WAR 03-10-2018-to-03-16-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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(311) 02-17-2018-to-02-23-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...2-23-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(312) 02-24-2018-to-03-02-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
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==========

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http://www.france24.com/en/20180310-down-but-not-out-lords-resistance-army-haunts-c-africa

10 March 2018 - 04H29

Down but not out: Lord's Resistance Army haunts C. Africa

OBO (CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC) (AFP) -
Every morning, Joseph gets on his motorbike to tend to his field of manioc, in the thick bush surrounding the Obo, in southeastern Central African Republic.

This day, though, is not ordinary. Joseph is tense with worry. There are rumours that the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), one of Africa's most notorious and longest-surviving militias, is in the area.

"They recently attacked hunters just 15 kilometres (nine miles) away," said Joseph, who, despite his fears, picks up his tools to work on his precious crop.

The LRA dates back to January 1987, when a voodoo priestess, Alice Auma Lakwena, set up a rebel group to fight Uganda's new leader, Yoweri Museveni.

The following year, Joseph Kony, presented as Lakwena's cousin, took over the group, which was renamed the LRA and whose mission was to rule by the Bible's Ten Commandments.

The fanatical Christian movement became a byword across central Africa for mutilations, massacres, kidnappings and the forced enrolment of children.

According to a UN toll in 2013, the LRA was to blame for the deaths of more than 100,000 people, the abduction of between 60,000 and 100,000 children and the displacement of 2.5 million people.

- Threat to local people -

The militia began to be rolled back in 2011 by a force of 2,000 Ugandan troops, supported by about a hundred US military advisors based in Obo.

Last March, the US military wrapped up its side of the operation, saying the LRA had been "reduced to irrelevance", and a month later the Ugandan army began withdrawing its troops from CAR.

Today, according to Laurent Wastelain, a representative of the UN peacekeeping mission in CAR, the LRA has been reduced to about 200 people, women and children included, spread across three groups, one of which is dissident.

"The organisation's political doctrine is falling away," he said in Obo. "They've gone from economic profit-making to economic subsistence, based on looting and trafficking."

The Ugandan and American pullout from southeast CAR, the absence of the state in this strife-torn region and the lack of a UN mandate to fight the LRA means that these marauding remnants are a lethal menace to local people.

Since April 19, 2017, when Uganda began its phased withdrawal, the LRA has struck 34 times in CAR, killing nine people and kidnapping 129 others, according to LRACrisisTracker, a site run by an NGO that is trying, in difficult conditions, to monitor the problem.

- Fleeing abduction -

Kidnappings are an LRA speciality, witnesses in Obo said. The militiamen capture adults to carry their loot and turn their children into fighters.

"On February 9, I was with nine hunters in a place about 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of Obo," said Brice, who has fled to the town from his home in Mboki.

"The LRA held us up, they took the manioc flour, the smoked fish, the meat and the ammunition," he said adding that this was the third time he had been robbed by the group.

Francois Apoyo, another man displaced from Mboki, said the LRA seized him on November 24 -- "they held us for a week, we carried their belongings."

The two men described small, mobile groups of LRA fighters speaking Acholi, the language of an ethnic Ugandan minority, dressed in combat gear, boots, carrying assault rifles and equipped with solar panels and satellite phones. They were accompanied by women and children who had been abducted.

Beatrice, not her real name, described how she was kidnapped in November last year -- an ordeal that ended after she ran away three weeks later.

"I was near Mboki when a man fired in the air and told me to pick up my chickens and follow him. We walked for a long time. One time I tried to flee and he beat me with a club," she said. "He wanted to make me his wife."

Other LRA victims said they had seen the group team up with nomadic herders, who escort their cattle to grazing grounds between Sudan and CAR, and are often armed.

How solid these alliances are is unclear -- and in this deeply troubled region, it is also possible that attacks attributed to the LRA were carried out by other gangs.

One victim, a pastor named Francois, said that he and 13 other people were held up by five cattle herders.

"They wanted to cut our throats and make out it was the LRA," he said. "But we escaped."

by Charles BOUESSEL
 

Housecarl

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https://www.insightcrime.org/news/analysis/report-sheds-light-private-sector-role-colombia-conflict/

Report Sheds Light on Private Sector Role in Colombia Conflict

ANALYSIS
Written by Tristan Clavel - MARCH 8, 2018

A new report examines the relationship between private businesses and paramilitary groups during Colombia’s decades-long armed conflict, arguing that a post-conflict truth commission should investigate these potentially criminal dealings.

The report, published on February 26 by Colombian think tank Dejusticia, details 439 instances of “corporate complicity” in human rights violations committed by paramilitary groups between 1970 and 2015.

The investigation is based on testimonies of former paramilitary leaders and 35 court rulings under Colombia’s special Justice and Peace law, which was set up in 2005 in the context of the demobilization of the paramilitary umbrella organization known as the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia – AUC).

The report says that less than a third of these cases sparked a judicial investigation into the economic entities’ responsibility, and only 10 percent reached the courts.

The report also notes that while these 35 court rulings named specific private entities, they did not rule on the “responsibility of the economic actors for the violence.”

The vast majority of businesses identified seem to have willingly helped paramilitary groups to commit human rights violations — including by financing armed groups, helping displace people by force or collaborating in targeted killings. However, a little over 10 percent of economic actors appear to have been forced to collaborate through extortion.

“Para-Economy” and Indirect Complicity
Links between economic actors and Colombia’s paramilitary groups go all the way back to the 1980s when local businessmen and foreign multinationals anxious to protect their businesses funneled money to paramilitary groups they perceived as a protective force against leftist guerrillas.

This patron-client relationship remained the most common type of interaction between private actors and paramilitaries, accounting for half of the cases analyzed by Dejusticia.

The interaction included the sharing of lists of union or social leaders, which Dejusticia defines as “indirect complicity” and accounts for 82 of the interactions documented.

Despite the perception that foreign multinational actors played a dominant role in financing Colombia’s conflict, 98 percent of the cases included in the report involved Colombian economic actors.

Most cases relate to the agricultural, commercial and natural resource sectors, representing 38, 24, and 10 percent of cases respectively. Cattle ranching, banana and palm oil plantations were some of the areas were the phenomenon was particularly prominent.

SEE ALSO: AUC News and Profile

As the paramilitary phenomenon grew, businesses not only contributed to but also benefited from armed groups’ illegal operations, spurring a mutually-beneficial relationship within a “para-economy.”

Still, certain economic commercial entities took a step further to become directly complicit in committing human rights violations. Testimonies from several demobilized paramilitary leaders indicate that forced displacement was at times carried out not for strategic military needs, but to fulfill the economic interests of private actors, while 4 percent of recorded instances of corporate complicity involved homicides.

Interactive Graph

The kinds of interactions documented in the Dejusticia report were concentrated in particular geographic areas. Northern parts of Colombia appear to have been particularly affected; the departments of Antioquia and Córdoba as well as the Urabá coastal sub-region topped the list of six areas that constituted more than 75 percent of registered cases.

Relatedly, certain paramilitary factions were more often linked to relationships with businesses. These included the Elmer Cárdenas Bloc, which operated in the Urabá region of Antioquia; the Pacific Bloc; the Catatumbo Bloc, named after a conflict-ridden area of the department of Norte de Santander; and the Montes de María Bloc, which operated in the department of Sucre.

SEE ALSO: Colombia News and Profiles

The areas singled out in the report still suffer from their paramilitary legacy. For instance, the demobilization of the Elmer Cárdenas Bloc, the most mentioned AUC faction for ties with businesses, led to the birth of the Urabeños criminal group, one of the most powerful criminal actors in the country.

The departments mentioned in Dejusticia’s report are also among those that most suffer from targeted attacks against social and community leaders, which have increased since the signing of the peace agreement with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia – FARC) and the guerrillas’ subsequent demobilization.

Neo-paramilitary actors were presumably responsible for more than half of attacks against social leaders in Colombia in 2017, according to the latest annual report by the human rights organization Programa Somos Defensores.

In fieldwork conducted in these areas, InSight Crime has also observed evidence of the lingering effects of paramilitary activities.

“Some of the recent targeted killings of social leaders appear motivated by drug-related struggles between the ELN guerrilla group and the Urabeños, within a context of a power vacuum spurred by the FARC’s demobilization,” InSight Crime Senior Investigator Ángela Olaya noted.

“But from our extensive work in the field in recent years, most of the homicides are committed by self-proclaimed paramilitary groups that are descended from the AUC, and many seem to take place after victims report these groups’ financing.”

Truth Commission: A Way Forward?
The report calls for Colombia’s truth commission (known by its Spanish name, “Comisión para el esclarecimiento de la verdad, la convivencia y la no repetición,” or CEV) to continue investigating the ties between businesses and paramilitaries. Launched in December 2017 as part of the peace agreement with the FARC, the commission was given three years to shed light on the history of Colombia’s decades-long conflict, in particular its most brutal instances of violations of international humanitarian law.

Specifically, Dejusticia calls on the CEV to “explicitly include the issue of corporate complicity within its mandate,” and offers structural and methodological advice based on a comparative study of hundreds of cases of corporate complicity with paramilitary groups registered by previous truth commissions in 19 other countries, nine of them in Latin America and the Caribbean.

The Colombian commission’s mandate, however, is tied to the country’s reconciliation process and precludes a judicial component. Still, the commission’s work could be significant, Dejusticia researcher Alejandro Jiménez told InSight Crime.

“The simple fact the CEV would mention and address this issue has impact, an impact in terms of guaranteeing the right to the truth,” he said. “Whether this materializes in terms of justice will be seen on a case by case basis.”

Beyond helping with Colombia’s reconciliation efforts, holding these economic actors accountable for their acts via the truth commission would be an important win for the FARC peace process, particularly as the implementation of the peace agreement has hit some major road bumps.

However, it will not be easy. Colombia’s upcoming elections include several hard-right candidates, and may result in some significant policy changes under the next administration.

“There’s clearly a competition for resources,” Dejusticia’s Jiménez said. “The commission has very little time and a lot of work ahead.”
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
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https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...-africa/ar-BBK4guZ?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp

'Weaponizing capital': US worries over China's expanding role in Africa

CNN
By Steve George and Brad Lendon, CNN
11 hrs ago

Concerns in Washington are growing amid reports that China is poised to gain control of a major commercial port on the Horn of Africa, further consolidating the country's influence in the critically strategic region.

In late February, the Djibouti government terminated a contract with Dubai-based port operator DP World to run the Doraleh Container Terminal (DCT), on the grounds it was "contrary to the fundamental interests of the nation."

The port is partly owned by China's state-owned China Merchants Port Holdings, which maintains a 23.5% stake. It is also located immediately adjacent to China's only overseas military base, on the west bank of the Gulf of Aden and the southern entrance to the Red Sea close to the Suez Canal.

The government's sudden seizure of the port, among the largest in Africa, has led to speculation it could fall into Chinese hands, with US lawmakers citing reports that Djibouti was preparing to hand it over to China as a "gift."

On Tuesday, the future of the port dominated discussions during a hearing of the US House Armed Services Committee, with one senior US general warning that the US military could face "significant" consequences should China take control of the port.

Marine Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, the US' top military commander in Africa, said Chinese control of the port could result in restrictions on its use, potentially cutting off access to a key US resupply route and naval refueling stop.

"If the Chinese took over that port, then the consequences could be significant," said Waldhauser.

The port currently constitutes the primary access point for American, French, Italian and Japanese bases in Djibouti. The US base, Camp Lemonnier, is home to an estimated 4,000 personnel, including various special forces troops, and is used as a staging point for US military and counter-terrorism operations throughout Africa, the Middle East and the Indian Ocean.

"When we talk about influence and access, this is a classic example with regards to China, of how we've got to proceed and how we've got to be careful as we move forward," said Waldhauser.

China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang did not comment directly on Djibouti during a regular press briefing Wednesday. When asked about the port, he said he was "not aware of the specific situation," adding that China hoped the US would view "China-Africa cooperation in an objective and unbiased manner.'

However, the question of China's role in Djibouti did appear in an article published Wednesday in China's state-owned Global Times, in which US concerns were dismissed as "pointless."

Quoting Song Zhongping, a military expert, the article argued that if a Chinese company were to gain the right to operate the port, "it would be based on business and economic interests between China and Djibouti, and it has no intention at all to make trouble for the US military."

Chinese funding
The Djibouti government currently relies heavily on investment capital from China. To date, China has provided more than $1.4 billion in infrastructure funding, equivalent to 75% of Djibouti's GDP, according to a 2018 report from the Center for Global Policy Development.

In addition to investing in the DCT, Chinese state firms have also financed and built Ethiopia-Djibouti Water Pipelines and the Ethiopia-Djibouti Railway.

