WAR 02-13-2016-to-02-19-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...se-icelands-keflavik-air-base-again/80561786/

US Navy in Talks To Use Iceland's Keflavik Air Base Again

By Gerard O'Dwyer, Defense News 2:40 p.m. EST February 18, 2016

HELSINKI — The government of Iceland is engaged in a dialogue with the United States over the proposed future deployment of Navy P-8 Poseidon submarine "hunter" aircraft from a renovated Keflavik Air Base.

The US Navy, which withdrew aircraft assets and personnel from the airport in 2006, plans to spend an initial $22 million to renew hangar facilities and restore infrastructure at Keflavik as part of a project to house P-8 Poseidon reconnaissance aircraft for maritime patrol operations in the North Atlantic.

The capital investment plan is included in the US Defense Department’s 2017 fiscal budget. Under the proposal, the Navy would use Keflavík Air Base to house P-8 Poseidon aircraft as needed. In effect, this would give the Navy the capacity to establish regular patrol rotations at the base in the future.

Iceland’s prime minister, Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, said the US plan would add a new tier of security to the defense of the North Atlantic island.

However, Gunnlaugsson added that in ongoing discussions the US has made no mention of locating a permanent force at Keflavik at the level that existed before 2006 when the Navy operated P-3 Orion planes to police North Atlantic waters around Iceland and Greenland.

At peak, about 2,500 US Navy and Air Force personnel were stationed at the Keflavík Naval Air Station.

"The US proposal for Keflavik is welcome, but we have had no talks about increased operations from there. Should more flights and operations happen, then this is already covered under our current defense agreements with the US," said Gunnlaugsson.

The Navy’s decision to withdraw from Iceland in 2006 happened against a backdrop that saw the US shift its operational focus in Europe away from the North Atlantic and toward the Mediterranean Sea.

Established in 1951, the Keflavik Naval Air Station became an important base for the US as it is strategically located midway between the United States’ East Coast and Europe. It allowed Navy P-3 Orion and fighter aircraft to patrol Arctic and sub-Arctic ocean waters in the North Atlantic between Greenland, Iceland and Britain.

Recent inter-government discussions with the US have focused increasing on Iceland’s concerns over a surge in the activity of Russian military aircraft and submarines in the air and waters around the island. Russian activity, according to Iceland, is now running at levels not witnessed since the end of the Cold War.

Under a treaty signed in 1951, the US continues to be responsible for the defense of Iceland, which has a small coast guard but no standing army or military organization. Since 2008, Iceland’s air space has been patrolled by NATO allies as part of the Icelandic Air Policing operation.
 

Housecarl

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http://johnbatchelorshow.com/schedules/tuesday-16-february-2016

Hour Two
Tuesday 16 February 2016 / Hour 2, Block A: Stephen F. Cohen is Prof. Emeritus of Russian Studies/History/Politics at NYU and Princeton. He is also a member of the Board of the recently-formed American Committee for East-West Accord (eastwestaccord.com); in re: Turkey – meaning NATO – vs Russia. Russian Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church. Poroshenko (president in Kiev) demanded the resignation of Yatseniuk (PM); a standoff. New cold war between the US and Russia; Medvedev in Munich at the annual security conference: “We are now in a new cold war.” John Kerry: Russia is our main enemy. Mtg between Pope Francis and the Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill in Cuba. . . .

Tuesday 16 February 2016 / Hour 2, Block B: Stephen F. Cohen, eastwestaccord.com, in re: Russia and geostrategy (2 of 4)

Tuesday 16 February 2016 / Hour 2, Block C: Stephen F. Cohen, eastwestaccord.com, in re: Russia and geostrategy (3 of 4)

Tuesday 16 February 2016 / Hour 2, Block D: Stephen F. Cohen, eastwestaccord.com, in re: Russia and geostrategy (4 of 4)

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-turkey-idUSKCN0VP0WO
http://abcnews.go.com/International...ish-forces-make-gains-countrys-north-36966411
http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/02/15/a-pope-a-patriarch-and-a-missing-superpower/
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-ukraine-crisis-politics-idUSKCN0VP0RG

https://audioboom.com/boos/4191433-...h-frontier-stephen-f-cohen-eastwestaccord-com
HOUR TWO

NATO War Warning on the Turkish Frontier. Stephen F. Cohen, EastWestAccord.com.

(Photo: Turkish-Syrian Frontier)

NATO War Warning on the Turkish Frontier. Stephen F. Cohen, EastWestAccord.com.

"Turkey, Saudi Arabia and some European allies want ground troops deployed in Syria as a Russian-backed government advance nears NATO's southeastern border, Turkey's foreign minister said, but Washington has so far ruled out a major offensive.

"Syrian government forces made fresh advances on Tuesday, as did Kurdish militia, both at the expense of rebels whose positions have been collapsing in recent weeks under the Russian-backed onslaught.

"The offensive, supported by Iranian-backed Shi'ite militias as well as Russian air strikes, has brought the Syrian army to within 25 km (15 miles) of Turkey's frontier, while Kurdish fighters, regarded by Ankara as hostile insurgents, have extended their presence along the border..."

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-turkey-idUSKCN0VP0WO
 

Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-sisi-says-wont-hesitate-send-troops-gulf-081644534.html

Egypt's Sisi says won't hesitate to send troops to Gulf if asked

Reuters
17 hours ago

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt will not hesitate to send military forces into the territory of Arab Gulf allies to offer protection if asked by the leaders of those countries, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said on Wednesday.

The most populous Arab state, the recipient of billions of dollars in aid from the Gulf, has entered a Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen but has yet to formally commit to sending ground troops. Sisi has often said that the Gulf's security is synonymous with Egyptian national security.

"The president made it clear that Egypt will not hesitate to send forces to brotherly Gulf counties to defend them if they face any direct threat or aggression," the presidency said in a statement. Sisi made his comments at a briefing with Kuwaiti journalists on Wednesday.

Egypt has received billions of dollars in aid from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates after Sisi, as military chief, ousted President Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood in 2013 following mass protests against his rule.

Tensions are high between Sunni Arab Gulf nations led by Saudi Arabia on one side and Shi'ite Iran on the other after Iranian protesters in January attacked Saudi diplomatic buildings in response to the kingdom's execution of a prominent Shi'ite cleric.

Saudi Arabia and Iran are involved in several proxy conflicts in Yemen, where Iran backs Shi'ite Houthi rebels and Saudi Arabia backs the Sunni government, and Syria where Saudi-backed Sunni rebels fight the forces of Iran-backed President Bashar al-Assad.

