WAR 04-01-2017-to-04-07-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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(261) 03-11-2017-to-03-17-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...17-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(262) 03-18-2017-to-03-24-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...24-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(263) 03-25-2017-to-03-31-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...31-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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http://thediplomat.com/2017/03/japa...apability-against-north-korea-missile-threat/

Japan Eyes 'Counter-Attack' Capability Against North Korea Missile Threat

Developing retaliatory capabilities will face political and financial headwinds in Japan.

By Yuki Tatsumi
March 31, 2017

On March 30, Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) submitted a recommendation for the steps Japan should take to effectively respond to an ever-heightening missile threat from North Korea. The recommendations had three main parts: potential new acquisition of ballistic missile defense (BMD) assets to enhance existing BMD capability; exploration of acquiring “counter-attack” capability; and protection of exclusive economic zones (EEZ).

Out of the three recommendation, the second — exploration of “counter-attack” capability — attracted the biggest attention for its controversial nature. While the members of the study group — comprised mostly of former defense ministers, former deputy defense ministers, and former parliamentary vice ministers — emphasized that they do not intend to recommend Japan acquire “pre-emptive strike” capability, the senior members of Komeito, LDP’s ruling coalition partner, are already voicing*concern that Japan’s move to acquire such “offensive” capability may contradict with “exclusively defense-oriented defense posture (senshu bouei),” one of the fundamental principles of Japan’s post-war defense policy.

Given how politically divisive the parliamentary debate was over a set of defense reform bills that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe put forward in 2015, the discussion of whether Japan should pursue “counter-attack” capability on its own will be just as politically divisive and controversial —*if not more so.

However, from the point of view of defense planning, the recommendations made by the LDP study group, including the one on “counter-attack” capability, are reasonable, especially given North Korea’s increasingly provocative and unpredictable behavior, not to mention the two missile tests within the past couple of months with less than a month in between, and persisting speculation about yet another nuclear test in the near future. As long as Japan acquires the capabilities recommended by the study group with close consultation with the United States, so that whatever the new capability Japan acquires will benefit overall deterrence of the U.S.-Japan alliance, it will ultimately work to counter urgent security challenges presented by North Korea.

However, if Japan seriously wants to pursue these capabilities, navigating through a divisive political debate is only a part of the problem. In fact, the acceleration in North Korean provocation forces another, more pressing question on Japan.

As Japan sets out to revise its National Defense Program Guidelines (NDPG) and the Mid-Term Defense Plan (MTDP), both of which serve to shape Japan’s defense posture (and required acquisitions) for a four-to-five year span, the Abe government will have to face the reality that it now has to prepare for two types of security challenges. On the one hand, Japan has to accelerate its investment in the capabilities to counter the North Korean threat, which is a conventional military threat. On the other hand, Japan will also have to continue the investment it began to develop capabilities to counter China’s assertive actions in the East China Sea.

The biggest problem for Japan is that the current trajectory of the Japanese defense budget does not give Japan enough resources to make such “two-theater” investments. Despite the headline-grabbing media reporting that Japan’s defense budget continues to rise under Abe, it is still in the middle of recovering from a decade-long defense spending cut between FY2003-2012. This has not only led to delay in some of the modernization programs, but also resulted in the Japan Self-Defense Force*(JSDF) being hollowed out, due to lack of equipment maintenance and inadequate opportunities for training for its personnel. And because of the emerging need for Japan to develop the capability to counter Chinese assertiveness in the East China Sea in addition to the modernization requirements, whatever increase that Japan’s defense budget has seen has been absorbed by the rising cost of acquisition for new capabilities such as F35As, V-22 Osprey,s Amphibious Assault Vehicles (AAVs), and Global Hawks. In short, in*a fiscal environment where*big increase in defense spending cannot be expected, Japan will continue to face a tough trade-off decision regarding where to spend its defense yen.

Already behind the curve in preparing for these two security concerns, both of which are increasingly more urgent, the next 12-18 months will be a critical period for Japan as it considers how best to shape the JSDF posture to defend Japan from these threats. The LDP study group’s recommendation is just one example of the dilemma Japan faces as it plans for its future defense posture.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-bangladesh-militants-idUSKBN1733SG

World News | Sat Apr 1, 2017 | 2:45pm EDT

Bangladesh police kill three militants in operation

Three Islamist militants were killed on Saturday during a police operation in Bangladesh’s north east Borohat of Moulavibazar, said Monirul Islam, chief of the counter-terrorism unit of Bangladesh police.

“Police asked them to surrender but instead the female militant (of the three)...responded with a grenade attack on SWAT,” Monirul told reporters.

On Thursday as many as eight militants including women and children blew themselves up with a grenade in the north-east of the Bangladeshi capital rather than surrender, police said.

The operation on Saturday was the latest clash in the South Asian country that has seen a rise in Islamist violence.

Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Saturday urged Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU) leaders to work together to fight militancy and terrorism.

Islamic State and al Qaeda have made competing claims over killings of foreigners, liberals and members of religious minorities in Bangladesh, a mostly Muslim country of 160 million people.

The government has consistently ruled out the presence of foreign groups, blaming domestic militants instead.

(Reporting by Serajul Quadir; editing by Ralph Boulton)
 

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http://www.cnn.com/2017/03/31/world/paraguay-unrest-capital/

At least one dead after violent protests in Paraguay

By Sanie López Garelli and Rafael Romo, CNN
Updated 2:45 PM ET, Sat April 1, 2017

Video

Story highlights
- Police officer detained in killing of protester, Paraguay interior minister says
- Changes to Senate rules allowing President's re-election angers protesters

Asunción, Paraguay (CNN)At least one protester is dead in Paraguay's capital after demonstrators stormed the congressional building and set it on fire Friday night, according to the country's National Police.

The protesters were enraged by recent changes to Senate rules that would allow President Horacio Cartes to seek re-election. Paraguay's 1992 Constitution limits presidents to one term.

Some demonstrators vandalized offices and hallways throughout the congressional building in Asunción as flames spread through the structure. Police vehicles also were targeted.

Firefighters rushed to the scene while riot police showed up with water tanks. Police fired rubber bullets at some of the protesters.

Interior Minister Miguel Tadeo Rojas said Saturday that authorities had opened an investigation into the protester's death and have detained one police officer in the killing. He lamented the death of Rodrigo Quintana and sent condolences to his family

A Senate meeting that was to be held Saturday morning was canceled.

The violence stems from the ruling Colorado Party's decision to create an alternative Senate with the goal of passing laws that would allow Cartes to seek a second term. Protesters indicated they will stop demonstrating once they get a commitment from Cartes that he will not seek a second five-year term.

On Tuesday, a group of 25 senators began holding what has been called "parallel sessions." Julio César Velásquez of the Colorado Party proclaimed himself Senate president and, with the help of two dozen other senators, began making changes to the body's rules and procedures.

The group held a secret vote early Friday in favor of the re-election bill. The vote was not held on the main Senate floor but in an office at the congressional building.

Paraguay's 45-member Senate requires a simple majority of 23 votes to pass legislation, meaning the group holding parallel sessions technically have two more votes than required.

Most of the senators involved in the parallel sessions were members of the Colorado Party, but some from the opposition also joined in.

Paraguay lived under a dictatorship for 35 years. Alfredo Stroessner, a Paraguayan military officer, took power after an armed coup in 1954. His rule ended in 1989.

