WAR 02-20-2016-to-02-26-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
(203) 01-30-2016-to-02-05-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...05-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(204) 02-06-2016-to-02-12-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...12-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(205) 02-13-2016-to-02-19-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...19-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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Well folks, I wake up with a still full stomach due to the cat feeling that her's wasn't, open up TB2K and spend the last hour on the current Syria-Turkish-Russian-Kurd-Saudi-Shia-Sunni thread....

The biggest "game changer" being posted by Possible Impact....

Turkey Says "Massive Escalation" In Syria Imminent *update #280, Saudis launch strikes
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...0-Saudis-launch-strikes&p=5955757#post5955757

:siren::siren::siren:

Rudaw English þ@RudawEnglish 3h Iraq
"#YPG is a unit of the Syrian army"
says Bouthaina Shaaban, political & media adviser to #Assad

More to come in a few.....Housecarl

ETA: The other almost missed in the same thread is this one posted by Seabear.....

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...0-Saudis-launch-strikes&p=5955597#post5955597

Saudi Political Analyst Dahham Al-'Anzi: KSA Has Obtained Nuclear Bomb.
http://www.memri.org/clip/en/0/0/0/0/0/0/5327.htm
Saudi Political Analyst Dahham Al-'Anzi: KSA Has Obtained Nuclear Bomb. Test May Be Held Soon

ETA 2: The added bit about Russian Navy SSKs now being a permanent part of their Mediterranean Squadron's force structure is another big DOT!
 
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.ktvq.com/story/31270008/two-serbians-believed-among-49-killed-in-us-airstrike-in-libya

2 Serbians believed among 49 killed in U.S. airstrike in Libya

By Greg Botelho and Barbara Starr CNN
3 Hours Ago

(CNN) -- American warplanes hit an ISIS camp in Libya where foreign fighters had been engaged in advanced training, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said. Local officials said at least 49 people had been killed and six injured.

Noureddine Chouchane, a senior operative in the terrorist group from Tunisia, was believed to be among those from around Africa and the Middle East who had converged on the site. It was not immediately clear whether Chouchane was killed, Earnest said Friday.

Chouchane is thought to have played an instrumental role in two terrorist attacks in Tunisia last year, one at Tunis' Bardo Museum that killed 23 people and another at a seaside resort in Sousse that left 38 people dead. ISIS claimed responsibility for both massacres.

Also believed to be among the dead are two Serbian embassy employees who were kidnapped last year, Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic said. Communications officer Sladjana Stankovic and driver Jovica Stepic were kidnapped in Sabratah in November 2015.

A spokeswoman for the Serbian Foreign Ministry said, however, that Serbia was still waiting for official confirmation of their deaths from Libyan authorities. She confirmed that Serbia had been informed by the Pentagon that the specific location where they were believed to be held had been bombed.

A Pentagon spokeswoman said the U.S. Defense Department was aware of the foreign minister's statement but had no indications to confirm that the Serbians were dead.

"We are still assessing the results of the strike," she said.

Friday morning's U.S. strike in the al-Qasser district in Sabratha, a coastal city in northwestern Libya where most residents are from Tunisia, killed at least 49 people, Hussain al-Thawadi, the Mayor of Sabratah, said.

Al-Thawadi told Libya TV in an interview the death toll could rise because more people might still be under the rubble. He said the house was rented by suspected ISIS members, and he believed more than 60 people were inside it when it was hit.

Also six people were wounded, according to the Sabratha Municipal Council.

A Libyan man started to expand the house in Sabratha to several levels last year, security officials in the city said. He had brought in several groups of fighters over the past few months, including one batch two days ago. That house was struck Friday.

Over the last several weeks, the United States observed militants moving around the site and undergoing what appeared to be special training, a U.S. official said. "This was outside the normal training camp scenario," the official said.

The activity raised concerns the people there might be planning to launch an external attack, though no details were discovered about where or when this might take place.

The U.S. military has launched hundreds of airstrikes against ISIS targets over the past two years. These have been concentrated in Iraq and Syria, where the Islamist extremist group has established its biggest foothold and has its de facto capital in Raqqa.

But Libya -- a North African nation that's been in turmoil and a hotbed for some militant groups since a 2011 revolution that toppled longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi -- has been in its crosshairs as well.

ISIS expansion in turbulent Libya

ISIS has emerged as the world's top terrorist threat, having conducted or inspired about 70 attacks in 20 countries since declaring its caliphate in June 2014.

It is significant that ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi exerts more control over the ISIS branch in Libya than any other, according to a report late last year to the United Nations Security Council. This conclusion is in line with U.S. intelligence determinations that al-Baghdadi sees the relatively lawless, impoverished North African state as prime ground to enlarge his self-declared caliphate.

The group has asserted itself in Libya by taking over territory and exercising terror, as evidenced by its beheadings of Egyptian Coptic Christians about a year ago on a Libyan beach.

Libya has also been a base to train militants, devise plots and launch them in places like neighboring Tunisia, which has been considered the Arab Spring's success story but has not been immune to the violence wrenching the region.

The Bardo Museum and Sousse beach attacks are gut-wrenching proof of that, not just because of the human carnage but also for their negative effects on a Tunisian economy that's long benefited from tourism.


Both attacks were carried out by one terror cell whose members came from Tunisia, communicated with ISIS leaders in Syria and Iraq, and trained in Libya, a Western counterterrorism source said. That training happened near Sabratha, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) east of the Tunisian border where the Friday morning strike took place.

The same cell planned to attack France's diplomatic complex in Tunis, only to be thwarted as Tunisian security forces moved in, according to the source.

All of its roughly half dozen core members -- at least those not killed in attacks -- who were still in Tunisia are now in custody. But others involved in the plots may not be in the country, possibly finding refuge in their former training ground in Libya instead.

U.S. official called for 'decisive military action' in Libya

It's no surprise the United States would help Tunisia. Last May, President Barack Obama cemented America's strong ties by designating the country as "a major non-NATO ally."

A few weeks ago, Obama's top military adviser talked about stepping up efforts to curtail ISIS specifically in the North African country.

Addressing reporters while traveling in Europe, Gen. Joseph Dunford, the Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, said the United States wants to "take decisive military action" to "check" ISIS in Libya.

CNN's Mohammed Tawfeeq, Hamdi Alkhshali, Tim Lister, Paul Cruickshank and Kevin Bohn contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/russia-says-regrets-un-rejection-rein-turkey-over-103855848.html

Russia says 'regrets' UN rejection to rein in Turkey over Syria

AFP
4 hours ago

Moscow (AFP) - Russia on Saturday expressed regret that the United Nations Security Council rejected its bid to halt Turkey's military actions against Syria and vowed to continue supporting government forces against "terrorists."

Western powers on Friday turned down a Russian draft resolution calling for an immediate end to cross-border shellings and plans -- supported by Turkey -- for foreign ground intervention in Syria.

"We can only express regret that this draft resolution was rejected," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists.

He said Moscow was "concerned at the growing tension at the Syrian-Turkish border.

"Russia considers such cross-border shelling that Turkey is carrying out as unacceptable."

President Vladimir Putin held a "detailed discussion of the situation in Syria particularly due to the escalation in tensions on the Syrian-Turkish border," on Friday with his security council, the Kremlin said in a statement.

Peskov stressed that Syrian government troops were coming under fire in the area being shelled by Turkey, as well as Kurdish fighters.

The Kremlin spokesman underlined that Russia is set to continue its support for President Bashar al-Assad's ground offensive.

"Russia is continuing a consistent line to provide assistance and help to the armed forces of Syria in their offensive actions against terrorists, against terrorist organisations," Peskov said.

He said that Russia's intervention is aimed at providing "stability in the fight with terrorism, to preserve the terrorial integrity of the country (Syria) and the region."

View Comments (25)

Related Stories

1. Russia to continue helping Syrian armed forces fight 'terrorists' AFP
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3. Russia pushes U.N. Security Council on Syria sovereignty Reuters
4. Kremlin says backs Syria peace, but will continue to support Assad Reuters
5. Kremlin denies Russian strikes on Syria hospitals AFP

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Here I think is the official public warning from the Russians.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/kremlin-says-concerned-turkey-shelling-syrian-territory-094103232.html

Kremlin says concerned by Turkey shelling Syrian territory

Reuters
4 hours ago

MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Kremlin on Saturday expressed concern over Turkey's shelling of Syria's territory, saying such actions were whipping up further tension on the two countries' border.

"The Kremlin is concerned by the growing tension on the Syrian-Turkish border," President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a teleconference with journalists.

"In general, Russia believes that such cross-border shelling of Syria's territory by Turkish artillery is inadmissible."

(Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Alexander Winning)

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4. Walls and watchtowers rise as Turkey tries to seal border against Islamic State Reuters
5. Putin, Obama agree on cooperation to implement Syria agreement Reuters
 
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.stripes.com/news/us/expert-enormous-threat-posed-by-n-korea-1.395224

Expert: 'Enormous threat' posed by N. Korea

By Charles D. Brunt
Albuquerque Journal, N.M.
Published: February 20, 2016

(Tribune News Service) — Siegfried S. "Sig" Hecker, a former director of Los Alamos National Laboratory and internationally recognized expert in plutonium science and nuclear security, estimated Friday that leader Jong Un's regime has 10 to 16 nuclear weapons and described the North Korean arsenal as "an enormous threat."

Hecker has traveled to North Korea several times by invitation and is one of the last outside scientists to see the secretive nation's nuclear weapons work. He made the comments during a question and answer session after a presentation to an audience of about 80 people attending a lecture sponsored by the Albuquerque International Association.

His invited visits, the last of which occurred in 2010, were North Korea's way of trying to convince the rest of the world that it had a workable nuclear weapons program, Hecker said, and secure what it views as the proper level of "respect" from the United States and the rest of the world.

Although Hecker said he doubts North Korea has tested a hydrogen bomb as claimed, he said it has built a nuclear arsenal.

Also, there have been confirmed satellite launches and tests of increasingly sophisticated missiles thought to be capable of reaching the continental United States.

Hecker said that shortly after President Barack Obama took office, there seemed to be some opportunity to "try to keep the situation from getting worse."

But after Obama said, "I'll reach out my hand if you unclench your fist," Hecker said, the Iranians responded with dialogue while North Korea responded with more testing — which Heckler said was, in essence, "a punch between the eyes."

Since then, the situation has worsened, and the only avenue being pursued is tightening sanctions against North Korea, he said.

He said that options are few and that military action is especially problematic given the proximity of Seoul to the North Korean border.

Although he said that somehow the U.S. has not managed to play its cards right, he acknowledged the difficulty in dealing with dictatorial regimes that deprive their own people to pursue their nuclear ambitions.

Russian engagement

Hecker's 50-minute presentation focused on what he described as the unprecedented cooperation that developed between Russian and American nuclear scientists after the collapse of the Soviet Union — cooperation that has evaporated with Russia's involvement in Ukraine and Syria.

But he predicted it will return, out of necessity, and become a model for nonproliferation.

Hecker, a research professor at Stanford University and senior fellow at The Center for International Security and Cooperation, said reining in nuclear weapons and materials is complicated by North Korea's quest for nuclear equity and, perhaps to a lesser degree, by Iran's nuclear ambitions.

As the Soviet Union dissolved and its former states struggled economically, American and Russian scientists immediately recognized the need to secure Russia's vast nuclear arsenal -- which included an estimated 100,000 warheads -- and more than 1 million kilograms of fissile material spread throughout the former Soviet Union.

The 1990s, he said, presented a "window of opportunity" for such cooperation because "scientists work best in this diplomatic mode when their governments are in chaos and, well, that's what happened" when the USSR folded.

"During that time, we had the opportunity to step in. What we needed were a few key government people who would help us along," Hecker said.

He credited former President George H.W. Bush, as well as former Sens. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and Richard Lugar, R-Ind., for creating a domestic political environment that allowed U.S. scientists to work with their Soviet counterparts to secure potentially "loose" nuclear weapons in Kazakhstan and other parts of the Soviet Union.

He also praised former President Bill Clinton and credited Russia's nuclear scientists and engineers — whom he described as highly competent, patriotic and responsible — for their willingness to cooperate with their American counterparts.


In the ensuing years, all of Russia's vast nuclear assets, including 39,000 weapons, and materials were secured without a single accident, he said.

Even afterward, Russian and American scientists and engineers continued helping each other solve numerous nuclear-related issues -- even allowing mutual benefits to one another's nuclear test facilities and laboratories.

The picture is very different today.

The road ahead

Despite the current uncertainty among most of the world's nuclear powers, Hecker said he believes such U.S.-Russian cooperation on nuclear issues is still possible.

"I'm going to Russia next week to try to rekindle that," he said, noting that it will be his 51st trip there.

"In the nuclear world, because the weapon proliferation and terrorism issues are so immense, you can't solve them by yourself," he said. "We (the U.S. and Russia) can do everything right, and the world can still go to hell. So the only way you can handle these dangers is to work together. You've got to cooperate.

"On the nuclear energy end, the only way you can generate significant electricity is if you do it safely, securely and economically," he said. "That takes cooperation. A country today cannot start a nuclear energy program by itself without cooperation.

"A great example is South Korea. South Korea had the United States' help all the way through, and now they're the best in the world at building nuclear reactors. But North Korea went it alone: They got the bomb, but they can't produce electricity.

"Cooperation is the key, and our governments know that," he said.
Regrettably, governments get bogged down by "political issues" that make nuclear cooperation nearly impossible.

"That's what makes this current situation so bad," he said. "The decisions are made mostly for domestic reasons on both sides. ... Russia is really hamstrung by domestic issues," particularly Putin's concerns with staying in power.