In the hearing Tuesday, Waldhauser admitted the United States would "never outspend the Chinese" in Djibouti, pointing out that in addition to major infrastructure projects, Beijing has built shopping malls and stadiums.

According to a report by CNA, a US-based nonprofit research and analysis organization, most of the capital that China provides to Djibouti is in the form of loans from the Export-Import Bank of China.

The bank, which is wholly state-owned and is under the direct leadership of the China's State Council, has a mandate from the Chinese government to "help Chinese companies secure contracts and acquire assets abroad," says the report.

In a letter to US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, dated March 5, Rep. Bradley Byrne, a Republican from Alabama, said he was concerned about China's influence in Djibouti and the potentially detrimental impact it would have on the US' ability to operate effectively in the region.

"If Djibouti is willing to confiscate a port terminal operating under a legal 30-year agreement, what is to stop (Djibouti) President Guelleh from reneging on the twenty-year lease the US signed in 2014 for Camp Lemonnier?" asked Byrne, who reiterated his question during Tuesday's committee hearing.

Military reach
Under Chinese President Xi Jinping, China's maritime reach has grown considerably, expanding far beyond its immediate coastline into areas not previously considered within its sphere of influence.

China formally established its Djibouti base in July last year, followed several months later by the country's controversial acquisition of the Hambantota port in Sri Lanka.

Speaking to CNN, Malcolm Davis, a senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute in Sydney, described the Hambantota deal -- which saw Sri Lanka grant China a 99-year lease on the port to service some of the billions in debt it owes to Beijing -- as part of a "bigger picture."

"The more you invest in the Belt and Road initiative, the more the Chinese are in a position to force your country to align politically in terms of policy," Davis told CNN, referring to the China's ambitious One Belt One Road (OBOR) international development strategy.

"So you become dependent on their investment and their largesse, and you're less likely to be critical of them and you're more likely to accommodate their interests strategically."

The government of Djibouti, led by President Ismail Omar Guelleh has so far welcomed China's role in the country's economy, maintaining that because Djibouti is resource-poor, its development is dependent on maximizing its location, and increasing investment in port infastructure.

In a separate hearing Wednesday before the House Appropriations Committee, US Navy Secretary Richard Spencer accused Beijing of "weaponinzing capital," saying China is making loans, not grants or aid, to finance the infrastructure projects.

If the debtor fails to make payments, "the asset owner comes and reclaims it and says these are now ours," said Spencer.

Blue-helmet deployments
China's infrastructure and development projects are only a part of a broader Africa strategy, that includes both military and peacekeeping elements. According to a report by the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), cooperation with Africa on peace and security is now an "explicit part of Beijing's foreign policy."

In 2015 Chinese President Xi Jinping committed 8,000 troops to the UN peacekeeping standby force — one fifth of the 40,000 total troops committed by 50 nations. China also pledged $100 million to the African Union standby force and $1 billion to establish the UN Peace and Development Trust Fund.

More than 2,500 Chinese combat-ready soldiers and police officers are now deployed in blue-helmet missions across the African continent, with the largest deployments in South Sudan (1,051), Liberia (666), and Mali (402), according to the ECFR.

"Blue-helmet deployments give the PLA a chance to build up field experience abroad -- and to help secure Chinese economic interests in places such as South Sudan," said the ECFR report.

In addition, Africa is currently home to an estimated one million Chinese nationals, with many employed in infrastructure projects backed by the Chinese government.

"China's involvement in African security is a product of a wider transformation of China's national defense policy. It is taking on a global outlook ... and incorporating new concepts such as the protection of overseas interests and open seas protection," said the report.

During the US House Appropriations Committee hearing Wednesday, the heads of the country's Navy and Marine Corps drew attention to China's attempts to finance ports and other infrastructure in places such as Africa, suggesting the country was "playing a long game."

Addressing the issue directly, Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Neller described the Chinese as having "big bags of cash" and no concern for human rights.

"They're buying airfields and ports to extend their reach," Neller said. "They want to win without a fight."

Spencer, the US Navy secretary, told the hearing that Beijing's financing practices could become a nightmare for Washington.

"Their open checkbook keeps me up at night," said Spencer.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
The Ugandan and American pullout from southeast CAR, the absence of the state in this strife-torn region and the lack of a UN mandate to fight the LRA means that these marauding remnants are a lethal menace to local people.

these marauding remnants are a lethal menace to DISARMED local people

One of the most informative parts of my previous working life was getting to talk to SF troopies just back from the far reaches of the world. And sometimes they brought photos.

I recall a set of photos brought back from the jungles of Peru by one of my 7th Group friends, showing a short line of porters carrying supplies to isolated Indian villages which were being terrorized by communist guerrillas from Sendero Luminoso, aka Shining Path.

The supplies? Small bundles of cheap single shot shotguns tied together butt to muzzle with twine, and cases of buckshot. And those villages shortly ceased to have a problem with Sendero, because the Indians who lived there soon graduated from single shot shotguns to captured AK-47s and SKSs. Messing with someone who lives his life in the jungle is one thing. Messing with someone who lives his life in the jungle and has a gun is a different deal entirely. And most of the Senderos were city kids ...
 

Housecarl

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https://www.upi.com/Defense-News/20...res-Kinzhal-hypersonic-missile/8141520791270/

Russia test-fires Kinzhal hypersonic missile

By Daniel Uria | Updated March 11, 2018 at 3:15 PM

March 11 (UPI) -- A Russian jet successfully test-lauched a hypersonic missile Sunday, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

The Kinzhal hypersonic missile was launched from an MiG-31 interceptor jet, which departed from an airfield in the Southern Military District, Russia's TASS News Agency reported.

"A MiG-31 fighter crew of the Russian Aerospace Forces made a training launch of a hypersonic missile of the Kinzhal high-precision air missile system in the predetermined area," the defense ministry said. "The launch was normal; the hypersonic missile hit the preset target on the test site."

Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country has developed supersonic nuclear weapons that can reach anywhere in the world, and are "invulnerable to enemy interception," during his state of the union address to Russian lawmakers in Moscow on March 1.

The Kinzhal missile is said to be capable of traveling 1,200 miles without entering the enemy's air defense zone.

The Russian Defense Ministry shared a video of the launch on Twitter, showing the jet carrying a large missile.

Kinzhal air system crews have conducted hundreds of tests emulating attacks made from a position of defense.

"Crews of the air system on the testing air alert sorties completed over 250 flights year-to-date under the combat training plan. The air staff has been trained in full scope day and night in various weather conditions," the defense ministry said.

Video

Related UPI Stories
  • Mattis: Syria 'very unwise' to use weaponized gas
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  • Airstrikes hit Eastern Ghouta in Syria as aid arrives
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.rferl.org/a/pakistan-ji...rnment-funding-haq-taliban-omar/29092748.html

PAKISTAN

'University Of Jihad' Gets Public Funds Even As Pakistan Fights Extremism

March 11, 2018 18:23 GMT
Frud Bezhan

Pakistan's so-called university of jihad is led by a man who proclaims himself "the father of the Taliban,” and counts some of the world's most notorious terrorists among its alumni.

It also receives millions of dollars in aid from the government of the restive Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province along the Pakistan-Afghan border, even as Islamabad carries out a national program to tackle extremism.

The Darul Uloom Haqqania religious seminary, located in Akora Khattak in northwest Pakistan, is known for preaching a fundamentalist brand of Islam and schooling a generation of fighters for both the Afghan Taliban and the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban.

Around 3,000 young men with beards and white skullcaps study at Haqqania's sprawling campus -- located about 50 kilometers east of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's capital, Peshawar, and 90 kilometers west of the national capital, Islamabad -- making it one of the largest Islamic teaching centers in the world.

As could be expected from an Islamic institution of learning, students memorize the Koran and study Islamic law and the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad. But the seminary's teachings rooted in the Sunni Deobandi movement, which developed in India in the late 19th century in opposition to British colonialism, encourages its adherents to conduct violent jihad, earning the seminary a sordid reputation.

"Faculty, students, and alumni of the seminary are intimately linked to several militant groups," said Michael Semple, an expert on Afghanistan and Pakistan at Queen's University, Belfast.

"The Afghan Taliban perhaps have the best-developed links, and they systematically recruit young graduates," he added. "This is not even a particularly secret activity. The recruitment works rather like the way blue-chip companies would approach a graduate recruitment fair."

History Of Violence

Among the seminary's more infamous graduates are the Afghan Taliban's longtime leader Mullah Mohammad Omar, who died in 2015 in Pakistan, and Jalaluddin Haqqani, the leader of the Pakistan-based Haqqani network that is allied with the Afghan Taliban.

Asim Umar, the head of Al-Qaeda's South Asia wing, is also believed to have studied at Darul Uloom Haqqania. Pakistan's Dawn newspaper also reported that the two suspects in the 2007 assassination of Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto attended the seminary. Haqqania rejected the claims.

The head of the seminary, Sami-ul Haq, who this week fell short in his bid to be elected to Pakistan's Senate, does not shy from Darul Uloom Haqqania's links to the Afghan Taliban. The 80-year-old cleric proudly embraces the title "Father of the Taliban" and said in an interview in 2009 that his students should fight against U.S. forces in Afghanistan. He has been quoted as describing Mullah Omar as an "angel" and one of his star pupils.

The seminary -- which was founded by Haq's father in 1947, the same year Pakistan gained its independence from the British Raj -- has published a two-volume collection of documents boasting of its role in the "Afghan jihad." During the Afghan-Soviet War from 1979-80 the seminary received millions in funding and provided thousands of fighters to the war effort. It was during that time that the seminary became fertile recruiting ground for Islamist groups.

"Many students of this madrasah [religious school] have fought in Afghanistan and in Pakistan and joined the ranks of both the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban," says Pakistani journalist and Taliban expert Rahimullah Yusufzai. "Not all the students go and fight, but the more radical join these militant groups and become even top leaders of these groups."

Yusufzai said that, while Darul Uloom Haqqania is not a terrorist training camp, its alumni provide a powerful precedent for current students to follow. He says the seminary also promotes a narrative that resonates among many in Pakistan -- that Islam is under attack from the West.

Millions In Public Funds

For years, Pakistan has promised to clamp down on religious schools that preach violence and have been recruiting grounds for domestic and foreign Islamist militant groups.

Yet radical seminaries like Darul Uloom Haqqania continue to operate freely and even receive government funds.

In February, the provincial government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province gave the seminary $2.5 million in a push to "mainstream" the controversial institution. Opposition politician Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehrik-e Insaf (PTI) also gave $2.7 million in public funds to Darul Uloom Haqqania in 2017.

F6F1AD46-520C-484F-891B-87456E600F65_w650_r0_s.png

https://gdb.rferl.org/F6F1AD46-520C-484F-891B-87456E600F65_w650_r0_s.png

Analysts say the funds have been used to expand and renovate the seminary's vast campus, not to modernize or diversify its teachings.

Pakistani politicians have attacked the decision by the conservative PTI, which has close ties to hard-line Islamic political parties and figures.

Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, said it was a "shame," while Syed Alam Mehsud, president of nationalist party Wolesi Tehrik, said the move "proved" that the government was "supporting extremist elements."

A 'Tall Order'

Pakistan launched a National Action Plan to tackle extremism shortly after a December 2014 assault on an army-run school in which Pakistani Taliban militants killed more than 150 people, most of them children. It included a plan to register all religious schools and reform their curriculum by introducing modern and secular subjects.

"Bringing reforms seems to be a tall order," says Yusufzai. "These schools and their ideology have become entrenched over a long period and now there are millions of students who have graduated from them. I think the focus of attention that is required from the authorities is lacking."

Semple said the seminaries and their leaders have become increasingly powerful in society and politics in Pakistan.

He said that would explain the PTI's decision to fund Darul Uloom Haqqania and its leader Haq, the leader of the Jamiat Ulema-e Islam political party, which will participate in general elections this year.

"The seminary and its head, Sami-ul Haq, have a vast network of alumni across the country," he said. "It's important to appreciate that Sami-ul Haq and his network's political influence were probably key in the PTI's decision."

Frud Bezhan
Frud Bezhan covers Afghanistan and the broader South Asia and Middle East region.
BezhanF@rferl.org
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Russian combat lasers can destroy hostile targets - Defense Ministry

MOSCOW. March 12 (Interfax-AVN) - Combat laser weapons capable of disarming enemy capabilities and destroying hostile targets were supplied to the Russian army last year, Deputy Defense Minister Yury Borisov told the ministry's newspaper Krasnaya Zvezda in an interview.

"Our nuclear scientists have learned how to concentrate energy required for destroying relevant enemy weapons instantly, in a split second," Borisov said.

"Laser weapons capable of disarming capabilities of the potential enemy and destroying every target of the laser beam were commissioned last year," he said.

