WAR 01/31/2013 to 02/07/2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Mzkitty

I give up.
KimbRothschild: Turkey has just accused the leftist DHKP-C . #Ankara
Friday, February 01, 2013 9:32:48 AM

Alexbarnett77: Former reporter injured in explosion at US embassy in #Ankara according to local media in Turkey via @HDNER http://t.co/xfoAdBLr
Friday, February 01, 2013 9:31:29 AM

Former reporter in critical condition after U.S. embassy blast

Former reporter Didem Tuncay is currently in critical condition at Ankara’s Numune Hospital after receiving treatment for injuries sustained in a bombing at the U.S. embassy in the capital earlier today.

Tuncay, who reportedly at the site to file a visa application, suffered a head wound and was taken to the hospital around 1:40 p.m., just minutes after the blast occurred.

Tuncay, a 38-year-old Turkish citizen, is still in critical condition with health officials continuing to conduct a series of tests to better determine her state of health. She is being treated in the hospital’s intensive care unit.

Tuncay was a former reporter for the private NTV channel.

A suicide bomb attack at the U.S. Embassy in Ankara killed one Turkish security guard along with the attacker.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/fo...last-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=40306&NewsCatID=341
 

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Mzkitty

I give up.
MFIjournalist: The bomber's name is Ecevit Şanlı,a DHKP-C member(Ecevit is the surname of a late leftist prime minister)via @AkyolinEnglish #Turkey #Ankara
Friday, February 01, 2013 10:07:51 AM

Anil62_: RT @wellsla: #BREAKING: live press conf. in #Turkey; dead attacker of #USEmbassy in #Ankara a member of #DHKPC, leftist anti-#US "terrorist" group
Friday, February 01, 2013 10:07:42 AM

Kostian_V: #US Embassy Blast in #Ankara , #Turkey (raw footage) - YouTube http://t.co/L20N9XWP
Friday, February 01, 2013 10:05:59 AM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Grb8-WpVhgQ&feature=em-uploademail

 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://debka.com/article/22731/Suic...-may-be-payback-for-Israel’s-Syria-airstrike-

Suicide blast kills guard at US Ankara embassy - may be payback for Israel’s Syria airstrike
DEBKAfile Special Report February 1, 2013, 3:56 PM (GMT+02:00)
Tags: bombing attack US Turkey Iran Syria
Suicide bombing at US embassy, Ankara


A Turkish security guard was killed and several others injured in a huge explosion set off by a suicide bomber at a side entrance of the US embassy in Ankara Friday, Feb. 1. Embassy staff dove into fortified shelters as smoke and debris rose in clouds over the fortified compound. Local TV showed damage to a compound wall and a smashed embassy building window. No organization has taken responsibility for the attack.

debkafile’s counter-terror sources initially estimate that the attack was the work either of al Qaeda, Syrian intelligence or Hizballah, possibly as part of the payback for Israel’s air strike Wednesday against the Jamraya military complex near Damascus. That complex served both Hizballah and the Syrian army and Syria has already threatened retribution on the scale of an earthquake.

It may also have been retaliation for the stationing of US Patriot missiles on the Turkish Syrian border or the meeting arranged for US Vice President Joe Biden with the Syrian opposition leader Mouaz Alkhatib in Munich, Germany.

Plenty of warnings have issued from Tehran on all three counts.

On Dec. 15, Iran’s armed forces chief Gen. Hassan Firouzabadi warned that the deployment of American anti-missile batteries in Turkey could cause a world war. Last Saturday, Jan. 26, Ali Akbar Velayati, a close aide of the Iranian supreme leader, declared that attacking Syria was tantamount to attacking Iran.
Israel’s air strike may have been the last straw for Tehran, which warned the “Tel Aviv regime” would suffer “grave consequences.”

By targeting the US embassy in Turkey, the Iranians and their allies may have been starting to hit back for all these grievances at the same time: the Israeli attack, the Patriots and Washington’s support for the Syrian opposition.

If that is so, then the US embassy bombing won’t be the last act of terror planned by Syria, Hizballah and Iran.

It is not the first time that the Iranian-Syrian-Hizballah alliance has targeted US interests in Turkey for terrorist attacks. On Aug. 21, 2012, seven months ago, a large bomb car blew up in the southern Turkish town of Gaziantep near the Syrian border, killing eight people and injuring at least 66.

No findings were ever released from the investigation of that incident. According to our sources, the bomb car was rigged by a terrorist cell serving Syrian military intelligence in collaboration with Hizballah, like many other political hits carried out in Lebanon over the years.

The Gaziantep attack was directed against the command center established in that town for US intelligence and special forces alongside a Free Syrian Army center.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Looks like things are getting crazy again in Egypt:

joinRAD: RT @CIApressoffice: Mention @MuhammadMorsi ask him how the walls are holding up. They are on fire so we imagine not very well. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:39:06 PM

karemisaid: As clearly seen on OnTV "@Sarahngb: Anything currently aflame has been set on fire by CSF." #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:39:00 PM

bencnn: Hard to believe President of #Egypt uses twitter to issue statements. He says security will act decisively to PROTECT state institutions
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:40:30 PM

anubidal: RT!!! #Egypt #Feb1 @Nadawassef: CSF conscripts burning down the tents outside #Itihadeya aired live now on @ontvlive
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:40:28 PM

nancyayoussef: RT @bencnn: Morsi calls on political forces to condemn violence and withdraw supporters from around Itihadiya palace. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:40:21 PM

Elserari: #Egypt protesters clash with police at President Morsi's palace http://t.co/U4ovMNUt
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:40:18 PM

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-21289729

MaiE_89: (2) @MuhammadMorsi also noted that the police and security forces would be ordered to deal with "violence" resolutely and strictly. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:40:12 PM

BBCAfrica: In a statement, #Egypt's Presidency says that the violence outside the palace is not a politically legitimate means of expression.
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:39:59 PM

anubidal: RT!!! @Reem_Abdellatif: Police frantically scrambling to disperse molotov/rock throwing protesters from #Egypt's plc. No presidential guard
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:39:51 PM

MarkElMasry: "WATCH LIVE: Fire breaks out in front of presidential palace in #Cairo as anti-Morsi protest turns violent http://t.co/i0qNFrvH #Egypt"
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:39:28 PM

http://rt.com/on-air/egypt-protest-live-clashes/

thejaoana: RT @Princessluna11: Very very intense at the #PresidentPalace in #Cario #Egypt Fires burning from Police starting tents of fire and fire is spreading #Tahrir
Friday, February 01, 2013 12:50:28 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
US and Turkish staff were struck by flying debris in Ankara US Embassy blast; treated on site, released, US State Department says - @Reuters

2 mins ago by editor

Update: Guard, bomber killed in Ankara US Embassy blast; police sources initially thought 3 were killed
- @NBCNews

6 mins ago from worldnews.nbcnews.com by editor
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
NewsBytesNow: Flash: At least 48 people were injured following clashes in front of the presidential palace in Cairo #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:19:39 PM

SalBytes: water sprayed on protesters, who responded with rocks, csf in turn threw tear gas, sm protesters threw molotov all hell broke loose #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:34:56 PM

MattapanAction: RT @CIApressoffice: Aerial live stream of on going battle in front of the presidential palace in #Cairo #Egypt. http://t.co/y4pTgBEs
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:34:49 PM

It works ^^^^^^^^^

Beltrew: Car breaks through frontline,big tear gas attack, canisters flying everywhere, does a quick U-turn. Someone's sat nav let them down #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:34:37 PM

DioscorusBoles: Yes, the US can ditch Morsi if it wants and put a stop to the Islamists' dark shadow in the MENA. @USEmbassyCairo @StateDept #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:34:32 PM

TheLazyShaman: mom holding tissues w vinegar to her nose after we got a wind of tear gas in the house. #itihadeya #egypt http://t.co/37PkZu0S
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:39:10 PM

https://twitter.com/TheLazyShaman/status/297413797868601346/photo/1

bothainakamel1: RT @OmarKamel: To Our Dear President #Morsi: Do you really think you can take on this opposition? http://t.co/c0biuWty #Morsi #Egypt #Tahrir #MB
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:39:06 PM

http://www.flickr.com/photos/righter/8435097537/in/set-72157632666496712

sharifkouddous: Multiple tear gas rounds being fired at crowd near presidential palace #Egypt http://t.co/xkawRi3s
Friday, February 01, 2013 1:41:49 PM

https://twitter.com/sharifkouddous/status/297414468399411201/photo/1
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
ColorMeRed: The crowd inf front of TV bldg came from Tahrir, growing steadily. #egypt via @bencnn #TGDN #tcot #lnyhbt #ocra #RESIST44 #egypt #p2 #MB
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:27:11 PM

amirahoweidy: RT @Beltrew: ****, just saw csf shoot birdshot close range straight at protester, he falls and is dragged into costa. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:27:11 PM

