WAR 03-12-2016-to-03-18-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/16/world/north-korea-unsc-meeting/

North Korea requests meeting with U.N. Security Council

By Euan McKirdy and Richard Roth, CNN
Updated 5:22 AM ET, Thu March 17, 2016


(CNN) ¡X The North Korean ambassador to the U.N. has filed a request for the body's Security Council to meet over the ongoing U.S.-South Korean joint military exercises.

The letter, obtained by CNN, calls the "Key Resolve" and "Foal Eagle 16" joint military operations, the largest to date, "aggressive" and directed toward the DPRK, an acronym for North Korea used by the regime.

The letter, written by North Korea's Permanent Representative, Ambassador, JA Song Nam, and addressed to the the president of the Security Council, Ismael Abraao Gaspar Martins, alleges that the operations are a "beheading operation" aimed to remove the supreme leadership of the DPRK and "bring down its social system."

Previous attempts by North Korea to convene the Security Council have failed.

Earlier this month the regime threatened a preemptive nuclear strike over the war games, which are held annually but have this year been ramped up to include 300,000 South Korean troops and at least 17,000 U.S. forces.

The two exercises will run until April 30. "Foal Eagle" will involve ground, air, naval and special operations forces from both militaries.

The request comes after the Security Council, including North Korea's longstanding ally China, voted on tougher sanctions on the North in the wake of Pyongyang's purported nuclear and rocket tests earlier in the year.

On Wednesday, the White House announced new sets of sanctions on the regime, independent of the U.N. restrictions.

In response, Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Lu Kang told journalists at a briefing Thursday that Beijing opposes unilateral sanctions "by any country" and "any measures that might escalate tensions on the (Korean) peninsula."

He said that Beijing has emphasized that "any country that imposes unilateral sanctions should not harm China's interests."

North Korea Groundhog Day coming to an end

Obligation cited

In the letter to the Security Council, the ambassador suggested that the body was obliged by the U.N. Charter to take the matter under consideration, and that a failure to do so would undermine its credibility.

Articles 34 and 35 of the U.N. Charter allow the Security Council to investigate "any dispute, or any situation which might lead to international friction," and gives member states the right to refer such situations to the attention of the Council.

The letter also references the U.N.'s "dealing with the DPRK's so-called 'human rights situation'" and suggests that addressing the U.S.-South Korean joint operations more crucial to "maintaining international peace and security" than focusing on North Korea's human rights record.

U.S. general: Conflict with North Korea would be akin to World War II

Human rights dismissed

The letter comes shortly after North Korea announced that a U.S. student, Otto Frederick Warmbier, had been sentenced to 15 years of hard labor after accusing him of removing a political banner from a hotel.

The sentence against the University of Virginia student is "unduly harsh," State Department spokesman Mark Toner said, calling for his release.

Who is Kim Jong Un?

CNN's Serena Dong in Beijing contributed to this report.
 

vestige

Deceased
Various parts of the posts lead to the conclusion we are a little less of a superpower than we used to be.

The evidence:

there is nonetheless a marked and visible shift toward being ready to fight and win against a large-scale modernized enemy such as Russia or China.
The obligatory denial:

The Army, naturally, does not single out these countries as enemies, train specifically to fight them or necessarily expect to go to war with them.

Is Uncle Sam watching movies/reading books or projecting time frames? (Doug are you reading this?)

"This isn't Pearl Harbor but if people on all sides aren't careful, it could be 'The Guns of August,'" says Kurt Campbell, former assistant secretary of state for Asia, referring to the chain of miscalculation that led to World War I. The administration, he says, is facing "another red-line moment where it has to figure out how to carry through on past warnings."
The stark realization:

There has been a lot of talk lately by senior Pentagon officials that the U.S. military is losing its long-held advantages in high-end warfighting capabilities. If one accepted uncritically statements by the Secretary of Defense, Deputy Secretary and Under Secretary for Acquisition, Technology & Logistics about how well our prospective adversaries are inventing and deploying new capabilities that undermine areas of U.S. military advantage, it is possible to conclude, as some in the media and the think tank class have, that the United States is in decline as a military power.

The conclusion:

Is the United States better off in a world where these other powers advanced as we stepped back? I don't think so.


v summary:

It isn’t looking good for the home team kiddies…. Eitherat home or across the waters.

While we have been spending huge quantities of time and money on social engineering for the masses our “buddies” across the waters have been planning our demise. (Anyone here not see that?)

Our military has suffered as well as our infrastructure (and damned near everything else about our culture which was once envied by the entire world.)

Our educational system (once the jewel of the world) is now a pathetic joke.

This summary is far from all-encompassing but just gives a glimpse of the mess we’re in.

We have a president in office who said he would “campaign in all 57 states”.

Think about that a while…

Lengthy bump
 

Housecarl

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http://www.business-standard.com/ar...f-rousseff-lula-recording-116031700144_1.html

Protests in Brazil after release of Rousseff-Lula recording

Release of a taped phone call between Rousseff and Lula has created an uproar among Brazillians

AFP/PTI | Brasilia
March 17, 2016 Last Updated at 09:56 IST

Outraged Brazilians protested in Brasilia and Sao Paulo following the release of a taped phone call between President Dilma Rousseff and her predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

During the call, recorded Wednesday by police and released by a federal judge, Rousseff called Lula on his bugged phone to tell him she would be sending him the official decree nominating him as her chief of staff so that he could make use of it "if necessary."

That extract was largely seen as confirmation that an aim of Lula's nomination to the post was to spare him possible arrest for corruption.

Cabinet ministers can only be tried before the Supreme Court in Brazil and ministerial immunity will now protect Lula from prosecution in criminal court.

The recording was made public by federal judge Sergio Moro, who is heading a probe into Brazil's biggest ever corruption scandal.

Lula vigorously denies involvement in the scandal, in which investigators say construction companies conspired with Petrobras executives to overbill the oil giant to the tune of $2 billion, paying huge bribes to politicians and parties along the way.

The release of the recording caused an uproar in Congress, where furious opposition lawmakers shouted "Resign! Resign!"

Some 2,000 people spontaneously gathered in the capital Brasilia demanding that Lula step down and Rousseff leave office and to show their support Moro.

As night fell, another protest began in Sao Paulo, according to an AFP photographer.

"Resign! Resign!" shouted several thousand protesters at the foot of a highrise housing FIESP, a powerful federation of Sao Paulo industries that was illuminated in green and yellow -- Brazil's national colors -- in addition to a large inscription that read "Impeach now."

The presidency responded by announcing in a statement that "judicial and administrative measures" would be taken to "repair the flagrant violation of the law and the constitution committed by judge" Moro, without going into specifics.

It said that Rousseff sent the decree to Lula only so that he could sign it and make it official since he had indicated he would not be in Brasilia for the official taking up of the role planned for Thursday.

Lula's appointment is a risky bet for Rousseff, who is battling crises on multiple fronts: an impeachment attempt, a deep recession, mass protests and the fallout of the Petrobras scandal.

The impeachment push against Rousseff is not directly related to the corruption scandal, but has advanced in tandem with it, deepening the crisis engulfing her administration.

On Sunday, an estimated three million Brazilians flooded the streets in nationwide protests calling for Rousseff's departure.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.ibtimes.com/russia-test-...clear-submarines-weapons-reach-mach-5-2338236

Russia Test-Fires Hypersonic Zircon Missiles For Nuclear Submarines, Weapons To Reach Mach 5 Speed

By Vishakha Sonawane †y@VishakhaNS On 03/17/16 AT 8:08 AM

Russian began testing its navy¡¦s new hypersonic Zircon cruise missiles, Sputnik News reported citing RIA Novosti Thursday. The cruise missiles are expected to reach five or six times the speed of sound (Mach 5 or Mach 6), the report added.

¡§The tests of the hypersonic Zircon missiles have begun using a ground-based launching site,¡¨ a senior Defense Ministry source told RIA Novosti, according to Sputnik News.

Once the tests are confirmed successful, the missile will reportedly be presented for state approval. It will reportedly be installed on Russia's newest fifth-generation Husky-class nuclear submarines, which are currently being developed.

Modern Russian anti-ship missiles, like Onyx, can reach up to Mach 2.6 (750 meters per second). The sea-based Kalibr cruise missile travels at a Mach 0.9 speed, but while approaching the target, its warhead speeds up to Mach 2.9.

The Zircon hypersonic cruise missiles will also be used for Russian battleship Pyotr Veliky, Tass news agency reported last month. The range of the missile is likely to be just over 248 miles.

"The Pyotr Veliky will start repairs in the third or fourth quarter of 2019. Repairs and upgrade are due for completion in late 2022, the ship to be equipped with Zircon hypersonic anti-ship missiles," a source told Tass at the time.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.ibtimes.com/lockheed-mar...der-1b-likely-be-ready-2030s-2337383?rel=rel1

Hypersonic Plane Could Be Built For Under $1B, Likely To Be Ready In 2030s

By Vishakha Sonawane †y@VishakhaNS On 03/16/16 AT 7:06 AM

Lockheed Martin Corp. said Tuesday it was on the verge of a technological breakthrough that would allow its conceptual SR-72 hypersonic plane to reach six times the speed of sound, or Mach 6, according to reports. Marillyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed, said that a hypersonic demonstrator aircraft the size of an F-22 stealth fighter could be built for less than $1 billion.

The company is working on an ¡§aerodynamic configuration¡¨ that would allow the successor to the famed SR-71 Blackbird spy plane to fly at Mach 6 speed, Hewson said, according to Reuters. Such a plane would give the U.S. military a major advantage, allowing it to reach targets before the enemy could react.

Orlando Carvalho, head of Lockheed's aeronautics division, said the U.S. government's current plan was to manufacture and deploy a hypersonic weapon, before moving on to develop and deploy a hypersonic aircraft, Reuters reported. He added that the U.S. could make a hypersonic weapon by the 2020s, but a hypersonic aircraft like the SR-72 would be manufactured in the 2030s.

Carvalho also said that Lockheed has been working on an engine for the hypersonic aircraft with Aerojet Rocketdyne, a rocket manufacturer, Financial Times reported. He added that innovation was ¡§much more rapid¡¨ now than in the past because of Aerojet¡¦s engine work and Lockheed¡¦s work on aircraft materials, the report added.

¡§That said, it¡¦s going to require a significant amount of development work, investment and maturing of the technology,¡¨ Carvalho, according to the Financial Times.

Lockheed announced plans for the SR-72 hypersonic plane in 2013, billing it as an aircraft that would fly twice as fast as the SR-71 Blackbird.
 

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https://news.yahoo.com/iraqi-army-plane-crashes-3-crew-missing-military-140009203.html

Iraqi army plane crashes, IS claims downing it

AFP
22 hours ago

Baghdad (AFP) - An Iraqi army plane went down Wednesday near Kirkuk, with the military blaming a technical problem but the Islamic State group claiming its fighters shot it down.

A high-ranking military source told AFP that the plane crashed during a reconnaissance flight near Kirkuk and that its three crew were considered missing.

The military source said authorities had launched a search for the crew after the Cessna 208 Caravan went down near Kirkuk, around 220 kilometres (135 miles) north of Baghdad.

In its combat version, the aircraft can be used to launch laser-guided Hellfire missiles.

The Islamic State jihadist group claimed in a statement posted on Twitter and a video released moments later that its fighters had shot the plane down, killing five crew members.

It said it used anti-aircraft artillery against a plane that had been on a bombing run against the city of Hawijah, a stronghold of the jihadists in Kirkuk province.

A video -- which claims to show the moment the aircraft was shot down -- released by the jihadist organisation shows the wreckage of a plane that could be a Cessna Caravan.

The footage also shows IS fighters celebrating around body parts, some of which are floating in a small canal.

Iraqi forces have been making gains against the jihadists in recent months as they seek to reclaim territory seized by IS during a major offensive in 2014.

Hawijah, like other IS bastions across Iraq, is increasingly isolated as federal, Kurdish and tribal forces slowly close in.

The pressure has mounted on anti-IS forces to flush the jihadists out of the Hawijah area after a chemical attack was launched from the nearby village of Bashir last week.

The suspected mustard agent attack on the Kurdish-controlled town of Taza killed a three-year-old girl and left hundreds of people complaining of burns and respiratory problems.

The town's residents have demanded government action to retake Bashir, which is visible from the main road between Baghdad and Kirkuk, but has remained in IS hands since 2014.

Military coordination between the Kurdish peshmerga fighters and the government-allied Shiite Turkmen militia groups that also operate in the area has been difficult, slowing any operation against the jihadists.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has responded by promising that an operation against Bashir would get under way soon.

A senior military official in Kirkuk said that such an operation would further increase the pressure on Hawijah, which is IS's main remaining hub east of the Tigris.

IS shot down an Iraqi military helicopter on February 17, killing two crew members.

Two days earlier, an Iraqi Mi-17 helicopter crashed south of Baghdad due to a "technical problem", killing nine people.


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Housecarl

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https://news.yahoo.com/kurds-declare-federal-region-syrias-north-officials-114048729.html

Kurds declare federal region, muddying Syria peace efforts

AFP
By Layal Abou Rahal and Nina Larson with Delil Souleiman in Rmeilan (Syria)
25 minutes ago

Geneva (AFP) - Syria's Kurds declared a federal region in the country's north Thursday, in a move that risks complicating already fragile talks underway in Geneva to end the country's brutal five-year conflict.

More than 150 delegates from Kurdish, Arab, Assyrian and other parties meeting in the Syrian town of Rmeilan agreed to create a "federal system" unifying territory run by Kurds across several Syrian provinces.

Both the Syrian government and the main opposition immediately rejected the move, which was expected to create more obstacles at already thorny peace talks underway in Switzerland, from which the Kurdish parties have so far been excluded.

The regime charged the move would "encroach on Syria's territorial unity", while the High Negotiations Committee (HNC) opposition coalition slammed it as "a misadventure (that) is detrimental to the Kurdish cause and the Syrian cause in general."

Speaking ahead of the Kurdish declaration, the UN's mediator in the talks Staffan de Mistura branded the federalism push as possibly "dangerous", according to the Swiss news agency ATS.

The Kurds control more than 10 percent of Syria's territory and three-quarters of its border with Turkey, and the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) are considered one of the most effective forces fighting the Islamic State group.

.. View gallery
Amer al-Halloush (C), a member of of the Syrian Democratic …
Amer al-Halloush (C), a member of of the Syrian Democratic Council, the political branch of a Kurdis �c

- Political message -

Yet so far they have been blocked from joining the peace talks due to harsh opposition from Turkey, which considers the YPG a Syrian affiliate of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), an outlawed group that has waged a decades-long insurgency against Ankara.

Washington-based analyst Mutlu Civiroglu said the Kurdish announcement was a political message "to the United Nations, the US, Russia, and especially to Geneva, that if you ignore us, we are going to determine our future by ourselves."

The latest round of UN-mediated talks aimed at ending Syria's tangled war, which has killed more than 270,000 people, have been taking place since Monday.

Observers agree the atmosphere this time around has been more constructive than during multiple previous failed peace efforts, largely thanks to a partial ceasefire introduced on February 27 that remains broadly in place.

.. View gallery
UN mediator Staffan de Mistura arrives for a meeting …
UN mediator Staffan de Mistura arrives for a meeting with the High Negotiations Committee (HNC) duri �c

But the talks were muddied Wednesday when de Mistura met for the first time with a second opposition coalition, which includes the so-called Moscow Group and is demanding an equal seat at the negotiating table.

That would not sit well with the HNC, which insists it must remain the sole opposition representative in the talks.

The HNC is expected to stress that position when it has a second official meeting with de Mistura on Thursday afternoon.

- Russian withdrawal? -

The entry into the talks of the Moscow Group, along with the so-called Cairo and Istana groups, followed Russia's surprise decision this week to withdraw most of its forces from Syria, where they had been fighting in support of President Bashar al-Assad.

.. View gallery
Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech …
Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech at a ceremony to present state awards to personne �c

Western governments had voiced hopes the pullout, expected to be completed by the end of the week, could boost the talks by pressuring Assad.

But Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday his country could ramp up its presence again if needed "within several hours".

Moscow is set to maintain its air base and a naval facility in Syria and Putin indicated that Russia's drawdown would not significantly change the balance of forces in Syria.

