WAR 03-19-2016-to-03-25-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/25/middleeast/iraq-violence/

Suicide attack at Iraqi soccer stadium kills 25, officials say

By Hamdi Alkhshali and Greg Botelho, CNN
Updated 3:38 PM ET, Fri March 25, 2016 | Video Source: CNN


CNN) — A man wearing a suicide belt walked into a Iraqi soccer stadium Friday and blew himself up -- killing at least 25 people and wounding 80 more, security officials said.

The attacker struck during a game at al-Shuhadaa stadium in the Babil province city of al-Iskandariya, roughly 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of Baghdad.

ISIS claimed responsibility, according to a statement posted online by supporters.

The Sunni Islamist extremist group has boasted about terrorist attacks around the world, most recently this week's carnage in Brussels that killed 31 people and wounded more than 300.

The bulk of ISIS' brutal actions -- not to mention the vast majority of its active members -- are in the Middle East. It spawned in the mid-2000s from al Qaeda in Iraq, and it has captured large swaths of territory in both Iraq and neighboring Syria in recent years.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-idUSKCN0WR0RA

World | Fri Mar 25, 2016 3:39pm EDT
Related: World, United Nations, Syria

Syrian army takes Palmyra citadel, IS commander killed

BEIRUT/WASHINGTON | By Dominic Evans and Andrea Shalal


Islamic State fighters were on the retreat in the strategic Syrian city of Palmyra on Friday, as the United States said it probably killed several senior leaders of the militant group this week including its top finance officer.

The double blow to the hardline Islamist group in its self-declared caliphate, which covers huge areas of Syria and Iraq, came three days after Islamic State suicide bombers killed 31 people in Brussels, the worst such attack in Belgian history.

Syrian soldiers fighting to retake the desert city of Palmyra from Islamic State forces recaptured its old citadel on Friday, various media reported. The citadel overlooks some of the most extensive ruins of the Roman empire.

Many of Palmyra's temples and tombs have been dynamited by Islamic State fighters in what the United Nations described as a war crime, although television footage on Friday showed that at least some colonnades and structures still standing.

The recapture of Palmyra, which the Islamist militants seized in May 2015, would mark the biggest reversal for Islamic State in Syria since Russia's intervention turned the tide of the five-year conflict in President Bashar al-Assad's favor.

The city controls routes east into the heartland of territory held by the militants, including province of Deir al-Zor and the Islamic State's de facto capital in Raqqa.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said on Friday an Islamic State leader was killed when his car was targeted in a strike on Raqqa on Thursday night.

It did not identify the dead militant, but U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said the group's top finance officer and other senior leaders were likely killed this week in a major offensive targeting its financial operation.

Carter said the United States believes it killed Haji Iman -- an alias for Abd ar-Rahman Mustafa al-Qaduli, a senior Islamic State leader in charge of the group's finances as well as some plots and external affairs.

"We are systematically eliminating ISIL's cabinet," Carter told reporters at a briefing at the Pentagon, using an acronym to refer to the group.

U.S. officials said they were helping Iraqis prepare for a major operation in Mosul to take back more territory from the militant group.



Related Coverage
› Iraqi army says border area with Syria taken from Islamic State

STRATEGIC PRIZE

The scale of Friday's fighting for Palmyra reflected how much of a strategic prize the city represents, with jets launching dozens of air strikes and soldiers firing mortar barrages, while Islamic State fighters hit back with two car bombings.

Russian warplanes have continued to back up the Syrian army and its allies, despite Moscow's recent announcement that it was withdrawing the bulk of its military forces.

Its planes carried out 41 sorties between Tuesday and Thursday in support of the Palmyra offensive and destroyed 146 targets, Russian news agencies reported on Friday, citing the Russian Defence Ministry.

Beirut-based television channel Al-Mayadeen, broadcasting from the edge of Palmyra, showed a low-flying jet carry out three air strikes against what it said were Islamic State fighters withdrawing from the old citadel back into Palmyra.

"Army units took control over Palmyra's ancient citadel... after dealing with the last Daesh terrorist groups," state news agency SANA said. "They are continuing their operations to restore security and stability to the city".

A ceasefire backed by the United States and Russia covers most of Syria but not areas held by Islamic State. The first truce of its kind since war began five years ago has been accompanied this month by the first peace talks attended by Assad's government and most of the groups opposed to him. Meanwhile, Damascus has turned its fire on Islamic State.

Moscow is the main ally of Assad's government, while Washington and other Western countries have backed foes trying to overthrow him during five years of civil war that has killed 250,000 people and led to the world's worst refugee crisis.

Both powers are committed to fighting Islamic State and have backed a new diplomatic push to end fighting on other fronts.

A Russian special forces officer was killed in combat near Palmyra in the last week, Interfax said, suggesting the Kremlin has been more deeply engaged in the Syrian conflict than it has acknowledged.

Soldiers interviewed on Mayadeen and Syrian television said that the army was completing the capture of high ground overlooking Palmyra.



Related Coverage
› Russian warplanes flew 41 sorties to support Syrian offensive near Palmyra
› Russia says U.S. agrees not to discuss Assad's future for now: Ifax

"JOY AFTER TRAGEDY"

Syria's antiquities chief Maamoun Abdulkarim said that driving Islamic State out of Palmyra would be a victory for the whole world.

"After all the tragedy we have suffered in Syria for five years, and the 10 months in Palmyra after it fell...it's the first time we feel joy," Abdulkarim told Reuters.

"We pray for victory soon, so that the damage is limited. Palmyra, under their control, was the loss of a civilization."

U.N. envoy Staffan de Mistura has set out a common blueprint for a political process aimed at ending the civil war, and said on Thursday talks would tackle the divisive issue of a post-war transition when the warring sides gather again next month.

Progress has been slow, with the government delegation and its opponents disagreeing fundamentally on the terms of such a transition, including whether Assad must leave power.

After talks in Moscow on Thursday, Russia and the United State said they agreed to use their influence over both sides in the conflict to speed things up.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said that would involve Assad making "the right decision" which would lead to a genuine transition.

But Interfax quoted Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov on Friday as saying that Washington now understood Moscow's position that Assad's future should not be discussed at the moment.


(Additional reporting by Kinda Makieh in Damascus and Mostafa Hashem in Cairo; editing by Peter Graff and John Stonestreet)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/la-fg-china-family-abduction-20160325-story.html

Chinese activist in N.Y. says Beijing officials 'abducted' his parents and brother

By Jonathan Kaiman •Contact Reporter
March 25, 2016, 5:29 AM |reporting from BEIJING

A Chinese freedom of speech activist in New York said Friday that Chinese authorities have “abducted” his family on the mainland, highlighting Beijing’s growing determination to silence critical voices overseas.