"I think the dynamics of achievements, especially in the field of weapons based on new physical principles, has gained pace," Borisov said. http://www.interfax.com/newsinf.asp?id=815802
 

Housecarl

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Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.realcleardefense.com/ar..._use_of_low-yield_nuclear_weapons_113180.html

Deterring Russian First Use of Low-Yield Nuclear Weapons

By Mark B. Schneider
March 12, 2018

The 2018 Nuclear Posture Review concluded that the U.S. must deploy a small number of low-yield nuclear warheads on its Trident missiles to deter Russian first use of low-yield nuclear weapons for limited nuclear strikes in conventional warfare. It states, “Russia’s belief that limited nuclear first use, potentially including low-yield weapons, can provide such an advantage is based, in part, on Moscow’s perception that its greater number and variety of non-strategic nuclear systems provide a coercive advantage in crises and at lower levels of conflict. Recent Russian statements on this evolving nuclear weapons doctrine appear to lower the threshold for Moscow’s first-use of nuclear weapons. Russia demonstrates its perception of the advantage these systems provide through numerous exercises and statements. Correcting this mistaken Russian perception is a strategic imperative.”[1]

The threat of Russian first use involving limited nuclear strikes was recognized by the Obama administration. In October 2016, Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter stated that “…it’s a sobering fact that the most likely use of nuclear weapons is not the massive nuclear exchange of the classic Cold War-type, but rather the unwise resort to smaller but still unprecedentedly terrible attacks, for example, by Russia or North Korea to try to coerce a conventionally superior opponent to back off or abandon an ally during a crisis.”[2] As Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis has stated, “We want to make certain they recognize that we can respond in kind and that we don't have to go with the high yield weapon.”[3]

Domestic opposition to this NPR decision appears to be largely ideological and ignores the disparity in such weapons that now exists and Russia’s doctrine with regards to the first use of nuclear weapons. There is nothing new about low-yield warheads on ballistic missiles. In addition to Russia, the UK and France reportedly have low-yield ballistic missile warheads on their SLBMs.[4]

Russia reportedly has acquired low-yield, precision low-yield and low-collateral damage nuclear weapons. This was originally reported by distinguished Russian journalist Pavel Felgenhauer who wrote in 2002 that in April 1999 the Russian National Security Council approved a concept for developing and using “…non-strategic low- and flexible-yield battlefield weapons,” and that the yield of these precision weapons would be tens or hundreds of tons of TNT.[5] “Flexible yield” is clearly what we call variable yield or dial a yield. New Russian low-yield nuclear weapons are reported in the Russian press including in the state media. A declassified year 2000 CIA report observed, “Moscow’s military doctrine on the use of nuclear weapons has been evolving and probably has served as the justification for the development of very low-yield, high-precision nuclear weapons. The range of applications will ultimately be determined by Russia’s evolving nuclear doctrine, and could include artillery, air-to-air weapons, ABM weapons, anti-satellite weapons or multiple rocket launchers against tanks or massed troops.…”[6] In 2009, the bipartisan U.S. Strategic Commission report said Russia was developing “…low-yield tactical nuclear weapons including an earth penetrator.”[7]

Actual Russian deployment of strategic low-yield nuclear warheads (tens of tons to 200 tons yield) on Russian SLBMs (the Sineva and Bulava-30) has been reported in the state media (Sputnik News and Ria Novosti), and in the decidedly non-state media, the liberal Ekho Moskvy Radio (in an interview with hardline but well connected Russian journalist Colonel (ret.) Viktor Litovkin.).[8] Since, according to then-Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov, the Bulava-30 SLBM and RS-24/Yars ICBM use the same new warhead, it is nearly certain that the RS-24 also has low- yield options.[9]

Russian media have also reported that Russia has developed and deployed new low-yield tactical nuclear weapons. In 2004, Russian television displayed a new howitzer which it said: “…could be used to fire low-yield nuclear bombs.”[10] In 2013, Academician Yevgeniy Avrorin, a former Director of the Sarov nuclear weapons laboratory (the All-Russian Scientific-Research Institute), in an interview published by the Sarov laboratory, said the Russian 152-mm nuclear artillery shell with “a kiloton yield” has been “broadly deployed” throughout the Russian Army.[11] In 2009, Russia’s main official news agency ITAR-TASS (now called TASS) reported that, “The nuclear submarine Severodvinsk will be equipped with long-range cruise missiles that can potentially carry low-capacity tactical warheads.”[12] The 2018 NPR report indicates that Russia has CRBM (Close Range Ballistic Missiles) which would have to have low-yield warheads because of their limited range. Dr. Philip Karber, President of the Potomac Foundation, has stated that roughly half of Russia’s 5,000 tactical nuclear weapons have been modernized with new sub-kiloton nuclear warheads for air-defense, torpedoes and cruise missiles.[13]

Russia is also reportedly developing advanced low-collateral damage designs. In 1999, Major General (ret.) Vladimir Belous discussed the development of “neutron artillery shells, mortar shells, and operational-tactical missile warheads.”[14] A declassified CIA report gives this some additional credibility, noting, “A number of articles [in the Russian press] suggest that Russia is developing low-yield warheads with enhanced radiation that could be used on high-precision non-strategic weapons systems.”[15] Moreover, in 2013, the Sarov nuclear weapons laboratory said that during the Cold War they had developed a peaceful nuclear explosive (PNE) device that was 99.85% based on fusion.[16] This is essentially a low-yield/low-collateral damage nuclear weapon. The only question would be its size and weight but, worst case, it certainly could be delivered by any strategic bomber which can deliver large and heavy weapons. Vice Admiral (ret.) Robert Monroe, former Director of the Defense Nuclear Agency, has recently stated that Russia is now 20 years ahead of the U.S. in such weapons.[17]

Pavel Felgenhauer has written that the Russian S-300, S-400, S-500 air defense missiles and the Moscow ABM are nuclear capable and have a secondary ground-attack capability.[18] While he did not mention yield, these missiles, two of which the Russians say are designed to intercept ballistic missiles and satellites in near space,[19] would have to have very low-yield warheads unless Russian leaders don’t mind destroying Russia with nuclear EMP effects from their own weapons. Both TASS and Sputnik News, both state media, have confirmed Felgenhauer’s report that the S-300 and S-400 anti-aircraft missiles have the capability to attack ground targets.[20] The 2018 NPR confirms the existence of nuclear warheads on Russian anti-aircraft missiles.[21]

Senior Russian officials have talked about Russian low-yield nuclear weapons. In 2007, Russian Deputy Chief of the General Staff General Alexander Rukshin, said Russia had “…created low-yield nuclear tactical nuclear ordnance with a yield of no more than 5 kilotons, which can be employed on the battlefield.”[22] In 2009, Vice Admiral Oleg Burtsev, then-First Deputy Chief of the Russian Naval Staff, said that tactical nuclear weapons may be the future and, “We can install low-yield warheads on existing cruise missiles.”[23] These statements are particularly interesting because they were made in contravention of the Russian propaganda line that the U.S. was developing such weapons, which was untrue at that time. It is normal for Russia to charge that the U.S. is doing what Russia is actually doing. Further confirmation of low-yield tactical nuclear weapons comes in a March 2009 ITAR-TASS story which said, “The missiles [on the new Russian nuclear submarine Severodvinsk] are capable of carrying low-yield tactical nuclear warheads and are meant to be used against the potential enemy’s aircraft carrying groups.”[24]

In December 2015, President Putin revealed that the Kalibr and Kh-101 cruise missiles used in attacks against Syrian targets, “…can be equipped either with conventional or special nuclear warheads.”[25] Interfax-AVN reported that the Kalibr has a “nuclear kiloton warhead.”[26]

Advanced low-yield nuclear and thermonuclear weapons were reportedly developed by the Soviet Union in its later years.[27] Russian expatriate Nikolai Sokov writes, “…as early as 1992, Lieutenant General Evgeniy Negin announced that Russia already had developed a miniaturized nuclear weapon.”[28] In 1994, Russian Atomic Energy Minister Viktor Mikhaylov stated that “a new generation” of nuclear weapons could be developed by the year 2000.[29] In 1996, he called for the construction of 10,000 very low-yield nuclear weapons.[30] In August 2003, when he was Director of the Sarov nuclear weapons laboratory, Mikhaylov said Russian efforts to improve thermonuclear weapons continued and that there were weapons “yielding hundreds of tons.”[31] This is more than a low-yield weapon. It would also be a low-collateral damage design (effectively a neutron bomb) which would be cleaner (producing less collateral damage) and more militarily effective than low-yield fission weapons against some targets. That same year he observed, “The philosophy of thermonuclear weapons has changed today, and on the agenda is the development of high-precision and deep-penetration nuclear bombs,” further adding that Russia was ahead of the United States in these weapons.[32] In December 2002, he declared, “The scientists are developing a nuclear ‘scalpel’ capable of ‘surgically removing’ and destroying very localized targets. The low-yield warhead will be surrounded with a superhardened casing which makes it possible to penetrate 30–40 meters into rock and destroy a buried target—for example, a troop command and control point or a nuclear munitions storage facility.”[33] These are very impressive characteristics. Since this was said 16 years ago and Mikhaylov also said that it would take 10-20 years to develop this weapon, these weapons could already be available. In March 2004 Mikhaylov again stated that, “Thermonuclear weapons development philosophy has changed and work is being conducted on the development of precision-guided munitions with penetrating capability.”[34]

Concerning the Russian Vostok 2010 military exercise, the official newspaper of the Far East Military District said, “To suppress a large center of the separatists’ resistance and to achieve minimal losses of the attacking troops a low-yield ‘nuclear’ attack was mounted against the enemy.”[35] In the same exercise, Pavel Felgenhauer wrote that Russia used a nuclear-armed S-300 surface-to-air missile against a ground target.[36]

Despite the near hysterical reaction from Russia and U.S. arms control enthusiasts, the U.S. program for a low-yield warhead for the Trident missile is quite modest, prudent and not remotely comparable to existing Russian capabilities and programs. The weapons that the U.S. plans to install will be small in number, modest in cost, not a new type of nuclear weapon and will not require a nuclear test.[37] This clearly rules out low-collateral damage warheads, precision or near-precision accuracy, or earth penetration – all capabilities that the Russians are reported to have or are developing. Such restrictions also preclude any significant warfighting capability. The purpose of the low-yield Trident warhead is not warfighting but rather to deter Russian first use of nuclear weapons which would very likely involve precision low-yield or low-collateral damage nuclear weapons. The Russians believe they can use these without precipitating a massive nuclear exchange.

The Trident submarines have the survivability that is necessary for an effective deterrent, but they have 1980s level accuracy which is good but not precision or near precision. Their survivable capability could deter Russian first use of low-yield weapons including use against bomber bases and nuclear-capable fighter bases to eliminate U.S. retaliatory capability against low-yield attack by a preemptive attack. However, these aircraft are not on alert and, hence, unless put on alert can be eliminated by about ten ordinary nuclear weapons. A 2007 study by CSIS concluded, “In a ‘bolt from the blue’ attack, just five dedicated nuclear strikes could take out all three strategic nuclear bomber bases and the two submarine bases.”[38] Trident submarines at sea will very likely survive, but non-alert bombers present at their bases could be destroyed. A small number of B-61 nuclear bombs are reportedly deployed at five NATO air bases in Europe.[39] Again, they could be taken out by a small nuclear attack if they are not on alert or dispersed. A very good recent analysis by James R. Howe has concluded that a small number of precision low-yield nuclear weapons would eliminate the ability of these bases to retaliate for months (even assuming no follow-on Russian nuclear attacks) with very low levels of collateral damage.[40] Howe also raised concern about the possibility of a much larger Russian precision-low-yield attack (about 1,300 to 1,500 weapons) which has the potential to defeat NATO with modest collateral damage.

The NPR decision on Trident low-yield capability was recommended by the Obama administration’s Defense Science Board in December 2016.[41] It plugs a major hole in our current deterrent capability at virtually no cost.

Putin’s remarkably militant nuclear superweapons speech to the Russia Duma on March 1, 2018, should be a wake-up call regarding the need to create a more effective deterrent to counter Putin’s irresponsible policies. Make no mistake about the intended target of this speech. As Maxim Trudolyubov, a senior fellow with the Kennan Institute, observed, “…Interestingly, both state-run [Russian] news media and independent outlets agreed that the speech was mainly targeted at Washington.”[42] Putin first staked out a claim to the former Soviet states because “…Russia, which was known as the Soviet Union or Soviet Russia abroad” had lost them with the demise of the Soviet Union.[43] Then, he alternated between portraying Russia as a victim (making ridiculous claims about U.S. missile defense and the failure of the West to “listen” to Russia) and making extreme forms of standard Russian nuclear threats – nuclear superweapons and an “immediate” nuclear launch after a supposed Western attack. Pavel Felgenhauer summed up the message as, “Russia is not aggressive, according to Putin, but it demands what it believes it is due—otherwise, its doomsday nuclear superweapons are ready.”[44]

Putin does not want Russia to be listened to. He wants its imperialism and aggression accepted at the point of his nuclear superweapons. After declaring to the West, “So listen now,” Putin went into a speech which, as a noted British Russia expert Roger McDermott observed, “…offered a vision of the Russian Armed Forces more akin to a parody of Dr. Strangelove.”[45]

Derek Williams and Adam B. Lowther attribute Russian confidence that Russia can start a nuclear conflict, control it and win it to the fact that, “…Vladimir Putin believes the United States lacks the will and the weapons to respond not only to limited nuclear war but the cohesive use of nuclear deterrence for political gain.”[46] We need nuclear deterrent programs that would convince Putin that his theory of victory is foolhardy and if he tries aggression it will be resisted and defeated and that Russian nuclear weapons first use will not assure his victory. We must assure that any U.S. President has the broadest possible range of credible nuclear options to convince any potential aggressor to desist from attacking us or our allies with nuclear or WMD weapons.