In Geneva, it was not immediately clear what impact the inclusion of the pro-Moscow group would have on the talks, or whether it was a gesture from de Mistura to Russia following the pullout.

The UN has not yet clarified what role the Moscow Group would play, but its co-president Randa Kassis told reporters Wednesday her camp was in Geneva "as a negotiating delegation".

The Moscow Group is tolerated by Damascus and has not insisted on Assad's departure as a condition for creating a transitional government, which is an unequivocal HNC demand.

The group's inclusion could be good news for the Kurds: it insisted Wednesday on the need to "lift the embargo" against bringing in Kurdish delegates.

A member of the Syrian government delegation meanwhile told AFP the Kurds would be "invited to the talks in the next stage".

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Related Stories

1. Syria peace talks broaden as pro-Russia opposition meet UN envoy AFP
2. The Latest: Syrian group 'optimistic' about Geneva talks Associated Press
3. Kurds plan to declare a federal region in northern Syria Associated Press
4. Syria regime says Assad ouster 'red line' ahead of peace talks AFP
5. US, France warn Syria regime ahead of new peace talks AFP
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-federalism-idUSKCN0WJ1EP

World | Thu Mar 17, 2016 1:28pm EDT
Related: World, United Nations, Turkey, Syria

Syria's Kurdish-controlled regions approve federal system

RMEILAN, Syria | By Rodi Said

Syria's Kurdish-controlled northern regions voted to seek autonomy under a federal system on Thursday, angering both the Damascus government and neighboring power Turkey with a move that could complicate new U.N.-backed peace talks.

The vote to unite three Kurdish-controlled provinces appears aimed at creating a self-run entity within Syria, a status that Kurds have enjoyed in neighboring Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

The proclamation is nevertheless an open challenge to many of the sides in Syria's 5-year-old civil war, as well as their international sponsors, who have mainly been battling for control of what they say must remain a unified state and have dismissed any unilateral move toward federalism.

The Kurds, who enjoy U.S. military support, have beaten back Islamic State fighters to control swathes of northern Syria, but the main Syrian Kurdish party, the PYD, has so far been excluded from peace talks that began this week in Geneva.

Although Washington has backed the Kurds militarily, the State Department said it would not recognize "self-ruled, semi-autonomous zones in Syria", although it might accept a federal structure if that were the choice of the Syrian people.

The three Kurdish-controlled regions agreed at a conference in Rmeilan in northeast Syria to establish the self-administered "federal democratic system of Rojava - Northern Syria", officials announced. Rojava is the Kurdish name for north Syria.

Officials said at a news conference they intended to begin preparations for a federal system, including electing a joint leadership and a 31-member organizing committee which would prepare a "legal and political vision" for the system within six months.


SWIFT TO DENOUNCE

Both the government of President Bashar al-Assad and Turkey, a regional heavyweight that is one of Assad's strongest enemies, were swift to denounce the declaration.


Related Coverage
› U.N. says Syria aid, medicine and prisoner releases still blocked

"Any such announcement has no legal value and will not have any legal, political, social or economic impact as long as it does not reflect the will of the entire Syrian people," state news agency SANA cited a foreign ministry source as saying.

The PYD has consistently said it wants a model of decentralized government for Syria, not partition. The document agreed on Thursday stressed that the federal system would "guarantee the unity of Syrian territory".

An official in Turkey said: "Syria must remain as one without being weakened and the Syrian people must decide on its future in agreement and with a constitution. Every unilateral initiative will harm Syria's unity."

Turkey fears growing Kurdish sway in Syria is fuelling separatism among its own minority Kurds, and considers the main Syrian Kurdish militia to be an ally of the PKK, which has fought an insurgency for Kurdish autonomy in southeast Turkey.

Nawaf Khalil, a former PYD official, played down parallels between Kurdish aspirations in Syria and Iraq, saying Thursday's announcement was a joint move taken together with the region's other communities.

"The experience resulted from discussions with Arabs and Assyrians, Chechens, Armenians, Turkmen. There is a special case in Rojava, it is not like the path taken in Iraq," he said.

A document seen by Reuters which was issued at the meeting said the aim was to "establish democratic self-administered regions which run and organize themselves ... in the fields of economy, society, security, healthcare, education, defense and culture."

Voting on the federal model had been expected on Wednesday but was delayed by one day, in part because of demands from Arab and Assyrian communities for reassurances that it would not mean separation from Syria, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.


KURDISH CONTROL

Syrian Kurds effectively control an uninterrupted stretch of 400 km (250 miles) along the Syrian-Turkish border from the Euphrates river to the frontier with Iraq. They also hold a separate section of the northwestern border in the Afrin area.


Related Coverage
› Activists and Western powers say justice must be part of Syrian peace

The areas are separated by roughly 100 km (60 miles) of territory, much of it still held by Islamic State.

A U.S.-backed force which includes Kurdish YPG fighters has been battling Islamic State and other militants, making some gains in Raqqa, Hasaka and Aleppo provinces. Kurdish official Idris Nassan said those "liberated" areas were included in Thursday's agreement.

Thursday's document said the political system would represent all ethnic groups living in the area.

On Saturday, Syria's government in Damascus ruled out the idea of a federal system for the country, just days after a Russian official said that could be a possible model.

Russia's five-month military intervention in Syria helped turn the tide of Syria's war back in Assad's favor.

President Vladimir Putin, who has announced the withdrawal of most Russian forces, said on Thursday Moscow's intervention had created the conditions for Syria's peace process.

The United Nations Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura, who is convening the peace talks in Geneva, suggested last week that a federal model for Syria could be discussed during negotiations.

"All Syrians have rejected division (of Syria) and federalism can be discussed at the negotiations," he told Al Jazeera television.


(Additional reporting by Lisa Barrington and John Davison in Beirut, Orhan Coskun in Ankara,; writing by Dominic Evans; editing by Kevin Liffey and Peter Graff)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-gambia-idUSKCN0WJ1DT

World | Thu Mar 17, 2016 10:27am EDT
Related: World, China

With Gambia move, China ends diplomatic truce with Taiwan

BEIJING/TAIPEI | By Ben Blanchard and J.R. Wu


China resumed ties with former Taiwan ally Gambia on Thursday, ending an unofficial diplomatic truce between China and Taiwan following January's landslide election of the leader of a pro-independence party as the self-ruled island's president.

The small West African state was one of a few African countries, along with Burkina Faso, Swaziland and São Tomé and Príncipe, to recognize Taiwan, which China regards as a wayward province to be recovered by force if necessary.

China and Taiwan had for years tried to poach each other's allies, often dangling generous aid packages in front of leaders of developing nations.

But they began an unofficial diplomatic truce after signing a series of landmark trade and economic agreements in 2008 after the election of the China-friendly Ma Ying-jeou as Taiwan's president, as Beijing tried to convince Taiwan of its friendly intentions after decades of hostility and suspicion.

While Gambia severed relations with Taiwan in November 2013, causing anger in Taipei, China had held off establishing formal ties with it until now.

"From here on, China and Gambia's relations have turned over a new leaf," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told his Gambian counterpart, Neneh Macdouall-Gaye, China's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

"The early resumption of ties accords with the basic interests of both countries and conforms to the trend of the times and general trend of the development of China-Africa friendship and cooperation," Wang added.

Macdouall-Gaye, in comments carried on Chinese state television, said the Gambian nation supported "the national reunification, peaceful reunification" of China and Taiwan.

Beijing has repeatedly warned against any moves toward independence since Tsai Ing-wen and her pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) won the presidential and parliamentary elections. Tsai assumes office in May.


Related Coverage
› Taiwan expresses regret at Gambia's resumption of China ties

Tsai has said she would maintain peace with China, and Chinese state-run media have noted her pledges to maintain the "status quo" with China.


"HIGHLY INAPPROPRIATE" ACTION

Taiwan must not let this kind of incident happen again, the DPP said in a statement, referring to China's rapprochement with Gambia, and was committed to consolidating diplomatic relations once it took power.

It also said it hoped China and Taiwan would not engage in "target competition," while the Foreign Ministry expressed regret over the Gambia move.

Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council said its counterpart in Beijing, the Taiwan Affairs Office, had warned it earlier in the day the announcement was coming.

"We call on the mainland to face the reality that the Republic of China is a sovereign state and not carry out negative actions. Otherwise, it must take full responsibility for the possible consequences," the council said in a statement, referring to Taiwan's official name.

It added that the move would have a negative impact on cross-strait relations.

The news came while President Ma was on a visit to allies Guatemala and Belize. He told reporters in Belize on Thursday China's action was "highly inappropriate."

In a separate statement, China's Foreign Ministry did not directly address whether the decision on relations with Gambia was a warning to Tsai or marked the end of the truce.

"We uphold the one-China principle. The direction of promoting the peaceful development of cross-Taiwan Strait has not changed," it said.

Gambia had recognized mainland China from 1974 to 1995, before switching over to Taiwan.

China says Taiwan has no right to diplomatic recognition as it is part of China. Defeated Nationalist forces fled to the island in 1949 after the Chinese civil war.

Other countries with diplomatic ties with Taiwan include the tiny Pacific island states of Nauru and Palau, as well as Vatican City, Paraguay, Panama, Haiti, and Nicaragua.

China has also been quietly courting São Tomé and Príncipe, whose president made a low key visit to China in 2014.

(Editing by Clarence Fernandez, Robert Birsel and Mike Collett-White)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-spying-trial-idUSKCN0WJ1XR

World | Thu Mar 17, 2016 9:49am EDT
Related: World

German intelligence worker sentenced for passing secrets to CIA

MUNICH | By Hans Seidenstuecker


A German court sentenced a former intelligence worker to eight years in prison on Thursday for treason and betraying state secrets by giving the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) over 200 secret documents.

The arrest in 2014 of the man, identified as Markus R., cooled relations between Berlin and Washington, close allies during the Cold War and afterwards, and followed revelations that the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) snooped on Germany.

The 32-year-old, a former office administrator at the headquarters of Germany's BND foreign intelligence agency near Munich, was found guilty of passing information to the CIA from 2008 until mid-2014 in return for 90,000 euros ($101,754.00).

Markus R., who had "top secret" clearance, passed on a database containing personal details of more than 3,000 BND employees as well as other information.

This threatened Germany's external security and BND operations, Judge Reinhold Baier said in the verdict, as the CIA used the material to exert diplomatic and political influence.

The BND was not able to collaborate with an unnamed Middle Eastern security service because of this, the judge said.

During his trial, Markus R. told the court he was bored at work and lax controls meant he felt he was running no risk.

He also provided the Americans with details on the BND's structure, activities, deliberations and collaboration with foreign spy agencies, prosecutors said during the trial.

They said the CIA gave him a laptop computer with a special email program, which he used to send almost weekly updates.

In mid-2014, Markus R. handed over three documents to the Russian consulate in Munich, which also presented a security risk to Germany, they said.

Markus R. was arrested after his employer intercepted an email in which he asked the Russian secret service for work.

Questioned about this upon his arrest in July 2014, he acted surprised, prosecutors said. "Why the Russians? I'm working for the Americans," he told them.

Markus R. began working for the BND in December 2007 and soon afterwards offered help to the CIA, prosecutors said.

From May 2008 until his arrest, he worked in a department responsible for the protection of soldiers serving abroad and had access to sensitive material.

Fugitive former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed two years ago the extent of U.S. surveillance in Germany, which included bugging the phone of Chancellor Angela Merkel.


(Writing by Tina Bellon and Paul Carrel; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
 

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http://www.newsweek.com/boko-haram-cameroon-sentence-89-militants-death-437844

Boko Haram: Cameroon Sentence 89 Militants to Death

By Conor Gaffey On 3/17/16 at 7:56 AM

Cameroon has sentenced 89 members of Nigerian militant group Boko Haram to death.

Some 850 alleged members of Boko Haram, which pledged allegiance to the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) in 2015, are being detained in Cameroon, according to the BBC’s Hausa service. The executions are the first since a new anti-terror law was enacted in 2014 in Cameroon, which is part of a multinational force along with Nigeria and others aimed at combating the group’s spread in West Africa.

Boko Haram has been waging an insurgency in northeast Nigeria since 2009, killing some 20,000 people and displacing more than two million. During 2015, the group upped its activities across Nigeria’s borders in Cameroon, Chad and Niger. Boko Haram militants have been suspected of carrying out suicide bombings particularly in Cameroon’s Far North region. The 89 suspects were convicted by a Cameroonian military court for their role in various attacks in the north of the country.

Cameroon joined forces with Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Benin in March 2015 as part of the 8,700-strong Multi-National Joint Task Force and has conducted cross-border operations with Nigeria’s permission. In February, the Cameroonian military said it killed more than 150 militants and liberated a Boko Haram stronghold in the town of Goshi in northeastern Nigeria. The U.S. is also providing tactical support to Cameroon—President Barack Obama pledged in October 2015 to send a total of 300 American military personnel to Cameroon to assist with providing intelligence and planning anti-Boko Haram operations.

In a video published in January 2015, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau threatened to attack Cameroon and assassinate President Paul Biya unless the Francophone country abandoned its secular constitution and embraced Islam. Biya has previously vowed to wipe out Boko Haram and said in his New Year message in December 2015 that “not one centimeter of our territory has been ceded to the aggressors.”
 

Housecarl

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http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...orth-korean-arms-ammunition-factory/81902650/

Namibia confirms North Korean-built arms and ammunition factory

Oscar Nkala, Defense News 9:10 a.m. EDT March 17, 2016

GABORONE, Botswana — The Namibian government has confirmed that North Korea built an arms and ammunition factory in the African country and is in the process of executing other contracts for the construction of the country's first military academy, military barracks and a new headquarters for the Ministry of Defense (MoD).

The confirmation came a week after the government refuted the recent United Nations Panel of Experts (PoE), which found that Pyongyang has continuously violated UN Security Council sanctions imposed to protest its nuclear weapons program by providing military weapons, training and embarking on military-related construction projects in African countries, including Uganda and Namibia.

This week, Namibian Deputy Prime Minister Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah confirmed that the North Korean state-owned firm Mansudae Overseas Projects, through its subsidiary Korea Mining Development Trading Corporation (KOMID), had indeed built a small arms and ammunition factory in the capital Windhoek.

The arms and ammunition factory was completed in 2005, although the company continued doing business in Namibia until early last year.

The US Treasury defines KOMID as "North Korea's primary arms dealer and main proliferation channel" for goods and equipment related to ballistic missiles and conventional weapons. Nandi-Ndaitwah said North Korea and Namibia have a long history of military cooperation, which dates back to the struggle for independence.

According to the leaked UN report, Namibia also confirmed that KOMID had been contracted to implement several other multibillion-dollar government projects, including the construction of the State House, the National Heroes Acre, the Namibian Defense Force (NDF) Military Museum and the Independence Museum.

However, Nandi-Ndaitwah said the Namibian government cooperated with the UN requests for information because there was nothing wrong with contracting the sanctioned North Korean company to build Namibian infrastructure and provide technical training to its armed forces.

She said the small arms and ammunition factory built by North Korea cannot be seen as a contravention of UN sanctions because all the products it manufactures are not for export but for use by Namibian security agencies.

Further, Nandi-Ndaitwah said the UN sanctions are primarily aimed at North Korea's nuclear weapons program and do not prohibit Namibia from having diplomatic or other military relations with Pyongyang.

However, Namibia's assessment varies with the leaked UN report, which concluded that "the construction of any munitions factory or related military facilities is considered to be services or assistance relating to the provision, manufacture or maintenance of arms and related material and therefore, prohibited under the resolutions."

Last year, the UN Panel of Experts on sanctions against North Korea found that the country had provided small arms equipment and counterinsurgency training for Uganda'a police and military special forces in contravention of the UN Security Council sanctions.

Email: onkala@defensenews.com


MILITARYTIMES

North Korea, on defense after sanctions, makes nuclear threat

MILITARYTIMES

Seoul: North Korea fires short-range missiles amid war games

DEFENSE NEWS

Southern Africa Emphasizes Spec Ops Training
 

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http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/03/17...-source-that-cellphone-business-with-orascom/

Voice

North Korea’s silent hard currency source: That cellphone business with Orascom

By Thomas E. Ricks
March 17, 2016

By Yonho Kim
Best Defense guest columnist

The new U.N. resolution contains the toughest sanctions so far on North Korea, which promise to put significant economic pressure on the regime, especially because of the prohibition on importing coal and iron ore from North Korea. Those account for nearly half the North’s exports to China.

