WAR 01-06-2017-to-01-12-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.thecipherbrief.com/iraq-elections-isis-rearview-iran-lies-ahead

Iraq Elections: With ISIS in Rearview, Iran Lies Ahead

JANUARY 11, 2018 | BENNETT SEFTEL

Bottom Line: On paper, Iraq’s democratic electoral system promises rare, fair representation in a region where politics is dominated by monarchies and authoritarian regimes. But in reality, the country’s political system has been hamstrung by inefficiencies and gridlocks that have often segregated, rather than united, the Iraqi populace. As Iraqis work to heal the wounds they suffered at the hands of ISIS, the fragile state of affairs in Iraq remains susceptible to deep sectarian tensions, rising Iranian influence, and an emboldened Kurdish independence movement. All the while, the Iraqi people face monumental decisions in the looming May parliamentary elections when they will chart their country’s future trajectory.

Background: Now that Iraq has been liberated from ISIS’ wrath, the Iraqi government can turn its attention towards resettling the vast number of refugees and displaced persons and rebuilding its fractured country.

On Dec. 9, Iraqi Prime Minister Hader al-Abadi declared victory over ISIS after the group was ousted from its strongholds in the country’s northwest. “Our forces fully control the Iraqi-Syrian border, and thus we can announce the end of the war against Daesh [ISIS],” Abadi said at the time.

Iraqi demographics are primarily split between Arabs, which comprise between 75 and 80 percent of the population, and Kurds, which represent the remaining 15 to 20 percent, according to the most recent estimates provided by CIA World Factbook. Religiously, between 55 and 60 percent of Iraqi citizens are Shia Muslims, while 40 percent practice Sunni Islam. Divisions along ethnic and religious lines, primarily the marginalization of Iraqi Sunnis by dominant Shia political parties and militias, have often been credited as a key factor that helped facilitate the initial rise of ISIS as a Sunni extremist group.

In late December, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees released figures stating that although more than 2.84 million displaced Iraqis have returned home, another estimated 2.78 million people remain displaced inside Iraq while more than 260,000 Iraqi refugees are hosted by neighboring countries in the region.

Next month, Kuwait is expected to host an international conference to discuss reconstruction efforts for Iraq. This week, Kuwait’s state-run Kuwait News Agency (KUNA), quoted secretary general of the Iraqi cabinet, Mahdi al-Allaq, as estimating that Iraq requires $100 billion for its reconstruction projects.

Questions linger over the effectiveness of stability operations and reconstruction efforts that have already begun throughout Iraq. Although the government maintains a certain degree of oversight in the reconquered territories, tensions between ethnic and religious groups remains a pressure cooker that could suddenly explode.

Iraq’s constitution was supposed to enshrine fairness by divvying up power among the different ethnic groups – a parliamentary democracy with a federal system of government. Former Ambassador of Iraq to the United States Lukman Faily wrote in The Cipher Brief that it didn’t quite work that way: “The Iraqi constitution of 2005 and its very definition of the state has failed to empower its stakeholders or serve as an adjudicator of disputes within the state of Iraq. This most recent crisis (with the Kurdish referendum) is a golden opportunity to discuss the key structural fault-lines that have been either ignored or wrongly implemented. These fault-lines relate to decentralization, revenue sharing, the role of religion and other important identity and governance challenges.”
Lt. Gen. (ret.) Guy C. Swan III, former Chief of Staff & Director of Operations, Multi-National Force-Iraq, Operation Iraqi Freedom



“The Iraqi government is working to stabilize areas of northern and western Iraq dominated for several years by ISIS. It is estimated that over 3 million Iraqis were displaced during this period so the major stabilization effort will be to get as many displaced persons back to their homes. The challenge will be the infrastructure destruction caused by the recent fighting, especially in the Old City of Mosul and surrounding area, which is estimated to cost over $1 billion dollars to repair. At the same time, the old flashpoints between Iraqi government forces and the Kurdish Peshmerga in Nineveh province and most notably around Kirkuk remain volatile. So far an uneasy peace is holding, but these historic hostilities will slow the stabilization effort.”

Lukman Faily, former Iraqi Ambassador to the United States



“If you cut it in a binary way, then everyone wants democracy. But if you look at the impact of collective governing, it has led to difficulties with decisions and too much engagement with the process rather than with the end of that process.”

Issue: The Iraqi government faces significant pressure from a strong Iranian presence in the country, particularly in Baghdad and the Shia dominated south. As part of its regional hegemonic objectives, Iran aims to fold the Baghdad government into its Shia crescent that stretches from northern Yemen all the way through Iraq, Syria and southern Lebanon.

Since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iran has steadily increased its influence in Baghdad. Tehran strongly supported former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Malaki who, along with his Shia-led government, imposed sectarian and authoritarian policies over Iraq’s Sunni and Kurdish minorities during his tenure from 2006-2014. Maliki’s refusal to reach a political accord with the Sunnis, a system of governance widely acknowledged as corrupt, and heavy-handed military repression of the Sunni minority have been listed among the main causes that ultimately led to the rise of ISIS.

