WAR 01-02-2016-to-01-08-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://warontherocks.com/2016/01/ru...rity-strategy-familiar-themes-gaudy-rhetoric/

Russia’s New National Security Strategy: Familiar Themes, Gaudy Rhetoric

Mark Galeotti
January 4, 2016

On the last day of 2015, Vladimir Putin put his signature on the decree adopting Russia’s new National Security Strategy out to 2020. Inevitably it is something to pore over looking for clues about Putin’s future intentions and the Kremlin’s assessment of the risks and opportunities ahead. The document can be downloaded as a PDF from the Kremlin website, and there is a pretty decent overview of the main points from RT.

In comparison with the last strategy, adopted in 2009, it comes across at first blush as pretty extreme. The new document contains fiercer and more explicit criticism of the West. The key issue is what Moscow calls the West’s efforts to “levers of tension in the Eurasian region” in order to undermine Russian national interests. In particular, the strategy condemns “the support of the United States and the European Union of an unconstitutional government coup in Ukraine which has led to a deep schism in Ukrainian society and the outbreak of armed conflict.”

More generally, “Russia’s independent foreign and domestic policy has been met with counteraction by the US and its allies, seeking to maintain its dominance in world affairs.”

Overall, the 2009 document was much more aspirational about opportunities and plans for development, while its successor is much more focused on challenges, problems, and threats — and it is not afraid to point the finger at where they come from.

However, beneath the gaudy patina, it is less fearsome and indeed more sensible a document than might otherwise appear.

First of all, the national security strategy remains essentially the same. In 2009, there was less reason to be so inflammatory and outraged, but even so the same concerns were there, in more measured tones. Consider, after all, paragraph 30 (the translation by Rustrans is here, slightly edited, with my emphases added):

Threats to military security include the policies of a number of leading foreign countries, directed at achieving predominant superiority in the military sphere, primarily in terms of strategic nuclear forces, but also by developing high-precision, informational and other high-technology means of conducting armed warfare, strategic non-nuclear arms, by unilaterally creating a global missile defense system and militarising space, which could lead to a new arms race, and likewise policies directed at the proliferation of nuclear, chemical, and biological technologies, and the production of weapons of mass destruction, their delivery systems or components.

Negative influences on the military security of the Russian Federation and its allies are aggravated by the departure from international agreements pertaining to arms limitation and reduction, and likewise by actions intended to disrupt the stability of systems of government and military administration, rocket attack warning systems, control of outer space, the functioning of strategic nuclear forces, nuclear weapons storage facilities, nuclear energy, nuclear and chemical industry, and other potentially dangerous sites.”

While we don’t get the United States and NATO explicitly name-checked in this passage, at heart it is not too far from the 2016 document’s claims that “the US and its allies are seeking to maintain dominance in world affairs.” Likewise, before the Arab Spring uprisings in Libya and Syria as well as the civil war in Ukraine the “actions intended to disrupt the stability of systems of government and military administration” were less about manufactured color revolutions and regime change, but the fear of Western political interference was still present. The essence of the perceived threat is much the same, it is just the urgency and the idiom that is new.

The prescriptions for Russia’s future security are also the same. Russia needs to be able to protect its own interests and borders, of course, but there remains a formal commitment to use military methods only when non-military ones fail, and nuclear weapons only in the face of an existential threat. The prescriptions stretch far beyond the usual realm of guns and geopolitics, though.

Perhaps one of the most interesting and distinctive aspects of how the 2016 document frames security, like the 2009 one, is the use of broad definitions: Security is as much about economics, health, and social order as anything else. In this context, the Kremlin sounds (rightly) much more alarmed about the situation today. Obviously the Russian economy is in crisis, but beyond the immediate impact of the oil price slump, the country is at risk because of

… a lag in the development of advanced technologies, the vulnerability of the financial system, an imbalance of the budgetary system, the economy going offshore, the exhaustion of the raw materials base, the strength of the shadow economy, conditions leading to corruption and criminal activities, and uneven development of the regions.

As if that were not bad enough, the Kremlin believes the world context is changing as these problems are being weaponized, with

political, financial, economic and information instruments brought into struggle for influence in the international arena … [with] attempts by individual states to use economic methods, tools of financial, trade, investment and technology policies to solve their geopolitical problems.

To this end, the 2016 document — like its 2009 predecessor — spends over a third of its content on such issues as health, education, and financial stability. This is because the Kremlin understands full well that these issues have security dimensions: Bad health undermines the conscript pool, cultural security means keeping out challenges to state propaganda, economic instability drains defense budgets and generates public unrest, and so on.

It also once again demonstrates that in so many ways Moscow is conceptually ahead of the West in realizing that security and governance are essentially indistinguishable. Russia’s new style of so-called “hybrid warfare” is in so many ways simply a logical reflection of that understanding, and suggests that — even if out of political constraints, economic shortage, inefficiency and downright stupidity in some cases — they may not be able to pull it off, they are also well aware that Russia needs also to be considering “hybrid defense.”

There are three takeaways for the West. First of all, do not get too worried about the strident new language; the tone reflects Russia’s new antagonisms with the West, but the underlying strategy is the same. Second, the Kremlin’s real security concerns are not so much military threats as political, economic, and technological challenges. Third, while the Russian economy may be in trouble and their geopolitical aspirations disproportionate to their actual capacities, the Russian state still has sharp strategic thinkers and their understanding of the modern “full spectrum” political-informational-economic battlespace is still unappreciated by their Western counterparts.


Mark Galeotti is Professor of Global Affairs at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs and director of its Initiative for the Study of Emerging Threats. His most recent book is Spetsnaz: Russia’s Special Forces (Osprey, 2015).
 

Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/saudi-iran-crisis-rebuke-us-policy-region-203515820.html

Saudi-Iran crisis a rebuke for US policy

AFP
By Dave Clark, and Nicolas Revise
2 hours ago

Washington (AFP) - Washington's single-minded pursuit of the Iran nuclear deal damaged its alliance with Saudi Arabia, experts say, and fed the escalating crisis in the Gulf.

The United States failed to manage its traditional Sunni Arab allies in the region while it reached out to mend ties with their bitter Shiite foes in Tehran.

As a result, experts warn, Washington has suffered a loss of influence at a time when it needs to implement the nuclear accord and work with both Tehran and Riyadh to end the Syrian war.

"I think the administration has had a one-eyed policy on this," Salman Shaikh, founder and CEO of regional consultancy the Shaikh Group, told AFP.

Shaikh said he and others had warned US officials "at the highest level" that its focus on Iran had hurt its traditionally warm relationship with Riyadh.

"As a result we're now seeing a fairly serious balance of power struggle being played out between the two main protagonists in the region," he said.

Secretary of State John Kerry called senior Iranian and Saudi counterparts on Monday to seek to deescalate the crisis that came to a head when Riyadh marked the New Year by executing a respected Shiite cleric.

"We hope it's not irreparable," State Department spokesman John Kirby said, of Riyadh's decision to cut diplomatic ties with Tehran.

He urged regional leaders to "work on resolving the pressing issues in Iraq, in Syria, in Yemen and throughout the Middle East."

- Stirring sedition -

But Shaikh said that Washington may have little power to redress the situation.

"Now I think the amount of US influence and leverage on this situation is alarmingly limited at this point in time," he warned.

The Middle East's two pivotal Muslim powers -- the Sunni kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Shiite Islamic republic of Iran -- have never seen eye-to-eye.

Riyadh accuses Tehran of stirring sedition among the Shiite minorities in Arab states, while Iran sees its rival as a US proxy and sponsor of extremism.

Washington broke off diplomatic relations with Iran after the 1979 hostage crisis at its Tehran embassy and has remained a close friend of Saudi Arabia.

But there has been mounting anger in Riyadh in recent years as Washington has reached out to Iran in order to secure an agreement on its nuclear future.

This appeared to bear fruit in July last year, when Tehran agreed to measures to put a nuclear weapon beyond its reach in exchange for sanctions relief.

Kerry publicly insists the nuclear deal was a self-contained effort, but it was widely seen as a step towards a better working relationship with Iran.

- 'Stakeholder' in Syria -

This has infuriated Riyadh and Saudi allies in the Gulf, who see Iran's hand behind militant attacks, Shiite unrest and the Huthi rebellion in Syria.

Washington has side-stepped their concerns and -- with Russia -- has worked to bring Iran on board as a "stakeholder" in efforts to end the Syrian war.

Last week it was Saudi Arabia's turn to ignore US warnings, when it marked the first day of 2016 with a mass execution, including of a leading Shiite cleric.

Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr's death was seized upon by Iranian hardliners and at the weekend local authorities stood by as protesters stormed the Saudi embassy.

The State Department condemned the attack on the embassy, but also reiterated what it said were its concerns about the Saudi judicial process.

"We continue to call on the government of Saudi Arabia to respect and protect human rights and to permit the peaceful expression of dissent," Kirby said.

Saudi Arabia and some of its Sunni allies have cut off ties with Iran and US rival President Vladimir Putin of Russia is offering to play mediator.

This also marks a setback for Washington for, as Shaikh said, "as the regional hegemon, it had a responsibility to manage this responsibly."

- Proved critics right -

Alberto Fernandez, a former US ambassador now with the Middle East Media Research Institute, said the crisis proved the US administration's critics right.

"How can you warm up with Iran without upsetting your ally?" he asked, pointing to Iran's aggressive role in other problem areas around the Middle East.

"Those who said that you cannot divorce the nuclear deal from Iran's other activities in the region were right," he told AFP.

Kerry would reject this criticism. His spokesman Kirby insisted that in pursuing a nuclear deal to make the world safer, the US had not given Iran a pass.

"Nobody is a turning a blind eye to the capability of the regime in Tehran to further conduct destabilizing activities in the region," he said.

"We still believe Iran is a state sponsor of terrorism. We know that they continue to support bad actors in the region."

Whatever Washington's next move is -- beyond appealing for calm -- the diplomatic crisis could last for years and feed into others, jeopardizing the Syrian talks.

The United States still hopes UN-mediated negotiations will go ahead later this month as planned, but the already slim prospects for a rapid peace have dimmed.


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Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/turkey-warns-saudi-iran-tensions-hurt-powder-keg-223703450.html

Turkey warns Saudi-Iran tensions will hurt 'powder keg' region

AFP
3 hours ago

Ankara (AFP) - Turkey on Monday urged Iran and Saudi Arabia to calm tensions in their diplomatic crisis, saying the hostility between the two key Muslim powers would only further escalate problems in an explosive region.


Related Stories

Iran-Saudi crisis deepens as diplomatic ties cut AFP
Turkey's Erdogan meets king in Saudi Arabia for Syria talks Associated Press
The Latest: Envoy says Saudis back Syria peace efforts Associated Press
France, Germany slam Saudi's execution of Shia cleric AFP
Saudis cut ties with Iran following Shiite cleric execution Associated Press


"We want both countries to immediately move away from the situation of tension that will obviously only add to the already severe tensions existing in the Middle East," Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said in Ankara's first reaction to the crisis.

"The region is already a powder keg," Kurtulmus, who is also the government spokesman, said after a cabinet meeting, quoted by the Anatolia news agency. "Enough is enough. We need our peace in the region."

The crisis began at the weekend when Saudi Arabia executed prominent Shiite cleric and activist Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr as well as 46 other convicts, prompting a furious reaction from Tehran and anti-Saudi protests.

Riyadh and then Bahrain and Sudan have now severed relations with Tehran, the main Shiite power.

Turkey's relations with Saudi Arabia have warmed considerably in recent months and in December President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited Riyadh for talks with King Salman and the entire Saudi elite.

Turkey and Saudi Arabia, both overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim powers, share the same vision over the conflict in Syria where they believe only the ousting of President Bashar al-Assad can bring an end to almost five years of civil war.

But in a rare public criticism of Ankara's ally, Kurtulmus emphasised that Turkey, which abolished the death penalty as part of its bid to join the EU, was opposed to capital punishment.

"We are a country that abolished the death penalty. Death penalties, especially ones that are politically-motivated, are of no help to making peace in the region," he said.

As Turkish ties with Riyadh have warmed, Ankara's relations with Tehran have grown more tense in recent months, notably over Iran's role in Syria -- where the Islamic republic supports Assad's regime -- and over its burgeoning relations with Russia.

But Kurtulmus said: "These are two major Islamic countries for Turkey. We have good relations with each of them."


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Housecarl

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/the-new-military-force-in-charge-of-chinas-nuclear-weapons/

The New Military Force in Charge of China’s Nuclear Weapons

Goodbye Second Artillery Force; hello PLA Rocket Force.

By Shannon Tiezzi
January 05, 2016

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On December 31, China inaugurated three new military forces: a general command for the army, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Strategic Support Force, and the PLA Rocket Force. The latter, which replaces the Second Artillery Force, will be in charge of China’s nuclear arsenal.

General Wei Fenghe was named the new force’s first commander. Wei has a long history with the Second Artillery Force; he served as its chief of staff from 2006-2012 and then as commander-in-chief from 2012 until the service was reconfigured as the Rocket Force.

The creation of the Rocket Force is part of a larger move to restructure China’s military with a streamlined command under the direct control of the Central Military Commission. The new force is considered the fourth branch in China’s military, on equal footing with the PLA Army, Navy, and Air Force, according to Global Times. Unlike the Second Artillery Corps, the Rocket Force will command all three legs of China’s nuclear triad, rather than just controlling land-based nuclear missiles. The Rocket Force will also be in charge of conventional missiles. Global Times reported that the force has already held its first drills, practicing mobile combat operations and missile launches.

In the inauguration ceremony on Thursday, President Xi Jinping (who is also chairman of the Central Military Commission) called the PLA Rocket Force the “core force of strategic deterrence, a strategic buttress to the country’s position as a major power, and an important building block in upholding national security.” He tasked the new force with enhancing China’s nuclear deterrence and counter-strike capabilities, and thus maintaining a strategic balance. He also urged the Rocket Force to improve China’s ability to conduct medium- and long-range precision strikes.

Yang Yujun, spokesperson for China’s Defense Ministry, emphasized on Friday that China’s nuclear policy and strategy will not change under the PLA Rocket Force. China remains committed to its no-first-use policy on nuclear weapons, and will keep its “nuclear capability at the minimum level required for safeguarding its national security,” Xinhua paraphrased Yang as saying.

According to the U.S. Department of Defense’s 2015 report on the Chinese military, the Second Artillery Force had 50 to 60 inter-continental ballistic missiles. Meanwhile, China was devoting more energy to developing sea-based nuclear platforms, such as the Jin-class nuclear ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs).

As the report notes, “Further increases in the number of mobile ICBMs and the beginning of SSBN deterrence patrols will force the PLA to implement more sophisticated command and control systems and processes that safeguard the integrity of nuclear release authority for a larger, more dispersed force.” The creation of the PLA Rocket Force may herald further changes to China’s command and control systems for nuclear forces.
 

Housecarl

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/japa...-fighter-to-make-maiden-flight-in-early-2016/

Japan’s 5th Generation Stealth Fighter to Make Maiden Flight in Early 2016

According to Japan’s Defense Ministry, the maiden flight will be preceded by taxiing and ground trials.

By Franz-Stefan Gady
January 04, 2016

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Japan’s Ministry of Defense Technical Research and Development Institute (TRDI) announced that a prototype of Tokyo’s first indigenously-designed fifth-generation air superiority fighter, the Mitsubishi ATD-X Shinshin, will make its maiden flight in February 2016, according to Japanese media reports.

Prior to its first test-flight, the aircraft will undergo extensive taxiing and ground trials at the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries testing center located in Aichi Prefecture on Japan’s main island of Honshu. From there the fighter prototype is expected to fly to Gifu Air Field, an airbase of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force, situated in the neighboring prefecture of Gifu sometime in February.

The principal objective of the ATD-X Shinshin program is to develop a research prototype aircraft an–“advanced technology demonstration unit” to test the capacity of Japan’s defense industry to develop, among other things, a powerful fighter engine and various other indigenous stealth fighter aircraft technologies.

The program is meant to eventually produce Japan’s first indigenously-designed fifth-generation air superiority fighter, designated F-3, with serial production slated to begin in 2027, although various delays in the development of the ATD-X Shinshin prototype –scheduled to be fully developed by 2018– make a later date more likely.

The reason behind the development of the F-3 is the refusal of the United States to sell to Japan the Lockheed-Martin F-22 Raptor stealth air superiority fighter in the 2000s. According to some media reports, Lockheed-Martin is playing an undetermined role in the development of the ATD-X prototype.

Among other things, the aircraft will feature 3D thrust vectoring capability. According to a The Diplomat contributor, other design characteristics include:


If completed, the F-3 is supposed to incorporate some cutting-edge technology. The aircraft will be fitted with an active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar. The radar will have capabilities for electronic countermeasures, communications functions, and possibly even microwave weapon functions. The Shinshin is planned to have a flight-by-optics flight control system. Data is transmitted by optical fibers rather than wires. In this way data is transmitted faster and is immune to electromagnetic disturbance. Furthermore, the new Japanese aircraft will have a so-called self repairing flight control capability. It will allow the aircraft to detect failures or damage in its flight control surfaces.

So far, one full-scale ATD-X prototype has been constructed. Back in 2011, Japan decided to procure 42 F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighters, the first of which are scheduled to arrive at the end of 2016. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter procurement is an interim solution until Tokyo can field its own indigenous fifth generation fighter.
 

Housecarl

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http://warontherocks.com/2016/01/clausewitz-would-not-like-americas-islamic-state-strategy/

Clausewitz Would Not Like America’s Islamic State Strategy

James Holmes
January 5, 2016

What would Clausewitz say about the war against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)? As the Prussian sage and his fellow greats of strategic theory might counsel, America is waging an “unlimited war by contingent” against ISIL. Last year President Barack Obama vowed to “degrade and ultimately destroy” the terror state, yet ruled out more than modest air and sea forces to execute this ambitious mission. U.S. ground warfare was out. That raises the question whether the regional contenders battling the Islamic State — the Iraqi army, the Peshmerga, various militias — together comprise a force capable of winning with aerial fire support. Fitful progress on the ground leaves that question open, the allies’ recent re-conquest of Ramadi notwithstanding.