In an interview with CNN, Sen. Lilian Samaniego of the Colorado Party rejected accusations that her political organization is trying to establish a dictatorship.

"I don't know what dictatorship they're talking about," Samaniego said. "Dictatorship is what these opposition senators and representatives, unfortunately with some dissidents from the Colorado Party, would like to establish because they want to decide for the people. And we want the Paraguayan people to decide for themselves."

On Thursday, Senate President Roberto Acevedo asked Paraguaya's Supreme Court to issue an injunction to annul modifications made by the rogue group to the Senate rules and procedures.

Sen. Carlos Amarilla of the Liberal Party told CNN affiliate Telefuturo that, legally speaking, "the only (Senate) president is Sen. Roberto Acevedo. Any other alternative would have to wait until June 30 to elect a new leadership by majority."

Journalist Sanie López Garelli reported from Asunción, and CNN's Rafael Romo reported and wrote from Atlanta. CNN's Marilia Brocchetto and Kim Hutcherson contributed to this report.
 

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Hummm.....

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https://origin-nyi.thehill.com/blog...ward-on-the-iran-nuclear-deal-under-president

The way forward on the Iran Nuclear Deal under President Trump

By Raymond Tanter and Ed Stafford, opinion contributors - 04/01/17 08:00 AM EDT
Comments 47

The way forward for the Iran nuclear deal under President Trump is to tighten enforcement of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA, aka, the nuclear deal) and impose sanctions on Iran’s ballistic missile program rather than dismantle the JCPOA.

Breaking News
On Mar. 26, 2016 at an American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) meeting, coauthor Raymond Tanter heard Vice President Mike Pence declare, “After decades of simply talking about it, the president of the United States is giving serious consideration to moving the American embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.”

If President Trump were to relocate the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, however, it is likely to be opposed by many American allies like Saudi Arabia that are important in pushing back against Iran in the region. *The relocation of the U.S. Embassy to Israel distracts from the greater issue of how to restrain Iran’s malevolent influence in the Middle East in the context of the JCPOA.

In prior years, AIPAC policy conferences focused on hot topics like the*Iran nuclear deal; the 2017 conference, however, centered on adjusting to new realities like the JCPOA. Issues considered at one of this year’s breakout sessions dealt with “Holding Iran Accountable,” and the discussion centered on conversations between two types of pundits in Washington: those focused on the Iran nuclear deal and those on non-JCPOA topics like non-nuclear sanctions, ballistic missile testing, state-sponsorship of terrorism, arms shipments to Hezbollah (Party of God), and human rights violations by Iran.

The key matter at hand remains the way forward for the Iran nuclear deal under President Trump. He has already indicated an unwillingness to accept the deal as written under the auspices of the previous administration and the other major powers.

Issues
There are several topics the Trump administration confronts regarding the JCPOA: heavy water, inspections, compliance, and nuclear sanctions. Heavy water reactors permit use of natural uranium as fuel, while light water reactors require enriched uranium, which is much more difficult to produce. As a member of Congress, President Trump’s Director of Central Intelligence Agency, then-Rep. Mike Pompeo cosponsored a bill passed by the House on July 13, 2016, that prevents Iran from purchasing heavy water from the United States.

Inspections of Iran’s nuclear facilities are necessary to ensure compliance, so Iran is unable to “breakout,” “sneakout,” or*“creepout.” The last one concerns both open and covert, legal and illicit activities designed to negate JCPOA restrictions prior to the agreed-upon time in which Tehran would be able to do so.

In prepared remarks before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa, Michael Eisenstadt of The Washington Institute for Near East Policy (TWI) testified that although Iran’s missiles are conventionally armed, many could deliver a nuclear weapon if Iran were to ever acquire such a capability. While the nuclear accord will likely defer such an eventuality, it did not impose new constraints on Iran’s missile program.On the contrary, UNSCR 2231 of July 20, 2015, loosened them, with provisions for lifting them in eight years, if not sooner.

In exchange for*Tehran’s agreement to*the nuclear deal, the Obama administration granted Iran flexibility for ballistic missile testing. UNSCR 2231 certified the deal, replacing the prohibition with accommodating language: “Iran is called upon not to undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons.” *

As reported by The Hill, on May 31, 2016, Sens. Robert Menendez, (D-NJ) and Mark Kirk, (R-IL), introduced legislation in 2015 that would extend the sanctions law for 10 years. Sen.*Kelly Ayotte, (R-NH), backed by 18 other GOP senators, introduced a separate bill to extend the law through 2031 and require new sanctions tied to Iran’s ballistic missile program.

On Mar. 23, House*and*Senate*legislators introduced bills that would increase sanctions on Iran for its ballistic missile tests and other destructive behavior. Tzvi Kahn, a senior Iran analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, states that, “The two bills are consistent with U.S. obligations under the 2015 nuclear deal, represent a bipartisan effort to advance an objective that both*President Trump*and*President Obama*have endorsed: deterring Tehran’s non-nuclear aggression in the region.”

The foregoing issues were raised in the context of candidate Trump’s stated view that the Obama administration negotiated badly: At one time, he called for tearing up the nuclear deal: “My number one priority is to dismantle the disastrous deal with Iran,” coauthor Tanter heard Trump tell the AIPAC Policy Conference in Mar. 2016. Immediately after the election, on Nov. 14, 2016, however, one of Trump’s advisors said if Trump cannot renegotiate its terms, he may kill it.

Soon, President Trump must decide whether to extend executive order waivers the Obama administration used to suspend some of the non-nuclear sanctions imposed on Iran and how scrupulously to hold the Iranian regime to account for infractions of the JCPOA. On Mar. 1, 2017, Laurence Norman of the Wall Street Journal reported that European officials are*growing in confidence President Trump will not shred the nuclear accord. “The test of that will come in May, when the president must decide whether to extend executive waivers that the Obama administration used to suspend some sanctions.”

The Way Forward
In testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Feb.*17, 2017, David Albright,*President of the Institute for Science and International Security and a former weapons inspector whom the Trump administration has consulted on*the Iran nuclear deal, testified at a congressional hearing entitled “Iran on Notice.”

Albright’s bottom line: “The Trump administration appears committed to maintaining the JCPOA. This decision makes good sense. But the administration also recognizes that if the deal is to survive and serve U.S. national security interests, the JCPOA needs to be more strictly enforced and interpreted, and its most significant weaknesses need to be corrected.” We concur with the views of Albright as a point of departure for President Trump to consider, per some of his short-term steps.

First, insist Iran create and implement a strategic trade control system that meets international standards and will be subject to review by the Joint Commission mentioned in the JCPOA; second, plug the loopholes in the JCPOA, including ambiguities that permit Iran to obtain heavy water that has not been approved by the “Procurement Working Group;” third, draw on the expertise of the U.S. Department of Justice to pursue extradition and prosecution of *those involved in outfitting Iran’s nuclear, missile, or conventional weapons programs in defiance of U.S. laws and sanctions.

In short, the way forward for the Iran nuclear deal under President Trump is to renegotiate the JCPOA, rather than dismantle it.

Dr. Raymond Tanter served as a senior member on the National Security Council staff in the Reagan-Bush administration and is now Professor Emeritus at the University of Michigan.*Edward Stafford is a retired Foreign Service officer; he served in Political-Military Affairs at the State Department, as a diplomat with the U.S. Embassy in Turkey, and taught at the Inter-American Defense College.
 

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Pakistani press interpretation of India's changes in policy...

