WAR 02-21-2015-to-02-27-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20150224/ml--iraq-626c8912b5.html

Bombs in Iraq, including twin blasts in busy street, kill 40

Feb 24, 1:05 PM (ET)
By SAMEER N. YACOUB

BAGHDAD (AP) — A series of bombings in Iraq, including twin blasts in a busy street in a Baghdad suburb, killed at least 40 people and wounded dozens on Tuesday, Iraqi officials said.

The deadliest of the day's attacks came shortly before sunset, when a bomb exploded in Baghdad's southeastern suburb of Jisr Diyala. Minutes later, a car bomb went off near the site of the first blast as people started gathering to help the victims of the initial explosion.

The casualty toll in Jisr Diyala rose throughout the evening, and within hours, police and hospital officials said that at least 25 people had been killed and that 50 were wounded, including several students who had just come out of a nearby school after class. The police sealed off the attack area.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombings but Iraq sees near-daily attacks, mostly by Sunni insurgents targeting the country's Shiite majority and security forces. The attacks are often claimed by the Islamic State group, which seized about a third of the country in a blitz last year, along with a swath of territory in neighboring Syria.

Earlier Tuesday, a parked car bomb went off in a commercial area in the town of Mishada, 30 kilometers (20 miles) north of Baghdad, killing at least four civilians and wounding 12, police officials said.

In Baghdad's northwestern Shula neighborhood, a bomb exploded near a restaurant, killing three civilians and wounded eight, they said. Another bomb also killed three civilians and wounded nine in a commercial area in Youssifiyah, 20 kilometers (12 miles) south of Baghdad.

Two more civilians were killed and seven others were wounded when a bomb struck an outdoor market in Latifiyah, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Baghdad. Another bomb hit a police patrol in Madain, about 20 kilometers (14 miles) southeast of Baghdad, killing a police officer and a civilian and wounding five people.

And in Baghdad's northern Shaab neighborhood, a bomb blast killed one civilian and wounded five.

Medical officials confirmed the casualty figures from al attacks. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release the information.

---

Associated Press writers Murtada Faraj and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20150224/af--boko_haram-388f428acb.html

Suicide bombers kill 24 at 2 bus stations in north Nigeria

Feb 24, 12:42 PM (ET)
By ADAMU ADAMU and IBRAHIM GARBA

(AP) Men inspect a bus following an explosion on the street in Potiskum, Nigeria....
Full Image

POTISKUM, Nigeria (AP) — Teenage suicide bombers, suspected to be Boko Haram extremists, killed at least 24 people in separate blasts Tuesday at crowded bus stations in two northern Nigerian cities 300 kilometers (200 miles) apart.

In an apparently unrelated development, an American missionary has been kidnapped from a school in central Kogi state. The Rev. Phyllis Sortor was taken away Monday by several abductors, according to a statement on the website of the First Methodist Church in Seattle. Kidnappings for ransom are common in Nigeria, and many victims are returned unharmed.

In the northeastern town of Potiskum, a young man forced his way onto a bus and detonated explosives that killed 12 people and injured 20, according to the bus driver and hospital records.

Hours later, two young men were blamed for explosions that ripped through a bus station in northern Kano city, killing at least 12 people and injuring many more, according to state police commissioner Ibrahim Idris. Witnesses said the bombers appeared to be 17 or 18 years old.

(AP) Men inspect a bus following an explosion on the street in Potiskum, Nigeria....
Full Image

The explosions triggered fires that destroyed two buses and a car, Idris said.

Firefighters rushed to the scene of twisted metal, wailing people and billowing smoke. Ambulances with sirens blaring carried bodies and the wounded to the hospitals in Kano, Nigeria's second largest city.

The attack in Potiskum comes two days after a girl who looked about 10 years old carried explosives that detonated killing her and four others at a market in the same town.

Bus driver Adamu Isa said a security guard stopped a man who set off a metal detector as passengers were boarding his bus in Potiskum.

"He was told to stand to one side but instead forced himself onto the bus and blew himself up," said Isa, who considered himself lucky to be alive.

(AP) Injured people from a bus explosion receive treatment at a local hospital in...
Full Image

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Tuesday's blasts but they bear all the signs of similar attacks by Nigeria's home-grown Boko Haram Islamic extremist group.

On Monday, a woman walked into a primary school in Fune, another area of Yobe state, and tried to give pupils a parcel to deliver to the headmistress. When they refused, she ran off, leading security agents to surmise she may have been carrying a bomb, teacher Mohammad Isa of Damagum Central Primary School told The Associated Press.

All schools in the area have been closed because of the possible threat.

Boko Haram is a nickname meaning "Western education is forbidden" in the local Hausa language and the extremists have perpetrated numerous attacks on schools and students.

Attacks by girls and young women have raised fears that Boko Haram is using some of its hundreds of kidnap victims to carry out bombings. It is unclear if children are detonating explosives, if the blasts are remotely controlled, and if the children understand what is happening.

At least 10,000 people have been killed in Nigeria's Islamic uprising in the past year, according to the Council on Foreign Affairs, and some 1.6 million people have been driven from their homes in the campaign to enforce strict Islamic law across Nigeria, whose 160 million people are divided almost equally between Muslims and Christians.

---

Garba contributed from Kano, Nigeria.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nationaljournal.com/defense/paralyzed-by-ukraine-dumbfounded-by-russia-20150223

Paralyzed By Ukraine, Dumbfounded by Russia

As the cease-fire collapses, Obama cannot commit to the next course of action to counter Moscow. And he’s running out of time.

By James Oliphant
2/23/2015

The sluggish disintegration of a weak peace deal in Ukraine has come as nothing less than a blessing for President Obama. It has helped mask his administration's inability to determine the best response to the crisis, and to Russia.

But this respite will not last. Given the events on the ground, Obama will soon have to decide whether to send weapons and trainers to the Ukrainian government and risk turning what has been largely a border skirmish into a major conflict by proxy with serious implications for the United States, Europe, and American interests worldwide.

Certainly, Obama has faced overseas challenges before—most notably in Libya, Iraq, and Syria. But he has never had to stare down a nuclear power bent on reestablishing its sphere of influence. And he's never faced an adversary with the swagger and smarts of Vladimir Putin, who hails from a throwback era of global power politics that predates Obama's experience on foreign policy, and one that the American president can't quite wrap his head around.

From all indications, the president and his aides are downright torn over how to proceed, mindful of the consequences of both action and inaction. Meanwhile, Putin-backed rebels consolidate their gains.

That's making hawks impatient. As separatists last week secured control of the strategically critical town of Debaltseve in eastern Ukraine, Republican Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham excoriated Obama. At times, they accused him of "hiding" behind the increasingly rickety cease-fire agreement and clinging to "any available excuse" to not provide arms and equipment to the embattled nation.

McCain and Graham simply don't believe Obama has the stomach for the fight. (Neither likely does Putin.)

The evidence suggests they might be right. It's become increasingly clear that the president has serious reservations about arming the Ukrainians, even as some members of his administration – his secretary of State, John Kerry, and his new Pentagon chief, Ash Carter, to name two – are in favor of it.

"President Obama can't come out and say Ukraine is not a vital interest. It's politically inadmissible," says Simon Saradzhyan, assistant director of the U.S.-Russia Initiative to Prevent Nuclear Terrorism, an institute at Harvard University. "But if you look at what he's really been doing, it shows that the U.S. does not want to get dragged into a military conflict."

SINCE HIS FIRST DAYS in the White House, Obama and his foreign-policy principals—National Security Advisor Susan Rice, top aide Benjamin Rhodes, and chief of staff Denis McDonough—have held Washington's national-security establishment in low regard, preferring to try and chart what it sees as a modern, 21st century approach and not be weighed down by Beltway groupthink.

That appears to be have never been more than it is now, when calls for action from insiders are turning feverish. That makes Ukraine Obama's biggest foreign policy test to date, and it's one time when the president simply cannot afford to get it wrong.

The prospect of arming Ukraine gained momentum this month after a group of former top-level government officials called for the move in a report. (The group included Strobe Talbott, who advised Bill Clinton on the breakup of the Soviet bloc, and Michele Flournoy, a policy expert that Democrats often tout as a potential Defense secretary.) That triggered a fierce debate in foreign-policy circles about whether arming Ukraine would be a show of strength that could cause Putin to think twice about backing the separatists, or whether it could escalate the situation to a dangerous degree.

Obama remains attuned to both arguments, the White House says. Yet, the president has repeatedly talked of there not being a "military solution" in Ukraine and how American weapons could only, at best, help slow the separatists' advances and perhaps save some lives. ("Lethal defensive aid" has been Washington's new favorite euphemism.) Just last week, Kerry's spokesperson, Jen Psaki, re-iterated that "getting into a proxy war with Russia is not anything that's in interest of Ukraine or in the interest of the international community." Psaki will soon join the White House as its communications director.

Part of what is holding the White House in check is what national-security policymakers call "escalation dominance." Simply put, because Russia has more at stake in Ukraine than America does, there's a worry that sending sophisticated weaponry to the Ukrainian government will only up the ante. Direct intervention by the United States could lead Putin to end the pretense that he isn't backing the separatists and push him to send the Russian military fully into Ukraine, creating the kind of confrontation between the two nations that was largely avoided during the decades of the Cold War.

Moreover, the president's postwar foreign policy, as recently restated by Rice, is, at root, all about stepping back and letting other nations with a greater tangible stake in the outcome do most of the heavy lifting. That means the question of Ukraine is largely viewed as a European problem, by virtue of proximity if nothing else. (And, indeed, the U.S. was not at the table when last week's cease-fire was negotiated in Minsk.) Rice, in a speech earlier this month notably said that Putin's regime did not pose an "existential" threat to America.

More evidence of the president's reluctance came from Obama himself. In an interview with CNN earlier this month, he was openly dismissive of Putin's motives, saying the Russian president does not have a coherent plan for Ukraine. That matches up nicely with the belief of some foreign-policy thinkers who argue the best course for the United States is to do little and let the conflict sputter out. They argue that Russia neither has the economic nor military might to pose a threat to Kiev, much less the NATO countries that lie beyond.

BUT MANY WHO study Russia for a living believe the president continues to underestimate both the long-term threat to American security and Putin himself. "Putin's actions are a direct threat to European stability, security, and democracy. As such, they are also a direct threat to U.S. national security," says Alexander Motyl, a Ukrainian political scientist at Rutgers University. "The Obama administration has thus far failed to understand, or openly articulate, this point—even though a large number of former top policymakers and academics have in fact stated that the Russian aggression against Ukraine is only part of a larger Putin assault on all things Western."

Ukraine by itself isn't important to America's national security interests, says John Herbst, a former ambassador to Ukraine during the George W. Bush administration who helped write the report recommending arming the country. "But Ukraine in this crisis is critical. It's critical because, right now—and this is something the [Obama] administration does not seem to be aware of—the Kremlin has turned Russia into the principal national security danger globally."

Those who favor arming the Ukrainians tend to talk in Cold War terms, seeing Kiev as just the first domino that could topple beneath Russian aggression. The way they game it out, Ukraine is ringed by NATO member states, the Baltic nations of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania—all countries that used to fall within Moscow's sphere of influence.

Should Russia take Ukraine, there would be no buffer between Putin and NATO, which means the U.S. could be facing a Guns of August scenario, in which treaty obligations could yank America into a European war it doesn't want. In their mind, the only way to stop Putin is now in Ukraine, by funneling in weapons and training its military.

"I am an admirer of President Obama's restraint in the Middle East," Herbst says. "But I don't think he understands big power politics. Big power politics is all about needing to restrain powerful actors whose actions might be dangerous."

Some of Obama's top military leaders also haven't shied away from using more provocative language about the crisis.

In a little-noticed interview with the Wall Street Journal earlier this month, the commander of the U.S. Army in Europe, Lt. Gen. Frederick Hodges, issued a warning: "I believe the Russians are mobilizing right now for a war that they think is going to happen in five or six years—not that they're going to start a war in five or six years," he said, "but I think they are anticipating that things are going to happen, and that they will be in a war of some sort, of some scale, with somebody within the next five or six years."

MUCH OF THE discerning of the threat involves reading Putin's psychology. Is he bent on restoring Russia's territorial glory or is he an insecure leader who needs to be reassured of his country's importance in the global scheme?

What frustrates foreign-policy experts on both sides is that the Obama White House can't seem to make up its own mind about it and seems unwilling either to confront Putin or engage him in direct diplomacy. Thus there is endless talk about making Putin "pay" through sanctions that have, so far, failed to deter him. It's a holding action designed to marginalize Putin, which, experts say, only seems to infuriate him. More important, there is little from the administration about an overall strategy in dealing with Russia in a global context.

Obama seems, in fact, to go out of his way to not treat Putin as the leader of a superpower, viewing him instead as a relic of a bygone geopolitical age. Obama hasn't pursed high-level talks with Putin since canceling a summit meeting in Moscow in 2013 after Russia granted Edward Snowden asylum. "There are times when they slip back into Cold War thinking and Cold War mentality," Obama said then. "What I continually say to them and to President Putin: That's the past."

In all, Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush made 12 trips to Russia. Obama has made just one—and that was in his first year of office. This, despite Obama's admissions that he has needed Putin's help with two of his recent most pressing security concerns: Syria's chemical weapons stockpile and Iran's nuclear program.

But more critically, isolating Russia and treating it like a second-rate European nation belies the reality of its nuclear arsenal. In the wake of the two countries' deteriorating relationship, Russia said late last year that it would boycott a planned summit on nuclear security to be held in the U.S. And there are growing worries that the U.S. and Russia no longer have the controls in place that kept nukes secure during the Cold War, giving rise to fears that a misunderstanding could have lethal consequences.

Putin's Russia, says Brookings' Jeremy Shapiro, "is the only existential threat the United States faces. Even if it is a low-probability outcome, it is a very bad one. I think it's worth talking about up front."

Shapiro does not support arming Ukraine. He says Obama should engage Putin directly to defuse the crisis and perhaps even grant Russia some say in the affairs of its border nations rather than stumble into a war incrementally.

While the Obama administration has been cool to the very notion of foreign "spheres of influence," Shapiro notes that the United States, as a matter of policy, has never much cared whether Ukraine is part of the West.

"We are literally risking World War III for something we do not want," Shapiro says. "We forget we're not fighting for anything worth having. That's the real danger."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nationalinterest.org/fea...-the-arms-control-crowds-iran-hypocrisy-12317

A Movement Betrayed: The Arms Control Crowd's Iran Hypocrisy

Why is the arms control community more concerned about a nuclear France than a nuclear Iran?

Emily B. Landau, Shimon Stein
February 25, 2015

There is a group of academic and think tank researchers and disarmament and nonproliferation advocates—that we collectively refer to in this article as the “professional arms controllers”—who place arms control and nuclear disarmament high on the agenda of their professional activities. One would think that this group of professionals would be at the forefront of those arguing against what seems to be emerging as a bad nuclear deal with Iran. Curiously enough, they are not, even though they know—as we all do—that this deal will very likely keep Iran at a dangerous nuclear threshold, enabling it to move to a nuclear weapons capability at a time of its choosing.

This is because there is unlikely to be enough time, political will, and/or means to stop Iran from doing so, even if it is caught violating the deal. Worse still, the deal will legitimize this bad situation, including Iran’s enrichment program, for the duration of the deal. Furthermore, when the deal expires—and regardless of any strategic reversal regarding Iran’s military ambitions—even the restrictions of this nuclear deal will be lifted, allowing Iran further enhance its already vast nuclear infrastructure. This deal will render irreversible Iran’s ability to quickly build a nuclear bomb, all with the blessing of the international community.

Has Iran done anything to deserve these benefits? After all, over the past year, all we have heard from Iran is continued defiance – everything it will not do in the context of a deal. Significantly, it continues to claim that there is no evidence of any wrongdoing on its part, even as it continues to stonewall the IAEA investigation into the weaponization aspects of its program. For years, Iran has been deceiving the international community about its military activities and intentions in the nuclear realm, and refuses to budge regarding its breakout potential.

The emerging deal—which would enable Iran to remain at the nuclear threshold—has dire implications in two main respects: for regional and global security, and for the nuclear non-proliferation regime. For the arms controllers, both should be a grave concern because nuclear weapons are as dangerous as the states that hold them. And Iran is an aspiring regional hegemon with a Supreme Leader who feels totally comfortable saying that the only solution for Israel is its annihilation. For disarmament diehards, this argument probably holds little weight because they focus only on the weapons, not the states that possess them. One can imagine, however, that in closed forums even they might admit that there are differences between nuclear weapon states. That, for example, a nuclear Britain or France is much less concerning than a nuclear Pakistan.

But what about the implications for the nonproliferation regime? This is surely the bread and butter of the arms controllers. Why are we not hearing their outrage that after years of fruitless negotiations, the P5+1 seems poised to agree to a deal that will give Iran a breakout capability? Why do they not say that this is a very hard blow to the NPT regime that purports to stop nuclear proliferation, and that it is likely to spur additional proliferation in the region? Why are the professional arms controllers not expressing concern that this Iran deal will create new realities on the ground, which will inspire other potential proliferators? For example, why should the United Arab Emirates agree to the so-called gold standard in the nuclear realm when Iran’s enrichment is legitimized?

We do not mean to imply that everyone should share our assessment and concerns about the Iran negotiations. Other observers may, and in fact do see the situation differently, and it is their right even if we strongly disagree with their position. But what is particularly perplexing and indeed disappointing is that some of the professional arms controllers, who for years stood at the forefront of the campaign to combat nuclear proliferation, calling day in and day out on the five nuclear weapon states to take meaningful steps toward disarmament, seem to have lost their fervor when it comes to Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Suddenly, the disarmament principles that guided them for so long are being relaxed for Iran, even though a nuclear Iran will pose a significantly more dangerous scenario than nuclear weapons in the hands of states like Britain and France.

One does not have to agree with former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger on every issue to take seriously his statements in a recent Congressional hearing, when he reminded us all that “nuclear talks with Iran began as an international effort, buttressed by six U.N. resolutions, to deny Iran the capability to develop a military nuclear option. They are now an essentially bilateral negotiation over the scope of that capability through an agreement that sets a hypothetical limit of one year on an assumed breakout. The impact of this approach will be to move from preventing proliferation to managing it.”