Iranian-aligned Shia militias, comprised of more than 60,000 troops, played an important role in ousting ISIS from Iraq. Several of these groups – including the Badr Organization, the Hezbollah Brigades, the Martyrs of Sayyid Brigades, Asaib Ahl al-Haq (AAH), and Jund al-Imam – formed a unified front known as the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF). Although the Iraqi government now provides funding and has nominal control of the PMF, the militias maintain close ties to top Iranian commanders – most notoriously Qasem Souleimani, who heads Iran’s elite Quds Force.
Lt. Gen. (ret.) Guy C. Swan III, former Chief of Staff & Director of Operations, Multi-National Force-Iraq, Operation Iraqi Freedom



“Iran will always have an influential role in Iraq. However, the level of influence and what form it takes going forward will be the issue. The U.S. and other coalition partners will have to balance that influence to enable Iraq to sustain a level of independence as it looks to the post-ISIS period. The Iraqi government reluctantly accommodated the Iranians, especially the Shia-dominated Popular Mobilization Fronts (PMFs), in order to defeat ISIS. The continued presence of these forces must be dealt with either through integration into Iraqi government forces or by disbanding.”

James Jeffrey, former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq and Turkey



“It’s Iran’s firm intention to lock Iraq into its growing regional empire as a second Lebanon by using the same Hezbollah-like tactics and relying on local surrogates more loyal to Iran than Baghdad to undermine an independent Iraqi State. If this occurs, the impact on the United States’ position in the region would be devastating. In essence, it could put the lie to Trump’s ‘anti-Iran’ policy by turning a country with two-thirds of Saudi Arabia’s oil reserves and the second largest oil production in the region – as well as a population larger than that of Saudi Arabia’s – over to “the enemy” after the U.S. intervened repeatedly to save it from Saddam Hussein, pro-Iranian militias, al Qaeda and of course ISIS.”

Issue: During the battle against ISIS, the Kurdish independence movement gained momentum as Kurdish Peshmerga forces put up a fierce resistance to prevent ISIS’ expansion. A Kurdish referendum for independence was soundly rejected by the international community and reworking the parameters governing the region may prove challenging for a new Iraqi parliament.

Kurdish forces were a stalwart in the battle against ISIS, preventing the group from advancing into Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, and even expanded its control to the oil-rich city of Kirkuk located in northeastern Iraq.

Iraqi Kurdistan currently houses more than 1.4 million displaced Iraqi and Syrian citizens, according to figures published by the Kurdistan Regional Government’s (KRG) Joint Crisis Coordination Centre (JCC) in December.

In a referendum held by the KRG at the end of September in three provinces across Iraqi Kurdistan, 92 percent of the 3.3 million voters supported independence and creation of a Kurdish state.

Following the vote, the U.S. State Department said it was “deeply disappointed that the Kurdistan Regional Government decided to conduct…a unilateral referendum on independence, including in areas outside of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region…The United States supports a united, federal, democratic and prosperous Iraq and will continue to seek opportunities to assist Iraqis to fulfill their aspirations within the framework of the constitution.”

Three weeks after the vote, the Iraqi army swept into Kirkuk – which had been won back from ISIS by Kurdish Peshmerga – driving the Peshmerga out and also retaking its contested oil fields. The U.S. did not protest, leading Iraq watchers to conclude that the U.S. was sending a signal to the Kurdish leader who spearheaded the referendum, Massoud Barzani, that he’d overstepped his bounds and lost crucial support from the U.S. and others – wasting the valuable political capital the KRG had accrued in helping the government of Iraq and the international coalition defeat ISIS.

Bayan Sami Abdul Rahman, Representative of the Kurdistan Regional Government to the United States



“The KRG has always maintained that the Iraqi constitution is the guarantor of the unity, stability and prosperity of Iraq. The constitution was welcomed in a referendum across Iraq in 2005 and the people of Kurdistan looked forward to a new era when Iraqis of all faiths, sects and ethnicities would be equal citizens, when the marginalization of one group or other would be a thing of the past. Unfortunately, over the next decade we saw rampant violations of the constitution – corruption, and a deepening of sectarianism which eventually led to ISIS and our call for a referendum on independence. Today, Baghdad is using that referendum as a pretext to impose an economic blockade on our people, ban international flights and threaten us militarily.

All while we continue to fight pockets of ISIS and we shelter over 1.6 million displaced Iraqi and Syrian refugees, which itself has had a devastating effect on our economy and public services like healthcare and electricity. The Iraqi Constitution remains in place. Dialogue on the basis of the Constitution is the way forward. We welcome serious face-to-face talks to resolve the myriad problems facing Iraq and to open a new chapter for our country.”

Norman Ricklefs, former Senior Advisor to the Secretary General at the Iraqi Ministry of Defense & to the Iraqi Minister of Interior



“The dream of an independent Kurdistan has been reset to the pre-2003 situation in my view, and it will take many years (if ever) for the Iraqi Kurds to come as close to independence as the de facto independence they enjoyed prior to the referendum.”

Issue: It also remains unclear if the Iraqi government has taken the necessary steps to prevent the re-emergence of the conditions that gave rise to ISIS in the first place. Sectarian divisions remain contentious throughout the country, sparked by fears that the Iranian-backed PMFs could seek revenge on Sunni populations accused of supporting ISIS.

Emile Nakhleh, former Director of the CIA’s Political Islam Strategic Analysis Program



“The Iraqi government has not taken serious steps to address the conditions that gave rise to ISIS in the first place. The government has yet to address the systemic discrimination against Iraqi Sunnis. Nor has the government curbed the extralegal and invariably illegal actions—including killings, pillaging, and thuggery – by Shia militias against Sunni neighborhoods, especially in areas that previously supported ISIS. The tons of rubble that clog the narrow streets in Mosul, Ramadi, and other Sunni communities have yet to be removed. The anger and frustration that permeate Sunni neighborhoods is being directed against the government’s slow response to the destruction, and to some degree against the United States and other members of the coalition that defeated ISIS. All of which, of course, creates an environment conducive for recruitment, radicalization, and terrorism.”

