WAR 05/11/2013 to 05/17/2013____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Here's more on this latest arms transfer.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/17/w...ovides-syria-with-advanced-missiles.html?_r=0

Russia Sends More Advanced Missiles to Aid Assad in Syria
By MICHAEL R. GORDON and ERIC SCHMITT
Published: May 16, 2013
74 Comments

WASHINGTON — Russia has sent advanced antiship cruise missiles to Syria, a move that illustrates the depth of its support for the Syrian government led by President Bashar al-Assad, American officials said Thursday.

Russia has previously provided a version of the missiles, called Yakhonts, to Syria. But those delivered recently are outfitted with an advanced radar that makes them more effective, according to American officials who are familiar with classified intelligence reports and would only discuss the shipment on the basis of anonymity.

Unlike Scud and other longer-range surface-to-surface missiles that the Assad government has used against opposition forces, the Yakhont antiship missile system provides the Syrian military a formidable weapon to counter any effort by international forces to reinforce Syrian opposition fighters by imposing a naval embargo, establishing a no-fly zone or carrying out limited airstrikes.

“It enables the regime to deter foreign forces looking to supply the opposition from the sea, or from undertaking a more active role if a no-fly zone or shipping embargo were to be declared at some point,” said Nick Brown, editor in chief of IHS Jane’s International Defense Review. “It’s a real ship killer.”

Jeffrey White, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and a former senior American intelligence official, said Syria’s strengthened arsenal would “tend to push Western or allied naval activity further off the coast” and was also “a signal of the Russian commitment to the Syrian government.”

The disclosure of the delivery comes as Russia and the United States are planning to convene an international conference that is aimed at ending the brutal conflict in Syria, which has killed more than 70,000. That conference is expected to be held in early June and to include representatives of the Assad government and the Syrian opposition.

Secretary of State John Kerry has repeatedly said that it is the United States’ hope to change Mr. Assad’s “calculations” about his ability to hold on to power so that he will allow negotiations for a political solution to the conflict. Mr. Kerry indicated that he had raised the issue of Russian arms deliveries to Syria during his recent visit to Moscow, but declined to provide details.

“I think we’ve made it crystal clear we would prefer that Russia was not supplying assistance,” he said. “That hasn’t changed.”

American officials have been concerned that the flow of Russian and Iranian arms to Syria will buttress Mr. Assad’s apparent belief that he can prevail militarily.

“This weapons transfer is obviously disappointing and will set back efforts to promote the political transition that is in the best interests of the Syrian people and the region,” Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, the senior Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement on Thursday night. “There is now greater urgency for the U.S. to step up assistance to the moderate opposition forces who can lead Syria after Assad.”

Senator Robert Menendez, Democrat of New Jersey and the committee chairman, added in a statement, “Russia is offering cover to a despotic ruler and defending a bankrupt regime.”

Syria ordered the coastal defense version of the Yakhont system from Russia in 2007 and received the first batteries in early 2011, according to Jane’s. The initial order covered 72 missiles, 36 launcher vehicles, and support equipment, and the systems have been displayed in the country.

The batteries are mobile, which makes them more difficult to attack. Each consists of missiles, a three-missile launcher and a command-and-control vehicle.

The missiles are about 22 feet long, carry either a high-explosive or armor-piercing warhead, and have a range of about 180 miles, according to Jane’s.

They can be steered to a target’s general location by longer-range radars, but each missile has its own radar to help evade a ship’s defenses and home in as it approaches its target.

Two senior American officials said that the most recent shipment contained missiles with a more advanced guidance system than earlier shipments.

Russia has longstanding interests in Syria, including a naval base at the Mediterranean port of Tartus.

As the Syria crisis has escalated, Russia has gradually augmented its naval presence in the region. In January, more than two dozen Russian warships sailed to the Black and Mediterranean Seas to take part in what the Defense Ministry said was to be the country’s largest naval exercise in decades, testing the ships’ ability to deploy outside Russian waters.

A month later, after the Black Sea exercises ended, the Russian Defense Ministry news agency said that four large landing vessels were on their way to operations off the coast of Syria.

“Based on the results of the navy exercises in the Black and Mediterranean seas,” the ministry said at the time, “the ministry leadership has taken a decision to continue combat duty by Russian warships in the Mediterranean.”

Russia’s diplomatic support of Syria has also bolstered the Assad government.

At the United Nations, the Russians recently blocked proposals that the Security Council mount a fact-finding trip to Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon to investigate the burgeoning flood of refugees, according to Western diplomats.

Jordan had sought the United Nations visit to make the point that the refugee situation was a threat to stability in the region, but Russia said that the trip was beyond the mandate of the Security Council, diplomats said.

When allegations that the Assad government had used chemical weapons surfaced, Russia also backed the Syrian government’s refusal to allow the United Nations to carry out a wide-ranging investigation inside Syria — which Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, said was an attempt to “politicize the issue” and impose the “Iraqi scenario” on Syria.

Russian officials have repeatedly said that in selling arms to Syria, they are merely fulfilling old contracts. But some American officials worry that the deliveries are intended to limit the United States’ options should it choose to intervene to help the rebels.

Russia, for example, previously shipped SA-17 surface-to-air missiles to Syria. Israel carried out an airstrike against trucks that were transporting the weapons near Damascus in January. Israel has not officially acknowledged the raid but has said it is prepared to intervene militarily to prevent any “game changing” weapons from being shipped to Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group.

More recently, Israeli and American officials have urged Russia not to proceed with the sale of advanced S-300 air defense weapons. The Kremlin has yielded to American entreaties not to provide S-300s to Iran. But the denial of that sale, analysts say, has increased the pressure within Russia’s military establishment to proceed with the delivery to Syria.

Related

Pressure of War Is Causing Syria to Break Apart (May 17, 2013)
Israel Hints at New Strikes, Warning Syria Not to Hit Back (May 16, 2013)
U.N. Calls for Political Transition in Syria (May 16, 2013)
Peacekeepers in Golan Abducted but Released (May 17, 2013)

Related in Opinion

Op-Ed Contributor: Assad’s Spillover Strategy (May 17, 2013)
Op-Ed Contributors: Can Obama Save Turkey From a Syrian Quagmire? (May 17, 2013)

________


Here's a breakdown of the system....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakhont

yakhont-missile.jpg


Yakhont+coast+2.jpg


61067277.png


That pretty much shuts off the Eastern Mediterranean to any surface shipping the Syrians or the Russians don't want in the area. Never mind using them for land attack.

ETA: This also covers a lot of the potential oil and natural gas fields in the Eastern Mediterranean.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
thanks Housecarl, I tried three times to get it (the full article) to cut/paste and it wouldn't do it correctly, that was why I didn't post it with the first tweet. Finally found this one with intro info.

Doug Pologe‏@DougPologe2h
"American officials": Russia recently delivered to Syria Yakhont antiship cruise missiles with upgraded radars. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/17/world/middleeast/russia-provides-syria-with-advanced-missiles.html

Retweeted by Nathan J Hunt
Hide summary Reply


The New York Times


Russia Provides Syria With Advanced Missiles

Antiship cruise missiles could make it more difficult for the United States and its allies to impose a naval embargo, establish a no-fly zone or carry out airstrikes in support of Syria’s rebels.

View on web
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source...
Posted for fair use....
http://www.nknews.org/2013/05/do-sa...n=Feed:+nknewsorg+(nknews.org+'Daily+Update')

Accounts suggest that Pyongyang acquired scientists for developing nuclear program decades before publicly acknowledging it

by Bill Streifer , May 16, 2013

“If North Korea’s claim of having conducted a nuclear test on October 9 is proven true, two questions stand out: What level of nuclear technology does the North possess, and how did North Korea, with only a per-capita gross domestic product of less than US$2,000, nurture the human capital necessary to go nuclear?”
The Hankyoreh, October 14, 2006

Like much of Kim Jong Un’s regime, the genesis of Pyongyang’s nuclear program is shrouded in secrecy, but accounts suggest that a former South Korean scientist named Do Sang-rok was instrumental in its beginnings.

Though nuclear activities in North Korea are widely assumed to have begun in the 1950s, certain programs – like the World War II-era hunt for nuclear materials by Korea’s then-colonial overlords Japan, and later by the Soviet Union during their occupation of northern Korea – began at least a decade earlier.

“The first known reference to nuclear related activity within North Korea dates to 1947 when the Soviet Union with assistance from a Chao Yang, surveyed North Korea’s monazite mines,” said Joseph S. Bermudez, Jr., the editor of The Journal of North Korean Defense and Intelligence Affairs. Monazite, the principal ore of thorium, also contains some uranium, the radioactive material necessary to construct the atomic bomb.

It is now clear, however, that North Korea’s nuclear program can be traced back to Seoul National University shortly after Korea’s liberation. Do, a student of theoretical quantum physics and a graduate of Kyoto Imperial University, fled to Pyongyang in May 1946 after a falling out with the caretaker U.S. government sometime between national liberation and the foundation of the South Korean state. By year’s end, he helped establish Kim Il-sung University, where he built his own particle accelerator and conducted North Korea’s first experiments in nuclear physics. For this reason, Do appears the most likely candidate for “father of North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.”

Although Do may have experimented with the weaponization of atomic power as early as the late-1960’s, it was not until October 2002, after being confronted with new American intelligence, that Kim Jong Il publically admitted for the first time what Japan, Seoul and the United States had feared for nearly a decade: Pyongyang had a secret nuclear weapons program. During his meeting with Kim Jong Il a month earlier, Japanese Prime Minster Junichiro Koizumi said he was willing to offer reparations — $1 billion per year for a decade — for the damage inflicted by Japan during its 1910-1945 colonization of Korea in the hopes that the North would abandon its dream of becoming a nuclear power.

It is now clear that before the Japan-North Korea Pyongyang Declaration of September 2002, U.S. President George W. Bush closely coordinated with Koizumi regarding the steps needed to be taken before Japan would consider normalizing relations with North Korea. Bush also updated Koizumi as to what the U.S. knew about Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program, a closely-held secret from a regime about which little was known.

According to Japanese sources, South Korea had passed information concerning North Korea’s Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) program on to the U.S. earlier in the year. One such report, from Japan’s Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper, quoted a North Korea defector who “had worked on North Korea’s uranium enrichment program.” South Korea’s Yonhap News agency would later contradict this account, citing a South Korean official who handled defectors as saying that no such defector existed.

“The claim that the defector told us that North Korea’s enrichment program began in 1998, that he had pinpointed the location of the enrichment plant, that he had detailed his technical tasks, and so on is not true,” Yonhap reported, arguing that “all defectors from North Korea are processed through a special agency and this agency has no knowledge of this person.”

Do_Sang-rok_sketch_kimsoft

Despite Yonhap’s denial, it is now believed that the defector was Lee Mi (a pseudonym), a female researcher at the Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center whose first-hand accounts of Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program may have been key in leading to Kim Jong Il’s October 2002 public disclosure. During her debriefing, Lee was asked 13 questions. Her responses, and her hand-drawn map pinpointing the location of the underground facilities, are what first appeared in the Yomiuri Shimbun. Question No. 4 read as follows:

Please describe the functions, owner, facilities and storage capacity of the underground structures in the Yak, Deungdae and Seokdu mountains. Also, please tell us about when these underground structures were excavated and constructed and the entry, exact locations, etc. of these underground structures as you remember them. If you could make simple drawings of the external shape and locations of these underground structures they would be very helpful. When did you go there and what were the purposes of your visit?

Lee Mi’s recollections were later translated into English and republished as “A Physicist Defector’s Account of North Korea’s Nuke Labs” by Lee Wha-rang (aka Kim Young-sik), who received his doctorate in high-energy particle physics from Purdue University in 1962.

“Some of the ‘facts’ are not accurate,” Kim Young-sik wrote of her answers, “but the general picture described is correct as far as I know.” In the following excerpt from Lee Mi’s account, as translated by Kim Young-sik, she said:

The underground facilities were constructed by the 66th Industry deep beneath Yak mountain at a huge human cost. Many workers died in various accidents during their construction. Construction began in 1965 and was completed in 1970. The underground caves branch out into different interconnected tunnels. The complex is extremely large and well-illuminated. Its entrance is large enough for trucks to enter. Concrete walls block the entrance and clever camouflage hides it from outsiders. The caves are used to hide lab equipment and other evidence of a nuclear weapons program in case of inspections or other events. During the IAEA inspection, tell-tale equipment and materials were secretly moved into the (Yak mountain) cave. During the inspection, the lab staff members wore military uniforms.

After graduating from Pyongyang Physics College in 1974, Lee Mi was assigned to the 304th Research Lab at the Yongbyon Nuclear Physics Center in Bungang, about 50 miles north of Pyongyang, where she worked until her dismissal on February 21, 1999. Then, in September 2000, she fled to China and later to a “third country,” probably South Korea or the United States. The secret laboratory she described was one of many, each with its own codename: 101st Research Lab, 206th Research Lab, 175th Industry, 66th Industry, August Industry, February Industry, and so forth. There was no “open communication” among the lab workers, Lee said, who were paid 20-30 percent extra to preserve security.

According to Lee Mi, the Bungang lab was created during the latter part of 1950 with the help of Soviet scientists and advisors. Special living quarters were built along Guwol-gang River and the staff members were bused to the lab. Families lived in the staff quarters. Select members of the staff were sent to China, Russia and other nations to study nuclear physics and chemistry, although staff scientists were not allowed to travel abroad or even within North Korea on their own.

“If a problem cannot be resolved by the staff then special permission is given to go abroad to find the solution,” Lee said. Some, who traveled abroad and engaged in “reactionary activities,” were sent to labor camps. A reactor at Bungang was later built with Soviet assistance. There were about 200 Soviet and foreign advisors working at the lab, and most of the lab equipment was of Soviet origin or design. In the early days reactor parts came from the Soviet Union, but later from China.

The uranium was mined domestically.

Lee Mi said that North Korea’s nuclear program began in 1950 when Kim Il Sung ordered Lee Hak Mun, a two-time national hero medal winner, to develop nuclear weapons. She said that Lee Hak Mun then recruited prominent scientists from the South including Lee Sung Ki, Doh Won Sung and Do Sang Rok during North Korea’s brief occupation of South Korea in the early months of the Korean War. After the war ended, Lee Sung Ki set up a branch lab in Hamhung, and Doh Wong Sup and Kim Do Sul headed the main lab at Bungang, she said.

