WAR 01-16-2016-to-01-22-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/philippine-plane-warned-chinese-navy-disputed-sea-105250004.html

Philippine plane warned by 'Chinese navy' in disputed sea

Associated Press
By JIM GOMEZ
2 hours ago

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Philippine officials said Monday they received two intimidating radio warnings identified as from the Chinese navy when they flew a Cessna plane close to a Chinese-constructed island in the South China Sea.

Eric Apolonio said the incident happened Jan. 7 when he and other personnel of the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines flew to a Philippine-occupied island for an engineering survey for the installation of civil aviation safety equipment on the island.

The island, which the Philippines calls Pag-asa and is home to a small fishing community and Filipino troops, is close to Subi Reef, one of seven reefs in the disputed Spratly archipelago which China has transformed into islands in the last two years using dredged sand.

Chinese officials say they have completed the island building and are now constructing buildings and runways to ensure safe civilian sea travel. They have acknowledged, though, that the islands could also be used militarily, adding that they have the right to build on what they say is Chinese territory.

The United States and governments with rival claims with China in the disputed region, including the Philippines and Vietnam, have expressed alarm over the Chinese construction, saying it raises tensions and threatens regional stability and could violate freedom of navigation and overflight.

As their Cessna approached Pag-asa to land, Apolonio said a message was received over an emergency radio channel warning: "Foreign military aircraft, this is the Chinese navy. You are threatening the security of our station."

The Filipino pilots ignored the warning and continued with the trip since they were flying a civilian plane over what Apolonio said was Philippine territory. After finishing the survey on Pag-asa, known internationally as Thitu island, they left in the plane and later received the same warning message, he said.

Asked if they felt threatened, Apolonio said they were apprehensive because "you'll never know, we can be fired upon."

The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not immediately reply when asked for comment.

Mayor Eugenio Bito-onon, the leader of the community on Pag-asa who flew with Apolonio's team, said the radio warnings were an act of intimidation and illustrated the threat to freedom of flight in the region. He said other civilian and military planes have also been shooed away by the Chinese in the region.

Despite the incident, Apolonio said the government will proceed with plans to install the aviation equipment, which is required by the International Civil Aviation Organization to help ensure the safety of commercial flights. Called the Automatic Dependent Surveillance Broadcast, the equipment helps aircraft determine their positions via satellite navigation and enables them to be tracked.

British Ambassador to Manila Asif Ahmad said Monday that his government would oppose any move that restricts freedom of navigation and overflight in the disputed waters.

"If a British aircraft, civilian or military, was intercepted and not allowed to fly over a space which we regard as international, we will simply ignore it," he told reporters.

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Housecarl

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Hummm......The other version is that they were at the home of their translator for a meal when thye got grabbed up....YMMV

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http://news.yahoo.com/three-americans-abducted-baghdad-apartment-133256934.html

Kidnapped Americans taken to Baghdad flat for 'women and alcohol'

AFP
1 hour ago

Baghdad (AFP) - Three American nationals missing in Iraq were kidnapped from a "suspicious apartment" in Baghdad, a spokesman for the security command responsible for the capital said on Monday.

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"Three people carrying American nationality were kidnapped while they were in Dura... inside a suspicious apartment," the spokesman said in a statement.

"Security forces have begun searching for them," the spokesman said.

A police colonel said on condition of anonymity that an Iraqi translator took the Americans for "drinking and women" at an apartment in the Dura area.

Militiamen "attacked the place", the colonel said, and "they were kidnapped from inside the apartment, not from the street."

The colonel and Iraq's parliament speaker have said the kidnappings took place on Sunday, but other reports indicated the Americans were abducted at an earlier date.

The abducted Americans were apparently taken to another area, the colonel said, as Dura was searched and they were not found.

Brothels and alcohol shops have been repeatedly targeted by powerful Shiite militia groups that are playing a major role in combating the Islamic State jihadist group, which overran large parts of Iraq last year.

Kidnappers have recently seized Qataris and Turks, but it has been years since Americans were abducted.

Iraqis have suffered the most from kidnappers seeking ransoms or to settle scores since the 2003 US-led invasion which toppled president Saddam Hussein.

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Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/end-europe-berlin-brussels-shock-tactic-migrants-104113981--business.html

End of Europe? Berlin, Brussels' shock tactic on migrants

Reuters
By Alastair Macdonald and Noah Barkin
5 hours ago

BRUSSELS/BERLIN (Reuters) - Is this how "Europe" ends?

The Germans, founders and funders of the postwar union, shut their borders to refugees in a bid for political survival by the chancellor who let in a million migrants. And then -- why not? -- they decide to revive the Deutschmark while they're at it.

That is not the fantasy of diehard Eurosceptics but a real fear articulated at the highest levels in Berlin and Brussels.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, her ratings hit by crimes blamed on asylum seekers at New Year parties in Cologne, and EU chief executive Jean-Claude Juncker both said as much last week.

Juncker echoed Merkel in warning that the central economic achievements of the common market and the euro are at risk from incoherent, nationalistic reactions to migration and other crises. He renewed warnings that Europe is on its "last chance", even if he still hoped it was not "at the beginning of the end".

Merkel, facing trouble among her conservative supporters as much as from opponents, called Europe "vulnerable" and the fate of the euro "directly linked" to resolving the migration crisis -- highlighting the risk of at the very least serious economic turbulence if not a formal dismantling of EU institutions.

Some see that as mere scare tactics aimed at fellow Europeans by leaders with too much to lose from an EU collapse -- Greeks and Italians have been seen to be dragging their feet over controlling the bloc's Mediterranean frontier and eastern Europeans who benefit from German subsidies and manufacturing supply chain jobs have led hostility to demands that they help take in refugees.

Germans are also getting little help from EU co-founder France, whose leaders fear a rising anti-immigrant National Front, or the bloc's third power, Britain, consumed with its own debate on whether to just quit the European club altogether.

So, empty threat or no, with efforts to engage Turkey's help showing little sign yet of preventing migrants reaching Greek beaches, German and EU officials are warning that without a sharp drop in arrivals or a change of heart in other EU states to relieve Berlin of the lonely task of housing refugees, Germany could shut its doors, sparking wider crisis this spring.

GERMAN WARNINGS

With Merkel's conservative allies in the southern frontier state of Bavaria demanding she halt the mainly Muslim asylum seekers ahead of tricky regional elections in March, her veteran finance minister delivered one of his trademark veiled threats to EU counterparts of what that could mean for them.

"Many think this is a German problem," Wolfgang Schaeuble said in meetings with fellow EU finance ministers in Brussels. "But if Germany does what everyone expects, then we'll see that it's not a German problem -- but a European one."

Senior Merkel allies are working hard to stifle the kind of parliamentary party rebellion that threatened to derail bailouts which kept Greece in the euro zone last year. But pressure is mounting for national measures, such as border fences, which as a child of East Germany Merkel has said she cannot countenance.

"If you build a fence, it's the end of Europe as we know it," one senior conservative said. "We need to be patient."

A senior German official noted that time is running out, however.

"The chancellor has been asking her party for more time," he said. "But ... that narrative ... is losing the persuasiveness it may have had in October or November. If you add in the debate about Cologne, she faces an increasingly difficult situation."

He noted that arrivals had not fallen sharply over the winter months as had been expected.

"You can only imagine what happens when the weather improves," he said.

SCHENGEN FEARS

Merkel and Juncker explicitly linked new national frontier controls across Europe's passport-free Schengen zone to a collapse of the single market at the core of the bloc, and of the euro. Both would ravage jobs and the economy.

"Without Schengen ... the euro has no point," Juncker told a New Year news conference on Friday. Historic national resentments were re-emerging, he added, accusing his generation of EU leaders of squandering the legacy of the union's founders, survivors of World War Two.

Merkel has not suggested -- yet -- that Berlin could follow neighbors like Austria and Denmark in further tightening border checks to deny entry to irregular migrants. But she has made clear how Europe might suffer.

"No one can pretend that you can have a common currency without being able to cross borders relatively easily," she said at a business event last week.

In private, German officials are more explicit. "We have until March, the summer maybe, for a European solution," said a second German official. "Then Schengen goes down the drain."

A senior EU official was equally blunt: "There is a big risk that Germany closes. From that, no Schengen ... There is a risk that the February summit could start a countdown to the end."

The next summit of EU leaders one month from now follows meetings last year that were marked by agreement on a migration strategy as well as rows over failures to implement it.

Of the 160,000 asylum seekers EU leaders agreed in September to distribute among member states, fewer than 300 have been moved.

Berlin and Brussels continue to press for more distribution across Europe. But few place much hope in that -- one senior German official calls it "flogging a dead horse".

TURKISH KEY

EU leaders' hope is for help from Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, a man many of them see as an embryonic dictator.

Berlin is pressing for more EU cash for Ankara, beyond an agreed 3 billion euros, which Italy is blocking. Some Germans suggest simply using German funds to stem the flow from Turkey.

EU officials say it is too early to panic. Arrivals have fallen this month. U.N. data show them running in January at half the 3,500 daily rate of December. Progress includes a move to let some of the 2.1 million Syrian refugees in Turkey take jobs. The EU will fund more schools for refugee children.

Yet EU Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos, who travels to Berlin on Monday, told the European Parliament last week: "The situation is getting worse."

The refugee crisis was jeopardizing "the very core of the European Union", he said, offering no grounds to be optimistic other than that "optimism is our last line of our defense".

(Additional reporting by Gabriela Baczynska, Paul Taylor and Tom Koerkemeier in Brussels; Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

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Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/u-sailors-held-captive-iran-were-held-gunpoint-154628320.html

U.S. sailors held captive by Iran were held at gunpoint: U.S. military

Reuters
By Sarah N. Lynch
1 hour ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The 10 U.S. sailors who were briefly detained by the Iranian military last week were held at gunpoint and had a verbal exchange with Iranian personnel before they were released, the U.S. military said Monday.

In its most comprehensive timeline of the incident to date, the U.S. military the sailors also had two SIM cards pulled out of their satellite phones, but that there was no gunfire exchange. There were no details on the verbal exchange.

The U.S. sailors, who were aboard two patrol craft, were detained by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) on January 12 when they inadvertently entered Iranian territorial waters. They were released the next day.

The U.S. military said the Americans were intercepted after the diesel engine in one of their boats developed a mechanical problem, although it was unclear if the crew was aware of their precise location.

The sailors were released unharmed and are in good health.

Their prompt release came just days before world powers lifted crippling sanctions on Iran in return for Tehran's implementation of a deal curbing its nuclear program.

Secretary of State John Kerry said on CNN that once he heard about the sailors' detention, he was "very frustrated and angry", and that "I raised it immediately with the Iranians."

He declined to give the content of his conversation, but added: "Suffice it to say that I made it crystal clear how serious this was. It was imperative to get it resolved."

(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Ian Simpson; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/pakistan-pm-riyadh-saudi-iran-mediation-bid-153630034.html

Pakistan PM in Riyadh on Saudi-Iran mediation bid

AFP
1 hour ago

Riyadh (AFP) - Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif held talks with Saudi King Salman on Monday as part of efforts to ease regional tensions between the Sunni kingdom and Shiite Iran.


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Sharif is to head on Tuesday to Riyadh's rival Iran where he is expected to meet President Hassan Rouhani.

Saudi Arabia and a number of its Arab allies cut diplomatic ties with Iran in early January, sending already tense relations between the rival nations to a new low.

Riyadh reacted after protesters burned Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran after the kingdom on January 2 executed Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr.

He was among 47 people put to death in a single day for "terrorism". Most of those executed were Sunnis.

According to the Saudi Press Agency, Salman "welcomed the prime minister of Pakistan and his delegation" to his palace.


.. View gallery
Iranian protesters set fire to the Saudi Embassy in …
Iranian protesters set fire to the Saudi Embassy in Tehran during a demonstration against the execut …


The report gave no details of their discussions, which SPA earlier said were to touch on regional as well as bilateral issues.

"Pakistan is deeply concerned at the recent escalation of tensions between the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Republic of Iran," Islamabad's foreign ministry spokesman Qazi Khalilullah said ahead of Sharif's trip.

He said the prime minister had called for a peaceful settlement of differences in the interests of Muslim unity.

"The purpose of the visit is to mediate and to end the standoff between the two countries," a Pakistani government official told AFP, requesting anonymity.

Sharif arrived two days after a historic international deal lifted sanctions on Iran in return for a scaling back of its nuclear capabilities.

Riyadh fears the agreement will only further embolden Iran, which it accuses of regional interference.

SPA said the prime minister was accompanied by Pakistan's powerful army chief, General Raheel Sharif.

Pakistan is a majority Sunni country but 20 percent of the population is Shiite.

The country's parliament last year refused to send forces to help a Saudi-led Arab coalition fighting Iran-backed Shiite Huthi rebels in Yemen.

But this month Islamabad said it "welcomes" a separate Saudi coalition of 34 nations to combat "terrorism" in the Islamic world.

Diplomats have said it remained unclear how that coalition will work in practice.

Pakistan has deep military ties with Saudi Arabia and it has long benefited from the oil-rich kingdom's largesse.

Sharif himself has close personal ties with the Saudi royal family who sheltered him during years in exile.

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Housecarl

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http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/pa...direct-link-paris-attacks-state-media-n498956

News
Paris Terror Attacks
Jan 18 2016, 11:51 am ET

Morocco Arrests Belgian With 'Direct' Link to Paris Attacks: State Media

by Cassandra Vinograd and Nancy Ing

A Belgian national with direct links to the Paris terror attacks has been arrested in Morocco, state-run media reported Monday.

The state-run Maghreb Arab Press said the suspect, of Moroccan descent, was "directly related" to some of the perpetrators of the Paris attacks and had been detained Friday near Mohammedia.

Video

According to The Associated Press, Morocco's Interior Ministry said the suspect had spent time in Syria with ISIS fighters — including the alleged ringleader of the Paris attacks. It did not name the individual other than to give his initials as "J.A.," the AP reported.

A number of the terrorists behind and tied to the Nov. 13 Paris attacks had ties to Belgium — including Salah Abdeslam, who has been on the run since the terror spree but is a French national.

Related: Paris Attack Fugitive Salah Abdeslam's Fingerprint Found in Belgium

Belgium's Federal Prosecutor Eric Van Der Sypt told NBC News he had "absolutely no idea" who was arrested in Morocco, saying that his office had not received any information from authorities there.

The Nov. 13 attacks on the French capital killed 130 people.
 

Housecarl

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Another hint as to the stability of France and the EU at large....

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http://www.reuters.com/article/france-economy-hollande-idUSL8N1521TH

Bonds | Mon Jan 18, 2016 10:17am EST
Related: Bonds, Markets

UPDATE 2-Hollande makes last-chance push to curb French unemployment

* Hollande offers firms 2,000-euro payout for new hires

* Socialist leader says will press on with reforms

* Unions, left-wing lawmakers criticise plan

* Employers say in right direction but not enough

* President seeks to save chance of 2017 re-election (Adds economist quotes, details)


By Leigh Thomas and Michel Rose

PARIS, Jan 18 French President Francois Hollande announced a two-billion-euro ($2.2 billion) job-creation scheme on Monday as he sought to save his 2017 re-election chances, offering a nod to the left of his Socialist party without undoing business-friendly reforms.

Rising unemployment, at an 18-year high of 10.6 percent, has dogged Hollande throughout his presidency and is a reminder to voters that he has failed to live up to promises to put the jobless rate on a convincingly downward path, which he set as a pre-condition for running in the next presidential election.

Hollande said the plan, which includes subsidies for firms that hire new staff, was not a political calculation.

He resisted pressure from some in his party for something more radical to help the low-paid and unemployed after regional election losses, drawing ire from some lawmakers and trade unionists, while employers said the moves were a step in the right direction but did not go far enough.

Hollande reaffirmed plans to push ahead with more business-friendly changes, including a cap on the amount dismissed workers can claim in labour courts, something employers have long called for.

"What counts is to go all the way with reforms, to do the reforms that are expected without thinking about anything else other than their effectiveness, the utility and pertinence," Hollande said in a speech presenting the measures.

"On that point, I will go all the way and I urge everyone to take part," he said.

Under Hollande's two-year plan, which takes effect immediately, companies with fewer than 250 workers would get 2,000 euros for hiring youths and unemployed people on contracts lasting more than six months.

A further one billion euros would go towards job training and a payroll tax cut will be made permanent. The aim is to get 500,000 people into training programmes, up from 400,000 in the first nine months of last year, bringing them out of the jobless total which has been stuck at a record high of 3.5 million.

"It's a victory for the reformist side," said Saxo Bank economist Christopher Dembik. "He clearly thinks the election will be won on the centre-ground of politics."

Drawing the ire of some trade unionists, Hollande also suggested unemployment benefit payments go on for too long, a nod to representatives of employers and employees who are in charge of reforming the deficit-stricken unemployment benefit system.

"How shameful to suggest the jobless are lazy or privileged people," said Philippe Martinez, the head of the communist CGT union, France's largest.


MORE MONEY FOR JOBS

Hollande also said more money would be funnelled into public research and rejected calls to ditch a generous research and development tax credit popular with companies.

"There's a desire to not upset anyone, to appeal to all political sides with measures that are interventionist for the left and others that are pro-business," said Francois Miquet-Marty, head of Viavoice pollsters.

The two billion euro cost of the scheme will be financed with additional savings elsewhere in the budget, Hollande said.

The head of the Medef employers association, Pierre Gattaz, said the measures went in the right direction but employers would have preferred a permanent scheme of hiring bonuses and voiced regret that nothing was done to reform labour contracts.

Left-wingers like Socialist lawmaker Christian Paul criticized Hollande's latest anti-unemployment effort as insufficient and weakening job security.

Some economists also doubted the job plan could make a sustainable dent in unemployment beyond the statistical impact of moving thousands of unemployed workers from the closely watched jobless claim numbers into the 'in training' category.

"It will have a positive impact on unemployment, but that will be a mechanical one, we won't be on a natural downward trend," Saxo Bank's Dembik said.

However, Societe Generale's Michel Martinez said the training plan offered the advantage of making a future reform of the unemployment benefit system more palatable to moderate, reformist unions like the CFDT.

Hollande has been under pressure from lawmakers like Paul to make a more left-leaning push in an effort to win over working class voters after the party suffered heavy losses in regional elections in December.

That has fuelled concern among reformists in his camp that Hollande's pro-business economic reforms will stall.

One French newspaper on Monday reported talk that popular Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron has not ruled out resigning if reforms do not go ahead.

In a sign of support for Macron, Hollande mentioned the young minister several times in the speech and said the plan would go hand-in-hand with Macron's push to tear down legal barriers to practicing many professions. (Additional reporting by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Andrew Callus and Janet Lawrence)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-descend-on-Swiss-Alps-amid-rising-inequality

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-davos-meeting-divisions-idUSKCN0UW007

Mon Jan 18, 2016 3:31am EST
Related: World, Davos

A world divided: Elites descend on Swiss Alps amid rising inequality

DAVOS, Switzerland | By Ben Hirschler and Noah Barkin

Politicians and business leaders gathering in the Swiss Alps this week face an increasingly divided world, with the poor falling further behind the super-rich and political fissures in the United States, Europe and the Middle East running deeper than at any time in decades.

Just 62 people, 53 of them men, own as much wealth as the poorest half of the entire world population and the richest 1 percent own more than the other 99 percent put together, anti-poverty charity Oxfam said on Monday.