"Right now, it's hard to do anything, because the Russians are blocking everything because of their domestic issues.

"Eventually, they're going to come around again, and hopefully it doesn't take a catastrophe to get us back together," Hecker said. "Hopefully somebody can see the light and say, 'Look, we've got to live with nuclear — it has bad sides; it has good sides.' The only way to make sure you manage that is cooperation. ... How long will that take? We don't know."

(c)2016 the Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, N.M.)
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Related
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...b7b61e-d5a0-11e5-a65b-587e721fb231_story.html

After nuclear test, Park has epiphanies on North Korea -- and China

By Anna Fifield February 20 at 9:00 AM
Comments 4

SEOUL – The 18th and 19th of each month were busy days at the Woori bank branch at the Kaesong industrial complex.

Salaries for the 54,000 North Koreans who worked in the inter-Korean economic zone, on the northern side of the demilitarized zone that separates the estranged countries, were due by the 20th.

So the managers of the 123 South Korean companies operating there would head to the Woori branch a couple of days before to withdraw cash. Always in U.S. dollars, and usually in $100 or $50 notes.

“Every month, the accountant would tally the hours of each worker, and each worker would check their hours and sign a list,” said Ok Sung-seok, head of Nine Mode, a clothing company that hired 300 North Koreans until the zone was closed this month.

“The manager of the factory would go to the Woori branch in Kaesong and take out the money in U.S. dollars,” Ok said. The cost for hiring each worker was between $180 and $200 a month.

Then, with the cash in an Woori bank paper bag, the company representative would drive five minutes down the road to a management office and hand over the cash to the North Korean officials there.

For more than a decade, South Korean companies have been handing over bags of greenbacks to the North Korean regime in this way.

When it was opened in 2004, the idea was that the Kaesong industrial complex would help lessen the economic gap between North and South, and at the same time expose a few isolated North Koreans to the outside world. The government theory went that these benefits outweighed concerns about what the north might do with the money.

But now, that has all changed.

Park Geun-hye, the South Korean president, has acted with unusual decisiveness – and acted alone, following her gut instinct, advisers say – to close down the complex in the wake of North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests, and with it the “sunshine policy” era of engagement.

“She’s the president. The buck stops with her,” said a senior government official, speaking on condition of anonymity to speak about internal deliberations.

In an address last week, Park said that the money South Korea was sending through Kaesong was helping “the runaway Kim Jong Un regime.” This echoes what critics of the project had been saying for a decade.

South Korea’s government estimates that it has sent more than half a billion dollars to North Korea through Kaesong over the past 12 years, including $120 million last year alone. By the time it closed this month, 54,000 North Koreans were working in 124 Southern-owned factories in the zone, making an average of about $160 a month.

They did not receive any of the money, instead being paid in vouchers that they could use in local stores. No ones knows what proportion of the monthly payment each worker received, but the Daily NK, a South Korean Web site with sources inside the North, estimated that it was about 20 percent – or about $30.

The $560 million sent through Kaesong was in addition to the $487 million it sent through the Kumgangsan tourist resort in the years it was open, according to unification ministry statistics, and the $2.2 billion in fertilizer, rice and disaster assistance from South to North since the mid-1990s.

Park’s decision to end the last major engagement project with North Korea was the result not just of North Korea’s actions, but of China’s.

In the three years since she took office, Park has made concerted efforts to woo China, including risking annoying Washington by attending a military extravaganza in Beijing last year.

Yet after North Korea conducted its nuclear test at the beginning of January, Xi refused to take a phone call from Park for a month, according to multiple people with knowledge of the situation. When they finally talked, the Chinese leader didn’t say anything that hadn’t already been said in the official media, anything that couldn’t have been said the day of the test, said one person, asking for anonymity to discuss private conversations.

Park’s decision to close Kaesong – and also to open discussions with the United States about hosting an advanced missile defense system that China staunchly opposes – is meant as a signal that South Korea will do everything it can to punish North Korea, and it expects other countries to do what they can, analysts say.

China, which shares a long border with North Korea, is by far its largest trading partner and therefore has the most leverage over its errant neighbor.

The Kaesong complex was shut down once before – by North Korea, which withdrew its workers during a period of heightened tensions in 2013. But experts think that this time, the closure is permanent.

“Realistically, it’s closed for good,” said Lee Jong-seok, who was South Korea’s minister of unification during the “sunshine policy” years and remains a strong proponent of engagement. “Now that the South Korean government has alleged that the money is going into North Korea’s nuclear program, there’s no way they can reopen this.”

Park had tried to find a middle ground between the sunshine policy and the hardline tendencies of her predecessor, pursuing what she called a “trustpolitik” approach to North Korea — a combination of carrots and sticks. But the nuclear test and missile launch forced her to call an end to this approach.

“She’s come to realize that trustpolitik doesn’t work,” said Chun Yung-woo, national security adviser to Park’s predecessor and an advocate of a much tougher approach to the North. “She’s now decided to speak the language that North Korea understands – the language of sanctions and regime change.”

Yoonjung Seo contributed to this report.

Anna Fifield is The Post’s bureau chief in Tokyo, focusing on Japan and the Koreas. She previously reported for the Financial Times from Washington DC, Seoul, Sydney, London and from across the Middle East.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Missed this one.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/North_Korea_Set_to_Deploy_KN08_Ballistic_Missile_999.html

From Space Daily's Nuke Wars section.....

North Korea Set to Deploy KN08 Ballistic Missile
by Staff Writers
Moscow (Sputnik) Feb 18, 2016

North Korea has taken steps toward the deployment of its KN08 (Hwasong-13) road-mobile intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) which could potentially launch a nuclear strike on the United States.

North Korea has formed a new "military unit" subordinate to Strategic Rocket Forces to deploy the weapon, Yonhap reported Sunday, citing US and South Korean officials.

On February 9 US director of national intelligence James R. Clapper said in a report to the senate armed services committee that North Korea had begun fielding the KN08 system, despite the fact that it "has not been flight-tested."

"North Korea's nuclear weapons and missile programs will continue to pose a serious threat to US interests and to the security environment in East Asia in 2016," he stated. "Pyongyang is committed to developing a nuclear-armed missile capable of posing a direct threat to the United States."

On February 12 the Pentagon issued its annual North Korea Military Report, stating, "if successfully designed and developed, the KN08 likely would be capable of reaching much of the continental United States."

However, the report noted that the intercontinental ballistic missiles cannot be considered reliable without additional trials, stating that multiple flight tests are required to identify and correct design and manufacturing defects of the "extremely complex systems." The pace of the development process will be slower without aid from abroad, according to Pentagon statements, and currently the northern state lacks the technology for a nuclear strike against the US.

In its 10 October 2015 military parade celebrating the 70th anniversary of the Workers' Party of Korea, Pyongyang unveiled a modified version of the ICBM with an apparent smaller and blunter nuclear warhead.

Last month North Korea surprised the international community by announcing that it had successfully tested a hydrogen bomb. Earlier this month, Pyongyang violated UN resolutions by launching a long-range rocket, claiming it was part of a "purely scientific space programme."

South Korea, the US, Russia, Japan and other countries highly criticized the move, saying it was a disguised ballistic missile test.
 

Housecarl

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

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2016/02/253088.htm

Secretary Kerry's Meeting with UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond

Readout
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
February 20, 2016

The following is attributable to Spokesperson John Kirby:

Secretary Kerry met in London this morning with British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond. The two ministers discussed the ongoing conflict in Syria and the progress being made in Geneva by UN task forces -- one to develop the modalities of a cessation of hostilities and the other to ensure the sustained and unimpeded delivery of humanitarian assistance to besieged areas.

Secretary ‎Kerry thanked the Foreign Secretary for Great Britain's continued leadership in the International Syria Support Group, as well as for British contributions in the coalition to fight Da'esh.

Finally, Foreign Secretary Hammond updated‎ Secretary Kerry on the EU negotiations just completed in Brussels.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/clashes-jihadist-held-iraq-city-halt-residents-seized-130221004.html

Clashes in jihadist-held Iraq city halt after residents seized

AFP
3 hours ago

Baghdad (AFP) - Clashes between Iraqi tribesmen and the Islamic State group in Fallujah have halted after the jihadists detained dozens of residents of the city west of Baghdad, officials said Sunday.
ðÁ
The fighting between the Sunni Arab tribesmen and IS in Fallujah, one of two cities it still holds in Iraq, challenges the jihadists' ability to maintain control.

But officials said tribesmen were running short of supplies on Saturday, and IS, which is known for its extreme violence, has already executed a large number of opponents elsewhere in Anbar province.

Tribesmen in three areas of Fallujah "withdrew from the clashes (with IS), fearing for the fate of the detainees", an army lieutenant colonel told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"The clashes stopped because of the imbalance of power and fear that the detainees would be executed," said Issa Sayir who was appointed by the Anbar governor to administer the Fallujah area.

Sayir said IS was likely to execute Fallujah residents for their alleged "cooperation with the security forces".

Raja Barakat, a member of the provincial council in Anbar, where Fallujah is located, said: "We now fear that the (IS) organisation will carry out a massacre in the city."

Sayir estimated the number of detainees at around 60, while the lieutenant colonel said the figure was over 110 and a tribal leader said more than 100.

Sheikh Majeed al-Juraisi, a leader in one of the tribes fighting the jihadists in Fallujah, said IS had seized the residents over the previous two days.

- Civilians trapped in city -

"We hold the prime minister responsible for any massacre carried out against the people of Fallujah," Barakat said, calling for the launch of a military operation to retake the city.

Both Sayir and the army officer said a military operation would be launched in the Fallujah area in coming days, but it may come too late for the detainees in the city.

Officials said the clashes began Friday as a fight between tribesmen and Al-Hisba, IS members charged with enforcing the religious strictures of the Sunni extremist group in the city.

The fighting escalated into gunbattles involving members of several tribes.

IS launched a sweeping offensive that overran swathes of Iraq in June 2014, but security forces and allied fighters have pushed the jihadists back with US-led air support.

Fallujah, 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Baghdad, is the only Iraqi city apart from IS's main hub, Mosul in the north, still under jihadist control.

The militants also hold other areas, including large towns such as Tal Afar and Hawijah.

Anti-government fighters seized Fallujah in early 2014 during unrest that broke out after security forces demolished a protest camp in western Iraq, and it later became an IS stronghold.

The tens of thousands of civilians in Fallujah are facing increasingly dire living conditions, and officials say IS is preventing people from leaving the city, which has largely been cut off by security forces.

There are an estimated 300 to 400 IS fighters inside Fallujah, but the jihadists have repeatedly seized areas and defended others for extended periods despite being heavily outnumbered.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/australia-issues-security-alert-kuala-lumpur-110912784.html

Australia issues security alert for Kuala Lumpur

Reuters
6 hours ago

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - The Australian government warned on Sunday that terrorists may be planning attacks in and around the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur.

Malaysia has been on high alert since a bomb and gun attack in Indonesia's capital in January, which was claimed by the Islamic State militant group. Malaysia had also arrested a suspected militant who confessed to be planning an attack in the country.

"Terrorists may be planning attacks in and around Kuala Lumpur. Attacks could be indiscriminate and may target Western interests or locations frequented by Westerners," read a travel advisory post on the Australian government website.

It also recommended that Australians avoid travel to the coastal region of eastern Sabah, where the beaches and islands are popular with foreign tourists and diving enthusiasts.

Malaysia's Foreign Ministry said it noted the travel advisories and would keep foreign missions informed on security developments.

"We also acknowledge the fact that foreign missions are at liberty to provide their own assessment of the security situation in their host countries albeit the fact that it may not be accurate or gives a true reflection of the situation," a ministry spokesperson said.

(Reporting by Emily Chow and Rozanna Latiff; Editing by Alison Williams)

View Comments (9)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/german-officials-horrified-anti-migrant-mobs-eastern-state-163727695.html

German officials horrified by anti-migrant mobs in eastern state

AFP
By Deborah Cole
1 hour ago

Berlin (AFP) - Shocked German officials on Sunday condemned two "disgusting" incidents involving anti-migrant mobs in the ex-communist east of the country, including a crowd cheering a blaze at a planned refugee shelter.
ðÁ
A group of 20-30 apparently drunken onlookers applauded as fire took hold in a former hotel being converted into home for asylum seekers in the town of Bautzen in Saxony state overnight. Police suspected arson and traces of fire accelerant were found.

Some members of the group tried to impede the work of firefighters dispatched to the scene, police said.

A police spokesman said that the group showed "unabashed delight" at the blaze and made "disparaging comments" about the efforts to contain it.

No one was hurt in the incident. Two 20-year-old men were temporarily detained for defying police orders.

The events came two nights after 100 people in the Saxony town of Clausnitz tried to block the arrival of a bus carrying about 20 asylum seekers to a new shelter.

The scenes, captured on video, show the mob angrily shouting "We are the people", borrowing the pro-democracy slogan from the peaceful revolution that led to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

The images, which have gone viral on social media, show police officers dragging terrified refugees out of the coach, including a teenage boy reportedly from Lebanon.

.. View gallery
People look at the burnt-out roof truss of a former …
People look at the burnt-out roof truss of a former hotel that was under reconstruction to become a �c

Police chief Uwe Reissmann sparked further outrage when he gave the migrants themselves partial blame for the fraught scene, noting that some had filmed the mob with their mobile phones and made obscene gestures at them.

He said he had not ruled out criminal charges against the protesters or the migrants.

- 'Something very wrong' -

Members of Chancellor Angela Merkel's left-right "grand coalition" government, which has come under increasing pressure over its liberal stance on asylum, expressed outrage at the incidents.

"Racists are pathetic lawbreakers, a disgrace for our country. Shame on you!" deputy foreign minister Michael Roth wrote on Twitter.

