WAR 02-27-2016-to-03-04-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Putting aside the EMP fixation the rest of the article is telling....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/7512/north-korea-nuclear-missiles

North Korea's Nuclear Missile Threat: Very Bad News

by Peter Pry and Peter Huessy
February 29, 2016 at 5:30 am

◾A careful technical reading of the DoD report clearly confirms that North Korea can strike the U.S. mainland with nuclear missiles right now. But the casual or non-expert reader can get the false impression that President Obama was right to assert that there is no nuclear missile threat from North Korea.

◾Given this overwhelming evidence of North Korea's ability to strike the U.S. mainland, how strange that most major news outlets have never reported that North Korea already has nuclear-armed missiles that can strike the U.S.

◾The DoD report was inexplicably silent about North Korea's current nuclear and missile capability, which could kill millions of Americans in an EMP attack -- as warned by both the 2004 and 2008 Congressional EMP Commission reports.

◾The EMP Commission and the authors of this article believe that North Korea tested what the Russians call a Super-EMP weapon.

◾It is time to stop wishful thinking -- that everything is fine, that diplomacy will work -- and to face reality.

◾Space-based missile defenses will offer a realistic prospect of rendering nuclear missile threats obsolete, thus neutralizing the growing nuclear missile threats to the U.S. from North Korea, Iran, China, and Russia.

The mainstream media and their stable of "experts" consistently underestimate North Korea's missile and nuclear weapon capabilities. The gap between how the media report on the North Korean nuclear missile threat and the reality of the threat has become so wide as to be dangerous.

In the aftermath of North Korea's latest nuclear test on January 6, 2016, for instance, and its launch of a mock satellite on February 7, 2016, the American people were told that North Korea has not miniaturized a nuclear warhead for delivery by missile nor could the missile strike the U.S. with any accuracy.

Mirren Gidda, for example, writing in Newsweek, inexplicably claims "International experts doubt that North Korea has manufactured nuclear weapons small enough to fit on a missile."

Yet this commonplace assertion that North Korea does not have nuclear-armed missiles is simply untrue.

Eight years ago, in 2008, the CIA's top East Asia analyst publicly stated that North Korea had successfully miniaturized nuclear warheads for delivery on its Nodong medium-range missile. This capability indicates that the Nodong is able to strike South Korea and Japan, or, if launched off a freighter, even the United States.[1]

In 2009, European intelligence agencies at NATO headquarters also told the media that North Korea's Nodong missiles were armed with nuclear warheads.[2]

In 2011, the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), Lt. General Ronald Burgess, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee that North Korea has weaponized its nuclear devices into warheads for arming ballistic missiles.[3]

And as it turned out, North Korea achieved a long-range missile capability to strike the U.S. at least as early as 2012, according to testimony of administration officials before Congress. North Korea's accomplishment occurred a bare two years outside of the fifteen-year "safe" window promised by the CIA in 1995.

In February and March of 2015, former senior national security officials of the Reagan and Clinton administrations warned that North Korea and Iran should be regarded as capable of delivering by satellite a small nuclear warhead to make an EMP attack against the United States.

In numerous articles that should have made media headlines -- by Dr. William Graham (President Reagan's Science Advisor, Administrator of NASA, and Chairman of the Congressional EMP Commission), Ambassador R. James Woolsey (President Clinton's Director of Central Intelligence), Ambassador Henry Cooper (former Director of the Strategic Defense Initiative), and Fritz Ermarth (former Chairman of the National Intelligence Council) -- have gone largely ignored by much of the media.[4]

On April 7, 2015, at a Pentagon press conference, Admiral William Gortney, Commander of North American Aerospace Defense (NORAD), responsible for protecting the U.S. from long-range missiles, warned that the intelligence community assesses North Korea's KN-08 mobile ICBM could strike the U.S. with a nuclear warhead.

And on October 8, 2015, Gortney again warned the Atlantic Council: "I agree with the intelligence community that we assess that they [North Koreans] have the ability, they have the weapons, and they have the ability to miniaturize those weapons, and they have the ability to put them on a rocket that can range the [U.S.] homeland."[5]

Given this overwhelming evidence of North Korea's ability to strike the U.S., how strange that network and cable television and most major news outlets have never informed the American public that North Korea already has nuclear-armed missiles that can strike the United States.

Just weeks prior to North Korea's fourth illegal nuclear test of an alleged hydrogen bomb on January 6, 2016, and prior to North Korea's second successful orbiting of a satellite a month later, the Department of Defense (DoD) finished, in late 2015, a report to Congress. The report, which was not released to the public prior to the recent 2016 North Korean tests, appeared to be low-balling the North Korean nuclear missile threat.

The DoD report -- finally released on February 12, 2016 -- acknowledges that North Korea does indeed have a mobile ICBM: the KN-08. It is armed with a nuclear warhead that "likely would be capable" of striking the U.S. mainland, but "current reliability as a weapon system would be low" because the KN-08 has not been flight-tested.

Such hedging language about the KN-08 echoes repeated past assurances by the Obama Administration to the American people that North Korea does not yet have a miniaturized nuclear missile warhead, and cannot deliver on its threats to strike the United States.

The earlier DoD report from 2015 had also downplayed the North Korean nuclear missile threat by comforting readers that, "The pace of its progress will also depend, in part, on how much aid it can acquire from other countries." Yet the DoD report is replete with evidence that North Korea is in fact receiving copious aid from Russia and China -- including Golf-class ballistic missile submarines and an SS-N-6 submarine-launched ballistic missile from Russia.

Kim Jong Un, the "Supreme Leader" of North Korea, supervises the April 22 test-launch of a missile from a submerged platform. (Image source: KCNA)

The DoD report from 2015 also acknowledges that North Korea is developing another system for a nuclear strike on the U.S., delivered by satellite; but also notes that the system currently lacks "a reentry vehicle." However, a nuclear EMP attack delivered by satellite requires no reentry vehicle.

In short, the DoD report was inexplicably silent about North Korea's current nuclear and missile capability, which, if used, could kill millions of Americans in an EMP attack -- as warned by both the 2004 and 2008 Congressional EMP Commission reports.

A careful technical reading of the DoD report clearly confirms the very bad news that North Korea can strike the U.S. mainland with nuclear missiles right now. But the casual or non-expert reader can get the false impression from the report, as no doubt was intended, that President Obama was right to assert that there is no nuclear missile threat from North Korea. As one newspaper article on the DoD report declared in its headline, "Pentagon: North Korea Lacks Technology For Anti-U.S. Nuclear Strike."

When not downplaying the missile and nuclear developments in North Korea, media reports tended to also discover benign North Korean motives for their missile and nuclear tests or technical arguments designed to lessen their import. One BBC report quoted Andrea Berger, for instance, from the Royal United Services Institute in London, who assured everyone that North Korea "wants a peace treaty with the USA" but "seems to believe that it will not be taken seriously until it can enter talks on this issue with sizeable military strength."

The New York Times also echoed other analyses, claiming, "Although North Korea can learn much about the technology to build ballistic missiles from satellite launches, putting a satellite into orbit does not guarantee an ability to deliver a nuclear warhead on an intercontinental ballistic missile."

The New York Times then further diminished the North Korean threat by commenting, "North Korea has never tested a ballistic-missile version of its Unha-series rockets. [And] after four nuclear tests by the North, Western analysts were still unsure whether the country had mastered the technology to build a warhead small enough to mount on a long-range missile" or "survive the intense heat while re-entering the atmosphere, as well as a guidance system capable of delivering a warhead close to a target."[6]

North Korea's H-Bomb

The dominant media assessment of North Korea's nuclear test also followed the same "minimalist" pattern as its coverage of North Korea's satellite-launch missile test.

The most common assumption by critics downplaying North Korea's test was that the bomb was no more than 10 kilotons in strength and thus not anywhere near as advanced as a hydrogen bomb, as the North Korean's claimed, nor appreciably different from previous North Korean tests.

Again, the conventional wisdom missed the real news. Let us explain.

Henry Sokolski, of the National Proliferation Education Center (NPEC), and Dr. Peter Vincent Pry, the Executive Director of the Congressional EMP Task Force, a former top staffer on the House Armed Services Committee, a former CIA analyst, and the co-author of this essay, both said "Not so fast."

First, U.S. intelligence on North Korea is not perfect. Second, the test could very well have been what is known as a "boosted fission weapon" (which such experts as former Secretary of the Air Force and Reagan's Deputy National Security Adviser Tom Reed believes it was),[7] rather than a primitive fission atomic bomb.

Remember, the U.S. and other intelligence services have not detected uranium or plutonium (A-Bomb fuels) in any of the North Korean tests, but they have detected tritium (H-Bomb fuel) in at least one. A boosted weapon could explain this anomaly.

One Rand analyst also thinks the test might have been of a boosted fission weapon, and uses a different seismic model that gives a test yield of 50 kilotons (KT) and not the 6-10 KT reported by South Korea and widely used by press reporting on the issue.

What Sokolski implies is that North Korea may be getting help from Russia or China, a possibility that changes the framework of how we in the U.S. have traditionally approached and dealt with proliferation of nuclear weapons, particularly the possible sophistication of nuclear threats from aspirant states.

If North Korea and Iran are getting help from Russia or China, as retired U.S. Northcom Commander General (Retired) Charles Jacoby agrees they are,[8] and do not have to rely only on their indigenous capabilities, their nuclear and missile programs at any time could be more advanced than is commonly thought. There is also the possibility that such advanced technology could be sold to other rogue regimes or by all of them to each other.

North Korea could, in fact, already have the H-Bomb. Everyone assumes that the North Korean test was not an H-Bomb because the seismic signal indicates that the yield was too low for an H-Bomb.

But North Korea could very well have conducted a "decoupled" nuclear test. In a decoupled test, the nuclear explosion is in a large cavern filled with shock-absorbing materials to reduce the seismic signal and conceal the true yield of the test. North Korea would not need help from Russia or China to do a decoupled test. It is both easy and well within North Korea's capabilities.

A decoupled test could reduce the seismic signal by more than 10-fold. Thus, a test that looks like 10 kiloton yield in the seismic signal could have had a yield of 100 KT. Also, a 50 KT seismic signal could really have been a 500 KT test. Such high yields are in H-Bomb territory.

Alternatively, North Korea could be testing only the primary or first stage of a much more powerful two-stage H-Bomb.

In the last decades of the Cold War this is what the U.S. did to comply with the Threshold Test Ban Treaty (TTBT). The U.S. rarely tested its H-Bombs to full yield -- both to comply with the TTBT and because if anything went wrong with a warhead, the problem would most likely be in the first stage.

After the July 1974 Threshold Test Ban Treaty (TTBT)[9] between the USA and the USSR, the U.S. never tested a nuclear weapon of more than 150 kilotons. Most tests were far below the 150 kiloton level and many were below 10 kilotons. And the U.S. has not tested to any yield in the past twenty years because component testing suffices even for America's most powerful nuclear weapons.

Can the U.S. get away with this because its scientific knowledge is so much better than that of other nations? Russia, China, Britain, and France are not testing their H-Bombs either, as such testing is not necessary to be confident the bombs work. Israel developed the H-Bomb without testing it. South Africa was on the way to doing so, without testing, when it dismantled its arsenal under pressure from the Reagan administration.

Pakistan and India claim to have tested H-Bombs; many of the "instant experts" dismissing the North Korean threat, however, also insist Pakistan and India are not being truthful because the test yields were like North Korea's recent test, also supposedly "too low."

Most "experts" cannot believe that North Korea and Pakistan could duplicate what the superpowers have done and reinvent the H-Bomb. None appears to remember that critical design information for thermonuclear weapons was leaked by a magazine, The Progressive, when it published the article. "The H-bomb Secret."[10]

The Carter administration, losing its case in the U.S. Supreme Court, objected to, but failed to stop, its publication. And "The H-Bomb Secret" is but just one example of copious critical design information for nuclear weapons that has been leaked, stolen, or foolishly declassified.

The EMP Commission and the authors of this article believe that North Korea tested what the Russians call a Super-EMP weapon. It better explains all the data.

Super-EMP Nuclear Warhead

The EMP Commission warned in its 2004 report, that "Certain types of relatively low-yield nuclear weapons can be employed to generate potentially catastrophic EMP effects over wide geographic areas, and designs for variants of such weapons may have been illicitly trafficked for a quarter-century."

A Super-EMP weapon is designed to produce gamma rays, not a big explosive yield. So a Super-EMP weapon is consistent with all the North Korean tests, including low yield tests, such as the first 3 KT test, and two other suspected North Korean tests. Those were sub-kiloton yet also showed evidence of traces of tritium.

Because a Super-EMP weapon is low-yield, and not designed for blast effects, it can be easily tamped when tested. That possibility could account for America's inability to detect any plutonium or uranium from North Korea's tests.

One design of a Super-EMP weapon, of Russian origin, is virtually a pure fusion weapon, so that after an explosive test, there would be little or no plutonium or uranium to detect. As a Super-EMP weapon is, essentially, a very low-yield H-Bomb, it would be consistent with North Korea's claim.

North Korea's two successful satellite launches -- of the KSM-3 in 2012 and the KSM-4 in 2016 -- both look like tests of a Fractional Orbital Bombardment System (FOBS). The FOBS, a Soviet-era secret weapon, would, like a satellite, launch a warhead into low-earth orbit. The FOBS could therefore disguise a nuclear EMP attack as a peaceful space launch. It would conceal the intended target because its flight path masked that information. FOBS would also have allowed the Soviets to attack the United States from over the South Pole, the opposite direction from which U.S. early-warning radars and missile-interceptors, under the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), are oriented, both during the Cold War and today.[11]

North Korea's KSM-3 satellite orbits the Earth at precisely at the right trajectory and altitude for making a surprise nuclear EMP attack on the United States -- practicable only if the North Koreans have a warhead small enough for delivery by satellite, as a Super-EMP warhead would be.

North Korea has also flown a Nodong medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM) over Japan at an altitude consistent with a potential EMP attack.

Russian experts, one Chinese military commentator, and South Korea's military intelligence all claim that North Korea has Super-EMP warheads. If we follow the rules for "all sources analysis," this data should not be ignored.

In November 1999, the North Korea Advisory Group of the U.S. Congress reported that they were convinced that North Korea was developing nuclear weapons, despite the 1994 Agreed Framework deal with the United States, under which North Korea promised to not build such weapons. At the time, the Clinton Administration claimed no such work was being done by the North Koreans.[12] Yet we now know the Advisory Group was right, and the Clinton Administration wrong.

Implications for the Nuclear Missile Threat from Iran

The late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin warned us that it was a terrible mistake to hold talks with North Korea in Beijing in 1994 in an effort to persuade North Korea to stop missile exports to the Middle East.[13]

Rabin said that instead of trying to solve the problem, "North Korea tried to fool Israel. North Korea demanded $1 billion to stop the sales." At the same time, according to Rabin, North Korea received hundreds of millions of dollars from Iran to produce missiles with longer ranges, threatening not only America's Middle East allies but allies elsewhere, once the North Koreans received financial help from Iran's mullahs.

The bottom line is that North Korea and Iran are strategic partners who cooperate on missile technology and probably nuclear technology. As both receive help from Russia and China, it is time to stop wishful thinking -- that everything is fine, that diplomacy will work -- and to face reality.

North Korea has nuclear-armed missiles that threaten the U.S. mainland -- right now. Defending our homeland from that threat is an imperative, including protecting our full electrical grid, other critical infrastructures and of course our cities. And if North Korea has such a capability, how close is Iran to such weaponry?

The mainstream media must face these facts and start reporting that North Korea has nuclear-armed missiles that threaten the United States -- right now. Defending the homeland now, including its critical electrical grid, from a nuclear EMP attack is imperative.

What should the United States therefore do?

First, the President should declare that a nuclear EMP attack on the United States is an existential threat to the American people and would warrant an all-out retaliatory response.

The President should prevent North Korea from further developing its long-range nuclear missile capabilities and capabilities to perform EMP attacks. The U.S. could surgically destroy -- on the launchpad -- any North Korean space-launch vehicle (SLV) or long-range missile prior to launch, or shoot down any SLV or long-range missile launch, including North Korea's KSM-3 and KSM-4 satellites.

The administration should also provide support to, and work in close consultation with, the newly re-established Congressional EMP Commission. Their primary goal should be to protect DoD assets, military critical infrastructures, and the civilian electric grid that provides 99% of the electric power needed to sustain DoD power-projection capabilities.

The Congress also should immediately pass the Critical Infrastructure Protection Act (CIPA), which passed the House unanimously and now awaits action in the Senate. CIPA empowers the Department of Homeland Security to work with the utilities, State governments and emergency planners at all levels of government, to develop plans to protect and recover the national electric grid and other civilian critical infrastructures from an EMP attack.

Finally, the next President should revive President Ronald Reagan's vision of the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) and develop and deploy space-based missile defenses. Space-based missile defenses will offer a realistic prospect of rendering nuclear missile threats obsolete, thus neutralizing the growing nuclear missile threats to the United States from North Korea, Iran, China, and Russia.


Dr. Peter Vincent Pry is Executive Director of the EMP Task Force on National and Homeland Security, a Congressional Advisory Board, and served in the Congressional EMP Commission, the Congressional Strategic Posture Commission, the House Armed Services Committee, and the CIA. Peter Huessy is President of Geostrategic Analysis, Senior Defense Consultant to the Mitchell Institute of the Air Force Association, and teaches nuclear deterrent policy at the US Naval Academy.


[1] Interview with CIA East Asia Division Chief Arthur Brown by Ruriko Kubota and Yosuke Inuzke, "DPRK Has Produced Small-Type Nuclear warheads," Sankei Shimbun, Tokyo: October 1, 2008.

[2] "Spy Agencies Believe North Korea Has Nuke Warheads," Agence France Presse, March 31, 2009.

[3] Lt. General Ronald Burgess, Director, Defense Intelligence Agency, "Worldwide Threat Assessment: Statement before the Committee on Armed Services, U.S. Senate," Washington, D.C.: March 14, 2011 and "North Korea Nukes Might Fit On Missiles, Aircraft," Global Security Newswire: NTI, March 14, 2011.

[4] "Experts: Iran Now A Nuclear-Ready State, Missiles Capable Of Hitting US" Newsmax (February 1, 2015); "When Iran Goes Nuclear," Washington Times (March 2, 2015), and Ambassador Henry Cooper and Dr. Peter Vincent Pry, "The Threat To Melt The Electric Grid," Wall Street Journal (April 30, 2015); Ambassador Henry Cooper, "North Korea's H-Bomb--And Iran's?" Family Security Matters (January 12, 2016).

[5] Admiral William Gortney, Commander, North American Aerospace Command, "Protecting the Homeland," remarks at the Atlantic Council, October 7, 2015.

[6] The New York Times apparently does not understand that an EMP strike delivered with a nuclear warhead does not re-enter the atmosphere nor is accuracy particularly an issue. Detonated thirty to seventy kilometers high roughly over the center of the eastern seaboard of the United States would be sufficient; and "Why Does the New York Times So Hate Missile Defense?", Gatestone Institute, June 11, 2013.

[7] Personal Conversation with Secretary Tom Reed by Peter Huessy, February 9, 2016 at the Institute of World Politics.

[8] Author's Conversation with General (Retired) Charles Jacoby at Real Clear Defense forum on ballistic missile defense issues, February 9, 2016.

[9] Treaty between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on the Limitation of Underground Nuclear Weapon Tests (and Protocol Thereto) (TTBT). BUREAU OF ARMS CONTROL, VERIFICATION, AND COMPLIANCE Signed at Moscow July 3, 1974. Entered into force December 11, 1990.

[10] United States of America v. Progressive, Inc., Erwin Knoll, Samuel Day, Jr., and Howard Morland, 467 F. Supp. 990 (W.D. Wis. 1979), was a lawsuit brought against The Progressive magazine by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) in 1979. A temporary injunction was granted against The Progressive to prevent the publication of an article by activist Howard Morland that purported to reveal the "secret" of the hydrogen. Though the information had been compiled from publicly available sources, the DOE claimed that it fell under the "born secret" clause of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954.

[11] In Air Power Australia, "The Soviet Fractional Orbital Bombardment System Program", Technical Report APA-TR-2010-0101 by Miroslav Gyurosi, January 2010.

[12] North Korea Advisory Group, Report to the Speaker, November 1999.

[13] The talks between Israel and North Korea were held in June 1993; see NTI-Jerusalem Post 18 Dec 1994, page 2, Rabin: "Earlier Talks with North Korea over missiles were a Major Mistake."


Recent Articles by Peter Huessy
◾The Real Cost of Nuclear Deterrence, 2016-02-08
◾Electronic Doomsday for the US?, 2016-01-13
◾Does the U.S. Need the Minuteman?, 2015-12-28
◾National Security Threats vs. Defense Cuts, 2015-11-17
◾The End of Arms Control in the Second Nuclear Age?, 2015-10-26
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Remember when I brought this up in the big diesel electric submarine thread a while back as a possibility.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/sale-americas-lethal-nuclear-powered-submarines-15344

The Buzz

For Sale: America's Lethal Nuclear-Powered Submarines?

Harry J. Kazianis
February 28, 2016
Comments 191

There was a time a few years ago, however brief, that some of us Asia-defense nerds had an unorthodox idea to tip the military balance in Asia. Quite a few people thought it was crazy and highly unlikely, but an idea none the less worth considering.

It went a little something like this: in order to lessen the impact of China’s massive naval build-up [4] and negate the lethality of Beijing’s growing anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) battle networks [5] in the Pacific, Washington could sell [6] or lease what many would call its most sophisticated weapons platform, nuclear-powered attack submarines. Specifically, the mighty Virginia-Class attack sub [7].

The idea still pops up now and again to this day. In fact, I was very keen on the suggestion and still am. Canberra would be provided with the best submarines the world has to offer at a price, that while more expensive than a conventional sub, would provide longer range and capability considering the large expanses Australia’s submarines would need to to patrol. Such submarines would be far more capable than the ones being pitched by Japan and others to replace the troublesome [8] Collins-class boats while providing strategic depth that could prove useful if Beijing were ever to push any of its claims in East Asia too far.

When I put the question to Ross Babbage [9], one of Australia’s best defense experts several years ago, he had some interesting thoughts—and even made the case for another nation to provide such attack subs:


“I remain strongly of the view that the best submarines for Australia for the coming 40 years would be 10-12 leased or bought Virginia or Astute class boats. The Virginia class boats, in particular, are well sorted and reliable, they have low risk, they have known costs, they never need to be refueled and they could be acquired with associated training programs and system upgrade pathways. . . .

“However, all other things being equal, if the U.S. government were open to the idea, it would seem more sensible for Australia to opt for the Virginia Class. Australian boats of this class would be operating in very close cooperation with U.S. boats in Pacific and Indian Ocean waters. There are likely to be substantial advantages flowing to both countries from joint basing, logistic support, training and many other aspects.

“It’s also worth noting that the U.S. Navy has advised Congress that it expects to be operating a global total of 39 SSNs in 2030 [10]. In a Western Pacific crisis in that timeframe it might have 30 to 31 SSNs available for operations, and it may be able to deploy some 20 to 24 into the primary operational theatre. Should the US be able to rely on 8 to 10 Australian SSN’s operating in very close cooperation with the U.S. boats, this could equate to a 30 percent to 40 percent combat supplement. This type of consideration should make the general idea attractive both to Washington and Honolulu.”