But with the falling prices of coal and iron ore in recent years, North Korea has been developing other hard currency sources, including labor export, tourism, and its own population. Labor export and tourism, again, mostly relying on China, were not included in the new U.N. Security Council resolution, although Beijing would take administrative measures against them at least temporarily if it determines the time is right to send a stronger message to Pyongyang.

A new source of money for the cash-strapped Pyongyang government has been the cell phone market. It has around three million subscribers, more than 10 percent of the country’s population. The government’s annual profits are estimated $200 million to $400 million so far.

North Korea prohibits Orascom, the Egyptian telecom company with a 75 percent stake in the joint venture, from repatriating its dividends, which would resulted in a massive outflow of hard currency. Koryolink has cash deposits equivalent to as much as $653 million, at the official exchange rate, as of the end of June of last year, and the operating income in the first nine months of last year reached $170 million. However, the Pyongyang authorities have been demanding that Orascom reinvest its profits in the North, effectively confiscating Orascom’s share of profits. The regime cannot tolerate an outflow of more than $600 million when its exports to China plummeted by around $300 million in 2015 and the shutdown of the Kaesong Industrial Complex earlier this year cut off an annual inflow of $100 million.

Last year Orascom was offered the chance to convert its North Korean earnings at the unfavorable black market rate, which would have put the Egyptian company’s June cash deposit at around $30 million as opposed to $658 million. If accepted, the deal would have forced Orascom to repatriate only seven percent of its total investments of $400 million, including the funds spent in fixing up the 105-story Ryugyong hotel, in North Korea since 2008.

In addition, North Korea breached the agreement that granted Orascom the exclusive rights to operate the mobile network until the end of 2015. I am told that the rival carrier, Byol, wholly owned by the government, has secured around one million subscribers since it was introduced in October 2013. The government has indicated that it intends to merge Koryolink with Byol without giving Orascom any management control. Although there is a rumor that Orascom is considering filing suit against its North Korean partner, the Egyptians would have no choice but to give up their assets in North Korea at the end of the day.

The new U.N. sanctions have further increased the risk of investing in North Korea, an impoverished country that desperately needs foreign investments. However, as far as mobile telecommunication is concerned, Pyongyang seems not to be interested in foreign direct investment success stories, but in extortion of technology and investments. Whether that trick will continue to succeed remains to be seen.

Yonho Kim is Senior Researcher of the U.S.-Korea Institute at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) and manages projects on the North Korean political economy. He is the author of Cell Phones in North Korea: Has North Korea Entered the Telecommunications Revolution? Prior to joining USKI, he was a Senior Reporter for Voice of America’s Korea Service, where he covered the North Korean economy, North Korea’s illicit activities, and economic sanctions against North Korea. He holds a B.A. and M.A. in International Relations from Seoul National University and an M.A. in International Relations and International Economics from Johns Hopkins SAIS.
 

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http://atimes.com/2016/03/the-strategy-behind-chinas-adiz-in-the-east-china-sea/

The strategy behind China’s ADIZ in the East China Sea

By Harry Kazianis on March 17, 2016 in Asia Times News & Features, China

While the world wonders whether the People’s Republic of China is taking incremental steps towards establishing an Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) in the South China Sea, detailed analysis of Beijing’s already established ADIZ in the East China Sea seems to point to an interesting conclusion: it may not be actively enforcing the zone and it could be part of a sophisticated “bargaining” strategy.

The above concept — and many other interesting conclusions detailing the declared East China Sea ADIZ along with an exploration of a possible South China Sea ADIZ — are part of a new report released by the US-China Economic and Security Review titled “ADIZ Update: Enforcement in the East China Sea, Prospects for the South China Sea, and Implications for the United States.”

The idea that Beijing might not be enforcing its ADIZ in the East China Sea is not entirely new. Indeed, Japanese scholars and retired defense officials on the sidelines of conferences I have personally attended over the last several years have also said as much. One prominent retired Japanese Defense Force official at a conference I attended in 2014 called it “An ADIZ on paper only.”

Reinforcing such ideas to a wider audience, the report nicely pulls together various strands of evidence of why China declared the zone and the reasons why enforcement today would be difficult — even with untold billions of dollars spent to modernize Beijing’s armed forces.

No integrated command

The report points out two big shortcoming China would need to overcome militarily. The first is the issue of command structure, something often overlooked. As the report explains:

“China is moving toward greater jointness in the administration of its ADIZ. China has established a joint operations command center (JOCC) in the East China Sea. A May 2015 report from Kanwa Defense Review—a magazine focused on Chinese defense issues—suggests the JOCC integrates People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force, Navy aviation, and Army aviation forces. Administering the ADIZ through a JOCC would facilitate the integration of radar data and the coordination of interceptors. It is unclear when China established its East China Sea JOCC. China previously may have lacked an integrated command center for the administration of its ADIZ, which may have hampered China’s ability to identify, track, and intercept foreign military aircraft.”

Radar lacking?

The second is important radar infrastructure, which could be lacking — and points to greater problems in maritime and air domain awareness:

“China’s network of land-based radar systems probably is broadly capable of tracking aircraft in its ADIZ, although some analysts suggest its effectiveness may suffer from a gap in coverage resulting from a division of radar assets between the PLA Air Force and PLA Navy. In addition to its land-based radar systems, China has more than a dozen airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) aircraft that could increase the PLA’s monitoring capabilities. It is unclear to what extent AEW&C aircraft are integrated into China’s ADIZ enforcement operations. A PLA Daily report from January 2014 indicated China planned to keep at least one AEW&C aircraft available at all times to support the ADIZ.”

Rely on ‘ratchet effect’

Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands claimed by Japan and China
Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands claimed by both Japan and China.

So if China may not have the full capability of enforcing an ADIZ over the East China Sea, why make such a declaration in the first place? Here, the report, citing research by the always smart US Congressional Research Service, points out that:

“[China] may be seeking to advance its position [in the East China Sea] over the long term after a short spike in tension, leaving a new status quo with the East China Sea ADIZ in place. [China] would acquire strategic advantage by asserting a maximalist position, then seeming to back down, while preserving some incremental gain — akin to a ‘ratchet’ effect. According to this theory, [China] would project a calm image and justify the East China Sea ADIZ as a ‘reasonable’ step to which foreign nations should not object. If there is an accident, crisis, or loss of life, Beijing could then blame Tokyo, Seoul, Taipei, or Washington.”

In other words, China seemingly asserts itself with the strongest of possible negotiating positions — that of a grand ADIZ in the East China Sea, laying down the largest of markers possible in the contested space above the Senkaku Islands. Publicly, and most likely for purposes of domestic politics, Beijing can take a very hard line towards its long-time rival Japan. It has the option of enforcing the zone selectively, just as Beijing sends various types of naval vessels near the Senkakus to enforce its claims on the water, having the ability to ratchet up or down the level of activity as it desires.

South China replay?

In times of lowered tensions or when it so wishes, Beijing could announce it is easing restrictions in its ADIZ, all in an effort to show it is pursuing a so-called “restrained” approach. Or it could offer to ease restrictions as part of a bilateral negotiation with Japan — say limiting its ADIZ to just military and not civilian aircraft. But as time passes, and as China’s military prowess increases, it can slowly (if it so chooses), enforce the zone with greater confidence — if accurate, a very smart strategy indeed. In fact, China loses nothing with declaring an ADIZ it may have difficulty enforcing and looks strong, while Japan, South Korea and the United States all scramble to react and look weak — as many perceived was as the case in late 2013.

And this would all have repercussions in the South China Sea. Beijing could take this same approach, declaring an ADIZ in the months or years to come, using the same playbook as described above. Indeed, with China building islands in the South China Sea — with new airfields being a big part of this approach along with radar sites and anti-aircraft batteries — Beijing may already be on its way towards implementing such an approach.

Harry Kazianis (@grecianformula) is a non-resident Senior Fellow for Defense Policy at the Center for the National Interest , a non-resident Senior Fellow at the China Policy Institute as well as a fellow for National Security Affairs at the Potomac Foundation. He is the former Executive Editor of The National Interest and former Editor-In-Chief of The Diplomat. The views expressed are his own.
 

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http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/18/world/europe/greece-idomeni-refugees.html?_r=0

A Journey Across Greece, a Bankrupt Land at Risk of Becoming a Refugee Prison

More than 44,000 people are already trapped in the country, a number ticking upward each day, as aid groups warn of a potential humanitarian crisis by summer.

By JIM YARDLEY
MARCH 17, 2016
Comments 311

IDOMENI, Greece — Taha al-Ahmad’s family is sleeping in mud. His youngest daughter, age 1, lies beneath wet blankets, coughing inside their soggy tent. It has rained for days. Portable toilets are overflowing. Men burn firewood to stay warm. A drone circles overhead. Television trucks beam images of misery to the world.

It is primeval, and surreal, this squalid, improvised border camp of 12,000 refugees, a padlocked waiting room for entering the rest of Europe. Mr. Ahmad, barely two weeks out of Syria, does not understand why his family cannot cross the Macedonian border — roughly a football field away — and continue toward Germany. Hundreds of thousands of migrants passed through last year, but now Macedonia is closed. Europe’s door is slamming shut.

“I am in a very high degree of miserable,” Mr. Ahmad told me, speaking in a singsong English he learned in Syria, as our shoes sank into the muck.

“I ask my friends in Germany and Turkey: ‘What is happening? Tell us,’” he said. “We don’t know what is happening outside.”

To Mr. Ahmad, “outside” is the world of politics and policy beyond the wretchedness of the Idomeni camp. In Idomeni, refugees exist in a decrepit suspended animation. Disease spreads. Grandmothers sleep beside train tracks. Outside, specifically in Brussels, the leaders of the European Union, under public pressure to stop the migrant flow, will begin discussing the fate of refugees on Thursday, and a disputed plan to deport them to Turkey.

“Impossible,” Mr. Ahmad said, startled at the suggestion that his family — having fled war in Syria, traversed Turkey and paid a smuggler to reach Greece by raft — could be forced to return. “I can’t accept this idea.”

For now, Idomeni is a locked gate, where refugees wait anxiously, hoping the border will reopen. Greece, itself nearly bankrupt, is at risk of becoming a refugee prison, with more than 44,000 people already trapped in the country, a number ticking upward each day, as aid groups warn of a potential humanitarian crisis by summer.

I walked into the Idomeni camp last Thursday to begin a journey across Greece and witness firsthand the new dynamic of Europe’s migration crisis — refugees, desperate and exhausted, are now frozen in place in a troubled country without the means to absorb them and no ability to pass them on.

Greece is now ground zero for the two greatest challenges to afflict Europe in recent years: the debt crisis and Germany’s insistence on austerity as the only cure, and the backlash against the wave of human migration from war-torn and impoverished countries.

Traveling along the migrant trail in reverse, from Idomeni in the north down to Athens and across the Aegean to the islands where refugees arrive from Turkey, amounted to a tour of dashed hopes: for refugees who are barred from going forward and do not want to go back, and for the Greek people, who see little chance of escaping the economic and social trauma of the past decade.

Idomeni was already an emblem of the human cost of European Union policy dysfunction, and Greece is now hurriedly opening official refugee centers in military camps, a bankrupt hotel, the decaying Olympic Park in Athens — even in a castle.

Greek officials warn that refugees might be stranded in the country for two years. So many are stranded at the port of Piraeus, near Athens, that the passenger terminals — usually where vacationers wait for ferries to the islands — are crammed with sleeping Syrians and others. On Saturday morning, a group of bewildered Korean tourists wandered into a terminal transformed into a Little Syria.

The question is when frustration will boil over, whether by Greeks already embittered by the economic crisis or by refugees angry at being penned in. On Monday morning, hundreds of disillusioned refugees marched out of Idomeni — some of them shouting, “Going to Germany!” — and forded a river to enter Macedonia.

Several hundred people made it to Moin, a Macedonian village. There, the police stopped them, and returned them to Idomeni.

“You can’t imagine this happening in Europe,” Babar Baloch, a spokesman for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, said days earlier while standing in Idomeni. “This is a humanitarian emergency.”



Is There No Hope?

Before migration overwhelmed Europe last year, Idomeni was a tiny village, with 154 people in the last census, just across the border from the Flamingo Casino, whose lights beckoned Greeks for a night of gambling. Every so often, a freight train rumbled over the tracks.

But that northbound rail route soon attracted refugees heading toward Austria and Germany. To manage the onslaught, the authorities and aid groups established a rudimentary transit center in September. More than 507,000 migrants passed through in the ensuing 12 weeks.

Unnerved Balkan countries soon began building fences and filtering refugees. By mid-November, Serbia had winnowed the approved list to Afghans, Iraqis and Syrians, and Macedonia quickly followed suit, leaving the outcasts stranded in Greece. Then on Feb. 22, Macedonian officials blocked Afghans and reduced the daily allotment of Syrians and Iraqis.

Idomeni overflowed. By early March, the crowds topped 12,000 people. On the morning I met Mr. Ahmad, Macedonia had officially closed the border, but few refugees understood what was happening. Credible information was scarce.

I came upon a group of Afghan families, living in a cluster of rain-soaked tents. A man named Zalmas Ghulam Haider produced an ID card from working as a translator for the United States Army. “Now America go,” he said. “My Army business is closed.”

He said he had fled with his wife and children because the Taliban wanted to kill him as an American collaborator. He could not understand why Afghans no longer qualified as refugees. “In Afghanistan,” he said, “everything bad.”

I peered into tents where women in black head scarves hid from the rain, often with young children. My Arabic translator was a young Iraqi refugee, Omar Sattar, who had studied English at a private school in Baghdad and wanted to reach Holland to become a dentist, or as he put it, “a doctor of teeth.” He had a smile any dentist would appreciate and helped break the ice with cautious Muslim women.

One Syrian woman carefully spelled out her name as she sat atop a soggy blanket. She seemed dazed, her eyes dark and wide, and she suddenly refused to allow her name to be used. Omar unexpectedly grabbed my notebook and scratched it out. He understood her fear. “Is there no hope for opening the border?” she asked. “What do we do now? Is there no hope?”

Smugglers promise to guide people over the border, but doctors say that those who have tried are often returned badly beaten by the police on the Macedonian side. Hygiene in the camp is abysmal. Cases of Hepatitis A were recently detected. Several women have delivered babies at a local hospital, only to return to the filthy camp. A photograph of a newborn being washed with bottled water ricocheted around social media, stirring outrage.

“Europe has the capacity to deal with this,” said Dr. Tomislav Gijatiz, a physician working in Idomeni with Doctors Without Borders. “Typically, camps are set up in Third World countries because there is no capacity there. These camps are purely the result of policy decisions.”

A Bankrupt Hotel

The refugee crisis arrived in the ancient city of Thermopylae like a slowly rising flood tide. For months, refugees had been loitering in public squares, resting on the route north, as others simply walked up the national highway toward Idomeni, more than 200 miles away. Traffic whizzed past at 80 miles per hour.

“Do you want to see a child hit by a car?” asked Kostas Bakoyiannis, 38, the tall, lanky governor of the central region of Greece.

I had driven to Thermopylae on Friday with two colleagues because Mr. Bakoyiannis had reopened the Aigli Hotel, a hot springs resort, and filled it with about 250 Syrians, mostly families. The bankrupt resort is among the state assets that European creditors want Greece to sell to offset the country’s crippling public debt.

Mr. Bakoyiannis described the hotel shelter as “completely a bottom up project,” a jab at the central government and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras. His uncle, the opposition leader of the Greek Parliament, was arriving soon for a political visit to make the same point.

Mr. Tsipras spent the first half of last year in a losing showdown with the European Union over economic austerity. When refugees began pouring into the country, he essentially waved them through. But as Balkan countries and others began building fences and closing borders, Greece was suddenly coping with stranded refugees even as new protests were erupting over austerity.