Kim Young-sik said, however, Lee Mi is mistaken concerning the names of certain key scientists. Rather than Doh Won Sung, for instance, he named Han In Suk as one of the primary scientists of note involved in the project. He also named many others including Kim Gyng Wan (a chemist and president of Kim Chaik University), Yo Gyong Ku (the son of Yo Wun Hyung, who studied nuclear physics in the Soviet Union), Jung Gun, Choe Hak Soon, Keh Yong Soon and Park Kwan Oh as having taken part. Like Lee Mi, however, Kim Young-sik listed Lee Sung Ki and Do among the renowned scientists involved during the infancy of the North’s nuclear program. Kim Young-sik also said that several hundred of North Korea’s top scientists studied at the Dubna Nuclear Research Institute in the Soviet Union, which might help explain how an impoverished nation like North Korea was able to develop a nuclear weapon.

Kim Dae-ho, who requested asylum at the South Korean embassy in Beijing in 1994, said Lee Sung-ki was kidnapped at the outbreak of the Korean War. Reluctant to participate, he was eventually persuaded by Kim Il-sung, who told him, “Nuclear development is an essential project for the unification of the nation.” Born in South Korea, Han In-suk, who studied physics in Japan and Germany before Korea’s liberation from Japanese colonization, later studied at Moscow University.

It is Do Sang Rok who is considered the closest thing to the “father” of North Korea’s nuclear program, according to a report published in 2000 by the South Korean Ministry of Unification. Born in Hamhung, North Korea in 1903 or 1904, Do began publishing research papers on quantum mechanics in Japan and the U.S. as early as 1930. According to a separate study by Lee Jae Sung, a South Korean expert on North Korea, Do was the No. 1 scientist at work on Pyongyang’s nuclear program at the time of his death in 1990, 16 years before North Korea conducted its first of three underground nuclear tests.

In May 1946, Do fell afoul of the U.S. Army Military Government in Korea (USAMGIK) when he protested their proposal to forcibly merge Seoul’s 10 colleges and technical schools, after which he voluntarily crossed into Soviet-occupied northern Korea, where he would remained for the rest of his life. Later that summer, Kim Il Sung met with Do and other defecting scientists. In September 1946, Do became head of the physics and mathematics departments, as well as the chief of research at what would later become Kim Il Sung University in Pyongyang. He also wrote and translated Japanese textbooks into Korean. Kang Ho-je stated, in “Father of North Korean Nuclear Physics Received the Appellation, ‘People’s Scientist,’” that Do presumably began research into weaponized nuclear technology in the late-1960s or early-1970s, apparently due to a confluence of factors including international developments, North Korean domestic politics, and the state of North Korean science.

Purely by coincidence, the U.S. Army began an investigation into possible nuclear research in Korea in July 1946, two months after Do’s defection. Following the Soviet invasion of northern Korea at the end of WWII, U.S. intelligence in Seoul began hearing “consistent rumors” of nuclear activities from the Hamhung/Hungnam area; information received, for the most part, from Japanese and Korean refugees. According to a May 1946 U.S. Army intelligence report, the actual experiments on atomic energy during WWII were conducted in Japan, but the “practical application of atomic energy to a bomb or other military use” was carried out in Hungnam, home of the largest fertilizer and chemical complex in the Far East.

U.S. Army Major Richard R. Entwistle, a member of the Economic and Science Section of SCAP, accompanied by 2nd Lt. Koyoshi “George” Yamashiro, an expert translator, interviewed Lee Tai-kyu and Ahn Dong-hyuk, reportedly the best technically-educated men in Korea. Lee, who studied under Henry Eyring and H.S. Taylor at Princeton, was a professor of chemistry at Kyoto Imperial University during WWII, and later the Dean of the College of Engineering at Seoul National University. Ahn, a professor at Seoul Technical College, was described by Entwistle as a chemical engineer and graduate of Kyushu Imperial University in Japan.

Although Lee Tai-kyu said he had no “on the spot” information as to what took place in Korea, he mentioned Bunsaku Arakatsu and Seishi Kikuchi, leading Japanese nuclear physicists with whom he was associated in the Osaka-Kyoto area.

“At no time,” Lee Tai-kyu said, “did Arakatsu and Kikuchi indicate that research in this field was being conducted in Korea,” nor is there any evidence of records or equipment which would indicate that such research had been conducted, although Entwistle and Lee Tai-kyu agreed that this was perhaps a top-secret matter, not subject to casual conversation. Nevertheless, “if atomic research had taken place in North Korea during WWII, Arakatsu and Kikuchi would have known about it,” he said.

According to information received from USAMGIK’s Department of Education, Ahn was reportedly the best-informed scientist in Korea. He had taught in Korea during WWII and was one of the very few Koreans taken into confidence by Japanese officials. For this reason, Ahn was not favored by certain Koreans in high governmental positions.

“Ahn was not a theorist but a fundamentalist,” Entwistle said, “interested in promoting basic research that will solve Korea’s immediate economic problems.” As Director of the Central Research Laboratory and President of Seoul Technical College, Ahn was able to obtain for his laboratory what little appropriate equipment there was in Korea. Entwistle was also impressed by the manner in which Ahn had laid out and arranged his laboratories and equipment.

During the interview, Ahn spoke freely from the outset, without going through the preliminary thawing out period like other Koreans Entwistle’s group had previously interviewed. Ahn appeared technically qualified to discuss the subject because of his familiarity with the sciences, and Entwistle concluded his report by noting that Ahn was an extremely capable and resourceful man.

“One cannot predict for certain that Korea will make any noteworthy contributions to science in the near future. However, it is certain to predict that if she does, Dr. Ahn will have some part in it.”

When asked specifically about nuclear physics research on the Korean Peninsula, Ahn said only that “prospecting for and research on the dressing and refining of rare element ores were conducted,” although no economically important sources of pitchblende or uraninite were known to exist in Korea. He also emphasized that no atomic research, theoretical or experimental, was conducted in Korea; no equipment existed in Korea for nuclear physics research; no nuclear physicists existed in Korea; no research work on isotope separation had been conducted; and that no plans for teaching or research in the field of nuclear physics had been contemplated because neither the equipment nor personnel existed.

Nevertheless, when Entwistle asked Ahn for the names of the five most capable men of science in Korea, he mentioned Do Sang Rok, who Ahn described as a “former professor of physics at Seoul University; Electronics, Communication.”

Following the interviews of Ahn and Lee Tai-kyu, and after inspecting what was described as “important scientific institutions,” Entwistle said the equipment and personnel necessary to maintain and promote a minimum level of research did not exist in Korea. This is not difficult to believe, Entwistle said, when one considers the overall attitude and policy of Japan toward Korea during colonization.

Japan had a “simple and effective policy designed to exploit Korea’s resources to the limit and reduce the Koreans to the level of serfdom,” he said. While pursuing this policy, he said, the importance of controlling the education of Koreans was not overlooked: “Except in rare cases, middle school was the highest education obtainable.”

Entwistle concluded his report by stating, “Scientific research in South Korea is today at an extremely low level; almost to the point of non-existence, so the need for exercising surveillance over the laboratories and their associated personnel does not exist except in the isolated instances of mining and mine development.” Instead, Korea needs technical direction and assistance to “guide her through these infant years”:

The situation is not one of spoon feeding or wet nursing a group of mature scientists incapable of seeing beyond their selfish ends. The research being performed now is basic, designed to solve the immediate economic problems and benefit Korean society as a whole, and not to determine “how many angels can sit on the point of a needle.” Such a policy merits active encouragement.

About Kim Young-sik

Born in North Korea, Kim Young-sik fled his homeland when a peasant mob killed his brother, Sung-sik. Though just 15 years old, Kim engaged in anti-communist guerilla activities during the Korean War. After the war, Kim traveled to Utah where he was “semi-officially adopted” by a wealthy Mormon family. While he worked on his uncle’s farm feeding cattle and ducks, his young wife, Mary, cooked breakfast. “Mormons do not drink coffee or tea,” Kim said, “but Postum, a coffee taste-alike, is consumed in huge quantity.” He then took a janitorial job and lived in a basement room while attending Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.

Upon graduation, Kim hitched a ride with a Korean friend to Purdue University in Indiana where he later earned his doctorate in physics. He then taught for 18 years at the University of Ohio in Athens, Ohio as an assistant professor of physics, devoting most of that time on nuclear research for the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and the Argonne National Laboratory as a Visiting Scientist. He also worked at the Brookhaven National Laboratory (New York), CERN (Switzerland) and Rutherford Laboratory (England).

From 1980, Kim ran a computer application software business, taught computer science at various universities, and starting in the mid-1990’s published the Korean Web Weekly, an anti-communist web-based magazine that covered various subjects concerning Korea. Kim’s site also included a section entitled intelligence/counterintelligence. Kim died in 2005. His website, www.kimsoft.com, was taken down in 2009, sometime after Pyongyang allegedly hacked it, leading the South Korean government to “filter” it according to Article 7 (1) of the National Security Law of South Korea. The statute provides for up to seven years’ imprisonment for “those who praise, encourage, disseminate or cooperate with anti-state groups…being aware that such acts will endanger the national security and the democratic freedom.” The contents of his website have been saved and remain available offline.

If a website, museum, library or university is interested in obtaining Dr. Kim Young-sik’s website (www.kimsoft.com) in its entirely, please contact the author.

Special thanks to Dong-won Kim, Tae-ho Kim, Mari Nakahara, Ken Ricci, Sang So Nam, Jacco Swetsloot, Terry Shima, Minoru “Frank” Kawamoto and Yun Chung for their assistance. I would also like to thank Brigham Young, Purdue and Ohio State Universities who confirmed Dr. Kim Young-sik’s academic record.

Sources:...

Intelligence Summary Northern Korea (ISNK) #12, May 21, 1946 (1-15 May 1946).
“Interview with Dr. Lee Tai-kyu,” Entwistle, July 16, 1946.
“Interview of Ahn D.H.,” Entwistle, July 16, 1946.
“Scientific Research in Korea,” Entwistle, July 16, 1946.
“N Korea — Set to Join the ‘Nuclear Club’?,” Joseph S. Bermudez Jr., Jane’s Defence Weekly, vol. 12, Sept. 23, 1989.
Dr. Kim’s autobiography. Kim, Young-sik. “Eyewitness: A North Korean Remembers,” kimsoft.com, Sept. 30, 1995.
Han Ho-suk, “The US-DPRK Relations at the Close of the 20th Century” (English extract), Feb. 19, 2000, Kimsoft.com
Lee, Jong-heon (UPI), “N. Korea, Japan Move Toward Ending Hostility,” Sept. 17, 2002.
“Memoir Of A North Korean Yongbyon Nuclear Researcher (full text),” Yomiuri Shimbun (Japanese), Sept. 27, 2002 (est)
“North Korea Says It Has A Program On Nuclear Arms,” New York Times, Oct. 17, 2002, p. A1.
Brooke, James. “Japan Hopes to Use Aid to Press North Korea to End A-Bomb Plan,” New York Times, Oct. 19, 2002, p. A6.
Lee Wha-rang. “A Physicist Defector’s Account of North Korea’s Nuke Labs,” Korean Web Weekly, Oct. 20, 2002. Kimsoft.com
“Defector Leaked Details of N. Korea’s N-Program,” Yomiuri Daily (English Edition), Dec. 18, 2002.
Korean Web Weekly (Kim Young-sik), Dec. 19, 2002.
“A Nuclear North: How Did They Do It?” The Hankyoreh, Oct. 14, 2006.
Greenlees, Donald. “How North Korea Fulfilled Its Nuclear Dream,” International Herald Tribune, Oct. 23, 2006.
Wortzel, Larry M. “North Korea and Failed Diplomacy,” spring 2009, p. 103.
Kang, Ho-je. “Father of North Korean Nuclear Physics Received the Appellation ‘People’s Scientist’” (in Korean), Institute of Modern History Researchers, No. 111, June 1, 2010.
Kraft, Diane. “South Korea’s National Security Law: A Tool of Oppression in an Insecure World,” Wisconsin International Law Journal, Vol. 24, No. 2, p. 629.
http://www.bekkoame.ne.jp/ro/renk/nuclear.htm (now defunct)
http://www.kimsoft.com (now defunct)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source......
Posted for fair use......
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/05/17/uk-afghanistan-russia-idUKBRE94G06D20130517

Fearing Afghanistan instability, Russia mulls border troops

By Amie Ferris-Rotman
KABUL | Fri May 17, 2013 9:12am BST

(Reuters) - Russia, predicting instability once NATO-led troops withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of next year, is considering deploying border guards on the Tajik-Afghan border, Moscow's envoy to Kabul told Reuters in an interview.

Moscow, still sore from its disastrous, decade-long war in Afghanistan in the 1980s, is increasingly concerned by what it describes as the combined threat of narcotics and terrorism reaching Russia through former Soviet Central Asian countries.

"We prefer to tackle this problem on the Afghan border to stop these threats," Andrey Avetisyan said late on Thursday in the Russian embassy in Kabul.

Its sprawling grounds host a Soviet-built teal Volga car recovered in Afghanistan by embassy staff and a memorial to the 15,000 Soviet lives lost in the war against mujahideen fighters.

"We used to have a serious presence on the Afghan-Tajik border and, at that time, the situation there was much better, so it would be in the interest of both Russia and Tajikistan and even Afghanistan if Russia is present there," he said.

Avetisyan said such a presence would involve Russian border troops, but declined to give a number.

Russian border guards used to patrol the Tajik frontier with Afghanistan but left in 2005, ending a Soviet-era legacy and handing all power over to local authorities. Ex-Soviet Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan also border Afghanistan to its north.

Avetisyan said any agreement on border troop deployment would "of course" have to be agreed upon with Tajikistan.

Intensifying violence across Afghanistan, less than two years before foreign combat troops withdraw, has sent tremors of worry across Russia, which is battling an Islamist insurgency in its North Caucasus as well as widespread use of heroin and a huge increase in the incidence of HIV and AIDS.

Russia is involved in a series of ambitious construction projects in Afghanistan, including rebuilding its Soviet-era cultural centre, aimed at fostering stability in the country which produces 90 percent of the world's opium.

Avetisyan, who also worked for the Soviet government in Kabul during Moscow's war, said fighting in northern Afghanistan -- traditional bastions of anti-Taliban power groups -- offers proof of a "general destabilisation of the situation".