MostafaAbnSami: RT @Beltrew: This is really bad. Really nasty. So much gunfire. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:27:05 PM

DillingersGhost: RT @AymanM: #protestors swarming cars blocking corniche street outside #maspiro #egypt's state media building http://t.co/H8YhyzAK
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:27:06 PM

http://instagram.com/p/VMy5banENJ/

Robespierre2013: RT @vdesc: Lost in chaos #egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:30:23 PM

BetOnMisr: "@TheBigPharaoh: Reports that live ammo is being used at the presidential palace." #Egypt Thanks to the U.S. backed #MB!
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:30:11 PM

samar_ismail: RT @Beltrew: Guy who was shot close range at costa is carried out. Ambulance picks him up- people shout 'don't shoot' #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:32:14 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Sarhan_: It all started when #Morsi imposed his non-consensual constitution in #Egypt, pushing people to lose confidence in democracy!
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:42:13 PM

weskandar: According to @Beltrew police shot a costa employee after he said to the officers he just wants to go home. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:41:20 PM

laylaanwar: Highly secretive cells within armed forces cells within cells #MB #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:41:16 PM

Hmmmm...... this all sounds vaguely familiar somehow..............

Fandango52: Not allowed to wear masks while you protest, wear a hijab! Men too! Side effect... it'll keep the real women from being raped. #egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:46:37 PM

Beltrew: 4 protesters advance behind metal sheet. One has molotov. Then #csf shoot birdshot straight at them-several rounds. They're running. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:46:37 PM

jamesx61: RT @soit_goes: Beautiful image of #Tahrir Square this evening. #Egypt #Cairo http://t.co/LviPzRbe
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:41:16 PM
 

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Be Well

may all be well
Thanks to all news hounds.

Reading the news thread today makes my skin crawl and hair literally stand on end. Insane and crazy doesn't even touch it.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Indyradmama: RT @sharifkouddous: Continuos tear gas and birdshot being fired at crowd near presidential palace #Egypt http://t.co/H9E4AIwT
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:52:19 PM

https://twitter.com/sharifkouddous/status/297431164430454785/photo/1

ESlAM_ElERAKY: We will be in deep shit !!! #Egypt #مصر
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:51:48 PM

jettzworld: RT @ibnezra: RT @bencnn: Police mobilizing at TV building, crowd coming down street, Big confrontation coming #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:51:08 PM

AlanaBowker: RT @AnonNewsSwe: The police are shooting at the people in #Egypt, #Cairo || Stay safe @TahrirBodyguard || Live stream: http://t.co/VVCXYsGA
Friday, February 01, 2013 2:56:13 PM

Camera trained on cops ^^^^^^^^
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
A glimpse into our future:

InesBelAiba: :-( "@Beltrew: Oh my god, they stripped a guy, they dragged him. He's naked. The police are animals. They're beating him. ****. #Egypt"
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:02:48 PM

AnonShinobi: “@OCCUPYCARLISLE: just counted 10 gunshot in a row being fired upon protesters in #Egypt” This is what will happen in the U.S in time
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:02:47 PM

OCCUPYCARLISLE: The police have taken 2 people. Beating he shit out of someone. Dragging him on the ground. They stripped him, they stripped him #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:02:30 PM

AlanaBowker: RT @jrosyfield: clashes happening in front of the Canadian embassy in #Cairo's garden city. teargas filling the area #tahrir #jan25 #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:02:29 PM

sallookka: RT @Nadawassef: Just shown on @ontveg NOW CSF dragged a man,beat him and ripped his clothes,dragged him into an APC @monasosh #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:05:34 PM

OCCUPYCARLISLE: **** the gun fire is intensifying. this is crazy #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:05:32 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
bitter_sweet140: RT @Beltrew: They dragged the protester they stripped naked and beat into the other #csf truck. God knows what they're doing to him #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:07:35 PM

BylineBeat: RT @eliselabottcnn: SecState John Kerry first official trip later this month. Plans to include stops in #Israel, #Egypt. Also invited to European capitals
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:07:25 PM

stony599: RT @ArlenWms: MT @m24miles: FAILED: Rand Paul's amendment to prohibit transfer of F-16s & tanks to #Egypt; ROLL CALL VOTE http://t.co/kJn1q9M3 #sovcam
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:07:00 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
analyticnomad: RT @Beltrew: It's brutal brutal here. Police have control of streets firing a lot of shot guns. Beating people they catch viciously. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:15:57 PM

adammowafi: RT @kanaafa: To ppl sitting in their bubble jerking off over desperate kids fighting cops/Ikhwan… man-up or shut-up #Egypt #Feb113
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:15:49 PM

northaura: #Egypt MT @Beltrew. Police shot at, beat and stripped a man, dragged him across concrete. Dragged him naked, his face scrapping the ground.
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:15:47 PM

missmayse: Watching guys standing up to guns with rocks. It is incredible to see. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:15:43 PM

TahrirBodyguard: We are a non political group but we strongly condemn police brutality taking place against protesters in #Itihadeya . #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:15:34 PM

MaiE_89: Here's the video of the man who was stripped, dragged, & beaten by CSF forces http://t.co/6T4JuWzX via @rdwawyssin #Egypt #Ittihadiya
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:18:42 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AlgUUGKZ4R4&feature=youtu.be

 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Oh goodie.

Winter Soldier gets to go see what fighting really is. Wonder if he'll collect a PH for a paper cut on this trip.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
fantakosia: PIGS ****ING PIGS. #****POLICE #EGYPT #MORSI
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:21:37 PM

SalBytes: #egypt csf beats and strips a man of clothes on live tv at pres palace
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:21:34 PM

nerminenabil1: The #egypt ian police are ANIMALS! #morsi did you see the video of them dragging naked protester beating him so inhumanely? Bastards!!
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:21:28 PM

liamstack: Follow the brave @Beltrew who is live tweeting police response to clashes at #itihadeyya. Gunshots, beating & stripping protesters #egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:21:14 PM

ColorMeRed: Egyptian police do a great job of creating their own problem. via @evanchill #EGYPT #CAIRO #TAHRIR #MORSI #MB
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:24:20 PM

ikabirsule: #Egypt boils again, as protesters, police clash in many cities
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:23:56 PM

aerdt: If the police think this kind of behavior is the solution, think again. This will only enrage protesters and escalate the violence #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:25:32 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Mai_AbdelKader: @ONtvLIVE First death reported caused by gunfire #Egypt #Cairo #Morsi
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:27:31 PM

DEMSnREPS2BLAME: NO 2 #HAGEL.NO 2 F-16s & #Abrams #tanks 2 #Egypt.#Senate had chance 2 stop the sale but DIDNT! Who will they use them against??? NO BRAINER
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:28:47 PM

virtualactivism: RT @MaiE_89: Another version of the horrifying video where CSF beat, strip, and drag protester via @ONtveg http://t.co/xpi95iBJ #Egypt #Ittihadiya
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:28:11 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJBFYEt859A&feature=youtu.be

 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Egypture_: The DIGNITY: Is nothing to be laughed about #EGYPT #****YOUMORSI
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:31:39 PM

musik1989: RT @kristenchick: I am sick to my stomach from watching this video of #Egypt police stripping, dragging, and beating a man http://t.co/Dbu2cvAD
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:31:38 PM

batootzamalek: RT @Ro2ahazem: the ugly truth #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:33:23 PM

CurlyZeee: RT @Nadawassef: The one thing that can truly unite us all is our hatred of the police. #ACAB #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:33:20 PM

JasminaOnline: The roofwindow of that policevan was open, you can see they did not just stripped and hit him only outside of the van. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:33:10 PM

ashiewk: The Armed forces of #Morsi are singling protestors and attacking them like hyenas... #Egypt #fb
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:34:59 PM

Old_Holborn: Looks like #Egypt got fooled again http://t.co/5VswKtcw
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:34:57 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LjA_RtsBfAo&feature=youtu.be

 

Mzkitty

I give up.
AhmedMhmd: ONE OF THE STRONGEST TEAR GAS I'VE EVER SMELLED, MILLIONS SPENT TONIGHT #EGYPT
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:36:46 PM

