far this year, mounting days of coordinated bombings across the country about once a month since the Americans left.

Although overall violence has declined since the height of sectarian fighting in 2006 and 2007, Iraqis fear their government lacks the wherewithal to impose security nine years after the U.S.-led invasion that overthrew Saddam Hussein.

Tuesday's attacks were the biggest since February 23 when dozens of explosions across the country killed at least 60 people.

A White House spokesman called the attacks "reprehensible acts".

"Despite these efforts by extremists, violence in Iraq remains at near historic lows," he said.

"Iraqi forces have demonstrated their capacity to deal with the security challenges that exist in that country again and again in recent years, and we do have faith in their ability."

EXTRA SECURITY

The Arab League summit on March 27-29 will be the first held in Baghdad since Saddam's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government considers it the most important diplomatic event yet for post-Saddam Iraq.

Tuesday was also the day after the ninth anniversary of the start of the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam.

Security has been ratcheted up across Baghdad in the run-up to the summit. Since Monday, intensive searches at checkpoints have ground the city of 7 million people to a halt.

In the northern city of Kirkuk, two car bombs exploded near a police headquarters, killing nine people and wounding 42, police and health sources said. In Baghdad, two bombs killed nine people and wounded 28.

Police in the northeastern city of Baquba said they had found and defused nine bombs, including one in a booby-trapped car which was parked on the road with a decapitated body in the driver's seat and the man's head in his lap.

Five other bombs exploded in the town, the capital of Diyala province north of Baghdad, which also saw a smaller string of deadly explosions on Monday night.

By evening, Reuters had recorded 32 separate explosions on Tuesday. The toll of the blasts, as provided by police and medical sources, was at least 52 killed and 249 wounded.

The government says it will be deploying up to 100,000 additional troops and police in Baghdad to impose extra security measures for the summit and will close Baghdad's airport. Hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent on preparations, including renovating hotels, planting trees and paving roads.

(Reporting by Kareem Raheem, Aseel Kami and Ahmed Rasheed in Baghdad, Mustafa Mahmoud in Kirkuk, Imad al-Khuzaie in Diwaniya and Habib al-Zubaidi and Ali al-Rubaie in Hilla; Writing by Serena Chaudhry; Editing by Peter Graff and Andrew Roche)


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Iran will produce nuclear weapons if attacked: Russia

By Dmitry Zaks (AFP) – 1 hour ago

MOSCOW — Russia warned Tuesday that Iran would have no option but to develop nuclear weapons if it came under attack from either the United States or Israel over its contested atomic programme.

"The CIA and other US officials admit they now have no information about the Iranian leadership taking the political decision to produce nuclear weapons," Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told Moscow's Kommersant FM radio.

"But I am almost certain that such a decision will surely be taken after (any) strikes on Iran," Lavrov said.

The pre-recorded interview was aired shortly after Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned that his country was ready to strike back against either the United States or Israel "at the same level as they attack us".

Moscow has close military and commercial ties with Tehran and has only grudgingly backed four rounds of UN Security Council sanctions over Iran's suspected nuclear weapons development drive.

But Lavrov argued that Russia was not defending an ally but trying to avert a broader conflict or possible nuclear arms race from breaking out in the region.

He added that Israel's threats against Iran were only pushing other nations on poor terms with the West to consider pursuing their own nuclear weapon drives.

"This happening... around Iran are forcing a lot of Third World countries to pause and realise that if you have a nuclear bomb, no one will really bother you.

"You might get some light sanctions, but people will always coddle you, they will court you and try to convince you of things," Lavrov said.

He particularly raised the case of North Korea and its decision to both develop and test nuclear weapons -- a move that was never followed by a threat of an attack from the United States.

"But we are all behaving responsibly" toward North Korea, said Lavrov.

"We are not proposing to bomb North Korea. We are all insisting on the immediate resumption of negotiations and looking for ways to make these negotiations productive."

He also repeated arguments from some Western military analysts saying that strikes could only set back but not permanently destroy any weapons programme Iran might have today.

"Scientists of almost all nations... agree that strikes against Iran can slow its nuclear programme. But do away with it, close it, eliminate it -- never."

Lavrov's comments represented one of Russia's most impassioned arguments to date against the start of another war on its southern periphery.

Russia had previously cautioned that such a campaign could lead to a mass flood of refugees to neighbouring countries like Azerbaijan. It has also warned of the dangers of possible reprisal attack from Iran.

But Lavrov appeared ready to drop that argument on Tuesday by noting that an attack against Israel could also endanger the lives of Palestinians.

"I am absolutely convinced that Iran will never decide to do this, if only because... a threat to destroy Israel will also destroy Palestine," he said.

He also went out of his way to strongly criticise Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for repeatedly threatening to destroy the Jewish state.

"This is completely unacceptable... and we categorically condemn it," Lavrov said. "It is simply uncivilised and unworthy of a country as ancient as Iran."

Copyright © 2012 AFP. All rights reserved. More »

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Middle East
March 20, 2012
Arab League Summit Provides Test for Beleaguered Baghdad
Pam Dockins

Wracked by militant attacks, political divisions, sectarian tensions, and economic troubles, Iraq is expected to host Arab leaders next week in a summit it hopes will be a positive play on the diplomatic stage.

Those efforts were complicated on Tuesday when at least 12 near-simultaneous explosions struck across Iraq, killing and wounding dozens.

The bombings came despite a massive security push ahead of the Arab League summit set for March 29 in Baghdad.

The Iraqi government says it is determined to show it can keep the nation secure after U.S. troops left in December. Islamic insurgents from the group Ansar al-Islam have warned they intend to disrupt the meetings and show the country is not safe from violence.

The summit is the first of the 22-member Arab League since the winds of Arab Spring revolutions unfolded last year. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is expected to attend.

Tens of thousands of security forces will be deployed. Baghdad hotels are being refurbished and streets spruced up. Save for arriving delegations, the Baghdad airport will be closed to traffic.

After nearly a decade of war and billions of dollars in foreign aid, Iraq is struggling in its bid for nationhood. But if the meeting of Arab leaders takes place, analysts say Baghdad could take a big step forward.

"It is an important milestone for Iraqis in their return to normalcy," said Daniel Serwer, a scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington.

Iraq has not hosted Arab leaders since May 1990, shortly before former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait and caused upset in the Arab world that led to the Gulf War.

Baghdad was to hold the Arab League conference last year. But it was postponed due to security concerns and political and social upheaval in the Mideast.

Concerns Persist

As demonstrated by Tuesday's carnage, those concerns - and others - persist.

"There are huge political problems inside Iraq," Hani Ashour, an adviser to the Iraqiyya political bloc, told The National, a newspaper in Abu Dhabi. "The various political groups here can't agree on much, which makes it difficult to host such a meeting. On top of that there is a storm of political problems in the Arab world."

Iraq has invited 21 leaders to attend the summit. Some key former Arab League participants no longer have their place.

Former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, who spearheaded the Arab League cause for 30 years, is jailed after having resigned last year in a popular uprising. Tunisia's Zine El Abidine Ben Ali is in exile after 23 years in power.

In Yemen, the decades-long rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh ended with vice-president Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi taking over in February. And in Libya, strongman Moammar Gadhafi met his death in civil war.

While those nations and Iraq forge new paths, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia have experienced protests that are leading to modest reforms.

Syria on the Agenda

Syria, meanwhile, is torn by a popular uprising and is expected to dominate the Arab League talks.

The Arab League suspended Syria's membership in November after President Bashar al-Assad failed to fulfill a pledge to bring an end to his government's violent crackdown on dissent.

The League has failed in efforts to broker an end to the year-long violence in Syria that has left more than 8,000 people dead.

Iraq has been one of the least vocal of League members about its neighbor Syria.

"These are problematic subjects for Iraq," analyst Serwer said. Iraq has been "less than completely committed to taking down Bashar al-Assad."

And Iraq too is struggling to find its diplomatic tone on another neighbor, Iran, which in a dispute with the West over its controversial nuclear program.

Iraq historically has had a "highly problematic relationship" with Iran, Serwer said.

Relations between the two countries have improved since the end of the Iran-Iraq war in 1988. However, tensions remain concerning the status of ethnic minority Kurds, who have regional autonomy in Iraq.

Kurdish militants seeking increased political and civil rights in Iran and Turkey have waged deadly attacks.

Better Ties to Kuwait

In the lead-up to the summit, Iraq paved the way for smoother relations with a southern neighbor, Kuwait.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki visited Kuwait earlier this month in a bid to boost ties that have remained strained since Iraq's 1990 invasion.

During talks, Iraq and Kuwait agreed on a $500 million deal that settles a decades-old legal dispute involving Iraq's state-owned airline. The dispute stemmed from Kuwait's accusations that Saddam Hussein stole 10 airplanes and millions of dollars in equipment from Kuwait during the invasion.

Kuwait's emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, is expected at the Baghdad summit.

The summit too will mark a religious milestone. Iraq is now Shi'ite-led. With the exception of Maliki, leaders attending the summit are Sunni Muslims.

Iraq has long struggled under the sectarian divide. Khattar Abou Diab, who teaches political science at the University of Paris, says Tuesday's bombing attacks are probably a barometer of a growing divide between Iraq's Sunni and Shi'ite factions.

Abou Diab says the attacks also might have been timed to discredit the government before next week's Arab League summit in Baghdad.

On Monday, hundreds of thousands of followers of Iraqi Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr took to the streets in Basra, not only to mark the anniversary of the 2003 U.S. intervention, but also as a show of power ahead of the summit.

Sadr, a member of Maliki's ruling coalition, vows to ban protests during the summit as a show of "hospitality."

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Khaleej Times Online > OPINION
Africa’s next menace
Davin O’regan (Geopolitics)
21 March 2012

Since emerging as Africa’s first narco-state in the mid 2000s, Guinea Bissau’s slide toward instability has been swift and precipitous.

The homicide rate has spiked by 25 per cent and is now nearly three times the global average. Meanwhile, poverty levels have remained near the very bottom of world rankings. Over the last five years its score on the well-known “Failed States Index” has plunged more than any other country.

Cocaine traffickers, mostly from South America, first visited this sleepy West African country almost a decade ago. Guinea Bissau offered a backdoor route into the booming European cocaine market and was virtually risk free on account of its weak, easily corruptible government agencies. Co-optation, after all, is the preferred method of South America’s drug cartels.