COMPARISONS WITH SOVIET CAMPAIGN

Comparisons are being increasingly drawn between the Soviet and NATO-led wars, and the Taliban have repeatedly warned Washington that it will encounter the same fate met by Moscow.

After the dispirited Soviet exit in 1989, the Afghan communist government collapsed, leading to infighting between warlords and a civil war that reduced much of Kabul to rubble and paved the way for the Taliban's rise to power in 1996.

"What have they been doing for the past 12 years?" Avetisyan asked of the current campaign, America's longest war.

"Fighting against terrorism with 150,000 troops without any success," he said, adding that a continued troop presence after 2014 "doesn't make any sense".

U.S. President Barack Obama is expected to soon announce how many combat troops Washington will leave after the withdrawal. Many Afghans are eager to know the size of the post-2014 force, fearing chaos and civil war could erupt with no foreign presence.

The United States is widely expected to retain nine bases across Afghanistan after 2014, NATO officials said after Afghan President Hamid Karzai revealed the plan this month.

But Avetisyan said any future U.S. military role in the country must be an international legal arrangement approved by the United Nations Security Council, in which Russia has veto power.

"A long-term or permanent military presence of a foreign force will be a reason of concern for us, especially if they are military bases. We would like to know what the purpose is and we still don't have answers to these questions," he said.

(Editing by Ron Popeski)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/may/16/putins-power-play-russia-building-missile-systems-/

Putin’s power play: Russia builds up missile systems, seeks to limit U.S. defenses

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By Bill Gertz - The Washington Free Beacon

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Russia is engaged in a major buildup of both nuclear and conventional missile defense systems at the same time Moscow is seeking legal limits on U.S. missile defenses, according to U.S. officials.

The Russian military is developing and deploying an array of new and modernized anti-missile interceptors that are part of a strategic doctrine that calls for defending against what Moscow believes to be an increasing threat posed by offensive ballistic missiles, said U.S. officials with access to intelligence reports.

New systems monitored by U.S. intelligence agencies under development or in the deployment phase include an advanced S-500 missile defense system currently being built in addition to the already available, and very capable, S-400 and S-300 defenses.

Additionally, the Russians are upgrading the SH-08 nuclear-tipped anti-missile interceptors that have been deployed around Moscow for more than two decades.

Other new Russian defenses with capabilities against both aircraft and missiles include SA-20 and SA-21 surface-to-air missiles, and a new advanced system called the SA-X-23, an advanced version of the S-300.

U.S. officials said the defenses are assessed as effective against cruise missiles, bombers, jet fighters, short- and intermediate-range ballistic missile, and intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Disclosure of the Russian missile defense buildup comes as the Obama administration is seeking to reach an agreement that critics say could result in legally binding restrictions on U.S. defenses. There are also fears an agreement with Russia will compromise classified technical data on missile defense that the administration is considering sharing with Russian officials.

One official said the administration is suppressing evidence of the Russian defense buildup. Instead, the White House is pressing ahead with questionable missile defense negotiations with Russia that are aimed at mollifying Moscow’s concerns that U.S. and NATO defenses are covertly aimed at countering Moscow’s strategic arsenal.

A second official said the Russians recently began announcing publicly a large-scale modernization of their missile defenses.

“What gives?” this official asked. “Why is the United States kowtowing and trying to please the Russians over their concerns about our missile defenses, and no one ever says anything about their missile defenses?”

In talks with the Russians on missile defense, Obama administration negotiators have not proposed that the Russians limit their missile defenses as part of any agreement, the officials said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin this week met with top officials, including the defense minister, chief of the military’s general staff, deputy defense minister in charge of armaments, and commanders of the military branches.

A presidential spokesman told Interfax the meeting was “dedicated to problems of the development of new missile defense systems and to issues of counteracting the existing systems.”

Arms control advocates have argued that missile defenses upset strategic stability and complicate efforts to reduce strategic offensive arms. But if that is the case, “why is Russia doing it and why are we letting them do it,” the second official asked.

If that logic is correct, “the Russians are merely getting us to disarm our defenses and disarm our offenses and shame on us,” he added.

Additionally, a Russian press report published Wednesday said President Barack Obama proposed in a recent letter to Putin that the United States and Russia conclude a legally binding agreement on exchanging information about missile defenses with the goal of “guaranteeing the absence of a mutual threat.” The report was carried in the Kommersant Daily.

White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden had no comment on the Russian report.

“We generally don’t comment on the content of the president’s correspondence and we won’t this time,” she told the Washington Free Beacon.

Disclosure of the letter followed Republican congressional opposition last week to revelations that the Pentagon has held internal discussions on declassifying missile defense technical data that could be shared with the Russians.

Rep. Mo Brooks (R., Ala.) and Sen. Mark Kirk (R., Ill.) said last week they opposed any sharing of missile defense data, warning such exchanges would undermine U.S. national security and compromise missile defenses developed at the cost of hundreds of billions of U.S. taxpayers’ dollars.

Thomas Moore, a former strategic affairs specialist with the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, said Russia plans to create a vast air and missile defense architecture in and among states of the former Soviet Union under the Collective Security Treaty Organization.

“Its recent announcement of the S-300 [air-missile defense] deployments to Belarus are an indicator of things to come,” Moore said, noting that open source reports indicated Moscow has developed a nuclear warhead for the S-300.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov linked the Belarus deployments to what he said was a violation of an agreement limiting NATO expansion in the 1990s.

“We can wonder aloud why Russia feels the need to make these threatening gestures, but with no real NATO missile defense architecture in Europe, I think the Russians are going to continue to use NATO air and missile defense improvements, or even the hint of future improvements, as an animating factor for most of their arms sales and defense cooperation,” Moore said.

“The final phases of this cooperation will result in a new Warsaw Pact, of sorts,” he said. “It doesn’t take much imagination to see that if one phase of this is some new Warsaw Pact, the next phase will be some new ABM Treaty.”

Jack Caravelli, a former CIA analyst now with the LIGNET strategic intelligence group, said Russian interest in expanding air defense and missile defenses is part of a larger, across-the-board effort by Putin to enhance strategic military capabilities that was announced during last year’s presidential campaign.

“Russia has the technical capabilities and decades of experience to develop robust defensive capabilities at the same time the Obama administration is pondering even deeper cuts in its strategic forces, on top of the New START Treaty signed with Russia several years ago,” Caravelli said.

Russia is also developing and deploying a new generation of long-range missiles, upgrades that will result in a more modernized force than any systems the United States will be able to match for at least two decades, he said.

“Russia’s planning for enhanced defensive and offensive forces almost certainly also is a reflection of a desire to keep apace of China’s growing investments in strategic offensive capabilities,” Caravelli said.

John Bolton, former undersecretary of state for Arms Control and International Security, said reports of Russian missile defense modernization are troubling.

“If the Russians are indeed improving their existing defenses, while simultaneously leading the Obama Administration down the primrose path of negotiations, it would fittingly embody the president’s naiveté in foreign affairs,” Bolton said. “Moscow must be looking forward to even more ‘flexibility’ from Obama, as he promised Russian President Medvedev last year.”

Obama was overhead during a discussion with Medvedev in Seoul saying he would have “more flexibility” in talks on missile defenses after his presumed reelection in November.

The Russians are continuing to demand legally binding restrictions on U.S. missile defenses as the price for dropping opposition to planned deployments of SM-3 missile interceptors on land in Europe. Those defenses are being planned in phases over the next several years amid concerns that Iran is on the verge of developing long-range missiles.

Frank Gaffney, a former assistant defense secretary in the Reagan administration, also sounded the alarm about the current administration’s negotiations with the Russians.

“The Kremlin, going back to Soviet days, has always believed missile defenses were not simply legitimate but necessary for protecting at least its priority assets and populations,” Gaffney said.

The Russian military pursued the development and deployment of such weaponry without interruption “including and notwithstanding its obligations under the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty,” Gaffney said.

“The Kremlin has, however, been at least as determined to prevent us from doing the same, using negotiations, coercion, and offensive missile enhancements to keep us vulnerable to their attack,” Gaffney said. “We indulge the Russians further in this double-game at our extreme peril.”

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Housecarl

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http://www.nationaljournal.com/nati...ct-will-be-decided-20130516?utm_source=feedly

How the Afghan Conflict Will Be Decided
A horrific week for U.S. casualties reaffirms President Obama’s rush to rely on the Afghan army. But can they handle it?

by Michael Hirsh
Updated: May 17, 2013 | 9:21 a.m.
May 16, 2013 | 2:45 p.m.

KABUL, Afghanistan – Gen. Sher Mohammad Karimi thumbs excitedly through a brochure prepared for him by Textron, the U.S. defense contractor. “This is what I want!” the Afghan army chief of staff says, pointing to a picture of the latest technology in armored troop carriers.

Outside Karimi’s window, the giant, $92 million new defense headquarters that Washington is building for him is nearly finished; Karimi moves in in September. “Pentagon No. 1. This no. 2,” Karimi’s adjutant, Col. Mohammed Shah, says proudly in broken English. What Shah means is that the vast domed structure atop a hill—which resembles nothing so much as the Temple Mount—is expected to be the second-largest defense headquarters in the world, a distinct oddity in one of the poorest countries in the world. The Pentagon is also spending about a billion dollars on Karimi’s pride and joy, a new Mobile Strike Force. That includes $58 million on brand-new armored vehicles designed especially for the Afghan army by Textron (and which are deemed so state of the art that Canada just bought some for itself).

More than anywhere else, the future of Afghanistan will be decided here, in the heart of the new Afghan security structure on which Washington is spending billions of dollars. And it may well be decided in the next six or seven months, when the latest “fighting season” ends and the mettle of Karimi’s new Afghan National Security Forces is truly tested. As of the end of June, the ANSF will move from planning and leading operations for the entire country. Asked in an interview what his plan was for defeating the Taliban, Karimi replied: “We will never allow the Taliban to take over the country. That’s the plan.”

It doesn’t sound like much of a plan, but Karimi had better be right. This has been a horrific week for U.S. casualties, culminating in a suicide bombing in Kabul on Thursday that killed six Americans and at least nine other people. The casualties, which included the deaths of four U.S. soldiers killed by a roadside bomb near Kandahar on Tuesday, will almost certainly harden President Obama’s commitment to hand this decade-long quagmire over to the ANSF as quickly as possible.

Like other Afghan and U.S. military officials, Karimi says the 334,000-strong ANSF are far stronger and more organized than they have ever been, reducing the insurgency to nighttime raids and occasional IED and suicide bombings. “We have kept, and protected, all the areas we are responsible for,” Karimi says. U.S. and Afghan officials now describe the Taliban as “confused” about their strategic aims, though the insurgents are not ready to talk peace, by all accounts.

Still, the Taliban-led insurgency, said to consist of no more than about 30,000 fighters, has made much of the country too dangerous to travel. And Thursday’s bombing points up the complex nature of the enemy, whose leaders perceive how quickly support for the war is fading in the U.S. and NATO countries and aims to launch “spectacular” attacks like Thursday’s to quicken the departure of the 50-nation International Security Assistance Force, which consists of 28 NATO and 22 non-NATO countries and is led by the United States. The American victims were two soldiers and four civilian contractors, a NATO source said. An extremist group called Hezb-e Islami under the Pakistan-based warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar claimed responsibility for the attack. A former Afghan prime minister, Hekmatyar is not part of the Taliban but occasionally fights alongside them—and sometimes against them. Other attacks have been blamed on various factions that are also supplied out of Pakistan, especially the notorious Haqqani network, which is also loosely allied with the Taliban.

Whoever this multifaceted enemy really is now, it’s increasingly apparent that most of the hardest fighting will still be left to the Afghans and Americans. For that, Karimi says he’s going to need a lot of U.S. military assistance well after the end of 2014, the deadline for withdrawal. “We still need their help and support, maybe for another five to 10 years,” he says. Lt. Gen. Nick Carter, the deputy commander of ISAF under Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, tends to back Karimi’s assessment. “For some time to come it’s our expectation that we will need to supply the Afghans ... [with] air support, certainly, counter-IED support, logistic support, and a number of areas where their capabilities are not at the level where they need to be at,” Carter said in an interview last Saturday. He says the U.S. and NATO will have to “train, advise, and assist”—the post-2014 catchphrase—probably until at least 2018.

But those plans are barely sketched out. U.S. and European officials interviewed here this week appeared to agree on one thing: Most of ISAF is waiting on Obama, whose administration is currently engaged in secret negotiations with Karzai’s government on the size and shape of the U.S. force that will be left in Afghanistan after the final drawdown of the 63,000 or so American troops that remain.

That force is expected to number perhaps 8,000 troops, complemented by another 4,000 or so from NATO and ISAF countries. But France and Canada have already announced they are leaving Afghanistan completely, and thus far only Germany has stepped up with an offer of 600-800 troops post-2014.

Can it work? “As we are tired of fighting, so are the Taliban,” insists Karimi, who was interviewed before Thursday’s attack. “They are not united. They have different approaches. Pakistan is supporting the Taliban, but Pakistan has its own [economic] problems. So it is not easy for Pakistan to continue sustaining them." Indeed, despite all the negative trends here now—enemy attacks may well be up, one reason NATO doesn’t even track them anymore—Thursday’s assault on the convoy was a rare “spectacular” in recent months. “The Taliban have more propaganda than actually what they can do,” said Karimi. “They announced [their spring offensive] and started it about two weeks ago. So where is it?”

Well, it’s still here, as a horrific week has demonstrated. Karimi may be right that the Afghan army will hold the center of the country, and that the Taliban are no longer taking over and holding large sections of Afghanistan. The ANSF now outnumbers the Taliban by 10-to-1. Even in the face of U.S. and NATO withdrawal, the long-term commitments Washington and other capitals are making, however reluctantly, will very possibly change the age-old equation that has often seemed to doom Afghanistan to a state of permanent war.

But it still promises to be a very long haul, no matter how much money and effort America pours into the new Afghan army.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/article/lessons-learned-iraq-invasion-0

May/June 2013
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Andrew J. Bacevich

The Iraq War teaches many things, but near the top of the list of lessons that Americans ought to learn (or relearn) is this: It’s not a black-and-white world. Statecraft is not a contest pitting innocence against evil. It never has been and it never will be. Any nation choosing to ignore this fundamental reality courts disappointment at the very least and may well invite full-fledged disaster.