The administration has backtracked from its “no boots on the ground” position since, ordering a “specialized expeditionary targeting force” to Iraq early this month. But with overall troop numbers fixed at 3,550, a token number, the sages might voice bafflement at this misbegotten approach to strategy. You cannot know in advance how many troops it will take to crush your enemies and see them driven before you.

Such a strategy is a contradiction in terms that is fated to disappoint. Why? Let us parse the first part of the phrase unlimited war by contingent. More than an arcane point of strategic theory is at stake here. Wars are generally limited by their strategic and political ends — not by the means, measured in personnel, ships, airplanes, and armaments that the leadership earmarks for waging war. Political leaders determine what they want out of the enterprise, ask themselves how much they want it, and allocate the resources necessary to achieve it. Politics drives strategy drives the amount of force used — that’s Clausewitz 101.

In strategic parlance, a belligerent prosecuting an unlimited war is after big goals. Eradicating a foe’s political existence is a quintessential unlimited end. Or combatants can go beyond regime change. They can make a desert and call it peace, destroying an enemy society altogether — much as Rome did after its final onslaught on Carthage. President Obama placed the counter-ISIL campaign in the unlimited category. In effect, Washington announced that it’s prepared to devote whatever it takes for as long as it takes.

Purpose, then, determines how warring states deploy power. That is what Clausewitz means when he proclaims that the value a combatant assigns the “political object” governs “the sacrifices to be made for it in magnitude and also in duration.” Trivial aims summon forth short-lived endeavors of meager amplitude. Big, passionately sought goals — such as the destruction of a political entity that holds and governs territory — warrant big outlays of lives, treasure, and military hardware, typically for a long time. This logic holds doubly in a fight to the finish, when an opponent bestriding death ground will presumably do his utmost to survive.

Or at least cost-benefit logic should hold. Rather than estimate what degrading and destroying ISIL would take and committing the necessary forces to the fray, Washington decided in advance what it was willing to send — namely fighter, attack, and bomber jets — and dispatched that contingent to the theater. Wittingly or not, administration officials limited this politically unlimited war by the size and configuration of the military contingent they were prepared to send in harm’s way. That’s something like proclaiming you’re going to buy a sleek, new 7-Series BMW for $10,000, getting a cashier’s check for that sum, and trundling off to the dealership to get the car. Good luck closing that deal. And good luck closing the deal in the Levant without deploying ground-pounders in substantial numbers. You pay the price for your political objectives, and the antagonist from whom you’re trying to wrest those objectives has every incentive to keep marking up the price.

Aerial bombardment may keep ISIL in check. It has thus far, and that is a worthwhile contribution. It will not put an end to ISIL unless the United States or its allies assemble a ground force capable of crushing the terror army, dismantling the military and political leadership, and preventing the would-be caliphate from rising again. If Washington does not will the means necessary to accomplish that, it does not will the ends.

Now, there is something to be said for prosecuting war by contingent under certain circumstances. It is a time-honored way to make trouble for a foe at low cost to yourself — if mischief-making is your purpose. It is just not a standalone or war-winning strategy. One example from classical antiquity: During the Peloponnesian War, the Athenians sent an expeditionary fleet and army to occupy Sicily, one of the breadbaskets of the Mediterranean world. Their archenemy Sparta got wind of the Sicilian campaign and dispatched the able soldier Gylippus to advise Syracuse, the island’s dominant city-state and the Athenian expedition’s chief target. Athens lost its force to a man owing in large measure to Gylippus’ advice. That constituted one heckuva return on investment for the Spartans.

Sea-power theorist Julian S. Corbett — think of the fin de siècle English scribe as Clausewitz riding the waves — explores the concept of war by contingent in some depth. Corbett points to Lord Wellington’s expeditionary force in Iberia during the Napoleonic Wars. Supported logistically by the Royal Navy, Wellington’s modest-sized army imposed a second front on Napoleon, dispersed French forces, and fought alongside partisans to make life hell for the French Army. The British expedition proved so nettlesome that the little emperor termed it France’s “Spanish Ulcer.”

Limited endeavors, then, can make an outsized difference in a larger struggle. How to choose places and methods to give a foe a nagging ulcer? Would-be troublemakers look for things away from the major fighting that their enemies must defend at lopsidedly unfavorable cost. Even so, ulcers are not fatal. Allocating a martial contingent — Wellington’s army then, U.S. Navy, Marine, and Air Force warbirds today — constitutes an excellent way to contain and degrade an adversary. But destroy Napoleonic hosts, or ISIL, through secondary ventures prosecuted on the cheap? Forget about it.

Next, a theoretical point about airpower. As one of Newport’s own theorists, J. C. Wylie, teaches, it is possible to destroy things from aloft without controlling events on the ground. And control — not destruction for its own sake — is the object of military strategy. For Wylie, mistaking destruction for control is a failing peculiar to airpower proponents. It misleads them into thinking airpower wins wars on its own. Instead, he insists, it is the soldier — the “man on the scene with a gun” — who’s the arbiter of wartime victory and defeat. All military efforts must be geared to getting soldiers into the right positions on the map in sufficient numbers and with capability to control affairs. In the campaign against ISIL, that means U.S. Army or Marine troops, allied troops, or some composite fighting force.

Lastly, though, there is a perverse dimension to the anti-ISIL air campaign: The more successful air strikes are, the less successful alliance-building and alliance-maintenance (the key to any ground component) is apt to be. Think about it. What happens if aerial bombardment contains ISIL geographically, as President Obama plausibly claims it has done? If aviators stymie the Islamic State’s efforts at expansion, they help current and potential Middle East allies step off death ground. In so doing they reduce the incentive for these countries to shoulder the burden of ground combat.

Such is the topsy-turvy challenge before Washington. Administration leaders must put policy and strategy, not artificial limits on military means, in charge of the counter-ISIL campaign. If U.S. policy is to destroy ISIL, let us figure out what that entails in terms of ground, air, and sea forces and set those forces in motion. If it is to contain ISIL through airpower, let us say that and resign ourselves to an open-ended effort promising few satisfactions.

The United States can wage unlimited war against the Islamic State, or it can wage war by contingent. Trying to do both opens up a world of strategic problems.



James Holmes is Professor of Strategy at the Naval War College. The views voiced here are his alone.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?481856-Merkel’s-right-wing-temptation-Politico-EU

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http://www.politico.eu/article/merk...land-opposition-far-right-elections-refugees/

Opinion

Merkel’s right-wing temptation

You could be forgiven for thinking the right-wing AfD is Merkel’s nightmare — it’s quite the opposite.

By Nikolaus Blome | 1/5/16, 5:30 AM CET
Comments 5

BERLIN — Since World War II it was taken for granted that Germany’s conservative Christian Democrats and their Bavarian partners, the Christian Social Union, would not allow a democratic party to permanently exist further to their right. For decades, they lived up to that principle. But in early 2013, the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) was founded as a home for conservative critics of Angela Merkel’s policies for saving the euro. The AfD narrowly failed to enter the Bundestag that same year by only 0.3 percentage points, then the party suffered a split one year later — but it came back.

As of today the AfD is a nationalistic, anti-establishment party which capitalizes on xenophobia and the ongoing refugee crisis. Opinion polls put its support at an amazing 10 percent, and it is on its way to entering the regional assemblies of the three Bundesländer scheduled to hold elections in March 2016.

That should be enough to send shivers down Merkel’s spine. But it will not. Instead, in the short term it promises to be a tactical win for the chancellor and her party. And in the long run, the AfD will either vanish as a political threat by splitting one more time, or it will turn into a potential partner to secure what would be a structural majority right of center — something entirely new to Germany’s political system.

* * *

Why so? First, it is about electoral arithmetic in the two most important Länder (Baden-Württemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate) that vote in March. As current polls suggest, the sitting heads of both regional governments will lose their tiny majorities if the AfD enters the state parliaments. They will presumably be replaced by coalition governments which will be led by CDU politicians. Thus, thanks to the AfD, Merkel’s CDU will win two important elections and can use that victory to publicly argue that Germans are backing the chancellor’s policy on refugees. Although that isn’t true, in political terms it will buy the chancellor time that she badly needs.

Second, whichever way the AfD goes in the long run, it suits Merkel. She can simply stand by and watch: If the party splits up again, leaving behind the rest of its decent middle-class followers, it will vanish like so many other right-wing extremist parties have done before. Its white-collar voters may even revert to the liberal Free Democrats (FDP). That again would help Merkel.

If, on the other hand, the middle-class faction of the AfD prevails, it will still remain an unpleasant populist movement: Islamophobic, utterly anti-European and turning its back on globalization and change. Yet it won’t be extremist and may develop into a party like Britain’s Tories or the French conservatives. So far, the AfD’s rise in the polls has done relatively little harm to the CDU’s ratings, potentially increasing the likelihood of a structural majority to the right in a country which is so far said to only have such a structural majority on the left.

Four out of the last five nationwide elections saw leftist parties — the Social Democrats (SPD), Socialists and Greens — win a majority of seats in the Bundestag. But only twice did their candidate then become chancellor, either because the three parties could not agree on a coalition or had ruled it out well ahead of election day. In the current Bundestag, on any given day, the three leftist parties could muster a majority to oust Merkel and vote in the head of the SPD, Sigmar Gabriel, as chancellor. To eliminate that potential threat when the new Bundestag is elected in late 2017 would be a strategic win for the German conservatives.

To sum up: like the vast majority of Germans, Angela Merkel strongly dislikes the AfD for its stance on refugees, the euro and its xenophobic rhetoric. Yet for various reasons the AfD holds political promise for the chancellor. And temptation, too.

Nikolaus Blome is deputy editor-in-chief of Europe’s biggest daily, BILD.
 

Housecarl

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http://nationalinterest.org/feature/does-political-islam-have-future-14786?page=show

Does Political Islam Have a Future?


Five years after the Arab Spring, hope for a nonviolent and Islam-inflected politics is narrower than ever.


Cameron Glenn
January 3, 2016

The political space for nonviolent, Islam-inflected politics has become narrower and more treacherous in the last year. Squeezed by repression on one side and radical violence on the other, nonviolent political Islamists were increasingly silenced or eliminated in 2015. Moderate parties were sidelines in Egypt, Algeria, Jordan and Morocco. In Syria, Libya, Yemen and the Palestinian Authority, their militant brethren marginalized and even attacked them. For many both inside and outside the Middle East, the growing reach of the Islamic State (ISIS) discredited even the idea of a peaceful version of political Islam in the twenty-first century.

There were two exceptions: In Turkey, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) secured a solid parliamentary majority in November elections—a significant reversal in fortune, since elections just months earlier had swung sharply against the AKP. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan consolidated his authority, and may even try to change the constitution to further strengthen his executive powers. In Tunisia, the Ennahda Party joined the ruling coalition, after coming in second during elections in late 2014.

But ISIS and Al Qaeda stole the spotlight in the Islamist political debate. These groups and their franchises carried out attacks in virtually every Middle Eastern country last year, with bombings in Lebanon, Yemen, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Turkey killing hundreds of people. ISIS also launched attacks in the West when Islamic State supporters killed more than 120 people in Paris, France, and fourteen in San Bernardino, California.

These trends bode ill for more moderate groups in 2016—and for the region’s security. Syria, Libya and Yemen are particularly vulnerable, despite new peace initiatives. Extremist militias that controlled territory in all three countries were not part of peace negotiations—and are unlikely to cooperate if those negotiations should succeed. Meanwhile, Egypt and Turkey became increasingly repressive against a broad array of opposition groups, justifying crackdowns as a response to Islamic extremism.

Political Parties

The marginalization of Islamist parties is a setback after the unprecedented political opportunities provided by the Arab Spring in 2011. Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, the ideological grandfather of dozens of Islamist parties, won the presidency and the largest share of seats in parliament—to be ousted and declared a terrorist organization in 2013. By the end of 2015, Islamist parties across the region had lost elections, been banned or opted to boycott political systems increasingly skewed against them.

In Egypt, the Salafist Nour Party won only twelve seats in the controversial 2015 parliamentary elections—down from 121 seats in 2011. Algeria’s Movement of Society for Peace damaged its credibility by strengthening ties with the ruling National Liberation Front. Jordan’s Islamic Action Front was weakened by deep internal fractures. Morocco’s Justice and Development Party, though still the largest party in parliament, remained largely limited in their political influence.

After falling to second in the polls in 2014, Tunisia’s Ennahda party survived by joining a coalition government with Nidaa Tounes, a secular party that won the largest bloc in parliament. Turkey’s AKP was another anomaly. Opposition parties dealt it a sharp blow in June elections, but they failed to form a government and the AKP reclaimed its parliamentary majority in November snap elections. Along the way, however, Erdogan and the AKP, once viewed as the region’s model Islamist party, have increasingly curtailed press freedoms and silenced opposition. The Committee to Protect Journalists has branded Turkey “Europe and Central Asia’s leading jailer of journalists,” while a security reform passed in March significantly expanded police powers and the role of government-appointed regional governors in the law-enforcement process, with critics accusing the measure of “treating popular protests as potential acts of terrorism” and turning Turkey’s gendarmerie into an “armed branch of the AKP.”

Conflicts also left little space for political parties. Hundreds of Syria’s Muslim Brotherhood members reportedly returned to Syria in 2015 to mobilize opposition to President Bashar al-Assad, but they struggled with finances and recruitment against militias. Yemen’s Islah Party, another Muslim Brotherhood offshoot, once held dozens of seats in parliament. One of its members, Tawakkol Karman, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011 for her advocacy for women before and during the Arab Spring. Many are now in exile due to the war between government forces and Houthi rebels.

Extremist Groups

In 2015, nearly every country in the region—regardless of its politics—had to contend with the power of militias as well as ISIS and Al Qaeda. In some countries, Islamist extremists even fought each other.

ISIS evolved into a network of affiliates in at least eight countries, expanding far beyond its epicenter in Iraq and Syria. By late 2015, ISIS reportedly had a branch of its leadership dedicated to facilitating attacks beyond the borders of its so-called caliphate.

In Libya, ISIS supporters made headlines this year for beheading Egyptian Christians, setting off car bombs and attacking foreign embassies. In Yemen, ISIS killed hundreds of people in attacks on Houthi mosques in March and September. In Gaza, ISIS supporters pledged to overthrow Hamas. In Lebanon, a pair of suicide attacks in Beirut killed more than 40 people in November.

Even relatively stable countries were not immune from ISIS attacks. In Turkey, ISIS claimed responsibility for killing more than one hundred people at a peace rally in Ankara in October. In Tunisia, ISIS murdered tourists at the Bardo museum and a beach resort in Sousse; later, they killed a busload of presidential guards. Egypt witnessed an average of 115 terrorist attacks by Islamist extremists monthly between January and August, up from less than thirty per month in 2014, according to the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy.

Another troubling trend was the apparent shift towards Western targets. In addition to November’s attacks in Paris and December’s in California, ISIS claimed responsibility for bombing a Russian airliner over Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula in October, killing all 224 on board.

The rivalry between ISIS and Al Qaeda complicates the crisis. For more than two decades, Al Qaeda was the dominant worldwide jihadist organization. But after ISIS preempted Al Qaeda by declaring a global caliphate in 2014, several former Al Qaeda affiliates—including Boko Haram and Egypt’s Ansar Beit al Maqdis—aligned with ISIS. Competition between ISIS and Al Qaeda may lead to more violence, both between the groups and against others.

With extremist groups becoming ever more violent and polarized and political systems becoming more repressive, nonviolent Islamist parties may find themselves even further pushed to the margins of the political debate in 2016. Political Islam’s annus horribilis isn’t over.

Cameron Glenn is a senior program assistant in the Center for Middle East and Africa at the U.S. Institute of Peace.

Image: Wikimedia Commons/Yuli Weeks/VOA.

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Housecarl

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http://www.politico.eu/article/turkey-unwinnable-war-pkk-protests-media-erdogan-kurds-nato/

Letter from Istanbul

Turkey’s unwinnable war

Things are looking far from stable in the most stable country in the region. And the world ignores it.

By Asli Aydintasbas | 1/5/16, 5:30 AM CET
Comments 3

ISTANBUL — If 2016 is anything like the year that just passed, we are in for real trouble.

Beneath the world’s radar, a serious insurgency has been simmering in Turkey’s Kurdish regions for months. Urban clashes, with three or four casualties each time, are a daily occurrence. Youth groups affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) are controlling parts of major Kurdish cities, fighting government forces for greater autonomy. And the Turkish government is responding with a harsh military crackdown that not only targets the militia but ends up affecting civilians.

Things are looking far from stable in the most stable country in the region.

But somehow, the fact that NATO’s second-largest army is fully mobilized on the Syrian border in a war against 16-year-old kids with AK-47s who have carved out “liberated zones” in their neighborhoods is getting almost no coverage in international media. European institutions — happy that they secured a money-for-refugees deal with Ankara last November — are mum, and Washington is unwilling to rock the boat in its complicated relationship with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoðan.

The Turkish government has, of course, been fighting the PKK for decades; and the tranquility over the past few years was a result of the peace negotiations between the two sides, which abruptly ended this summer. Each side blames the other for ending the ceasefire, but the truth is that neither is much in control of the catastrophe we are witnessing now.

* * *

Even for a decades-long war, this is a whole new level of escalation. Let me explain. Much of what took place in the 1990s was in the countryside, between Kurdish guerrillas and army units. This time, it is urban, just as deadly, and far more explosive.

To be clear: We are not talking about a skirmish here or there; this is a conflict about tanks, artillery, snipers and heavy fire in densely populated areas. Last month, the Ministry of Education sent text messages telling over 3,000 public school teachers doing mandatory service in restless Kurdish towns to leave. Schools are shut down and thousands of students have no access to education.