How do the professional arms controllers respond to Kissinger’s statement? Indeed, the facts are that instead of remaining true to their noble goals, these arms control advocates are now supporting an approach to Iran that will likely end up encouraging proliferation rather than stopping it. In this manner, they are in fact betraying their own stated agenda, at everyone’s risk.

Emily B. Landau is Head of the Arms Control Program at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), at Tel Aviv University and the author of "Decade of Diplomacy: Negotiations with Iran and North Korea and the Future of Nuclear Nonproliferation."

Amb. Shimon Stein is a Senior Research Fellow at INSS and a former deputy director general of Israel's Foreign Ministry, and ambassador to Germany.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
Paralyzed By Ukraine, Dumbfounded by Russia

As the cease-fire collapses, Obama cannot commit to the next course of action to counter Moscow. And he’s running out of time.

By James Oliphant

SINCE HIS FIRST DAYS in the White House, Obama and his foreign-policy principals—National Security Advisor Susan Rice, top aide Benjamin Rhodes, and chief of staff Denis McDonough—have held Washington's national-security establishment in low regard, preferring to try and chart what it sees as a modern, 21st century approach and not be weighed down by Beltway groupthink.

Moreover, the president's postwar foreign policy, as recently restated by Rice, is, at root, all about stepping back and letting other nations with a greater tangible stake in the outcome do most of the heavy lifting. That means the question of Ukraine is largely viewed as a European problem, by virtue of proximity if nothing else. (And, indeed, the U.S. was not at the table when last week's cease-fire was negotiated in Minsk.) Rice, in a speech earlier this month notably said that Putin's regime did not pose an "existential" threat to America.


Mr. Oliphant is ignoring a very important factor. We had complex networks stirring up the Arab Spring. Our own State Department stirred up Ukraine. So Obama's foreign policy is not so hands off. It only beomes hands off when the killing starts.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.stripes.com/news/kerry-defends-iran-nuclear-negotiations-before-congress-1.331507

Kerry defends Iran nuclear negotiations before Congress

By DEB RIECHMANN and MATTHEW LEE
The Associated Press
Published: February 24, 2015

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State John Kerry told wary lawmakers Tuesday that it was premature to criticize nuclear negotiations with Iran before any deal can be reached to keep Tehran from developing atomic weapons.

"The president has made clear — I can't state this more firmly — the policy is Iran will not get a nuclear weapon," Kerry told members of a Senate Appropriations subcommittee. "And anybody running around right now, jumping in to say, 'Well, we don't like the deal,' or this or that, doesn't know what the deal is. There is no deal yet. And I caution people to wait and see what these negotiations produce."

Kerry testified in Congress 12 hours after returning to Washington from the latest round of talks in Geneva involving Iran, the U.S. and five other world powers. U.S. and Iranian officials reported progress on getting to a deal that would clamp down on Tehran's nuclear activities for at least 10 years but then slowly ease restrictions.

Negotiators are rushing to try to meet a March 31 deadline for a framework agreement.

Republican and Democratic senators are skeptical that Iran is negotiating in good faith and accuse Tehran of buying time and meddling throughout the Mideast. Still, a comprehensive pact could ease 35 years of U.S-Iranian enmity — and seems within reach for the first time in more than a decade of negotiations.

Subcommittee chairman Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said the U.S. is negotiating with Iranian officials who are "hell bent on expanding their influence in the Mideast in a destructive fashion."

"I think they are wreaking havoc," Graham said. "I think they've destabilized the Yemeni government, who was helpful in the counterterrorism actions against al-Qaida in the region. I think they are propping up (Syrian President Bashar) Assad, who is one of the great mass murderers of the 21st century. I think Hezbollah has been a destructive element in Lebanon and a constant thorn in the side of Israel."

Kerry agreed that Iranian influence was having an impact on other countries in the region.

When asked whether Assad was a "puppet" of the Iranian regime, Kerry replied, "Pretty much."

Asked whether Hezbollah, an Islamic militant group based in Lebanon, was a subcontractor of the Iranian regime, Kerry answered, "Totally."

But he said it would be worse if Iran was armed with nuclear weapons and could project even more power and influence in the region than it does today.

The administration's battle with Congress over the nuclear talks is expected to get louder next week, when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses Congress and is expected to strongly criticize any deal with its archenemy. The invitation to Netanyahu from Republican leaders has spurred a contentious debate in Congress.

Democratic Sens. Richard Durbin of Illinois and Dianne Feinstein of California sent a letter to Netanyahu on Monday, saying the speech would sacrifice long-standing U.S. cooperation with Israel for "short-term partisan points" that could have "lasting repercussions." The two invited Netanyahu to a private meeting with Democratic senators during his visit to Washington.

As Kerry testified, a prominent Iranian opposition group alleged that Iran has been conducting secret nuclear research and some uranium enrichment using sophisticated machinery at an underground facility in the suburbs northeast of Tehran. The group offered no proof but said it had learned of the activities through years of reporting from its sources inside Iran, including people who had visited radiation-shielded tunnels under what is purported to be a building housing the ministry of intelligence.

The group, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, has in the past revealed secret Iranian nuclear sites, most prominently when it disclosed a hidden nuclear facility in Natanz in 2002. But it has also made claims that have been disputed by experts. U.S. intelligence officials had no immediate comment on the claims.

Group leaders described a 62-acre site they dubbed Lavizan-3, which they said included four underground tunnels below a building used by Iran's intelligence agency. The facility was built in great secrecy between 2004 and 2008, they said, by companies that had been affiliated with Iran's nuclear program.

The hearing was supposed to be about the State Department's budget request for the 2016 fiscal year, yet most of the questions were about the world's hot spots, not dollars and cents.

RUSSIA: Kerry said Russia has repeatedly lied to him about its activities in Ukraine where pro-Russian rebels are fighting national forces. Russian President Vladimir Putin denies arming rebels in the war in eastern Ukraine, which has killed more than 5,600 people and forced over a million to flee their homes. The fighting began last April, a month after Russia annexed the mostly Russian-speaking Crimean Peninsula.

"They have been persisting in their misrepresentations — lies — whatever you want to call them about their activities there to my face, to the face of others on many different occasions," Kerry said.

During his second congressional appearance of the day — this time before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee — Kerry said: "The separatist movement is, in our judgment, a de facto extension of the Russian military and it is an instrument of Russian national power."

AFGHANISTAN: On whether to adjust the schedule for U.S. troop withdrawals, Kerry said President Barack Obama will make a decision shortly after he reviews their pace.

NEW WAR POWERS TO FIGHT ISLAMIC STATE: Obama's proposed draft of new war powers to fight Islamic State militants proposes a ban on "enduring offensive combat operations." The White House says that language gives him the ability for rescue missions, intelligence collection and the use of special operations forces but would not authorize a ground war like the one U.S. troops fought in Afghanistan or Iraq.

Some Republicans say Obama's proposal is too restrictive for the mission to succeed while some Democrats want more limitations on Obama's authority so the United States doesn't sign on for another open-ended war.

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., told Kerry that the language was big enough to "drive a combat truck through." She said she and other Senate Democrats would not support that language in a new authorization for military force against the Islamic State.

Kerry challenged Boxer to find new language that could satisfy both sides of the aisle.

SYRIA: Several lawmakers questioned the Obama administration's focus on fighting the Islamic State and not ousting Assad.

Kerry noted that there has been a slight increase of Islamic State presence in Syria but that the group was defeated in Kobani and lost as many as 1,000 fighters there.

He noted that the U.S. and its partners are setting up sites to train moderates to fight militants. He said there were other things "taking place that will augment the ability of the moderate opposition to be able to have an impact on Assad." Kerry did not elaborate, but he said that he thinks that during the next months, "the pressure can increase significantly on the Assad regime and that will affect who is willing to do what on the ground."

Associated Press writer Ken Dilanian contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/25/us-usa-northkorea-nuclear-idUSKBN0LT09D20150225

U.S. 'deeply concerned' by North Korean nuclear advances

By David Brunnstrom
WASHINGTON Tue Feb 24, 2015 11:07pm EST

(Reuters) - The United States is "deeply concerned" about North Korea's nuclear advances, a senior U.S. official said on Tuesday after a U.S. research institute predicted Pyongyang could possess as many as 100 nuclear weapons within five years.

Sung Kim, U.S. Special Representative for North Korea Policy, told a Washington seminar he could not comment on findings presented earlier by experts at the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies, because he had not seen the report and U.S. government assessments were classified.

"(But) obviously we are deeply concerned about the fact that the North Koreans are continuing to advance their nuclear capabilities; we know that they are continuing to work on their nuclear program," Kim said when asked about the report.

Experts at the U.S.-Korea Institute presented three scenarios for North Korea’s future nuclear stockpile, which they estimated currently amount to 10-16 weapons.

In the first, assuming minimal technological improvements, the stockpile was expected to grow to 20 weapons by 2020. In the second, it could grow to 50 and advances in miniaturization would allow North Korea to mount warheads on a new generation of intermediate- and shorter-range ballistic missiles.

The report's co-author, Joel Wit, described a "worst-case scenario", which would see an increase to 100 devices and significant technological advances allowing North Korea to deploy battlefield and tactical weapons if it chose to.

"This is a pretty scary scenario," Wit said, adding that the more nuclear weapons North Korea had, the more difficult it would be to try to coerce it to rolling back its nuclear program.

"To me it's a risky business trying to punish a country with so many nuclear weapons.”

The report said North Korea's existing missile systems were able to reach most of Northeast Asia, particularly its foes South Korea and Japan, and Pyongyang may also in the future be able to deploy a limited number of Taepodong missiles - a militarized version of a space-launch vehicle - that could reach the United States.

Kim said concern over North Korean advances was driving international diplomatic efforts "to find a credible path to negotiation so that we can stop North Korea’s development of their nuclear capabilities."

He said Washington was "under no illusions" about North Korea's willingness to denuclearize voluntarily and would "continue to apply pressure both multilaterally and unilaterally" though sanctions to increase the cost of failing to do so.

(Reporting by David Brunnstrom; Editing by Ken Wills)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.arirang.co.kr/News/News_View.asp?nseq=176358

N. Korea could have 100 nuclear weapons by 2020: U.S. expert
Updated: 2015-02-25 12:10:00 KST

North Korea could potentially expand its nuclear stockpile to one-hundred weapons over the next five years.

This, according to Joel Wit -- senior fellow at the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University -- who says Pyongyang is currently believed to possess between 10 to 16 nuclear weapons.

He gives three possible scenarios for the North's nuclear expansion, with Pyongyang forecast to double its stockpile at minimal growth, up to 50 at moderate growth -- which presumes the nation's nuclear and missile programs continue to develop at the current pace, and in the worst case a ten-fold increase from now.

The expert also called on the South Korean government to give up its unrealistic fantasy of unification, and see reality, stressing that North Korea is a country that will soon have between 50 to 100 nuclear weapons.

And such developments pose a serious threat not only to the Korean peninsula, but also to the United States.

U.S.-based think tank, The Heritage Foundation, says the North likely possesses the ability to place nuclear weapons on its medium-range missiles, as well as the technology to miniaturize warheads.

Saying that Pyongyang has an extensive ballistic missile force, the think tank added the country has deployed about 800 Scud short-range missiles, 300 Nodong medium-range missiles and 50 Musudan intermediate-range ballistic missiles.

It goes on to say that the North continues to develop ICBMs, some capable of hitting the United States.

The think tank also noted that North Korea has deployed 70 percent of its ground forces within 140 kilometers of the demilitarized zone,.. making it possible to attack South Korea with little or no warning.

Kim Min-ji, Arirang News.
Reporter :
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20150225000797

N. Korea's possible nuke test forecast to be more powerful: Seoul

Published : 2015-02-25 14:25
Updated : 2015-02-25 14:25

North Korea has continued high-explosive detonation tests and its possible nuclear test is forecast to be much more powerful both in scale and yield than previous ones, Seoul's intelligence authorities said Wednesday.

"North Korea has been carrying out high-explosive tests at a test site in Pyongyang to secure technology for weapons miniaturization and stronger explosive power," an official said, requesting anonymity.

"Should the North conduct a fourth round of nuclear test, its explosion would have a yield of at least 10 to 15 kilotons with a larger scale compared to the previous ones," he added.

The North's initial underground test in 2006 was measured at 3.9 on the Richter scale with a wield of less than 1 kiloton. In May 2009, Pyongyang carried out the second test that created a 4.5-magnitude tremor with a yield of 3 to 4 kilotons.

During the third and the latest test in February 2013, the figures jumped to 4.9 on scale and 6-7 kilotons, according to South Korean and the U.S. authorities.

"No unusual signs have been detected in and around its nuclear test site of Punggye-ri in North Hamkyong Province. But Pyongyang has been ready to carry out a fresh test round whenever it wants," the official noted.

The communist country has repeatedly vowed to develop its economy and nuclear arsenal in tandem under the notion that the destructive weapons programs are a deterrent against what it claims is the U.S.' hostile policy against it. Last year, it threatened to conduct a "new form" of nuclear test.

The provocative regime was also estimated to have increased its nuclear stockpile.

"North Korea has revved up efforts to secure more weapons-grade plutonium and to have the highly enriched uranium program, though the exact amounts are not known," another Seoul official said on condition of anonymity.

In its 2014 white paper, Seoul said the North is presumed to have secured some 40 kilograms of weapons-grade plutonium, "but the figure is literally nothing but a presumption," he said.

On Tuesday, Joel Wit, the chief analyst running the website 38 North at Johns Hopkins University, said Pyongyang is currently believed to have 10-16 nuclear weapons -- six to eight of them based on plutonium and four to eight based on weapons-grade uranium -- and its nuclear stockpile could expand to as many as 100 weapons by 2020. (Yonhap)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...h-Korea-may-have-100-atomic-arms-by-2020.html

North Korea may have 100 atomic arms by 2020
US researchers say country could increase its nuclear arsenal from at least 10 weapons today to between 20 and 100 weapons in five years.

By Julian Ryall, Tokyo
12:01AM GMT 25 Feb 2015
Comments

Pyongyang's scientists have succeeded in miniaturising nuclear warheads to enable them to be fitted to ballistic missiles and the regime is likely to have a stockpile of 100 atomic weapons by 2020, according to the top North Korea analyst at Johns Hopkins University.

Joel Wit, who runs the respected 38 North web site, told a seminar in Washington on Tuesday that Pyongyang is believed to already have an arsenal of between 10 and 16 nuclear weapons and that its technological prowess has advanced to the stage at which it no longer needs to carry out tell-tale nuclear tests.

"Our fixation with when these tests happen really is not the right way to view this issue", Yonhap News quoted Mr Wit as saying. "Tests could happen. They may never happen again. If they never happen again, it does not mean that North Korea isn't a threat or isn't a problem".

To date, North Korea has carried out three underground nuclear tests, the most recent in February 2013 and each of increasing power. It has also stepped up development of its medium-range Nodong ballistic missiles, which are able to strike targets in South Korea and Japan, while the Taepodong-2 missile is assumed to have a range of more than 3,700 miles.

At a minimum, Mr Wit said, North Korea will be able to deploy 20 nuclear weapons by 2020, but a far more likely scenario puts that stockpile at 50 weapons by the end of the decade.

A "worst-case scenario", in which North Korea makes dramatic technological advances in both its nuclear programme and delivery systems, would permit Pyongyang to have 100 atomic weapons available.

Analysts believe these weapons would have a yield of as much as 50 kilotons. The atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945 had a yield of 18 kilotons.

Mr Wit also warned that as the North's nuclear knowledge and weapons stockpile grow, there is an increased likelihood of nuclear exports to states that similarly wish to possess atomic weapons.

He called on the US, South Korea and Japan to "wake up" to the threat that Pyongyang poses to peace and stability in the region and to devise ways in which to deal with the growing problem of an unstable and belligerent nuclear-armed regime in North Korea.

Related Articles

North Korea stages chemical warfare drills
06 Feb 2015

David Blair: Could North Korea start a war by mistake?
04 Apr 2013

What threat does North Korea pose to US?
04 Apr 2013

Cameron: North Korea has technology for nuclear strike on UK
04 Apr 2013

Korea crisis piques tourists' interest
04 Apr 2013

North Korea's Twitter and Flickr accounts hacked by Anonymous
04 Apr 2013
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-Weapons-Stockpile-Could-Grow-Tenfold-by-2020

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thediplomat.com/2015/02/repo...weapons-stockpile-could-grow-tenfold-by-2020/

Report: North Korea’s Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Could Grow Tenfold by 2020

Research from the US-Korea Institute and NDU warns North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs are developing rapidly.

By Shannon Tiezzi
February 25, 2015

0 Shares
6 Comments

A new research project warns that North Korea’s nuclear stockpile could grow from roughly 10-16 nuclear weapons at the end of 2014 to 100 by the year 2020. The North Korea Nuclear Futures Project, a joint collaboration between the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and National Defense University, aims to predict possible futures for North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs over the next five years. The major findings were announced to the press by Joel Wit of the U.S.-Korea Institute and David Albright of the Institute for Science and International Security on Tuesday.

The project provided three scenarios for the growth of North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs over the next five years. Under the “minimal growth, minimal modernization” scenario – a best care scenario for concerned observers – North Korea conducts no further nuclear or missile tests and its technology progresses slowly. Even under this scenario, North Korea is expected to roughly double its stockpile of available nuclear weapons, from 10 to 20.

In the moderate scenario, which postulates North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs continue to develop at the same pace as they have so far, Pyongyang will have 50 nuclear weapons by 2020 and will be able to mount them on both mobile intermediate-range ballistic missiles (IRBMS) and possibly even intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). The worst-case scenario, assuming an increased commitment to the nuclear and missile programs, would involve rapid growth, including successful efforts to gain foreign technologies and information). Wit described this as a “pretty scary scenario” of “dramatic expansion” that would see North Korea armed with 100 nuclear weapons by 2020 to go along with 20-30 ICBMs.

The report also warns that North Korea already has the capability to mount miniaturized warheads on both its short-range Nodong missile (which can cover most of the Northeast Asian theater) and its Taepodong-2 missile, which has the potential to be used as an ICBM. Wit notes that, given current capabilities, North Korea could amass a nuclear arsenal of around 100 weapons and mount them on Nodong missiles able to reach South Korea and Japan by 2020 even without ever conducting another nuclear or missile test.