However, such nuclear powered boats are very expensive. So, I asked Babbage about another option--the purchase of older Los Angeles-class attack subs from Washington? He responded:


“While an interesting suggestion, I don’t think that this is a good idea for Australia. If our politicians decide to take the major step of leasing or acquiring nuclear powered submarines from either the U.S. or U.K. (or conceivably from France), the Australian Navy would be keen to integrate training as far as was reasonably feasible with the host navy at an early stage. The Australian Navy would likely insist on training and certification standards that were at least as stringent as those employed by the U.S. Navy and Australian Navy. This training and skill development would most appropriately center around the class of boat that Australia intends to operate for the following 30 to 40 years. If the Australian Navy were to acquire or lease Virginia Class boats, it would make greatest sense for nearly all training to be directed towards that class.”

Babbage continued, noting that there could be another path for the older subs to join the effort:


“ . . . there might be a case for the Australian Navy and U.S. Navy to jointly operate one or two late model 688 Los Angeles Class boats for a few years in the early stages of an Australian SSN program. This type of special arrangement might be designed both to build key Australian Navy skills and qualifications and to keep valuable U.S. SSNs operating a few years longer than their currently planned date of decommissioning. This approach may be worth considering if all other key issues concerning an Australian SSN force and fleet cooperation were agreed by the respective governments.”

Other noted defense experts down under felt the acquisition of nuclear subs could work. Simon Cowan, a Research Fellow at the Centre for Independent Studies and author of the report “The Future Submarine Project Should Raise Periscope For Another Look [11]”, had his own thoughts when it came to the issue, making some compelling points in a piece also featured in The Diplomat [12] when it come to leasing the boats:


“Leasing the Virginia Class submarines together with training, upgrades, sustainment and disposal of spent nuclear material would limit the risks and challenges of establishing a nuclear submarine program.

“It would cost less too at about $20 billion upfront, plus $4 billion to $6 billion for facilities and setup costs...Three-quarters of a billion dollars a year in operational savings might be achieved as well – a Collins Class submarine costs Australia a lot more to run than a Virginia Class submarine costs the United States.

“While nuclear safety is an important consideration, U.S. nuclear-powered submarines have a perfect safety record, having travelled more than 240 million kilometres without a single reactor incident and visited Australian bases since 1960 without any problems. Moreover, submarine reactors are a fraction of the size of a nuclear power plant and much less dangerous.

“Critics cite reliance on foreign support as a reason why Australia shouldn’t operate nuclear-powered submarines. These concerns are spurious. In reality, Australia already relies heavily for the development and sustainment of its platforms on foreign defense forces and foreign defense companies, and their Australian subsidiaries.”

I still believe that best option for Canberra is a nuclear-powered submarine. Anything else, shall we say, is sub-optimal.

Harry Kazianis (@grecianformula [13]) is a non-resident Senior Fellow for Defense Policy at the Center for the National Interest , a non-resident Senior Fellow at the China Policy Institute [14], fellow for National Security affairs at the Potomac Foundation [15] and is now a regular contributor to Asia Times [16]. He is the former Executive Editor of The National Interest and former Editor-In-Chief of The Diplomat [17]. The views expressed are his own.

Image [18]: Wikimedia Commons/U.S. Navy.

Tags
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Security [23][3]
Links:
[1] http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/sale-americas-lethal-nuclear-powered-submarines-15344
[2] http://nationalinterest.org/profile/harry-j-kazianis
[3] http://twitter.com/share
[4] http://thediplomat.com/2012/11/u-s-...-becoming-a-world-class-military-shipbuilder/
[5] http://warontherocks.com/2015/10/gr...i-access-and-the-threat-to-the-liberal-order/
[6] http://thediplomat.com/2011/11/why-australia-needs-nuclear-subs/
[7] http://www.forbes.com/sites/lorenth...-are-the-face-of-future-warfare/#22d1b9bf3e93
[8] http://www.smh.com.au/federal-polit...fleet-worlds-worst-report-20121212-2b97g.html
[9] http://thediplomat.com/2012/05/meet-the-diplomat-writers-22/
[10] http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL32418.pdf
[11] http://cis.org.au/images/stories/policy-monographs/pm-130.pdf
[12] http://thediplomat.com/2012/10/australias-nuclear-sub-option/
[13] https://twitter.com/grecianformula
[14] http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/cpi/
[15] http://www.thepotomacfoundation.org/
[16] http://atimes.com/
[17] http://thediplomat.com/
[18] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Virginia_class_submarine.jpg
[19] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/politics-defense
[20] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/technology
[21] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/military
[22] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/submarines
[23] http://nationalinterest.org/topic/security
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://news.yahoo.com/china-bracing-north-korean-response-sanctions-093219517.html

China bracing for North Korean response to new sanctions

Associated Press
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
15 hours ago

BEIJING (AP) — Beijing is on alert for any angry responses from North Korea to proposed new United Nations sanctions over the North's recent nuclear test and rocket launch, a Chinese diplomat said Monday.

The diplomat, who accompanied Foreign Minister Wang Yi during talks in Washington last week, said the two countries had agreed on the need for harsh sanctions against North Korea for defying U.N. resolutions.

However, the diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said the U.S. should also provide incentives to North Korea to return to negotiations, such as offering progress on a permanent peace agreement between the sides. The two countries are still technically at war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with a cease-fire, not a peace treaty.

"We are fully aware that in the next couple of months the situation in this area could be very sensitive. On the one hand, you have to be prepared, keep alert on what kind of reaction might be from Pyongyang," the diplomat said.

The U.S. and South Korea also bear responsibility to avoid actions that North Korea might view as provocative, such as scheduled military drills, he said. "We hope that after the adoption of the resolution all sides should refrain from taking any measures that could escalate."

China is North Korea's most important ally, biggest trading partner and key source of food and fuel. However, Beijing says its influence with Kim Jong Un's government is limited and has argued against measures from the international community that could spark its collapse, potentially leading to a wave of refugees crossing the border into China and the stationing of U.S. and South Korean troops in the North.

Despite its reservations, Beijing signed on to a draft resolution that for the first time would subject cargo ships leaving and entering North Korea to mandatory inspections, prohibit the sale of small arms and other conventional weapons to the North, and impose financial sanctions targeting North Korean banks and assets and ban all dual-use nuclear and missile-related items.

The proposed sanctions would also limit and in some cases ban exports of coal, iron, gold, titanium and rare earth minerals from North Korea and would prohibit countries from supplying aviation fuel, including rocket fuel, to the country. Items such as luxury watches, snowmobiles, recreational water vehicles and lead crystal were also added to a long list of luxury goods that North Korea is not allowed to import.

North Korea started off the new year with what it says was its first hydrogen bomb test on Jan. 6. It followed with the launch of a satellite on a rocket on Feb. 7 that was condemned by China and much of the world as a test of banned missile technology.

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Housecarl

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Salman Taseer murder: Protests after Pakistan hangs Mumtaz Qadri

29 February 2016
From the section Asia

Thousands of people have protested across Pakistan following the execution of the former police bodyguard who shot dead Punjab's governor.

Mumtaz Qadri was hailed as a hero by Islamists after killing Salman Taseer over his opposition to blasphemy laws in Islamabad in 2011.

His supporters took to the streets in Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad and also blocked highways into Islamabad.

However, most rallies dispersed peacefully, AFP news agency reported.

Security forces were on high alert and riot police were in place in the area around Qadri's home in Islamabad.

Demonstrators burned tyres and chanted slogans, while schools and markets in Islamabad and nearby Rawalpindi closed early over fears of violence.

What are Pakistan's blasphemy laws?

'Religious duty'

Qadri's funeral will be held on Tuesday at Liaquat Bagh park in nearby Rawalpindi, where large numbers of mourners are expected.

Prison officials said he was executed at 04:30 local time (23:30 GMT) at Adiala jail in Rawalpindi, near the capital, Islamabad.

Qadri, who had trained as an elite police commando and was assigned to Taseer as his bodyguard, shot the politician at an Islamabad market in January 2011. He was sentenced to death later that year.

He claimed it was his religious duty to kill the minister, who was an outspoken critic of Pakistan's harsh blasphemy laws and supported liberal reforms.

Analysis: M Ilyas Khan, BBC News, Islamabad

Mumtaz Qadri's hanging has come as a surprise to many who thought such a move could spark a severe backlash from the religious lobby.

The hanging comes amid two recent developments that have already incensed religious groups.

In January, the Punjab government banned preaching in educational institutions by Tablighi Jamaat, a proselytising and revivalist movement. And earlier this month it enacted a law that provides for a helpline for women to report abuses by their husbands and others.

Amid this atmosphere, the move to hang Qadri indicates a growing confidence of the government in taming the street power of religious groups, which the military has long been accused of using to control politicians at home and fight its proxy wars abroad.

One reason may be the fact that most hard-line groups adhere to the Deobandi school and would be loath to lionise Qadri, an adherent of the rival Barelvi sect. But a more important reason seems to be the military's new-found willingness to curb militant groups that have a domestic agenda.


Pakistan has seen Islamist groups grow in influence in recent years and several high profile blasphemy cases.

When it came to Qadri's court case, many lawyers argued that Qadri's actions were religiously justified and refused to take part in the prosecution, chief prosecutor Saif ul Malook told the BBC.

"There was a time when nobody was ready to prosecute this accused person and it was really a challenge and I did it only to protect the rule of law," he said.

At his first court hearing Qadri was showered with rose petals by supporters. He never expressed any regret for the killing. His brother appeared to reassert that when he told the AFP news agency about his final meeting with Qadri.

"I have no regrets," Malik Abid told AFP. "We started crying, but he hugged us and chanted 'God is great,'" he added.

In May, just months after Taseer was gunned down, Pakistan's Minorities Minister Shahbaz Bhatti, the cabinet's only Christian, was shot dead by gunmen who ambushed his car.

That August, Salman Taseer's son, Shahbaz Taseer, was abducted in Lahore. His whereabouts are still unclear.

Blasphemy is an extremely sensitive issue in Pakistan and critics argue that blasphemy laws are often misused to settle personal scores and unfairly target minorities.

___

Who was Salman Taseer?

◾The 2011 murder of Taseer, who was the governor of Punjab, was one of Pakistan's most high-profile assassinations.
◾He was one of the most prominent liberal politicians in the country and a close associate of Asif Ali Zardari, who was then the president.
◾Known to be an outspoken critic of the country's harsh blasphemy laws, arguing that they discriminated against religious minorities, and sought liberal reforms.
◾He had called for a pardon for Asia Bibi, a Christian woman who was sentenced to death in 2010 for insulting the Prophet Muhammad.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-nuclear-un-idUSKCN0W34QN

World | Tue Mar 1, 2016 2:51pm EST
Related: World, Russia, United Nations, North Korea

U.N. delays vote on tough new North Korea sanctions at Russia's request

UNITED NATIONS | By Louis Charbonneau and Michelle Nichols


The United Nations Security Council delayed until Wednesday a vote on a U.S.-Chinese drafted resolution that would dramatically expand U.N. sanctions on North Korea after Russia said it needed more time to review the text, diplomats said.

The vote, which had been scheduled for Tuesday afternoon, is now planned for 10 a.m. (1500 GMT) on Wednesday, the diplomats said on condition of anonymity.

"Subsequent to the United States' request ... to schedule a council vote for this afternoon, Russia invoked a procedural 24-hour review of the resolution, so the vote will be on Wednesday," the U.S. mission to the United Nations said in a statement to reporters.

The expanded sanctions, if adopted, would require inspections of all cargo going to and from North Korea and blacklisting North Koreans active in Syria, Iran and Vietnam.

After nearly two months of bilateral negotiations that at one point involved U.S. President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, China agreed to support the unusually tough measures intended to persuade its close ally North Korea to abandon its atomic weapons program.

Last week the United States presented the 15-nation council with the draft resolution that would significantly tighten restrictions after North Korea's nuclear test and Feb. 7 rocket launch, and create what it described as the toughest U.N. sanctions regime in two decades.

Originally Washington had wanted the council to adopt the resolution last weekend but Russia had demanded more time to study it.


Related Coverage
› Fact box: Highlights of draft U.N. North Korea sanctions resolution

The draft seen by Reuters would require U.N. member states to conduct mandatory inspections of all cargo passing through their territory to or from North Korea to look for illicit goods. Previously states only had to do this if they had reasonable grounds to believe there was illicit cargo.

The list of explicitly banned luxury goods will be expanded to include luxury watches, aquatic recreational vehicles, snowmobiles worth more than $2,000, lead crystal items and recreational sports equipment.

Pyongyang denied the Feb. 7 launch involved banned ballistic missile technology, saying it was a peaceful satellite launch.

The official North Korean news agency KCNA said in a commentary on Monday its "position as a satellite manufacturer and launcher will never change (and) ... space development is not something to be given up because of someone's 'sanctions'."

It called the proposed sanctions "a wanton infringement on (North Korea's) sovereignty and grave challenge to it."

The proposal would also close a gap in the U.N. arms embargo on Pyongyang by banning all weapons imports and exports.

There would also be an unprecedented ban on the transfer to North Korea of any item that could directly contribute to the operational capabilities of its armed forces, such as trucks that could be modified for military purposes.

Other proposed measures include a ban on all supplies of aviation and rocket fuel to North Korea, a requirement for states to expel North Korean diplomats engaging in illicit activities, and blacklisting 16 North Korean individuals and 12 entities, including the National Aerospace Development Agency, or NADA, the body responsible for February's rocket launch.


Related Coverage
› North Korea vows to shun U.N. rights forum over political attacks

North Korea has been under U.N. sanctions since 2006 because of its four nuclear tests and multiple rocket launches.

Candidates for the blacklist include Choe Chun-sik, who was head of North Korea's long-range missile program; Hyon Kwang Il, senior official at NADA; Yu Chol U, director of NADA; Jang Bom Sun and Jon Myong Guk, Tanchon Commercial Bank officials in Syria; Jang Yon Son and Kim Yong Chol, Korea Mining Development Trading Corporation (KOMID) representatives in Iran; and Kang Ryong and Ryu Jun, KOMID representatives in Syria.

Two Tanchon bank representatives in Vietnam are also to be blacklisted.

In addition to NADA, North Korean entities to be blacklisted include the Academy of National Defense Sciences, Chongchongang Shipping Co and the Ministry of Atomic Energy Industry.

Also new, countries will be required, not just encouraged, to freeze the assets of North Korean entities linked to Pyongyang's nuclear or missile programs and to prohibit the opening of new branches or offices of North Korean banks or to engage in banking correspondence with them.


(Reporting by Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Michael Perry and James Dalgleish)
 

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World | Tue Mar 1, 2016 4:33pm EST
Related: World, China, South China Sea

China's militarization of South China Sea will have consequences: U.S.

SAN FRANCISCO | By Andrea Shalal

U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter on Tuesday warned China against what he called "aggressive" actions in the South China Sea region, including the placement of surface-to-air missiles on a disputed island, and said they would have consequences.

"China must not pursue militarization in the South China Sea," Carter said in a wide-ranging speech at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco. "Specific actions will have specific consequences."

He did not elaborate, but underscored the U.S. military's determination to safeguard maritime security around the world, and particularly in the South China Sea region, which sees about 30 percent of the world's trade transit its waters each year.

The U.S. defense chief also took aim at both Russia and China for their actions to limit Internet access, as well as state-sponsored cyber threats, cyber espionage and cyber crime.

In his prepared remarks, Carter drew a sharp contrast between such behavior by Russia and China and what he described as much healthier U.S. actions to preserve Internet freedom.

"We don't desire conflict with either country," he said. "But we also cannot blind ourselves to their apparent goals and actions."

He urged cooperation with U.S. technology companies to ensure data security and necessary encryption levels, despite growing controversy over the FBI's request to circumvent security features on an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino, California, shooters.

Carter, on his third visit to the technology-heavy Silicon Valley since taking office a year ago, said he could not address the case specifically since it was under litigation, but made clear that the Defense Department viewed encryption as a necessary part of data security.

"It's important to take a step back here, because future policy shouldn't be driven by any one particular case," Carter said in what appeared to be a departure from the Justice Department's view.

Carter noted that the Defense Department is the largest user of encryption in the world and needed it to be as strong as possible.


(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-pakistan-usa-blast-idUSKCN0W34TD

World | Tue Mar 1, 2016 3:43pm EST
Related: World

Blast kills two employees of U.S. consulate in Pakistan, soldiers: Kerry

WASHINGTON

Two local employees of the U.S. consulate in the Pakistani city of Peshawar and some soldiers were killed by an explosive device while on drug-eradication mission, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Tuesday.

"Just this morning, I woke to the news that we had lost two local employees in Peshawar who worked with our consulate there who were going out on a effort to eradicate narcotics fields," Kerry told an event in Washington on countering violent extremism.

"An IED exploded and several were lost; a few of the soldiers who were there to guard them also," Kerry said.

State Department spokesman John Kirby said the incident occurred on Tuesday when the two Pakistani employees were traveling in a Pakistani government Anti-Narcotics Force convoy in Ambar tehsil, in the Mohmand Agency of Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

"The U.S. government strongly condemns the attack," Kirby said, adding that the United States was offering its assistance to Pakistan in investigating the incident and bringing the perpetrators to justice.

Kirby said he said not know whether the consulate employees were the targets of the attack, which came during a visit to the United States by Pakistan's national security adviser Sartaj Aziz.

"Nobody has claimed responsibility at this point," Kirby told a regular news briefing.

"We don't know how premeditated or planned this was, and we certainly don't have additional information about the specific targets, we're going to have just keep working at this."


(Reporting by David Brunnstrom; Editing by Susan Heavey and Alan Crosby)
 

Housecarl

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World | Tue Mar 1, 2016 3:44pm EST
Related: World

Jordan says a number of 'outlaws' killed in manhunt for Islamist militants

AMMAN

Jordan said on Tuesday security forces had killed a number of "fugitive outlaws" in a large-scale manhunt for Islamist militants in which at least three members of the security forces had been injured.

State television quoted Jordanian officials as saying the security operation involving raids by hundreds of security forces was continuing in the northern city of Irbid.


(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
 

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http://news.yahoo.com/charges-dropped-against-only-suspect-1998-ira-bombing-113225832.html

Only suspect in 1998 Omagh bombing freed as case collapses

AFP
By Paul Faith
5 hours ago

Maghaberry (United Kingdom) (AFP) - Seamus Daly, the only remaining suspect in Northern Ireland's 1998 Omagh bombing that killed 29 people and threatened a peace deal, walked free from prison Tuesday after a British court dropped all charges.

Daly had been in Maghaberry high-security prison near Belfast for nearly two years awaiting trial after being charged over the atrocity committed by the Real IRA militant republicans -- a splinter group of the Provisional IRA (Irish Republican Army).

The case against Daly, a 45-year-old bricklayer, collapsed as prosecutors withdrew all charges after inconsistent evidence by a key witness in preliminary pre-trial hearings.

The car bombing, which also injured around 220 people, was the single worst atrocity of the sectarian conflict known as The Troubles in which around 3,500 people were killed over three decades.

No-one has ever been convicted in a criminal court over the bombing, which tore through the market town of Omagh, testing the peace accords signed only months earlier to put an end to the conflict.

In 2009, the Belfast High Court found that Daly and three other men were liable in a civil case brought by families of the victims and they were later ordered to pay more than £1.6 million (2.1 million euros, $2.2 million) in damages to the relatives.

In civil cases, guilt can be proven on the "balance of probabilities" rather than criminal law's requirement of "beyond reasonable doubt".

Daly has always denied involvement in the bombing.

.. View gallery
Northern Irish officials inspect the damage after the …
Northern Irish officials inspect the damage after the 1998 Omagh bombing -- the single worst atrocit …

"It's very painful but on the evidence we've heard, I wouldn't want anyone to be convicted," Michael Gallagher, whose 21-year-old son Aiden was one of those killed in the bombing, told the BBC after Tuesday's decision.

"I feel that there has been a chance wasted here. There never was a political will to find the people responsible," he said.

- Decision 'not taken lightly' -

Acting on conflicting bomb warnings, police had moved shoppers and shop employees into a part of Omagh where a car packed with 500 pounds (225 kilogrammes) of explosives was parked, unwittingly putting them in close proximity to the huge blast.

A fireball swept from the epicentre of the explosion and shop fronts were blown back on to shoppers inside. The blast was so powerful that some of the victims' bodies were never found.

Among the dead were nine children and three generations of one family.

The Real IRA -- which sees itself as the successor to the Irish Republican Army paramilitaries -- claimed responsibility for the attack.

.. View gallery
Seamus Daly had been on remand in prison since 2014 …
Seamus Daly had been on remand in prison since 2014 after he was accused of murdering 29 people in t …

Daly faced murder charges along with causing the explosion and possessing the bomb, and two charges relating to another 1998 bomb plot.

The decision by the Northern Ireland Public Prosecution Service (PPS) to drop the charges came in preliminary hearings before the case had even reached trial in the Crown Court, taking the decision of whether to proceed out of the hands of judge Peter King.

"Under cross-examination a number of issues became apparent which impacted upon the reliability of the evidence that the witness was providing," said a PPS spokesman.

"On behalf of the PPS, I extend our sympathy to the families affected by the Omagh bomb. We hope they are assured that this decision was not taken lightly," he added.

- Ceasefire test -

Judge King later said he "must discharge Mr Daly and order his release immediately."

Daly was driven away by family members without making a comment.

The Release Seamus Daly campaign group hit out at his long detention.

"The case against Seamus Daly showed a total disregard for his human rights and liberty," it said in a statement.

Colm Murphy, the only man ever jailed over the bombing, had his conviction overturned in 2005 following accusations of perjury against police and a new trial was ordered.

Sean Hoey, an electrician from south Armagh, was found not guilty of the 29 murders in 2007 following a lengthy trial.

Around 3,500 people died in three decades of violence between Protestants favouring continued union with Britain, and Catholics seeking a unified Ireland.

The Omagh bombing was seen as a major test of the fragile peace established by the Good Friday agreements inked just four months earlier.

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Housecarl

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http://abcnews.go.com/International...-saudi-preacher-diplomat-philippines-37314584

Gunman Wounds Saudi Preacher, Diplomat in Philippines

By The Associated Press · MANILA, Philippines — Mar 1, 2016, 3:17 PM ET

A gunman attacked and wounded a Saudi preacher and a diplomat from Saudi Arabia's embassy late Tuesday before being killed by policemen in the southern city of Zamboanga, police said.

Preacher Aaidh Al-Qarni was about to leave Western Mindanao State University after delivering a lecture when he and religious attache Turki Assaegh were shot by the gunman, who darted out from a crowd, police spokeswoman Senior Inspector Helen Limen Galvez said.

Both victims were taken to a hospital for treatment and declared out of danger, Galvez said. Al-Qarni was shot in his right shoulder, left arm and chest while Assaegh was hit in his right thigh and left leg.

Investigators at the scene found a pistol and a motorcycle the gunman may have used, police said. Policemen later arrested two other suspects in connection with the attack, Galvez said.

The motive for the attack was not immediately clear.

Philippine Foreign Undersecretary Rafael Seguis said last week that the Saudi government had asked several countries, including the Philippines, for improved security because of a possible threat, the nature of which was not specified.

Philippine police strengthened security at Saudi Arabia's embassy and its national airline following the request, Seguis said.

Seguis noted that Saudi Arabia has a conflict with Iran, where the Saudi Embassy recently came under attack, but said it's hard to say whether the reported threat was connected to that.