Dunya_hassanein: RT @yeh1a: #egypt presidential palace now. Tear gas & sporadic confrontations (via ontv live feed) but the night is young http://t.co/RAv7ZLzk
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:37:49 PM

https://twitter.com/yeh1a/status/297443281799872512/photo/1

NoonArabia: “@Abdallah_h: On @ONtvLIVE, police rid badly beaten up guy of his clothing, beat him with batons, drag him around.” #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:37:42 PM

htay_allday: RT @Beltrew: Hate the sound of the reloading of the gun. It's worse than the gunfire. Lots of shotgun pellets being fired now. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:39:03 PM


So.............. it's useless to mass protest. They will do the same or worse to us. Think sneakier.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Beltrew: I want to repeat the police were laughing and shouting 'go get him' before capturing,stripping,beating and dragging man #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:44:16 PM

NiveenAbdelaziz: And this is why we're continuing this revolution. Nothing has changed. I feel like we're back at where we started. #Jan25 #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:44:13 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
BondInNewYork: .@nytimes If you mean subdued as in 'over', you couldn't be more wrong, judging from what I've just seen! #Egypt #Anonymous
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:02:51 PM

geokem7: RT @Beltrew: Big push from #csf - ambulances make a swift exit as tear gas engulfs Khalifa Mamoon street. Protesters flee #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:02:47 PM

sarahahmed80: RT @Sarhan_: #Egypt protesters calling Morsi "Morsilini" a reference to the Italian fascist dictator Mussolini. @stevenacook @bencnn http://t.co/EJRq7SGW
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:02:58 PM

Beltrew: Police just did a pincher movement. One lot moving slowly towards Khalifa Mamoon, another group came around the side started shooting #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 3:59:17 PM

This is little Beltrew, out there on those mean streets, to bring the world the news:
 

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Mzkitty

I give up.
Ranahalim: RT @Cairo67Unedited: when you strip a man when you strip a woman you strip the nation. #Egypt #morsi #csf
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:09:06 PM

Foulyism: RT @Gsquare86: Mohamed Hussien Orani, 23 years old, dead by gunshot in chest #Itihadiya CONFIRMED #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:08:58 PM

notalreadytaken: RT @Omniaaldesoukie: Two years struggling for dignity and this is what #Egypt ians get, being stripped naked in a protest! http://t.co/EEJVmIjf
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:11:28 PM

marmoora: I'd rather you shoot me and kill me with dignity than to strip me naked and beat me in the middle of the street.. #egypt #egypolice.
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:12:49 PM
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
AhmedTawfik1996: This is the results of #Morsi authorizing any types of violence for state security to combat protests in his last speech. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:16:39 PM

A_Fotouh: RT @FatennMostafa: What a successful trip Mr President! "@MayarAbdelAziz: #Germany issues travel warning for all of #Egypt http://t.co/gw662NqQ
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:16:38 PM

acarvin: RT @Zeyadsalem: I wonder when will the days of checking if a friend of yours is tweeting to make sure they are still alive. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:19:09 PM

aerdt: MoI orders investigation into incident of police beating and dragging a naked man. Or most likely why they did so in front of camera #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:19:01 PM

Beltrew: Clashes on Khalifa Mamoon street now. Protesters pushed right back, even though fighting originated by gates of presidential palace #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:18:59 PM

Revenant0303: I hope you all realize that #Egypt is getting these tanks and planes for free. Technically they "bought" them, but we kicked the money back.
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:18:45 PM

PygmySioux: RT @Jmaklad: Bullshit! Just b/c scene caught on tape #egypt MOI orders investigation. What about those in jails &out of sight. #ikhwan hypocrites LEAVE
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:18:01 PM

Faboueldahab: There it goes, the last bit of humanity left in this country. #egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:17:02 PM

JosephThabet: Even if the naked guy was a Thug WHY abuse him like that? There is no law in #Egypt. It's a street war. @JosphineMamdouh #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:23:39 PM

NDiwany: RT @Kemety: What happened wasn't that an #Egypt-ian citizen got stripped naked, it's Muslim Brother's regime that got stripped naked in front of world
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:23:05 PM

VividSocialNet: RT @ASE: Tear gas outside the presidential palace in #Egypt http://t.co/7ZOWCCCH via @sharifkouddous
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:25:02 PM

http://instagram.com/p/VM8TN6xUdB/

theseinspire: Nearly 11:30 PM in Heliopolis Cairo #Egypt and protesters holding ground. CSF maintaining defense. No clue to how/when this ends
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:24:13 PM
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.google.com/hostednews/af...ocId=CNG.bf7138e37d4cb14dba220e58be70d6a9.1b1

Suicide bomber kills 24 at Pakistan mosques

By S.H. Khan (AFP) – 33 minutes ago

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A suicide bomber targeted a Shiite Muslim mosque in northwest Pakistan on Friday, killing 24 people and wounding up to 55 as worshippers poured out of weekly prayers, officials said.

The bomber detonated explosives packed into a motorcycle in a narrow lane containing both the Shiite and a Sunni Muslim mosque in the town of Hangu, the latest bloody sectarian attack in a country where such violence is on the rise.

Pools of blood and pieces of human flesh littered the street after the attack, which also destroyed at least five nearby shops, witnesses said.

"It was a suicide attack which targeted Shiites but Sunni Muslims also fell victim since their mosque and some shops were also very close to the site," district police chief Mian Muhammad Saeed told AFP.

"We have found the head of the bomber, who came there on a motorbike," he said, putting the death toll at 24 with up to 55 others wounded.

Police said the bomb exploded as Shiites were leaving Friday prayers and Sunnis were going into their mosque for the main weekly sermon.

Hangu has long been a flashpoint for violence against minority Shiites, who make up an estimated 20 percent of Pakistan's population of 180 million.

The town is close to Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal belt on the Afghan border where Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants have carved out strongholds.

"The Shiite and Sunni mosques are very close to each other, and the explosion took place just as Shiites were coming out of the mosque and Sunnis were going into their mosque to say Friday prayers," said police official Imtiaz Shah.

Muzammil Hussain, a 28-year-old Shiite who received wounds to his head and hand, told AFP that he heard the blast as he left the mosque.

"As soon as I reached the mosque exit, a huge blast rocked the area. Many people fell on me with the impact of the blast," he said by telephone from the District Headquarters hospital (DHQ) in nearby Kohat.

"I saw red and bloodied pieces of human flesh everywhere. It was a scene I'd never seen in my life before. I was half conscious when people shifted me to a local hospital from where my family took me to the DHQ," he said.

Police constable Raaz Muhammad, who took part in the rescue effort, said the blast damaged two shops selling cosmetics and three trading in vegetables.

"I could see pieces of human flesh and big blood stains on the boundary walls of the mosque and on nearby shops," he said.

"The entire street was littered with sandals and caps of the people who were coming out of the mosque," he added.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

On January 10, a twin suicide attack killed 92 Shiites from the Hazara ethnic community in the southwestern city of Quetta -- the worst single attack on Shiites in Pakistan.

Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Pakistan's most extreme Sunni terror group, claimed responsibility for the attack.

It is linked to both Al-Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban -- Sunni fundamentalists who have fought an insurgency against the government since 2007.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) says it documented a sharp escalation in persecution of religious minorities in Pakistan in 2012, which it called the deadliest year on record for Shiites, with well over 400 killed in targeted attacks.

Activists accuse the government of failing to protect Shiites and say the perpetrators operate with impunity because the judiciary fails to prosecute them.

"Pakistan's human rights crisis worsened markedly in 2012 with religious minorities bearing the brunt of killings and repression," Ali Dayan Hasan, Pakistan director at HRW, said in the group's annual report.

"The government needs to show some backbone and act urgently to protect vulnerable communities such as the Hazara, or risk appearing indifferent or even complicit in the mass killing of its own citizens," he added.

Copyright © 2013 AFP. All rights reserved. More »

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use......
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/02/01/uk-syria-crisis-idUKBRE9100KS20130201

Moscow, U.N. play down report of four-way Syria talks

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis
AMMAN | Fri Feb 1, 2013 8:47pm GMT

(Reuters) - Moscow and the United Nations played down Syrian opposition assertions that its leader would hold a joint meeting with the U.N. Syria envoy and officials from the United States and Russia at a security conference in Munich on Saturday.

But a Russian diplomatic source did not rule out a meeting taking place 'spontaneously' at the weekend Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe in the southern German city.

If it occurred it would be the first time the United States and Russia, who have been at loggerheads over whether President Bashar al-Assad can have a role in a transitional government, had sat down together with the opposition.