Dr. Mark B. Schneider is a Senior Analyst with the National Institute for Public Policy. Before his retirement from the Department of Defense Senior Executive Service, Dr. Schneider served in a number of senior positions within the Office of Secretary of Defense for Policy including Principal Director for Forces Policy, Principal Director for Strategic Defense, Space and Verification Policy, Director for Strategic Arms Control Policy and Representative of the Secretary of Defense to the Nuclear Arms Control Implementation Commissions. He also served in the senior Foreign Service as a Member of the State Department Policy Planning Staff.

Notes:
[1] Department of Defense, Nuclear Posture Review, (Washington D.C., US, Department of Defense, February 2018), pp. XI-XII, available at https://media.defense.gov/2018/Feb/.../2018-NUCLEAR-POSTURE-REVIEW-FINAL-REPORT.PDF.
[2] “Remarks by Secretary Carter to troops at Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota,” (Washington D.C., U.S. department of Defense, Sept. 26, 2016), available at http://www.defense.gov/News/ Transcripts/Transcript-View/Article/957408/remarks-by-secretary-carter-to-troops-at-kirtland-afb-new-mexico.
[3] Jamie McIntyre, “Jim Mattis: Low-yield nukes mean US won't have to choose between ‘surrender’ and ‘suicide’,” The Examiner, February 6, 2018, available at https://dialog.proquest.com/professional/docview/ 1999173890? accountid=155509.
[4] Federation of American Scientists, “Trident-II D-5,” Federation of American Scientists, December 4, 2006, http://fas.org/nuke/guide/uk/slbm/d-5.htm.: David S. Yost, “France’s New Nuclear Doctrine,” International Affairs, Vo. 82, No. 4 (2006), p. 704, available at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1468-2346.2006. 00564.x /abstract.
[5] Pavel Felgenhauer, “Bomber Makers Trade Union,” The Moscow Times, March 14, 2002, available at http://www. themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/bomb-makers-trade-union/247805 html.
[6] “Evidence of Russian Development of New Subkiloton Nuclear Warheads [Redacted],” Intelligence Memorandum, Central Intelligence Agency, August 30, 2000, approved for release October 2005, pp. 6, 10, available at http://www.foia.cia.gov/sites/default/files/document_conversions/89801/DOC_0001260463.pdf.
[7] William J. Perry and James R. Schlesinger, America’s Strategic Posture - The Final Report of the Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States, (Washington D.C.: U.S. Institute of Peace, 2009), p. 12, available at http://media.usip.org/reports/strat_posture_report.pdf.
[8] Ilya Kramnik, “Nevsky and Novomoskovsk: Two Submarines for Putin,” Sputnik News, December 12, 2010, available at http://sputniknews.com/analysis/20101215/161784522.htmlz.: Andrey Kislyakov, “Does Russia Need a ‘Wet’ Missile and One More Tank?,” Ria Novosti, January 19, 2008. (Translated by World News Connection).; “Russian pundit Litovkin argues case of Bulava,” Ekho Moskvy Radio, July 17, 2009. (Translated by World News Connection).
[9] “Russia to use same warheads on land, sea,” UPI News Track, April 24, 2006. (Transcribed by World News Connection).
[10] “Russian TV shows howitzer capable of firing low-yield nuclear warheads,” BBC Monitoring Former Soviet Union, April 11, 2004, available at https://dialog.proquest.com/professional/docview/460568620?Accounted =155509.
[11] Àêàäåìèê Åâãåíèé Íèêîëàåâè÷ Àâðîðèí: «Íàóêà — ýòî òî, ÷òî ìîæíî ñäåëàòü, à òåõíè÷åñêàÿ íàóêà — ýòî òî, ÷òî íóæíî ñäåëàòü»,” atomicenergy.ru, April 10, 2013, available at http://www.atomic-energy.ru/interviews/
2013/04/10/41068. (In Russian).
[12] “RF To Build 6 Nuclear Subs With Long-range Cruise Missiles,” ITAR-TASS, March 27, 2009. No longer available on the TASS webs-site, but Western press stories citing the ITAR-TASS report remain on the internet. “Russia to build 6 nuke subs with Cruise Missiles,” CNN, March 28, 2009, available at https://army.ca/forums/ index.php?topic = 85048.0 World/.
[13] A video of Karber’s presentation is available at http://www.lse.ac.uk/ideas/podcasts/karber.
[14] National Institute for Public Policy, “Section II Minimum Deterrence: Fragile Hope for Constant and Benign Threat Environment,” (Fairfax Va.: National Institute for Public Policy, September 2014,), p. 22, available at http://www.esd.whs.mil/Portals/54/Documents/ FOID/ Reading%20Room/Other/Litigation%20Release%20-%20Section%20II%20Minimum%20Deterrence 20 Fragile%20Hope.pdf.
[15] Office of Russian and European Analysis, Central Intelligence Agency “Russia: [Deleted],” June 22, 2000,
available at http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB200/20000622.pdf.
[16] “About Snezhinsk,” CNCP.ru, April 2013, available at http://www.cncp.ru/new_site/ng/participants/snezhinsk/ snezinsk1.shtml.
[17] Vice Admiral (ret.) Robert Monroe, “Facing the grave nuclear risk,” The Washington Times, January 27, 2017, available at https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/jan/26/america-must-resume-underground-nuclear-testing/.
[18] Pavel Felgenhauer, “Russia Seeks to Impose New ABM Treaty on the US by Developing BMD,” Eurasia Daily Monitor, Volume 7, No. 136 (July 16, 2010), available at http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ Ttnews[tt_news]=36624.
[19] “Russia: Comments by Deputy Defense Minister Ostapenko on Aerospace Defense Troops Programs Commentary by Interfaks-AVN, Moscow, 24 April: The New S-500 Air Defense Missile System Will Be Able To
Effectively Combat Advanced Offensive Aerospace Weapons…” Interfax-AVN Online, April 26, 2013. (Translated by World News Connection).: “Regiment of S-400 to enter duty in Sevastopol in February 2018,” TASS, October 24, 2017, available at http:// tass.com/defense/972236.
[20] “Russian Armed Forces will get five S-400 air defense systems in September-October 2016,” TASS, February 29, 2016, available at http://tass.ru/en/defense/859641.: “S-400 missile defense regiment takes up combat duty outside Moscow (VIDEO),” Sputnik News, January 11, 2017, available at https://sputniknews.com/russia/2017011110 49464109-russia-s-400-moscow/.
[21] Nuclear Posture Review, op. cit., p. 53.
[22] Quoted in Mark B. Schneider, “The Future of the U.S. Nuclear Deterrent,” Comparative Strategy, Vol. 27, No. 4 (October 31, 2008), p. 348, available at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01495930802358539.
[23] “Russian Federation Will Increase Role of Tactical Nuclear Weapons on Multirole Nuclear Submarines,” Gazeta, March 23, 2009, available at https://dialog.proquest.com/professional/docview/460452801?Accounted =155509.
[24] “Russia’s Severodvinsk attack sub to be armed with new cruise missiles,” BBC Monitoring Former Soviet Union, March 27, 2009, available at https://dialog.proquest.com/professional/docview/460438489? Accounted =155509.
[25] “Meeting with Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu,” Kremlin.ru, December 8, 2015, available at http://en.kremlin. ru/events/president/news/50892.
[26] “Shipbuilding And Navy; Severodvinsk nuclear sub tests will end in 2012 - Navy commander,” Interfax, August 24, 2012, available at https://dialog.proquest.com/professional/docview/1038339219?accountid=155509.
[27] John T. Correll, “The Neutron Bomb,” Air Force Magazine, December 2017, available at http://www. Airforce mag.com/MagazineArchive/Pages/2017/December%202017/The-Neutron-Bomb.aspx.
[28] Nikolai Sokov, “TACTICAL NUCLEAR WEAPONS ELIMINATION: NEXT STEP FOR ARMS CONTROL,” The Nonproliferation Review, Winter 1997, p. 18, available at http://www.nonproliferation.org/wp-content/uploads/ npr/sokov42.pdf.
[29] “New Generation of Arms,” The Moscow Times, June 7, 1994, available at http://www.themoscowtimes.com/ news/article/new-generation-of-arms/212085.html.
[30] Sokov, “TACTICAL NUCLEAR WEAPONS ELIMINATION: NEXT STEP FOR ARMS CONTROL,” op. cit., p. 18.: George Lewis and Andrea Gabbitas, “What Should Be Done About Tactical Nuclear Weapons?”, (Washington D.C., The Atlantic Council, March 1999, p. 18.
[31] Quoted in Schneider, “The Future of the U.S. Nuclear Deterrent,” op. cit., p. 348.
[32] Quoted Mark B. Schneider, The Nuclear Forces and Doctrine of the Russian Federation, (Fairfax Va.: National Institute Press, 2006), p. 20, available at http://www.nipp.org/Publication/Downloads/ Publication% 20 Archive% 20PDF/Russian%20nuclear%20doctrine%20--%20NSF%20for%20print.pdf.
[33] Quoted in Schneider, “The Future of the U.S. Nuclear Deterrent,” op. cit., p. 348.
[34] Quoted in Schneider, The Nuclear Forces and Doctrine of the Russian Federation, op. cit., p. 16.
[35] John W. Parker, Russia’s Revival: Ambitions, Limitations, and Opportunities for the United States (Washington,
D.C.: Institute for National Strategic Studies, January 2011), p, 23, available at John W. Parker, Russia’s Revival: Ambitions, Limitations, and Opportunities for the United States (Washington, D.C.: Institute for National Strategic Studies, January 2011), p, 23, available at http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/ u2/a546683.pdf.
[36] Pavel Felgenhauer, “Russia Seeks to Impose New ABM Treaty on the US by Developing BMD,” Eurasia Daily
Monitor, Vol. 7, No. 136 (July 16, 2010), available at http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_Ttnews [tt_news]=36624.
[37] “News Briefing on the 2018 Nuclear Posture Review,” U.S. Department of Defense, February 2, 2018, available at https://www.defense.gov/News/Transc...-briefing-on-the-2018-nuclear-posture-review/.
[38] Owen C. W. Price and Jenifer Mackby, eds., Debating 21st Century Nuclear Issues, (Washington, DC: Center For Strategic and International Studies, 2007), 23, available at www.northropgrumman.com/analysis-center/other-publications/assets/triad-mono graph.pdf.
[39] Hans M. Kristensen, “B61-12: The New Guided Standoff Nuclear Bomb,” Federation of American Scientists, May 2, 2014, available at https://fas.org/programs/ssp/nukes/publications1/Brief2014_PREPCOM2.pdf.
[40] James R. Howe, “Potential Military Utility of Russian Employment of Advanced Technology Nuclear Weapons in Europe—Implications for US Extended Deterrence,” Vision Centric, Inc., no date.
[41] Defense Science Board, Seven Defense Priorities for the New Administration, (Washington. D.C.: The Defense
Science Board, December 2016), p. 24, available at https://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports/2010s/Seven_Defense
_Priorities.pdf.
[42] Maxim Trudolyubov, “Putin Is Pushing a War Mentality on Unwilling Russians (Op-ed),” The Moscow Times, March 6, 2016, available at https://themoscowtimes.com/articles...r-mentality-on-unwilling-russians-op-ed-60714.
[43] “Presidential Address to the Federal Assembly,” The Kremlin, March 1, 2018, available at http://en.kremlin.ru/ events/president/news/56957.
[44] Pavel Felgenhauer, “Putin Unveils Array of Nuclear ‘Super Weapons’ Aimed at US,” Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 15 Issue: 32, (March 1, 2018), available at https://jamestown.org/program/putin-unveils-array-of-nuclear-super-weapons-aimed-at-us/.
[45] Roger McDermott, “Russia’s Armed Forces Rehearse New ‘Shock-Fire’ Tactics,” Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 15 Issue: 34, (March 6, 2018), available at https://jamestown.org/program/russias-armed-forces-rehearse-new-shock-fire-tactics/.
[46] Derek Williams and Adam B. Lowther, “Lower-Yield Weapons Will Raise, Not Lower, the Threshold for Nuclear Use,” Defense One, August 29, 2017, available at http://www.defenseone.com/ideas/ 2017/08/lower-yield-weapons-will-raise-not-lower-threshold-nuclear-use/140610/.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2018-03/china-wages-drug-war

China Wages a Drug War

Proceedings Magazine - March 2018 144/3/1,381 [2]
By Captain Jim Fanell, U.S. Navy (Retired) and William C. Triplett, II

Two important documents published in December reveal that the United States is now in a new hot war with the People’s Republic of China (PRC). This statement is based on the reality that, because of actions by the PRC, Americans are dying at an annual rate that is higher than during the entirety of the Vietnam War.