Protesters set fire to the Saudi Embassy in Tehran and attacked its consulate in another Iranian city in response to the kingdom's execution of a prominent Shiite cleric on Jan 2. The protests prompted Saudi Arabia to cut diplomatic ties with Iran, escalating tensions between the longtime regional rivals.

Zamboanga, a major port city 860 kilometers (540 miles) south of Manila, has been hit by deadly bombings blamed on Abu Sayyaf militants, some of whom have pledged support to the Islamic State group.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-rightwing-idUSKCN0W34XM

World | Tue Mar 1, 2016 12:05pm EST
Related: World, Germany

German court starts hearings in bid to ban far-right NPD party

KARLSRUHE, Germany | By Ursula Knapp

Germany's constitutional court began hearings on Tuesday to decide whether to ban the far-right National Democratic Party, with one regional leader saying the party aimed to abolish the country's democratic system.

Germany's federal states filed a petition in 2013 to outlaw the NPD which the domestic intelligence agency has branded racist and anti-semitic and which it says contains neo-Nazis among its leaders.

Banning a political party is difficult in Germany, a result of the crushing of dissent in the Nazi era and in communist East Germany. A previous attempt to ban the NPD collapsed in 2003.

Dietmar Woidke, state premier of the eastern state of Brandenburg, in comments to reporters, said the NPD was striving for the elimination of the "democratic constitutional order".

"It is anti-Semitic, it is xenophobic, and it is one of the intellectual instigators behind the violence, at least indirectly, which we have to deal with in many parts of Germany these days," he said.

Court President Andreas Vosskuhle said parties were considered unconstitutional if they aimed to damage or eliminate the democratic order or jeopardize Germany's existence.

With some 5,200 members, the NPD is more radical than populist anti-immigrant parties elsewhere in Europe such as the Alternative for Germany (AfD) and France's National Front.

Although it has never won enough support to be represented at a federal level, it secured a European Parliament seat in 2014 and has one seat in the eastern state of Mecklenburg Vorpommern assembly.

With many Germans worried about the migrant crisis, NPD Chairman Frank Franz argued his party is highly relevant.

"All the things the NPD has been warning against for years, is happening now on the political stage," he told reporters.


(Additional reporting by Reuters TV; Writing by Madeline Chambers)
 
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Housecarl

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http://blogs.wsj.com/brussels/2016/03/01/does-nato-need-to-rethink-its-nuclear-strategy/

10:06 am ET
Mar 1, 2016

Does NATO Need to Rethink its Nuclear Strategy?

By Julian E. Barnes
Comments

Leaders of the western alliance have begun talking more about nuclear deterrence, but a prominent American military strategist said the U.S. and its allies need to take a new look at their doctrines as well as the strategies being developed by other countries.

Gen. Philip Breedlove, the top commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, testifies in Washington Tuesday on the threats faced in Europe by America and its allies, including Russia and its nuclear arsenal.

In his prepared statement, Gen. Breedlove reiterated the long-held position that nuclear weapons remain “the supreme guarantee of alliance security.” Still, some allies have been arguing for NATO to take a new look at its nuclear deterrence in light of renewed Russian aggression and what allied officials have called loose talk on nuclear weapons.

Timed with Gen. Breedlove’s testimony, the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments will release a new paper Tuesday that calls for the U.S. to develop new nuclear deterrence strategies. Andrew Krepinevich, the president of the think tank and a prominent military strategist, said that the world has entered a second nuclear age, one far more complex than the Cold War stand off between Russia and the U.S.

The U.S. nuclear policy has been for many years that the nuclear arsenal is maintained to deter anyone else from using a nuclear weapon. But threats grow around the world, and as a growing number of countries, like North Korea, have nuclear capability, the U.S. has to take a hard look at the situations where another country might use nuclear weapons, Mr. Krepinevich said.

“If we are trying to reassure them and trying to deter them we have to understand what their strategic doctrines are,” Mr. Krepinevich said. “We can’t assume the only use of nuclear weapons is to deter someone else from using nuclear weapons.”

According to the CSBA paper, Chinese strategists have suggested a nuclear-like weapon that generated an electromagnetic pulse could be used in electronic warfare, without crossing the nuclear threshold. Russian military experts have sometimes advocated strategies that involve escalating a situation to deescalate, an approach that could lower the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons, the paper said.

Russian officials say their strategy is clear, nuclear weapons will only be used if there is a threat to the existence of their state.But Russian officials have also argued that a dialogue with the U.S. and its allies over nuclear weapons must include broader strategic issues, like missile defenses, weaponization of space and long-range conventional weapons.

Mr. Krepinevich said Russia and China are worried that America is developing a conventional weaponry designed to destroy their nuclear arms, a development that Beijing and Moscow believe could be deeply destabilizing.

“That is a huge problematic rung on the escalation ladder,” Mr. Krepinevich said. “You don’t know if that would intimidate them not to push a crisis or to go beyond that to a higher rung which involves there use of nuclear weapons.”
 

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http://www.psmag.com/politics-and-law/broken-nuclear-promise-of-barack-obama

Barack Obama's Broken Nuclear Promise

The president made non-proliferation a centerpiece of his administration. What happened?

Jared Keller · 10 hours ago

In the early days of his presidency, during a visit to Prague's Hradčany Square, Barack Obama launched what observers saw as a centerpiece of his foreign policy: a doctrine for a nuclear free world. "The Cold War has disappeared but thousands of those weapons have not," President Obama announced, pointing out the paradoxical twist of the modern nuclear dilemma—as the threat of global nuclear war has subsided, the risk of a singular nuclear attack has only intensified.

"More nations have acquired these weapons. Testing has continued. Black market trade in nuclear secrets and nuclear materials abound. The technology to build a bomb has spread. Terrorists are determined to buy, build, or steal one," Obama continued. "Our efforts to contain these dangers are centered on a global non-proliferation regime, but as more people and nations break the rules, we could reach the point where the center cannot hold."

Taken in the context of his other campaign promises—the closure of Guantanamo, (which has only truly blossomed in the twilight hours of his presidency) and the end of the two costly wars he inherited—Obama's nuclear promise seemed both heroic and unimpeachable, especially given its tacit support by past foreign policy luminaries. Mere months after his Prague address, Obama was awarded the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize—a symbolic endorsement of his nascent doctrine—with the Nobel Committee specifically citing the "special importance to Obama's vision of and work for a world without nuclear weapons." Obama used the moment to make the case for "just war" in the modern geopolitical stage: "We will not eradicate violent conflict in our lifetimes. There will be times when nations—acting individually or in concert—will find the use of force not only necessary but morally justified."

But six years later, in a book released last year, the former Pulitzer director wrote that the prize "didn't have the desired effect" of helping to catalyze such change. He's not wrong. The Obama administration certainly made historic steps in unifying the international community on the issue of nuclear weapons, particularly the historic nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1 countries. But at the same time, despite promises to pursue new restrictions on nuclear technology and decrease the nation's nuclear stockpile, the American military's nuclear posture has remained largely static. Obama's dream of non-proliferation is, it seems, long dead.

First, consider the efficacy of the historic Iranian nuclear deal signed in 2015. While Republican opponents (and Israel) remain dead-set on dismantling an agreement that would essentially prevent Iran from ever building a bomb, the deal has been branded a foreign policy coup for the Obama administration. With the deal, Obama managed to decrease military and diplomatic tensions in line with his administration's continued policy of engagement with the Iranian regime. As of now, Iran appears to be in compliance, and as a result has received much-awaited sanctions relief. This, in turn, helped deliver a sweeping political victory of moderates and reformers in Iran's February elections, "seen as an endorsement of the deal [President] Rouhani sealed with six world powers," according to the Los Angeles Times.

This affirmation has, per the Los Angeles Times, long-term repercussions for Iran's internal politics:


Hard-liners who oppose the nuclear deal also suffered significant setbacks in a parallel election taking place for the Assembly of Experts, an 88-member panel of Islamic jurists who are supposed to select the clerical supreme leader, the most powerful figure in Iran's hybrid political system.

Two of the most conservative members of the assembly, Mohammad Yazdi and Mesbah Yazdi, were not reelected to their posts following a social-media campaign to oust hard-liners. The assembly election is being closely watched because its members could choose the successor to the current supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who is 77 and in declining health.

But despite this, the Obama administration continues to face challenges with the second biggest nuclear threat in the world: Russia, the country with an enormous (and insecure) nuclear stockpile.

Given the ubiquity of fissile material available on the black market in former Soviet nations, Russia is ground zero for proliferation. Things hit a high point for Obama in 2010: There were the negotiations with Russia to form the 2010 New START agreement (which was created to slash both countries' nuclear arsenals), and his efforts to secure a 47-nation agreement to help secure loose nuclear materials within the next four years at the inaugural Nuclear Security Summit in 2010.

The intervening years, however, have not been good to the administration's initial successes: From the start, Russia repeatedly ignored continued proposals from the Pentagon on implementing the terms of the New START treaty, and recently pulled out of attending this year's Nuclear Security Summit in Washington in what's been widely seen as yet another blow to the Obama administration's nuclear efforts.

Vladimir Putin's return to power and Russia's increasing involvement in Syria and the Ukraine (plus the annexation of Crimea) have only served to ratchet up tensions between Russia and the West. The downing of a Russian warplane by a North Atlantic Treaty Organization jet in November certainly didn't help things; Russia's foreign minister even threatened "world war" if the West ever sent ground troops into Syria to combat ISIS. "The most fundamental game changer is Putin's invasion of Ukraine," former Obama nuclear adviser Gary Samore told the New York Times in 2014. "That has made any measure to reduce the stockpile unilaterally politically impossible."

The administration's relationship to the world's biggest source of loose nuclear materials is at its lowest point in recent memory, a development that doesn't just effectively invalidate the New START agreement but has actually led to a slight uptick in operational nuclear warheads worldwide. The minute things went south with Russia, the United States went back on its promise to work toward a nuclear-free world.

It's this tension that has forced Obama to break America's nuclear pledge to the world. With the release of the Pentagon's 2010 Nuclear Posture Review, the Department of Defense had ostensibly committed itself to "a multilateral effort to limit, reduce, and eventually eliminate all nuclear weapons," seemingly in line with Obama's nuclear-free doctrine laid out in his Nobel speech and solidified in the Nuclear Security Summit and New START agreements. The U.S., the document promised, "will not develop new nuclear warheads," and efforts to maintain and update the government's existing nuclear arsenal "will use only nuclear components based on previously tested designs, and will not support new military missions or provide new military capabilities." The nuclear umbrella that's implicitly backed Western hegemony over international affairs would grow no further.

But Obama's nuclear budget has swollen in recent years. In his proposed $620.9 billion defense budget for 2017, Obama called for a $1.8 billion increase in nuclear spending "to overhaul the country's aging nuclear bombers, missiles, submarines and other systems," according to Reuters. The budget request allocates millions in taxpayer dollars for the development of a new nuclear-tipped cruise missile, replacing the military's arsenal of air-launched missiles, and almost doubling the military's nuclear cruise missile collection to nearly 1,000 missiles—all initiatives seemingly in contradiction to the 2010 Nuclear Posture Review and Obama's early-term non-proliferation rhetoric. And this isn't a sudden change, but the latest jump in nuclear arms spending at the cost of non-proliferation efforts since 2011, according to reporting from Mother Jones.

Data from the Center for Arms Control & Non-Proliferation shows a steady increase in nuclear spending in Obama's defense budget since 2012, all while non-proliferation spending has been on the decline:

MTM2OTMxNTkwNTk1OTQ2MDc5.png

http://a4.files.psmag.com/image/upload/c_fit,cs_srgb,w_620/MTM2OTMxNTkwNTk1OTQ2MDc5.png

"What's more problematic is the decrease in nuclear nonproliferation programs by over $100 million," Global Zero executive director Derek Johnson wrote for the Hill. "These are highly functional programs dedicated to keeping the world's nearly 16,000 nuclear weapons out of terrorist hands and locking down vulnerable nuclear material.... In a global security climate traumatized by the rise of ISIS, decreasing nuclear nonproliferation programs seems a dangerously misguided trade-off."

Johnson's not wrong: In 2014, ISIS seized a cache of 88 pounds of uranium compounds in Iraq, and a June 2015 report indicated that ISIS had already gathered enough nuclear material to build a dirty bomb. It's vaguely ironic, considering Obama couched his nuclear-free plea of 2009 in the closure of Cold War-era geopolitics. The U.S. has conducted 15 long-range missile tests since 2011 as reminders to Russia and North Korea—even though the threat of a nuclear ISIS is probably more dangerous than any Iranian centrifuge ever could be.

In retrospect, we should have known better. In his Nobel address, Obama didn't just lay out a doctrine that would define his foreign policy; he delivered a masterclass in doublespeak, using the validation of his campaign rhetoric of a utopian, nuclear-free world while recognizing the permanent reality of modern realpolitik and nuclear terrorism. And while the promise of a nuclear-free world is an inherently naïve proposition, his doctrine of just war was prescient: Obama has expanded the field of battle against terrorism with a deadly drone program while in turn touching off a "modernization" arms race with Russia, as the Intercept puts it.

The administration is trumpeting its success with Iran—and with good reason—but Obama's record on nuclear weapons is hardly an affirmation of his Nobel Peace Prize. The dream of a world without nukes, it turns out, was always really just that: a dream, and nothing more.
 

Housecarl

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

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.globalresearch.ca/operat...nuclear-war-games-on-russias-doorstep/5511158

Operation Barbarossa 2, The Baltic Gambit: US-NATO “Mock” Nuclear War Games on Russia’s Doorstep

By Christopher Black
Global Research, March 01, 2016
New Eastern Outlook 29 February 2016

On Friday, February 26, just a day before the limited ceasefire in Syria was to take effect, the Atlantic Council, the preeminent NATO think tank, issued a report on the state of readiness of the NATO alliance to fight and win a war with Russia. The focus of the report is on the Baltic states.

The report, entitled “Alliance at Risk” has the sub-heading “Strengthening European Defence in an Age of Turbulence and Competition.” Layers of distortions, half-truths, lies and fantasies of course obscure the fact that it is the NATO countries that have caused the turbulence from the Middle East to Ukraine. NATO is responsible for nothing in this report, except “protecting the peace.” Russia is the supreme aggressor state, intent on undermining the security of Europe, even intent on attacking Europe, an “existential threat” that NATO must prepare to repel.

An interesting image that appears just below the title page is the logo of the Airbus Group, in letters as large as the title and a statement that the publication is a product of the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, in partnership with Airbus. There you have it, the logo of big business, intertwined with the US military machine; portraying one of the principle characteristics of fascism in the west, the interdependence and shared power of the western corporate and military complex.

The Scowcroft Center is named after American Army general Brent Scowcroft, who, among other things, was national security advisor to Presidents Ford and Bush, lately advisor to President Obama and a long associate of Henry Kissinger. General Scowcroft is interesting for another reason for on September 11, 2001 Scowcroft was on board a US Air Force E-4B aircraft, known as the National Airborne Operations Command Center.

The E-4B is a militarized version of a Boeing 747. Its purpose is to provide the American president, vice president, and Joint Chiefs of Staff with an airborne command center that could be used to execute war plans and coordinate government operations during a national emergency.

The plane was sitting on the tarmac at Andrews Air Force Base, just outside Washington, D.C. waiting to take off for Offutt airbase in Nebraska, the headquarters of the Strategic Air Command when the first plane hit the World Trade Center in New York.

Supposedly the E-4B was to take part in a previously scheduled military exercise called Global Guardian involving a mock nuclear war, but just a few minutes after take-off the Pentagon was hit by some type of airborne craft and the E-4B immediately withdrew from the purported scheduled exercise and became the actual American government command and control center. It then continued to Offutt Air Base in Nebraska where it delivered Scowcroft and his staff to the National Command Center, their original destination, where he was joined later that day by President Bush and his staff.

Scowcroft was then head of the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and an adviser to and friend of President Bush. He was not a member of the armed forces, having been retired. He was a civilian. It was Scowcroft who later advised against the USA attacking Iraq alone and who called for the building of a “coalition” to invade instead to give the US cover, which is what finally transpired. Neither his presence on board the E-4B that day nor why it was prepared to be put into action just prior to the attack on the World Trade Center for an alleged military exercise involving a possible nuclear war, has never been adequately explained.

I digress, but I am sure you cannot blame me, since it is my argument that the NATO alliance will stage a series of actions in the Baltic states using hybrid warfare methods, or will simply manufacture images that will be used to create a new myth to justify war, the myth that Russia is trying to seize the Baltic region.

The report is designed essentially to provide the European governments concerned, that is, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Norway, with propaganda they can feed to the people through the media channels, most of which they control, to justify increased military spending and increased military forces in order to face a “threat” from Russia.

It states at page 6 that


The Russian invasion of Crimea, its support for separatists, and its invasion of eastern Ukraine have effectively ripped up the post-Cold War settlement of Europe. President Vladimir Putin has shattered any thoughts of a strategic partnership with NATO; instead, Russia is now a de facto strategic adversary. Even more dangerously, the threat is potentially existential, because Putin has constructed an international dynamic that could put Russia on a collision course with NATO. At the center of this collision would be the significant Russian-speaking populations in the Baltic states, whose interests are used by the Kremlin to justify Russia’s aggressive actions in the region. Under Article 5 of NATO’s Washington Treaty, any military move by Putin on the Baltic states would trigger war, potentially on a nuclear scale, because the Russians integrate nuclear weapons into every aspect of their military thinking.

This supports warnings that have been made all last year of a move by NATO in the Baltic states which will be justified by false flag hybrid war operations conducted by NATO, as I have stated several times in other essays. This is emphasized by the recommendation in the report that “to deter any Russian encroachment into the Baltic states, NATO should establish a permanent presence in the region… to prevent a Russian coup de main operation …”

Throughout the report the imagined enemy is Russia. Each segment written by an expert in military analysis from each of the countries concerned in the report contains the standard propaganda about Russia and that Europe is vulnerable and about to fall to the Russian hordes.

The level of intelligence they expect the public to have must be very low if they really think such a fantastic document could be taken seriously as a description of reality or that their intentions could be understood as anything less than criminal. Any intelligent person handed such a document would automatically throw it in the garbage for the trash it is but then he would immediately retrieve it to take a second look, because they are telling us what they are going to do, what they preparing for. I wrote in my last essay that the increased build-up of NATO forces, in eastern Europe especially, has some similarity to the Nazi build-up for the invasion of Russia in 1941 Operation Barbarossa, is in fact a Barbarossa 2.

This new report adds support to the expectation of dangerous actions in the Baltic states that will be blamed on Russia. It is probably not a coincidence that the report was released just as the Syrian cease-fire was to come into effect. The United States, clearly outwitted, out played and out fought, by the Syrians, Russians, Iranians and their allies in Syria has been forced to accede to a Russian proposed ceasefire for now. But already the Americans have talked about their Plan B, the carving up of Syria, their intention all along. We can expect them to do all they can to undermine it, engaging in a fight and talk strategy, keeping Russia occupied; in Syria, in constant tension in the Donbass, harassing their allies China and Iran, and now we can expect a new front to be opened in the Baltic states. What gambit NATO will use to create that front and a direct confrontation with Russia, who can say, but there will be one – the Baltic Gambit.

Of course, it goes almost without saying but I shall say it once again, that this is all illegal under international law, under the United Nations Charter that prescribes the only acceptable means of settling international disputes. Under the Rome Statute this document could be used in evidence against the people that wrote it and applaud it in a trial on the charge of conspiracy to commit war crimes. But I doubt the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court will ask for a copy to read to draft an indictment. The prosecutor of the Court will do absolutely nothing as all this goes on right in front of her eyes and involving countries over which she has jurisdiction.

The final disturbing aspect of the document is that it calls for nuclear “modernization” meaning rearmament and increased building of nuclear weapons and delivery systems, a call for more nuclear arms from the same countries which for months have been attacking North Korea for having the same weapons. You have to give it to them; they’ve got a lot of nerve. Trouble is, they’ve go too much and it really seems that they’re insane.

So what can Russia do? Well, they called the American bluff in Syria, so why not do it again. This world cannot have peace unless peace is the only way that things can be done. The only way that can happen is to eliminate nuclear weapons so that no nation can threaten the existence of any other. The French section of the report happily reports that the nuclear disarmament groups in France no longer even bother to mention the matter much anymore so little resistance can be expected from that quarter. That applies around the world. But if Russia were to throw down the glove and call for mutual disarmament, a rejection by the Americans would at least underline the importance to mankind of nuclear disarmament and would make clear to the world who is the aggressor state. Otherwise it’s the Balkan Gambit and all that will follow.

Christopher Black is an international criminal lawyer based in Toronto, he is a member of the Law Society of Upper Canada and he is known for a number of high-profile cases involving human rights and war crimes, especially for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Saudis admit they have nuclear weapons
Started by alchemike‎, 02-22-2016 12:36 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?485255-Saudis-admit-they-have-nuclear-weapons

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/OldNewsPage/?Id=7014&NEW/NUCLEAR/HYSTERIA/IN/WEST/ASIA

NEW NUCLEAR HYSTERIA IN WEST ASIA

BAHER KAMAL
Tuesday, March 01,2016

MADRID (IPS): Three years ago when the tsunami of panic around Iran’s potential capability to develop nuclear weapons reached its peak, a combined diplomatic, media campaign warning that a Gulf Arab state would think of purchasing atomic bombs was spread like an oil spot.

Now that the so-called P5+1group (US, UK, France, Russia and China, plus Germany) few months ago concluded an agreement with Iran to prevent the risk of an eventual military nuclear programme in exchange of lifting massive Western sanctions, a new wave of nuclear hysteria seems to be in the air.

In fact, just a few days ago, a news item that the Gulf states would be now seeking nukes, came out of the Munich Security Conference, which was basically meant to set an accord between the US and Russia to establish a humanitarian ceasefire as a step on the 18 December 2015 UN Resolution 2254 (2015) roadmap for Syria.

The majority of Arab media did not pay due attention to this piece of news which, if translated into real facts, would change the fate of the whole region.

What is this all about ?

The Persian Gulf states seeking nuclear weapons to counter “bad guy” Iran have held clandestine meetings with Israel despite not having official ties with Tel Aviv, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon revealed at the Munich Security Conference in Germany, RT on 15 February reported.

“We see signs that countries in the Arab world are preparing to acquire nuclear weapons, that they are not willing to sit quietly with Iran on brink of a nuclear or atomic bomb,” Ya’alon told fellow defense ministers on Sunday [14 February], the final day of the Munich Security Conference.

Ya’alon did not name specific countries who might be interested in developing nuclear weapons and gave no evidence to back up his claims –RT informed– however, he then made a surprise statement that the Gulf states – officially hostile to Tel Aviv because of its occupation of the West Bank – had held clandestine meetings with Israel.

“Not only Jordan and Egypt,” he said, referring to the only Arab countries who signed peace treaties with Israel after three Arab-Israeli wars, according to this television network which runs cable and satellite television channels directed to audiences outside the Russian Federation.

“I speak about the Gulf states and North African states too. Unfortunately they are not here to listen. For them, Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood are the enemy. Iran is the bad guy for us and for the Sunni regimes. They are not shaking hands [with Israelis] in public, but we meet in closed rooms.”

In the meantime, Israel is widely believed to possess dozens of nuclear warheads, although official statistics do not exist… Israel possesses Jericho-3 ballistic missiles capable of delivering up to 1,000kg load at ranges of 4,800 to 6,500km. Additionally, it is believed to have a naval nuclear strike capability, using Dolphin-class submarine-launched nuclear-capable cruise missiles, said RT.