Wen Yunchao, an influential Communist Party critic with more than 220,000 followers on Twitter, said Friday that authorities detained his parents and younger brother in their hometown of Jiexi County, southern China’s Guangdong province, on Tuesday. He said that he has been unable to reach them, and that “the situation is unclear.”

Although Chinese authorities have placed increasing pressure on critics living abroad in recent years, the detention of an activist’s full family is extremely rare.

Wen said that police suspect that he helped disseminate an open letter demanding that Chinese President Xi Jinping step down. The anonymous letter, posted March 4 by Wujie News, a Chinese media website, blamed Xi for creating “unprecedented problems and crises” by adopting a hardline authoritarian leadership style. It was signed "loyal Communist Party members.”

“The police wanted to know if that letter was by me or distributed by me,” Wen said in a phone interview. He denied any involvement in the letter’s drafting or distribution.

Censors have scrubbed the letter from the Internet. On March 15, Jia Jia, a Beijing-based freelance writer, vanished while preparing to board a flight from Beijing to Hong Kong; his lawyer later confirmed that he had been detained on suspicion of drafting the letter.

At least 16 other people have been detained in connection with the letter, including several Wujie News employees, the BBC reported on Friday. It remains unclear who wrote the letter and how it appeared on Wujie News, an otherwise unexceptional site funded by the e-commerce giant Alibaba and the government of Xinjiang, a region in China's far northwest.

On March 19, U.S.-based blogger Liu Gang penned an online post claiming that Wen had also been behind the letter. “[Liu] said that I wrote this letter, and since then, the government has been harassing my family, trying to get me to acknowledge that the letter was by me,” Wen said.

“I don’t think the letter itself is a big deal, but it seems the party thinks it is," said Qiao Mu, a media scholar at Beijing Foreign Studies University. "They think the letter is a result of a collusion of domestic anti-Xi forces and overseas anti-China forces ... the letter itself hasn't spread widely within the Great Fire Wall, [China's Internet censorship apparatus], so a lot of people didn’t know about it at all. But disappearing people makes things bigger."

Human rights groups say that Xi Jinping has steered China into a new era of “hard authoritarianism,” marked by a dramatically reduced space for even mild forms of dissent. Authorities have detained scores of critical lawyers, activists and journalists within China’s borders, and used intimidation tactics to silence dissenting voices abroad.

Over the past half year, five Hong Kong booksellers who specialized in salacious tomes about top Communist Party leaders have vanished under mysterious circumstances; one was in Thailand and another in Hong Kong when they went missing, raising fears of political abductions. The booksellers have since reappeared, but the incidents have cast a chill over the city’s once-freewheeling publishing industry.

Since 2014, Chinese authorities have detained three brothers of Shohret Hoshur, an ethnic Uighur reporter for Radio Free Asia, a U.S. government-backed broadcaster in Washington, D.C., possibly in retaliation for his reporting on the ethnically riven western region of Xinjiang. Two of the brothers have since been released; one is serving a five-year jail term for “endangering state security.”

“First of all it’s absolutely egregious that they’re doing this,” said William Nee, a Hong Kong-based spokesman for Amnesty International, “because it shows they’re really going after family members of dissidents, and people who they believe to be troublemakers. This is a worrying pattern, because it appears to be on the rise over the past year or so."

“I think disappearing a whole family is taking it to the next level,” he continued. “There are lots of cases in which state security might have tea with family members, and put pressure on them. But actually disappearing a family, if that’s true — and I think Wen Yunchao is a good source, and I don’t see why he would lie about his own family — then that really is an escalation of the tactics that have been used over the past year or so.”

Yingzhi Yang in The Times' Beijing bureau contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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Add this to the statements regarding the statements by the Japanese constitutional expert regarding Japan possessing nuclear weapons and "Hummm" is a minimal response.....

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http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...urized-nukes-Japan-report-says/9551458918614/

North Korea could have miniaturized nukes, Japan report says

Pyongyang is stepping up missile development, according to a Tokyo government think tank.

By Elizabeth Shim | March 25, 2016 at 12:55 PM

TOKYO, March 25 (UPI) -- North Korea may be capable of producing nuclear warheads, a Japanese think tank stated Friday.

Tokyo's National Institute for Defense Studies said in its annual East Asian Strategic Overview report Pyongyang developed miniaturization capabilities under Kim Jong Un's direct orders, Jiji Press reported.

The report also stated the North is ramping up submarine-launched ballistic missile development, and if Pyongyang deploys SLBMs, its nuclear capabilities would make significant advancements.

Since Kim came to power, North Korean officials have been purged at increasing rates, the Japanese report stated.

"Fearpolitik through purges is strengthening the dictatorship," the report stated, according to South Korean news service Newsis.

The Japanese findings align with a growing concern in Washington that North Korea has made advancements in weapons miniaturization.

A number of U.S. officials told CNN they have reason to believe North Korea has "probably" a miniaturized nuclear warhead in its possession.

There have been no formal announcements on the issue in Washington, although North Korea has increasingly touted its nuclear weapons capabilities and has claimed it has nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles capable of hitting the continental United States.

Kim Jong Un is "determined to prove his doubters wrong," a U.S. official said.

Adm. William Gortney, head of the U.S. Northern Command, told Congress that it would be "prudent" to "assume [Kim] has the capability to miniaturize a nuclear weapons and put it on an ICBM."

Others are refraining from a definitive response and said assuming North Korea has the capability is not conclusive since they have "not demonstrated" its capacity, according to Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook.

Kim recently said Pyongyang had "successfully" tested a solid-fuel rocket engine and that the test is a stepping stone to developing a "ballistic rocket" that can "ruthlessly beat down hostile forces."
 

Housecarl

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http://www.military.com/daily-news/...t-xi-discuss-south-china-sea-north-korea.html

Obama, Chinese President Xi to Discuss South China Sea, North Korea

Mar 25, 2016 | by Richard Sisk
Comments 41

The White House said Thursday that President Barack Obama would meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in Washington, D.C., next week on the sidelines of a nuclear summit to discuss "areas of disagreement" on the South China Sea, North Korea and other matters.

Xi's hastily arranged visit, which was only officially announced Wednesday, will afford the Chinese leader an opportunity to "draw world attention" to the divide between the U.S. and China "on hot issues such as South China Sea disputes and cyber security," China's official Xinhua news agency said.

Earlier this week, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told the House Armed Services Committee that the U.S. was "re-assessing" China's invitation to the biannual RIMPAC, or Rim of the Pacific, naval training exercises off Hawaii this summer in response to its aggressive activities and island-building in the South China Sea.