Norman Ricklefs, former Senior Advisor to the Secretary General at the Iraqi Ministry of Defense & to the Iraqi Minister of Interior



“The conditions on the ground now are fundamentally different. After a long and brutal campaign, the liberated provinces are controlled by a combination of forces – local tribal militias, provincial police forces, and Iraqi military – that are all deeply opposed to ISIS (even if they are often in competition with each other). They now, arguably for the first time since 2003, control the ground. This is an entirely new dynamic, and will prevent the return of ISIS in the near term.”

James Jeffrey, former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq and Turkey



“Encouraged and advised by the U.S. and others, the government of Iraq says all the right things and gives nice speeches. But its performance, understandably, is deeply flawed. What will make a difference is if Abadi can ensure the security forces, especially quasi-official Shia militias, do not start once again oppressing liberated Sunni communities.”

Response: As the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS mission winds down, the Trump administration has reiterated its support for a unified and democratic Iraq, but has also remained cautious about withdrawing U.S. forces on the ground. One priority for the current administration is to help prevent the Iraqi government from falling into the sphere of Iranian influence.

During the Obama administration, the U.S. gradually decreased its military presence in Iraq, although it briefly halted its drawdown during the fight against ISIS. According to the U.S. Department of Defense’s most recent quarterly report published in September 2017, the U.S. has approximately 7,400 troops stationed in Iraq.

In October, Prime Minister Abadi said he would not allow Iraq to evolve into a battleground between the U.S. and Iran. “We would like to work with you, both of you,” Abadi told The Washington Post. “But please don’t bring your trouble inside Iraq. You can sort it anywhere else.”
The National Security Strategy released by the White House in December, prioritized the strengthening of “our long-term strategic partnership with Iraq as an independent state.”
Lukman Faily, former Iraqi Ambassador to the United States



“Iraq has a myriad of challenges. There are issues with the government and how democratic and representative it is, with the economy, with terrorism, and with minorities. Where the U.S. can help is in alleviating the pain and pressure that is on the government due to some of these factors. Offering support – whether it’s security or financial or even with respect to political support for Iraq’s relationship with its neighbors including Saudi Arabia – is essential to help alleviate some of the pressure on the government so that it can address domestic issues. But with respect to democracy and power sharing, the U.S. can’t help a lot in that aspect. There are too many stakeholders in Iraq; no single party is dominant enough to be a key partner to the U.S. moving forward.”

Anticipation: Iraq’s recent history and deep sectarian fractures paint a difficult roadmap for the government in Baghdad. Abadi is now charged with revamping the Iraqi military and integrating the different elements that disjointedly fought ISIS into one cohesive, national military. The country’s upcoming elections in May could serve as an important benchmark for the Iraqi government to heed the voices of the Iraq population and embark on a mission of building towards the future.

Norman Ricklefs, former Senior Advisor to the Secretary General at the Iraqi Ministry of Defense & to the Iraqi Minister of Interior



“The 2018 election will probably result in a parliament without any clear victor and with the traditional political blocs being even more divided than in the past. Abadi will likely gain a plurality, though not a majority, and will be supported by the Shi’ite religious hierarchy, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, the United States and Britain. But the possibility of a protracted period of post-election government formation and parliamentary maneuvering will provide an opening for Maliki, with the support of Iran, to use his great wealth and wide political support base to attempt to prevent another Abadi government; unless Maliki and Abadi can forge some kind of rapprochement. Abadi has grown into a competent politician, and has genuine voter support as well as international support, but the end result is far from assured.”

Emile Nakhleh, former Director of the CIA’s Political Islam Strategic Analysis Program



“The next elections will likely be determined by at least three factors: emerging coalitions among the Shia parties and the changing influence of the Da’wa party; Iran’s extensive role in the elections and interest in a particular party or leader; and the reconstruction of the country in the post-ISIS era. Neighboring Sunni states, especially Saudi Arabia, might show an interest in the elections but their involvement will be minimal compared to Iran’s role. Of course, the other unknown factor, or wild card, will be whether another Gulf war breaks out. If Iran decides to see a new and more inclusive leader take the helm, then al-Abadi would be replaced, which also could result in the Da’wa party losing much of its influence.”

Bennett Seftel is director of analysis at The Cipher Brief. Follow him on Twitter @BennettSeftel.

ELECTIONS IRAN IRAQ

CLICK TO ADD YOUR POINT OF VIEW
One Reply to “Iraq Elections: With ISIS in Rearview, Iran Lies Ahead”
Eugene
JANUARY 11, 2018 AT 1:58 PM
Going on 15 years, like Afghanistan, how much longer will this take place? Obviously, who ever is calling the shots, hasn’t learned its lessons, right from the start. The one issue that’s out front: the cost these adventures have thrust upon the treasury of the U.S.A. How many more years will this go on?