(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

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Saudi ready to join anti-IS ground op in Syria: general AFP
 

Housecarl

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/02/why-is-malaysia-in-saudi-led-war-games-in-the-middle-east/

Why Is Malaysia in Saudi-Led War Games in the Middle East?

The Southeast Asian state’s participation in a major military exercise this year has raised questions.

By Prashanth Parameswaran
February 18, 2016

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Malaysia has joined a major military exercise led by Saudi Arabia for the first time, raising questions about the extent of the Southeast Asian state’s involvement in the Middle East.

This week, Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said that Malaysia was among 20 Arab and Islamic countries participating in the so-called “Thunder of the North” exercise at King Khalid Military City in Hafar Al-Batin in the country’s north, which is taking place from February 16 up till March 4. While the exercise has been going on for 15 years, this is the first time Malaysia has taken part in it.

Malaysia’s involvement is just the latest in a series of steps it has taken that suggests a closer alignment with the kingdom amid growing turmoil in the Middle East and the rising threat of the Islamic State. As I noted in a previous piece, Malaysia had sent armed personnel and equipment to Riyadh last year to evacuate people trapped in Yemen – both its own citizens as well as those of neighboring states – with the help of Arab states and aid agencies (See: “Did Malaysia Just Join the Saudi-Led Coalition in Yemen?”). Malaysia also joined a Saudi-led, 34-member Islamic alliance against the Islamic State in December last year, though defense officials subsequently said that its participation was limited to intelligence sharing.

Each of these moves has raised concerns that Malaysia may be getting directly involved in military operations by Saudi-led coalition against Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen, requiring Malaysian officials to respond that this is in fact not the case. This instance was no different. On February 16, Malaysian defense minister Hishammuddin Hussein clarified in a statement seen by The Diplomat that the exercise had “no link whatsoever with the military campaign in Yemen,” noting that the exercise had been going on for years and that the war games were being held in the north of Saudi Arabia, while Yemen was located in the country’s south.

“While I have been consistent in stating that Malaysia is supportive of efforts to curb militancy, our Armed Forces have never taken part in any military operation in Yemen,” Hishammuddin said according to Malaysian media outlets.

Hishammuddin went on to add that Malaysia was participating in the exercise as it would provide its armed forces with an opportunity to understand humanitarian assistance and disaster relief procedures and methods to extract Malaysians from conflict zones. That is consistent with both what Malaysian defense officials have said before and what has been publicly disclosed thus far about the Southeast Asian state’s activities in the Middle East.

While Malaysian officials have been focused on downplaying the country’s involvement, Saudi Arabia has unsurprisingly been trying to play the exercises up as a demonstration of its military might. SPA dubbed this iteration of the exercise the “most important and largest in the region’s history” in terms of both the number of nations participating as well as the weaponry being used.

Apart from Saudi Arabia and Malaysia, the other participating countries in the exercise are UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Jordan, Egypt, Senegal, Sudan, the Maldives, Morocco, Pakistan, Chad, Tunisia, Comoro Islands, Djibouti, Mauritania and Mauritius.

Saudi sources also indicated that the members of the new “anti-terrorism” coalition will gather in Saudi Arabia next month for the first meeting.
 

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http://news.sky.com/story/1644580/defiant-north-korea-plans-more-rocket-launches

Defiant North Korea Plans More Rocket Launches

The secretive state's leader Kim Jong-Un declares space exploration to be a "fierce class struggle against hostile forces".

04:32, UK, Friday 19 February 2016

Kim Jong-Un has said he is planning to launch more satellites, declaring space exploration to be a "strategic goal" for North Korea.

The defiant message came after the secretive state was condemned by the United Nations for launching a satellite into space, the latest in a series of rocket and nuclear tests which have alarmed the West.

"Conquering space is ... a fierce class struggle against the hostile forces seeking to usurp our peace and sovereignty", Kim was quoted as saying at an awards ceremony for those involved in the launch.

"The advance toward space... is the DPRK's (North Korea's) strategic goal," he said, adding that the scientists who worked on the project were "admirable heroes" as he honoured them with medals.

The launch, which most in the international community viewed as a disguised ballistic missile test, violated multiple UN resolutions banning the nuclear-armed country from testing ballistic technology.

On Tuesday the president of South Korea threatened tough action against the North to help it come to the "bone-numbing realisation" that nuclear activity will only bring about its downfall.

Park Geun-hye pledged further "strong" measures after suspending operations at a jointly-run industrial park.

Kim's latest missile launch comes hours after the US sent four of its F-22 stealth fighter jets to South Korea as a warning to the North.

The radar-evading Raptor jets, accompanied by eight more planes from South Korea and the US, flew to Osan Air Base near Pyeongtaek, 45 miles (70km) south from the border with North Korea.

On Thursday, Barack Obama approved new sanctions against North Korea, aimed at anyone importing goods or technology related to weapons of mass destruction into the country.

Under the bill already passed by Congress, penalties for the sanctionable activities would include the seizure of assets, visa bans and denial of government contracts.

And for the first time, it establishes a framework for sanctions in response to North Korean cyber threats.

Talks this week between Seoul and Washington could also see an agreement to deploy the American missile defence system, the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence System (THAAD), in South Korea.
 

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http://www.defenceweb.co.za/index.p...pound--msf&catid=52:Human Security&Itemid=114

Eighteen killed in fighting at UN South Sudan compound – MSF

Written by Reuters, Friday, 19 February 2016

Fighting at a United Nations compound sheltering people fleeing conflict in South Sudan has killed 18 people, including two Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) workers, the international medical aid group said.
South Sudan descended into civil war in December 2013 when a row between President Salva Kiir and his sacked deputy Riek Machar ended with fighting that often occurred along ethnic fault lines.

People have been taking refuge in UN-administered "protection of civilian" sites, or POCs, since then. Thousands have been killed and more than two million people displaced from their homes since late 2013.

The UN peacekeeping mission, UNMISS, said on Thursday fighting the night before between youths sheltering in the UN compound in Malakal had killed five and wounded 30 after violence erupted between two ethnic groups.

The UN secretary-general's spokesman said later at least seven people had been killed.