In a statement, the White House said that Obama and Ji would hold a bilateral meeting next Thursday on the margins of the three-day 2016 National Security Summit that was scheduled to begin the same day at the Washington Convention Center.

"This bilateral meeting will present an opportunity to advance U.S.-China cooperation on a range of issues of mutual interest, while also enabling President Obama and President Xi to address areas of disagreement constructively," the White House said.

Xi's ostensible main reason for coming to Washington was to attend the summit of more than 40 world leaders on stopping the proliferation of nuclear weapons and material and preventing the smuggling of nuclear material that could be used by terrorist groups for so-called "dirty bombs."

The White House said that the summit would focus on "the evolving threat" of nuclear terrorism and identifying steps "to minimize the use of highly-enriched uranium, secure vulnerable materials, counter nuclear smuggling and deter, detect, and disrupt attempts at nuclear terrorism."

However, Xi has come under increasing pressure at home from the downturn in China's economy and his suppression of dissent, and he could be seeking to offset internal disputes by presenting a forceful image on the world stage.

Four staff members of the Chinese Wujie News outlet have reportedly been missing for a week since publishing a stunning letter calling on Xi to resign for the good of the country, Agence France Presse reported.

In the lead up to his Washington visit, Xi has conducted a series of meetings and addresses urging the People's Liberation Army to remain "combat ready" and true to what Xinhua called "Marxist military theory." Perhaps taking a cue from the U.S., Xi also stressed "jointness" in operations by the Chinese army, navy and the air forces.

China has thus far ignored the complaints of the U.S. and regional allies over China's efforts to assert hegemony over the South China Sea and a sprawl of uninhabited reefs and island chains, such as the Spratlys and the Paracels.

In another sign of Chinese assertiveness, Xi earlier this month warned the incoming, independence-minded government of Taiwan that China would use force if necessary to prevent formal secession from the mainland.

Xi told delegates at the annual meeting of China's rubber-stamp parliament that Beijing would "resolutely contain Taiwan independence secessionist activities in any form," and would never allow the "historical tragedy" of a split to occur.

In testimony last month to the Senate Armed Services Committee, Adm. Harry Harris, head of U.S. Pacific Command, warned that China was escalating its military buildup in the South China Sea and expressed concerns about the ability of the U.S. to counter China's aggression.

"In my opinion China is clearly militarizing the South China Sea," Harris said. "You'd have to believe in a flat earth to believe otherwise."

Harris spoke following reports that satellite images showed China had installed a surface-to-air missile battery on the Paracel Islands near Vietnam, and also was seeking to install a high-tech air search radar on one of its man-made islands in the Spratly Islands.

Harris said the U.S. needed to invest more in next-generation anti-surface missiles to counter China, noting that the Navy was still using the same weapons that were operational when he was a junior officer.

"When I started flying P-3s (Orion surveillance aircraft) in the 1970s, we had the Harpoon missile, and it's the same one we have today," Harris said.

Xi's visit will also give Obama a chance to press him on reining in the nuclear ambitions of North Korea, which has China as its only main ally. South Korea's military went on high alert this week following a series of threats from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to set off North Korea's fifth nuclear test and a series of short-range missile launches into the sea in response to renewed economic sanctions by the U.S. and the United Nations.

--Richard Sisk can be reached at Richard.Sisk@Military.com.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/revealed-britain-and-jordan-s-secret-war-libya-147374304

REVEALED: Britain and Jordan’s secret war in Libya

#Abdullah'sWar

Middle East Eye confirms that British and Jordanian special forces are secretly battling Islamic State fighters in Libya

Rori Donaghy
Friday 25 March 2016 09:00 UTC
Last update:
Friday 25 March 2016 11:52 UTC

Britain has launched covert military operations in Libya against Islamic State (IS) militants with the support of Jordan, Middle East Eye can reveal.

Soldiers from the elite Special Air Services (SAS) regiment have been sent to tackle an emerging IS threat in Libya as part of a global war against the group, and Britain has recruited Jordanian special forces to provide local intelligence, according to Jordanian King Abdullah II Ibn Hussein.

It is the first official confirmation that British troops are operating inside Libya against IS.

MEE has obtained a detailed account of a meeting Abdullah held with US congressional leaders in January, when he revealed the previously unreported deployment of British and Jordanian special forces in Libya.

According to the account, sent on the condition of anonymity by a source close to the meeting, Abdullah said that he expected covert military operations in Libya to increase after the meeting, which was held in the week of 11 January. He told his American audience that Jordanian special forces would be embedded with their British counterparts.

“His Majesty [King Abdullah] said he expects a spike in a couple of weeks and Jordanians will be imbedded [sic] with British SAS, as Jordanian slang is similar to Libyan slang,” the account said.

He did not reveal the size or scope of the operations in Libya, where IS has seized control of territory amid a political vacuum that has emerged in the chaos since former leader Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown and later killed in a NATO-backed 2011 uprising.

Abdullah met the congressional leaders during a visit to the United States in which he held a slew of high-level discussions with Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of Defence Ashton Carter, but not with President Barack Obama, who was forced to say he didn't snub the king and hadn't met him because of "scheduling conflicts".

The king revealed the secret special forces operations in Libya when speaking to a large gathering of senior American politicians including John McCain and Bob Corker, who each attended with their respective armed services and foreign relations committees.

'Third world war'

In the meeting, Abdullah, Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh and Royal Court political director Manar Dabbas spoke at length about how the fight against IS was the beginning of a "third world war" stretching from Indonesia to California.

“The problem is bigger than ISIL, this is a third world war, this is Christians, Jews working with Muslims against Khawarej, outlaws,” the king said, using an alternative acronym for IS, and referring to an early schismatic Islamic sect that was known for killing Muslims they declared not part of Islam.

Responding to Abdullah’s statement that his country was in a battle against the outlaws of Islam, House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan said “they don’t comprehend that view here in Washington”.

Abdullah urged the US and Russia to bury the hatchet and work together to beat IS, the document said.

“The problem is many countries are still living the cold war, but they have to get beyond that and focus on the third world war,” he said.

This prompted Senator John McCain to say American and Russian priorities were different – particularly on their approach to the Syrian civil war. He argued the Russians "don’t want to see a democratic Syria".

None of the Congress members responded to requests for comment before publication.

Royal court political director Dabbas referred MEE to the Jordanian Royal Court's media advisor when asked for comment, adding: "The discussions we had in Washington were off the record."

Abdullah lamented a lack of clear strategy from the Americans to tackle IS, saying their objectives were “not clear”. He called for Washington to give him a better understanding of their plans to take on the group in 2016.