The analysis of both the current situation and possible future developments make it clear that the current approach to North Korea’s nuclear program has failed. Both Wit and Albright noted that North Korea can routinely access the Western technologies it needs via Chinese companies willing to smuggle them over the border. The assumption that sanctions are affecting North Korea’s ability to get nuclear technology is wrong, Wit said. Albright added that a crackdown on smuggling along the Chinese-North Korea border “could make life much harder for North Korea,” but noted that currently China simply doesn’t have mechanisms in place to enforce relevant laws.

From a geopolitical perspective, perhaps the most interesting takeaway is Wit’s point that the United States is failing in its attempt to force North Korea to choose between nuclear weapons and economic prosperity. “They’re not having to choose… they’re doing both,” Wit said. And economic sacrifices are even less of a factor now that North Korea has built up the necessary infrastructure for its nuclear and missile programs. It’s “not that expensive” for North Korea to continue along its current trajectory, Albright said.

Meanwhile, North Korea is winning the battle for acceptance as a nuclear state, as a number of regional countries (Russia, China, and the ASEAN states) seem content to conduct normal political and economic relations with North Korea despite pro forma protests over its nuclear ambitions. North Korea’s recent “charm offensive” resulted in warmer ties (to varying degrees) with Russia, ASEAN, and even Japan. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has even been invited to join Russian President Vladimir Putin and other world leaders in Moscow for ceremonies marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II. With the Kim regime strengthening ties with at least some neighbors, it will only become more difficult for the U.S. and its allies to find a way to stem the growth of Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal.

6 comments
The Diplomat

Avatar
Join the discussion…

Avatar
TDog • 4 hours ago

What is interesting is that while states like Japan and Russia seem fine with this - or at least accepting - China and the US find themselves in the same boat in regards to their distaste for Pyongyang's ambitions and actions. And therein lies the problem: by allowing a myriad of other frankly more trivial issues sideline the debate over North Korea's nuclear arsenal, both China and the US have allowed a bad situation to get worse. The time to act was when North Korea first tested a device, but mutual distrust if not sheer malice prevented any meaningful action from taking place.

A nuclear-armed North Korea satisfies no one's strategic or geopolitical goals but for perhaps North Korea's. Even then one could argue that North Korea's arsenal is of limited political and economic utility as it represents more of a terrorist shakedown than a mature policy maneuver. And the problem is that the Kim dynasty is so supremely spoiled and detached from reality that so long as they have enough food to cram into their chubby faces and enough female companionship to satisfy them at night, a nuclear arsenal is an ego project and satisfying their ego, it would seem, is more of a priority than actually making sure their nation is able to feed and power itself.

Furthermore, North Korea knows it has everyone by the neck. China's seeming unwillingness to rein them in stems not from a stalwart adherence to a friendship so much as keeping a lid on a noxious band of criminals. If North Korea falls, North Koreans flood into China. The capacity for instability there is beyond their willingness or perhaps even ability to contain and Beijing above all values stability.

The tragedy is that it could have been handled years ago, but as I noted, belligerence, shortsightedness, mutual distrust, and sheer malice on the part of both the US and China prevented anything from happening. And so Kim gets to hold the entire region hostage for not other reason than he has delusions of grandeur and a propensity for acting like a spoiled, heavily-armed child.
1

Reply

Share ›
Avatar
jetcal1 TDog • an hour ago

If I remember correctly, the Clinton administration claimed a promise had been made by the DPRK not to develop nukes. As you know, he has been out of office for a few election cycles now.

Reply

Share ›
Avatar
TheSaucyMugwump • 7 hours ago

"The assumption that sanctions are affecting North Korea's ability to get nuclear technology is wrong"

Absolutely true, yet there are a few right-wingers, e.g. Joshua Stanton, who claim that sanctions will bring the DPRK to its knees. As long as China refuses to cooperate, sanctions on North Korea will have limited effect. The only way to enforce sanctions on the DPRK would be to enforce them against China at the same time, but the world's capitalists would quickly slap their bought-and-paid-for politicians into submission.

"the United States is failing in its attempt to force North Korea to choose between nuclear weapons and economic prosperity"

The Kim-groupies in Pyongyang are living very well, but people outside the capital are living in poverty. Not to mention the people in the labor camps being used as slaves in mines and other ventures.

I can only see three choices for the West, given China's refusal to rein in the DPRK:
1) acceptance of the DPRK as a nuclear power, working with them to add inspectors to prevent WWIII,
2) installation of a ring of missile defense around the DPRK, but it had better be invulnerable, and a ring is impossible by definition given that the DPRK borders both China and Russia, or
3) a massive air strike against the DPRK which would have immense implications around the world, as well as enormous casualties in the ROK, Japan, and perhaps other places.

Given that #2 is technically impossible today and #3 is unthinkable, the world may have no choice but to invite Kim Jong-un to some NBA games.

Reply

Share ›
Avatar
pug_ster TheSaucyMugwump • 6 hours ago

Or 4) Not try to overthrow the country, establish a peace treaty with North Korea and try to normalize relations like what they did to Cuba.
1

Reply

Share ›
Avatar
MingDynasty TheSaucyMugwump • 4 hours ago

I believe Mr. Putin's invite to the redoubtable Un was intended to be a diplomatic hand gesture to the Leader of the Free World if not to Messieurs Rogen and Franco. As dour as he may appear, I believe that Vladimir the Terrible has a somewhat dry sense of humor.

Reply

Share ›
Avatar
Elvis • 7 hours ago

Interesting, so assuming the North Koreans have successfully miniaturized their nukes then its too late. Time to end the sanctions & accept them into the ranks of the nuclear powers. If we want to maintain the fig leaf of doing something, keep the American sanctions but let the rest of the world carry on. What I want to know is if the North Koreans have shared the tech to miniaturize nukes with the Iranians as they have been partners for a while in regards to R&D in missiles & nukes.

Reply

Share ›
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.gulf-times.com/korea/247/details/428450/korea,-us-announce-joint-military-drills

Korea, US announce joint military drills

11:15 PM
24 February 2015

AFP/Reuters/Seoul

South Korea and the United States said yesterday that they would launch their annual joint military exercises on March 2, setting the stage for a likely surge in tensions with North Korea.

Pyongyang had offered a moratorium on nuclear testing if this year’s joint drills were cancelled – a proposal rejected by Washington as an “implicit threat” to carry out a fourth nuclear test.

The Key Resolve and Foal Eagle exercises are a perennial source of tension on the divided Korean peninsula.

Seoul and Washington insist they are defensive in nature, but they are regularly condemned by Pyongyang as provocative rehearsals for invasion.

“The whole course of Key Resolve and Foal Eagle is aimed to occupy (North Korea) through preemptive strikes,” the North’s ruling party newspaper Rodong Sinmun said in an editorial yesterday.

By refusing to cancel this year’s exercises, Seoul and Washington had effectively “scuppered” any chance of resuming a dialogue with Pyongyang, the editorial said.
“What remains to be done is to militarily react to the US while bolstering up war deterrence to the maximum,” it added.

Key Resolve lasts just over a week and is a largely computer-simulated exercise. The eight-week Foal Eagle drill involves air, ground and naval field training, with around 200,000 Korean and 3,700 US troops.

Both exercises will begin on March 2, with Key Resolve lasting until March 13 and Foal Eagle winding up on April 24, South Korea’s defence ministry said.

North Korea has regularly resorted to missile tests and high-decibel bellicose rhetoric in expressing its displeasure with the exercises in the past.

In 2013, following its third nuclear test, North Korea declared the armistice agreement which ended the 1950-53 war as “invalid” in response to the exercises.

The US responded with long-range nuclear-capable B-2 bomber flights over the Korean peninsular in a show of force that it said was designed to show US ability to “conduct long-range, precision strikes quickly and at will”.

In a speech to the ruling party’s Central Military Commission at the weekend, North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un directed the army to ensure its combat-readiness in order to react to “any form of war ignited by the enemy”.

There are close to 30,000 US troops permanently stationed in South Korea and, under current arrangements, the US would take operational command of the allies’ combined forces in the event of a conflict with the North.

“Exercising our multi-national force is an important component of readiness and is fundamental to sustaining and strengthening the alliance,” General Curtis Scaparrotti, head of the allies’ Combined Forces Command, said in a statement.

“The United Nations Command has informed the Korean People’s Army in North Korea... about Foal Eagle exercise dates and the non-provocative nature of this training,” the statement said.

There was no immediate response from Pyongyang to the formal announcement of the drill dates, but South Korean defence ministry spokesman Kim Min-Seok said nothing would derail the exercises.

“North Korea’s position and provocative remarks will have no impact,” Kim told a press briefing.

Overtures for dialogue by both Koreas in recent months have stalled, with Pyongyang describing inter-Korean relations as “inching close to a catastrophe”, in a separate Rodong Sinmun article.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/0...enezuelan-14-year-old-during-anti-government/

Tensions high following killing of Venezuelan 14-year-old during anti-government protest

Published February 24, 2015
Associated Press

SAN CRISTOBAL, Venezuela – The killing of a 14-year-old boy by a policeman during an anti-government protest is raising already high tensions in Venezuela amid a crackdown on the opposition and crippling economic problems.

The student, identified as Kluiverth Roa, was shot in the head and killed Tuesday during a confrontation between police and protesters in San Cristobal, the capital of a restive western state. Now that city is braced for a night of unrest and government opponents in the capital of Caracas are calling for a rally Wednesday morning.

Police officer Javier Mora Ortiz, 23, confessed to firing on the boy with plastic ammunition, officials said.

A photo and video of the student lying in a pool of blood, his backpack hanging over his shoulder, as a man frantically tries to staunch the bleeding and others scream and clutch their heads in horror rocketed around social media.

Ruling party officials, including President Nicolas Maduro, condemned the killing with rare speed and forcefulness.

But what had started as a small demonstration against the socialist government grew into a larger protest as night fell in San Cristobal, with shops closing their doors and public transportation stopping routes in anticipation of unrest. Some schools in the university town near the Colombian border announced that the next day's classes would be canceled.

One of Venezuela's more radical opposition parties called for a demonstration in the capital Wednesday to demand an investigation into the cases of students who have died at the hands of the government.

Maduro said in a nationally televised address that masked protesters had used rocks to attack police who sought to quell the demonstration. He called on young people to resist instigating such confrontations, but also condemned the killing.

"I want to offer my condolences to the parents of this young man who was murdered in an act of violence," he said.

Venezuelan ombudsman Tarek William Saab, a federal official charged with defending human rights, said on Twitter that he deplored the "vile assassination" of the teen, who he named as Kluiverth Roa, though other officials spelled his first name differently.

Last month, the government issued a policy change to allow law enforcement officials to open fire and use deadly force to control protests. At the time, human rights groups said the new regulation was dangerously vague, but Saab defended it. On Tuesday, critics questions whether the police might actually have been using live rounds.

Also on Tuesday, legislators from Venezuela's ruling socialist party moved to strip an opposition congressman of his seat.

Lawmakers began the process of removing Julio Borges from the National Assembly. The Supreme Court must also approve the motion. Borges is one of a laundry list of high-profile opposition leaders recently accused of plotting to overthrow the government, and could be prosecuted if he loses his seat, and thus his legislative immunity.

Tensions were already running high in Venezuela following of a slew of bad economic news and the arrest last week of the opposition mayor of Caracas. February marks the one year anniversary of massive street protests that choked neighborhoods around Venezuela and left more than 40 people dead.

Dissatisfaction with the administration has grown in the past year.

In San Cristobal, residents vented their outrage Tuesday night.

"How are you going shoot point blank at a student who's just leaving school to go home?" asked Glenda Lugo. "We're tired of this injustice."

___

Fabiola Sanchez contributed to this story from Caracas
 

Be Well

may all be well
Mr. Oliphant is ignoring a very important factor. We had complex networks stirring up the Arab Spring. Our own State Department stirred up Ukraine. So Obama's foreign policy is not so hands off. It only beomes hands off when the killing starts.

Maybe not then either. People were killed during the so-called Arab spring and in the Maidan protests. And war materiel (sp?) at least, is going to Ukraine from the US.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://hibbs.armscontrolwonk.com/archive/3117/turkeys-interests-and-tanideh

Turkey’s Interests and Tanideh

By mark | 23 February 2015 | 1 Comment

Two months from now in New York, cabinet-level officials from 189 countries will read out national statements filled to the brim with resolve to combat the spread of nuclear arms, as they do every five years when the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) is reviewed by its member states.

The NPT imposes legally binding obligations on its parties. These include putting peaceful-use nuclear materials under safeguards, and not manufacturing nuclear weapons. But there are other things that constitute good nonproliferation behavior that the NPT does not require. When governments don’t do those things, it is often because internal conflicts arise at the level of national government decision-making–especially when more than one policy goal competes for supremacy, and when perceived strategic interests are at stake.

Beginning in the late 1970s, the United States became increasingly annoyed by two Turkish companies that were supplying power inverters for Pakistan’s uranium enrichment program. After having requested Turkey for ten years without avail to halt this trade, in 1988 U.S. President Ronald Reagan personally raised it with Turkey’s President, Kenan Evren. But after that tete-a-tete another decade passed before Turkey snuffed out the assistance to Pakistan. For Ankara, the bottom line then was that Pakistan was a critical bilateral partner–and more important than Turkey’s nonproliferation interest in this instance.

U.S. officials were deterred from taking action by their own internal policy conflicts. Some concluded that allegations against the Turkish firms justified halting aid to Turkey under terms of the U.S. Foreign Assistance Act, which barred recipients from contributing to foreign nuclear-weapon programs. But that proposal got nowhere because the need to keep Pakistan on board Washington’s proxy war with the Soviet Union in Afghanistan “was always in the way,” as one former U.S. diplomat recalled.

Turkey and Tanideh

Turkey also figured in a recent case where nonproliferation interests and perceived strategic interests collided.

Beginning in April 2013, Germany’s Federal Attorney General’s Office prosecuted four businessmen accused of supplying a wealth of equipment for Iran’s IR-40 heavy water reactor project, a unit which, it said, “may be used to produce weapons-grade plutonium.”

Berlin then requested Ankara to extradite to Germany an Iranian citizen, Hossein Tanideh, who prosecutors, on the basis of wire taps and other evidence, concluded had been directed in 2006 by Iran to procure equipment for the primary circuit of the IR-40 reactor. Tanideh had been arrested in Turkey in early 2013 after Turkish investigators, cooperating with foreign counterparts, probed Tanideh’s commercial activities in Turkey. Prosecutors believed that Tanideh had used shell companies and false identities to try to obtain the equipment for Iran. Germany’s Attorney General determined that Tanideh was working for the company responsible for construction of the IR-40 and that is subject to Security Council sanctions since 2006. The U.S. Department of State identifies that organization as the Modern Industries Technique Company (MITEC).

In November 2013, a German court convicted the four businessmen of export control violations, including of the Security Council embargo of assistance to Iran’s nuclear program, and for seriously disturbing Germany’s foreign relations.

Tanideh remained in custody in Turkey, and Germany still aimed to prosecute him. The Turkish government mulled its options. It could honor the German extradition request. Or it could prosecute Tanideh in Turkey for export control violations that its probe of Tanideh found had been perpetrated.

Instead, Turkey released Tanideh from custody in early 2014, and it is now assumed by Western governments closely following the case that Tanideh has returned to Iran.

Tanideh is by all accounts not an insignificant player in Iran’s clandestine nuclear procurement effort. Since 2012 his name has been on the list of Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) maintained by the U.S. Treasury Department subject to sanctions and asset seizure for aiding Iran’s nuclear program.

So why didn’t Turkey extradite Tanideh to Germany or put him on trial in Turkey?

The short answer you get is that Tanideh was released as a consequence of bilateral intelligence cooperation between Iran and Turkey. Sources report that what happened in the Tanideh case was generally consistent with unconfirmed published accounts asserting that Hakan Fidan, from 2010 until this month head of Turkey’s intelligence agency, MIT, had riled Western governments by cooperating with Iran, and who may have passed on to Iran classified U.S. government intelligence assessments that had been shared with Turkey. This month, Turkish media assert that Fidan had been implicated in a Turkish judicial probe targeting pro-Iran officials in the Turkish government, and that the government thereafter pressured Turkish prosecutors to drop their investigation. Effective February 10, Fidan, a close associate of President Recip Tayyip Erdogan, resigned, according to Turkish press reports, in order to run for parliament.

Behind Turkish-Iranian intelligence cooperation however may lie deeper interests–including protecting Turkey’s 500-mile-long border with Syria, to say nothing of its 200-mile-long frontier with Iran. Since 2014 perimital security may be a more strategic concern for Turkey in the wake of Turkish efforts since 2013 to assist combatents who aim to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, some of whom may be jihadists. Separately, Turkey’s AKP rulers may be minding other bilateral interests with Iran that in 2014 outweighed Ankara’s nonproliferation interest in cooperating with an important NATO and European Union partner country to halt illegal procurement to Iran’s nuclear program–including in Turkey. These might include lucrative trade ties with Iran; compensation to Iran for Turkish deployment of technology related to NATO’s anti-missile defenses; cooperation with Iran on managing political and security developments in Iraq and Kurdistan; and, in the future, cooperation with Iran in fighting jihadist terrorists.

Twitter
Facebook
1

← “India’s Bilateral Obligations” (Previous)
One Response to “Turkey’s Interests and Tanideh”

Shaheen | February 23, 2015

I was reading this post as an e-mail without knowing who the author was. And I thought, gee, what a great post, exactly what we want ACW to be, informative and analytical on a topic I need to know more about. Thanks Mark.
Reply

What’s your take?

(Show your face, get a gravatar.)

* Name:
* Email:
Website:
* Comment:
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2015/02/24/is_americas_nuclear_arsenal_dying__107655.html

February 24, 2015
Is America's Nuclear Arsenal Dying?
By Michaela Dodge and Adam Lowther

As Russia and other nations around the world flex their “nuclear muscles,” when it comes to the United States, maintaining a credible nuclear force is certainly a tough task. Challenges include: declining research, development and acquisition budgets; uncertain prospects for modernization, and an American public that lacks a clear understanding how nuclear weapons contribute to national security.

The U.S. nuclear force has prevented a great power war for seven decades. Yet the commitment to maintain a credible nuclear force appears shaky.