The first document that reveals that the United States is in such a conflict is the President’s new National Security Strategy (NSS), which boldly states *“the illicit opioid epidemic, fed by drug cartels as well as Chinese fentanyl traffickers, kills tens of thousands of Americans each year.” The second was the announcement from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDCP), National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) that for the calendar year 2016 63,600 Americans died from drug overdose, nearly three times the rate in 1999. According to the NHCS, “the pattern of drugs involved in drug overdose deaths has changed in recent years,” with the rate of death from synthetic opiods other than methadone (such as fentanyl and tramadol) having doubled from 2015 to 2016. According to the CDCP, fentanyl is now “the leading cause of overdose death in the U.S.,” accounting for more than 19,000 of the 63,400 fatalities last year. And by all appearances, the numbers for 2017 (which will be published in early 2019) are on track to be greater than in 2016.

While Beijing and apologists for the Communist Party of China (CCP) seek to place the responsibility for these deaths on the demand from an immoral and decadent American population, the fact remains Americans are being killed by a lethal drug that is being manufactured in, and transported from, the PRC.

According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), China provides the majority of all the illegal fentanyl that is shipped to the United States. While most of the interdicted drugs have been through the mail or within shipments of heroin smuggled across the southern border, there is growing evidence of just how much fentanyl is being shipped by sea.

For instance, Anne Arundel County Maryland reported nearly 200 people died in overdoses in 2017. Despite devoting increased resources to fight this influx, the county lost more lives to opioid overdoses than traffic accidents, homicides, and suicides in all of 2016. Anne Arundel County is not Appalachia; it is an upscale country, home to the U.S. Naval Academy, the National Security Agency (NSA), and lots of high paying-government contracting jobs. Yet this county has been inundated by a wave of fentanyl from China that comes into the state through the Port of Baltimore. What is of concern is how much is coming by sea and how to deal with this influx, especially in view of the PRC’s reluctance to support requests from the U.S. government to crack down on production and shipping of this deadly drug.

In October 2017, for instance, the U.S. Department of Justice announced the first indictment of two PRC nationals for illegally shipping fentanyl into the United States. The PRC’s National Narcotics Control Commission (NNCC), the equivalent to the U.S. DEA, however, reported that the two individuals had not been arrested because it was unclear if they had broken any PRC laws and that the United States was at fault for having state-level marijuana legalization laws that are contributing to the increase in fentanyl abuse.

Whether or not this response is indicative of a purposeful PRC strategy to erode U.S. national health and security, illegal opioids from China are killing U.S. citizens.

What can be done? Well, short of stopping and searching all container ships coming from the PRC, the U.S. Sea Services can do a few things today:

1. Intrusive Leadership . If there ever was a time for military leaders to get closer to their young servicemembers, it is now. In addition to drug testing, the more important effective course of action will be for leaders to personally educate their people about the exceptionally lethal nature of opioids like fentanyl. For instance, a recent bust in New York in December 2017 took in 196 pounds of this synthetic drug, enough to kill every person in New York City…eleven times over. It is so deadly, the CBP agents wear latex gloves and masks because ingesting just a few milligrams of this drug could kill them. The risk of death from opioid overdose is not like taking one too many drinks at the club or smoking marijuana and getting behind the wheel of your car (both of which are illegal). Servicemembers need to know how lethally volatile it is and that even just one trial use could end their lives.

2. It’s about National Security . While we certainly owe it to our Sailors, Marines, Soldiers, Airmen, Coast Guardsmen, and their families to warn them about this plight, we need our senior leaders to take a stand and call attention to this issue in our multitude of mil-to-mil engagement activities. While it has been standard protocol for U.S. military leaders not to engage in contentious political issues when conducting international engagement events, the fact that the Commander-in-Chief has stated that this is a national security issue should impact how U.S. military leaders engage with their Chinese counterparts. Considerations should be made to introduce this issue as a talking point during future high-level dialogues. To the extent that there is no reduction in the inbound flow of Chinese fentanyl to our shores, then further actions like deferring the PRC’s participation in events like the Rim of the Pacific exercise should be considered.

Seasoned experts have recommended that the ultimate solution for fighting the drug wars, especially this opioid crisis, is curbing demand. While limiting demand will continue to be a focus of effort for many, the message for the U.S. military is that we are now engaged in a drug war with China. It is a war we must fight to protect U.S. national security and our most precious resource—our people.

Captain Fanell served as a career naval intelligence officer whose positions included the senior intelligence officer for China at the Office of Naval Intelligence and the chief of intelligence for CTF-70, 7th Fleet, and the U.S. Pacific Fleet. He retired from the Navy in 2015 and currently is a government fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy.

William Triplett was a former chief counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Moscow on Expulsion of 23 Diplomats From UK: 'Unacceptable, Unjustified' Move
Prime Minister Theresa May has announced the largest expulsion of Russian diplomats from the UK since the Cold War over the alleged attack on a former spy. Moscow has denounced May's claims as baseless.

The Russian Embassy in London called the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats announced by UK Prime Minister Theresa May over the poisoning of former intelligence officer Sergei Skripal "unacceptable, short-sighted and unjustified."
In a statement, the Embassy confirmed that the diplomats had been declared persona non grata, adding that London was to blame for the harm caused to Russian-UK relations by this "hostile step."
The Russian Embassy's reaction followed UK Prime Minister Theresa May's address to the House of Commons, where she announced a response to the alleged attack on Skripal.
Biggest Expulsion of Russian Diplomats Since Cold War
Reiterating a claim she made Monday about Russia's alleged culpibility in the Skripal case, the prime minister accused Russia of an "unlawful use of force against the United Kingdom," saying this crime was part of a well established pattern of "Russian state aggression" in Europe, and accused Moscow of "sarcasm, contempt and defiance" in its response to London's ultimatum to provide further information.
May announced that 23 Russian diplomats "identified as undeclared intelligence officers" will be expelled and given one week to leave.Second, she vowed the creation of new legislative powers against "hostile state activity," as well as possible new counter-espionage powers.
May promised the freeze of Russian assets in cases where they threaten UK citizens or property, adding there was no place for those seeking to do harm British citizens in the UK.London will suspend all high level contacts with diplomatic officials from Moscow, including during the upcoming FIFA World Cup in Russia, which British ministers and members of the royal family will skip.
The prime minister stressed that the London and its allies will coordinate its actions, and welcomed support received from NATO and the EU. A NATO Council meeting will be held to discuss the matter on Thursday. The UK is also pushing for a debate at the UN on the Skripal case, and has asked the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to to help verify its claims against Moscow.Responding to a lawmaker's question about whether she will respond to any Russian response with an even firmer response, May said there were "other measures" that London stands ready to deploy should it face "further provocations" from Moscow.
May accused Russia of having a "pattern" of aggression, from Syria to Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, to meddling in elections in other parts of the world to "propaganda" and "misinformation campaigns."
Asked is the UK will seek to further diversify away from the delivery of Russian gas, May confirmed that "we are indeed looking" to other countries for supplies.Asked whether Russian English language media including RT would be targetted, May said that this was not a matter for the government, but for media regulator Ofcom. She added that the UK would continue to support the efforts of BBC's Russian language service. Moscow had previously warned that UK media would be expelled from Russia if Russian media was expelled from the UK.
May encouraged lawmakers to send a "clear message" by refusing to appear on RT and Sputnik.Salisbury Incident

Ex-GRU officer and MI6 double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found unconscious on March 4 outside a shopping center in the southern English city of Salisbury. Police believe they were poisoned by a "very rare" nerve agent. The pair remain hospitalized in critical condition.Not waiting for the conclusion of the investigation, Theresa May accusedRussia of responsibility for the attack.
Investigators suspect that a nerve agent known as Novichok was used in the poisoning attack. Russian officials have pointed out that Moscow destroyed its stocks of the weapon in the 1990s. US media have also revealed that the Pentagon has had access to the nerve agent since the late 1990s, when it was tasked with helping to dismantle a Soviet-era chemical weapons research institute in Uzbekistan.Moscow has dismissed all accusations of involvment in the Skripal incident and requested access to the case. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has characterized London's claims as "propaganda," and complained that Russia wasn't being provided with any evidence regarding the crime, in spite of the accusation of Russian involvement, and the fact that Russia had made an official request for information regarding a crime which affected Yulia Skripal, who is a Russian citizen. https://sputniknews.com/europe/20180...URL_shortening
Revelation 14:7
 

Housecarl

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https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...n-niger/ar-BBKe46n?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartandhp

U.S. Kept Silent About Its Role in Another Firefight in Niger

The New York Times
By CHARLIE SAVAGE, ERIC SCHMITT and THOMAS GIBBONS-NEFF
6 hrs ago

WASHINGTON — Green Berets working with government forces in Niger killed 11 Islamic State militants in a firefight in December, the American military acknowledged for the first time on Wednesday. The battle occurred two months after four United States soldiers died in an ambush in another part of Niger — and after senior commanders had imposed stricter limits on military missions in the West African country.

No American or Nigerien forces were harmed in the December gun battle. But the combat — along with at least 10 other previously unreported attacks on American troops in West Africa between 2015 and 2017 — indicates that the deadly Oct. 4 ambush was not an isolated episode in a nation where the United States is building a major drone base.

After the ambush, senior officers at United States Africa Command, which oversees American military operations on the continent, imposed additional measures to enhance the safety of troops on missions that were designed to train and advise local forces in Niger.

But the missions did not end.

On the morning of Dec. 6, a combined force of Nigerien and American troops “came under fire from a formation of violent extremists,” Samantha Reho, a spokeswoman for Africa Command, said in a statement to The New York Times on Wednesday.

She said the gun battle killed 11 militants — including two wearing suicide vests — who were believed to be affiliated with the Islamic State in West Africa. No American or Nigerien forces were killed or wounded, she said.

It was the first time the American military has acknowledged the December firefight, and Ms. Reho gave no explanation for the Pentagon’s failure to disclose the episode at the time.

The head of Africa Command, Gen. Thomas D. Waldhauser, did not mention the December battle in testimony to Congress this month and only broadly outlined the threats in the region. A senior House Republican aide said on Wednesday that lawmakers had been notified about the Dec. 6 attack soon after it happened.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is reviewing the results of a lengthy internal investigation into the October ambush, near the border with Mali, which set off a widespread debate about why American troops are fighting a shadowy war in Niger. A military official said on Wednesday that Mr. Mattis was wrestling with the investigation’s apparent attempts to blame low-level commanders for the deaths of the four soldiers and not implicate senior officers.

The families of the soldiers — Staff Sgt. Bryan C. Black, Staff Sgt. Dustin M. Wright, Staff Sgt. Jeremiah W. Johnson and Sgt. La David Johnson — have not been told of the investigation’s conclusions, said the military official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the findings have not yet been released.

The Pentagon appears ready to scale back military operations in West Africa even further. A draft of the investigation, parts of which were described to The Times in February, called for the military to reduce the number of ground missions, and to strip commanders in the field of some authority to send troops on potentially high-risk patrols.

Between 2015 and 2017, there were about 10 instances of American troops and local training partners being attacked in Niger and elsewhere in West Africa, said Brig. Gen. Donald C. Bolduc, the former commander of United States Special Operations in Africa.

Enemy fighters were killed in some of those unreported episodes, General Bolduc said on Wednesday, but there were no American casualties.

The existence of the Dec. 6 firefight was referenced in a terse line in an unclassified report the Trump administration gave to Congress this week about its legal and policy views on using military force. That report, obtained by The Times, mentioned only that a joint American-Nigerien force was attacked by a group of presumed Islamic State militants on that date, and returned fire “in self-defense.”

Ms. Reho portrayed the firefight as an act of self-defense after the unit happened to come under attack.

“The purpose of the mission was to set the conditions for future partner-led operations against violent extremist organizations in the region,” she said. “There was no aspect of this mission focused on pursuing enemy militants, and the combined force was postured to respond as necessary in case contact with the enemy occurred.”

She added: “With that said, our forces do operate in unstable areas and are occasionally exposed to danger from enemy forces. When such a situation occurs, our personnel are authorized to respond to threats and violence appropriately.”