The European Union’s proposed refugee deal with Turkey is a blunt attempt to create a disincentive for refugees to pay smugglers to reach Greece. The deal dictates that refugees landing in Greece would be deported back to Turkey and placed at the back of a waiting list to legally seek asylum in Europe. For every refugee deported from Greece, an eligible Syrian waiting in a Turkish refugee camp would be allowed to seek asylum in the European Union.

The questions are whether it will work, and whether it is legal. As we waited in Thermopylae for the opposition leader, I stood with Mohammed Obeaida, 32, a Syrian who spoke English.

“We escaped from Syria and Turkey, but we go back to Turkey? Why?” he asked. “We lost our money, our homes, everything. We know the European Union is not criminals like Bashar al-Assad,” the Syrian president. “And it would be a crime to send us back to Turkey.”

A police cruiser roared up, lights flashing, ahead of a black BMW delivering the opposition leader, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, the president of the New Democracy party. He stepped out and slipped into a jacket as photographers quickly surrounded him. The Syrians stood quietly to the side, watching the spectacle.

It lasted barely 15 minutes: Mr. Mitsotakis moved quickly through the hotel, trailed by his gaggle of photographers, then made a brief statement praising his nephew and denouncing the absence of the Greek state. “The problem becomes worse with every day that passes,” Mr. Mitsotakis said. Then he hustled back into the BMW and sped away, barely acknowledging a single Syrian.

Inside the hotel, men crowded around a television in the lobby as the Al Arabiya news channel flashed a map of Syria. Then an image of a young, screaming child filled the screen.

Ordinary Greeks Respond

“What do you mean ‘a system’?”

Anetta Karathanasi was amused that I thought someone was managing the refugees pouring out of the morning ferries arriving at the port of Piraeus from the Greek isles. I had arrived early last Saturday morning as refugees disembarked from the Lesbos ferry. In the predawn darkness, hundreds of people stood in the rain, groggy and confused, as a few young Greeks handed out pink ponchos. Other refugees trudged toward Passenger Terminal No. 5 — but sleeping refugees already filled the room.

Last summer, Ms. Karathanasi went on vacation on the island of Samos and was startled to find refugees sleeping outdoors. She started a Facebook page, Help Samos Refugees, and money and volunteers unexpectedly followed. She joined other Greek volunteers at Piraeus to become, more or less, the refugee greeting committee.

“We were running from terminal to terminal with milk and tea,” she said. Different aid organizations now deliver meals, though sometimes there are scheduling breakdowns. “Then we are calling 10 mothers and 10 grandmothers,” Ms. Karathanasi said.

Just as many ordinary Germans rallied to help refugees in Germany last year (even as their arrival also set off a backlash), ordinary Greeks have also responded. In Idomeni, an elderly man parked his car and handed out candy, food and diapers. A pro-refugee rally in Athens brought a deluge of donations in a city where many people have lost their jobs.

An occupational therapist, Ms. Karathanasi said her hardest job was persuading refugees to forget about Idomeni and instead take shelter in one of the government camps proliferating across Greece.

“They think the camps are detention centers,” Ms. Karathanasi said. “They get out of the camps and come back to the port.”

At not yet 7 a.m., I followed Ms. Karathanasi to Passenger Terminal 3. Families were sprawled on the floor as the police took two refugees to the station. They were filing a complaint against a travel agency that had sold them bus tickets to Idomeni, even though the bus did not exist.

Inside, a grandmother in a head scarf rocked a crying toddler as children played with a donated dollhouse. I stepped between people on the floor, and a man looked up. “Doctor?” he asked, showing me his leg, wrapped sloppily in gauze. Another man displayed his grossly swollen ankle. A young woman with red-rimmed eyes held a baby beneath a blanket.

“Where is the doctor?” she asked.

Dazed, I sat on the floor beside a woman in a burqa as she carefully folded her children’s clothes. She had fled the devastated Syrian city of Aleppo with her husband and six children. She knew the Macedonian border was closed. She did not care.

“I go to Germany,” she said in broken English, “to save my children.”

They Killed My Son

It was 6:15 last Sunday morning, and volunteers had built a fire on the beach. They were on lookout along the southern coast of Lesbos Island, where only a narrow strait of the Aegean Sea separates Greece from Turkey. Lights flickered along the Turkish coast.

Then a volunteer spotted a shape on the water. Lesbos is now a hive of aid groups. One group created a camp that now houses more than 500 migrants. Others brought open-water swimmers in wet suits, stacks of warm blankets, Arabic translators and boxes of dry clothes. The beaches are a traffic jam of good intentions.

Visible through binoculars, a gray raft was packed with refugees. But the raft was pointed down the beach, so everyone jumped into cars or vans. Later a Greek Coast Guard ship came and intercepted two other refugee rafts. But this one slipped through.

We reached the spot. A volunteer rushed out in a speedboat. Swimmers in wet suits waded into the water. People on the raft began shouting, happily. A man stood and waved his arms.

Then everything happened quickly: Mothers, babies, grandmothers were helped off, as well as the men. Blankets were wrapped around screaming toddlers. “Does anyone speak Kurdish?” a translator yelled.

Soon, everyone was on a bus headed to an official processing center. A man with blue slacks, a pressed jacket and a well-trimmed mustache could have been headed to work, except his slacks were wet. “Thank you! Thank you!” he said into his cellphone.

The man, Saydo Ashur Yousif, 36, is a math teacher. He had been talking with his brother. He fled Mosul, Iraq, with his wife and young children. I asked if he was happy to have made it to Europe. His family is Yazidi, the religious minority group whose members were raped and murdered by the Islamic State. An Islamic State fighter killed one of his children.

“I’m not happy,” he said.

He plans to go to Germany. How would he get there? “I have no idea,” he admitted.

He had traveled a long road. Now he faced the road ahead.

Dimitris Bounias contributed reporting.
 

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http://38north.org/2016/03/sinpo031716/

North Korea’s Ballistic Missile Submarine Program: An Update

By 38 North
17 March 2016

A 38 North exclusive with analysis by Joseph S. Bermudez Jr.

North Korea’s recent launch of the Kwangmyongsong-4 satellite has also raised concerns about its continuing development of the Bukkeukseong-1 (Polaris-1, KN-11) submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) and the GORAE-class experimental ballistic missile submarine.[1] Recent commercial satellite imagery of the Sinpo South Shipyard indicates that North Korea is continuing to actively pursue development of both programs. Specifically:
◾Unidentified work on the GORAE-class submarine during the past two months appears to have been completed. A heavy crane, engaged in that activity, has been moved to the pop-up test stand for work on the support tower.
◾Construction and refurbishment continues at halls that will be capable of building submarines larger than the GORAE-class when completed.
◾The removable tower—moved to the test stand to support a rocket engine, missile or launch tube and then removed—has remained in place for the past two months, allowing the North to more quickly conduct a pop-up test.

Despite legitimate concerns about North Korea’s development of a SLBM and a ballistic missile submarine having a significant effect upon regional security, these developments represent an emerging rather than a current threat. Deployment of such operational systems will be an expensive, time-consuming endeavor for North Korea and there is no guarantee of success. Regardless, these programs require continual monitoring to ensure appropriate responses are in place if or when they reach fruition.

Work on GORAE-Class Submarine Completed

Recent commercial satellite imagery indicates that unspecified work on the GORAE-class experimental ballistic missile submarine over the past two months may be complete. The submarine is present within the secure boat basin at the Sinpo South Shipyard in the January 27 and February 16 imagery along with the submersible test stand barge and a support vessel. The netting draped over the decks of the submarine, first seen in early January, remains in place, concealing any work.[2] The heavy crane, however, also seen throughout January, is no longer present and appears to have moved to the test stand in the February 16 image.[3] Also visible in the latest imagery is what appears to be a large shipping container or tank adjacent to the submarine and a small number of people moving about on the dock. The container or tank (approximately 10 meters long by 2.5 meters in diameter) is larger than the missile-shipping container spotted last May that measured 9.5 meters long by 1.5 meters in diameter.[4] The purpose of this container or tank is unclear.

Figure 1. The secure boat basin at the Sinpo South Shipyard on January 27, 2016.

Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

Figure 2. The secure boat basin at the Sinpo South Shipyard on February 16, 2016.

Image © 2016 DigitalGlobe, Inc. All rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image © 2016 DigitalGlobe, Inc. All rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

The submersible test stand barge remains in the same location as it did in January and retains the netting draped over it, partially concealing details of any activity. No personnel are seen working near the barge.

A small support vessel not present in the December imagery is now visible in the January and February imagery and is docked at a location at the north end of the secure boat basin. It is believed that this vessel is used to tow the submersible test stand barge and support the submarine during ejection tests.

Refurbishment of Submarine Construction Facilities

Construction and refurbishment activity at the submarine construction hall, 400 meters to the south of the boat basin, continues at a slow pace. Only minor activity is observed on the launching ramp—most likely due to winter weather. When work on the construction halls, fabrication buildings and machine shops is completed, these facilities will be able to build new submarines much larger than the GORAE-class.

Figure 3. Main Construction Hall and ramp on January 27, 2016.

Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

Figure 4. Main Construction Hall and ramp on February 16, 2016.

Image © 2016 DigitalGlobe, Inc. All rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image © 2016 DigitalGlobe, Inc. All rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

Ability to Conduct Pop-Up Tests More Quickly

Imagery indicates that the removable tower used to support a rocket engine, missile or launch tube at the test stand 1,100 meters to the southwest of the secure boat basin has remained in place for several months. Leaving the tower in place—somewhat counter to previous practice when it was erected just before a test and then removed afterwards—allows the North Koreans to more quickly conduct a “pop-up” or ejection test with little advance warning. In the February 16 image, the pad has been cleared of snow. The heavy crane, previously located at the submarine, is present and appears to be working on the test stand’s support tower. The purpose of this activity remains unclear however.

Figure 5. Test Stand at the Sinpo South Shipyard on January 27, 2016.

Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

Figure 6. Test Stand at the Sinpo South Shipyard on February 16, 2016.

Image © 2016 DigitalGlobe, Inc. All rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image © 2016 DigitalGlobe, Inc. All rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

——————————————–

[1] North Korea conducted an “ejection” test of the Bukkeukseong-1 (Polaris-1, KN-11) submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) on December 21, 2015, that appears to have failed. Gorae is Korean for whale. This boat was previously identified as the SINPO-class experimental ballistic missile submarine (SSBA).

[2] Joseph S. Bermudez Jr., “North Korea’s Ballistic Missile Submarine Program: Full Steam Ahead,” 38 North, January 5, 2016, http://38north.org/2016/01/sinpo010516/.

[3] Due to the recent snow fall, the look angle of the satellite and the reflection of the sunlight many details are not clearly visible in the February 16 image.

[4] Bermudez Jr., Joseph S. “Underwater Test-fire of Korean-style Powerful Strategic Submarine Ballistic Missile,” 38 North, May 13, 2015, http://38north.org/2015/05/jbermudez051315/.


Found in section: Satellite Imagery

Tags: ballistic missile submarine, ejection test, gorae, joseph s. bermudez, sinpo, sinpo south shipyard, submarine, test stand
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2016-03-17/iran-is-a-jekyll-and-hyde-problem

Middle East

Iran Is a Jekyll-and-Hyde Problem

comments 14 time Mar 17, 2016 2:00 AM EDT
By Marc Champion

It doesn't take long in Iran before you start looking at the country through a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde prism: How to get rid of the monstrous Hyde without also harming the well-intentioned Jekyll, when they share the same body.

The Hyde part of this analogy seems clear: it's Iran's clerical regime. It retains power by dictating who can stand for election, repressing and censoring political and cultural opposition and executing about 1,000 people per year. Abroad, it arms terrorist groups and tests ballistic missiles emblazoned with the words "Israel must be wiped out."

The Jekyll side is less understood. This is the Iran where an American is more likely to get an enthusiastic reception than in any other country I've visited in the Middle East; as far back as 2002, survey data suggested that three quarters of Iranians wanted closer relations with the U.S. Iranians are better educated than citizens of other countries in the region and women make up 60 percent of the university student body (enough for the regime to try to start excluding them from certain courses). The economy, though far too oil dependent, is more diversified than others in the Persian Gulf. Above all, Iran is a stable nation state with thousands of years of history in a region of shifting sands As sanctions lift under the nuclear deal signed in January, the trick is to make sure that any unfrozen assets and investments that pour into the country strengthen "clean" private-sector companies, and starve those with links to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. Economic success should lift moderate politicians such as President Hassan Rouhani, and help them to bring Guard-owned companies into the tax system and generally undermine hardline opponents. The hope is that over time -- say by the time the time restrictions on Iran's nuclear fuel program expire in 15 years -- the regime will be changed by the country's opening up to human contact and financing from the outside world.

I tested this idea on two men with contradictory views on how the West, and more particularly the U.S., should deal with Iran.

Ali Kedery was the longest-serving senior U.S. official in Iraq from 2003 to 2009, after which he went to work for ExxonMobil. From there went on to set up Dragoman Partners, a consultancy based in Dubai, where we met. His experience in Iraq, where Iran supplied roadside bombs to kill U.S. soldiers and organized Shiite militias that terrorized Sunnis, left him with a deeply unsentimental -- and hostile -- view of his near neighbor:


You cannot separate Dr. Jekyll from Mr. Hyde. President Obama and his very inexperienced and ideological team have bet the farm on their ability to separate the regime from the Iranian people. But you are dealing with a real regime, one that has deep roots planted since 1979.

Kedery went on to describe the regime's vice-like grip on political power -- proved by its crushing of pro-democracy protests in 2009 -- and over Iran's economy. As a result, he said, the idea that hardliners will allow Western capital and interaction penetrate the country to such an extent that it can erode their power and change the nature of the regime is dangerously wrong:


They are not stupid. The model they have adopted is something like Russia's or China's. There will be a lot of foreign direct investment, but they will make sure it is directed towards the government.

Kedery's understanding of Iran (he says he can't visit the country because "it would be a one way ticket") leads to several conclusions. First, that the nuclear deal with Iran was a mistake; in 15 years the same regime with the same goals will be able to develop an industrial-scale nuclear fuel program, making it a threshold nuclear state by right. Second, having made that mistake, the U.S. should apply as much pressure as possible on Iran and its economy, using residual sanctions to constrain both U.S. and European business with Iran. Above all, it should contain the IRGC:


There is a storm gathering in the region. I think we're in a 1913/1938 moment, because appeasement -- as [then British Prime Minister Neville] Chamberlain learned -- doesn't work when you have a regime with violent, expeditionary instincts baked into its DNA.

For the alternate view, I spoke in Tehran with Saeed Laylaz, a former economic adviser to Iran's former, reformist President Mohammad Khatami. To start with, says Laylaz, while "the U.S. is the only country that has the power to affect domestic politics in Iran," it can do so in only one direction. That's because U.S. interference -- any attempt to pressure on Iran in any way -- simply creates more leverage for the country's radical conservatives:


Radicals in Iran love it. If you sent ballot boxes to Iran in November, all of the radicals would vote for Donald Trump, not Clinton.

Laylaz gave an example of how this works. After the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington on Sept. 11, 2001, he recalled, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei offered Iranian airspace and cooperation to help the U.S. fight the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. Not long afterwards, U.S. President George W. Bush called Iran part of an "Axis of Evil." Then he invaded Iraq, bringing U.S. troops to Iran's border:


What was the message? Please be as strong as possible, or we will destroy you. They forced Khamenei to go kick out Khatami.

Eight years of hardline rule and expansion of the Revolutionary Guard's control of the economy followed, under Khatami's replacement, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad . Far from being naively ideological, Laylaz believes U.S. President Barack Obama has shown political courage by upending U.S. policy towards Iran, which for 70 years -- from engineering a coup in 1953, to today -- has been based on trying to force compliance on governments in Tehran.

"Pressure will help the regime," said Laylaz. "If the U.S. would leave us alone, we can solve our problem with the conservatives." He sees Rouhani's recent success in parliamentary elections as evidence to support the country's ability to change.

Sure, there are no guarantees, says Laylaz. But the U.S. has been trying for more than 35 years to contain Iran -- from funding Iran's invasion by Iraq in 1980, a war that cost hundreds of thousands of lives, to imposing economic sanctions over Iran's support of terrorism and its nuclear fuel program. The policy has failed. The regime in Tehran remains as much in control, as conservative and as anti-American as ever. With the nuclear deal implemented, why not at least give the other approach an honest try?