The Israeli Air Force also has F-15I and F-16I Sufa fighter aircraft, which can be utilized to deliver tactical and strategic nuclear weapons at long distances using external fuel tanks or aerial re-fueling fleet of modified Boeing 707s, according to the Russian network.

“We do have atomic bombs. This is no news. World powers know that we have the bomb and we want to test it. This would take place should Iran conduct a nuclear test,” prominent Saudi political analyst, Daham to Anzi, told RT,” the Russian TV network on 20 February½ reported in its Spanish service.

“US sources said in May last year that Saudi military had traveled to Pakistan, an ally country, to acquire nuclear weapons “available for sale”. This action of the Saudi military was motivated by Ryiad’s concerns of a hypothetical nuclear threat from Iran.”

This is not the first time that the risk that Gulf countries may acquire nuclear arms has been raised. Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former Saudi ambassador to the United States, had over two years ago warned that nuclear threats from Israel and Iran might force Saudi Arabia to follow suit.

As the Wall Street Journal on November 2013 pointed out, the Saudis may conclude that international acceptance of a nuclear programme of any kind by Iran may compel them “to seek their own nuclear weapons capability through a simple purchase.” The likely source: Pakistan, whose nuclear programme was partly funded by the Saudis.

In fact, the 22 states forming the Arab region are all signatories to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which meets, every five years, to review the state of implementation of this global agreement aimed at preventing the proliferation of atomic warheads. In all successive review conferences, the Arab states reiterated their proposal to declare the Middle East a nuclear-free zone.

Though the UN Security Council adopted in 1995 a resolution meant to pursue this goal, the NPT review conferences have so far failed to move forward in such direction, mainly due to Israeli, US-backed position against any attempt implying that Tel Aviv dismantles its nuclear arsenal.

Israel is widely believed to posses between 210 and 250 nuclear warheads, an amount that largely exceeds those in the hands of India (80 nuclear bombs) and Pakistan (90). The government of Tel Aviv systematically refuses either to confirm or deny the existence of such nuclear arsenal.

The sole attempt to implement the 1995 Security Council’s resolution, came out in 2010, when the NPT review meeting called for an “international conference” –not under the UN umbrella– to deal with that resolution. Following intensive efforts to find a country ready to host the conference, Finland volunteered to have it in Helsinki. But diplomatic talks failed to organise the meeting.

In view of this yet another frustration and also of the brinkmanship games being played by big military powers in the region, the Arab countries in general, and in the Gulf region in particular, have lately been expressing fresh fears of Iran’s nuclear programme and therefore focusing, again, on nukes.

Arab states have repeatedly heralded their opposition to any kind of nuclear activity in the region.

In fact, a couple of years ahead of the 2015 NPT conference, both Bahrain’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Ghanum Fadhel Al Buainain, and Foreign Affairs Minister, Shaikh Khalid Bin Ahmed Bin Mohamed Al Khalifa, told this journalist in Manama in March 2013 that their nation – likewise all other Gulf countries – do not want to hear a word about any nuclear activities, even for peaceful purposes.

Their arguments are that even civil nuclear activities of whatever nature, have strong, negative impacts on the very lives and livelihoods of the Gulf peoples, from polluting waters and thus affecting the fish –which historically constituted an important source of living– to the risk of a nuclear accident.

The Bahraini stand is still valid and it applies to all the Gulf states, said to IPS this week a retired high governmental official. “None of us want to have to do with any atomic weapon. But you must understand our fears from both nuclear Israel and a potential nuclear Iran… We have to defend ourselves, protect our people.”

In an evident signal confirm their stand, the Bahraini capital, Manama, hosted a major anti-nuclear campaigners activity–the international exhibition “From a Culture of Violence to a Culture of Peace: Towards a World Free from Nuclear Weapons”

Organised by the Tokyo-based non-governmental civil society association Soka Gakkai International (SGI), with the support of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), together with the Inter Press Service IPS and the UN Information Centre in Manama, and promoted by the Bahraini and Japanese ministries of foreign affairs, the exhibition was held in Manama from Mar. 12-23, 2013.

“Nuclear weapons – the most inhuman and destructive of all tools of war – are at the peak of a pyramid of violence in this increasingly interdependent world,” said anti-nuclear campaigners. “The threat of atomic weapons is not in the past… It is a major crisis today.”

“This exhibition –the first ever in an Arab country – (represents) a step further toward making the human aspiration to live in a world free from nuclear weapons a reality,” SGI’s executive director for peace affairs, Hirotugu Terasaki, told this journalist.

“The very existence of these weapons –the most inhuman of all– implies a major danger,” said Terasaki, who is also the vice president of this Buddhist organisation that promotes international peace and security, with more than 12 million members all over the planet.

Asked about the argument used by nuclear powers that the possession of such weapons is a major guarantee of safety and security – the so-called “deterrence doctrine” – Terasaki said, “The world should now move beyond this myth.”

According to the exhibition’s promoters, “Security” begins with basic human needs: shelter, air to breathe, water to drink, food to eat. People need to work, to care for their health, to be protected from violence.

These—and not nuclear bombs, are exactly the basic human needs that are lacking in Iraq, Libya, Palestine, Somalia, South Sudan, Syria, Yemen… and more to come.

(INTER PRESS SERVICE)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Turkey Says "Massive Escalation" In Syria Imminent *update #280, Saudis launch strikes
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...nent-*update-280-Saudis-launch-strikes/page30

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2016/0...peace-talks-prepares-for-future-fighting.html

Syria: Russian bombing ahead of peace talks prepares for future fighting

By George Russell · Published March 02, 2016 · FoxNews.com

Video
What terror hotspots in Iraq and Syria mean for America

Despite the fragile “cessation of hostilities” over much of Syria, a steady barrage of Russian air strikes is still aimed at moderate and U.S.-supported rebel forces, further complicating desperately strained humanitarian relief efforts and preparing the way for a renewed offensive by the dictatorial regime of Bashar al-Assad, say experts keeping tabs on the air assault.

“The air strikes definitely seek to give regime forces a tactical advantage” says Genevieve Casagrande, an analyst at the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War, which monitors and confirms the Syrian attacks. “The question is when they intend to make use of it.”

The air assault is a strong indication that the Assad regime’s Russian allies do not intend to be deterred or even delayed in their military planning and battlefield preparations by the on-again, off-again peace talks between the regime and the non-radical opposition forces in Syria, which are now slated to start on March 9, two days later than originally planned.

United Nations special envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura told wire services that the delay was for “logical and technical reasons and also for the ceasefire to better settle down.”

In fact, according to Casagrande, the bombings never ceased, but instead were reduced in tempo and altered in terms of targeting. They “are continuing at a steady rate,” she told Fox News. “A lot of it is just not being talked about.”

Indeed, that is currently something akin to the official position of the U.S. State Department. Queried about the assaults, a State Department official pointed to a Monday statement by Secretary of State John Kerry, who reported, after “a couple of conversations” with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, that “we have agreed that while there have been some number of violations reported on both sides and we take them all very seriously, we do not want to litigate these in a public fashion in the press.”

Kerry added, “We want to work to eliminate them, and we have agreed on a process by which we will do that.”

So far, however, the major difference is that the Russian strikes are now taking place behind the front lines of combat between regime forces and the non-radical opposition, and thus have less visibility than waves of Russian air attacks late in February—right up to the Feb. 27 start of the “cessation”-- that indiscriminately hit civilian targets and caused tens of thousands of additional Syrian refugees to flee toward the northern Syrian border with Turkey.

The assaults “appear to be hitting rural towns along opposition supply routes” especially to the west of Aleppo, Syria’s second largest city and an increasingly encircled stronghold of opposition to the Assad regime, Casagrande told Fox News.

They “are largely aimed at logistics and communications,” Casagrande told Fox News and could “facilitate the eventual movement of regime ground forces.”

In fact, some of those movements may already be taking place. A spokesman for The Syria Campaign, a media group with ties to non-radical Syrian opposition forces, told Fox News that on-the-ground observers were charging that the air strikes were part of a deliberate strategy to quietly gain more territory.

The spokesperson said the observers claimed Russian and regime forces were “bombing roads so that they are disconnecting some parts of the liberated areas” controlled by the opposition. Meantime, the spokesman claimed that “hundreds” of regime soldiers were massing in various areas, notably moving toward the near-destroyed western provincial city of Homs and had taken control of formerly rebel areas south-west of Damascus.

In the shorter term, the attacks are crimping the movement of supplies and humanitarian assistance into Aleppo from the west, after the earlier attacks shut down major supply routes into the city from the north.

For international non-governmental organizations that deliver cross-border humanitarian aid into Syria—United Nations relief organizations inside the country work under the say-so of the Assad regime itself —the earlier round of assaults proved especially stifling.

The U.S.-based aid organization Mercy Corps, which has no links with Assad, reports that in February it could only deliver humanitarian supplies of food and emergency shelter to about 180,000 people monthly, vs. its previous average of 500,000.

While saying that the organization “needed more time before we can say the cessation of hostilities is holding,” Christine Bragale, Mercy Corps’ director of media relations, told Fox News that the group was making “daily, sometimes hourly, assessments” of the dangers posed to the relief effort.

Despite the pressure, Mercy Corps “continues to deliver humanitarian support into northern Syria,” she said, including Aleppo, where some 66,000 people are dependent on the organization’s help.

“We have seen some of our access routes exposed,” she added, and a number of Mercy Corps aid workers in Syria—who are all Syrian citizens—are themselves living with their families in refugee camps.

Overall, humanitarian aid remains drastically insufficient: “We are delivering every last piece of supplies that we can, and it’s not enough,” she said.

Moreover, she added, “Mercy Corps absolutely believes that humanitarian access cannot be used as a bargaining chip in any negotiations. We cannot use the lives of men, women and children as part of this process. The situation in Syria is morally unacceptable.”

The situation is far worse in areas of Syria where at least 100,000 Syrians, and perhaps many more, are holding on in more than a dozen besieged areas that are in the overwhelming number of cases cut off by Assad regime forces (and, in a couple of cases, by the radical jihadists of ISIS and other organizations).

In the long-besieged suburb of Moadamiyyah, outside Damascus, a local resident who calls himself Dani Qappani told Fox News that a much heralded one-time aid delivery by a United Nations convoy—one of a handful approved by the Assad regime in advance of the “cessation of hostilities”—had made a difference, at least for a time.

“People have food for one month,” he told Fox News in a long-distance interview. “But today they were supposed to bring medicine but we didn’t get it.” His town was still besieged by a combination of Assad regime forces and fighters from Hezbollah, the radical militia supported both by the Assad government and by Iran.

The nearby southern city of Daraya is still cut off completely from outside humanitarian aid, he reported, and “there have been many violations of the ceasefire by Assad in rural areas.”

Nonetheless, he added, rebels were adamant that the bombings must stop and sieges before lifted before true peace talks could start.

And one other demand remained non-negotiable: “Assad has to go.”

George Russell is editor-at-large of Fox News and can be found on Twitter: @GeorgeRussell or on Facebook.com/GeorgeRussell
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2016/0...e-isis-operative-in-iraq.html?intcmp=trending

US Special Operations troops capture ISIS operative in Iraq

By Lucas Tomlinson ·Published March 02, 2016 · FoxNews.com
Comments 695

An ISIS operative captured in Iraq by U.S. Special Operations forces will only be detained for a "short term," U.S. Central Command spokesman Col. Pat Ryder said Wednesday.

Ryder would not specify exactly how long the unidentified militant would be held, or whether substantial intelligence could be acquired during that time.

The ISIS operative was seized during a recent raid in northern Iraq, a U.S. official confirmed to Fox News on Tuesday. The operation was first reported on by CNN. A report in The New York Times described the operative as a "significant" member of the terror group.

In December, Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced that a special operations task force was headed to Iraq. Fox learned the 200-man unit, which included an assault force, intelligence cell and aviation element would be based in Irbil in northern Iraq.

In October, Army Master Sgt. Joshua Wheeler, a Delta Force Commando, was killed during a mission to rescue of dozens of mostly Kurdish prisoners held by ISIS in northern Iraq.

In May, a Delta Force raid in eastern Syria resulted in the death of an ISIS commander, Abu Sayyaf, and the detention of his wife Umm. U.S. forces hope to gather evidence about the terror group's operations from its latest captive, as it did in the case of Umm Sayyaf.

Umm Sayyaf remains held by the Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq. She was charged last month by the Justice Department with being part of a conspiracy resulting in the death of Kayla Mueller, a 26-year-old American aid worker kidnapped by ISIS.

Mueller was held as a sex slave by the Sayyafs and repeatedly raped by ISIS' self-proclaimed emir, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, while in his custody.

Mueller was “sexually abused by Baghdadi, who forced her to have sex with him,” according to a Justice Department statement.

A U.S. official told Fox News the latest so-called "kill or capture" mission follows the template of the raid that targeted the Sayyafs and will be the model for such missions going forward.

The official also said there was "no plan to make a detention center," in Iraq, adding that captured ISIS operatives would be held either by the Kurds or the Iraqi government.

Carter reiterated his desire to close the military detention center at the Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba during a Pentagon press conference Monday.

But Carter acknowledged closing the prison is currently against the law and that some prisoners are too dangerous to transfer to other counties.


Lucas Tomlinson is the Pentagon and State Department producer for Fox News Channel. You can follow him on Twitter: @LucasFoxNews
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
North Korea Launches Ballistic Missile Confirmed
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...ea-Launches-Ballistic-Missile-Confirmed/page5

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-nuclear-un-idUSKCN0W41Z2

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 3:06pm EST
Related: World, United Nations, North Korea

U.N. imposes harsh new sanctions on North Korea over its nuclear program

UNITED NATIONS | By Louis Charbonneau and Michelle Nichols

North Korea faces harsh new U.N. sanctions to starve it of money for its nuclear weapons program following a unanimous Security Council vote on Wednesday on a resolution drafted by the United States and Pyongyang's ally China.

The resolution, which dramatically expands existing sanctions, follows North Korea's latest nuclear test on Jan. 6 and a Feb. 7 rocket launch that Washington and its allies said used banned ballistic missile technology. Pyongyang said it was a peaceful satellite launch.

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power said the sanctions go further than any U.N. sanctions regime in two decades and aim to cut off funds for North Korea's nuclear and other banned weapons programs.

Two council diplomats said on condition of anonymity that the new resolution makes the North Korean sanctions regime even tougher than the Iran sanctions regime that they say led to a decision on Tehran's part to agree to an historic nuclear deal last year that led to most restrictions being lifted in January.

All cargo going to and from North Korea must now be inspected and North Korean trade representatives in Syria, Iran and Vietnam are among 16 individuals added to a U.N. blacklist, along with 12 North Korean entities.

Previously states only had to inspect such shipments if they had reasonable grounds to believe they contained illicit goods.

"Virtually all of the DPRK's (North Korea) resources are channeled into its reckless and relentless pursuit of weapons of mass destruction," Power told the council after the vote, adding that the cargo inspection provisions are "hugely significant."

She said the point of the resolution was to target the country's leadership, not its impoverished people, adding that North Korea is "a master of evasion" and would continue to try to evade the sanctions although the new measures would make that harder.

There was no immediate reaction from the North Korean U.N. mission. The official North Korean news agency KCNA said on Monday the proposed sanctions were "a wanton infringement on (North Korea's) sovereignty and grave challenge to it."

The White House said it was not clear how Pyongyang would react. The European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini welcomed the U.N. vote, saying the European Union would update the bloc's sanctions regime to include the new measures. Diplomats said that could be done as soon as Friday.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the 15-nation council's move, saying in a statement that Pyongyang "must return to full compliance with its international obligations."

North Korea has been under U.N. sanctions since 2006 because of its four nuclear tests and multiple rocket launches.

After nearly two months of bilateral negotiations that at one point involved U.S. President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, China agreed to support the unusually tough measures intended to persuade its close ally to abandon its atomic weapons program.

China's Ambassador Liu Jieyi called for a return to dialogue, saying: "Today's adoption should be a new starting point and a paving stone for political settlement of the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula."

However, he reiterated Beijing's concerns about the possible deployment of an advanced U.S. missile system in South Korea.

"At this moment all parties concerned should avoid actions that will further aggravate tension on the ground," he said. "China opposes the deployment of the THAAD anti-missile system ... because such an action harms the strategic and security interests of China and other countries of the region."

He was referring to the U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system.

Shortly after the U.N. move, the U.S. Treasury Department said it was blacklisting two entities and 10 individuals for ties to North Korea's government and its banned weapons programs, and said the State Department was also blacklisting three entities and two individuals for similar reasons.

The new U.N. sanctions close a gap in the U.N. arms embargo on Pyongyang by banning all weapons imports and exports.

The Security Council's list of explicitly banned luxury goods has been expanded to include luxury watches, aquatic recreational vehicles, snowmobiles worth more than $2,000, lead crystal items and recreational sports equipment.

There is also an unprecedented ban on the transfer to North Korea of any item that could directly contribute to the operational capabilities of its armed forces, such as trucks that could be modified for military purposes.

The new U.N. measures also blacklist 31 ships owned by North Korean shipping firm Ocean Maritime Management Company (OMM).

Added to the U.N. sanctions list was the National Aerospace Development Agency, or NADA, the body responsible for February's rocket launch.

Newly blacklisted individuals include a senior official in North Korea's long-range missile program, senior officials at NADA, officials for Tanchon Commercial Bank in Syria and Vietnam, and Korea Mining Development Trading Corporation (KOMID) representatives in Iran and Syria.

An earlier draft would have blacklisted 17 individuals but the proposed designation of a KOMID representative in Russia was dropped from the final version of the resolution.


(Additional reporting by Robin Emmott in Brussels and Susan Heavey in Washington; Editing by James Dalgleish and Diane Craft)
 

Housecarl

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http://38north.org/2016/03/aberger030216/

The New UNSC Sanctions Resolution on North Korea: A Deep Dive Assessment

By Andrea Berger
02 March 2016

UN Security Council Resolution 2270, passed on March 2, 2016, substantially shifts the multilateral sanctions regime on North Korea. It not only bolsters existing provisions, but also moves beyond sanctions that rest on determinations that a proscribed activity has taken place, such as arms-related proliferation.

The resolution seeks to ensure that Pyongyang’s latest provocations are met by efforts to shrink the number of overseas locations from which North Koreans can facilitate illicit activity, and increase the cost of doing business in those countries.

A complete assessment of the impact of the new resolution requires a deep dive into the prospects for implementation and the potential impact on North Korea. Two disclaimers are necessary. First, predicting implementation decisions by individual states at this stage is difficult, and largely rests on assessments of past behaviour. Second, the resolution’s effect will depend upon how vague concepts in the document are interpreted in practice.

North Korea’s Overseas Networks

North Korea’s official foreign presences have traditionally been essential nodes in the country’s illicit trade networks. In the past, other state-based proliferation and procurement networks have, for example, relied upon far-flung loyal diaspora communities to help facilitate their illegal activities and evade detection. Outside of China, North Korea generally does not have such established communities that it can draw upon. Instead, when generating or carrying out illicit activity, it relies to a much greater extent on deployed representatives of sanctioned entities, Embassy or trade officials or trusted foreign partners. The more locations it can base these representatives in without incurring intense scrutiny, the easier facilitating proscribed activity becomes. North Korea continues to use countries as diverse as Myanmar, Thailand, Brazil, Namibia, Vietnam, Uganda, Iran, Syria, China and Russia as bases for overseas operations of designated entities.

UNSCR 2270 takes aim at those ‘safe spaces.’ States are henceforth required to expel DPRK diplomats and associated individuals who are violating Security Council resolutions, close any offices of designated entities within their territory, and expel their representatives. If this provision is to be effective in curtailing North Korea’s overseas networks, outreach to a wide variety of states needs to occur quickly. The US and its like-minded partners should swiftly embark upon a diplomatic campaign where designated entities are known to be or suspected of being located, and demand compliance.

It will also be essential to closely monitor who North Korea is courting diplomatically in the future, as these countries pose a risk of becoming new conscious or unconscious bases for illicit North Korean operations. Namibia is one example where North Korea’s regular, and seemingly benign assistance in large-scale construction projects, has given officials who double-hat as arms traders a location from which to market goods across Southern Africa, either without the knowledge of or challenge from the Namibian government.

Realistically, however, it will be impossible to cripple North Korea’s illicit foreign networks. In the best-case scenario, a coalition of countries eager to support sanctions implementation will succeed in convincing other governments believed to be hosting North Korean designated entities (but who are unwedded to North Korea in any political, military or commercial sense) to comply with the resolution. In this scenario, diplomatic pressure and information dissemination campaigns may also help ensure that North Korean designated entities have more difficulty locating new safe territory from which to operate with cover from the host government. Intelligence gathering and sharing will also help identify any North Korean progress in finding such havens.

Even in this scenario, North Korea will continue to enjoy the protection of its more steadfast friends and those countries which actively reject or ignore sanctions obligations—Iran, Syria and Russia for example. The effect could be a consolidation of North Korean networks in countries where traditionally nonproliferation-active Member States have little realistic leverage.

In the worst case scenario, the majority of countries hosting North Korean designated entities will refuse to comply, perhaps believing (partly justifiably) that they are unlikely to face significant, concrete penalties for inaction. In some cases, if irritated by political pressure, foreign capitals may simply claim they have expelled the relevant representatives, and then avoid devoting resources to monitoring whether those designated entities reappear under a new guise or with new representatives. This dynamic would not be new. Furthermore, while this diplomatic struggle unfolds, North Korea’s designated entities will continue searching for uncharted territory to operate from. In both the best and worst case scenarios, it is clear that intelligence gathering and sharing will be key to making progress on the resolution’s implementation.

Logistical Restrictions

The introduction of significant logistical restrictions is a noteworthy feature of the resolution. States must prohibit their companies and nationals from chartering vessels, aircraft or crew services to the DPRK, and prohibit their nationals from operating DPRK vessels or using the DPRK flag,[1] unless those activities are exclusively for livelihood purposes. States are also required to ‘inspect’ all cargo going to and coming from the DPRK, cargo brokered by North Koreans or anything on North Korean-flagged vessels or aircraft.

While it will be relatively simple to police use of the DPRK flag by non-North Korean-owned vessels—curbing a fairly small stream of revenue from North Korea’s flag of convenience—provisions relating to cargo screening will be far more challenging to implement. At the moment, it is unclear what constitutes ‘inspecting’ cargo for the purposes of the resolution—a term probably deliberately left vague. Without clarification of the precise level of scrutiny expected, the inevitable effect of this provision will be widespread confusion and highly uneven implementation.

If clarified with its strongest interpretation, States whose ports see a substantial amount of North Korean trade and who opt to adhere to the letter of the resolution, will experience major burdens in screening relevant cargo. It is for that very reason that the prospects for the provision’s full implementation, especially by China, are very low. Indeed, given China’s abysmal record on implementing previous, softer cargo vigilance measures, it is difficult to envision Beijing taking systematic action to inspect North Korean cargo, however ‘inspect’ is defined. Unconfirmed reports that China has introduced a state ordinance which forbids North Korean-flagged vessels from docking in Dandong ports, based on interviews with local traders, should therefore be treated with skepticism and should not be viewed as an early indication of China’s intentions regarding the resolution.