Opposition sources had said early on Friday that National Coalition President Moaz Alkhatib would meet Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi on the sidelines of the conference.

But a U.N. official and a senior Russian diplomat said there no plans for them all to meet together.

"The U.N. special envoy is not involved in any trilateral meetings," a U.N. official in Munich said, though Brahimi did plan separate meetings with Biden, Alkhatib and Lavrov.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov said Lavrov was not scheduled to take part in expanded talks.

"Media reports of a meeting in Munich in the format of Lavrov-Biden-Brahimi and Syrian opposition representative Alkhatib do not correspond with reality," he said.

Lavrov has yet to meet Alkhatib, who in December rejected a Russian invitation to come to Moscow for talks and urged Lavrov to apologise for what he said was Russian intervention in Syria and support for Assad.

Russia, Syria's main arms supplier, has blocked three U.N. Security Council resolutions on the 22-month-old Syrian conflict, which has killed more than 60,000 people.

Alkhatib had to fight off an overnight challenge to his authority after going against the opposition's established position by saying he was willing to sit with Syrian officials to discuss a transition if tens of thousands of political prisoners arrested since the revolt began were freed, without Assad stepping down first.

A high-level Coalition member told Reuters Alkhatib's changed position is what softened the resistance of the Russians to a meeting.

Brahimi told the Security Council this week that he believed an international accord reached in Geneva last year, which was deliberately vague about Assad's future role, was "largely understood... (to mean) that the President would have no role in the transition".

Brahimi likened cities in Syria to the battered German capital Berlin at the end of World War Two.

Citing the "mass murder" of nearly 100 students at Aleppo University, the "slaughter" of civilians in Homs province and the apparent execution of 65 men in an Aleppo suburb - all in the last month - Brahimi said Syria's "tragedy simply does not have an end".

STRATEGY FOR PEACE OR WAR

The Coalition's 12-member politburo met until 5 a.m. on Friday and instructed Alkhatib not to respond to any proposals made in Munich without consulting with them first.

The structure of the 70-member Islamist-dominated coalition, which was formed with Western and Arab backing in December, makes Alkhatib, a Sunni preacher from Damascus, a first among equals rather than an outright leader.

The opposition source said the "knives were out for Alkhatib" from Islamists on the politburo and from the Syrian National Council after his remarks, which Kamal al-Labwani, a secular leader and long-time political prisoner, said hurt the morale of the revolt.

Alkhatib responded that he was motivated by the plight of the prisoners, many of whom are in secret police dungeons, and made clear that he still believed Assad and his cohorts must eventually leave.

A Western diplomat in contact with the Syrian opposition said any proposals made in Munich had to be crafted carefully if Alkhatib was going to be able to accept without losing credibility.

"The level of frustration among the opposition with lack of international support for the revolt is very high," the diplomat said. "We may be seeing one of the last chances before the opposition says: 'To hell with the international community, and let's direct all our efforts toward war'."

FRUSTRATION

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged Assad's allies Iran and Russia on Thursday to rethink their positions, saying the conflict could still spill beyond its borders. More than 700,000 Syrians have fled into neighbouring countries.

She told reporters there were signs that Iran was sending more people and increasingly sophisticated weaponry to support Assad's war, in which he has lost swathes of rural areas but managed to hold on to the central parts of most major cities.

"I personally have been warning for quite some time of the dangers associated with an increasingly lethal civil war and a potential proxy war," Clinton told a small group of reporters.

"Therefore, I think it's incumbent on those nations that have refused to be constructive players to reconsider their positions because the worst kind of predictions of what could happen internally and spilling over the borders of Syria are certainly within the realm of the possible now."

Western support for the uprising has been mostly limited to political rhetoric denouncing Assad and humanitarian aid, despite pleas from rebels for arms.

On Wednesday, Israeli jets struck what Syria said was a military research centre and diplomats said was a weapons convoy heading for Lebanon.

Syria warned of a possible "surprise" response. Lebanese residents reported that Israeli war planes were flying in Lebanese airspace on Friday, a common occurrence but more sensitive after the strike.

(Writing by Oliver Holmes; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.scmp.com/news/china/arti...access-documents-support-japans-claim-diaoyus

Beijing cuts access to documents 'that support Japan's claim to Diaoyus'
Saturday, 02 February, 2013, 12:00am

Julian Ryall in Tokyo

Japan's Jiji Press news agency says the Chinese Foreign Ministry has been "strictly limiting" access to its archives since the start of this year because they might contain documents that support Tokyo's claim to the Senkaku - or Diaoyu - Islands.

In a story from Beijing, the agency reported that unidentified Chinese researchers said they suspected the limits on access had been imposed as a result of a document that a Jiji Press journalist had found in the archives in December.

Jiji said the 10-page document was a draft outline on territorial disputes to be used as the basis of a peace treaty with Japan that was produced by the Chinese government in May 1950.

Throughout the document, the Chinese reportedly refer to the disputed islands as the Senkakus and describe them as part of the Ryukyu chain, in modern-day Okinawa prefecture.

The document has been widely cited in Japan as evidence that China made no claim of sovereignty until reserves of oil and natural gas were located in nearby waters in the early 1970s.

In response to a query about why access was being restricted, Hong Lei , a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry in Beijing, told Jiji the archive was "in the process of updating its computer system for technical reasons".

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Mzkitty

I give up.
ozgulayse: RT @ikhras: The MB in #Syria & #Egypt are allied w/the Zionist imperialist alliance in the entire #MENA region. @ikhwanSyria @Ikhwanweb
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:55:14 PM

I saw a tweet that said Israel wants Egypt to have those F-16's......

moftasa: RT @RashaAbdulla: Emma Maersk, one of the biggest cargo ships in the world, is drowning in the Suez Canal. Fears of canal blockage. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:55:10 PM

AngusBlair1: If news is true that a supertanker's sinking in the Suez Canal, then #Egypt looks that bit more screwed. The Canal's a key revenue generator
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:55:04 PM

tublani2010: RT @Beltrew: Two words: Police reform. Witnessed disgusting behaviour tonight. Disgusting. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:55:01 PM

Mariyam11: RT @hmhex: #Egypt hurts. #Syria burns. #Palestine withers. #Mali languishes. #Pakistan bursts. #US parties. #Israel bloats.#China blooms. #Russia looms
Friday, February 01, 2013 4:54:43 PM
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Pulling F-16 aircraft out of AMARC for the Philippines wouldn't be the problem. The problem will be getting their air crews, maintenance and other support services up to speed to get the most use out of them. That would also really mean AWACS and AAR capability of some kind if everyone is really serious.

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.......
http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/article/1140584/manila-signals-resolve-defence-news-fighter-jet-deal

Manila signals resolve on defence with news of fighter jet deal
Friday, 01 February, 2013, 12:00am
Greg Torode
greg.torode@scmp.com

If last week's move by Manila to challenge Beijing's territorial claims at the United Nations highlighted its legal and diplomatic intent, this week's announcement that it is poised to buy a squadron of fighter jets from South Korea shows its determination to create a meaningful strategic deterrent.

For years the Philippines' armed forces have been dismissed by military analysts as a joke, but the prospect of its first operational fighters in more than a decade is merely the latest in a string of recent acquisitions that are being closely watched in Beijing.

Philippine defence officials confirmed yesterday that Manila would this month finalise a US$443 million contract to purchase 12 FA-50 light fighter jets from Korea Aerospace Industries of South Korea.

Two planes could arrive within six months to be used for training - the first time in the best part of two decades since the Philippines had operable jet fighters, United States-made F-5s from the Vietnam war era. "They are not arming themselves to the teeth, but they are making up for years of atrophy," said Richard Bitzinger, a senior fellow at Singapore's S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies. "They've been floundering around for years with possible purchases, but now they are getting some things done - it may not be a credible deterrent yet, but it is at least a start."

The FA-50s can be used for a range of fighting and ground attack scenarios but are also considered a vital training platform if the Philippines pushes ahead with other possible purchases, including larger US F-16s.

News of the deal comes after a busy 12 months or so that has seen the Philippines move to acquire three ageing coast guard cutters from the US, three used frigates from Italy and 10 state-of-the-art coast guard ships from Japan under an aid project, doubling its current fleet. Deals are also in the works with France and Canada.

President Benigno Aquino has significantly expanded defence spending, vowing to overturn years of official neglect by creating a workable strategic deterrent.

While officials repeatedly insist that the build-up is not aimed at China, the moves come amid months of intensifying tension with China over the South China Sea, including the permanent stationing of Chinese ships inside the disputed Scarborough Shoal.