Narco-corruption quickly penetrated the highest levels of power, including the office of former President Joao Bernardo Vieira, who was assassinated in March 2009. Leading military officers have since been designated “drug kingpins” by the US government. As a result of such corruption, the narcotics trade flourished and may now surpass the entire value of the national economy.

Were Guinea Bissau an isolated case, these events would be sad but strategically insignificant. Unfortunately, the country may be but Africa’s first narco-state.

In recent years, traffic in heroin, amphetamines and cocaine has expanded dramatically across Africa, growing into a roughly $6 billion to $7 billion illicit industry on the continent, according to conservative estimates. As in Guinea Bissau, these drug profits are filtering to the upper echelons of power in Africa, even in some of the continent’s so-called “anchor states” such as Ghana, Kenya, and South Africa. Members of Parliament, police officials and government ministers have been implicated in drug smuggling over the past year.

This raises a host of concerns. Narco-corruption imperils the continent’s recent unprecedented economic boom, which averaged five per cent annually over the last decade and is projected to outstrip all other regions in the next five years. Likewise, roughly 60 per cent of African countries are now on a democratic path, a trend that could easily be reversed with the instability brought on by drug networks. Trafficking also threatens to destabilise an increasingly vital supplier to global oil and gas markets, including a fifth of US oil imports.

Ominously, Africa’s growing drug trade is also amplifying a range of international security threats. Hezbollah and Al Qaeda in the Maghreb have become involved in narco-trafficking. They earn millions from Africa’s cocaine trade. Much of this money may go to purchasing the sophisticated weaponry that has flooded Africa’s black markets following the fall of the Gaddafi regime, including Semtex explosives popular with terrorist groups that were recently seized by Nigerian security units following a battle with Qaeda militants.

The African trafficking corridor to Europe also provides South American groups a low-risk alternative to the increasingly cut-throat cocaine transit routes in the Americas. In Pakistan, where the heroin trade continues to fuel instability and violence, Africans account for roughly half of all annual drug trafficking arrests.

Most worrying is the persistence of these challenges. The prolonged drug violence that continues to claim thousands of lives in Colombia, Mexico, Guatemala and elsewhere is tragically clear evidence of such intractability. Narco-trafficking is by definition a transnational challenge. Therefore, this shouldn’t simply be viewed as an African problem.

Modest efforts have been made against Africa’s accelerating narco-trafficking networks. The United States has frozen assets and imposed sanctions against a few alleged African drug traffickers, including Mozambique’s richest citizen and a major donor to the ruling political party as well as an assistant trade minister in Kenya.

If more frequently used and reinforced by similar pressure from European and other governments, these tools could deliver even better results. Were the African Union to impose restrictions and embargoes, as it did during a recent political crisis in Guinea, breakthroughs in deterrence and cooperation toward a more comprehensive counternarcotics agenda could be achieved.

In Africa’s drug trafficking hubs such as Nigeria, Ghana, Mozambique, Kenya and South Africa, a primary aim must be to stem traffickers’ infiltration of critical state institutions. Africa’s anti-corruption commissions and offices of inspectors general should be strengthened with expanded authorities, resources and autonomy. Political party systems must also become more transparent and accountable to prevent drug profits from buying Africa’s elections, which are becoming more frequent and expensive.

Now is the best chance to head off the creation of more narco-states in Africa and prevent a new scourge from sinking roots in this long-suffering continent. The job will be much harder once the kingpins are running the show.

Davin O’Regan is a research associate at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies at the National Defense University in Washington who specialises on transnational organised crime issues in Africa
 

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Afghanistan and the Long War
March 19, 2012 | 2235 GMT
By George Friedman

The war in Afghanistan has been under way for more than 10 years. It has not been the only war fought during this time; for seven of those years another, larger war was waged in Iraq, and smaller conflicts were under way in a number of other countries as well. But the Afghanistan War is still the longest large-scale, multi-divisional war fought in American history. An American soldier's killing of 16 Afghan civilians, including nine children, on March 11 represents only a moment in this long war, but it is an important moment.

In the course of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, military strategists in the United States developed the concept of the long war. The theory was presented in many ways, but its core argument was this: The defeat of Taliban forces and the Iraqi resistance would take a long time, but success would not end the war because Islamist terrorism and its supporters would be a constantly shifting threat, both in the places and in the ways they would operate. Therefore, since it was essential to defeat terrorism, the United States was now engaging in a long war whose end was distant and course unknown.

Sometimes explicit but usually implicit in this argument was that other strategic issues faced by the United States should be set aside and that the long war ought to be the centerpiece of U.S. strategic policy until the threat of Islamist terrorism disappears or at least subsides. As a result, under this theory -- which very much influences U.S. strategy -- even if the war in Afghanistan ended, the war in the Islamic world would go on indefinitely. We need to consider the consequences of this strategy.

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who allegedly perpetrated the appalling slaughter in Afghanistan, was on his fourth tour of combat duty. He had served three tours in Iraq of nine, 15 and 12 months -- he had been at war for three years. His tour in Afghanistan was going to be his fourth year. The wars he fought in differed from prior wars. Fallujah and Tora Bora were not Stalingrad. Still, the hardship, fear and threat of death are ever-present. The probability of dying may be lower, but it is there, it is real, and there are comrades you can name whom you saw die.

In Vietnam, only volunteers served more than a single one-year tour. For Americans in World War II, the war lasted a little more than three years, and only a handful of U.S. troops were in combat for that long. U.S. involvement in World War I lasted less than two years, and most U.S. soldiers were deployed for a year or less. In U.S. history, only the Civil and Revolutionary wars lasted as long as Bales had served.

Atrocities occur in all wars. This is an observation, not an excuse. And they become more likely the longer a soldier is in combat. War is brutal and it brutalizes the souls of warriors. Some resist the brutalization better than others, but no one can see death that often and not be changed. Just as important, the enemy is dehumanized. You cannot fight and fear him for years and not come to see him as someone alien to you. Even worse, when the enemy and the population are difficult to distinguish, as is the case in a counterinsurgency, the fear and rage extends to everyone. In Bales' case, it extended even to children.

It is no different for the Taliban save two things. First, they are fighting for their homeland and in their homeland. Americans fight for the homeland in the sense that they are fighting terrorism, but that fight becomes abstract after a while. For the Taliban it is a reality. Americans can go home and may become bitter at those who never shared the burden. The Taliban are at home, and their bitterness at those who did not share the burden outstrips the bitterness of the Americans. Second, it is a fact of war that Taliban atrocities are usually invisible to the Western media, but they are there, even if reporters are not. It could be said that the Taliban were brutalized by years of fighting before the Americans came, but in the end, the fact of brutalization is more important than the genesis.

It is important to remember that for the United States, the Afghanistan War is the first major war since the Civil War that did not involve a draft. Opposition to the draft during Vietnam gave rise to the volunteer army. One thing no one assumed after Vietnam was that the United States would attempt to fight a counterinsurgency on the mainland of Asia again, and therefore the conditions for reconstituting the draft were never considered.

When the war in Afghanistan began, there was no theory of the long war. It was assumed that the goal was the dislocation and destruction of al Qaeda, and grandiose notions of democratizing Afghanistan were not yet part of the policy. In Iraq, the assumption was that the defeat of Saddam Hussein's conventional forces would require neither significant cost nor time and that there would be no resistance to constructing a pro-American democracy there. It took time for the mission in Afghanistan to creep up to democratization, and it took a while to realize that not all Iraqis were cheering the American occupation.

But even while it became apparent that the United States was in a long war, neither the Bush nor the Obama administration ever grappled with the consequences of a force in which individuals could be in combat for four years and more. And we might include here the dangers for noncombatants and headquarters troops, who faced mortar and rocket fire at their desks. No one escaped the burden.

The result was a war that was seen on the home front as not requiring a massive effort but that required some volunteers to remain in combat for longer than many had in World War II. And while it was true that all of the soldiers had volunteered, the volunteers were no more ready than the government for the tempo of operations they would face. Additionally, they were not always free to leave. During the height of the war, some of those trying to leave service when their time was up were "stop-lossed." For them, it became less of a volunteer army than a captive army.

The doctrine of the long war fought by the present force fails to take into account whether the force can sustain the war. Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld argued that you fight with the army you have. What he did not address was that while you begin fighting with the army you have, as the United States did in World War II, you do not continue fighting with that army, but move to mobilize the country. But Rumsfeld did not realize how long the war in Afghanistan would last, and in particular, he did not anticipate the cost that two multi-divisional wars would have. It is noteworthy that Bales began with three tours in Iraq. The war in Iraq might be over, but its consequences for the force remain.

What Bales is alleged to have done is inexcusable. There have been many atrocities, both recorded and not, both outright and ambiguous, and conducted by both NATO and the Taliban. It is unrealistic to imagine a war of this length devoid of atrocities. But in a counterinsurgency, in which the goal is not simply the defeat of an enemy force but also persuading the population that turning against that force is the safest course, a massacre like this can have strategic consequences. The Taliban's psychological warfare operations will focus on the killings as they did with the February Koran-burning incident at a U.S. base. In the meantime, American psychological warfare efforts will focus on U.S. troops, both making sure they remain restrained and -- after the Feb. 25 shooting of two U.S. officers in a Kabul ministry by an Afghan colleague -- reassuring them that they must not be afraid of Afghans, since training Afghans is their mission.

The long war, without a major readjustment of the American force structure, creates unintended strategic consequences. One consequence is a force that contains large numbers of troops at the limits of their endurance. Their potential actions undermine the strategic purpose of the counterinsurgency: winning over the populace. That opens the door to increased influence for the Taliban and reduces the Taliban's inclination to negotiate as the U.S. position deteriorates. Put differently, troops are not numbers on a table of organization. They wear out.

There are four strategic assumptions of the long war underlying all of this. The first is that the fight against Islamist terrorism can be won and that ultimately it is more than just a threat that has to be accepted. The second is that large-scale operations like those in Iraq and Afghanistan help achieve that goal. Third, that the United States is able to wage a long war such as this without massive adjustments to its domestic life. Fourth, that this should continue to be the centerpiece of U.S. strategy indefinitely, regardless of other events in the world -- in other words, that this is the single most important challenge facing the United States.

The invasion of Afghanistan was strategically justifiable as a means of disrupting al Qaeda and preventing follow-on attacks against the United States. The invasion of Iraq was based on a false assumption that the Iraqis would not resist occupation. As the wars went further, the military situation became more difficult while the goals expanded. The ultimate expansion was the idea that the United States was committed to an indefinitely long war, with available forces, and that this would involve occupying large and hostile countries.