If this prediction proves correct, the broader effect of the logistical measures contained within the resolution will be limited. As long as North Korean cargo can make it into China, it will be able to go elsewhere relatively easily. Once China can be falsely declared as the point of origin or destination of North Korean goods, those consignments will probably successfully evade most screening by other states and fall through the cracks in global sanctions implementation.

For North Korea in responding to this provision, the next steps will be to keep its flagged vessels close to home, wait and see how implementation proceeds, and then determine whether or not any special efforts are needed to get around changes that have occurred. In the unlikely event that North Korean-flagged vessels or vessels owned by the designated entity Ocean Maritime Management are systematically rejected from Chinese ports, for example, the broader task of getting goods into and out of China will become more challenging. In that situation, Pyongyang could re-flag and rename all of its vessels to conceal their national affiliation, a step it may take regardless of how China implements this provision. It appears that, already in the past few years, the share of the North Korean fleet that flies the North Korean flag has been shrinking—a trend which will likely be accelerated by this resolution.

How the US will treat any lacklustre Chinese implementation of inspection provisions is an interesting question. Under the new sanctions legislation recently passed by the US Congress, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is tasked with reporting on foreign ports that do not adequately screen North Korean cargo. If a port is deemed deficient, then the US is required to subject everything flowing between US territory and that port to increased scrutiny.[2] In practice, however, calling out Chinese ports for inadequate compliance could create more headaches for the US than for China, making it improbable that the DHS will take this step.

Coal and Mineral Sanctions

DPRK exports of coal, iron and iron ore are prohibited by the new resolution, exempting those for ‘livelihood’ purposes and unrelated to prohibited activity. How these caveats will be interpreted remains unclear, and it is probable that this language was inserted at the behest of Beijing. How can coal, iron, and iron ore exports be concretely proven to be directly linked to UNSCR violations? This distinction may have been slightly easier to make for imports to North Korea, perhaps by identifying an end-use facility that is part of the defence industrial complex, but is otherwise difficult to comprehend.

An additional caveat was also inserted by Russia to allow for coal from outside of the DPRK to be exported from Rason. While this exception may sound unusual, it likely relates to a specific deal between Mongolia, Russia and North Korea reached last year. Mongolia is set to transport its coal to Rason via Russia, with a view to selling it to the international market from there.

In practice, this provision means that China and other North Korean coal and iron importers will be able to take solace in vague language when they wish to. With caveated provisions such as these, Beijing appears to have bought itself leverage over North Korea that it previously argued (possibly disingenuously) that it did not enjoy. It is reasonable to believe that China’s agreement to UNSCR 2270—which goes far beyond the existing multilateral sanctions framework—indicates that, at minimum, it will vary its enforcement of new measures in accordance with North Korea’s own behaviour, taking action on some, but not all of the time. The most likely outcome of caveated sanctions on coal and iron trade is that there will be little systematic curbing of North Korean coal imports, but only periodic use of the measure to demonstrate displeasure with Pyongyang’s actions: an occasional pinching action.

The resolution also includes a ban on the DPRK’s exports of titanium ore, vanadium ore, rare earth minerals and gold—some of which have previously ended up in the supply chains of major multinational corporations. These measures will further curb existing and future streams that help North Korean generate hard currency, especially since they do not appear to contain Chinese-inserted caveats. This may be because it is in China’s interest to stem exports of those commodities. Recent geological studies assert that North Korea sits atop the world’s largest rare earth deposit, potentially jeopardizing China’s continued market dominance. Any foreign companies interested in North Korean rare earths will now have a strong disincentive to invest, meaning those minerals will likely stay in the ground and away from traditional Chinese customers. That could irritate Pyongyang, which has recently trumpeted the imminent expansion of its rare earths sector in the media. [3] Given the interests at play, this provision perhaps holds the greatest prospect of being implemented by China.

It is also worth noting that restrictions on exports of gold in particular could hamper North Korea’s use of that commodity as a form of payment for foreign goods and services—a method that evades the formal financial sector.[4]

Airplane Fuel Imports to North Korea

The resolution bans the export to North Korea of aviation fuel, including rocket fuel. As with other clauses, this was likely watered-down from a stronger US request for general restrictions on commercial air traffic with Pyongyang. Combined with the obligation to screen all cargo aboard Air Koryo flights, this revised measure is designed to hamper the airline’s ability to act as a means of transporting illicit cargo to and from North Korea. In practice, this measure will not affect Air China, and Russia made sure to clarify that countries will be permitted to fuel Air Koryo planes in their countries if that fuel will be used to fly to North Korea and back to the country in question. In effect, the provision therefore only requires countries to cease formal exports of airplane fuel consignments to North Korea.

As with other provisions, the primary country of interest from an implementation perspective is China, as the country accounts for most of Air Koryo’s commercial flights.[5] China is also a primary supplier of jet fuel to North Korea, having exported significant quantities in 2015. Yet despite its relevance as a transit point for North Korean air freight and previous UN Security Council resolutions compelling vigilance on Air Koryo’s cargo, China has not traditionally cooperated in scrutinizing those flights. If Beijing’s attitude has not changed in this respect, any cessation of formal airplane fuel exports will matter little. North Korean passenger flights will be able to fuel in the cities they fly into. Where Air Koryo planes are chartered, their journeys are usually to countries who are broadly friendly to North Korea with little regard for UN sanctions.

Financial Barriers

A raft of new financial restrictions are outlined in the resolution. States are obliged to close any existing North Korean financial institution presence on their territories. They must also ensure that financial institutions under their jurisdiction do not establish new joint ventures, take an ownership interest in DPRK banks, or have correspondent relationships[6] with DPRK banks unless with prior Sanctions Committee approval (which in most cases will probably not be given). Furthermore, they must ensure no such relationships, links or presences form in future. In short, if robustly implemented (a big ‘if’), these measures would further restrict North Korea’s direct and indirect overseas connectivity. China is not the only significant variable in this equation. Amongst others, Russia and Vietnam would also be affected, and they are unlikely to be enthusiastic adherents to these blunt requirements.

On the reverse side of the picture—the activities of foreign financial institutions inside the DPRK—the resolution is heavily caveated. While States must ensure that financial institutions under their jurisdiction do not henceforth establish new relationships or ventures in North Korea, they are allowed to keep open existing branches, subsidiaries or accounts there unless the State has ‘credible information’ that provides ‘reasonable grounds’ that those relationships are being used for prohibited activity.

In other words, Chinese financial institutions have existing representations and/or accounts in Pyongyang that they have no intention of closing. The enduring presence of foreign financial institutions in North Korea leaves the country with a channel for financing. International pressure will be increased on those banks and their home governments to make sure they are appropriately vigilant for use of that channel for illicit purposes.

North Korea’s approach to these obstacles will be consistent: keep assets offshore in accounts that conceal North Korean ownership, and use those assets to facilitate international transactions. Acknowledging this work-around, UNSCR 2270 also requires states to freeze the assets of any DPRK government- or party-linked entity or individual that ‘the State determines’ are associated with the DPRK’s nuclear and missile programs or other prohibited activities. Even then, North Korea’s wealth of experience in hiding those assets and their owners makes it improbable that these provisions will change the status quo to the extent that North Korea’s ability to work around other financial barriers introduced by the resolution is diminished.

The Bottom Line

The largest variable in its success for any UN Security Council resolution is always the breadth of implementation. UNSCR 2270 is no exception, as it makes the sanctions compliance task more complex than ever. In some areas, such as restrictions on rare earth exports from North Korea, major players have strong incentives to enforce the new provisions. Heavy caveating of other provisions, such as existing financial relationships in North Korea and coal exports, indicates that issues with competing interpretations and variable enforcement are likely to arise. In respect to provisions designed to constrain North Korea’s international networks, the past behaviour of relevant states indicates that demands for compliance may be ignored or half-heartedly responded to. Even in best-case scenarios, North Korea’s ‘safe spaces’ may simply be distilled down to the territories of persistently uncooperative governments.

It is difficult to foresee broad and consistent implementation of the new resolution, especially from players such as China, to create barriers that North Korea cannot find its way around. Pyongyang will continue to use its sanctions evasion experience to keep substantial assets hidden offshore for the purpose of facilitating legal and illegal trade deals, for example. And it will probably embark upon a campaign to re-flag and re-name what remains of the North Korean-flagged fleet. However, an important effect of the new resolution is that all of these initiatives require time, energy and resources, which are limited in the North Korean context.

Pyongyang will therefore probably feel a pinch in those places where China chooses to act systematically, where it cannot adapt quickly, or where limited resources do not permit all issues to be addressed simultaneously. The North will be irritated by future opportunities that the resolution now denies it, such as rare earth exports and increased gold trade. Whether those pressures are substantial enough to change decision-making calculations in Pyongyang over the merits of any or all of its illicit pursuits or in terms of its continued pursuit of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles remains to be seen. But without participation from a wide range of states, we may never find out.


————————————–

[1] North Korea’s flag continues to be used as one of convenience. This author’s investigations suggest that companies in territories as diverse as the UAE and Pakistan have flagged their ships under the North Korean flag. In 2014, a North Korean-flagged oil tanker evaded a Libyan naval blockade and was subsequently stopped by US marines. Pyongyang later announced that it had nothing to do with the incident and had only lent its flag for a six month period. ‘North Korea disowns Libya oil tanker,’ BBC News, March 13, 2014, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-26558959.

[2] H.R. 757, North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act of 2016, signed into law on February 18, 2016, https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-114hr757enr/pdf/BILLS-114hr757enr.pdf.

[3] Pyongyang has not stopped talking about the discovery since, though some experts have shed doubt on the original study. See Leo Byrne, ‘Experts Skeptical of North Korea’s Rare Earth Mineral Claims,’ NK News, March 26, 2015, https://www.nknews.org/2015/03/experts-skeptical-of-north-koreas-rare-earth-mineral-claims/.

[4] The latest known case of North Korean payment with gold was only one year ago, when the first secretary for commercial affairs at the North Korean Embassy in Bangladesh, was caught importing 27 kilograms of gold via Singapore, likely intended as payment for a major deal elsewhere. “Bangladesh orders N Korean envoy out for smuggling gold,” Al Jazeera, March 9, 2015, http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/...ean-envoy-smuggling-gold-150309165605145.html.

[5] Air Koryo also flies to countries such as Russia and Kuwait, though those governments are equally unlikely to robustly implement UN restrictions on North Korean aircraft.

[6] The correspondent relationship and branch/office-opening provisions are significant for political reasons. While the US may eventually gain the legal ability to pursue foreign financial institutions for contributing to, or not sufficiently preventing, illicit North Korean activity, the political headaches of acting against Chinese or Russian banks unilaterally could have been so immense as to be self-deterring. With the new UN resolution, China and Russia have voluntarily acquiesced to greater restrictions on the interactions between their financial sectors and North Korea’s. That strengthens the US argument when firing future warning shots over any enduring financial relationships, before concluding that unilateral measures drawing upon secondary sanctions are a necessary course of action.


Found in section: WMD

Tags: andrea berger, arms, aviation fuel, china, economic sanctions, economy, flags of convenience, gold, inspections, interdictions, mining, missiles, nuclear, ore, rare earths, russia, sanctions, security council, supply chain, United Nations, unsc, UNSC 2270

Previous Topic: UN Security Council’s New Sanctions on the DPRK
 

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http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...s-calais-migrant-camp-called-jungle/81217156/

Chaos, riots as France dismantles Calais migrant camp called the 'Jungle'

Aida Alami, Special for USA TODAY 4:29 p.m. EST March 2, 2016
Comments 10

CALAIS, France — Rahmanjan Safy scrambled to salvage anything valuable from the demolished tents and makeshift shelters at this Calais migrant camp Wednesday, even as riot police and bulldozers destroyed the site.

Food, clothing, spoons — he picked up everything he could find.

Safy, 25, from Jalalabad, Afghanistan, has been in France since 2009. He once lived in this camp but now works with an organization that helps the migrants and refugees. Driving his big white truck, he moved these precious commodities to a section of the camp still intact, so people could still use them.

“I once was in the same situation as them,” he said. “I never forgot. I want to help them.”

A judge gave the green light last week for the French government to tear down part of the Calais “Jungle,” as the camp is commonly called, but riots broke out this week amid the resulting chaos.


USA TODAY

Migrants in Calais protest over demolitions


Police and bulldozers began pushing migrants out of tents and temporary shelters Monday, tearing apart the ad hoc camp that houses an estimated 6,000 people.

Camp residents fought back, starting fires and attacking police with rocks. The situation Wednesday was calmer, if not less tense. Confusion, uncertainty and sorrow still hang over the camp and the people who have no place to go.


An Iranian migrant with sewn lips, holds a placard
An Iranian migrant with sewn lips, holds a placard reading, "Where is your democracy? Where is our freedom?", as he demonstrates during the demolition of the southern part of the so-called "Jungle" migrant camp in Calais, France, on March 2, 2016. (Photo: Philippe Huguen, AFP/Getty Images)


Ahmed Salah from Sudan stood amid trash and debris, mourning the loss of his home of seven months. He says he wants to leave but can't.

“I would go anywhere, not just to England," he said about wanting to cross the English Channel to the United Kingdom. "I don’t want to stay in France. They don’t respect their own laws.”

The French government initially announced its plan to dismantle the southern part of the camp — closer to the highway — in early February. Migrants in that section would attempt to jump on trucks crossing through the Chunnel, despite barbed wire set up to protect the road.

The rest of the camp is being left alone — for the moment.

French authorities defended their move to dismantle part of the Calais camp, while also saying France remains open to refugees.

“Our policy is to support those who are in vulnerable situations,” Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said before the dismantling operation began. “The state will continue its strategy of accompanying migrants toward a humanitarian solution that lives up to the values of our country and our tradition of welcoming those who seek asylum in France.”

But volunteers described how people rushed to collect their few belongings in a short amount of time and tried to salvage parts of their shelters for protection against the cold weather.

“They gave people one hour to assemble their belongings,” said Christian Salome, founder and head of L’Auberge Des Migrants, the main organization that distributes food and clothes at the Calais camp. "It is sad and inhumane to expel people from their homes in the winter and by destroying their shelters."


Workers demolish a shelter in the makeshift migrant
Workers demolish a shelter in the makeshift migrant camp, the "Jungle.", in Calais, France, on March 2. 2016. (Photo: Yoan Valat, European Pressphoto Agency)


Other volunteers call the entire situation shameful.

“It is a political decision not to address this issue,” said Paul Bejannin, 30, a volunteer from Paris. “France has the means to accommodate everyone. And the only state presence we ever see here is the riot police.”

Many fear that with the conflicts intensifying in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, the wave of refugees will be even greater this year.

“The only way to solve this is to move the UK to another place that doesn’t face Calais,” said Christophe Ruggia, an award-winning French director who mobilized dozens of artists to protest the country’s resistance to welcoming war refugees. “They are constantly reacting without a long-term vision.”

In downtown Calais, just a few miles from the camp, outrage over the situation has been growing for more than a year. Business owners like Jean Claude Burei, who has a restaurant in town, want the government to find a long-term solution because the bad publicity over the camp keeps tourists away.

“The location of the camp has been a disaster for the city,” he said. “Some of these migrants are escaping war, but others have no reason to be here. ... We also need to expel those who create trouble, like smugglers who take advantage of people’s misery.”

French President François Hollande and British Prime Minister David Cameron will meet Thursday in Amiens, France, to discuss the ongoing migrant crisis ahead of next week's EU summit on the issue.

Hundreds of British volunteers at the Calais Jungle, like Malcom Mitchel, 69, do what they can.

“The 6,000 here is smaller than a crowd that goes to a (soccer) match,” he said. “There are a lot of people with potential here — doctors, engineers. We should open borders and let everybody in the United Kingdom.”

Amine Khan, 31, from northern Afghanistan, helplessly watched the bulldozers Wednesday and said his "home" will likely be next.

“I have no choice, I don’t know where I will go,” he said. "I will just keep trying to reach England.”
 

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...eepening-military-ties-and-china-is-watching/

Checkpoint

The U.S. and India are deepening military ties — and China is watching

By Dan Lamothe March 2 at 2:57 PM

The U.S. military’s top officer in the Pacific urged Indian officials Wednesday to pursue even closer military ties with the United States — part of a broader effort by the Pentagon to strengthen a relatively new partnership in the region, as China expands its military footprint in ways that alarm its neighbors.

Adm. Harry Harris, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, said that expanded cooperation between the United States and India will not only be critical to Washington’s re-balance toward the Pacific, but “will arguably be the defining partnership for America in the 21st century.” He said he shared a vision with U.S. Ambassador to India Richard Verma that Indian and U.S. naval vessels will soon steam together “as we work together to maintain freedom of the seas for all nations.”

The comments came as India has moved to strengthen partnerships not only with the United States, but with Australia, Japan and other U.S. allies in the region. India also has voiced opposition to some of China’s actions in the East and South China seas, where Beijing has attempted to assert its sovereignty.

“This is ambition in action,” Harris said, speaking at the Raisina Dialogue, a conference in New Delhi focused on geopolitics and geo-economics. “It ensures the vision of our country’s leaders by strengthening military-to-military collaboration and in the process, it will improve the security and prosperity of the entire region.”

[How China is testing Obama as it expands its influence in Southeast Asia]

Harris’s comments also came as the Obama administration’s ability to curb China’s ambitions have been called into question by analysts. China has installed military radar, HQ-9 surface-to-air missiles and fighter jets on several atolls in the South China Sea in recent months. Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter and other U.S. officials have said repeatedly that China’s rise is not a problem, but the way it is exercising its power can be.

Carter and Frank Kendall, undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics, are expected to visit India next month as the two countries continue to deeper relations. It will mark Carter’s second trip to India in a year, and comes after the Navy’s top officer, Adm. John Richardson, visited last month along with the heads of other navies, including China’s, Russia’s and Iran’s.

Harris did not mention China directly in his latest remarks, but clearly seemed to call the country out.

“While some countries seek to bully smaller nations through intimidation and coercion, I note with admiration India’s example of peaceful resolution of disputes with your neighbors in the waters of the Indian Ocean,” Harris said. “India, indeed, stands like a beacon on a hill, building a future on the power of ideas… not on castles of sand that threaten the rules-based architecture that has served us all so very well.”


A satellite image released by the Asian Maritime Transparency Initiative at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International Studies shows construction of possible radar tower facilities in the Spratly Islands in the disputed South China Sea in this image released on February 23, 2016. REUTERS/CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe/Handout via Reuters

One of the great concerns about the South China Sea is whether China will seek to cut off or control international navigation on water and in airspace. The United States has carried out two so-called “freedom of navigation” exercises in the region in recent months, sending Navy destroyers near Chinese claimed islands and saying the missions demonstrate that free passage is still open to all nations.

Harris touched on the issue Wednesday, saying India, Japan, Australia, the United States and other like-minded nations can operate “anywhere on the high seas and airspace above them” outside of recognized territorial areas. China has rebuked the recent U.S. freedom of navigation exercises as provocative.

“The idea of safeguarding freedom of the seas and access to international waters and airspace is not something new for us to ponder – this is a principle based upon the international, rules-based global order that has served this region so well,” Harris said. “And for decades, the United States has conducted freedom of navigation patrols – or FONOPs – without incident. No nation should perceive FONOPs as a threat.”

[U.S. Navy to China: We’ll sail our ships past your man-made islands anytime we want]

Adm. Scott Swift, the senior officer for the Navy’s Pacific Fleet, said in a phone interview Friday that China’s direction has created a “general sense of angst” among other nations in the Pacific region. But he added that it isn’t just the South China Sea where concerns are being raised.

“That behavior and activity can be described as an arc,” Swift said. “We’re not sure where that arc is going to terminate… but there is a strategic plan that is being implemented.”

The United States has sought to counter that arc by deploying ships, aircraft in and troops in new locations and by strengthening ties with countries in the region. While many of the partnerships Washington has relied on there are decades old, the relationship with India — formerly a non-aligned power in the Cold War that had warm relations with the Soviet Union — has changed significantly in the last few years. Carter and Indian Defense Minister Manohar Parrikar reached an agreement late last that calls for a series of joint military exercises this year.

“This kind of progress is, frankly, stunning,” Harris said Wednesday. “We went from rarely talking only a few years ago to not only talking together, but doing together. Skepticism, suspicion, and doubt on both sides have been replaced by cooperation, dialogue, and trust.”

Swift said there is also a desire to increase the number of amphibious ships he has in the region by one or two, which would allow Marines and sailors to train more with other nations in the region. They’d likely transport Marines who are based in Darwin, Australia, where they have been based on a rotational basis since 2013. The deployment prompted China to accuse the United States of escalating military tensions.

India also is expected to participate in the Navy’s biannual Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise in and around Hawaii beginning in June. China was invited for the first time in 2014, and is expected to participate again this year again with more than dozen other countries.

Swift said there are benefits to having China involved, and that he and Richardson, the Navy’s chief of naval operations, remain advocate of its participation.

“I think it’s so easy to judge because it’s so hard to understand what we get out of RIMPAC is a much deeper understanding not just of operating together, but an understanding of… that sense of angst that is here in the theater because of a lack of transparency,” Swift said. “I think we have a much higher probability of understanding what Chinese goals are by interacting with their sailors on a regular basis as we do throughout RIMPAC.”


Dan Lamothe covers national security for The Washington Post and anchors its military blog, Checkpoint.
 

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US proposes reviving naval coalition to balance China’s expansion

Published March 2, 2016 - 10:48am

Updated: March 2, 2016 - 10:48am
By ELLEN BARRY NYTimes News Service

NEW DELHI — The chief of the U.S. Pacific Command, Adm. Harry B. Harris Jr., on Wednesday proposed reviving an informal strategic coalition made up of the navies of Japan, Australia, India and the United States, an experiment that collapsed a decade ago because of diplomatic protests from China.

The proposal was the latest in a series of U.S. overtures to India, a country wary of forming strategic alliances, to become part of a network of naval powers that would balance China’s maritime expansion.

The U.S. ambassador to India, Richard R. Verma, expressed hope in a speech that “in the near future” joint patrols by navy vessels from India and the United States “will be a common and welcome sight throughout Indo-Pacific water.”

And Harris told a congressional committee last week that the United States was close, after 10 years of demurral from the Indian side, to concluding a logistics agreement that would allow the two countries’ militaries to easily use each other’s facilities for refueling and repairs.

Although he did not specifically mention China on Wednesday, Harris spoke of “a potential dark age” in which powerful countries would “bully smaller countries through intimidation and coercion,” and made the case that a broad naval collaboration was the best way to avert it.

“Exercising together will lead to operating together,” he said, before meetings with his Indian counterpart. “By being ambitious, India, Japan, Australia and the United States and so many like-minded nations can aspire to patrol together anywhere international law allows.”

India reacted furiously in 2014 when a Chinese People’s Liberation Army submarine docked in the Sri Lankan port of Colombo and has warily watched the expansion of one of President Xi Jinping’s priority projects, a maritime “silk road” with major ports in Pakistan and Bangladesh. When President Barack Obama visited India last year, the two countries issued a joint statement on “the Asia-Pacific and Indian Ocean region,” something India had refused to do in the past.

Still, some of the U.S. proposals smack of wishful thinking. India has not, to date, shown interest in carrying out joint patrols with the United States, even under the more neutral auspices of counterpiracy operations.

Officials here rebutted a Reuters report last month in which a U.S. official suggested India might participate in joint patrols in the South China Sea, something not even treaty allies like Australia or Japan have agreed to.