"The military upgrade is already a priority before our incident with China," said Aquino spokesman Edwin Lacierda.

Dr Ian Storey, a strategic scholar at the Institute of Southeast Asia Studies, said while the Philippines was clearly diversifying by buying from a range of sources, it would still please its main security ally, America.

"For years now, Washington has been urging the Philippines to rebuild and expand its military capability, so it will be music to American ears that this is starting to happen."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opinion/asias-own-balkans-a-tinderbox/story-e6frg6zo-1226566850594

Asia's own 'Balkans' a tinderbox

by: Kevin Rudd
From: The Australian
February 02, 2013 12:00AM

THESE are no ordinary times in East Asia. With tensions rising from conflicting territorial claims in the East China and South China seas, the region increasingly resembles a 21st-century maritime redux of the Balkans a century ago - a tinderbox on water.

Nationalist sentiment is surging across the region, reducing the domestic political space for less confrontational approaches. Relations between China and Japan have now fallen to their lowest ebb since diplomatic normalisation in 1972, significantly reducing bilateral trade and investment volumes, and causing regional governments to monitor developments with growing alarm.

Relations between China and Vietnam, and between China and The Philippines, have also deteriorated significantly, while key regional institutions such as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations have become increasingly polarised. In security terms, the region is more brittle than at any time since the fall of Saigon in 1975.

In Beijing, current problems with Tokyo, Hanoi and Manila are top of mind. They dominate both the official media and the social media, and the latter has become particularly vitriolic. They also dominate discussions between Chinese officials and foreign visitors. The relationship with Japan in particular is front and centre in virtually every official conversation as Chinese interlocutors probe what they identify as a profound change in both the tenor of Japanese domestic politics and the centrality of China within the Japanese debate.

Beijing does not desire armed conflict with Japan over territorial disputes, but nonetheless makes clear that it has its own red lines that cannot be crossed for domestic reasons, and that it is prepared for any contingency.

Like the Balkans a century ago, riven by overlapping alliances, loyalties and hatreds, the strategic environment in East Asia is complex. At least six states or political entities are engaged in territorial disputes with China, three of which are close strategic partners of the US. Furthermore, these territorial claims - and the minerals, energy and marine resources at stake - are vast. And while the US remains mostly neutral, the intersection between the narrower interests of claimant states and the broader strategic competition between the US and China is significant and not automatically containable.

Complicating matters, East Asia increasingly finds itself being pulled in radically different directions. On the one hand, the forces of globalisation are bringing its peoples, economies and countries closer together than at any other time in history, as reflected in intraregional trade, which is now approaching 60 per cent of total East Asian trade. On the other hand, the forces of primitive, almost atavistic nationalisms are at the same time threatening to pull the region apart.

As a result, the idea of armed conflict, which seems contrary to every element of rational self-interest for any nation-state enjoying the benefits of such unprecedented regional economic dynamism, has now become a terrifying, almost normal part of the regional conversation, driven by recent territorial disputes, but animated by deep-rooted cultural and historical resentments. Contemporary East Asia is a tale of these two very different worlds.

The most worrying fault lines run between China and Japan, and between China and Vietnam. In September last year, the Japanese government purchased from a private owner three islands in the Senkakus, a small chain of islands claimed by both countries (the Chinese call the islands the Diaoyu). This caused China to conclude that Japan, which had exercised de facto administrative control over the islands for most of the last century, was now moving towards a more de jure exercise of sovereignty.

In response, Beijing launched a series of what it called "combination punches": economic retaliation, the dispatch of Chinese maritime patrol vessels to the disputed areas, joint combat drills among the branches of its military, and widespread, occasionally violent public protests against Japanese diplomatic and commercial targets across China.

As a result, Japanese exports to China contracted rapidly in the fourth quarter of last year, and because Japan had already become China's largest trading partner, sliding exports alone are likely to be a significant contributive factor in what is projected to be a large contraction in overall Japanese economic growth in the same period.

In mid-December, Japan claimed that Chinese aircraft intruded into Japanese airspace above the disputed islands for the first time since 1958. After a subsequent incident, Japan dispatched eight F-15 fighter planes to the islands. While both sides have avoided deploying naval assets, there is a growing concern of creeping militarisation as military capabilities are transferred to coastguard-type vessels.

While the "static" in Japanese military circles regarding China-related contingency planning has become increasingly audible, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who took office in mid-December, has sought to moderate his public language on China, apparently to send a diplomatic message that he wishes to restore stability to the relationship. This was reinforced by a conciliatory letter sent from Abe to Xi Jinping, China's new leader, on January 25 during a visit to Beijing by the leader of New Komeito, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's coalition partner.

This has been publicly and privately welcomed in Beijing, as reflected in Xi's public remarks the following day. Beijing's position is that while it wants Japan to formally recognise the existence of a territorial dispute in order to fortify China's political and legal position on the future of the islands, it also wishes to see the Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute managed in a manner that does not threaten regional security, which would undermine the stability necessary to complete its core task of economic reform and growth.

There may therefore be some softening in the China-Japan relationship in the immediate future. But diplomatic and strategic realities appear to have remained largely unchanged. The intensity of Abe and Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida's unprecedented mid-January diplomatic offensive, involving visits to seven East Asian states, demonstrates that the temperature between Beijing and Tokyo remains high - just as statement late last month from Tokyo on the establishment of a special Japanese Coast Guard force of 12 enhanced vessels and 600 servicemen specifically dedicated to the Senkaku theatre underlines the nature of the challenges lying ahead.

The problem is that neither side can afford domestically to be seen as retreating from current positions. China believes that Japan has altered the status quo; Japan believes it has no need to budge because there is no sovereignty issue in the first place. All of this means that both sides remain captive to events on the high seas and in the air - events that could quickly spiral out of control.

To prevent this from happening, both sides will need to maintain their public political positions for domestic reasons, while both will need gradually and reciprocally to de-escalate the deployment of maritime and air assets. This would need to be done according to a schedule negotiated by an intermediary or though their own back channels. If such back-channel negotiations are not already under way (and there is some evidence they may be), then it's in the interests of both sides to get the ball rolling.

Japan should not install any equipment or station any personnel on the islands, as has been discussed from time to time in Tokyo, as this would inevitably result in further retaliatory action from Beijing, with every prospect of generating a further crisis. If these steps could be taken and the situation then stabilised, perhaps longer-term consideration could be given to inviting an appropriate international environmental agency to exercise environmental management responsibilities on and around the islands, where, by informal agreement, national vessels would not go.

Territorial claims in the South China Sea are even more complex. According to US agencies, Chinese officials have claimed that the sea contains proven oil reserves as high as 213 billion barrels (10 times US reserves, though American scientists are more sceptical) and 25 trillion cubic metres of gas reserves (roughly the total proven reserves of Qatar). The South China Sea also accounts for about 10 per cent of the world's annual fisheries catch. The region is already the scene of deeply disputed exploratory activities for deep-sea energy resources. Fisheries are also already the subject of multiple physical confrontations between vessels. Furthermore, unlike the Senkaku/Diaoyu chain, many islands in the South China Sea are already occupied, garrisoned and home to naval bases.

Six states plus Taiwan have disputed territorial claims in the area, though the largest overlap by far is between China and Vietnam. The two states have already skirmished over their conflicting claims, in 1974 and 1988; they also fought a border war in 1979. One senior Vietnamese neatly described the Sino-Vietnamese relationship in May 2011 by saying, "The two countries are old friends and old enemies."

It is also clear that the Chinese today possess considerable economic leverage over Vietnam, to the extent that one senior Vietnamese official candidly remarked recently that China could simply wreck the Vietnamese economy if it so chose. It would be wrong, however, given ancient resentments, to assume that economic dependency would automatically constrain Vietnamese diplomatic or even military action in relation to the South China Sea.

The China-Vietnam relationship has soured since Chinese ships severed the seismic cables of Vietnamese exploratory vessels in May 2011 and again last December. According to Reuters, Vietnam subsequently stated that as of last month it would deploy civilian vessels supported by marine police to stop foreign vessels from violating its waters, while India, Vietnam's partner in some of the explorations, indicated it would consider sending naval vessels to the South China Sea to protect its interests.

Meanwhile, China's Hainan province announced that, starting this year, provincial maritime surveillance vessels would begin intercepting, searching, and repelling foreign vessels violating Chinese territorial seas, including the disputed territory. These various statements concerning new and conflicting procedures for the interception of foreign vessels set the stage for significant confrontation in the year ahead. Vietnam and China appear to have set themselves on a collision course, and those who monitor this relationship closely fear a repeat of those earlier armed conflicts.