I argued in my last book, "The Next Decade," that the danger of empire was that it threatened the republic. After the fall of the Soviet Union, the United States became the world's only superpower, combining military, economic and political might on a global basis. Whether it wanted this power or not, it had it. Within a decade of the Soviet Union's collapse, 9/11 happened. Whatever its initial intentions, the United States found itself in a war that has lasted more than 10 years. That war has strained American resources. It has also strained the fabric of American life.

The threat to the republic comes from multiple directions, from creating systems for national defense that undermine republican principles to overestimating military capability and committing the republic to a war whose end state is unclear and where the means are insufficient. War transforms countries, and the long war transforms domestic life and creates an unbalanced foreign policy. Most of all, it creates a professional class that fights wars that are considered limitless while the rest of society, though paying the bills, does not see the war as being part of everyday life. The alienation between citizen and soldier in a nation struggling to reconcile global power with republican institutions is historically dangerous.

This is made all the more dangerous because the force is reaching its limits. Resisting terrorism is important. Eliminating it is an illusion. To continue with the long war with the forces available puts in motion processes that threaten the republic without securing U.S. interests. Leaving aside the threat to the republic, a force at its limits and left to fight a war on the margins of national consciousness will not be effective.

Read more: Afghanistan and the Long War | Stratfor
 

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March 20, 2012
North Korean Satellite Plan to Loom Over Meeting
By CHOE SANG-HUN

SEOUL, South Korea — When regional powers gather in Seoul next week to discuss nuclear terrorism, they will have to deal with another urgent matter: how to pressure North Korea to cancel its plans to launch a satellite, President Lee Myung-bak of South Korea said Tuesday.

“No matter what excuses North Korea may have, this would be an act of flouting a U.N. Security Council resolution,” Mr. Lee told a group of reporters during an interview in his office. He was referring to a 2009 Council resolution that bans the North from any rocket launching using ballistic missile technology.

North Korea has been sending out conflicting messages about its nuclear ambitions since it reached a deal last month with the United States to suspend long-range missile tests and uranium enrichment and admit United Nations inspectors in exchange for 240,000 tons of food aid.

Its announcement on Friday that it would launch its new modified Unha-3 rocket to put a satellite into orbit between April 12 and 16 to celebrate the 100th birthday of Kim Il-sung, North Korea’s founding president, drew swift international condemnation.

Late on Monday, however, the International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that it had received an invitation to return to the country, apparently signaling North Korea’s readiness to implement its side of the nuclear deal.

American officials have said that they made clear to North Korean officials during negotiations last month that a satellite launching would be a deal-breaker. Washington suspects North Korea of using the launchings as cover to develop intercontinental ballistic missile technology, while the North has insisted that it has the sovereign right to develop “peaceful” space technology.

By first accepting that missile-moratorium deal and then announcing its plan to launch the rocket, North Korea appeared to be delivering a diplomatic slap to Washington and at the same time testing the Obama administration’s tolerance for its rocket program.

“Our satellite launch has nothing to do with” the nuclear deal with Washington because a satellite launching and a long-range missile are “two separate things,” the North’s official Korean Central News Agency said late Monday.

Victoria Nuland, the State Department spokeswoman, said Washington would welcome the nuclear agency’s regaining access to the North three years after it was expelled. But, she said, “It doesn’t change the fact that we would consider a satellite launch a violation not only of their U.N. obligations but of the commitments they made to us.”

North Korea’s maneuvers are its first diplomatic gambit since Kim Jong-un took power after the death of his father, Kim Jong-il, in December.

“This will be an opportunity to assess the new North Korean leader and test his trustworthiness,” Mr. Lee said. If North Korea pushes ahead with a satellite launching, he said, “it may gain some benefits in domestic politics, but it will lose a lot in the international community.”

Kim Jong-un’s rise to power had raised hopes among some regional analysts that the young leader, educated in Switzerland as a teenager, might steer his country away from its extreme isolation and confrontation. But others cautioned that his preoccupation with consolidating power at home would leave him with little flexibility.

Like the North’s nuclear weapons program, its rocket program constitutes a crucial legacy of his father and his elite. It has featured prominently in the continuing centenary celebrations that are intended to instill the impoverished North Koreans with pride and unity.

Unless the United States or North Korea backs down, the North’s rocket launching will probably deprive Mr. Kim of the 240,000 tons of badly needed food aid. But the promised “nutritional assistance” was neither of the type nor of the amount the North had wanted. China, which cherishes stability in the North and has endorsed Mr. Kim, reportedly shipped large amounts of food aid to the North recently.

The South Korean leader offered the joint interview ahead of the Nuclear Security Summit meeting, which brings together the other five nations involved in the six-nation forum aimed at dismantling the North’s nuclear weapons program: the United States, Russia, China, Japan and South Korea. The meeting focuses on reducing nuclear weapons-grade materials and preventing nuclear materials and radioactive substances from falling into the hands of terrorists.
 

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North Korea: There They Go Again

North Korea, Nuclear Weapons, Nonproliferation, National Security, Arms Control

Evans J.R. Revere, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies

The Brookings Institution
March 20, 2012 —

What is it about North Korea and that country’s penchant for violating agreements?

The ink on the February 29th “Leap Day” agreement to freeze Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programs was hardly dry when North Korea announced its intention to launch a satellite – a clear violation of that agreement, and of several UN Security Council resolutions. The Leap Day accord is now in peril. It is hard to imagine the United States keeping its side of the bargain if the North proceeds with the mid-April launch.

In retrospect, the U.S. decision to treat the February 29th agreement as a modest achievement was wise. Any agreement with Pyongyang has the potential to fall apart, and this one was particularly fragile – and limited in scope.

The February 29th accord, even if fully implemented, would only have returned conditions to December 2008, when a tenuous, self-imposed “freeze” was in place on the North’s nuclear and missile programs. But it would have set the stage for the United States, North Korea, and other members of the Six-Party Talks to restart negotiations on implementing the September 19, 2005 denuclearization agreement – which the DPRK abandoned when it found it no longer useful.

The North Koreans also treated the Leap Day accord in a low-key manner, probably because they had concluded they were getting little from the deal. In return for freezing their nuclear and missile programs, they received expressions of U.S. non-hostility and willingness to promote cultural and educational exchanges, a U.S. statement that sanctions were not meant to hurt the North Korean people, and, in a separate but parallel negotiation, 240,000 metric tons of nutritional assistance that the Korean People’s Army is unlikely to find appetizing. The North was also compelled to agree to a strict monitoring regimen for the food aid based on an accord originally negotiated by the Bush Administration.

With the looming collapse of the Leap Day agreement, some critics are faulting the Obama administration for its willingness to negotiate in good faith, rather than criticizing Pyongyang for breaking faith. Venting at the administration is badly misplaced. It also ignores the fact that each time Pyongyang breaks its word it strengthens the U.S. hand, making it easier to secure the support of the international community for tougher measures against the DPRK.

Three important questions about the satellite issue require answers. What was behind the satellite launch announcement? When and why did the DPRK decide to conduct the launch? And why did the North Koreans think that this would not undermine the February 29th agreement?

First, last week was not the first time that the DPRK spoke of its plans to launch a satellite. I first became aware of this possibility on December 15, 2011, during an exchange with a DPRK official. The official spoke at length about the DPRK’s “sovereign right” to conduct such launches and warned that any U.S. effort to interfere with or oppose this plan would make the DPRK even more determined to carry it out.

My North Korean interlocutor was well aware that a launch would violate a series of UN Security Council resolutions and would lead to serious consequences. This conversation convinced me that the DPRK was determined to carry out a launch in the near future.

The Obama administration had already heard similar statements from North Korean counterparts, and had already delivered a strong warning to the DPRK. The warning included specific statements that a launch would violate of the U.S.-DPRK understandings that eventually resulted in the Leap Day agreement.

Equally or even more important, my conversation took place three days before the death of Kim Jong-il. It thus seems likely that the decision to announce a launch had already been taken by the now-deceased Kim. After his death, the only question that remained was when to announce it.

Why did Pyongyang make the launch announcement? Chinese officials believe that the DPRK made this decision for internal political reasons, and this judgment seems entirely credible.

Domestic priorities, and particularly managing the succession of Kim Jong-un, have driven much of North Korea’s internal and external behavior since Kim Jong-il’s stroke in the summer of 2008. The North believed that announcing the launch would reaffirm the power and authority of Kim Jong-un, and perhaps help celebrate the conferring of additional titles on the young successor anticipated at a Korean Workers’ Party meeting in April.

A launch would also elevate the North’s national prestige (at least in its own eyes), please the military, and provide a dramatic statement commemorating the centennial of Kim Il-sung’s birth. Moreover, if the decision to conduct a launch had been made on Kim Jong-il’s watch, his son and successor was in no position to reverse that decision.

Why did the North Koreans think they could get away with a satellite launch, especially since they were in the midst of negotiations with the U.S. that would be put at risk by the announcement?

The North Korean calculation probably consisted of two elements. Pyongyang may have convinced itself that the United States was so eager to impose a freeze on the North's medium- and long-range missile program (and therefore reduce its threat) that Washington would accept the North's assertion that satellite launches are not missile launches.

Pyongyang may also have believed that the United States would not walk away from the Leap Day deal, since it had the potential to lead to a negotiation that would freeze and eventually dismantle significant parts of the North’s nuclear weapons program.

Despite the DPRK’s frequent profession of its commitment to the “goal” of denuclearization, the DPRK has been consistently reminding U.S. interlocutors that it intends to keep its nuclear weapons capability for a long time to come. During the recent visit to New York of DPRK Vice Foreign Minster Ri Yong-ho, he said nothing to contradict this.

Pyongyang may have calculated that the United States wanted the deal the DPRK has been proposing (a monitored freeze at Yongbyon and resumed negotiations to eliminate major components of their nuclear program) so much that the United States would accept the DPRK as a de facto nuclear weapons state for years to come.

We may be in for difficult and dangerous days ahead. A North Korean launch will almost certainly kill the food assistance deal, and the North Koreans could use that as an excuse to say they are no longer obligated to fulfill their commitment to freeze their nuclear and missile programs and re-admit IAEA monitors. But the North Koreans could also offer to re-admit IAEA monitors while proceeding with the launch, which would put the United States in a difficult position.