“The last thing India wants to do is accidentally make itself into a front-line player in the South China Sea,” said Nitin A. Gokhale, a security analyst, adding that “the best U.S.-aligned players can expect” is for India to remain active in regional forums, and shore up smaller navies like those of Vietnam and the Philippines.

“I don’t think India will be a front-line state,” he said.

Harris’ proposal of a quadrilateral security grouping, given at a forum hosted by the Observer Research Foundation, is certain to capture Beijing’s attention. It did the same in 2007, when Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan introduced the idea.

But Chinese analysts viewed the grouping as hostile; one called it a “mini-NATO.” Even before the four countries convened for their first joint meeting, China had sent formal diplomatic protests to Washington, New Delhi, Canberra and Tokyo. At a summit meeting with China less than two years later, Australia announced that it was withdrawing from the quadrilateral arrangement.

Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India’s navy has embarked on the creation of a web of bilateral and trilateral agreements, which serve the same purpose but are less likely to be “caricatured” by China as a containment strategy, said Rory Medcalf, the head of the National Security College at the Australian National University. He added, however, that growing cooperation with the United States had forced China to take India more seriously.

Shen Dingli, a professor of international relations at Fudan University in Shanghai, dismissed the idea that the grouping could be revived and said that India would not join such a network for fear of Chinese retaliation.

“China actually has many ways to hurt India,” he said. “China could send an aircraft carrier to the Gwadar port in Pakistan. China had turned down the Pakistan offer to have military stationed in the country. If India forces China to do that, of course we can put a navy at your doorstep.”
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-idUSKCN0W41VO

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 1:12pm EST
Related: World

Car bombing against Syrian rebels in southern province Quneitra kills 18: monitor

BEIRUT

Eighteen fighters were killed in a car bomb blast that hit a Syrian insurgent group in the southern province of Quneitra on Wednesday, monitors reported, and a rebel source said the attack was likely carried out by hardline Islamists.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said the explosion occurred in the village of al-Isha, targeting a base belonging to Jabhat Thuwwar Souria, a Free Syrian Army group.

Issam al-Rayyes, spokesman for the Southern Front of the Free Syrian Army, said 11 people had been killed in the blast, including the Front's commander, known as Abu Hamza al-Naimi.

Rayyes said it was not clear who was behind the attack.

Suhaib al-Ruhail, a spokesman for the Alwiyat al-Furqan group which operates in the area, said it was most likely carried out by "Daesh sleeper cells", a reference to Islamic State insurgents. He gave a lower initial death toll of 10 people.

The incident did not immediately appear to be related to the current cessation of hostilities between the Syrian government and its allies and non-jihadist insurgent groups.


(Reporting by John Davison in Beirut and Suleiman Al-Khalidi in Amman; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
 

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South China Sea Islands: China Presses Its Maritime Luck, Blocks Access To Fishing Lanes
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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-Maritime-Luck-Blocks-Access-To-Fishing-Lanes

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World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 3:39pm EST
Related: World, China, South China Sea

Philippine officials say China blocked access to disputed South China Sea atoll

MANILA | By Manuel Mogato


China sent several ships to a disputed atoll in the South China Sea, preventing Filipino fishermen from accessing traditional fishing grounds and raising tensions in the volatile region, Philippine officials said on Wednesday.

China had sent as many as seven ships to Quirino Atoll, also known as Jackson Atoll, in recent weeks, said Eugenio Bito-onon Jr, the mayor of nearby Pagasa Island in the Spratly Islands.

The Spratlys are the most contested archipelago in the South China Sea, a resource-rich region and critical shipping lane linking North Asia to Europe, South Asia and the Middle East.

"This is very alarming, Quirino is on our path when we travel from Palawan to Pagasa. It is halfway and we normally stop there to rest," Bito-onon told Reuters.

"I feel something different. The Chinese are trying to choke us by putting an imaginary checkpoint there. It is a clear violation of our right to travel, impeding freedom of navigation," he said.

In Beijing, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said China's Ministry of Transport had sent vessels to tow a grounded foreign ship and they had since left the surrounding waters.

"To guarantee safety of navigation and of work conditions, China urged fishing vessels near the site to leave," Hong said, adding that China had indisputable sovereignty over the atoll.

The Philippines Foreign Ministry said Chinese coast guard vessels had been seen at the atoll two weeks ago but were not in the area on Wednesday.

"The Department is monitoring reports on the situation on the ground and reiterates its call for China to exercise self-restraint from the conduct of activities that could complicate or escalate disputes in the South China Sea and affect peace and stability in the region," the ministry said in a statement.


Related Coverage
› U.S. says does not want China use navy to intimidate fishing vessels


TENSIONS ON THE RISE

Earlier, the Philippine military said it was looking into the situation around Jackson Atoll, where a Chinese warship allegedly fired warning shots at Filipino fishermen in 2011.

"We know there are Chinese ships moving around the Spratly area," spokesman Brigadier-General Restituto Padilla told Reuters. "There are also ships around Second Thomas Shoal, so we want to make sure if the presence is permanent."

A spokesman for the U.S. State Department said it was trying to confirm the latest reported incident.

Mark Toner told a regular news briefing that the United States, a treaty ally of the Philippines that has repeatedly expressed concerns about Beijing's methods in pursuit of maritime claims, did not want to China using its ships "to intimidate ... fishing vessels in that region."

Second Thomas Shoal is where the Philippine navy has been occupying and reinforcing a rusting ship it ran aground in 1999 to bolster its claims to the disputed reef.

A military source from Palawan said a surveillance plane had seen four to five ships in the vicinity of Jackson Atoll last week.

"There are no indications China will build structures or develop it into an island," said the source, who was not authorized to speak to the media about the South China Sea.

The Philippines Star newspaper, which earlier reported the story, quoted an unidentified fisherman as saying Chinese boats chased them away when they tried to enter the area last week.

Along with China and the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims on the waters, through which about $5 trillion in trade is shipped every year.

Tensions have been building recently, with the United States and others expressing concerns about China's land reclamation in the Spratly Islands and deployment of surface-to-air missiles and fighter jets in the Paracel Islands.

U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter warned China on Tuesday against what he called "aggressive" actions in the region, saying there would be "specific consequences" to militarization of the South China Sea.

In response, Hong urged Washington on Wednesday to "stop exaggerating and sensationalizing" the issue.

For its part, Beijing has been angered by "freedom of navigation" air and sea patrols the United States has conducted near the islands it claims in the South China Sea and says it needs military facilities for its self defense.


(Additional reporting by Michael Martina and Adam Rose in Beijing and David Brunnstrom in Washington; Writing by Lincoln Feast and John Chalmers; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Peter Cooney)
 
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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mexico-violence-idUSKCN0W42NK

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 3:41pm EST
Related: World, Mexico

Rights group decries 'crisis of violence and impunity' in Mexico

MEXICO CITY

Too many crimes, including torture, disappearances and killings, go uninvestigated in Mexico, which is suffering a "serious crisis of violence and impunity," the Inter-American Human Rights Commission (IACHR) said on Wednesday.

In a new report, the IACHR highlighted repeated failures to get to the bottom of some 27,000 disappearances registered in Mexico as of 2015, as well abuses of power by police and the armed forces in the fight against the country's drug gangs.

The report, which also acknowledged that Mexico has made progress on judicial reforms, followed a government announcement this week about the deaths of five young Mexicans targeted by suspected gang henchmen.

Their remains were ground up after they were mistaken for members of a rival cartel in the eastern state of Veracruz.

The Mexican government criticized the IACHR report, arguing it did not reflect the "general situation" in the country.

IACHR experts last year condemned the government's account of the 2014 disappearance of 43 trainee teachers in the southwestern city of Iguala, a crime that sparked outrage and battered President Enrique Pena Nieto's reputation.

Pena Nieto has pledged to tackle longstanding failings of the Mexican justice system, but the IACHR report said "the state's response is still insufficient to deal with this serious crisis of violence and impunity."

"Unfortunately, there's a gap between what the law says and the reality. Somebody needs to take responsibility for changing the practices," said IACHR commissioner James Cavallaro, adding the commission was shocked by the impunity it found in Mexico.

"It's like there was no interest in looking for the perpetrators and solving the crimes," he said.

In a statement, the government denied there was a "human rights crisis" in Mexico. It said the report was based on premises and assessments the administration did not agree with.

Furthermore, the government argued the IACHR's findings were not objective or well founded.

"The Mexican state is constantly working to deal with the causes and consequences of violence in the country caused by crime, to guarantee security, to protect, promote, respect and guarantee human rights and improve access to justice," it said.

More than 120,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence in Mexico since former President Felipe Calderon sent in the army to take on the gangs in late 2006.

As the gangs fragmented, many increasingly focused on extortion, kidnapping and human trafficking.


(Reporting by Anahi Rama; Editing by Tom Brown)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-iraq-biden-idUSKCN0W42IK

Politics | Wed Mar 2, 2016 2:36pm EST
Related: World, Election 2016, Politics

Biden, Iraq's Abadi discuss military, financial support in call: White House

WASHINGTON

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden spoke with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on Wednesday to discuss military assistance requested by Iraq to fight Islamic State militants, the White House said.

Biden also pledged U.S. support for Iraq's efforts to stabilize its economy, and said the United States would work with G7 nations and others to make sure Iraq has financial resources to fight Islamic State, the White House said in a statement.


(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Susan Heavey)
 

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World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 1:32pm EST
Related: World, Africa

Zambian opposition leader arrested over illegal militia drills

LUSAKA


A leader of Zambia's official opposition party was arrested on Wednesday on suspicion of conducting drills of party supporters to become an illegal militia, police said on Wednesday.

Last week President Edgar Lungu accused political opponents of training a militia group to cause violence during elections. They denied the accusation.

Geoffrey Mwamba, vice president of the United Party for National Development, was released soon after his arrest and will appear in court on March 10, police spokeswoman Charity Chanda said.

"He has been charged with illegal drilling," Chanda said.

The offense carries a maximum penalty of seven years in prison, according to George Chisanga, chief of the southern African country's Law Association.

Police last week said they had arrested 21 United Party for National Development supporters found training in a gym on Mwamba's business premises, some with weapons like machetes and with live ammunition.

United Party for National Development President Hakainde Hichilema, who lost narrowly to Lungu in the last election, said Mwamba's arrest was an improper move to intimidate the opposition.


(Reporting by Chris Mfula; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mali-attacks-idUSKCN0W42G2

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 2:23pm EST
Related: World, Spain, Africa, Mali

Spanish al Qaeda commander killed by French forces in Mali: sources

DAKAR

French forces killed a Spaniard working as an al Qaeda commander in northern Mali during a military operation against the group this week, a Spanish intelligence firm and security sources said.

Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), a group that emerged from Algeria's civil war, has stepped up a regional insurgency in West Africa, claiming two hotel attacks in Mali and Burkina Faso's capitals since November that killed at least 50 people.

U.S. Africa Command calls it the world's "most enduring" extremist group and a U.S. commander warned last month it could strengthen further.

"The death of (Abu al-Nur al-Andalusi) happened during an attack by French forces on a meeting of al Qaeda members in northern Mali," AICS, a Spain-based intelligence company said in a statement sent to Reuters on Wednesday, citing local sources.

The firm's CEO Salvador Burguet described al-Nur as a 35-year-old from Melilla, an autonomous Spanish enclave in north Africa. For at least the past year he has been leading a Katiba, or brigade, made up of around 25 fighters in the desert area north of Timbuktu, Burguet said.

Two other security officials in Mali confirmed al-Nur's death, adding two French operations were made in the Gao and Timbuktu regions earlier this week. It was not clear how many other militants were killed.

Spain's Foreign Ministry said they did not have information on the case and French defense officials declined to comment.

Al-Nur has been involved in a number of attacks against the U.N. peacekeeping force in the country, known as MINUSMA.

An AQIM video in September showed a smiling al-Nur, wearing sun-glasses, encouraging others to join militants in Mali in Spanish, according to a video released by the SITE global intelligence agency.

He then boards a truck with a group of fighters to ambush a U.N. vehicle and begins firing bullets into an apparently lifeless pile of bodies.

The U.N. said at least six Burkinabe soldiers were killed in that attack.

Separately, MINUSMA said six peacekeepers were wounded on Tuesday when their vehicle hit a landmine in northern Mali.

French forces intervened in northern Mali in 2013 to drive out Islamic militants from urban centers but scattered bands of fighters remain in desert areas.

France is the largest Western power involved in fighting insurgents in the arid Sahel region, with around 3,500 troops based there.


(Reporting by Emma Farge; Additional reporting by Paul Day in Madrid, Adama Diarra in Bamako and Marine Pennetier in Paris; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-turkey-erdogan-lawsuit-idUSKCN0W42ES

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 1:35pm EST
Related: World, Turkey

Nearly 2,000 legal cases opened for insulting Turkey's Erdogan

ANKARA

Turkish prosecutors have opened nearly 2,000 cases against people for insulting Tayyip Erdogan since he became Turkey's president 18 months ago, the justice minister said on Wednesday.

Insulting the president is a crime in Turkey punishable by up to four years in jail, but the law has previously been invoked only rarely. Critics accuse Erdogan of intolerance and say he is using the law to stifle dissent.

Those who have faced trial for insulting Erdogan include journalists, cartoonists, academics and even schoolchildren.

"The justice ministry has allowed 1,845 cases on charges of insulting Erdogan to go ahead," Bekir Bozdag said, responding to questions in parliament.

"I am unable to read the shameful insults made against our president. I start to blush," said Bozdag, who is from Erdogan's ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party.

Last month, a Turkish man filed a criminal complaint against his wife for insulting Erdogan. It is the first known case where somebody has faced legal action for comments made about Erdogan in the privacy of their own home.

Erdogan became president in 2014 after serving as prime minister for more than a decade. He is now trying to reshape Turkey's constitution to boost the powers of the president, until now a largely ceremonial role.


(Reporting by Ece Toksabay; Editing by Gareth Jones)

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World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 9:05am EST
Related: World

Turkish PM says pro-Kurdish lawmakers seek to drag Turkey into chaos

ANKARA

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Wednesday lawmakers from the opposition Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), which has Kurdish origins, had sought to collaborate with "terrorists" and drag Turkey into chaos.

President Tayyip Erdogan backs legal action against members of the HDP, parliament's third-biggest party, whom he accuses of being an extension of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which the government lists as a terrorist organization. The HDP denies this.

Davutoglu also told a news conference there are plans to make it easier for civilians to leave areas under curfew in the mainly Kurdish southeast, where hundreds have died since PKK militants and the state resumed hostilities after the collapse of a ceasefire in July, and for militants to surrender.


(Reporting by Ercan Gurses and Ayla Jean Yackley in Istanbul, writing by Dasha Afanasieva)
 
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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-jordan-militants-idUSKCN0W40QA

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 12:49pm EST
Related: World

Jordan says foils Islamic State plot to attack civilian, military targets

AMMAN | By Suleiman Al-Khalidi

Jordan's security services said on Wednesday they had thwarted a plot by sleeper cells of Islamic State militants to blow up civilian and military targets in the U.S.-allied Arab kingdom.

One of Jordan's biggest security operations in years tracked down militants with suicide bomb belts to a hideout in the northern city of Irbid near the Syrian border, according to a statement carried by the state news agency Petra.

Seven militants were killed in clashes that began on Tuesday night and lasted until dawn and a police officer was also killed, it said. Security forces seized automatic weapons, munitions and explosives from the Islamic State cell.

"After diligent and detailed intelligence gathering the intelligence department was able soon to thwart a criminal and destructive plot linked by the terrorist Daesh group aimed at destabilizing national security," the statement said, using the pejorative Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

No details were given on the targets or the plot.

Two security sources said dozens of special forces had been involved in the operation and that the militants had been holed up near a Palestinian refugee camp in the center of Irbid.

Militants who refused to surrender engaged in heavy exchanges of fire with special forces that also injured five policemen, the security services statement said. "They showed heavy resistance with automatic weapons and so the security forces dealt with the situation with the necessary force."

King Abdullah, a key Middle East ally of Western powers against Islamist militancy who has also safeguarded Jordan's peace treaty with Israel, has been among the most vocal leaders in the region in warning of threats posed by Islamic State, which has seized swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq.

The monarch, in ceremonial military attire, attended the funeral of the dead police officer along with several thousand people near the city of Zarqa.


BATTLING ISLAMIC STATE

Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour told lawmakers that the security operation had fully achieved its goals, saying the targeted "terrorist group" had forged organizational ties with Islamic State in an attempt to destabilize Jordan.

Jordan has tried and sentenced dozens of suspected militant, mostly Jordanians returning from neighboring Syria's civil war. Some of them were recruited by Syria's al Qaeda offshoot Nusra Front or by Islamic State insurgents.

"We live in a neighborhood that is full of terrorist organizations ... All of our effort is directed towards stopping these terrorist organizations from attacking us and undermining the security of our country," government spokesman Mohammad al-Momani told Reuters.

Intensifying its crackdown on followers of radical Islamist groups since last year, Jordan has also arrested dozens of sympathizers who show support for such groups on social media.

International rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, have accused Jordan of using the crackdown on Islamist militants as an excuse for harsher curbs on freedom of speech by civil activists and dissidents.

Jordan's military has also conducted some raids on Islamic State hideouts in Syria. Since Syria's war erupted in 2011, hundreds of Jordanians have joined Sunni Muslim militant groups fighting to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.

Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have meanwhile fled across the border and are now living in Jordan, some in refugee camps.

Jordan has long been vigilant about the risk of militant attacks. During the U.S. occupation of neighboring Iraq, Jordan suffered bombings of Amman hotels by al Qaeda-linked militants.


(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-ukraine-crisis-russia-savchenko-idUSKCN0W41RR

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 9:26am EST
Related: World

Russian prosecutor demands 23 years in jail for female Ukrainian pilot

MOSCOW

A prosecutor asked a Russian court on Wednesday to jail Ukrainian military pilot Nadezhda Savchenko for 23 years, saying she was guilty of complicity in killing two Russian journalists reporting on the fighting in east Ukraine, Russian media reported.

The 34-year-old's plight and defiant stance in captivity have made her a national hero for many in Ukraine, where she is considered a political prisoner. The West, as well as rights groups, have repeatedly called on Moscow to free her.

Prosecutors allege that in June 2014, Savchenko, who had transferred from the air force to fight with Ukrainian ground forces, helped to direct the fire of Ukrainian artillery in the Luhansk region where a shell killed two Russian television reporters.

Savchenko has gone on a hunger strike while in captivity and has denied any wrongdoing. She says she was spirited into Russia by Moscow-backed rebels after being captured in a day-long battle in June, 2014.


(Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov and Jack Stubbs; Editing by Christian Lowe)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-palestinians-guns-idUSKCN0W41QS

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 9:25am EST
Related: World, Israel

Palestinians turn to makeshift guns in escalation of street violence

JERUSALEM | By Dan Williams and Ismael Khader

During previous rounds of Palestinian violence, Israeli raids on the occupied West Bank would turn up small arsenals of military assault rifles. Now hauls more often include what look like toy guns and the tools required to make them lethal.

After years of seizures that have choked the supply of unlicensed M-16s and Kalashnikovs in the territory and raised black-market prices, some Palestinians are turning to improvised firearms to carry out street attacks on Israelis.

Five months into a series of killings by Palestinians that have mainly involved stabbings and car-rammings, some are stepping up the assaults by using such makeshift guns.

This escalation could pose problems for authorities on both sides, who are seeking to keep the bloodshed from spilling over into another uprising that could draw in armed Palestinian factions and trigger sweeping Israeli crackdowns.

The shift was illustrated by the haul from an Israeli raid on a foundry in the occupied West Bank this week; photos released by Israel's Shin Bet intelligence service showed a sniper rifle held together by duct tape, a Wild West-style long gun with a silencer welded on, as well as a lathe machine tool.

The foundry may be a testament to the effectiveness of past raids, by both Israeli and Palestinian security services.

"A genuine M-16 now costs 60,000 to 70,000 shekels ($15,000-$18,000) on the street, whereas an improvised gun can cost as little as 2,000 shekels ($512)," one Palestinian with knowledge of the trade told Reuters. "For a young person looking to carry out an attack with limited resources, the choice is obvious."

The crudity of the cobbled-together guns may offer scant comfort to Palestinian and Israeli security officials.

Palestinian leaders and international powers have already said Israel has often used excessive force against assailants, many of them youths, though Israel has rejected this, saying it has prevented lethal attacks on civilians and security forces.

Security experts cautioned that Israel was likely to be even less restrained should its forces or citizens come under regular attack with guns, regardless of how lethal they are.

"It's one thing for a soldier to face someone who is trying to stab him with scissors, quite another to face a gunman - he can never know whether if there is more ammunition, if the gun is still a threat, so he is likelier to shoot," said Amy Ayalon, who headed the Shin Bet between 1996 and 2000, when the last Palestinian revolt against Israel erupted.

"So the response, on site, tends to be harsher, and the political echelon will be forced to back it up."


OVER 200 KILLED

Palestinian attackers have killed 28 Israelis and a U.S. citizen since October. Israeli security forces have killed at least 172 Palestinians, 114 of whom Israel says were assailants, while most others were shot dead during violent protests.

Tensions have been stoked by various factors including a dispute over Jerusalem's al-Aqsa mosque compound and the failure of several rounds of peace talks to secure the Palestinians an independent state in Israeli-occupied territory.

Palestinian leaders have said that with no breakthrough on the horizon, desperate youngsters see no future ahead. Israel says young Palestinians are being incited to violence by their leaders and by Islamist groups calling for Israel's destruction.

Two Palestinians who killed an Israeli policewoman and wounded another in Jerusalem last month before they were shot dead were armed with improvised guns known as "Carlos", Israeli authorities said.

Carlos - simple knock-offs of Swedish-made Carl Gustav machine-pistols made in metal foundries - are among the cheapest makeshift guns to buy on the black market, say the authorities.

According to one Israeli security source, the relatively low Israeli death toll in the attack was partly due to the gunmen's failure to fire rapidly, possibly due to the Carlos jamming.

Israel is also holding two Palestinian brothers from the West Bank city of Hebron for four gun attacks that wounded two soldiers and two civilians. The Shin Bet says they used a Carlo and an improvised sniper rifle with a silencer fashioned out of an oil can as instructed by a video they found on the Internet.

A spokesman for the Palestinian Security Services in the West Bank said they were aware makeshift weapons were being manufactured there.

"Making weapons locally is common everywhere in the world and we are moving against the sources of such weapons because they represent a risk," Adnan Al-Dmairi told Reuters.

Improvised guns can be air-rifles converted to shoot real bullets rather than pellets, the Palestinian source said. According to one Shin Bet official, some West Bank armourers cannibalize parts from broken M-16s or Kalashnikovs and reassemble them as workable composites, with missing components manufactured in private workshops. These can sell for around 5,000 shekels ($1,280) on the Palestinian black market.

"Obviously such weapons will not be as reliable as a complete factory-made gun," the Shin Bet official told Reuters. "Most of the recent gun attacks employed improvised firearms. It appears that in many cases they malfunctioned."


(Writing by Dan Williams; Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Pravin Char)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-egypt-sinai-insurgency-insight-idUSKCN0W41JO

World | Wed Mar 2, 2016 8:15am EST
Related: World, Egypt

In Islamic State battle, Cairo struggles to rally Sinai tribes

ARISH, Egypt | By Ahmed Aboulenein

An Egyptian military effort to recruit and arm tribal fighters to take on Islamic State militants in the Sinai is failing, according to security sources, Sinai residents and tribal figures.