Significantly, the wealth gap is widening faster than anyone anticipated, with the 1 percent overtaking the rest one year earlier than Oxfam had predicted only a year ago.

Rising inequality and a widening trust gap between people and their political leaders are big challenges for the global elite as they converge on Davos for the annual World Economic Forum, which runs from Jan. 20 to 23.

But the divisions go far beyond those that exist between the haves and have-nots. In the Middle East, the divide between Shi'ites and Sunnis has reached crisis point, with Iran and Saudi Arabia jostling openly for influence in a region reeling from war and the barbarism of Islamic extremists.

The conflicts there have spilled over into Europe, causing deep ideological rifts over how to handle the worst refugee crisis since World War Two and - with Britain threatening to leave the European Union - raising doubts about the future of Europe's six-decade push towards ever closer integration.

The shock emergence of Donald Trump as the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination has exposed a gaping political divide in the United States, stirring anxiety among Washington's allies at a time of global turmoil.

Among the key figures in Davos, will be U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State John Kerry, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the foreign ministers of both Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Canada's new Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be on hand, as will Britain's David Cameron and Mario Draghi at a time when a new transatlantic monetary policy divide is opening up between his loosening European Central Bank and a tightening U.S. Federal Reserve.

Celebrities will also be out in force, including film stars Leonardo Di Caprio and Kevin Spacey.

FUELLING POPULISTS

Edelman's annual "Trust Barometer" survey shows a record gap this year in trust between the informed publics and mass populations in many countries, driven by income inequality and divergent expectations of the future. The gap is the largest in the United States, followed by the UK, France and India.

"The consequence of this is populism - exemplified by Trump and Le Pen," Richard Edelman, president and CEO of Edelman, told Reuters, referring to French far-right leader Marine Le Pen, whose National Front has surged ahead of traditional parties in opinion polls.

The next wave of technological innovation, dubbed the fourth industrial revolution and a focus of the Davos meeting, threatens further social upheaval as many traditional jobs are lost to robots.

The Oxfam report suggests that global inequality has reached levels not seen in over a century.

Last year, the organisation has calculated, 62 individuals had the same wealth as 3.5 billion people, or the bottom half of humanity. The wealth of those 62 people has risen 44 percent, or more than half a trillion dollars, over the past five years, while the wealth of the bottom half has fallen by over a trillion.

"Far from trickling down, income and wealth are instead being sucked upwards at an alarming rate," the report says.

It points to a "global spider's web" of tax havens that ensures wealth stays out of reach of ordinary citizens and governments, citing a recent estimate that $7.6 trillion of individual wealth - more than the combined economies of Germany and the UK - is currently held offshore.

"It's a major wake-up call," said Jyrki Raina, general secretary of IndustriALL Global Union, which represents 50 million workers in 140 countries in the mining, energy and manufacturing sectors. "Inequality is one of the biggest threats to economic well-being and it needs to be addressed."

U.S. President Barack Obama touched on the issue in his recent State of the Union address, noting that technological change was reshaping the planet.

"It's change that can broaden opportunity, or widen inequality. And whether we like it or not, the pace of this change will only accelerate," he said.

"Companies in a global economy can locate anywhere, and face tougher competition...As a result, workers have less leverage for a raise. Companies have less loyalty to their communities. And more and more wealth and income is concentrated at the very top."

(Editing by Anna Willard)
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-As-Men-Linked-To-Xi-Book-Vanish-in-Hong-Kong

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http://time.com/4184324/gui-minhai-dissident-search/

World China

China’s Search For Dissdents Has Now Expanded to Foreign Countries

Hannah Beech / Pattaya, Thailand @hkbeech
January 18, 2016, 12:16 PM ET

Gui Minhai, a publisher of scurrilous reports about the Chinese leadership, appears to have been abducted from the Thai resort of Pattaya before turning up weeks later on Chinese TV


More

Missing Hong Kong Publisher Appears on Chinese State Television in Bizarre Twist

Taiwan Elects Its First Female President

Governor of China’s Sichuan Province Suspected of Corruption, Official Says


Just over a year ago, Gui Minhai, a publisher specializing in juicy political tales banned in mainland China, jotted down a note on his iPad. “Writing progress,” read the document, detailing the prolific Chinese-born publisher’s upcoming projects. A future book was titled, with characteristic relish, ‘The Pimps of the Chinese Communist Party’, another ‘The Inside Story of the Chinese First Lady’. But one title was notably missing from Gui’s to-do list, even though several of his confidantes say it was the naturalized Swedish citizen’s biggest project of the year, one of that may have gotten him in serious trouble with the Chinese government: a tell-all—who knows how truthful?—of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s rumored female liaisons.

On Jan. 17, Gui showed up on Chinese TV in a video that would have strained belief as a plot point in his best-selling but, at times, questionably sourced books detailing scandal—political and sexual—among China’s ruling elite. In the video, Gui, a Manchurian with broad shoulders and thick hair, slumps forward, face crumpling, as he says he returned to China to repent for a fatal drunk-driving accident in his eastern Chinese hometown of Ningbo 12 years ago. Distancing himself from his Swedish citizenship, which the one time poet picked up during exile after the 1989 Tiananmen massacre, Gui says, in a monotone: “Although I have Swedish citizenship, I truly feel that I am still Chinese and my roots are in China. So I wish the Swedish government will respect my personal choice, respects my rights and privacy and let me solve my own problems.” Gui’s current Swedish passport, which was issued by the Swedish consulate in Hong Kong, expires next year.

The tearful confession was Gui’s first appearance since the 51-year-old vanished on Oct. 17 from outside the gates of his seaside condominium in the Thai beach town of Pattaya. Four other men associated with Gui’s Mighty Current Media have also disappeared, most recently Lee Bo, Gui’s business partner. Lee, who holds a British passport, was last seen on Dec. 30 in Hong Kong, where he and his wife ran a bookshop hawking hundreds of salacious political accounts to curious visiting mainlanders. There is no official record of Lee exiting the former British colony, which is governed by different laws from the rest of China. Yet days after Lee’s disappearance, a fax in his handwriting was sent out, explaining that he had used his “own methods” to travel to the mainland and was busy assisting in an unnamed investigation. The faxed letter went on to say: “I am very well. Everything is fine.” The other three all disappeared while traveling in Southern China on separate occasions and have not been seen in public since.

Since taking office in late November, President Xi has cracked down on dissent, locking up hundreds of free-thinkers and cementing his reputation as China’s most powerful leader in decades. Everyone from the nation’s top female lawyer to a moderate Muslim academic has been swept up. Most have been jailed on what human-rights experts consider suspect charges, either oversized crimes like subversion of state power or seemingly unconnected infractions such as disturbing traffic. Xi’s campaign feels both brutal and brittle—a powerful ruling party spooked by a collection of unarmed poets, feminists and lawyers, few of whom are calling for an end to communist rule. Xi may have come to power vowing to strengthen China’s commitment to rule of law but on Monday a group of high-profile foreign lawyers and heads of bar associations directly criticized the Chinese President for intimidating or detaining hundreds of Chinese lawyers, along with their staff and families.

China’s detentions have often been accompanied by videos in which journalists, legal scholars and bloggers, among others, are paraded on Chinese state TV admitting to a variety of alleged crimes. The coerced feel of the confessions gives an impression less of due process and more of state control. In one example, Gui, whose shirt mysteriously changes color partway through his televised confession, says: “I don’t want any individual and any organizations interfering with my return or hyping it maliciously.” It is a peculiar sentiment—and a familiar one. Lee’s fax used a similar formulation.

Previously dissidents felt safe overseas but Beijing’s dragnet has expanded abroad to include both Chinese and Chinese-born foreign citizens. Panic is setting in among communities that once considered foreign soil safe ground. “I thought once I escaped China I would be safe,” says one Chinese dissident who was smuggled to Thailand last year and is now being tailed by unknown Mandarin-speaking men as she waits in Bangkok for a UNHCR hearing to determine whether she will be classified as a political refugee. “If I disappear tomorrow, you will have no doubt about who took me. The [Chinese] Communist Party is too powerful.”

If Gui was planning to return to China to face up to his troubled conscience, he gave no public signal of an impending life change At his spacious Pattaya condominium, which he bought around a year ago, a new cabinet delivered days after his disappearance stands in the middle of the room, swaddled in plastic. On a desk, which afforded Gui an expansive view of the Gulf of Thailand, two days-of-the-week pillboxes sit, still filled with medicine for the days following Oct. 17. On a nearby table, a bag filled with Gui’s swimming gear rests, awaiting his usual daily swim.

Gui was out grocery shopping on Oct. 17 when a man speaking broken Thai and no English showed up at the gate of the Silver Beach condominium. (His image was recorded on the building’s CCTV.) When Gui eventually returned, he asked the compound’s guard to take his groceries up to his apartment and leave them in the hallway. The two men climbed into Gui’s white hatchback. That was the last sighting of the publisher of around half of the pulp political thrillers available in Hong Kong. Indeed, Mighty Media’s books are so popular that Asian airports stock them in prime display spaces, although spot checks at Chinese customs can get the books’ new owners in trouble.

For a couple weeks, Gui kept in contact with condo employee Pisamai Phumulna by phone, much as he did when he was in Hong Kong and needed her help in watering plants or ensuring bills were paid. Later on Oct. 17, he called, asking her to put the groceries—smoked salmon, bread and eggs, among other food—in the fridge. Then, in early November he rang again, saying that friends would be coming by to pick up a few things from his home and to please let them in. Four men showed up, one wearing a straw hat and sunglasses. Two spoke native Thai, while the other two only spoke Mandarin. The four registered in the building’s log with a common Chinese name, He Wei, written in Chinese. Their images were also recorded on the building’s CCTV.

The four men stayed in Gui’s apartment for less than half an hour and took, at the very least, a laptop that had been on his desk. The printer’s cartridge also appears missing. Apart from shelves lined with copies of Mighty Current’s books, such as ‘The Mystery of Xi’s Family Fortune’ and ‘The Dark History of the Red Emperor’, the apartment now contains not a single document connected to his work. It’s not clear if his Pattaya holiday home ever housed such papers although Gui often edited and commissioned new books while in Thailand, according to two of his writers who live in the U.S. They both believe he was soon to publish a book about Xi’s past female companions. (Xi is married to his second wife, Peng Liyuan, a former singer in the People’s Liberation Army who was for many years far more famous than her husband.)

As he left, one of the men joked to Pisamai that Gui had lots of girlfriends and had probably neglected to return to his condo because he had been diverted by his latest love affair. Pisamai had never seen him bring any woman home, other than his second wife, who lives in Germany, and his daughter, who lives in England. But this was Pattaya, infamous for its sex trade and easy morals. She giggled.

Shortly afterward, some of Gui’s friends became worried, particularly because he had failed to communicate with printers about an upcoming book. One friend contacted Pisamai. When Gui called her next in mid-November, again from an unknown foreign number, she told him his family was concerned. He hung up and never called again. Pisamai called the number of one of the four men who had visited Gui’s condo. A taxi driver picked up, saying the men had left the phone in his car on their way to a Cambodian border town.

Despite Pisamai visiting a local police station, not to mention the public outcry following his business partner Lee’s disappearance from Hong Kong early this year, no Thai or Swedish authorities have visited his Pattaya apartment. Last week, the Swedish government summoned the Chinese and Thai ambassadors to answer questions about Gui’s disappearance from Thailand.

Meanwhile, in Gui’s Pattaya apartment, a poem by William Butler Yeats, “When You Are Old”, is filed away, among quotidian notes-to-self to buy medicine and tweak wifi routers. Gui studied history at China’s prestigious Peking University, and fellow poet Bei Ling, who was once jailed in China before going into exile overseas, remembers a passionate young man who thrilled at the power of words. In the mid 1980s, at a time when translating Kafka could be a crime, Gui and other Beijing poets snuck into foreign salons and read whatever samizdat Western literature they could find. As censorship loosened by the late 1980s, Gui published a book called ‘A Guide to Twentieth Century Western Cultural History’ and studied comparative literature. Then the Tiananmen massacre forestalled further political reform in China for years. Somewhere along the way, Gui, living in Sweden and then Germany, discovered the profitable business of selling gossipy political tell-alls. (The more esoteric literary efforts of his publishing house failed to sell well.) He built up a stable of Chinese writers, some former poets and writers who now live abroad. Over the years, Gui’s publishing company churned out hundreds of tales of sex and scandal. “Maybe some of the information you can’t check,” acknowledges one writer. “It’s more important that it’s a good story.” Gui made enough money to buy his Pattaya pad for $430,000.

Gui’s writers are now jittery. If the Mighty Media five have all ended up detained in China, what safety is guaranteed for the publishing house’s authors? Chinese dissidents, particularly those in Thailand, are also nervous, given the recent deportation of the two Chinese activists, one of whom dabbled in caricatures of President Xi. (They were both arrested upon being extradited to China.) Indeed, some of Gui’s friends suspect he may have been repatriated on the same chartered plane that took the dissident pair back home. “The Chinese government is so scared that it has to steal people from abroad,” says Yi Feng, a Chinese dissident and former teacher who arrived in Bangkok on a tourist visa last September, along with his young son. (They have since overstayed their visa and are trying to apply for refugee status through the UNHCR, a years-long process.) “Maybe the Chinese government has power,” he says, “but they don’t have legitimacy.”

with reporting by Yang Siqi/Beijing
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm......

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/art..._for_stability_in_the_middle_east_108913.html

January 18, 2016

A New 5-Point Plan for Stability in the Middle East

By Will Staton

BACKGROUND

As civilization’s cradle, the Middle East naturally has a turbulent history. For thousands of years, no shortage of peoples with different cultural, religious, linguistic, and ethnic identities have lived, fought, and blended with and alongside one another. Though religion, literature, art, and learning have emanated from the region, it has rarely been spared violence.

While the nature of that violence has evolved, it still plagues the Middle East today. The region’s brief colonial history from the collapse of the Ottoman Empire through the end of the 1940s paved the way for its current violent divisions. Since the end of World War II, the turmoil in the Middle East has primarily affected America, but Western Europe has been drawn into the violence as well, and already France has suffered heavily.

I have written previously about why inaction will not lead to better outcomes for the West or the inhabitants of the region. Instability and violence in the Middle East have historically affected Africa, Europe, and Asia. Neither the people of the region nor those of us outside it will benefit from inertia. A lethargic response to the Arab Spring and the escalation of hostilities in Syria have allowed the rise of Daesh and facilitated the exportation of violence.

The West needs a new plan for curbing violence and increasing stability and prosperity in the Middle East. We have decades of experience from which we can learn in order to map out more effective future strategies. This article details a new 5-point plan for promoting peace, prosperity, and stability in the Middle East.

I should stress two important aspects of this proposal. First, many Americans and Westerners are understandably wary of further involvement in the Middle East after more than a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan. People will rightly ask what makes the interventions I propose here any different from past, failed attempts.

I view the current impetus for action in the Middle East through the lens of the Arab Spring, the ripple of authentic and largely peaceful pro-democracy movements that began years ago, and have since devolved into the quagmire of violence that exists today. We were told that in Iraq we would be hailed as liberators. I do not make such a claim about our future involvement, but I also see a profound difference in the invasion of Iraq and the need to involve ourselves in the humanitarian crisis in Syria. If, in Iraq, we imagined a stable democracy, we first had to tear down an autocratic structure in order to create it. My plan, on the contrary, is predicated on the fact that the Arab Spring has unleashed forces that are challenging unsustainable autocracy--so long the supposed linchpin of stability in the Middle East! We are not creating instability; unfortunately, that has already occurred. We must now offer a helping-hand in the rebuilding process; the void of leadership will be filled with or without our involvement, and if we act as legitimate partners we will build friendships and shape the outcome in line with our values.

Secondly, the five points I lay out below are part of a comprehensive package, which must be implemented as such to be effective. This is not a pick-and-choose buffet of suggestions for action. In fact, some of what I suggest is not new at all. For example, re-committing to a two-state solution in Israel and Palestine has been on the international community’s to-do list since 1948. As a standalone issue it has bedeviled Western leaders for decades, and it has stagnated into a process that stretches out not in search of an outcome, but for fear of an alternate reality. In some instances previous poor results should give us pause and make us question the efficacy of the ideas themselves, but not all past failures reflect poor ideas. There are other reasons past actions have gone awry. That we remain frustrated in the goal of a peaceful, two-state solution for Israel and Palestine is not a reason to give up on that vision. While we must learn from past mistakes, a thorough analysis may reveal whether the ideas themselves were bad, or the implementation, circumstance, or other factors caused their failure.

When I examine our past actions and interventions in the Middle East, what I primarily see are naked self-interest and a failure to address problems in a long-term, sustainable manner using the extant military, diplomatic, and economic tools at our disposal. What therefore follows is my plan for how those tools must be used together to help build a more peaceful and prosperous Middle East.

THE PLAN

1) The ideological schism driving the violence is an intra-faith split between Sunni and Shi’a Islam, typically represented by Saudi Arabia and Iran, respectively. This rift must heal at least enough to prevent bloodshed if stability is to be realized. While it is not the place of Western governments to wander into theological debates, we do have the ability to create conversation and cooperation around geopolitical issues. Daesh presents a threat to regional stability that is unacceptable to both Iran and Saudi Arabia, thus creating a condition for possible collaboration. The civil war in Yemen, into which Saudi Arabia has been drawn, is another conflict in which the competing interests of the two nations converge again, but in a counterproductive and competitive manner. The West should pressure both governments to engage diplomatically and collaboratively in the former and proactively mitigate military competition in the latter.

As the West and its allies in the Middle East, including Israel, look for enforcement of the Iranian nuclear accord, any room for dialogue, transparency, and cooperation will be meaningful and enhance our ability to hold Iran accountable. To achieve this, the West must work with regional allies and international bodies to foster dialogue and cooperation among competing stakeholders now facing common threats. The U.S. should immediately work to convene a regional security forum with both Iran and Saudi Arabia to discuss the threat of Daesh, the war in Yemen, and how to contain the spread of weapons of mass destruction, particularly to areas controlled by Daesh. These are concerns shared by both nations, and provide an opportunity for constructive dialogue. Because of the nature of the issues, these can involve diplomatic and low level military officials.

2) The West must reevaluate its relationships with traditional allies. While seeking the ouster of Assad in Syria — a worthy goal — the West simultaneously gives weapons and military aid to other secular Arab strongmen under the false premise that they were the best bulwark against Islamic terrorism. In Egypt and Saudi Arabia, the militaries fly American jets and use American missiles, yet these two nations produced the majority of the 9/11 bombers. The armies of the Gulf monarchies, Jordan, Israel, Pakistan, and of course, Afghanistan and Iraq, also tote American military hardware into battle and are often trained by American or other Western forces. The U.S. must reconsider this mode of “aid.” Though nation-building efforts are often considered—and have lately often been—failures, there is also evidence they work. After World War II the Marshall Plan helped European countries—including West Germany—rebuild themselves and served as a bulwark against more bloody conflict in Europe. Similar investments in Asia spurred growth there as well, and today Germany, Japan, and Korea are among the largest economies and wealthiest nations in the world. It is true that Germany and Japan had pre-existing infrastructure and institutions that made their transformations rebuilding processes as opposed to the nation-building endeavors we see today. This is not true of South Korea, however, which was a poor, rural nation but is now a tech-producing, innovating leader in the global economy.