And then there are the curfews, which last for days. According to Turkey’s Human Rights Foundation, there have been 52 intermittent curfews in seven Kurdish towns where 1.3 million people live, sometimes lasting as long as 14 days. The organization puts the civilian death toll since the summer at 124.

One of Turkey’s leading human rights lawyers, Tahir Elçi, died in November when he was caught in crossfire between police and PKK militias in the meandering streets of Diyarbakir’s old town — moments after he finished a press conference asking for a cessation of hostilities in urban areas.

I feel nervous even admitting this to myself but some of the photographs coming out of the region have an unnerving similarity to early images from Syria in 2011 — with buildings bearing signs of last night’s fighting or smoke rising on the horizon from gray, concrete-colored towns.

* * *

That all this is happening in a NATO country that just hosted a G20 meeting is remarkable.

So is the mainstream Turkish media’s reticence about the events. You will not read much in Turkish papers. Since winning an impressive majority on November 1, Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has been further tightening the screws on whatever is left of the country’s free media, blocking opposition networks from broadcasting cable news, threatening mainstream media with court cases, investigations, and so on.

Senior Turkish editors and media executives tell me that they are in constant fear of being accused by the government of sounding sympathetic to the PKK. The coverage is skewed toward Turkish nationalism and the valiant efforts of the security forces, with almost no mention of civilian casualties — which included a three-month-old baby and a five-year-old last week.

There is no human face to the conflict for anyone reading the papers. No one bothers interviewing residents caught between security forces and the PKK. On top of that, the funerals of slain soldiers are also not supposed to be played up for fear it would incite anti-government sentiment. It is one of the darkest periods for Turkish journalism.

* * *




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The background to what is happening in the Kurdish regions is an overall rise in authoritarianism touching every aspect of Turkey’s civic life. The Islamist AKP was once the poster child of Muslim democracy and a hope for reform even for secular democrats like myself.

In the first few years of AKP reign, a decade ago, Turkey advanced toward European Union membership, took important steps to recognize Kurdish identity in the public sphere and carried out impressive democratization. All that stopped when Erdoðan hoarded enough power that he didn’t need to compromise with secularists, intellectuals, the media, the business elite, or the military. He turned into a Sunni version of his current nemesis, Vladimir Putin, altering the constitutional system to accommodate his personality cult in an atmosphere of nationalism and religiosity.

Ironically, rising tides of illiberalism coincide with a second honeymoon in Turkey’s relations with the West. These days, stability trumps democracy in international relations and Erdoðan’s promise of “stability” is seen as an asset by Turkey’s Western allies. Panicked about the refugee crisis, Europeans have now agreed to “re-energize” relations with Ankara.

There has been a similar thaw in relations with Washington since Turkey agreed to take a more active part in the fight against ISIL and open its bases to coalition planes. Whatever happens in Turkish democracy, the country’s “real-estate value” is enough for the world to turn a blind eye to its domestic struggles. Just as in the Cold War.

* * *

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoðlu is promising to “root out [terrorists] house to house and street to street,” but that doesn’t seem doable unless entire population centers are forced to migrate. Turkey’s Kurdish issue cannot be solved through military means alone and Ankara’s friends around the world would do well to urge a return to the negotiating table, rather than watch Turkey follow its neighbors’ path to ethnic and sectarian warfare.

This is not a “winnable” war for either side and there is no denying that the PKK has some level of support in Turkey’s Kurdish areas. In most neighborhoods where curfews are imposed, the pro-Kurdish party HDP scored over 90 percent in elections.

Across the border in Syria, a PKK-backed party has established an autonomous zone and is experimenting with self-rule. Both in Iraq and Syria, PKK-linked groups (made up of Kurdish volunteers from Turkey) are fighting ISIL alongside coalition forces. In many ways, this is the coming of age for Kurds, and Turkey needs to adjust to that reality.

To be fair, both sides are to blame for the current flare-up in the conflict and no government would allow an armed militia to control parts of its cities. This is what the PKK is trying to do through its belated “Arab Spring” in Kurdish towns. The PKK needs to understand that its “revolutionary” armed struggle is an outdated concept — and will only bring destruction to Kurds and Turks.

Turkey is getting more authoritarian, the world is indifferent and it is the Kurds who are dying: Something is wrong with this calculus. Armed struggle is negating the advances of legitimate Kurdish players like the HDP. This cannot be good for Kurds.

Ankara has to return to democracy, update its administrative structures, and re-invent itself as a Turkish-Kurdish nation. Administrative reform that allows more power to local governments — not just in Kurdish areas, but across Turkey — may not be such a bad idea after all. But more importantly, it needs to re-establish the state’s troubled relationship with “the Kurd.”

Kurds are not a threat — they are a prelude to building our democracy. Turkey’s future and its borders are best secured through a lasting Kurdish peace. Turks and Kurds, we are too intertwined — economically, demographically, culturally — to chart out an independent course.

In sickness and health, we are destined to live side by side.

Asli Aydintasbas is a journalist based in Istanbul.
 

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One Thousand plus Muzzies Go On Rape/Sexual Assault Spree/Cologne Germany Train Station
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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...l-Assault-Spree-Cologne-Germany-Train-Station


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http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/c...-sexually-assaulted-dozens-new-year-s-n490371

News
Jan 5 2016, 8:29 am ET

Cologne Police: Roving Packs Sexually Assaulted Dozens on New Year's Eve

by Carlo Angerer

MAINZ, Germany — Roving packs of men sexually assaulted dozens of women on New Year's Eve in western Germany's city of Cologne, officials said, describing the attacks as unprecedented.

The spree suggested a "new dimension of organized criminality," German justice minister Heiko Maas told a press conference on Tuesday.

Police said the attackers — who struck in pairs and groups of up to 20 men — appeared to be part of a larger, 1,000-strong group that had gathered in one of the city's main plazas for New Year's celebrations.

Cologne's police spokesman Thomas Held told NBC News that authorities had fielded around 90 complaints of pick-pocketing, groping and at least one of rape.

Eye witnesses described getting groped multiple times near the city's train station and its famed cathedral.

"It was horror. Although we shouted and hit around us, the guys did not stop. I was desperate," a 28-year-old woman identified as Katja L. told Cologne's Express newspaper, saying she was groped about 100 times while walking 600 feet.

Another woman, who did not give her name, told Bild newspaper that several men attacked her and her friend. "They had circled us and started to grope us. They were everywhere with their hands," she said.

NBC News was not able to independently verify the witness and victim accounts.

Police on Monday had said the suspects appeared to be of "Arab or North African descent," sparking fears on social media they were among around 1 million asylum seekers who have flooded Germany this year. Held told NBC News that it was too early to tell if the suspects were recent arrivals.

Amid the fears and outrage, Cologne city officials were meeting Tuesday to discuss further measures to prevent similar incidents — especially in light of upcoming carnival festivities.
 

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/putins-perennial-pivot-problem/

Putin’s Perennial Pivot Problem

Why Russia’s Asia-Pacific diplomatic outreach struggles to gain traction.

By Richard Weitz
January 05, 2016

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The Diplomat has helpfully published several articles on the neglected topic of how Moscow has sought to use its Far Eastern Federal District, a traditional backwater, as a foundation for building more comprehensive relations between the Russian Federation and the Asia-Pacific region. These pieces are (which can be read here, here and here) are well-written, well-researched, and convincingly argue that, along with many other non-Asian countries, Russia has been pursuing a Pacific pivot. However, like many other articles and statements by Russian leaders themselves, they catalog the large number of Russian initiatives and inputs into Asian processes but obscure the small number of positive results and enduring outputs that they have so far achieved. On balance, Moscow is still very far from realizing Russia’s desired place in Asia.

The Russian government has sought to increase Russia’s integration with Asia for both offensive and defensive reasons. These goals include achieving mutually advantageous economic ties in general, developing eastern Siberia in particular, attracting considerably more investment and high technology into Russia, bolstering Moscow’s diplomatic influence on critical Asian issues, raising Russia’s profile in Asian regional organizations, and promoting multipolarity by constraining U.S. influence in Asia without excessively enhancing that of China. Moscow’s main tools to realize this strategy has been to reaffirm Russia’s often overlooked Asian identity, leveraging Russian arms exports and energy riches, adopting a low-key neutral position on Asian territorial disputes except for its own with Japan, and pursuing flexible diplomatic and economic ties with a realpolitik indifference towards countries’ domestic political practices.

Russia has tried not only to tighten ties with China but also to sustain relations with longstanding partners like India, Vietnam, and North Korea, while cultivating new partnerships with Japan, South Korea, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to bolster Moscow’s leverage and options. In recent years, Russia has hosted the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit and joined the East Asian Summit. Like their peers elsewhere, Russian analysts see demographic, economic, and other trends making the Asia-Pacific the most important economic region in the coming decades. A rising share of Russia’s arms and energy exports are already going to Asian customers.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has led this campaign. In his presidential state-of-the-nation address in early December, Putin confirmed that Sochi would host a Russian-ASEAN summit in 2016. He also proposed studying whether to pursue a massive economic integration project that would encompass the members of ASEAN, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and the Moscow-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU).

Poorly Integrated

However, Putin hardly mentioned East Asian issues in his lengthy end-of-year news conference ten days later, reflecting the long-standing pattern of Russian officials announcing admirably grandiose projects to deepen ties that never sustain high-level interest. Russia remains poorly integrated into East Asia’s dynamic economies. The country has some first-rate educational establishments but most Asians who study abroad do so in Europe, the United States, or in other Asian countries. Although Putin can cite record two-way trade figures with some countries, Russia is not a leading economic partner of China, Japan, South Korea, or most other Asian countries. All too often, Russia’s potential contribution is treated as an afterthought in Asian initiatives.

Moscow’s ability to realize its regional goals has been hindered by Russia’s unattractive investment climate, limited use of the country’s abundant human and natural resources, excessive dependence on energy and other natural resource exports, unstable national currency, troubled ties with key regional players including Japan and the United States, and unbalanced relations with others, particularly China. As seen in the recent visit by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Moscow, the foundation of the Russia’s relationship with many Asian states remains arms and energy.

Russians are eager to reduce intra-Korean tensions to transform the Korean Peninsula into a gateway for new Russian economic ties with South Korea and other East Asian countries. Despite several years of intense diplomacy, however, Russia’s economic ties with North Korea are still negligible, while Seoul has lost faith in Moscow’s ability to cajole Pyongyang into abandoning its nuclear weapons program or moderating its provocative foreign policy.

Meanwhile, economic and social ties between Russia and Southeast Asia remain modest. At the aggregate level, the Russian Federation has never ranked among ASEAN’s largest foreign partners in tourism, trade, or investment. Finally, Moscow has been unable to attract significant foreign direct investment (FDI) from any Asian country to the Russian Far East, thwarting Moscow’s plans to use foreign capital and technology to transform the region into Russia’s “window to Asia.” Those few Asian businesses that have made major investments in Russia have largely been focused on the country’s more economically developed European parts.

Despite all efforts to diversify Russian influence by revitalizing its industrial and post-industrial economy and its soft power, and a Kremlin leadership that clearly relishes shock-and-awe diplomacy and has a first-rate diplomatic corps to support it, Russia’s main source of influence remains its arms sales. The Russian economic slowdown that deepened throughout 2014 has further constrained Russia’s socioeconomic ties with Asian countries.

The Russian government has been trying to change this situation for decades. With regards to Southeast Asia, Russia became a formal Dialogue Partner of ASEAN in 1996, but it was not until a decade later that they launched a detailed action program for 2005-2015. Then it took another five years to begin drafting an implementation roadmap, which the relevant government ministers finally adopted in October 2012. Moscow’s current focus is to develop a Russian-ASEAN free trade agreement, but even this achievement would not compensate for the impending incorporation of key members of the bloc in the Chinese-led Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

In their presentations at the Jakarta conference, many of the Asian participants enumerated the serious barriers to closer Russian-ASEAN ties and the difficulties of overcoming them. For example, they characterized official Russian interest in their region as sporadic, with Russian leaders frequently skipping even high-profile events like the East Asian Summit. On other occasions ASEAN experts have referenced perceptions that Russia is too close to China, too reliant on military power for projecting influence, a business risk due to Western sanctions and domestic problems, and perennially treating Asia as a second choice after having its European aspirations thwarted. They have also faulted Russia’s perceived lack of an overarching vision or strategy for the region, with Moscow’s pursuing unconnected bilateral deals exacerbated by a lack of follow through, and doubts regarding Russia’s long-term commitment to the region once other opportunities beckon.

The Russian analysts at the event offered their own list of obstacles, such as U.S. economic, diplomatic, and security policies allegedly aimed at Russia’s containment, the negative stereotypes of Russia common in the Western media, and their belief that Western sanctions had made Asian businesses fearful of pursuing Russian economic ties. They acknowledged though that the Russian economy is not export oriented and its leading business enterprises are more comfortable dealing with European partners. They hold themselves partly responsible for Asians’ unfamiliarity with the rich economic and educational opportunities available in their country. In Russia, people commonly call Asia ”the Orient” or “the East,” even though Asia lies mostly south of the territory of the Russian Federation, which even after the seizure of Crimea has lost much of its former Soviet territory in Europe. Russian civilian businesses, unlike arms exporters, have generally failed to find their natural niche selling better quality goods than China but at a lower price than Western competitors. Russians further noted that their government had, for logical reasons, focused its recent foreign economic initiatives on joining the World Trade Organization (WTO) and building the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU)

Other impediments hindering Russia from assuming a prominent role in Asia include Moscow’s having the same challenge as Washington in trying to promote multilateral region cooperation between states that dislike their proposed partner. In Moscow’s case, this rivalry includes China vs. Vietnam, China vs. India, and North vs. South Korea. Unlike the United States, which has generally managed to pursue a balanced Atlantic and Pacific orientation for a century, Russia has clearly focused its energies on its westward frontiers. Because of its misbehavior in Europe and its territorial dispute with Japan, Russia still cannot play its potential roles as a Eurasian bridge between Europe and Asia or as a major balancer between China and the rest of Asia. Russian proposals for collective security structures are perceived as too vague to bring concrete benefits and designed to dismantle the U.S.-led alliance structures that have kept regional peace for decades. When the Russian minister attending the May 2015 Shangri-La Dialogue security conference attacked U.S.-sponsored “color revolutions” and regional missile defense plans, his message may have resonated in Beijing but hardly beyond. One reason Moscow is so eager to shake up the Asian security order is that Russia is not a leading member of any strong regional multinational structure.

Some Russian government and NGO participants at the Jakarta meeting warned Asians to avoid joining the TPP because they would have to upend their state-dominated economies to qualify. Moreover, the Russian participants appealed to Asians to distance themselves from the United States by appealing to Asian nationalism, asking aloud “why Asians would want an Asian Century led by a non-Asian power,” as one participant put it. Meeting the high requirements of TPP membership will prove more of a challenge for the region’s statist economies than joining a Moscow-sponsored free trade agreement with the EEU, but the short-term pain would impart long-term development benefits, while security ties with the United States bring advantages, such as ensured freedom of navigation, which Russia cannot guarantee.

Russian leaders have tried to use energy assets as a tool supporting their Asia Pivot. However, many of the deals announced are simply framework agreements or memoranda of understanding that never seem to result in actual projects. Those few projects that have resulted in actual energy flows have often required Russia to make various price and transit concessions. The sad fact for Moscow is that Asian states can play hard to get since they generally possess many alternative sources of energy, now including LNG, shale oil, and other new energy sources. In the future, Russia’s potential leverage as an energy partner could fall even further due to low global energy supplies, globalization of gas markets due to improving production technologies and improved distribution methods, the expansion of energy pipelines from Central Asia into China, the potential for further renewable and energy efficiency gains, efforts within the EU to reduce dependence on Russian energy by developing alternative types and geographic sources of energy, and how Western sanctions are crippling Russia’s Arctic exploration plans.

Perhaps Moscow’s one lifeline would be a comprehensive and balanced Russian-Chinese economic partnership. Russian and Chinese scholars can readily describe such a “win-win” arrangement, which would be based on large-scale Russian energy sales to China complemented by renewed Chinese purchases of industrial and high-technology goods, heavy Chinese company participation in developing the Russian Far East, joint oil and gas resource exploration and production in the Arctic, and integration of the EEU with China’s Silk Road Initiative complemented by other reinforcing mechanisms in line with Putin’s vision.

Many Russian and Chinese foreign-policy goals are compatible. They both would like to see more “multipolarity” (read: less U.S. influence) in global affairs while improving bilateral ties, but not at the cost of their flexibility to pursue other partnerships. Their two governments share interests in promoting stability in Central Asia, the Middle East and the Korean Peninsula while deepening mutual trade and investment.

However, though Moscow’s ties with Beijing have never been better, they have never been very good. The bilateral relationship is still mostly marked by harmonious rhetoric but few specific projects outside of Central Asia, arms sales, and intermittent energy deals marked by protracted negotiations over pricing and other disputes. Chinese entrepreneurs have been as wary as others about investing in Russia, with China’s FDI flowing overwhelmingly into other Asian countries as well as the EU and the United States. Despite Moscow’s outreach to Beijing, there is no indication that China has made any effort to use its much greater leverage with ASEAN to assist Russia’s integration efforts

Russia’s lagging presence in Asian economic affairs is not necessarily beneficial to the region. A stronger Russia under a less confrontational leadership could help counter the potential negative repercussions of China’s rise, better rein in a problematic Pyongyang, and more effectively resist transnational threats in Eurasia. Unfortunately, it seems unlikely that Russia will reverse this situation anytime soon.
 

Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/iran-unveils-...0NG9yBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwM3BHZ0aWQDBHNlYwNzcg--

Iran unveils second underground site, storing Emad missile

Reuters
37 minutes ago

DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran unveiled a new underground missile depot on Tuesday inaugurated by the speaker of parliament, Ali Larijani, Tasnim news agency, which is close to the Revolutionary Guards, reported.