These are both powerful cases. It isn't obvious which will prove correct. In Robert Louis Stevenson's novella, Jekyll eventually killed himself, because he could no longer prevent his transformations into the monster. There was no way to divide his body and dispense with only Hyde. Everyone should hope Iran's future proves otherwise.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Marc Champion at mchampion7@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Therese Raphael at traphael4@bloomberg.net
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-35831833

Brazil tumbles like 'House of Cards' in crisis

By Daniel Gallas
BBC South America Business Correspondent, Brazil
9 hours ago
From the section Latin America & Caribbean

The plot to Brazil's political crisis has become so complicated that even makers of political drama 'House of Cards' joke they are now following events.

There is even an online quiz where one has to guess: did it happen in Brazil or in House of Cards, or both?

But this is no laughing matter in Brazil.

This is the country's toughest political crisis since the early 1990s, when its first democratically-elected President in the modern era, Fernando Collor, was removed from power.

On Wednesday night the crisis took a bizarre turn, as a judge revealed phone conversations between President Dilma Rousseff and her predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and suggested they are trying to obstruct the course of an investigation into corruption.

Spontaneous protests erupted in more than 15 cities across the country and riot police acted against demonstrators in Brasilia.

Both Rousseff and Lula - as he is known - are fighting for their political survival.

Their political project has been shaping Brazil since 2003, when Lula defeated the opposition and established the Workers' Party at the top of Brazilian politics.

Rousseff is under fire for allegedly doctoring government accounts last year and could be suspended from her job as early as May if she loses a key vote in Congress.

Lula is investigated for allegedly having received gifts from construction firms that were benefitted with inflated contracts from state oil giant Petrobras.

Two weeks ago it looked like investigators were close to charging Lula for corruption, after he was detained and questioned for three hours.

On Sunday, opponents of Rousseff and Lula staged one of the country's largest demonstrations in history asking for her removal and his imprisonment.

Strange times

Usually when politicians are involved in corruption allegations, they are either fired or suspended from their jobs - not invited into the government.

But these are strange times in Brazilian politics.

Rousseff's reaction this week took everyone by surprise.

She invited Lula to become her Chief of Staff and help lead her efforts out of the impeachment mess.

On Wednesday, she justified her decision by saying he is "important and relevant for his unequivocal political experience".

She dismissed criticism that Lula was only being offered a job to escape criminal charges.

As a minister, he will have prosecution privileges and only Brazil's Supreme Court will be able to try him.

She also denied that Lula would become a "de-facto" President - a "super minister" more powerful than the President herself.

"I have to laugh when you ask that," she told journalists on Wednesday.

But hours after Rousseff's announcement to the press, a "bomb" was dropped in Brazil's political scene.

A phone conversation between Rousseff and Lula - taken earlier that day - was released to the public.

Rousseff tells Lula that she is sending him a document which he can use "if necessary".

That document confirmed Lula's nomination as a minister.

One reading of that conversation suggests that Lula should use it in case prosecutors want to charge him before he is sworn in.

That would corroborate the idea that Lula's nomination is nothing but a plan to save him from prison.

'Hero' judge

The phone conversation was revealed by federal judge Sergio Moro who has become a central person in the Petrobras probe and a hero to many people who are anti the Workers' Party..

In Sunday's mass protests, demonstrators showed hostility towards opposition politicians. The only unanimous figure amongst them was Moro.

Moro has been granting power to prosecutors and the police to investigate, arrest and charge.

He has also judged and sentenced some of Brazil's most powerful figures.

The repercussions to the phone conversations were immediate. Protestors erupted into the streets in over 15 cities and in Brasilia, anti-riot police stepped in.

Rousseff's government announced that she would sue Moro for illegally releasing her conversation.

It also emerged that Lula's phone was tapped by the Federal Police, but that the key conversation with Rousseff had been recorded minutes after the legal mandate for the tapping had expired.

Next chapters

The plot of Brazil's political crisis has become so complicated that it is impossible to predict what will happen next.

Lula will be sworn in on Thursday as a new minister.

On Friday there are planned demonstrations by his supporters across the country.

Next month, Rousseff's key political ally - the PMDB party - has announced it may leave her government.

And in May, Congress will begin voting whether to carry on with Rousseff's impeachment process.

Meanwhile the country's economy is receding - in the face of its worst crisis in over 20 years.

Rousseff has dismissed the idea that Lula would implement a sharp turn to the left - and says she will carry on with austerity measures.

But it is hard to see how she will deliver on her economic reforms with so many developments in politics.

Not even the scriptwriters for House of Cards could have devised such a complicated and explosive thriller.



Lula: 'Man of the people'

Lula at a campaign rally for President Dilma Rousseff in October 2014Image copyright Reuters ◾Born 27 October 1945 into a poor, illiterate family in Pernambuco state
◾Worked in Sao Paulo's car industry
◾Achieved national fame leading strikes during Brazil's dictatorship
◾In 1980 he founded the Workers' Party (PT), the first major socialist party in Brazil's history
◾Elected president in 2002 at the fourth attempt and went on to serve two terms
◾Pumped billions of dollars into social programmes such as Bolsa Familia that benefited tens of millions of Brazilians
◾When he left office in 2010 he said: "I am leaving government to live life on the streets. Man of the people that I always was, I will be more of the people than ever before"
◾Currently under investigation over his deals with construction firms
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
:dot5::dot5::dot5:

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.businessinsider.com/army-wants-to-place-supplies-in-south-china-sea-2016-3

US: Yes, China, we want to stockpile military supplies in countries around the South China Sea

Jeremy Bender
Mar. 16, 2016, 3:52 PM
Comments 32

In a strong political signal to China and the nations throughout the South China Sea, the US Army has announced that it plans to stockpile supplies throughout the region.

The supplies, Breaking Defense reports, would be placed in such Pacific and Southeast Asian countries as Vietnam, Cambodia, and other unnamed nations — although the Philippines is a likely option.

The basing of such permanent supplies would form a basis for potential temporary rotational troop deployments throughout the region.

Such deployments would send a sharp signal to China that its continued militarization of the South China Sea will be met with increasing pushback by both the US and neighboring nations.

However, the current US plans are for the basing of light equipment that are not immediately scalable for war time. Instead, the equipment will instead be tailored for use in humanitarian mission sets.

“Throughout the Pacific Rim, these will be humanitarian assistance/disaster relief-type equipment and material, so that when you have typhoons and other types of natural disaster US Army Pacific Command can respond more quickly,” Army Material Command chief Gen. Dennis Via said at the Association of the US Army winter conference.

“We are looking, for example, at in Cambodia placing a combat support hospital.”

Even so, the placement of such supplies throughout the region — particularly in a country such as Vietnam — would send a strong signal of US interest and dedication to the South China Sea.

The US decision to place supplies in the region comes as Beijing continues its push to dominate the South China Sea. China has so far dredged islands, established runways, and installed radars throughout the region, over the protests of its neighboring nations.

These developments have led to a report from CSIS claiming that the South China Sea will be nothing but a "Chinese lake" by 2030. And in mid-February, Beijing took a further step of militarizing the region by placing advanced surface-to-air missiles on a disputed island to solidify its claims.

This militarization of the region, and the potential consequences, has led the former CIA chief Gen. Michael Hayden to claim that mishandling the rise of China "will be catastrophic."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
This sort of "concern" was the reasoning Sweden had for their "bomb in the basement" program....The Soviets were one thing, now they're not only looking at the Russians but also all of their Muslim migrants....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.defensenews.com/story/de...-defense-military-strategy-doctrine/81908664/

Sweden Adopts Tougher Military Strategy Doctrine

Gerard O’Dwyer, Defense News 11:31 a.m. EDT March 17, 2016

HELSINKI — Sweden’s defense command has responded to the growing unpredictability of a changed security landscape in the greater Baltic Sea area by toughening up the Military Strategy Doctrine (MSD) under which the Swedish Armed Forces (SAF) deals with threats against the country’s sovereignty.

The new doctrine shifts the emphasis of national defense from a post-Cold War era strategy largely based on containment to a more aggressive model that will deploy advanced weapons systems and modern warfare forces as part of a "sustained" and coordinated high-impact strike against attackers.

The revised MSD formats a framework under which the defense of Sweden can be conducted either "alone" or potentially in collaboration with multinational Nordic, European Union or NATO forces.


DEFENSE NEWS

Finnish Legislation Seeks Direct Military Support for Partners


Running doubts over Sweden’s defense capability and preparedness were affirmed by the SAF’s former supreme commander, Gen. Sverker Göranson, in January 2013.

Göranson observed that capacity shrinkage and serial budget cuts had reduced the SAF’s operating capability to such a skeletal level that Sweden’s combined land, air and naval forces would be incapable of defending the country "in one place for more than a week" against a major hostile power.

Göranson’s remarks triggered a politically charged debate on national defense that culminated in a government commitment to scale up military spending and modernize fighter aircraft, artillery and naval capacities, while re-establishing a military presence on Gotland, Sweden’s strategic island outpost in the Baltic Sea.

"The depletion in the Armed Forces’ capacity was substantial, and it could not continue. We now live in more unpredictable times. The old military doctrine was shaped after the last Cold War when Sweden believed that Russia was on the road to becoming a real democracy that would no longer pose a threat to this country and its neighbors," said Allan Widman, Parliamentary Defense Committee chairman and member of the Liberal party.

Russia’s annexation of Crimea, and its activities in Ukraine, serve as a warning to all states in the region concerning the indeterminate nature of the Kremlin’s future actions and intentions, Widman said.


DEFENSE NEWS

Russian Aggression Drives Increase in European Defense Spending


The notable downsizing of Sweden’s military end strength and capacity began in the wake of the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989. In subsequent years, lower spending on the then-conscription-based defense system substantially reduced fighter strength and manpower in core Army, Navy, Air Force, Home Guards and local defense units.

The SAF’s mobilization capacity comprised around 100,000 active-duty soldiers in 1985, supported by a further 350,000 trained reserves. Sweden’s front-line response arsenal included 300 modern combat aircraft; a Navy operating a fleet of 40 warships and 12 submarines; and an extensive battalion-based coastal artillery system..

Post 1985, the SAF has lost over 50 percent of its operational Army combat units, 75 percent of its local defense divisions, over 60 percent of its aircraft and around 30 percent of its naval capacity, including surface ships and submarines.

According to supreme commander Gen. Micael Bydén, the new MSD reflects a resolute "must win" mentality and the SAF’s determination to aggressively defend Sweden against an invading force "to the last soldier" is necessary.

"If for some reason we need to stand alone as a country, I promise that the Armed Forces will do all we can down to the last man or woman standing with arms in hand," Bydén said.

Sweden’s government and military maintain the official view that Russia does not pose an immediate direct threat, despite the Kremlin’s unpredictability regionally and the increased activity of Russia’s modernizing armed forces in the High North and Baltic Sea areas.

"We may not have a direct threat to our national security, but we do need to prepare and plan for the future," said parliamentary defense committee member Hans Wallmark.

The Moderate party to which Wallmark belongs advocates a long-term defense-building plan that includes higher spending on defense and Swedish membership of NATO.

"We hold the belief that having Sweden in NATO would strengthen security in the Baltic region. Having Sweden outside the alliance just increases uncertainty. A Sweden in NATO would also give us more influence over the security issues that concern us, and a place at the table where the decisions that affect us are made. Sweden needs a road map for NATO membership," Wallmark said.

The Moderates also want Sweden to adopt a Total Defense strategy that would extend the SAF’s mission-based mandate to bolstering air-defense and anti-submarine capabilities, as well as cyberwarfare counterstrike technologies and capacities.

This envisaged Total Defense structure would run parallel to building closer bilateral and general defense cooperation agreements with Nordic Defense (NORDEFCO) partner nations, including nonaligned Finland and NATO-member states Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.


DEFENSE NEWS

Finland, Sweden Consider Treaty-based Defense Union


"This deeper form of Nordic defense cooperation will provide for a direct response to aggressive Russian behavior," Swedish Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist said.

Sweden has also moved to strengthen military partnerships with NATO, the U.S. and the EU, as well as pursuing single interstate defense cooperation agreements with neighborhood states like Poland.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-libya-security-politics-idUSKCN0WJ2ZG

World | Thu Mar 17, 2016 5:37pm EDT
Related: World, United Nations, Libya

Libya's U.N.-backed government to move to Tripoli within days: PM

TRIPOLI

Libya's U.N.-backed unity government will move to Tripoli from Tunis "within a few days", its prime minister said in a television interview broadcast on Thursday.

Fayez Seraj said a security plan agreed with police and military forces in Tripoli, with some armed groups, and with the United Nations, would allow the Presidential Council and the government it nominated to transfer to the Libyan capital.

The unity government was named under a plan to end the political chaos and conflict that has beset Libya since the uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi five years ago.

Since 2014, the country has had two rival parliaments and governments, one based in Tripoli and one in the east.

"We, the government of national accord, will be in the capital Tripoli soon ... within a few days," Seraj told Jordan-based Libya HD channel in a pre-recorded interview.

"The armed groups will remain in their camps until an agreement is found with them about whether their members will be integrated and young people absorbed within certain programs according the security plan," he said.

The unity government has faced opposition from hardliners on both sides of Libya's political divide, and the prime minister of the government based in Tripoli this week warned the unity government not to move there.

But Western powers have been pushing hard for the unity government to start work, hoping that it will be able to tackle the threat from Islamic State, both by drawing together Libyan armed factions, and by requesting international help.

Seraj said the Presidential Council saw a need to take advantage of the "international momentum" around Libya, but it was up to Libyans to determine their needs.

"If the international community provides assistance I do not think the Libyans would reject that, but within the rules and standards, and according to what Libyans want," he said.

"Direct intervention is unacceptable, and we have sent that message clearly."


(Reporting by Ahmed Elumami; Writing by Aidan Lewis; Editing by Louise Ireland)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/defiant-north-korea-fires-ballistic-missile-sea-japan-005939869.html

Defiant North Korea fires ballistic missile into sea, Japan protests

By Jack Kim and Ju-min Park
Reuters
March 18, 2016

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea fired at least one ballistic missile which flew about 800 km (500 miles) before hitting the sea off its east coast, South Korea's military said on Friday, as the isolated state stepped up its defiance of tough new U.N. and U.S. sanctions.

A U.S. official told Reuters in Washington it appeared to be a medium-range missile fired from a road-mobile launcher. That would mark North Korea's first test of a medium-range missile, capable of reaching Japan, since 2014.

The missile, launched from north of the capital, Pyongyang, flew across the peninsula and into the sea off the east coast early Friday morning, South Korea's Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.

It appeared the North may have fired a second missile soon after from the same region, with a projectile disappearing from radar at an altitude of about 17 km, the statement said.

South Korea did not confirm the type of the missiles. But 800 km was likely beyond the range of most short-range missiles in North Korea's arsenal. The North's Rodong missile has an estimated maximum range of 1,300 km, according to the South's defense ministry.

Friday's launch quickly provoked a barrage of criticism and appeals.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang urged North Korea to abide by U.N. resolutions and not do anything to exacerbate tensions.

The U.S. State Department in a statement urged North Korea to focus on taking concrete steps toward fulfilling its international commitments and obligations.

Japan lodged a protest with North Korea through its embassy in Beijing, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told parliament.

"Japan strongly demands North Korea to exercise self-restraint and will take all necessary measures, such as warning and surveillance activity, to be able to respond to any situations," Abe said.

South Korea's Unification Ministry said Pyongyang should focus on improving the lives of its people and that provocative actions would help nothing.

NUCLEAR WARHEADS

North Korea often fires missiles during periods of tension on the Korean peninsula or when it comes under pressure to curb its defiance and abandon its weapons programs.

Last week, the North fired two short-range missiles into the sea off its east coast and its leader Kim Jong Un ordered more nuclear weapons tests and missile tests.

That came after North Korean media said the North had miniaturized nuclear warheads to fit on ballistic missiles and quoted Kim as calling upon the military to prepare for a "pre-emptive nuclear strike" against the United States and South Korea.