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http://nation.com.pk/national/01-Ap...kes-against-pakistan-india-s-nuclear-scholars

The Nation

India 'jettisoning no-first-use of nukes against Pakistan'

April 01, 2017, 1:06 pm

Leaving behind*Ronald Reagan declaration from*1984 that ''a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought'', the nuclear scholars have predicted that India may be re-interpreting its no-first-use of nuclear weapons policy to allow pre-emptive strikes against its neighbor (Pakistan), reported Times of India.

The nuclear doctrines*community is deducing this based among other things on cryptic statements from the Indian establishment.

The purported evolution of India's nuclear doctrine towards pre-emptive first use is primarily based on throwaway remarks made by former defense minister Manohar Parrikar last November wondering why New Delhi should bind itself to a no-first use policy, instead of saying more cryptically that it is a responsible nuclear power and will not use nuclear weapons irresponsibly. Those remarks (which Parrikar immediately clarified were his personal views), taken together with a more deliberative narration in former Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon's memoir that ''There is a potential gray area as to when India would use nuclear weapons first'' against a nuclear-armed adversary, has led some nuclear scholars to infer that New Delhi is moving its nuclear doctrine in a new direction.

Some of the conjecture was articulated by Vipin Narang, an MIT nuclear proliferation scholar, at a Carnegie International Nuclear Policy Conference in Washington DC, attracting attention of domain experts across the world. Outlining developments in the subcontinent that had led India to conceive of its Cold Start doctrine (a punitive conventional strike) only to have it countered by Pakistan's development of tactical battlefield nuclear weapons, Narang said it looked increasingly likely that India may abandon its no-first use police and launch a preemptive strike if it believed Pakistan was going to use any kind of nuclear weapons first.

''India's opening salvo may not be conventional strikes trying to pick off just Nasr batteries in the theatre, but a full 'comprehensive counterforce strike' that attempts to completely disarm Pakistan of its nuclear weapons so that India does not have to engage in iterative tit-for-tat exchanges and expose its own cities to nuclear destruction,'' Narang said. ''There is increasing evidence that India will not allow Pakistan to go first.''

Narang's presentation caught the attention of nuclear pundits and geo-political scholars both in the subcontinent and the U.S, and on Friday, the New York Times highlighted it with the additional speculation that India could be emboldened to evolve its posture by President Trump's softer stance on nuclear proliferation.

''This (allowing a pre-emptive strike against Pakistan) would not formally change India's nuclear doctrine, which bars it from launching a first strike, but would loosen its interpretation to deem pre-emptive strikes as defensive,'' the paper said. ''It would also change India's likely targets, in the event of a war, to make a nuclear exchange more winnable and, therefore, more thinkable.''
 

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https://www.dodbuzz.com/2017/03/31/stratcom-chief-nuclear-force-upgrade/

Stratcom Chief Presses for Nuke Force Upgrade

Posted By: Brendan McGarry
March 31, 2017

The head of U.S. Strategic Command on Friday acknowledged the potential high cost of upgrading the military¡¯s nuclear force but said the country can¡¯t afford not to do so.

¡°Deterrence will always be cheaper than war and there¡¯s nothing more expensive than losing a war,¡± said Air Force Gen. John Hyten, echoing recent comments made by Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David L. Goldfein.

As head of Stratcom, Hyten oversees the so-called nuclear triad consisting of strategic bombers; land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs; and submarine-launched ballistic missiles, or SLBMs. He was the keynote speaker Friday morning at the annual Military Reporters and Editors conference, which took place in Arlington, Virginia, outside Washington, D.C.

¡°Look at what the world has done in the last 20 years since we started de-emphasizing nuclear weapons in our arsenal,¡± Hyten said. ¡°Did our adversaries de-emphasize? No. Russia completely modernized their entire nuclear force and expanded and now just deployed a ground launched cruise missile in violation of the Intermediate-[Range] Nuclear Forces Treaty into Russia. China has completely modernized and built up. North Korea has gone from zero to a nuclear capability in that time frame. Iran has built ballistic missiles.¡±

The general added, ¡°When we started de-emphasizing nuclear weapons, what did the rest of the world do? The rest of the world did exactly the opposite. So if we de-emphasize nuclear weapons, we¡¯re putting the country at jeopardy and we can never allow that to happen.¡±

The Defense Department¡¯s fiscal 2017 budget called for spending $108 billion over five years to sustain and recapitalize the nuclear force and associated strategic command, control, communications, and intelligence systems.

That money would essentially be a down-payment on a long-term project to overhaul the entire nuclear triad by building new ICBMs to replace the Minuteman III, a replacement to the Ohio-class ballistic submarines and a new fleet of strategic bombers to be called B-21 Raiders.

Hyten acknowledged he has seen estimates for the nuclear modernization program ranging from $300 billion over a decade to $1 trillion over 30 years.

¡°I don¡¯t know if any of those numbers are right,¡± he said. ¡°But if you bought a house and you did an estimate about what you thought it would be to build a house, would the first thing you do [be] go tell the builder, ¡®Hey this is my estimate. Now let¡¯s start negotiating?¡¯ Now that¡¯s just a crazy way to build things.¡±

Hyten added, ¡°We should be able to build it for an affordable price. We should be able to afford 6 percent of the defense budget to do that when it¡¯s the most critical thing that we do in the military.¡±

President Donald Trump as part of the so-called skinny budget has proposed the Defense Department receive $639 billion in fiscal 2018, which begins Oct. 1. Six percent of that figure is about $38 billion. The president¡¯s full budget request, due in February, is expected to be released in May.

¡ª Richard Sisk contributed to this report.

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http://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20170401/p2g/00m/0dm/032000c

1st round of nuke ban treaty negotiations ends on high note

April 1, 2017 (Mainichi Japan)

NEW YORK (Kyodo) -- The first session of the negotiations to ban nuclear weapons ended on Friday at the United Nations with diplomats and activists agreeing that the conference went beyond expectations and the goal of realizing the first-ever treaty of its kind can be reached in July.

"This week has been a resounding success, first and foremost because it did what it meant to do," said Mexico's Ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, Jorge Lomonaco, at a side event just before the conference closed.

Mexico has played an instrumental role, along with Austria, Brazil, Ireland, Nigeria and South Africa in leading the efforts to ban nuclear weapons and in pressing for the adoption of a U.N. General Assembly resolution last year that set out the schedule for two conferences to be held in New York. The aim is to see a landmark treaty banning nuclear weapons realized for the first time ever.

The first of the sessions ended Friday after five days and a second is to begin in mid-June and conclude by July 7.

"We went beyond those expectations," Lomonaco added, noting how diplomats provided the president of the conference with ideas and proposals that will be considered in the production of a draft so that negotiations can move forward.

More than 115 countries participated in the conference with over 220 representatives from civil society, including atomic bomb victims from Hiroshima, according to Elayne Whyte Gomez, Costa Rican ambassador in Geneva, who is also president of the conference.

Absent from the discussions was Japan, which says it aspires to a nuclear-weapon-free world but relies on U.S. nuclear deterrence for protection. After delivering a speech on Monday, Japan's disarmament ambassador Nobushige Takamizawa announced his country would not participate in the talks.

The United States also staged a press conference, along with about 20 of its allies, to protest the start of the New York process.

The other nuclear weapon states -- Britain, China, France and Russia -- also did not attend, yet despite their absence many viewed the start of the negotiations as a success.