America spends $14 billion on foreign military aid each year, and it seems all there is to show for it is dead Americans. The military aid should be rerouted into local infrastructure and micro-finance spending, with a certain portion earmarked for weapons only if the nation meets certain human-rights benchmarks. We ought to be building mores schools, hospitals, and roads while giving fewer tanks and helicopters. The appropriate agencies and governing bodies, such as the Departments of State and Defense need to re-prioritize how they spend foreign aid to emphasize that America is interested in creating stability through shared opportunity, not fearful obedience.

3) By itself, a Kurdish state could be a stabilizing factor in the Levant, but in conjunction with other steps laid out here such a state would be a linchpin of stability by serving as a true democratic and pluralistic society alongside Turkey and Israel. Just the symbolism of an authentic Kurdish and largely-Muslim democracy abutting a democratic Jewish state is a powerful statement, and would help foster the resolution of the decades-old conflict between Israel and Palestine. The Kurds already enjoy semi-autonomy in a region that runs from the southeastern border of Turkey through northern Syria and Iraq into Iran. Recognized as a distinct ethnic group with a history and culture as old as that of the Jews and Persians, the Kurds not only have a strong historical claim to statehood, but they have proven worthy of the task.

To date, the Kurds have demonstrated they are the only reliable ground force in the war against Daesh. Furthermore, the Kurds have shown a willingness and ability to build an inclusive, tolerant society. Women serve in the Kurdish military — the Peshmerga, the Kurds govern themselves democratically, if imperfectly, and last year the Kurds sent troops to rescue a religious minority, showing no signs of the religious extremism that drives many other regional players. The West should work with the governments of Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Israel to create a Turkish state within the following geographic boundaries: Kurdistan will abut Turkey, Iraq, and Syria as well as potentially Israel, Jordan, or Lebanon. The state will be located within boundaries of land that is currently held by Daesh in both Iraq and Syria. Territory seized from Daesh, but not from Assad or other rebel groups, will belong to the Kurds.

The U.S. must aid the Kurds in drafting and ratifying a constitution that protects human rights. Furthermore, we must enable and incentivize Kurdish non-aggression treaties with Turkey, Iraq, Israel, and Iran in exchange for international recognition and sufficient aid to achieve statehood. Many of those nations have longstanding concerns and opposition to Kurdish nationalism and aspirations of statehood, but rather than an obstacle, this should be seen as an opportunity. Turkey, a nation at violent odds with its Kurdish population, would have a real opportunity to engage in meaningful ways to put an end to the violence that fuels their opposition. If violence and instability within Turkey and other nations that have traditionally opposed Kurdish dreams are fueled by the inability of the Kurds to fulfill those dreams, the natural solution to ending violence is to help the Kurds realize their goal via statehood. The dissolution of the modern nation-state of Syria and the rise of Daesh as a pseudo-governing body controlling territory with that nation’s borders present a unique and heretofore non-existent opportunity to address the question of a Kurdish state. Non-aggression agreements as pre-conditions for statehood address the violent reality that failure to solve this problem has fueled for centuries.

Working to create Kurdistan would facilitate even more room for conversation between Iran and other regional stakeholders. It would give Turkey, Iran, and their respective Kurdish populations a chance to resolve longstanding disputes by allowing Kurds to emigrate freely to a new homeland in exchange for repatriations from their former countries. Finally, it would provide stability on Israel’s northern border and act as a proof point for what a secular, but majority-Muslim country can achieve.

4) For a century, the West has viewed the Middle East as the world’s source for oil, but historically and currently there are many other possible economic drivers. Many parts of the region are ideal for different types of agriculture. The rich historical traditions of the Middle East are ideal for tourism if stability and safety were only assured, and already present opportunities for exporting cultural goods. Most importantly, green and sustainable energy can replace oil as a source of revenue and prosperity.

Diversifying economically will decouple wealth from one precious resource and alleviate some of the geographic and economic pressure for conflict. Spread more equitably, wealth will create a measure of prosperity that further undermines the ideology of violent extremism. With increased stability, much of the budget allocated to arming foreign militaries can be diverted into micro-finance and other economic empowerment projects that may further mitigate grievances of inequality and provide meaningful, new economic opportunities.

Unlike oil, the most precious natural resource in the Middle East—human potential—is largely wasted. Women and minority groups are repressed, and without full civil rights they are unable to offer their maximum contribution to economic and social health. Both Queen Rania of Jordan and Princess Reema of Saudi Arabia are champions of women’s health and economic issues. These are the types of leaders who need support and investment to improve their nations. Working with local governments and NGOs, the West should encourage micro-economic development and local prosperity, which will also support the empowerment of women.


5) Finally, a complete reset and re-commitment to the two-state peace process between Israel and Palestine is extraordinarily important. The formation of the current Middle East was catalyzed by the creation of Israel, and a firm and final resolution of the seven-decade conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians is necessary to eliminate the impetus for future conflict.

It does not serve the West’s purposes to arbitrate a conflict that neither side seems interested in resolving. The U.S. must be firm with our expectations for both parties. To Israel, no more military aid without a complete halt on settlement construction, and a plan for scaling back settlements in anticipation of two states. However, the U.S. should also provide more direct military aid to Tel Aviv if it is attacked by Palestinian terrorists. This promise shows the Palestinians that Americans are serious about their statehood, but will not tolerate violence against Israel. Undoubtedly there will be extremists on both sides who will use violence to undermine this project. Sadly, some do not want peace, but their existence does not preclude it. Good behavior and relations will not replace bad habits overnight, but if we set high expectations and hold both sides accountable transparently and as equal partners, we will empower those peaceful and diplomatic factions on both sides who will be able to make peace a reality.

By withholding military aid to Israel so they will abandon settlements, but playing a more active role in Israel’s domestic defense against terrorism if needed, the United States can influence both sides to cooperate and set firm boundaries for a future Palestinian state. The ongoing cycle of violence and encroachment will only continue to erode further if forceful action is not taken. It is time the West made its non-negotiables clear to both sides.

CONCLUSION

To many, these ideas may seem idealistic, and a complicated history with the region may be a deterrent for taking action, but no matter how much or little blame the West deserves in creating the current reality in the Middle East, inaction will not absolve western nations of having to grapple with what happens there. The Middle East needs and deserves a better and more prosperous future. By helping build a better Middle East, America and the West will also be helping themselves by investing in friendship instead of enmity, broad prosperity rather than concentrated oil wealth, and universal civil rights over repressive, hierarchical regimes.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Will Staton is an independent education consultant and free-lance writer. Formerly a history teacher, as well as a religious studies and history major, Will remains passionate about international affairs. When he’s not traveling the country to deliver career readiness professional development, Will maintains his website, serves on the board of a charter schools, and does community organizing work in New York. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent the official policy or position of the Department of Defense of the U.S. Government.


This article originally appeared at Strategy Bridge.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
01.17 Middle East Markets Plunge as Iran Plans Massive Oil Exports
Started by JohnGaltfla‎, Yesterday 06:41 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...kets-Plunge-as-Iran-Plans-Massive-Oil-Exports

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/iran-nuclear-idUSKCN0UV0AL

Mon Jan 18, 2016 5:20pm EST
Related: Davos

Iran boosts oil output, foreign firms keen to seal deals

DUBAI | By Sam Wilkin and Bozorgmehr Sharafedin


Iran ordered a sharp increase in oil output on Monday to take immediate advantage of the lifting of international sanctions, and some foreign firms raced to snap up deals as Tehran emerges from years of international isolation.

Others were more wary, mindful of the risk of falling foul of an array of U.S. penalties that remain in place despite the lifting of nuclear-related sanctions on Saturday by the United States, European Union and United Nations.

Those measures were scrapped as part of a landmark deal between Iran and world powers, rewarding the Islamic Republic for scaling back its atomic energy programme in ways that U.S. President Barack Obama said would prevent it from getting its hands on a nuclear bomb.

"We will be committed to the nuclear deal as far as the other side is," Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said on Monday, adding that his country was "morally and religiously committed not to seek weapons of mass destruction".

The agreement restores Iran's access to tens of billions of dollars in frozen assets, reopens the country to foreign investment and allows it to resume selling oil on world markets, albeit at a time when they are drowning in excess supply.

Deputy Oil Minister Rokneddin Javadi said Iran could increase output by 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) "and the order to increase production was issued today."

The sanctions revoked at the weekend had cut Iran's oil exports by about 2 million bpd since their pre-sanctions 2011 peak, to little more than 1 million bpd.

Oil prices touched their lowest since 2003 on Monday as an already oversupplied market braced for additional Iranian exports.

The lifting of sanctions opens up business opportunities across a host of sectors, from planes to telecoms.

"Iran is a huge market and in our focus," Kaan Terzioglu, head of Turkey's biggest mobile operator, Turkcell, said in an interview with Reuters.

He said Iran could be a target market as the company looks for regional acquisitions: "We are closely watching the Iranian market and in touch with all of its fixed line and mobile operators."


NEW MIDDLE CLASS

Dennis Nally, global chairman of PricewaterhouseCoopers, told Reuters before the start of this week's World Economic Forum in Davos that the audit and consultancy firm was seeing strong client interest in opportunities in Iran.

"Without question the energy, energy-related and infrastructure industries stand to benefit, but also sectors like retail, with the potential creation of a new middle class," he told Reuters.


Related Coverage
› U.S. imposes ballistic missile sanctions on Iran after prisoner release
› U.S. official eyes more Iran engagement, defends prisoner swap
› "Glitch" delayed departure of American prisoners from Iran

A clutch of German firms were among those to signal their appetite to ramp up business ties with Tehran, and the Berlin government said it planned to revive state export guarantees for companies that wanted to do so.

Daimler said its trucks division had signed letters of intent with joint venture partners in Iran in order to re-enter the market, where it was selling up to 10,000 vehicles a year until 2010. Its rival Audi said it had representatives in Iran right now to discuss the "growing potential for luxury cars."

Herrenknecht, a family-run German tunnelling company that helped to build the Tehran metro in the 1990s, said it expected Iran to put up new projects for tender, and it was ready to pounce on the opportunity.

Commerzbank, Germany's number two lender, also said it was considering the possibility of returning to Iran.

That announcement was especially striking, less than a year after Commerzbank agreed to pay $1.45 billion to U.S. authorities for sanctions violations partly linked to Iran. At the time, it joined a long line of foreign banks similarly penalised - France's BNP Paribas alone paid $8.9 billion.

For that reason, most international banks are expected to tread very carefully to avoid violating U.S. trade sanctions that remain in place.

DEALS AND DIPLOMACY

In further signs of likely deals in the pipeline, Switzerland's Zurich Insurance said it would look into insurance cover for corporate customers doing business with Iran, and the head of British Airways' parent company IAG said it hoped to start flying to Tehran "in the very near future".

Russia, another party to last year's nuclear deal, said it was looking to sell military helicopters to Iran and export more grain. India's national aluminium company NALCO said it would soon send a team to Iran to explore setting up a smelter complex worth about $2 billion, taking advantage of cheap and plentiful gas there.

Spain's foreign minister said Madrid and Tehran were discussing the building of an Iranian-owned oil refinery on the southern tip of Spain.

In a burst of diplomatic activity that will provide opportunities for discussing investment deals, Chinese President Xi Jinping will visit both Iran and its regional arch-rival Saudi Arabia this week.

In Rome, a diplomatic source said the Iranian president would travel to Italy and France next week on his first trip to Europe since the lifting of sanctions.

The nuclear deal removed restrictions that stifled Iran's economy for most of this decade - on banking, money transfers, insurance, trade, transport and technology procurement.

This will allow Iran to satisfy pent-up demand for goods and services that it had trouble obtaining at affordable prices under sanctions, from aircraft to factory machinery, medicines and some consumer goods such as cosmetics and branded clothing.

In an indication of the scale of potential deals, the transport minister said at the weekend that Iran intended to buy 114 civil aircraft from Airbus - a deal that could be worth more than $10 billion at catalogue prices. Airbus said on Saturday it had not yet held commercial talks with Iran.


Related Coverage
› UN's Ban commends US-Iran prisoner swap, lifting of sanctions
› Iran's Rouhani: nuclear deal can be used as model to resolve regional issues
› Released Americans have not left Iran yet - senior Iranian official
› Iranians held in U.S. for sanctions violations released - lawyers


OPPORTUNITIES AND RISKS

Entering the Iranian market is not without risks: indebted local banks, a primitive legal system, corruption and an inflexible labour market. Many foreign companies will remain wary that sanctions could "snap back" if Tehran is later found in breach of the nuclear agreement.

"A lot of work has been done to get to where we are now. A similar and sustained effort will be required in the future," U.N. nuclear watchdog chief Yukiya Amano said on a visit to Tehran. "We must maintain the momentum."

U.S. companies look set to lag rivals from other countries in restoring trade with Iran, because Washington will retain broad sanctions that predate the nuclear crisis and were imposed over other issues such as terrorism and human rights abuses.

But U.S. business with Iran may still increase, after the U.S. Treasury said on Saturday that it would permit foreign subsidiaries of American companies to trade with Iran - a channel that big multinationals may be able to exploit.

"In most respects the sanctions are not lifted at all" for U.S. businesses, said Adam M. Smith, a former senior adviser at the U.S. Treasury Department who is now an attorney at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP in Washington. "There are still significant limitations on what a company can do in Iran.”

He spent Monday fielding calls from corporate clients who were curious about whether they now had larger leeway in Iran. But even without the sanctions, Iran is still a challenging place for businesses, Smith said, because of issues such as corruption and money laundering. "It’s not a very transparent place," he said.

A big foreign investment presence may take longer to rebuild than trade ties. Some firms may want to wait until they see the stance of the next U.S. president towards Iran; many will worry about "reputational risk," or exposure to legal action from shareholders or lobby groups, if they invest there.

Further complicating the picture, the United States imposed new sanctions on Sunday on 11 companies and individuals for supplying Iran's ballistic missile programme, even as it removed the old nuclear-related measures and carried out an exchange of prisoners with Tehran.

The new sanctions are much smaller in scope, but Tehran denounced them on Monday. Foreign ministry spokesman Hossein Jaberi Ansari said they had "no legal or moral legitimacy," because U.S. weaponry sold to regional allies was used to commit "war crimes against Palestinian, Lebanese and most recently Yemeni citizens".

The weekend lifting of international sanctions was accompanied by a U.S.-Iranian prisoner swap. Three of the five Americans released from detention by Iran were flown on Sunday for medical checks at a U.S. military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany.

"I want people to know that physically I'm feeling good," the Washington Post quoted one of them, journalist Jason Rezaian, as saying. "I know people are eager to hear from me but I want to process this for some time."


(Additional reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin in Dubai, Edward Taylor, Irene Preisinger and Georgina Prodhan in Frankfurt, Michael Nienaber and Gernot Heller in Berlin, Conor Humphries in Dublin, Ben Hirschler in Davos, Angus Berwick in Madrid, Jatindra Dash and Krishna N. Das in New Delhi, David Randall in New York; Writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Peter Millership, Pravin Char and Marguerita Choy)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-afghanistan-army-desertions-idUSKCN0UW1K3

World | Mon Jan 18, 2016 2:55pm EST
Related: World, Afghanistan

Desertions deplete Afghan forces, adding to security worries

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan/KABUL | By Sayed Sarwar Amani and Andrew MacAskill

Afghan Lieutenant Amanullah said he was ready to fight to the death to stop the Taliban making gains across the south of the country, where insurgents have already overrun a series of districts in their traditional heartland.

In November, 15 months after joining up, he deserted, one of thousands of tired and frustrated soldiers who have shed their uniforms, seriously blunting the Afghan army's power to repel a growing militant threat.

For Amanullah, everything changed late last year when, fighting on an empty stomach and without being paid for months, militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns attacked his base from all directions in a three-day battle.

The final straw came when requests for reinforcements at the remote outpost went unanswered and colleagues bled to death around him because of a lack of medical care. When the ambush ended, he joined three friends shedding their uniforms and walking away from the base near Kandahar, an area that has long been a Taliban stronghold. "I joined the army so that I could support my family and serve my country, but this is a suicide mission," said Amanullah, 28, who, like many Afghans, uses one name.

The attrition rate hits at the heart of the U.S. exit strategy in Afghanistan, which is to build a force capable of taking on the Taliban when it fully withdraws.

NATO ended its combat mission in Afghanistan at the end of 2014, and a smaller force remains mainly training and advising Afghans. Alarmed by Taliban gains, the United States decided last year to slow the pace of withdrawing troops still there.

In 2015, the Afghan army had to replace about a third of its roughly 170,000 soldiers because of desertions, casualties and low re-enlistment rates, according to figures released by the U.S. military last month. That means a third of the army consists of first-year recruits fresh off a three-month training course.

HEAVY CASUALTIES

The turnover rate is one of the most serious problems faced by Afghan security forces, according to Michael Kugelman, a senior associate for South and Southeast Asia at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

"These high turnover issues increase the possibility that when U.S.-led forces leave Afghanistan for good, whenever that is, they will be leaving Afghan forces unable to fend off a still-ferocious insurgency," he said.

The United States has spent around $65 billion preparing fledgling Afghan security forces, intended to number about 350,000 personnel, for when it leaves.

U.S. General John Campbell, commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, told Congress in October high attrition rates are because of poor leadership and soldiers rarely getting holiday. In some areas, soldiers "have probably been in a consistent fight for three years," he said.

When the Afghan army in 2015 took over almost all combat operations for the first time since the Taliban were ousted, casualties rose 26 percent, according a NATO military officer. About 15,800 soldiers were wounded or killed, or almost one in 10, according to the officer, who asked not to be named.Despite the challenges, the overall size of the Afghan army remains stable. Afghans willing to risk their lives for a basic monthly salary of about $300 a month equal those walking away.

RECRUITMENT DRIVE

The army has been running adverts on prime-time television that show inspiring images of resolute soldiers on training exercises, eating in well-stocked mess halls and with good kit.

But on the frontlines, army and police deserters complain of commanders having no answer for deadly ambushes, no broader strategy for prevailing in the war, corruption among their leaders and poor food and equipment.

"Barely a day passed without gunfire, ambushes, roadside bombs," said Farooq, a police officer from Helmand province, who quit his job three months ago. "We were treated as if we had no value and our job was to get killed."

Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman for the interior ministry, said the government was working to improve conditions for security forces and praised their work under difficult circumstances.

"We are very happy with the commitment of the police and soldiers," he said.

Since quitting his job, Amanullah said he has been struggling to find work in a nation with one of the lowest labor participation rates in the world. He has decided to reapply for the army.

"I am hoping to work in a safer region and under better commanders," he said. "I am just waiting for their response."


(Editing by Mike Collett-White)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-indonesia-blast-prisons-idUSKCN0UW298

World | Mon Jan 18, 2016 5:42pm EST
Related: World, Indonesia

Jail to jihad: Indonesian prisons a breeding ground for militancy

JAKARTA | By Randy Fabi and Kanupriya Kapoor

Afif was an inmate in a high-security Indonesian jail when he transformed from aspiring radical Islamist to soldier for Islamic State, ready to sacrifice his life for a group based thousands of miles away in the Middle East.

His journey ended with his death last week on a busy intersection in central Jakarta, after the gun and suicide bomb attack he launched with three other militants that brought Islamic State's brand of violence to Southeast Asia for the first time.

Afif's graduation from jailbird to jihadi shines a light on a prison system where staff shortages, overcrowding and corruption have allowed extremists to mingle and emerge as determined killers in the name of Islam.

Security officials say Afif, also known as Sunakim, was sentenced to seven years in prison for taking part in a militant training camp in the province of Aceh, where Islam is generally practiced in a stricter form than other parts of Indonesia.