"Those who shamelessly applaud when houses burn and scare refugees to death are displaying disgusting and revolting behaviour," Justice Minister Heiko Maas tweeted.

Maas told media group RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland he was stunned by the growing brazenness of far-right groups, which he said crossed the line of free expression to become a threat to public safety.

"Verbal radicalism is a prelude to physical violence," he said, noting there were more than 1,000 criminal acts against refugee shelters recorded in Germany last year, when the country let in nearly 1.1 million asylum seekers. Saxony registered the highest number of attacks.

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said it was "totally unacceptable that people who are seeking protection from oppression are met with hatred and incitement".

"There is a basic level of decency and respect for the law that may not be violated and in these incidents in Saxony, that level was clearly violated," he said, according to DPA news agency.

Aydan Ozoguz, who handles integration issues for the government, condemned the actions of the police in Clausnitz, calling it "deeply shocking" that the authorities were "not protecting the refugees".

She also blasted the "deplorable" scenes in Bautzen.

"I am horrified that you again have scenes in Germany in which a mob applauds because a refugee shelter is burning," she said.

"Something is going very wrong in Saxony."

Around 100 people held a "solidarity rally" for refugees in Clausnitz late Saturday, carrying signs calling for safe and humane living conditions for the asylum seekers, DPA reported.

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Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/kerry-says-lavrov-reached-provisional-agreement-terms-syria-103447405.html

Violence rages in Syria as Kerry and Lavrov reach provisional deal on ceasefire

Reuters
By Patricia Zengerle
10 minutes ago

AMMAN (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday he and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov had reached a provisional agreement on terms of a cessation of hostilities in Syria and the sides were closer to a ceasefire than ever before.

But he indicated there were still issues to be resolved and he did not expect any immediate change on the ground.

Violence continued to rage in Syria on Sunday. Multiple bomb blasts in a southern district of Damascus killed at least 62 people, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, while twin car bombs killed at least 57 people in Homs, the monitoring group said.

Russian air strikes launched in September against rebels fighting President Bashar al-Assad have exacerbated suffering and destruction in Syria, where a five-year-old civil war has killed more than a quarter of a million people.

Assad said on Saturday he was ready for a ceasefire on condition "terrorists" did not use a lull in fighting to their advantage and that countries backing insurgents stopped supporting them.

The Syrian opposition had earlier said it had agreed to the "possibility" of a temporary truce, provided there were guarantees Damascus's allies including Russia would cease fire, sieges were lifted and aid deliveries were allowed country-wide.

"We have reached a provisional agreement in principle on the terms of a cessation of hostilities that could begin in the coming days," Kerry told a news conference in Amman with Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh.

"The modalities for a cessation of hostilities are now being completed. In fact, we are closer to a ceasefire today than we have been," said Kerry, who was also to meet King Abdullah.

He declined to go into detail about the unresolved issues, saying the two sides were "filling out the details" of the agreement.

But he repeated the U.S. position that Assad had to step down. "With Assad there this war cannot and will not end," he said.

Assad's fate has been one of the main points of difference between Washington and Russia, the Syrian leader's main international backer. Russia recently has begun to say Syrians should decide on whether Assad should stay or not, but it continues to support Damascus with air strikes.

OBAMA AND PUTIN TO TALK

Kerry said he had spoken to Lavrov on several occasions, including earlier on Sunday, and that he anticipated U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin would talk in the coming days to complete the provisional agreement in principle.

The Russian Foreign Ministry confirmed Lavrov and Kerry had spoken by phone on Sunday about conditions for a ceasefire. It said discussions were on ceasefire conditions which would exclude operations against organizations "recognized as terrorist by U.N. Security Council".

These are groups including Islamic State and the al Qaeda- linked Nusra Front.

Despite the provisional agreement, Kerry did not see an imminent change in fighting on the ground.

"I do not believe that in the next few days, during which time we try to bring this into effect, there is somehow going to be a tipping point with respect to what is happening on the ground ... The opposition has made clear their determination to fight back," he said.

The car bombs and suicide attacks on Sunday in the Sayeda Zeinab district of Damascus where Syria's holiest Shi'ite shrine is located were claimed by Islamic State. Suicide attacks last month in the same district, also claimed by Islamic State, killed 60 people.

The car bomb attacks on Sunday in Homs, in which at least 100 were also wounded, were among the deadliest in the city in five years of civil war, a monitoring group said.

Kerry said any deal would take a few days to come together, while the two sides consulted with other countries and the Syrian opposition. Russia had to speak to the Syrian government and Iran, and the United States had to speak to the Syrian opposition and its partners, Kerry said.

Russia's RIA news agency said on Sunday that Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu had arrived in Tehran, quoting a source in the Russian Embassy in Iran. It did not give a reason for the visit.

(Additional reporting by Suleiman al-Khalidi, John Davison, Kinda Makieh and Katya Golubkova; Editing by Richard Balmforth)

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.......Recall that one claim posted of South African involvement in Saudi Arabia's claim of getting nukes over on the current Syria-Turkey-Saudi thread?.......

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/south-african-ruling-party-official-accuses-us-plot-171731456.html

South African ruling party official accuses US of plot

Associated Press
By LYNSEY CHUTEL
5 minutes ago

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — The U.S. government must clarify the "irregular activities" of some its diplomats in the country, a spokesman for South Africa's ruling party said Sunday.

"There seems to be irregular activities coming from the U.S. Embassy," said Keith Khoza, spokesman for the ruling African National Congress party. The ANC party will communicate their concerns to Washington through diplomatic channels, he said.

Khoza referred to accusations made last week by ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe that the U.S. is planning regime change in South Africa, similar to the Arab Spring. Speaking Friday at a march for non-racialism in the capital Pretoria, Mantashe said "regime change elements" similar to those in Libya and Egypt have crept into South Africa, the African News Agency reported.

"Those meetings in the American Embassy are about nothing else other than mobilization for regime change," said Mantashe, according to the agency. "We're aware of a program that takes young people to the United States for six weeks, brings them back and plants them everywhere."

The U.S Ambassador to South Africa Patrick Gaspard has strongly denied the allegations.

Gaspard said the young people in question are part of the Mandela Washington Fellowship for Young African Leaders, an initiative started by President Barack Obama in 2014.

"I'm incredibly proud of the work my U.S. Embassy colleagues do every day to partner with South Africans on health, education and job growth," Gaspard tweeted. "And I will defend their honor and non-partisan integrity."

___

Follow Lynsey Chutel on Twitter at www.twitter.com/lynseychutel.

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Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://news.yahoo.com/saudi-prince-muslim-nations-must-lead-counterterrorism-144732576.html

Saudi prince says offer of troops reflects unease over Syria

Associated Press
By AYA BATRAWY
2 hours ago

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A prominent Saudi prince said Sunday that the kingdom's offer to send troops to Syria to fight extremist groups reflects growing unease over the ability of U.S.-led airstrikes alone to defeat the Islamic State group and end the Syrian civil war.

Prince Turki al-Faisal, speaking at a luncheon in Abu Dhabi attended by a handful of journalists, said the kingdom does not expect the U.S.-led coalition battling the IS group, of which Saudi Arabia is a member, will succeed unless there is a ground intervention.

Saudi Arabia has made clear that its willingness to send special forces to Syria is contingent on the U.S. leading the ground effort.

"The world community has the capability, economic, political, military and otherwise, to put a stop to the killing," he said.

"I think it is high time that people said enough is enough, but simply saying it is not going to do it. There has to be concrete action on the ground to put a stop to the killing."

He added that he has not seen any indication from Saudi leaders that if Saudi troops were deployed to Syria, they would also fight Syrian President Bashar Assad's forces.

.. View gallery
Former director of the Saudi Arabia General Intelligence …
Former director of the Saudi Arabia General Intelligence Directorate, Prince Turki Bin Faisal Al Sau …

Riyadh is one of the main supporters of Syrian rebels battling to overthrow Assad. Its regional rival Iran is one of Assad's main backers.

The prince, who does not hold an official seat in government, is an influential and outspoken member of the Saudi royal family. He headed Saudi Arabia's General Intelligence Directorate for more than two decades until Sept. 1, 2001, and held ambassador posts to the U.S., the U.K. and Ireland.

Speaking earlier at a press conference, he said Muslim countries need to take the lead in fighting terrorism.

The kingdom is currently hosting an 18-day military exercise with 20 members of a recently announced Islamic counterterrorism alliance, which includes Pakistan, Sudan, Jordan and neighboring Gulf states.

Defense ministers from the coalition of Muslim-majority countries are scheduled to hold their first meeting in Saudi Arabia sometime in March, and the Saudi leadership is working on making its capital a logistical hub for the 34-nation alliance.

The prince said that because the majority of victims of terrorist acts are Muslims, "it is our responsibility as Muslim countries to play the primary role in fighting this disease that has impacted us all."

Notably absent from the coalition are Iran, Syria and Iraq, all of which are battling the Islamic State group.

Sunni-majority Saudi Arabia and Shiite-majority Iran are fiercely divided on a host of issues and support opposite sides in the wars in Yemen and Syria.

Relations worsened after the execution of a popular Shiite cleric in Saudi Arabia last month, which triggered protests in Iran and the ransacking of the Saudi Embassy and another diplomatic mission there. The two countries then severed diplomatic and trade ties.

As Iran readies for parliamentary elections on Feb. 26, the prince said he has little hope that those elected will help bridge the political divide.

He said the vote is likely to make the relationship "even worse" because some liberal and reformist candidates were barred from running by the country's Guardian Council, which vets candidates.

"You are going to get a very conservative (parliament) as is the present one, and so we're going to have more of the same," he said.

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Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://in.reuters.com/article/southchinasea-china-paracels-idINKCN0VU02E

World | Sun Feb 21, 2016 8:11am IST
Related: World

Paracels build-up a pointer to China's broader South China Sea ambitions

HONG KONG/BEIJING | By Greg Torode and Megha Rajagopalan

From listening posts to jet fighter deployments and now surface-to-air missiles, China's expanding facilities in the Paracel Islands are a signal of long-term plans to strengthen its military reach across the disputed South China Sea.

Diplomats and security experts in contact with Chinese military strategists say Beijing's moves to arm and expand its long-established holdings in the Paracels will likely be replicated on its man-made islands in the more contentious Spratly archipelago, some 500 kms (300 miles) further south.

Eventually, both disputed island groups are expected be used for jet fighter operations and constant surveillance, including anti-submarine patrols, while also housing significant civilian populations in a bid to buttress China's sovereign claims.

Crucially, that would give Beijing the reach to try to enforce any effective air defence zone in the South China Sea, similar to the zone it created over the East China Sea in late 2013.

U.S. officials confirmed on Thursday the "very recent" placement of surface-to-air missiles on Woody Island, the site of the largest Chinese presence on the Paracels, criticising the move as contrary to China's commitments not to militarise its claims in the South China Sea.

Beijing says it is entitled to "limited defensive facilities" on its territory, and dismissed reports about the missile placement as media "hype".

Ian Storey, a South China Sea expert at Singapore's ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute, said he believed similar weapons could be deployed to China's holdings in the Spratlys within a year or two.

"This would enable China to back up its warnings with real capabilities," he said.

Bonnie Glaser, a military analyst at the Centre for Security and International Studies in Washington, said the Paracels build-up was a likely precursor to similar military deployments on China's recent reclamations in the Spratlys.

While Chinese officials might use on-going U.S. operations in the South China Sea as justification, "there is a plan that has been in place for quite some time", Glaser said.

The HQ-9 missile batteries, guided by radar tracking systems, have a range of 200 km (125 miles) and are the most significant defensive weapon China has yet placed on the Paracels, regional military attaches say.

The move could complicate surveillance patrols carried out routinely by U.S. and Japanese aircraft as well as flights by U.S. B-52 long-range bombers, operations China objected to last November.

It could also challenge operations by Vietnam's expanding fleet of Russian-built SU-30 jet fighters.


STEADY EXPANSION

China's expansion of the Paracels, which it has occupied since forcing the navy of the-then South Vietnam off the islands in 1974, pre-dates its moves to begin large-scale reclamations on seven reefs in the Spratlys three years ago.

It landed fully-armed jet fighters on an expanded airstrip on Woody Island in November, and reinforced hangars have been completed, regional diplomats said.

Coast guard and fishing facilities have also been expanded, along with fuel storage tanks and housing for more than 1,000 civilians in what was declared "Sansha City" in 2012, Chinese analysts say.

Radar coverage and other electronic surveillance equipment has also been improved, and analysts expect the Paracels to play a key part in protecting China's nuclear armed submarine fleet on Hainan Island, 200 km to the north.

Speaking privately, Vietnamese officials say it is now far more difficult for their fishing fleets and coast guard to get close to the Paracels as they try to assert their own sovereign claims.

A similar build-up in the Spratlys would give China its first permanent military presence deep in the maritime heart of Southeast Asia, military attaches say.

China claims most of the South China Sea and while Vietnam and Taiwan also claim both archipelagoes in their entirety, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei also claim part of the Spratlys.

The waterway carries some $5 trillion in seaborne trade each year.


HIGHER STAKES IN SPRATLYS

Chinese officials have repeatedly stressed the civilian nature of the Spratlys expansion, including lighthouses, search and rescue bases and environment research stations.

Three runways have recently been completed and China last month announced the first successful test landings of civilian airliners on the new 3,000-metre airstrip at Fiery Cross reef.

Chinese analysts say the first military flights from the Spratlys could start within months.

Wu Shicun, the head of China's National Institute for South China Sea Studies, said lessons learnt from the Paracels expansion could be transferred to the Spratlys, particularly to manage water supplies and waste.