U.S. President Barack Obama imposed new sanctions on North Korea on Wednesday over its nuclear test and satellite launch. The sanctions freeze North Korean government assets in the United States, bans U.S. exports to, or investment in, North Korea, and expands a U.S. blacklist to anyone - including non-Americans - who deal with North Korea.

North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test on Jan. 6 and launched a long-range rocket on Feb. 7 in defiance of existing U.N. Security Council resolutions.

The North has reacted angrily to annual joint military drills by U.S. and South Korean troops that began on March 7, calling the exercises "nuclear war moves" and threatening to wipe out its enemies.

The U.S. and South Korea remain technically at war with the North because the 1950-53 Korean War ended in an armed truce instead of a peace agreement. Over the last several weeks, the two Koreas have suspended economic ties over the mounting tensions.

South Korea and U.S. officials this month began discussions on deploying the advanced anti-missile Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system to the U.S. military in the South, despite Chinese and Russian objections.

On Wednesday, North Korea's supreme court sentenced a visiting American student to 15 years of hard labor for crimes against the state, a punishment Washington condemned as politically motivated.

(Additional reporting by Tokyo newsroom, Phil Stewart in Washington and Megha Rajagopalan in Beijing; Editing by Bill Tarrant)

Comments 1298
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Note that an arch drawn from the launch site to the impact point in the Sea of Japan intersects with Hiroshima....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...o-condemns-latest-north-korean-missile-tests/

National / Politics

Tokyo condemns latest North Korean missile tests

by Ayako Mie
Staff Writer
Mar 18, 2016

Two suspected North Korean missile launches drew Japanese condemnation on Friday, just days after the isolated country’s defiant leader Kim Jong Un threatened to carry out a series of nuclear warhead tests and missile launches.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said North Korea shot off a medium-range ballistic missile at around 5:54 a.m. from the western part of Sukchon. It flew about 800 km and fell into the Sea of Japan about 650 km east of the Korean Peninsula. Suga said Tokyo lodged protest with North Korea through the embassy in Beijing, and that there is no report of damages caused to Japanese ships by the launch.

The U.S. officials said the second missile, fired about 20 minutes later, disappeared from radar in the early stage of its flight. Yonhap News reported that it may have exploded before reaching its target area, citing South Korean defense officials.

Both U.S. and South Korean defense officials believe the missiles were probably Nodongs fired from mobile launch vehicles.

Tokyo has yet to confirm details on the second missile or what type may be involved, but Defense Minister Gen Nakatani did tell reporters he has not ruled out the possibility they were Nodong missiles, which have a maximum range of 1,300 km and are capable of striking Japan. Kyodo News reported that Nakatani issued an order to destroy the missiles should they threaten Japanese territory, citing government sources.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe denounced the North’s lates tprovocation, calling it a clear violation of the U.S. Security Council resolutions.

“We demand that North Korea refrain (from any provocative actions), and we are bracing for any contingency,” Abe said during the Upper House budgetary committee session.

Tensions have been simmering since Pyongyang carried out its fourth nuclear test on Jan. 6, followed by the launch of a long-range rocket that was seen as cover for another long-range ballistic missile test.

Friday’s launch is widely believed to be a blatant protest against the biggest joint military drills held by the United States and South Korea. The drills, underway since March 7, are often criticized by Pyongyang as a provocative rehearsal for invasion.

On March 10, the North fired two short-range missiles into the Sea of Japan. It also launched a Nodong missile in March 2014, while the U.S. and South Korea were staging joint drills.

Pyongyang’s continuous provocations come amid mounting international pressure against it. Japan and South Korea have already adopted their own sanctions and the U.N. Security Council earlier this month unanimously adopted a resolution that imposes the most stringent sanctions ever on the North. U.S. President Barack Obama on Thursday also signed an executive order implementing tough sanctions based on the resolution, further isolating a country that is already known as the hermit kingdom.

The newly imposed sanctions are aimed at weakening Pyongyang’s ability to further develop nuclear weapons. Pyongyang is believed to already have a small stockpile of nuclear weapons, though its ability to accurately strike targets has been questioned. Among the North’s ambitions is to develop a usable inter-continental ballistic missile that can strike the North America. Yet experts say it will take years for North Korea to develop that capability.

To diffuse such skepticism, the North has been flaunting its technological development.

The state-run Korean Central News Agency earlier this month reported that the country has succeeded in miniaturizing nuclear warheads to fit in ballistic missiles.

The state media on Tuesday also reported that North Korea successfully conducted a simulation of the atmospheric re-entry of a warhead. The technology, if actually developed, would give the North the ability to not only launch a long-range missile, but also guide it through re-entry and to a target, including the United States.

South Korea’s defense ministry said that Pyongyang is yet to acquire such technology. Yet experts say that the North could soon be testing an ICBM, which could further destabilize the security landscape of the Korean Peninsula and escalate military tensions.

Information from AFP-Jiji added
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Meanwhile on a related subject.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...tonium-u-s-official-warns-proliferation-risk/

National

Japan to return 331 kg of plutonium as U.S. official warns of proliferation risk

by Eric Johnston
Staff Writer
Mar 18, 2016

OSAKA – A large shipment of plutonium is expected to depart Japan soon amid a warning from a senior American official saying nuclear reprocessing in East Asia could lead to increased amounts of nuclear material that could be used for nuclear weapons.

By late Sunday, two armed British transport ships currently docked in Kobe, the Pacific Egret and the Pacific Heron, are to be dispatched to the Japan Atomic Energy Agency’s port in the village of Tokai, Ibaraki Prefecture, according to Greenpeace, which is monitoring the ships.

The vessels will pick up 331 kg (729 pounds) of plutonium that was sent to Japan by the United States for civil research years ago but can also be used for nuclear weapons. The material will be returned to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Savannah River Site in South Carolina in a trip expected to take about two months.

The initiation of the plutonium’s return comes less than two weeks before the March 31 to April 1 Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, D.C., which Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and U.S. President Barack Obama are expected to attend.

In 2014, Abe and Obama agreed that Japan would return plutonium which was sent to Japan in the Cold War era for research purposes.

In particular, the material was used for research into the country’s failed fast-breeder reactor program at Monju in Fukui Prefecture, which aimed to produce more plutonium from spent nuclear fuel than it consumed.

In addition, Japan is still officially pursing reprocessing at a facility in Rokkasho, Aomori Prefecture, which extracts plutonium from spent conventional nuclear reactor fuel. The Rokkasho reprocessing plant is decades behind schedule and way over budget, costing over ¥2 trillion by unofficial estimates, due to technological problems. Last November, its start was postponed for the 23rd time, until 2018.

On Thursday, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Countryman told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel had little, if any, economic justification and creates international nuclear security concerns in a region where tensions are escalating.

“I would be happy to see all countries get out of the plutonium reprocessing business,” Countryman told the Senate committee.

“If 331 kilograms of plutonium warrants removal from Japan on the grounds of its vulnerability and in the interests of securing nuclear weapons material, then there is no credible justification for Japan’s current program and future plans to increase its plutonium stockpiling,” Shaun Burnie, senior nuclear specialist at Greenpeace Germany, said in a press statement.

As of early 2015, the total amount of separated plutonium managed within and outside of Japan was about 47.8 tons. Approximately 10.8 tons was held domestically and about 37 tons was held abroad, according to the Japan Atomic Energy Commission.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thepeninsulaqatar.com/news/a...chinese-activity-around-south-china-sea-shoal

US sees new Chinese activity around South China Sea shoal

March 18, 2016 - 3:25:16 pm
By David Brunnstrom and Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON: The United States has seen Chinese activity around a reef China seized from the Philippines nearly four years ago that could be a precursor to more land reclamation in the disputed South China Sea, the U.S. Navy chief said on Thursday.

The head of U.S. naval operations, Admiral John Richardson, expressed concern that an international court ruling expected in coming weeks on a case brought by the Philippines against China over its South China Sea claims could be a trigger for Beijing to declare an exclusion zone in the busy trade route.

Richardson told Reuters the United States was weighing responses to such a move.

China claims most of the South China Sea, through which more than $5 trillion in global trade passes every year. Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Taiwan have rival claims.

Richardson said the U.S. military had seen Chinese activity around Scarborough Shoal in the northern part of the Spratly archipelago, about 125 miles (200 km) west of the Philippine base of Subic Bay.

“I think we see some surface ship activity and those sorts of things, survey type of activity, going on. That’s an area of concern ... a next possible area of reclamation,” he said.

Richardson said it was unclear if the activity near the reef, which China seized in 2012, was related to the pending arbitration decision.

Asked about Richardson’s statement, Lu Kang, a spokesman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said it was hypocritical for the United States to criticize China for militarizing the region when it carries out its own naval patrols there.

“This is really laughable and preposterous,” he said.

The Philippine foreign ministry said it had yet to receive a report about Chinese activity in Scarborough Shoal.

A Philippine military official who declined to be identified because he is not authorized to speak to the media said he was unaware of a Chinese survey ship in the area.

“China already has de facto control over the shoal since 2012 and they always have two to three coastguard ships there. We are also monitoring their activities and movements,” the official told reporters.

Richardson said China’s pursuit of South China Sea territory, which has included massive land reclamation to create artificial islands elsewhere in the Spratlys, threatened to reverse decades of open access and introduce new “rules” that required countries to obtain permission before transiting those waters.

He said that was a worry given that 30 percent of the world’s trade passes through the region.

Asked whether China could respond to the ruling by the court of arbitration in The Hague by declaring an air defense identification zone, or ADIZ, as it did to the north, in the East China Sea, in 2013, Richardson said: “It’s definitely a concern.

“We will just have to see what happens,” he said. “We think about contingencies and ... responses.”

Richardson said the United States planned to continue carrying out freedom-of-navigation exercises within 12 nautical miles of disputed South China Sea geographical features to underscore its concerns about keeping sea lanes open.

JOINT PATROLS?

The United States responded to the East China Sea ADIZ by flying B-52 bombers through the zone in a show of force in November 2013.

Richardson said he was struck by how China’s increasing militarization of the South China Sea had increased the willingness of other countries in the region to work together.

India and Japan have joined the U.S. Navy in the Malabar naval exercise since 2014, and were due to take part again this year in an even more complex exercise that will take place in an area close to the East and South China Seas.

South Korea, Japan and the United States were also working together more closely than ever before, he said.

Richardson said the United States would welcome the participation of other countries in joint patrols in the South China Sea, but those decisions needed to be made by the countries in question.

He said the U.S. military saw good opportunities to build and rebuild relationships with countries such as Vietnam, the Philippines and India, which have all realized the importance of safeguarding the freedom of the seas.

He cited India’s recent hosting of an international fleet review that included 75 ships from 50 navies, and said the United States was exploring opportunities to increase its use of ports in the Philippines and Vietnam, among others - including the former U.S. naval base at Vietnam’s Cam Ranh Bay.

But he said Washington needed to proceed judiciously rather than charging in “very fast and very heavy,” given the enormous influence and importance of the Chinese economy in the region.

“We have to be sophisticated in how we approach this so that we don’t force any of our partners into an uncomfortable position where they have to make tradeoffs that are not in their best interest,” he said.

“We would hope to have an approach that would ... include us a primary partner but not necessarily to the exclusion of other partners in the region.”

(Additional reporting by Neil Jerome Morales in Manila and Megha Rajagopalan in Beijing; Editing by Peter Cooney and Nick Macfie)

Reuters
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paris-attacks-salah-abdeslam-police-raid-brussels-belgium/

CBS/AP/ March 18, 2016, 9:56 AM

Paris attacks suspect "likely" escaped, again

Last Updated Mar 18, 2016 10:06 AM EDT

One of the main suspects in the Nov. 13, 2015 terror attacks on Paris, Salah Abdeslam, likely escaped capture in a raid on an apartment in Brussels earlier this week.

Abdeslam, whose brother was one of the suicide bombers in the carnage that left 130 people dead in the French capital, may have slipped through the fingers of European law enforcement at least twice now since the attack.

"According to our information, it is more than likely that he is one of the two individuals who escaped during the shootout," Belgium's public broadcaster RTBF reported.

One suspect was killed in the Tuesday raid in the Forest neighborhood of Brussels, but police said soon after that two other people who escaped the operation were the subject of a manhunt.

Belgian federal prosecutor Eric Van der Sypt confirmed to CBS News on Friday that Abdeslam's fingerprints were found in the apartment raided on Tuesday, but he could not confirm whether he was one of the two people who escaped during the raid. French and Belgian media reports suggested he was.

The dead man was identified as an Algerian man living illegally in Belgium, Mohamed Belkaid, whose only contact with authorities appeared to be a years-old theft charge, said Thierry Werts, the Belgian federal prosecutor. Two others taken into custody during the raid were later released without charge.

Forest is not far from the neighborhood of Molenbeek, an area rife with unemployed young Muslims considered fertile ground for terrorist recruiters. Several of the nine Paris attackers had links to the area.

Another Brussels apartment raided by police late last year was likely used to make bombs for the Paris attacks, and Abdeslam also hid out there after escaping a police dragnet in the days after the carnage, Belgian prosecutors said early in January.

The prosecutors said they found Abdeslam's fingerprint in a search of the apartment on Dec. 10, but didn't know when he had last holed up there. An international manhunt has been ongoing for the 26-year-old Brussels native since not long after the attacks.

The search of that apartment also turned up three suspected suicide belts, traces of the same explosive used in the Nov. 13 attacks, and other material that could be used to manufacture bombs, according to the Belgian Federal Prosecutor's Office.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...me-wardens-will-now-carry-radiation-detectors

:siren::siren::siren:

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/...s-are-now-looking-for-poachersand-terrorists/

Texas Game Wardens Are Now Looking For Poachers … and Terrorists

Along the Texas coast, game wardens will now carry radiation detectors.

Dave Fehling | Posted on March 18, 2016, 6:21 AM
Podcast
https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/...-Warden-Nuke-SPOT.mp3?source=download-article

Up and down the Texas Gulf Coast, the state’s game wardens are on the water, looking for people fishing or hunting illegally. But as we’ve reported, they sometimes come across things like illegal chemical dumpsites and more says Texas Parks and Wildlife’s Tom Harvey.

“Game wardens encounter all kinds of things on their patrols, including a lot of illegal fishing, and this is a new threat we’re gearing up to be able to address,“ Harvey told News 88.7.

That new threat is terrorism. One fear is that terrorists could try to smuggle radioactive material into the country by boat. The Port of Houston has for years had radiation detectors to scan cargo.

So now, besides guns and handcuffs, game wardens will have one more tool.

“We’ve acquired about a hundred devices that allow game wardens to detect radiological or nuclear emissions. These are little devices that can be worn on someone’s belt,” Harvey said.

They’re about the size of a cellphone and can help a warden determine if something suspicious is radioactive. It wouldn’t necessarily have to be connected to terrorism: radioactive materials used in the energy and medical industries can be illegally dumped.

Game wardens began training with the radiation detectors in January and completed a mock exercise to find radioactive packages along the coast.
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.brecorder.com/world/sout...rnment-protesters-from-central-sao-paulo.html

Brazil police clear anti-government protesters from central Sao Paulo

Friday, 18 March 2016 19:38
Posted by Shoaib-ur-Rehman Siddiqui

SAO PAULO: Brazilian riot police fired water cannon and tear gas to clear anti-government protesters from Sao Paulo's central Avenue Paulista, local media said, ahead of a planned demonstration on Friday in favour of embattled President Dilma Rousseff.

The anti-government protesters had blocked Sao Paulo's main thoroughfare since Wednesday evening when demonstrations erupted against the appointment of former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as a minister.

Opponents say the move is designed to help Lula evade prosecutors who have charged him with money laundering and fraud.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-gas-facility-in-algeria-hit-by-rocket-attack

Statoil, BP Gas Facility in Algeria Hit by Rocket Attack

by Mikael Holter, Caroline Alexander
March 18, 2016 — 3:33 AM PDT
Updated on March 18, 2016 — 8:15 AM PDT

- Statoil says no indications of injuries, staff are safe
- Attack occurs 3 years after In Amenas assault that killed 40


Statoil ASA and BP Plc said no one was hurt in a rocket attack on a gas facility they run in Krechba, Algeria.

The central processing plant has been shut down as a safety precaution and all its staff in Algeria have been accounted for, BP said in an e-mailed statement on Friday. Statoil said it has been in contact with its three employees at the Krechba facility and all are unharmed.