Once behind bars, he refused to follow deradicalization programs, the officials added.

Akbar Hadi, spokesman for the Ministry of Law and Human Rights, declined to comment on whether Afif's activities were monitored after he was released last August.

Police said he planned the Jakarta siege with the three other attackers, one of whom was also a former convict. Four civilians died in the attack along with the militants.

A report by the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC) last year said that 26 prisons across Indonesia housed about 270 "convicted terrorists", but Islamic State supporters accounted for only a small minority of them.

National Police Chief Badrodin Haiti told Reuters that at least five jailed militants were believed to have been in communication with the plotters in the lead-up to the attack.


COURIERS, CELL PHONES

While inside Jakarta's Cipinang prison, Afif was one of some 20 convicts heavily influenced by fellow convict and firebrand Islamist cleric Aman Abdurrahman, experts said.

From behind bars, Abdurrahman heads an umbrella organization formed last year through an alliance of splinter groups that support Islamic State.

"They shared the same cells, they prayed together, they cooked together," said Taufik Andrie, Jakarta-based executive director of the Institute for International Peacebuilding.

Abdurrahman regularly spread "takfiri" doctrine, a belief among Sunni militants who justify their violence by branding others as infidels, through his sermons and lectures.

Abdurrahman was moved to a maximum security prison in Nusakambangan in Central Java in 2013, but continued to communicate with Afif and a growing group of around 200 followers using couriers and cell phones.

A lawyer for Abu Bakar Ba'asyir, another high-profile radical inmate at Nusakambangan, told Reuters it is easy to convey messages to the outside world from inside prison.

"Any kind of visitor is allowed and even if they don't exchange any cell phones, there is still an exchange of information and the visitor can interpret that," said Achmad Michdan.


SOCIAL MEDIA A KEY TOOL

Experts say radical inmates like Abdurrahman still get away with disseminating sermons by email, Facebook, and hard copies. Despite being behind bars, Abdurrahman was able to make an online pledge of allegiance to Islamic State in 2014.

"Those with more radical thinking can also hold religious sermons on a regular basis and it is very easy to convey radical ideas to others," said Farihin, a former militant who participated in a government deradicalization program during his time in a prison in Palu on the island of Sulawesi.

Indonesia's counter-terrorism chief, Saud Usman Nasution, told Reuters in November that prison officials were unable to halt this type of communication because of overcrowding.

"We are aware that there is a problem with convicts being allowed to communicate using the Internet and cell phones. There is definitely room for improvement," said Ministry of Law and Human Rights spokesman Hadi, adding that inmates cannot be forced to join deradicalization programs.

Experts say access to social media and messaging apps like Telegram is a large part of the problem.

Police believe the alleged mastermind of the Jakarta attack, an Indonesian fighting with Islamic State in Syria called Bahrun Naim, used social media to communicate his radical ideas to followers in Indonesia.

He may also have transferred thousands of dollars to accounts here, police said.

Since the attack, Indonesia has blocked websites and sent letters to social media networks Twitter, Facebook and Telegram, asking them to take down radical content.


(Additional reporting by Aubrey Belford; Editing by John Chalmers and Mike Collett-White)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/jf-17-vs-hal-tejas-new-competitors-on-the-military-block/

JF-17 vs HAL Tejas: New Competitors on the Military Block

The Pakistani and Indian fighter jets are set to compete in markets around the world.

By Kabir Taneja
January 18, 2016

1.3k Shares
66 Comments

The Bahrain International Air Show slated to be held between January 21-23 at the Sakhir Airbase in Bahrain is supposed to be the first international symposium where India will showcase its indigenously built, but much delayed, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) Tejas light combat aircraft. This move, reportedly taken at a “political level,” could place the Tejas as an export option in the future and will expose it to much wider scrutiny over its performance and offerings in the international market.

However, even though this may become an exciting time for the Tejas as a potential option for foreign militaries for their arsenal, it has an interesting competitor from its own neighborhood. The JF-17 Thunder fighter jet, jointly developed by China’s Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) and its Pakistani partner, Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC), is also now in the export variety with similar attributes to those of the Tejas. In fact, at the Bahrain air show both the Tejas and the JF-17 are quite literally going to be pitted against each other, as they share parking space on the flight line tarmac right next to each other.

The HAL Tejas is still looking for its “carpe diem” moment, as the Indian Air Force, the project’s main beneficiary, has made no qualms in admitting that it is not pleased about the delays over the Tejas Mk II variant of the model that it urgently wants to induct into its fleet. Meanwhile, manufacturer HAL has offered the IAF a Mk 1A variant instead, saying the Mk II variant is not expected to have its first flight before 2019, or enter series production before 2024. On the other hand, the Block 1 JF-17s have already seen service with the Pakistan Air Force, and are now expected to be upgraded to Block 2 standards (which includes mid-air refuel capabilities and improved avionics).

Both India and Pakistan understand the worth of a fighter jet such as the JF-17 and the Tejas in the specific markets where they are likely to compete. The light, maneuverable, low-maintenance and comparatively cheap offerings represented by both variants could find many takers; however the fact that the JF-17 is available for purchase today has already given it a head start, even if its production output remains sluggish. Other countries such as Myanmar, Nigeria and Azerbaijan are known to have shown interest in the JF-17. Both India and Pakistan themselves have operated the MiG 21 (Pakistan as the Chinese license built version Chengdu F-7), one of the world’s most successful, duplicated, and cost-effective combat jets. Like the MiG 21 during its high-sales days, both the JF-17 and HAL Tejas could build customer bases in financially challenging areas such as Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia, with many states looking for ‘low-end’ solutions to air defense needs.

The JF-17, now a predominantly a “for Pakistan by China” project (China does not operate the type in its military) made recent news after reports suggested that Sri Lanka was interested in purchasing eight JF-17s with further options. News of the deal came as Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif made a state visit to Colombo; however, since the visit Indian apprehensions regarding the deal, attempts to sell the Tejas instead, and a recent quick visit by Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar seem to have stalled any such deal, if indeed one was in the making. Sri Lankan media outlets have said that the JF-17 discussion was “not on the table” with Pakistan, while an Indian defense news website has claimed that New Delhi is considering offering upgraded MiG 27s, a type already operated by Sri Lanka, free of cost to the country’s air force.

Even if India has, or in the future does manage to scuttle Sri Lanka’s attempts to procure the JF-17, the fact that it does not have the appropriate variant ready for IAF’s very own needs, let alone international suitors, is a wake up call to the country’s domestic military complex. India’s previous homegrown success story in military aviation, the HAL Dhruv or the Advanced Light Helicopter, also ran into turbulence with its only international military buyer, the South American nation of Ecuador had purchased seven of HAL’s Dhruv ALHs. However, since its addition to the Ecuadorian forces in 2009, four out of the seven helicopters have crashed. Two of the crashes were attributed to pilot error, but the other two were blamed on mechanical faults. Ecuador in October last year unilaterally cancelled its deal with HAL.

The new initiative by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi under his government’s flagship “Make In India” program, a drive to uplift India’s manufacturing sector, has accorded great importance to military development. India is currently one of the world’s largest importers of weapons despite having many indigenous flagship military programs, specifically in the aviation sector. However, a concoction of poor project execution, stretched resources, political oversight, and lack of culpability over failed programs have stalled or completely cancelled critical projects like the Intermediate Jet Trainer (IJT), forcing the armed forces to look abroad to plug gaps.

For Make In India to be successful, concrete moves to develop India’s R&D sector and involving the private sector heavily into the fold with pro-market policies will be essential. India has huge potential not only to successfully service its own military needs, but to become an exporter of arms in the extremely competitive global military industrial complex, but only if it applies correct policies, political will, and strategic tact.

While the HAL Tejas remains a proud symbol of Indian industry, the fact that it took nearly three decades for the project to get where it is today should be made into a handbook for the government and associated agencies on how not to botch critical national security projects in the future. As of today, the JF-17 with its operational experience makes more sense for potential buyers. India may have had some influence in Sri Lanka’s interests for the JF-17, but it may not have the same leverage if other neighbors such as Myanmar or even Bangladesh consider the same option.

Kabir Taneja is a journalist and researcher specializing in foreign affairs, energy security and defence.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/chinas-aircraft-carrier-ambitions/

China’s Aircraft Carrier Ambitions

As the country builds its first indigenous carrier, what might it have in mind?

By Koh Swee Lean Collin
January 18, 2016

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51 Comments

thediplomat_2016-01-18_12-54-15-386x249.jpg

http://thediplomat.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/thediplomat_2016-01-18_12-54-15-386x249.jpg
A replica of Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning.
Image Credit: REUTERS/Stringer

The international media landed itself a gift shortly before ushering in 2016, when it transpired at a recent Chinese Defense Ministry press conference that Beijing’s first indigenous aircraft carrier, and the second one for the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) after the Liaoning entered service since September 25, 2012, is currently under construction.

A Surprise?

The announcement is hardly a surprise, given that open-source intelligence, academic and media commentaries have long reported on China’s ongoing aircraft carrier program. Even Chinese reports (see here and here) have hinted at PLAN’s aspirations to operate more than one carrier. The carrier was even dubbed “Project 001A,” and Internet photos of what appears to be the assembly of modules for an aircraft carrier-like platform at a Dalian shipyard have circulated. Chinese officials, including those from the PLA, have also noted the existence of the program.

Compared to the past, Beijing has certainly become more forthright about its defense programs, such as publishing defense white papers since 1998 and holding regular defense ministry press conferences. Of course, one could still claim that these efforts lack real transparency – the white papers, for instance, are rich in policy rhetoric but lack details. Nonetheless, the disparate nuggets of information, whether deliberately intended by Chinese authorities for release into the public domain or otherwise, allow the analyst to formulate a picture, even if an incomplete one.

While imperfect, this picture at a minimum allows a glimpse at what exactly may be in store for China’s new aircraft carrier. In a way, the information helped in desensitizing the academic and intelligence communities to the prospective materialization of China’s carrier ambitions, in the context of external suspicions towards Beijing’s massive military buildup. This was very similar to the earlier case of the unfinished ex-Soviet carrier Varyag, which Beijing purchased from Ukraine in the 1990s and subsequently refurbished and refitted prior to adding it to the PLAN as Liaoning in 2012. Since the 1990s, the international community was aware of the existence of this program thanks to the availability of fragmentary information, even though it took quite some time for Beijing to officially announce plans to put Liaoning into service. As such, the Liaoning did not really come as a surprise, even if one continues to question Beijing’s underlying strategic intent behind this move.

Based on Beijing’s pattern of information disclosure, one may anticipate that in the future, the public will at least have prior snippets of information related to the PLAN’s new, follow-on carriers before official announcements are made. But as Beijing’s recent clampdown (see here and here) on the leakage of militarily sensitive information has shown, there is every attempt to safeguard operational security. At the same time, though, Beijing may also rely on the release of disparate information, through proxy channels perhaps, to help desensitize the international community to its new future carriers. While this certainly falls short of “complete” transparency, it is better than having no information at all.

Defying Speculation

Based on this diverse, if disparate information, there has been considerable speculation about the new aircraft carrier based. Much of it has overestimated the progress China has made with its carrier program. This is similar to the errors Western intelligence made with the performance of the much-acclaimed Soviet MiG-25 Foxbat interceptor, which was found to be grossly overrated following the defection of pilot Viktor Belenko with one of the jets to Japan in 1976.

For example, earlier speculation put the propulsion as possibly nuclear. But the latest official revelations reveal that the new ship will be conventionally powered. Likewise, the new carrier was initially believed to possess steam-powered aircraft launch catapults, dispensing with a ski-jump flight deck that equips the Liaoning. A PLA Daily report in April 2012 claimed that China is developing an electromagnetic catapult analogous to the American electromagnetic aircraft launch system (EMALS) installed on board the new Gerald R. Ford class supercarriers, thereby fuelling even more optimistic speculation. But as the new official information reveals, the new carrier will still have a ski-jump, indicating that domestic efforts to develop steam or electromagnetic catapult technologies have yet to reach maturity. Zhang Junshe, a researcher with the PLA Naval Military Studies Research Institute, alluded to this, saying that catapults involve more complex technology.

Some Chinese analysts held that virtually every component and subsystem on board the new carrier would be different from those on board the Liaoning, an assertion that could potentially be misconstrued as meaning the new ship would be “revolutionary.” Instead, one can assume that the new carrier will be equipped with a mix of mature, tried-and-tested components and subsystems based on valuable insights Chinese naval technicians gleaned from the Liaoning. Some of these systems may even be improved or refined domestically to suit specific PLAN needs. But a cautionary note here: It would be prudent not to exaggerate the progress Beijing has made in its carrier quest. Perhaps a more relevant question to ask is: How will the future PLAN carrier battle group (CBG) take shape?

A Possible CBG Approach?

To be sure, while the invariable temptation is to focus on the aircraft carrier itself, it is important to note that such a valuable platform cannot operate independently on its own, but as part of an entire CBG comprising the escorting warships, organic aviation forces and afloat logistics support. The Soviet Kiev class “aircraft-carrying heavy cruiser”, though fitted with a battery of P-500 Bazalt (NATO codenamed SS-N-12 Sandbox) 550km-range cruise missiles as its offensive armament and its own shipboard air defense and anti-submarine warfare (ASW) combat systems, still had to operate in conjunction with other fleet assets.

It is clear that Beijing has adopted a concerted strategy in developing a CBG, paying close attention to how established carrier navies operate such forces. As such, while developing the carrier, efforts are long afoot to develop a slew of other capabilities that can help constitute a full-fledged CBG. Notably, the Chinese are churning out new major surface combatants, such as the Type-052C/D Luyang II/III guided missile destroyers and Type-054A Jiangkai II frigates, which are optimized for fleet air defense and ASW respectively. Even more ominously, but often overlooked, is China’s ambitious program to build more capable ocean-going fleet replenishment vessels. In the past recent years, new units of the Type-903 (plus the improved 903A variant) replenishment vessels have entered service. An even more capable successor, touted the Type-901 which is said to displace some 40-45,000 tons (just slightly smaller than the new carrier itself), is at an advanced stage of construction.

The U.S. Navy carrier strike group (CSG) is plausibly one that the Chinese aspire towards, but in the distant future. If the Liaoning’s air wing is of any indication, the PLAN’s carrier-borne aviation looks set to remain limited in the range of capabilities available compared to those of the American CSGs. First, the Liaoning air wing has limited airborne early warning (AEW) capacity in the form of Ka-31RLD Helix helicopter that mounts a folding air search radar. But compared to fixed-wing aircraft, such rotary-winged AEW platforms lack the range, endurance and sensor capacity to provide fleet air cover. The Chinese are attempting to rectify this by developing an analogue to the E-2C Hawkeye, touted the JZY-01, but little has come about this project. The Chinese are more likely to employ the larger Z-18J AEW helicopter, which is a refined version of the Z-8 that is in turn a reverse-engineered copy of the old French SA321 Super Frelon design.

Second, the new carrier is said to be equipped with the J-15 Flying Shark carrier-borne fighter jets, which currently equip the Liaoning. Plans to develop carrier-borne J-31 multi-role fighters have not materialized, thus leaving the J-15 as the only carrier-borne fighter jet. Suspiciously similar to the Soviet/Russian Su-33 Flanker-D, the J-15 is optimized primarily for fleet air defense while possessing a limited secondary ability for surface strike, mainly anti-ship (especially important since the new carrier will not have shipboard offensive weapons). The Liaoning carries a small J-15 complement (possibly slightly over 20 in all) and the new carrier, of roughly the same size, may carry more or less the same number. Moreover, the new carrier’s ski-jump configuration limits the J-15’s payload, thereby reducing its operational flexibility. In any case, the myriad of envisaged defensive and offensive roles does place an invariably heavy burden on this small fighter component. Although more J-15s being spotted on the Liaoning’s flight deck point to serial production, according to a recent Kanwa Defense Review report some critical steps of the manufacturing process were performed by human labor instead of automated precision machine tools. This not only slows down production rate but also brings airframe and systems reliability into question.

As such, the PLAN’s approach to CBG operations may be aligned more closely with that of the Soviet/Russian Navy, giving primacy to defensive carrier-borne air operations and emphasizing the role of accompanying escorts to share defensive and offensive burden. The Type-052C/D destroyers will have to bear the brunt of the fleet air defense mission by utilizing their “Chinese Aegis” system, which revolves around phased array radars to compensate for AEW shortfalls while employing the S-300FM (Chinese copy HHQ-9) long-range surface-to-air missiles to complement the limited coverage provided by the J-15s. The PLAN’s future warship designs may hint at a possible continuation of this approach; there is an existing program to build a new destroyer bigger and more capable than the Type-052C/D. Popularly known as the Type-055, the new ship is envisaged to displace almost 10,000 tons and equipped with a much bigger payload of vertically launched missiles, including surface-to-air, thus bringing its fleet air defense capabilities closer to those of the American Arleigh Burke class Aegis destroyers.

Limited Operational Utility?

Notwithstanding those aforementioned limitations of the envisaged new carrier, the PLAN’s future CBG is certainly taking shape thanks to immense political will and funding, to not just simultaneously carry out a complex undertaking of parallel platform and systems sub-programs but also to conduct intense training and trials using the existing Liaoning and handful of J-15s. The envisaged CBG will certainly expand strategic options available to the Chinese political leadership. Some Chinese thinkers called on the PLAN to acquire a viable carrier capability, arguing that prior to the induction of Liaoning, China was the sole great power without an aircraft carrier. From this perspective, an aircraft carrier – the symbol of a modern, blue-water naval power – equates to national greatness. This coincides also with Chinese President Xi Jinping’s contemporary “Chinese Dream” vision.

The question remains whether the PLAN carrier fleet will serve more as a prestige asset or one with real operational utility. No matter how advanced the future Chinese carrier will be, and how the CBG is constituted, it remains to be seen how Beijing will choose to employ this newfound naval instrument. Within immediate regional waters in the Western Pacific littorals, the CBG will be a significant addition to the already impressive plethora of weaponry available to the PLA. In a Taiwan Strait conflict scenario, the PLAN CBG may plausibly station itself to the east of Taiwan in an attempt to at least delay or disrupt any American reinforcements coming from Guam or Hawaii, while opening the “eastern front” by coordinating with land-based PLA units operating against the western Taiwanese coast. This prospect is plausibly seen as an alarming one, for the Taiwanese Ministry of National Defense war-gamed the scenario of a PLAN carrier involved in a cross-strait conflict.

PLAN carriers are also believed to be useful assets in the context of existing regional maritime disputes. Northwestward into the East China Sea (ECS), it is possible for the CBG to facilitate military operations against Japanese forces within the vicinity of the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands. However, the CBG will most likely find itself well exposed to land-based SDF defenses, particularly those arrayed around the remote southwestern Japanese islands and US Forces in Japan. The open nature of ECS waters gives greater room for maneuver by the CBG. But this is not the case for the semi-enclosed South China Sea (SCS) waters. Compared to the land-based PLA forces arrayed along the southern Chinese coast, the CBG may have limited utility and much less survivability in the face of the anti-access and area denial capabilities mustered by some of China’s Southeast Asian rivals, especially Vietnam, whose smaller forces may take advantage of local geography for concealment and surprise anti-carrier strikes. Moreover, Hainan Island and the newly constructed artificial islands in the SCS are comparably more survivable as “unsinkable aircraft carriers.” The loss of such valuable strategic asset as a carrier to cheaper sea denial weapons such as anti-ship missiles launched by mobile coastal batteries and land-based fighter jets, submarines, and naval mines will be a costly proposition to Chinese defense planners. Or at least, even if Beijing is bent on deploying the CBG in a SCS conflict, it will have to accept its limited operational utility and in the worst case, accept potential losses inflicted upon the CBG.