READ MORE
Fighting at U.N. compound in South Sudan kills five - U.N. mission
South Sudan rebel leader wants soldiers out in further hurdle to peace deal
Sudan opens border with South Sudan for first time since 2011 secession

South Sudan

"At least 18 people were killed in armed conflict that erupted ... in the Protection of Civilians site in Malakal ... including two South Sudanese staff members of ... Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) who were attacked in their homes," the medical charity said in a statement.

MSF, also known as Doctors Without Borders, said it had also treated 36 people wounded in the fighting, including at least 25 with gunshot wounds.

“This attack on civilians is outrageous and we demand that armed groups stop these actions,” Marcus Bachmann, co-ordinator of MSF projects in South Sudan, said in the statement.

UNMISS said youths from the Shilluk and Dinka ethnic groups - both staying in its protection site - began the fighting on Wednesday night using small arms, machetes and other weapons.

UNMISS says the Malakal site shelters 47,791 people out of a total 198,440 that live in six of its bases throughout South Sudan.

Kiir and Machar signed an accord last August to end fighting that has killed thousands of people.

The warring parties agreed in January to share ministerial positions in a transitional government of national unity, and earlier this month Kiir re-appointed Machar to his old post as vice president.
 

Housecarl

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/02/iran-deal-npt-and-the-norms-of-nuclear-non-proliferation/

Iran Deal, NPT and the Norms of Nuclear Non-Proliferation

The Iran deal has serious implications for the nuclear non-proliferation architecture.

By Arka Biswas
February 18, 2016

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The implications of the recently implemented Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) on Iran’s nuclear program, commonly referred to as the Iran deal, are immense for the nuclear non-proliferation architecture. P5+1 and Iran arrived at the deal after over twenty months of intense negotiations, starting from November 2014 when the interim nuclear deal was signed, to August 2015 when the negotiators agreed on the JCPOA. During the course of negotiations, some of the key sticking points that emerged had their roots in differences in understanding between what the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) states as the rights of its signatories and what the current understanding of acceptable non-proliferation practices are. These differences reflect the reality that the current non-proliferation architecture has already expanded beyond NPT. Acknowledging this difference and limiting reference to the NPT as the “central pillar” of the non-proliferation architecture will allow the non-proliferation community to better manage future proliferation threats.

Right to uranium enrichment

A primary sticking point over Iran’s nuclear program was regarding Iran’s right to enrichment. Beginning from 2003, when concerns over Iran’s nuclear program emerged, Iran reiterated its longstanding position that the NPT bestows on it the inalienable right to enrich uranium on its soil. Article IV of the NPT states that “nothing in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting the inalienable right of all the Parties to the Treaty to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination and in conformity with Articles I and II of this Treaty.”

Though Article IV of the NPT does not directly refer to the right to uranium enrichment, its language, however, remains open to interpretation. While U.S. government officials have lately stated that “it has always been the U.S. position that article IV of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty does not speak about the right of enrichment at all [and] doesn’t speak to enrichment, period,” as William O. Beeman explains, that has not always been the case. Moreover, the U.S. government has in the past recognized the legitimacy of the uranium enrichment programs of other non-nuclear weapon states (NNWS) of the NPT. Even if recognition does not reflect acceptance of uranium enrichment as an inalienable right, it demonstrates that the U.S. does not see uranium enrichment by NNWS as a violation of the latter’s NPT obligations. Moreover, the U.S. government alone cannot override the interpretation of the remaining 189 members of the NPT and other bodies such as the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Speaking from a legal perspective, Dan Joyner, a professor at the University of Alabama, School of Law, concludes that while Article IV continues to be open to interpretation, technical understanding of the right to peaceful use of nuclear energy refers to access to all steps of the nuclear fuel production cycle, which includes uranium enrichment.

The potential for this right to uranium enrichment to be misused by a NNWS to acquire the requisites to build a bomb, however, is real and remains a serious concern for the non-proliferation community. While some of the NNWS already qualify as threshold states – meaning they have the requisites to build a nuclear weapon – permitting other NNWS to reach that status is based on the political understanding of the threat that might pose to the nuclear non-proliferation architecture, even without crossing over the nuclear Rubicon.

What the Iran deal does is that it acknowledges Iran’s right to enrichment, as a NNWS to the NPT, but simultaneously restricts Iran’s capability to enrich uranium. Given the current understanding, however, it is not in the interest of the non-proliferation community to concede the right to enrichment, under NPT, to more states in future. And while Iran has agreed to accept the heavy restrictions on its enrichment capacity for at least the next ten years, other states may not agree to such conditions.

Monitoring and Verification

Another sticking point has been with regard to the monitoring and verification of Iran’s nuclear activities. Article III of the NPT states that “Each non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty undertakes to accept safeguards, as set forth in an agreement to be negotiated and concluded with the International Atomic Energy Agency in accordance with the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Agency’s safeguards system…” Fulfilling its obligation to the NPT as a NNWS, Iran signed and ratified the Safeguards Agreement (SA) in 1974.

However, the insufficiency of the SA, as obligated by the NPT, was realized in the early 1990s when Iraq’s clandestine nuclear activities came out into the open. It was then that the decision to introduce the Additional Protocol to the SA was made. The NPT Article, however, was not revised to make negotiation and ratification of the AP to the SA a Treaty obligation. In Iran’s case, for instance, the IAEA report of June 2003 did not find Iran in violation of the NPT, but recommended that Iran cooperate with the IAEA by providing more information regarding its suspected nuclear activities which Iran may not have revealed. Similarly, assessing the IAEA Director Board of Governors adopted-resolution (GOV/2005/77) of September 24, 2005, which recommended that Iran comply with the Board’s demands, Paul K. Kerr notes in CRS report that, “no international legal obligations required Tehran to [comply by the Board’s demands].”

Thus, as far as the monitoring mechanism is concerned, the non-proliferation community has already accepted the shortcoming of the NPT and moved beyond NPT obligations and introduced Additional Protocols to the SA. Continued emphasis on the NPT may therefore make managing future threats of nuclear proliferation difficult from the perspective of monitoring and verification mechanisms. While Iran eventually agreed to an AP that provides “extraordinary and robust monitoring, verification and inspection,” other NNWS may not agree to sign or renounce AP, using Iran’s non-violation of NPT obligations in their defense.

In essence, the Iran nuclear deal succinctly captures how the nuclear non-proliferation community either has already moved beyond the NPT obligations, as with monitoring and verification mechanisms, or does not find the provisions of the NPT in its best interest, with regard to the right to uranium enrichment. The fact that NPT Articles have not been updated or revised only weakens the Treaty’s relevance to the current non-proliferation practices that qualify as acceptable. This reality may be hard to accept given the important role that the Treaty has played over the last four decades, but it nonetheless remains important, especially as the non-proliferation community is confronted with proliferation threats in the future.