If the UN Security Council were to adopt additional measures against the DPRK after a launch, the DPRK might well carry out missile and nuclear tests, and a new downward spiral would begin. One thing seems certain: the frustrating challenge of dealing with North Korea’s missile and nuclear activities is about to get a lot more difficult.

Related:

Reuters - A North Korean Television KRT news reader announces the launch of a working satellite to mark the 100th birthday of Kim Il-sung in Pyongyang, March 16, 2012.

Reuters - A North Korean Television KRT news reader announces the launch of a working satellite to mark the 100th birthday of Kim Il-sung in Pyongyang, March 16, 2012.

Reuters
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Germany sells sub to Israel
but warns on attacking Iran


March 20, 2012 08:16 PM
By Alexandra Hudson
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Mi...ut-warns-on-attacking-iran.ashx#axzz1pYdGPMzY

BERLIN: Germany said on Tuesday it will sell Israel a sixth military submarine and shoulder part of the cost, although it warned its ally that any military escalation with Iran could bring incalculable risks.

German Defence Minister Thomas de Maiziere said he shared Israel's fear of a nuclear-armed Iran and he was convinced Tehran aimed to make nuclear weapons, but he called for caution.


"I recommend all sides show urgent restraint, both in their rhetoric and their action. A military escalation would bring incalculable risks for Israel and the region, to the detriment of Israel," he told reporters at a press conference in Berlin with his Israeli counterpart Ehud Barak.

Barak by contrast said all options regarding Iran should remain on the table, apart from containment. "To accept a nuclear Iran would be inconceivable and unacceptable to the whole world," he said.

Germany, which after the Nazi-perpetrated Holocaust is absolutely committed to Israel's security, has championed international diplomatic campaigns to rein in Tehran. But Berlin has also criticised Israel's settlement-building programme.

"Israel can be sure of German solidarity in questions of its sovereign integrity and its existence ... but it is important that Israel and its partners make moves towards a solution of the Middle East conflict," de Maiziere said.

DOLPHIN SUBMARINES

Israel operates three German-built Dolphin submarines, manufactured by Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (HDW), a unit of ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems, and expects delivery of two more shortly. The vessels are considered a vanguard against foes like Iran.

Israel is threatening to take military action, with or without U.S. support, if Iran is deemed to be continuing to defy pressure to curb its nuclear projects. Iran insists its nuclear energy programme is purely non-military.

The Dolphins are small, diesel-powered submarines, designed for coastal patrols and equipped with 10 torpedo tubes.

Israel is widely assumed to have the Middle East's only nuclear weapons, which it neither confirms nor denies. These could be onboard the Dolphins.

Israel's purchase of a sixth submarine had been widely expected, although discussions over the degree of Germany's contribution drew out the process.

"A further boat will be delivered to Israel and there will be financial help. It is part of the budget and is therefore a public action," de Maiziere said.

Germany's state budget for 2012 foresees spending of 135 million euros for "defence systems for Israel", 70 million euros of which will fall this year.

Germany delivered the first three submarines between 1999-2000, two of which it paid for outright. In 2005 Germany struck a deal with Israel on another two submarines, this time paying a contribution of 333 million euros for both, amounting to about a third of the cost.



Read more: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Mi...ut-warns-on-attacking-iran.ashx#ixzz1phGZ74Jq
(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: http://www.dailystar.com.lb)


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Russia Fears 'Nuclear Arms Race'

Moscow claims a military strike on Iran's nuclear facilities would
prompt Tehran to build nuclear bombs and set off a regional arms race.


First Publish: 3/20/2012, 9:52 PM
Segei Lavrov
Reuters
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/153967

Russia warned Tuesday that Iran would have no option but to develop nuclear weapons if it came under attack from either the United States or Israel.

“The CIA and other US officials admit they now have no information about the Iranian leadership taking the political decision to produce nuclear weapons,” Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told Moscow’s Kommersant FM radio.


“But I am almost certain that such a decision will surely be taken after (any) strikes on Iran,” Lavrov said.

Moscow has close military and commercial ties with Tehran, and has only grudgingly backed four rounds of UN Security Council sanctions over Iran’s suspected bid for nuclear weapons.

Lavrov argued Russia was not defending an ally, but trying to avert a broader conflict or possible nuclear arms race from breaking out in the region.

He also strongly criticized Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for repeatedly threatening to destroy Israel.

“This is completely unacceptable... and we categorically condemn it,” Lavrov said. “It is simply uncivilized and unworthy of a country as ancient as Iran.”

Russian forces have increased their state of alert as an Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear facility appears increasingly imminent. Moscow fears a strike on Iran could lead to a regional war and destabilize its Central Asian border regions.

Lavrov's remarks come ahead of expected nuclear talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany.

Last week, Iran for the first time hinted it would consider suspending its uranium enrichment program - a key demand by Jerusalem and Washington to avert a strike - in exchange for Western assistance with its civilian nuclear activities.

Tehran also signaled it would allow "permanent human monitoring" of its nuclear sites.






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Syrian rebels find themselves outgunned,
with arms in short supply


Opposition leadership says that only
military aid can stop Assad’s forces


March 20, 2012, 11:03 pm
http://www.timesofisrael.com/syrian-rebels-outgunned-strugging-for-supplies/

ORENTAS, Turkey (AP) — Syrian rebel commander Ahmad Mihbzt and his ragtag fighters grabbed their aging rifles to fight Syrian troops advancing on their village, but soon fled under a rain of exploding artillery shells.

“We will fight until our last drop of blood,” Mihbzt declared a week later in this village across the Turkish border. “We just withdrew because we ran out of ammunition.”


Like Mihbzt’s men, rebels across Syria fighting to topple President Bashar Assad lack the weapons that can pose a serious challenge to the regime’s large, professional army. Some rebel units have more fighters than guns, forcing them to take turns fighting. Because of ammunition shortages, some fire automatic rifles one shot at a time, counting each bullet.

Rebel leaders and anti-regime activists say rising gun prices and more tightly controlled borders are making it harder for them to acquire arms and smuggle them into Syria. This could tip the already unbalanced military equation of Syria’s year-old uprising further in the regime’s favor.

The opposition has suffered a series of military setbacks as regime forces have repeatedly routed them in their strongholds, most recently the eastern city of Deir al-Zour on Tuesday.

The weapons shortage has grown so acute that the opposition’s disorganized leadership say only military aid can stop Assad’s forces. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Libya have spoken positively of the idea, but no country is known to be arming the rebels. The United States and many European countries have rejected sending weapons, fearing that it would fuel a civil war.

The weapons problems reflect the fractured, haphazard nature of the rebel movement. The uprising began a year ago with peaceful protests demanding political reform, inspired by the successful revolts in Tunisia and Egypt. Since then, Assad has waged a withering crackdown.

In response, some in the opposition began to take up arms to defend their towns and attack government troops. The local militias and breakaway units from the Syrian army mostly identify with the Free Syrian Army, a loose-knit umbrella group, but they operate independent of each other. The groups, numbering anywhere from a few dozen to a few hundred men, are largely on their own in finding weapons and supplies.

Defectors from the army, mostly low-level soldiers, bring arms and know-how with them. Most have only light weapons, such as Kalashnikov assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades. Rebel coordinators say groups have looted heavier weapons from army caches, and activist videos posted online show anti-aircraft guns and anti-tank missiles. But heavy weapons remain rare and have not significantly boosted rebel capabilities.

Smuggling from neighboring countries was key earlier in the conflict. But rebels and anti-regime activists now say Syrian forces have mined many of the smuggling routes from Turkey and Lebanon, and the Turkish and Jordanian governments have tightened border controls to avoid being pulled into the conflict.

Rebel frustrations are clear in the string of poor Turkish villages across Syria’s northern border where more than 16,000 Syrians live in refugee camps. The camps host hundreds of rebel fighters seeking to regroup as well as smugglers who trade in livestock, cigarettes and gasoline.

Last week, some 200 rebels with light arms in the Syrian hill village of Janoudiyeh were no match for Assad’s forces, which shelled the area before sending in troops, said Mihbzt, the rebel commander.

His forces fled across the border, about 6 miles from town, and into Turkey. But rising gun prices and strict border controls prevent his men from rearming, he said. So they plan to target border sentries to seize their arms or loot Syrian arms depots.

Other fighters who have found refuge in Turkey reported similar frustrations.

“We were forced to fire single shots in clashes because we don’t have enough ammunition,” said Majdi Hamdo. “I have two magazines for my Kalashnikov and one of them has been empty for the past month.”

In contrast, analysts say Assad’s army boasts 330,000 soldiers and highly advanced weaponry, most of it bought from Russia.

While many of its recent weapons purchases — like air defense technology and anti-ship missiles — can’t be used against rebels, they point to a highly sophisticated force.

Joseph Holliday, an analyst with the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War who has studied Syria’s rebels, said they will not be able to challenge the army without substantial help, though they can wage an effective insurgency.

“There is no possibility in the foreseeable future that they’ll be able to pose a real challenge to or defeat the regime’s forces in a pitched battle,” he said. “They can continue to survive. They can attack areas where the regime is not in full control, and they can sap regime forces and get them to play the proverbial whack-a-mole that U.S. forces had to deal with in Iraq.”

That means the violence could last. Already the revolt has become one of the bloodiest of the Arab Spring, with the U.N. saying more than 8,000 people have been killed.

“Because of the strength of the regime and because of the rebels’ survivability and resilience, you’re looking at a protracted conflict,” he said.

Rebels in Syria’s south typify this insurgent strategy, where small bands of fighters attack regime targets then disappear into nearby farmland. This week, they bombed a bridge on a key highway to prevent the army from bringing in more tanks.

Activist Raed al-Suleiman said his village of Nawa in Daraa province has fewer than 100 rebels, whom local residents support.

“They give them money, food or clothing,” he said. “Their ammunition is all booty from the regime since no aid is coming from Jordan.”

Ahmad Kassem, an FSA coordinator outside Syria, said rebels had recently looted weapons caches in Daraa and outside of Damascus, getting thousands of machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, anti-aircraft guns and missiles.

“The seized weapons will give a qualitative jump to our military operations,” he said. “It’s not enough, but sufficient in the meantime to inflict harm on Bashar’s oppressive army.”

The Syrian government blames the uprising terrorist groups acting out a foreign conspiracy and cites insurgent attacks to press its argument. It has vowed to keep fighting.