That is certainly not the case in competitor nations such as Russia, China and North Korea. While sanctions and low oil prices have crippled Russia’s economy, the Kremlin is still doggedly spending billions of dollars on modernizing its strategic rocket forces. Washington’s lack of commitment takes a toll on more than investment. It does not go unnoticed by the men and women who man the nation’s nuclear submarines, bombers, and intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). That only makes executing a nuclear mission more difficult, both practically and morally.

State of Affairs

Imagine being out on the vast prairie of Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado or Nebraska in the dead of winter, the blasts of wind making the sub-zero temperatures nearly unbearable. After driving one to three hours to reach your missile alert facility, you go down into the launch control center (LCC) where the 50-year-old equipment smells the same as it did to your father, who pulled alerts here before you were born. During winter, heavy snow may trap maintenance and missile alert crews in the missile field for days. When they finally get to go home, the smell of old equipment and chemicals lingers on their clothes.

Much the same can be said for the bomber crews who fly the exact same aircraft their fathers flew and their sons or daughters will likely fly.

Recent Analysis

The Heritage Foundation’s newly released 2015 “Index of U.S. Military Strength” evaluates the health of the U.S. nuclear complex according to nine categories. In four of those categories—“Warhead Modernization,” “Delivery Systems Modernization,” Nuclear Weapons Complex” and “Nuclear Test Readiness”—the complex was rated as “weak” (the second worst rating possible).

One of the main factors behind these low scores is sequestration. Its “automatic pilot” budget regimen threatens sustained and predictable funding—a major problem for addressing issues within the nuclear complex. Already it has forced a delay in plans to replace aging delivery systems. This includes everything from a new bomber and its nuclear certifications, to a replacement for the Ohio-class strategic submarine, to a follow-on intercontinental ballistic missile.

Another major factor contributing to lower scores are the government’s conflicting policies regarding the nuclear complex. We say we care about the nuclear force and the complex that supports it, yet manpower and resources available to execute the nuclear mission have been steadily declining until recently. We say we are in favor of a robust nuclear modernization program, yet proclaim, at the same time, we need to get to a world without nuclear weapons—all while refusing to truly modernize our weapons.

The President’s fiscal year 2016 budget dedicates over $75 million for the ground-based strategic deterrent, better known as the Minuteman replacement. While the current missiles are in fact woefully archaic—they were first deployed in the 1970s—there is no provision for replacing the even older silos and launch control centers from which a new missile would be launched.

On the bright side, the President’s budget accelerates by two years the Long-Range Stand Off missile, an essential advancement in American capabilities. This project is particularly vital considering the limited number of available stealth bombers and the angle of attack needed to counter the tunneling efforts of our adversaries, which make targets hard to reach.

The main question, however, is what Congress will do. At the end of the day, it’s the House and Senate that decide which programs get funded and at what level.

The Index’s low rankings indicate the areas of America’s nuclear force that are in greatest need of investment. And it’s a force that must be sustained. The nuclear mission is critical. Its ultimate purpose is to deter a catastrophic attack on our homeland, our forces abroad, and our allies. While it is true that we require a nuclear force we never hope to launch, it is important to recognize that our nuclear weapons serve to keep the peace every day.

Michaela Dodge is a defense and strategic policy analyst in The Heritage Foundation’s Allison Center for Foreign and National Security Policy. Dr. Adam Lowther is a research professor at the Air Force Research Institute.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.defenseone.com/threats/2...troops-wont-defeat-isis/105876/?oref=d-skybox

Why Arab Ground Troops Won’t Defeat ISIS

February 23, 2015 By Bobby Ghosh Quartz

It is one thing for the Egyptian air force to bomb ISIS from the air. But the ability of Arab militaries to fight an organized, motivated enemy is highly suspect.

Many in the West will take heart from the news that Egypt’s dictator, Gen. Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, is calling for a joint Arab military force to take on Islamist extremism in the region. Coming shortly after his air force carried out bombing runs in Libya against groups that have pledged fealty to ISIL, it is tempting to take Sisi’s proclamation as a call to arms against the monstrous terrorist organization that calls itself the Islamic State. It raises the prospect of Arab boots on the ground in Syria and Iraq, taking on‚ with the help of Western planes and drones—ISIL.

Ready for the reality check?

It is one thing for the Egyptian air force to bomb ISIL—aka ISIS—from the air. But when it comes to ground troops, the ability of Arab militaries to fight an organized, motivated enemy is highly suspect. (That may explain why, only last week, Sisi was calling for a United Nations force to bring order to Libya.)

It has been decades since the Egyptian military has fought a full-fledged war, and the last time it was deployed in another Arab country—in Yemen in the 1960s—it was humiliated. Since then, Egypt’s rulers have used their army mainly to bully and beat up unarmed civilians protesting against oppression, and to fight homegrown terrorist groups in the Sinai Peninsula. They’ve been pretty good at the former, but not especially effective at the latter. Despite official claims of successes in the Sinai, terrorists attacks have been on the rise, and it is a bad sign that the Sisi regime feels it necessary to exercise strict censorship on reporting from the peninsula.

If Egypt’s recent track record is dismal, the history of Arab military cooperation isn’t especially reassuring, either. Some Western analysts hope that the GCC Peninsula Shield, a 40,000-strong force made up of countries in the Persian Gulf, can be brought to bear against ISIL. But like the Egyptian military, this mini-military was built mainly to protect Gulf regimes from internal political unrest. The Peninsula Force was most recently deployed in Bahrain in 2011, to stamp down civilian rallies against the royal family.

It’s worth remembering, too, that one of the most powerful Arab militaries—Syria’s—has been fighting against ISIL for nigh on four years. The forces of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad enjoy home-field advantage, and are not restrained by any concern for civilian casualties or such niceties as the Geneva conventions. Assad’s planes and tanks have flattened entire towns and cities, and still have failed to defeat ISIL, much less recover territory under the terrorists’ control.

The other Arab military in the war against ISIL, Iraq’s, seems to be leaving the hardest fighting to Kurdish militias and Iran-backed Shi’ite gangs. Last week, as the Pentagon talked up an Iraqi-led, US-guided offensive against Mosul, many Iraqi leaders were skeptical that their troops would be ready.

None of this is to suggest that the fight against ISIL will not require Arab military involvement—it will. But just as in the current air campaign against the terrorists in Syria and Iraq, regional forces can at best be expected to put in a token effort. When the time comes for a ground offensive against ISIL, expect the heavy lifting to be done by battle-hardened Western troops, rather than the tin soldiers who make up most Arab militaries.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.defenseone.com/threats/2...urity-response-russia/106008/?oref=d-mostread

Baltic States Adopting Tougher Security in Response to Russia

February 24, 2015 By Hanna Kozlowska
Quartz

Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia are introducing new security measures, including conscription, to help defend against possible threats from Moscow.

Russian president Vladimir Putin may be assuring the world that he is working to secure peace in Ukraine and that it is “unlikely” he will wage war with the country, but events on the ground tell the real story. Kremlin-backed rebels ignored a ceasefire, continuing their fight with the Ukrainian army, and Russia refuses to stop carrying out snap military exercises on its territory.

And this is making Russia’s western neighbors nervous.

Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia—all former Soviet republics and NATO members—are adopting new security measures, anxious about Putin’s next move. Lithuania’s State Defense Council, which includes the country’s highest officials, said Tuesday it would temporarily re-introduce military conscription. In 2008, Lithuania suspended the draft, moving toward a professional force. But times are changing, and men between the ages of 19 and 26 will have to serve, bolstering the 15,000-strong Lithuanian army by between 3,000 and 3,500 men a year.

“Under new geopolitical circumstances, the army must be properly prepared for the country’s armed defense even in times of peace,” said the country’s president Dalia Grybauskaite. The bill still has to be approved by the Lithuanian parliament.

All three Baltic states are significantly increasing their military spending. Latvia announced new recruitment efforts, and Estonia finalized the biggest military deal (paywall) in its history in December, buying 44 combat vehicles and six tanks from the Netherlands, totaling 138 million euro. But the Baltics’ higher defense shopping bill—1.2 billion euro—is nothing more than a blip compared to Russia’s defense spending, which amounted to 60 billion euro in 2014.

Poland, which also borders Russia, and is far bigger than the Baltics, announced earlier this month a long shopping list of its own, allocating 33.6 billion euro over a decade on a military upgrade.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://breakingdefense.com/2015/02/want-stability-fund-nuke-triad-modernization/

Want Stability? Fund Nuke Triad Modernization
By Peter Huessy on February 23, 2015 at 9:26 PM

Nuclear modernization will receive at least $1.2 billion more this year than last year’s $23.5 billion if the president’s Defense Department budget request is approved. Modernization funding for nuclear weapons and their delivery systems comprise 4 percent of the defense budget and 0.6 percent of the Federal budget. These include : the Ohio-class submarine replacement program (ORP); a new long range bomber (LRSB); and a follow-on air launched cruise missiles (ALCM), as well as the ground-based strategic deterrent (currently the Minuteman missile system.)

Critics says that’s too much. They want to eliminate four of the ORPs while retiring four of the current submarines early and delaying by four years the procurement of the first new sub; delay buying the LRSB; cancel the ALCM and modernization of the ground-based cut upwards to allegedly save $75 billion over the next decade.

Are these reductions workable? Would they contribute to improving and enhancing our strategic deterrent, especially in terms of questions of stability and the future adequacy of our deterrent?

Reducing the fleet of strategic nuclear armed submarines to eight from the planned 12 submarines means over the next few decades as few as six submarines would be available at any one time. This would seriously degrade the US nuclear deterrent capabilities, leaving as few as two submarines on patrol at any one time.

This would dramatically reduce the ability of the US to hold at risk adversary targets. It would also require operation of the sub fleet at a much higher tempo, thus increasing their potential vulnerability and boosting their costs of operation.

Some have suggested putting all currently planned SLBM warheads (roughly 1,000) on eight subs to make up for the elimination of four of the boats. (Breaking Defense readers will remember what happened when OMB suggested something similar).

This doesn’t work. Two submarines on patrol cannot cover the same targets as the current four to five submarines on patrol, no matter how many extra warheads their missiles might carry. Two-thirds of the targets we now hold at risk would suddenly be in a sanctuary from which they could be used to attack the US and our allies.

This undermines our nuclear deterrent requirements. And it would increase pressure on our allies to either deploy their own nuclear weapons or make accommodations with our adversaries.

Some critics of the Navy budget proposals appear not to understand what the basis is of the Navy requirement for 12 submarines. Some have suggested that the strategy is one in which we would launch our submarine missiles quickly in a crisis–what some refer to as “prompt launch”.

This idea apparently stems from confusing a capability—much of our nuclear forces can be launched quickly in a crisis IF already placed on heightened alert. But that is not our strategy.

Submarines on patrol are there precisely so they DO NOT have to be launched promptly. The entire US nuclear deterrent strategy for many decades has been to have a secure second-strike retaliatory capability, especially in the submarine fleet. This eliminates any need to launch any of our nuclear weapons quickly in a crisis. This is possible because there is no current danger that the sub force could be found and destroyed before launching its missiles — even should a U.S. retaliatory launch be ordered by the President after an adversary’s first strike against the United States or its allies.

That was precisely the aim of nuclear modernization and simultaneous arms control proposals under previous administrations and which is a stated goal in the 2010 Nuclear Posture Review.

Our strategic posture aims to lessen the temptation or incentives to launch our nuclear weapons quickly in a crisis. It is also designed to make our nuclear assets difficult targets so that an adversary is not tempted to strike us first.

The synergy between all three legs of the nuclear Triad (bombers, missiles and subs) thus makes it impossible for any adversary to strike all three legs simultaneously and thus the compulsion of an enemy to strike first in a conventional or nuclear crisis or conflict is virtually eliminated.

The 2010 START and 2002 Moscow strategic arms control treaties and the limiting of our land based missiles to one warhead each has helped considerably to move us toward that goal.

By not having to use such weapons early in a crisis, strategic stability is maintained and the chances that nuclear weapons would be used against the United States are significantly lessened.
Air-Launched Cruise Missile (ALCM)

Air-Launched Cruise Missile (ALCM)

What about the proposal to delay acquisition of a new strategic bomber? The new bomber is not just for nuclear purposes. Current law requires the new bomber to be nuclear capable only two to three years after its initial deployment as a conventional platform. And its nuclear related costs are just 1.5 percent of the total cost –less than $1 billion — for the new bomber force, hardly cause for alarm.

What about the idea of eliminating the new ALCM? That makes no sense either. Adding a cruise missile capability is needed to deal with enemy air defenses of increasing capability for both conventional and nuclear requirements.

Vietnam shot down over 1,700 US tactical airplanes and 17 B-52s and that was over 40 years ago. We only have 20 B-2 bombers that have both a needed penetrating capability today and a modern, effective ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) capability.

Given these limits, carrying out a conventional campaign such as Desert Storm that required hitting over 30,000 aim-points, could not be done in the future with the airplane fleet of today.

The penetrating capability of a new strategic aircraft is also critical to find mobile and re-locatable targets while the stand-off ALCM allows the targeting of an enemy’s time-urgent assets. It also compels the enemy air defenses to have to deal with a very large number of missile assets, as opposed to a smaller number of strategic aircraft.

lockheed boeing long range strike bomber

As for the Minuteman land-based missiles, the Air Force is moving in the right direction. First, a recent Rand study recommended a modernized force and supported an option that turned out to be very similar to what the recent Air Force’s own Analysis of Alternatives (AOA) also concluded was the correct path forward.

Second, while it is true that Minutemen can be sustained for the immediate future, the missile technology needs to be modernized, including at some point the ground-based support equipment is approaching a lifetime of 50 years.

Third, the future force will not be mobile—as some seem to believe– as the recommended modernized force will remain in fixed silos as they are today — at a very significant lower cost.

Fourth, the costs of a modernized land based strategic deterrent force would be roughly $42 billion over 20 years, or about $2.2 billion a year compared to the $1.5 billion we are spending today. Thus, the notion that a future ICBM force will cost $200 billion, as some analysts have concluded, is not consistent with what the Air Force has chosen and is off by a factor of at least 400 percent. A new ICBM also will be dramatically lower in annual operations and maintenance costs.

Some critics have not only called for the elimination of key elements of our nuclear deterrent, they have also argued the current New Start Treaty warhead levels are in excess of what is needed.

Could the United States deploy fewer than the 1,550 to 1,800 strategic warheads we have today? Yes, but such a move would make no sense if deterrence could not also be maintained. Our deterrent requires a balance with potential adversaries and a force which is “second to none” as underscored by a 2014 essay by Henry Kissinger and Brent Scowcroft, both former Presidential national security advisers.

Some analysts have concluded that we could unilaterally reduce our total warheads to 1,000—including reserve, hedge and operational weapons, and still have 200 retaliatory weapons available.

Implicit in such a claim is that the deployed strategic nuclear force would have to be nearly all submarines carrying roughly 600 warheads aboard six to eight submarines.

Each of the 16 missiles planned for the Ohio Replacement Program would have to carry six warheads to have two submarines on patrol able to retaliate with 200 weapons.

Such a force would present an adversary with no more than six targets. That would significantly heighten strategic instability.

Others have claimed that 1,000 deployed weapons would be sufficient to meet our deterrent goals even should Russia not follow suit. They also assert the administration won’t unilaterally reduce to that number for political reasons; although deterrent requirements would allow it.

But there is no record of this administration testifying before Congress that unilaterally reducing to 1,000 total warheads — up to a one-third reduction from the current New Start level — can be done and meet current deterrent requirements.

But the implicit math is the same. Squeezing current bomber weapons (400 to 700), ICBM warheads (400) and the current Trident missiles (around 1,000) into a total deployed ceiling of 1,000 warheads requires killing upwards of two legs of the triad.

Or conversely, it would significantly weaken each leg of the triad to where the deterrent capability of the US nuclear force will no longer be able to meet its required goals.

Russia does not plan to reduce its strategic forces to such levels. In fact, it is trying to modernize its strategic forces at a rate not even seen during the height of the Cold War. And no US administration has made any progress is controlling the level of Russian tactical nuclear weapons deployments, which further complicates any reductions to such warhead levels.

As for China, it rejects outright any arms control restrictions on its nuclear forces even as it keeps their capability and numbers secret. Finally, we should be cognizant of the reported request by the senior military leaders of China to do combined military exercises with the Russians that would “jointly” target the United States with nuclear weapons.

Furthermore given China’s growing nuclear arsenal and its plans for global hegemony (backed up by nuclear weapons and other asymmetric military capabilities as revealed in a new book by Mike Pillsbury, The Hundred Year Marathon) a significantly smaller US deployed strategic nuclear force could easily be outnumbered by a combined Russian and Chinese strategic arsenal by three to one or more.

The nuclear deterrent has prevented nuclear weapons from having been used, especially by the two largest nuclear armed adversaries, for some 70 years. This is an extraordinary record.

Cutting the very backbone of our nuclear security is not the way forward to a safer world or safer America.

Peter Huessy, president of the consulting firm GeoStrategic Analysts, also organizes the Air Force Association’s well-known breakfast series on Congress and space issues.