Even further westwards, the utility of the PLAN CBG, as a result of its inherent capabilities, declines exponentially. Far from its mainland bases, the CBG can no longer count on the kind of land-based reinforcements it might expect in the Taiwan Strait, ECS and SCS. It will have to operate autonomously for the most part, with little support available even if there is access to friendly bases and ports. PLAN carrier ambitions were often linked closely with growing Chinese strategic and economic interests in the Indian Ocean region. No doubt, the Chinese carrier will be a welcome asset to do “flag-showing” for Beijing in the region. It will prove more than capable in undertaking such low-intensity missions as non-combatant evacuation (similar to those PLAN warships earlier conducted in Yemen) and humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. But in a wartime scenario with India as the adversary for example, the CBG will be vulnerable even if it has ample maneuver space in the open waters of the Indian Ocean. Indian air and naval forces are more likely to secure the local advantage and prove capable of saturating the CBG with kinetic and electronic strikes, even if one factors in Pakistani assistance to the PLAN.

The Unstoppable Chinese

It is a foregone conclusion that China will continue to forge ahead with its carrier ambitions. The carrier currently being built in Dalian is its first indigenous attempt, but certainly not its last. More than just a symbol of national greatness, the Chinese carrier program is an indispensable part of the overall PLAN drive towards a blue-water force befitting China’s stature and Beijing’s desire to play a more active global security role, just as it has recently demonstrated in the Indian Ocean region, including Africa and the Middle East. This strategic conviction, which will likely outlast the term of Xi Jinping, will sustain this ongoing momentum if one observes the intensity at which the PLAN seeks to snap up every opportunity to master the intricacies of aircraft carrier construction and operations.

In fact, ever since its commissioning, the Liaoning has gone on multiple long-duration training cruises to stage, in particular, flight training in diverse operating environments such as the SCS and the Bohai Gulf. A cadre of pioneer carrier-borne aviators has also been established, which will sow the seeds for an institutionalized PLAN Air Force carrier-borne aviation training program. Chinese naval planners do recognize the “practice makes perfect” mantra. Future Chinese carriers are tipped to be more capable, especially when Beijing’s researchers yield fruits from ongoing high-tech, carrier-related scientific projects such as electromagnetic catapult and fixed-wing AEW platform.

For a latecomer into the carrier game, the PLAN appears determined to shorten the capacity-building process by funneling vast amounts of time, resources and manpower into the program, even if it means having to adapt lessons through trial-and-error, overcoming the steep learning curve while having to endure painful setbacks, including the loss of life. That said, there ought to be little doubt that notwithstanding the challenges it faces, China will persist in pushing its dream of operating multiple aircraft carriers towards reality. But one also should also temper expectations by not exaggerating the progress Beijing has made in this gargantuan quest.

Koh Swee Lean Collin is associate research fellow at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, a constituent unit of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, based in Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He can be reached at iscollinkoh@ntu.edu.sg.

__

Also the Russian program that I discussed with JohnGaltfla in the Iran oil production thread....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.janes.com/article/51452/russia-developing-shtorm-supercarrier

Sea Platforms

Russia developing Shtorm supercarrier

Nikolai Novichkov, Moscow - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
14 May 2015

Russia's Krylovsky State Research Center (KRSC) has developed a new multipurpose heavy aircraft carrier design called Project 23000E or Shtorm (Storm).

A scale model of the ship is going to be demonstrated for the first time at the International Maritime Defence Show 2015 in St Petersburg from 1-5 July, Valery Polyakov, the deputy director of KSC, told IHS Jane's .

"The Project 23000E multipurpose aircraft carrier is designed to conduct operations in remote and oceanic areas, engage land-based and sea-borne enemy targets, ensure the operational stability of naval forces, protect landing troops, and provide the anti-aircraft defence," Polyakov said.

The design has a displacement of 90-100,000 tons, is 330 m in length, 40 m wide, and has a draft of 11 m. It has a top speed of 30 kt, cruising speed of 20 kt, a 120-day endurance, a crew of 4-5,000, and designed to withstand sea state 6-7. Currently it has been designed with a conventional power plant, although this could be replaced by a nuclear one, according to potential customers' requirements.

The ship carries a powerful air group of 80-90 deck-based aircraft for various combat missions. The model features a split air wing comprising navalised T-50 PAKFAs and MiG-29Ks, as well as jet-powered naval early warning aircraft, and Ka-27 naval helicopters.

The carrier's flight deck is of a dual design, features an angled flight deck, and four launching positions: two via ski-jump ramps and two via electromagnetic catapults. One set of arrestor gear is included in the design. The design also features two islands; a feature only previously seen on the latest UK design.

Protection against air threats will be provided by four anti-aircraft missile system combat modules. An anti-torpedo armament suite is available.

The electronic support complex includes integrated sensors, including a multifunction phased array radar, electronic warfare system, and communications suite.

Polyakov pointed out that these specifications are subject to change, correction, and modification during the ship's design and development at every stage of work, once potential customers come up with a demand to change the weapons package and equipment.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://nationalinterest.org/feature/the-chinese-plans-nuke-america-14952

The Chinese Plans to Nuke America

A recent publication details the fallout from a strike on the United States.

Lyle J. Goldstein
January 19, 2016
Comments 111

When one reads enough Chinese naval literature, diagrams of multi-axial cruise missile saturation attacks against aircraft carrier groups may begin to seem normal. However, one particular graphic from the October 2015 issue (p. 32) of the naval journal Naval & Merchant Ships [½¢´¬ÖªÊ¶] stands out as both unusual and singularly disturbing. It purports to map the impact of a Chinese intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) strike by twenty nuclear-armed rockets against the United States.

Targets include the biggest cities on the East and West Coasts, as well as in the Midwest, as one would expect. Giant radiation plumes cover much of the country and the estimate in the caption holds that the strike ¡°would yield perhaps 50 million people killed¡± [¿ÉÄÜÔì³É5000 ÍòËÀÍö]. The map below that graphic on the same page illustrates the optimal aim point for a hit on New York City with a ¡°blast wave¡± [»ð·çÁ¿] that vaporizes all of Manhattan and well beyond.

That makes the North Korean ¡°threat¡± look fairly insignificant by comparison, doesn¡¯t it? But what¡¯s really disturbing is that the scenario described above envisions a strike by China¡¯s largely antiquated DF-5 first generation ICBM. In other words, the illustration is perhaps a decade or more out of date. As China has deployed first the road-mobile DF-31, then DF-31A and now JL-2 (a submarine-launched nuclear weapon), China¡¯s nuclear strategy has moved from ¡°assured retaliation¡± to what one may term ¡°completely assured retaliation.¡±

Indeed, the actual theme of the article featuring those graphics concerns recent reports regarding testing of the DF-41 mobile ICBM. The author of that article, who is careful to note that his views do not represent those of the publication, observes that when a Chinese Defense Ministry spokesperson was queried about the test on August 6, 2015, the spokesperson ¡°did not deny that the DF-41 exists¡± [²¢Ã»ÓзñÈÏ¡®¶«·ç¡¯41 µÄ´æÔÚ]. The author also cites U.S. intelligence reports, concluding that four tests have now been conducted, including one that demonstrates multiple-reentry vehicle (MIRV) technology. The author estimates that DF-41 will finally provide China with the capability to launch missiles from north central China and hit all targets in the U.S. (except Florida). With the goal of better understanding the rapidly evolving strategic nuclear balance between China and the U.S. and its significance, this Dragon Eye surveys some recent Mandarin-language writings on the subject of Chinese nuclear forces.

To be sure, a flurry of Chinese writings on the nuclear balance did follow after the September parade in Beijing that highlighted Chinese missile forces. Perhaps the most remarkable revelation from the parade was the unveiling of the DF-26, a new, longer-range anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM), based on the revolutionary shorter-ranged cousin, the DF-21D ASBM. In fact, the November 2015 issue of the aforementioned journal ran a series of articles on the DF-26. In those articles, the weapon is described multiple times as a ¡°nuclear conventional dual-purpose¡± [ºË³£¼æ±¸] weapon. The major thrust of the article in that issue on the impact of the DF-26 on nuclear strategy seems to be to try to debunk the argument that China¡¯s deployment of this new type of missile is ¡°destabilizing.¡± Like their American counterparts, Chinese strategists seem to be increasingly practiced (at least in a domestic context) at selling the argument that more and new types of weapons enhance deterrence and thus strategic stability.

Despite the developments related above, the balance of opinion in Beijing seems impressively moderate on the prospects for a major nuclear buildup by China. In the allegedly nationalist forum of Global Times [»·Çòʱ±¨], one commentator from the China Institute for International Studies (associated with the Foreign Ministry), for example, offered a few illuminating comments about a year ago in an expert forum entitled ¡°How Many Nuclear Warheads Are Enough for China?¡± He is evidently concerned that ¡°We have heard some new voices calling to ¡®build a nuclear force appropriate for a great power.¡¯¡± Instead, he argues that China must continue to focus on building a ¡°small, elite and effective nuclear forces¡± [¾«¸ÉÓÐЧµÄºËÁ¦Á¿]. Likewise, a former vice-director of the Chinese Navy Nuclear Security Bureau offers that China is a medium-sized nuclear power, which should learn from the experience of Britain and France and deploy no fewer than four submarines carrying nuclear weapons (SSBNs)¡ªfar fewer than operated by either Russia or the United States.

Yet one can still find in that same analysis ample concern among Chinese specialists regarding new directions in U.S. military capabilities that could threaten China¡¯s deterrent. Another concern amply evident in Chinese writings concerns tactical nuclear weaponry. Most of this reporting of late concerns a recent upgrade to the American B-61 nuclear bomb. A full-page graphic in the same issue that discusses the DF-41 missile tests offers many specifics on the B-61, including its ¡°dial-a-yield¡± [ÍþÁ¦¿Éµ÷¼¼Êõ] feature that enables the operator to choose destruction on a scale ranging from fifty to 0.3 kilotons. That same month, in the magazine Aerospace Knowledge [º½¿Õ֪ʶ], a ¡°centerfold¡± featured the SS-26 Iskander, a Russian short-range tactical nuclear weapon. Elsewhere, I have, moreover, documented Chinese discussions of tactical nuclear weapons for anti-submarine warfare, as well as the importance of nuclear-tipped submarine-launched cruise missile (SLCMs) for strategy in the late Cold War. Let¡¯s hope that these are just academic discussions in the Chinese context and do not reflect actual weapons under development.

As one can see from this discussion, there is ample reason for anxiety with many new Chinese nuclear systems now coming online, as well as substantial reason for optimism. As an author who frequently rides China¡¯s high-speed rail [¸ßÌú], I am acutely aware that astronomical sums of money spent on that system could just as easily have been spent building an enormous arsenal of nuclear weaponry. That was not done and it¡¯s certainly good that Chinese leaders have their priorities straight. American strategists need to keep this Chinese restraint in mind, especially as they weigh both new, expensive weapons systems (missile defense augmentation, the new strategic bomber, SSBN-X and also prompt global strike) and a set of measures to counter Beijing within the maritime disputes on its flanks.

Lyle J. Goldstein is Associate Professor in the China Maritime Studies Institute (CMSI) at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. The opinions expressed in this analysis are his own and do not represent the official assessments of the U.S. Navy or any other agency of the U.S. Government.

Image: Wikimedia Commons/National Nuclear Security Administration.

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Housecarl

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Saudi Arabia Is More Dangerous as a Frenemy than Iran is as an Adversary

Posted: 01/18/2016 9:13 am EST
Updated: 01/18/2016 9:59 am EST

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, by 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 suppressed 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, Washington has considered Saudi Arabia 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. Recently reported the Washington Post: "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-Nimir, 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." His ex-wife and Badawi's sister was just arrested, apparently for aiding Abul-Khair.

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 keep religious repression at 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, funding 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 against and bombing of Iraq supported the meme of a U.S. war on Islam. Finally, invading that nation 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. 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 United Arab Emirates downgraded bilateral ties. On the other side, 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 suppressing 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 the word "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 easily 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 had been killed, a large majority--including three-fourths of children, by United Nations count--from misdirected Saudi airstrikes. Other estimates were closer to 3000. 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. Most 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. Regime change in Riyadh is as necessary, indeed, perhaps even more so, than regime change in Tehran.

This article was first posted to Forbes online.
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-army-idUSKCN0UX0SF

World | Tue Jan 19, 2016 7:28am EST
Related: World, United Nations, Syria

Fighting between Syrian army, Islamic State kills scores: monitoring group

BEIRUT

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights group said scores of Syrian government forces have been killed in three days of fighting with Islamic State in the east of the country, where the jihadist group has attacked government-held areas.

Islamic State advanced against government forces on Monday near the city of Deir al-Zor after attacking the towns of Ayyash and Begayliya, the Observatory said.

The jihadist group is in control of most of Deir al-Zor province while the government is holding parts of the city, including a military airport - one of the few pockets of east Syria still held by President Bashar al-Assad.

Syrian officials could not be reached for comment on the battles or the scale of losses on its side.

The Britain-based Observatory said 120 members of the Syrian government forces and 70 Islamic State fighters had been killed in clashes since Saturday.

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The official news agency SANA reported on Monday that government forces had recaptured some residential areas taken by Islamic State in Begayliya, near the city of Deir al Zor, and killed a number of fighters.

On Tuesday, Islamic State said it had made further gains against government forces near Ayyash, and had captured two military vehicles.

Deir al-Zor province links Islamic State's de facto capital in Raqqa with territory controlled by the group in Iraq. The group made previous attempts to take over government-held areas of the city in 2015, including the airport.

The United Nations has warned that around 200,000 besieged residents in Deir al-Zor face severe food shortages.

Islamic State kidnapped at least 400 civilians during its assault on Saturday, the Observatory said.

SANA said on Sunday that at least 300 people, including women and children, had been killed during the attacks in Deir al-Zor. Reuters was unable to independently verify the reports.


(Reporting by John Davison; Editing by Alison Williams)
 

Housecarl

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Thanks HouseCarl...

You're welcome.....

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-germany-idUSKCN0UX1NG

World | Tue Jan 19, 2016 8:27am EST
Related: World, United Nations, Germany, Saudi Arabia

Germany sees Iran as key to stabilizing Middle East

BERLIN | By Joseph Nasr and Paul Carrel


Germany wants to work with Iran to help calm regional conflicts now that the Islamic Republic is emerging from international isolation and also prevent tension escalating with regional rival Saudi Arabia, Germany's foreign minister said on Tuesday.

Iran emerged from years of being considered a pariah state at the weekend after the United States, European Union and United Nations lifted sanctions linked to its nuclear program under an international deal which involved Germany.

Iran was the key to stabilizing the Middle East, referring to conflicts in Syria and Yemen, the minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, said.

"We need Iran to calm the conflicts and re-establish stability in this crisis-hit region. And I hope Iran is ready for this," Steinmeier told foreign journalists.

Steinmeier said calming the war in Syria was central to solving Europe's refugee crisis, which has prompted deep divisions within the EU on how to share the burden of accommodating the influx.

Gulf Arab neighbors, including Saudi Arabia, accuse Iran of backing rebels in Yemen and pro-government militias in Syria. A mostly Arab coalition led by Saudi Arabia launched a military offensive against Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen in March.

Tensions rose further this month when Saudi Arabia executed a prominent Shi'ite Muslim cleric, prompting an angry reaction from Shi-ite Iran.

Steinmeier said these tensions would not disappear soon but it was possible to build trust between the two regional rivals.

"Neighborly tensions, like those between Saudi Arabia and Iran, will not turn into friendship overnight," he said.

"In a first step, a lot would be achieved if both sides brought the current situation under control, not let it escalate, and talked to each other," he said.

"I am very confident that this new beginning of German-Iranian relations will be filled with substance," Steinmeier told foreign journalists in Berlin.


(Editing by Richard Balmforth)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-iran-nuclear-khamenei-idUSKCN0UX10Q

World | Tue Jan 19, 2016 9:35am EST
Related: World, United Nations, Davos

Iran's Khamenei welcomes sanctions lift, warns of U.S. 'deceit'

DUBAI

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Tuesday welcomed the lifting of international sanctions against Iran, but warned that Tehran should remain wary of its old enemy the United States.

State television reported that Khamenei wrote to President Hassan Rouhani to congratulate him on implementing the nuclear deal, which resulted in U.S., European Union and United Nations sanctions being lifted over the weekend.

In his first comments since the deal took effect, Iran's highest authority made clear that Washington should still be treated with suspicion. He made no mention of a surprise prisoner exchange that also took place this weekend.

"I reiterate the need to be vigilant about the deceit and treachery of arrogant countries, especially the United States, in this (nuclear) issue and other issues," Khamenei said.

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"Be careful that the other side fully meets its commitments. The comments made by some American politicians in last two, three days are suspicious," he added.

Republican candidates for the U.S. presidency have criticized the deal, and some Iranian officials fear Washington could walk away from the deal when President Barack Obama leaves office in early 2017.

Hopes for a broader rapprochement between the two countries were dashed on Sunday when Washington slapped new sanctions on companies accused of supporting Iran's ballistic missile program, drawing an angry response from Iranian officials.


Related Coverage
› Gulf banks exploring prospects in Iran, others may follow

(Corrects day to Tuesday, not Monday)

(Reporting by Sam Wilkin and Bozorgmehr Sharafedin; Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-afghanistan-helmand-idUSKCN0UX1GZ

World | Tue Jan 19, 2016 7:24am EST
Related: World, Afghanistan

Afghan forces fighting to hold off Taliban in three Helmand districts

LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan


The Taliban were threatening on Tuesday to capture three key strategic districts in Afghanistan's province of Helmand as fierce fighting with government forces stoked fears over the Islamist insurgents' gains in their traditional heartland.

The arid, semi-desert southern region is a major center of opium cultivation where the Taliban have stepped up pressure on security forces since the withdrawal of international troops from combat last year.

The government has sent reinforcements from Kabul to protect the districts of Gereshk, Sangin, and Marjah around the provincial capital Lashkar Gah, Helmand's police chief, Abdul Rahman Sarjang, said. Some of the fighting is hundreds of meters (yards) from the main highway linking the major southern city of Kandahar with the western city of Herat, he said. "The Taliban are putting all their efforts in," Sarjang said. "We have received some reinforcements and we will get more soon." The biggest problem for security forces is hit-and-run attacks by the Taliban, as when reinforcements move to one district they attack another, said Omar Zwak, a spokesman for the provincial governor. "They usually attack the weak places and exploit the gaps in our security," he said.In a sign of the growing violence engulfing Afghanistan, the Taliban are unleashing major attacks during the winter, a break from the past, when the cold weather typically prompted them to hold off from fighting.

The Taliban fight to take Helmand has echoes of the build-up to September's attack on the northern city of Kunduz, their biggest success in the 15-year war, with Taliban forces picking off a series of districts around the provincial capital.


(Reporting by Mohammad Stanekzai in Lashkar Gah Writing by Andrew MacAskill; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
 

Housecarl

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World | Tue Jan 19, 2016 7:28am EST
Related: World, United Nations, Iraq

About 3,500 slaves held by Islamic State in Iraq: U.N. report

GENEVA | By Stephanie Nebehay


An estimated 3,500 people, mainly women and children, are believed to be held as slaves in Iraq by Islamic State militants who impose a harsh rule marked by gruesome public executions, the United Nations said on Tuesday.