It bars most media organizations for working in the country, and rebel and activists claims could not be independently confirmed.

Still, many rebels say the arms shortage restricts their abilities.

Rebel coordinator Mohammed Qaddah in Jordan said some 2,000 fighters in the countryside around Damascus have less than one rifle per man, forcing them to take turns or resort to simpler means.

“We use Molotov cocktails and homemade grenades in roadside ambushes because we’re desperate,” he said. “But we have no means to arm all our eager men.”





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Iran paid Hamas to block Palestinian deal: Fatah
March 21, 2012
RECORDER REPORT
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Business Recorder Logo Iran paid the Islamist group Hamas to block a deal with the rival Fatah movement that would have ended a five-year rift between the two main Palestinian factions, a Fatah spokesman said on Tuesday.

He said Tehran recently resumed financial aid to Hamas which it had suspended six months ago over the Palestinian movement's failure to back their mutual ally President Bashar al-Assad of Syria in his military campaign to crush dissent.

Hamas has since turned overtly against Assad.

But, according to Fatah, Iran is more concerned with supporting the armed Palestinian movement that is ready to challenge Israel from its Gaza Strip stronghold, under Israeli blockade.

"We have information that Iran paid tens of millions of dollars to Zahar and Haniyeh in their visits to Iran," said Ahmed Assaf, referring to Hamas leaders Mahmoud al-Zahar who visited Tehran last week and Ismail Haniyeh who was there in February.

Assaf was responding to a comment by Zahar that Palestinian political reconciliation "is in the freezer now", despite a unity deal signed last month.

"Reconciliation is in the freezer because Zahar was the one who put it there and he got the price from Iran," Assaf told Reuters.

"Zahar, Haniyeh and Hamas's Gaza leadership were paid by Iran to freeze reconciliation."

Hamas rejected the charges.

"The Fatah government did not implement any of their obligations (under the unity deal) and they prefer American money to nationalist agreements," spokesman Taher al-Nono said.

Assaf said that by visiting Tehran, the Palestinian officials aimed to send a message to Hamas's exiled supreme leader Khaled Meshaal, who had agreed the reconciliation deal, that the Gaza Strip leaders of Hamas were the ones now in control of the movement.

Meshaal abandoned his Damascus headquarters months ago as it became politically impossible for him to ignore the fact that Assad's crackdown was killing thousands of fellow Sunni Muslims.

Backed by Egypt, he signed a long-awaited Hamas-Fatah reconciliation agreement last month with Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas, the Western-backed Palestinian president.

But it was denounced by hard-liners who said Meshaal was making unnecessary concessions to the secular faction at a time when Islamism was on the rise in the Arab world.

"Iran has an interest in the division continuing.

Iran realises the importance of the Palestinian cause from the religious, political and geographic status and, therefore, it wants to control it," Assaf said.

If unity was restored and the Palestine Liberation Organisation or any legitimate leadership ruled Gaza, Iran would lose its influence, he said.

Hamas forces seized control of Gaza in 2007 and ousted those loyal to Abbas, a year after it swept parliamentary elections ending decades of Fatah dominance.

The open rift split the Palestinian national movement politically and geographically, between Fatah in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza.

Hamas is regarded in the West as a terrorist organisation which refuses to recognise Israel and foreswear violence.

As such, it remains isolated with no formal role in the Middle East peace process, unlike Abbas's Fatah.

Leaders of both sides have been trading blame over the responsibility for the stalemate, while taking no substantial steps on ground to end the divide.

Analysts say neither faction, with Hamas split by internal differences over the terms of the unity deal, is really interested enough in reconciliation to make it happen.

Copyright Reuters, 2012
 

Housecarl

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Hummm.....

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special...lls-citizens/UPI-26851332263463/?spt=hs&or=tn

Special Reports
Leave Gaza Strip, U.S. tells citizens
Published: March. 20, 2012 at 1:11 PM

WASHINGTON, March 20 (UPI) -- U.S. citizens are called on to leave Gaza Strip immediately and be on high alert when traveling to Israel or the West Bank, the U.S. State Department advised.

A cease-fire backed by leaders from the militant Islamic Jihad appeared to be holding in Gaza after a rockets were fired into Israel territory last week.

In a travel warning, the State Department called on U.S. citizens in Gaza to leave immediately through the Rafah crossing to Egypt.

"The security environment within Gaza, including its border with Egypt and its seacoast, is dangerous and volatile," the statement read. "Small clashes continue to occur along the boundary of the Gaza Strip."

The advisory mentioned similar concerns about Israel and the West Bank.

The warning comes as European foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton signed a $46 million finance agreement for border-crossing and water infrastructure in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

"The EU has repeatedly called for the opening of the crossings for the flow of humanitarian aid, commercial goods and persons to and from Gaza," Ashton said in a statement.
 

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http://blogs.voanews.com/breaking-news/2012/03/20/nigerian-militants-abandon-talks-with-government/

Nigerian Militants Abandon Talks With Government
Posted Tuesday, March 20th, 2012 at 7:05 pm

A purported spokesman for the Nigerian militant group, Boko Haram, says it has broken off talks with the Nigerian government.

A man calling himself Abul Qaqa Tuesday told local reporters in the city of Maiduguri that the militants had engaged in indirect talks with the government, but that those talks had failed. The spokesman said the group will not go into such a dialogue again.

“We have closed all possible doors of negotiation. We would never listen to any call for negotiations. Let the government forces do whatever they feel they can do and we too would use all the wherewithal at our disposal and do what we can. If the government thinks arresting our members will discourage us from launching onslaught, then let them continue arresting and killing our members. We strongly believe that Almighty Allah will give us the power to catch and prosecute government forces. We are optimistic that we would dismantle this government and establish Islamic government in Nigeria. Let the federal government and its agents do what they can; and we in return, would also do what we can.”

His comments came just days after Muslim cleric Ahmed Datti announced that he has given up his involvement in facilitating the talks. He said he could not trust the government after news about the talks leaked out.

The indirect talks were aimed at ending months of attacks by Boko Haram in the mostly Muslim north. The group is blamed for hundreds of deaths in bombings and shootings over the past 18 months.

President Goodluck Jonathan is under mounting pressure to restore security in the north. Many of the attacks have targeted police, government officials and other authority figures. In an effort to stem the crisis, Mr. Jonathan recently declared a state of emergency in 15 areas and deployed extra troops to the north, but attacks have continued.

Much is unknown about Boko Haram, but it is believed to want wider implementation of sharia, or Islamic law.

Boko Haram first came to international attention with a brief but violent uprising against the government in July 2009. The uprising sparked a heavy military response and a week of fighting that killed some 700 people.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.voanews.com/english/news/asia/Tibetans-Demand-UN-Action-on-Human-Rights-143545086.html

Asia
March 20, 2012
Tibetans Demand UN Action on Human Rights
Margaret Besheer | United Nations

Three Tibetan independence activists are nearly one month into a hunger strike outside of the United Nations in New York. They promise to continue their water-only fast until a fact-finding mission is sent to their homeland to assess the human rights situation there. On Monday night, New York police and medics forcibly transported the oldest striker, Dorjee Gyalpo, to a local hospital out of concern for his deteriorating condition. He remains in hospital but has refused food and is only accepting intravenous fluids.

Hunger striker Dorjee Gyalpo says he is prepared to lay down his life to get international intervention for his homeland, where more than 20 people have set themselves on fire in the past year to demand independence from China and the return of Tibet's spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

Recently, two busloads of supporters from Dorjee’s Tibetan-American community in Minnesota came to show their solidarity with him and the other two hunger strikers.

In addition to a U.N. fact-finding mission, the activists also want the release of political prisoners, foreign media access to Tibet, the end to China's policy of so-called patriotic re-education, and pressure on Beijing to lift what they say is undeclared martial law.

"Those five appeals are reasonable. They are not something impossible for the U.N. to take a look at. So my father and two hunger strikers they are waiting for the U.N. - not just their word, they are waiting for an action. It’s been 53 years," said Deden Gongmae, Dorjee’s daughter from San Francisco.

U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky says that a senior human rights official met recently with the protesters and the number two diplomat at China’s U.N. Mission.

“He said he would convey the group’s concerns to the relevant Special Rapporteur and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva, in line with established procedure in handling human rights matters,” Nesirky said.

The spokesman added that the secretary-general supports the right of all people to peaceful protest, but he is very concerned about the health of the hunger strikers.

Tsewang Rigzin is president of the Tibetan Youth Congress. He said the group is grateful for the U.N. official’s visit, but the indefinite hunger strike would continue.

“Because in Tibet, unlike here, in Tibet, people do not have basic fundamental rights, they do not have the right to protest, they do not have the right to assembly, freedom of expression, freedom of religion, what have you. So because of that, people are setting themselves on fire to make their case, to voice their opposition to the Chinese government,” Rigzin said.

Earlier this month, the Chinese-appointed governor of Tibet, Padma Choling, criticized the self-immolations. “This is against humankind consciousness and moral principles, so I think that the self-immolations, their supporters, and the people that commit those acts should be punished severely by the law,” Padma said.

Dorjee Gyalpo is physically weak, but his resolve is not.

"China wants to wipe out the whole Tibetan nation and the Tibetan people. But they will never succeed. It is like a tree. China has been cutting branches, but they can never destroy the roots, so the Tibetan people will never give up," said Dorjee Gyalpo.

Related Articles

* Free Tibet supporter protests outside White House, Washington, D.C., Feb. 12, 2012.
Tibetans on Hunger Strike Demand UN Action

Three men outside of UN headquarters say they are willing to sacrifice themselves so the world will wake up to their plight
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/20/us-obama-korea-dmz-idUSBRE82J1D720120320

Obama to visit DMZ, raise pressure on North Korea
By Alister Bull and Matt Spetalnick
Comments 1
WASHINGTON | Tue Mar 20, 2012 7:58pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama, seeking to increase pressure on North Korea to abandon its atomic weapons, will visit the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) on South Korea's tense border on Sunday before a nuclear security summit in Seoul.

Obama's visit to the border will be a strong show of support for South Korea, the White House said on Tuesday, sending a message to the North as Washington builds an international effort to get stalled nuclear disarmament talks back on track.

North Korea will not attend the summit, where Obama will meet with Chinese President Hu Jintao and urge him to use Beijing's long-standing influence with Pyongyang, where leadership has recently passed to Kim Jong-un.