A one-minute video of the facility broadcast on state television showed Iran's Emad precision-guided ballistic missile which was tested in October.

The United States has said Emad would be capable of carrying a nuclear payload and violates a 2010 U.N. Security Council resolution.

(Reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

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http://news.yahoo.com/look-where-countries-stand-saudi-arabia-iran-dispute-121636103.html

A look at where countries stand in Saudi Arabia-Iran dispute

Associated Press
By JON GAMBRELL
1 hour ago

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Diplomatic tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran, which began with the kingdom's execution of a Shiite cleric and later saw attacks on Saudi diplomatic posts in the Islamic Republic, have seen countries around the world respond.


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Some nations have followed the Saudis' lead in severing or downgrading ties with Iran, while others have offered words of caution aimed at cooling the war of words before it escalates further.

Here's a look at where countries and other regional actors stand at this point:

THE MAIN ACTORS:

SAUDI ARABIA — The kingdom severed ties to Iran after attacks on two of its diplomatic posts following its execution of a Shiite cleric last weekend; it also later cancelled all flights between the two nations.

IRAN — Since the attack on the diplomatic posts, Iran says it has made arrests and has criticized the violent protesters. However on Tuesday, President Hassan Rouhani took a slightly harder line, saying Saudi Arabia's move to sever ties with his country couldn't "cover its crime" of executing Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr.

COUNTRIES BACKING SAUDI ARABIA:

BAHRAIN — The tiny, Shiite-majority island kingdom off the Saudi coast, which long has relied on Saudi Arabia for support of its Sunni rulers, was the first to cut ties with Iran. Bahraini officials repeatedly have accused Iran of training militants and attempting to smuggle arms into the country, which hosts the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.

SUDAN — The African nation cut its diplomatic ties to Iran and gave Iranian diplomats two weeks to leave the country. Sudan once tilted toward Iran, but has been looking to Saudi Arabia for aid since the secession of oil-rich South Sudan in 2011.

UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — The oil-rich country of seven emirates says it will reduce the number of diplomats in Iran, recall its ambassador and focus only on business relations. While backing Saudi Arabia, it may have chosen to reduce — rather than completely sever ties — because of a long trading history with Iran.

KUWAIT — The oil-rich country is recalling of its ambassador from Tehran, but it isn't immediately clear how Kuwaiti-Iranian diplomatic ties will be affected. Tiny Kuwait is home to both Shiites and Sunnis living in peace and has the most free-wheeling political system among all Gulf nations.

JORDAN: Overwhelmingly Sunni Jordan is a close ally of Saudi Arabia in the region and a beneficiary of Gulf aid. Jordan's government spokesman, Mohammed Momani, has condemned the attack on the Saudi Embassy in Iran.

THE MEDIATOR:

OMAN — The sultanate has long historical ties to Iran and served as the base for secret talks between Iranian and U.S. officials that jump-started the deal reached between Iran and world powers over the Islamic Republic's contested nuclear program.

THOSE BACKING IRAN:

LEBANESE HEZBOLLAH MOVEMENT — Hezbollah was founded in 1982 with the help of Iran's Revolutionary Guards after Israel invaded Lebanon. The group is one the main Iran-backed factions in the region.

SYRIA'S EMBATTLED PRESIDENT BASHAR ASSAD — Iran has been one of the biggest supporters of Syria since the 1980s and has stood by Assad's government in his country's grinding civil war. Saudi Arabia has been one of the biggest benefactors of those trying to overthrow him.

IRAQ'S SHIITE-LED GOVERNMENT IN BAGHDAD — Even as Iraq is embroiled in a major war against the militant Islamic State group, al-Nimr's execution sparked outrage among the country's majority Shiites who have taken to the streets in Baghdad and the south, calling for an end to ties with Saudi Arabia. The Shiite-led government has warmed Riyadh that such executions "would lead to nothing but more destruction."

OTHER REGIONAL ACTORS:

ISRAEL — Israel considers Iran to be its greatest regional threat because of its nuclear program, its arsenal of long-range missiles, its support of anti-Israel militant groups and its repeated threats to destroy it. While Israel has no direct ties to Saudi Arabia either, the countries have come closer because of a shared concern over Iran's growing influence.

THE PALESTINIANS — The Palestinian Authority issued a statement after the execution of al-Nimr saying that it stands alongside the Saudis in their fight against "terrorism." The Saudis are the largest donor to the Palestinian Authority in the Arab world, providing them some $200 million annually. The PA, and the Fatah faction that leads it, has had a strained relationship with Iran because of its support of its rival, Hamas.

YEMEN — The Arab world's poorest country is torn by a civil war pitting its internationally recognized government, backed by a Saudi-led coalition, against Shiite rebels known as Houthis, who are supported by Iran.

THOSE URGING CAUTION:

THE UNITED NATIONS — U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged Saudi Arabia and Iran to support peace efforts in Syria and Yemen and avoid escalating tensions.

EUROPEAN UNION: The 28-nation bloc, which opposes the death penalty, criticized Saudi Arabia's mass executions and said al-Nimr's case undermined freedom of expression and basic political rights in the kingdom. Since tensions flared between Iran and Saudi Arabia, the EU foreign policy chief has had phone contact with both sides, fearing an escalation would further destabilize the whole region.

THE UNITED STATES — The White House has urged Saudi Arabia and Iran to not let their dispute derail efforts to end the Syrian civil war, while President Barack Obama's administration also hopes to see the Iranian nuclear deal through.

UNITED KINGDOM — Britain and Iran reopened their respective embassies in 2015, four years after hard-line protesters stormed the British embassy in Tehran. Saudi Arabia is a key diplomatic and economic ally of Britain, though Middle East Minister Tobias Ellwood said Britain told the kingdom about its "disappointment at the mass executions."

TURKEY — Turkey has urged both Saudi Arabia and Iran to ease tensions, saying the Middle East region is "already like a powder keg" and cannot withstand a new crisis.

GERMANY — Berlin has called on Saudi Arabia and Iran to work to mend their diplomatic ties, while condemning both the mass executions in the kingdom and the storming of the Saudi missions in Iran.

RUSSIA — State news agency RIA Novosti quoted an unnamed senior diplomat as saying Moscow is ready to act as a mediator between Iran and Saudi Arabia. It's unclear whether Russian officials have made a formal offer to work with the two nations.

___

Associated Press writers Aron Heller in Jerusalem; Bassem Mroue in Beirut; Karin Laub in Amman, Jordan; Frank Jordans in Berlin; Raf Casert in Brussels, Susannah George in Baghdad and Jill Lawless in London contributed to this report.

___

Follow Jon Gambrell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/jongambrellap

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Housecarl

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https://www.yahoo.com/politics/obama-blamed-for-failing-to-prevent-shiite-022355900.html

WHITE HOUSE

Obama blamed for failing to prevent Shiite cleric’s death

Michael Isikoff
Chief Investigative Correspondent
January 4, 2016

The brother of a prominent Shiite cleric whose execution has roiled the Mideast and set off worldwide protests is blaming President Obama for failing to use his influence with the Saudi government to prevent his death.


“I am sorry to say that the American government did not offer to make any efforts on this, although they knew the danger of this action and the repercussions,” Mohammed Al-Nimr said about the weekend execution of his brother, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, in an interview with Yahoo News.

“We asked very clearly for the American president to intervene as a friend of Saudi Arabia — and the Americans did not intervene,” he added.

While he personally asked officials at the U.S. consulate in Dharan, Saudi Arabia, to urge the president to speak out forcefully against his brother’s death sentence, “the Americans did not issue such a statement,” al-Nimr said in a telephone interview from Awamya in eastern Saudi Arabia. “They limited themselves to general statements from the State Department.”

The question of how forcefully the Obama administration raised the treatment of Sheik al-Nimr with the Saudi government — and whether it was caught flat-footed by the intense response in the region — got new attention Monday, a day after protestors stormed the Saudi Embassy in Tehran over the execution, and Saudi Arabia cut off relations with Iran in response. Iran is the leading Shiite power and views itself as the protector of Shiite interests in the Mideast. The issue also made its way to the presidential campaign trail where Hillary Clinton — whose former top legislative aide at the State Department is now a lobbyist for Saudi Arabia — mildly criticized the execution of al-Nimr, one of 47 prisoners who were put to death, mostly by beheading, by the Saudis over the weekend.

“Clearly, this raises serious questions that we have to raise directly with the Saudi government,” Clinton said at a campaign event in New Hampshire.

The comments by Mohammed al-Nimr, himself a Shiite political dissident as well as a businessman, had added poignancy because his son, Ali al-Nimr, is also facing a Saudi death sentence.

Arrested by Saudi authorities in 2011 when he was 17 for participating in street protests during the Arab Spring, Ali al-Nimr was sentenced to be executed — with his body to be crucified following his death — last September, an action that has been widely condemned by human rights groups. State Department spokesman John Kirby said at the time that the U.S. government was “deeply concerned by the case of Ali al-Nimr,” noting that he was then a juvenile and that a confession he made in a Saudi jail was reportedly made “under duress.”

Mohammed al-Nimr said that, in the aftermath of his brother’s execution, he is now increasingly concerned that his son will also be put to death.

“Our fears were great, but now our fears are greater,” he said. “We don’t trust promises anymore. This issue needs political energy from the friends of Saudi Arabia. I am certain that if somebody like Obama calls for the release of Ali al-Nimr, Ali would be set free.”

Asked for comment about Mohammed al-Nimr’s statements, including his criticism that the president did not use his influence with the Saudis to prevent his brother’s death, a White House spokesman declined comment. However, a senior administration official emailed Yahoo News: “We have spoken to the Saudi government about the cases of Nimr al-Nimr and Ali al-Nimr, as well as other Shia protesters who were sentenced to death, and asked the Saudi government to ensure fair trial and appeal guarantees and transparent judicial proceedings in all cases.”

At a State Department press briefing on Monday, chief spokesman Kirby made a similar point, telling reporters “We’ve been very clear about our concerns about the legal process in Saudi Arabia. It’s something that we have talked to Saudi officials about before. We all continue to do so.”

But in recent weeks, Obama administration officials have privately acknowledged that the Saudi kingdom’s mass executions and other human rights abuses, including reported widespread civilian casualties from its military intervention in Yemen, raise difficult diplomatic issues at a time the U.S. government is attempting to encourage the Saudis to take a more active part in the campaign against the Islamic State. “Sometimes, it’s better to raise these issues privately,” one official said last month when asked about the impending death sentence of Ali al-Nimr.

But the intensity of the response in the Shiite world to Nimr al-Nimr’s death, and the inflamed tensions with Iran over the issue, appears to have caught the administration off-guard. “They were blindsided,” said Ali al-Ahmed, director of the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Gulf Affairs and a frequent critic of the Saudi human rights record. “This is a huge problem that will hurt the United States. I think they failed to understand that this is an issue that is not going to go away.”

Mohammed al-Nimr said he had been hopeful that Saudi King Salman would not sign the writ of execution for his brother because of Nimr al-Nimr’s stature as a widely respected Shiite cleric who had publicly disavowed violence even as he protested the Saudi government. The fact that the king did so — and equated his actions with al-Qaida terrorists — was “shocking,” he said.

His brother’s case “was a political problem, it was not a security problem,” said al-Nimr. Many of the others executed over the weekend were in fact al-Qaida terrorists, he said. “Their hands were tainted with blood and they deserved the punishment,” he said. But “this mixing of the names together — the whole word noticed this.”

Mohammed al-Nimr said that the execution of his brother is emblematic of more hard-edged, aggressive Saudi policies under King Salman. He cited stepped up repression against the country’s Shiite minority and the military intervention against Iranian-allied Houthi rebels in Yemen. In the past, Saudi policy was “much more pragmatic,” he said, blaming the shift on “inexperienced, young advisers” to the king — an apparent reference to 30-year-old Mohammed bin Salman, King Salman’s son, the deputy crown prince and minister of defense.

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Housecarl

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http://www.catholicregister.org/hom...yor-s-murder-was-message-from-organized-crime

Bishop says Mexican mayor's murder was message from organized crime

By David Agren, Catholic News Service
January 5, 2016

MEXICO CITY - The assassination of a Mexican mayor the day after she assumed office was a message from organized crime and evidence of its influence in the area around the city of Cuernavaca, said the bishop who celebrated her funeral Mass.

"How is it possible that all of a region of the state is in the hands of organized crime, that people are paying protection money," said Bishop Ramon Castro Castro of Cuernavaca, in comments published by the newspaper Reforma.

"This is evidence of our reality," Bishop Castro said Jan. 3 outside the home of slain Mayor Gisela Mota in Temixco, about 50 miles south of Mexico City in Morelos state. "I've been saying it for some time and pleading, and no one has been able to do anything."

He said Mota's murder sends the message, "If you don't cooperate with organized crime, look at what's going to happen to you."

"This crime is a signature act that characterizes the failed public security system in the state," he said at the funeral. "I hope and pray to God that Gisela's death helps to make us all more conscious."

Authorities said Mota was murdered after assailants burst into her home Jan. 2, one day after she took the oath of office. Two of the suspects were subsequently killed in a shootout with police, while three more were arrested. The exact motive remains unclear, though Mota promised to clean up Temixco, a suburb of Cuernavaca.

Morelos Gov. Graco Ramirez said the suspects belonged to a drug cartel known as Los Rojos. The mayor's Party of the Democratic Revolution said at least 100 mayors in Mexico had been attacked over the past 10 years as criminal groups attempt to infiltrate and corrupt local governments.

Drug cartels have been fighting over territory in Morelos for much of the past decade, causing crime to escalate and damaging the tourism economy of Cuernavaca, a city once popular with expatriates and weekenders from Mexico City and known previously for its local pastor, now-deceased Bishop Sergio Mendez Arceo, nicknamed the "Red Bishop."

Former Mexican soccer star Cuauhtemoc Blanco -- controversial for his on- and off-field behavior and a novice to politics -- assumed office as mayor of Cuernavaca in late December, sparking a dispute with the state government over policing.

Ramirez took to Twitter to blast Blanco for backing out of a scheme for putting all police in the state under a single commander, a concept promoted as an attempt to prevent police corruption. Blanco, who won the last mayoral race with less than 30 percent of the vote, said the scheme was not working.
Bishop Castro has stayed out of politics and has promoted peace in the Diocese of Cuernavaca since arriving in 2013, although his work has not been without controversy.

Before the June election, he organized a Walk for Peace that resulted in attempts at a boycott and buses from one parish being prevented from leaving.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/...-railway-modernisation-agreements-signed.html

Senegal - Mali railway modernisation agreements signed

05 Jan 2016

AFRICA: The governments of Senegal and Mali have entered into agreements with China Railway Construction Corp (International) Ltd for the repair and reconstruction of the 1 286 km metre-gauge railway between the port of Dakar and Bamako.

The contract with the National Railway Administration of Senegal covers 644·6 km of the route and is worth US$1·26bn,

The framework agreement with the National Trucking & Shipping Bureau of Mali covers 641·4 km and is worth US$1·47bn. It would include the provision of staff training and the modernisation of 22 stations. Mali’s Transport Minister Mamadou Hachim Koumare said the upgrade would enable passenger trains to operate at speeds up to 100 km/h, compared to 20 km/h at present, while freight trains would run at 80 km/h.

The two governments are to discuss financing for the project with Chinese institutions. Once the funding is in place they would sign 48-month implementation agreements with CRCC.

Related news
21 Nov 2015 - World rolling stock market November 2015
19 Oct 2015 - Côte d'Ivoire – Mali railway study
 

Housecarl

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World | Tue Jan 5, 2016 7:00am EST
Related: World, Afghanistan

Afghan forces end siege near Indian consulate in Mazar-i-Sharif

MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan | By Bashir Ansari


Afghan special forces killed a group of insurgents holed up in a house in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif late on Monday, bringing to an end a 24-hour siege following the insurgents' attack on the nearby Indian consulate.

The soldiers killed the three insurgents who had shut themselves into a large house near the consulate, said Abdul Razaq Qaderi, deputy police chief of Balkh province.

He said an investigation was under way to try to identify the men and those behind the attack, which occurred on the same day gunmen attacked an Indian air base in Pathankot in the northwestern state of Punjab near the border with Pakistan.

Eight members of the security forces were wounded in the gun battle which followed the attack on the consulate. The Indian ambassador said all the consulate staff were safe.

The attack began late on Sunday after gunmen tried unsuccessfully to break into the consulate, taking advantage of the fact that many people were watching the final of a soccer championship between Afghanistan and India.

After a heavy exchange of fire that went on until well into the night, security forces suspended operations before resuming in the morning, firing rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns at the building.

"The area is sealed off and we are proceeding cautiously and making all possible efforts to protect the lives of those in the area. The attackers will be killed," the provincial governor, Atta Mohammad Noor, said on his Facebook page.

Gunfire rang out as helicopters circled overhead in a residential area of the city.

Noor blamed "enemies of peace and stability" for the attack, which came amid renewed efforts to lower tension between India and its rival Pakistan and restart peace talks with the Taliban in Afghanistan.


Related Video

Video

Afghan forces battle insurgents near Indian consulate


But there was no more concrete indication of who may have been responsible.

Last month, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Kabul and Islamabad on the same day, underlining the drive to improve stability and overcome the longstanding hostility in the region.

However, Sunday's attack and the assault in Pathankot underlined how difficult that process is likely to be.

In 2014, India's consulate in the western Afghan city of Herat was hit by heavily armed insurgents including suicide bombers, one of a series of attacks on Indian diplomatic stations in Afghanistan over previous years.

Pakistan has long been suspicious of India's engagement with Afghanistan and its diplomatic presence there.

In Kabul, two suicide attacks on the same day highlighted how fragile the security situation in the country has become.