The king said he had turned to the British for support due to the absence of a clear US plan, and added that the war against IS required “counter-insurgency warfare” and not “traditional open warfare”.

Abdullah said that he thought it most efficient to connect civil servants from allied countries and get them to work together on global military operations, as politicians can be more cautious about the covert deployment of high-value specialised army battalions.

The king has rich military experience and close connections to the British armed forces.

He trained as a special forces officer at Britain’s Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in 1980, before briefly serving as a British army officer.

Since becoming king in 1999, Abdullah has sought to develop Jordan’s special forces as a respected elite force and he has positioned Amman as a key regional site for the defence industry through hosting an annual military exhibition called SOFEX, which allows arms companies to show off their latest high-tech equipment.

“If there is a special forces capital of the Middle East, it is Jordan,” said Sean Yom, an assistant professor of political science at Temple University in Philadelphia.

“It's not quantity. It's not strategic depth. It’s the quality of Jordanian training, the hardiness of the Jordanian soldier and their reliability for Jordanian policy.

"Abdullah has said time and again that these three factors are what sets the Jordanian military establishment apart from every other Arab military which is why he can be the most reliable partner for the West."

Demystifying Britain's role in Libya

Abdullah’s revelation that British and Jordanian troops are covertly fighting IS in Libya is the first official confirmation that Britain is playing a direct combat role in the troubled North African country, and it comes after weeks of intensifying pressure on British Prime Minister David Cameron to clarify his country’s rumoured military role in Libya.

On 17 March, Britain’s Foreign Affairs Select Committee wrote to Cameron asking for a statement on reports that Britain was planning to send 1,000 troops to Libya as part of a 6,000-strong international force.

Cameron had earlier told the House of Commons that “we would of course come to this house and discuss” any planned deployment.

Conservative MP Crispin Blunt, who chairs the foreign affairs panel, told MEE that he wasn’t surprised the SAS were operating in Libya.

“It was implied in Tobias Ellwood’s statement to us about RAF (Royal Air Force) flights going there and not being prepared to say anything more about it,” he said via telephone, referring to Middle East minister Ellwood's February statement that British jets were flying reconnaissance flights over Libya.

“Obviously there are reports of special forces activity and our enemies in the form of IS are operating in Libya. I think military action against Daesh (IS) is a good thing."

A spokesperson for Britain's Ministry of Defence would not clarify the Special Forces' role in Libya and told Middle East Eye: "We do not comment on special forces operations."

Blunt said that the separation between special forces and the rest of the army is "slightly artificial" and he called for a more complete anti-IS strategy to be formulated with the consultation of MPs.

“I think a more coherent military strategy would be well-advised and that would require an engagement of parliament,” he said.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a former top British military official told MEE that it was normal for special forces, which are not considered conventional forces, to be deployed without MPs being given the opportunity to debate the issue in parliament.

He said that he “assumed we (the British SAS) are there in a support and training role rather than a frontline role – but that’s been a bit muddy too," adding that while special forces are a “very useful tool” they would not “make a material difference” in the fight against IS.

“Special forces will never substitute for a conventional force that occupies and holds ground,” he said.

“A properly orchestrated international force would start to have an effect in terms of building up the proxy [Libyan] force that you’re actually going to use.”

Australian counter-insurgency expert David Kilcullen, who advised US general David Petraeus and helped design the 2007 surge in Iraq, told MEE that special forces can have two positive effects on wider military efforts.

“The first is if special forces are on the ground they can provide close targeting intelligence for air strikes,” he said. “The second is that they can provide a stiffening effect on the local forces they work with, by giving them intelligence and tactical advice.”

Kilcullen pointed to the US-led war in Afghanistan, when 100 CIA officers and 300 US special forces soldiers built up 50,000 Afghan fighters to seize control of the country from the Taliban.

However, he said having such highly trained men on the ground could also have present problems of escalation.

“It puts Westerners in harm’s way. And this makes it harder for their governments to walk away,” he said.

“If someone is kidnapped or killed this can become a tripwire to a wider unplanned engagement – it leads to raids to rescue a kidnapped soldier with the possibility of further operations.”

Kilcullen said that if there are British special forces in Libya, it was highly likely there would also be a “quick reaction force with search and rescue troops – along with drones with full strike capacity – in the event of special forces being killed or kidnapped.

The former British army official said that special forces could be used to kill senior IS leaders in Libya as part of a plan to stop the group increasing its presence in a North African country that acts as a key route for refugees heading for Europe.

Who will benefit in Libya?

However, Mattia Toaldo, a senior policy fellow at the London-based European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), told MEE that such missions did not guarantee wider success.

“Even if you kill the IS leadership it’s not clear who will control the ‘liberated’ territory afterwards,” he said.

“This is very likely to be the case in Sirte with competing forces now claiming to have a plan to defeat IS there but no plan to govern it in a unitary way,” he added, referring to the main Libyan town under IS control.

Libya’s civil war is a complex web of militias and parliaments vying for control of a fractured country that possesses Africa’s largest oil reserves.

The House of Representatives (HoR) is based in the east of the country and it is backed militarily by the Libyan National Army, which is lead by Khalifa Haftar, a former Gaddafi general who became a rebel leader in 2011.

They have been fighting for control of the country against the Misratan-led alliance of Libya Dawn - a hodgepodge of militias that control the capital Tripoli, and protect the General National Congress (GNC), a parliament which the HoR officially replaced after elections in June 2014.

IS has seized on this political vacuum to take over territory, including the central town of Sirte, where Gaddafi was born.

UN-brokered talks have attempted to form a unity government to end the fighting and strike a strong front to stop IS. In 2015, a new administration, the Government of National Accord, was agreed and has since been established but not endorsed officially by Libya’s internationally recognised parliament, the HoR.

Toaldo said the GNA's rumoured plan to set up in Tripoli could mark the beginning of a new struggle.

“The GNA could try to install in Tripoli,” he said. “But that won't mean a unity government but rather the beginning of a new phase in the competition between the existing four governments: Serraj (GNA); Ghwell (GNC); Thinni-Haftar (HoR); and Daesh (IS).”

The fallout from NATO's 2011 intervention

The former British military official told MEE that Libya’s troubles stretch back to Gaddafi's overthrow, coupled with a lack of post-intervention planning.

"There was very little discussion what would happen next at that time," he said, adding that the post-conflict plan which "was done on the back of a fag packet".

"As Colin Powell said: ‘When you break a country you own that country until you put it together again.’