Reply
RELATED ARTICLES
The Kremlin and a statue of Abraham Lincoln
The U.S. Struggles against Russian Cyber Disinformation
MACKENZIE WEINGER

Moscow Takes U.S. Meddling Tactics to German Vote
LEVI MAXEY

Russia Meddles in Western, Northern Europe
KAITLIN LAVINDER

RECENT BRIEFS
Short Half-Life for Peaceful Korean Peninsula after Olympics
Cipher Brief Analysis
Cyber Vigilantes & Hacktivists: Double-Edged Sword Against ISIS
Levi Maxey
Kremlin's New Subs Set Sights on Internet's Undersea Backbone
Levi Maxey
Agency Transformed, NSA Chief Rogers Set for Spring Departure
Cipher Brief Analysis
'Persistent, Expanding and Worrisome': ISIS Rebounds in Afghanistan
Bennett Seftel
 
Last edited:

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Um, Housecarl the deployment of 10,000 soldiers to overseas posts, in addition to the several thousand now, apparently, in Syria, plus the several thousand troop increase in Afghanistan shows Trump was never really serious about downsizing Imperial pretensions at all. Further, when you add in all the heavy whoop ass now going to Guam we are clearly mobilizing for war with somebody, anybody in the near to medium future.

Given the shortages in trained soldiers, sailors and airmen, combined with critical shortages in spare parts, ammo and training cycles it paints a grim picture of just how combat effective the US military is.

I saw where the Air Force was short 2,000 pilots alone.

Yeah, making threats when you don't have the muscle to back them up isn't a wise policy. And what in God's name are we doing deploying Combat Marines to Norway, or armored and mechanized infantry to the Baltic States?
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Um, Housecarl the deployment of 10,000 soldiers to overseas posts, in addition to the several thousand now, apparently, in Syria, plus the several thousand troop increase in Afghanistan shows Trump was never really serious about downsizing Imperial pretensions at all. Further, when you add in all the heavy whoop ass now going to Guam we are clearly mobilizing for war with somebody, anybody in the near to medium future.

Given the shortages in trained soldiers, sailors and airmen, combined with critical shortages in spare parts, ammo and training cycles it paints a grim picture of just how combat effective the US military is.

I saw where the Air Force was short 2,000 pilots alone.

Yeah, making threats when you don't have the muscle to back them up isn't a wise policy. And what in God's name are we doing deploying Combat Marines to Norway, or armored and mechanized infantry to the Baltic States?

Particularly when you talk about the supply of JDAMs, as I've noted before, when things do "go hot" regarding North Korea, it will be glass making temperatures for no other reason than the state the military was left in by Obama.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ign-ministers-meet-in-support-of-nuclear-deal

UK, Germany and France urge US not to tear up Iran nuclear deal

Three EU signatories to 2015 deal say Iran is respecting agreement that has made world safer and ‘prevented potential nuclear arms race’

Thu 11 Jan ‘18 10.03 EST

Washington’s closest allies have sent a carefully timed warning to Donald Trump not to tear up the Iran nuclear deal, saying it is essential for international security, and no better alternative has been suggested by the White House.

At a meeting in Brussels attended by the Iranian foreign minister, Javad Zarif, the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Germany, the three EU signatories to the deal, insisted that Iran was respecting the agreement signed in 2015.

The display of resolve came before a decision by the US president, expected on Friday, on whether to continue to sign a waiver to prevent the reimposition of economic sanctions against Iran. Tehran has warned that any failure to sign the waiver would lead to the deal’s collapse, and the speedy restart of uranium enrichment.

The EU’s top diplomat, Federica Mogherini, said the deal, denounced by Trump as the worst ever made, had in reality “made the world safer and prevented a potential nuclear arms race in the region”.

She also said any doubts the EU harboured over Iran’s development of ballistic missiles, or its overall policy of interference across the Middle East, were separate from the nuclear deal – also known as the JCPOA.

Both France and Britain, in part to remain in alliance with the US, have said Iran needs to sign fresh agreements over both issues. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, has spoken of supplementing the nuclear deal.

Zarif did not join the post-meeting press conference but tweeted: “Strong consensus in Brussels today: 1) Iran is complying with #JCPOA, 2) Iranian people have every right to all its dividends, 3) Any move that undermines JCPOA is unacceptable. E3 and EU fully aware that Iran’s continued compliance conditioned on full compliance by the US.”

The German foreign minister, Sigmar Gabriel, said: “We want to protect the JCPOA against every possible undermining decision whatever that may come. It would send a very dangerous signal to the rest of the world if the only agreement that prevents the proliferation of nuclear weapons was negatively affected.”

The French foreign minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said: “There is no indication today that could call into doubt Iranian respect of the agreement.”

Boris Johnson, Britain’s foreign secretary, said: “I don’t think anybody has so far produced a better alternative” to the agreement.

He said it was “incumbent on those who oppose the JCPOA to come up with that better solution because we have not seen it so far. We greatly value the JCPOA, the nuclear deal with Iran. We think it is a considerable diplomatic accomplishment. It’s a way of stopping Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and Iran is in compliance with this agreement, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.”

Q&A
Why is Trump hostile to Iran?

Show
On a bilateral basis Johnson raised with Zarif the issue of the British dual national Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who has been held in a Tehran jail for two years after being found guilty of espionage.

Johnson raised her plight on a visit to Tehran before Christmas, but no further progress was reported, and it is likely that the recent Iran-wide street protects – which hardliners blame on foreign including UK interference – may not have helped her chances of early release.

Washington has been more forthright than Europe in supporting the protests and implying that regime change is a realistic possibility. The EU has focused on ensuring that the right to protest is defended.

Discussing Iran’s wider behaviour, Le Drian reiterated that European governments were open to pressing Iran on its missile programme and regional activities but that this must happen separately from the nuclear accord.

French officials have said they will consider sanctions if Iran pushes ahead with its missile programme. However, EU sanctions must be agreed unanimously by all member states and, unlike in the US, no preparation for such sanctions has been made.