"We certainly hope and recommend that China bring all the instruments of power to bear to influence the decision-making in North Korea," said Daniel Russel, White House National Security Council senior director for Asia.

Secretive North Korea has twice tested a nuclear device, and the United States says its long-range ballistic missile program is progressing quickly.

While experts doubt North Korea has the ability to miniaturize an atomic bomb to place atop a warhead, last year Washington warned that the American mainland could come under threat from North Korean missiles within five years.

ROCKET LAUNCH PLAN

Last month, North Korea reached an agreement with Washington to suspend nuclear tests, long-range missile launches and uranium enrichment as part of a deal to restart food aid, but then announced it would launch a rocket carrying a satellite to mark the centenary of founder Kim Il-sung's birth next month.

The United States has said this plan could violate the nuclear moratorium deal and scuttle the resumption of food aid.

Obama's visit to the DMZ, which splits the peninsular that was divided by the 1950-1953 Korean war, was cast by the White House as a chance for him to thank some of the more that 20,000 U.S. troops still stationed in South Korea.

Beijing is the closest thing North Korea has to an ally but has also voiced concern about the planned rocket launch, which has raised tensions ahead of the March 26-27 summit, dedicated to reducing the threat of nuclear terrorism.

North Korea will loom large, as well as Iran's nuclear program, which has spurred worries about the possibility of fresh military conflict in the oil-rich Middle East.

"North Korea will be the odd man out," said Russel in a conference call previewing the trip.

"The nations that will gather in Seoul will assemble in a modern prosperous city, in an open and democratic society ... The choices that the North Korean leaders have made have taken the people of North Korea into isolation and poverty."

Obama will also meet Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak on the sidelines of the summit to discuss what can be done to discourage the missile launch and Pyongyang's nuclear program.

Obama will also discuss with Hu and Medvedev the latest world power efforts to tackle Iran over its nuclear program, which the West says is aimed at building an atomic bomb but Tehran insists is for peaceful power generation.

"We are committed to pursuing a diplomatic path that allows the Iranians to make the right decision," said White House National Security Council spokesman Ben Rhodes.

Washington has urged Israel to hold off from attacking Iran's nuclear sites to give more time for international sanctions and diplomacy to work, but Obama has also said that he would not allow Tehran to acquire a nuclear weapon.

(Reporting By Matt Spetalnick; Editing by David Brunnstrom)


Related News

* U.S. exempts 11 states from Iran sanctions; China, India exposed
6:10pm EDT
* China raises concern to North Korea about rocket launch
6:20am EDT
* U.N. nuclear watchdog says it received North Korea invitation
Mon, Mar 19 2012
* China exerts rare public pressure on North Korea over missile plan
Sat, Mar 17 2012
* N.Korea's plan for rocket launch stirs regional concern
Fri, Mar 16 2012
 

Housecarl

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Patriot missiles may be deployed in Okinawa to counter North Korean rocket
Kyodo

The Defense Ministry is considering deploying the Patriot-3 antiballistic missile defense system on Ishigaki Island and Okinawa Island to possibly shoot down the rocket North Korea says it will launch next month with a satellite onboard, a senior vice minister said Tuesday.

Shu Watanabe revealed the idea during a graduation speech at the Maritime Self-Defense Force cadet school in Etajima, Hiroshima Prefecture.

The ministry is also considering deploying an Aegis destroyer in the Sea of Japan to defend Tokyo in case the North Korean rocket veers off course, the government sources said.

According to the sources, the Defense Ministry is thinking about deploying some of the Pac-3 system equipment on public land on Ishigaki Island, which is in Okinawa Prefecture, while other parts of the system would be deployed at MSDF facilities on Okinawa Island, including the Chinen base in Nanjo, southern Okinawa.

North Korea has said it will launch the rocket between April 12 and April 16, from 7 a.m. to noon Japan time.

If the rocket travels on the course Pyongyang announced, it would fly over the Sakishima Islands in Okinawa Prefecture.

The first stage of the rocket would fall into the Yellow Sea off southern South Korea, while the second stage would fall into the Pacific off Luzon, the Philippines, according to Pyongyang.

In 2009, the Defense Ministry deployed the PAC-3 system in Iwate and Akita prefectures to prepare for an expected launch of a ballistic missile by North Korea.
 
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Israel must exercise restraint in showdown with Iran

Editorial Desk
The China Post
Publication Date : 21-03-2012
http://www.asianewsnet.net/home/news.php?id=28823&sec=3

Over the last several weeks, the world has heard increased saber rattling from the Israeli government regarding a suspected Iranian nuclear program and some now believe the Israeli government will launch airstrikes against sites in Iran in the near future. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said repeatedly that he does not intend to allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons and has said that this issue must be resolved quickly. “This is not a matter of days or weeks. It is also not a matter of years,” said the Israeli leader earlier this month.


While many are sympathetic with the plight of the state of Israel, a nation struggling to survive in a hostile environment, talk of acts of war against Iran make much of the planet nervous. Should Israel choose to take military action it would be embarking on a course of pre-emptive or preventive war, something which the very recent action taken by the United States against Iraq demonstrates can be exceedingly fraught with danger. US intelligence on Iraq turned out to be wrong and thousands of US troops as well as hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians lost their lives for what might be fair to call a mistake.

Such actions are also of questionable morality. Retaliation after being attacked is a justifiable action. While the United States has now perhaps overextended itself in Afghanistan, the United States entered that nation after it was attacked by forces based in Afghanistan. There were, however, no attacks on America from Iraq. If Israel decides to bomb Iran it would be claiming, in the words of Professor of International Relations at Lehigh University Rajan Menon, “the right to attack based not on an evident and compelling threat from Iran but on its assessment that Iran might acquire the wherewithal to harm Israel at some undefined juncture”. Menon also rightly points out that Israel already has several major deterrents against any threats from regional hostile powers, including not only an incredibly strong military but also the almost certain fact that the Jewish state possesses nuclear weapons.

Much of the world may find it hard to believe that the Islamic Republic of Iran would be willing to face total nuclear annihilation at the hands of Israel — and quite possibly the United States as well — should it launch a nuclear strike on the Jewish state. Of course, the current Israeli Prime Minister says he's not willing to wait until his nation suffers a catastrophic attack, and many people understand his position. Israel might be able to decimate Iran in a retaliatory strike, but if the Jewish state were hit first it would still be a calamity; being able to strike back doesn't lessen the blow of being nuked. But the best course of action for now may not be military action.

The Israeli government must consider the voice of its own people as the public is not rallying behind their government's saber rattling. The majority of Jewish Israelis polled in February did not support unilateral bombing. In fact, 32 per cent of Jewish Israeli respondents said Israel should not strike at all while 43 per cent said any such action should only be taken with American support; something that has been less than forthcoming. In addition, 21 per cent of those polled said strikes would have no effect on Iran's nuclear program while 12 per cent said it would actually accelerate Iran's atomic aspirations. Among those who believed a strike would set back Tehran's nuclear program, 25 per cent said it would only be delayed by three to five years while 10 per cent guessed strikes would only lead to a delay of one to two years.

Many around the world strongly support the state of Israel and its right to exist. Many also sympathise with the plight of living near a nation that publicly calls for Israel to be “wiped off the map.” But the world has faced dangerous brinkmanship games before and fortunately strong leaders have been able to step back and think things through before acting. Many around the world are hoping Israel will find the strength to restrain.





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Tehran warns of retaliation

Posted on » Wednesday, March 21, 2012
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=326286

TEHRAN: Tehran will retaliate against any attack by Israeli or American forces "on the same level", Iran's top leader said yesterday in a defiant address just moments after US President Barack Obama appealed directly to the Iranian people with a message of solidarity.


Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, speaking on state TV to mark the Iranian new year, repeated his claims that the country does not seek atomic weapons, but said all of Iran's conventional firepower was ready to respond to any attack.





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:shkr:
Israel asks to clear Cairo embassy contents: Egypt sources

CAIRO | Tue Mar 20, 2012 9:32pm EDT
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/21/us-egypt-israel-embassy-idUSBRE82K03320120321


CAIRO (Reuters) - Israel has asked Egypt for permission to send planes to remove the contents of its Cairo embassy, Egyptian foreign ministry and airport sources said on Tuesday, highlighting deteriorating ties between the two states since Hosni Mubarak was ousted last year.


It was not immediately clear what prompted the request but a parliamentary committee issued a statement last week in the wake of Israeli raids on Gaza demanding the Israeli envoy be expelled from Cairo and for a review of ties with the Jewish state.

It was not clear whether or not the move would also involve evacuating staff. Israeli diplomats in Cairo could not be reached and Israel's Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment.

The Israel's ambassador was evacuated from Cairo in September last year after demonstrators stormed the embassy in protest at a deadly border shooting incident in August.

The ambassador, Yitzhak Levanon, briefly returned in November for farewell assignments at the end of his tour. A new Israeli ambassador, Yaacov Amitai, took office in February.

"The Israeli embassy contacted us (on Tuesday) requesting permission for two planes to land in Cairo to transport the contents of the embassy," a ministry official told Reuters.

The official said approval was needed from the military, which has ruled Egypt since Mubarak was ousted in February last year. He said a decision on the request was expected on Wednesday.

An airport source also said a request to send two planes had been submitted, and that the airport had already received approval for the planes to land.

Many in Israel have worried that ties with Egypt, which in 1979 became the first Arab state to sign a peace treaty with the Jewish state, could be jeopardized after Mubarak's overthrow in a popular uprising last year and the rise of Islamists.

Anti-Israeli sentiment in Egypt was muted before Mubarak, a U.S. ally, was toppled but have since become more vocal. The Muslim Brotherhood's political party and others have said they are committed to Egypt's international treaties and agreements.

The storming of the embassy in Cairo in September followed the killing in August of five Egyptian security guards by Israeli soldiers pursuing militants who had ambushed and killed eight Israelis along the Israeli-Egyptian border.

Egypt brokered a truce between Israel and militant groups in Gaza this month after four days of violence in which 25 Palestinians were killed and 200 rockets were fired at Israel.






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French Ambassador to Israel:
France on 'Highest Alert'


France’s Ambassador to Israel, Christophe Bigot, in Knesset:
France is on the highest alert following brutal murders in Toulouse.


By Elad Benari & Hezki Ezra
First Publish: 3/21/2012, 4:42 AM
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/153978

France’s Ambassador to Israel, Christophe Bigot, took part in a special discussion held on Tuesday by the Knesset’s Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Committee, headed by MK Danny Danon (Likud).