"As president, I feel very much satisfied with the progress achieved so far," Gomez told reporters at a press conference Thursday. "It makes me be very hopeful and optimistic that the completion of an effective and legally binding instrument to prohibit nuclear weapons by July 7 is an achievable goal."

On Friday, she said she is aiming to provide a draft to the delegates between the second half of May and the beginning of June, ahead of the next New York meeting.

She also pointed to the importance of the testimonies of Hiroshima atomic bomb survivors, Toshiki Fujmori and Setsuko Thurlow, as well as Sue Coleman Haseldine, an Australian Aboriginal survivor of nuclear tests, who spoke at the conference.

Their stories, she said have "reminded all delegates of the catastrophic humanitarian impact of any use of nuclear weapons" and "reaffirmed the commitment of all delegations to work toward a very positive result."

During the sessions, some raised the idea of mentioning the victims in the final document but that remains to be seen.

"I think there is general agreement in the room that we have to recognize the rights of the victims and survivors but there is disagreement on how that should be shaped," Beatice Fihn, executive director of the International Coalition to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, told Kyodo News.

Fihn said the mention of the survivors raises concerns about whether victims, for example, could seek out compensation in courts or whether it might only apply to future victims or what types of general obligations there are to provide assistance and support.

She also agreed that the talks so far have been positive.

"Based on this week, we have a really good chance of adopting a strong treaty in July...but it is going to require a lot of work to get there."

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http://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20170401/p2a/00m/0na/013000c

Head of nuclear arms ban talks aims to draft treaty next month

April 1, 2017 (Mainichi Japan)
Japanese version

NEW YORK -- The president of a conference on establishing a convention to outlaw nuclear weapons said she aims to draw up a draft of the convention next month and have it adopted in July.

¡¾Related¡¿Mainichi photo page showing Hiroshima A-bomb aftermath draws attention at U.N.

¡¾Related¡¿Japan says it will not take part in nuclear ban treaty talks without nuclear powers

¡¾Related¡¿Anti-nuke NGO hands paper cranes to delegates at U.N. conference
The five-day first round of the conference, which was held at the United Nations headquarters in New York, ended on March 31.

Over 100 countries are participating in the conference, and many of them have expressed hope that a treaty to outlaw the use, production, possession, stockpiling and experiments of nuclear arms will be concluded.

Elayne Whyte Gomez, Costa Rican ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva and president of the conference, will draw up a draft while coordinating views among participating countries, and is expected to present the draft to the participating states as early as late May.

Whyte also said a meeting will be held in Geneva by June to exchange opinions between the countries involved, and she aims to have it adopted by the end of the second round of the conference to be held from June 15 to July 7.

About 40 countries, including the five major nuclear states -- the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China -- and NATO members and others that rely on the U.S. nuclear umbrella, are opposed to a treaty that would ban nuclear arms and are not participating in the conference.

Japanese disarmament ambassador Nobushige Takamizawa announced in a speech at the outset of the conference on March 27 that Tokyo would not participate in the talks.
 

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http://www.eurasiareview.com/01042017-hullabaloo-over-decoupling-of-indias-nuclear-doctrine-oped/

Opinion

Hullabaloo Over Decoupling Of India’s Nuclear Doctrine – OpEd

April 1, 2017 Maimuna Ashraf* 0 Comment Foreign Policy, India, Military, Missiles, Nuclear, Pakistan, South Asia
By Maimuna Ashraf*

The purported claim of Indian Former National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon in his book, ‘Choices- Inside the Making of India’s Foreign policy’, followed by the assessment of Vipin Narang at recently held Carnegie International Nuclear Policy Conference, have rekindled the debate about stirrings of change in Indian declaratory nuclear doctrine.

The deliberations under discussion raised question if India is shifting from its No-First Use (NFU) doctrine of 2003 backed by massive retaliation in response to a pre-emptive strike. However, these voices indicating to the amount of review in Indian nuclear posture are not seen as surprise by the Pakistani strategic community since this rethinking has been hinted by the BJP’s election manifesto and personal views of former Indian officials (Lt. Gen. B.S. Nagal and Manohar Parrikar) in recent years.

Moreover, India’s stated stance in its official doctrine to threaten nuclear use against chemical and biological weapons had already questioned the sanctity of its NFU posture.

The ‘grey areas’ being discussed indicate ‘flexibilities in use of nuclear weapons by India’. Narang based his assessment on the viewpoints of Menon, which asserts India would keep an option to go-first in its no-first use policy, “if India were certain that adversary’s launch was imminent.”

In wake of presumed conventional and nuclear escalation scenarios in South Asia, it is opined that Pakistan would use low-yield tactical nukes against Indian conventional incursion. Pakistan’s nuclear establishment argues that Cold-Start Doctrine (CSD) would provide India the space for conventional or limited conflict in a nuclearised region. For an appropriate reactionary response to CSD, which excludes massive nuclear retaliation, Pakistan developed the low-yield, short range, tactical battlefield ‘Nasr nuclear missiles’ which provides a qualitative response to the conventional threats and asymmetry perceived by India.

Moreover, it offers a range of options since Pakistan will not be forced to retaliate with strategic nuclear weapons as a first response to conventional force. Conversely, it has been lately expressed by Indian former head “India would hardly risk giving Pakistan the chance to carry out a massive nuclear strike after the Indian response to Pakistan using tactical nuclear weapons.

In other words, Pakistani tactical nuclear weapon use would effectively free India to undertake a comprehensive first strike against Pakistan.” This implies that India will not open a conventional response to tactical nukes rather it would launch a comprehensive retaliation response with the aim to completely disarm Pakistan’s nuclear forces.

It is plausible that Indian massive response would inflict to diffuse Pakistan’s capability to retaliate or launch a third-strike in response to Indian massive retaliation. The strategy probably aims to avoid interactive exchanges and put its cities under nuclear destruction. Nevertheless, the option of first-use or preemptive nuclear strike would end the India’s NFU posture. Interestingly the stir of change revamped after Pakistan lately declared to achieve seaborne nuclear deterrent and MIRV technology that neutralized Indian nuclear powered submarine and BMD developments.

Here arises the question about Indian nuclear posture for its two nuclear neighbors, would India be adopting two different nuclear doctrines or postures for China and Pakistan? NFU for China and First-Use for Pakistan? Critics argue that these opinions do not speak volume about an official shift in India’s NFU doctrine however specify a serious mainstream thinking of Indian elite to shift its counter-value strategy, which refers to target opponent’s civilians and cities, to the counterforce strategy that aims at targeting enemy’s nuclear weapons and military infrastructure.

Pragmatically, is it possible for India to locate all Pakistani nuclear weapons and completely destroy Pakistan’s nuclear forces? Can India wage a full scale nuclear war on the basis of hypothetical scenarios or mere enemy’s intentions? India currently does not possess the capabilities to maintain high level of accuracy and increase response in real-time crisis. Theoretically or practically, a ‘splendid first strike’ will not ensure the complete destruction of Pakistani nuclear forces.

Consequently, all these confusions and startling personal claims about a country’s nuclear posture can be highly destabilizing as it would mount the ambiguities in the already murky landscape of South Asia. If this ‘call for change’ will be heard and India moves in the direction to abandon NFU, the country would speed up its all undergoing nuclear programs to increase its number of nuclear weapons, build-up new technologies and ensure readiness.

Opinion already prevails that India is moving from its minimum deterrent posture to higher state of readiness and war-fighting capabilities. It is also working to expand its intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities while the remote sensing and satellite capabilities will further boost India’s confidence.