The former UK foreign secretary Jack Straw has suggested the EU consider legislation to protect EU companies from US sanctions if Washington reimposes sanctions over the deal.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/arti...his-ballistic-missile-intercepted-over-Najran

Houthi’s ballistic missile intercepted over Najran

7 hours ago

NAJRAN — The Saudi Air Defense Forces on Thursday intercepted a ballistic missile launched by the Houthi militias over Najran. Col. Turki Al-Malki, spokesman of the Coalition forces, said that the Air Defense Forces spotted at 5.31 p.m. on Thursday the launch of a ballistic missile by the Iranian-backed Houthi militias from Amran governorate within Yemeni territory towards the territory of the Kingdom.

Al-Maliki said that the missile was in the direction of the city of Najran and was deliberately launched to target civilian and populated areas. “It has been intercepted and destroyed over the skies of Najran and there was no loss of life,” he said.

The spokesman said that this hostile action by the Iranian-backed Houthi militias proves the continued involvement of the Iranian regime in supporting the Houthi armed militias in clear and explicit defiance of the UN resolutions 2216 and 2231. “These (missile launch) are aimed at threatening the security of not only Saudi Arabia but also the region and the world as firing of ballistic missiles targeting densely populated cities and villages is contrary to international humanitarian law,” he said in Riyadh.

Al-Maliki renewed his call to the international community to take more serious and effective steps to stop the blatant Iranian violations through the continued smuggling and transfer of ballistic missiles and weapons to terrorist groups. He also underlined the need to hold Iran accountable for its support and flagrant defiance of international norms and values.

Last Friday, the Air Defense Forces of the Arab Coalition had intercepted a ballistic missile fired by the Houthi militias over the skies of Najran. Social networking sites shared a number of pictures of an intercepted Houthi missile in the Najran area. The pictures showed that the missile fragments were scattered and the shrapnel hit one of the cars, which was partially destroyed, without any injuries reported.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
I have heard through the grapevine that Trump has ramped up production of spare parts, ammo and increased training cycles, but Obama put us in so deep a hole it may take several years to simply get us back to having just shortages, instead of critical shortages. The lag time on some of these missiles can be measured in months. It isn't like World War Two where you just hire some people, flip a switch and spare parts start to roll off the assembly line.

I would imagine a JDAM takes a while to make, and costs a million dollars for each one. In 1944 the USA made a total of 100,000 airplanes of all types, including making B-17's at the rate of 17 per day. The last time I checked we had the ability to make 350 F-16's PER YEAR. Of course, that was years ago so we may only be able to make 50 a year now.

Trump is baiting everybody, ie all our enemies and we simply don't have the stuff to fight them, nor can we make it fast enough to deal with the shortages.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I have heard through the grapevine that Trump has ramped up production of spare parts, ammo and increased training cycles, but Obama put us in so deep a hole it may take several years to simply get us back to having just shortages, instead of critical shortages. The lag time on some of these missiles can be measured in months. It isn't like World War Two where you just hire some people, flip a switch and spare parts start to roll off the assembly line.

I would imagine a JDAM takes a while to make, and costs a million dollars for each one. In 1944 the USA made a total of 100,000 airplanes of all types, including making B-17's at the rate of 17 per day. The last time I checked we had the ability to make 350 F-16's PER YEAR. Of course, that was years ago so we may only be able to make 50 a year now.

Trump is baiting everybody, ie all our enemies and we simply don't have the stuff to fight them, nor can we make it fast enough to deal with the shortages.

The "strap on" kits for the Mark 80 series of bombs cost $25k a piece, which considering what they give in capabilities is a real bargain. The new purpose made ones, the GBU-39 and 40 run between $40K and $250K depending on what's built into them.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-member-afghanistan-wounded-possible-insider-attack-184127668.html

U.S. service member in Afghanistan wounded in possible insider attack

Reuters • January 11, 2018

KABUL (Reuters) - The U.S. military in Afghanistan is investigating an incident in the eastern province of Nangarhar in which one of its forces was wounded in an apparent insider attack by members of a pro-government militia.

Capt. Tom Gresback, public affairs director at the NATO-led Resolute Support headquarters in Kabul confirmed there had been an "active ground engagement" in Achin district in which he said one U.S. service member had been wounded but none killed.

"We are looking into the details of engagement with our Afghan partners and will provide more information when appropriate," he said in an emailed statement.

No comment was immediately available from provincial government officials.

Details of the incident remain unclear but a local member of parliament, Obaidullah Shinwari, said members of a pro-government militia had opened fire on U.S. forces, killing two Americans and an interpreter.

He said an air strike was then called in, killing 22 members of the militia force.

If confirmed as an insider attack, it would be the latest in a series against U.S. forces, including an incident in Achin district in June in which an Afghan commando opened fire, killing three U.S. personnel and wounding another

The incident occurred during a joint operation against fighters from Islamic State in Khorasan (IS-K), the local one Nangarhar province, on the border with Pakistan.

"We continue to strategically push IS-K back from their fighting positions taking seven kilometers and clearing much of the Mohmand Valley, Nangarhar," Gresback said.

U.S. Special Forces, cooperating with Afghan units, have been heavily engaged in Nangarhar, where Islamic State in Khorasan, the local affiliate of the radical movement, first appeared three years ago.

In the months between June and November last year, U.S. Special Forces carried out at least 420 ground operations and 214 air strikes against Islamic State fighters in Afghanistan, according to a Pentagon report in December.