Topics: Air-Launched Cruise Missile, ALCM, commentary, Ground-based strategic deterrent, Minuteman 3, nuclear weapons modernization, Ohio Replacement Program, op-ed, op-eds, ORP

Sign up and get Breaking Defense news in your inbox.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....

http://johnbatchelorshow.com/schedules/tuesday-24-february-2015

Hour Two
Tuesday 24 February 2015 / Hour 2, Block A: Stephen F. Cohen, NYU & Princeton professor Emeritus; author: Soviet Fates and Lost Alternatives: From Stalinism to the New Cold War, & The Victims Return: Survivors of the Gulag after Stalin; in re: NATO must prepare for Russian attack, warns UK general. . . . War parties' endeavoring to upset the results of Minsk II. They negotiated for six full hours, of which many were devoted to the outcome of Debaltseva. They agreed on something a bit similar to a federated state. War and peace hinged on the fate of the five to seven thousand men in Debaltseva. . . . Until recently, Merkel seemed to side with those who wanted a showdown with Putin (economic, not military) but in the last ten days she saw that Kiev is collapsing financially so Putin can do what he wants, Also that the discussion of shipping weapons from the US to Ukraine was not a bluff. (1 of 4)
Tuesday 24 February 2015 / Hour 2, Block B: Stephen F. Cohen, NYU & Princeton professor Emeritus; author: Soviet Fates and Lost Alternatives: From Stalinism to the New Cold War, & The Victims Return: Survivors of the Gulag after Stalin; in re: U.S. military vehicles paraded 300 yards from the Russian border U.S. military combat vehicles paraded Wednesday through an Estonian city that juts into Russia, a symbolic act that highlighted the stakes for both sides amid the worst tensions between the West and Russia since the Cold War. The armored personnel carriers and other U.S. Army vehicles that rolled through the streets of Narva, a border city separated by a narrow frontier from Russia, were a dramatic reminder of the new military confrontation in eastern Europe. The soldiers from the U.S. Army’s Second Cavalry Regiment were taking part in a military parade to mark Estonia’s Independence Day. Narva is a vulnerable border city separated by a river from Russia. It has often been cited as a potential target for the Kremlin if it wanted to escalate its conflict with the West onto NATO territory. Russia has long complained bitterly about NATO expansion, saying that the Cold War defense alliance was a major security threat as it drew closer to Russia’s borders. The anger grew especially passionate after the Baltic states joined in 2004, and Russian President Vladimir Putin cited fears that Ukraine would join NATO when he annexed the Crimean Peninsula in March last year. Russia’s Baltic neighbors, meanwhile, have said that what happened in Ukraine demonstrates exactly why they wanted to join NATO in the first place. U.S. tanks rolled through the streets of Riga, Latvia, in November for that nation’s Independence Day parade, another powerful reminder of U.S. boots on the ground in . . . [more] & British Infantry in Ukraine Training Mission (2 of 4)
Tuesday 24 February 2015 / Hour 2, Block C: Stephen F. Cohen, NYU & Princeton professor Emeritus; author: Soviet Fates and Lost Alternatives: From Stalinism to the New Cold War, & The Victims Return: Survivors of the Gulag after Stalin; (3 of 4) in re: Poroshenko failed in Debaltseva; when his men fled, they left arms in situ, said to be American arms that had been supplied using Georgia as a surrogate. . . . Kiev is now subject to a genuine Fascist coup Is Washington aware of this? Ultranationalists played a driving role at the end of the Maidan protests; they grew out of a tradition that collaborated with Hitler, use the same symbols, and pledge to rid Ukraine of Jews, homosexuals, Poles. These people might come to power. Guess that CIA has written it up, but has that got to the White House? WH may be so invested in its policy that it can't entertain anyother view. . . . Yatseniuk brought a lot of these people into Parliament on his list – but the main thing is that they command battalions. Leader of Right Sector, Dmitry Yarosh: "Right Sector does not accept Minsk agreement." . . . [It’s said that Yarosh is Jewish, has a Star of David tattooed inside his Right-Sector insignia.] There are Ukraine scholars who hold that the country may soon be run by warlords. Consistent reports of draft-dodging. Azov Battalion.
Tuesday 24 February 2015 / Hour 2, Block D: Stephen F. Cohen, NYU & Princeton professor Emeritus; author: Soviet Fates and Lost Alternatives: From Stalinism to the New Cold War, & The Victims Return: Survivors of the Gulag after Stalin; (4 of 4) in re:

http://johnbatchelorshow.com/podcas...on-professor-emeritus-author-soviet-fates-and

Very key point made by Prof. Cohen, what Russia wants/wanted before the fighting started doesn't threaten US interests i.e. a federated Ukraine so that all parties within the country, i.e. ethnic Russians, have representation and a Ukraine that is not part of NATO and neutral pursuant to the agreement of 1994 between Ukraine, Russia, the US and the UK.

As it is even with the fighting, Ukraine's biggest trading partner is still Russia.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20150225000104&cid=1101

PLA carried out further test of JL-2 SLBM last month

Staff Reporter
2015-02-25
16:42 (GMT+8)

The People's Liberation Army Navy conducted another test flight of its JL-2 submarine-launched ballistic missile again last month, Bill Gertz, senior editor of the Washington Free Beacon writes in an article published Feb. 18.

US military sources said that the JL-2 test was carried out on the same day North Korea tested its KN-11 submarine-launched ballistic missile. No direct link between the two tests has been established, nor have any further details regarding the test of the JL-2 been revealed. Pentagon spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Jeff Pool refused to comment on the JL-2 test, though he said the SLBM was discussed in the Pentagon's most recent annual report.

Pool said the JL-2 was described in the report as a weapons system which enables the PLA Navy its "first credible long-range sea-based nuclear deterrent." The congressional US-China Economic Security and Review Commission in its own annual report also said the SLBM has reached initial operating capability as part of the PLA's expanding strategic nuclear forces. With an attack range of approximately 4,600 miles (7,400 kilometers), the JL-2 gives China the ability to conduct nuclear strikes against the US.

Both Alaska and Hawaii would be in range if the missile were fired from waters south of Japan. From waters west of Hawaii, the missile could reach the west of the continental United States. From waters east of Hawaii, all 50 US states would be in range, according to the report.

"It is clear China's nuclear forces over the next three to five years will expand considerably and become more lethal and survivable with the fielding of additional road-mobile nuclear missiles," the report said. China was expected to launch more routine patrol missions with its Type 094 Jin-class ballistic submarine last year. Lieutenant General Vincent Stewart, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, said the first submarine patrol mission is likely to take place this year.

Stewart admitted that China has on two occasions deployed submarines to the Indian Ocean, though these were characterized as plans for boosting Chinese power projection rather than routine submarine patrols. Though President Barack Obama and Admiral Jonathan Greenert, chief of US naval operations, have downplayed the threat to the United States from PLA submarines, Stewart said China is continuing to expand its fleet of nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines and stock of submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2015/02/116_174157.html

Posted : 2015-02-25 17:17
Updated : 2015-02-25 18:10

Plan B needed for N. Korean regime change
음성듣기
NK feared to have 100 nukes by 2020

By Kang Seung-woo

Steps should be taken to deal with a power vacuum in North Korea considering the growing uncertainty about its future, an analyst at a state research center said Wednesday.

His call takes an even more ominous tone when combined with the latest prediction by a U.S. think tank that the reclusive country may have as many as 100 nuclear weapons by 2020.

"North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has led the impoverished nation on the rationing of privileges among the elite since he came to power in December 2011," Kim Jin-ha, director of the Center for International and Strategic Studies at the Korea Institute for National Unification, said at a forum in Seoul.

He pointed out the rationing of privileges has been made harder by the North's isolation from the international community due to its development of nuclear weapons.

"The North has little ability to deal with an emergency or crisis situation if its leader loses his control," Kim said. "Extreme confrontation between the elite and the alienated and destitute public could result in anarchy."

He stressed the need for the South Korean government to seek an effective contingency plan in the event of the collapse of the North Korean regime.

"The existence of those who pursue democracy and market reform is a precondition for the North's full-scale yet stable transition," he said.

The government downplayed the likelihood of such a scenario.

"A state of anarchy will naturally follow the collapse of the leadership, but there could also be an interim military government," said a defense ministry official. "However, the worst case scenario is a possible intervention of China in the North, as this would turn upside down the post-war order of Northeast Asia."

Meanwhile, Joel Wit, the chief analyst of 38 North that specializes in analysis of North Korea, said Tuesday that the North may have 100 atomic bombs by 2020.

The U.S. expert put forward three scenarios of the North's nuclear arsenal expansion, with the minimal growth scenario forecasting the stockpile to grow to 20 weapons and the moderate growth scenario predicting an arsenal of 50 weapons by 2020.

Should the North remain on its current trajectory, the moderate growth scenario would be the case, he said.

Wit added that the worst case scenario of 100 weapons could happen when significant advances are made in weapons designs allowing the North to deploy battlefield and tactical weapons if it chooses to do so.

Separately, a U.S. think tank said Tuesday that the South Korean military is significantly smaller than that of North Korea.

In addition, it said the reclusive country will neither give up its nuclear weapons nor return to the six-party talks for denuclearization.

The Heritage Foundation released its annual "Index of U.S. Military Strength" Tuesday and compared the military strength of the two Koreas.

According to the report, South Korean military manpower was 639,000, with 3.2 million reserve troops, but the North has 1.19 million people in its military, along with 7.7 million in reserve.

As for tanks, the South was outnumbered by the North 4,200-2,400, and the North has 4,800 rocket launchers compared to the South's 200.

In 13 comparison categories, the South edged the North in terms of only armored vehicles and helicopters.

"South Korea has about half as many active-duty troops as North Korea, and the size disadvantage carries over to many categories of military equipment and vehicles," the report said.

Citing the North's long-range missile launch in December 2012 and third nuclear test in February 2013, it said, "These events clearly signaled that new leader Kim Jong-un had no intention either of resuming North Korea's six-party talks pledge to denuclearize or of abiding by U.N. resolutions that require a cessation of Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs."

The report also said that the North had mastered the miniaturization and warhead design that may enable the North to attack the U.S. mainland.

"The recovered North Korean missile (from the December 2012 launch) provided tangible proof that North Korea was building the missile's cone at dimensions for a nuclear warhead, durable enough to be placed on a long-range missile," it said.

The report also said that Pyongyang has deployed approximately 800 Scud short-range tactical ballistic missiles, 300 Rodong medium-range missiles, and 50 Musudan intermediate-range ballistic missiles.

ksw@ktimes.co.kr,
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://in.reuters.com/article/2015/02/25/yemen-security-special-forces-idINKBN0LT0RJ20150225

Yemen Houthis take over U.S.-trained special forces base in Sanaa

By Mohammed Ghobari
SANAA Wed Feb 25, 2015 2:47pm IST

(Reuters) - Armed men from Yemen's newly dominant Houthi group took over a special forces army base in the capital Sanaa early on Wednesday, soldiers there said.

The clashes, which lasted around six hours, started late on Tuesday when Houthis shelled the camp with heavy weapons, soldiers from the camp said. At least 10 people were killed.

The troops had been trained and equipped by the United States as an elite counterterrorism unit during the rule of ex-president Ali Abullah Saleh, who was ousted by Arab Spring protests in 2011, military sources told Reuters.

Houthi militiamen seized Sanaa in September, eventually leading President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to flee to Aden this week where he seeks to set up a rival centre of power.

For more than a decade the United States has watched with alarm as Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula - the most powerful arm of the global militant group - has grown in Yemen as the political chaos has mounted.

The U.S. military trained and kitted out Yemeni soldiers under Saleh, and under Hadi the CIA has stepped up drone strikes aimed at killing suspected militants.

U.S. officials have expressed concern that the rule of the resolutely anti-American Shi'ite Muslim Houthis will harm their counterterrorism efforts in a country that shares a long border with Saudi Arabia, the world's oil exporter.

Yemen's Sunni Gulf neighbours have decried the Houthi takeover as a coup, and the head of the Gulf Cooperation Council Abdullatif al-Zayyani arrived in Aden to meet Hadi on Wednesday, political sources there said.

The power struggle between the Houthis in Sanaa and Hadi in Aden casts more doubt on U.N.-sponsored talks to resolve Yemen's crisis peacefully, and exacerbates sectarian and regional splits which may plunge the country into civil war.

The Houthis said on Tuesday that Hadi had lost his legitimacy as head of state and was being sought as a fugitive from justice.

(Additional reporting By Mohammed Mukhashaf and Noah Browning; Writing by Maha El Dahan; Editing by Alison Williams)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20150225/1018721857.html

Yemen's Houthi Group Seeks Russia's Recognition
© REUTERS/ Mohamed al-Sayaghi
Middle East
11:44 25.02.2015(updated 12:24 25.02.2015)

Representatives of Yemen's main opposition group Ansarullah, more commonly known as the Houthis, have met with Russian MPs in Moscow.

Representatives from Yemen's main opposition group Ansarullah, more commonly known as the Houthis, have met with Russian MPs in Moscow, Russian sources said.

During the meeting, the Houthi delegation promised an array of lucrative contracts in exchange for Moscow's recognition of the Ansarullah's authority.

The delegation assured that the Houthis will soon take control of oil-rich Marib Province, which they say will yield billions of dollars per day.

In light of this, the delegation signaled its readiness to invite Russian companies to engage in oil production in the region. Also, the Houthis called for talks with Russia on bilateral cooperation in the agriculture sector, and already have a relevant business plan in the pipeline.

The Moscow meeting came several days after Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi said that he is withdrawing his resignation and resuming his duties, branding all measures adopted by the Houthis "null and illegitimate."

The security situation in Yemen was shaken after Hadi resigned last month following a takeover by a Shia militia group, the Houthis.

This prompted several countries, including France, Germany, Italy, Britain and Spain, to close their diplomatic missions, withdraw staff and urge their nationals to leave Yemen.

Meanwhile, the Russian side has said that it is proceeding from the principle of non-interference in Yemen's internal affairs.

At the same time, the Russian MPs expressed hope that the Houthi delegation's visit to Moscow "will help launch a national dialogue in Yemen."

Several factions still divide Yemen's territory; the Houthis dominate what was historically North Yemen, which united with formerly communist, Soviet-backed South Yemen in 1990. However, they are ideologically opposed to both America and Israel and are allegedly funded by Iran.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://nation.com.pk/international/25-Feb-2015/iran-contributed-to-collapse-of-yemen-govt-kerry

Iran ‘contributed’ to collapse of Yemen govt: Kerry
February 25, 2015
AFP

WASHINGTON - Iran’s support for rebels in Yemen “contributed” to the militia’s takeover of the Yemeni capital and the collapse of the government, top US diplomat John Kerry said Tuesday.

Speaking to US lawmakers, Kerry agreed Tehran’s support for the Huthi militia was “critical” in shoring up the rebels.

Asked whether the Yemeni government collapsed because of Iran’s support for the Huthi, Kerry replied: “I think it contributed to it .. without any question whatsoever.”

“But I do know that the Iranians were surprised by the events that took place and are hoping to see a national dialogue” take place,” Kerry told the Senate appropriations committee, at the start of two days of intense budget hearings.

Kerry met Sunday and Monday in Geneva with his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif for talks on Tehran’s nuclear program, but acknowledged he had had “brief conversations” on other topics.

Yemen’s Gulf neighbors have rejected the sidelining of the Western-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi as a “coup,” while the UN Security Council has urged the militia to withdraw its forces from government institutions.

An aide to Hadi said Tuesday the embattled leader has retracted his resignation after escaping house arrest in the militia-controlled capital, Sanaa, at the weekend.

Hadi had tendered his resignation last month after the Shiite militia seized the presidential palace and besieged his residence in Sanaa.

Kerry revealed he planned to meet on Friday with leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council in London to discuss the crisis in Yemen among other issues.

The United States closed down its embassy in Yemen earlier this month, along with France and Britain, amid growing concerns about insecurity in the country.
The Huthis, whose power base is in the mainly Shiite northern highlands, overran Sanaa unopposed five months ago.

They have pushed their advance south and west into mainly Sunni areas, where they have met with fierce resistance from tribesmen and Yemen’s powerful branch of Al-Qaeda.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MID-02-250215.html

Middle East
Feb 25, '15
Devastation of Syria’s 'barrel bombs'
By Thalif Deen

Barrel bombs are unguided high explosive weapons that are cheaply and locally made from large oil drums, gas cylinders, and water tanks, filled with high explosives and scrap metal to enhance fragmentation, and then dropped from helicopters. Their widespread use in Syria is causing human devastation.

UNITED NATIONS - The warring parties in the brutal four-year-old military conflict in Syria, which has claimed the lives of over 200,000 civilians and triggered "the greatest refugee crisis in modern times," continue to break every single pledge held out to the United Nations.

Despite UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon’s plea for a political rather than military solution to the country’s ongoing civil war, both the Syrian government and the multiple rebel forces continue to escalate the conflict with aerial attacks and artillery shelling, hindering the delivery of humanitarian aid.

But the worst of it, says Human Rights Watch (HRW) in report released Tuesday, is the use of locally improvised deadly "barrel bombs."

By examining satellite imagery, HRW said, it has identified at least 450 distinct major damage sites in 10 towns and villages held by rebel groups in Daraa and over 1,000 in Aleppo between February last year and January this year.

"These impact sites have damage signatures strongly consistent with the detonation of large, air-dropped munitions, including improvised barrel and conventional bombs dropped by helicopters. Damages that possibly result from the use of rockets, missiles, or fuel-air bombs are also likely in a number of instances," the group said.

According to HRW, barrel bombs are unguided high explosive weapons that are cheaply made, locally produced, and typically constructed from large oil drums, gas cylinders, and water tanks, filled with high explosives and scrap metal to enhance fragmentation, and then dropped from helicopters usually flying at high altitude.

Asked if the explosives in the barrel bombs originate either from Russia or China, two strong political and military allies of the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the United Nations Director of HRW Philippe Bolopion told IPS: "We are not in a position to say where the high explosive is coming from but barrel bombs are pretty primitive and made from commonly found materials."

With the 15-member Security Council deadlocked over Syria, there is little or no hope that Russia and China, two members with veto powers, will ever relent or penalize the Assad regime despite several resolutions.

"We certainly hope they will stand by their own resolution and impose consequences on the regime for thumbing its nose at the Security Council," Bolopion said.

Asked if protests by HRW and other human rights organizations will be an exercise in futility, he said: "Sadly, when thousands of civilians are being slaughtered, we have to continue to place the Security Council, and Russia and China in particular, in front of their responsibilities, no matter how futile it may sound."

Nadim Houry, HRW’s deputy Middle East and North Africa director, said: "For a year, the Security Council has done nothing to stop Bashar al-Assad’s murderous air bombing campaign on rebel-held areas, which has terrorized, killed, and displaced civilians.

"Amid talk of a possible temporary cessation of strikes on Aleppo, the question is whether Russia and China will finally allow the UN Security Council to impose sanctions to stop barrel bombs," Houry said.

The Security Council is expected to meet Thursday for its next round of reporting on resolution 2139 of February 22, 2014, which demanded that all parties to the conflict in Syria end the indiscriminate use of barrel bombs and other weapons in populated areas.

In a statement released Tuesday, HRW said non-state armed groups have also conducted indiscriminate attacks, including with car bombs and explosive weapons in government held areas.

The Security Council should impose an arms embargo on the government as well as rebel groups implicated in widespread or systematic indiscriminate attacks, HRW said.