Arka Biswas is a Junior Fellow with ORF’s Nuclear and Space Policy Initiative. He is currently pursuing projects related to nuclear developments in Iran, India’s nuclear weapons policy and India’s membership in the export control groups. He has been a Visiting Fellow at the Stimson Center, Washington DC. His work has appeared in Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Foreign Policy, The Diplomat, and The National Interest, among others.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.realcleardefense.com/art..._the_american_strategic_deterrent_109049.html

February 19, 2016

New ICBMs: Necessary to Secure the American Strategic Deterrent

By Constance Baroudos

Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) that make up one part of the American nuclear deterrent remain highly relevant to security. The ICBM force provides many benefits that other strategic systems do not: they shorten the time needed to execute the president’s response to a nuclear attack, increase the total number of targets an adversary would have to destroy to compromise America’s deterrent, and cannot be wiped out with conventional forces like other nuclear weapons. Eliminating ICBMs would weaken America’s nuclear deterrent that protects its homeland and allies from a nuclear first strike.

ICBMs are deployed in underground silos at three U.S. bases. Current weapons were fielded in 1970 with a planned service life of 10 years, but have lasted over 40 years because they have been refurbished many times. The U.S. cannot continue to sustain its Cold War ICBM force any longer because it is antiquated and hard to maintain. Thus, the Air Force will develop a new missile as part of the Ground-based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD) program that will be deployed in the 2027 timeframe.

The Air Force’s initial proposal calls for 642 missiles of which 400 would be operationally deployed until the 2070s; the remaining rockets will be used for flight tests and to support the program. But the ICBM force is facing controversy because funding for its modernization will take place simultaneously with replacements of other legs of the Cold War “triad.” The cost to develop and deploy the new weapons is $62.3 billion from fiscal year 2015 through fiscal year 2044 – $48.5 billion for the missiles, $6.9 billion for command and control systems, and $6.9 billion to renovate the launch control centers and facilities.

The GBSD budget is calibrated to the New Start Treaty that expires in 2021 – the approach could change if Russia and the U.S. agree to further reductions or fail to conclude a follow-on treaty. The Air Force requested $113.9 million in fiscal year 2017 for GBSD to develop, test and evaluate the new missile. For fiscal year 2018 the service will request $294 million, and $321.1 million for fiscal year 2019. The cost of the program will then rise significantly in fiscal year 2020 to about $1.03 billion and $1.56 billion for 2021.

Unfortunately, the White House’s fiscal year 2017 budget proposes to delay fielding GBSD by one year, from 2027 to 2028, and to postpone the milestone B decision to begin an engineering and manufacturing development phase from March 2019 to June 2020, according to U.S. Air force budget documents. GBSD should not be fielded later than 2027 because the program only has three years of leeway to deploy new missiles before the current ICBM force must retire in 2030. It takes time to develop, test, launch, and certify a brand new missile. Hence, it is a good idea to allow a few years between fielding the new missiles and retiring the old ones as insurance in case the process experiences delays. The ICBM force is already decades past its originally planned service life – delaying another year potentially puts the credibility of the ground-based deterrent at risk. Developing a new ICBM allows the U.S. Air Force and Navy to develop commonalities for their missiles to save funds and consolidate maintenance in the future.

While modernizing ICBMs is not cheap, it is worth noting that they are the least expensive component of the nuclear deterrent, and they provide many benefits that the other legs do not. First of all, ICBMs are on alert status which shortens execution of a president’s decision to launch weapons in response to a nuclear surprise attack. De-alerting ICBMs is a bad idea; if the president decided to launch them, execution would be delayed since missiles would have to be prepared. In addition, if ICBMs were eliminated, an enemy would only need to strike a small number of targets to diminish the American strategic posture.

There are three bases for nuclear-capable bombers and two bases for ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs); that makes a total of five targets on the American homeland. If an adversary were to launch a nuclear attack, some SSBNs would be safe at sea carrying up to 24 Trident missiles with multiple warheads on each and could launch an attack on an enemy or combination of enemies. However, bombers are not undetectable and can be destroyed with conventional forces, thus the air leg would be vulnerable and possibly compromised.

While nuclear submarines are undetectable in the ocean today, a technological breakthrough could occur that would make the oceans less opaque – especially with the fast pace at which technology now develops. The sea-based leg might be severely weakened and could be at risk of being destroyed by conventional forces. Thus, the land leg would increase in significance as would any remaining bombers. Finally, eliminating ICBMs may motivate potential adversaries to try even harder to develop the capability to locate nuclear submarines underwater to put America’s second-strike capability at risk.

If those reasons are not sufficient as to why ICBMs remain relevant today, take a look at what countries are doing in other parts of the world. Moscow plans several tests of ICBMs this year and even more in 2017 while working on a new liquid-fueled ICBM that may be able to carry 10 nuclear warheads with a combined explosive yield of about 7,500 kilotons – roughly 500 times that of the Hiroshima bomb. Beijing tested its DF-41 road-mobile ICBM twice last year that has a range of up to 7,456 miles – road mobile ICBMs increase survivability because they do not have set locations for an enemy to target – and the latest flight test used two multiple independently-targetable reentry vehicles on the DF-41. China is developing the DF-5B, a new liquid-fueled ICBM designed to strike targets anywhere on Earth carrying four to six warheads, expected to be deployed in the next two years. North Korea revealed a modified version of its liquid-fueled KN08 ICBM in its fall parade, and recently launched its sixth long-range rocket test that placed a satellite into orbit (testing rockets through satellite launches provides invaluable data for potential future ICBMs).

Deterrence is effective because it causes the enemy to fear a massive retaliatory response; ICBMs in particular ensure an adversary’s objectives are beyond reach because they are on alert and cannot be destroyed by conventional forces. Without ICBMs, execution of the president’s response to a nuclear first strike might be delayed and the challenge of disarming America in a surprise attack would be greatly simplified. A new ICBM is an expensive but essential investment that will prevent a potential aggressor from launching a nuclear first strike and ensure these fearsome weapons are never used.


This article originally appeared at Lexington Institute.
 

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http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/19/w...-kurds-threatens-us-turkey-alliance.html?_r=0

Middle East | Q. And A.