(Reporting by Ahmad Sultan and James Mackenzie Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)

4 reactions
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.france24.com/en/20180112-three-french-prison-guards-hurt-attack-al-qaeda-inmate

12 January 2018 - 05H58

Three French prison guards hurt in attack by Al-Qaeda inmate

LILLE (FRANCE) (AFP) - Three guards at a jail in northern France have been injured in a blade attack by a German Al-Qaeda militant who plotted the deadly suicide bombing of a Tunisian synagogue, sources said Thursday.

Islamic convert Christian Ganczarski, serving an 18-year sentence over the 2002 blast in Djerba that killed 21 people, launched himself at prison officers after hearing he may face extradition to the US in connection with 9/11 investigations, according to union sources.

Prison authorities did not confirm or deny the identity of the assailant, but said they were investigating an assault with a razor blade and chisel as a terrorist plot to kill officials.

Regional director of prison services Alain Jego confirmed to AFP that "an inmate, who is finishing a long sentence and who risks being extradited to the United States, assaulted three agents with a blade" at the jail in Vendin-le-Vieil, near the northern town of Lens.

Four officers tried to control the prisoner and three were slightly injured, Jego added.

Ganczarski, who visited Afghan and Pakistani militant camps and met Osama bin Laden, was found guilty in 2009 of helping to plan the Tunisia attack, which was claimed by Al-Qaeda.

In the suicide bombing a fuel tanker rigged with explosives was detonated in front of the Ghriba synagogue on the island of Djerba, killing 14 German tourists, five Tunisians and two French nationals.

Ganczarski put his expertise in radio and Internet communications at the service of Al-Qaeda and helped recruit members in Europe, according to investigators.

He was charged along with 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who is said to have been be Al-Qaeda's "military commander" and responsible for all foreign operations.

According to Francois Forget, secretary-general of the Ufap-Unsa Justice union, Ganczarski had been informed "that he might be extradited" to the United States as part of investigations into the September 11 attacks.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm....


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zon...drone-attack-now-implies-ukrainian-connection

Russia Offers New Details About Syrian Mass Drone Attack, Now Implies Ukrainian Connection

Though no group has taken responsibility, Russian authorities continue to insist the attackers needed outside support.

BY JOSEPH TREVITHICK
JANUARY 11, 2018

image

http://imagesvc.timeincapp.com/v3/f....wordpress.com/2018/01/drone-1.jpg?quality=85

he Russian military’s top officer in charge of drone development has offered new details about apparent first of their kind mass drone attacks on its forces in Syria in an official briefing at the country’s Ministry of Defense. The presentation reiterated the Kremlin’s assertion that terrorists or rebels could not have conducted the operation without significant outside support, now implying a possible Ukrainian connection, but significant questions remain unanswered.

Speaking from the Russian Ministry of Defense’s briefing room, amid examples of the drones and their munitions that the country recovered after the attacks, Major General Alexander Novikov, head of the Russian General Staff's Office for Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Development, gave the most detailed and complete official description of the incident to date. He said that unspecified terrorists utilized a total of 13 improvised drones, each carrying 10 bomblets, sending 10 to Russia's Khmeimim air base in Latakia governorate and the other three to its naval base in Tartus on the Mediterranean Sea. The munitions each had an explosive charge weighing nearly one pound, as well as strings of metal ball bearings or BBs glued together as pre-formed shrapnel, which would have made them most effective against individuals out in the open.

RUSSIA IMPLIES DRONE SWARM ATTACK ON ITS BASE IN SYRIA LINKED TO US P-8 PATROL PLANE
By Joseph Trevithick
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
RUSSIA'S AIR BASE IN SYRIA SEEMS TO BE UNDER REGULAR ATTACK NOW
By Tyler Rogoway
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
RUSSIA SAYS JANUARY 5TH ATTACK ON ITS SYRIAN AIR BASE WAS BY A SWARM OF DRONES
By Tyler Rogoway
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
RUSSIA CONFIRMS SYRIA ATTACK BUT DENIES SEVEN AIRCRAFT GOT DESTROYED AS PHOTOS EMERGE
By Joseph Trevithick and Tyler Rogoway
Posted in THE WAR ZONE
RUSSIA'S "SAFE ZONES" IN SYRIA ONLY MAKE THINGS MORE COMPLICATED
By Joseph Trevithick
Posted in THE WAR ZONE

“Construction of these drones takes significant time period and special knowledge of aerodynamics and radioelectronics,” Novikov. “Assembly and use of these components in the joint system are a complicated engineer task demanding special training, scientific knowledge, and practical experience of producing these aircraft.”

Novikov said that Russian forces had been able to capture a number of the drones after electronic warfare systems at Khmeimim knocked them out of the sky. Somewhat confusingly, he later said that whoever had built the unmanned aircraft had included systems to specifically to defeat those countermeasures, though.

A video of Novikov's full briefing is available online, with additional views of the captured drones and associated items and imagery, but the commentary is entirely in Russian.



Air defense radars aided in detecting the attacks and Pantsir-S1 short-range air defense systems destroyed some of the improvised unmanned aircraft, as well. He added that this was the first time Russian forces in Syria had come under such an attack, though rebels and terrorists have been employing such systems for years now in both that country and neighboring Iraq.

The general officer acknowledged that the individual components, such as the apparent lawnmower or moped motors, were available commercially. This is a point the U.S. military has been keen to stress in the aftermath of the attacks.