However, another military official familiar with the Dec. 6 firefight, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, offered a different portrayal of the events.

The official said that the Green Berets were assisting Nigerien forces on a multiday operation near Diffa, a city in southeastern Niger near the border with Nigeria. It sought to clear the potentially hostile area so that Nigerien forces could build a new outpost there. It is unclear if the small base was ever built.

The mission had attracted attention among American forces after the firefight, the official said, because it was one of the first major forays into the field in Niger since the Oct. 4 ambush.

The White House only this month approved giving combat pay to American troops deployed to Niger. Army soldiers in Niger are still not eligible for certain combat awards — including the Combat Infantry Badge and Combat Action Badge — that are highly respected and sometimes can help with promotion. The four soldiers who were killed in the Oct. 4 raid were given the awards posthumously, but those troops who have fought in Niger have not received them.

Questions about whether the American military, under the Trump administration, is seeking to obscure the expanding scope of operations in Africa were raised last week when it was revealed that the United States carried out four airstrikes in Libya between September and January that Africa Command failed to disclose at the time. The military has said it will acknowledge such missions if asked about them, even if it does not affirmatively disclose them in a news release.

The Dec. 6 firefight was the main nugget of new information in the report that the Trump administration submitted to Congress this week, and was eagerly awaited by specialists on national security issues related to counterterrorism operations.

They hoped it would offer a thorough public explanation of issues — ranging from when the Trump administration thinks it can attack other countries without prior permission from Congress, to an acknowledgment that President Trump secretly relaxed limits on when the military or the Central Intelligence Agency can carry out kill-or-capture operations with drones or commando teams, away from conventional battlefields.

But the unclassified portion of the report, which was just over eight pages long, largely consisted of a slightly rewritten version of last December’s version of the semiannual War Powers Resolution letter in which the executive branch lists deployments abroad.

The unclassified report gave only terse descriptions of certain matters while making no mention of key topics like Mr. Trump’s changes to the drone strike rules, suggesting that they were relegated to the classified annex the public cannot see.

“It’s disappointing to see this administration show disrespect for Congress’s effort to obtain public answers to key legal questions of our time,” said Joshua Geltzer, a former senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council in the Obama administration.

“This report was an opportunity to inform discussion on the Hill and, perhaps even more important, across the country on critical questions about when and why our country can take the grave step of using military force. That opportunity for a more robust public debate has now been lost.”

On Twitter, follow Charlie Savage @charlie_savage, Eric Schmitt @EricSchmittNYT and Thomas Gibbons-Neff @tmgneff.
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Russia to expel UK diplomats as row over spy attack escalates

Russia to expel UK diplomats as row over spy attack escalates
Reuters|Published: 03.15.18 , 14:06
Russia will soon expel British diplomats in retaliation for Britain's decision to kick out 23 Russian envoys over a chemical attack on a former Russian double agent, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Thursday.


In London, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson ratcheted up the rhetoric against Russia, accusing it of glorying in the attack on Sergei Skripal, which he described as a way of scaring anyone who stood up to President Vladimir Putin.


Britain says Russia is responsible for the poisoning with a Soviet-era 'Novichok' nerve agent of Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia, 33. They were found unconscious on March 4 in the city of Salisbury in southern England and remain critically ill in hospital.


Moscow denies any involvement. The Kremlin said the British position was irresponsible and not backed up by evidence. It said Britain would not have to wait long for Russia's response. https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5169325,00.html
 
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danielboon

TB Fanatic
Egypt's president says ready to join fight against militants

Egypt's president says ready to join fight against militants
AP|Published: 03.15.18 , 14:07
With less than two weeks before elections, Egypt's president says he's prepared to personally join security forces battling Islamic militants in the Sinai Peninsula.


The outcome of the March 26-28 election is a foregone conclusion, with general-turned-president Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi running virtually unopposed. His only challenger is a little-known politician who supports him.


With a landslide win beyond doubt, al-Sisi and his supporters are urging voters to come out and cast their ballots since a high turnout will accord the vote legitimacy.


In televised comments Thursday, al-Sisi vowed to prosecute the fight against Islamic State-led militants until the end. "We either live together, or we die together," he said, referring to himself and security forces.


"We are fighting modern day heretics ... we are fighting for the sake of God."https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5169327,00.html
 
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danielboon

TB Fanatic
FRANCE, GERMANY, US, UK SAY SALISBURY INCIDENT A VIOLATION OF UK’S TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY BY RUSSIA

France, Germany, US, UK say Salisbury incident a violation of UK’s territorial integrity by RussiaA joint statement by the UK, US, France and Germany says the poisoning of ex-double agent Sergei Skripal was a violation of Britain’s sovereignty by Russia and was the first offensive use of a chemical agent since World War II.
The incident, in which Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned in Salisbury on March 4, involved “a military-grade nerve agent, of a type developed by Russia,” said the statement issued on Thursday. The four countries said the incident constituted “the first offensive use of a nerve agent in Europe since the Second World War.”The document branded the incident “an assault on UK sovereignty,” adding it came in violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) and international law. Washington, Paris and Berlin back the UK’s claim that Moscow was responsible for what they called “the attack.”



Russia should provide “full and complete disclosure” of Novichok – the nerve agent allegedly used to poison the Skripals – to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the statement urged.

Though France was one of the signatories to the statement, a spokesman for President Emmanuel Macron’s suggested earlier on Thursday that British Prime Minister Theresa May was prematurely accusing Russia of complicity in the incident. “We don’t do fantasy politics. Once the elements are proven then the time will come for decisions to be made,” Benjamin Griveaux told a news conference in Paris.Also on Thursday, Moscow said that it had urged the UK to hand over samples of the chemical to the OPCW and relevant Russian authorities, but to no avail. Commenting on the row, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused Britain of refusing to share any evidence in the case, while making “insane” accusations.

London was reluctant to share “any factual information on the [Skripal] case,” she said. The Russian embassy in London has sent four requests to the Foreign Office calling for “extensive dialogue,” but received “formal replies that made no sense.” https://www.rt.com/news/421396-nerve-agent-europe-use-skripal/
 
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Housecarl

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https://www.yahoo.com/news/mali-militias-us-vehicle-taken-niger-attack-174558327.html

Mali militias say have US vehicle taken in Niger attack

AFP • March 15, 2018

Bamako (AFP) - Two Malian militia groups say they have recovered a US military vehicle and weapons that jihadist fighters seized after a deadly ambush of American special forces in neighbouring Niger in October.

The attack, which left four US troops dead, shed light on the scale of the US military presence in the Sahel and became a political issue in Washington.

The claim was made in a statement released on Wednesday by two armed groups, one of which in 2015 signed up to a peace deal with the Malian government pledging to join its fight against jihadists.

They said that in clashes with "the bandits," their fighters had recovered "a car and weapons belonging to the US special forces."

They want to return the equipment to the US authorities "by legal means," said the statement, adding that the fighting took place "on March 11-12."

It was issued by a group called GATIA, the acronym in French for the Imghad and Allies Touareg Self-Defence Force), which is pro-government, and the Movement for the Salvation of Azawad (MSA), comprising former rebels.

The US Africa Command (Africom), asked by AFP, said the Pentagon "is aware" of the claim.

"However, at this time cannot verify authenticity of the claims and are looking into it," it said.

The October 4 attack occurred as a unit of 12 American special forces soldiers and 30 Nigerien troops returned from the village of Tongo Tongo, near the border with Mali.

They were attacked by a group of some 50 IS-affiliated fighters equipped with small arms, grenades and trucks mounted with guns.

Four Nigerien soldiers also died. The body of one US soldier, Sergeant La David Johnson, was not recovered until the following day.

The ambush was claimed by a group calling itself the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, led by Adnan Abu Walid Sahrawi, who has sworn allegiance to the Islamic State.

A nine-minute propaganda video by the jihadists showed US troops wearing only limited body armour, desperately seeking cover behind an unarmored SUV while coming under heavy fire.

It raised fresh questions as to the nature of the mission and why the soldiers had been left so vulnerable.

24 reactions
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
So that's pretty much a done deal....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/saudi-crown-prince-mohammed-bin-salman-iran-nuclear-bomb-saudi-arabia/

Video

CBS NEWS March 15, 2018, 4:32 AM

Saudi crown prince: If Iran develops nuclear bomb, so will Saudi

The next leader of Saudi Arabia says his country would quickly obtain a nuclear bomb if arch rival Iran successfully develops its own nuclear weapon. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman made the statement about a possible nuclear arms race in the Middle East to "CBS This Morning" co-host Norah O'Donnell, in an interview set to air on this Sunday's "60 Minutes."

The interview is the first with a Saudi leader for a U.S. television network since 2005. O'Donnell, a contributing correspondent for "60 Minutes," asked the 32-year-old crown prince about the political, economic and social reforms unfolding in his kingdom.

The heir to the throne has ushered in significant changes for women in the conservative Sunni Muslim kingdom, including granting them the right to drive for the first time. The crown prince discussed foreign policy, including his views on Saudi Arabia's longtime foe, Shiite Muslim-ruled Iran.

Below is a preview of O'Donnell's conversation with the crown prince, and above is a clip in which Mohammed explains why, in his view, Iran's supreme leader is behaving like Adolf Hitler during the rise of Nazi Germany.

NORAH O'DONNELL: You've been rivals for centuries. At its heart, what is this rift about? Is it a battle for Islam?

MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN: Iran is not a rival to Saudi Arabia. Its army is not among the top five armies in the Muslim world. The Saudi economy is larger than the Iranian economy. Iran is far from being equal to Saudi Arabia.

O'DONNELL: But I've seen that you called the Ayatollah Khamenei, "the new Hitler" of the Middle East.

MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN: Absolutely.

O'DONNELL: Why?

MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN: Because he wants to expand. He wants to create his own project in the Middle East very much like Hitler who wanted to expand at the time. Many countries around the world and in Europe did not realize how dangerous Hitler was until what happened, happened. I don't want to see the same events happening in the Middle East.

O'DONNELL: Does Saudi Arabia need nuclear weapons to counter Iran?

MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN: Saudi Arabia does not want to acquire any nuclear bomb, but without a doubt if Iran developed a nuclear bomb, we will follow suit as soon as possible.

For the full interview, tune in to "60 Minutes" on Sunday, March 18 at 7:00 p.m. ET/PT on CBS.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm....

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https://www.militarytimes.com/news/...f-its-brigades-ready-to-deploy-at-any-minute/

Milley: Army is pushing to get two-thirds of its brigades ready to deploy at any minute

By: Meghann Myers  
7 hours ago

The Army is working to pull itself out of a readiness crisis after almost two decades of continuous combat, coupled with waves of build-ups and drawdowns.

But thanks to an increase in funding over the past two years, the Army has been able to ramp up its brigade combat readiness from two out of 58 total, Army Chief of Staff Mark Milley told the House Appropriations Committee on Thursday.

“That is not to say we’re where we need to be,” Milley said.

The goal is to get 66 percent of the active Army’s BCTs to the highest level of readiness, he said, and the Reserve and National Guard’s teams to 33 percent, in the next three years. He didn’t say how many BCTs have achieved that level, but indicated in response to a congressman that it is more than five.

“Units aren’t built just overnight, and their readiness isn’t built overnight, as you know,” he said.

Part of that push will include bringing back headquarters elements from train-advise-assist missions in the Middle East and replacing them with Security Force Assistance Brigades, so that BCTs can work on boosting lost combat readiness.

“If the international environment stays the way it is this minute, we think with the glide path we’re on, we’ll achieve our readiness objectives – complete – somewhere around the 2021-22 time frame,” Milley said.

Aviation in “pretty good shape”

Multiple members of the committee asked Milley and Army Secretary Mark Esper about Army aviation, and particularly, the Army’s budget request for next year.

Rep. Martha Roby, R-Alabama, whose district includes the Army’s aviation headquarters at Fort Rucker, pointed to a billion-dollar difference between the Army’s fiscal year 2017 aviation budget and its request for fiscal year 2019.

In fact, Esper said, the Army had asked for $3.6 billion in 2017 but received $4.7 from Congress, so this year’s $3.6 billion request is a natural progression.

“So it’s not a planned decrease by the service,” he said. “We find at this point that because of the investments we made in previous years, the bump up in ‘17, that Army aviation cross the board is in pretty good shape.”

Milley echoed that sentiment on the topic of manning, as the Army in recent years has faced a shortage of aviators.

The Army is bringing back pilot retention bonuses
By the numbers, the Army has 110 percent of its requirement for certified aviators. The issue is keeping the right experience levels in each formation.

By: Meghann Myers
“What I’ve seen is not so much a retention issue as a production issue,” Milley said. “We are short pilots, but we’re at 94 percent on warrant officer pilots for rotary wing aircraft. We’re actually not in that bad of shape.”