The government attacks have led to the death and injury of thousands of civilians in rebel-held territory, according to HRW researchers.

The Violations Documentation Center (VDC), a local monitoring group, has documented 609 civilian deaths, including 203 children and 117 women, in Daraa from aerial attacks between February 22, 2014, and February 19, 2015.

During the same period they have documented 2,576 civilian deaths in Aleppo governorate from aerial attacks, including 636 children and 317 women.

While deaths from aerial attacks are not exclusively from barrel bombs, residents from rebel-held territory in Daraa and Aleppo told HRW that barrel bombs account for a majority of air strikes.

Last week, Ban appealed to all parties to de-escalate the conflict in order to provide a reprieve for the long-suffering civilians of Syria. An immediate de-escalation is a much needed step towards a political solution to the conflict, he added

UN Special Envoy Staffan de Mistura told the Security Council last week that the Syrian government has committed to suspend all aerial attacks and artillery shelling over the entire city of Aleppo for a period of six weeks.

This is in order to allow the United Nations to implement a pilot project of unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid starting with one district in Aleppo and building incrementally to others.

Ban said Security Council resolution 2139 called for an end to the indiscriminate employment of weapons in populated areas in Syria, including shelling and aerial bombardment, and expects the Syrian government to follow through on its commitment.

The secretary-general also appealed to all armed opposition groups in Aleppo to suspend their shelling of the city.

He pointed out that the last four years of war have led to the deaths of over 200,000 civilians, the greatest refugee crisis of modern times and created an environment in which extremist groups and terrorist organizations such as ISIL/Daesh (the Arabic acronym for Islamic State) flourish.

The secretary-general recalled Security Council resolutions 2170 and 2178 and stressed that there is no military solution to this conflict.

"This is a political conflict. Ending the killing, reversing the increasing fragmentation of Syria requires a political process, based on the full implementation of the Geneva Communique of 2012, that addresses the deep roots of the conflict and meets the aspirations of all Syrians," he added.

The writer can be contacted at thalifdeen@aol.com

(Inter Press Service)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2015/02/60894.php

Islamic State continues to advance in Iraq’s Anbar province
By Caleb Weiss and Bill Roggio | February 24th, 2015 | weiss.caleb2@gmail.com and billroggio@longwarjournal.org | @Weissenberg7

Zaw11

The Islamic State continues to maintain the initiative against Iraqi forces in Anbar as it presses an offensive in the eastern part of the province.

Evidence of the Islamic State’s offensive is seen in both Iraqi media reports and a recently published a video report by the jihadist group showcasing clashes near Zawbaa, which is east of the town of Amiriyat al Fallujah and is close to Abu Ghraib.

The video as well as images published on Twitter bear the title of the Islamic State’s Wilayat Junub, or its Southern Province. This administrative division is comprised of areas south of Baghdad and parts of northern Babil province. The fact that the propaganda were published by Wilayat Junub and not Wilayat al Fallujah more than likely represents operational overlap between the two divisions. The video and images were disseminated on Twitter by its supporters after being posted elsewhere online.

The photos show Islamic State fighters targeting Iraqi Security Forces personnel, Sunni tribal allies, and Shiite militis in the vicinity of Zawbaa. The Islamic State uses mortars, heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers (RPGs) and sniper fire in its assault in the town. Several photos show Islamic State snipers with the US-made Mk. 14 EBR designated marksman rifle, which is currently in use by the Iraqi special forces. At least four Humvees are shown to have been destroyed or damaged in the attack, as well as several buildings used by security forces and militias.

Other photos appear to show the capture and beheading of security personnel or tribal fighters. The Islamic State was also able to capture a large cache of weapons, including M-16’s, AK-47’s, RPG’s, and PK machine guns. One photo also shows the identification badges and personal cell phones of the captured or killed Iraqi personnel. [The photos can be seen in the LWJ report, Islamic State launched attack near Amiriyat al Fallujah.]

In the video, the Islamic State is seen scouting the Iraqi Army and militia positions before launching the attack from a nearby dam. At least one fighter is shown firing rocket propelled grenades (RPG’s), other fighters are seen firing at the Iraqi Army with rifles. The video then cuts to several dead bodies, which the video identifies as being members of the Iraqi Army.

As the Islamic State fighters are conducting their attack, an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV or more commonly referred to as drones), which is likely operated by the United States, is spotted flying above the battle. Despite the presence of Coalition air support, the jihadists are successful in their attack.

The video then cuts to the jihadist group showing its “spoils,” or weapons captured from the Iraqi Army and a Shiite militia. At least one Humvee and one BMP armored vehicle are shown to have been captured, while several AK-47 and M16 assault rifles, RPG’s, mortars, several light machine guns and copious amounts of ammunition were also taken. The armored vehicles appear to have bright green painting on them that are commonly associated with Shiite militias.

Iranian-backed Shiite militias, including several that have been listed by the US government as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, have increasingly been taking the lead in the fight against the Islamic State after the Iraqi military crumbled in the face of the jihadist group’s coordinated assault in northern, central, and western Iraq in June 2014. These militias have helped retake some areas in Iraq, including Jurf al Sakhar and Amerli, and they will lead the Iraqi assault against Tikrit, according to The Washington Post.

Several Arabic-language news site have been reporting that the Islamic State has launched a new campaign to take control Amiriyat al Fallujah. On Jan. 31, it was reported that Iraqi police and tribal militias killed four Islamic State fighters during the renewed offensive. Additional reporting also indicated that Ameriyat has been encircled and the group is firing mortar rounds into the town; the Islamic State has also released pictures showing its fighters firing 120mm mortars on Amiriyat al Fallujah in recent days. Other photos released by the group show a Russian suicide bomber detonating an M113 armored personnel carrier near the town.

The Iraqi military is said to be sending reinforcements to the area. Clashes are still ongoing in the Zawbaa area and north of the town. Al Jazeera has also reported that Islamic State fighters in the Owesat area of northern Babil province, which is just south of Amiriyat al Fallujah, are also engaging ISF personnel. However, the current Iraqi offensive to rout Islamic State forces in the area has been slowed. The National Iraqi News Agency has noted that the areas surrounding the town are full of improvised explosive devices (IED’s) and other land mines.

Near Abu Ghraib, the Iraqi Police arrested several Islamic State militants in recent days. On Feb. 20, police officers reported arresting six gunmen, including one of “Asian nationality,” in a house in the Zawbaa region. Additionally, 10 elements of the “popular crowd” were killed in an IED attack near Abu Ghraib yesterday. The term “popular crowd” collectively refers to the various Shiite militias that have sprung up since the Islamic State began its advances last year.

Amiriyat al Fallujah is a strategic locale in western Iraq as it links up with Jurf al Sakhar in Babil province. Control of both towns would allow the Islamic State to put significant pressure on Baghdad, as well as Karbala and Najaf. Jurf al Sakhar was previously held by the Islamic State, but was recaptured by Iraqi Security Forces and Shiite militias in October 2014. That same month, Amiriyat al Fallujah came under siege by the Islamic State before being beaten back by the Iraqi military and its Sunni tribal allies.

The Islamic State is attempting to take control of Amiriyat al Fallujah even as its forces seized most of the town of Al Baghdadi further west near Ramadi and have launched attacks on Al Assad Air Base, where more than 300 US Marines are training Iraqi forces. Iraqi Security Forces, backed by Sunni tribal elements and aircraft from the international coalition, are currently trying to retake Al Baghdadi. The Iraqi Army’s 7th Division, which has faced severe setbacks in the region, is estimated to have 800 troops taking part in the operation. While the Anbar Provincial Council said that Iraqi forces have managed to retake the police station and move into the city center, they have not yet liberated the entirety of the city and the fighting still rages for Al Baghdadi.

Screenshots from the recent video can be seen below:

Scouting Iraqi positions before the attack:

Zaw2

Islamic State fighters moving towards the nearby dam in order to use it as cover:

Zaw3

A Shia militia flag can be seen flying:

Zaw4

Coalition UAV (drone) flying above the battle:

Zaw5

Firing on Iraqi positions with a light machine gun and a Dragunov SVD sniper rifle:

Zaw6

Zaw7

Humvee and BMP taken from the militia:

Zaw8

Zaw9

Other spoils taken by the group:
Zaw10

5 Comments

pre-Boomer Marine brat says:
February 24, 2015 at 2:04 pm

… even as an (almost-certainly US) drone flies overhead.

Either the Pentagon’s air-strike coalition has room for improvement, or it was a band-aid to begin with.

Why do I suspect the latter?

An American Present-cy which has no spine for a fight is micro-managing the operation.
Reply
mike merlo says:
February 24, 2015 at 7:19 pm

am pleased to read Shiite Militia’s are actively involved the ‘affrays.’ This means they are getting killed, maimed & wounded. This also means that the Iranians have committed manpower & ‘material’ to the skirmishes/battles & they too are suffering losses. Am also looking forward to more Sunni Tribal’s joining up with ISIS/ISIL/IS. Whatever it takes to bleed ‘both sides’ dry I’m all for.
Reply
m3fd2002 says:
February 24, 2015 at 8:28 pm

Mike,
I agree with your thinking here. My perspective is that the west, at this point, may be getting involved in a “domestic” dispute (shia vs sunni) that has been simmering for centuries. I’m not going to lay blame on anyone for the current situation, but we should look carefully to what we do NOW. My feeling is that we don’t pick a side at all. There are few friends left in theater. None in positions of power, that is for sure. I feel sorry for the pawns on this chess board.
Reply
mike merlo says:
February 24, 2015 at 11:53 pm

Time to openly & aggressively support a ‘Kurdistan’ & just for kicks support the Pathan Tribals in Trashistan in their quest for their own Nation. The swath of ‘Earth’ from the Eastern Atlantic North African Coast to the Indus & its watershed is unraveling before our ‘eyes.’ Instead of trying to help ‘hold it together’ or somehow assist in managing some kind of a measured ‘deconstruction’ followed by some form of Civilized Governance a part of me feels the US should be doing everything it can, overtly & covertly, to help this conflagration along. Its quite clear that no one can guarantee or predict, even within a reasonable degree of certainty, what the ‘final result’ will look like. What does appear near certain is that unlike Eastern & Central Europe & parts of Asia Proper that transitioned into acceptable modes/systems of Governance many, if not all, of the emerging winners will be a collection Dictators, quasi juntas, Totalitarian & Authoritarian Governments, Warlords, etc.,.
Reply
James says:
February 25, 2015 at 3:56 am

I give them another 5 years and if they are left to their own ambitions, they will be nuking each other over there.

They have turned that region into a virtual ‘Devil’s Island’ with every nut case, criminal and social reject they can muster from all over this planet.

It is clear to me that we are now facing a bunch of nut cases more diabolical than Hitler’s Gestapo and Hirohito’s fanatical followers combined.

The only way to end it now may be what Truman had to do to end WWII and that is to nuke them.
Reply
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htspace/articles/20150224.aspx

Space: The Iranian Space Program

February 24, 2015: Iran launched another space satellite on February 2nd. Iran announced it as a high-resolution photo satellite called Fajr but its resolution appears to be very low. Life expectancy of Fajr is 18 months and it seems to be more experimental than something intended for serious work. That’s because Iran can get its satellite photography needs handled by Google Earth and arranging for third parties to order satellite photos sanctions do not allow it to obtain directly. Fajr also included solar panels and a positioning system, a first for Iranian made satellites. Also included was an experimental GPS system which could, if enough satellites were launched, replace dependency on American GPS.

The fact is Iran cannot afford to build put a lot of modern satellites into orbit just now. But they have scientists who keep themselves busy reinventing technologies developed half a century ago in the United States and the Soviet Union. It’s good for morale, of the scientists involved and Iranians in general. As a result of this policy in early 2014 Iran announced that their scientists and engineers at a university had built two new space satellites. One of the satellites was for communications, specifically for supporting satellite phones that use encryption. Just the thing Quds Force requires for its agents overseas. Quds Force supports Islamic terrorists that are allies of Iran. The second satellite can take photos and transmit them back to earth. This one is apparently the recently launched Fajr as it is only capable of 100 meter resolution (pictures taken allow the identification of any object 100 meters wide or larger.) You can get higher resolution photos on the web. But the point Iran is making here is that it is becoming less and less dependent on other nations for space satellites. The many sanctions against Iran make it increasingly difficult to buy satellites from foreign manufacturers so Iran must learn to build its own or do without.

When Iran could buy foreign satellites they did so and paid for foreign rockets to launch them. This is how Iran launched its first satellite in 2005. This was the Sina-1 communications and photo-reconnaissance satellite that was capable of performing espionage, especially against Israel. Launched on a Russian rocket, the satellite was described as being used for scientific purposes only. With a three year lifetime, the Iranians described camera equipment as capable of 50 meter resolution (pictures taken allow the identification of any object 50 meters wide or larger.) This is not military grade resolution. You can get better stuff from Google Earth.

Russia built the 110 kg (375 pound) Sina-1, and is unlikely to have secretly provided higher resolution (and much more expensive) camera gear. Besides, you can’t get high res equipment into a satellite of that size. Russia received a $132 million contract with Iran, to build and launch this satellite, so the Russians kept quiet about the Iranian claims. The “spy satellite” claim by Iran is apparently for domestic consumption, another attempt to show the Iranian people that the country is getting its money’s worth and to buff the country’s anti-Israeli reputation.

Even before Sina-1 Iran was getting caught using spies to steal Western satellite technology. They have had some success with this espionage and smuggling effort. Iran launched its second satellite in 2008 using a Chinese rocket. In 2012, for the third time in the previous three years, Iran put a satellite (Navid) into orbit using one of its own rockets. Navid was a 50 kg (110 pound) photo satellite with an estimated lifespan of 18 months. Navid was also used for testing other functions, like communications. Iran launched the Rasad-1 photo satellite in 2011. The first Iran launched satellite, Omid, was called an experimental telecommunications effort, and it went up in 2009.

Since 2005 Iran has been trying to get an Italian firm to let go of a $10 million Mesbah-1 telecommunications satellite built for Iran. Shipment of the satellite was halted when new sanctions were slapped on Iran, which made the paid-for satellite illegal for Italy to export. When Iran made the Mesbah-1 deal, the 75 kg (175 pound) satellite was to be launched using a Russian rocket. But now Iran has rockets that can launch small satellites, and wants to get their hands on Mesbah-1 and launch it themselves. But that won't happen with the sanctions. And even more recent sanctions make it illegal for Russia to launch the Mesbah-1. Since the Mesbah-1 was somewhat low-tech, Iran went ahead and built one itself.

In 2009, using a modified Shahab 4 ballistic missile, Iran put a crude satellite into low earth orbit. This was done to coincide with the 30th anniversary of their Islamic revolution. The satellite was described as a "communications satellite", but it was actually nothing more than a transponder, giving off a signal that could be tracked. What Iran has done is carry out the same kind of early satellite launches Russia and the United States did in the 1950s. Iran then announced that they were building more satellites and they have done that. But given the level of technology they have access to, these have been low capability birds, launched in to low orbit and have short lifetimes.

The Iranian launch is similar to the Russian Sputnik launch of 1957, which was the first satellite ever put in orbit. The U.S. followed in 1958. Since then, eight other nations, including Iran, have done the same. Ukraine was the last to do so, in 1995. Israel launched its first satellite in 1988. France launched its first satellite in 1965, Japan and China in 1970, Britain in 1971, and India in 1980.

Iran is continuing to combine ballistic missile and satellite launcher development. Most of the larger ballistic missiles, especially ICBMs, can launch satellites. The U.S. and Russia have used retired ICBMs for this. Iran is following the same path, sort of.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htairw/articles/20150224.aspx

Air Weapons: Two And A Half Pakistani Cruise Missiles

February 24, 2015: Pakistan recently announced the successful test of its second cruise missile design, the Hatf 8 (Raad). Hatf 8 appears to be an original design, first tested in 2007, that weighs 1.1 tons and has a range of 350 kilometers. It can carry a nuclear or conventional warhead.

Pakistan’s first cruise missile was the Hatf 7 (Barbur), which was first tested in 2005. Hatf 7 appeared to be a copy of the American Tomahawk, (several of which had crashed on Pakistani territory during a 1998 American attack on Taliban camps in Afghanistan). The Tomahawk was not terribly high tech, and easy for the Pakistanis to copy. GPS made it easier to replace the earlier (and only high tech aspect of the missile) terrain following guidance system. Hatf 7 is a 1.5 ton, 6.8 meter (22 foot) long missile has a range of 500 kilometers. It appears to carry a 225 kg (500 pound) warhead, and the Pakistanis appear to have developed a nuclear weapon that fits in Hatf 7. This missile can be used from ships or aircraft.

Another Pakistani cruise missile was not publicized much at all. In 2009 the United States accused Pakistan of stealing military technology by modifying American made Harpoon anti-ship missiles (received in the late 1980s) to attack land targets. The 545 kg (1,200 pound) Harpoon has a 221 kg (487 pound) warhead and a range of 220 kilometers. It approaches the target low, at about 860 kilometers an hour. GPS gets the missile to the general vicinity of the target, then radar takes over to identify and hit the target. The Harpoon has successful combat experience going back to the 1980s. Most Indian warships (corvettes and frigates) are small enough to be destroyed by one Harpoon. The modified Harpoons can hit land targets like air defense radars or headquarters.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thediplomat.com/2015/02/the-perils-of-korean-unification/

The Perils of Korean Unification

Any discussion of a united Korea’s economic future must consider the potential for a perilous and drawn-out transition.

By 38 North / Jennifer Lind
February 23, 2015

2 Shares
26 Comments

This article was first published at 38 North, a blog of the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins SAIS. It is republished with kind permission.

Recent events have brought the topic of Korean unification back into public debate. Republic of Korea (ROK) President Park Geun-hye gave an important address on the subject last spring in Dresden, Germany. Last fall, Kim Jong-un’s month-long disappearance got observers speculating about his health and whereabouts. Was Kim still in power? Was the regime losing its grip? Kim reappeared (apparently having undergone ankle surgery), but speculation continues about North Korea’s political stability. And last November, the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall encouraged further comparisons between German and Korean unification.

In these discussions of Korean unification, observers have debated its economic benefits versus costs. While some analysts emphasize a unified Korea’s tremendous economic potential, others warn of the huge price tag required to bring the DPRK up to the ROK’s living standards. These debates are important, but the economics of Korean unification cannot be discussed alone. Any discussion of Korea’s economic future must consider the potential for what might be a truly perilous and drawn-out transition.