The military launched the program with much fanfare last year and tribal leaders pledged to provide hundreds of fighters. But the number of fighters in the field is no more than 35, security sources say. The scheme has been hampered by the military's reluctance to provide weapons to local fighters and by attacks by Islamic State, which are scaring off would-be tribal troops.

The failure is a blow to President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who has promised to crack down on militants, whom he sees as an existential threat to Egypt. Islamic State's insurgency in Sinai gives the ultra-hardline group a fourth front in the Middle East after Iraq, Syria, and pockets of Libya.

In statements and videos, Sinai Province, the Sinai branch of Islamic State, has said it has executed at least 17 people so far this year. On Feb. 28, the group warned on its Telegram channel, which functions as an encrypted online message board, that it had set up checkpoints around the Sinai to intercept and kill anyone who collaborates with the military.

In January, Islamic State wrote in its weekly magazine Naba', which runs news from the group's various branches, that the Sinai branch had killed 1,400 people – members of the military and police as well as collaborators and tribal fighters – in the previous 15 months. The military has disputed this figure and said only 69 military personnel were killed in that period.

It would not comment on its Sinai operations.

The army had hoped its plan, launched in April last year, would gain it an edge in the massive region, which stretches from the Suez Canal east to the Gaza Strip and Israel. It wanted to team up with tribal leaders and local fighters who know the terrain.

The local fighters promised to provide 300 men who could bring intelligence and help close down routes used to smuggle in weapons from neighboring countries. Those fighters were to be organized in what the military calls "popular committees."

But a counter-terrorism researcher who closely watches the Sinai and did not want to be named because of the threat of violence when he visits the Sinai said the strategy was floundering. "The militias are child's-play. It is a failed initiative. These guys are getting the floor wiped with them by the Islamists. They do not have the training to match them."


DIGGING THEIR OWN GRAVES

Given the history of tensions between the Bedouins and the military, the scheme was never going to be easy to implement.

The Sinai's Bedouins are seen by some in government as a fifth column, while tribesmen have long felt neglected by the central government, tribal leaders say. Some senior officials initially remained uneasy about handing over weapons to local fighters.

A police captain stationed in North Sinai said tribal fighters receive no formal combat training but are advised by the military and police.

Even some tribal leaders were reluctant to have their men armed. One senior tribal member, who was once at the forefront of the military's campaign, said arming tribal fighters could cause infighting.

"Help the army? Yes. But carry guns, no. We do not form militias," said the man, who is on an Islamic State hit list and has moved away from North Sinai, the epicenter of the insurgency, after militants attacked his home.

But the main reason the military has struggled to recruit more tribal fighters has been the punishment those who have joined have faced when captured by Sinai Province militants.

Abdelrahman al-Moqata'a was one of nine prisoners beheaded or shot by the group in January. On a Sinai Province video of the executions, the men all said they had fought alongside or provided intelligence to security forces.

In the video, Moqata'a is seen digging his own grave. "This is the fate of those who work with the army, whether young, old, or a child," he said, standing in a sandy ditch up to his waist.

"No one work with the army. This is the advice of the brother digging his own grave."

Sinai Province later circulated a list of men it wanted dead for "crimes" such as "forming militias against Muslims" and spying for the military.


NEW RECRUITS, BUT NOT NEARLY ENOUGH

Despite the dangers, some tribal fighters remain enthusiastic about helping the army.

Some 500 meters outside the eastern entrance to al-Arish, North Sinai's provincial capital, motorists are questioned at a police checkpoint. One day in January, two masked men brandishing assault rifles stood guard about 100 meters up the road. They were young members of a popular committee.

"We are a group of youths who decided over two months ago to do our part in protecting our people from what the militants are doing," one told Reuters.

"At first there were nine of us. We met with police and military leaders, asking to be allowed to help get rid of these militants after the city became a war zone home to murder and horror," he added in a thick Bedouin accent. His group now numbers 15, and has been asked to provide the military with local intelligence.

Initially the authorities did not want to give the men guns, the man said.

"A while later we went back and told them it was important they allow us to carry weapons to protect ourselves and families and they agreed, but under certain conditions."

A security source said the tribal fighters can only use the guns to help secure checkpoints or to repel an attack. They also have to tell the military who is participating in each shift or mission.

Residents in Arish, Sheikh Zuweid, and surrounding villages have mixed views of the army initiative. Some said the tribal fighters had restored some normality to the province. Others complained that the fighters steal food from them or bully them.

"We don't have a problem with them helping (the security forces), said one shopkeeper. "But they shouldn't bully people and act like thugs."


(Additional reporting by Ahmed Mohamed Hassan, Mahmoud Mourad, Omar Fahmy and Aly Abdelaty; Edited by Simon Robinson)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2016/03/02/europe_without_the_union_111734.html

https://www.stratfor.com/weekly/europe-without-union

March 2, 2016

Europe Without the Union

By Mark Fleming-Williams
5 Comments

The European project was always bound to fail. Europe is a continent riven by geographic barriers. It has spent two millennia not only indulging in massive and constant internal wars, but also keeping written records of them, informing each generation of all the times their forebears were wronged. Over the centuries, great empires have risen and fallen, leaving behind distinct groups of people with different histories, languages and cultures. Any project attempting to fuse these disparate cultures into one monolithic state over the course of just 70 years was by its very nature doomed. It would inevitably encounter insurmountable levels of nationalistic resistance, and eventually the project would stall. That is the point at which we now find ourselves.

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Crises abound, and though they all have different facades, each stems from the same underlying issue: Citizens ultimately prize their national and regional identities over the supranational dream. The sovereign debt crisis and repeating Grexit scares, born of the introduction of the euro in 1999, have exposed Northern Europe's unwillingness to subsidize the south. The Brexit referendum, scheduled for June, can trace its roots to the 2004 enlargement of the European Union, and the ensuing wave of Polish migration to the United Kingdom. Meanwhile, amid the ongoing immigration crisis, national leaders are appeasing their populations by bypassing European rules and re-erecting border controls to stem the flow of refugees across their territory. In all of these situations, the same factors are at work: The driving forces within Europe are national in nature, and countries will ultimately put their own interests first.

Today's problems were both predictable and predicted. The next step, however, is harder to foresee. Having identified a system's inherent flaw, one can very well state that it is unsustainable, but unfortunately the flaw provides no guide as to the exact circumstances of the system's end. There are still many different ways that the demise of the European Union's current form could come about. For example, the project could unravel via market forces, as it nearly did in 2012 when investors tested the commitment of the core to save the periphery and found it to be (barely) willing to do so. Or a disaffected populace could elect a nationalist party such as France's National Front, which could either lead the country out of the European Union or make the bloc so unmanageable that it ceases to function. Perhaps the most likely scenario at this point would be for the European Union to survive as a ghost of its former self, with its laws ignored and stripped back to the extent that it holds only a loose grip on its members.

Where Integration Will Persist

The exact circumstances of the European project's end are not yet clear, but there are certain fixed, underlying truths that are sure to outlast the European Union's current form. With them, a forecast can still be made of the shape of things to come. These fundamental realities stem from deeper, unchanging forces that will bring countries together according to their most basic goals; they are the same forces that limited the European project's lifespan in the first place. By looking at these underlying factors, one can predict which countries will emerge from a weakened or collapsed European Union with close ties, and which are likely to drift apart in pursuit of their own interests once they are freed from the binding force of the European Union and its integrationist ideals.

The best place to start is the Benelux region. Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg have long played a key role in European geopolitics, situated as they are on the flat and traversable land between Europe's two great Continental powers, France and Germany. Indeed, it was in the Benelux region that the European project began. Belgium and Luxembourg formed an economic union in 1921, and talks began for a customs union with the Netherlands in 1944, before the end of World War II. But it was World War II itself that really gave birth to the European Union as the Benelux countries combined with their two flanking giants and Italy to create a bloc that would prevent a reoccurrence of such destructive conflict. In the 70 years that had elapsed since German unification, France had endured three invasions, and all the members of the fledgling union suffered greatly as a result. Today, 70 years later and without a reoccurrence of catastrophic conflict, their strategy appears to have worked.

Thus the Benelux, France and Germany will be motivated to continue their integration efforts. Caught between two economic powers, the Benelux will want to secure their friendship. Meanwhile, France and Germany's rivalry will also draw them together. However, the fateful fact here is that the Franco-German relationship has been one of the major fault lines in the current European Union, meaning that a smaller version of the bloc will be similarly flawed.

Italy, for its part, will not be invited to the party this time around. For one, it lacks the same geopolitical circumstances, safely shielded as it is behind an Alpine wall. Moreover, the eurozone's third-largest economy has been at the center of both the sovereign debt and the immigration crises, and Germany in particular will be as reluctant to stay attached to the indebted Italy as it is to remain tied to Spain. The Franco-German-Benelux bloc is the likely heir to the euro, if the currency continues to exist, and it will maintain the European Union's integrationist ethos. It will adopt a more positive stance toward free trade than its predecessor, with the Netherlands and Germany outweighing the protectionist urges of Belgium and a France shorn of its traditional Mediterranean allies. This "core" bloc will be the Continent's center of gravity in the future. In the times that it has been whole since its unification in 1871, Germany has dominated the Continent, and it appears set to keep doing so for at least the next decade or two.

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Germany's influence in Europe is not purely geopolitical. A large part of it is based on trade. The past two decades in particular have seen Germany assemble a powerful international goods factory. It takes unfinished products from its neighbors (eight of whom send Germany more than 20 percent of their exports) and transforms them into sophisticated mechanical goods before shipping them onward. In 2014, Germany was the number one export destination for 14 of its 27 EU peers, and the top source of imports for 15 of them. Access to this machine has especially benefited former communist states in Central and Eastern Europe, which have capitalized on high levels of investment from Germany (as well as the Netherlands and Austria) and capital inflows to achieve impressive GDP growth. European Union or no, the players in this network will all be highly motivated to keep it running.

Eastern and Western Interests Diverge

Still, there are two catches. The first is immigration. The subject has hung over these relationships since at least the 2004 enlargement, when Germany was one of several countries to impose restrictions on the freedom of movement for new eastern members. The influx of refugees into Europe has recently rekindled this friction, with the Visegrad Group (Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Poland) bonding over a mutual aversion to Germany's attempts to dole out quotas of newly arrived migrants. The relationship emerging to Germany's east and southeast is one in which the free movement of goods and capital is encouraged, but the free movement of people is restricted.

The second catch is Russia. Over the next decade, Russia will experience some significant changes in both its external relationships and its internal systems. The first half of this forecast has already come to pass, and Russia has grown increasingly belligerent in its periphery. Stratfor believes this will become more pronounced until the system designed by Russian President Vladimir Putin either adapts or collapses. This will clearly have a considerable effect on Russia's European neighbors, albeit to varying degrees. And so, geography will come into play once more. We have already seen the Russian military used to powerful effect in Ukraine, but its ability to push farther into Romania is somewhat tempered by the Carpathian Mountains, a natural barrier that snakes north and west, also providing protection to Hungary and Slovakia. Poland, by contrast, stands starkly exposed to Belarus, a close Russian ally, with no mountain range to shield it. Farther north, the similarly unprotected Baltic states lack Poland's bulk and thus have even less protection; a larger country like Poland could at least buy time to organize a defense.

This geographic divergence will divide Central and Eastern Europe into two groups, one focused on trade and the other on security. The Central Europeans (the Czechs, Hungarians, Romanians, Bulgarians and Slovaks) will be wary of antagonizing Russia. The Carpathians, though a barrier, are not insuperable. And yet these countries, sheltered by the mountains, will also be free to focus much of their energy toward pursuing continued prosperity through trade with the core. A shared interest in maintaining trade with Germany is not the foundation for a defined bloc, but more the makings of a loose grouping that becomes weaker with both distance from Germany and time, as Germany's strength begins to wane. Poland and the Baltics, by contrast, will not have the luxury of focusing primarily on their own enrichment. With Russia's presence looming, these countries will be bound closely together, focusing their energies on defense pacts and alliances — and especially on cultivating strong relationships with the United States. Trade will continue, of course, but the identity of this bloc will center on resisting the Russian threat. If and when internal challenges force Russia to turn its attention inward, Poland will have an opportunity, the likes of which it has not seen for several hundred years, to spread its influence east and south into the former territories of the old Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in Belarus and Ukraine.

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In the north, Scandinavia will form its own bloc. Its members have a history of shared empires, free trade, freedom of movement agreements and a (failed) currency union; they are natural bedfellows. Indeed, an institution that has been somewhat dormant since the rise of the European Union — the Nordic Council — already exists to aid their international governance. This bloc is likely to be almost or equally as integrated as the French- and German-led core, with which it will have close trade and diplomatic relations.

Winners and Losers in a New Order

One of the countries most pleased with the new arrangements will be the United Kingdom, assuming it can hold itself together long enough to enjoy them. Having dedicated much of the last millennium to keeping the Continent divided and playing one side off another, the United Kingdom was forced to join the European Union once the organization's unity was truly unquestionable. With a Continent divided once more, the United Kingdom will be able to return to its preferred long-term strategy, maintaining a balance of power while at the same time attempting to develop a trade network that mixes regional with global. By contrast, Spain and Italy are likely to be left behind. Both will be struggling to stay whole, with Spain in particular danger of coming apart at the seams because of the internal conflicts raging among its constituent parts. Both will attempt to remain as close as possible to the core, though protectionist tendencies in the southern countries may inhibit these trading relationships. Spain and Italy are also likely to enjoy the newly regained freedom of being able to devalue their own currencies to regain competitiveness. From the core bloc's perspective, the two countries are likely to represent a continuing point of tension, with France pushing for their inclusion as Germany and the Netherlands resist. But time will work in France's favor here, since its advantageous demographics compared with those of Germany point to it gaining increasing influence over the bloc as the years pass.

The picture that has been laid out here is not meant to be an exact representation of Europe at a specific date in the future. Even if the European Union does unravel suddenly, as it nearly did in 2012, it is unlikely that countries would move on and settle into their new roles as seamlessly as described. Events will move at different speeds, and there may be considerable strife involved in the transition. With countries such as Italy and Spain battling to avoid isolation, France will be put in the difficult position of having to choose between either remaining close to Germany or standing with its Mediterranean allies. Elements of the current system may persist, and links will continue to exist across the blocs. For example, if the euro does survive in the core bloc, it may also continue to be used in some of today's other eurozone countries that are deemed to be fiscally responsible, such as Finland, for want of a compelling reason to make a change. There are still many unknowns. However, the intention is to show the picture that exists beneath the tracing paper. The image that actually emerges will depend on where and how pressure is applied in the years ahead.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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http://qz.com/625108/indias-extreme-left-and-right-are-equally-intolerant-and-violent/

Hatred of dissent visible in all ideologies in India

Written by Dilip Simeon
March 02, 2016 Quartz india

The ongoing agitation surrounding the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi, was sparked off by an event at the institution highlighting the plight of the Kashmiri people. Before delving into the depths of the debate, it may be pertinent to remember a few forgotten persons.

I will begin with two names and a question which (to my mind) are as significant as the grievances of Kashmiris and non-Kashmiris about the Indian justice system.

The two names are Mohammad Maqbool Sherwani (aged 19, died 1947) and Ravindra Mhatre (aged 48, died 1984). The question concerns the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits from their homes in the Valley. Why are they not a part of Left-wing concerns about Kashmir?

Sympathisers of Maoist revolutionary politics may consider four names—Francis Induwar (died 2009), Kenduka Arjun (died 2010), Lucas Tete (died 2010), and Niyamat Ansari (died 2011). What happened to them and why did they die? These names and the question signify an experience of injustice. For that reason alone, they deserve the attention of the defenders of democracy.

Now let us take a look at what is happening in Delhi:

Police protection, Delhi version

The most striking image of the times we inhabit is the photograph of a young accused person being brutally assaulted in the premises of a prominent court in New Delhi. He was in the custody of the police, hence under the indirect protection of the court.

His assailants were lawyers, who have bragged about their deeds, and are known for their proximity to senior leaders of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Most of them have not been charged for what is a clear offence under the IPC Section 325.

The ruling party spokespersons routinely deploy the platitude that the law will take its course. Typical of its behaviour in matters such as the murder of professor MM Kalburgi in August, they make a perfunctory disapproval of hooliganism, and then produce belligerent justifications for their violence. None of them show the slightest remorse or compunction for what even a village constable would recognise as a criminal offence.

We are being intimidated in broad daylight by persons who do not care a whit for reasoned speech—let alone the law. All we hear these days is a reminder of the heavy price we shall pay for opposing prime minister Narendra Modi, the Sangh, and their “development agenda”.

The Delhi Police operates under the union government and was responsible for the raids on the JNU campus as well as the acts in the court premises. Some of its decisions have now been shown to have been taken on doctored evidence.

The National Human Rights Commission has declared the assault on JNU students union president Kanhaiya Kumar to have been planned. The home minister’s utterances were akin to those of a con artist, so we need not be surprised by those of his followers.

We may also assume that these acts have the approval of the union cabinet—and that we are now under the grip of a government that has no respect for the rule of law.

The situation will worsen because the private army that controls the government is bent upon revising the foundational statutes of the Indian republic.

It also adheres to an ideology that justifies violence in the name of patriotism. Violent attacks, disruptions, and dire threats by Hindutva-oriented vigilantes and legislators are occurring on a daily basis across India.

The ruling party has shown itself to be no different from the Maoists whom it routinely condemns. But whereas the Maoists have proven incapable of capturing state power, the Hindutva ideologues believe they have done so. Let us see if the Indian public will endorse this belief.

This is serious enough to bear repeating: the government of India is enabling, condoning, and encouraging vigilante violence and hooliganism. Controlled mobs now operate under state protection.

‘Anti-nationalism’

Most of the slogans heard on the JNU campus expressed unobjectionable Left-wing and feminist demands.

However, there were some that spoke of a long war for the break-up of the country. There were other calls that could be confusing to anyone not familiar with the term “oppressed nationalities” that has been part of communist vocabulary since 1917. So the current political agitation marks the intersection of many controversial themes, ranging from definitions of the nation to constitutional and legal matters.

Some bare facts need recapitulation.

Some students attracted to Maoism and including those who believe in “self-determination” for Kashmir, and were agitated over the execution of Afzal Guru, held an event to commemorate the latter.

Denied permission due to objections from one student group, they used the good offices of the union, whose president belongs to the All India Students Federation—the student wing of the Communist Party of India, the moderate wing of the communist movement. This is the party of the late Satyapal Dang, one of India’s staunchest secularists and fighters against terrorism in Punjab in the 1980s and ‘90s. (I wonder if our home minister has heard of him).

As the event unfolded, some began shouting belligerent slogans—let us leave aside the question of who started it. As often happens, when ideologues wish to hurt each other by methods short of physical assault, they say things designed to cause maximum emotional pain. Both sides—the ultra-nationalists and those rooting for self-determination—proceeded to do this. Some persons alleged to be outsiders also shouted the objectionable slogans referred to above.

The ultra-nationalists used their contacts in the central government to facilitate police intervention. Some of them now regret the consequences of what has ballooned into a nasty confrontation. I appreciate the fact that the three Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad office-bearers who resigned from their posts disagreed with the habit of painting all Left-wing students with the same brush.

Similarly, all people who object to slogans calling for the break-up of India also cannot be painted with the same brush. I too object to such a slogan—although I don’t think it calls for police action unless there is a direct incitement to violence. We know many people calling for and indulging in violence who seem to have no fear of police action.

Something similar took place on Feb. 10 at the Delhi Press Club, where persons who stand for Kashmiri self-determination used the good offices of a lecturer who booked the venue for them, but who does not share their political vision. He is now been targeted—along with three other retired teachers from Delhi University—for collusion with so-called anti-national elements.

In both cases, persons of democratic persuasion were used to facilitate expressions of extreme beliefs. As far as I can tell, they had no idea of what was about to transpire, and their own statements at these gatherings were attempts at lowering the pitch and calming the atmosphere. A kind of verbal “guerrilla action” was undertaken by some radical activists who—it would appear—were unconcerned with the repercussions. They did not care that people who do not support their politics, but helped them because of their commitment to free expression, would be paying the price.

To use well-meaning people for your purposes via subterfuge can bear terrible consequences. It is unfair to those well-meaning people. It typifies the belief that the end justifies the means.

Some of us are so consumed by anger that we feel justified in doing this. But it is not an ethical course of action and brings your politics into disrepute. It is similar to what happened in Kandhamal in 2008 when the Maoist party murdered the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s Swami Laxmanananda and left the common people to face the communal violence unleashed by the Sanghis who blamed “the Christians” for the murder.

In the spiral of violence unfolding in so-called insurgent districts, the state utilises the opportunity provided to it by extremists to suppress opposition from all quarters. It targets all democratic protest for being anti-national, seditious, and so on. This is what is happening now in India’s capital.

Unscrupulous TV anchors are adding fuel to the fires of “patriotic” indignation—some of them behaving as flag-bearers for a hysterical version of nationalism. As a supreme court bench said recently, “Moderation is a forgotten word today in all spheres of life”.

Self-determination and violence

There is also the tangled issue of self-determination, a term many people use as if it were an axiom. It is not. The idea of democracy is linked to the concept of identity. “Demos” is the term for “the people” in “the rule of the people”. The slogan of self-determination carries the implicit presupposition that we know who “the people” are before we speak of their right to “self-determination”.

Ideologically defined boundaries of the self are presupposed in the practice of democracy. This issue is related to the birth of the nation-state and the notion of sovereignty. Let me add here that the multiplication of sovereignties is not a solution to the violation of human rights, nor should it be conflated unquestioningly with the concept of democracy. In some cases, it might worsen the situation.

Identity is a matter of power, interest and definition. For example, the slogan that Kashmiris have a right to self-determination implies that the identity of Kashmiris is self-evident. The moment the identities of Kashmiri Pandits and Sikhs, Ladakh’s Buddhists and Jammu’s Dogras, Gujjars, and Bakerwals, are brought into the argument, the presumptive nature of unilateral definitions becomes evident.

Who is included in, and who is excluded from the “self”, and why? Is it all very clear to us, or does it deserve a discussion?

Given that this agitation has highlighted the plight of the Kashmiri people, let us examine some facts that tend to get left out of Leftist concerns. Some amongst us remain aggrieved by the execution of Maqbool Butt on Feb. 11, 1984. They need to remember the kidnapping and murder of the Indian consular official Ravindra Mhatre, in Birmingham, on Feb. 6 the same year.

It does not behoove a state to make vengeful decisions, but it does not help matters if we forget significant facts. We may also mention in passing the names of BJP politician Tikka Lal Taploo, Judge NK Ganjoo (who had tried Maqbool Butt); and journalist, PN Bhat—all three murdered in late 1989 by warriors of Kashmiri self-determination.

I have often reiterated my belief that the question of violence is—or should be—the crux of the political debate. Militarism has emerged as the ground shared by enemies. The militarist appropriation of martyrdom is a deeply patriarchal gesture. Violence is a never-ending spiral. The best metaphor for violence is a black hole—the place that swallows up everything in its vicinity. Once again, therefore, I will remind all ardent supporters of political causes that violence feeds on itself.