"We have seen this type of commercial UAV technology used to carry out missions by ISIS," Pentagon spokesperson Major Adrian Rankin-Galloway told Russian state outlet Sputnik on Jan. 8, 2018. "Those devices and technologies can easily be obtained in the open market and that is cause for concern."

However, Novikov insisted that militants would not have been able to conduct the necessary research and development and flight testing out of their workshops in Syria to make sure the improvised aircraft actually worked without significant assistance. "It is impossible to develop such drones in an improvised manner. They were developed and operated by experts with special skills acquired in countries that produce and apply systems with UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles]," he said, without naming where those individuals might be situated or where the militants might have received such training.

View image on Twitter
View image on Twitter

Adam Rawnsley

@arawnsley
Check that pull handle. Starting to think that maybe @aaronstein1 was right and the engines on the Syrian drones used to attack Russia’s base are lawnmower-adjacent.

6:45 AM - Jan 11, 2018
7 7 Replies 21 21 Retweets 36 36 likes
Twitter Ads info and privacy
To support these assertions, Novikov focused heavily on the drones’ on-board GPS, which has become an important component of Russia’s allegation that outside actors, including one or more nation states, would have had to have been involved in the attacks at some level. The Major-General said the systems gave them military-grade precision when navigating to Khmeimim and releasing their bombs over the target area.

The “pre-programmed coordinates are more accurate than those in the Internet,” Novikov, challenging arguments that militants could have acquired the necessary data via open sources online. Though the briefing included maps of the pre-programmed flight routes, which the Russian Ministry of Defense said it had created using information it downloaded from the examples it captured, he did not provide any actual data to support his claims.


RUSSIAN MOD
Maps showing the drones flight path during the attack.

In his January 2018 briefing, Novikov also specifically appeared to suggest there might be a connection to Ukraine. He brought up the country when talking about the source of the explosive material inside the bombs the drones dropped on Khmeimim.

“The PETN [pentaerythritol tetranitrate] is produces [sic] by a number of countries, including Ukraine at the Shostkinsky Chemical Plant,” he explained. “This explosive material cannot be produced in an improvised manner or extracted from other munitions.”

image

http://imagesvc.timeincapp.com/v3/f...message-editor%2F1515692919715-drone-bomb.jpg
RUSSIAN MOD
One of the captured drones showing it carrying eight, rather than the reported 10 bomblets.

Besides Syria and Russia, Ukraine was the only other country Novikov mentioned by name, according to the official transcript. He did not note that military forces around the world and commercial mining companies use PETN, which German scientists first developed in 1894, and that it is relatively easy to obtain.

The difficulty in spotting the explosive on typical airport x-ray machines has made it particularly popular with terrorists for more than a decade. “Shoe bomber” Richard Reid, “butt bomber” Abdullah Al Asiri, and “underwear bomber” Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, among many others, all employed or attempted to employ devices featuring PETN charges.

Russia and Ukraine have been at odds since the Kremlin seized the latter’s Crimea region in 2014 and subsequently began directly supporting separatists fighting the government in Kiev. The conflict has earned the Russian government international censure and economic sanctions from various countries, including the United States.

image

http://imagesvc.timeincapp.com/v3/f...ng/message-editor%2F1515692955324-bomblet.jpg
RUSSIAN MOD
A close up of some of the captured bomblets, showing the metal ball shrapnel.

Ukraine is the third country Russia has indirectly implied might have aided the attacks in some fashion. On Jan. 9, 2018, an official statement from the Russian Ministry of Defense, as well as reports from state media outlets, strongly suggested that a U.S. Navy P-8A Poseidon patrol plane flying off the coast of Syria during the attack was somehow involved in the incident.

The implication was that the aircraft was feeding targeting information, such as the aforementioned GPS coordinates, or other information to the militants controlling the drones. These aircraft do have a robust electronic support measures suite that can collect information about various emitters, such as enemy radars, but additional electronic and signals intelligence systems have yet to become operational.

The idea that the United States is supporting ISIS, who may have been responsible, is a long-standing, but completely unfounded conspiracy theory. The U.S. government and its partners have armed groups opposed to Syrian dictator Bashar Al Assad, though, most notably with TOW anti-tank missiles. Still, there is no actual evidence whatsoever the U.S. military had a role in the attack.

Then, on Jan. 10, 2018, the Russians indirectly pointed the finger at Turkey and rebel groups it backs in Northern Syria. The Turkish government is responsible for a so-called “de-escalation zone” in Idlib governorate, which is where the Kremlin says militants launched the drones. In 2017, Russia, Iran, and Turkey agreed to establish the ceasefire areas as part of a controversial plan that seemed aimed at challenging the influence of the United States, its allies, and its local Syrian partners, especially the Kurdish People's Protection Units in the country.

According to The Washington Post, Russian officials sent a letter to their Turkish counterparts, not accusing them directly of involvement, but holding them responsible for the Khmeimim attack, blaming them for not being able to maintain the ceasefire in Idlib. Turkey in turn accused Russia and Iran of not keeping up their end of the bargain and demanded that they halt an offensive into the governorate, exposing potential fractures in the partnership.


ISMAIL COSKUN, IHA VIA AP
Turkish troops ride in an armored personnel carrier near the border with Syria in 2016.

The conspiratorial claims appear to be in response to these bold and unprecedented attacks coming so soon after Russian President Vladimir Putin’s victory tour of the Middle East in December 2017. This trip included a brief stopover at Khmeimim, where Putin declared total victory over terrorists in Syria.