The militant group, which also controls large parts of neighboring Syria, has committed widespread abuses that may "in some instances, amount to war crimes, crimes against humanity, and possibly genocide," the report said.

The U.N. Assistance Mission for Iraq and the U.N. human rights office estimated that 3,500 people were "currently being held in slavery by ISIL".

"Those being held are predominantly women and children and come primarily from the Yezidi community, but a number are also from other ethnic and religious minority communities," said the joint report issued in Geneva.

The report detailed executions by shooting, beheading, bulldozing, burning alive and throwing people off the top of buildings.

It said the United Nations had information about the murder of child soldiers and had verified reports suggesting between 800 and 900 children in Mosul had been abducted for military and religious training.

“Even the obscene casualty figures fail to accurately reflect exactly how terribly civilians are suffering in Iraq," U.N. human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said in a statement.

"The figures capture those who were killed or maimed by overt violence, but countless others have died from the lack of access to basic food, water or medical care.”

He added that the report laid bare the "horror" that Iraqi refugees were attempting to escape when they fled to Europe and other regions.


(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
 

vestige

Deceased
From #56:

As one can see from this discussion, there is ample reason for anxiety with many new Chinese nuclear systems now coming online, as well as substantial reason for optimism. As an author who frequently rides China¡¯s high-speed rail [¸ßÌú], I am acutely aware that astronomical sums of money spent on that system could just as easily have been spent building an enormous arsenal of nuclear weaponry. That was not done and it¡¯s certainly good that Chinese leaders have their priorities straight. American strategists need to keep this Chinese restraint in mind, especially as they weigh both new, expensive weapons systems (missile defense augmentation, the new strategic bomber, SSBN-X and also prompt global strike) and a set of measures to counter Beijing within the maritime disputes on its flanks.

Optimist IMO.
 

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-

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http://www.nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/saudi-arabia-the-next-syria-14959

Is Saudi Arabia the Next Syria?[1]

As pressure on ISIS mounts in Syria, foreign fighters may flock to Saudi Arabia.

Schuyler Moore
January 19, 2016
Comments 24

The Islamic State group (ISIS) is running up against a wall. As national coalitions take a larger role in the fight against ISIS, the group will become increasingly unable to operate on as large a scale as it has in years past, and it will be pushed out of its previously held territories—its decline may take years or even decades, but it will ultimately decline. But although ISIS may deplete its resources and feel increasing pressure from the international community, its members will not simply disappear as the group loses momentum. ISIS is largely comprised [4] of foreign fighters with limited ties to the countries they fight in, and in the event of a relocation, one country in particular looks like a promising alternative—Saudi Arabia. With internal unrest, the threat of oil-driven economic instability and a history of conflict with its neighbors, the House of Saud is ripe for insurgency and would be the ideal next location for jihadists looking for a new rallying point. As ISIS loses steam and is pushed out of its old stomping grounds, Saudi Arabia is in danger of becoming the next ground zero for terrorism in the region.

Internal Risk Factors

Saudi Arabia has always faced unique demographic and socio-economic challenges. Out of a population of approximately 28 million people, immigrants make up nearly a third of entire population and over three-quarters of the labor force. Approximately 70 percent of the population is under the age of 30 [5], and within that age group, unemployment is close to 30 percent. Nationals and non-nationals alike live under Sharia law with strict Wahhabi principles dictated by the royal family and the religious leadership of the ulema, which often cause strains within the immigrant population as well as the native population. While some within the kingdom push for modernization, the ultra-conservatives consistently call for increased rigidity in religious practice, causing friction within the royal family and the Saudi population as a whole. The recent ascension of King Salman last year has only added fuel to the fire as the internal politics of the royal family add another layer of uncertainty, opening the door for terrorist groups who might take advantage of the instability.

Saudi Arabia is also suffering a major hit to its largest source of income—with 80 percent of its budget revenues coming from oil production, Saudi Arabia has been massively affected by dropping oil prices, running some of its highest deficits in history [6]. The kingdom has also traditionally depended on its constant influx of oil wealth to supply high-paying government jobs to key supporters, but with the rapidly dropping oil prices, Saudi Arabia may lose its ability to maintain popularity through employment opportunities. Saudi Arabia’s massive wealth will undoubtedly survive the instability, but the oil crisis adds to a growing list of uncertainties plaguing the country. These circumstances not only encourage terrorist organizations to view Saudi Arabia as prime real estate, but also create an environment in which the young, unemployed Saudi citizens themselves might fuel the fire of insurgency.

History of Insurgency

Ever since Saudi Arabia allowed the United States to station permanent bases on its territory in 1990, it has faced an increasingly radical conservative Wahhabi faction that has objected to any sort of friendly relations with the Western world. Ultra-conservatives have consistently held this relationship with the United States as a point of contention (Osama bin Laden was one such dissident), and that radical base has been responsible for the majority of terrorist attacks within the kingdom. Saudi Arabia has recently clamped down on insurgency within its borders by revamping its counterterrorism efforts [7], while at the same time attempting to address future threats by making it a punishable crime for Saudis to fight abroad. However, these actions may be too little too late.

Saudi Arabia was not always so strongly against foreign fighting; in fact, there was a time when its government actively encouraged [8] its youth to go abroad to support its Muslim brothers, whether in Iraq, Afghanistan or Chechnya. However, the Saudi government has seen this strategy backfire when Saudi fighters have returned and conducted attacks at home using the skills they acquired while fighting abroad. Saudi Arabia is currently one of the largest sources [9] of foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria with upwards of 2,000 Saudi nationals [10] joining ISIS, and is home to the largest number of pro-ISIS Twitter users [11] in the world. The recent crack-down on foreign fighters is likely a response to fears that these jihadists will similarly return home and bring the fight to Saudi Arabia’s doorstep, as has happened in the past, and an implicit recognition that Saudi Arabia may very well become the new hub for terrorism.

External Pressure

In addition to internal pressure due to widespread unemployment, a massive immigrant population and falling oil prices, Saudi Arabia faces multiple challenges from external sources as well. Saudi Arabia’s involvement in Yemen is steadily draining resources and political good will. The Iranian nuclear deal was perceived as a loss and a sign of weakness for Saudi Arabia and the Sunni community, which has always fought to contain its Shia neighbor. ISIS has already targeted Saudi Arabia for its ties to the United States, and in response the government has been driven to arrest almost one hundred people [12] in 2015 alone for suspected ties to ISIS. These perceived weaknesses and flaws in the Saudi government provide ideal material for an insurgency seeking a common enemy, and ISIS may seize that opportunity in the event that it is pushed out of its current strongholds.

But why Saudi Arabia specifically? The foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq come from all over the world – Libya is currently a bastion of ISIS support, as are multiple other locations throughout the Middle East and North Africa. Why would Saudi Arabia suffer the brunt of a relocation?

Saudi Arabia has the potential to be a unifying enemy, with enough ties to the West to fuel radical censure but without the stability of most Western countries to counter an insurgency movement. It provides a platform for recruitment with its youthful population and high unemployment, and at the same time allows for foreign outreach through its massive immigrant population. The Saudi government itself is stretched thin operating in Yemen and contributing military resources to Syria, all while suffering blows to its economy from dropping oil prices. The royal family is caught between a rock and a hard place, risking censure from radical conservatives if it modernizes and popular discontent if it pushes more stringent Wahhabism on its population. Critically, Saudi Arabia is home to two of the most holy sites of Islamic culture, Mecca and Medina, which makes it a natural rallying point. All of these factors make Saudi Arabia an ideal location for insurgency, and suggest that Saudi Arabia will suffer the consequences when ISIS’s power is depleted and its fighters scatter beyond Iraq and Syria.

It is unlikely that ISIS will ever be truly eliminated. More likely it will continue on in some modified form, moving locations and continuing attacks on a smaller scale and under different names. But the dispersed fighters will seek to find a rallying point to reconsolidate their power, and Saudi Arabia provides the optimal environment. While ISIS deserves our full attention at present, we must also consider the repercussions of its decline and watch for new challenges that will emerge as a consequence in other regions.

Schuyler Moore [13] is currently an analyst at an aerospace & defense consulting firm based in Washington, D.C. She previously studied international relations at Harvard University, and has published work on subjects regarding the Levant, Middle East and Central Asia in the National Interest and the Diplomat. Prior to her current position, she worked with the National Defense University in Washington, D.C. The views expressed in this article do not reflect the policy or position of any official organization. This article [14] first appeared in the Bridge.

Image [15]: Flickr/Ash Carter.

Tags
Saudi Arabia [16]ISIS [17]Islamic State [18]Syria [19]Riyadh [20]
Topics
Security [21]Terrorism [22]
Regions
Middle East [23] [3]
Source URL (retrieved on January 20, 2016): http://www.nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/saudi-arabia-the-next-syria-14959

Links:
[1] http://www.nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/saudi-arabia-the-next-syria-14959
[2] http://www.nationalinterest.org/profile/schuyler-moore
[3] http://twitter.com/share
[4] http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/is...s-foreign-fighter-total-keeps-growing-n314731
[5] http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/25/opinion/letter-from-saudi-arabia.html?_r=0
[6] http://www.businessinsider.com/afp-saudi-projects-huge-deficit-as-oil-price-drop-bites-2014-12
[7] http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/saudi-arabias-shifting-war-on-terror
[8] http://www.newstatesman.com/world-a...-arabia-exported-main-source-global-terrorism
[9] http://www.rferl.org/contentinfogra...a-iraq-is-isis-isil-infographic/26584940.html
[10] http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...y-foreign-fighters-are-fighting-for-Isil.html
[11] http://mashable.com/2015/03/06/isis-twitter-reach/#RCsLOkdzHkqj
[12] http://english.alarabiya.net/en/New.../Saudi-arrests-93-ISIS-linked-militants-.html
[13] https://www.linkedin.com/in/schuyler-constance-moore-41945736
[14] http://www.thestrategybridge.com/the-bridge/2015/12/29/why-saudi-arabia-may-be-the-next-syria
[15] https://www.flickr.com/photos/secde...RvB-nD5YEi-ihcq28-ihd7BV-ihcP5J-nLQShR-numMB2
[16] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/saudi-arabia
[17] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/isis
[18] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/islamic-state
[19] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/syria
[20] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/riyadh
[21] http://www.nationalinterest.org/topic/security
[22] http://www.nationalinterest.org/topic/security/terrorism
[23] http://www.nationalinterest.org/region/middle-east
 

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http://news.yahoo.com/balance-asia-pacific-military-power-shifting-against-u-021812067.html

Balance of Asia-Pacific military power shifting against U.S.: report

Reuters
6 hours ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The balance of military power in the Asia-Pacific is shifting against the United States, as China and North Korea challenge the credibility of U.S. security commitments and the Pentagon faces spending limits, according to a study released on Tuesday.

Researchers at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, which conducted the study for the U.S. Department of Defense, were left "concerned" that President Barack Obama's "rebalance" of U.S. interests toward Asia might not be sufficient to secure U.S. interests in the region.

Congress required the Department of Defense to commission the report under the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act.

"Chinese and North Korean actions are routinely challenging the credibility of U.S. security commitments, and at the current rate of U.S. capability development, the balance of military power in the region is shifting against the United States," the study said.

Pentagon leaders, and supporters in Congress, say efforts to keep pace with China's growing military might and other international security threats have been hampered by mandatory "sequestration" budget cuts imposed across the government in 2011 in an effort to address the massive U.S. deficit.

Congress passed a spending bill at the end of 2016 that addressed some of those concerns, but has not come up with a long-term solution.

The report makes four recommendations.

The first is that the White House should develop a single rebalance strategy, after finding confusion throughout the government. Among other things, the report said the administration should increase its outreach to Congress and coordinate better with allies.

The second recommendation is that Washington should accelerate efforts to strengthen its allies and partners, including in the area of maritime security. "Many states are struggling to mitigate regional security risks that range from major humanitarian crises to maritime disputes to missile threats," the study said.

The third recommendation is that the United States should sustain and expand its military presence in the Asia-Pacific, and the fourth was that the United States should accelerate development of new capabilities for U.S. forces, such as the ability to resist the growing ballistic missile threat to U.S. ships and forward bases.

(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

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http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/turkeys-failed-double-game/article8116852.ece

Opinion » Comment
January 18, 2016
Updated: January 18, 2016 01:28 IST

Turkey’s failed double game

Stanly Johny
Comments 22

If Ankara acts firmly against the IS, this would undermine its own Syria policy, but if it doesn’t, the threat from the IS to its domestic security will grow

The January 12 suicide bombing in Istanbul that killed 10 people is yet another violent reminder that something is terribly wrong with Turkey’s regional and security policies. This is the third bombing in Turkey by suspected Islamic State (IS) militants in six months. In July 2015, a suicide bomber killed more than 30 people in Suruc, a Kurdish town on the Turkish-Syrian border. In October, in one of the deadliest terror attacks in the country, suicide bombers blew themselves up outside the central railway station in the capital, Ankara, killing more than a 100 people and injuring over 400. If the attacks in Suruc and Ankara primarily targeted Kurds, the victims of the Istanbul bombing were tourists, mostly foreigners.

Over the past few years, the security situation in Turkey has steadily deteriorated. The ceasefire with the Kurdish rebels has broken and a full-fledged war is taking place in the border areas. Several cities in the south-east districts, where most of the country’s Kurdish minorities live, have been turned into virtual battlefields, and the IS has now, as the bombings show, grown into a major security threat. How did Turkey reach here, after a long period of relative calm and stability?

The Syrian morass

Much of the blame should lie with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. After becoming Prime Minister in 2003, Mr. Erdogan adopted an assertive foreign policy. He opposed the Iraq war, grew critical of Israel’s atrocities on the Palestinians, and presented Turkey as a regional power in West Asia. But his approach also pandered to sectarian Sunni sentiments and to Islamist Turkish nationalism, which counterposed the Kemalist secular order. When the dictators in Tunisia and Egypt were overthrown by popular protests in early 2011, Mr. Erdogan found it an opportunity to expand Turkish influence. In both countries, the direct beneficiaries of the regime change were the Muslim Brotherhood or its offshoots, the brethren of Mr. Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party. He expected the “Arab Spring” would radically change the political landscape of the Arab street.

But his calculations went wrong. In Egypt, the Brotherhood rule was crushed by the army. In Tunisia, the Islamist Ennahda party is competing with the secularists for political power. Libya, which Mr. Erdogan visited and hailed the “advent of democracy” soon after Muammar el-Qaddafi was overthrown, is at war with itself. Mr. Erdogan’s biggest mistake yet was Syria. He expected Syria to follow Egypt and Tunisia. He was among the first global leaders to call for President Bashar al-Assad to quit. Ankara wanted to replace Mr. Assad, an Alawite and an ally of Iran, with a Sunni ruler, possibly from the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood. That would not only strengthen the Turkish influence in the region, but also help the Sunni bloc to curtail Iran’s rise.

When it was evident that the Assad regime was stronger than its counterparts in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, Turkey started supporting anti-Assad rebels. Until recently, it kept its long border with Syria open so that rebels and jihadists could come to Turkey first and then cross into Syria to join various anti-Assad forces. Hard-core jihadists, particularly the IS and Jabhat al-Nusra militants, were the biggest beneficiaries of this open door policy. American investigative reporter Seymour Hersh recently wrote in the London Review of Books that Turkey, along with Saudi Arabia and Qatar, had provided direct financial and logistical support to IS and al-Nusra. Russia has also accused Ankara of having deep ties with the IS. There were several independent reports about Turkish middlemen being involved in people smuggling and oil trade along the Syrian border. Despite international outcry, Ankara didn’t do much to seal the border or act tough against the jihadists, as Mr. Erdogan was ready to go to any extent to see the fall of President Assad.

The Kurdish momentum

This approach, however, had an undesirable outcome. The Syrian government had withdrawn its troops from the Kurdish-populated border regions in the initial phase of the civil war. When IS militants, after capturing Raqqa, moved towards border towns, Kurdish rebels took out a strong resistance. The People’s Protection Units, the armed wing of the Syrian Kurdistan, defeated the IS in Kobane and Tal Abyad. The YPG is closely associated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the insurgent group which has been fighting the Turkish army for years over autonomy. Their glorious resistance did not just bring the Kurdish cause once again to global attention, but also prompted the U.S. to coordinate with them in the fight against the IS. On the Syrian border, Kurds, after throwing the IS out of their towns, formed autonomous enclaves, which created a new nightmare for Turkey. Ankara feared that the Kurdish momentum, unless it was broken, would strengthen demands for autonomy among Kurds in Turkey. Besides, in the June election, a Kurdish political party made history by winning enough votes to gain seats in Parliament for the first time, multiplying the ruling elites’ anti-Kurdish paranoia.

On the other side, Turkey was under enormous international pressure to do more against the IS and other jihadists in Syria. The pressure mounted from domestic quarters as well after the Suruc bombing. It was against this backdrop that Mr. Erdogan declared war against the IS. Though his government took some steps to control movements across the border and let the U.S. use its Incirlik airbase to bomb IS targets, the focus of Ankara’s bombing campaign remained on the Kurds. But Ankara’s increased collaboration with the American coalition and the domestic crackdown on jihadist networks seem to have angered the IS, which established a strong logistical and organisational network within Turkey, thanks to Mr. Erdogan’s open door policy.

Turkey is now trapped in a complex tri-directional war. If Ankara acts firmly against the IS, it would undermine its own Syria policy. If it doesn’t act, the threat from the IS to domestic security will grow as will the international efforts to co-opt the Kurds in a larger fight against extremism. This is a foreign policy dilemma for Ankara — whatever it is doing to maximise its interests is actually diminishing its foreign policy prospects. The worsening security situation at home and the growing global consensus that a forceful removal of President Assad would be catastrophic for the region demonstrate that Mr. Erdogan’s double game has failed miserably.

There are no easy ways out. Ideally, President Erdogan has to resume peace talks with the Kurds, step up attacks against the IS and pave the war for a larger anti-IS coalition by including the Kurds to take on the jihadists on the ground. But for that, he has to give up his neo-Islamist regional ambitions and sectarian tendencies and start thinking like a statesman. This is something unimaginable, given Mr. Erdogan’s recent record.

stanly.johny@thehindu.co.in
 

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/conf...-light-attack-aircraft-arrive-in-afghanistan/

Confirmed: First Four A-29 Light Attack Aircraft Arrive in Afghanistan

The four light attack planes arrived in Kabul fully combat ready.

By Franz-Stefan Gady
January 19, 2016

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After repeated delays including a contract cancellation, the first four out of 20 Embraer/Sierra Nevada Corporation A-29 Super Tucano light attack aircraft slated for service in the Afghan Air Force (AAF) arrived on January 15 at Hamid Karzai International Airport, IHS Jane’s Defense Weekly reports.

The AAF is expecting an additional delivery of four more A-29 Super Tucano by the 2016 fighting season, with an additional four delivered in 2017. The remaining eight will be handed over to the AAF by the end of 2018.

“The A-29 light attack aircraft is a versatile aircraft that brings a number of critical capabilities to the AAF. These include close air support, armed escort, and armed overwatch,” according to NATO’s ‘Resolute Support’ Mission spokesperson, Colonel Michael T. Lawhorn.

The four aircraft will become operational within the next couple of days and will, in all likelihood, be deployed to support combat operations in the eastern province of Nangarhar and the southern province of Helmand, according to Afghanistan’s acting Defense Minister, Masoom Stanikzai.