•Apart from their other numerous “actions”, the Maoists murdered two policemen who were in their custody, both of them tribals—Francis Induwar (beheaded in 2009) and Lucas Tete (shot in 2010). Kenduka Arjun, secretary of the Chasi Muliya Adivasi Sangh in Orissa, was murdered by Maoists in 2010. They also beat to death Niyamat Ansari, a Mahatama Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act activist, in front of his family in 2011. I will not go into the implications of the derailment of the Jnaneswari Express in 2010, which cost 148 lives.
•On communal issues, let us remember Taslima Nasrin, the author who defended religious minorities in Bangladesh, and was hounded out of Kolkata in 2007 by fanatics who browbeat the Left Front government. Perpetually under threat, she finally had to leave India.
•On the price paid for dissent, let us remember T P Chandrashekharan, a dissident Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader in Kerala murdered in 2012 for setting up an alternative left group.
•A week ago, on Feb. 15, a Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh cadre named Sujith was murdered inside his house in front of his parents. The accused in both these cases belong to the CPI (M).

There are many more examples, cutting across party lines. Whatever we might think of our political opponents, do not such actions undermine democracy? Do they not indicate that we live in a dangerously authoritarian culture?

As regards Afzal Guru, like many others, I too felt that the trial process and submission of evidence raised several disturbing questions; that life imprisonment would have been a fairer sentence, and that he should not have been executed. I was severely perturbed by the phrase “collective conscience of the nation” appearing in a court judgment sentencing a man to death. I wrote about this well before the judgment, and about the death sentence, which I oppose in principle, whether it is handed out by judges or revolutionaries, sanghis, or jihadis. People have every right to criticise judgments without being accused of contempt—have not the ultra-nationalists also criticised judgments they did not like? Such criticism should be couched in temperate language, but we remain within our rights to make it.

The Pandit issue

Going on from this, doesn’t the plight of Kashmir’s Pandits also deserve consideration in a debate about Kashmir? At the time of their enforced exodus from the Valley, concerns were expressed by some human rights activists and Leftists. On the whole, however, the so-named “Left and democratic” bloc has remained silent about that enormity. I do not believe the “Jagmohan did it” theory on this although I am aware of Jagmohan’s role in Sanjay Gandhi’s slum-clearing activism during the Emergency. A great deal of evidence has been supplied by those who experienced the exodus—evidence that needs serious debate, not outright rejection. All Kashmiri Muslims cannot be blamed for the plight of the Pandits, nor for desiring their exodus. But neither are all Hindus supporters of Hindutva. Acknowledgement of injustice is the first and essential step towards reconciliation—this is as true for the Valley’s Pandit population as it is for its Muslims. Activists for human rights should also note the presence of a large number of migrant labourers in the Valley—numbers of whom have been victims of terrorist acts.

Be that as it may, conflicting views on what caused the Pandits to depart need an airing, not silence. Why have the victims of the largest (the number could be 300,000) communally driven migration in independent India’s history been the target of barely concealed animus from Leftists? Kashmiris have undergone terrible suffering ever since militancy began, and they include Pandits as well as Muslims, residents of the Jammu region as well as those of the Valley; Kashmiri speaking people as well as others.

Apologists for the status quo ask us to stop talking about caste-based discrimination—as if it will go away by pretending it does not exist. The same attitude has been exhibited by many of us with regard to Kashmiri Pandits—as if we can get rid of a mountain of pain and injustice by looking the other way. If we stand for giving voice to suffering humanity, we must stand for all the victims of oppression in the Valley, regardless of their faith. If we stand for free expression and dissent we must ask why the Pandits have been treated with indifference and worse, by Leftists (given some honourable exceptions). Failure to conjoin the plight of the Pandits with all other victims of insurgency and state repression is a betrayal of our humanity and weakens our political integrity. Furthermore, it drives victims to other kinds of extremism, or to cynicism and despair. Why should we abandon good causes to bad politicians?

Defending democracy and the constitution

Indian politics has entered a phase of extreme danger—from the standpoint of the labouring citizens who need democracy the most. It is disturbing to see a section of India’s ruling class seeking to bypass and undermine constitutional rule by validating a politics of hatred and intimidation. Hindu Rashtra and Akhand Hindustan are mutually contradictory ideals: If you want one you will automatically rule out the other. The relentless tirade against Muslims, Christians, and Communists by the Sangh Parivar will produce the contrary of what they wish for (or say they do). The theories of VD Savarkar, KB Hedgewar, and MS Golwalkar are recipes for India’s disintegration. Extremism feeds on itself by appearing in different forms.

Whatever be its flaws, the Indian Constitution is the best consensual statute upon which to base a defence of democracy. Revolutionaries should consider the possibility that a section of the Indian ruling class is already bent upon doing away with democracy. So rather than a violent revolution to overthrow the constitution, we need a non-violent mass awakening to defend and implement it. But that will require serious re-thinking on socialist politics. Since the ongoing student movement is committed to defending the freedom of thought, there should be no problem with this.

The current student movement in JNU has received welcome support from students and academics all over India and the world, in addition to the support of many political parties. It can make a difference to Indian politics, but politics is too important to be left to specialists of revolution. Authoritarianism and hatred of dissent may be witnessed across the political spectrum—Right, Left and “marketist”. It would be best if students made up their own minds about political issues, and inaugurated an open dialogue with society. Incidentally, the term “revolution” means the completion of a circle. If you want transformation, close the circle and get out of it. The only answer to extremism is moderation, truthful speech and non-violence. Jai Ho.


This post first appeared on Feb. 22 on dilipsimeon.blogspot.in, under the title What is to be Undone. We welcome your comments at ideas.india@qz.com.
 

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http://time.com/4245473/iran-election-hassan-rouhani/

Iran’s Moderates Won—But Will Struggle to Keep Their Ruling Coalition Together

Kay Armin Serjoie/Tehran
5:12 PM ET

Iran's historic elections on Feb. 26 yielded a victory for a coalition of moderates, reformers and conservatives—but governing will be hard

With every ballot counted from Iran’s first election since the nuclear deal, it has become clear that no one political faction or group has managed to gain an outright majority in the Islamic Republic’s parliament. With the fate of 68 of the 290 seats having to be decided in a runoff scheduled for April, the only decisive outcome has been the near rout of hardliners, especially in the capital Tehran, by an unprecedented alliance between conservatives, reformists and moderates. That’s left the moderate government of President Hassan Rouhani with a free hand to pursue his policies of détente and reconciliation with the world community—policies that had been vigorously opposed by the hardliners.

Video

But while the short term effects of Feb.26’s vote might seem to favor Rouhani, who is up for reelection in 15 months, the formation of the first parliament in more than 30 years without a dominant faction might have surprising consequences for Iran’s internal politics.

In all but one of the nine previous parliaments formed since the Islamic Republic’s founding in 1979, there has always been a strong majority, usually in tandem with the administration in power at the time. Split government is not something that generally happens in Iran. But the faction most associated with the Rouhani presidency, the moderates, is if anything the weakest link in the tenth parliament. The only way the moderates were even able to make a showing in the election results was by joining up with reformists, still recovering from the brutal crackdown on their protests to the 2009 contested reelection of former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and with those conservatives that had been pushed out of their traditional circles by more hardline elements of their parties.

Read More: Everything You Need to Know About Iran’s Elections

While that alliance paid off at the polls, it is by definition very fragile. Analysts believe that Rouhani will have to pay dearly to keep the coalition together if he wants to get any legislation of substance passed in the short time he has left before he must get back to the campaign trail in 2017. “Rouhani will have a golden period until the 2017 elections to pass bills that are important to the voters, bills on economic growth, foreign investment, lowering unemployment, international relations and the environment,” says Amirhossein Rasael, a veteran journalist and political analyst. “But when it comes to topics such as freer political activity or Hijab [compulsory Islamic veil for women] he will undoubtedly face challenges.”

Already main reformist figureheads, emboldened by their higher than expected showing in the election, are calling for an end to the five-year house arrest of banned green movement leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, as well as the loosening of the state-enforced controls on social and political interaction among the youth. Doing this would put Rouhani in direct confrontation with the more conservative elements of his coalition—but failing to do so could alienate the reformists, who carry a great deal of weight with the middle-class voters Rouhani will need for reelection.

Read More: The U.S. Still Dominates World Oil Prices

Yet the politicians within the Principalist camp, the main umbrella group that covers both traditional conservatives and hardline elements, are in similar waters. While they blame the extremist positions taken by parties such as the Paydari Front for their lack of success at the polls, they in turn are being accused by those very same groups of having lost their revolutionary zeal. “Conservatism has crippled principalists… the people no longer see any appeal for the fight in their faces,” says Vahid Yaminpour, a young but rapidly rising cultural activist turned politician close to the Paydari Front, in reaction to the election results. “[The] Revolution does not linger for depressed pretenders, it will rise once again with its ever appealing revolutionary principles to forge new settings.”

While most Principalist politicians and decision makers would probably disagree with the assessment of Yaminpour and others like him, they know they cannot disregard the chance of disillusionment among their rank and file supporters, especially after such a dismal result for the conservatives and hardliners. It was exactly such a defeat in Tehran in a previous parliamentary election in 1999 that caused many of their supporters to turn to more extreme elements that directly led to the rise of Ahmadinejad in 2005. Though the former president has been all but sidelined at the present by wiser heads among the conservatives, he has already been touted as a savior of the Principalists by his supporters, who the very next day after the elections published a poster of Ahmadinejad on a channel dedicated to him on the messaging network Telegram. Written underneath in red bold letters “Now they must have realized, without you they are nothing!”
 

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The New Iranian Parliament Is Loyal to Khamenei but Advocating for Rouhani

03/02/2016 03:31 pm ET | Updated 11 hours ago
Seyed Hossein Mousavian
Head of Foreign Relations Committee of Iran’s National Security Council (1997-2005)

On Feb. 26, Iran held its 10th parliamentary election since the 1979 Islamic Revolution and fifth election for its Assembly of Experts, the clerical body that appoints the supreme leader. Members of parliament serve four-year terms, while members of the assembly serve 8-year terms. The elections were relatively competitive; nearly 5,000 candidates vied for 290 seats in parliament and 161 for 88 seats in the Assembly of Experts.

A record-breaking 12,862 individuals had originally signed up to run; 12,067 for the parliament and 795 for the Assembly of Experts. While there is no cost or gathering of signatures required to register as a political candidate in Iran, candidates do have to be vetted by an institution known as the Guardian Council. This time around, after the vetting process was all said and done, 6,372 candidates were deemed qualified. Of those, roughly 5,000 ultimately decided to stay in the race. There were over 55 million eligible voters and 55,000 polling stations were made available across the country for voting.

Ten points stand out from these elections:


1.In 2015, the nuclear agreement between Iran and global powers was the only positive and hopeful news coming out of the Middle East and marked the only diplomatic solution reached to a regional crisis. Now, in 2016, the rest of the Middle East is on fire and ravaged by war and terrorism. According to the Israeli defense minister, the region is already in the midst of World War III. The elections in Iran are a beacon of light in a region otherwise shrouded in violence and political discord.


2.Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was the foremost public official urging Iranians, even those who oppose the political system, to participate in the election. He made this call right up until the day of voting. The enthusiastic participation of Iranians in the election, with an official turnout of 62 percent, was a triumph for the Islamic Republic. At the same time, the election was conducted in a reliable and fair manner and with complete security. These are all signs of Iran's stability, strength and democratic prowess -- rare traits for a state in today's Middle East.


3.While forces close to centrist President Hassan Rouhani made impressive gains in the election, media across the world incorrectly cast the results as a victory for reformists. The reality is that the outcome of the election will see the next parliament consisting of three political groupings: principlists, otherwise known as hard-liners, centrists/reformists and independents, with each group garnering about equal representation. Generally, in the past, one major political grouping would earn a strong majority in the parliament. In the current outgoing parliament, for example, principlists have an absolute majority. But with this election, for the first time since the revolution, there will be a fair balance between the various groups. This is a development that will lead to the strengthening of democracy in Iran.


4.Upwards of 66 percent of incumbent MPs will be replaced as a result of this election. However, the real unprecedented development of this election is the huge gains made by a third faction: the independents. How these independents act will determine what direction the next parliament takes and what decisions it makes.


5.Many of the MPs who opposed the nuclear deal were voted out, particularly those who were most vitriolic in their attacks on Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and Dr. Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. This is a clear sign that the majority of the Iranian people support the nuclear deal and that the majority of the new MPs will uphold it. This ensures that the deal will not be undermined from the Iranian side.

6.On the Assembly of Experts, 43 percent of incumbent members will be replaced. The list announced by two big clerical organizations in Qom and Tehran on behalf of the principlists won 47 percent of the seats, while candidates from the centrist/reformist list won 19 percent. The remainder were common candidates in both lists. Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani, the head of Iran's judiciary, has released a statement expressing his dissatisfaction with some of the principlist clerics failing to win enough votes. He is referring to figures like Ayatollah Mohammad Yazdi, who leads the Society of Seminary Teachers in the Shia holy city of Qom and is the current chairman of the Assembly of Experts, and Ayatollah Mohammad Taqi Mesbah Yazdi, the godfather of the Jebheye Paydari (Perseverance Front) party, which supported former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.


7.The centrist/reformist political grouping gained absolute majority in Iran's capital, Tehran. However, the results in the provinces were more balanced -- even slightly in favor of principlists. Even so, this has not stopped principlist cleric Jafar Shojooni from stating: "Tehran is the center for opposition to the revolution and velayat-e faqih (clerical jurisprudence) and these people winning the vote demonstrates this problem." On the other side, reformist Hossein Marashi has opined: "We can now see that the level of political maturity in Tehran is 100, in provincial capitals is 50, and in smaller cities is 30." In my view, both of these statements are wrong. The vote in Tehran was influenced more by the nuclear deal because most of the known opponents of the deal and the Rouhani government were MPs from Tehran who have now been voted out. Furthermore, Iran's supreme leader was the most important defender of the nuclear deal and consistently defended the Rouhani administration.


8.Since the Islamic Revolution, how the Iranian people vote in elections has typically been unpredictable. Officials in Iran and across the world have repeatedly been shocked by the results of Iranian elections. In this election, too, there were shocking results. As mentioned above, the current chairman of the Assembly of Experts did not win enough votes to keep his office. Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel, who led the principlists in parliament, was also not reelected. A reformist, Mohammad Aref, received the most votes in Tehran for parliament. On the other hand, Mojtaba Zolnoor, a principlist politician and supporter of the Jebheye Paydari party, won the most votes in Qom for parliament. Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, meanwhile, got the most votes in Tehran for the Assembly of Experts. The meaning of all of this is that the Iranian people are free to elect for themselves whomever they wish.


9.With the new makeup of the parliament, it can be said that practically all of the elected representatives are loyal to the supreme leader. What is known of the independent candidates is that they are mainly pragmatic and realistic. It can be confidently said that majority of the new parliament will support the Rouhani administration and its policies to enhance Iran's foreign relations, develop the economy and industries and further privatization.


10.The Middle East is currently experiencing its most unstable period in the modern era. Iran is undeniably a stabilizing weight in the region. The 2013 presidential election in Iran, the reaching of the nuclear deal in 2015, the speedy release of American sailors who had drifted into Iranian waters, the prisoner exchange in 2016, the progress in the Syria peace talks after Iran was invited to join in late 2015, and now the conclusion of successful elections for two important political bodies in Iran, are all clear signs of the importance of engagement and cooperation with Iran and the continued need for global powers to have a new approach towards Iran. After 10 years of being under the most deadly sanctions and harshest of economic pressures, the Iranian people have showed with their massive turnout in these elections that they will strongly be present in their country's political scene and will not bow down to pressure and force.


The message of these elections to global powers is that they should approach Iran with respect rather than with threats and drop anti-Iranian rhetoric. The United States Congress and its future president should take policy initiatives that advance beyond the Iran deal and move towards a new vision that reduces pressure and sanctions on Iran. Those Iranians who went to the voting booths have a palpable sense of the indifference of the West to the existence of democracy and elections in Iran. The Iranian people know that any claims by the West to respect public participation in Iran loses its credibility, because they see that Western allies in the region have zero democracy.

Ambassador Seyed Hossein Mousavian is a research scholar at Princeton University and a former spokesman for Iran's nuclear negotiators. His nuclear book, "The Iranian Nuclear Crisis: A Memoir," was published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. His latest book, "Iran and the United States: An Insider's view on the Failed Past and the Road to Peace" was released in May 2014.
 

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http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/wo...-growing-nuclear-weapons-pentagon/204153.html

Posted at: Mar 3, 2016, 1:27 PM; last updated: Mar 3, 2016, 1:27 PM (IST)

US concerned over Pak’s growing nuclear weapons: Pentagon

Washington, March 3

The US is concerned over Pakistan’s fast-expanding stockpile of nuclear weapons which combined with its evolving doctrine increases the risk of an “accident”, Pentagon’s top spy master has said.

“Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile continues to grow. We are concerned that this growth, as well as the evolving doctrine associated with tactical nuclear weapons, increases the risk of an incident or accident,” Lt Gen Vincent Stewart, Director of Defence Intelligence Agency told lawmakers yesterday during a Congressional hearing.

“Islamabad continues to take steps to improve its nuclear security, and is aware of the threat presented by extremists to its programme,” Stewart said during his testimony before the House Armed Services Committee on Worldwide Threats.

Pakistan will face internal security threats from militant, sectarian and separatist groups this year, he said, adding that ISIS in Khorasan and al-Qaeda in the Indian subcontinent will also remain significant security concerns for Islamabad.

Counterinsurgency operations along Pakistan’s western border and paramilitary operations in Karachi have had some success in reducing violence and are likely to continue, he said.

Tensions between India and Pakistan subsided in late last year following high-level diplomatic engagement and an agreement to continue talks next year, he noted.

However, there remains a significant risk that tensions could once again escalate with little warning, particularly if there is a large-scale terrorist attack in India, Stewart said.

Pakistan has ruled out any change in its “dynamic” policy of increasing its nuclear weapons, dismissing the US’ request in this regard, citing India’s rapid military modernisation. — PTI
 

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http://zeenews.india.com/news/world/saudi-arabia-buying-nuclear-weapons-from-pakistan_1861651.html

Saudi Arabia buying nuclear weapons from Pakistan?

Last Updated: Wednesday, March 2, 2016 - 20:55
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Islamabad: The Senate of Pakistan witnessed a heated debate over reports that oil-rich Saudi Arabia might buy nuclear weapons from Islamabad.

Senate chairman Mian Raza Rabbani admitted an adjournment motion moved by Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) Senator Hafiz Hamdullah despite the government's opposition, with directives that the house would hold a detailed debate on this issue by next Tuesday.

Senator Hamdullah said that Saudi Arabia could buy nuclear bomb amidst mounting tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Riyadh's move to buy nuclear weapons would destabilise the Middle East as well as Pakistan, JUI-F Senator maintained.

Federal Minister for Commerce and Trade, Khurram Dastgir Khan, opposed the adjournment motion.

The House was informed that a national census would be taken this year and the reason for a delay in the census was the ongoing military operation against militants in the restive North Waziristan.

Federal Minister for Inter-Provincial Coordination, Riaz Hussain Pirzada, informed that a national census would be taken in March 2016 as per the recommendation of the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS).
ANI

First Published: Wednesday, March 2, 2016 - 20:55
 

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http://www.globalresearch.ca/nuclear-red-alert-saudi-arabia-equipped-with-nuclear-bombs/5511402

Nuclear Red Alert. Saudi Fight-Bombers Equipped with Nuclear Warheads

By Manlio Dinucci
Global Research, March 02, 2016
Il Manifesto and Voltairenet.org 28 February 2016

Warning: Saudi Arabia, although a signatory to the Nuclear Weapons Non- Proliferation Treaty has just, in violation of its pledge, acquired atomic bombs from Pakistan.

“We have nuclear bombs”: this is what was said on February 19 on Russia Today by the Saudi political analyst, Daham al-Anzi, de facto spokesman for Riyadh.

He repeated it on another Arab channel. Saudi Arabia had already declared [1] its intention to acquire nuclear weapons from Pakistan (not a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty), of whom it finances 60% of the military nuclear program. Now, through al-Anzi, the Saudis have indicated that they started buying them two years ago. Of course, for Riyadh, this is to confront the “Iranian threat” in Yemen, Iraq and Syria, where “the Russians aid Assad.” That is to say, where Russia supports the Syrian government to free the country from Daesh (Islamic state) and other terrorist groups, financed and armed by Saudi Arabia as part of the US / NATO strategy.

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https://youtu.be/5HmWMdE9o4E

Riyadh has over 250 fighter-bombers with dual conventional and nuclear capability, provided by the US and by the European powers. Since 2012, Saudi Arabia is part of the “Nato Eurofighter and Tornado Management Agency,” the NATO agency that manages European Eurofighter and Tornado fighters, of which Riyadh bought from Britain twice the number of that of the whole Royal Air Force.

In the same context, enter the imminent 8 billion EUR maxi contract – thanks to Minister Roberta Pinotti, efficient sales representative for the supply of weapons – to supply Kuwait (ally of Saudi Arabia) with 28 Eurofighter fighter Typhoons, built by a consortium including Finmeccanica with British, German and Spanish industries. This is the largest order ever obtained by Finmeccanica whose coffers will absorb half the 8 billion. Guaranteed with 4 billion in funding by a pool of banks, including Unicredit and Intesa Sanpaolo, and the group Sace Cassa Depositi e Prestiti.

And thus accelerates the conversion of military Finmeccanica, with outstanding results for those who enrich themselves with war: in 2015 Finmeccanica share value grew by 67%. Right in the face of the “Arms Trade Treaty” ratified by parliament in 2013, which states that “no State Party shall knowingly authorize the transfer of arms if the weapons could be used for attacks against civilian targets or subjects, or for other war crimes. ” Faced with the denunciation that the weapons provided by Italy are used by Saudi and Kuwaiti air forces for the massacre of civilians in Yemen, Minister Pinotti replies: “Let us not transform the states that are our allies in the battle against Daesh into enemies. This would be a very serious mistake. ”

This would be especially a “mistake” to allow it to be known who are our “allies” Saudi and Kuwaiti: absolute monarchies, where power is concentrated in the hands of the ruler and his family circle, where parties and trade unions are banned; where immigrant workers (10 million in Saudi Arabia, about half of the labor force; 2 million to 2.9 million people in Kuwait) live in conditions of exploitation and slavery, where those who call for the most basic human rights are hanged or beheaded.

In these hands, “democratic” Italy places bombers capable of carrying nuclear bombs, knowing that Saudi Arabia already has them and that they can also be used by Kuwait.

At the “International Humanitarian Law Conference,” minister Pinotti, after stressing the importance of “respecting the norms of international law,” concluded that “Italy is a immensely credible and respected country.”

Video: Manlio Dinucci : Allarme nucleare, l’Arabia Saudita ha la Bomba (Italian)
https://youtu.be/Goq6mAKdVSQ

Manlio Dinucci, Geographer and geopolitical scientist. His latest books are Laboratorio di geografia, Zanichelli 2014 ;Geocommunity Ed. Zanichelli 2013 ; Escalation. Anatomia della guerra infinita, Ed. DeriveApprodi 2005.

Translation
Roger Lagassé

Source
Il Manifesto (Italy)<:recommander:recommander:> Facebook Twitter Delicious Seenthis Digg RSS

Note

[1] “Iran nuclear talks : Prospect of deal with Iran pushes Saudi Arabia and Israel into an unlikely alliance”, Kim Sengupta, The Independent, March 30, 2015.

The original source of this article is Il Manifesto and Voltairenet.org
Copyright © Manlio Dinucci, Il Manifesto and Voltairenet.org , 2016
 
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