That is still several hundred pilots, he added.

To fix that, the service has looked to not only retention bonuses, but to increased funding at flight school to get more students through training.

“We’re filling all of the scheduled seats and we’re monitoring that very, very closely,” Milley said.

Author
About Meghann Myers
Meghann Myers is the senior reporter at Army Times. She covers personnel, fitness, the sergeant major of the Army and various other lifestyle issues affecting soldiers.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.timesofisrael.com/one-k...-ramming-terror-attack-in-northern-west-bank/

Two soldiers killed, 2 hurt in car-ramming terror attack in West Bank

Palestinian driver, a former security prisoner, hits 4 troops along road outside Mevo Dotan settlement, south of Jenin

By TOI STAFF and JUDAH ARI GROSS
16 March 2018, 4:49 pm 22

A Palestinian driver hit four Israeli soldiers with his car Friday afternoon, killing an officer and a soldier and seriously injuring the others, outside the Mevo Dotan settlement in the northern West Bank. One of the injured soldiers suffered severe head trauma and was fighting for his life.

The military confirmed that the incident was a terror attack. It said the troops were hit while standing near a military guard post.

The driver was injured and taken to hospital, where he will be questioned, the army said. He was identified as Ala Qabha, 26, of the village of Barta’a in the northern West Bank.

Haaretz reported that Qabha was released from Israeli prison in April of last year after completing a 17-month sentence, though there were no immediate details on his crime. According to Hadashot news he was incarcerated for security-related activities.

Palestinian media reported that military forces searched the Qabha family’s home in Barta’a and questioned family members following the attack. Qabha’s brother was arrested, and the Israeli work permits of several family members were revoked.

Hamas welcomed the attack, saying it “proves our people’s readiness to continue the Jerusalem intifada.” The Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group also said it “commends” the attack and “calls for further attacks against the Zionist occupation. Palestinian groups had called for Friday to be a “day of rage,” in response to US President Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in December.

Qabha’s family claimed the incident was an accident and not an attack, with one relative telling Haaretz that the young man was a painter, and had been on his way home from Jenin after buying supplies. “He’s not politically affiliated and doesn’t belong to any organization,” he said.

The car-ramming occurred next to an army observation post along the 585 road near the entrance to Mevo Dotan, approximately 10 kilometers southwest of Jenin.

Video from the scene showed Israeli and Palestinian medics treating the wounded. The area was also filled with IDF personnel, who inspected the wrecked car, which was tangled in barbed wire.

One of the victims was pronounced dead at the scene. A second died a short time later, after attempts to save his life failed. One of the two was an officer, the IDF said later.

The two injured soldiers were taken by helicopter to Petah Tikva’s Beilinson Medical Center for treatment, according to the Magen David Adom ambulance service.

Health officials said one of the soldiers suffered severe head trauma and was fighting for his life.

The driver was lightly wounded and taken to Hillel Yaffe hospital in Hadera.

A second Palestinian man was treated by the Palestinian Red Crescent medical service. It was not immediately clear how he was involved.

Palestinian groups in the West Bank and Gaza had called for Friday to be a “day of rage” to mark 100 days since US President Donald Trump announced his decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

The Palestinian National and Islamic Forces, a coalition consisting of various groups, called on Palestinians to confront IDF soldiers and settlers immediately after Friday prayers.

It would be the latest in a series of weekly demonstrations, many of them violent, which have taken place since the December 6 announcement and subsequently announced plans for the US to move its embassy to the city. The protests shrunk in size after the first few weeks.

Jacob Magid and Khaled Abu Toameh contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...pattern-of-russian-interference-idUSKCN1GR1O0

WORLD NEWS MARCH 15, 2018 / 5:11 AM / A DAY AGO

After nerve agent attack, NATO sees pattern of Russian interference

Robin Emmott
3 MIN READ

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - NATO accused Russia on Thursday of trying to destabilise the West with new nuclear weapons, cyber attacks and covert action, including the poisoning of a Russian former double agent in Britain, that blurred the line between peace and war.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters the use of the Novichok nerve agent against Sergei Skripal and his daughter “happened against a backdrop of a reckless pattern of Russian behaviour over many years”.

Russia denies any involvement and says it is the U.S.-led Atlantic alliance that is a risk to peace in Europe.

Britain’s National Security Adviser Mark Sedwill told NATO envoys at a special meeting of the alliance’s governing North Atlantic Council that Russia was to blame.

“What happened in Salisbury was the latest in a clear pattern of reckless and unlawful behaviour by the Russian state,” Sedwill said in a statement he read to reporters after the meeting, referring to the English city where Skripal was attacked.

Sedwill said the attack “concerns the whole alliance” and that Britain would support allies who faced similar threats. Britain’s ambassador to NATO briefed the envoys on Wednesday.

Stoltenberg said Russia was mixing nuclear and conventional weapons in military doctrine and exercises, which lowered the threshold for launching nuclear attacks, and increasingly deploying “hybrid tactics” such as soldiers without insignia.

Stoltenberg listed Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, its direct support for separatists in Ukraine, its military presence in Moldova and Georgia, meddling in Western elections and its involvement in the war in Syria as evidence of Russia’s threat.

He cited the development of new nuclear weapons, which President Vladimir Putin unveiled in a bellicose speech on March 1, as another worrying development.

“BLURRING THE LINE”
He also accused Moscow of a “blurring of the line between peace, crisis and war”, which he said was “destabilising and dangerous”.

Stoltenberg, who will meet British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson on Monday in Brussels, stressed there had been no request from London to activate the Western military alliance’s mutual defence clause, but said Russia must be deterred.

“The UK will respond and is responding in a proportionate and measured way ... I fully support there is a need for a response, because there must be consequences when we see actions like those in Salisbury,” he said.

NATO has deployed significant ground forces to the Baltic countries and Poland to dissuade Russia from repeating any Crimea-like seizures.

Stoltenberg said there was little for NATO as an alliance to do immediately in response to the nerve agent attack, beyond giving Britain strong political support.

Reporting by Robin Emmott; editing by Philip Blenkinsop and Kevin Liffey
 

Housecarl

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https://www.realcleardefense.com/ar..._doctrine_updating_or_overhauling_113207.html

The Evolution of Chinese Nuclear Doctrine: Updating or Overhauling?

By Lorenzo Termine
March 16, 2018

What role is played by the atomic weapon in Chinese defense strategies? How has nuclear doctrine changed since 1964?

The historical root of Chinese nuclear doctrine dates to the traumatic experiences of the Taiwan Strait crises during the 50’s when the United States, then politically and militarily bound to Taiwan, kept on the table a nuclear attack option against Beijing. Meanwhile, the unbalanced nuclear partnership of PRC with the Kremlin got stuck in a dead end when the USSR abandoned the cooperation in June 1959.

Before the first nuclear weapon was tested in 1964, two major theorists had given their contribution to the future Chinese nuclear approach, Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai. The former elaborated the concept of “people’s war” that, coherently with the Marxist-Leninist war theories, gave very little relevance to the atomic weapon. Mao used to utterly disparage atomic weapons, “paper tigers” in his words. Nuclear capacities could be a part, but not the core of PRC’s strategies. The latter supported a more active nuclear approach with his concept of “existential deterrence.” China had to join the nuclear and thermonuclear clubs on its own terms to ensure its survival in a world of “mass destruction.”

Given these assumptions, it’s easier to understand the nature and scope of the first Chinese A-bomb test in the southern Xinjiang in October 1964. The Chinese leaders attending the test would have told that, given the power of annihilation, ‹‹China will not at any time or under any circumstances employ nuclear weapons first››. True or not, this affirmation witnesses how the No First Use (NFU) policy is congenitally rooted in China’s nuclear doctrine.

A NFU policy focuses the resources on the later moment of a nuclear confrontation: the second-strike. Given its pledge not to attack first, China could only develop counter-value second strike capabilities to deter rivals to take the big step toward nuclear aggression. A second strike capability would ensure China’s need for resiliency to survive a hostile counter-force strike and effective to be a credible deterrent and, eventually, to hit the target.

Moreover, a clear and solid division between nuclear and conventional capabilities was in effect within Beijing strategies. At least until the 90’s, Chinese atomic weapons were meant to be used only after a hostile atomic first strike while the conventional force was in charge of defense from all the other attacks. Coherently with Maoist stance, nuclear deterred nuclear, conventional deterred conventional and, consequently, Beijing committed not to use atomic weapons against Non-Nuclear Weapon States and in Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones.

Until the end of the Cold War, given these precepts and the series of constraints and limitations, China’s nuclear deterrent could be correctly defined as “minimum” and “defensive.”

Since the 90’s, despite a formal adhesion to NFU policy, some important exceptions were introduced, mitigating the nuclear-conventional division and, apparently, tempering the weight of No First Use in Chinese strategy-making. Some important clues can be found in the Second Artillery Corps (SAC) text “Science of Second Artillery Campaigns” (2004) where a Chinese nuclear strike is considered possible not only after a hostile first strike but also when Beijing feels to be under the threat of it. This addition takes Chinese nuclear decision-making onto a totally different level, but one perception. In the following lines, SAC explains how the nuclear threshold can legitimately be lowered in case of “threat of conventional attack on nuclear facilities, on important strategic targets and against political or economic centres›› (mainly Beijing and few others large cities) and in case of ‹‹sustained escalation of conventional war” that critically compromises national security. Besides that, obviously, any real or expected attack against the nuclear architecture that makes the second strike possible has to be considered a valid reason for threatening atomic retaliation.

The combined provisions of the aforementioned exceptions and the ongoing nuclear modernization make the whole situation far more ambiguous and nuanced than before. Indeed, the emerging technologies and dual-use systems deployed by China (both for nuclear and conventional capabilities), such as C4 infrastructures, satellites, submarines, or even theatre and short/intermediate range missiles mounting both atomic and conventional warheads, may provide the slippery slope from conventional to nuclear war. Any attack or harm against these systems could be considered as a potential threat to its second strike capabilities by China, that could opt for nuclear retaliation.

Thanks to its long and solid economic rise, China is increasing its power projection in the global political arena, and nuclear capabilities can prevent other actors to damage Chinese interests across the world. As Xi Jinping put it in December 2012, atomic weapons serve not only as the "cornerstone of strategic deterrence" and, therefore, of Chinese "national security," but also as "support for the country's great power status."

The main concern in for the U.S. and its allies in Asia is whether China is modernizing the nuclear arsenal solely to secure a credible and effective second-strike capacity or if it is overhauling the nuclear policy toward a completely new approach. Anyhow, two main problems seem to arise: Beijing never joined any nuclear-related agreement or understanding with Washington or with other Western Nuclear-Weapons States to reduce first-strike incentives and the risks of misperception and escalation; the overlap of nuclear and conventional capabilities is likely to increase the disastrous consequence of an error or a limited war option.

Lorenzo Termine is an Italian student in International Relations (MD), and a Chinese Foreign and Security policy analyst for various Italian magazines. He is also a Junior Fellow at Geopolitica.info, a think tank on IR and Geopolitics based in Rome. You can follow me on Twitter at @LorenzoTerm and Linkedin.

This article appeared originally at Geopolitica.info.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.thecipherbrief.com/dead-drop/dead-drop-march-16

Dead Drop: March 16

MARCH 16, 2018 | ANONYMOUS

FOGGY BOTTOM BOUND? As long-predicted, and long-denied, President Donald Trump announced his intention to nominate CIA Director Mike Pompeo to become Secretary of State. The impact of that decision (and Trump’s plan to elevate Agency #2 Gina Haspel to CIA Director) has been discussed at length on other pages of The Cipher Brief and elsewhere. Here at The Dead Drop, however, we thought we would look at another angle. If Pompeo does indeed go to the State Department – will he take anyone from Langley with him? The advice being offered by long-time bureaucrats is for Pompeo to travel as lightly as possible. The signal it would send to the already beleaguered State Department if he showed up with a large “landing party” as part of a hostile takeover, would be bad. “There are plenty of highly-experienced, career diplomats,” who Pompeo can deputize to fill important positions,” one former official told us. There certainly are lots of openings at State – with the possibility of more coming every day. Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Steve Goldstein was reportedly fired just hours after Tillerson – for committing truth about the lack of warning Tillerson received regarding his impending defenestration. Goldstein, a former BP senior VP, had been in his State Department job for 99 days. One Pompeo pal who might tag along to State is current CIA Chief Operating Officer Brian Bulatao. The long-time Pompeo cohort is relatively new at Langley having assumed the COO job (previously known as Executive Director) last June 1. He might feel a bit lonely at Langley after his sponsor decamps. Don’t expect to hear anything about such a move until after Pompeo is confirmed by the Senate for his new position, however. Folks on the Hill consider it especially bad form for nominees to talk publicly about who they will put in what position until they are approved by the full Senate.