The committee’s special session took place one day after the brutal murder of four people in the Otzar Hatorah Jewish school in Toulouse.


During the discussion, Bigot strongly condemned the attack on innocent civilians and, according to a report in the Ma’ariv newspaper, said, “This is a barbaric act, a violation of human rights and of democratic values ​​and a threat to French society.”

Bigot expressed condolences to the families and noted that the victims included both Israelis and French citizens.

“The shocking murder in Toulouse was a big shock for France and was followed by a whole wave of solidarity and empathy which engulfed the Jewish community, and condemnations came from all across the political spectrum,” Ma’ariv quoted Bigot as having said.


He added, “There is the highest level of security alert in France. That means security, of course, around school, synagogues, and public places. To my knowledge, this is the first time we’ve had this high level of alert.”

“There couldn’t be more mobilization, both in terms of leaders, street, people and security forces,” said Bigot.





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:shkr:
Is America's view of Iran and
Hezbollah dangerously out of date?


By Frank J. Cilluffo and Sharon Cardash & Michael Downing
Published March 20, 2012
FoxNews.com
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/03/20/is-americas-view-iran-and-hezbollah-dangerously-out-date/


There's been an uptick in attempted, actual attacks on and assassinations of Israeli, Jewish, U.S., and Western targets from New Delhi to Tbilisi recently.

Iran denies and dissociates itself from these incidents, but allegations against Iran and its proxies persist from multiple and varied sources.


Collectively, these events form a dangerous tapestry, which should serve as spur to the United States to think carefully about its homeland security posture, and how it might best be reinforced, should these types of activities continue or escalate, with potentially serious implications for this country.

As a step in that direction, the House Homeland Security Committee will convene a hearing Wednesday on the threat posed to the U.S. homeland by Iran/Hezbollah.

Remember that Hezbollah once, not that long ago, held the mantle of deadliest terrorist organization: it killed more Americans (including 241 Marines in a single bombing in 1983) than any other terrorist organization prior to 9/11, when it was surpassed by Al Qaeda.

For the past decade, U.S. Government analysts have understandably focused on Al Qaeda, resulting in a lesser reservoir of U.S. intelligence on, and perhaps even a bit of a blind spot about, Hezbollah. Yet Hezbollah’s activities have grown global, ranging from West Africa to the Tri-Border Area of Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay.

According to the House Homeland Committee’s announcement, the witness panel (full disclosure: witness Matthew Levitt also serves as Senior Fellow at our Institute) will “focus on Iran’s primary terrorism proxies, including Hezbollah, which already has a robust network within the U.S., and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps” — against a concerning backdrop: the recently thwarted Iranian plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States; and the Director of National Intelligence’s assessment just weeks ago, that Iran is “now more willing to conduct an attack in the United States.”

Chairman King’s leadership on this matter is laudable, in part because the lenses through which the United States has historically understood and reacted to Iran and its proxies may be out of date.

Under present circumstances, characterized by a relatively high degree of tension—with Iran’s nuclear weapons program under both scrutiny and sanctions, the danger of such a lag is exacerbated, and the prospect of re-examining first principles is welcome.

Sound policy requires sound assumptions, after all. Yet we may be at risk on this count, which means that risks may materialize and surprise us, while opportunities to minimize and mitigate same may be missed.

“Redlines” are at the heart of the matter, as concerns both threat and response.

For years, a series of operating presumptions prevailed. Among them: that the United States homeland, although a venue for terrorist fundraising and criminal activity, was not itself perceived as fair game as subject of attack; that the terrorist ideologues would not tie themselves too closely to criminal counterparts; and that Shia and Sunni forces would not cooperate.

These and other assumptions no longer apply as they once may have, and the ramifications are disturbing.

Start with the convergence of crime and terror. Hezbollah’s nexus with criminal activity is, notably, greater than that of any other terrorist organization. These interconnections, including with gangs and cartels, give rise to the potential for outsourcing, and open up new avenues and networks to facilitate terrorist travel, logistics, recruitment, and operations.

The situation is not entirely without upside, however: from the point of view of U.S. intelligence and law enforcement authorities, these various points of intersection with criminal networks provide additional opportunities to exploit (for collection and other purposes).

At the same time, Shia and Sunni forces are, in fact, cooperating, notwithstanding that this may be counterintuitive or surprising to some.

Law enforcement officers confirm that ends are trumping means, as Shia members of Lebanese Hezbollah and Sunni (Saudi/Iraqi) militant forces, for example, share and complement each other’s skill sets and human resources.

Having said that, it is important not to overstate the case. Indeed, even within Shia circles, there is competition — for instance, there is debate as to who calls the shots and when, and analysts have also observed more competition than cooperation to date between Lebanese Hezbollah and the Iranian Quds Force.

The potential consequences of a reversal of this equation, however, are sufficiently potent as to bear (at minimum) red-teaming and the production of additional threat assessments, to include modalities of attack (such as cyber) and potential consequences.

Turning from capability to intent, law enforcement officials likewise have noted significant terrorist interest in and study of the range of methods and means used to smuggle narcotics and people from Mexico into the United States.

Taken in tandem with the plot to kill the Saudi ambassador to Washington, such interest is not academic, and all it takes is one bad apple.

Once stateside, opportunities abound to blend in, plot, and plan. On the first point (integration), consider Los Angeles, which is home to the largest Iranian population outside of Iran itself. The picture becomes even more fraught when vulnerabilities are overlaid. Based on recent activity, the Los Angeles Police Department has elevated the Government of Iran and its proxies to a Tier One threat.

The city of Los Angeles contains the most active Hezbollah presence in the United States.

Jewish communities and facilities situated throughout the United States, for example, constitute relatively soft targets — and so too outside the country, as events in France this week so tragically evidence.

It doesn’t take much imagination to conjure up the flashpoints that could ensue here at home if certain actions were taken against Iran (even if not undertaken by the United States itself).

Given this convergence of threat vectors accompanied by concerning indicators of adversary intent, coupled with significant vulnerability, what can and should we do?

- Information gathering and sharing is crucial to planning and preparation: keeping eyes and ears open at home and abroad to glean indications and warnings (I&W) of attack will be fundamental, as will outreach to and partnership with state and local authorities and communities, where the rubber meets the road.

- Searching for I&W will require fresh thinking that identifies and pursues links and patterns not previously established by U.S. officials. In part, this entails hitting the beat hard, with local police tapping informants and known criminals for leads.

The flip side should be conversations with respected leaders in the community, to keep channels open, build trust, and foster mutual assistance. These discussions should take place across the board, and not just in major metropolitan centers.

- Disruption should be our determined goal — no doubt Iran and its proxies are expecting as much.

Ironically, the post-9/11 shift of U.S. law enforcement resources away from drugs and thugs toward counterterrorism may be in need of some recalibration, precisely to serve counterterrorist aims, as criminal and terrorist networks increasingly support and reinforce one another.

Lines in the sand may shift, and the maxim “never say never” is prudent philosophy.

Taking the time and making the effort now to understand Iran (its Quds Force, Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Ministry of Intelligence and Security, etc.) and Hezbollah, and react accordingly, is an investment that is primed to yield substantial returns.

It is important to further peel back and comb through the lessons learned about current tactics, techniques, and procedures as manifested in the spate of recent incidents referenced above.

Refining our understandings in this way will assist with the creation and activation of domestic tripwires designed to keep us left of boom. Though attacks on the United States by Iran and or its proxies have so far been limited to U.S. interests and personnel abroad, the distinction between here and “over there” is no longer as operative as it once was.

The fronts are intertwined, and some analysts have characterized the situation overseas as a “shadow war” between Israel and Iran, with their respective proxies fighting it out, with varying degrees of competence and lethality, in settings from Baku to Bangkok.

Iran and its allies have a penchant, furthermore, for conflating the United States and our ally Israel in the context of Israeli contingency and attack plans, which provides all the more reason to adopt a careful stance, informed by the best possible intelligence, both foreign and domestic.

Now is the time to think through, and operationalize, U.S. strategy – to puncture the threat balloon before it ever goes up.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012...hezbollah-dangerously-out-date/#ixzz1piV4mlDJ



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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://www.voanews.com/english/news...-Deepen-Sudan-Crisis-Says-JEM--143590036.html

Africa
March 20, 2012
Death Sentence against Darfur Rebels Will Deepen Sudan Crisis, Says JEM
Peter Clottey

* Comments

A leading member of the Darfur-based Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) has condemned as illegal a Sudan court ruling that sentenced six members of the group to death.

Ahmed Hussein Adam, JEM’s foreign secretary, also called on human right groups and the international community to pressure the Sudanese government not to carry out the sentence.

“JEM strongly condemns this illegal and criminal judgment or sentence issued by one of the government’s courts,” said Adam. “JEM doesn’t recognize this court because [the ruling is] against the law and against international humanitarian law.”

A Sudanese court Tuesday sentenced to death six members of the rebel group after they were charged with committing criminal acts including terrorism, murder and illegally carrying arms. Among the rebels is Ibrahim al-Maz, a leading member of the group. A 76-year-old member of the group was also sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Adam dismissed the ruling as illegal.

“Where is the law? If there is a law, [President] al-Bashir would now be before the International Criminal Court. If there is law, Abdel Raheem Muhammad Hussein, the defense minister should now be before the International Criminal Court,” continued Adam.

Adam said the rebels are prisoners of war and should be treated under “international humanitarian law under the Geneva convention.” He said they should not be subjected to such rulings.

“It is not a surprise that the government that committed genocide against the people of Darfur …can make this kind of judgment,” said Adam.

He said the rebel group has so far released over 400 prisoners of war from the Sudanese army following clashes with government forces.

“This sentence against our prisoners of war is going to complicate things in Sudan and is actually going to deepen the crisis in Sudan,” continued Adam. “That’s why I call on the international community, the United Nations and all concerned human rights international organizations to act and to intervene to stop this illegal [act] against these prisoners of war.”

The Hague-based International Criminal Court has indicted both the Sudanese leader and the defense minister among others in the administration of orchestrating genocide against the people of Darfur.

Adam said the court ruling is a diversionary tactic employed by Khartoum.