Dispute Over Kurds Threatens U.S.-Turkey Alliance

By RICK GLADSTON
EFEB. 19, 2016

Escalating tensions between Turkey and the United States, which now jeopardize their alliance in the Syria conflict, can be traced to the Kurds, a Middle East people who do not have a state of their own. Here are five questions about the Kurds and their role in the rapidly evolving events in Syria and Turkey:

Q. Who are the Kurds, where do they live and what do they want?

A. The Kurds are an indigenous ethnic group with a population of 25 million to 35 million. They are basically spread through four countries — Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, with lesser numbers in Armenia and Azerbaijan. They primarily follow the Sunni branch of Islam, share cultural identities and speak variants of the Kurdish language. Historically they resided in the Zagros Mountains, a range that straddles parts of these countries, commonly known as Kurdistan or land of the Kurds. But they are divided politically, reflecting a long history of uprisings for autonomy that have repeatedly been crushed.

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Q. Why have the Kurds become such a priority for Turkey?

A. Turkey has historically worried about aspirations of Kurdish autonomy because it has more Kurds — at least 15 million — than any other country. They reside mostly in the southeast, which shares borders with Syria, Iraq and Iran. The Turks have been suppressing a violent Kurdish insurgency since the late 1970s led by the Kurdish Workers’ Party, or P.K.K., a militant group regarded by both Turkey and the United States as a terrorist organization. A short-lived peace process collapsed last year.

Now the Turks say the P.K.K. is collaborating with Kurdish militants in northern Syria, known as the People’s Protection Units, or the Y.P.G., to establish an autonomous region spanning both countries.

Q. Are the Kurdish militants in Syria different from the Kurdish militants in Turkey?

A. That depends on whom you ask. The United States says they are different, arguing that Y.P.G. fighters are basically focused on protecting Kurdish areas in Syria from the ravages of the civil war and are successfully fighting the Islamic State militant group, which is based in eastern Syria. The Turks say the Y.P.G. fighters basically share the same goals as the P.K.K. — secession through armed struggle — and that the United States should regard them all as terrorists.

Q. Why has this difference of opinion between Turkey and the United States, which are NATO allies, escalated into a huge problem?

A. The United States is actively supporting the Y.P.G. fighters while Turkey is attacking them, which threatens to cause a deeper rupture in Turkish-American relations. Turkish forces have been shelling Y.P.G. positions in Syria since last weekend over American objections, and on Thursday Turkish officials intensified the pressure on the United States by accusing the Y.P.G. of responsibility for a bombing in Ankara on Wednesday that killed 28 people. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey has said the United States must make a choice of loyalties, implying a further schism with the Americans is possible.

Q. How might the Kurdish dispute between Turkey and the United States affect the Syrian war?

A. It could further complicate and prolong the conflict, now five years old, between President Bashar al-Assad of Syria and his array of rebel foes. Turkey and the United States are among the most important opponents of Mr. Assad, whom they accuse of butchering his own people. So American-Turkish frictions over the Kurds can indirectly benefit him and his allies, Russia and Iran.

The Americans have strongly signaled that they will not join Turkish calls for a military ground operation in Syria, even as Mr. Assad’s forces, emboldened with Russian and Iranian help, are regaining territory and strengthening his position should peace talks take place. The United States also has made it clear that it will not be drawn into the possibility of a direct military confrontation with Russia in the Syrian conflict.


A version of this article appears in print on February 19, 2016, on page A8 of the New York edition with the headline: Dispute Over Kurds Threatens U.S.-Turkey Alliance
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-nigeria-violence-cameroon-idUSKCN0VS16G

World | Fri Feb 19, 2016 5:58am EST
Related: World, Africa

At least 19 dead in suicide attack in north Cameroon: local officials

YAOUND

Two suicide bombers killed at least 19 people and injured 50 in a market in Meme, northern Cameroon, local officials told Reuters.

The bombing is the latest in a string of deadly attacks in northern Cameroon, an area where Nigerian militant group Boko Haram is active.


(Reporting By Sylvain Andzongo, writing by Edward McAllister)
 
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WORLD
Fri Feb 19, 2016 | 7:12 AM EST

U.S. aircraft hit militants in Libya, more than 40 reported dead

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - U.S. warplanes carried out air strikes early on Friday morning in the western Libyan city of Sabratha, where Islamic State militants operate, killing as many as 40 people.

A U.S. military spokesman said the attacks targeted a senior Tunisian militant linked to attacks in Tunisia last year.

Sabratha's mayor, Hussein al-Thwadi, told Reuters the planes struck at 3.30 a.m. (0130 GMT), hitting a building in the Qasr Talil district in which foreign workers were living. He said 41 people had been killed and six wounded. The death toll could not immediately be confirmed with other officials.

Tunisian security sources have said they believe Tunisian Islamic State fighters have been trained in camps near Sabratha, which is close to the Tunisian border.

Two major attacks in Tunisia last year claimed by Islamic State - one on a Sousse resort hotel and another on a Tunis museum - were carried out by gunmen who officials said had trained in Libya.

The New York Times earlier reported that Friday's air strikes targeted a senior Tunisian operative, Noureddine Chouchane, connected to both of last year's attacks.

The mayor said officials visited the site of the strike and found weapons in the building, but he did not give any further details. Some Tunisians, a Jordanian and two women were among the dead, he said.

Several Tunisians who had recently arrived in Sabratha were among survivors.

Since Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown in 2011, the north African country has slipped deeper into chaos with two rival governments each backed by competing factions of former rebel brigades.

As Islamic State has expanded in Libya, taking over the city of Sirte and attacking oil ports, so too have calls increased for a swift Western response to stop the group establishing a base outside its Iraq and Syria territory.

Western officials and diplomats have said air strikes and special forces operations are possible as well as an Italian-led "security stabilization" plan of training and advising.

RELATED COVERAGE

U.S. forces conduct air strikes on militants in Libya: military spokesman
U.S. and European officials insist Libyans must invite help through a united government, but say they may still carry out unilateral action if needed.

Last November the United States said it carried out an air strike on Libya's Derna to target Abu Nabil, also known as Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi commander in Islamic State.