PAUL PLOT: Who gave Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky., bad information? On Wednesday, the Senator announced that he would oppose Trump’s nominations of Mike Pompeo for Secretary of State and Gina Haspel for CIA Director. In the case of Pompeo, Paul’s objection vaguely had something to do with his perception of the CIA director’s position on Iran. But regarding Haspel, Paul was very clear on what has him peeved. “To really appoint the head cheerleader for waterboarding to be head of CIA, I mean, how could you trust somebody who did that to be in charge of the CIA?” he asked. “To read of her glee during the waterboarding is just absolutely appalling.” Paul told MSNBC: “On Mrs. Haspel, if you read her quotes, when she was present during waterboarding, she was gleeful at the waterboarding and sort of gloating at the fact that the guy is acting as he’s struggling to breathe and drowning in fluid. This is not what America stands for.” Apparently, he was referring to a ProPublica story from over a year ago which claimed that they learned from a book written by a former CIA interrogator that Haspel confronted Abu Zubaydah in his black site cell and mocked him. Although ProPublica did not identify the book – the quotes in the story match ones contained in “Enhanced Interrogation” written by James Mitchell and published in late 2016. One problem – OK, maybe two. The person described in Mitchell’s book is referred to as “he.” Intelligence officials have told reporters the “he” was not Ms. Haspel. The other issue with Senator Paul’s characterization is that CIA officer involved was not mocking Abu Zubaydah’s reaction to waterboarding – but was commenting on how the terrorist was faking mental illness symptoms from the comfort of his cell months before enhanced interrogation started. (The book says the symptoms disappeared when the male Chief of Base challenged Abu Zubaydah on them.) Mitchell addressed some of the issues on Fox Business News on Wednesday afternoon.

STRANGE BEDFELLOWS: Right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’s Infowars website was promoting a tweet this week from Julian Assange. The WikiLeaks founder and fugitive from justice in turn was promoting a three-part article from the World Socialist Web Site raising the alarm that “an extraordinary number of former intelligence and military operatives from the CIA, Pentagon, National Security Council and State Department are seeking nomination as Democratic candidates for Congress in the 2018 midterm elections. We’re not sure what has gotten people ranging from Jones, Assange and the Socialists alarmed – but considering who they are – whatever it is, we’re for it.

LOOSE LIPS SINK (AIR) SHIPS? Defense News reported on Monday that the U.S. Air Force has developed a case of lockjaw. Apparently alarmed by airmen engaging in excessive communication, the Air Force has slashed “access to media embeds, base visits and interviews” until the service can “retrain” their entire public affairs team and senior commanders on the importance of maintaining radio silence. Frankly, if you were to have asked us – we would have guessed that the Navy, Marine Corps, and Army were all having rougher times with the media coverage these days – but apparently the Air Force feels that some secrets have escaped, and they are going to clamp down on their communicators to try to prevent it from happening again.

POCKET LITTER: Bits and pieces of interesting /weird stuff we discovered:

  • Mostly Corrected: On Thursday evening, ProPublica issued a lengthy “correction” apologizing and attempting to explain the errors in their reporting. Agency officials welcomed the publication acknowledging their mistakes — although some current and former officials tell us that there remain factual inaccuracies in the correction as well.
  • Dead Wrong: Buzzfeed, citing two anonymous sources, is reporting the CIA’s Special Activities Center is hunting and killing terrorists. “Small teams are locating and killing bad guys. That’s what we are doing,” one of the sources said. “Your story is wrong,” said CIA spokesperson Ryan Trapani, in a rare on-the-record denial.
  • That’ll Show ‘Em: Politico’s Europe edition reports that one of the steps the U.K. government is considering in response to Moscow’s attempted murder of a former Russian spy on British soil, is to cancel the license which allows the Kremlin-backed RT television network to air in Britain. There currently are probably more Brits eyeballing the Russian embassy in London looking for guys carrying nerve agents than there are watching RT – but it’s the thought that counts. Britain did order the expulsion of 23 Russian “diplomats,” which undoubtedly will make more of an impression on Moscow.
  • Late to the Grill: Pundits and the media have said if CIA Director nominee Gina Haspel is to be approved for her position – she is going to face some tough questioning by members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence regarding the Agency’s “enhanced interrogation program.” Cynics have pointed out to us that the same committee spent several years producing a report on EITs (published in 2014 by Senate Democrats) – but that those who put that report together elected to not talk to Haspel or any other CIA officer knowledgeable about the program. Better late than never?
  • Perp Walk: Amid all the excitement over the Tillerson twitter toss, Pompeo promotion and Haspel hiring, on Tuesday – news outlets managed to squeeze in some reporting that Trump’s personal assistant, John McEntee, had been fired because he could not obtain a security clearance. The stories said McEntee had been escorted off White House grounds. According to some accounts, he is under investigation for criminal wrongdoing. Sounds bad, eh? Maybe not so much. As far as getting the bum’s rush from the 18-acre White House complex, one veteran of presidential service told us that everyone gets escorted out on their last day. “You turn in your ‘hard pass’ (badge) and someone has to walk you out to the gate on your final day.” And McEntee was immediately hired to work on Trump’s reelection campaign, so he has that going for him.

NETWORK NEWS: Not a day goes by when members of The Cipher Brief Network aren’t making news. Here are just a few examples from this week:

  • Skullduggery: Former CIA Russia-hand Daniel Hoffman appeared on the Yahoo News podcast “Skullduggery” and said the poisoning of an ex-Russian spy in the U.K. has the hallmarks of a Russian hit.
  • Chemical Agents: Fellow Agency Russian operations boss, Steven Hall, wrote an op-ed for the The Washington Post published on Tuesday, arguing that if Russia is allowed to get away with their chemical attacks in Britain, all of the West would be at risk of similar provocative acts.
  • Proxy Wars: The Iranian threat is evolving, and the country now has “proxies everywhere, and they’re providing each with advanced weapons technology” according to recently-retired CIA Iran watcher Norman Roule. He was interviewed on Israeli-run I24 News.
  • An End-Game in Syria? Former NATO Supreme Allied Commander, Admiral Jim Stavridis wrote for Time about four things the United States can do to try to resolve the seven-year-long civil war in Syria.
  • Calgary Stampede: Former DEA Agent Mike Vigil was quoted in Canadian media about the risks that tourists face when they vacation in places like Playa Del Carmen, Mexico, despite warnings about drug cartel related violence in the region. Apparently, Canadians are still heading south of the border in droves.
  • A Welcomed Rexit: Writing in The Hill, former Obama administration defense and homeland security official Todd Rosenblum shares his view that replacing Rex Tillerson with Mike Pompeo is “a net gain for American national security.”
  • A Pro’s Pro: Former DNI James Clapper and former CIA and NSA Director Michael Hayden were among those singing the praises of CIA Director nominee Gina Haspel on CNN. Hayden also has an op-ed in The Hill titled “America needs Gina Haspel to lead the CIA.”

WHAT’S ON THEIR NIGHTSTAND? (Our contributors tell us about what they’re currently reading)

“I have picked up two classics on Sub-Sahara Africa, ‘The Conquest of the Sahara: A History’ by Douglas Porch, who teaches the Naval Postgraduate School. It recounts French colonial adventures across the wide expanse of North Africa. This was a valuable reference to better understand the historical underpinnings of colonial expansion in the last century that takes on a new perspective in the light of militant Islamic objectives in the region ranging from ISIS to Boko Haram. Also, I’m re-reading ‘The Green and the Black: Qaddafi’s policies in Africa,’ published in 1988. Although somewhat dated, this collection of essays illustrates Qaddafi’s engagement with African regimes and takes on a different light given the recent Western engagement in the region.” — Alex Bolling, CIA chief of station and deputy chief of station in several war zones in the Middle East, North Africa and Southwest Asia

IF YOU SEE SOMETHING, SAY SOMETHING: Got any tips for your friendly neighborhood Dead Drop? Shoot us a note at TheDeadDrop@theCipherBrief.com or TheCipherBrief@protonmail.com.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/russian-pragmatism-display-south-east-asia

MYANMAR | VIETNAM | RUSSIA

Russian pragmatism on display in South East Asia

SU-30SM: Russia has struck a $400 million deal to sell military jets to Myanmar

BY Dmitry V. Shlapentokh
16 March 2018
13:30 AEDT

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu visited Myanmar recently in a clear display of Moscow’s pragmatism.

Many Western observers, especially from the US, present Vladimir Putin as either a Machiavellian mixer with almost superhuman abilities – he who put Donald Trump in the White House and created problems for NATO and Europe – or as an insane imperialist who wants to restore the Soviet Union, or empire of the tsar.

But this is not the case.

Putin, and the Russian elite which he represents, is quite pragmatic. There are certain geopolitical ambitions caused by the sense of US decline and Russia’s increasing strength, but these are limited, and economic considerations often play a crucial role in defining Moscow’s geopolitical postures. Russia’s aims in South East Asia might raise questions of regional ambitions, but Shoigu’s visit to Myanmar was defined mostly by a pragmatic desire to find a market for Russian weapons.

Russia has little to sell besides gas, oil, and military hardware. It has increased its weapons sales since the end of the Cold War, and while many of the old restrictions have disappeared, there are new ones. A good example is its relationship with Tehran, where in 2007 Russia signed a contract with Iran to deliver S-300 missiles but delayed the actual delivery for almost 10 years. The reason was that Moscow did not want to irritate Washington and other players.

After 2014, with the Ukraine crisis and increasing tensions with Washington, Moscow saw few restrictions on selling its military hardware. Myanmar presents as a good customer, and while there Shoigu, who also visited Vietnam, played less the role of Minister of Defense than salesman.

The visit was a success. Soigu signed a contract to deliver Russian military jets for $400 million. There were also discussions regarding the purchase of Russian tanks and light arms. Russia had already sold a considerable number of Kalashnikov assault rifles to nearly Thailand.

In dealing with Myanmar, the Kremlin ignored the Rohingya crisis sparked by the persecution of Myanmar’s Muslim minority, and in doing so ignored the protests of Ramzan Kadyrov, the Kremlin viceroy in Muslim Chechnya and a man presumably faithful to Putin.

There are geopolitical benefits for Russia in the deal: selling weapons and obtaining permission to enter Myanmar’s ports offer ways to project power in Asia, not only against the US but also against China, despite Russia’s close friendship with Beijing.

It is likely that Shoigu also discussed weapons sales while in Vietnam. The Kremlin sees economic and geopolitical benefits in playing both Myanmar and Vietnam against the US and China.

The US approach to the region is essentially the same as that of Russia. Military hardware is an industry where the US has a competitive advantage, and the ideological underpinnings of US foreign policy – so important during the Cold War and during the neo-con era – have almost disappeared. (Trump went to Saudi Arabia in the first overseas trip of his presidency and was very happy with the deal to sell weapons for several hundred billion dollars.)

Secretary of Defense James Mattis was also in South East Asia earlier this year, advertising US military wares to Vietnam and Indonesia. Washington has sought to increase its influence in the areas in which the small nations are anxious to find leverage against the rising China.

The US is the clear option, even for Vietnam where the elite quickly pushed aside memories of the bloody Vietnam War. Indeed, small states in the region, which Shoigu and Mattis visited almost simultaneously, have become quite attuned to changes in the geopolitical arrangements.

The leaders of these countries understand that the absence of an overwhelming power allows them to flirt with several global players – the US, Russia, and China. The near-simultaneous visits by Shoigu and Mattis demonstrate that the small states have achieved an unprecedented level of flexibility in their behaviour, at least in comparison to the Cold War era and short periods of the US unipolarity.

When the arrangements can change quickly and unexpectedly, it entails not only opportunities but also new risks.


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https://www.voanews.com/a/colombia-foils-cuban-plan-attack-americans/4300589.html

AMERICAS

Colombia Says It Thwarted Cuban's Plan to Attack Americans

March 15, 2018 5:37 PM
VOA News

Colombian authorities say they have arrested a Cuban national suspected of plotting to kill American diplomats on behalf of Islamic State.

The suspect, Raul Gutierrez, appeared in a Bogota court Thursday and was ordered held without bail on terrorism and conspiracy charges. He has pleaded not guilty.

Prosecutors say Gutierrez, who is in Colombia illegally, planned to attack Bogota's exclusive Zona Rosa, a densely populated area frequently visited by American tourists and diplomats.

Colombian authorities began tracking Gutierrez after they intercepted communications from late February in which Gutierrez allegedly discussed plans to make and detonate a homemade explosive.

Spanish police and the FBI had been monitoring Gutierrez for several weeks. They say he showed signs of indoctrination in radical Islam.

Colombian prosecutors said Gutierrez had received precise instructions in communications with people from Spain and Morocco on carrying out an attack targeting Americans.

It is not yet known if Gutierrez is part of the Islamic State network, or merely a sympathizer.
 
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