To prevent further escalation, Beijing and Hanoi need now to step back from the edge. They should agree to prioritise development of, and agreement on, the long-awaited code of conduct between ASEAN and China on the South China Sea, including the joint development of energy projects. Both governments should identify a single project in an area where both sides claim sovereignty and begin the practical negotiation of a joint development regime.

If this is too difficult, then both sides could consider the development of a joint fisheries project in a single defined area, as this would further sidestep sensitive sovereignty issues more acutely connected with resource extraction regimes. In other words, rather than wait for the conclusion of a complex diplomatic negotiation over the final text of the code of conduct, start to build trust by co-operating on a real project. If this approach succeeds with China and Vietnam, similar joint projects could be developed with the other claimant states.

None of this might work. Nationalism might prevail. Policymakers could simply allow events to run their course, as they did a century ago.

In his recent book The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914, historian Christopher Clark recounts how the petty nationalisms of the Balkans combusted with the great-power politics and failed statesmanship of the time to produce the industrial-scale carnage of World War I. This was a time when economic globalisation was even deeper than it is today, and when the governments of Europe, right up until 1914, had concluded that a pan-European war was irrational and, therefore, impossible.

I believe a pan-Asian war is extremely unlikely. Nonetheless, for those of us who live in this region, facing escalating confrontations in the East China and South China seas, Europe is a cautionary tale very much worthy of reflection.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
ski7days: RT @kabretism: #Egypt is where humans exist but humanity doesn't.
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:10:47 PM

marihameskander: #Egypt : CIVIL WAR IS STARTING, HAPPY?
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:03:54 PM

TheLazyShaman: Cops are backing off or leaving. Protestors coming back to #mirghany street. #itihadeya #egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:11:45 PM

SHARAFZIAD: RT @DaniaYounis: What the **** is this????? Abusing and stripping a man from his clothes??? What is going on #Egypt???
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:11:34 PM

MutlaqAlhenaki: From bad to worst #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:11:41 PM

Beltrew: Protesters moving back towards prez palace,dragging sheets of metal,cylindrical police pods anything they can get their hands on #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:11:27 PM

KimFoxWOSU: RT @vynguyenhoang: Protester using water pump to extinguish tear gas around the presidentila palace #Cairo #Egypt #Tahrir http://t.co/V5SNsVK2
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:03:28 PM
 

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BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://debka.com/article/22731/US-A...d-to-leftist-group-suspected-of-Burgas-attack

US Ankara suicide bomber belonged to leftist group suspected of Burgas attack
DEBKAfile Special Report February 1, 2013, 6:41 PM (GMT+02:00)
Tags: bombing attack US Turkey Iran Syria Bulgaria
Sucide bombing at US embassy, Ankara

Turkish interior minister Moammer Guler identified the suicide bomber who detonated an explosive Friday, Feb. 1 at the US embassy in Ankara killing a Turkish security guard as Ecevit Sanli, 31, a member of the Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C), a left-wing terrorist group outlawed in Turkey. He was released from Turkish jail eight months ago. debkafile: The DHKP/C, which is associated with Lebanese terrorist groups and Syrian left-wing factions, was suspected of the attack in Burgas, Bulgaria last July, which left five Israeli tourists dead.

Sanli died detonating his explosive at a side entrance of the US embassy in Ankara Friday, Feb. 1, sending embassy staff diving into fortified shelters as smoke and debris rose in clouds over the fortified compound.

A former broadcast journalist Didem Tuncay was seriously injured in the attack.

Local TV showed damage to a compound wall and a smashed embassy building window. No organization has taken responsibility for the attack.

debkafile’s counter-terror sources estimate that it was the work either of al Qaeda, Syrian intelligence or Hizballah, possibly as part of the payback for Israel’s air strike Wednesday against the Jamraya military complex near Damascus. That complex served both Hizballah and the Syrian army and Syria has already threatened retribution on the scale of an earthquake. It may also have been retaliation for the stationing of US Patriot missiles on the Turkish Syrian border and the meeting arranged for US Vice President Joe Biden with the Syrian opposition leader Mouaz Alkhatib in Munich, Germany.

Plenty of warnings have issued from Tehran on all these counts.

On Dec. 15, Iran’s armed forces chief Gen. Hassan Firouzabadi warned that the deployment of American anti-missile batteries in Turkey could cause a world war. Last Saturday, Jan. 26, Ali Akbar Velayati, a close aide of the Iranian supreme leader, declared that attacking Syria was tantamount to attacking Iran.

Israel’s air strike may have been the last straw for Tehran, which warned the “Tel Aviv regime” would suffer “grave consequences.”
By targeting the US embassy in Turkey, the Iranians and their allies may have been starting to hit back for all these grievances at the same time: the Israeli attack, the Patriots and Washington’s support for the Syrian opposition.

If that is so, then the suicide bombing attack on the US embassy in Ankara won’t be the last act of terror planned by Syria, Hizballah and Iran, and it would not be the first time they have hired or enlisted local hit-men or sympathisers for an terrorist operation.

Israel has accused Hizballah of being behind the Burgas attack.

The Iranian-Syrian-Hizballah alliance has targeted US interests in Turkey for terrorist attacks before. On Aug. 21, 2012, seven months ago, a large bomb car blew up in the southern Turkish town of Gaziantep near the Syrian border, killing eight people and injuring at least 66.

No findings were ever released from the investigation of that incident. According to our sources, the bomb car was rigged by a terrorist cell serving Syrian military intelligence in collaboration with Hizballah, like many other political hits carried out in Lebanon over the years. The Gaziantep attack was directed against the command center established in that town for US intelligence and special forces alongside a Free Syrian Army center.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/01/us-egypt-protests-idUSBRE90U1CN20130201

One dead, dozens hurt as police clash with Egypt protesters
By Yasmine Saleh and Seham Eloraby

CAIRO/PORT SAID, Egypt | Fri Feb 1, 2013 5:05pm EST

(Reuters) - At least one protester was shot dead and dozens wounded on Friday when riot police clashed with demonstrators demanding the overthrow of Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, witnesses said.

Youths threw petrol bombs and shot fireworks at the outer wall of Mursi's Cairo presidential compound as night fell. Police responded by firing water cannon and tear gas leading to skirmishes in the surrounding streets.

Two witnesses said they had seen a protester shot dead in Cairo with live ammunition in front of them.

"It's verified. I am at the morgue. He was shot with two bullets, and that's the report of the hospital. The shots were in the neck and the right side of the head," said one of the witnesses, lawyer Ragia Omran. Medical and security sources confirmed Mohamed Hussein Qurany, 23, was killed with live bullets.

The head of Egypt's ambulance service said at least 54 people had been wounded across the country, mostly in Cairo.

The renewed violence brought an end to a few days of calm after the deadliest week of Mursi's seven months in power. Protests marking the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak have killed nearly 60 people since January 25, prompting the head of the army to warn this week that the state was on the verge of collapse.

With multi-colored fireworks bouncing off their shields and bursting among them, helmeted and baton-wielding riot police chased protesters at the palace and set their tents ablaze. Petrol bombs briefly set fire to a building inside the compound.

The head of the Republican Guard, which protects the palace, condemned what he described as attempts to climb the compound walls and storm a gate. In a statement to the state news agency, he urged protesters to keep their demonstration peaceful.

Earlier, men dressed in mourning black marched through the Suez Canal city of Port Said, scene of the worst bloodshed of the past eight days, chanting and shaking their fists.

"There is no God but God and Mohamed Mursi is the enemy of God," they chanted. Brandishing portraits of those killed in recent days, they shouted: "We will die like they did, to get justice!"

There were also scuffles earlier near Cairo's central Tahrir Square, where police fired teargas at stone-throwing youths. In Alexandria, protesters blocked roads, staged a sit-in on the railway and tried to break into the TV and radio building.

The protesters accuse Mursi of betraying the spirit of the revolution by concentrating too much power in his own hands and those of his Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood accuses the opposition of trying to overthrow the first democratically elected leader in Egypt's 5,000-year history.

Mohamed Ahmed, 26, protesting at the presidential palace, said: "I am here because I want my rights, the ones the revolution called for and which were never achieved."

For the Port Said marchers, Friday was also the first anniversary of a soccer stadium riot that killed 70 people last year. Death sentences handed down on Saturday against 21 Port Said men over the riots helped fuel the past week's violence there, which saw dozens shot dead in clashes with police.