The United States Air Force (USAF), responsible for the training of Afghan pilots, allocated $427 million for the A-29 Super Tucano planes under the USAF’s Light Air Support program. One hour of flying time usually only costs $1,000, a big cost advantage for the cash-strapped AAF.

The A-29 Super Tucano is a turboprop aircraft specifically designed for counter-insurgency operations and can be equipped with a wide array of bombs (including precision guided munitions) and machine guns. According to IHS Jane’s Defense Weekly:

The A-29 features two internally mounted .50 cal machine guns (one in each wing), and has five hardpoints under the wing and a fuselage that can carry up to 1,500 kg of additional weapons. These can include .50 cal or 20 mm gun pods, rocket pods, short-range air-air missiles of the AIM-9X class, and conventional or smart freefall bombs. The aircraft’s inboard stations, as well as its ventral one, are also ‘wet’-configured for underwing fuel tanks.

According to the Afghan Ministry of Defense, the four A-29 delivered on January 15 will be all capable of dropping laser-guided bombs.

Brazilian aircraft maker Embraer and its U.S. partner Sierra Nevada Corporation where initially awarded the contract to supply 20 A-29 light attack aircraft in 2011. However, the contract was cancelled in 2012 due to a dissatisfaction of USAF leadership “with the quality of the documentation supporting the award decision.” However, the contract was re-awarded to Embraer and Sierra Nevada Corporation in 2013.

“In hindsight, I wish we would’ve started that years ago,” the commander of U.S. Forces in Afghanistan, General John F. Campbell said in front of the U.S. House of Representatives Armed Services Committee in March 2015, yet “we are where we are. (…) Quite frankly, we can’t get it out there quick enough for them.”

The first eight Afghan A-29 Tucano pilots graduated in December 2015 from flight school in the United States. Up to 30 Afghan pilots will be trained by the USAF over the next three years. The training program has been suffering from occasional desertion of AAF personnel. Most recently, two AAF members from a maintenance crew undergoing training at Moody Air Force Base in Georgia went missing in December 2015.

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/afghanistan-to-receive-12-new-attack-helicopters/

Afghanistan to Receive 12 New Attack Helicopters

Kabul has ordered 12 more MD530F Cayuse Warrior light attack helicopters for the 2016 fighting season.

By Franz-Stefan Gady
January 14, 2016

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The Afghan Air Force (AAF) has placed an order for 12 more MD530F Cayuse Warrior light attack helicopters fitted with a so-called Enhanced Mission Equipment Package (EMEP) for the 2016 fighting season, MD Helicopters, Inc. announced in a January 11 press release.

MD Helicopters already delivered 12 MD530F Cayuse Warrior aircraft to the AAF for the 2015 fighting season and has also converted five unarmed MH-6 Little Bird helicopters into MD530F light attack gunships, bringing the total number of Cayuse Warrior light attack aircraft in the AAF up to 16. (One helicopter was lost in a training incident.)

Should the helicopters be delivered within the next five months, the AAF will be able to enter the 2016 fighting season with a fleet of 28 MD 530F Cayuse Warrior light attack helicopters. However, in 2015 it took MD Helicopters around eight months to deliver the 12 helicopters after the contract was awarded, which could imply that the AAF will be without the additional aircraft for the most intense part of the fighting season during the summer. The press release notes that “MD Helicopters has demonstrated the ability to deliver fully integrated gunships to theater in less than 12 months,” perhaps indicating that it will take more than eight months for the helicopters to appear on the battlefields of Afghanistan.

The helicopters are armed with machine guns and 70 mm rockets. In detail, according to MD Helicopters, the EMEP will include:
•Rhode & Schwarz M3AR tactical radio communications solution
• Aviatech tactical communication antennas
•DillonAero Mission Configurable Aircraft System (MCAS) and fixed-forward sighting system
•Kinetic Defense ballistic armor panels
•FN HMP400™ .50 caliber gun pods from FN Herstal
•2.75” rocket capability

“The MD530F has played an integral role in building the capabilities of the Afghan Air Force and the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces since the first aircraft arrived in Shindand in 2011,” said Lynn Tilton, Chief Executive Officer for MD Helicopters. “In both training and combat configurations, the fleet has consistently maintained a mission launch rate of greater than 97 percent. This reliability – coupled with ease of operation, proven close air support and close air attack capabilities – stands as a testament to the legacy of this iconic airframe.”

However, as I previously reported (See: “Afghanistan’s Newest Attack Helicopter a ‘Total Mess’?”), AAF pilots questioned the usefulness of the American-made light attack helicopter gunship during last year’s fighting season. “It’s unsafe to fly, the engine is too weak, the tail rotor is defective and it’s not armored. If we go down after the enemy we’re going to have enemy return fire, which we can’t survive. If we go up higher, we can’t visually target the enemy,” one of Afghanistan’s most decorated pilots, Colonel Qalandar Shah Qalandari noted. “Even the guns are no good.”

Indeed, the helicopters lack proper gun sights for their two .50 caliber machine guns, as I was able to personally witness during a battle that I describe in detail in this month’s The Diplomat Magazine. The helicopters periodically appeared in the sky over contested mountains, but had difficulties locating and attacking ISIS positions with their weapons.

As I noted previously, one of the principal reasons for rushing MD530Fs to the frontlines is delays in the delivery of 20 Brazilian-made Embraer EMB 314 Super Tucanos, aka A-29s, fixed-wing aircraft specifically designed for counter-insurgency operations. The first A-29 is slated to enter service at the end of 2015.

However, as I noted in a previous piece (See: “When Will the Afghan Air Force Be Ready to Fight the Taliban?”), only a handful of aircraft will arrive in 2016, with the majority being delivered in 2017 and 2018.
 

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/01/indi...ew-sub-killer-planes-to-counter-chinese-subs/

Indian Ocean: India Deploys New Sub-Killer Planes to Counter Chinese Subs

Two Poseidon 8I aircraft have recently been dispatched to the strategically-located Andaman and Nicobar archipelago.

By Franz-Stefan Gady
January 19, 2016

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India has deployed two of its most advanced maritime patrol/anti-submarine warfare aircraft, the Poseidon 8I, at a military base in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, located in the Indian Ocean, The Times of India reports.

The deployment comes as a response to repeated forays of Chinese conventional and nuclear submarines into the Indian Ocean, according to Indian defense officials who spoke to The Times of India on the condition of anonymity.

The two aircraft are just about to complete their two week deployment at India’s farthest military outpost, 1,200 kilometers (745 miles) away from the Indian mainland.

In addition, the India has also deployed drones at the island. “Navy and IAF [Indian Air Force] are also deploying their (Israeli) Searcher-II unmanned aerial vehicles to the islands on a temporary basis,” the defense official said.

The Andaman & Nicobar Command is India’s first and only theater command, yet, according to the defense official, “not much progress” has been made to expand the military infrastructure in order to accommodate a division-sized military force on the 572-island chain, which extends over 720 kilometers (447 miles).

“As of now, amid turf wars among Army, Navy and IAF as well as fund crunches and environmental concerns, ANC has just over an infantry brigade (3,000 soldiers), 20 small warships and patrol vessels, and a few Mi-8 helicopters and Dornier-228 patrol aircraft,” The Times of India reports.

As I reported previously (See: “India Inducts First Squadron of Anti-Submarine Warfare Plane”), the Indian Navy inducted its first squadron of Boeing P-8I Poseidon aircraft at Rajali Naval Air Station in southern India, about 70 kilometers off Chennai in November 2015.

In January 2009, India became the first international customer for the P-8I aircraft, an export variant of the P-8A Poseidon, designed and built by Boeing to replace the Indian Navy’s aging P-3 fleet, with the signing of a $2.1 billion contract for the purchase of eight planes. The first plane was delivered to India in May 2013. All eight planes are currently operational and have been inducted into the Indian Navy.

In July 2015, India announced that it will acquire four additional P8-I aircraft from the United States. “The case for acquisition of another four P-8Is is in the final stages. P-8Is can operate from Port Blair (naval air station INS Utkrosh) to keep tabs on the entire region,” according to the Indian defense official.

The Indian Navy explains in a press release that the P-8I aircraft “is equipped for long range anti-submarine warfare, anti -surface warfare, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance in support of broad area, maritime and littoral operations.” The aircraft is armed with Harpoon Block-II missiles, MK-54 lightweight torpedoes, rockets, and Mark 82 depth charges.

The P-8I aircraft are also equipped with a Telephonics APS-143 OceanEye aft radar and a magnetic anomaly detector, and are data-linked with Indian submarines patrolling the Indian Ocean, to which they can pass on the location of enemy vessels in the event of a conflict.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-nuclear-usa-idUSKCN0UY042

World | Tue Jan 19, 2016 8:25pm EST
Related: World, North Korea

North Korea nuclear test did not increase technical capability: U.S.

WASHINGTON | By Andrea Shalal, David Brunnstrom and Jonathan Landay


North Korea's Jan. 6 nuclear test did not expand its technical capability, but the U.S. government is keeping a close eye on Pyongyang's efforts to develop a thermonuclear warhead capable of reaching the United States, the head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency said on Tuesday.

"I would assess that their technical capability has not increased," Vice Admiral James Syring told an event hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "That said, everything that they're doing continues to be alarming and provoking. ... We continue to watch it closely."

Syring gave no further details on what was North Korea's fourth nuclear test.

The United States has made no major changes in efforts to identify, track and intercept potential North Korean missile threats as a result of the latest test, he said. "If it was warranted, you would see our program change," he said. "We are absolutely on the right path to stay ahead of that threat."

He said the Missile Defense Agency would have 37 ground-based interceptors in place in Alaska and California by the end of the year, and 44 such interceptors by the end of 2017. Then-Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered 14 additional interceptors to be put in place in March 2013 after North Korea's third nuclear test.

Nuclear experts say North Korea likely gained data and practical know-how from the test. They reject North Korea's assertion that it detonated a hydrogen bomb.

In an H-bomb, conventional explosives compress and detonate a conventional fission bomb, triggering a powerful secondary fusion device. The process likely used by North Korea, called "boosting," involves an intermediate device that uses a hydrogen isotope to vastly increase the explosive power of an old-fashioned fission bomb, the experts told Reuters.

Boosting is key to miniaturizing a thermonuclear weapon, and Pyongyang must master miniaturization in order to build a warhead small enough to fit atop a ballistic missile that can reach the United States or other distant targets, experts said.


'SMALLER AND LIGHTER'

Siegfried Hecker, a former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, said the test "will certainly allow North Korea to increase the sophistication of its nuclear arsenal - specifically, to make the nuclear bombs smaller and lighter."

Admiral Bill Gortney, commander of U.S. Northern Command, has said he believes North Korea already has the ability to miniaturize nuclear weapons and place them on missiles that could reach the United States.

North Korea is likely moving along the miniaturization path, developing a boosting process and reducing the amount of chemical explosive needed to compress the core, experts say.

"On those two levels, they can achieve some real weight savings," said Hans Kristensen, director of the Federation of American Scientists' Nuclear Information Project.

North Korea has shown off two versions of a ballistic missile that appear to be of a type that could reach the U.S. West Coast, but there is no evidence the missiles have been tested.

North Korea has also tested a space-launch vehicle that could be modified to work as an intercontinental ballistic missile. It also has released a video of a what it said was a successful test of a submarine-launched missile.

Pyongyang has maintained its nuclear programs despite broad international sanctions, helped by lax enforcement of restrictions by its neighbor and main ally China.


(Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Jonathan Landay and David Brunnstrom; Editing by Peter Cooney)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
:dot5::dot5::dot5::siren::siren::siren::dot5::dot5::dot5:

Beijing is picking the Saudi/Sunnis(?) while Russia is paired with the Iranian/Syrian Shia....That on first pass contradicts with reports of the PRC looking at putting troops into Syria to assist the Russians....Let's see how much longer the SCO holds together.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-saudi-china-yemen-idUSKCN0UY0C1

World | Wed Jan 20, 2016 3:51am EST
Related: World, China, Saudi Arabia, Yemen

China offers support for Yemen government as Xi visits Saudi Arabia

BEIJING

China has signaled its support for Yemen's government, which is fighting an Iran-allied militia, on the first day of a visit to Saudi Arabia by Chinese President Xi Jinping, who will also be heading to Tehran later in the week.

A Saudi-led coalition began a military campaign last year against the Iranian-allied Shi'ite Houthi movement in Yemen, which has seized the capital, Sanaa. The government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi is now based in the southern city of Aden.

Riyadh sees the Houthis as a proxy for bitter regional rival Iran to expand its influence in the impoverished Arabian Peninsula nation. The Houthis deny this and say they are waging a revolution against a corrupt government and Gulf Arab powers beholden to the West.

A growing diplomatic dispute between Riyadh and Tehran, triggered by mainly Sunni Saudi Arabia's execution of a prominent Shi'ite cleric, has damaged the outlook for any resolution to the conflict in Yemen.

Saudi Arabia and China said in a statement on Wednesday that the two countries affirmed their support for the unity, independence and sovereignty of Yemen. The statement was released by China's Foreign Ministry after Xi met Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz in Riyadh on Tuesday.

All social, religious and political groups in Yemen should maintain their national solidarity and avoid any decisions that may cause social disruption and chaos, it said.

"Both sides stressed support for the legitimate regime of Yemen," the statement said.

Xi is expected in Iran later in the week, with a further stop in Egypt after he leaves Saudi Arabia.

Asked whether China was siding with Saudi Arabia over Yemen and whether that could risk upsetting Iran, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said China had always acted in the interests of the Yemeni people and maintaining peace in the Middle East, and had promoted peace talks.

"(We) hope clashes in Yemen can come to an end as soon as possible and there can be reconciliation so the country can return to stability," Hong told a daily news briefing.

China relies on the region for oil but has tended to leave Middle Eastern diplomacy to the other four permanent members of the U.N. Security Council - the United States, Britain, France and Russia.

However, China has been trying to get more involved, especially in Syria, and recently hosted its foreign minister and opposition officials.

China and Saudi Arabia expressed deep concern about Syria and renewed a call for a peaceful political settlement as soon as possible.

A Chinese president has not visited Saudi Arabia since 2009, when Hu Jintao went. Jiang Zemin was the last Chinese president to visit Iran, in 2002.


(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Paul Tait and Simon Cameron-Moore)
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...empt_for_international_agreements_108922.html

January 20, 2016

Iran's Treatment of U.S. Sailors and Contempt for International Agreements

By William Luti & Seth Cropsey

The U.S.’s unfreezing of billions of dollars of Iranian assets overwhelms the still fuzzy details of Iran’s seizure of two U.S. Navy small riverine boats. It shouldn’t. Iran’s capture and treatment of ten U.S. Navy sailors violates maritime custom and international treaties. Is there any reason to believe that the Iranian clerics will honor this one?

Here are the facts. Two riverine command boats likely strayed into Iranian territorial waters as they transited the roughly 350 mile journey from Kuwait to Bahrain. The Navy Times reports that the boats were heading for a fueling rendezvous when they went off course. Riverine command boats are approximately 50 feet long with a beam of 12 feet and lightly armed.

Naval forces of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, (IRGC) Iran’s version of the political commissars that suffused the Soviet military, intercepted the U.S. small craft as they passed Farsi, one of seven Iranian islands in the Gulf on which there is a small naval base.

Here, the picture becomes clearer. The boats and their crews were taken to Farsi Island. The IRGC forced the crews to kneel with their hands behind them and made maximum propaganda use of the photos. The pictures include a female sailor who was, no doubt, forced to wear a head covering. A statement of apology that appears to have been made under duress was obtained from the Navy lieutenant who was in charge of the two boats. U.S. diplomatic efforts resulted in the return of crews and boats within 24 hours of their capture. Secretary of State John Kerry thanked Iran for releasing the sailors. The mainstream media decided that the incident was closed.

They’re wrong. The riverine boat incident is not just a tangled story of mechanical, navigational, and political jockeying. It is, rather, an additional insight into the outlaw character of a regime whose contempt for international order is at fundamental odds with our respect for this order.

1. According to custom and law, vessels of all states enjoy the right of innocent passage through territorial seas. China, for example, acknowledged this right in late October when it objected to, but took no action, asthe destroyer USS Larsen passed within 12 miles of a Chinese man-made island in the South China Sea.

China is no respecter of the international order—as its actions toward neighbors over disputed islands in the region continually demonstrate. And the combat power of an American destroyer cannot be compared to the small arms that riverine boats carry. But Beijing’s non-action this past autumn represents at least an understanding of law and custom’s protection of the right of innocent passage.

2. According to the Law of the Sea Treaty which the current Iranian government signed in 1982 and the U.S. observes despite non-ratification, warships “enjoy sovereign immunity from interference by the authorities of nations other than the flag nation,” in peace that is. “Police and port authorities,” continues the same treaty, “may board a warship only with the permission of the commanding officer.” And, “a warship cannot be required to consent to an onboard search of inspection…”

Operating in an area as dangerous and complex as the Persian Gulf, it is as difficult to imagine that the Navy lieutenant who was the officer in charge of the two riverine boats was as unaware of this provision as he was willing to invite the IRGC aboard.

3. Iran is a signatory to the Geneva Convention. While we are not at war with Iran, the Geneva Convention’s Article 3(c) prohibits “outrages upon personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment,”and the filming of detainees. The photographs speak for themselves. They show the humiliation and degrading of American sailors. It cannot be imagined that international treaties’ sanction against outrages in war permits them in peace. Iran violated the spirit of the treaty it signed.

A state that acted within the boundaries of recognized custom, international law, and treaties it had signed would have assisted the Navy sailors if mechanical, navigational, or communications problems had placed them in its territorial waters, and sent them on their way. Providing assistance to mariners is codified in various international agreements for good reason. The sea is a harsh mistress. Helping others in distress regardless of their flag or actions goes back at least to the Old Testament when God saves the disobedient Jonah from drowning when his shipmates have tossed him overboard into a pitching sea.

By contrast to Iran’s behavior the U.S. Coast Guard in early 2014 sent its icebreaker, Polar Star, at considerable risk to crew and ship, to rescue the Russian research ship Academik Shokalskiy and the Chinese research ship, Xue Long, which were trapped in Antarctic ice. This was a few weeks before Russia invaded Crimea and after a long series of incidents with the U.S. and its allies in the region over territorial issues in the South and East China Sea.

Iran’s recent actions in the Persian Gulf show its disregard for international agreements such as the one it will benefit from with the return of billions of dollars of frozen assets.

The incident at sea shows that the current U.S. administration’s trust in Iran is as misplaced as Iran’s treatment of our sailors was shameful.

-

Seth Cropsey is director of Hudson Institute’s Center for American Seapower. He served as a naval officer and as deputy Undersecretary of the Navy in the Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations.

Mr. Luti is Vice-President at Hudson Institute, a retired naval officer, and former special assistant to President George W. Bush for defense policy and strategy. He commanded an amphibious assault ship in the Persian Gulf.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.theblaze.com/stories/201...-capability-timed-to-expiration-of-iran-deal/

Saudi Arabia Hints It Could Pursue Nuclear Capability Timed to Expiration of Iran Deal

Jan. 20, 2016 9:29am
Sharona Schwartz
Comments 24

An editorial in a pro-Saudi government newspaper as well as the words of Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister suggest that the Sunni kingdom may be considering aiming to develop a nuclear capability timed to coincide with the expiration of the international nuclear deal with Saudi Arabia’s archrival Iran.