"We didn’t do that. There’s this great cry in the British military: ‘Clout, don’t dribble.’ And we’ve consistently dribbled and hoped to get away with it. And therefore the result is what we see in Libya today.”

In a recent interview with The Atlantic, US President Barack Obama appeared to criticise British Prime Minister Cameron and former French President Nicolas Sarkozy for losing interest in Libya after leading the bombing campaign that resulted in the fall of Gaddafi.

However, British and French interest has certainly increased in Libya in recent months, particularly as IS has risen and Europe’s refugee crisis has deepened, but Cameron has said that his focus is not on military action but instead on seeing the formation of an effective Libyan unity government.

The ECFR's Tolado said King Abdullah's comments in Washington would raise questions over how sending SAS into Libya fits in with the British goal of a unified Libya.

“The surprise is not the Jordanian-British cooperation but the fact that there is now hard evidence of UK involvement on the ground in Libya. It is worth asking how the UK government thinks these operations interact with efforts to strike a unity deal.”
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/03/iran-weapons-arms-experts-iraq-syria-lebanon.html

Is Iran becoming a major regional arms producer?

Author Abbas Qaidaari
Posted March 24, 2016
Comments 3

TEHRAN, Iran — The Iraqi capital, Baghdad, has been host to a special military and defense industry exhibition since March 5. Among the various countries displaying their goods, China has been particularly active. However, the perhaps most noteworthy feature of the exhibition is the strong — and official — presence of Iran’s Ministry of Defense, and the fact that a vast array of Iranian-made armaments and military equipment is being showcased. According to Iran's official IRNA news agency, after China, the Iranian Ministry of Defense and the Defense Industries Organization of Iran have had the strongest presence at the exhibition when it comes to equipment variety.

The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) stipulates that Iran will until October 2020 be barred from conventional weapons trade, without first obtaining authorization from the United Nations Security Council. Nonetheless, during the past few years, in spite of extensive sanctions on exports of conventional military equipment, Iran has managed to become self-sufficient in the production of a vast range of weapons and military equipment. Indeed, a large portion of Iran’s military equipment is presently met by domestic production. Given this capacity, Iran appears now ready to establish a serious and effective presence in the international armament market.

In past years, both the Iraqi and Syrian governments — among the most important political and security allies of the Islamic Republic in the region — have been dealing with civil war and terrorism. As political differences emerged between the governments in Damascus and Baghdad on the one hand, and with Western countries on the other, the provision of Western military equipment to these countries was disrupted. Enter Iran, which — after the Islamic State's capture of Mosul in the summer of 2014 — was the first country that sent arms to Iraqi security forces and the Kurdish peshmerga. Moreover, deliveries of weapons to Iraq have increased so much that all semi-heavy artillery equipment, sniper weapons and many other types of personal and armored weapons presently used by Iraqi paramilitary forces are Iranian-made. In addition, over the past year, Iran has also started sending the T-72S main battle tank to Iraq.

The same trajectory is evident in regard to Syria. In comparison with Iraq, Syria has always had a more advanced and better-equipped army while Russian military cooperation has been continuous. However, as Iraqi and Afghan paramilitary forces entered Syria, and Damascus faced the danger of its arsenals being depleted, Iranian military equipment has emerged in Syria. For instance, during the ongoing battle for Aleppo, the extensive presence of Iranian-made goods has been widely recorded. This equipment includes Safir tactical military vehicles, Shaheen sniper weapons and other types of personal weapons.

It is thus evident that Iranian-made military equipment is officially and extensively now in use in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria. Since Iranian-made arms and equipment have yet to be tested, it is not possible to compare them with the originals they’re modeled after. However, the expansion of terrorism in the region has given Iran an opportunity to test its military equipment in action and learn about possible defects.

Iran’s focus on its domestic arms industry has been ongoing. Upon taking office in 2013, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani published the general principles of the government and officially announced, in section 7.2.18, that “considering the international sanctions and the widespread threats against the country, it is necessary for the Administration to follow up on the self-sufficiency programs of the defense industry. Also, the Administration will put on its agenda the commercialization of military industries and will utilize the existing potentials of the country’s defense industry in order to increase the country's foreign currency revenues.”

The JCPOA, and the prospect of the lifting of conventional arms-related sanctions in the next five years, have resulted in the Iranian armed forces seeking a way to expand their domestic military industrial capabilities and become part of the international arms market. For instance, Iran’s minister of defense participates in most military exhibitions in the region. He is also constantly in contact with countries such as China and Russia regarding the transfer of the most advanced military equipment technology to Iran. In this vein, it appears that the sanctions related to conventional weapons trade are already being dropped, and that in the near future Iran will become a serious rival of both Western and Eastern arms firms that are presently providing conventional weapons to regional states.

At the Baghdad exhibition, Iran has showcased a wide range of military equipment such as twinned combat boats, powerful sea engines, unmanned aerial vehicles, various mortars, different rockets and artillery systems, defense items such as advanced systems capable of identifying chemical and radioactive elements, as well as systems capable of designing and producing helicopter and reconnaissance aircraft. Considering Iran’s active participation in the Baghdad military exhibition, it can be concluded that Iran wants to enter the lucrative global arms market.

Given the nature of political relations between Iran and the West, what can be described as a mutual arms embargo — beyond the existing legal restrictions— appears to be in place. Meanwhile, during the past two years, the Iranians have generously delivered weapons to their regional partners so much that Lebanon’s defense minister has announced that his country is ready to receive a large amount of weapons from Iran to address the needs of its military. Thus, if the current trajectory of arms deliveries continues, it appears that countries such as Iran, Russia and China are set to become the Middle East’s main weapons suppliers.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.militarytimes.com/story/...likely-deploy-iraq-top-officer-says/82253250/

The Pentagon is planning to send more combat troops into Iraq

Andrew Tilghman, Military Times 12:45 p.m. EDT March 25, 2016

The Pentagon will likely send more troops into Iraq in the coming weeks to support operations against Islamic State militants in Mosul, the military's top officer said Friday.

Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that he and Defense Secretary Ash Carter will recommend to the White House expanding the U.S military footprint there as Iraqi forces undertake a complicated, large-scale offensive to oust ISIS from its stronghold in the country's north.

“We have a series of recommendations that we will be discussing with the president in the coming weeks to further enable our support for the Iraqi security forces,” Dunford said during a press briefing. “The secretary and I both believe that there will be an increase to the U.S. forces in Iraq in the coming weeks but that decision hasn’t been made."


MILITARYTIMES

U.S. Marines report second attack on 'Firebase Bell' in northern Iraq


Currently, the U.S. force level in Iraq is officially capped at 3,870. But privately, defense officials say the real number is closer to 5,000 when accounting for troops considered to be there on “temporary” deployment.