(Reporting by Ahmed Elumami; Writing by Aidan Lewis/Dominic Evans; editing Patrick Markey and Jeremy Gaunt)
 

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The Great Debate

What makes just 16 missiles such a deadly threat in the South China Sea

By James Holmes
February 19, 2016

In a move that should surprise precisely no one, China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has positioned surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) on one of its South China Sea islands — namely Woody Island, home to Sansha, the administrative capital for the islands, atolls, and other geographic features Beijing claims in the Paracels and Spratlys. For Beijing this move makes eminent sense on many levels: it constitutes yet another reply to American and Southeast Asian challenges to its claims of “indisputable sovereignty” over most of the South China Sea.

For a 19th-century Prussian take on the situation, think about Carl von Clausewitz’s definition of war. War, opines the West’s master of strategy, is essentially fighting, while fighting in turn is “a trial of moral and physical forces through the medium of the latter.” That is, it’s a test of wills settled through deploying manpower and hardware for battlefield encounters. Whoever prevails by force of arms wins — and breaks the enemy’s resolve to continue the fight in the process. Battlefield victory begets strategic and political success.

A war of words, on the other hand, might be described as a trial of moral and physical forces through the medium of perceived physical force. To prevail in a peacetime showdown, convince the opponent and influential outsiders that you would have won in actual combat. Do that — make believers out of important audiences — and you may reap the rewards of victory without enduring the hazards, costs, and sheer caprice of combat. You may win without fighting — as sane leaders everywhere want to.

The missile deployment represents Beijing’s way of trying to make Asian and Western competitors believers in the PLA’s unbeatable martial prowess. Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense reported spotting two batteries of eight HQ-9 missiles apiece, along with the associated search and fire-control radars. Admiral Harry Harris, commander of the Hawaii-based U.S. Pacific Command, confirmed the report while condemning China’s “militarization” of South China Sea waters and skies — something China’s President Xi Jinping has vowed not to do. Harris’ words corroborate the reporting out of Taipei convincingly.

But what does it all mean? Start with the obvious: this is a weapons system that packs a wallop. The Woody Island deployment spells danger for hostile air forces that venture within a sizable bubble above and around Woody Island. The HQ-9’s maximum range of 200 km, or about 124 miles, traces the outer reaches of that bubble, which encloses some 48,300 square miles of sea area — about the same land area as my former home state of Mississippi — centered on the island. That empowers HQ-9s to bring down aircraft anywhere over the Paracels group — including over Triton Island, where USS Curtis Wilbur staged a “freedom-of-navigation” cruise last month. These lethal “birds” could make short work of the helicopters operated by surface ships like Curtis Wilbur.

That should give American skippers pause before defying Chinese challenges to freedom of the seas — one of which is the freedom to operate aircraft outside coastal states’ territorial seas, namely anywhere more than 12 nautical miles offshore. The HQ-9 is a Frankenmissile. A close cousin to Russia’s S-300 — a missile that keeps American and allied aviators awake nights — it allegedly incorporates technology from U.S. Army Patriot SAMs as well. China reportedly obtained a Patriot from Israel following the first Gulf War, studied it, and used its findings to improve the HQ-9 during the research and development phase. China is the Borg of military affairs: it strives constantly to add foreigners’ technological distinctiveness to its own, making PLA weaponry more lethal than it otherwise might be.

But it would be a mistake to interpret Woody Island’s HQ-9s as a standalone weapons system. Sure, 16 missiles constitutes a potent deterrent to Southeast Asian air forces, which field small numbers of tactical aircraft — many of which are technologically backward. The Vietnam People’s Air Force, to name one such force, boasts an impressive-looking force of 217 Russian-built MiG and Sukhoi fighter aircraft. Of those, however, fully 144 are MiG-21s — Soviet planes that first took to the skies in 1955. These antique warbirds would make easy pickings for HQ-9s. Or, Chinese air defenses could take down a sizable fraction of Vietnam’s more modern, 73-plane inventory should Hanoi hurl them into the fray. The prospect of losing one-fifth of Vietnam’s air force in an afternoon could certainly deter.

It doesn’t stop there, however. PLA commanders’ goal is to erect an increasingly dense thicket of defenses against ships, aircraft, and missiles spanning areas China considers its own. Anti-ship missiles stationed along the mainland’s shorelines can already strike throughout the South China Sea. Land-based, missile-armed aircraft are part of the mix, as are missile-armed surface craft and submarines. So is China’s nascent force of aircraft carriers.h Missile batteries deployed to all Chinese-held islands — naturally occurring, like Woody Island, or manufactured, like Mischief Reef — would integrate with such weaponry, creating overlapping fields of fire. In other words, ships or planes entering China’s no-go zone would face multiple threats along multiple axes. Commanders would think twice before hazarding precious assets and crews in Southeast Asia — and might abjure the attempt altogether.

If so, Beijing will have upheld its territorial claims without fighting. By making believers out of prospective foes, it will have vindicated its indisputable sovereignty in the South China Sea. Sovereignty, at its most basic, means physical control of territory and airspace within certain lines inscribed on the map. Physical supremacy in the South China Sea would let Beijing dictate the rules whereby ships and aircraft pass through regional waters and skies. It would also let Beijing reserve the right to close Southeast Asian sea routes to foreign shipping should it see the need — making one of the world’s great nautical thoroughfares a no-go zone.

So enough with the tit-for-tat debate over who militarized what in Southeast Asia. Navies are the guardians of freedom of the sea. When someone lodges unlawful claims, navies flout those claims to keep them from calcifying into international practice and, perhaps, into customary international law. China, therefore, can always claim America was the first to militarize the South China Sea controversy — a controversy that China itself created by challenging freedom of the seas. If Beijing won this point, it’s a trivial one. It’s doubtful anyone will buy the narrative that a hegemonic United States is bullying poor little China.

And on and on the Clausewitzian dialogue by displays of force will go. To reply to China’s HQ-9 challenge, the United States and its Asian allies must demonstrate that they can exercise maritime freedoms despite the worst the PLA can throw at them. They should also ponder how to prove that they could take down Chinese missile sites should the worst come. If they do that, they may make believers of the Chinese and other observers—and bolster their likelihood of deterring future Chinese misconduct.
 

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Xi tours Chinese top state media, demands total loyalty

By Didi Tang | AP February 19 at 10:39 AM

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping made a rare, high-profile tour of the country’s top three state-run media outlets Friday, telling editors and reporters they must pledge absolute loyalty to the party and closely follow its leadership in “thought, politics and action.”

The remarks by Xi, also head of the ruling Communist Party, are the latest sign of the party’s increasingly tighter control over all media and Xi’s unceasing efforts to consolidate his powers.