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir gave an interview to Reuters Tuesday, during which he avoided ruling out the possibility that the Saudis could pursue developing a nuclear bomb.

Reuters reported:


Asked in an exclusive interview if Saudi Arabia had discussed seeking a nuclear bomb in the event Iran managed to obtain one despite its atomic deal, he said Saudi Arabia would do “whatever we need to do in order to protect our people”.

“I don’t think it would be logical to expect us to discuss any such issue in public and I don’t think it would be reasonable to expect me to answer this question one way or another,” he said.


A Sunday editorial in the Saudi pro-government daily paper Al-Riyadh set out a “road map” for constructing nuclear reactors for peaceful purposes timed to the expiration of the Iran deal.

The Middle East Media Research Institute published excerpts of the editorial titled, “What Will Happen in 15 Years?” which pointed to the year 2031 when the Iran deal’s restrictions are lifted and Iran might be free to pursue nuclear weapons.

A Saudi nuclear program would be one way of countering Iran’s potential future progress in nuclear weapons, the editorial suggested.

“In 2031, [this] nuclear agreement will be consigned to the U.N. archives, and Iran will be free to do whatever it pleases regarding its nuclear program,” the editorial said. “This, because most of the restrictions imposed [on Iran] by the articles of this agreement expire in 15 years. In the interim, Iran will enrich uranium to a level of no more than 3.67 percent, which is the safe level. But what happens after 15 years?”

“What we need to do, even today, is begin preparing a nuclear program for peaceful purposes so as to gain the necessary knowledge about the nuclear fuel cycle and build nuclear reactors for producing electricity and desalinating water, [thus] varying our energy sources,” the editors wrote.

“A brief review of the nuclear programs in the region leaves us confident of Saudi Arabia’s ability to begin building nuclear reactors and complete them before 2031,” the editors added, saying that Saudi Arabia should “set out a timetable or a clear road map for a civilian nuclear program to meet Saudi Arabia’s goals.”

They added, “2030 will be set as the date for activating the first nuclear reactor.”

The paper observed that President Barack Obama had offered Iran a “lifeline” by lifting nuclear-related economic sanctions.

“The fact is that the American president has thrown the Iranian regime a lifeline that will ensure its survival, and North Korea is an example of how nuclear power can constitute a shield for diseased regimes,” the editorial read. “This philosophy [of Obama's] should not interest us at all.”
 

Housecarl

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http://www.algemeiner.com/2016/01/2...-option-open-after-iran-deal-implementation/#

Saudi Arabia Keeps Nuclear Option Open After Iran Deal Implementation

January 20, 2016 10:59 am 0 comments

JNS.org – Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir hinted that his country would keep open all options, including pursing a nuclear weapon, if Iran obtained a nuclear weapon despite the newly implemented deal with world powers.

Saudi Arabia would do “whatever we need to do in order to protect our people,” al-Jubeir told Reuters.

“I don’t think it would be logical to expect us to discuss any such issue in public, and I don’t think it would be reasonable to expect me to answer this question one way or another,” he said.

Al-Jubeir’s comments come following the announcement that Iran sanctions would be lifted as part of the Islamic Republic’s compliance with the nuclear deal that was signed with world powers last summer. Saudi Arabia, like Israel, has been strongly critical of the nuclear deal, which it fears could embolden Iran’s regional ambitions such as supporting terror proxies in Syria and Yemen. Iran is set to receive nearly $150 billion in sanctions relief as part of the deal.

“It depends on where these funds go. If they go to support the nefarious activities of the Iranian regime, this will be a negative and it will generate a pushback. If they go towards improving the living standards of the Iranian people then it will be something that would be welcome,” Jubeir said.
 

vestige

Deceased
Housecarl;5919263]Hummm.........

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-nuclear-usa-idUSKCN0UY042

World | Tue Jan 19, 2016 8:25pm EST
Related: World, North Korea

North Korea nuclear test did not increase technical capability: U.S.

WASHINGTON | By Andrea Shalal, David Brunnstrom and Jonathan Landay


North Korea's Jan. 6 nuclear test did not expand its technical capability, but the U.S. government is keeping a close eye on Pyongyang's efforts to develop a thermonuclear warhead capable of reaching the United States, the head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency said on Tuesday.


"I would assess that their technical capability has not increased," Vice Admiral James Syring told an event hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.


on the other hand....

neither did it decrease technical capability


They aren't building nukes for the purpose of keeping weeds out of rice paddies.


morning bump
 

Housecarl

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http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NN-China-Saudi-Arabia-agree-to-build-HTR-2001164.html

China, Saudi Arabia agree to build HTR

20 January 2016

China and Saudi Arabia have signed a memorandum of understanding on the construction of a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTR). It was one of 14 agreements and memoranda of understanding signed yesterday during a meeting in Riyadh of Chinese president Xi Jinping and Saudi's Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz.

The MOU for cooperation in building the high-temperature gas-cooled reactor was signed by King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KA-CARE) president Hashim bin Abdullah Yamani and China Nuclear Engineering Corporation (CNEC) chairman Wang Shu Jin. No details of the size of the plant or the project timeline were disclosed.

CNEC has been working with Tsinghua University since 2003 on the design, construction and commercialization of HTR technology. The partners signed a new agreement in March 2014 aimed at furthering cooperation in both international and domestic marketing of the advanced reactor technology.

In a statement today, CNEC said: "After 30 years of basic research, experimental reactor operation and demonstration projects, China has now systematically mastered all the key HTR technologies."

A demonstration HTR-PM unit under construction at Shidaowan near Weihai city in China's Shandong province. That plant will initially comprise twin HTR-PM reactor modules driving a single 210 MWe steam turbine. Construction started in late 2012 and it is scheduled to start commercial operation in late 2017.

A proposal to construct two 600 MWe HTRs at Ruijin city in China's Jiangxi province passed a preliminary feasibility review in early 2015. The design of the Ruijin HTRs is based on the smaller Shidaowan demonstration HTR-PM. Construction of the Ruijin reactors is expected to start next year, with grid connection in 2021.

CNEC said it is actively promoting its HTR technology overseas and has already signed memoranda of understanding with Saudi Arabia, Dubai, South Africa "and other countries and regions" to consider the construction of HTR plants.

Although Saudi Arabia's nuclear program is in its infancy, the Kingdom has plans to construct 16 nuclear power reactors over the next 20 years. A 2010 royal decree identified nuclear power as essential to help meet growing energy demand for both electricity generation and water desalination, while reducing reliance on depleting hydrocarbon resources.

Last September contracts were signed between the Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI) and KA-CARE to support their cooperation in developing KAERI's SMART (System-integrated Modular Advanced Reactor). This is a 330 MWt (100 MWe) pressurised water reactor with integral steam generators and advanced safety features.

Researched and written
by World Nuclear News
 

Housecarl

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http://www.scmp.com/news/china/dipl...i-arabia-upgrade-diplomatic-ties-riyadh-seeks

China, Saudi Arabia upgrade diplomatic ties as Riyadh seeks new allies

Beijing also pledges support for Yemen’s Saudi-backed government fighting Iran-allied Houthi militia

Zhen Liu
zhen.liu@scmp.com

PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 20 January, 2016, 11:23pm
UPDATED : Wednesday, 20 January, 2016, 11:28pm

China and Saudi Arabia have vowed to elevate their ties to form a comprehensive strategic partnership as President Xi Jinping continues touring the Middle East and seeking greater presence in the region.

Observers say it is China’s first time establishing such a partnership with a western Asian nation, as the Arab state – once a staunchly anti-communist nation and a close ally of the United States – diversifies its diplomatic ties.

Xi kicked off his trip in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday and visited Egypt on Wednesday. He will wrap up his tour in Iran, just days after economic sanctions on the country were lifted last week following its agreement to roll back the scope of its nuclear activities.

READ MORE: ‘Solutions welcome’: Tehran sees bigger role for China in Middle East

During Xi’s two-day stay in Riyadh, China and Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil importer and producer respectively, signed 14 agreements and memoranda of understanding, including massive oil deals and pacts to speed up China-Gulf region free-trade talks and build a nuclear reactor.

A joint statement by the two states said China supported Saudi Arabia’s counterterrorism efforts and would step up cultural and religious exchanges. They would also set up a high-level committee to guide bilateral cooperation.

In another agreement on Tuesday, Beijing signalled its support for Yemen’s Saudi-backed government, which is fighting Iran-allied Houthi militia.

Saudi Arabia weighs significantly in China’s energy security. In 2014, Beijing bought nearly 50 million tonnes of crude oil from it – 16 per cent of its oil imports and the most from a single country.

But its importance to China has been weakened as Beijing diversifies its energy sources. By October, oil trade between the two nations had dropped more than 10 per cent year-on-year, with Russia occasionally overtaking Saudi Arabia as China’s top monthly oil supplier.

Still, the Middle Eastern nation remains crucial to China as it features prominently in the country’s “One Belt, One Road” strategy, through which Beijing is promoting trade and infrastructure cooperation.

A politically, economically and religiously influential country at the crossroad of the “Silk Road Economic Belt” and the “Maritime Silk Road”, Saudi Arabia is one of the most important destinations in the initiative.

At the same time, pressured by falling oil prices, the Middle Eastern country is also looking into alternatives to drive its economy.

The move would provide Chinese firms with businesses opportunities, according to Chinese Academy of Social Sciences *researcher Wang Jian.

Saudi Arabia is home to holy sites of Islam and is the religious centre for Sunni Muslims. Most Chinese Muslims, who number about 30 million, are Sunni.

“China should take advantage of Saudi Arabia in the area of *anti-terrorism,” said Gong Zheng, a researcher at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations.

The upgrading of bilateral ties comes as relations fray between Saudi and the US. Riyadh is Washington’s closest ally in the Gulf region. It established diplomatic ties with Beijing only in 1990.

“Saudi Arabia used to trade oil for security with the US,” Wang said. “But now they feel abandoned as there has been a large difference between the US’ and Saudi Arabia’s interests. As a result, Saudi Arabia is seeking to diversify its diplomatic ties.”

Domestic oil production in the US has surged in recent years with the development of shale – or natural – gas. The Saudi regime, after the Arab Spring pro-democracy movement, has also come under increasing US criticism for its poor human rights records.

READ MORE: Iran to compete with Russia, Saudi Arabia to supply China’s huge demands for oil

Beijing and Riyadh had military ties even before official diplomatic ties were established. China sold up to 60 intermediate-range ballistic missile DF-3s to Saudi Arabia in 1988, and has reportedly also provided it with more advanced medium-range DF-21 ballistic missile systems.

Xi’s Middle East tour comes after Saudi Arabia and Iran severed ties following Riyadh’s execution of a Shiite cleric. Observers are watching how Beijing will strike a balance between the two states; China is expected to downplay political issues while focusing on economic matters.

“The visits to Saudi Arabia and Iran exemplify this approach,” said Mary Gallagher, associate professor of political science at the University of Michigan.

“China tries to placate both sides through its oil purchases and infrastructure development plans for central Asia.”

But with declining Chinese growth, Beijing’s economic diplomacy may also be less effective, at least in the short run, she said.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35361791

Charsadda attack: Why can't Pakistan stop the militants?

By M Ilyas Khan
BBC News, Islamabad

2 hours ago
From the section Asia

People in Pakistan woke up on Wednesday to yet another devastating attack on an educational institution in the Peshawar valley region.

This time, the death toll was lower than that seen in the December 2014 attack on Peshawar's Army Public School (APS), though at least 19 innocent lives were lost.

The area where the attack took place is located close the tribal region of Mohmand where a strong force of native militants has been operating, its control of territory waxing and waning with the fluctuating intensity of military operations.

While their control of territory has shrunk considerably, their fighters still have access to 'safe-houses' in the valley where they can feed and rest before embarking on a mission.

Investigations into the APS attack last year led to the arrest of men who ran such 'safe-houses' in Peshawar and its outskirts, hosting the attackers and providing them with food and transport.

Gunfire, explosions and stampedes

Likewise, officials believe the militants who stormed the Bacha Khan University campus on Wednesday morning probably walked out of a similar safe-house in the area and, under cover of thick fog, scaled the back wall of the sprawling campus to launch the attack.

TV pictures showed anxious relatives crowding the area around the front gate of the university, searching for information about the fate of their children.

Students who came out through the gate spoke of gunfire, explosions and stampedes.

Many in the three hostels on the campus said they locked themselves in their rooms. Others hid in the bathrooms or latched up their classroom doors.

But most of them were herded out of the compound safely by the university's security guards who were apparently aided by the fog, which gave them an advantage over the attackers due to their better knowledge of the premises.

The local police also arrived promptly on the scene, and helped confine the attackers to a couple of blocks on the premises. They were soon joined by the army.

Spike in attacks

However that did not stop alarm spreading rapidly across the country, with frustrated voices raising questions over the army's claims to have dismantled the militant infrastructure.

"Those who said 2016 was the year of the end of militancy should explain these attacks," well-known Geo TV talk-show host Hamid Mir commented, without naming army chief Gen Raheel Sharif who had made these remarks recently.

Many say a recent spike in militant attacks indicates that while some Taliban groups have fragmented, they still have sanctuaries in the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region and are able to share resources.

And they have access to funds and weapons.

Some in the Pakistani establishment blame India for picking up their bills, while others blame elements in the Afghan government. Delhi and Kabul have routinely denied such accusations in the past.

Continued militancy

But ethnic Pashtun nationalists - who inhabit the north-western region - and many political groups in Sindh and Balochistan provinces in the south, believe the fault lies with the selective nature of Pakistan's own action against militants.

"Militant attacks have continued because we failed to fully implement the national action plan (NAP) that was drawn up in the aftermath of the APS attack," Mian Iftikhar Hussain, a former minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and a leader of the nationalist ANP party, said in comments aired on TV.

_87804133_map2.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/8174/production/_87804133_map2.jpg

The 20-point NAP, which was drawn up unanimously by the country's political and military leadership, claimed that "no armed militants (would be) allowed to function" in the country, and that the government would "ensure against the re-emergence of proscribed organisations (under new names)".

But there have been questions over the continued existence of groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad under different names, and over recurrent reports that Afghan Taliban continue to use Quetta (as well as Peshawar and Karachi) as their command-and-control centres.

Deadliest recent attacks in Pakistan

The relatives of victims. 13 May 2015Image copyright AP
Image caption
Shia Muslims were attacked in Karachi in May
◾ 20 January 2016: Militants kill at least 19 people in attack on Bacha Khan University in Charsadda, near Peshawar
◾ 13 December 2015: Bomb blast kills 24 people at a clothes market in the Kurram tribal region
◾ 18 September 2015: Taliban militants kill 29 people in an attack on an air force base in Peshawar
◾ 13 May 2015: Gun attack on a bus carrying Ismaili Shia Muslims in Karachi leaves at least 45 people dead
◾ 13 February 2015: Militants attack a Shia mosque in Peshawar with guns and grenades. At least 20 people killed
◾ 30 January 2015: Bomb blast at a Shia Mosque in Shikarpur district, Sindh province, kills at least 40 people


These groups in turn share resources with Pakistani Taliban, whom Islamabad wants to eliminate but who have now either melted into groups allegedly supported by Pakistan or spread across inaccessible areas along the Afghan border's northern stretches - but still within striking range of Peshawar valley region.

'Quid pro quo'

Many believe the problem requires a regional solution. They say Pakistan should single-mindedly move against militants focused on India and Afghanistan, and in return call for these countries to help block funding for Pakistan-focused groups and prevent them finding sanctuary.

"It's all down to a quid pro quo now," one ANP leader tells me in confidence. "If not, then as (US President Barack) Obama said in his state of the union address, Pakistan will continue to remain unstable for several decades."
 

Housecarl

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rebecca-conroy/iran-and-saudi-arabia-whe_b_9017944.html

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Iran and Saudi Arabia: Where Does the United States Really Stand?

Posted: 01/20/2016 11:12 am EST
Updated: 2 hours ago

There needs to be clear, concise articulation from the United States regarding its strategy in the Middle East, and it needs to happen soon. War could easily break out any moment between Iran and Saudi Arabia, which will call for our intentions and relations to be obvious, and currently necessary directions are needed in the region for us to have any kind of backbone and charge as a world leader. Our policy regarding the Middle East has been inconsistent and muddled, to put things mildly. Bahrain hosts the United State's 5th fleet, our main naval base in the Gulf, a region that we need critical access to. We have witnessed Iranians be stampeded, executed and scapegoated left and right; the outside world has now begun to suffer from the filthy hands of growing ISIS terror, all while our politicians publicly talk about notions of democracy, nuclear deals and freedom being a priority.

Now is not the time to remain coy about our alliances -- for the sake of the various elements we want to engage in, short-term, with both forces. Fanning the flames of frienemies' for the sake of questionable oil profits makes less and less sense by the day. In the last few weeks, our congress sent mixed messages to Iran with the amendments to the VWP HR-158 after our nuclear deal with the country was being set into motion. We need to strengthen the deal with them, and to pass sanctions on missile authorizations. The world at large wants to fight ISIS, and to resolve the Syrian war issue. For these things to occur, the U.S. needs clarity with communication from a supportive Iranian government. As a second-string partner with America, Saudi Arabia should take heed of the United States' interests and not throw unbridled sabotaging techniques into our proactive negotiations with Iran for the sake of extremist ideologies and last attempts at a last ditch effort for prime-time world stage presence. The United States should also state more clearly what the punishments or results would be for playing into the hands of such unacceptable behavior not only from Saudis but with the Iranian hardliners, especially before February's important parliament and guardian council elections there. The time for smoke and mirrors is coming to a close, globally, and it is obvious that Iran is being turned into a scapegoat boogeyman by the Saudis and their allies (including United States Republicans). Human rights violations from Saudi Arabia must be kept in check.

It was a short-sighted, blatant distraction from Saudi Arabia's horrid inner state of governmental affairs and lack of democracy to kill a prominent Shia Cleric, and was a slap in the face to Iran and the U.S. alike, with whom Iran is thawing relations. The vandalization of the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Tehran by the Iranian public is no doubt a hostile act, but Iranian government has arrested the 40 culprits and is trying them justly in a court of law. There has been no justice for the Saudi Arabians' murder of leading Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr on January 2, or for the huge drama they are now trying to carry out across the Middle East. The United States has, of course, recently made clear that it did not condone more senseless violence, yet the Saudis went ahead anyway. Easing tensions for the sake of fighting ISIS was supposed to be one of the modern world's priorities at this juncture. Their inflated response to the Embassy vandalization is a reflection of their desire to thwart Iran's geopolitical relations and glaring potential. By cutting ties so vehemently and quickly with the Shiitte country, it is clear that their competition is very much thriving, and more than just alive as it has been for decades. The Saudis are creating a giant theatrical world distraction so that they can maybe get a leg up and seem like a powerful player in the Middle East. If they abruptly collect their alliances and make two clear sides to choose from and invest with, they can maybe turn a blind eye to the messy state of their own affairs.

Although the U.S. publicly hoped for decency and compromise between the two rival powers that have so much sway in the Middle East, sectarian divisions and proxy wars will now be fueled further, leaving the question of: what is the United States' stance? Do we need to be fake with Saudi Arabia for oil much longer, when their dependence on oil wealth has led them down a road of huge deficit? I don't think so. We also have huge promise in our own country for oil, and may need to strengthen ties with Iran and work on our nuclear deal with a country that has true world leadership potential, if they don't fall into the trap being so blatantly put in front of them in a time of unsurety.
 
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