Among those temporary troops was Marine Staff Sgt. Louis Cardin, of Temecula, California, who was killed March 19 in an ISIS rocket on Fire Base Bell in northern Iraq.

Before Cardin’s death, military officials had not publicly acknowledged the fire base's existence. It was created several days before the fatal attack, near the forward line of troops and the Iraqi army's division headquarters in the northern Iraqi town of Makhmour.

Dunford said the decision to send more U.S. troops would be “focused on what is it we need to do to maintain momentum in the campaign and what specifically do we need to do to enable operations in Mosul.”


MARINE CORPS TIMES

Marines in Iraq technically not in combat but still getting some


In December, Carter told Congress that the Obama administration was willing send additional combat advisers and attack helicopters for close air support if the Iraqis made an official request for such additional assistance. The Iraqi government declined that military support, mainly because many powerful Shiite factions in Baghdad oppose expanding the U.S. military presence.

The Iraqi army on Thursday announced the launch of an offensive to seize several villages south of Mosul, operations aimed at cutting off key supply lines to ISIS territory south and east of Mosul.

Marines at Fire Base Bell provided artillery fire support for the offensive operations, military officials said.

635945028173202628-2481745.jpg

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/673.../MilitaryTimes/635945028173202628-2481745.jpg
U.S. Marines operating at Fire Base Bell fire an M777A2 Howitzer at an ISIS infiltration route March 18. (Photo: Cpl. Andre Dakis/Marine Corps)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
This guy's worried about weapons grade plutonium when there's more than enough spent fuel rods and medical waste around that could fill the role of his concern (dirty bombs) just as well.....

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http://www.livemint.com/Politics/3j...-atomic-chief-warns-on-nuclear-terrorism.html

Last Modified: Fri, Mar 25 2016. 08 26 PM IST

UN atomic chief warns on nuclear terrorism

Enough plutonium and highly enriched uranium still exist to make 20,000 weapons of the magnitude that levelled Hiroshima in 1945

Vienna: The world needs to do more to prevent “nuclear terrorism”, the head of the UN atomic watchdog has warned ahead of an important summit and in the wake of the Brussels terror attacks.

“Terrorism is spreading and the possibility of using nuclear material cannot be excluded,” International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief Yukiya Amano told AFP in an interview late Thursday.

“Member states need to have sustained interest in strengthening nuclear security,” he said. “The countries which do not recognise the danger of nuclear terrorism is the biggest problem.”

Amano’s comments came before a summit of around 50 leaders in Washington on 31 March-1 April on ensuring that nuclear material in the world’s roughly 1,000 atomic facilities are secured.

Highlighting the risks, in December Belgian police investigating the 13 November Paris terror attacks found 10 hours of video of the comings and goings of a senior Belgian nuclear official.

The material, filmed by a camera in bushes outside the official’s home, was reportedly found at the property of Mohamed Bakkali, incarcerated in Belgium for his links to the Paris attackers.

One Belgian newspaper reported that the device was collected by none other than brothers Ibrahim and Khalid El Bakraoui—two of the suicide bombers in this week’s Brussels attacks.

The Washington summit is part of a process begun by US President Barack Obama in a speech in Prague in 2009 and follows similar gatherings in Seoul in 2012 and The Hague in 2014.

Major progress has been made, with countries reducing stockpiles of nuclear material, experts say. Japan for example is this month returning to the US enough plutonium to make 50 nuclear bombs.

But according to the International Panel on Fissile Materials, enough plutonium and highly enriched uranium still exist to make 20,000 weapons of the magnitude that levelled Hiroshima in 1945.

A grapefruit-sized amount of plutonium can be fashioned into a nuclear weapon, and according to Amano it is “not impossible” that extremists could manage to make a “primitive” device—if they got hold of the material.

“It is now an old technology and nowadays terrorists have the means, the knowledge and the information,” he said.

But he said that a far likelier risk was a “dirty bomb”.

This is a device using conventional explosives to disperse radioactive material other than uranium or plutonium.

Such material can be found in small quantities in universities, hospitals and other facilities the world over, often with little security.

“Dirty bombs will be enough to (drive) any big city in the world into panic,” Amano said. “And the psychological, economic and political implications would be enormous.”

This is thought to be well within the capabilities of extremists. The Islamic State group has already used chemical weapons, CIA director John Brennan told CBS News in February.

Since the mid-1990s, almost 2,800 incidents of illicit trafficking, “unauthorised possession” or loss of nuclear materials have been recorded in an IAEA database. One such incident occurred in Iraq last year.

Only a few involved substances that could be used to make a actual nuclear weapon, but some could be used to create a dirty bomb.

“It is very possible this is the tip of the iceberg,” Amano told AFP.

A vital step, he said, would be the entry into force of the arcane-sounding but important 2005 Amendment to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (CPPNM).

It is the only legally-binding international undertaking for the physical protection of nuclear material.

Amano said it will reduce the likelihood of a dirty bomb by making it legally binding for countries to protect nuclear facilities and to secure nuclear material in domestic use, storage and transport.

Pakistan this week became the latest country to ratify the CPPNM, bringing to just eight the number of adherences still required.

“The weakest link (in nuclear security) is that this amendment. .. has not entered into force. This is a top priority,” Amano said, expressing hope that this could happen “in the coming months”.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-boeing-uk-idUSKCN0WR1IR

Business | Fri Mar 25, 2016 6:31pm EDT
Related: World, Aerospace & Defense

U.S. approves $3.2 billion sale of Boeing P-8A patrol planes to UK

WASHINGTON

The U.S. government has approved the sale of up to nine Boeing Co P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol planes to Britain in a deal valued at up to $3.2 billion, the U.S. Defense Department said Friday.

The Pentagon's Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA), which oversees foreign arms sales, notified Congress about the potential sale on Thursday. Lawmakers now have 15 days to block the sale although such action is unlikely given close ties between the United States and the UK.

The proposed sale will enhance Britain's capabilities to provide national defense and contribute to NATO and coalition operations, DSCA said in a statement. It said the deal was a top priority for Britain.

Britain announced its intention to buy the submarine-hunting patrol planes in November as part of a five-year plan that will increase spending by 12 billion pounds ($16.96 billion) to 178 billion pounds ($251.60 billion) over the next decade.

At the time, British Prime Minister David Cameron said the planes would help the UK protect its nuclear deterrent and fill a gap left by a much-criticized decision to scrap the Nimrod spy-plane program in 2010.