Two people fired home-made rockets at the plant about 6 a.m. local time, state-run Algeria Press Service reported, citing an unidentified person. The assault did not cause any material damage and security forces are still tracking the two attackers, the report said.

The assault, which targeted facilities at the In Salah gas fields, occurred three years after a deadly attack by Islamist militants linked to Al Qaeda against the In Amenas gas plant, operated by Statoil, BP and Algeria’s state-owned Sonatrach. Forty people were killed, including 38 foreign workers.

The attack underlines the deteriorating security situation across North Africa, said Richard Mallinson, an analyst at Energy Aspects Ltd.

“Algeria faces both Islamic State along the long border with Libya and Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb,” which has experienced a revival in recent months with attacks on soft targets in Mali and Burkina Faso, Mallinson said by e-mail. “Energy infrastructure is generally located in remote regions and well guarded, but as IS and other militant groups gather strength, oil and gas facilities could still be vulnerable to a sophisticated attack.”

Statoil said last month that the In Salah joint venture had started production at the Southern Fields development, which will maintain total natural gas production from the project at about 9 billion cubic meters a year. The company has mobilized its emergency preparedness and is working to get a full overview of the situation.

About 600 workers were present at the site, Statoil spokesman Baard Glad Pedersen said by phone. He couldn’t say how long production would remain halted.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Paris Attack Fugative Salah Abdeslam Captured in Belgium Police Raid
Started by Housecarlý, Today 09:44 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...alah-Abdeslam-Captured-in-Belgium-Police-Raid


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.voanews.com/content/captured-american-is-fighters-story-raising-red-flags/3244295.html

Captured American IS Fighter's Story Raising 'Red Flags'

Jeff Seldin
March 18, 2016 1:08 PM

WASHINGTON— Intelligence officials are taking a close look at what an American Islamic State (IS) fighter is telling Kurdish media; parts of his account raise as many questions as answers.

Mohamad Jamal Khweis, the 26-year-old from Alexandria, Virginia, spoke just days after he claims to have fled from the IS-held city of Mosul.

Kurdish forces saw him wandering near the northern Iraqi city of Sinjar Monday and fired upon him before he surrendered.

During the heavily edited version of the interview released by Kurdistan24 television, Khweis seems relaxed and, at times, smokes a cigarette, something he said is prohibited in the terror group’s self-declared caliphate.

“I made a bad decision to go with [a] girl and go to Mosul,” Khweis said in English. “I wasn’t thinking straight.”

Journey to Mosul

He described how the Iraqi girl, the sister of a woman married to an IS fighter, made arrangements for the fairly uneventful journey.

“First, we took a bus from Istanbul to a city, Gaziantep,” he said. “From there, a driver picked us up and took us to the border and then [we went] from Syria to Iraq.”

U.S. intelligence officials hope to learn more about Khweis’ travels and, if possible, to validate his accounts of IS, including information on foreign fighters in the Mosul area.

For now, current and former intelligence officials, as well as analysts, are approaching the account with caution.

“There are a ton of holes in his story,” said Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a senior fellow at the Foundation to Protect Democracies.

“The answers he is giving don't appear to be satisfactory,” he added. “The question then becomes whether he's lying, obfuscating, or just doesn't want to talk about aspects of his story. And then the next question is why?”

How did he get ID and cash?

One of the ‘red flags’ is Khweis’ account of his escape.

In the interview, he described how upon arriving in IS territory he was stripped of his identification papers.

“All the foreigners had to give their IDs and passports to one of the person in charge there,” Khweis said. “From there, after we gave all our IDs and passports, we got picked up… we drove into Raqqa.”

Yet when Khweis surrendered to Kurdish forces, he was carrying his Virginia driver’s license, as well as a stack of what appears in photos to be U.S. $100 bills, Turkish money, debit and credit cars and three cell phones.

One former intelligence officer who watched the interview called that part of Khweis’ story – “magically getting his docs and cash” – odd.

“It doesn’t make sense,” said Patrick Skinner, now with The Soufan Group, a strategic security intelligence consultancy.

“I've interviewed lots of people like that and if you don't ask for details you don't get them -- get the old 'every time frame is a week' spiel and generic 'went to a house'.” he said. “But odd from an educated person.”

Why was his escape so easy?

Skinner also wondered why Khweis never speaks to a basic question.

“What made him travel in the first place, not just to Mosul but the whole trip?” Skinner asked.

The ease of Khweis’ escape also raises questions given IS’s reputation for executing fighters and others who try to flee.

“About a month [after] I was there, I decided to return back home,” Khweis said.

“At first [a friend] said he could help me, but then he said it will be difficult to take me all the way to Turkey,” he said. “He told me he will take me close to Turkey’s border.”

According to his account, though, his escape from Mosul is seamless.

The Iraqi girl?

Another claim that has raised suspicions is his story about the Iraqi girl who escorted him from Turkey to Syria.

IS has long used the promise of women or brides to lure would-be foreign fighters. And intelligence officials have said IS does make use of unofficial networks, like family relations, to help bring in more recruits.

But the role Khweis described for the Iraqi girl is, at least, unusual.

“It's surprising that ISIS would allow a woman who is not related to the recruit to travel with him alone,” said terror analysts J.M. Berger, a fellow with George Washington University's Program on Extremism and co-author of ISIS: State of Terror. "It could also be a sign something isn't right with this story.”

Still, officials and analysts say parts of Khweis’ account are plausible.

“It is very possible he was lured over through a network that used women - to alleviate suspicion of a single male or single female,” said ex-undercover Canadian security and counterterrorism operative Mubin Shaikh. “It does seem that she was indeed part of a network waiting for him.”

There is also Khweis’ journey from London to Amsterdam to Turkey, where he finalized his travel plans to Syria and IS territory.

“We've seen this route before,” Shaikh said.

And his description of the training and the array of foreign fighters is consistent with other accounts.

Khweis said he spent about a week at a house in Raqqa, spending time with “a lot of Asians, a lot of Russians, people from the surrounding area, like Uzbekistan,” as well as Egyptians, Moroccans and Algerians.


Jeff Seldin

Jeff works out of VOA’s Washington headquarters and is national security correspondent. You can follow Jeff on Twitter at @jseldin or on Google Plus.

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vestige

Deceased
Mohamad Jamal Khweis, the 26-year-old from Alexandria, Virginia, spoke just days after he claims to have fled from the IS-held city of Mosul.

Most people from VA don't have his accent either.

Something sucks bump
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Having trouble opening Reuter's web site, but article reports that the US is claiming that the Russians are using artillery instead of CAS to support Syrian forces now....

From another site/link....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.streetinsider.com/Reuter...yria,+now+using+artillery:+U.S./11432854.html

Russia pulls most strike aircraft from Syria, now using artillery: U.S.

March 18, 2016 12:59 PM EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Russia has withdrawn most of its strike aircraft from Syria, the U.S. military said on Friday, adding that it was now entirely carrying out strikes in support of Syrian government forces using artillery instead of aircraft.

"They still have helicopters and some transport aircraft. But what we've seen is that the majority of Russian strike aircraft have left Syria," Colonel Patrick Ryder, a spokesman at the U.S. military's Central Command, told Pentagon reporters.

Ryder said the United States had not seen Russia carrying out any air strikes in recent days, including around the Syrian city of Palmyra and was instead using artillery.

"In the last week, we have not seen any Russian aircraft conducting any strikes in Syria. And that any counter-ISIL strikes that may have been done, would have been -- from a Russian standpoint -- would have been via artillery systems," Ryder said, using an acronym for Islamic State.


(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

---

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://tass.ru/en/defense/863458

Russian warplanes supported Syrian forces in operation to free Palmyra — General Staff

Military & Defense
March 18, 16:54 UTC+3

According to the chief of the main operations department of the Russian General Staff, conditions have been created for encircling and routing the IS armed units in Palmyra

MOSCOW, March 18. /TASS/. Russia’s Aerospace Forces continue delivering airstrikes at terrorist targets in Syria, and Russian jets make 20-25 sorties daily to support the operation to free Palmyra, Lieutenant General Sergey Rudskoy, chief of the main operations department of the Russian General Staff, said on Friday.

"A large-scale operation to free the city of Palmyra has been carried out recently by government forces and patriotic forces with support from Russia’s Aerospace Forces. On average, Russian jets make 20-25 sorties daily," Rudskoy told reporters.

"Conditions have been created for encircling and routing the armed units of ISIS [former name of the Islamic State terrorist group outlawed in Russia - TASS] in Palmyra," Rudskoy said.

According to him, the Syrian military have established control over the dominant hills and major traffic areas, shut off the routes to deliver ammunition and materiel to gunmen.

"I want to stress that the Russian Aerospace Force will continue delivering strikes against the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra terrorist organizations in Syria," he said.

Part of equipment from Syria to be transported by sea

The official however noted that preparations for return of aviation and support units from Syria to Russia proceed according to plan

"Preparations are currently underway for relocation of army aviation and support units that will be carried out in accordance with the schedule," Rudskoy said.

He noted that main part of aviation task force is being withdrawn in strict accordance with the plan. "The group of Su-24M, Su-25 and Su-34 jets, as Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Aerospace Defense Forces Col. Gen. (Viktor) Bondarev already noted, already returned to aerodromes of permanent deployment on the territory of Russia," Rudskoy said.

According to the official, ship transport will be used to return equipment and cargoes of the Russian aviation task force from Syria.

"Part of equipment and cargoes will be transported by planes of Military Transport Aviation, another part - by ship transport," Rudskoy said.

The Kremlin press service released a statement on March 14 that the Russian and Syrian presidents, Vladimir Putin and Bashar Assad, agreed to start withdrawing the main part of the Russian aviation task force from Syria because the Russian Aerospace Forces had fulfilled the fundamental tasks which had been assigned to them. Russia’s Aerospace Forces started delivering strikes in Syria at facilities of the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra terrorist groups (both banned in Russia) on September 30, 2015.

Russia will leave an air flight control center in the Syrian territory that will monitor the observation of the Syrian ceasefire, the Kremlin said. Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu ordered starting the Russian troops’ withdrawal as of March 15. Earlier today Russian Deputy Defense Minister Nikolay Pankov said that Russian forces will continue delivering airstrikes as terrorists in Syria.

247 ceasefire violations since February

Russia’s center for reconciliation of the warring parties in Syria has registered 247 episodes of ceasefire violations in a period since February 27, of which five were registered in the past day.


More news on
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© Valeriy Sharifulin/TASS


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Kurdish representative says Kurds’ federalization is step towards resolving Syrian crisis


"In all, 247 episodes of ceasefire violation have been registered since February 27, including five - in the past five days," Rudskoy said.

He said that the number of such cases has been decreasing in the past days. "Whereas the Russian center reported dozens of episodes of ceasefire violations on the first day of reconciliation, in the past day there were only five such cases," the official said.

"Measures to promote dialogue between the parties to the intra-Syrian conflict taken by the Russian Armed Forces contribute to the ceasefire regime," Rudskoy said.

According to him, currently "more and more Syrian opposition units are joining the truce, which inspires confidence that this process will become irreversible."

A ceasefire process has been under way in Syria. "Forty-three documents, in which the commanders of ‘moderate opposition’ armed units gave their consent to cease the hostilities, have been signed. They include Halafi Turki al-Hassan, the commander of the Tribes army operating in Et Tell el-Abyad province," Rudskoi stressed.

"Russia-mediated agreements have been reached with administration chiefs in 51 populated localities: 37 - in Hama province; 6 - in Homs; 4 - in Damascus and Daraa provinces, respectively. Their number is constantly on the rise," Rudskoy added.

"The introduction of the ceasefire regime has considerably stabilized the situation in the country; the population in various parts of Syria managed to return to peaceful life as the warring parties had reciprocally reduced the intensity of shelling," the general stressed.

The Russian center for reconciliation of the warring parties, which operates round-the-clock at the Hmeymim air base, contributes to the ongoing reconciliation process. It has established constructive interaction with representatives the US coordination center in Jordan and a ceasefire center set up by the International Syria Support Group based in Geneva.

"They exchange information at least twice a day," Rudskoy clarified.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
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http://www.voanews.com/content/un-deplores-awful-carnage-in-yemen-from-saudi-airstrikes/3243777.html

UN Deplores 'Awful' Carnage in Yemen From Saudi Coalition Airstrikes

Amanda Scott
March 18, 2016 12:11 PM

WASHINGTON— The United Nations has condemned recent airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, which have killed more than 100 civilians this week alone.

Zeid Raad al-Hussein, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, said Friday that two air attacks Tuesday on a crowded market in northwestern Yemen were among the deadliest incidents since the Saudis and their Arab partners in the Gulf began attacking Yemen's Houthi rebels last year.

Saudi Arabia announced late Thursday, just hours before the U.N. issued its statement, that the Arab military coalition was scaling down combat operations in Yemen.

Zeid said the latest attack was one of "these awful incidents [that] continue to occur with unacceptable regularity." Despite many previous complaints about civilian casualties caused by indiscriminate military action, he said the Saudi coalition failed to take actions to avert such incidents, or to report any progress on investigations of the carnage.

"Looking at the figures, it would seem that the coalition is responsible for twice as many civilian casualties as all other forces [in Yemen] put together — virtually all as a result of airstrikes," Zeid said.

Civilian casualties

The human-rights official said airstrikes carried out by Saudi pilots and their allies from the Gulf states "have hit markets, hospitals, clinics, schools, factories, wedding parties and hundreds of private residences in villages, towns and cities, including the capital, Sana'a."

U.N. Human Rights office staff in Yemen who visited this week's attack site and interviewed survivors "could find no evidence of any armed confrontation or significant military objects in the area at the time of the attack," U.N. officials reported.

The rights commissioner said the scope of the destruction in Yemen and the attackers' apparent failure to distinguish between legitimate military targets and civilians, who are protected under international law, raise the possibility that "international crimes" were committed.

Since the fighting in Yemen began a year ago, the U.N. Human Rights Office said it has recorded just under 9,000 casualties. including 3,218 civilians killed and a further 5,778 injured.

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Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/libya-unity-government-dealt-another-blow-home-front-183525506.html

Libya unity government dealt another blow on home front

AFP
16 minutes ago

Tripoli (AFP) - Libya's authorities that are backed by an internationally recognised parliament said Friday they oppose a UN-backed unity government from starting work inside the country.

In the second such blow this week for the unity administration, the government which holds sway mostly in eastern Libya warned against "measures by certain international parties that want to impose this government of national unity".

Such steps would "further complicate" Libya's political crisis and "deepen divisions" in the country, it said on its Facebook page.

The authorities based in eastern Libya cautioned "all Libyan institutions at home and abroad from dealing with" the unity government "before it has won a vote of confidence in parliament".

On Tuesday, Libya's unrecognised authorities in control of Tripoli also warned that the new government would not be welcome in the capital.

"A government that has been imposed from abroad without the consensus of Libyans... has no place amongst us," the so-called Tripoli government said in a statement.

Libya has had two rival administrations since mid-2014 when the recognised government was forced from Tripoli to the far east after a militia alliance including Islamists overran the capital.

The United Nations is pushing Libya's rival politicians to accept the unity government, created under a power-sharing deal sealed by the rival parties in December.

It has not been formally endorsed by lawmakers from either side but last Saturday the government announced it was taking office on the basis of a petition signed by Libya's elected lawmakers.

The United States and its European allies have called on the new unity government to swiftly move to Tripoli and take up power, threatening sanctions against those who undermine the political process.

In a show of solidarity, French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault met in Tunis on Friday with the unity government's prime minister-designate, Fayez al-Sarraj.

"I wanted to give him the backing of France," Ayrault said after their meeting. "It's a very difficult mission, very risky."

Tunisia is to host a meeting of foreign ministers of Libya's neighbours on Monday and Tuesday to press for a political settlement, the country's Foreign Minister Khemaies Jhinaoui said.

Libya has descended into chaos since the 2011 ouster of longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi, allowing extremist organisations including the Islamic State jihadist group to gain ground.


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Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/us-philippines-agree-locations-covered-defense-pact-152925533--politics.html

US, Philippines agree on locations covered by defense pact

Associated Press
By MATTHEW PENNINGTON
52 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. and the Philippines have agreed on locations where American forces will have access, as the U.S. looks to reassert its presence in Asia, officials said Friday.