When India will advance the technologies to track Pakistani missiles and nuclear assets, Pakistan will also work on its operational nuclear strategy, the state of art technologies, assured second-strike capability and techniques to reduce the vulnerability of its nuclear assets. Resultantly, all these developments would increase the alertness level and lower the nuclear threshold in South Asia.

*Maimuna Ashraf is a member of an Islamabad based think tank, Strategic Vision Institute (SVI). She works on issues related to nuclear non-proliferation and South Asian nuclear equation. Furthermore, she regularly writes for national and international dailies.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-pakistan-attack-idUSKBN17407N

World News | Sun Apr 2, 2017 | 5:47am EDT

Twenty tortured, then murdered in Pakistan Sufi shrine: police

Twenty people were tortured and then murdered with clubs and knives at a Pakistani Sufi shrine, the police said on Sunday, in an attack purportedly carried out by the shrine's custodian and several accomplices.

Four others were wounded during the attack on Sunday morning at the shrine on the edge of Sargodha, a remote town in the Punjab region.

The custodian of the shrine, Abdul Waheed, called on the worshippers to visit the shrine and then attacked them with his accomplices, said Liaqat Ali Chattha, deputy commissioner for the area.

"As they kept arriving, they were torturing and murdering them," Chattha told Geo TV.

Pervaiz Haider, a doctor in a Sargodha hospital, said most of the dead were hit on the back of the neck.

"There are bruises and wounds inflicted by a club and dagger on the bodies of victims," he told Reuters.

Police arrested Waheed. During his interrogation, the custodian told police he believed his victims were out to kill him, said Zulfiqar Hameed, Regional Police Officer for Sargodha.

"Waheed told police that he killed the people because they had tried to kill him by poisoning him in the past, and again they were there to kill him," Hameed told Reuters.

Reuters could not immediately find contact details for Waheed or any lawyer representing him.

With its ancient hypnotic rituals, Sufism is a mystical form of Islam that has been practised in Pakistan for centuries.

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But in recent months, Sufi shrines have been targeted by extremist Sunni militants who consider them heretics, including a suicide bombing by Islamic State that killed more than 80 worshippers at a shrine in Lal Shahbaz Qalandar shrine in southern Sindh province.

Last November, an explosion ripped through another Sufi shrine, the Shah Noorani in southwestern Pakistan, killing at least 52 people. Islamic State also claimed responsibility for that attack.

(Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari; Writing by Drazen Jorgic; Editing by Randy Fabi)
 

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Philippine government, communist rebels restart peace talks without truce

Reuters
02 April 2017

MANILA (Reuters) - Peace negotiations between the Philippine government and Maoist rebels started anew on Sunday in Oslo, but without any ceasefire and with both parties warning of continuing violence.

The conflict between the government and the New People's Army (NPA), the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), has raged since 1968 and killed more than 40,000 people.

The government could not agree to a unilateral ceasefire because the NPA had taken advantage of the truce to extort businesses and citizens, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Chief General Eduardo Ano said in a statement.

In a separate statement, the communist rebels said they expected intensified operations by the military. The CPP added that it did not declare a unilateral ceasefire because of the government's refusal to declare its own truce.

Philippines' President Rodrigo Duterte scrapped the truce with the communist rebels in February.

Angered by the deaths and abduction of soldiers since the NPA halted its unilateral ceasefire, Duterte ordered soldiers to prepare to fight.

General Ano appealed to the public to report all attempts at extortion. The military said it had recorded more than 60 incidents of arson related to extortion since the breakdown of the truce in February.

Duterte wants to end guerrilla wars with both communist and Muslim rebels that have been hampering economic development. The 3,000-strong NPA operates mainly in the east and south.

(Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
 

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Missiles fired from Afghan border into Pak's Kurram Agency

ANI
02 April 2017

Peshawar [Pakistan], Apr. 2 (ANI): At least four missiles were fired into Kurram Agency area of Pakistan from across the Afghan border on Sunday.

The Express Tribune cited officials as saying in a statement that two rockets, each fell into the Shangak and Kharplan areas, destroyed a shop completely. There was, however, no loss of life in the incident.

Last month, a suspected missile-firing U.S. drone killed two Afghan Taliban militants in a village near the Afghan border. The missile struck the two men while they were riding a motorcycle in north-western Kurram.

Earlier in February, the Pakistan Army said that it destroyed camps and a training compound of militants across the border in Afghanistan following which the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi handed over a list of 76 terrorists orchestrating terrorist activities in Pakistan from the Afghan soil. (ANI)
 

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http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/weak-today-and-aqim-are-counting-tomorrow-s-algeria-1342332831

Algeria: Tomorrow's battleground for Islamic State and al-Qaeda?
#Algeria


Though weakened by regular military losses, Algeria's armed Islamist groups are waiting to take advantage of any future political instability

Malek Bachir
Akram Kharief
Sunday 2 April 2017 09:18 UTC
Last update:*
Sunday 2 April 2017 8:35 UTC

ALGIERS –*In a new blow for the Islamic State (IS) group in Algeria, the Ministry of Defence last Sunday announced that it had killed "two dangerous terrorists," one of whom led a local affiliate in the country.

Noureddine Laouira, aka Naoura aka Abu al-Hammam – not to be confused with Yahia Abou al-Hammam, the emir of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in the Sahel – was the leader of the el-Ghoraba (Constantine and its surroundings) militia, which affiliated itself to IS after splitting from AQIM in July 2015.

Originally centred in Faubourg Lamy, a working-class neighbourhood in Constantine, IS has benefited from the eradication of the area's shanty town and the exodus of its population towards the new town of Ali Mendjeli, about 15 km out of Constantine, an inland city in northeast Algeria, where the group has now also began to extend its influence.

According to information collected by Middle East Eye, both men killed at the weekend were previously identified and followed because of intelligence received by the Algerian security forces.

These forces preferred to wait until the militants were isolated in the Djebel El Ouahch district, which overlooks the town of Constantine, so as to minimise any collateral damage or risk of escape.

The authorities claim to have found on Abu al-Hammam the exact weapon, a Beretta*92, which was used to shoot Amar Boukaabour, a policeman killed by three gunshots in October in Constantine, a shooting later claimed by IS.

"The murder was attributed to Abu al-Hammam, who is suspected of also having plotted the aborted attack against the Constantine police station on 26 February, claimed by IS. Even if the suicide bomber came from Jijel [which is outside the IS base in Constantine], it is known that the el-Ghoraba militia organised the plot,” an Algerian security source told MEE.

Three groups, barely a hundred men

Despite its notorious beginnings – with the kidnapping and killing of French hiker Herve Gourdel in September 2014 and the defection of a number of leading figures from AQIM – IS has not managed to develop its Wilaya al-Djazair (or Algeria province) - the name given by IS to all of its dormant urban cells and active armed divisions in the Algerian hills.

According to security sources, its current manpower is estimated to be just 80 men, spread across three groups.

"In the east, there is the el-Ghoraba militia [in the Constantine area], and the al-Itissam militia [in the Skikda area], also known under its new name of Ansar al-Khilafa. Alone, these two count around 50 or so men." There are also "former soldiers from the GIA [an armed organisation from the 1990s], whose role is mostly linked to coordination and logistics," a military source said.