From time to time decisionmakers in Washington have chosen to believe otherwise (or have made a pretense of doing so). When he announced in 1917 that war against the German Reich had become an imperative, Woodrow Wilson not only abandoned the policy of neutrality that he had steadfastly pursued over the previous two and a half years, he also invested the Allied cause with vast (and largely undeserved) moral significance. Germany was not just the enemy; it represented a threat to civilization itself. Presented with Wilson’s eloquent appeal to wage a war that would end all wars, Americans swooned. Yet although the nation’s doughboys—“crusaders,” Wilson called them—pitched in to defeat the Hun, the results fell well short of those that the president had envisioned.

Twenty-five years later, with the onset of a second world war, the good-versus-evil paradigm came roaring back. To judge from the line coming out of Washington by 1942, the Axis powers represented all that was evil, while the Allied cause embodied all that was good—freedom and democracy, respect for human dignity, and adherence to the rule of law. The problem with this formulation lay less with the first half than with the second. Sustaining it obliged the administration of Franklin Roosevelt to soft-pedal the totalitarian and imperialistic tendencies of our chief allies, while sweeping American racism under the carpet altogether. Crimes against humanity committed by the other side received appropriate condemnation. Crimes against humanity committed by our side? Not so much. Given the urgency of the situation, the tendency to permit a double standard was all but irresistible.

Once again, the white hats prevailed. Yet here too the expected happy outcome failed to materialize. Indeed, with the passing of World War II, Washington wasted no time in replenishing the ranks of evildoers, moving the Soviet Union from the column headed “allies” to the column headed “adversaries.” In short order, China followed, along with a motley crew of lesser nations, all said to take marching orders from the Kremlin. By the time the Korean War erupted, US policymakers—helped along by another Red Scare at home—had once more cast the world in unambiguously black-and-white terms.

However useful as a device for mobilizing the American people, this Manichaeism also underwrote a penchant for mischief by US policymakers that exacted heavy costs. Persuaded that the freedom of the Free World was at stake in Vietnam, the United States committed itself to a catastrophically unnecessary and ultimately unsuccessful war. Persuaded that anyone opposed to communism must necessarily possess some redeeming qualities, Washington threw in with a long list of unsavory autocrats from Somoza and Batista to Marcos and Chiang. Persuaded that commie sympathizers posed a threat to vital US interests in places like Iran and Guatemala, Washington toppled governments not to its liking—and then professed surprise at the unanticipated adverse consequences.

Again, the urgency of the postwar situation—European weakness combined with Stalin’s demands for accommodation as a prerequisite for “peace”—may have provided a partial justification for depicting the situation in terms that were “clearer than truth,” as Dean Acheson once put it. Yet implicit in Acheson’s remark was this assumption: Ordinary Americans lack the capacity to deal with nuance and complexity; hence, the need to address the public in dumbed-down, oversimplified terms.

Has there ever existed a more useful bogeyman than “monolithic communism,” the figment of fevered imaginations employed to enforce the Cold War foreign policy consensus? Well, yes, actually. That would be “global terrorism,” the product of equally fevered imaginations employed to similar effect in the wake of 9/11.

Immediately after the September 11th attacks, whether acting from instinct or out of calculation, George W. Bush framed the problem at hand as something both frighteningly novel and yet reassuringly familiar. The nineteen hijackers had initiated a new round of an old fight, he told Americans. Once again, the forces of light stood toe-to-toe with the forces of darkness. The enemy represented and drew inspiration from values that threatened freedom’s very survival. That enemy—not al-Qaeda alone, but the much larger enterprise of which al-Qaeda represented the radical vanguard—intended to impose those values on the entire world. So once again, it was us against them in what was going to be—could not be other than—a fight to the finish.

“We have seen their kind before,” the president declared. “They are the heirs of all the murderous ideologies of the twentieth century. By sacrificing human life to serve their radical visions—by abandoning every value except the will to power—they follow in the path of fascism, Nazism, and totalitarianism. And they will follow that path all the way, to where it ends: in history’s unmarked grave of discarded lies.”

Ipso facto, it followed that targeting the organization actually responsible for the 9/11 attacks would not suffice as a war aim. Much, much more was needed. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s immediate response, a cryptic note written on September 11th itself, captures the administration’s mood. “[G]o massive—sweep it all up, things related and not.” Two days later Rumsfeld’s deputy Paul Wolfowitz identified “ending states” involved in sponsoring terrorism as a primary US policy objective. As for President Bush, he was intent on eliminating tyranny and, indeed, evil itself, while inter alia removing any last remaining constraints on the exercise of American power.

This describes the context in which the administration devised and promulgated the Bush Doctrine of preventive war. Bush and his lieutenants quickly identified Saddam Hussein’s Iraq as an ideal locale for giving that doctrine a trial run. Yet Operation Iraqi Freedom turned out to be a costly bust, with the reputations of Bush, Rumsfeld, and Wolfowitz among the lesser casualties.

How did they get away with perpetrating such a preposterously stupid war? Through means not dissimilar to those that Lyndon Johnson, Robert McNamara, and McGeorge Bundy once employed to perpetrate an unnecessary and ill-advised war in Vietnam. Simply put, they snookered us. They employed demagoguery to frighten and seduce. To scare the American people, they portrayed Saddam Hussein—uninvolved in the 9/11 plot and himself on Osama bin Laden’s enemies list—as the equivalent of Adolf Hitler. To seduce their fellow citizens, they painted America’s intentions toward Iraq as selfless and benign—part of the nation’s providential mission to liberate the oppressed and spread the blessings of democracy. They either ignored or were themselves oblivious to vast historical, religious, sectarian, ethnic, and national complexities that soon enough made a mockery of Washington’s portrayal of dragon-slayers pitted against dragons.

For Americans, one big lesson of the Iraq War should be this one: When policymakers and pundits purport to explain what the United States “needs to do” by resorting to hoary old comparisons drawn from some mythic past, don’t believe them. Their aim is to manipulate and deceive. Whatever problem you’re talking about—did someone say Iran?—it’s not simple. And the nation’s purposes, whether measured by past actions or future aspirations, do not qualify as altruistic.

Alas, Americans are unlikely to learn this lesson for one simple reason. Rather than subjecting the Iraq War to the critical scrutiny it deserves, Americans are keen to forget this latest painful episode in their history. For that very reason, they can count on being snookered yet again.

Andrew J. Bacevich is a professor of history and international relations at Boston University. An updated edition of his book The New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War will be published this spring.

Related Essay
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Paul D. Wolfowitz | essay
While Iraqis may have been unprepared to manage affairs of state after Hussein’s removal, it would have been preferable for Iraqis to make governing mistakes, rather than American occupiers.

May/June 2013 - Contents
Editor’s Introduction
James S. Denton
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Andrew J. Bacevich
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Jackson Diehl
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Michael V. Hayden
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Walter Laqueur
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Meghan L. O'Sullivan
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Richard Perle
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
David Rieff
Lessons Learned: The Iraq Invasion
Paul D. Wolfowitz
Fractured Continent: The Turmoil and Promise of Latin America
Juan de Onis
Pollution in China: The Business of Bad Air
Anonymous
Almost a Miracle: Encouraging Inclusive Growth in India
Samir Goswami and Mark P. Lagon
Scotland’s Independence Bid: History, Prospects, Challenges
Roland Flamini
The Game Changer: Syria, Iran, and Kurdish Independence
Oray Egin
The Perils of Development: Afghanistan’s Threatened Treasures
Cheryl Benard and Eli Sugarman
Historical Fiction: China’s South China Sea Claims
Mohan Malik
Judging History: The Great War, Reconsidered
Jordan Michael Smith
Behind the Curtain: Stalin’s Plan Almost Worked
Michael Zantovsky
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/article/historical-fiction-china’s-south-china-sea-claims


May/June 2013
Historical Fiction: China’s South China Sea Claims
Mohan Malik

The Spratly Islands—not so long ago known primarily as a rich fishing ground—have turned into an international flashpoint as Chinese leaders insist with increasing truculence that the islands, rocks, and reefs have been, in the words of Premier Wen Jiabao, “China’s historical territory since ancient times.” Normally, the overlapping territorial claims to sovereignty and maritime boundaries ought to be resolved through a combination of customary international law, adjudication before the International Court of Justice or the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, or arbitration under Annex VII of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). While China has ratified UNCLOS, the treaty by and large rejects “historically based” claims, which are precisely the type Beijing periodically asserts. On September 4, 2012, China’s foreign minister, Yang Jiechi, told US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that there is “plenty of historical and jurisprudence evidence to show that China has sovereignty over the islands in the South China Sea and the adjacent waters.”

As far as the “jurisprudence evidence” is concerned, the vast majority of international legal experts have concluded that China’s claim to historic title over the South China Sea, implying full sovereign authority and consent for other states to transit, is invalid. The historical evidence, if anything, is even less persuasive. There are several contradictions in China’s use of history to justify its claims to islands and reefs in the South China Sea, not least of which is its polemical assertion of parallels with imperialist expansion by the United States and European powers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Justifying China’s attempts to expand its maritime frontiers by claiming islands and reefs far from its shores, Jia Qingguo, professor at Beijing University’s School of International Studies, argues that China is merely following the example set by the West. “The United States has Guam in Asia which is very far away from the US and the French have islands in the South Pacific, so it is nothing new,” Jia told AFP recently.

China’s claim to the Spratlys on the basis of history runs aground on the fact that the region’s past empires did not exercise sovereignty. In pre-modern Asia, empires were characterized by undefined, unprotected, and often changing frontiers. The notion of suzerainty prevailed. Unlike a nation-state, the frontiers of Chinese empires were neither carefully drawn nor policed but were more like circles or zones, tapering off from the center of civilization to the undefined periphery of alien barbarians. More importantly, in its territorial disputes with neighboring India, Burma, and Vietnam, Beijing always took the position that its land boundaries were never defined, demarcated, and delimited. But now, when it comes to islands, shoals, and reefs in the South China Sea, Beijing claims otherwise. In other words, China’s claim that its land boundaries were historically never defined and delimited stands in sharp contrast with the stance that China’s maritime boundaries were always clearly defined and delimited. Herein lies a basic contradiction in the Chinese stand on land and maritime boundaries which is untenable. Actually, it is the mid-twentieth-century attempts to convert the undefined frontiers of ancient civilizations and kingdoms enjoying suzerainty into clearly defined, delimited, and demarcated boundaries of modern nation-states exercising sovereignty that lie at the center of China’s territorial and maritime disputes with neighboring countries. Put simply, sovereignty is a post-imperial notion ascribed to nation-states, not ancient empires.

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Mohan Malik is a professor in Asian security at Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, in Honolulu. The views expressed are his own. His most recent book is China and India: Great Power Rivals. He wishes to thank Drs. Justin Nankivell, Carlyle Thayer, Denny Roy, and David Fouse for their comments on this article.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
I made a separate thread for the suicide bombing in Kandahar today:

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-elite-housing-complex-in-Kandahar-70-wounded


But Iraq is really sucking too. I get so tired of posting about people blowing each other up. Tell me again why we wasted so much over there?


Toll from sectarian bomb attacks across Iraq rises to 66
- @nytimes

55 mins ago from www.nytimes.com by editor

19 persons killed in roadside bomb at commercial complex in Amiriya, West Baghdad, Iraq: police, medics
- @Reuters

2 hours ago from twitter.com/Reuters by partner

Iraqi officials: Bomb strikes a Sunni area in Baghdad, raising overall daily death toll to 58 - @AP

2 hours ago from bigstory.ap.org by editor

Iraq police raise death toll from Friday bombings to 47
- @AP

5 hours ago from bigstory.ap.org by editor

Update: Bomb at Sunni mosque in central Iraq kills 23 people, officials say
- @AP

8 hours ago by editor

:dvl2:
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/article/game-changer-syria-iran-and-kurdish-independence


May/June 2013
The Game Changer: Syria, Iran, and Kurdish Independence
Oray Egin

Before Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government was reelected in July 2007, Erdogan made a calculated decision to shift his foreign-policy focus away from his NATO allies in Europe, where Turkey’s European Union membership application had been long stalled. He cast his glance eastward, toward the Middle East, with the intention of establishing himself as the region’s preeminent leader and positioning Turkey as the indispensible link between west and east. In April of that year, Erdogan visited Damascus, where he called upon Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad. By all accounts, the two leaders became fast friends. A few months later, the two vacationed together in Bodrum, a beautiful vacation hot spot on Turkey’s Aegean Sea coast, where they were joined by their first ladies, Asma and Emine, who also appeared friendly.

Then came the Arab uprisings, which exposed, toppled, and humiliated dictators in Tunisia and Egypt in rapid succession. Soon after, as Libya’s Muammar Qaddafi was being hunted down and shot dead by a merry band of his fellow countrymen in the desert, the hot winds of the revolution were blowing in the direction of another heretofore invincible dictator—Assad himself. As these successive revolutions burned their way across North Africa, no doubt Erdogan saw a new order taking shape and calculated that his regional leadership aspirations obliged him to ride this wave of popular revolution and revolutionary change. After hedging initially, Erdogan began to distance himself from Assad, and in short order began to attack the Syrian strongman and call for his removal. The Erdogan-Assad honeymoon thus ended after it was consummated but before anything was born. Even Erdogan’s wife, Emine, lamented her old friend Asma’s shocking new ways. “She broke my heart,” said Turkey’s first lady. “I cannot believe how insensitive she’s become to her country.”

Erdogan’s decision to reject Assad, and his subsequent support of the Syrian rebels, have brought the two countries to the brink of armed conflict. Last summer, Syrian forces shot down a Turkish military jet. According to Syria, it was an accident. Fearing a spreading war, Turkey’s NATO allies apparently persuaded Ankara to refrain from a direct military response. A few months later, in October, Syrian forces fired a shell—accidentally, Syria claimed—that struck a Turkish border town. This time the Turks retaliated by firing artillery rounds into Syria for several days. The Turkish Parliament passed a resolution authorizing the government to send troops across the border if needed. Meanwhile, with tensions mounting and Erdogan appearing somewhat vulnerable to air attack, in order to reassure Erdogan of its support, NATO began deploying the Patriot missile air defense system in January, along with four hundred military personnel, inside Turkey along its Syrian border, presumably to deter future “accidents.” Or perhaps, as US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said, to “deal with threats that come out of Syria.”