(Additional reporting by Mirwais Harooni in Kabul; Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Robert Birsel and Hugh Lawson)
 

Lilbitsnana

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Conflict News ‏@Conflicts 42m42 minutes ago

BREAKING: U.S. medevac helicopter responding to wounded U.S. Special forces has gone down in #Afghanistan: NBC - @Reuters


Israel News Feed ‏@IsraelHatzolah 28m28 minutes ago

BREAKING - AFGHANISTAN: US medevac helicopter responding to wounded US special forces has gone down, possibly shot down, casualties reported


Conflict News ‏@Conflicts 20m20 minutes ago

MORE: Unknown number of US special operations forces wounded or killed in Helmand, #Afghanistan. - @AP



Conflict News ‏@Conflicts 18m18 minutes ago

BREAKING: One U.S. service member killed, two wounded in #Afghanistan: report http://reut.rs/1Z3ba2F - @Reuters

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Tue Jan 5, 2016 10:41am EST
Related: U.S., World, Afghanistan
One U.S. service member dead, two wounded in Afghanistan: report
WASHINGTON

Early reports indicate that one American service member died and two others were wounded amid an incident in southern Afghanistan, NBC News reported on Tuesday, citing a senior U.S. defense official.

(Reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
 

Housecarl

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Unknown Number of American Special Forces Killed and Wounded, Rescue Chopper Down
Started by Red Baroný, Today 07:44 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...Forces-Killed-and-Wounded-Rescue-Chopper-Down


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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-two-wounded-in-helmand-province-afghanistan/

Checkpoint

One U.S. soldier killed, two wounded in Helmand Province, Afghanistan

By Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Missy Ryan January 5 at 10:49 AM
Comments 2

An American soldier was killed and two others were wounded Tuesday in the midst of heavy fighting in Helmand province in Afghanistan, according to U.S. officials familiar with the matter.

The U.S. casualties come as the restive province has seen an uptick in fighting in recent weeks as Taliban forces have attempted to regain control of key towns such as Sangin, Marja and the provincial capital of Lashkar Gar. In December, Afghan army troops and Afghan police were surrounded by Taliban forces in the town of Sangin in a move that prompted a Deputy Governor in Helmand to use social media to make a plea for help from the government in Kabul.

In the wake of heavy fighting and steep Afghan casualties, the United States deployed special operations troops to assist their beleaguered Afghan counterparts, though the extent of their operations is relatively unknown. In addition to the U.S. troops, the British government also dispatched a small team of advisers to the province–a place that bore the brunt of their casualties in the years prior to the British withdrawal in 2014.

Last month, six U.S. Airmen were killed when a suicide bomber detonated in the middle of their patrol, marking the single largest loss of U.S. life in the country in 2015. According to the website iCasualties.org, 22 Americans died in Afghanistan last year, while Tuesday’s incident marks the first U.S. casualties of 2016.


Thomas Gibbons-Neff is a staff writer and a former Marine infantryman
 

Housecarl

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...y-for-help-as-islamic-state-attacks-oil-tanks

Libya Issues `Cry for Help' as Islamic State Attacks Oil Tanks

by Claudia Carpenter and Hatem Mohareb
January 5, 2016 — 4:03 AM PST
Updated on January 5, 2016 — 6:44 AM PST

- Militants attack oil tanks in Es Sider, Ras Lanuf terminals
- National Oil says it's `helpless' in defending facilities


Libya’s National Oil Corp. issued a “cry for help” as Islamic State militants attacked a second oil tank in the region of Es Sider, the country’s biggest oil port which has been closed for more than a year.

Two members of the Petroleum Facilities Guard were killed and 16 others wounded in clashes with Islamic State militants west of Es Sider oil port, guards spokesman Ali al-Hasy said by phone. The militants attacked an oil tank in Es Sider, setting it on fire, according to a statement on the NOC website. Islamic State had shelled a tank in the nearby Ras Lanuf oil terminal region on Monday during a clash with the guards.

“We are helpless and not being able to do anything against this deliberate destruction to the oil installations” in Es Sider and the nearby Ras Lanuf oil terminals, NOC said. “National Oil Corporation urges all faithful and honorable people of this homeland to hurry to rescue what is left from our resources before it is too late.”

Islamic State militants previously tried to attack Es Sider in October, killing one guard, but were repelled at the gate of the terminal by the petroleum guards. Es Sider and Ras Lanuf terminals have been closed to oil exports since force majeure was declared in December 2014 when armed groups attacked the ports. Force majeure is a legal status protecting a party from liability if it can’t fulfill a contract for reasons beyond its control.

Libya, with Africa’s largest oil reserves, pumped about 1.6 million barrels a day of crude before the 2011 rebellion that ended Moammar Al Qaddafi’s 42-year rule. It’s now the smallest producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, producing 370,000 barrels a day in December, data compiled by Bloomberg show.


Read this next

- Libya Oil Guards Clash With Islamic State Near Biggest Terminal

- Ramadi Mostly Cleared of Islamic State Yet Mines Remain
 

Housecarl

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:dot5::dot5::dot5::dot5::dot5:

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http://freebeacon.com/national-security/north-korea-conducts-successful-submarine-missile-test/

North Korea Conducts Successful Submarine Missile Test

Ejection test from Gorae submarine followed earlier failure

BY: Bill Gertz
January 5, 2016 5:00 am

North Korea¡¯s military carried out a successful ejection test of a new submarine-launched ballistic missile recently, an indication that an earlier test failure has not derailed the underwater missile program, U.S. defense officials said.

The test of the submarine-launched missile, or SLBM, which the Pentagon has called the KN-11, from a submerged submarine on Dec. 21 took place near the port city of Sinpo, where the capability is being developed. The facility is located along the North Korean coast of the Sea of Japan.

The test followed a Nov. 28 ejection tube launch failure that damaged North Korea¡¯s first missile submarine, which officials identified as the Gorae, Korean for whale.

No additional details of the test could be learned, including whether the missile¡¯s engine ignited after the ejection or whether the missile took flight.

North Korean state-run media did not publicize the latest test. In May, North Korea announced that its developmental SLBM was flight tested from what analysts believe was an underwater test platform.

One official said that based on the latest successful ejection test, North Korea could be as little as a year away from deploying a submarine armed with a nuclear-tipped missile. Other analysts remain skeptical that the North Koreans can master the technology for submarine missile firings.

At the Pentagon, spokesman Cmdr. Bill Urban had no comment. ¡°We are not going to be able to provide any information regarding matters of intelligence,¡± he said.

But military analysts said the successful test is a significant step forward in the difficult technical challenge of firing a missile from a submerged submarine.

North Korea is building up its missile forces in an effort to develop a nuclear strike capability. Its current force of strategic missiles includes long-range Taepodong missiles that are vulnerable to preemptive strike because of the time it takes to prepare the missiles for launch.

To develop a more survivable missile force, North Korea has a small number of KN-08 road-mobile ICBMs and has also been developing the KN-11. The SLBM program was first disclosed by the Washington Free Beacon in August 2014.

North Korea is believed by U.S. officials to have obtained the technology for a small warhead capable of being carried by missile in the late 1990s or early 2000s from the covert Pakistani nuclear supply network led by A.Q. Khan.

David Maxwell, a retired Army colonel and expert on North Korea at Georgetown University, said a North Korean missile submarine could be a significant challenge to the United States and its allies.

¡°If they can successfully field an operational SLBM in a capable submarine that can evade advanced anti-submarine measures, it could be a game changer as it could give them a possible second strike capability in a nuclear exchange,¡± Maxwell said.

Maxwell said he suspects the North Koreans remain ¡°some ways off¡± from fielding a missile submarine and the current forces of submarines are not advanced and thus could be tracked.

¡°If we were to determine that they had the capability, we would focus our anti-submarine efforts on perhaps one or two submarines that they might be able to deploy,¡± he added.

Maxwell noted that North Korea has ¡°surprised us before¡± in developing arms and missiles.

¡°What I think is most important is that their pursuit of an SLBM capability is another indicator that they believe their nuclear program is key to regime survival, and that they have absolutely no intention whatsoever of ever giving up their nuclear program,¡± Maxwell said.

Bruce Bechtol, a former Defense Intelligence Agency expert on North Korea, said the North Korean missile thought to be used in the test is a variant of an SS-N-6 SLBM obtained covertly from Russia.

Bechtol, a professor at Angelo State University, said North Korea, with one of the largest missile arsenals and production capabilities in Asia, appears to have been able to reverse engineer an SLBM from one SS-N-6, just as Pyongyang was able to develop an array of missiles after obtaining a Russian short-range Scud decades ago.

¡°North Korea has moved more quickly than most analysts would have anticipated on the SLBM program,¡± Bechtol said.

¡°Not only do they now have a missile that can successfully be fired using the technically challenging procedure of sub-surface launching¡* but now it appears they are actually able to do this from a submarine¡ªas evidenced by the most recent test,¡± he added.

When operational, the submarine and missile capability will provide Pyongyang with a new strike option that could be potentially lethal to the United States and its allies.

Iran is believed to have acquired North Korea¡¯s Musudan missile, and reportedly uses technology from the SS-N-6 in the Safir rocket, he said.

The origin of the Gorae missile submarine is not known. It is believed to be based on either a Soviet design Golf II-class submarine, or reverse-engineered from Golf II submarines obtained by North Korea in the 1990s. The submarines are designed with launch tubes in the vessel¡¯s sail and are believed to be capable of launching two missiles.

Commercial satellite photographs have identified the submarine and a test platform at the coastal facility at Sinpo.

Rick Fisher, a military affairs analyst with the International Assessment and Strategy Center, said the latest test indicates the North Koreans are making progress in the SLBM program.

¡°With an operational SLBM, North Korea will have more options for nuclear coercion against South Korea, Japan, and the United States, as well as being able to offer a new weapon of mass destruction for export,¡± Fisher said, noting Iran would likely be among the first customers of an SLBM design.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made no mention of the new submarine missile program in his New Year¡¯s day speech.

Kim warned that the Korean Peninsula is becoming ¡°the world¡¯s biggest flashpoint and origin of nuclear war today¡± because of what he said were South Korean and U.S. nuclear war exercises.

Meanwhile, North Korea may be preparing to conduct an underground test of a thermonuclear weapon, according to a South Korean military report.

¡°We can¡¯t discount the possibility that the North¡¯s excavation of a new tunnel at its Punggye-ri test site could be designed for thermonuclear weapons tests,¡± said the Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Defense Command, a Defense Ministry group, in a report made public Sunday.

¡°Considering its research of nuclear technology, its history of underground and projectile tests, and elapsed time since its nuclear development, North Korea has the foundation for thermonuclear weapons,¡± the report said, according to the official Yonhap news agency.

Thermonuclear bombs have more explosive power than early-generation nuclear arms. The weapons use the energy from a primary nuclear fission reaction to compress and ignite a secondary nuclear fusion reaction with greater blast yield.

North Korea¡¯s leader Kim Jong Un has announced that it is capable of building hydrogen bombs, though the South Korean report contested this assertion.

¡°The North could detonate its boosted fission weapon, but we don¡¯t believe it is yet capable of directly testing hydrogen bombs,¡± the command report stated.

North Korea carried out three nuclear tests in 2006, 2009, and 2013 at the Punggye-ri test facility in the northeastern part of the country.

A South Korean Defense Ministry-affiliated think tank warned in a report made public last week that North Korea is pushing ahead with additional nuclear tests.

¡°As threats to conduct nuclear and missile tests themselves have considerable impact on the regional balance of power, the North is expected to remain ready and seek appropriate timing for the tests while maintaining ambiguity about its ultimate intentions,¡± Institute for Defense Analyses stated in the report made public Jan. 3.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Sunday warned that North Korea poses a nuclear threat.

¡°Nuclear is a major problem,¡± Trump said on Face the Nation. ¡°And we have major problems, because you have other people that would be very fast on that. You look at North Korea, you look at some of these countries, I don¡¯t think they would hesitate to use it if they really had it in a proper manner.¡±




ªÆ
 

Housecarl

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Saudi Arabia could buy nuclear weapons from Pakistan: US Senator Ron Johnson

By PTI | 5 Jan, 2016, 10.45PM IST
Comments 3

WASHINGTON: Amid mounting tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran over execution of a prominent Shiite cleric, a top US Senator has expressed concern that Riyadh could purchase nuclear weapons from Pakistan thus further destabilise the Middle East.

"Saudi has good relationships with Pakistan. They could just buy a weapon and again further destabilise the Middle East," Senator Ron Johnson told a television channel in an interview.

Tensions between Saudi Arabia, the main Sunni power, and Shiite-dominated Iran over Riyadh's execution of prominent Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr have erupted this week into a full-blown diplomatic crisis, sparking widespread worries of regional instability.

The crisis has raised fears of an increase in sectarian violence in the Middle East.
 

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Jan 5, 2016 @ 06:00 AM 327 views

Iran Is Dangerous, But So Is Saudi Arabia

Doug Bandow, Contributor
I write about domestic and international policy.

Saudi Arabia and Iran continue to turn their national struggle into a religious conflict. The first is dangerous. The second could be catastrophic. Yet Riyadh, America’s nominal ally, has demonstrated that it is the more reckless of the two states, executing an important Shia cleric and severing diplomatic relations with Iran.

There is much bad to say about Tehran’s Islamic regime. It is authoritarian at home, dominated by intolerant fundamentalism, politically repressive, and a persistent persecutor of minority faiths. The Islamists are interventionists abroad, backing Hezbollah and Syria’s Bashir al-Assad. Long antagonistic to the U.S., Iran has displayed a disturbing interest in nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

Unfortunately, Washington inadvertently set Iran on its present course. In 1953 the U.S. helped oust Tehran’s democratic government and turn the Shah into a despised despot, who antagonized political liberals and religious conservatives alike. After his 1979 overthrow the Reagan administration backed the even more loathsome Saddam Hussein in Iraq’s invasion of Iran, which ended in stalemate after the death of perhaps one million Iranians. Since then Washington has supported sanctions on Iran for its nuclear research and threatened war if Tehran tried to develop nuclear weapons. Today the U.S. backs efforts to overthrow the Assad government, one of Tehran’s only three allies (along with Iraq and Lebanon’s Shia movement) in the Middle East.

Iran may be a threatening actor, but American officials have unintentionally made it as threatening as possible. Even worse, however, is Saudi Arabia, considered by Washington to be a valued ally and partner.

For decades U.S. officials have treated the Saudi royals, who conveniently sit atop vast oil reserves, as dear friends. The monarchy’s relationship with the Bush clan, including both Presidents H.W. and George, was particularly intimate. After vowing war against Islamist terrorism in the aftermath of 9/11, George fils allowed Saudi nationals to flee the country while Americans were grounded. After the death of King Abdullah early last year, Obama administration officials offered slavish praise of the departed, speaking of his moderation, courage, tolerance, vision and asceticism. The Washington Post reported yesterday: “the administration felt that, despite the occasional bumps, its relations with the kingdom had reached a smooth cruising speed since King Salman took over last January.”

Yet Republican Party presidential candidates don’t believe that President Barack Obama has genuflected low enough to the Saudi monarchy. For instance, Jeb Bush insisted on the need to rebuild “our relationships with allies and key relationships in the Middle East, including the Persian Gulf states.” The Saudis and others are “important partners.” New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie complained that the Saudi king did not attend the administration’s Gulf summit last fall and demanded that America “stand with those who share our values and interests,” in this case apparently theocracy and dictatorship. Similarly, the Wall Street Journal, while allowing that “the Saudis are often difficult allies,” asked “who lost the Saudis?” But America never won them. Rather, the royals consistently triumphed, brilliantly manipulating the U.S. to advance their interests.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is essentially a totalitarian state which acts as a tool of plunder for some 7000 princes and their families. Riyadh’s execution of noted Shia cleric Nimr al-Nimr, who had the temerity to advocate democracy, set off riots across the Shiite world. Among al-Nimr’s alleged crimes: “disobeying and breaking allegiance to the ruler.” Still awaiting death by beheading is Nimr’s 21 year-old nephew, Ali al-Nimr, arrested at age 17, and 19-year-old Abdullah al-Zaher, who at age 15 also demonstrated for democracy. In 2014 liberal blogger Raif Badawi was sentenced to ten years in prison and 1000 lashes for allegedly insulting Islam. Then the latter’s lawyer, Waleed Abul-Khair, was sentenced to 15 years for “undermining the regime and officials” and “inciting public opinion.”

Freedom House rates the kingdom at the bottom in terms of both civil liberties and political rights. Last year’s report noted that Riyadh had “tightened restrictions on dissent and freedom of speech” and “intensified criminal penalties for religious beliefs that veer too far from official state orthodoxy.” Purported “antiterrorism” legislation allowed the “authorities to press terrorism charges against anyone who demands reform, exposes corruption or otherwise engages in dissent.”

Last year Human Rights Watch reported that Saudi Arabia continued “to try, convict, and imprison political dissidents and human rights activists solely on account of their peaceful activities. Systematic discrimination against women and religious minorities continued.” The “antiterrorism” law “can be used to criminalize almost any form of peaceful criticism and the authorities as terrorism.”



Amnesty International said much the same: “The government severely restricted freedoms of expression, association and assembly, and cracked down on dissent, arresting and imprisoning critics, including human rights defenders. Many received unfair trials before courts that failed to respect due process.”

The U.S. State Department devoted 57 pages to the Saudi monarchy’s human rights (mal)practices. Noted State: “The most important human rights problems reported included citizens’ lack of the ability and legal means to change their government; pervasive restrictions on universal rights such as freedom of expression, including on the internet, and freedom of assembly, association, movement, and religion; and a lack of equal rights for women, children, and noncitizen workers.” There were other violations as well, though even with the U.S. government’s help it’s hard to keep track of them.

The Saudi royals are, if anything, even more repressive when it comes to matters of faith. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom named Saudi Arabia a “Country of Particular Concern.” The regime “remains unique in the extent to which it restricts the public expression of any religion other than Islam.” The monarchy “privileges its own interpretation of Sunni Islam over all other interpretations and prohibits any non-Muslim public places of worship.” The KSA also “continues to prosecute and imprison individuals for dissent, apostasy, blasphemy, and sorcery,” while the antiterrorism legislation “classifies blasphemy and advocating atheism as terrorism.”