READ: Herve Gourdel: One year on, the mountain has been ‘cleansed’

The Ansar al-Khilafa group*emerged from the Katiba of Shuhada (martyrs) of AQIM. The Katiba of Shuhada had settled in the difficult-to-reach and wooded region around Skikda, on the Gulf of Stora, northeast of Constantine, at the beginning of the 2000s in the wake of the decision by many Skikda, Jijel and Berber groups to abandon militancy for the Peace and National Reconciliation Charter, which provided amnesty for all armed Islamist fighters who chose to give up fighting.

This group, which is still active, is reportedly led by Amar Lemloum, aka Zakaria al-Djidjeli. Since the summer of 2015, the army has placed pressure on the region by deploying over 4,000 men, in operations which have seen many killed.

"At the centre, in the triangle of Bouira-Boumerdes-Bejaia [Kabylie], was the group named Jund al-Khilafa [Caliphate Soldiers]. Since its presumed leader, Othmane al-Acimi, was killed in May 2015, the identity of its emir is unknown," the military source said.

"We do not know who the emir is who leads all of the groups. The name of Abu al-Hammam has been put forward, but we know this not the case."

Losses which are not compensated for by recruitment
It is considered unlikely Abu al-Hammam that had been the overall IS leader in Algeria, firstly because he only became a militant in 2008 and had previously been only a fairly junior member of AQIM.

"He is therefore considered as 'new' and cannot, in this capacity, claim such a responsibility," said the military source.

"A further clue lies in the fact that he was killed when travelling with his deputy. However, if he was emir, there would be at least four or five militants around him," the source said.

The emir of the Wilaya al-Djazair also does not, according to him, personally take part in any direct action in the city, such as that of the assassination of the policeman in Constantine.

"Finally, the most influential group affiliated to IS is that of Jund al-Khilafa, as shown by the most significant operations led by the Algerian army since 2014 in the Bibans mountain range. In an operation in February, to the northeast of Boura, 14 terrorists and nine soldiers were killed. It is therefore impossible that, whilst the largest force of IS is in this area, the emir would be located in Constantine" - around 300km to the east.

With an average of 200 men (across all groups) killed each year by the army, armed groups in Algeria are today facing major difficulties, suffering losses for which new recruitment cannot compensate.

This is to such an extent that, according to an Algerian security source contacted by MEE, local IS leaders had asked for men from cells in Tunisia and Libya to join.

"If we look closely at the profile of terrorists eliminated in recent years, we can note that they joined the militancy before 2010," a leading figure in the fight against terrorism told MEE.

"This shows that they are struggling to recruit. Algerians are either eliminated during military operations, or they want to benefit from the Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation. This is why newcomers are primarily foreigners from Mali, Morocco, Niger, Tunisia and Libya."

However, this optimism is not shared in the intelligence services.

"It is true that they have been weakened and, for some, extremely isolated. However, it should not be forgotten that for a terrorist, the greatest victory is to remain alive," one anti-terror expert said.

"They know that they have everything to gain in staying hidden whilst awaiting a more favourable situation, such as for instance political instability. In this instance, overnight, they can once more recruit and become operational. Complete eradication is impossible and this is where the risk lies."*

AQIM have the advantage over IS

Meanwhile, the emir of AQIM seems to have had a lot more success than his IS counterparts.

Abdelmalek Droukdel, who is almost 50 years old, has become very isolated over the years. From the mountains of Kabylie in the north of the country, where he is presumed to be hiding, he has seen his organisation develop over the years, and steadily gain influence in the Sahel region, although his original central ground has weakened.

He remained a spectator of the most recent significant last movement when the merger was announced in a video by the group led by Mokhtar Belmokhtar (al-Mourabitoune) with the group led by the Malian Touareg Iyad Ag-Ghali (Ansar Dine) and that of Djamel Okacha, aka Yahia Abou al-Hammam (Emirate of Sahara, a branch of AQIM).

The new movement, called "Islam and Muslim Support Group," has sworn allegiance to Ayman al-Zawahiri, the present leader of al-Qaeda. "Emails have been intercepted by the Western security services in November and December 2016 between Ayman al-Zawahiri, Iyad ag-Ghali and Djamel Okacha," said an Algerian security source.

"The Emir of al-Qaeda asked the jihadist chiefs in northern Mali to unite under the same commander in order to present the activities in northern Mali as a legitimate resistance against the French occupation," he said.

EXCLUSIVE: Algerian al-Qaeda boss seriously injured but alive

In a statement on Saturday, the group claimed responsibility for an attack on 29 March that killed three members of Mali's security forces near the border with Burkina Faso.

The attack was the second operation claimed by the group after it said it had been responsible for killing 11 soldiers in the same area on 5 March.*

While AQIM has also lost a lot of men, according to the intelligence services, the organisation still has around 500 members. Above all, it has shown, over time, a remarkable ability to adapt. **

"It has faced the desertion of a large portion of its directors to IS" but "it has rectified its fighting and communication tactics so as to minimise its losses," a military source said.

"AQIM's advantage over IS, beyond the number of people, is that it has vast knowledge of the field and expertise related to its number of years in terrorism. And, above all, it has the best casemates [shelters] to hide."

Confronted with this, Islamic State is seeking to survive while awaiting a possible return of IS fighters from Syria or Libya.

"The expression 'residual terrorism' used by the authorities is realistic. However, in the case of IS as in that of AQIM, it is important not to underestimate the threat," the expert said. "Overnight, in a favourable context, they could regenerate."

This article was originally published on Middle East Eye’s French page.

-

Read more:*

British-Algerian journalist dies after hunger strike in Algiers #HumanRights

Remembering Algeria 1992: The first Arab spring that never became a summer #Algeria

How to fix an election, Algerian style #AlgeriaPowerPlay
 

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http://www.kdrtv.com/al-shabaab-kills-kenyan-fighters-over-spying-suspicion/

Al Shabaab kills Kenyan fighters over spying suspicion

By standard media - April 1, 2017

Kenyans fighting for Al Shabaab are being killed as tension rises between foreign fighters and their Somalia commanders over suspicion of spying.

A large number of Kenyan Al Shabaab fighters have since sneaked back into the country and some of them arrested.

On Monday, 26-year-old Ahmed Yusuf Hassan and Ahmed Nur Abdi Osoble, 20, were executed by Al Shabaab’s firing squad in Buq Aqable in Hiraan region as hundreds of locals watched. The two had been accused of collaborating with the Somali government and allied forces’ operatives.

Other Kenyan Al Shabaab fighters like Nairobi’s Majengo estate-born Asum, former Moi University student Jared Omambia and Mombasa-born Faraj Abdulmajid, alongside four other foreign fighters, were publicly executed by Al Shabaab in Lower Jubba last year on accusation of spying for the Kenya Defence Forces (KDF)and Somalia National Army (SNA).

In November last year, the terror group beheaded five civilians in Somalia’s Tieglow town in Bakool region for allegedly cooperating with security agents.
Executing fellow Kenyans

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KDF kill 31 Al Shabaab terrorists in Baadhere, Somalia

Only Ahmed Iman, a former Kenyatta University student who is in charge of the group’s prosecutions and executions of his fellow Kenyans, seems to still hold favour with the Al Shabaab Somalia commanders. Most of those whose execution he is authorising were recruited by him.

Three Kenyan fighters have been executed since the Kulbiyow attack in January because of the increased belief that Kenyan fighters are spies working for both the Somali and Kenyan governments.

This recent Al Shabaab paranoia has extended to local clans like the Galjeel in the forested Kudey and Ras Kamboni populated by charcoal dealers who the terror group suspects of spying for AMISOM troops. Youth from this community have been kidnapped and recruited into the group and some local leaders killed for collaborating with AMISOM.