While Turkey and Syria have managed to avoid direct armed conflict, the two sides are engaged in war by other means, the consequences of which will shape the region’s structure, borders, and balance of power for years to come. Erdogan has given safe harbor to refugees fleeing Syria, as well as the Free Syrian Army, now headquartered inside Turkey. As of late last year, over one hundred thousand refugees had taken shelter in a dozen or so camps scattered inside the Turkish border. The Turkish government has reportedly spent more than $300 million for the refugees’ housing, food, and medical aid. Some estimate that the number of refugees will reach four hundred thousand by summer.

The flood of refugees and the overcrowded conditions have presented domestic challenges for Erdogan as resentments have grown among Turks whose local services are being burdened by the onslaught of refugees. Some have complained that refugees are selling their government-provided blankets and heaters on the black market. In an effort to escape the overcrowded camps, some refugees have attempted to rent apartments in nearby towns, but local authorities have refused permission and forced them back to the camps. Turks also suspect, and it’s widely reported in local media, that large numbers of Syria’s refugees are not so much seeking shelter from war as they are using the conflict to enter Turkey in hopes of citizenship, employment, and ultimately access to Europe. It’s also been reported that, in protest of camp conditions, Turkish police officers have been abducted. Turkish authorities have maintained control until now, but they have relied on increasingly harsh measures to maintain order, and many fear that if relief doesn’t come soon more trouble looms in the hot months ahead.

Beyond the many challenges Erdogan’s anti-Assad policy has caused, however, the most significant impact is that it has breathed new life into the Turkish Kurds’ long struggle for independence.

When the Turkish Republic was established in 1923, the Turkish Kurds made up some eighteen percent of the population, but the new republic did not recognize its approximately 1.8 million Kurds as a distinct minority with its own culture, language, and traditions. The Turkish government considered the Kurds to be “Mountain Turks.” In an effort to assimilate and perhaps control the Kurds, the Turkish government launched a series of repressive policies intended to diminish the Kurds’ identity by various means, including banning their language among them. The Kurds’ future, like the fate of other minority groups around the world, would come to be determined by their efforts to reclaim their ethnic identity through various demands—initially for minority recognition and rights, later for autonomous zones, and now for independence, something that seemed wholly implausible before the invasion of Iraq and the Arab uprisings.

Founded in 1978 by Abdullah Ocalan, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) was the first to take up the Kurdish cause in Turkey. Waging its struggle through guerrilla warfare and terrorism, the group’s ideology embraced Marxist revolutionary socialism fused with Kurdish nationalism. After the PKK’s first armed attack, on a border town in Eruh, in Turkey’s southeast, in August 1984, many regarded the ragtag fighters as a small, disorganized terrorist group. Yet they waged a relentless armed struggle for another fifteen years, until Turkish intelligence operatives captured Ocalan in 1999. With the group’s charismatic leader out of the picture, Kurdish commentators in Europe managed to convince the movement’s leaders that their dependence on armed conflict and terrorism was working against their interest. In time, the PKK scaled back its emphasis on armed struggle and ended its attacks in Europe. The Kurds had established a political wing and entered Parliament as early as the 1990s, but the process was disrupted when the Constitutional Court ordered that the party be disbanded and its parliamentarians arrested. In 2008, Kurds formed the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), which began to moderate the movement’s ideological profile and increase its civil engagement in Turkey and abroad. Party operatives opened active and visible bureaus in Brussels and Washington, and today Kurd leaders shuttle between world capitals routinely to meet with foreign officials to advance their agenda. Although the majority of Turkey’s citizens still see the Kurds as a terrorist group, over time the Kurds’ cause has been largely legitimized abroad, with many foreigners likening the BDP to the Kurdish Sinn Fein. While the PKK continues to be officially designated as a terrorist group by the US, Europe, and Turkey, the BDP won some thirty seats in Turkey’s 2011 election—a clear sign that the Kurds can conduct political as well as actual warfare.

When Erdogan’s AKP party took control in 2002, the PKK was a non-issue. Kurdish rebels had accepted a cease-fire. Their imprisoned founder and leader had been condemned to death (a sentence later commuted, under EU pressure and the need for reconciliation, to life in prison, where Ocalan has established a Mandela-like presence). For the first time, Turkey’s government began to grant greater rights to the Kurds. By 2009, this took the form of the “Kurdish Opening,” which proposed granting amnesty to PKK militants, broadcasting rights to private Kurdish television networks, and Kurdish-language classes in schools. The AKP government also initiated secret negotiations with senior PKK operatives in Oslo, probably between 2009 and 2010, that excluded Ocalan, who remained imprisoned. Erdogan tapped Turkey’s chief of intelligence, Hakan Fidan, to represent the government in these talks, but the negotiations halted when audio recordings of the secret meetings were leaked by an unknown source. Worried about jeopardizing the strong nationalist vote his party depends on, Erdogan quickly retreated and recommenced his anti-Kurdish rhetoric. Indeed, in the following months the government launched a crackdown on Kurd intellectuals, journalists, BDP members, mayors, and political activists, accusing them of being members of a terrorist organization. Between 2009 and 2011, 7,748 people were detained and 3,895 arrested. But the detention, trial, and political repression of these nonviolent Kurds backfired, stirring sympathy for the PKK at home and abroad.

After Erdogan abandoned Assad and began to support the rebellion against him, Assad gave him a taste of his own medicine, providing aid to the PKK fighters living along Syria’s border with Turkey. The government of Iran, Assad’s most important and reliable ally, wasted little time reversing its longstanding anti-Kurd policies to bolster Assad and increase pressure on Erdogan in Turkey. These shifting alliances have provided the Kurd fighters with a degree of logistical support, free passage, and refuge unimaginable only a short time ago, greatly reinvigorating the Kurds’ armed struggle against Turkey. Once thought to have been defeated, the Kurds’ military capacity is now stronger and more influential than ever. Thus tensions between Turkey and Syria (and Turkey and Iran) have made it possible for the PKK to reengage in armed struggle.

“The PKK has become an influential force in the Middle East,” explains Selahattin Demirtas, leader of the BDP. He refers to the fact that Assad, spurned by Erdogan, now supports the Kurds in Syria along with the PKK’s aim to form autonomous zones within Turkey. Although the PKK has not yet achieved any tangible success, its battle against the Turkish military for control of towns dominated by Kurdish citizens escalates daily. The death toll has spiked in recent years too, now resembling that of the 1990s, when the guerrilla campaign was at its peak. According to the International Crisis Group, the renewed fighting has claimed more than seven hundred lives in the last year and a half, from pitched battles between Turkish and PKK forces as well as “a wide-spread campaign of kidnapping, suicide bombings, and terrorist attacks” by Kurdish fighters.

Kani Xulam, director of the American Kurdish Information Network in Washington, tells me that “the war that many thought had taken a deep sleep is being awakened again and Turkey is going back to its past.” Unable to find a solution, past governments in Ankara sponsored anti-Kurd groups that murdered Kurdish businessmen who supported the PKK financially. In those days, Kurdish activists mysteriously disappeared, many abducted and arrested and routinely tortured in prison. The less fortunate of those turned up dead, their bodies randomly scattered.

In recent television appearances, Erdogan has declared that the “Oslo talks” with the Kurds could restart. At first, Erdogan stressed that the BDP would not be included because the government considered the party’s agenda and style too radical and confrontational toward its positions and policies. Erdogan preferred that the government negotiate directly with the imprisoned Ocalan, whom the government views as more moderate. The move was also widely interpreted as an effort to nudge the BDP leadership aside by establishing Ocalan as the Kurds’ authentic representative, much as South Africa’s government attempted to diminish the more radical African National Congress by deferring to Nelson Mandela during the reconciliation process between the whites and blacks there. Erdogan made it clear that he believed peace could be made in talks with Ocalan, because, as he put it, the PKK was “destroying everything [his] government has built for the Kurdish people.”

There are practical political incentives for Erdogan to appear firm in any negotiations with the Kurds, given that the vast majority of Turkey’s citizens consider the PKK and the BDP to be, simply stated, terrorists. In the view of most Turks, an Erdogan meeting with Ocalan would be comparable to President Obama sitting down to chat with Osama bin Laden in bin Laden’s better days. Yet Erdogan has opened the way for peace talks at a time when Ocalan has never been more credible or influential among the Kurds, not to mention some influential international constituencies. Indeed, a single utterance from Ocalan can alter the political agenda in Turkey.

For example, he recently ended the hunger strikes by imprisoned PKK members that began last September. The strikes had spread quickly and, according to some estimates, nearly a thousand people had joined the cause, including elected BDP parliamentarians, creating a tense political standoff in Turkey. The striking Kurds’ demands were straightforward: officially recognize the Kurdish language and allow it to be used in Turkish schools; permit defendants to use the testimony of other Kurds in court; and improve Ocalan’s prison conditions and lay out a plan for his eventual release. On the sixty-eighth day of the strikes, the government allowed Ocalan’s brother, Mehmet, to visit him in prison. At the visit’s end, Mehmet emerged with a message from his brother announcing to his PKK followers that their demands had been heard and that it was time to end the strikes. The strikes were soon ended and, during the same period, the governing AKP party proposed legislation in Parliament that would permit defendants (meaning Kurds) the right to use “another language” (meaning the Kurdish language) in a court of law. The resolution, which passed in the General Assembly, marked a milestone achievement for the Kurdish liberation movement.

Soon after Ocalan called off the hunger strikes, the Erdogan government announced its intention to restart formal negotiations with the Kurds and work directly with Ocalan as their representative. In January 2013, the talks reconvened. Turkey’s intelligence chief, Hakan Fidan, attempted to begin these negotiations with Ocalan but without the BDP represented, as Erdogan wanted, but both the PKK and BDP resisted and demanded that the talks include party representatives. Erdogan ultimately capitulated, although he was able to strike a deal whereby the three members of the BDP negotiating team were vetted and approved by him, ensuring the more radical elements were kept out of the talks.

As of this writing, the negotiations continue with hints of progress, as well as political intrigue. Ocalan has written three letters—one to the PKK, one to the BDP, and one to the EU. Many speculate that the letters outline some sort of road map to reconciliation and an end to the armed resistance, but only a handful of people are aware of their actual contents. Notes of the negotiations, however, have not been kept quite so private. As happened during the earlier secret meetings in Oslo between the government and the Kurds, notes recorded during the new closed meetings were leaked to the media. It’s not yet known who leaked the notes, and why, but it is widely recognized that the primary effect has been to undermine Erdogan’s political standing. The documents portray Ocalan as a self-confident, stubborn, tough negotiator. This differs from accounts by the government, which wants to appear tough on the “terrorists” to appease Erdogan’s nationalist backers. “If I do not succeed,” Ocalan apparently said in the meeting, “then Turkey will have to suffer from a civil war.”

Neither the government nor the Kurds deny the accuracy of the leaked records. The government has said that those who leaked the papers are attempting to sabotage the peace process. But it seems at least equally likely that the leakers are engaged in an internal and increasingly tense power struggle inside Turkey, whose goal is to undermine Erdogan’s political standing.

The late Mehmet Ali Birand, a prominent Turkish journalist who followed the PKK closely for many years until his death in January, suggested late last year that a general amnesty is inevitable, which would lead to Ocalan’s freedom and the possibility that he would lead the PKK as a political party into Parliament. “If we want to overcome [the Kurdish-Turkish conflict], dispose of a bleeding wound, and prevent the country from disintegrating, we should prepare for these,” he wrote. In an e-mail to me, however, he added, “It’s not something that is going to happen overnight.”

Yet the government’s restarted negotiations with Ocalan are bearing fruit. Just before the Nevrouz holiday that marks the beginning of the Kurdish spring, the AKP government allowed another BDP delegation to meet with Ocalan—this time with a legitimate BDP leader included in talks. During the meeting, Ocalan gave the delegation a statement that was read to a crowd celebrating the Nevrouz holiday in the flag-draped Kurdish city of Diyarbakir. In it, Ocalan made a historic bid for a cease-fire between the PKK and the Turkish government, calling for a withdrawal of fighters from Turkey. Remarkably, the statement also rescinded the Kurds’ demand for a separate homeland. While some Kurds are dubious about what has been promised in return—and indeed the PKK leadership has hinted that an agreement will require a consensus among Kurds beyond a private deal between Ocalan and Erdogan—the international press is crediting Erdogan for an important achievement. And, by the stroke of his pen, Ocalan has profoundly changed the course of the long conflict and potentially ended a struggle that has raged for a generation.

“I think that in the short term Ocalan will be taken out of solitary confinement: he’ll either be held in house arrest or in exile,” Ahmet Tulgar, an independent journalist and a novelist who writes often about the Kurds, told me. “But Kurds won’t settle for this, they want his release. The Turkish state is aware that it has lost the battle with Kurds. And Kurds are also aware of this, that’s why they are constantly raising the bar with their demands.”

These scenarios were not even imaginable a generation or even five years ago. “The PKK is at its most powerful and fortunate stage in its entire history,” said Birand. “As long as the conflict goes on in the Middle East they will not give up the guns and will not reach a solution.”

If the Arab Spring was a stone dropped in the waters of Middle East politics, the waves it created, passing through Syria, now lap upon the shores of Turkey’s domestic politics, creating uncertainty even more than conflict. “What’s interesting is that Kurds know what they want, but nobody knows what the government will do,” says Tulgar. “Because the government itself doesn’t know it either. Even if they have an agenda, they are reluctant to share it with anyone else.”

Oray Egin is a Turkish journalist based in New York and Istanbul.

Related Essay
The Rise and Decline of Erdogan’s Grand Vision
Hillel Fradkin and Lewis Libby | essay
Prime Minister Erdogan’s aspirations to restore Turkey’s national glory and to unify the Islamic world have been unhinged by rebellion in Syria and the region’s ferocious rivalries and inflexible dogma.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source...
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/17/w...-is-causing-syria-to-break-apart.html?hp&_r=0

May 16, 2013
Syria Begins to Break Apart Under Pressure From War
By BEN HUBBARD
Comments 168

CAIRO — The black flag of jihad flies over much of northern Syria. In the center of the country, pro-government militias and Hezbollah fighters battle those who threaten their communities. In the northeast, the Kurds have effectively carved out an autonomous zone.

After more than two years of conflict, Syria is breaking up. A constellation of armed groups battling to advance their own agendas are effectively creating the outlines of separate armed fiefs. As the war expands in scope and brutality, its biggest casualty appears to be the integrity of the Syrian state.

On Thursday, President Obama met in Washington with the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and once again pressed the idea of a top-down diplomatic solution. That approach depends on the rebels and the government agreeing to meet at a peace conference that was announced last week by the United States and Russia.