In its latest religious liberty report State noted that citizens are required to be Muslims and that apostasy may be punished by death. Non-Muslim foreigners and non-Sunni Saudis “must practice their religion in private and are vulnerable to discrimination, harassment, detention, and, for noncitizens, deportation.” The law criminalizes “calling for atheist thought” and “calling into question the Islamic religion.” Obviously, “freedom of religion is not protected under the law.” Essentially, Saudi Arabia is an early version of the Islamic State which won social acceptance in the West.

Unfortunately, Riyadh doesn’t limit religious repression to home. The licentious royals long ago made a deal with fundamentalist Wahhabis to enforce repressive Islamic theology at home and fund its propagation abroad in return for clerical support. Pre-9/11 the KSA backed the Taliban regime, which shared Riyadh’s enthusiasm for brutal implementation of 7th century Islam. Some wealthy Saudis went further, backing al-Qaeda before the attack on America, yet the Bush administration classified the section of the 9/11 report detailing these activities. According to Wikileaks, no less an authority than Secretary of State Hillary Clinton later confirmed that money continues to flow from well-heeled Saudis to terrorists. And the monarchy has generously supported, with money and weapons, Syrian rebels, mostly those who range from jihadist to more extreme.

By turning the American military into the Saudi royals’ bodyguard, Presidents Bush, Clinton, Bush and Obama spurred terrorism and attacks on Americans. The first Gulf War was directed more to safeguard Saudi Arabia than liberate Kuwait; the U.S. garrison left in Saudi Arabia stoked Osama bin-Laden’s anger and was later targeted by terrorists in the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing. (Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz cited the withdrawal of these troops as an important benefit of the Iraq invasion.) Subsequent sanctions and bombing supported the meme of a U.S. war on Islam. Finally, attacking Iraq created the murderous al-Qaeda in Iraq, which became a prolific employer of suicide bombers and morphed into the Islamic State.

At least as an energy producer Saudi Arabia is supposed to be friendly to the West. However, the royals market their oil because they need the money, not because they like Americans (or Europeans or any of their other customers). Any successor regime also would sell the oil, since drinking it isn’t an option and the revenues would be necessary in order to stay in power. Moreover, with the transformation of the international energy marketplace and America’s move toward becoming an oil exporter, Washington need not worry about reduced Saudi oil exports. One of the most positive geopolitical impacts of the fall in prices is weakening malign energy autocracies and kleptocracies, including the kingdom.

As for foreign policy, Riyadh is proving to be as problematic as Iran. The execution of al-Nimr for opposing the al-Saud dictatorship sparked protests in Beirut (Lebanon), Baghdad (Iraq), and Manama (Bahrain), as well as Tehran. Killing a Shiite cleric for standing up to the oppressive Sunni monarchy moves the region closer to multinational sectarian conflict, which is far more dangerous than a bilateral struggle between nation states. Other governments began to take sides, as Sunni-ruled Bahrain also broke diplomatic relations while Sunni-majority Kuwait and United Arab Emirates downgraded bilateral ties. (Majority-Sunni Sudan also severed official ties, but it plays a minor role in Middle East affairs.) Nouri al-Maliki, former prime minister of Shia-majority Iraq, predicted that the execution “will topple the Saudi regime.”

Intensifying the Saudi-Iran conflict will undermine Washington’s battle against the Islamic State, an extremist Sunni group. In practice, the U.S. must rely mostly on Shiite and other non-Sunni forces—the Baghdad government, Assad forces, various Kurdish fighters. America’s other supposed allies, notably Saudi Arabia, along with the smaller Gulf States and Turkey, have done far more to back ISIL and other radical groups in Syria. By taking a step Riyadh surely knew would discourage any improvement in relations with Tehran, the royals have made a diplomatic settlement far harder, if not impossible. Yet Washington’s only hope of squaring the circle—defanging if not destroying the Islamic State, marginalizing if not ousting Assad, moderating if not converting Assad supporters Iran and Russia—requires a political solution.

Saudi Arabia also is as ruthless as the Soviet Union in crushing democracy and human rights in friendly regimes. For instance, Riyadh intervened militarily to back Bahrain’s Sunni monarchy in suppressing the majority Shia population, which sought a share of power. The royals lavished money on Egypt’s al-Sisi dictatorship, which has proved to be more brutal than Hosni Mubarak’s rule.

Even worse has been the KSA’s brutal intervention in Yemen’s long-running civil war. Giving new meaning to hypocrisy, the Saudi monarchy engages in deadly meddling even as it complains about Iran’s troublemaking. Riyadh intends to reinstate President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, overthrown by a combination of Houthi insurgents, who have been in rebellion for decades, and Hadi’s predecessor, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who once battled the same Houthis. The conflict long was tribal more than sectarian, as the Houthis do not fit with either Sunnis or Shiites. But by treating the civil war as yet another proxy fight between Shia and Sunnis, Saudi Arabia encouraged Tehran to join. And Washington foolishly backed its “ally.”

As of the end of October at least 2400 civilians, and as many as 3000, had been killed, a large majority—including three-fourths of children, by United Nations count—from misdirected Saudi airstrikes. Reported journalist Bryan Schatz: “The Saudi coalition has repeatedly targeted schools, hospitals, and religious buildings. Civilian infrastructure, including a camp for displaced people, water supplies, and power stations, have been destroyed. Civilian hospitals—overloaded with patients injured by airstrikes yet painfully under-supplied because of coalition blockades—are nearing collapse.”

At least 1.5 million people have been displaced. Much of the population has been reduced to poverty and hunger; the World Food Programme warned that a quarter of Yemenis are approaching starvation. Peter Maurer, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross, said “Yemen after five months looks like Syria after five years.” Amnesty International concluded that “All the parties involved in the conflict raging across the country have committed widespread human rights abuses, including war crimes.”

Yet the U.S. acts as if it needs a repressive, unprincipled, myopic, and meddlesome ally more than the latter needs the U.S. In fact, the royals cannot be sure that their combination of bribes and brutality will forever preserve today’s ostentatious kleptocracy. Indeed, the regime’s vulnerabilities are only likely to grow. Which is why the Saudis look to Washington for support. President Obama lauded the late King Abdullah’s “steadfast and passionate belief in the importance of the U.S.-Saudi relationship as a force for stability and security in the Middle East.” Of course, every Saudi king believes that. It’s cheaper for the royals to borrow U.S. troops than to hire bodyguards. While Washington requires Riyadh to pay for its weapons, so far logistical support for the Yemen war has been free.

Instead of being treated as an ally, Saudi Arabia “should be a pariah,” argued Freedom House President Mark Lagon. At the very least, U.S. officials should drop the faux intimacy and treat Riyadh as Washington once treated Moscow. An important power to be engaged, not supported, endorsed, praised, subsidized, and reassured. Ultimately regime change in Riyadh is as necessary, indeed, perhaps even more so, than regime change in Tehran.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....With 47 metric tons of their own in stock talk about "window dressing".....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asia/japan/2016/01/06/455302/Japan-to.htm

Japan to send plutonium cache to US under nuke deal: report

AFP
January 6, 2016, 12:00 am TWN

TOKYO -- Japan will send a huge cache of plutonium — enough to produce 50 nuclear bombs — to the United States as part of a deal to return the material that was used for research, reports and officials said Tuesday.

The plutonium stockpile, provided by the U.S., Britain and France decades ago, has caused some disquiet given that Japan has said it has the ability to produce a nuclear weapon even if it chooses not to.

Some 331 kilograms (730 pounds) of the highly fissionable material will be sent by ship to a nuclear facility in South Carolina by the end of March, Kyodo News reported Monday in a dispatch from Washington that cited unnamed Japanese government sources.

The shipment, which comes ahead of a nuclear security summit in Washington in March, is meant to underscore both countries' commitment to nuclear non-proliferation and is part of a deal they made in 2014.

It will be one of Japan's most significant overseas movements of plutonium since it transported one tonne from France in 1993 to be used in nuclear reactor experiments.

That shipment triggered an outcry at the time from countries citing environmental and security concerns.

A Japanese official confirmed the amount of plutonium to be sent to the U.S. and said that preparations for the shipment are under way.

"But we can't comment on further details, including the departure date and route, for security reasons," the official in the nuclear technology section at the education ministry told AFP Tuesday.

The material has been stored at the Nuclear Science Research Institute northeast of Tokyo, he added.

Japan relies heavily on nuclear technology for its energy needs.

In 2006, then foreign minister Taro Aso sparked panic in neighboring countries by saying Japan, a scientific superpower with numerous Nobel prizes to its credit, had the know-how to produce nuclear arms but opts not to.

Japan is the only country to ever have been attacked with nuclear weapons, and under a 1967 policy it refuses to produce, possess or allow nuclear weapons on its soil.

But in 2010 Tokyo admitted to previous secret agreements with the United States to allow American warships to carry nuclear weapons across Japanese territory and to take the arms to U.S. bases on Okinawa island in an emergency.

U.S. atomic bombs obliterated the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the closing days of World War II, killing more than 210,000 people.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/iran-reveals-missile-city-bunker-new-weapons-661232633

Iran reveals 'missile city' bunker for new weapons

#InsideIranMilitary publishes photographs of bunker storing 'Emad' ballistic missile, whose test-firing last year broke UN resolution

Graeme Baker
Tuesday 5 January 2016 14:13 UTC
Last update:
Tuesday 5 January 2016 17:15 UTC

Iran's military has revealed a secret underground "missile city" used to store a new generation of ballistic missiles which the US claims are "nuclear capable" and whose test-firing last year broke a UN resolution.

The Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) on Tuesday released pictures and video of the underground bunker after a visit by Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani.

Iran's Tasnim news agency said the bunker, which it dubbed a "missile city", stores the Emad ballistic missile, which has a range of 2,000km and was first successfully tested on 10 October. The US says the missiles are advanced enough to be fitted with nuclear warheads.

It is the second such bunker to be publicised in three months, after the guards in October revealed a facility dug into an unnamed mountain to store and protect Iran's advanced weaponry.

Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the commander of the IRGC's aerospace division, said the facility was only one of many bases scattered across the country.

The publicising of the existence of the bunker comes at a sensitive time in relations between Iran and world powers, who signed an agreement in July to largely curtail Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Iran is still the subject of UN Security Council resolutions on missile development. The Emad's test-firing in October was deemed by a UN panel of experts to have contravened UN Security Council resolution 1929 of 2010, which prohibits Tehran from launching ballistic missiles.

A report by the UN Security Council sanctions committee, requested by the UK, US, Germany and France, stated last month: "On the basis of its analysis and findings, the panel concludes the Emad launch a violation by Iran of paragraph 9 of Security Council resolution 1929."

Paragraph 9 states Iran "shall not undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using ballistic missile technology".

Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zaif hit back at the UN report saying "none of the Islamic Republic of Iran's missiles has been designed for a nuclear capability".

A threat of renewed sanctions against Iran could scupper the agreement, with Iran's leaders saying that the missile programme has nothing to do with the nuclear deal.

The report was released on the same day the IAEA, the UN's atomic agency, closed its decade-long investigation into Tehran's attempt to gain nuclear arms, stating that it had closed its "consideration of the matter".

The IAEA said earlier that Iran had conducted "a range of activities relevant to the development" of a nuclear bomb before the end of 2003 in a "coordinated effort", and that some activities continued until 2009.

The closure of the probe removed an important obstacle to implementing July's landmark nuclear deal with global powers, that shut down large parts of Iran's domestic nuclear programme for the lifting of crippling sanctions.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
01.05 BREAKING NEWS: 5.1 M EARTHQUAKE near N. Korea Nuke Test Site
Started by JohnGaltflaý, Today 06:01 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...5.1-M-EARTHQUAKE-near-N.-Korea-Nuke-Test-Site


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/north-korea-quake-nuclear-1.3391121

Updated

'Artificial earthquake' reported near North Korea nuclear test site

Officials trying to determine if quake was North Korea's fourth nuclear test

The Associated Press Posted: Jan 05, 2016 9:23 PM ET| Last Updated: Jan 05, 2016 10:05 PM ET

South Korean officials detected an "artificial earthquake" near North Korea's main nuclear testing site on Wednesday, a strong indication that the nuclear-armed country had conducted its fourth atomic test.

The U.S Geological Survey measured the magnitude of the seismic activity at 5.1 on its website. An official from the Korea Metrological Administration, South Korea's weather agency, said it believed the earthquake was caused artificially, without elaborating, and originated 49 kilometres north of Kilju, the northeastern area where North Korea's main nuclear test site is located. The country conducted all three previous atomic detonations there.

South Korean government officials couldn't immediately confirm whether a nuclear blast or natural earthquake had taken place, but South Korean media reported that North Korea was planning a major announcement on Wednesday, likely at 3:30 a.m.GMT (10:30 p.m. ET).


North Korea conducted its third nuclear test in February 2013. A confirmed test would mark another big step toward Pyongyang's goal of building a warhead small enough to be mounted on a missile capable of reaching mainland America's shores.

A test would further North Korea's international isolation by prompting a push for new, tougher sanctions at the United Nations and worsening Pyongyang's already bad ties with Washington and its neighbors.

Pyongyang is thought to have a handful of crude nuclear weapons. The United States and its allies worry about North Korean nuclear tests because each new blast brings the country closer to perfecting its nuclear arsenal.

With files from Reuters
© The Associated Press, 2016
The Canadian Press
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://38north.org/2016/01/sinpo010516/

North Korea’s Ballistic Missile Submarine Program: Full Steam Ahead

By 38 North
05 January 2016

A 38 North exclusive with analysis by Joseph S. Bermudez Jr.

Reports of a North Korean “ejection” test of the Bukkeukseong-1 (Polaris-1, KN-11) submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) on December 21, 2015, appear to be supported by new commercial satellite imagery of the Sinpo South Shipyard. This imagery also indicates that despite reports of a failed test in late November 2015 North Korea is continuing to actively pursue its SLBM development program.

Specifically:
◾Activity at the secure submarine area may be an indicator supporting reports of a test two days earlier since it is similar to the level of activity that has been previously seen at the SINPO-class submarine prior to the May 2015 test of the Bukkeukseong-1.
◾At the Sinpo South Test Stand, the structure used to support a rocket engine, missile or launch tube, usually present either immediately prior to or shortly after a test is conducted, is in place, suggesting that such a test has been conducted recently or will be conducted soon.
◾Imagery shows the SINPO-class submarine docked at the secure boat basin with netting concealing ongoing work. While the nature of the work remains unclear, it seems that although the boat may have been damaged during a recent test as some reports have speculated, it remains seaworthy.
◾The refurbishment and construction program at the Sinpo South construction halls, fabrication buildings and machine shops that will allow building new submarines much larger than the SINPO-class is nearing completion.

North Korea’s development of a SLBM and associated ballistic missile submarine has the potential to present a significant threat in the future. However, the development of an operational system will be an expensive, time-consuming endeavor with no guarantee of success.

Status of the North’s SLBM Development Program

On November 29, 2015 South Korean government sources reported that North Korea had conducted a failed test of the Bukkeukseong-1 (Polaris-1, KN-11) submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) the previous day. This test was conducted from the North’s sole SINPO-class experimental ballistic missile submarine (SSBA) in the waters of the East Sea northeast of Wonsan.[1] This follows an earlier test during May 2015 that Pyongyang claimed as a great success but was reported by South Korean intelligence sources as a simple ejection test and not a full capabilities operational test.[2]

The November test has been assessed as a failure because no missile flight was tracked on radar and debris—sometimes reported as “fragments of a safety cover”—was observed floating on the surface of the water following the test. It has also been suggested that the Bukkeukseong-1 either never left the launch tube or that it was successfully ejected but the main engine failed to fire. There has also been speculation that the submarine was damaged during the test.

While some assess this failure as a significant setback for the SLBM program, it should more accurately be viewed as a normal part of a development program that had likely been anticipated as a possibility by North Korea’s development team. Indeed, the reports of a subsequent December 21st ejection test suggests that North Korean designers, engineers and technicians have probably learned from the previous test failure and actively continuing development of the Bukkeukseong-1, launch system and submarine. Recent commercial satellite imagery provides an important glimpse of activities at the Sinpo South Shipyard, the main facility for the development of North Korea’s SLBM and associated missile.

Figure 1. Overview of the Sinpo South Shipyard.


contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

Increased Activity at the Secure Boat Basin

Imagery shows a level and type of activity at the secure area that was seen prior to the May 2015 test of the Bukkeukseong-1, which may support recent reports of a test two days earlier. A support vessel, submersible launch barge and SINPO-class submarine are present at the secure boat basin. Personnel and equipment are observed throughout the area but concentrated near the submersible launch barge. A large construction crane is erected adjacent to the barge and work appears to be underway.

Figure 2. Close-up of secure boat basin at the Sinpo South Shipyard.

The SINPO-class submarine is berthed immediately north of the submersible launch barge with personnel present on the dock adjacent to the boat. What appears to be elevated netting has been erected over large portions of the forward and aft decks obscuring topside activity. While it is difficult to discern, the panel/hatch on the top of the sail and over the launch tube may be removed or open. Moreover, it is also difficult to identify the purpose of this activity. One possibility is that the work is related to damage caused by the failed late November launch. However, if reports are correct of a successful test on late December, the work is more likely related to post-test maintenance.

In addition, the submarine is seen for the first time resting with a slight bow-up attitude. The reasons for this are unknown but may suggest that the bow ballast and/or fuel tanks are completely empty. Alternately, if the submarine was damaged during the November 28 test, the bow-up attitude could be related to repairs.

Also, a basic camouflage pattern consisting of large dark green or blue grey splotches has been applied to the sail during the last several months. The purpose of the camouflage is unclear. One possibility is that it is used in propaganda and to boost morale since this is an experimental submarine and unlikely to encounter foreign warships or be involved in coastal operations where camouflage might be useful.