"There is no real dispute in the Paracels...so the development on the Paracels has been much faster and governance has also been more complete," he said.

Yanmei Xie, a Beijing-based security analyst with the International Crisis Group think-tank, said China would seek to exploit dual-use facilities, such as radars and runways, on the Spratlys but would be cautious about openly deploying military assets.

"The Spratly Islands are more complicated because they involve every claimant," she said. "It can be more costly to China diplomatically and geopolitically."


(Additional reporting by My Pham in Hanoi; Editing by Lincoln Feast)
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://in.reuters.com/article/india-haryana-jat-protests-delhi-idINKCN0VU07Y

Sun Feb 21, 2016 11:41pm IST
Related: Top News

Army deployed to quell protests, water cut to Delhi

BAHADURGARH, India/NEW DELHI | By Rupam Jain and Douglas Busvine


India deployed thousands of troops in Haryana on Sunday to quell protests that have severely hit water supplies to Delhi, a metropolis of more than 20 million, forced factories to close and killed 10 people.

Rioting and looting in Haryana by the Jats, a rural caste, is symptomatic of increasingly fierce competition for government jobs and educational openings in India, whose growing population is set to overtake China's within a decade.

The latest unrest threatens to undermine Prime Minister Narendra Modi's promise of better days to come for Indians who elected him in 2014 with the largest majority in three decades.

As before, the 65-year-old leader ignored the protests - instead giving a speech on rural and urban development in Chattisgarh, unveiling a statue to a late Indian guru and praising a 104-year-old woman for backing his campaign for a Clean India.

The central government deployed 4,000 troops and 5,000 paramilitaries in a massive show of force, and ordered an end to the protests by Sunday night. Home Minister Rajnath Singh met Jat leaders and offered to meet their demands.

In Bahadurgarh, on the road west from Delhi, around 2,000 protesters occupied a highway intersection and stopped truck traffic. Shops in the town were closed.

Related Coverage
› Maruti Suzuki says suspends production in north India amid protests

"We are here to die," said Rajendra Ahlavat, a 59-year-old farmer and protest leader. "We will keep going until the government bows to our pressure. There is no way we will take back our demands."

TV reports from Jhajjar, further west, showed troops fanning out on the streets against a backdrop of burning and damaged buildings - evidence of the fury of Jats who make up a quarter of Haryana's population and number more than 80 million in all.

Haryana's police chief said the death toll had risen to 10 and 150 more had been injured. "We are trying to identify the conspirators and take action," Director General of Police Yash Pal Singal told a televised news conference.

An official from Singh's BJP - which also rules Haryana - said after talks at his residence that it would bring a bill in the state assembly to grant "reservation", or a guaranteed quota of government jobs, to Jats.


WATER STATION ATTACKED

Protesters have attacked the homes of regional ministers, torched railway stations and staged sit-ins on tracks, blocking hundreds of trains. They sabotaged pumping equipment at a water treatment plant that provides most of Delhi's water.

"No water available now. Still no hope to get it," Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said in a tweet on Sunday.

The Delhi government ordered schools to shut on Monday and rationed water supply to residents to ensure that hospitals and emergency services have enough.

Maruti Suzuki India Ltd, India's biggest carmaker by sales, suspended operations at its plants in the state after the protests disrupted the supply of some components.

Modi wants to attract foreign investment to back his 'Make in India' drive to create 100 million manufacturing jobs by 2022. At the current rate India may only create 8 million jobs in that period, by one independent estimate.


(Additional reporting Suvashree Choudhury in Mumbai; Editing by Miral Fahmy and Digby Lidstone)
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.businessinsider.com/a-mu...-cannot-convince-anyone-to-do-anything-2016-2

'A multifaceted catastrophe': Turkey has 'so alienated everyone it cannot convince anyone to do anything'

The Washington Post
Liz Sly, The Washington Post
3 Hours Ago

ISTANBUL — Turkey is confronting what amounts to a strategic nightmare as bombs explode in its cities, its enemies encroach on its borders and its allies seemingly snub its demands.

As recently as four years ago, Turkey appeared poised to become one of the biggest winners of the Arab Spring, an ascendant power hailed by the West as a model and embraced by a region seeking new patrons and new forms of governance.

All that has evaporated since the failure of the Arab revolts, shifts in the geopolitical landscape and the trajectory of the Syrian war.

Russia, Turkey's oldest and nearest rival, is expanding its presence around Turkey's borders — in Syria to the south, in Crimea and Ukraine to the north, and in Armenia to the east. On Saturday, Russia's Defense Ministry announced the deployment of a new batch of fighter jets and combat helicopters to an air base outside the Armenian capital, Yerevan, 25 miles from the Turkish border.

Blowback from the Syrian war in the form of a string of suicide bombings in Istanbul and Ankara, most recently on Wednesday, has brought fear to Turkish streets and dampened the vital tourist industry.

The collapse of a peace process with Turkey's Kurds has plunged the southeast of the country into war between Kurds and the Turkish military just as Syrian Kurds carve out their own proto-state in territories adjacent to Turkey's border.

The economy is in the doldrums, hit by fears of instability and by sanctions from Moscow targeting such goods and revenue sources as Turkish tomatoes and tourism in retaliation for the downing of a Russian plane in November.

screen%20shot%202016-02-08%20at%204.37.32%20pm.png

http://static1.businessinsider.com/...-744/screen shot 2016-02-08 at 4.37.32 pm.png

Worries that the tensions could escalate further are spreading, both in Turkey and in the international community, prompting French President François Hollande to warn on Friday that "there is a risk of war between Turkey and Russia."

"Turkey is facing a multifaceted catastrophe," said Gokhan Bacik, professor of international relations at Ankara's Ipek University. "This is a country that has often had problems in the past, but the scale of what is happening now is beyond Turkey's capacity for digestion."

A rift with the United States, Turkey's closest and most vital ally, over the status of the main Syrian Kurdish militia, the People's Protection Units (YPG), has further exposed Turkey's vulnerability. A demand by President Recep Tayyep Erdogan that Washington choose between NATO ally Turkey and the YPG, its main Syrian ally in the fight against the Islamic State, was rebuffed by the State Department this month, despite Turkish allegations that the YPG had carried out the bombing in Ankara.

On Saturday, Turkey dug in, demanding unconditional support from the United States. "The only thing we expect from our U.S. ally is to support Turkey with no ifs or buts," Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told journalists in Ankara.

Turkey now stands completely isolated, trapped in a maze of quandaries that are partly of its own making, said Soli Ozel, professor of international relations at Istanbul's Kadir Has University.

"It has so alienated everyone it cannot convince anyone to do anything," he said. "It is a country whose words no longer carry any weight. It bluffs but does not deliver. It cannot protect its vital interests, and it is at odds with everyone, including its allies.

"For a country that was until very recently seen as a consequential regional power, these facts strike me as quite disastrous," he added.

Most immediately, Turkey is agonizing over the fast-changing dynamics along its southern border with Syria, where Russia is bombing, Kurds are advancing and the rebels it has supported against President Bashar al-Assad for the past five years are facing defeat.

Sending troops into Syria, as Ankara has hinted it might, would risk a confrontation with Russia that Turkey would almost certainly lose. The downing of a Russian plane in November was, in retrospect, a major miscalculation, analysts say, one that has hamstrung Turkey's ability to project its influence into Syria and prevented it from flying missions there, even in support of the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State.

Not to intervene would mean bowing to the inevitability of an autonomous Kurdish enclave in northern Syria bordering Turkey's own restive Kurdish region, as well as the defeat of the rebels Turkey had hoped would topple Assad and project Turkish influence into the Arab world.

For now, Turkey has confined its response in Syria to artillery shelling against the advancing Kurdish forces and efforts to reinforce the rebels. A rebel fighter in the border town of Azaz, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the issue is sensitive, confirmed multiple reports that Turkey has facilitated the deployment of several hundred rebel fighters from the province of Idlib into Aleppo, via Turkish territory.

At the same time, Erdogan has sought, without success, to revive pressure on the United States to agree to long-standing Turkish proposals for the creation of a safe zone in northern Syria that would protect Syrian civilians who have sought refuge from the fighting along Turkey's border.

Most observers think direct Turkish intervention unlikely, at least for now. There is no public support for a war and no support for one within the Turkish armed forces. A group of more than 200 academics signed a petition this past week urging Turkey not to go to war in Syria, and the military has publicly stated that it is not willing to send troops across the border without U.N. Security Council approval.

But that has not deterred Erdogan from continuing to threaten action, drawing supposed red lines and seemingly digging Turkish policymakers deeper into a hole from which there is no obvious escape. He recently said the fall of rebel-held Azaz to the advancing Kurds would be a "red line" and vowed that Turkey would not allow the creation of a refuge for militant Kurds in Syria.

Turkey's predicament is not entirely self-inflicted. Some of the broader global trends — such as Russia's increasing assertiveness and the United States' waning interest in the Middle East — could not readily have been foreseen when Turkey set about crafting its ambitious foreign policy earlier in the decade, analysts say.

But Erdogan appears to have misjudged the extent to which the shifting parameters have constrained Turkey's room to maneuver, according to Henri Barkey, a Turkey expert at the Wilson Center in Washington.

"Erdogan has mismanaged foreign policy because of hubris," Barkey said. "He was overconfident in 2010 that Turkey was the darling of the world, and that went to his head. There are setbacks that are not of his doing, but how he managed those setbacks are his doing."

When Erdogan is also confronting unforeseen challenges to his domestic ambitions, notably his plans to amend Turkey's constitution to enhance his presidential powers, further Turkish missteps cannot be ruled out, said Bacik, the professor in Ankara.

"I'm not saying that Turkey has lost its mind and is poised for war, but the posture in Ankara is very strange and could lead to surprises," he said. "What's happening in Syria is a question of survival for Erdogan, so it is not possible to rule anything out.

"For Turkey," he added, "there is no good scenario from now on."
 

Housecarl

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:dot5:

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.stripes.com/army-moves-massive-ammo-shipment-to-europe-1.395339

Army moves massive ammo shipment to Europe

Published: February 21, 2016

STUTTGART, Germany — More than 5,000 tons of U.S. Army Europe ammunition has arrived at a depot in Germany — the largest Europe-bound ammo shipment in 10 years, according to the Army.

The massive delivery comes as USAREUR is ramping up missions on the Continent, particularly along NATO’s eastern flank, in response to concerns about a more aggressive Russia.

“This critical shipment will help us to continue to enable the NATO alliance, and the fact that it’s the largest single shipment in 10 years demonstrates our continued commitment to the defense of our allies,” said Col. Matthew Redding, 21st Theater Sustainment Command chief of staff, who helped oversee the mission.

The ammunition, which required 415 shipping containers to transport overseas, will be stored at the Army’s depot in Miesau, and will be available to units operating in support of the ongoing Atlantic Resolve operation, launched in the wake of Russia’s 2014 intervention in Ukraine.

A major upcoming USAREUR exercise — Anakonda 2016 in Poland — will involve some 20,000 troops and draw heavily from the ammunition stockpile.

On Thursday, the 21st TSC, in conjunction with 598th Transportation Brigade, completed the ammo transport from the port of Nordenham in northern Germany to the Miesau depot.

Such stockpiles also enable U.S. soldiers to rapidly draw ammo for short-notice operations.

news@stripes.com
 

Housecarl

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:dot5:

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...tary_abandons_district_in_helmand_109055.html

February 21, 2016

Afghan Military Abandons District in Helmand

By Bill Roggio

The Afghan military withdrew its remaining combat forces from the district of Musa Qala in Helmand province today after battling the Taliban there for nearly a year. The district is now firmly under the control of the Taliban.

The Afghan Army commander in charge of the fighting in Helmand characterized the Army’s withdrawal from Musa Qala as a redeployment of forces.

“Their presence in the area [in Musa Qala] did not mean anything,” Mohammad Moeen Faqir, the commander of 215th Corps told Reuters. “We will use them in battle with enemies in other parts of Helmand province.”

According to Reuters, Faqir said the beleaguered troops who were based in Musa Qala will be relocated to the town of Gereshk in Nahr-i-Sarraj district in Helmand, where the Taliban is pressing an offensive to take over the central part of the province.

The Afghan military’s retreat from Helmand means the Taliban is now fully in control of the district. The Long War Journal previously assessed Musa Qala as being under Taliban control, as Afghan forces were confined to a few bases and according to Afghan press reports, the Taliban was controlling and administering key areas of the district, including government buildings and the bazaar.

Musa Qala has switched hands between Coalition and Afghan forces and the Taliban several times over the past decade. In September 2006, the British made a secret deal with the Taliban that ultimately led to the Taliban controlling the district. The district center switched hands several times between 2007 up until US forces surged in Helmand in late 2009. [See LWJ report, The checkered history of Musa Qala.]

When US forces began withdrawing from Helmand in 2011, the Taliban immediately restarted offensive operations in Musa Qala and the surrounding districts. Security in Helmand has spiraled out of control as the Taliban has pressed its offensive to regain the ground lost there between 2009-2011. Of Helmand’s 13 districts, five are known to be controlled by the Taliban (Nowzad, Musa Qala, Baghran, Dishu, and Sangin), and another five are heavily contested (Nahr-i-Sarraj, Kajaki, Nad Ali, Garmsir and Khanashin). Of the remaining three districts, The Long War Journal believes two (Washir and Nawa-i-Barak) are contested, but the situation is unclear. Only Lashkar Gah, the district that hosts the provincial capital, has not seen significant Taliban activity.

US and British special operations forces have been deployed to Helmand since the summer of 2015 to support the struggling Afghan forces. Most recently, the US deployed an additional 500 Special Forces advisers to oppose the Taliban. However, the reintroduction of US and British forces in Helmand has not prevented the districts of Nowzad, Musa Qala, and Sangin from falling to the Taliban.