Xi overshadowed the party’s propaganda chief, Liu Yunshan, who accompanied him on his visits to the newsrooms of the party newspaper People’s Daily, the official Xinhua News Agency and state broadcaster China Central Television.

At CCTV, Xi was welcomed by a placard pledging loyalty to the party. “The central television’s family name is the party,” the sign read, anticipating remarks made by Xi at a later meeting.

“The media run by the party and the government are the propaganda fronts and must have the party as their family name,” Xi told the propaganda workers at the meeting during which he demanded absolute loyalty from state media.

“All the work by the party’s media must reflect the party’s will, safeguard the party’s authority, and safeguard the party’s unity,” Xi said. “They must love the party, protect the party, and closely align themselves with the party leadership in thought, politics and action.”

Willy Lam, an expert on elite Chinese politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said Xi is raising standards for the state media by requiring that they obey the will of the party’s core leadership, which is increasingly defined by Xi himself in another sign of how he has accrued more personal authority than either of his last two predecessors.

“This is a very heavy-handed ideological campaign to drive home the point of total loyalty to the party core,” Lam said. “On one hand, Xi’s influence and power are now unchallenged, but on the other hand, there is a palpable degree of insecurity.”

Lam said Xi faces lurking challenges not only from within different party factions but also from among a disaffected public, grown unhappy with the slowing economy and a recent stock market meltdown.

Zhang Lifan, a Beijing-based independent historian and political observer, said the tour of state media added further to Xi’s burgeoning personality cult. “I am afraid we will see more personal deification in the media in the future,” Zhang said. “I think Xi is declaring his sovereignty over the state media to say who’s really in charge.”
 

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http://www.voanews.com/content/chin...-foreign-firms-to-publish-online/3197972.html

China Requires Approval for Foreign Firms to Publish Online

Associated Press
February 19, 2016 8:36 AM

BEIJING — A new Chinese regulation announced this week will require foreign companies and foreign-Chinese joint ventures to acquire approval before publishing content online, in the government's latest move to tighten control of the digital realm.

In an apparent countervailing trend born of the need to shore up slowing growth and flagging foreign investment, the government on Friday also announced plans to make it easier for foreigners to live and work in the country under new rules for obtaining permanent residency.

Under the new regulations going into effect March 10, firms with at least part-foreign ownership will be banned from publishing on the mainland text, pictures, maps, games, animation and sound "of informational or thoughtful nature" without approval from the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television.

Chinese law has long required Internet service providers to hold an operating license that can only be obtained in partnership with a Chinese firm, and the new regulations do not represent a wholesale revision of existing rules or practices, experts say.

But the new policies underscore the increasingly restrictive political climate in China, where the leadership has sought to rein in public speech and thought, with an emphatic focus on the country's fast-growing Internet industry.

The explosive rise of new media, ranging from social media messaging services to streaming TV shows, for instance, has prompted Chinese censors to introduce a slate of new regulations so it could police digital and social media as closely as it did traditional publications. The country's top Internet regulator has repeatedly warned that an untamed cyberspace would pose a risk to domestic security and the government should decide who to allow into "its house."

"China is still focused more on maintaining the social stability and national security interests when it comes to making policies on the Internet industry, while caring less about the commercial and individual interests," said Zhang Zhian, the director of the school of communication and design at Sun Yat-sen University.

As part of the new regulations, online publishers must store their content on servers in the mainland, a stipulation that gives the government expanded legal powers regarding data access and control. Beijing has made similar data storage requirements for technology firms as part of new cybersecurity and national security laws passed in the past year.

Paul Gillis, a visiting professor at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management who studies Chinese-foreign joint ventures, said China has introduced regulations in recent months that explicitly give authorities censorship powers under the law that they have long had in practice.

"From a practical standpoint it's not much different," he said. "There was tough regulation of anything online before and they shut down anything they thought disrupts social order. But a lot of what might have been common practices before are being put into legislation so China can argue it's operating under the rule of law."

Meanwhile, the new guidelines issued by China's Cabinet aim to expand the categories of foreigners in China eligible to obtain the Chinese equivalent of a U.S. green card. Procedures will be simplified and restrictions relaxed on foreign students seeking jobs in the country.

China's economy posted its slowest growth in a quarter century last year, expanding 6.9 percent. Officials expect growth this year of between 6.5 and 7 percent, while once-robust interest among foreign investors is falling amid complaints over excessive government interference.
 

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https://news.yahoo.com/iraq-tribesmen-clash-jihadists-inside-held-fallujah-115554303.html

Iraq tribesmen clash with jihadists inside IS-held Fallujah

AFP
By Salam Faraj
24 minutes ago

Baghdad (AFP) - Deadly clashes erupted between Iraqi tribesmen and the Islamic State group inside jihadist bastion Fallujah on Friday, a sign their longstanding hold on the city west of Baghdad is weakening.

Fallujah is one of two Iraqi cities still controlled by IS, and a concerted and sustained uprising by local tribes could pose a significant threat to the estimated 300 to 400 jihadists inside it.

Sunni Arab tribesmen from Anbar province, where Fallujah is located, played a key role in driving back IS's predecessor organisation Al-Qaeda in Iraq after joining forces with US troops from 2006.

The Friday Fallujah shootout pitted fighters from multiple tribes against IS members known as Al-Hisba, who are responsible for enforcing religious strictures in the city.

"Clashes took place between sons of the Al-Mahamda and Al-Juraisat tribes against the Al-Hisba group," Issa Sayir, the exiled official responsible for the Fallujah area, told AFP.

Sayir said the gunfight reflected tensions resulting from increasingly difficult living conditions caused by Fallujah's isolation by the security forces.

Conditions in Fallujah are dire, with Anbar Governor Sohaib al-Rawi saying that the situation "has reached a state of famine."

Sayir said the fighting began in Al-Jolan in northwest Fallujah, and spread to the Nazal area in the city centre and Al-Askari on its east side.

Anbar provincial councillor Raja al-Barakat also said the unrest had spread to Nazal and other areas.

A police lieutenant colonel gave a different account of the start of the fighting, saying it began after Al-Hisba members accused a woman in Al-Nizaiza market in central Fallujah of misconduct because she had failed to cover her hands with gloves.

- Years outside government control -

The officer said that members of a third tribe, Al-Halabsa, were also involved in the clashes against IS, and that sporadic fighting was continuing.