“We’re going to keep increasing the pressure on the Assad regime and working with the Syrian opposition,” Mr. Obama said. “We are going to keep working for a Syria that is free of Assad’s tyranny.”

But as evidence of massacres and chemical weapons mounts, experts and Syrians themselves say the American focus on change at the top ignores the deep fractures the war has caused in Syrian society. Increasingly, it appears Syria is so badly shattered that no single authority is likely to be able to pull it back together any time soon.

Instead, three Syrias are emerging: one loyal to the government, to Iran and to Hezbollah; one dominated by Kurds with links to Kurdish separatists in Turkey and Iraq; and one with a Sunni majority that is heavily influenced by Islamists and jihadis.

“It is not that Syria is melting down — it has melted down,” said Andrew J. Tabler, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and author of “In the Lion’s Den: An Eyewitness Account of Washington’s Battle with Syria.”

“So much has changed between the different parties that I can’t imagine it all going back into one piece,” Mr. Tabler said.

Fueling the country’s breakup are the growing brutality of fighters on all sides and the increasingly sectarian nature of the violence.

Recent examples abound. Pro-government militias have hit coastal communities, targeting Sunni Muslim civilians. Sunni rebel groups have attacked religious shrines of other sects. A video circulating this week showed a rebel commander in Homs cutting out an enemy’s heart and liver, and biting into the heart.

Analysts say this shift in the nature of the violence will have a greater effect on the country’s future than territorial gains on either side by making it less likely that the myriad ethnic and religious groups that have long called Syria home will go back to living side by side. As the momentum seesaws back and forth between rebels and the government, the geographic divisions are hardening.

After steadily losing territory to rebels during the first two years of the conflict, government forces have progressed on a number of key fronts in recent weeks, routing rebel forces in the southern province of Dara’a, outside Damascus and in the central city of Homs and its surrounding villages.

These victories not only reflect strategic shifts by government forces but also could further solidify the country’s divisions.

Since mass defections of mostly conscripted soldiers shrank the government’s forces earlier in the uprising, it has largely given up on trying to reclaim parts of the country far from the capital, said Joseph Holliday, a fellow with the Institute for the Study of War in Washington.

Instead, the government has focused on solidifying its grip on a strip of land that extends from the capital, Damascus, in the south, up to Homs in the country’s center and west to the coastal area heavily populated by Mr. Assad’s sect, the Alawites.

Other than hitting them with airstrikes or artillery, Mr. Assad has made little effort to reclaim rebel-held areas in the country’s far north and east.

The character of those fighting for Mr. Assad has changed, too. As the uncommitted defected, the loyalists remained. “All of these defections and desertions basically created a more loyal and therefore more deployable core,” said Emile Hokayem, an analyst with the International Institute for Strategic Studies, who is based in Dubai. “At least you know who is fighting for you.”

Mr. Assad has also come to rely more heavily on paramilitary militias that draw largely from his Alawite sect and other minorities who consider him a bulwark against the rebels’ Islamism. More recently, fighters from Lebanon’s Shiite militant group Hezbollah have added extra muscle, especially in the border region near the town of Qusair, an area dotted with Shiite and Sunni villages that has seen intense fighting in recent months.

This new focus on tightening his grip on the country’s center suits Mr. Assad fine, said Abdulrahim Mourad, a Lebanese politician and former Parliament member who visited Mr. Assad in Damascus last month.

“He told jokes, was very funny,” Mr. Mourad said. “He was very relaxed and relieved.”

In the void left by the government in the country’s north and east, rebel groups have seized swaths of territory and struggled to establish local administrations.

Although the Obama administration and its allies share the rebels’ goal of removing Mr. Assad from power, they have little else in common with the many rebel brigades that define their struggle in Islamic terms and seek to replace Mr. Assad with an Islamic state. Among them is Jabhet al-Nusra, or the Nusra Front, the local branch of Al Qaeda, which the United States has blacklisted as a terrorist group.

The war’s duration and the competition for resources have left the rebel movement itself deeply fractured. Few effective links exist between the rebels’ exile leader, Gen. Salim Idris, and the most powerful groups on the ground.

And recent months have seen increasing fights among rebels, diminishing their ability to form a united front against the government. This week, the Islamist Shariah Commission in Aleppo went after rebels accused of looting. The council sent fighters to surround the group’s headquarters and arrested some of its members, confiscating trucks full of looted goods. The haul in one neighborhood included five washing machines and a television.

Another video, circulated this week, showed a Nusra Front leader in eastern Syria standing behind 11 bound and blindfolded captives. After announcing that they had been sentenced by an Islamic court for killing Syrians, he drew a pistol and shot them in the back of the head, one by one.

Activists later identified the man as a Saudi citizen named Qaswara al-Jizrawi. They also determined that the executions took place months earlier since Mr. Jizrawi was killed in March in a gunfight between his and another rebel group that left dozens of people dead on both sides.

In Syria’s northeastern Hassakeh Province, the country’s largest Kurdish majority area, residents have taken in Kurds fleeing violence elsewhere, expanded the teaching of the Kurdish language in schools and raised militias that have clashed with rebel brigades. Many local Kurds are linked to groups in Turkey and Iraq and hope to use the uprising to push for greater autonomy.

These spreading fissures leave little optimism that Syria can be stitched back together under one leadership in the near future.

“The only real outcome I see in the next 5 to 10 years is a series of cantons that agree to tactical cease-fires because they are tired of the bloodletting,” said Mr. Holliday, the analyst with the Institute for the Study of War. “That trajectory is in place, with or without Assad.”

Anne Barnard and Hwaida Saad contributed reporting from Beirut, Lebanon, and Michael D. Shear from Washington.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I made a separate thread for the suicide bombing in Kandahar today:

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-elite-housing-complex-in-Kandahar-70-wounded


But Iraq is really sucking too. I get so tired of posting about people blowing each other up. Tell me again why we wasted so much over there?


Toll from sectarian bomb attacks across Iraq rises to 66
- @nytimes

55 mins ago from www.nytimes.com by editor

19 persons killed in roadside bomb at commercial complex in Amiriya, West Baghdad, Iraq: police, medics
- @Reuters

2 hours ago from twitter.com/Reuters by partner

Iraqi officials: Bomb strikes a Sunni area in Baghdad, raising overall daily death toll to 58 - @AP

2 hours ago from bigstory.ap.org by editor

Iraq police raise death toll from Friday bombings to 47
- @AP

5 hours ago from bigstory.ap.org by editor

Update: Bomb at Sunni mosque in central Iraq kills 23 people, officials say
- @AP

8 hours ago by editor

:dvl2:

I know what you mean MzKitty. If there was a coherent plan, it got lost.

From what I gathered from the deployment and disposition of forces in Iraq, the intent was two fold, one to get Saddam out of the picture, which should have been done back in 1991, and putting a big enough force into the region to be a credible threat to Iran. Threatening to bomb somebody is one thing, but invading and having the means close at hand is quite another.

The internal security situation was exasperated by the attempt to go in with the minimum amount of force, the wholesale disbandment of the Iraqi Army and the failure to deal with Syrian and Iranian assistance to the Sunni and Shia "resistance movements".

What also didn't help was the apparent loss or ignoring of the lessons learned in the US occupations of Italy, Germany and Japan during and after World War 2 as well as policy calls from State, Justice/DoD JAG and the White House in both administrations.
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://www.france24.com/en/20130517-tribal-violence-hits-jordan-university-system

17 May 2013 - 23H02

Tribal violence hits Jordan university system

AFP - Unprecedented and sometimes deadly tribal violence at university campuses in Jordan threatens the country's ambitions to build a solid system of higher education, experts warn.

The latest unrest broke out in the restive southern city of Maan last month.

Maan has a bloody and rebellious past dating back to the turn of the last century, when it was the seat of the Great Arab Revolt that crushed Ottoman rule.

Armed clashes between students at the King Hussein bin Talal University in the city at the end of April killed four people and wounded more than 25, provoking a public outcry and royal fury.

"We cannot remain silent about all this violence and illegal actions. We cannot accept them," King Abdullah II told MPs and government ministers at a meeting after the clashes.

"We need a strategy to tackle this problem which is affecting all Jordanians.

"The rule of law must be reinforced in a firm, courageous and transparent way, without any leniency or favouritism."

Military prosecutors on Thursday charged five men with rioting, possessing automatic weapons and "forming a gang" over the university violence.

"This problem has become a very dangerous issue," Hussein Khazaai, a sociologist at the Balqa Applied University, told AFP.

"More than 10 percent of the country's 255,000 university students are involved in such violence, affecting the learning process of the remaining 90 percent."

Campus violence has been on the rise, with 80 violent brawls reported in universities in 2012, compared with 31 in 2010, Khazaai said.

"Some students keep guns in their cars, just in case there is a fight. Small things create problems, but later families and tribes get involved, creating a much bigger conflict.

"They are destroying the universities," he added.

According to Elizabeth Buckner, a PhD candidate in international and comparative education at Stanford University, these problems "threaten Jordan's reputation as a regional higher education exporter and its larger goals of building a globally competitive university system."

"Jordanian violence is most directly attributable to tribal rivalries, which are exacerbated by tribal influence in national admissions policies and in university-based administrative decisions," Buckner said in an article published on Sada, an online Carnegie Endowment for International Peace journal.

"That Jordan cannot control violence on its campuses also highlights a larger tension in the country's higher education between the universities' desire to be modern and egalitarian and susceptibility to tribal pressure, which occasionally allows individuals to evade bureaucratic rules."

Admissions policies are also widely recognised as a contributing factor, she said.

"They grant students from certain tribes or backgrounds admissions and scholarships through elaborate affirmative action policies... meaning that those with much lower academic preparation are often admitted to national universities."

Oraib Rintawi, head of the Al-Quds Centre for Political Studies, called the clashes "unprecedented."

"The state has failed to apply the rule of law to all. Important segments in society feel that they are above the law. This level of university clashes is unprecedented," Rintawi told AFP.

"This has strengthened tribal identity at the expense of national identity. The state must restore its prestige and reconsider the educational system."

Rintawi echoed government concerns that campus violence could force thousands of international students to leave Jordanian universities.

Other experts agreed.

"The government is not doing enough prevent these growing problems, tackle their causes and punish perpetrators because it is in denial," said Fakher Daass of the National Campaign for Defending Students' Rights.

Musa Shteiwi, head of the University of Jordan's Centre for Strategic Studies, urged reform.

"The students are frustrated at the economic and political situation. They feel there is no light at the end of the tunnel. The state needs to act fast and start by reforming the entire educational system," Shteiwi told AFP.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://www.france24.com/en/20130517-syria-opposition-dire-straits-regime-scores-points

17 May 2013 - 22H50

Syria opposition in dire straits, regime scores points

AFP - Already weakened by political infighting, Syria's opposition has been dealt another blow by the posting online of videos purporting to show rebel fighters committing atrocities, analysts say.

And on the back foot due to army advances on the ground, the opposition is also under international pressure to enter into dialogue with President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

Videos posted online that showed a rebel mutilating a soldier's corpse, and of a jihadist summarily executing 11 Assad supporters "will undermine the opposition's narrative of an uprising against a dictator", said Swedish expert on Syria, Aron Lund.

"Even though they are not representative of the whole of the insurgency, such footage puts the opposition in a difficult position as it draws attention to the opposition's abuses... and undermines their chances of getting support from Western nations", Lund told AFP.

The videos also shed new light on the sectarian nature of the Syrian conflict, with victims often apparently targeted because of their religious affiliation.

While most rebels -- like the population -- are Sunni Muslims, Assad and many of his military commanders adhere to the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

Aside from the videos, abuses committed against members of particular faiths by followers of other religious beliefs have frequently been documented by rights groups.

Most recently, the Syrian Observatory for Human rights reported the killing of 145 people in a Sunni district of the coastal city of Banias on May 3 by regime troops and militiamen.

The watchdog said the slaughter came a day after some 51 others were killed in the nearby Sunni town of Bayda.

The videos showing rebel atrocities have been met with international condemnation, further raising concerns over arming the rebels, for fear such weapons may fall into the hands of extremists.

"The opposition is under two kinds of pressure. It is being told to accept a political solution with members of the regime, and to limit... the presence of Islamists among its ranks," said Ziad Majed, who teaches at the American University of Paris.

"This makes both the situation on the ground and relations with some of the opposition's backers more difficult," Majed told AFP.

"Meanwhile, the regime steps up the savagery of its operations on the ground... while many divisions mar and weaken the opposition."

Opponents to Assad "seem to be in a perpetual state of organising themselves", Salman Shaikh of the Brookings Institution told AFP.

The main opposition National Coalition now has to decide whether to take part in an international conference called by Moscow and Washington to push for a political solution, and also to choose a new chief, said Shaikh.

"The opposition is put into a difficult position in that it is going into this conference (set for June) without any real assurances -- if it goes," he added.

Though they support opposite sides in the Syria conflict, the United States and Russia have made a joint call for a political solution.

Their call was adopted by the other UN Security Council members as well as by Turkey and the Arab League.

The proposed talks are an extension of the Geneva agreement last year, which did not specify that Assad had to step down as part of any solution to the crisis.

The main opposition National Coalition, which insists that Assad's departure is a key condition for a political solution, will decide in an Istanbul meeting on May 23 whether it will take part in the international conference.

Assad has made it clear he does not intend to leave power before his mandate ends in 2014.

On the ground, the army has escalated its operations and made advances near Damascus and in the central province of Homs, strategically located near the Alawite heartland.

Hundreds of fighters from Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah, who support Assad, have helped the army in Qusayr near Lebanon and in Sayyida Zeinab near Damascus.

Although large swathes of northern Syria are under rebel control, insurgents lack the weapons they need to overrun army bases that they have besieged for months.

Moscow's military support to Damascus has meanwhile remained strong. It opposed a UN General Assembly resolution Wednesday that condemned the regime's escalation, and has continued to provide new heavy weapons.

"Undoubtedly, the key backers have reinforced their support and doubled and tripled it," said Sheikh.

Damascus' main regional ally Tehran "is the cause of many of the army's military advances", said Riad Kahwaji, a Dubai-based military expert.

"The advances on the ground are small-scale, not strategic", Kahwaji told AFP.