The allies were holding strategic talks in Washington amid heightened tensions in the South China Sea, where the Philippines is challenging China's sweeping territorial claims.

Senior U.S. defense official Amy Searight said there was agreement on five locations to be covered by a 10-year defense cooperation agreement. She did not identify them.

Searight predicted a "momentous" year for the U.S.-Philippine relationship. She said Defense Secretary Ash Carter would travel to the Philippines in April to discuss implementation of the pact.

The pact was signed by U.S. and Philippine officials in 2014 and has a 10-year lifespan, but only got the green light this January after the Philippine Supreme Court ruled it was constitutional. The pact will allow American forces, warships and planes to temporarily base in local military camps. The U.S. shut its bases in the Philippines in 1992 amid a tide of Philippine nationalism, but the resurgent territorial dispute with China has since prompted Manila to reach out to Washington.

U.S. Defense Undersecretary Pio Lorenzo Batino said the Philippines was a "reliable partner" and was looking forward to working with the U.S. to develop the agreed upon locations.

Searight said the administration has notified Congress that it intends to spend $50 million on boosting the maritime security of Southeast Asian nations, and most would go to the Philippines.

Congress has authorized for this year that amount to be spent on assistance and training of nations along the South China Sea, where six Asian governments have competing territorial claims.

Daniel Russel, top U.S. diplomat for East Asia, said an upcoming ruling by an international tribunal on a case brought by the Philippines that challenges the legal basis of China's claims to virtually all of the South China Sea would be a critical moment for "rules-based" future of the region.

China says it is not bound by the arbitration and has refused to take part.

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http://news.yahoo.com/two-separate-islamist-attacks-kill-4-niger-040153911.html

Two separate Islamist attacks kill 4 in Niger

AFP
15 hours ago

Niamey (AFP) - Two separate Islamist attacks killed three policemen and a soldier in Niger, an official said, just days before the impoverished west African nation votes in the second round of presidential elections.

Gunmen believed to be linked to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), the terror group's African affiliate, shot dead three policemen in a market in Dolbel near the border with Burkina Faso, the interior minister Hassimi Massaoudou told AFP.

"The attackers were repelled, and we are currently sweeping the area. We don't know the toll on the attackers side, they took their wounded and dead," the minister said.

Near the border with Nigeria, four suicide bombers attacked a military convoy, killing the local military commander and injuring two others, the minister said.

A fifth suicide bomber, a young girl, was prevented from detonating her vest.

Massaoudou said Boko Haram militants were behind the attack.

There were no civilian casualties.

Niger goes to the polls on Sunday for the second round of presidential elections expected to hand another term to incumbent President Mahamadou Issoufou.

The opposition has said they will not recognise the results of the vote and have repeatedly complained that their candidate Hama Amadou, who is currently receiving medical treatment in Paris and was in jail in Niger before that, has been treated unfairly.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Well this is poised to get really "interesting"......Fox News reporting now that the demonstrators have pushed through Green Zone security and are rallying within the Green Zone now....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://timesofoman.com/article/7967...rters-begin-anti-corruption-sit-in-in-Baghdad

Iraqi cleric's supporters begin anti-corruption sit-in in Baghdad

March 18, 2016 | 9:30 PM
by Reuters

Baghdad: Supporters of Iraq's powerful cleric Moqtada Al Sadr began a sit-in outside the walls of Baghdad's fortified Green Zone on Friday to press the government to see through a move to stem endemic corruption.

Leveraging his ability to mobilise grassroots pressure on the government, Sadr wants Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi to replace cabinet ministers with non-party technocrats to tackle systemic political patronage that has fostered graft.

Sadr rejected calls to cancel the sit-in prompted by fears of clashes between his supporters and security forces guarding the highly sensitive Green Zone, which hosts major government offices and foreign embassies in the Iraqi capital.

There were no reports of disturbances. A senior Sadr aide, Ibrahim Al Jabri, said the protest would last for 10 days if needed, until the end of a 45-day deadline Sadr gave on February 12 to Abadi for a cabinet overhaul.

Corruption is eating away at the central government's financial resources at a time when revenues are declining due to rock-bottom oil prices and Abadi needs to increase funding the US-backed war against IS militants.

Abadi on March 11 asked political blocs in parliament and "influential social figures" to nominate technocrats, but his room for manoeuvre appears limited by pressure from political factions not to erode their powerful influence.

The Green Zone was originally set up in 2003 to protect US occupation forces that had toppled Saddam Hussein from suicide bombings and other militant attacks, and has been kept in place by successor Iraqi authorities for security reasons.

Thousands of demonstrators held Friday prayers in a main street leading into the Green Zone nearby, then set up tents to accommodate those staying on for the sit-in.

The Interior Ministry said it had not granted approval for the sit-in and riot police initially blocked roads and bridges leading to the Green Zone, before relenting and allowing demonstrators to march almost to its entrance.

On Al Jumhuriya (Republic) Bridge, riot police moved aside and let the demonstrators pull aside barbed wire barriers.

"Let's get rid of them!" they shouted as they advanced across the Tigris River span.

Waving Iraqi flags, the protesters also chanted, "Yes, yes to Iraq; no, no to corruption!"

Sadr published a statement on his website thanking the police for "their cooperation and devotion to their people".

On Thursday, he branded the Green Zone "a bastion of support for corruption" but also asked followers to refrain from any violent reaction should they be stopped by security forces.

Authorities beefed up security around the sprawling capital, deploying additional checkpoints and police patrols, amid fears that the crowds could be attacked by IS, whose militants hold swathes of northern and western Iraq.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.thedailystar.net/backpage/clerics-supporters-defy-ban-baghdad-sit-1196284

12:00 AM, March 19, 2016 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:00 AM, March 19, 2016

Cleric's supporters defy ban for Baghdad sit-in

Afp, Baghdad

Thousands of supporters of prominent Iraqi cleric Moqtada Sadr defied a government ban yesterday to launch sit-ins at the main gates of Baghdad's Green Zone aimed at pushing for reforms.

Many of the demonstrators carried Iraqi flags as they muscled past tight security and set up tents to begin what they said was an open-ended protest.

"The sit-ins have started in front of the Green Zone gates as a message to the corrupt people who live there," Ibrahim al-Jaberi, a local official from Sadr's movement, told AFP.

The Najaf-based Sadr has called on his supporters to remain in front of the fortified "Green Zone" until his demands are met.

The young Shia cleric has demanded Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi reshuffle the cabinet to bring in technocrats and threatened a no-confidence vote in parliament if he failed to do so soon.

"The sit-in is open-ended," said Jaberi, as Sadr followers started setting up camp on the streets and under trees.

The vast restricted area in the heart of the city is home to most key institutions, including the prime minister's office, parliament and the US embassy, which is the world's largest.

Demonstrators chanting slogans such as "Yes, yes to reforms" moved to crossroads around the Green Zone and started setting up tents, rolling out mats and pulling blankets out of bags.

"We and all the people demand improvement in the country, a solution to corruption and the sacking of all those who stole our money," said Abu Hassan, 65, sitting by a tent with his three brothers and two of his sons.

His walking stick by his side, the man from Sadr City, a huge Shia neighbourhood in northern Baghdad where Moqtada Sadr is very popular, said: "He told us to hold a sit-in, so we will stay here years if that's what it takes."

Sadr promptly issued a statement claiming victory in his tussle with the authorities and thanking God "for letting the will of the people triumph".

The move was in defiance of a cabinet decision denying the rally the necessary permits and an interior ministry warning not to provoke the security services.

Sadr had issued a statement on Thursday saying his movement would ignore the ban but also calling on his supporters to refrain from violence.

Sadr heads a militia called Saraya al-Salam (Peace Brigades) that had caused strong concern when it deployed armed men during a previous protest in Baghdad.

Amid fears the stand-off could escalate, Iraqi security forces have locked down Baghdad, the Arab world's second most populous capital with an estimated eight million residents.

"All entrances to Baghdad have been blocked and some main streets and bridges are also closed, especially those leading to the Green Zone," a police colonel said.

A group of demonstrators clipped the barbed wire on one of the bridges over the Tigris river to reach an entrance to the sprawling Green Zone but no violence ensued.

In his statement, Sadr praised the behaviour of the riot police and army forces deployed en masse to protect the Green Zone.

The 42-year-old scion of an influential clerical family rose to prominence when he launched a Shia rebellion against US troops following their 2003 invasion of Iraq.

He had lost some of his political influence in recent years but has brought himself back into relevance with a series of rallies against corruption.

Senior politicians from his own Ahrar bloc are perceived as some of the most corrupt in Iraq but the mercurial leader has recently distanced himself from them.

He is seen as a nationalist with fewer ties to neighbouring Iran than many of the country's other leading Shia politicians.
 

Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/police-fire-tear-gas-protests-against-brazils-president-023854502.html?nf=1

Rival protests set Brazil on edge as crisis deepens

AFP
By Natalia Ramos
2 hours ago

Sao Paulo (AFP) - Riot police in Brazil broke up an angry anti-government protest Friday as President Dilma Rousseff's supporters mobilized for a rival show of force against impeachment proceedings launched by her enemies in Congress.

With the leftist leader fighting calls to quit and financial markets apparently betting on a collapse of her government, Rousseff's embattled left-wing base has vowed to take to the streets.

Hours before nationwide demos seeking to prove the president's strength, riot police in Sao Paulo -- Brazil's largest city and an opposition bastion -- fired stun grenades and water cannon to disperse some 150 hard-core anti-government protesters who had been camped out for nearly two days in the heart of the financial capital.

Police in the capital Brasilia had fired tear gas and stun grenades Thursday night to fight back furious protesters demanding the president's resignation.

The ongoing protests come against the backdrop of new impeachment proceedings against Rousseff, 68.

An impeachment committee in the lower house of Congress held its first session Friday, saying it expected to reach a decision within a month on whether to recommend removing the president.

.. View gallery
Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (L) and …
Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (L) and President Dilma Rousseff have between them govern …

Its recommendation will then pass to the full chamber, where a vote by two-thirds of the 513 lawmakers would open an impeachment trial in the Senate.

Rousseff is accused of manipulating the government's accounts to boost public spending during her 2014 re-election campaign, and again in 2015 to mask a deep recession.

She accuses her enemies of mounting a "coup" against her.

The courts have meanwhile blocked Rousseff's bid to bring her powerful predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva into the cabinet.

- Protests sweep country -

.. View gallery
Demonstrators rally for Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's …
Demonstrators rally for Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's impeachment along Paulista Avenue i …

Raising fears of clashes between rival demonstrators later in the day, the anti-government protesters in Sao Paulo vowed they would return.

"According to the art of war, you take a step back now and two steps forward later. We're going to come back," protest leader Renato Tamaio told news portal G1.

The latest protests follow a day of pandemonium in Brasilia, where Rousseff swore in Lula, 70, as her new chief of staff -- only to have the courts block the appointment.

A federal court intervened after a crusading anti-corruption judge leaked a wiretapped phone call suggesting the president was trying to shield her mentor from prosecution through ministerial immunity.

The Sao Paulo stock exchange soared 6.6 percent Thursday on optimism in the financial world that the end was near for Rousseff. Stocks were down one percent on Friday, however.

.. View gallery
Demonstrators gather next to Planalto Palace to protest …
Demonstrators gather next to Planalto Palace to protest against the government in Brasilia on March …

Lula and Rousseff between them have governed Brazil since 2003. He presided over a boom, but political and economic crises are now gripping Latin America's biggest economy.

Lula, who stepped down in 2011, is charged with accepting a luxury apartment and a country home as bribes from construction companies implicated in a multi-billion-dollar corruption scam at state oil company Petrobras.

He denies involvement.

Anti-government protests have swept the country since Sunday, when between one and three million people, according to different estimates, took to the streets nationwide.

Protests erupted again on Wednesday after the release of the wire-tapped phone call between Rousseff and Lula, in which she told him she was sending him a document with his official ministerial appointment, to be used only "if necessary."

That fueled outraged cries that the president was bringing Lula into her government to save him from arrest in the Petrobras case.

Friday's pro-government protests are an attempt by the ruling Workers' Party to show it still retains the support that made it the dominant force in Brazilian politics over the past 13 years.

Organizers said in a statement the demonstrations aimed to fend off a "coup" and to defend Rousseff's social policies. Leaders vowed the rallies would be peaceful.

Brazil grabbed world headlines in 2013 when it was gripped by mass riots against corruption and increased transport costs.

Recent polls show Rousseff's popularity rating is down to about 10 percent and 60 percent of Brazilians would support her impeachment.

"Things have to change," said protester Adilio Brasil, 32, in Sao Paulo.

"We do not have healthcare, education and security, and we see these politicians robbing us."

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Housecarl

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http://news.yahoo.com/putin-visits-crimea-mark-2-years-since-annexation-104205516.html

Putin visits Crimea to mark 2 years since annexation

AFP
By Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber
3 hours ago

Moscow (AFP) - President Vladimir Putin visited Crimea on Friday as Russia marked two years since annexing the Black Sea peninsula from Ukraine in a move that dramatically damaged its ties with the West.

The Kremlin strongman stopped over on the island of Tuzla to oversee progress on a $3-billion (2.66-billion-euro) bridge project connecting Russia to Crimea, a key link that Moscow hopes will further bind it to the isolated region.

Putin said the bridge's construction -- which he called a "historical mission" -- should be completed by December 2018, and that the first direct link to the mainland was essential for bolstering Crimea's struggling economy.

The Russian leader also said an undersea power cable that could reduce the peninsula's electricity dependence on Kiev could become fully operational in May, a pressing concern after blasts severed power lines from Ukraine last year and left much of Crimea in the dark.

In an address broadcast on national television, Putin congratulated Russians on the annexation's second anniversary and said the bridge between Crimea and Russia would be "yet another symbol of our unity".

"We will confidently move forward together, and only forward," he said.

.. View gallery
Pro-Kremlin supporters attend a rally in central Moscow …
Pro-Kremlin supporters attend a rally in central Moscow on March 18, 2016 to mark two years since Ru …

Meanwhile, state-sponsored concerts and public festivities took place across Russia to commemorate the March 2014 takeover that Moscow insists followed a referendum in which Crimea residents voted overwhelmingly to swap countries.

In Moscow, thousands gathered just off Red Square for a concert featuring pro-Kremlin pop stars including 78-year-old crooner Joseph Kobzon, who was blacklisted by the EU last year after he performed for rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Spectators waved large Russian flags and released balloons as they faced a giant stage set up outside the Russian capital's iconic St Basil's Cathedral.

- 'Pervasive climate of fear' -

The annexation of Crimea boosted Putin's popularity with state media going into overdrive over a move to reclaim a region many see as Moscow's rightful property.

.. View gallery
People take part in a rally in the Crimean city of …
People take part in a rally in the Crimean city of Yalta, on March 18, 2016 to mark two years since …

A survey published last month by the independent Levada Centre showed 83 percent of Russians support Moscow's takeover of Crimea, which was transferred to Ukraine by Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in 1954.

Ahead of the annexation, Putin sent in thousands of special forces to take control of army bases and government institutions across Crimea after the ouster of a pro-Russian leader by protesters in Kiev.

Ukraine and the West insist the takeover -- which has not been recognised internationally -- was an illegal landgrab and that the vote to join Russia was a Kremlin-organised farce.

"The Russian Federation has demonstrated that it is not prepared to return to a civilised way of conducting international relations," Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said Friday.

The annexation pushed Russia's relations with the West to a new post-Cold War nadir, with Washington and the European Union slapping sanctions on Moscow.

Since then, rights groups say those who opposed the annexation have faced a crackdown.

Human Rights Watch on Friday accused the authorities of creating "a pervasive climate of fear and repression in Crimea" in the two years since annexation.

The group deplored abuses perpetrated against the Crimea Tatar community, a minority Muslim group that opposed the Russian annexation, as well as a crackdown on pro-Ukraine activists and journalists.

The West continues to condemn the annexation, vowing to keep sanctions in place as long as Crimea remains under Russian control.

The US State Department on Wednesday called on Russia to "end that occupation and return Crimea to Ukraine" -- a prospect Russian authorities have repeatedly rejected.

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