VIOLENCE DISAVOWED

Friday's marches took place despite an intervention by Ahmed al-Tayyeb, head of the 1,000-year-old al-Azhar university and mosque, who hauled in politicians for crisis talks on Thursday where they signed a charter disavowing violence. Mursi's foes said the pact did not require them to call off demonstrations.

"We brought down the Mubarak regime with a peaceful revolution and are determined to realize the same goals in the same way, regardless of the sacrifices or the barbaric oppression," tweeted Mohamed ElBaradei, a former head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog who has become a secularist leader.

The main opposition National Salvation Front denied it was to blame for the demonstrations turning violent. Mursi's office said it would "hold the political forces that may have participated in incitement fully politically responsible, pending results of investigation."

Tahrir Square, ground zero of the uprising against Mubarak, has become a graffiti-scarred monument to Egypt's perpetual turmoil, strewn with barbed wire and burnt-out cars. Vendors sold flag bracelets, pharaonic statues, sunflower seeds, water and fruit while the protesters gathered.

A man with a microphone shouted to the crowd, calling for Mursi to be put on trial. "We came here to get rid of Mursi," said furniture dealer Mohammed al-Nourashi, 57.

UNGOVERNABLE

The rise of an elected Islamist after nearly 60 years of rule by secular military men in the most populous Arab state is the most important change achieved by two years of Arab revolts.

But seven months since his narrow election victory over an ex-Air Force commander, Mursi has failed to unite Egyptians and protests have made the country seem all but ungovernable. The turmoil has worsened an economic crisis, forcing Cairo to drain its currency reserves to prop up its pound.

Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie, on his Facebook page, blamed the unrest on "regional and international forces which aim for instability and to stir up problems and ignite strife to damage Egypt ... to thwart the democratic transition".

Brotherhood followers have clashed with demonstrators in the past, especially at the presidential palace which they regard as a symbol of his legitimacy. But the group has kept its men off the streets during the latest violence.

It is far from clear that opposition politicians could call off the street demonstrations, even if they wanted to.

"You have groups who clearly just want a confrontation with the state - straightforward anarchy; you've got people who supported the original ideals of the revolution and feel those ideals have been betrayed," said a diplomat. "And then you have elements of the old regime who have it in their interests to foster insecurity and instability. It is an unhealthy alliance."

Many Egyptians are fed up.

"We are exhausted. This protests thing is a political game whose price the people are paying. I hate them all - liberals and Brotherhood," said Abdel Halim Adel, 60, near the presidential palace.

(Additional reporting by Tom Perry, Shaimaa Fayed and Alexander Dziadosz in Cairo, Abdul Rahman Youssef in Alexandria and Yusri Mohamed in Ismailia; Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by Stephen Powell)
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
theseinspire: RT @Beltrew: Brief period of calm then big attack from #csf again by prez palace. People running. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:25:10 PM

NevineAbaza: #Egypt #Morsi #Mubarak the more shit we see the more determined we will be. It will never end, we will never give up or give in. #tahrir
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:24:21 PM

NforNadine: We're getting used to moral&physical violence,the upcoming generation will be nothing but killers&criminals I fear. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:24:12 PM

That's the program!! ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^


CarolBasilious: I can only say : I am not living, I am surviving :') #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:27:44 PM

patrickdehahn: Report from @beltrew: CSF appeared to have withdrawn back towards gates of Prez palace. Protesters building barricade. Extraordinary #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:27:44 PM

yanouz: .@AlainGresh RT @OpAntiSH An @OpAntiSH video http://t.co/PlvP8y9mshowing a mob sexual attack! (Strong images) #EndSH #OpAntiSH #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:27:27 PM

I'm not watching it ^^^^^^^^:shkr:

mybeshert: RT @EANewsFeed: #Egypt Live: Intense video shows teargas, gunfire, flash grenades, and fireworks on streets of #Cairo http://t.co/fGdMhUYE | #p2 #tcot #MENA
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:30:07 PM

itweet4beans: RT @TheGreatOne2012: Hillary Clinton says the world is a safer place!! Is she watching what is going on in Egypt now?? #Egypt #StateDepartment
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:28:58 PM

DaliaNewYork: My time line has news about George Bush's dog death and condolences! #Egypt #Syria ya welad el kalb!
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:28:44 PM

:spns:
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
ProfMohamedAdel: RT @Aymondo: Suez Canal official just confirming the Emma Maersk is fine w/ minor engine trouble and being towed to safety. #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:50:47 PM

SheriFElDeeeb: RT @SarahEbeid: Breaking : #Egypt is getting ****ed.
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:50:36 PM

riversniffer: I'm reading far too much news. I remember the last revolution in #egypt . World politics should come with a warning label. #depressing
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:50:22 PM

nadaskandar: “Here’s to my unprecedented success” - An evil spirit somewhere in the ether surrounding #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 5:50:21 PM
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://www.wnd.com/2013/01/panicked-iran-makes-power-move-after-nuke-site-loss/#0iohyEsSOroVd1ju.99

'Panicked' Iran makes power move after nuke-site loss
Bomb program stepped up at another facility to maintain posture with West
Published: 1 day ago
by Reza Kahlili

Two days after WND’s exclusive report on the devastating explosions at Iran’s Fordow nuclear site, Tehran informed the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog it was going to install thousands of modern centrifuges at another of its nuclear facilities in an apparent move to restore its bargaining position.

In a Jan. 23 letter to the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency, the IAEA, Iran said it plans to install thousands of its upgraded centrifuges at the Natanz facility.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in Moscow today that Iran has every legal right under its obligations to the IAEA to enrich uranium, even with the more modern centrifuges.

Iranian media viewed Lavrov’s remarks as supportive of the decision. But the Russian minister also urged the Islamic regime to “freeze enrichment operations” during the negotiations with the 5-plus-1 countries, the permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany.

The White House this afternoon called Iran’s decision “provocative.”

As a former spy in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Reza Kahlili has the riveting, inside story, and you can read it in “A Time To Betray,” available at WND’s Superstore

Iran, whose economy has been battered by the international sanctions brought by its illicit nuclear program, apparently has lost much of its negotiating position since the incident at Fordow.

The facility, deep under a mountain and immune to conventional airstrikes and most bunker-busting bombs, already had the more modern centrifuges, which could enrich uranium two to three times faster to the 20-percent level, a critical step to weaponization grade.

As reported by WND Jan. 24 with updates on Jan. 27, 29 and 30, explosions rocked the Fordow site Jan. 21, trapping scores of workers, including 16 North Korean technicians and military attaches. The source for the information, a member of the security forces, said rescue efforts were delayed several days because of the fear of radiation.

The source said today some workers have been rescued and there have been casualties. He said a secret, underground tunnel with a stone-covered entrance door about two and a half miles away from the main entrances at Fordow is being used for the rescue efforts.

The source added that regime intelligence agents, since the explosion, have arrested dozens of security force members in charge of protecting Fordow.

The tunnel was built after the secret facility was revealed in 2009. The source said he would provide more information in the coming days to verify the explosions. The U.S. and Iran have denied the incident took place.

Iran’s unusual notification to the IAEA two days after the Fordow incident likely is an indication of panic by the regime. The incident at Fordow must have badly damaged its ability to enrich uranium to the 20-percent level. Accompanying the loss would be a weakening of Iran’s negotiating position with the world powers. Installing the same type of centrifuges at Natanz to keep the output of its highly enriched uranium at same level in its pursuit of a nuclear bomb would mitigate the loss.

European Council members discussed Fordow this morning, but the source said the world intelligence community does not have a full grasp of what really happened at the facility.

As WND previously reported, Iran received intelligence of planned covert operations on its nuclear facilities by Israel and other countries in the West in a last-ditch effort to avoid all-out war. Regime officials adopted a strategy to respond to Israel, with Quds Force members traveling to southern Lebanon to evacuate villages for a likely aggression against Israel.

The Quds Force is an elite international operations unit within Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps that reports directly to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Yesterday, Israeli Air Force jets, attacking inside Syria’s border with Lebanon, bombed a truck convoy that was apparently carrying missile parts and other equipment destined for Hezbollah. Quds Force members reportedly were in the convoy.

Ali Akbar Velayati, the senior adviser on international matters to the Islamic regime’s supreme leader, previously warned Israel that any attack on Syria would be construed as an attack on Iran. Today Iran, Syria and Hezbollah warned that there will be consequences for the attack.