The Price Tag

In Park’s Dresden Declaration, as it became known, the president commented that unification would bring an “economic bonanza.” Comparing South Korea to Germany, Park said, “The Republic of Korea will similarly reach ever greater heights after unification. The northern half of the Korean Peninsula will also experience rapid development.”

Goldman Sachs also sees bonanza: a 2009 study enthused that by mid-century, the 75 million person economy of a unified Korea could surpass that of France, Germany, and Japan, and that Korea could have the eighth-largest economy in the world. Unification is expected to benefit the Korean economy because, as the Wall Street Journal reported, “the North’s huge growth potential could help offset the slowing growth of South Korea, burdened by limited natural resources and a fast-aging population. North Korea has huge mineral deposits and a population that is younger and growing twice as quickly.”

While unification “bulls” expect a bonanza, unification “bears” warn about the costs and challenges of lifting the North up to the South’s level. A 2013 ROK Ministry of Finance report calculated that the cost of unification could run as high as 7 percent of GDP (about $80 billion) for a decade. More recently, South Korea’s Financial Services Commission estimated the cost at $500 billion over a 20-year period. The Economist dismissed this as “optimistically low.” It argued that raising up the North to Southern standards “without massive internal migration southwards or post-unity civil chaos is likely to cost far more than $500 billion, and most of this will fall on Southern taxpayers for decades.”

The Dangers of Transition

But aside from bulls and bears, there’s an 800-pound gorilla in the room: the great uncertainty of the transition period. Aidan Foster-Carter cautions that discussions of a unification bonanza tend to start with the assumption of a peaceful, negotiated transition. But the road to unification could, of course, be far messier, and could include a humanitarian disaster, a refugee crisis, civil war, and loose nukes.

The way that the Koreas unify will have profound effects on the country’s future economic success and political stability. Analysts of Korean unification have long discussed “soft” versus “hard” landings.” Regarding the former, unification might indeed occur peacefully, through a negotiated settlement and an orderly transition (which avoids an anarchic, unstable period in which authority is contested). This was the fortunate end to German division, and this would be the most orderly, least dangerous way for the Koreas to unite — and the quickest way for a unified Korea to realize an economic bonanza.

But unification might also occur through the collapse of the North Korean government — perhaps during an interstate war, or in the midst of a power struggle or civil war in the North. In contrast to a negotiated settlement, collapse scenarios could be extremely dangerous.

RAND political scientist Bruce Bennett and I modeled one collapse scenario, seeking to estimate the force requirements for military operations to stabilize a post-collapse North Korea. In our study we adopted self-consciously optimistic assumptions: for example, that the North Korean military and people would accept and cooperate with a stabilization effort. We made this assumption in order to generate force requirements in a best-case scenario — with the implication that the demands of stabilization could be far higher. (Bennett and I previously discussed our study with 38 North.)

In the wake of a North Korean regime collapse, instability could take a variety of forms. If government-provided food and health services were to cease, the result could be a humanitarian disaster fraught with hunger and disease. Militias or gangs could seize the country’s numerous weapons caches, and could prey on the population or fight for territory. Hunger and insecurity could lead people to flee to China or South Korea for safety. And don’t forget North Korea’s arsenal of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Assembled atomic bombs, fissile material, pathogens, and toxic chemicals could disappear across international borders.

If such instability were to occur, South Korea and other countries may decide to send military forces into North Korea to perform stability operations. In the scenario we examined, such operations might include direct humanitarian relief and policing of major cities and roads, border control, elimination of WMD, conventional weapons disarmament, and operations to deter or defeat pockets of violent resistance.

In our study, Bennett and I modeled the force requirements for these five missions. Among them, by far the most demanding (in terms of force requirements) is the humanitarian stability operation. The purpose of this mission would be to control roads and other transportation infrastructure, to transport, protect and distribute food and medicine to the North Korean people, and to take over the responsibilities of the police to provide public security. Performing this mission would be important to prevent instability, hunger and illness in the North, and to prevent large numbers of North Koreans from fleeing in search of food and security.

Analysts of stability operations usually base their estimates for force size on the size of the local population. Historically, operations with little to no popular resistance have required about four peacekeepers per 1,000 people in the population. More challenging operations have required closer to 20 peacekeepers. For our purposes, we adopted a mid-range estimate of 13 peacekeepers per 1,000 people, which (based on the then-North Korean population of 23 million) yielded a requirement of 312,000 peacekeepers.

For a variety of reasons (related to diplomacy, logistics and North Korea’s inadequate infrastructure), it may not be possible to flow a force of this size into North Korea all at once. Therefore, we also modeled a stability operation by dividing North Korea into horizontal tiers and estimated that the tiers would be stabilized sequentially. Such an operation would have lower force requirements than one that sought to stabilize the entire country simultaneously.

For each of the five missions, Bennett and I used historical and theoretical metrics in order to estimate force requirements. The second-most demanding mission in terms of requirements was the disarmament mission, which could require in the range of 50,000 soldiers to adequately disarm North Korean forces. Failing to perform this mission would risk arms caches falling into the hands of insurgents, as the experience of Iraq shows all too well.

All told, the five missions we examined would require 260,000 to 400,000 soldiers. This exceeds the number of military forces that the United States sent to Iraq and Afghanistan.

As noted earlier, these numbers were calculated under the assumption that after a collapse, the North Korean military would cooperate and the North Korean people would not resist. Other analysts might dispute this assumption, arguing that stabilization forces would encounter violent resistance and that civil war would be ongoing in the North.

If one expected North Korean resistance to stability forces, this would add substantially to the numbers we produced. Force requirements would be higher because one would need to add additional missions to the list of missions we analyzed — for example, the need to subdue civil war and to perform counterinsurgency operations. And force requirements would be higher because one should assume more dangerous conditions for the missions we analyzed. For example, for the humanitarian stability operation we used a mid-range ratio of soldiers/population (13 per 1,000). If one expects more dangerous conditions, then it would be appropriate to use a number closer to the 20:1,000 ratio that historically, more challenging stability operations have demanded. Using that ratio, a North Korean stability operation — just that one mission — would require 460,000 soldiers.

Before the Bonanza

Aside from the massive human and financial costs of the transition period, the duration of transition may also delay Korea’s “bonanza.” Some of the stability operations could take years — for example, the disarmament and destruction of North Korea’s massive and rusting military forces. Stability forces would need to find and secure weapons on North Korea’s many bases and in its potentially huge number of weapons and ammunition caches. North Korea is also said to have thousands of tunnels and underground facilities, which would need to be searched for WMD, conventional weapons, and ammunition stocks. Finding, sorting through, and destroying North Korean weaponry will be a huge project that would take years, as it did in the case of German unification.

As the problems of transition linger, the economic dividends from unification will be delayed. If the Chinese military drops down into North Korea to stabilize China’s southern border — which, in the event of a crisis in North Korea, most analysts see as likely — this would create a precarious situation. It could take some time before Seoul is able to negotiate the PLA out of the country. Meanwhile, what investors will eagerly surge their capital and managers into an area with an ongoing standoff between American, Chinese, and Korean military forces?

The end of a divided Korea would be a momentous event. In the long term, as President Park extolled at Dresden, and as other analysts have pointed out, Korean unification would bring a welcome peace dividend for Korea, the United States, and other countries. A unified Korea may also someday enjoy great economic success. And as we discuss the costs and benefits of unification, we should, of course, remember the real bonanza — that the North Korean people would finally be rid of an oppressive and brutal regime. But conversations about the costs and benefits of unification must recognize tremendous uncertainty about the transition period — the dangers of which could have significant consequences for the political stability and economic potential of a unified Korea.

Jennifer Lind is Associate Professor of Government at Dartmouth, and the author of Sorry States: Apologies in International Politics (Cornell, 2008). Follow on Twitter @profLind.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/26/world/europe/russia-ukraine-crimea-annexation.html?_r=0

Kremlin Sought Annexation of Crimea Before Ukrainian Government’s Collapse, Russian Paper Says

By NEIL MacFARQUHAR
FEB. 25, 2015

MOSCOW — The Russian government laid plans to annex Crimea and invade southeastern Ukraine weeks before the government fell in Kiev, a Russian newspaper reported on Wednesday, citing a Kremlin memo.

Russia has long contended that it acted without premeditation in Crimea, seeking to protect Russian speakers who were under threat of attack and to stave off what it suspected was an attempt by NATO to move its forces into the region.

A report in Novaya Gazeta, one of the few independent voices still publishing in Russia, said that the Kremlin had concluded by Feb. 4, 2014, long before President Viktor F. Yanukovych of Ukraine resigned, that he would fall, and that Russia would have an opportunity to annex Crimea.

The Kremlin said in a memo that Mr. Yanukovych’s presidency was “bankrupt” and that the central administration was paralyzed,. Novaya Gazeta said.

Continue reading the main story
Related Coverage

A shelled pipeline burned near town last week. Russian gas must go through Ukrainian pipelines to reach other European customers.
Russia Heightens Dispute With Ukraine Over Natural Gas FEB. 24, 2015
Pro-Russian rebels were greeted in Donetsk on Monday during a rally to celebrate their recent victory over the Ukrainian Army in Debaltseve.
Ukraine Rebels Celebrate Their Taking of DebaltseveFEB. 23, 2015
Ukrainian forces continued to face attack despite a cease-fire deal, and bombs appeared to target pro-government ceremonies and parades.
New Violence Belies Talk of Peace in UkraineFEB. 22, 2015
Residents of the war-torn town of Debaltseve gathered on Friday for a food giveaway outside a damaged supermarket.
Ukraine Town Eases Back Into Life After Deadly Week of FightingFEB. 20, 2015
Soldiers who were evacuated from Debaltseve drank at a pizzeria in Artemivsk. Other soldiers commandeered taxis and shot up an expensive restaurant.
Retreating Soldiers Bring Echoes of War’s Chaos to a Ukrainian Town FEB. 19, 2015

With Ukraine likely to break into two — a pro-European west on the one hand, and a pro-Russian east combined with Crimea, on the other — Moscow had to act quickly, the report said, particularly given that the Yanukovych regime could soon fall.

Continue reading the main story
Ukraine Crisis in Maps
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/02/27/world/europe/ukraine-divisions-crimea.html

Russia should take advantage of the “centrifugal forces” tearing the country apart in order to merge the east with the rest of Russia, the report said. “The dominant regions for the application of force should be Crimea and the Kharkiv region,” it said, particularly given that strong groups there endorsed the idea of joining Russia.

The authenticity of the memo could not be independently verified. Novaya Gazeta said that a conservative Russian oligarch, Konstantin V. Malofeev, was the mastermind behind the document. The newspaper quoted Mr. Malofeev’s communications team as having denied his involvement.

The Kremlin spokesman could not be immediately reached for comment. State-controlled television and other official news outlets largely ignored the report.

The report said that oligarchs in Ukraine, who are not tempered by bureaucracy as much as their Russian counterparts, had lost control of the demonstrations in the central square in Kiev known as the Maidan. The report said that the commanders in the square were “presumably controlled not by the groups of oligarchs, but to a great extent by Polish and British secret services.”

Russia has since switched tactics, blaming the protests on the United States.

The report was also dismissive of the Ukrainian leader’s chances of bringing the situation under control.

“President Yanukovych is not a very charismatic person,” it said. “He is afraid to give up the presidential post and at the same time is prepared to trade the security officers for guarantees of keeping the post and of immunity after resignation.”

Moscow should abandon the Ukrainian leader, the report suggested. “There is no sense in further Russian political, diplomatic, financial or media support for the regime,” it said.

The potentially explosive report emerged as the cease-fire in southeastern Ukraine seemed to be taking hold.
Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story
Continue reading the main story

In Kiev, the military said that for a second night in a row cease-fire violations had “significantly decreased,” and that the previous 24 hours had been the quietest since the May 12 signing of a cease-fire in Minsk, Belarus.

Donetsk, Luhansk and the Mariupol area experienced no shooting, it said. In the past 24 hours, separatist forces have fired mortars or other shells just 15 times and light weapons four times, the Ukrainian military said.

Yet concerns about the strength of the truce remained, with the Ukrainian military spokesman saying it could move to the next stage — the withdrawal of heavy weapons — as long as the separatists continued fighting.

“For now, there is still no order on the withdrawal of weapons, as the fighters have not yet fulfilled the first point of the Minsk agreement, to cease fire,” said Andriy Lysenko, the military spokesman.

The unease was also reflected elsewhere, with France, which helped negotiate the cease-fire, threatening new sanctions if fighting erupted around the strategic southern Ukrainian port of Mariupol.

“The problem today is particularly around Mariupol,” the French foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, told France Info radio. “We’ve told the Russians clearly that if there was a separatist attack in the direction of Mariupol things would change completely, including in terms of sanctions.”

The comments came after the foreign ministers of France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine met in Paris on Tuesday but made little progress in solidifying the agreement known as Minsk II. Violations on the ground would mean that Europe would again raise the question of sanctions, Mr. Fabius said.

Rebel forces said that they had already begun withdrawing heavy weapons, including 100 howitzers pulled back from the front during the first day of operations on Tuesday. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe issued a statement saying it could not confirm withdrawals from either side because it did not have a thorough accounting of the weapons there before the cease-fire.

But the rebel forces said O.S.C.E. forces would soon be able to monitor the withdrawal.

There has been a kind of unspoken contest in Ukraine about whether the economic situation or the low-grade war was the worst news, and the economy seemed to edge out the conflict on Wednesday.

With the Ukrainian currency falling precipitously against the dollar, the central bank on Wednesday banned banks from buying foreign currency for the rest of this week, Reuters reported.

Maïa de la Baume contributed reporting from Paris.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://gulfnews.com/opinions/columnists/obama-s-foreign-policy-assurances-wishful-thinking-1.1462681

Obama’s foreign-policy assurances wishful thinking

The coming two years offer only two chances for US president to burnish his legacy: trade deals with Europe and Pacific nations, and a nuclear deal with Iran

By Fred Hiatt
Published: 16:41 February 25, 2015

Can US President Barack Obama sell an Iran deal at home? If his negotiators strike an agreement next month, we already know that it will be far from ideal: Rather than eradicating Iran’s nuclear-weapons potential, as once was hoped, a pact would seek to control Iran’s activities for some limited number of years.

Such a deal might be defensible on the grounds that it is better than any alternative, given that most experts believe a military “solution” would be at best temporary and possibly counterproductive.

But making that kind of lesser-evil defence would be challenging in any circumstances. Three conditions will make it particularly hard for Obama to persuade Congress and the nation to accept his assurances in this case: the suspicious, poisonous partisanship of the moment here, with Israeli politics mixed in; worries that he wants a deal too much; and the record of his past assurances. The partisanship needs no explanation, but the record of foreign-policy assurances is worth recalling:

* In 2011, when he decided to pull all US troops out of Iraq, Obama belittled worries that instability might result. Iraq and the United States would maintain “a strong and enduring partnership,” Obama said. Iraq would be “stable, secure and self-reliant,” and Iraqis would build a future “worthy of their history as a cradle of civilisation.”

Today Iraq is in deep trouble, with a murderous “caliphate” occupying much of its territory and predatory militia roaming through much of the rest.

* That same year, Obama touted his bombing campaign in Libya as a model of US intervention and promised, “That’s not to say that our work is complete. In addition to our Nato responsibilities, we will work with the international community to provide assistance to the people of Libya.” The US and its Nato allies promptly abandoned Libya, which today is in the grip of civil war, with rival governments in the east and west and terrorists in between.

* Obama also said then, “Some nations may be able to turn a blind eye to atrocities in other countries. The United States of America is different. And as president, I refused to wait for the images of slaughter and mass graves before taking action.”

That was before Syrian dictator Bashar Al Assad’s barrel bombs, systematic and well-documented prison torture and other depredations of civil war killed 200,000 of his compatriots, and drove millions more from their homes

* In August 2011, Obama declared that Al Assad must “step aside.” In a background briefing a senior White House official added, “We are certain Al Assad is on the way out.” In August 2013 came Obama’s statement that “the worst chemical attack of the 21st century ... must be confronted... I have decided that the United States should take military action against Syrian regime targets.” No military action was taken, and Al Assad remains in power.

* In September, the president said his strategy for defeating Daesh “is one that we have successfully pursued in Yemen and Somalia for years.” Shortly thereafter, an Iran-backed rebellion deposed Yemen’s pro-US government, forcing the United States to abandon its embassy and much of its anti-terror operation.

n Just last month, in the State of the Union address, Obama presented his Ukraine policy as a triumph of “American strength and diplomacy. “We’re upholding the principle that bigger nations can’t bully the small by opposing Russian aggression and supporting Ukraine’s democracy,” he said.

Since then Russian forces have extended their incursion into Ukraine. Russia’s economy is hurting, but Ukraine’s is in far worse shape.

This litany of unfulfilled assurances is less a case of Nixonian deception than a product of wishful thinking and stubborn adherence to policies after they have failed. But inevitably it will affect how people hear Obama’s promises on Iran, as will his overall foreign policy record.

That record includes successes, such as the killing of Osama Bin Laden, warming ties with India and a potentially groundbreaking agreement with China on climate change.

Democracy in retreat

By most measures, though, the world has not become safer during Obama’s tenure. Extremists are stronger than ever; democracy is in retreat around the globe; relations with Russia and North Korea have worsened; allies are questioning US steadfastness. Openings as well as problems can appear unexpectedly in foreign affairs, but the coming two years offer only two obvious opportunities for Obama to burnish this legacy: trade deals with Europe and with Pacific nations, and a nuclear agreement with Iran.

That limited field fuels worries that administration negotiators will accept the kind of deal that results from wanting it too badly. Whatever its contours, Obama would be making a big mistake to try to implement such a momentous pact without congressional buy-in. But it’s not surprising that he would be tempted to try.

— Washington Post

Credit: Fred Hiatt is The Washington Post’s editorial page editor.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://blogs.wsj.com/korearealtime/...-exploratory-talks-with-north-korea-on-nukes/

10:34 pm KST
Feb 25, 2015

North Korea
South Korea Touts ‘Exploratory Talks’ With North Korea on Nukes

Article
Comments
By Alastair Gale


Is there finally some progress on getting North Korea back to dialogue about ending its nuclear weapons program?