Outside of Helmand, the Taliban has significantly expanded its influence in the past year. The Taliban now controls 38 districts in Afghanistan and contests another 40, according to data compiled by The Long War Journal. These numbers may be low given the methodology used to assess control in contested districts.


This article first appeared at The Long War Journal.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
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http://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-agreed-to-north-korea-peace-talks-1456076019

U.S. Agreed to North Korea Peace Talks Before Latest Nuclear Test

Pyongyang rejected condition that nuclear arms would be on the agenda—and then carried out atomic test

By Alastair Gale in Seoul and Carol E. Lee in Washington
Updated Feb. 21, 2016 2:46 p.m. ET

Days before North Korea’s latest nuclear-bomb test, the Obama administration secretly agreed to talks to try to formally end the Korean War, dropping a longstanding condition that Pyongyang first take steps to curtail its nuclear arsenal....

(Rest of article behind their pay wall....)
 

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U.S. agreed to North Korea peace talks days before nuclear test: report

By Bradford Richardson - 02/21/16 01:55 PM EST
Comments 8

The Obama administration secretly agreed to engage in peace talks with North Korea, dropping a condition that the rogue nation first take steps to dismantle its nuclear program, sources familiar with the situation told the Wall Street Journal.

The revised proposal would have reportedly called for North Korea’s nuclear program to simply be on the table at talks, but was rejected by Pyongyang days before its latest nuclear-bomb test on Jan. 6.

American officials told the paper the counter-proposal was one of several attempts by the Obama administration to denuclearize North Korea during his second term, while also negotiating with Iran over its nuclear program.

The White House had signaled to the Kim Jung Un regime that it is willing to cut a deal similar to that brokered with Iran to curtail its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.

But North Korea has expedited its plans to develop a nuclear bomb, which it sees as a valuable bargaining chip in eventual peace negotiations.

A long-range rocket launched by North Korea earlier this month triggered additional international sanctions, including a law signed Thursday by President Obama imposing steeper penalties.

Un, who took power at the end of 2011, has demanded additional conditions for a treaty with South Korea, 63 years after the Korean War ended with an armistice.
 

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http://www.buzzfeed.com/borzoudaragahi/what-to-expect-in-irans-upcoming-elections#.bf2z20Bxv0

What To Expect In Iran’s Upcoming Elections

Hassan Rouhani has ended Iran’s international isolation but has faltered badly in improving the economy and outmaneuvering hardliners ahead of parliamentary elections.

posted on Feb. 21, 2016, at 8:02 a.m.

Borzou Daragahi
BuzzFeed News Middle East Correspondent
Reporting From Istanbul, Turkey

ISTANBUL — During annual February 11 parades marking the anniversary of Iran’s 1979 revolution at least one man came dressed as a woman, wearing a blond wig, fake breasts, and lipstick. He was portraying the lone female soldier among U.S. military personnel briefly detained in in the Persian Gulf last month. The event was a typical effort to rile the U.S. But it was also the latest effort to undermine Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s efforts to present a shiny new image of his country ahead of crucial elections on February 26.

Iranians are gearing up for elections to both parliament and the council of clerics, a body that monitors the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. This will be Iran’s first election since the implementation of the historic nuclear deal with the U.S. and world powers.

Rouhani, a 67-year-old cleric partly educated in the U.K., has long been a part of the Iranian elite, an establishment figure who knows the ins and outs of the Iranian system. He won the presidency in a surprise 2013 election campaigning as a moderate who would seek to to soften Iran’s domestic and foreign policies. In some ways, he succeeded — signing the deal on Iran’s nuclear program with the U.S. and other world powers, which paved the way for the easing of sanctions.

Since then, executives and political leaders from around the world have been rushing to Tehran daily to pursue possible investments and restore ties with a country that boasts the world’s fifth-largest oil reserves. More than 120 foreign business delegations have passed through Tehran over the last 20 months. In selling his country to the world, Rouhani has visited France and Italy, the first such visits by an Iranian president in 16 years.

But improving the economy is proving much harder.

Majid Judeh, a 30-something grocer from Tehran who voted enthusiastically for Rouhani in Iran’s 2013 presidential elections, had hoped the moderate candidate would break the country out of its international isolation and improve a moribund economy reeling from the effects of sanctions over its nuclear program. Speaking by telephone from Iran, he said: “For now nothing has gotten better.”

“The economic situation is going badly,” Judeh said. “But I will likely vote, but only so certain extremists won’t come into parliament.”

Many in Iran and the West discount the significance of Iran’s elections. All Iran’s political players swear fealty to Khamenei and the country’s opaque political system, which vests ultimate power in the hands of high-ranking Shia clerics. But within the circles of elite power, Iran’s reformists, moderates, pragmatic conservatives and hardliners have jostled for power since the world’s first Islamic Republic was founded in 1979, and elections have frequently had important consequences, shifting the country’s domestic and international policies.

On the same day that demonstrators mocked the Americans captured at sea, Rouhani urged voters to come out in high numbers to send a message to those same hardliners.

“Our vote will be ‘no’ to those who want to turn their back on the law. Our vote will be ‘no’ to those inclined to disputes and extremism,” Rouhani told thousands gathered in central Tehran on Feb. 11. “Today, our goal is to build a prosperous and developed Iran and this cannot be done if the country is isolated … Our people do not deserve old and decrepit railways, aviation, and road fleet. Iranians deserve the best railways, aviation, and roads.”

Rouhani, a Western-educated cleric and jurist who once served as the country’s nuclear negotiator as well as secretary of the powerful Supreme National Security Council, is a wily political insider who has long sought to work within the system to change Iran’s trajectory. But his ability to moderate Iran, turn it into a less ideologically driven place appealing to both middle-class Iranians and foreign investors, is being seriously challenged, potentially limiting his appeal and dampening prospects for the high voter turnout that tends to favor Iran’s moderates and reformists.

He has been challenged every step of the way by powerful hardliners in the judiciary and security forces.

In the months during which the nuclear deal was finalized and implemented, hardliners have sought to illustrate Rouhani’s weakness by cracking down on civil society groups and dissidents. They have increased the number of prisoners executed and locked up dual national and foreign businesspeople on specious security charges, including Iranian-American business consultant Siamak Namazi and Lebanese-American consultant Nazar Zaka. Internationally, hardliners are escalating a high-risk intervention in Syria and have stormed two Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran as well as seized and humiliated the U.S. military personnel who allegedly crossed into Iran’s territorial waters.

Rouhani urged thousands of Iranians to run for office in elections, hoping to pressure his hardline rivals — but an estimated 99% of moderates who applied to run were initially disqualified by the hardline Guardian Council, although about 1,500 of the thousands disqualified were later reinstated. At stake in the elections is control over the 290-seat parliament and 88-member Assembly of Experts, which oversees the office of the Supreme Leader.

Rouhani’s success will likely hinge on whether he is able to convince enough Iranians he has the clout to improve the economy, which remains in bad shape, and the lives of a people that finds its purchasing power diminishing and costs escalating. Unemployment remains high, especially among women and youth. Inflation is down but still rampant. The price of oil, Iran’s economic pillar, is hovering at record lows. Reforms of the expensive state bureaucracy have failed, in large part because hardliners tend to benefit from it.

“The economic situation is more important to people than Rouhani’s travels abroad in informing their election decision or whether to vote,” said Amir Khaleghiyan, a researcher at the Iranian Institute for Social and Cultural Studies, a think tank in Tehran.

“The real situation feels gloomy but there is the other face which is the potential,” said Ramin Rabii, managing director at Turquoise Partners a Tehran-based investment firm. With sanctions lifted it recently teamed up with Charlemagne Capital, a London investment advisory. “Not a single week goes by without having foreign investors here.”

But if Iran seems stable enough to draw European investors, it is in part because the region around it is going up in flames, subsumed by ISIS extremists and civil war. Despite international hopes that Iran would align its policies more closely with the West after the nuclear deal, on almost every front, Iran is moving away.

The number of Iranian or Iranian-backed officers, soldiers, and fighters dying in Syria is skyrocketing. Many Iranians fear it is an investment in blood that will make any withdrawal or moderation of its support for Bashar al-Assad politically unfeasible.

Security apparatuses firmly under the control of hardliners have stepped up their repression of Iran’s civil society, keeping hundreds locked up on political charges. Rouhani’s entreaties to ease pressure on opposition leaders Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, the reformists who ran against hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in disputed 2009 elections, have come to naught.

Even as Iranian politicians and clergy protested Saudi Arabia’s execution of dissident cleric Nimr al-Nimr, Iran last year executed at least 850 people, more than it had in decades. At least 160 juvenile offenders remain on death row.

Giving Iranians some hope, however small, that the country is heading in the right direction economically might be all it takes to keep the enthusiasm of voters alive and public pressure on the the system high. Elections were the likely reason why Iran’s government so quickly cut a deal with Airbus to buy 114 new aircraft to replace its aging, rotting fleet of civilian planes, a pricey purchase that gives middle-class Iranians a tangible sign of change.

All of this posturing will come to a head soon: Iranian political campaigns tend to be curtailed affairs, lasting just a few days at the most. Voters tend to decide at the very last moment whether to vote and for whom to vote, often influenced by word-of-mouth or, more recently, social media campaigns.

“The voters are waiting to see what the reformists say before they make a final decision,” said Khaleghiyan. “If they can foment a social wave, it will give a big boost to the government.”
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-nuclear-idUSKCN0VU0XE

World | Sun Feb 21, 2016 3:30pm EST
Related: World, United Nations, North Korea

U.S. rejected North Korea peace talks offer before last nuclear test: State Department

WASHINGTON

The United States rejected a North Korean proposal to discuss a peace treaty to formally end the Korean War because it did not address denuclearization on the peninsula, the State Department said on Sunday.

State Department spokesman John Kirby made the comment in response to a Wall Street Journal report that the White House secretly agreed to peace talks just before Pyongyang's latest nuclear bomb test.

The newspaper, citing U.S. officials familiar with the events, said the Obama administration dropped its condition that Pyongyang take steps to curtail its nuclear arsenal before any peace talks take place, instead calling for North Korea's atomic weapons program to be just one part of the discussion.

Pyongyang declined the proposal, and its Jan. 6 nuclear test ended the diplomatic plans, the newspaper reported.

"ýTo be clear, it was the North Koreans who proposed discussing a peace treaty," Kirby said in an emailed statement.

"We carefully considered their proposal, and made clear that denuclearization had to be part of any such discussion. The North rejected our response," he said. "Our response to the NK proposal was consistent with our longstanding focus on denuclearization."

The isolated state has long sought a peace treaty with the United States and other parties in the 1950-53 Korean War, as well as an end to military exercises by South Korea and the United States, which has about 28,500 troops based in South Korea.

North Korea said on Jan. 6 it had tested a nuclear device it claimed was a hydrogen bomb, provoking condemnation from its neighbors and the United States. Weeks later, it launched a long-range rocket carrying what it called a satellite, prompting renewed criticism.

On Jan. 16, Pyongyang had demanded the conclusion of a peace treaty with the United States and a halt to U.S. military exercises with South Korea to end its nuclear tests.

But U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken said then that Pyongyang needed to demonstrate by its actions that it was serious about denuclearization before any dialogues could start.

The Korean War ended in 1953 in an armistice, not a peace treaty, signed by the United States, representing United Nations forces; the North Korean military and the Chinese army.

Now North Korea wants those three sides and South Korea to sign a treaty.


(Reporting by Megan Cassella and Doina Chiacu; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-libya-security-benghazi-idUSKCN0VU0UM

World | Sun Feb 21, 2016 1:31pm EST
Related: World, United Nations, Libya

Army claims advances in Libyan cities of Benghazi and Ajdabiya

BENGHAZI, Libya | By Ayman al-Warfalli


Military forces loyal to Libya's eastern government said on Sunday they had pushed back Islamist fighters in several areas of Benghazi, seizing the strategic port of Marisa.

The Libyan National Army said it had also taken control of the town of Ajdabiya, about 150 km (90 miles) south of Benghazi, another city where it has been battling Islamist groups.

Libya has been riven by conflict since the 2011 uprising against Muammar Gaddafi, as armed factions supporting rival governments in Tripoli and the east have fought for power and a share of the country's oil wealth.

Islamist fighters have used a security vacuum to expand their presence, and militants loyal to Islamic State control of the city of Sirte, to the west of Ajdabiya.

Benghazi, Libya's second-largest city, has seen some of the worst fighting, with violence escalating when military commander Khalifa Haftar launched a campaign in 2014 against Islamists and other armed groups.

Munthir al-Khartoush, a spokesman for the army's Battalion 309, said that as well as Marisa port, the army had taken control of the nearby neighborhood of Al-Halis, and had advanced in the district of Boatni, which also saw heavy fighting on Saturday.

At least three soldiers and 15 Islamist fighters were killed in Sunday's clashes, the military said.

Marisa would be a significant gain for the army as the groups it has been fighting have been receiving weapons deliveries through the port.

"We have completely cut off the supplies coming to the front line for the Islamist groups in the west of Benghazi by capturing Marisa Port," Khartoush said.

In Ajdabiya, military spokesman Akram Bouhaliqa said the army had forced Islamist fighters from the area around Galouz Street and the industrial zone, the last positions they held.

A resident also confirmed to Reuters that the army was in control of the city.

Three soldiers were killed in Sunday's clashes, Bouhaliqa said. A hospital source in Ajdabiya said 65 people had been killed and 140 wounded in fighting there over the past two months.

The violence comes as a unity government nominated under a United Nations-backed plan is trying to win approval from Libya's internationally recognized parliament in the east.