Foreign fighters in Al Shabaab’s ranks have not been left out in the purge because command positions are a preserve of the locals. Kenyans from North Eastern and those who offer financial support have been appointed to mid-level command positions.

Hundreds of foreign fighters have been lured into Al Shabaab ranks, including about 40 Americans and hundreds of Kenyans, but the terror group is now on them as it wages a brutal campaign to rid itself of perceived spies in its midst.

Foreign fighters have been used especially in pushing up the number of attackers when the group attacks AMISOM troops.

Al Shabaab has also set up a network of secret prisons in which they hold, on charges of spying, a number of US, British and Kenyan citizens who joined the group.

The detainees are tortured by water-boarding, beating as well as food and sleep deprivation. One of the alleged fighter spies was recently tied to the back of an SUV and driven around town for the locals to witness what would happen to them if they spied on the group.

Suicide missions

One of the Kenyan fighters in such torture cells is Ramadhan Shuaib, alias Nawal Hussein.

Al Shabaab’s Istishahadi, the bomber unit, mostly uses foreign fighters, especially those from Kenya, to carry out suicide missions, further creating tension within its ranks.

The history of the purge in Al Shabaab can be traced back to the leadership of former Al Shabaab leader Ahmed Godane, which later continued and worsened after Abu Ubeidha, aka Ahmed Diriye, took over in 2014.

Former Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden had always wanted to establish a foothold in Somalia for al Qaeda, but the country’s clan-based system made it difficult. He later named Mohammed Fazul, a Comoros-born al Qaeda operative, as the head of al Qaeda in East Africa, with a major directive to support the jihad in Somalia.

Fazul was later to become one of the masterminds of the 1998 US Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania and had organised a series of attacks against Western targets in Kenya in 2002.

ALSO READ:

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He served as the link between al Shabaab and al Qaeda, tapping into Osama’s resources, bringing in more foreign fighters as well as financial resources, specifically military know-how, explosives production and training of recruits.

By 2011, Al Shabaab was facing pressure from AMISOM-backed forces and had taken heavy losses, while Fazul was losing favour with the Somali Al Shabaab leadership. As the militants’ leaders began to bicker over the group’s next step, Fazul became isolated and unable to deal with the complex Somalia clan politics.

Fazul’s differences with the Somali Shabaab leadership were further fuelled by his dissatisfaction of the group’s recruitment of young people, who were in few months sent out as suicide bombers.

Strained relations
After Osama’s death, Fazul found it more and more difficult to deliver adequate resources from al Qaeda to al Shabaab, straining further his relations with the Somalis.

On June 7, 2011, Fazul was killed after which the crack between the local Shabaab leadership and the foreign fighters widened.

Abu Mansour al Amriki, alias Omar Hammami, an American from Minnesota, began to openly criticise the Shabaab leadership’s tactics and decisions.

When Al Amriki and other leading foreign fighters forged an alliance with Mukhtar Robow, a longtime senior member of Al Shabaab, the internal civil war for control of Al Shabaab exploded.
ALSO READ:

President Uhuru meets KDF troops in Somalia

Al Shabaab began an assassination campaign against prominent foreign fighters. Amriki was eventually killed in 2013.
 

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http://nationalinterest.org/feature/pakistan-no-friend-america-19955

Pakistan Is No Friend to America

At every turn, Pakistan empowers terrorists abroad while persecuting dissenters at home.

C. Christine Fair
March 30, 2017

Since the earliest years of the so-called global war on terrorism, Pakistan has played a double game. With one hand, it has taken some $33 billion from the United States in the name of partnering with it to fight Islamist militancy in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Yet, with the other hand, it continued to kill Americans and their Afghan partners, as well as NATO and non-NATO allies in Afghanistan, through its varied proxies such as the Afghan Taliban, the Jalaluddin Haqqani network, Lashkar-e-Taiba and others. And increasingly, it seems likely that Pakistan colluded to protect Osama bin Laden—the very reason why the United States invaded Afghanistan in the first place. While Pakistan has tenaciously maintained the viability of these so-called Islamist militant assets, it has prosecuted a brutal campaign of violence and threats of violence against Pakistanis who are fighting for a saner Pakistan, one that it is at peace with itself and its neighbors.

It is well known that Pakistan harbors the Afghan Taliban, and that it provides every kind of imaginable amenity to the organization, inclusive of political, military, diplomatic and financial support. It is also well known that Pakistan affords similar perquisites to other groups that the United States and the United Nations consider to be terrorist groups, such as Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jaish-e-Muhammad and the Haqqani network, among others. However, the degree to which Pakistan’s civilian and/or military leaders actively sought to protect bin Laden remains a serious question.

Carlotta Gall, in her 2014 volume The Wrong Enemy, asserts that Pakistan’s notorious intelligence agency, the ISI, had a desk dedicated to overseeing his protection. As is well known, bin Laden was “hiding” in plain sight a mere mile or so from the famed Pakistan Military Academy. His home was a Spartan but fortified compound with high walls, limited communications and a small electrical profile for the outsize compound. They even burned their trash in the compound itself. His security was surprisingly absent, suggesting that bin Laden felt reasonably secure. He fathered several children, two of whom were delivered in government hospitals in Karachi, where they received the bin Laden name. (It is likely that they also received birth certificates, although this cannot be confirmed).

Pakistan’s position on bin Laden is difficult to parse. On the one hand, officials claim that there was no government effort to support him. On the other, when the United States initially offered Pakistan, in the words of one highly-placed official, “a ride on the victory bus,” Pakistan had no interest. While early U.S. statements suggested that the United States could not have accomplished this without Pakistani cooperation; the Pakistani government soon made it clear that it had no part in the raid. Soon thereafter, civilian and military leaders alike vocally decried the U.S. raid that killed him as a breach of Pakistan’s sovereignty. The civilian government convened the so-called Abbottabad Commission Report, which ostensibly aimed to discern how bin Laden entered the country and who protected him. The report fell considerably short of identifying any culprits who harbored him. The only person they have arrested is a lone physician, Dr. Shakil Afridi, who helped the U.S. effort. Afridi is being held under violations of the Frontier Crimes Regulations, a colonial-era legal regime that does not even apply to him.

However, Pakistan is keenly interested in pursuing the one man who did much to help the United States: Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States from 2008–11. A recent article by Haqqani in the Washington Post on how diplomats build contacts with incoming administration officials was described in Pakistan variously as a “confession” or “admission” of secretly helping the Americans in finding bin Laden. Ignoring the question of why and how bin Laden lived for years in Pakistan, the country’s politicians and media are busy condemning Haqqani for inadvertently helping conclude the hunt for the world’s most wanted terrorist by granting visas to American operatives who, along with Pakistani nationals, located bin Laden.

Alas, Haqqani is not the only foe of terrorism that the state is hunting. In recent years, the Pakistani state has launched a tenacious crackdown upon a wide array of activists who oppose the perduring state project of jihad and a creeping, vulgar Islamism that has led to grievous sectarian and communal carnages throughout the country. These activists include secular bloggers and other social media activists, civil rights lawyers, journalists, musicians, and other dissidents, such as Baloch and Sindhi ethnic activists. These diverse activists generally oppose the army’s instrumentalization of so-called jihadis as principal tools of foreign policy and the government’s tacit alignment with Islamism. For these reasons, they are considered “enemies of the state” and have been relentlessly harassed and threatened with violence. Sometimes the thuggish arms of the state arrive at their home or place of business in caravans of black SUVs with government plates and disappear them. While some are returned after periods of internment and abuse, others are never seen again. Few of these persons have the resources to flee Pakistan or the skills to make new homes in safer countries. To further marginalize and endanger the foes of the state’s twin projects of jihadism and Islamism, private citizens—no doubt at the state’s behest—file blasphemy charges. Even if they are acquitted in court, it is not uncommon that vigilante hordes murder the accused, along with members of their family.