South Korea’s envoy to the process known as six-party talks on the North Korean nuclear issue gave a tantalizing suggestion of movement on Tuesday. Speaking in Moscow after meeting with his Russian counterpart, Hwang Joon-kook said that the five countries that have engaged with North Korea collectively in the past on its nuclear weapons program had agreed to pursue “exploratory talks” with Pyongyang.

“The exploratory discussions are meant to notify North Korea about the five parties’ consensus for restarting the six-party talks and to gauge North Korea’s seriousness about engaging in a sincere dialogue on denuclearization,” a South Korean Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said Wednesday.
Advertisement

The implied significance is that the five nations—China, Russia, Japan, South Korea and the U.S.—are better aligned and working in consort to try to bring North Korea back to the negotiating table. A unified voice—particularly one shared by the U.S. and China—could perhaps be more persuasive in getting Pyongyang to engage in denuclearization talks.

That may yet be true—if Washington and Beijing are indeed aligned— but there are ample reasons to be cautious about a breakthrough.

Firstly, there is no indication that a critical difference in the approach to negotiations by the five countries has changed. While China and Russia have called for full-fledged nuclear talks with North Korea to resume as soon as possible, the U.S., Japan and South Korea have sought a suspension of North Korea’s nuclear program before dialogue can start.

Secondly, there have already been recent attempts by the U.S. to engage North Korea in preliminary discussions about nuclear talks, according to a person familiar with the situation. Pyongyang has shown no interest, the person said. On a visit to Beijing late last month, Sung Kim, U.S. special representative for North Korea policy, said the North Koreans weren’t ready to have serious discussions.

Perhaps most significantly, at least in the short term, relations between North Korea, the U.S. and South Korea are about to get more strained when joint military exercises between Washington and Seoul begin early next month and run through late April. North Korea routinely lashes out with threatening rhetoric during those drills, making any chance of dialogue seem remote.

Such is North Korea’s loathing of the exercises—despite it holding its own drills at the same time—that it made a rare mention of its nuclear program as a bargaining chip recently by offering to suspend nuclear weapons tests if the exercises in South Korea were called off.

It is a bargaining chip North Korea remains unlikely to give away easily.

—Jeyup S. Kwaak contributed to this article.

For the latest news and analysis, follow @WSJAsia
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20150226/nato-a617c06d90.html

Think tank: Some NATO countries cutting defense spending

Feb 25, 7:11 PM (ET)
By JOHN-THOR DAHLBURG

BRUSSELS (AP) — Despite stern talk and solemn pledges from NATO, a British-based think tank says some alliance member nations are cutting their spending on defense.

In a report released Thursday, the European Leadership Network said Britain, Bulgaria, Canada, Germany, Hungary and Italy are all on track to reduce military expenditures in 2015.

In France, spending is forecast to remain flat.

"Despite Russian aggression in Ukraine and much rhetoric from NATO leaders that this has been a game-changer in European security, all the evidence suggests there is a continuation of business as usual," said Ian Kearns, director of the European Leadership Network and the report's co-author.

In September, NATO leaders vowed to "reverse the trend of declining defense budgets."

On Feb. 6, NATO's secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg said total spending on defense by alliance members declined by 3 percent last year.

"The fact is that our security challenges are increasing. But our defense spending is decreasing," Stoltenberg said.

"This is simply not sustainable," he said. "We cannot do more with less forever."

The European Leadership Network's report examined defense spending in 14 of the 28 NATO countries where budgeting decisions for 2015 have been formally announced or indicated in advance through the public release of information. It excludes the United States, which the think tank said accounts for over 75 percent of alliance defense spending on its own.

The report found that six member nations_Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland and Romania_will hike spending in 2015, but not reach the ultimate target of 2 percent of Gross Domestic Product agreed to at the NATO summit.

This year, the report said, Britain is on course to spend the lowest percentage of its national wealth on defense in 25 years. In Germany, it said, defense spending is declining both in terms of spending and as a portion of the country's overall economic output.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20150225/ml--israel-iran-28c58ab5c6.html

Netanyahu: World powers 'have given up' in Iran nuke talks

Feb 25, 12:54 PM (ET)
By IAN DEITCH

JERUSALEM (AP) — In his sharpest criticism yet, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday that world powers "have given up" on stopping Iran from developing nuclear weapons in ongoing negotiations.

Netanyahu's comments, at a meeting of his Likud Party outside of Jerusalem, come as he plans to address the U.S. Congress on the nuclear negotiations.

The West fears Iran could build an atomic bomb with its nuclear program. Iran says its program is for peaceful purposes. The Islamic Republic is now negotiating a final deal with the U.S., Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany, with hopes of on a preliminary deal in March and a follow-up pact in June.

Netanyahu, as well as many in Israel, view a nuclear-armed Iran as a threat to its very existence, citing Tehran's repeated calls for Israel's destruction and its support for groups like Hezbollah.

In his remarks, Netanyahu said that the greatest challenge Israel faces is "the threat of Iran arming itself with nuclear weapons with a declared goal of annihilating us."

"From the agreement that is forming it appears that they (world powers) have given up on that commitment and are accepting that Iran will gradually, within a few years, develop capabilities to produce material for many nuclear weapons," he said. "They might accept this but I am not willing to accept this."

Netanyahu's remarks come amid an uproar over his upcoming visit to Washington. He accepted a Republican invitation to address Congress about Iran in early March, but the speech has angered the Obama administration because it was arranged without consulting the White House, a breach of diplomatic protocol.

Relations between Netanyahu and the White House always have been tense. His planned speech also has drawn fire in Israel, coming just two weeks before national elections. Netanyahu has rejected the criticism, saying it is his duty to lobby against the nuclear deal.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.irishexaminer.com/world/us-deeply-concernedover-nukes-in-n-korea-314820.html

US ‘deeply concerned’ over nukes in N Korea

Thursday, February 26, 2015

The United States is “deeply concerned” about North Korea’s nuclear advances, a senior US official said after a US research institute predicted Pyongyang could possess as many as 100 nuclear weapons within five years.

Sung Kim, US Special Representative for North Korea Policy, told a Washington seminar he could not comment on findings presented earlier by experts at the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies, because he had not seen the report and US government assessments were classified.

“(But) obviously we are deeply concerned about the fact that the North Koreans are continuing to advance their nuclear capabilities; we know that they are continuing to work on their nuclear programme,” Kim said when asked about the report.

Experts at the US-Korea Institute presented three scenarios for North Korea’s future nuclear stockpile, which they estimate amount to 10-16 weapons.

In the first, assuming minimal technological improvements, the stockpile was expected to grow to 20 weapons by 2020. In the second, it could grow to 50 and advances in miniaturisation would allow North Korea to mount warheads on intermediate- and shorter-range ballistic missiles.

The report’s co-author, Joel Wit, described a “worst-case scenario”, which would see an increase to 100 devices and technological advances allowing North Korea to deploy battlefield and tactical weapons if it chose to.

“This is a pretty scary scenario,” Wit said, adding that the more nuclear weapons North Korea had, the more difficult it would be to try to coerce it to rolling back its nuclear programme.

The report said North Korea’s existing missile systems were able to reach most of Northeast Asia, particularly its foes South Korea and Japan, and Pyongyang may also in the future be able to deploy a limited number of Taepodong missiles — a militarised version of a space-launch vehicle — that could reach the United States.

Kim said concern over North Korean advances was driving international diplomatic efforts “to find a credible path to negotiation so that we can stop North Korea’s development of their nuclear capabilities.”

He said Washington was “under no illusions” about North Korea’s willingness to denuclearise voluntarily and would “continue to apply pressure both multilaterally and unilaterally” through sanctions to increase the cost of failing to do so.

KEYWORDS: North Korea, nuclear weapons

© Irish Examiner Ltd. All rights reserved
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://english.donga.com/srv/service.php3?biid=2015022642138

How Seoul will countervail Pyongyang`s nuclear ambition?

FEBRUARY 26, 2015 07:11. . North Korea may have 100 nuclear bombs at maximum in five years, a U.S. researcher said. Former State Department official Joel Wit estimated the communist regime has a stockpile of some 10 to 16 nuclear weapons currently and made a projection that the isolated country may get 20 to 100 atomic arms by 2020. If the worst scenario of North Korea having "100 nuclear arms" becomes reality, the North would be able to deploy the strategic nuclear arms in any places that are deemed necessary. In the “2015 Index of U.S. Military Strength,” American research think tank Heritage Foundation said that the Kim Jong Un regime is not interested in relinquishing its nuclear ambitions or returning to the six-party talks. The North will continue developing nuclear weapons, the foundation forecasted.

However, the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff has overlooked the projection, saying, “It would be hard for North Korea to make such achievement. ” Downplaying the North’s nuclear ambition does not resolve all the nuclear threats. In the U.S. -China summit held in November last year, U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping shared the view that “North Korea’s nuclear program development is not likely to succeed,” but no solution has been in sight yet. Rather, North Korean nuclear issue seems to be put on the back burner in the priority list of President Obama, who is busy handling other international issues, such as the terrorist attacks by IS or Ukraine crisis.

If the North Korean nuclear issue is left unchecked, the international community will be put under serious threat. South African confidential document revealed that the British Secret Intelligence Service known as MI6 launched a secret operation to win over a North Korean official who knew the top secret information about the nuclear program in North Korea. What would be the reason for secret intelligence agencies of two nations, which are not direct stakeholders of the North’s nuclear program, to be engaged in secret intelligence operation like 007 films? The six party talks have been put to a hold for six years after the chief delegate meeting in December 2008. The South Korean government says it is having discussions with other participants on the so-called "Korean Formula," which contains conditions for resumption of the talks, in an effort to search for a solution different from previous ones. However, as the "Korean Formula" has never been made public, it still remains questionable whether it is a truly new solution.

No matter how hard it is to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue, the South Korean government must exert every possible effort including the resumption of the six party talks. South Korea must be on alert not to waste time and end up with a disaster where North Korea builds up its nuclear stockpile. The former U.S. official Wit said, “Why does anyone think that a North Korea with 50 to 100 nuclear weapons is going to be interested in reunification with South Korea on any terms but its own? So we need to purge our policies of fantasies and focus on reality. " The South Korean government must ruminate over this view.

North Korea may have 100 nuclear bombs at maximum in five years, a U.S. researcher said. Former State Department official Joel Wit estimated the communist regime has a stockpile of some 10 to 16 nuclear weapons currently and made a projection that the isolated country may get 20 to 100 atomic arms by 2020. If the worst scenario of North Korea having "100 nuclear arms" becomes reality, the North would be able to deploy the strategic nuclear arms in any places that are deemed necessary. In the “2015 Index of U.S. Military Strength,” American research think tank Heritage Foundation said that the Kim Jong Un regime is not interested in relinquishing its nuclear ambitions or returning to the six-party talks. The North will continue developing nuclear weapons, the foundation forecasted.

However, the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff has overlooked the projection, saying, “It would be hard for North Korea to make such achievement.” Downplaying the North’s nuclear ambition does not resolve all the nuclear threats. In the U.S.-China summit held in November last year, U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping shared the view that “North Korea’s nuclear program development is not likely to succeed,” but no solution has been in sight yet. Rather, North Korean nuclear issue seems to be put on the back burner in the priority list of President Obama, who is busy handling other international issues, such as the terrorist attacks by IS or Ukraine crisis.

If the North Korean nuclear issue is left unchecked, the international community will be put under serious threat. South African confidential document revealed that the British Secret Intelligence Service known as MI6 launched a secret operation to win over a North Korean official who knew the top secret information about the nuclear program in North Korea. What would be the reason for secret intelligence agencies of two nations, which are not direct stakeholders of the North’s nuclear program, to be engaged in secret intelligence operation like 007 films? The six party talks have been put to a hold for six years after the chief delegate meeting in December 2008. The South Korean government says it is having discussions with other participants on the so-called "Korean Formula," which contains conditions for resumption of the talks, in an effort to search for a solution different from previous ones. However, as the "Korean Formula" has never been made public, it still remains questionable whether it is a truly new solution.

No matter how hard it is to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue, the South Korean government must exert every possible effort including the resumption of the six party talks. South Korea must be on alert not to waste time and end up with a disaster where North Korea builds up its nuclear stockpile. The former U.S. official Wit said, “Why does anyone think that a North Korea with 50 to 100 nuclear weapons is going to be interested in reunification with South Korea on any terms but its own? So we need to purge our policies of fantasies and focus on reality." The South Korean government must ruminate over this view.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://krepon.armscontrolwonk.com/archive/4492/nuclear-postures#more-5250

Nuclear Postures

By krepon | 25 February 2015 | No Comments

Nuclear postures matter. They frame requirements, add to or detract from stability, and can affect outcomes when deterrence fails, which happens more than expected. Vipin Narang covers this ground in his masterful new book, Nuclear Strategy in the Modern Era: Regional Powers and International Conflict (2014). Finally, we have a book on proliferation that is rooted in the discipline of Political Science with persuasive explanatory powers and great analytical value. Vipin’s book has one chapter that only Political Scientists can relate to, but the rest is highly accessible.

Most of the deterrence literature spawned by the Cold War has little applicability to newer entrants into the nuclear club. For example, we can’t tell from this literature what nuclear posture newcomers will chose, and why. Vipin offers three basic choices: (1) assured retaliation; (2) catalytic (a posture designed to prompt the intervention of a patron); and (3) asymmetrical escalation. At present, India and China have adopted assured retaliation. South Africa, Israel, and Pakistan initially chose catalytic postures. France, and now Pakistan, adheres to asymmetrical escalation. Vipin concludes that an assured retaliation posture doesn’t fare well when paired up against asymmetrical escalation.

Nuclear postures aren’t immutable. He argues, quite cogently, that Pakistan switched from a catalytic to an asymmetric escalation posture after testing nuclear devices in 1998. He argues, less persuasively, that Israel switched from a catalytic to an assured destruction posture after the 1991 Gulf War. More on this later.

Why do countries choose one posture or another? Vipin argues that states optimize force structure and posture “for their external security and their internal threats and constraints.” Does the state have a reliable patron? If so, a catalytic posture might fit. Does it have assertive civil-military relations and confidence in its conventional capabilities? Then assured destruction is a good fit. Is a state disadvantaged conventionally and does its military hold sway? Then look for tactical nuclear weapons and asymmetric escalation. Here’s what the decision tree of Vipin’s “Posture Optimization Theory” looks like:

chart-580x512.png

http://krepon.armscontrolwonk.com/files/2015/02/chart-580x512.png

Vipin has persuaded me that his theory has stronger explanatory power than analytics grounded in realism, technological determinism, and strategic culture. His theory also does well in explaining when nuclear postures shift. His argument that, “If a state’s available options to augment deterrence through external balancing disappear and it faces extremely binding security constraints, a regional power has no option but to adopt an asymmetric escalation posture” fits Pakistan to a “T.” His characterizations of Indian, Chinese, French and South African nuclear postures are also quite good.

Israel is the outlying case, where Vipin’s theory falls short, as he readily acknowledges. He makes a convincing argument that Israel’s nuclear posture shifted away from catalytic after the 1991 Gulf war undermined assurance that Washington would intervene even more emphatically after Saddam Hussein’s Scud attacks. But shifted to what? Vipin’s typology suggests a shift to assured destruction, but this seems uncharacteristic of a nation that does not accept a mutual deterrence relationship with other states in the region.

All nuclear postures project mixed messages of catalytic, assured retaliation, and asymmetric escalation capabilities. Vipin maintains that “the primary envisioned employment of these three postures is mutually exclusive.” I’m not capable enough to parse Vipin’s coding methodology, but his analysis rings true, with the exception noted above.

Vipin’s analysis suggests that if Iran’s nuclear program is unconstrained, it could adopt either asymmetrical escalation or assured retaliation, depending on the state of civil-military-Revolutionary Guard interactions. As for the DPRK, Vipin’s typology suggests a catalytic posture as long as China is viewed as a reliable patron. If not, expect an asymmetric escalation posture.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/0...s-clash-with-police-outside-acapulco-airport/

1 dead as protesters clash with police outside Acapulco's airport

Published February 26, 2015
Associated Press

MEXICO CITY – A 65-year-old retired teacher died early Wednesday, a day after suffering injuries when riot police cleared away protesters who tried blocking access to the airport in the resort city of Acapulco.

Guerrero Gov. Rogelio Ortega Martinez lamented the death of Claudio Castillo Pena in a statement released by the state. He called for dialogue and said the government had been as tolerant of the protests as possible, but had reached a limit.

The teachers, however, responded Wednesday by blocking highways leading into Acapulco.

On Tuesday, protesters drove a bus into police lines in the Pacific coast resort city, injuring seven officers, Mexican federal officials said.

The Interior Department said 15 protesters also were injured in the confrontation Tuesday evening, which came after thousands of protesters tried to block entrances to the Acapulco airport, prompting police to ferry tourists to the terminal in trucks.

When police tried to open the entrance roads, a protester drove the bus into them. The department said some protesters had been detained, but did not give a number. On Wednesday, the state prosecutor's office said 106 people were detained during the protests, but only eight remained in custody.

State authorities did not give a specific cause of death for Castillo. But Federal Police Commissioner Enrique Galindo said on Radio Formula the preliminary medical report indicated injuries to his thorax and abdomen that could have been caused by "crushing." Colleagues said he suffered injuries in the confrontation with police.

When the violence broke out, local police said they sheltered some airport-bound tourists at a local police station.

The estimated 4,500 demonstrators belonged to two radical unions protesting the Sept. 26 disappearance of 43 students. Those students were detained by police in the city of Iguala in the same state. The city police turned the young men over to a drug gang, which apparently killed them and incinerated their remains.

The governor said those protesting in Acapulco were not the families of the missing students, but rather radical members of a teachers' union using the banner of that cause to vandalize.

Castillo was a founding member of the Guerrero teacher's union known by its Spanish acronym CETEG.

Acapulco is hosting the Mexican Open tennis tournament, which was not interrupted. A small group of protesters arrived outside the site of the tournament earlier Tuesday but were quickly surrounded by police.

Acapulco hotel owners and businesses have complained that months of protests, bus hijackings and highway blockades related to the students' disappearances have hurt Acapulco's once-thriving tourism industry.
 
Top