It also comes two days after a U.S. air strike targeting a suspected Islamic State training camp in the western city of Sabratha killed nearly 50 people, including two Serbian embassy staff abducted in Libya in November.


(Writing by Aidan Lewis; editing by Andrew Roche)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-india-attack-idUSKCN0VU0OR

World | Sun Feb 21, 2016 10:18am EST
Related: World

Death toll rises to seven in Kashmir militant clash

SRINAGAR, India


The death toll from a militant attack in India's disputed Kashmir region rose to seven on Sunday, as security forces fought to flush attackers out of a building they had stormed.

The militants had attacked a bus carrying police reservists near Srinagar, Kashmir's summer capital, before breaking into a training institute. More than 100 people were inside at the time, including people on a course.

Two reservists and one civilian were killed in Saturday's attack and operation to evacuate the institute. Three elite soldiers died on Sunday as they fought to eliminate the attackers.

"We have killed one militant," Bhavish Choudhary, a spokesman for the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), said on Sunday evening. "The operation is ongoing."

There were repeated blasts at the scene and television news pictures showed smoke billowing from the roof of the five-story training center.

Muslim separatists have been fighting Indian forces in the Indian portion of Kashmir since 1989. India accuses Pakistan of training and arming the rebels in the portion it controls and sending them to the Indian side, a claim its neighbor denies.

India and Pakistan fought two of their three wars since independence in 1947 over Muslim-majority Kashmir, which they both claim in full but rule in part.


(Reporting by Fayaz Bukhari; Writing by Mayank Bhardwaj and Douglas Busvine; Editing by Digby Lidstone)
 

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http://news.yahoo.com/north-korea-confirms-military-chief-reported-execution-070632638.html

North Korea confirms new military chief after reported execution

AFP
15 hours ago

Seoul (AFP) - North Korean state media on Sunday confirmed the country has a new military chief following earlier reports in Seoul that the former holder of the post had been executed.

Ri Myong-Su, former People's Security Minister, was referred to as "chief of the Korean People's Army General Staff" when the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported on an army exercise guided by leader Kim Jong-Un.

Ri Myong-Su was again mentioned in a separate KCNA report on Kim's inspection of an air force exercise.

His predecessor Ri Yong-Gil was reportedly executed early this month in what would be the latest in a series of purges and executions of top officials.

Ri Yong-Gil was accused of forming a political faction and corruption, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said, citing a source familiar with North Korean affairs.

In May last year South Korea's spy agency said Kim had his defence chief Hyon Yong-Chol executed -- reportedly with an anti-aircraft gun.

.. View gallery
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (R) shares a light …
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (R) shares a light moment with then the chief of the Korean People&# …

Hyon's fate was never confirmed by Pyongyang but he has never been seen or heard of since. Some analysts have suggested he was purged and imprisoned.

Reports -- some confirmed, some not -- of purges, executions and disappearances have been common since Kim took power following the death of his father Kim Jong-Il in December 2011.

A large number of senior officials, especially military cadres, were removed or demoted as the young leader sought to solidify his control over the powerful military.

In the most high-profile case, Kim had his influential uncle Jang Song-Thaek executed in December 2013 for charges including treason and corruption.

Professor Yang Moo-Jin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said the new military chief was one of Kim's top three aides and was known to be well-versed in missile technology.

North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test last month and launched a long-range rocket this month, sparking international outrage.

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http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/22/world/europe/fighting-in-ukraine-picks-up-sharply.html?_r=0

Europe

Fighting in Ukraine Picks Up Sharply

By ANDREW E. KRAMER
FEB. 21, 2016

MARYINKA, Ukraine — Though overshadowed by the war in Syria, fighting in eastern Ukraine has picked up sharply in recent weeks, residents along the front line, commanders and European monitors say.

The resumption of hostilities in Ukraine, with exchanges of machine gun and mortar fire across the front line now up to levels not seen since last summer, suggests a willingness by Russia, which supports the rebels in eastern Ukraine, to sustain two active conflicts at once. In late September, Russia began airstrikes in Syria on behalf of the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

A cease-fire took hold here in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and the government on Sept. 1, which was apparently coordinated with Russia’s military deployment in Syria.

But that truce is now unraveling, and Maryinka has become one of the new hot spots.

“A week ago, we had shelling every two to three days, and mostly at night,” Lt. Col. Mikhailo M. Prokopiv, the commander of Ukrainian Army troops in this town, said in an interview on Sunday while touring the front line in a jeep. “Now, not a day goes by when we don’t fight.”

Separatist militias have crept forward to carve new trenches within 150 yards of the army’s front line, he said, close enough for the soldiers and militiamen to yell insults back and forth.

His positions now regularly come under fire from mortars and truck-mounted antiaircraft machine guns, lowered to fire horizontally, Colonel Prokopiv said. A sniper killed one of his soldiers on Saturday.

Neither side has yet resorted to firing heavy artillery. For now, the shooting appears intended to “give us a little nightmare,” he said, to encourage Ukrainian politicians to carry out the stalled peace accord known as Minsk 2.

Russia was drawn deeper into the Syrian conflict in November after Turkey shot down a Russian bomber that Turkey said had violated its airspace. Moscow sent more planes and a sophisticated air defense missile system to Syria.

Alexander Hug, the deputy chief of the monitoring mission in eastern Ukraine for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, told journalists on Friday that observers last week saw 88 tanks on the pro-Russian side of the line.

He did not specify their origin, and Russia has denied sending weapons to help the rebels.

“They just sit there, armed and battle-ready, within easy reach of the contact line,” Mr. Hug said of the tanks.

In Ukraine’s capital, Kiev, several hundred right-wing paramilitary veterans added to the government’s troubles by kicking off a protest over the weekend on the city’s Independence Square, known as the Maidan, demanding the ouster and trial of the country’s leaders. The men, who call themselves the Revolutionary Right Forces, pitched tents and milled about, but did not appear to have much popular backing.
 

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http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...ategic-defense-industry-cooperation/80703822/

Turkey, Ukraine Pledge 'Strategic' Defense Industry Cooperation

By Burak Ege Bekdil, Defense News 1:33 p.m. EST February 21, 2016

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey and Ukraine, both Russian adversaries, have pledged to boost defense industry cooperation.

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu visited the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, Feb. 15 in efforts to bolster the regional anti-Russian bloc. On the sidelines of that visit procurement and defense technology officials from Turkey and Ukraine met and agreed to boost their defense industry cooperation.

Turkish and Ukrainian officials agreed to set up different working groups that would work on weapons systems production as well as on “advanced technology cooperation.”

One senior Turkish procurement official called the move “strategic.”

Turkey’s top procurement official, Ismail Demir, said that defense industry cooperation with Ukraine was of great importance and would progress even further.

A senior official in the Turkish prime minister’s delegation said Turkey and Ukraine hope to cooperate primarily in turbojet aircraft engines, radars, military communications technologies and navigation systems.

“There will be partnerships in designing, developing and manufacturing those systems,” he said.
 

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http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...g-military-training-mission-tunisia/80708480/

Report: Germany Mulling Military Training Mission In Tunisia

Agence France-Presse 4:44 p.m. EST February 21, 2016

BERLIN — Germany is considering sending troops to Tunisia to help train soldiers in the fight against the Islamic State group, a newspaper report said on Sunday.

Bild am Sonntag said that representatives of the defence and foreign ministries would hold talks in Tunis on Thursday and Friday about how the German military could lend support in a training mission.

It said the engagement envisaged training Tunisian soldiers first and could eventually be extended to setting up a training camp in Tunisia for Libyan soldiers, run with other international partners.

“The IS terror is threatening all of North Africa,” German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen told the newspaper.

She said it was thus crucial “to make every effort to support countries struggling with democracy such as Tunisia.”

Von der Leyen told the newspaper that a training camp in Tunisia would be a contribution toward regional stability.

“And if its direct neighbor Libya manages to put in place a unity government one day, its security forces could also benefit from established training facilities in Tunisia,” she said.

A defence ministry spokesman told AFP he had no further details beyond the minister’s remarks.

A foreign ministry spokesman confirmed the planned talks in Tunis “on further cooperation on security” but declined to provide more information.

German forces are currently engaged in the international alliance against the Islamic State group, including by arming and training Kurdish forces in northern Iraq and flying reconnaissance missions over Syria with Tornado jets.

Since 2013, Germany has provided Tunisia with more than €100 million ($111 million) in programs to improve its economy. It also provides its security forces with equipment and training.

However the country’s defence commissioner Hans-Peter Bartels warned in a report last month that the German military was overstretched and underfunded and had reached “the limit of its capacity for interventions.”

Tunisia suffered two devastating attacks targeting its vital tourist sector last year, in the beach resort of Sousse and on the National Bardo Museum in Tunis, that together left 60 people dead. Both were claimed by IS.

IS has also been gaining ground in Libya amid the unrest that has gripped the country since longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi was ousted in 2011.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-india-attack-idUSKCN0VV0C2

Mon Feb 22, 2016 7:45am EST

Indian forces kill all militants in Kashmir after 3-day gunbattle

SRINAGAR

A three-day gunbattle in the disputed region of Kashmir ended on Monday when Indian security forces killed two more militants who stormed a government building, a senior police official said.

(See pictures from the operatihere)

The militants captured the five-storey training institute on Saturday, killing six people in the gunbattle that followed.

"The encounter is over. All three militants have been killed," Deputy Inspector General of Police Ghulam Hassan Bhat said. One militant was killed on Sunday.

Muslim separatists have been fighting Indian forces in the Indian portion of Kashmir since 1989. India accuses Pakistan of training and arming the rebels in the portion it controls and sending them to the Indian side, a claim its neighbour denies.

"This is one of the longest encounters in Kashmir in recent memory," said an army officer, who asked not to be named. "This is because the building is very big and we have suffered casualties."

The attack began on Saturday when militants shot at a bus carrying police before breaking into the training institute. More than 100 people were inside at the time.

Three Indian army commandos, two policemen and a civilian died in the fighting.The latest attack bore similarities to other militant attacks in India where heavily armed, well-trained men have captured buildings and used them to fight security forces.

A similar recent attack on the Pathankot air base that lasted for four days stalled efforts to revive bilateral talks between nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan.India and Pakistan fought two of their three wars since independence in 1947 over Muslim-majority Kashmir, which they both claim in full but rule in part. The third was fought over the founding of Bangladesh.


(Reporting by Fayaz Bukhari; Writing by Malini Menon; Editing by Douglas Busvine)
 

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http://www.foxnews.com/world/2016/02/22/latest-turkey-ground-troops-in-syria-not-on-agenda.html

Europe

The Latest: Turkey: Ground troops in Syria 'not on agenda'

Published February 22, 2016
· Associated Press

BEIRUT – The Latest on the civil war in Syria (all times local):

3:05 p.m.

The Turkish foreign minister says a land operation by Saudi Arabia and Turkey in Syria has never been on the agenda.

Mevlut Cavusoglu on Monday dismissed speculation about such an operation as "disinformation and manipulation."

The minister said: "A land operation of Saudi Arabia and Turkey in Syria has never been on the agenda, and it is not on the agenda."

However, Turkey views ground operations as necessary and would be a willing partner if the notion got approval from a broader coalition, an official said last week. The country raised the issue in recent talks with the U.S. and other Western nations, said the Turkish official, who spoke on customary condition of anonymity.

The U.S., Russia and other world powers agreed Feb. 12 in Munich to bring about a pause in hostilities that would allow for the delivery of humanitarian aid and the revival of peace talks.

— By Dominique Soguel

___

12:41 p.m.

A Syrian opposition activist group says heavy fighting has cut off the government's only supply route to the northeastern city of Aleppo.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says clashes were underway Monday along the southeastern approaches to the city, which is bitterly divided between the government and the rebels, and also around the town of Khanaser.

The Observatory tracks Syria's civil war. A news agency close to the Islamic State group said the extremist group's fighters had cut the road.

Aleppo, Syria's largest city and one-time commercial center, is divided between the government and its opponents, while IS holds a wide front to the east of the city.

Fighting has been fierce in Aleppo province in recent weeks amid a government offensive to cut off the rebel stronghold.
 

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http://www.stripes.com/news/middle-...f-more-military-involvement-in-syria-1.395475

ANALYSIS

Concerns in Saudi Arabia over signs of more military involvement in Syria

By Hugh Naylor
The Washington Post
Published: February 22, 2016

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Saudi Arabia is flexing its muscles as pro-government forces in Syria's civil war make sweeping advances, but concerns have mounted about its expanding military involvement in the conflict.

Syrian President Bashar Assad's military, backed by Iranian-led militiamen and Russian airstrikes, has pressed a major offensive in the northern city of Aleppo, even as talks to broker a ceasefire have made some progress. The move threatens rebel groups that have received cash and weapons from Saudi Arabia, a Sunni powerhouse and U.S. ally that opposes Assad because of his alliance with Shiite rival Iran.

Saudi officials have responded by dispatching warplanes to Turkey, another opponent of the Syrian leader. They have said they could commit ground forces to Syria that would technically fight the Islamic State militant group but could also seemingly challenge pro-Assad forces.

Saudi leaders also have announced large-scale military exercises involving 20 mostly Arab and African nations.

"Bashar al-Assad will leave — have no doubt about it," Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir recently told CNN. "He will either leave by a political process or he will be removed by force."

Saudi Arabia is fighting a war in Yemen, and the prospect of the kingdom becoming entangled in another costly conflict at a time when it is facing ecomonic troubles has unsettled many Saudis.

"Our economy is really struggling, and yet some leaders come out and say things that could get us caught up in a war in Syria against Russia," said a prominent Saudi political observer who is close to senior officials.