As yet, the Kremlin has provided little firm evidence to support its assertions about foreign involvement. There is a growing body of evidence calling into question Russia’s insistence that militants could not have crafted the drones on their own, as well.

On Jan. 10, 2018, the Daily Beast reported that it had found similar drones for sale via the Telegram online messaging service, which militants in the Middle East and North Africa especially have increasingly used to conduct black market arms deals .The detailed investigation also turned up images of similar improvised unmanned aircraft and bomblets in Syria on Jan. 1 and 2, 2018. The munitions in particular are almost identical in design and construction to examples various research groups have documented through open sources.

“From what I can see, this ‘drone’ was fabricated using wooden parts and tape,” Mike Blades, a drone industry analyst at the consulting firm Frost & Sullivan, told the Daily Beast. “Perhaps the servos and engine were purchased online, although it’s more likely been scavenged from a model airplane.”

On top of that, fighters with the Saray al-Areen militia, which is aligned with the Assad regime, said they had found one drones near Khmeimim on or about Jan. 1, 2018 and posted the video seen below, suggesting the unmanned aircraft had seen some action before the mass attack later in the month. On New Year’s Eve 2017 there was another attack on the air base, but Russian authorities said the militants used a mortar. The Kremlin also disputed reports that the incident had left a number of aircraft destroyed.



It remains unclear who has been responsible for this string of attacks. As yet, no group has officially claimed to have carried out the operations, despite their high profile nature and obvious propaganda potential.

“There’s a lot of fishy stuff going on in Idlib – agents running around, and groups working with groups they shouldn’t work with,” Aron Lund, an analyst at the Century Foundation, told The Washington Post earlier in January 2018. “It’s very, very murky.”

What is increasingly clear is that Khmeimim and Russia’s military and other interests in Syria are more vulnerable than many reports have previously suggested. The air base in Latakia province in particular appears to be under regular attack now.

It also seems safe to say that swarm drone attacks have arrived, albeit in a very primitive state, and are likely to become a major tool of both national militaries and terrorists and insurgents. It’s a danger that many, including us at The War Zone, have expressed concern about for years already.

In light of the mass attack in Syria, Russia has called for the creation of an international coalition to combat this emerging threat. Novikov said the Russian government was prepared to use all "appropriate measures" to eliminate the danger, without elaborating on whether this might involve an increase in military operations in Syria or elsewhere or sanctions or other actions against those it believed facilitated the attack.

“There is a real threat that terrorists can use drones for their attacks worldwide,” Novikov said near the end of his briefing. This particularly statement seems indisputable.

Contact the author: jtrevithickpr@gmail.com
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Missed this one a couple of days ago.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.longwarjournal.org/arch...es-jihadist-leader-behind-deadly-uprising.php

Pakistan frees jihadist leader behind deadly uprising

BY BILL ROGGIO | January 9, 2018 | admin@longwarjournal.org | @billroggio

A Pakistani court has freed Sufi Mohammed, a radical cleric who has backed the Taliban and was responsible for the group’s uprising and rebellion in Swat and neighboring districts in northwestern Pakistan a decade ago. His son-in-law is Mullah Fazlullah, the emir of the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan.

The Peshawar High Court granted Mohammed bail after he petitioned the court and claimed that “his health is deteriorating with each passing day,” Dawn reported.

Mohammed led the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammed (TNSM), or the Movement for the Enforcement of Mohammed’s Law, a Taliban-like group that operated in the Malakand Division, a region in northwestern Pakistan. He recruited thousands of fighters to battle US forces in Afghanistan in the early 2000s. The Musharraf government banned the TNSM and placed Mohammed under arrest, but he was released in late 2007 to negotiate a peace agreement that allowed the TNSM and the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan to take control of the district of Swat.

The peace agreement, known as the Malakand Accord, placed the Malakand Division and the district of Kohistan under control of the Taliban. The Malakand Division comprises the districts of Malakand, Swat, Shangla, Buner, Dir, and Chitral. Together with the neighboring Kohistan district, the Malakand Division encompasses nearly one-third of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province.

During its two-year reign from 2007 through 2009, the Taliban terrorized the people of Swat and destroyed its local economy, including its popular tourism industry. Additionally, the Taliban used its stronghold in Swat to attack Pakistani forces and destabilized neighboring districts. The Taliban’s insurgency spread to within 50 miles of Islamabad and seeped into Punjab province before the Paksitani military responded in late 2009.

Mohammed often espoused anti-democratic views and believed in the primacy of Islam. “We hate democracy,” he told a crowd of thousands of followers during a rally in Swat in Feb. 2009. “We want the occupation of Islam in the entire world. Islam does not permit democracy or election.”

Mohammed has been imprisoned and released several times during the past two decades. Pakistani forces arrested Mohammad in Aug. 2009, along with seven of his associates. He was charged with “treason, rebellion and terrorism,” as well as “waging war and conspiracy against the country.” [See FDD’s Long War Journal report, Pakistan charges Sufi Mohammed with treason.]

However, as Dawn noted, “A number of cases were registered against Sufi Mohammed; however, in each case, witnesses against him had either died or could not be traced.” Mohammed was never convicted of any of these crimes, and likely never will be.

Pakistani officials, when criticized by Americans for sheltering, supporting, or turning a blind eye to jihadists, often complain that its citizens and soldiers have endured more casualties while fighting jihadists. Yet jihadists such as Sufi Mohammed, who is responsible for open rebellion and the murder of thousands of Pakistanis, routinely avoid justice for their crimes.

Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of FDD’s Long War Journal.
 
Top