Activity at the Test Stand

At the Sinpo South test stand, the temporary structure used to support a rocket engine, missile or launch tube, usually present either immediately prior to or shortly after a test is conducted, is in place, suggesting that such a test has been conducted recently or will be conducted soon. In addition to the reported December 21 ejection test at sea, North Korea has conducted a number of additional “pop-up” or ejection tests from the stand and submersible launch barge over the past two years that have not been reported in the media. The bermed-in test cell area immediately northwest of the test stand has been leveled since May 2015 with some minor excavation of unknown purpose noted in the center.

Figure 3. Close-up of Test Stand at the Sinpo South Shipyard.

Construction Nearing Completion Allowing the Building of Bigger Submarines

Imagery shows that a refurbishment and construction program begun in summer 2014 focused on the construction halls, fabrication buildings and machine shops appears to be in its final stages and will allow the building of much larger submarines than the current SINPO-class boats. The main bay of the refurbished main construction hall is now approximately 194-meters-long, 35-meters-wide and 28-meters-tall (the hall doors are only 20-meters tall). Work also continued on extending the launching ramp in front of the main construction hall. When completed, this will allow for maintenance and repairs of larger submarines to be conducted outside the hall without disturbing construction progress and schedules inside.

Figure 4. Close-up of Main Construction Hall and ramp.

———————————————————-

[1] Some sources identify the submarine as the GORAE-class (Gorae is Korean for whale).

[2] “North Korea tested submarine-launched missile, but launch failed,” Asahi Shimbun, November 29, 2015, http://ajw.asahi.com/article/asia/korean_peninsula/AJ201511290017; Sang-hun Choe, “North Korean Missile Test Was Unsuccessful, South Says,” New York Times, November 30, 2015, http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/01/w...mc=edit_tnt_20151130&nlid=817416&tntemail0=y; Bill Gertz, “North Korean Submarine Damaged in Missile Test,” Washington Free Beacon, December 8, 2015, http://freebeacon.com/national-security/north-korean-submarine-damaged-in-missile-test/; and Bill Gertz, “North Korea Conducts Successful Submarine Missile Test,” Washington Free Beacon, January 5, 2016, http://freebeacon.com/national-security/north-korea-conducts-successful-submarine-missile-test/.


Found in section: Satellite Imagery, WMD

Tags: ballistic missiles, Bukkeukseong-1, ejection test, joseph s bermudez jr., KN-11, Polaris-1, sinpo class submarine, sinpo south shipyard, slbm, submarine launched ballistic missiles, submarines, WMD


Previous Topic: Inspector O Gets the Shpilkes
 

mzkitty

I give up.
I have no clue:


8m
Bangladesh Supreme Court upholds death penalty for war crimes charges to chief of largest Islamic political party despite his appeal - @shamimashraf
 

Be Well

may all be well
Quite a collection of icky headlines. I haven't really thought much about Nork lately. I did read over the years they've teamed up with Iran for quite some time in the weapon department, includling nukes.

Sigh, not pretty.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2016/01/05/the_islamic_states_libyan_province_108859.html

January 5, 2016

The Islamic State's Libyan 'Province'

By Thomas Joscelyn

The Islamic State’s so-called “province” in Libya has launched a new offensive and claims to have captured a town on the Mediterranean coast.

“The soldiers of the Khilafah [caliphate] managed to take complete control over the coastal city of Bin Jawad,” the Islamic State’s Wilayat Barqat (or province) said in a short statement released online earlier today. The “blessed operations come during the battle of Sheikh Abdul Mugirah al Qahtani (May Allah accept him), and all praise is due to Allah, master of the universe,” the statement continued.

In a concurrent operation, the “caliphate’s” fighters attacked the port town of Al Sidr, which is approximately 20 miles away from Bin Jawad and home to one of Libya’s largest oil ports. One or more suicide bombers may have initiated the assault after they struck guard positions with car bombs. Photos posted on social media appear to show the wreckage caused by their blasts, but the images have not yet been verified. The status of the fighting in Al Sidr is also not clear as of this writing.

Separately, the jihadists set fire to a storage tank at an oil facility in Ras Lanuf, another port that houses an oil refinery. Libya’s rival factions have long fought over access to Ras Lanuf.

Bin Jawad, Al Sidr and Ras Lanuf are all in the district of Sirte. The Islamic State’s Libyan arm took over much of the city of Sirte last year, turning it into an operational hub. Bin Jawad is also a short drive from the town of Nawfaliyah, which the “caliphate’s” men overran in March 2015. [See LWJ report, Islamic State ‘province’ in Libya claims capture of town.]

The Islamic State’s Libyan branch has repeatedly targeted the country’s oil infrastructure, some of which has been shut down for months or longer because of the violence. As in Iraq and Syria, the “caliphate” seeks to control key Libyan oil fields, refineries, ports and other facilities. It remains to be seen if today’s attacks, which are testing local security forces, lead to further advances.

Abu Bakr al Baghdadi’s followers in Libya have named their new offensive after Sheikh Abdul Mugirah al Qahtani, who was identified in an issue of Dabiq magazine released last September as the head of the Islamic State’s province in the country. [See LWJ report, In Dabiq magazine, Islamic State complains about jihadist rivals in Libya.]

In his interview with Dabiq, Qahtani complained bitterly about the Islamic State’s jihadist rivals in Libya, including the leaders of Ansar al Sharia. Qahtani said Ansar al Sharia’s leaders are close to their counterparts in Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), which opposes the Islamic State’s expansion in North Africa. Qahtani promised that the “caliphate’s” opponents “will continue to be a target for our swords, which we will not hold back until they repent.”

Qahtani’s true identity has always been murky, as he was not clearly identified in the Islamic State’s propaganda.

CNN reported in November 2014 that an Islamic State leader known as Abu Nabil al Anbari, a jihadist “veteran” who was imprisoned with Baghdadi in Iraq, had been dispatched to Libya to oversee the group’s efforts. The Wall Street Journal offered a similar account, saying that Anbari was an ex-Iraqi policeman.

The Defense Department announced in November 2015 that Anbari was killed in a US airstrike in Libya. Anbari (also known as Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi) “may have been the spokesman in” an Islamic State video showing the execution of Coptic Christians in February 2015, according to the Pentagon.

Anbari’s “death will degrade [the Islamic State’s] ability to meet the group’s objectives in Libya,” Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook claimed at the time. Cook said the organization’s objectives include “recruiting new…members, establishing bases in Libya, and planning external attacks on the United States.” In December 2015, the Pentagon claimed to confirm Anbari’s death, describing him as “a longtime al Qaeda operative and the senior [Islamic State] leader in Libya.” The airstrike that purportedly killed him was the first US “strike against an [Islamic State] leader in Libya.”

It is possible that Abdul Mugirah al Qahtani and Abu Nabil al Anbari were the same Islamic State official, but that has not been confirmed. Their aliases indicate different countries of origin (Anbari refers to Iraq, while Qahtani is generally used by jihadists from the Arabian Peninsula), but the jihadists often adopt new pseudonyms for various reasons. Regardless, the Islamic State, like al Qaeda, has proven to be adept at replacing fallen leaders. And Qahtani’s death did not stop the jihadists’ latest advances on Libya’s coast.

Thomas Joscelyn is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Senior Editor for The Long War Journal.

This article originally appeared at The Long War Journal.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
2m
Turkish President Erdogan says executions in Saudi Arabia are a domestic Saudi issue; says those who remain silent to deaths in Syria are now causing uproar over execution of 1 person in Saudi - @Reuters
End of alert
 

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http://www.wsj.com/articles/north-korea-bomb-test-thrusts-it-back-into-world-spotlight-1452081459

World | Asia

North Korea Bomb Test Thrusts It Back Into World Spotlight

Reclusive nation’s test challenges U.S. to be more active in responding to its threat

By Alastair Gale in Seoul, Te-Ping Chen in Beijing and Trefor Moss in Manila
Jan. 6, 2016 6:57 a.m. ET
9 COMMENTS

North Korea’s latest nuclear bomb test thrusts the reclusive nation back into the diplomatic spotlight, challenging the U.S. to take a more active approach to tackling a threat that has faded from headlines as tensions in the Middle East rose.

Pyongyang’s announcement that it detonated its first hydrogen bomb Wednesday caught outsiders by surprise, while also generating skepticism over its claim to have developed the powerful form of nuclear weapon.

The decision to stage a fourth nuclear test and the announcement of a new type of bomb appeared aimed at drawing attention back to North Korea’s ability to destabilize the region, several experts said.

“North Korea intends to strengthen its status as a nuclear power this year, particularly before the U.S. presidential election and a possible change in government there,” said Cheong Seong-chang, a senior analyst at the Sejong Institute, a think tank near Seoul.

Added Masashi Nishihara, president of the Tokyo-based Research Institute for Peace and Security: “They’re making an attempt to get in touch. Through the hydrogen bomb test, they hope to draw America closer and conduct some kind of negotiation.”

In announcing the test, North Korea linked its nuclear buildup to a long-standing demand that the U.S. withdraw from its military alliance with South Korea. North Korea portrays that as a threat to its sovereignty.

“There can neither be suspended nuclear development nor nuclear dismantlement on the part of the DPRK unless the U.S. has rolled back its vicious hostile policy toward the former,” North Korean state media said in a statement, using the abbreviation for the nation’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

U.S. officials say North Korea has taken a harder line under current leader Kim Jong Un, refusing to engage in talks over its nuclear program despite repeated approaches. That has created a deadlock, allowing Pyongyang to press ahead with developing its arsenal of weapons.

In December, Mr. Kim made his first known reference to the development of hydrogen bombs, which are far more powerful than the roughly dozen atomic bombs that experts estimate North Korea possesses. It comes after North Korea has shown signs of possible internal tension. On Dec. 30, the regime’s top official on South Korean affairs died in a traffic accident, according to state media, sparking suspicions of a purge.

Nuclear experts and South Korean officials said the size of the latest explosion, similar to that of North Korea’s last nuclear test in 2013, means it is unlikely it was caused by a typical hydrogen bomb. “But they might have taken a step in that direction,” said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies.

The test is likely to be discussed on Wednesday by the United Nations Security Council, which has banned North Korean nuclear tests since its first detonation in 2006. The failure of U.N. sanctions, as well as those imposed by the U.S. and other nations, to rein in North Korea’s nuclear advances raises questions over whether a new approach is needed to tackle the issue.

“We should give them two choices: denuclearization or the end of the regime,” said Chun Young-woo, a former South Korean national security adviser and negotiator at the six-nation talks process that for several years tried to coax North Korea into giving up its nuclear ambitions.

Critics of U.S. President Barack Obama say his administration has soft-pedaled its policy to tackle the threat from North Korea, particularly in the wake of a cyberattack in December 2014 against Sony Pictures Entertainment that the U.S. blamed on North Korea.

One year ago, Mr. Obama signed a broad executive order authorizing the U.S. Treasury Department to freeze any assets of North Korea’s government, ruling party, officials and third-country enablers. A year later, the administration has designated just 18 targets under this order, mostly low-level arms dealers and entities whose assets were already frozen. The administration has yet to freeze the assets of Kim Jong Un or any of his top deputies.

The blast may now push the Obama administration to refocus on North Korea. “This has demonstrated to everyone that the U.S. has to stay active in Asia—that there are big problems here that aren’t all about U.S.-China competition,” said Richard Bitzinger, a security expert at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.

U.N. sanctions on North Korea have over the years faced resistance from North Korea’s closest ally, China. While Beijing has repeatedly called for the elimination of nuclear weapons from the Korean Peninsula, pressuring North Korea is a balancing act. An implosion in the North Korean leadership risks destabilizing China’s northeast provinces, with the potential for thousands of North Korean refugees to spill across the border, said Jin Canrong, international relations professor at Renmin University.

At a regular press briefing Wednesday, foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said that China knew nothing about the test before it was carried out and that it would lodge solemn representations with North Korea over act. Ms. Hua said that Beijing firmly opposes the test and nuclear proliferation and would support work toward a denuclearized peninsula through the six-party talks.

Asked whether it would sanction North Korea following Wednesday’s test, Ms. Hua said China would “honor its international obligations to realize the denuclearization of the peninsula.” To date, she said, there weren’t signs of radiation or any impact on Chinese public health from the test.

The North Korean test may also alter the defense and security dynamics in two of the nation’s closest neighbors: South Korea and Japan.

It may force Seoul to invest in costly American missile defense systems, despite long-held ambitions to develop an indigenous alternative.

“The South Koreans have dragged their feet on this, but missile defense is the way to go,” said Robert Kelly, a security expert at South Korea’s Pusan National University.

While Seoul has already ordered cutting-edge strike aircraft from the U.S., notably the stealthy Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the country would be better advised to buy defensive weaponry in the face of the “existential threat” posed by the North’s H-bomb, said Mr. Kelly.

In September, South Korean military officials said they would rather build their own missile interceptors than invest around $2.6 billion in the Terminal High Altitude Air Defense System, or THAAD, built by Lockheed Martin Corp., which can destroy incoming missiles up to 200 kilometers away.

While neighboring Japan has acquired land-based Patriot PAC-3 missiles, as well as ship-based Standard-3 missiles—both missile defense systems built by Raytheon Co. of the U.S.—South Korea has been slow to develop a missile shield, said Mr. Kelly. It currently has a limited missile defense missile capability comprising older, secondhand Patriot systems acquired from Germany.

The Japanese government said last year that it was interested in acquiring THAAD, and will now likely go ahead in response to the North Korean test, Mr. Kelly said.

Reports that Pyongyang successfully tested its first ever submarine-launched ballistic missile in December, now followed by the H-bomb revelation, could pile pressure on the South Korean government to follow suit.

Japanese officials said they would consider their own punitive steps in addition to any adopted by the international community. But they declined to be specific about whether that would include further economic sanctions.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in 2014 expressed a readiness to loosen sanctions if North Korea were to offer more information about Japanese citizens it kidnapped in the 1970s and 1980s. But negotiations over the abductees haven’t made progress.

In recent years, Japan has been beefing up its defense against North Korean missiles, another threat cited by Mr. Abe in his statement Wednesday.

—Jun Hongo in Tokyo and Kwanwoo Jun in Seoul contributed to this article.

Write to Alastair Gale at alastair.gale@wsj.com, Te-Ping Chen at te-ping.chen@wsj.com and Trefor Moss at Trefor.Moss@wsj.com


Related Coverage

North Korea Says It Successfully Conducted Hydrogen-Bomb Test
Hydrogen-Bomb Test Would Signal Dangerous New Phase
North Korea Tests China With Nuclear Claim
Statement From North Korea
 

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...bf4840-b316-11e5-8abc-d09392edc612_story.html

Middle East

After Islamic State collapse in Ramadi, militants intensify siege of Haditha

By Erin Cunningham January 5 at 4:24 PM
Comments 15„³

BAGHDAD ¡X Islamic State militants have launched a deadly offensive against security forces in a key part of western Iraq, residents and tribal fighters said Tuesday, unleashing a wave of car bombs and seizing an area near one of the country¡¦s largest dams.

The fresh attacks in Haditha district have set off some of the fiercest fighting in that area in months ¡X and follow the stunning defeat of the Islamic State in the nearby city of Ramadi in December. An Iraqi army offensive backed by U.S. airstrikes forced the radical Islamists to retreat from Ramadi last month, marking a devastating blow for a group striving to expand its Islamic ¡§caliphate.¡¨

[Victory in Ramadi may not yet be proof of strategy, but it is a milestone]

But this week, the militants turned their guns on Haditha, a strategic area about 90 miles northwest of Ramadi and home to Iraq¡¦s second-largest hydroelectric dam. U.S. troops are also training Iraqi forces at the Ayn al-Asad military base just 20 miles away. The militants have had Haditha encircled for more than a year.

Haditha, in Anbar province, holds both symbolic and strategic significance. The district is one of the last government redoubts amid swaths of militant-held territory in the desert of western Iraq. In addition, its six-mile-long dam generates power for large tracts of the country, granting whoever controls it influence over much of Iraq¡¦s electricity and water supplies.

Troops in Haditha said the three-day attacks by the Islamic State were unprecedented in the area. On Monday, the U.S.-led coalition launched two strikes on several Islamic State targets near Haditha ¡X the first time warplanes have struck in the area since November, according to coalition statements.

¡§These are the most violent attacks we¡¦ve ever seen in this area,¡¨ Sabah Ali, an Iraqi army captain with the 7th Division in a largely rural area known as Barwana, said of the Islamic State offensive.

[Ramadi residents describe their nightmare escape from Islamic State]

Other tribal fighters said the Islamic State killed scores of people, including local police and civilians, in the village of Sakran, but the reports could not be confirmed.

The Islamic State holds territory across Syria and Iraq but has suffered a string of setbacks in recent months. Iraqi forces and pro-government militias have ousted the extreme Islamists from the Iraqi cities of Sinjar, Tikrit and now Ramadi. Security forces and analysts said the group¡¦s focus on Haditha is meant to distract from its collapse in Ramadi, the capital of Anbar.

¡§They have been attacking us with car bombs constantly and from all sides,¡¨ Ali said of the attacks in Haditha. ¡§They are trying to make up for what they lost in Ramadi.¡¨

On Sunday, the radical Islamists began to step up attacks in Haditha, launching ambushes on checkpoints, arriving in villages atop armored convoys and engaging Iraqi troops in pitched battles on local farmland.

Early Tuesday morning, Islamic State fighters, bolstered by what locals said were reinforcements from outside Haditha, staged a surprise attack on Iraqi forces in Barwana. They seized two villages before Iraqi troops recaptured one of the hamlets later in the day.

Between two dozen and 60 Iraqi soldiers and others fighting on the side of the government have been killed in the attacks since Sunday, security forces and media reports said. The discrepancy in the reported death tolls could not immediately be reconciled.