"One cannot say the regime has made a strategic shift and that it is winning on the ground. We are still very far away from that."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.france24.com/en/20130517-tunisia-bans-salafists-ansar-al-sharia-conference

Latest update: 17/05/2013
- salafism - security - Tunisia

Tunisia bans Salafist group from holding conference

Tunisa’s government announced on Friday that it had banned the hard-line Salafist group Ansar al-Sharia from holding its annual conference this weekend, saying the gathering posed a “threat to public order."
By News Wires (text)

The Tunisian government has definitively banned hardline Salafist group Ansar al-Sharia from holding its annual congress at the weekend, the interior ministry announced on Friday.

"We have decided to prohibit this gathering, which would be in violation of the law and because of the threat it represents to public order," a statement said.

Earlier, Interior Minister Lotfi Ben Jeddou said Ansar al-Sharia, which does not recognise the authority of the state, had not submitted a request for authorisation to hold the meeting, planned for Sunday.

Rached Ghannouchi, who heads the moderate Islamist ruling party Ennahda, said this week the government had banned Ansar al-Sharia from holding its congress.

Angered by that, the group vowed to go ahead with the gathering in the historical central city of Kairouan and warned that the government would be responsible for any violence.

"We are not asking permission from the government to preach the word of God and we warn against any police intervention to prevent the congress from taking place," spokesman Seifeddine Rais said on Thursday.

Rais said more than 40,000 people were expected to attend the congress and warned that "the government will be responsible for any drop of blood spilt".

Prime Minister "Ali Larayedh will answer for his policies before God," Rais said.

The ministry statement warned that "all those who defy the authority of the state and its institutions, who try to sow chaos, who incite violence and hatred will bear all the responsibility".

It also warned of a harsh response to "anyone who tries to attack the forces of order" and said the police and army are on "high alert to protect the security of citizens and their property".

And it said the state is committed to "respecting the right to demonstrate peacefully, to safeguard freedom of expression, religious practice and peaceful preaching for all citizens in conformity with the laws in force."

Earlier, Ben Jeddou warned that the government would not tolerate unrest.

"We have special forces to protect Tunisia," he said.

"We do not accept death threats or incitement to hatred. We do not accept to be treated as tyrants."

Ansar al-Sharia did not apply for permission to hold the congress, he said, urging the Salafists to embrace "wisdom".

"We told them there should be no violence, physical or verbal, and that they should limit themselves to preaching (Islam). But so far they did not request a permit."

"God willing," Ben Jeddou said, "we will not have to resort to violence" if the Salafists break the law.

"We don't want a confrontation with them. They are Tunisians. We did not close their mosques; we did not prevent them from preaching. They are they ones who are raising the stakes."

A US embassy travel advisory warned its citizens against travelling to Kairouan at the weekend, saying "large rallies and demonstrations are possible" if Ansar al-Sharia's congress goes ahead.

"There is the potential for disruption to traffic in the area of Kairouan and possible confrontations with security forces. The embassy recommends against all travel to Kairouan during this period."

Salafists advocate an ultra-conservative brand of Sunni Islam, and Ansar al-Sharia is considered the most radical of the extremist groups that emerged in Tunisia after the 2011 revolution that overthrew veteran strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

Islamists have been blamed for a wave of violence across the country, including an attack on the American embassy in September that left four assailants dead.

The group's fugitive leader, Saif Allah Bin Hussein, a former Al-Qaeda fighter in Afghanistan, warned last week he would wage war against the government, accusing it of policies in breach of Islam.

Ennahda leader Ghannouchi has said the Salafists were behind the brutal killing of a policeman this month, and that they acted in response to a fatwa, or religious decree, issued by a top cleric.

The victim was slaughtered, stripped and hidden in a mosque.

Bin Hussein, who goes by the name of Abu Iyadh, was jailed under Ben Ali but freed after the uprising.

His movement has denied any connection with jihadists being hunted by the army in the border region with Algeria.

(AFP)
 

Housecarl

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http://apnews.myway.com/article/20130517/DA6B99D00.html

Bombs targeting Sunnis kill at least 76 in Iraq

May 17, 4:36 PM (ET)
By SAMEER N. YACOUB

(AP) Iraqis gather at the scene of a bomb attack in Baqouba, northeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, May 17,...
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BAGHDAD (AP) - Bombs ripped through Sunni areas in Baghdad and surrounding areas Friday, killing at least 76 people in the deadliest day in Iraq in more than eight months. The major spike in sectarian bloodshed heightened fears the country could again be veering toward civil war.

The attacks followed two days of bombings targeting Shiites, including bus stops and outdoor markets, with a total of 130 people killed since Wednesday.

Scenes of bodies sprawled across a street outside a mosque and mourners killed during a funeral procession were reminiscent of some of the worst days of retaliatory warfare between the Islamic sects that peaked in 2006-2007 as U.S. forces battled extremists on both sides.

Tensions have been intensifying since Sunnis began protesting what they say is mistreatment at the hands of the Shiite-led government, including random detentions and neglect. The protests, which began in December, have largely been peaceful, but the number of attacks rose sharply after a deadly security crackdown on a Sunni protest camp in northern Iraq on April 23.

(AP) The dead body of a thwarted suicide bomber lies outside of the Mustafa mosque after being killed by...
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Majority Shiites control the levers of power in post-Saddam Hussein Iraq. Wishing to rebuild the nation rather than revert to open warfare, they have largely restrained their militias in the past five years or so as Sunni extremist groups such as al-Qaida have frequently targeted them with large-scale attacks.

Nobody claimed responsibility for Friday's attacks, but the fact they occurred in mainly Sunni areas raised suspicion that Shiite militants were involved. The bombs also were largely planted in the areas, as opposed to the car bombings and suicide attacks that al-Qaida in Iraq and other Sunni insurgents are known to use.

Talal al-Zobaie, a Sunni lawmaker, called on politicians across the religious and ethnic spectrum to put aside their differences and focus on protecting the nation.

"The terrorist attacks on Sunni areas today and on Shiite areas in the past two days are an indication that some groups and regional countries are working hard to reignite the sectarian war in Iraq," he said. "The government should admit that it has failed to secure the country and the people, and all security commanders should be replaced by efficient people who can really confront terrorism. Sectarianism that has bred armies of widows and orphans in the past is now trying to make a comeback in this country, and everybody should be aware of this."

The areas hit Friday were all former Sunni insurgent strongholds that saw some of the fiercest fighting of the U.S.-led war as sectarian rivalries nearly tore the country apart.

(AP) Family members of Mohammed Aboud, chant slogans against the Sunni-dominated Free Syrian Army rebel...
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The deadliest blast struck worshippers as they were leaving the main Sunni mosque in Baqouba, 60 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of Baghdad. Another explosion went off shortly afterward as people gathered to help the wounded, leaving 41 dead and 56 wounded, according to police and hospital officials.

Grocery store owner Hassan Alwan was among the worshippers who attended Friday prayers in the al-Sariya mosque. He said he was getting ready to leave when he heard the explosion, followed by another a few minutes later.

"We rushed into the street and saw people who were killed and wounded, and other worshippers asking for help," he said. "I do not know where the country is headed amid these attacks against both Sunnis and Shiites in Iraq."

Baqouba was the site of some of the fiercest fighting between U.S. forces and insurgents. Al-Qaida in Iraq essentially controlled the area for years, defying numerous U.S. offensives aimed at restoring control. It also is the capital of Diyala province, a religiously mixed area that saw some of the worst atrocities as Shiite militias battled Sunni insurgents for control.

A roadside bomb exploded later Friday during a Sunni funeral procession in Madain, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) south of Baghdad, killing eight mourners and wounding 11, police said. Two medical officials confirmed the casualties.

(AP) Family members of Mohammed Aboud chant slogans against the Sunni-dominated Free Syrian Army rebel...
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Another blast struck a cafe in Fallujah, 65 kilometers (40 miles) west of Baghdad, killing two people and wounding nine, according to police and hospital officials.

Ahmed Jassim, a 26-year-old taxi driver, had to take a wounded friend to the Fallujah hospital after the attack.

"We used to meet every Friday to smoke shisha (a water pipe) and we thought we would have a good time today, but things turned into explosions and victims," he said, waiting outside the hospital.

In Baghdad, a bomb exploded near a shopping center during the evening rush hour in the mainly Sunni neighborhood of Amariyah, killing 21 people and wounding 32. That was followed by another bomb in a commercial district in Dora, another Sunni neighborhood, which killed four people and wounded 22, according to officials.

All the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief reporters.

(AP) Family members of Mohammed Aboud, chant slogans against the Sunni-dominated Free Syrian Army rebel...
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"It is not a coincidence that the attacks were concentrated in some areas of one sect and then moved the next day into areas of the other sect," said Jawad al-Hasnawi, a lawmaker with the bloc loyal to Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

"It is clear that terrorist groups such as al-Qaida and Baathists are trying hard to reignite the sectarian war in Iraq," he added. "But the government bears full responsibility for this security chaos and it has to take quick and serious measures in order to stop the bloodshed, instead of just blaming other political blocs."

Al-Hasnawi added: "Today and yesterday, the Iraqi people paid for the failure of government security forces. Everybody should expect darker days full of even deadlier attacks."

Iraqis have grown used to a cycle of high-profile bombings.

It was the deadliest day since Sept. 9, 2012, when 92 people were killed, according to an Associated Press tally.

The attacks on Sunnis came after two days of car bombs targeting Shiite areas in Baghdad and other attacks that left 33 dead on Wednesday and 21 dead on Thursday.

The violence against a Sunni Muslim house of worship represented a trend that has been on the rise. About 30 Sunni mosques have been attacked from mid-April to mid-May, killing more than 100 worshippers. It also comes against the backdrop of the civil war in neighboring Syria that also has taken on sectarian undertones and frequently spilled across the border.

In the southern city of Basra, hundreds of Iraqis attended the funeral of two Shiite fighters killed in Syria. Several such funerals have been held in recent months as Iraqi Shiite fighters have trickled into Syria to fight for President Bashar Assad's regime. The Assad government is dominated by the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, which is fighting mostly Sunni rebels.

---_

Associated Press writers Kim Gamel in Cairo and Nabil al-Jurani in Basra contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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Iran may ban candidates who seek ties with US

May 17, 8:04 AM (ET)

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - The head of Iran's constitutional watchdog says it may disqualify candidates in June presidential elections who seek full relations with the United States.

Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, secretary of the Guardian Council that vets candidates, said Friday on state radio that some nominees may hope that international sanctions over Tehran's disputed nuclear program will end if the country restores relations with the U.S.

"Indeed, we should laugh at this comment," said Jannati. "If somebody has such a viewpoint, is it possible to approve him or to vote for him?"

The U.S. has had no diplomatic relations with Iran since 1979. No high-profile candidate has suggested full restoration. But one candidate backed by reformists, ex-president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, suggested better relations are possible.

The final list of candidates will be announced Tuesday.
 

Housecarl

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Hints of political change on horizon in Algeria

May 17, 10:52 AM (ET)
By PAUL SCHEMM

(AP) FOR STORY ALGERIA GENERATION'S END - Algerian youth in Algiers on April 30, 2013 as they celebrate...
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ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) - The Arab Spring may finally be en route to Algeria.

With the president in a French hospital recovering from a stroke, the generation of aging politicians and generals that has run Africa's largest country for a half-century is reaching its end. Adding to the mix, Algeria's overwhelmingly young population is increasingly vocal in its demands for jobs and housing that its oil-dependent economy isn't providing.

What comes next is of vital importance to Algeria - and the West.

Algeria has the most powerful and best-equipped military in North Africa and the Sahel and is an important bulwark against terrorist groups linked to al-Qaida. Any further instability in North Africa, where Tunisia, Libya and Egypt are already struggling, could embolden the armed militants.

(AP) FOR STORY ALGERIA GENERATION'S END - Tahar Belabes, one of the few activists in Algeria that has...
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So far Algeria has been buoyed by high oil prices and, with almost $200 billion in foreign reserves, it has spent lavishly to try to buy off the discontent. But critics maintain that short-term approach does not take into account the volatile energy market or of Algerians' deep-seated need for a new political vision.

Algeria has been more stable than its neighbors, but that may not last. In a country where the age of the average government official is the 70s, the biggest driver of political change has been the funerals, as one by one the grand figures of Algeria's revolutionary generation die off.

In the past year, the country's first president, Ahmed Ben Bella; Chadli Benjedid, the third president; and Ali Kafi, an interim leader after the 1992 military coup have all died. During a moment of silence for Kafi at a soccer game last month, the crowd started chanting "Bouteflika next."

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 76, has been ill since he disappeared into a French hospital in 2005 to treat what was called a bleeding ulcer. U.S. State Department cables at the time said it could possibly be stomach cancer. Yet despite his apparent frailty and his frequent absences from public life, Bouteflika is widely believed to be aiming for a fourth presidential term in the 2014 election.

He has been in Paris since April 27 recovering from a mini-stroke.

Chafiq Mesbah, a former member of Algeria's intelligence service and now a political analyst, said Bouteflika's mini-stroke should mean that Algerians in 2014 will finally get to truly elect a leader.

He said Bouteflika's insistence on going for another term and growing reports of corruption in his entourage have aggravated Algeria's powerful military and intelligence circles.

What happens next depends on the shadowy head of the intelligence service, Gen. Mohammed "Tewfik" Mediene, the power behind the throne since 1990.

"The head of intelligence - he was my boss, so I know him - could take the path of Andropov or Beria," Mesbah said, referring to Soviet-era KGB heads Lavrentiy Beria, who was notorious for his repressive methods, and Yuri Andropov, who began opening up the superpower in the 1980s.

But if the choice is made for rigged elections and more of the same, the results could be dire, Mesbah warned.

"If there is not real democratic transition, there will be an uprising ... we will return to the violence of the 1990s," he said.

He was referring to Algeria's so-called black decade, when a civil war raged between Islamic militants and security services after the government voided the 1992 election that Islamists were winning. Some 200,000 people died and villages were razed in the ensuring violence.

Memories of that grim time up to now have kept Algerians from pushing for real political change, analysts say. But with nearly half the population under the age of 24, the black decade is a distant memory for many.

Algerians have increasingly held small protests in the past few years demanding housing, electricity and jobs - in 2011 alone there were more than 10,000 protests, some of which turned violent. They have never, however, come together into any kind of broader movement.

For days after Bouteflika's illness was announced, young Algerians drove through the streets honking horns and cheering over an upcoming soccer championship, showing how profoundly little they cared about which old man was running the country.