He was referring to Russia's intervention late last year in the Syrian conflict to boost Assad, its ally, a move that has changed the tide of a civil war that has killed more than 250,000 people and displaced millions.

The Saudi armed forces appear bogged down in Yemen against Iranian-aligned rebels in a drawn-out war that appears to be spilling over into the kingdom. Increasingly the rebels, known as Houthis, have been mounting assaults into southern Saudi Arabia, forcing the kingdom to deploy tens of thousands of troops to defend its border.

On the domestic front, finances are in rough shape. Slumping oil prices have forced Saudi authorities to slash public spending, freeze hiring at state-run entities and lift subsidies on energy and water.

"At all levels in Saudi society, including the royal family itself, there is serious concern about our involvement in all these foreign conflicts," said the prominent Saudi, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of concerns about retribution. "I think there's a sense that we've lost an ability to look at things realistically."

His concern reflects broader questions in some Saudi circles over the country's 30-year-old defense minister and deputy crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, the son of King Salman and second in line to the throne.

Prince Mohammed has steered the historically cautious country toward a far more aggressive — and expensive — foreign policy that aims to blunt what many in the kingdom see as unchecked Iranian expansionism in the region.


The changes include forming the mostly Sunni Arab military coalition that launched an air and ground attack last year in Yemen, as well as enhanced backing for Syria's opposition. In December, Saudi Arabia hosted a conference to unite Syrian opposition groups ahead of peace talks that ultimately collapsed earlier this month because of the pro-government attacks around Aleppo.

The stakes have risen because of the fighting in Aleppo, where government forces threaten to cut supply lines from Turkey that feed a variety of rebel groups in the city and elsewhere in Syria. That could hinder Saudi Arabia's ability to send support to fighters opposed to Assad, whom the kingdom officially insists must give up power.

"This Iranian expansionism can't be tolerated," said Salman al-Ansari, a Saudi analyst who lives in both the capital, Riyadh, and Washington. He described the fall of Aleppo to Syrian government forces as a possible threat to Saudi Arabia's national security but noted that the kingdom would nevertheless refrain from any unilateral action.

Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist, described Riyadh's war games and offers of deploying troops to Syria as more of a test of U.S. support for the kingdom's policies.

The Saudi leadership fears that the Obama administration may no longer be nearly as willing to back the kingdom, especially in Syria, where the U.S. president has ruled out large-scale military involvement. Of particular concern is the U.S.-backed deal lifting sanctions on Iran in return for curbs on its nuclear program, which Saudi officials fear will embolden Iran.

"The bottom line is that Saudi Arabia is very concerned with not allowing the Iranians and Russians to win in Syria because this is a threat to Saudi national security," Khashoggi said.

"But our options are very limited, so what you're seeing coming from here is mostly an attempt to get our principal allies engaged again," he said, referring to the United States.

U.S. officials have called for more Saudi involvement in the fight against the Islamic State. Although Saudi forces have participated in the U.S.-led coalition that is targeting the militant group with airstrikes in Syria, they have turned their attention to the Yemen war over the past year.

"By making these silly announcements, the Saudis have made themselves look even weaker," said Labib Kamhawi, a Jordanian analyst. "There's no way they can send over ground forces to Syria when they're stuck in Yemen."
 

Housecarl

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Yeah this is going to go over real well.....NOT....But with the way things are it has to be done....

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http://www.voanews.com/content/us-s...e-offense-during-joint-exercises/3201231.html

US, South Korea to Practice Offense During Joint Exercises

Brian Padden
February 22, 2016 5:00 AM
Comments 2

SEOUL— The United States and South Korea will reportedly practice preemptive military strikes to take out North Korean nuclear sites next month when they begin the largest joint exercises ever conducted by the two allied forces.

In the wake of North Korea’s recent nuclear test and long-range rocket launch, Washington and Seoul will focus in part on defending against attacks by weapons of mass destruction during this year’s annual joint exercises.

In some scenarios being game planned by military strategists, the best defense is a good offense, one that would eliminate a North Korean missile site, nuclear facility or other strategic military target prior to an imminent attack.

“These types of exercises, this type of training, considering the nature of the threat, it’s going to be the new normal for North Korea, unless they were to roll back their nuclear program, which I don’t foresee that happening anytime soon,” said Northeast Asia security analyst Daniel Pinkston with Troy University in Seoul.

War games

This year’s annual U.S., South Korean joint military exercises will start on March 7 and will involve 15,000 American troops, four times more than the 3,700 troops that participated last year, according to South Korea’s Defense Ministry.

Australia, Canada and a number of other countries that fought with the U.S. during the Korean War from 1950 to 1953 will also likely either participate or send observers.

The annual joint exercises include the Key Resolve strategic simulation drill, where U.S. and South Korean troops and military assets are deployed to respond to potential North Korean threats, and field exercises called Foal Eagle.

The U.S. has already deployed four F-22 stealth fighters and a nuclear-powered submarine, the USS North Carolina, to South Korea.

For the joint exercises, the U.S. will bring more aircraft and assets, including the nuclear-powered carrier the USS John C. Stennis.

Over 4,500 American troops stationed in Okinawa, along with American V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft and the amphibious transport dock the USS New Orleans will take part in an amphibious landing drill.

Invasion rehearsal

North Korea has protested these exercises as rehearsals for invasion, while at the same time conducting its own operational readiness drills.

Washington and Seoul in the past have stressed the defensive nature of the exercises to counter criticism from Pyongyang and to ease concerns from Beijing.

While China opposes North Korea’s nuclear program, it also blames the ongoing U.S. military presence in South Korea for contributing to the tense regional security situation.

The emphasis on offensive options this year reflects an increased recognition in Washington and Seoul that the North Korean nuclear program presents a growing existential threat that must be addressed, one way or another.

“When you are brandishing nuclear weapons and you are making declaratory statements such as North Korea does, then you are putting yourself in a dangerous situation in a crisis,” Pinkston said.

Also on Monday, Seoul’s Defense Ministry announced that U.S. and South Korea will conduct a joint nuclear deterrence drill this week in Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. The drill is a computer simulation planning exercise against a potential North Korean nuclear threat.

Peace talks

The U.S. State Department Monday confirmed reports that officials from Washington and Pyongyang discussed entering into peace treaty talks prior to North Korea’s nuclear test on January 6.

Washington reportedly expressed an openness to negotiate a formal peace treaty to replace the 1953 armistice that halted the Korean War. The U.S. was willing to compromise its long held position that North Korea halt its nuclear program before any talks could occur, but did insist the nuclear issue to be part of the agenda. Pyongyang ultimately rejected this offer and proceeded with its fourth nuclear test.

The United Nations has banned North Korea from developing nuclear weapons and ballistic missile technology and has imposed increasingly stronger rounds of sanctions since 2006.

Washington recently passed harsh new financial sanctions that could seize the U.S. assets of any company linked to illicit North Korean activities.

THAAD

This week, South Korea and the U.S. will begin working level talks on the possible deployment the controversial Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense system.

China and Russia oppose THAAD deployment Korea, saying it can potentially be used against their military forces in the region.

Seoul had been hesitant to support THAAD to maintain good relations with Beijing its biggest trading partner, but following North Korea’s recent provocations, South Korea has come out in favor of deployment.

Youmi Kim in Seoul contributed to this report.


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Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-afghanistan-blast-idUSKCN0VV1L6

World | Mon Feb 22, 2016 10:19am EST
Related: World

Suicide bomber kills 14 at Afghan clinic

KABUL

A suicide bomber on a motorcycle killed 14 people and wounded another 11 at a clinic in Parwan, north of the Afghan capital Kabul on Monday, officials said.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which it said was aimed at a local police commander. It said the civilian casualties were caused when police opened fire.

Wahid Sediqqi, a spokesman for the Parwan governor, said 14 people, including six police officers and eight civilians, were killed and 11 others wounded in the attack on the clinic.

The incident took place a day before representatives of Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United States and China were due to resume meetings in Kabul aimed at laying the ground for a resumption of peace talks with the Taliban.


(Reporting by Mirwais Harooni, writing by James Mackenzie, editng by Angus MacSwan)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2016/02/485_198610.html

Posted : 2016-02-22 12:55
Updated : 2016-02-22 12:55

Park renews concern over N. Korea's possible terror attacks

President Park Geun-hye called on officials Monday to ensure the safety of South Koreans, citing North Korea's possible terror attacks against the South.

South Korea "should put in place a thorough readiness posture against another North Korean provocation," Park said in a meeting with her senior secretaries.

Tensions have spiked on the Korean Peninsula over North Korea's nuclear test and long-range rocket launch in recent weeks.

Park said Kim Jong-un has ordered officials to concentrate on capabilities for terror attacks and cyberattacks on South Korea, referring to the North Korean leader.

She did not use his official title, in the latest sign of her personal distrust of the young North Korean leader who pursues nuclear and missile programs.

On Saturday, North Korea's Foreign Minister Ri Su-yong reaffirmed Pyongyang's "consistent stand opposing all forms of terrorism" in a condolence message to his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu over a recent deadly bomb attack in Turkey.

Still, it remains unclear why there is an apparent sign of discrepancy in North Korea over terrorism.

South Korean police have recently said that North Korean hackers sent massive amounts of spam emails to South Korean public organizations last month in an apparent bid to launch cyberattacks against the South.

North Korea has a track record of staging terror attacks against South Korea in the past few decades, including the 1987 midair bombing of a Korean Air flight that killed all 115 people aboard. (Yonhap)
 

Housecarl

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http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/us-russia-plan-sets-syria-ceasefire-saturday-37113085

New US-Russia Plan Sets Syria Ceasefire for Saturday

By Bradley Klapper and Matthew Lee, Associated Press
·WASHINGTON — Feb 22, 2016, 11:17 AM ET

The United States and Russia agreed Monday on a new cease-fire for Syria that will take effect on Saturday, U.S. officials said.

They said the former Cold War foes, which are backing opposing sides in Syria's civil war, agreed on all the terms and conditions for the "cessation of hostilities" between Syrian President Bashar Assad's government and armed opposition groups. Those sides still need to accept the deal.

The truce will not cover the Islamic State, the al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front and any other militias designated as terrorist organizations by the U.N. Security Council. Both the U.S. and Russia are still targeting those groups with airstrikes.

An announcement is expected after Presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin speak on the matter by telephone Monday, according to the officials, who weren't authorized to speak publicly on the matter ahead of time and demanded anonymity.

The timing of the cease-fire is only days ahead of Moscow's proposal earlier this month for it to start on March 1. Washington rejected that offer at the time, saying it wanted an "immediate cease-fire" and not one that would allow Syria and its Russian backer to make a last-ditch effort for territorial gains in the Arab country's north and south.

While negotiations dragged, however, Russian airstrikes pummeled areas in and around Aleppo, Syria's largest city. And Assad's military made significant gains on the ground. Russia says it is targeting terrorists, but the U.S. and its Arab and European partners say it is mainly hitting "moderate" opposition groups.

Syria's conflict started with violent government repression of largely peaceful protests five years ago, but quickly became a full-blown rebellion against Assad and a proxy battle between his Shiite-backed government and Sunni-supported rebels.

The war has killed more than 250,000 people, created Europe's worst refugee crisis since World War II and allowed the Islamic State to carve out territory across Syria and neighboring Iraq. Independent of Russia, a U.S.-led coalition is carrying out a separate bombing campaigns in Syria, targeting IS militants.
 

Housecarl

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http://thediplomat.com/2016/02/north-korea-hawks-gain-the-upper-hand/

North Korea Hawks Gain the Upper Hand

In the wake of North Korea’s nuclear test and rocket launch, hawks have the advantage in both Seoul and Washington.

By John Power
February 23, 2016

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Isolation or engagement? That’s the fundamental question that has long defined policy toward North Korea in both South Korea and the United States. Until recently, both schools of thought appeared relatively balanced in terms of influence in the halls of power. But in the wake of Pyongyang’s most recent nuclear test and rocket launch, the hawks have won the argument — at least for now — and inspired policymakers to take actions previously considered beyond the mainstream.

In South Korea, the closure on February 10 of Kaesong Industrial Complex, the last major cooperative project between the sides, has most powerfully illustrated this shift in consensus. President Park Geun-hye, who brought the axe down on the complex, had championed a policy of trust-building through mutual exchanges, so-called “trustpolitik,” despite coming from the conservative, engagement-skeptic side of South Korean politics. Pyongyang’s February 7 rocket launch, which was blasted by South Korea and the United States as a covert missile test and came just a month after its fourth nuclear detonation, abruptly shut the door on Kaesong — and any talk of reconciliation.

Kaesong, which started operations in 2004 under previous liberal President Roh Moo-hyun, had been close to untouchable even among South Korea’s conservatives. One of the most broadly supported symbols of the controversial “sunshine” years of inter-Korean summits and unconditional aid, the complex survived the tenure of Park’s predecessor President Lee Myung-bak, who was known for taking a hard line against Pyongyang. Despite a presidency that coincided with the fatal sinking of the warship Cheonan and shelling of Yeongpyeong Island, Lee never went further than threatening to shut the complex.

In justifying the closure, Park’s administration leaned on a claim that hawks have made for years: the North Korean regime was diverting money paid by the South for wages and facilities at Kaesong to its weapons programs. While pro-engagement voices in South Korea and elsewhere have criticized the move, the South Korean public appears to be on Park’s side. In one opinion poll carried out last week, 55 percent of respondents said they agreed with the closure, compared to 33 percent against.

In Washington, a similar resurgence in hawkish sentiment saw President Barack Obama on Friday sign into law a new sanctions bill targeting the assets of entities that do business related to Pyongyang’s weapons programs or human rights abuses. The bill passed the Senate without a single dissenting vote and received just two “nays” in the House of Representatives.