“They can use it to unify their party, which is so divided right now. And you know the ruling party is so desperate because the economy is collapsing and the people of Sudan now want a democratic change. So, they want to divert attention with this kind of sentence,” said Adam.
 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Thanks for sounding another alarm, Dutch! Americans are too clueless as to the large Islamofascist presence here. When these cells go active, there will be widespread carnage that the LEO community, as well as the National Guards, will not be able to rapidly, and effectively, neutralize... We're in trouble deep, Pard, and it can only get worse, before it might get better... These bastards have been here for at least a generation, and are able to walk about us, without our even knowing... Too bad the PTB already knew this, and didn't do a damned thing about it...

OA, out...
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source...
Posted for fair use....
http://au.christiantoday.com/article/christians-targeted-in-sudans-ethnic-cleansing/13002.htm

World
Christians targeted in Sudan’s ‘ethnic cleansing'
Black, largely pro-south civilians of Nuba Mountains flee aerial bombing.
By: Simba Tian
Compass Direct News
Wednesday, 21 March 2012, 13:00 (EST)

The “ethnic cleansing” that Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has undertaken against black Africans in the Nuba Mountains is also aimed at ridding the area of Christianity, according to humanitarian workers.

By targeting Christians among people who are also adherents of Islam and other faiths in the Nuba Mountains, military force helps the regime in Khartoum to portray the violence as “jihad” to Muslims abroad and thus raise support from Islamic nations, said one humanitarian worker on condition of anonymity.

In South Kordofan state – which lies on Sudan’s border with the newly created nation of South Sudan but is home to sympathizers of the southern military that fought against northern forces during Sudan’s long civil war – Bashir’s military strikes are directed at Muslims as well as Christians, but churches and Christians are especially targeted, he said.

“The ongoing war against Christians and African indigenous people is more of an ‘ethnic cleansing’ in that they kill all black people, including Muslims, but they give specific connotation to the war in targeting Christians to secure funding and support from the Arab and Islamic world by saying this war is a religious war,” he said. “And in so doing, they get huge support from those countries.”

Aerial bombardment killed the five members of the Asaja Dalami Kuku family, which belonged to the Episcopal Church of Sudan, in Umsirdipa in the Nuba Mountains on Feb. 25, the source said.

The government in Khartoum is using Antonov airplanes to drop bombs, “coupled with state- sponsored militia targeting churches and Christian families,” said the humanitarian worker.

“The brutal state-sponsored militias are moving from house to house searching for Christian and African indigenous homes as the government continues with air strikes,” he added.

The Satellite Sentinel Project has gathered evidence that Antonov aircraft have indiscriminately bombed civilian populations in South Kordofan, although after a recent crash the government has said it will no longer use the planes.

In Kadugli, the capital of South Kordofan, at least four church buildings have been razed and more than 20 Christians killed, he said.

“The Islamic north sees Nuba Christians as infidels who need to be Islamized through Jihad,” the source said. “But the fact of the matter is this war is ethnic cleansing – a religious as well as political war, indeed a complex situation.”

Between June 2011 and March 2012, four church buildings have been destroyed, said another humanitarian worker; they belonged to the Episcopal Church of Sudan, the Roman Catholic Church, the Sudanese Church of Christ and the Evangelical Presbyterian Church.

“On Aug. 18, 2011, the Sudanese Church of Christ building was razed to ashes,” the worker said.

On June 7, 2011, state-sponsored militia destroyed the office of the Sudan Council of Churches at Kadugli, along with its vehicle, the sources said.

On Feb. 26, three church leaders visited the devastated areas of Kaduguli, led by Bishop Daniel Deng of the Episcopal Church of Sudan, and then presented grievances to the government. They were surprised that the government denied the attack on the church buildings.

“A government official said [southern and other] militia groups were the ones destroying the churches, and not the government,” one of the aid workers said.

Fighting in South Kordofan, a major battleground during Sudan’s 1983-2005 civil war, broke out again in June 2011 as Khartoum moved to assert its authority against gunmen formerly allied to the now independent South Sudan. The conflict between Bashir’s forces and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) spread from South Kordofan to Sudan’s Blue Nile state in September 2011.

The United Nations estimates the conflict has displaced 400,000 people, with 300,000 in danger of starving within a month. Additionally, the U.N. Commissioner for Refugees estimates there are 185,000 refugees from South Kordofan and Blue Nile in South Sudan and Ethiopia.

Sudan’s Interim National Constitution holds up sharia (Islamic law) as a source of legislation, and the laws and policies of the government favor Islam, according to a U.S. Department of State report. On several occasions in the past year, Bashir has warned that Sudan’s constitution will become more firmly entrenched in sharia.

When the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed in 2005, the people of South Kordofan were to decide whether to join the North or the South, but the state governor, wanted for war crimes himself, suspended the process, and Khartoum instead decided to disarm the SPLM-N by force.

“The church and enfeebled women and children have become victims of this fight,” one of the humanitarian workers said. “We as the church have a moral and spiritual obligation to stand with our brothers and sisters who are suffering in the Nuba Mountains.”

For more information, visit www.compassdirect.org
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2012/03/taliban_commander_wa.php

Taliban commander wants Pakistan's nukes, global Islamic caliphate
By Bill Roggio
March 20, 2012

One of the top leaders of the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan said the terror group seeks to overthrow the Pakistani government, impose sharia, or Islamic law, seize the country's nuclear weapons, and wage jihad until "the Caliphate is established across the world."

The statements were made by Omar Khalid al Khurasani, the al Qaeda-linked leader of the Movement the Taliban in Pakistan's branch in the Mohmand tribal agency, in a video that was released on jihadist web forums yesterday. The video, which also discussed the history and evolution of the Movement the Taliban in Pakistan, was released by Umar Studios and has been translated by the SITE Intelligence Group.

In the video, Khalid said the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan was united and strong and operating under the leadership of Hakeemullah Mehsud. Khalid outlined five "important goals" of the Taliban: overthrow the Pakistani institutions; release both Pakistani and "foreign" fighters; impose sharia law; obtain a nuclear weapon; and establish a global caliphate.

"First of all, we aim to counter the Pakistani government, its intelligence agencies, and its army, which are each against Islam and have oppressed the mujahideen and their families," Khalid said, according to the SITE translation. The Taliban want to "avenge the oppression of the mujahideen in the tribal and urban areas" as well as the "humiliation of the mujahideen in Pakistani prisons."

"Our second objective is to seek the safe release of Pakistani and foreign mujahideen in Pakistan," Khalid continued. The term "foreign mujahideen" refers to members of al Qaeda and other outside terror groups such as the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

Khalid said the Taliban want to "replace the English system of democracy with Islamic Shariah" as "the Pakistani system has nothing to do with Islam."

Khalid also said that the Taliban want to seize Pakistan's nuclear weapons and "other resources," including the army, to defend Islam.

"Another objective of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan is to use Pakistan's strengths including the atomic bomb, army, and other resources, to guide other Muslim countries and for the survival of Islam," Khalid said. "Pakistan's soil, Pakistan's people and Pakistan's mujahideen must not be used to serve American interests, but must be used for the survival and integrity of Islam."

Finally, Khalid said that the Taliban would continue their fight even after taking over Pakistan and Afghanistan.

"Our objectives are as clear as the orders in the Qur'an, which is our constitution. Allah said in the Qur'an: 'Fight against hypocrites and apostates till there is no more fitna [sedition],'" he said. "So, until Islam is implemented in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and the Caliphate is established across the world, our jihad will continue. This is our first and foremost objective."

Mohmand Taliban under command of able leader

Khalid is a senior deputy of Hakeemullah Mehsud's Taliban movement. Khalid is considered one of the Taliban's most effective and powerful leaders in the tribal areas. He also maintains close ties to al Qaeda and is believed to have given sanctuary to Ayman al Zawahiri in the past.

Khalid is also allied with Qari Zia Rahman, the dual-hatted Taliban and al Qaeda leader who operates in Pakistan's tribal agencies of Mohmand and Bajaur as well as in Afghanistan's provinces of Kunar and Nuristan. Rahman established and runs the suicide training camps that are used to indoctrinate and train female bombers [see LWJ report, Al Qaeda, Taliban create female suicide cells in Pakistan and Afghanistan]. In August 2011, Khalid claimed credit for a female suicide attack in Peshawar.

Khalid has been active in the Taliban's propaganda machine since the death of Osama bin Laden, and has been vocal in his support of al Qaeda. In mid-May, Khalid vowed revenge on Pakistani and US forces for the death of Osama bin Laden.

"We will take revenge of Osama's killing from the Pakistani government, its security forces, the Pakistani ISI, the CIA and the Americans, they are now on our hit list," Khalid said. "Osama bin Laden has given us the ideology of Islam and Jihad, by his death we are not scattered but it has given us more strength to continue his mission."

In early June, Khalid said the Taliban have been behind the spate of attacks in Pakistan and again threatened the US.

"Our war against America is continuing inside and outside of Pakistan. When we launch attacks, it will prove that we can hit American targets outside Pakistan," Khalid said.

In the same interview, Khalid said that Ayman al Zawahiri is al Qaeda's "chief and supreme leader." He stated this more than one week before Zawahiri was officially declared emir of al Qaeda.

Khalid gained prominence during the summer of 2007 after taking over a famous shrine in Mohmand and renaming it the Red Mosque in honor of the radical mosque in Islamabad whose followers had attempted to impose sharia in the capital.

The Mohmand Taliban took control of the tribal agency after the Pakistani government negotiated a peace agreement with the extremists at the end of May 2008. The deal required the Taliban to renounce attacks on the Pakistani government and security forces. The Taliban said they would maintain a ban on the activities of nongovernmental organizations in the region but agreed not to attack women in the workplace as long as they wore veils. Both sides exchanged prisoners.

The Taliban promptly established a parallel government in Mohmand. Sharia courts were formed, and orders were given for women to wear the veil in public. "Criminals" were rounded up and judged in sharia courts. Women were ordered to have a male escort at all times and were prevented from working on farms. The Taliban also kidnapped members of a polio vaccination team.

In July 2008, Khalid became the dominant Taliban commander in Mohmand after defeating the Shah Sahib group, a rival pro-Taliban terror group with ties to the Lashkar-e-Taiba. The military claimed it killed Khalid in January of 2009, but the Taliban denied the report and he has since surfaced.

The Pakistani government placed a $123,000 bounty on Khalid's head in 2009. But Pakistan has failed not only to arrest or kill Khalid; it has yet to capture or kill any of the terrorist leaders on that bounty list. The US succeeded in killing Baitullah Mehsud, who topped the list, in a drone strike in South Waziristan in August 2009.
 
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