While Algeria has dozens of political parties and thousands of civic organizations, they have little impact on society because the state has coopted, attacked, weakened, infiltrated or bought off any group that showed a real chances of connecting to the people, said Nour-Eddine Benissad, president of the Algerian League for the Defense Human Rights.

"They have broken civil society, the political parties and the unions. So I fear if there is an uprising, it will be just the protest movements face to face with the authorities without any intermediaries that could manage the situation," he said.

In the midst of this leadership crisis, the state is coming under new pressure from a group organizing one of society's most volatile sectors - unemployed young people.

The National Committee for Defense of the Rights of the Unemployed is based in the south, the home of Algeria's sensitive oil and gas industry, and has mobilized young people to demonstrate for jobs in the oil industry in several southern cities. It also has ambitions to take its cause nationwide.

In a country that is so outwardly rich yet feels poor, unemployment is a top issue. Officially the rate stands at 10 percent, but it rises to 22 percent for those between 18 and 24. Algeria's economy is almost entirely based on oil and gas, an industry that is lucrative but does not produce large numbers of jobs.

More than 100 Algerians have set themselves on fire in the last two years over the lack of opportunities - an act that in neighboring Tunisia set off what became the 2011 Arab Spring revolutions.

The leader of the new movement has been nicknamed after South American revolutionary Che Guevara, and has seen success despite dropping out of school at a young age.

"I am not Che, I just am a simple activist demanding his rights - I have a brother who committed suicide along with four other friends in my neighborhood who did," said Tahar Belabes, who comes from the southern oil city of Ouargla, where the largest protests have been.

"I want people to apply the principles and actions of Che, but not to dress up like him with berets and do nothing," he said in the rough accent of the south, a traditionally neglected area.

The government has used its familiar methods to quiet the movement, announcing thousands of new police recruit jobs in Ouargla and low interest loans for unemployed youths looking to start businesses.

Far from appeasing Belabes and his movement, however, the measures have only made the activists more political, expanding their demands beyond jobs.

"We are calling for change in the regime because we believe that there is corruption throughout the government," he said, adding that the plan was to coordinate with groups all over the country and start holding new protests everywhere.

Whether the movement is eventually repressed or coopted is less important than how it shows the pressures for change, said sociologist Nasser Djabi of Algiers University.

He said with Algeria's coffers filled with oil money it was a good time for wide-ranging reforms to engage the population and reinvigorate the economy so it can produce jobs. He acknowledged, however, that Algeria's leaders have been profoundly cautious about anything that would lessen their control.

"They could miss this moment for change and it could explode or not explode and we would just live in a time of chronic instability," said Djabi. "It is the end of a political generation ... it's the biological end of a system."
 

Housecarl

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http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2013/05/18/943424/coast-guard-may-have-violated-rules-engagement

‘Coast Guard may have violated rules of engagement’
By Edu Punay (The Philippine Star) | Updated May 18, 2013 - 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines - The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) personnel who shot dead a suspected Taiwanese poacher last May 9 appeared to be on the defensive but may have violated rules for dealing with such a situation, an official privy to the government’s investigation said yesterday.

“That is what the investigation has shown so far,” said the official, who declined to be named pending completion of the probe.

“While it could have been self-defense, the next questions would be: was it proper to immediately fire the shots? What are the rules of engagement? the official said. “Given that they acted in self-defense, is it justifiable to fire right away? What do the rules of engagement of the PCG say?”

Information gathered so far by the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) showed the crew of MCS-3001, a 35-meter vessel jointly manned by the PCG and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR), were preventing the Taiwanese fishermen from further entering Philippine territory. One of the foreign vessels, Guang Ta Hsin-28, threatened to ram the PCG vessel several times.

The NBI based its initial findings on the incident report submitted by the PCG, and on interviews with coast guard and BFAR personnel involved, as well as ballistics testing of firearms used.

The NBI, meanwhile, presented to the media yesterday the firearms involved. The guns consist of eight M-16 rifles, six M-14 rifles and a machine gun. An official report is expected next week.
Headlines ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1

The NBI has yet to send a team to Taiwan to examine the fishing vessels and get a statement from companions of the victim, 65-year-old Hung Shih-cheng.

The official said there were violations of some provisions in the PCG’s rules of engagement.

For instance, the Coast Guard crew admitted having fired warning shots, which is generally not allowed under the rules. The source said the rules require Coast Guard personnel to employ other means to make foreign intruders leave Philippine territory.

Warning shots are fired only under extreme circumstances or when an intruding vessel clearly shows hostility.

In its incident report, the PCG explained that the crew of MCS-3001 fired warning shots in the air and sounded the vessel’s horn to make the fishing vessels stop.

The PCG claimed that the Taiwanese vessel revved up its engine, maneuvered backward before speeding forward, nearly hitting the MCS 3001’s stern.

The Coast Guard fired another round of warning shots but the Taiwanese vessel refused to stop and engaged the PCG-BFAR in a high-speed sea chase. They said the Taiwanese vessel repeatedly tried to sink their ship, prompting them to fire at the ship in a bid to disable it.

Reports from Taiwan, however, said the vessel showed over 50 bullet holes. Video footage of the incident showed the Coast Guard vessel chasing the Taiwanese ship.

“This proved that a chase did take place. The BFAR’s Monitoring, Control and Surveillance (MCS) 3001 vessel was chasing the Taiwanese ship. This means that the two vessels were not stationary at sea,” another source said.

“If the NBI findings would show that the PCG personnel on board the MCS 3001 were wrong, then they would have to face the consequences of their actions, but if what the PCG crew of MCS 3001 said was true, then they are vindicated,” the source added.

Meanwhile, Justice Secretary Leila de Lima said that while the NBI cannot hold a “joint investigation” with a team of Taiwanese investigators who arrived last Thursday, both governments may cooperate to have a “parallel investigation” instead.

“We cannot prevent (Taiwan) from investigating. They can’t prevent us from investigating. So what’s going to happen is like a parallel investigation,” she told reporters after confirming receipt of an official request from Taiwanese investigators for cooperation in the probe.

De Lima said the NBI’s probe is “almost done” and what’s left is for its team to go to Taiwan to gather additional evidence.

She said she hopes the result of the investigation would help “ease the tension between the Philippines and Taiwan.”

– With Evelyn Macairan
 

Housecarl

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http://thediplomat.com/2013/05/17/why-japan-should-ignore-chinas-okinawa-provocation/


Why Japan Should Ignore China’s Okinawa Provocation
East Asia Politics
May 17, 2013
By Taylor Washburn

Nationalists are seeking leverage for the Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute. Japan shouldn’t play into their hands.

By now the narrative is familiar: China, brandishing a sheaf of faded maps and records, questions the basis of Japan’s authority over islands in the East China Sea. The dispute summons bitter memories of the Middle Kingdom’s humiliation at the hands of its neighbor starting in the late 19th century, but also heightens fears that Beijing is abandoning its decade-old mantra of “peaceful rise” to become the revisionist power its neighbors and Washington fear.

For the last year, this has been the tale of the Senkaku Islands, a remote cluster of rocks whose only mammalian inhabitants are goats and an endangered race of moles. China’s claim to the islets, which it calls Diaoyu, dates back at least four decades, but tensions have heightened since the Japanese government announced last year that it would purchase them from a private owner.

Just last week, however, Beijing opened up a new front in the dispute. On Wednesday, China’s leading state-run newspaper, the People’s Daily, ran a piece questioning the status of Okinawa, home to 1.4 million Japanese citizens as well as 25,000 U.S. troops. Its authors, two scholars at a government-backed think tank, surveyed the history of the Ryukyu Islands, of which Okinawa is easily the most important, and concluded that the legitimacy of Japan’s rule over the chain is “unresolved.” When pressed for comment, China’s Foreign Ministry refused to affirm that the Ryukyus are part of Japan, instead reiterating that “the Diaoyu Islands,” which sit to Okinawa’s west, “are China’s inherent territory,” and not part of the Ryukyus. This is hardly the first time that nationalists have attempted to sow doubt about Okinawa, but never before have questions about Japanese sovereignty been entertained at such a high level.

The Ryukyus arc from Kyushu, the southernmost of Japan’s main islands, towards Taiwan. Most of their residents are indigenous Ryukyuans, a group of peoples who have traditionally spoken their own Japonic languages and maintained political and trade ties with both China and Japan. Even before the unification of Okinawa and surrounding islands under a single king in the 15th century, the Ryukyuans were tributaries of the Ming Dynasty. But after their king refused to help the Japanese daimyo Hideyoshi invade Korea in the 1590s, the islands were subjugated by a feudal lord from Kyushu. For almost three centuries, the islands’ kings paid tribute to two masters, the shogun of Japan and the emperor of China.

The arrival of Commodore Matthew Perry and his “black ships” in the 1850s rocked Japan, but the new state that emerged from this political turmoil was unified and assertive. In 1879, the young Emperor Meiji, a modernizing reformer, formally absorbed the Ryukyus, which became Japan’s Okinawa Prefecture. China’s Qing Dynasty ratified this action in 1895, but only under duress; the Treaty of Shimonoseki, which ended the First Sino-Japanese War, not only provided that China would abandon any claims to the Ryukyus, but signed away Taiwan and severed China’s longstanding tributary relationship with Korea. (The treaty also helped set the stage for the Senkaku dispute, which turns in part on whether those islets were part of Taiwan, and thus reverted to China after 1945, or the Ryukyus.)

Okinawa was captured by Allied troops in the final months of the Pacific War, but this victory came at such a terrible cost that it may have influenced President Truman’s decision to use atomic weapons rather than mount a ground assault on Japan’s home islands. When the American occupation of Japan ended in 1952, the Treaty of San Francisco provided that Washington would continue to administer the Ryukyus. Okinawa became a key pedestal of American power in Asia, an idea that Commodore Perry had championed a century earlier. The chain reverted to Japanese control in 1972, but the U.S. military continues to maintain a constellation of bases on Okinawa under the terms of Washington’s security alliance with Tokyo.

The Ryukyuan people have a complex relationship with their national government. Many resent the way the islands were used during the Pacific War –in particular, the compulsory mass suicides ordered by Imperial officers during the Allied invasion – and feel that they still bear a disproportionate burden for Japan’s defense. One particular source of controversy is the location of U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, today situated in an urban area near Okinawa’s capital. While Washington and Tokyo long ago negotiated a plan to move the base, a combination of local opposition and waffling by Japanese leaders has delayed its implementation.

But none of this knotty history casts any doubt on Japanese sovereignty. The islands’ residents remained citizens of Japan throughout the postwar U.S. administration, and most welcomed the return of Japanese control. In polls, a majority of Okinawans either identify themselves as Japanese or adopt a dual identity, and independence advocates – who, ironically, express solidarity with similar movements in Taiwan, Tibet and Xinjiang – have fared poorly in local elections.

These facts are hardly news to Beijing. The questions that state organs have raised are not part of a disinterested historical inquiry (as the Foreign Ministry asserts), nor do they foreshadow a campaign to claim the chain for China. Rather, they are an attempt to broaden the Senkaku dispute, itself a pointed challenge to Tokyo and the U.S.-Japan alliance.

Indeed, an unsigned editorial in Global Times has already acknowledged as much, describing the issue as a source of “leverage,” to be raised whenever Beijing is displeased with Tokyo. “If Japan, binding itself with the U.S., tries to threaten China’s future,” the hawkish state-run paper warns, Beijing should seek to “impose threats on the country’s integrity” by backing Ryukyuan independence.

Since last week, formal diplomatic protests have ping-ponged between between Tokyo and Beijing. Japan is entitled to its outrage, but its leaders must recognize that an angry response could play into the hands of Beijing’s hawks. Facing two genuine independence movements and tied up in territorial disputes with other neighbors from India to Southeast Asia, China in fact has much to lose from pressing a theory that could embolden “splittists” at home and heighten anxieties abroad. Emphasis on the Ryukyus’ antique tributary relationship with China is particularly incendiary, given that many other Asian nations were similarly tied to the Middle Kingdom at some point in history.

With even Chinese netizens mocking the People’s Daily for overreaching, Japan has nothing to gain from becoming ensnared in a debate over Okinawa. By refusing to be goaded, Tokyo can deny China the leverage it seeks – and watch as Beijing suffers the consequences of its own provocation.

Taylor Washburn is a lawyer studying at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and was previously a visiting professor at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology. He can be followed on Twitter @washburnt.

Related Features

Insult to Injury in Okinawa
Why Nationalism is Driving China and Japan Apart
7 Reasons China and Japan Won’t Go To War
Why Japan-China Spat Hurts Both
Japan’s Persistent “Ameriphobia”
 

Housecarl

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http://www.google.com/hostednews/af...docId=CNG.174881c9835ed64b4e86317223ee7c90.81


Chinese ships in disputed-islands waters: Japan

(AFP) – 16 hours ago

TOKYO — Three Chinese government ships entered the waters of disputed islands on Friday, Japan's coastguard said, more than a year after the then-Tokyo governor set off the row by announcing plans to buy them.

The Chinese maritime surveillance vessels were spotted off the Senkaku islands, which China calls the Diaoyus, in the East China Sea at around 2:30 pm (0530 GMT), the coastguard said.

It is the latest episode in a fraught few months that has seen repeated stand-offs between official ships from both sides as they have jostled over ownership of strategically-important and resource-rich islands.

The territorial row blistered in September when Tokyo nationalised three islands in the chain, in what it said was a mere administrative change of ownership and one intended to pre-empt a more volatile purchase by nationalist Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara.

Tokyo's move prompted angry anti-Japan demonstrations across China, which has intensified claims to the islands it says should have been "returned" in the post-World War II settlement Tokyo made.

Copyright © 2013 AFP. All rights reserved.
 

Lilbitsnana

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http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2013/05/18/0401000000AEN20130518002400315.HTML


2013/05/18 16:08 KST


(URGENT) N. Korea launches three short-range guided missiles: officials


I'm thinking they might not "bluff" so much in the future with the new guy.

It only took them a little over an hour after making the condemnation statement over US tests to fire off their own missile tests.



2013/05/18 14:50 KST



N. Korea denounces U.S. ICBM test plan as military provocation


SEOUL, May 18 (Yonhap) -- North Korea on Saturday denounced a possible move by the United States to test fire an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) later in the month, calling it a serious military provocation.

The Rodong Sinmun, an organ of the ruling Workers’Party of Korea said in a article monitored in Seoul, the launch, if it takes place, will be an insult to the international community and a direct threat to Pyongyang.

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/nort...002200315.HTML
 
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