“It’s very simple — Kim Jong-un proved us right, and when our moment came, we were ready to offer better ideas,” Joshua Stanton, the writer of the blog One Free Korea and a longtime supporter of sanctions, told The Diplomat.

“Engagement failed. It meant well, and the idea of showing North Koreans the value of joining the civilized world is still valid, but we’ve wasted the last 20 years engaging all the wrong North Koreans in all the wrong ways.”

Stanton said the triumph of hawkish sentiment was years in the making, with roots in Obama’s policy of “strategic patience,” which critics have described as a grandiose term for doing nothing.

“The 2009 nuke test broke Washington’s faith in engagement and negotiated disarmament, but what was the alternative? The State Department hasn’t had a North Korea policy since then, so it came up with ‘strategic patience’ to create the illusion of one,” Stanton said.

“After the 2013 test, the hawks — both Republicans and Democrats — decided to offer their own concrete alternatives. The U.N. Commission of Inquiry report helped us appeal to liberals who shared our concerns about human rights. This diverse coalition worked for years to persuade legislators, scholars, and constituencies to change the policy paradigm. When Kim Jong-un nuked off, the dam broke in Congress.”
 

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Freedom Isn't Free
U.S. Scrambles to Contain Growing ISIS Threat in Libya

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/22/w...ontain-growing-isis-threat-in-libya.html?_r=0

THIES, Senegal — The Islamic State’s branch in Libya is deepening its reach across a wide area of Africa, attracting new recruits from countries like Senegal that had been largely immune to the jihadist propaganda — and forcing the African authorities and their Western allies to increase efforts to combat the fast-moving threat.

The American airstrikes in northwestern Libya on Friday, which demolished an Islamic State training camp and were aimed at a top Tunisian operative, underscore the problem, Western officials said. The more than three dozen suspected Islamic State fighters killed in the bombing were recruited from Tunisia and other African countries, officials said, and were believed to be rehearsing an attack against Western targets.
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Even as American intelligence agencies say the number of Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria has dropped to about 25,000 from a high of about 31,500, partly because of the United States-led air campaign there, the group’s ranks in Libya have roughly doubled in the same period, to about 6,500 fighters. More than a dozen American and allied officials spoke of their growing concern about the militant organization’s expanding reach from Libya and across Africa on rules of anonymity because the discussions involved intelligence and military planning.
Photo
During training supervised by the United States military, Senegalese commandos practiced evacuating a wounded comrade. Credit Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

Islamic State leaders in Syria are telling recruits traveling north from West African nations like Senegal and Chad, as well as others streaming up through Sudan in eastern Africa, not to press on to the Middle East. Instead, they are being told to stay put in Libya. American intelligence officials, who described the recent orders from Islamic State leaders, say the organization’s immediate goal is to carve out a new caliphate in Libya, and there are signs the affiliate is trying to establish statelike institutions there.

“Libya has become a magnet for individuals not only inside of Libya, but from the African continent as well as from outside,” John O. Brennan, the director of the C.I.A., told a Senate panel this month.

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The rising threat from Libya comes as President Obama is being asked by many of his top military and intelligence advisers to approve the broader use of American military force in Libya to open another front against the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL.

While administration officials have disclosed that Mr. Obama is mulling over how large of a military campaign to order for Libya, the new intelligence reports and the analysis on the spread of the Islamic State are energizing the high-level debate in Washington and allied capitals.

“The jihadist threat emanating from Syria and Iraq cannot be defused without addressing the growing danger posed by the terror groups’ co-conspirators in Libya,” Representative Devin Nunes, a California Republican who heads the House Intelligence Committee, said Friday.

Before resorting to any wider military action, however, the White House and Western allies like Britain, Italy and France are trying to help create a unity government in Libya. The goal is to use such a new central authority to rally dozens of fractious militias to fight against a common enemy — the Islamic State. American and European Special Operations forces could help advise and assist those militias, officials said.

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“Our strong preference, as has always been the case, is to train Libyans to fight,” Mr. Obama said last week at a news conference in California. “There’s a whole bunch of constituencies who are hardened fighters and don’t ascribe to ISIS or their perverted ideology. But they have to be organized and can’t be fighting each other.”

As a result, the administration and its allies are taking several steps to prepare to train Libyan troops, should a newly formed unity government request such aid. They are also rushing to bolster pivotal African allies outside of Libya as a bulwark against Islamic State expansion on the continent.

The Pentagon has proposed spending $200 million this year to help train and equip the armies and security forces of North and West African countries. The United States is about to break ground on a new $50 million drone base in Agadez, Niger, that will allow Reaper surveillance aircraft to fly hundreds of miles closer to southern Libya.

Col. Mahamane Laminou Sani, Niger’s top intelligence officer, said in an interview that his country had increased its border patrols against the threat in neighboring Libya, and French troops stationed in Niger’s far north are doing the same.

“It’s a global threat that is not restricted by borders,” said Lt. Col. Moussa Mboup, a Senegalese Army operations officer who had trained in the United States and France. He spoke here during the Pentagon’s annual Flintlock military exercise with 1,800 African troops, United States Army Special Forces and other Western commando trainers, which ends later this month.

The Islamic State in Libya is now the most dangerous of the group’s eight affiliates, counterterrorism officials say. About half a dozen senior Islamic State lieutenants have arrived from Syria in recent months to build up the franchise, these officials say.

New United States and allied intelligence assessments say that Islamic State commanders in Libya are seizing territory there, starting to tax its residents and setting up quasi-government institutions — mirroring the Islamic State playbook in Syria and Iraq.

“They’re trying to establish a statewide structure,” Brett McGurk, Mr. Obama’s envoy to the United States-led coalition fighting the Islamic State, told American lawmakers this month.

The militant group is also starting to move in on the lucrative African migrant-smuggling operations that have been thriving in lawless Libya, developing a new source of revenue for the terror group.

American officials caution that while the Islamic State’s Libya branch is trying to act like its parent organization in Syria, the affiliate faces some inherent limitations.

The Libya branch, unlike its Syria headquarters, does not control any oil fields that can generate revenue, although it has attacked some of the fields in eastern Libya.

The banks the franchise has seized in its stronghold of Surt were not as flush as the banks in Mosul — having around $500 million, by some accounts — when the Islamic State conquered that northern Iraqi city in 2014.

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American officials say the main source of revenue for the Libya branch is taxation and extorting fees from residents who live or businesses that operate in the 150-mile swath of territory they control in and around Surt.

The Islamic State in Libya is swelling its ranks through one of the main means its parent in Syria uses: a savvy social media campaign aimed at enticing disaffected young people who are facing few education options and bleak economic futures in their countries.

Indeed, intelligence officials said there was emerging evidence that the Islamic State had turned to its affiliate in Nigeria — the Islamic militant organization called Boko Haram, which was formerly aligned with Al Qaeda — to poach young commanders and fighters from Al Qaeda’s affiliate in northwest Africa and from its Shabab franchise in Somalia.

Previous attempts by senior Islamic State leaders to reach out directly to those Qaeda groups received the silent treatment, the officials said. But the new approach, while still in its early stages, seems to be gaining traction.

The Senegalese authorities recently reported that 30 men had gone to Libya to fight with the Islamic State there, trends that officials in Niger, Nigeria and Mali have also noticed.

As the Islamic State pushes closer to some of the poorer countries of the Sahel region, like Niger and Mauritania, the authorities here believe there will be no shortage of unemployed young men who are eager to join the fight.

To help fight that trend, Special Forces from 30 African and Western countries are participating in a three-week counterterrorism training exercise here on this sprawling army encampment 35 miles outside Dakar that is also home to Senegal’s military academy.

On several shooting ranges, dotted with massive baobab trees, American, Canadian, Dutch and Belgian trainers worked with soldiers from Niger and Nigeria.

Some troops were practicing first aid; others were shooting at close-range targets. The Belgians were leading a more difficult training exercise in which the African soldiers approached fortified targets from afar, and then assaulted the targets from several different directions — as they would in an actual raid.

With help from Dutch Marines and American Special Forces, Senegal is also training a new force to patrol its watery northern border with Mauritania, and it is deploying troops to neighboring Mali to help a United Nations force stymie Qaeda and other militant fighters there.

“ISIS is spreading even to here,” said Col. Guirane Ndiaye, a Senegalese zone commander. “If we do not have a multinational effort, ISIS will spread even more.”
 

Housecarl

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I wondered when they'd get around to this.....

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-building-powerful-radar-on-disputed-islands/

Satellite images show China may be building powerful radar on disputed islands

By Simon Denyer February 22 at 11:59 AM „³ Follow @simondenyer

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https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-a...ldviews/files/2016/02/A1_watermark.jpg&w=1484
A satellite photograph of Cuarteron Reef in the South China Sea's Spratly islands, showing a possible high frequency radar installation being constructed by China on January 24, 2016. A radar system of this nature would dramatically enhance China's ability to monitor vital shipping lanes, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe)

Satellite images show China may be building a powerful new radar system on a disputed island in the South China Sea, which could have worrisome military uses in monitoring -- and potentially trying to control -- a strategically vital waterway, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).

Gregory Polling, head of the Asian Maritime Transparency Initiative at CSIS, said the images appear to show a high-frequency radar installation being built on Cuarteron Reef, one of seven islands China has recently expanded through a massive land reclamation program in the Spratly chain.

"If it is an HF radar, then it would enormously boost China¡¦s capacity to monitor ships and aircraft in the South China Sea," Polling wrote by email. "Cuarteron is the logical place for such an installation because it is the southernmost of China¡¦s features in the Spratlys, meaning that it would be the best place if you wanted early warning radar to give notice of ships or planes coming up from the Strait of Malacca and other areas to the south such as Singapore.

"This would be very important in a Chinese anti-access area denial strategy that sought to reduce the ability of the U.S. to operate freely in the South China Sea, including bringing forces up through the South China Sea in case of any future crisis in Northeast Asia," Polling wrote.

The Strait of Malacca passes between Malaysia and Indonesia and is one of the most important shipping lanes in the world, while a third of the world's shipping, and much of Asia's oil, passes through the South China Sea.

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https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-a...ldviews/files/2016/02/A2_watermark.jpg&w=1484
A satellite photograph of Cuarteron Reef in the South China Sea's Spratly islands, showing a possible high-frequency radar installation being constructed by China on January 24, 2016. (CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe)

China has built up seven islands in the South China Sea, and is in the process of constructing three runways on those islands. The United States says it is concerned about the growing militarization of the South China Sea, Secretary of State John F. Kerry expressed "serious concern" last week when other satellite images showed what appeared to be surface-to-air missile batteries deployed by China on Woody Island, part of the Paracel chain, also in the South China Sea.

U.S. to have ¡¥very serious conversation¡¦ with China over suspected South China Sea missile deployment

China says its construction program in the South China Sea is mainly for civilian use, adding that it is only building limited and necessary defensive facilities on what it considers to be its sovereign territory. It points out that other nations have also reclaimed land and built runways in the past, although not on anything like this scale.

"It is certainly possible to claim a civilian purpose, and China will," Polling wrote. "But just like you don¡¦t need a 3,000-meter runway to land civilian planes, you don¡¦t need a high-frequency radar (assuming that is what this is) to give early warning of commercial traffic. Radar is inherently dual-use, but just like its other ¡§dual-use¡¨ infrastructure in the Spratlys, the real value is military. More limited radar, like China has at every other feature in the Spratlys, is more than sufficient to monitor and ensure the safety of civilian traffic near the features."

China points to lighthouses it has constructed on two islands, as well as meteorological stations and shelter and rescue facilities, to highlight the civilian nature of its construction program. One of the new lighthouses sits on Cuarteron Reef.

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https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-a...ldviews/files/2016/02/A3_watermark.jpg&w=1484
A satellite photograph of Cuarteron Reef in the South China Sea's Spratly islands, showing a lighthouse, probable communications and radar towers, a probable bunker, and a possible observation post constructed by China. The photo was taken on January 24, 2016. (CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe)

On Monday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying accused the United States of "sensationalizing the South China Sea issue" and "hyping up tensions."

"Islands in the South China Sea have been part of China since ancient times," she said at a daily news conference. "The Chinese side is entitled to safeguard its territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests. China conducts construction on relevant islands and reefs mainly for civilian purposes of providing better public services and goods for the international community. China's deployment of limited defense facilities on its own territory is its exercise of self-defense right to which a sovereign state is entitled under international law. It has nothing to do with militarization. It is something that comes naturally, and is completely justified and lawful. The U.S. should view that correctly instead of making an issue of that with deliberate sensationalization."

Other photographs supplied to The Washington Post by CSIS also show radar facilities being built on other islands in the Spratlys, which are also claimed in full or in part by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.

imrs.php

https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-a...ldviews/files/2016/02/B1_watermark.jpg&w=1484
A satellite photograph of Gaven Reef in the South China Sea's Spratly islands, showing a possible radar tower being constructed by China on February 12, 2016. (CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe)

imrs.php

https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-a...ldviews/files/2016/02/C1_watermark.jpg&w=1484
A satellite photograph of Hughes Reef in the South China Sea's Spratly islands, showing a probable radar tower being constructed by China on February 7, 2016. (CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe)

imrs.php

https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-a...ldviews/files/2016/02/D1_watermark.jpg&w=1484
A satellite photograph of Johnson South Reef in the South China Sea's Spratly islands, showing a probable radar tower being constructed by China on February 9, 2016. (CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe)

Simon Denyer is The Post¡¦s bureau chief in China. He served previously as bureau chief in India and as a Reuters bureau chief in Washington, India and Pakistan.
 
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