Sheikh Majeed al-Juraisi, a leader of the Al-Juraisat tribe, described the clashes as an uprising against IS in the city and called on the government and security forces to help residents who are fighting the jihadists.

Tribesmen have seized part of Al-Jolan, where the fighting began, Juraisi said.

The interior ministry said tribesmen had seized parts of Al-Jolan and its outskirts but that IS later regained control.

Citing intelligence information, the ministry said the clashes began as a fight between Al-Juraisat tribesmen and the Al-Hisba in Al-Nizaiza market.

It escalated into a shootout in which light and medium weapons were used, and Al-Mahamda and Al-Halabsa tribesmen backed Al-Juraisat fighters, the ministry said.

Fallujah, which is located about 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Baghdad, has been held by anti-government forces since the beginning of 2014.

It is the only Iraqi city apart from the main northern city of Mosul still under IS control.

Tens of thousands of civilians are estimated to still be inside Fallujah.

Anti-government fighters took control of the city in early 2014 during unrest that broke out after security forces demolished a protest camp farther west, and it is now one of IS's key remaining strongholds in the country.

IS launched a sweeping offensive that overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in June 2014, but security forces and allied fighters have pushed the jihadists back with support from US-led air strikes.

Tribesmen have played a key role in holding the jihadists back in multiple areas, including Haditha in Anbar, Amerli in Salaheddin province and Dhuluiyah in Diyala.

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http://news.yahoo.com/saudi-arabia-says-suspends-3-billion-package-lebanese-131628408.html

Saudi Arabia says halts $3 billion package to Lebanese army, aid to security service

Reuters
4 hours ago

DUBAI (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia has suspended a $3 billion aid package for the Lebanese army to buy French arms, its state news agency said on Friday, in what an official described as a response to Beirut's failure to condemn attacks on the kingdom's missions in Iran.

The SPA agency also quoted an official source as saying in a statement that Saudi Arabia has also canceled the remainder of $1 billion in aid it had earmarked for Lebanon's internal security service.

Saudi Arabia pledged the aid package for the Lebanese army in 2013 in what then-Lebanese President Michel Suleiman called the largest grant ever to the country's armed forces.

The first shipment of French weapons and military equipment had already been delivered to Lebanon in April last year under the Saudi-funded deal to bolster the Lebanese army's fight against Islamist militants encroaching from neighboring Syria.

A Lebanese security source said Lebanon had not received a formal notification of the decision.

In the statement, the Saudi official said Riyadh had always stood with Lebanon and supported the country through difficult times.

"Despite these honorable stands, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia had been met with Lebanese stands that are against it on Arab, regional and international arenas, in the shadow of the confiscation of the will of the state by the so-called Lebanese Hezbollah," the statement said.

Hezbollah is the Iranian-backed Shi'ite Muslim group that wields major power in Lebanon. Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia is the arch-regional rival of Shi'ite Iran.

The SPA statement said Lebanon, at recent meetings of the Arab League and the Organization of the Islamic Conference, had failed to condemn "the blatant aggression on the kingdom's embassy in Tehran and the consulate in Mashhad," last month.

It was referring to an attack by Iranian demonstrators protesting over the execution by Saudi Arabia of a senior Shi'ite cleric convicted of incitement to violence.

Saudi Arabia severed diplomatic relations with Iran over the attacks on its missions.

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny in Beirut and Mostafa Hashem in Cairo Writing by Sami Aboudi; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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fairbanksb

Freedom Isn't Free
US stealth fighters fly over South Korea in dramatic show of force


Published February 17, 2016 Associated Press
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2016/0...ver-south-korea-amid-standoff-with-north.html

OSAN AIR BASE, South Korea – Four U.S. F-22 stealth fighters flew low over South Korea on Wednesday in a clear show of force against North Korea, a day after South Korea's president warned of the North's collapse amid a festering standoff over its nuclear and missile ambitions.

The high-tech planes capable of sneaking past radar undetected were seen by an Associated Press photographer before they landed at Osan Air Base near Seoul. They were escorted by other U.S. and South Korean fighter jets.

Pyongyang will likely view the arrival of the planes flown from a U.S. base in Japan as a threat as they are an apparent display of U.S. airpower aimed at showing what the United States can do to defend its ally South Korea from potential aggression from North Korea.

"The F-22 `Raptor' is the most capable air superiority fighter in the world, and it represents one of many capabilities available for the defense of this great nation," Lt. Gen. Terrence J. O'Shaughnessy, deputy commander of the U.S. military command in South Korea, said in a statement.

"The U.S. maintains an ironclad commitment" to the defense of South Korea, he said.

The U.S. military would not say how long the F-22s will be deployed in South Korea.

The United States often sends powerful warplanes to South Korea in times of tension with North Korea. Last month it sent a nuclear-capable B-52 bomber to South Korea after North Korea defiantly conducted its fourth nuclear test.

The international standoff over North Korea deepened earlier this month when Pyongyang ignored repeated warnings by regional powers and fired a long-range rocket carrying what it calls an Earth observation satellite. Washington, Seoul and others consider the launch a prohibited test of missile technology.

Foreign analysts say the North's rocket launch and nuclear test put the country further along it its quest for a nuclear-armed missile that could reach the U.S. mainland.

South Korea's president on Tuesday warned North Korea faces collapse if it doesn't abandon its nuclear bomb program, an unusually strong broadside that is certain to infuriate Pyongyang.

In a speech at parliament, President Park Geun-hye said South Korea will take unspecified "stronger and more effective" measures to make North Korea realize its nuclear ambitions will result only in accelerating its "regime collapse."

Park made the speech while defending her government's decision to shut down a jointly run factory park in North Korea in response to the North's rocket launch. Pyongyang retaliated by expelling all the South Koreans there, put its military in charge of the area and cut off key communication hotlines between the Koreas.

It is unusual for a top South Korean official to publicly touch on such a government collapse because of worries about how sensitive North Korea is to talk of its authoritarian government losing power. Pyongyang has long accused Washington and Seoul agitating for its collapse.

After the rocket launch, Seoul announced that talks would begin with Washington on deploying a sophisticated U.S. missile defense system in South Korea and that the allies' annual military drills in the spring will be the biggest ever.

The deployment of the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, is opposed by North Korea, China and Russia. Opponents say the system could help U.S. radar spot missiles in other countries.

Pyongyang has also called regular U.S.-South Korea military exercises a rehearsal for a northward invasion. The allies say their drills are defensive in nature.
 
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