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2013/01/panicked-iran-makes-power-move-after-nuke-site-loss/#0iohyEsSOroVd1ju.99
 

Border guard

Inactive
http://rt.com/news/martial-law-north-korea-180/print/

North Korea imposes martial law, orders troops to ‘be ready for war’ - report


Published: 31 January, 2013, 23:37
Edited: 1 February, 2013, 12:54

North Korea has allegedly been placed under martial law and its ruler Kim Jong-un has ordered the army to “prepare for war”, a South Korean daily claims.

*The North Korean leader issued a series of orders to his top defense and security officials on Saturday to conclude preparations for a new nuclear test, the Seoul based Korea JoongAng Daily alleges citing an unnamed source.

The source reportedly said that Kim Jong-un issued a secret order to “complete preparations for a nuclear weapons test <…>and carry it out soon”.

According to the source, Kim Jong-un also said, “The country will be under martial law starting from midnight January 29th and all the frontline and central units should be ready for war.”

The source told the South Korean daily that the nuclear test could come earlier than expected. Other analysts have said it would likely be held on February 16th, the birthday of the former leader Kim Jong-il, who died in 2011.

Another suggestion as to the test’s timing included February 25th, the inauguration day of South Korean President-elect Park Geun-Hye, the Korea JoongAng Daily reported.

North Korean media also reported that Kim Jong-un told his top defense officials to take “effective, high-profile state measures” at a meeting on Saturday.

The alleged measures come amid a new spike in tensions caused by a new round of sanctions on North Korean entities and individuals, including travel bans and asset freezes, which were passed unanimously by the United Nations Security Council in December 2012.

The Security Council, including China, backed Resolution 2087, after Pyongyang carried out the launch of a long range rocket in December 2012.

Pyongyang claimed it was for the peaceful launch of a satellite, but critics say it was a thinly veiled test-firing of an intercontinental ballistic missile.

Since the resolution was approved North Korea has issued a number of warnings, including a statement on the day it was implemented, that there will be “no more dialogue or denuclearization.” It also threatened “all-out war” against Washington, which it said was its sworn enemy and blamed for leading the sanctions.

However, the source also said that Kim Jong-un is concerned about China’s reaction to a nuclear test.

“China is still useful to us. We need to be careful of the relationship with China,” Kim allegedly said at the meeting.

A South Korean government official told reporters Wednesday that satellite images had discovered increased activity and movement of equipment near the Punggye-ri nuclear test site in the northwest of the country and that the mouth of the test shaft had been sealed in readiness for a nuclear test.

According to the report in the Korea JoongAng Daily, the South Korean military, as of Tuesday, had not detected any movements in North Korea’s frontline units.

The President of South Korea, Lee Myung-bak, has ordered the military to make a “strong response” to any provocation from North Korea.
The last time North Korea was placed under martial law was in March 1993, just days before it withdrew from the Treaty for the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, and the regime also ordered its troops to be ready for war.

North Korea carried out its first nuclear test in October 2006 and conducted a second underground blast in May 2009.

There is also international concern about whether Pyongyang will use highly-enriched uranium to get better results in its third nuclear test. Previous tests used plutonium, were detonated underground, and had reportedly limited success.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
Omarwardany: A country with no future #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 6:31:57 PM

Us either ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
esfahanhanim: RT @Nervana_1: #Egypt state TV: a man arrested yesterday turn out to be NOT a member of black bloc & he will be referred to "mental hospital." OMG!
Friday, February 01, 2013 6:59:32 PM

Beltrew: Wow just watched CSF detain a guy and let him go. Clearly behaving themselves after video of them abusing protesters goes viral #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 6:58:40 PM

Axelrod_EJ: RT @ACLJ: #Egypt gifted 4 F-16 fighter jets from US w/ more scheduled to arrive http://t.co/zaRQ5YOa Sign petition: stop US-armed threat to #Israel
Friday, February 01, 2013 6:58:46 PM

Fandango52: In the US, everyone has high-powered guns. So one side or the other would all be dead by now. #egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 7:04:05 PM

Psypherize: If we catch a police officer, strip him naked and beat the shit out of him, can we apologize too? #Egypt #Itihadeya
Friday, February 01, 2013 7:03:44 PM

ggball: RT @United4Libya: How is supposed to be a democracy or freedom when a demonstrator get killed in front of the presidential palace? #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 7:03:02 PM

dudi_1707: Snipers aiming at protesters at the top of buildings around the presidential palace http://t.co/7TBVHQ5L @AP @CNN @Reuters @BBCWorld #Egypt
Friday, February 01, 2013 7:03:00 PM

SherryCruz4: RT @Princessluna11: What has been happening in #Egypt is getting pretty ****ing overboard. Men getting Stripped and Beaten, Women getting gang rapped? WTF
Friday, February 01, 2013 7:07:15 PM
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.economist.com/news/china...t-over-its-troublesome-neighbour-naughty-step

China and North Korea
On the naughty step
China continues to fret over its troublesome neighbour
Feb 2nd 2013 | BEIJING |From the print edition

LIKE an indulgent parent forgiving of the most petulant of childish tantrums, China usually cuts North Korea a lot of slack. So when China on January 22nd signed on to United Nations Security Council Resolution 2087, tightening sanctions on North Korea to punish it for a rocket launch in December, its ally was surprised and outraged. Without naming China, a North Korean statement accused it of “abandoning without hesitation even elementary principles”. By the same token, the outside world saw an encouraging sign: perhaps China will at last take serious steps to rein in its pugnacious neighbour’s efforts to build a nuclear arsenal.

That is probably too much to hope. But on North Korea, China might for a while be more aligned than recently with America, Japan and South Korea. China has insisted that its main interest is in regional stability. If so, with North Korea reacting to the UN resolution by threatening to attack South Korea and stage its third test of a nuclear bomb and by vowing never to abandon its nuclear programme, it is hard not to see the country’s regime as a threat.

Moreover, Global Times, a Chinese newspaper owned by the Communist Party, chided North Korea for its ungrateful reaction to the efforts China had made to soften the UN resolution, and warned it that if it “engages in further nuclear tests, China will not hesitate to reduce its assistance”. Since North Korea relies on China for fuel and food, that is a potent threat.

Now, more than ever, China might want to seem a contributor to regional peace. Its belligerence over the disputed Senkaku or Diaoyu islands has brought relations with Japan to their worst level since 1945, with China now considering Japan’s proposal for a summit between its prime minister, Shinzo Abe, and the Communist Party leader, Xi Jinping. China’s assertion of territorial claims in the South China Sea has soured relations there, too. The Philippines has been provoked into asking a UN tribunal to rule on whether part of China’s claim has a legal basis.

On both those issues China will find it hard to offer concessions. This week Mr Xi growled that “no country should presume that we will engage in trade involving our core interests or that we will swallow the ‘bitter fruit’ of harming our sovereignty, security or development.”

North Korea offers a chance for China to seem flexible without jeopardising any “core interests” and, indeed, to enhance its own security at the same time. The new treatment of North Korea could also strengthen China’s relations with South Korea, which were damaged by the failure to join the widespread international condemnation of the North for attacks on the South in 2010. And it would offer what Zhu Feng, a scholar at Peking University, calls “a new platform for China and the United States to get closer”.

But Mr Zhu also says China will not want to “corner” North Korea. At a conference in Seoul in December, Teng Jianqun, of the China Institute of International Studies in Beijing, said there were three views about policy on North Korea: that it is a troublemaker which China should abandon and treat as a security problem; that it is nothing to do with China and should be left alone; and that it is an old ally deserving of China’s full support.

Yet the consensus is that China’s prime interest is stability. The survival of the Kim dynasty ruling North Korea now seems bound up with its nuclear programme. So China may think that stepping up efforts to shut that down would not be in its interest. Certainly many Chinese scholars and, presumably, officials feel exasperated with North Korea and rather embarrassed by its antics. But China fears that collapse of the regime might lead to unrest, refugees crossing into China and the presence of American forces on the other side of China’s own borders. That would be even worse.

Plenty of voices still call for the continued support of the regime. Mr Teng recalled that “old diplomats” complained fiercely when China condemned North Korea’s nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009. And Tang Ge, a commentator whose blogpost is translated on sinonk.com, a website, thunders against those who argue that North Korea no longer matters to China as a “strategic buffer” between it and the American troops in South Korea. On the contrary, he claims, supporting North Korea is a “small-cost big-benefit” activity.

This suggests another way of responding to China’s poor relationships with its other neighbours: to recall that North Korea is an old ally—and as “close as lips and teeth” with China. It is likely to remain so, even if, for now, the lips are pouting and the teeth are grinding.

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