[Why success against the Islamic State in Ramadi hints at U.S. military strategy to come]

In 2005, U.S. Marines committed what was widely seen as a massacre in Haditha after a roadside bomb killed one of their comrades while on patrol. For many Iraqis, the bloodshed became a bitter emblem of the U.S. presence in Iraq.

More recently, Islamic State spokesman Abu Mohammed al-Adnani, a Syrian, urged attacks on Haditha and called on its tribesmen to repent and join the extreme Islamists.

The militants ¡§have Haditha under siege and may enter it at any moment,¡¨ Adnani said in an audio recording released in June. He also threatened to wipe out a local tribe if its members continued to work with the Iraqi government.

Haditha¡¦s residents have been cut off from the rest of Iraq for more than a year, surviving on aid that needs to be airlifted from the Iraqi capital, Baghdad. The World Food Program said last month that it had distributed food assistance to nearly 70,000 people in Haditha and the nearby town of Baghdadi, the first time the agency had dispensed aid to the area since April.

Abu Fahad al-Nimrawi, a tribesman opposed to the Islamic State, said he fled with his family as soon as word spread that the group¡¦s fighters were arriving in Barwana on Tuesday morning. He took them to the Haditha city center, which is still largely protected from the violence.

¡§All of them were armored vehicles. It was in the morning,¡¨ said Nimrawi, who returned to Barwana to fight. ¡§I took my family and we ran. The people who couldn¡¦t leave, they were killed.¡¨


Mustafa Salim contributed to this report.


Read more

Islamic State has increasingly hit soft targets outside of ¡¥caliphate¡¦ borders

Russia¡¦s Syria intervention makes scant progress on the ground

Tunisian bus attack strikes presidential guard in heart of capital


Erin Cunningham is an Egypt-based correspondent for The Post. She previously covered conflicts in the Middle East and Afghanistan for the Christian Science Monitor, GlobalPost and The National.
 

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8 hours ago

Another viewpoint: Facing a long road on Syria, Islamic State

Excerpted editorial from Los Angeles Times

As the year ended, the campaign against the Islamic State militant group recorded some significant victories on the battlefield. Iraqi forces trained by the United States and supported by U.S.-led airstrikes regained control of the city of Ramadi and coalition attacks killed several Islamic State operatives, including two men linked to the gunmen who killed 130 people in Paris in November.

But no one should be under any illusion that President Obama's campaign to "degrade and ultimately destroy" the Islamic State is on the verge of achieving the more ambitious of those objectives. Obama has acknowledged that progress probably will be gradual, even with an increase in U.S. and allied airstrikes and the deployment of U.S. Special Forces. Moreover, exterminating the Islamic State will depend on diplomatic as well as military initiatives — notably negotiations on a ceasefire in Syria's civil war and the creation of new political arrangements.

A major concern is the future role of Syrian President Bashar Assad, whose brutal suppression of peaceful dissent was the prime cause of the civil war and the attendant humanitarian catastrophe. Russia continues to support Assad and insists he should be able to run in a future election. Although Obama has long maintained that Assad must "step aside," Secretary of State John F. Kerry recently said that the U.S. is not seeking "so-called regime change" in Syria.

The notion that the brutal Assad would have any role in a future Syrian government is a bitter pill, and not only for Syrians. But the Obama administration is right to attach greater priority to ending the killing, stopping the hemorrhage of refugees and targeting the Islamic State. Obama is also right to rule out the use of ground combat forces in either Syria or Iraq and to resist proposals (from Hillary Clinton, among others) that the U.S. establish a no-fly zone in Syria.

In both Syria and Iraq, degrading and ultimately destroying the Islamic State will take time and will require not only military action but also compromise among hostile ethnic and sectarian groups, a process the U.S. can influence only indirectly. Persistence is important, but so is patience.


Los Angeles Times
 

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http://www.dw.com/en/german-police-...utrage-over-new-years-sex-assaults/a-18963082

Security

German police face criticism amid outrage over New Year's sex assaults

Police in the German city of Cologne have come under fire from the interior minister for failing to prevent dozens of sexual assaults on New Year's Eve. But the city's police chief has said he will not be stepping down.

Date 06.01.2016

Cologne police chief Wolfgang Albers on Wednesday ruled out stepping down amid criticism of alleged police inaction while dozens of women were sexually assaulted and robbed in the center of the city on New Year's Eve.

Abers told WDR5 public radio, "I think I am needed here, especially now."

Abers admitted, however, that upcoming Carnival festivities in the city from Febraury 4-10 could pose a security challenge.

"We will put up a good deployment, and I'm needed there as well," he said.

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere earlier strongly criticized the Cologne police force, accusing officers of waiting passively by while the attacks were taking place.

"The square was evacuated - and then these events take place and [the police] wait for people to bring them complaints. That's not how police must work," he told ARD public service television.

'Unaware of attacks'

Police said they tried to clear the square in front of Cologne's main train station after a crowd of some 1,000 men began throwing fireworks about. They reported that the sexual assaults and robberies, of which they claimed to be initially unaware, started after a number of smaller groups of men formed, some of which surrounded and molested female revelers.

So far, some 100 complaints by women of sexual assault and/or robbery have been received by police, some of them filed several days after the incidents took place - possibly partly due to the fact that some two-thirds of the victims were not from Cologne itself. A plain-clothes police woman was reportedly among those attacked, and at least one rape was reported.

Police quoted witnesses as saying that the men "appeared to be of Arab or North African origin."

Attacks 'not new'

Amid some reports that the attacks might have been coordinated, Justice Minister Heiko Maas spoke of "a new dimension of crime that we will have to get to grips with."

Maas' assessment of the situation as "new" was however, contradicted by the chairman of the police union BDK, Andre Schulz, who said these types of attacks on women with intent to steal had long been familiar to police.

"Anyone who speaks of a new dimension of organized criminality is either wrong, or lacks criminalistic and criminological knowledge," Schulz told the daily "Handelsblatt" newspaper.

The Cologne local newspaper "Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger" said many of the suspects were already known to police for their involvement in a spate of pickpocketing and muggings near the railway station, which is situated next to the city's famous Gothic cathedral.

Migration debate

In his interview, Maas declined to say whether refugees were responsible for some of the attacks, saying police were still trying to identify the assailants.

"This is not about where someone is from but what they did."

Maas also warned against letting outrage about the events of New Year's Eve spill over into the debate on Germany's refugee policy, with 1.1 million asylum seekers coming to the country in 2015.

"Making an issue out of it, lumping it together with the refugee issue, is nothing but exploitation. Now is the time to determine the facts and then decide on the necessary consequences," he said.

Fuel to the fire

The right-wing populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has been one of several groups to seize on the attacks as fuel for its anti-migrant rhetoric.

"Here we see the appalling consequences of catastrophic asylum and migration policies on Germany's everyday realities," said party leader Frauke Petry.

Chancellor Angela Merkel called on Germans in her televised New Year's address to continue welcoming refugees despite growing criticism, including from within her own conservative bloc, that Germany could be overwhelmed by the migrant influx. She also warned against far-right ideologues who were trying to foster anti-migrant sentiment.

Merkel called on Tuesday for a thorough investigation of the "repugnant" attacks.

tj/se (dpa, AFP, Reuters)


DW recommends

Opinion: Red alert in Cologne

The assaults and harassment of women by groups of young men of Arab or North African descent have hit Cologne like a bombshell. The shocking incidents are a turning point for German society, says DW's Volker Wagener. (06.01.2016) 46 Comments


Twitter storm as Cologne mayor suggests women stay at 'arm's length' from strangers

Following dozens of sexual assaults on New Year's Eve, Cologne mayor Henriette Reker has faced a backlash of criticism after suggesting that women stay at an "arm's length" from strangers. Protests have been held. (05.01.2016)


A 'new dimension' of sexual assault in Cologne

A mob of young men sexually assaulted and harassed dozens of women outside of Cologne's busy main train station on New Year's Eve. The city has said it wants to ensure that it never happens again. (05.01.2016)


String of New Year's Eve sexual assaults outrages Cologne

Some 1,000 men are alleged to have carried out dozens of sexual crimes on New Year's Eve in the city of Cologne. That these crimes occured in the city's most famous square has left local authorities reeling. (04.01.2016)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southchinasea-china-idUSKBN0UK1HT20160106

World | Wed Jan 6, 2016 7:26am EST
Related: World, China, South China Sea

China again lands planes on disputed island in South China Sea: Xinhua

BEIJING


China on Wednesday landed two test flights on an island it has built in the South China Sea, four days after it angered Vietnam with a landing on the same runway in the disputed territory, the Xinhua state news agency said.

The two flights are likely to spark further condemnation from Vietnam, which launched a formal diplomatic protest over the weekend, and the Philippines, which said it was planning to do the same.

Both countries have claims to the area that overlap with that of China, which claims almost the whole of the South China Sea.

Xinhua said the two planes landed on an artificial island in the Spratly Islands on Wednesday morning.

"The successful test flights proved that the airport has the capacity to ensure the safe operation of large civilian aircraft," Xinhua said, adding that the airport would facilitate the transport of supplies, personnel and medical aid.

Xinhua did not give any more detail about what type of aircraft had landed.

The runway at the Fiery Cross Reef is 3,000 meters (10,000 feet) long and is one of three China has been building for more than a year by dredging sand up onto reefs and atolls in the Spratly archipelago.

On Saturday, China landed a civilian plane on the same runway in the Spratlys in its first test, which was also the first time it had used a runway in the area.

The United States has criticized China's construction of the islands and worries that it plans to use them for military purposes, even though China says it has no hostile intent.

The United States said after the first landing it was concerned that the flight had exacerbated tension.

The runways would be long enough to handle long-range bombers and transport aircraft as well as China's best jet fighters, giving it a presence deep in the maritime heart of Southeast Asia that it has lacked until now.

More than $5 trillion of world trade is shipped through the South China Sea every year. Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Taiwan have rival claims.


(Reporting by Sui-Lee Wee; Editing by Robert Birsel)
 

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World | Wed Jan 6, 2016 8:06am EST
Related: World, France

A year after 'Je suis Charlie', a divided France struggles

PARIS | By Ingrid Melander


One year on, an anxious, fragmented France is paying tribute to the victims of the killings at Charlie Hebdo magazine, with old divisions made worse by what President Francois Hollande has called "a terrible year".

After the Islamist attacks that killed 17 on January 7-9 last year at the satirical weekly and at a Jewish supermarket, the French rallied, marched and lit candles in emotional gatherings celebrated as "the spirit of January 11", the day four million took to the streets.

But cracks in that unity soon appeared and, a year later, after an even bloodier assault on Paris by another set of home-grown Islamists in November, politicians are embroiled in a bitter debate over homeland security, and the anti-immigrant National Front (FN) is stronger than ever.

The slogan "Je suis Charlie," a defiant cry of solidarity that appeared everywhere immediately after the killings, is little seen a year on.

"Events such as the January or November attacks trigger moments of unity, in reaction. But that is not enough to offset deep divisions," said Brice Teinturier, head of the Ipsos polling organization in France.

"The divisions are huge. There are several Frances and they are clashing," he said, describing a France of big cities turned towards the future, a rustbelt France that feels crushed by globalization, and a France of housing estates that feels forgotten.

Regional elections last month highlighted those divisions.

In the first round, the National Front came first, doing well in rural and small-town France. In the run-off, voters in big cities helped to keep the Front out of power, exposing another deep split, this time between those who look to the far-right for hope and those who reject it.

In a further sign of tension, a Muslim prayer hall was ransacked to cries of "Arabs out" during a protest rally in Corsica after firemen were attacked last month on a housing estate with a large migrant population.


Related Coverage
› Vatican newspaper denounces 'woeful' Charlie Hebdo cover


DIVISIVE

While the "spirit of January" prompted politicians of all sides to paper over differences for a while, the Nov. 13 killings of 130 people across Paris were quickly followed by criticism and divisions.

The most divisive issue is the Socialist government's plan to strip dual citizens of their French nationality in terrorism cases, a proposal supported by the National Front and until now opposed by left-wing politicians.

Opinion polls show the plan is overwhelmingly backed by voters, but it caused outcry within the ruling Socialist party and its allies. Even Hollande's justice minister and his former prime minister criticized it.

Opponents say the plan would further divide a fragmented society by making distinctions among French citizens. Hollande urges critics to rally behind him in the name of national unity.

About five percent of French people aged between 18 and 50 hold two passports. That is the case for two-thirds of north Africans who have become French, but only a third of their children. They form the majority of France’s Muslim population, the biggest in Europe.

"Instead of addressing the real issues to boost cohesion, (the government) pretends they come from abroad and wants to push them abroad," said Dominique Sopo, the head of anti-racism group SOS Racisme.

SOS Racisme has received calls from people who for the first time felt discriminated against because of their ethnic background or skin color, he said.

"There is a lot of tension around everything that has to do with religion and secularism," said Nicolas Cadene, a senior official at France's Observatory of Secularism, a government body that promotes secular values.

"It's linked to the social, political, economic and identity crisis that France is going through, which leads some to withdraw into their shells, to turn to identity politics."

While most French people rallied together after the Charlie Hebdo shootings, that unity started to crack after a few days.

Some high school children in poorer suburbs with large immigrant populations rejected the "Je suis Charlie" slogan because they did not want to support a publication that lampoons religion.

Social and economic fragmentation was already a major theme in Jacques Chirac's 1995 presidential campaign. His pledge to tackle the "social fracture" that caused economic inequality helped to get him elected.

Yet critics say neither he nor subsequent presidents have managed to bridge the gap between France's privileged insiders and its struggling outsiders.

It will be a big issue in the 2017 presidential elections.

"What does France stand for? This will be the question for 2017," said Stephane Rozes, head of the CAP political analysis group. Mainstream parties must look harder for credible answers, he said. "If it's just empty words, it will play into the hands of the FN and the Islamists."


(Additional reporting by Emmanuel Jarry; Editing by Giles Elgood)
 

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http://www.voanews.com/content/afghan-forces-claim-advances-in-taliban-held-district/3133138.html

Afghan Forces Claim Advances in Taliban-held District

Ayaz Gul
Last updated on: January 06, 2016 7:00 AM

ISLAMABAD—Afghan authorities said that security forces made advances Wednesday in a volatile southern district, killing 43 Taliban insurgents and wounding many others.

The fighting in Marjah, a Taliban-held district in the restive Helmand province, erupted a day earlier when Afghan forces backed by U.S. military personnel launched a counter-offensive to try to regain lost territory.

“We have evicted the opposition from three places (in Marjah),” provincial police chief General Abdul Rehman Sarjang told VOA. He said the counterinsurgency operation has also opened a main road for traffic in the area that was heavily mined by the Taliban.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid refuted the official’s claim.

“The American and forces of the Kabul administration have suffered heavy losses and in order to divert public attention they are making false claims,” he told VOA.

It was not immediately possible to independently verify claims by either party because most of the Helmand province has been in the grip of hostilities for months.

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US casualties

On Tuesday, the United States confirmed that one of its service members was killed and two others were wounded during the fighting.

“They came under fire while conducting a train, advise and assist mission with their Afghan special operations counterparts on the ground in Marjah… We understand a number of Afghan forces were injured as well," Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook told reporters.

Two helicopters were sent to provide assistance but one was waved off after taking fire and returned safely to its base while the second landed safely but sustained damage to its rotor blades after it apparently struck a wall, Cook said, adding the helicopter was still on the ground trying to retrieve the wounded U.S. personnel.

“We can confirm the wounded have been evacuated,” U.S. military spokesman Col. Michael Lawhorn told VOA on Wednesday.

Marjah is one of several parts of Helmand under control of the Taliban. Taliban insurgents have put pressure on the province in southern Afghanistan's poppy-growing region for months.

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Ground situation

Ten of Helmand's 14 districts either have fallen to the Taliban or have an uncertain status in the midst of fighting between the Afghan government's security forces and Taliban fighters.

The insurgents' advances prompted commanders of NATO's Resolute Support mission in Afghanistan to deploy American and British military advisers last month to help Afghan forces better coordinate their efforts to re-take lost territory in Helmand, Afghanistan's largest province bordering Pakistan.

According to U.N. data from October, the Taliban insurgency has spread across Afghanistan more than at any other point since 2001 and Afghan security forces have struggled to contain the insurgents.

In his Tuesday briefing, Pentagon spokesman Cook would not concede that Afghan security forces are losing ground.

“They're getting better at defending their own country. But they're not at a point yet where they are able to operate entirely on their own, which is why U.S. forces, other NATO forces are there, assisting and providing this kind of training and assistance to the Afghans,” said Cook.

The hostilities come as Afghan, Pakistani, U.S. and Chinese officials prepare to meet in Islamabad on Monday to discuss how, where and when stalled peace talks between the Kabul government and the Taliban can be resumed.

"The U.S. and Afghan governments agree that the best way to ensure lasting peace and security in Afghanistan is through an Afghan-led and Afghan-owned peace process,” Cook reiterated.

UN condemns bombings

Meanwhile, the United Nations has condemned a spate of bombings this week in civilian areas of Kabul by the Taliban.

The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said in a statement Wednesday that at least five civilians were killed and 56 others wounded in the three suicide vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices attacks in the Afghan capital since the beginning of the year. The victims included ten children and nine women.

“International humanitarian law explicitly prohibits attacks against civilians and requires all parties to uphold their legal obligations to at all times avoid harm to civilians,” it said, adding the attacks occurred while many Afghans held hope for the restart of a peace dialogue for Afghanistan.
 

vestige

Deceased
From #75:

Following dozens of sexual assaults on New Year's Eve, Cologne mayor Henriette Reker has faced a backlash of criticism after suggesting that women stay at an "arm's length" from strangers. Protests have been held. (05.01.2016)

He should be criticized.

Women should stay at least the length of an MP 5 from strangers.

...and he should issue one MP 5 to every woman 21 and over in age
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
News_Executive ‏@News_Executive 59m59 minutes ago

TransCanada has filed a lawsuit alleging US President Obama's decision to deny Keystone XL exceeded his power under the U.S. Constitution
 
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