DSCA said Britain had retained core skills in maritime patrol and reconnaissance following the retirement of the Nimrod aircraft through personnel exchange programs that have left UK forces work on the U.S. Navy P-8A aircraft.

Additional contractors on the deal include ViaSat Inc, Rockwell Collins Inc, Spirit Aerosystems Holdings Inc, Raytheon Co, Northrop Grumman Corp and Harris Corp and General Electric Co, the agency said.


(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Bernard Orr)
 

Housecarl

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http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/ne...gues-mexican-beach-resort-during-easter-week/

Cartel-related violence plagues Mexican beach resort during Easter week

Published March 25, 2016 / EFE

Mexico City, Mar 24 (EFE) – Violence has continued unabated in Acapulco, Mexico, despite a stepped-up security presence and high hotel occupancy rates in the week leading up to Easter Sunday, spoiling authorities' efforts to restore the Pacific resort city's image.

Five more deaths attributable to gangland violence – three people were killed at a bar on the Acapulco-Mexico City highway and two whose bodies were found in the city's Ciudad Renacimiento neighborhood – were added to the city's crime statistics on Wednesday.

On Monday, gunmen burst into the office of the Potable Water and Sewage Commission and killed one employee and seriously wounding another.

While those incidents occurred in areas far removed from the port city's tourist center, the coastal zone has not been immune from violent crime.

As recently as Monday, two fishermen were slain on La Angosta beach in front of tourists strolling through the area. Days earlier, a man was killed execution-style on Papagayo beach.

Criminals seem undeterred by the 87 percent hotel occupancy rates in the city this Easter Week and the deployment of more than 4,000 police to bolster security.

These latest killings are far from unusual in Acapulco, which, according to the non-governmental Citizen Council for Public Safety and Criminal Justice, is the third-most violent city in the world with an annual rate of 104 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.

State and federal authorities have responded by launching a campaign to showcase Acapulco's positive side and try to recover a bit of the former glamor of the resort city, which was once a getaway for Hollywood stars in the 1950s and '60s.

The number of foreign tourists has plummeted in recent years, falling from 3.6 million in 1999 to 110,000 in 2014, according to the Ministry of Tourism, although domestic tourism has remained stable thanks to Acapulco's affordability and its accessibility to residents of Mexico City.

The largest city in the state of Guerrero was "one of the country's first tourist destinations that gave us global visibility," and "we don't want it to be tarnished by the levels of crime and violence that have racked Guerrero in recent years," Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto said recently.

He underscored the "recovery" underway in Acapulco and noted that he had spent the New Year's holiday there.

Acapulco Archbishop Carlos Garfias, for his part, earlier this month called on criminal gangs operating in the city to observe a "truce" during the religious holiday – a plea that thus far appears to have fallen on deaf ears.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.economist.com/news/inter...it-drugs-next-month-looks-likely-be-flop-five

Five former presidents demand an end to the war on drugs

But don’t hold your breath—a UN summit on drugs next month looks likely to be a flop

Mar 24th 2016 | International
Comments 96

AS THE drug war has rumbled on, with little to show for all the money and violence, its critics have become a more diverse bunch than the hippies and libertarians who first backed drug reform. The latest broadside against prohibition was fired on March 24th by a group of former heads of state and businesspeople, who put forward a sober case for rethinking the international approach to drug control.

“Ending the War on Drugs” is a collection of essays by former presidents of Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Nigeria and Switzerland, as well as a former deputy prime minister of Britain and assorted scientific folk. George Soros, a financier who has bankrolled many pro-legalisation pressure groups, provides a chapter; the book carries an introduction by Richard Branson, a business mogul whose company, Virgin, is its publisher. All condemn what they see as a political, economic and public-health failure.

The arguments are well-rehearsed but bear repeating, especially when made by such a diverse and level-headed group. In spite of its vast cost to taxpayers (estimated by the authors at $100 billion per year) the war against drugs has failed to stop people taking them, instead driving up the price of narcotics to the point where they generate upwards of $300 billion a year for their dealers and traffickers. More than 1.4m drug arrests are made each year in America alone, and they are unevenly distributed, with black Americans jailed for drug offences at ten times the rate of whites, the authors write.

Latin America has borne the brunt of the war, and perhaps the sharpest chapter is by Ernesto Zedillo, who witnessed the narcotics industry’s destructive, corrupting power as president of Mexico in 1994-2000 (even his drug tsar turned out to be working for the Juárez cartel). He spells out that merely decriminalising consumption—in effect, downgrading drug-taking from a serious offence to something more like a parking violation—is inadequate, since it leaves the supply side of the business in the hands of the mob. Indeed, “decriminalising consumption without taking away from organised crime the provision of the supply of drugs would be counterproductive, even disastrous,” he argues. Governments should “intelligently regulate”—that is, legalise—drug markets, he concludes.

The arguments are aimed at the diplomats who next month will gather in New York for a special session of the UN General Assembly to discuss the question of drugs. The last such session was in 1998, when the summit’s slogan was “A drug-free world: we can do it”. That aim has been missed in spectacular fashion—indeed, the consumption of most drugs has risen steeply. Yet the signs are that this year’s summit will be little more enlightened. A meeting of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs, another UN organ, ended on March 22nd with a draft declaration that failed even to criticise the use of the death penalty for drug offences, something that reformers had previously hoped might be achieved as a minimum.

The arguments of the ex-presidents and their allies are persuading growing numbers of the need for a rethink—not least in America, once the arch drug-warrior, where more than half the population now wants to legalise cannabis, and more and more states are doing just that. The trouble is that changing the UN conventions that mandate worldwide prohibition would require the agreement of all 193 member states, and plenty are still firmly against even tentative reform. The most likely outcome of next month’s powwow is more waffle, and a growing realisation that the UN drug conventions will not be reformed but simply ignored.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.insightcrime.org/news-briefs/mexico-jalisco-cartel-expands-to-baja-california-official

Mexico's Jalisco Cartel Expands to Baja California: Official

Written by Sam Tabory
Wednesday, 23 March 2016

Authorities in Mexico have voiced fears the Jalisco Cartel has arrived in Baja California state, the most substantial indication yet the powerful criminal organization is expanding northward, potentially setting the stage for a deadly turf war between rival cartels.

Gualberto Ramírez Gutiérrez, head of the kidnapping unit within Mexico's Attorney General's Office (Procuraduría General de la República - PGR), said authorities believe the Jalisco Cartel - New Generation (Cartel de Jalisco - Nueva Generación - CJNG) is moving into the border state as he announced the capture of a suspected Sinaloa Cartel hit man, El Universal reported.

Marco Tulio Carrillo Grande, alias "El Marlon," allegedly the Sinaloa Cartel's head of assassins in the area, was arrested in Tijuana -- Baja California's largest city.

Authorities suspect Carrillo Grande of organizing recent violent attacks against members of rival cartels, including the Arellano Félix Cartel (also known as the Tijuana Cartel) and CJNG.

Baja California's location affords valuable smuggling routes into the United States. It was previously contested by the Sinaloa Cartel and the Arellano Félix Cartel, and the former emerged as the predominant organization following a 2008 - 2010 turf war.

Headed by Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias "El Mencho," the CJNG already has an established presence in the states of Colima, Guanajuato, Guerrero, Jalisco, Michoacán, Morelos, Nayarit, and Veracruz, according to El Universal, despite being a relative newcomer to Mexico's criminal landscape.

The group has developed a particularly brutal reputation for violence and bloodshed. In April 2015, the CJNG carried out an attack on a police convoy that killed 15 officers. The following month the cartel shot down a military helicopter with a rocket propelled grenade.

InSight Crime Analysis

Ramírez's statements are the highest-profile claim yet made by a Mexican official placing CJNG in Baja California. While previous official comments suggested the CJNG might be attempting to expand its influence in the region, they stopped short of suggesting the group had established a significant foothold there.

SEE ALSO: Coverage of the Jalisco Cartel

Speculation the CJNG was moving into Baja California arose earlier this year as authorities sought an explanation for an uptick in violence in Tijuana, which saw nearly twice as many murders in January 2016 as it did in January 2015.

Ramírez Gutiérrez's claim about the CJNG's presence in the state appeared to be linked to evidence suggesting Carrillo Grande organized attacks against CJNG operators on behalf of the Sinaloa Cartel.

A straightforward narrative about warring cartels, however, may be too simplistic an explanation of the reality on the ground in Baja California. Previously, it has been difficult to parse when and where the Sinaloa Cartel and CJNG are in open conflict, versus where they engage in varying degrees of collaboration.

As such, it is too early to definitively conclude what type of organizational alignment or turf war might ultimately emerge in Tijuana -- if the CJNG is in fact seeking to expand its presence in region.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Going to be interesting to see how the Saudis and the vapid Sunni Salafists are going to take this.....

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http://www.voanews.com/content/pakistan-iran-aim-enhance-trade-border-security-ties/3255363.html

Pakistan, Iran Aim to Enhance Trade, Border Security Ties

Ayaz Gul
March 25, 2016 4:47 PM

ISLAMABAD — Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in talks with leaders in neighboring Pakistan has pledged to enhance bilateral trade, security and energy cooperation to move the relationship forward in the wake of the removal of international economic sanctions against Tehran.

Rouhani arrived in Islamabad Friday on a two-day visit, his first to the country since taking office and held wide-ranging talks with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

The two leaders briefly spoke to reporters after the meeting and announced signing of several memoranda of understanding to further enhance bilateral cooperation, in economic and social sectors.

“Our economic relations had suffered due to sanctions imposed on Iran. In our consultations today, we have reiterated our resolve to enhance the level of bilateral cooperation in diverse fields, including trade, economic and energy,” Sharif said.

He added the two sides have also decided to open two new border crossings to facilitate commercial activities and “people to people” contacts between Pakistan and Iran.

Officials expect the Iranian president’s visit will lead to exponential growth in bilateral trade which currently stands at around $250 million a year. It is expected to increase to $5 billion in the next five years.

Energy and security

Iran has also been pushing Pakistan to expedite work on a multi-billion dollar pipeline to bring Iranian gas to the neighboring country to run power plants. Tehran says it has largely completed work on its side, but Pakistani officials blame the sanctions against Iran for preventing work on their side.

President Rouhani said that in his discussions with Pakistani interlocutors, he discussed issues related to energy and export of gas or electricity to Pakistan as well as establishing connectivity between Iran's Chabahar and Pakistan’s Gawadar seaports.

Speaking through an interpreter, he said that Pakistan’s security is important for Iran’s own security. Rouhani emphasized the need for enhanced joint efforts to secure the nearly 1,000-kilometer border separating the two nations.

“It is the will and the resolve of the two countries to firmly combat against extremists and the terrorist groups not to allow them to threaten our shared borders,” Rouhani asserted.

Rouhani went on to say that in his talks with Sharif they both agreed on the need for more cooperation between Iran and Pakistan on regional security and various issues facing the Muslim world.

“And we do believe that the only solution for the regional problems and conflicts is a political one,” Rouhani said in a veiled reference to Shiite Iran’s rivalry with the Sunni kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the prolonged conflict in Afghanistan, which shares borders with both Iran and Pakistan.

The predominantly Sunni Muslim Pakistan has traditionally close economic and political ties to the Saudi rulers and Islamabad is trying to maintain a delicate balance while promoting ties with next door neighbor Iran so it does not upset Saudi Arabia.

Pakistan, having the largest and only nuclear-armed army in the Muslim world, last year refused a Saudi request to join its anti-Houthi military coalition, saying it would not become part of any alliance against Iran. The move angered Riyadh, although Islamabad vowed to stand ready to defend Saudi Arabia against any aggression.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.voanews.com/content/taliban-assassinate-afghan-army-general/3254635.html

Taliban Assassinate Afghan Army General

Ayaz Gul
Last updated on: March 25, 2016 12:00 PM

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN — Taliban suicide bombers have assassinated a senior army general and his bodyguard in Afghanistan's southern Kandahar province, Afghan officials said Friday.

Three gunmen with explosives strapped to their bodies entered the home of General Khan Agha in the Dand district disguised as guests late Thursday.

The gunmen opened fire before blowing themselves up or being killed in a firefight with security forces, regional Corps Commander General Dawood Shah Wafadar told VOA.

The deadly overnight attack also left a teenaged son of the slain general seriously wounded.

Wafadar said Agha, the deputy head of 205th Atal Military Corps for civilian affairs, routinely received guests at his residence.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, with a spokesman saying two of its suicide bombers participated in it and 10 Afghan security personnel, including Agha, were killed while many others were wounded.

The insurgent group often gives inflated casualty figures in such attacks.

Separately, at least seven police officers were killed in a suspected insider attack in Kandahar's Arghandab district. Officials said the slain members of the Afghan Local Police, or ALP, were asleep when three of their colleagues sprayed them with bullets and fled the scene along with the victims' weapons and ammunition.

The ALP is a community policing system established about six years ago to protect villages and remote districts around Afghanistan because of the insufficient presence of army and police forces there.

The Taliban spokesman later claimed responsibility, with a spokesman saying the assailants were its loyalists and returned to the insurgent ranks after carrying out the attack.
 
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