The relentless prosecution of reformers whose only real crime is wanting a saner, more peaceful and less querulous Pakistan stands in contrast to the leeway the state gives to the menagerie of terrorists the Pakistani state maintains to kill on its behalf in Afghanistan and India. These groups enjoy police protection at their residences, in their offices and when they travel. Pakistan’s intelligence agencies keep a close protective eye on them, moving them into safe houses when needed. Pakistan’s military forces train them and equip them. Pakistan’s intelligence agencies plan their attacks.

The United States has done much to embolden the army and its intelligence agencies over the last fifteen years to hunt down reformers at home, because it believes the United States needs Pakistan more than Pakistan needs the United States. Pakistanis frequently lament that while the United States never brought down a civilian regime, its historical support to the military ensures that a praetorian junta, unaccountable to any law, truly governs the state.

I agree. The United States needs to right this course. Washington needs to demand that Pakistan knock off its jihad habit while at the same time working to ensure this relentless liberal witch hunt ends. The United States has many tools at its disposal, ranging from sanctions, to declaring Pakistan to be a state sponsor of terror, to significant curbs on military assistance. Washington needs to muster the intestinal fortitude to employ these tools—now.

C. Christine Fair is an associate professor at Georgetown University’s Security Studies Program. Most recently she is the author of Fighting to the End: The Pakistan Army’s Way of War and co-editor of Pakistan’s Enduring Challenges.
 

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https://ca.news.yahoo.com/trump-national-security-aides-complete-north-korea-policy-194900938.html

Trump national security aides complete North Korea policy review: official

Reuters
By Matt Spetalnick
Reuters
April 2, 2017

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's top national security aides have completed a broad review of U.S. options aimed at countering North Korea's nuclear and missile programs, a senior U.S. official said on Sunday.

The review, which was accelerated to have it done before Trump's summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping this week, includes a range of economic and military measures but leans towards new sanctions and increased pressure on Beijing to rein in its neighbor, the official said.

The list of recommendations was put together by Trump's National Security Council on his orders and was ready for his consideration, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

It was not immediately clear if the review had reached the Republican president's desk or how quickly he would decide on a course of action, which could be delayed by the slow pace at which the administration is filling key national security jobs.

The White House declined comment.

Trump told the Financial Times in an interview published on Sunday that the United States was prepared to respond to North Korean nuclear threats on its own if China fails to pressure Pyongyang.

Trump made clear he would he would urge China to use its influence with North Korea when he meets Xi at his Florida resort on Thursday and Friday for their first face-to-face meeting.

The review, which was led by national security adviser H.R. McMaster, proposes a multi-pronged approach aimed at tightening the screws on North Korea economically and militarily, the official said. It will be up to Trump to decide how and when to proceed, and he could also send the review back for further work, the official said.

While most details remained under wraps, senior U.S. officials told Reuters recently that options under consideration included tougher sanctions aimed at cutting North Korea off from the global financial system, which could entail “secondary sanctions” against Chinese banks and firms that do the most business with Pyongyang.

The U.S. official said Trump may warn Xi of such moves, including efforts to beef up South Korean and Japanese anti-missile defenses – something Beijing strongly opposes.

The Chinese have urged Washington to de-escalate tensions with Pyongyang and to find a way to restart negotiations, but U.S. officials say it would be premature to resume talks now because it would be seen as a reward to North Korea for bad behavior.

The chief U.S. concern is North Korea’s efforts to develop an intercontinental nuclear missile that could carry a nuclear warhead and be capable of hitting the United States.

Although the long-standing option of pre-emptive military strikes against North Korea is not off the table, the review gives priority to less-risky steps and “de-emphasizes direct military action,” the official said.

Other steps that have been under consideration are escalating cyber attacks and other covert action aimed at undermining North Korea's leadership, another U.S. source said recently.

(Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom; Editing by Sandra Maler and Peter Cooney)

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-nuclear-idUSKBN1740SH?il=0

WORLD NEWS | Sun Apr 2, 2017 | 11:18pm EDT

Trump presses China on North Korea ahead of Xi talks

By David Brunnstrom and Matt Spetalnick | WASHINGTON

U.S. President Donald Trump held out the possibility on Sunday of using trade as a lever to secure Chinese cooperation against North Korea and suggested Washington might deal with Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs on its own if need be.

The comments, in an interview published on Sunday by the Financial Times, appeared designed to pressure Chinese President Xi Jinping ahead of his visit to Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida this week.

"China has great influence over North Korea. And China will either decide to help us with North Korea, or they won’t. And if they do that will be very good for China, and if they don’t it won’t be good for anyone," Trump was quoted as saying, according to an edited transcript published by the newspaper.

Asked what incentive the United States had to offer China, Trump replied: "Trade is the incentive. It is all about trade."

Asked if he would consider a "grand bargain" in which China pressured Pyongyang in return for a guarantee the United States would later remove troops from the Korean peninsula, the newspaper quoted Trump as saying: "Well if China is not going to solve North Korea, we will. That is all I am telling you."

It is not clear whether Trump's comments will move China, which has taken steps to increase economic pressure on Pyongyang but has long been unwilling to do anything that may destabilize the North and send millions of refugees across their border.

It is also unclear what the United States might do on its own to deflect North Korea from the expansion of its nuclear capabilities and from the development of missiles with ever-longer ranges and the capacity to deliver atomic warheads.

NORTH KOREA REVIEW COMPLETED

Trump's national security aides have completed a review of U.S. options to try to curb North Korea's nuclear and missile programs that includes economic and military measures but leans more toward sanctions and increased pressure on Beijing to rein in its reclusive neighbor, a U.S. official said.

Although the option of pre-emptive military strikes on North Korea is not off the table, the review prioritizes less-risky steps and "de-emphasizes direct military action," the official added, saying it was not immediately known if the National Security Council recommendations had made their way to Trump.

The White House declined comment on the recommendations.

Trump and Xi are also expected to discuss Chinese ambitions in the South China Sea, through which about $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year, when they meet on Thursday and Friday. China claims most of the resource-rich South China Sea, while Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims on the strategic waterway.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson spoke on Sunday with China's top diplomat, State Councilor Yang Jiechi, about Xi's visit "and other issues of bilateral and regional importance," a State Department official said on condition of anonymity.

China's foreign ministry said in a statement on Monday about the call that Yang had described the meeting between Xi and Trump as being of "great significance" for peace, stability and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and the world at large.

Tillerson told Yang that the United States would do its utmost to ensure that the meeting had "positive results," the ministry said.

ALSO IN WORLD NEWS

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Trump's deputy national security adviser, K.T. McFarland, said there was a "real possibility" North Korea could be capable of hitting the United States with a nuclear-armed missile by the end of Trump's four-year term, the Financial Times reported.

McFarland's estimate appeared more pessimistic than those of many experts.

"The typical estimates are that it will take five years or so," said Siegfried Hecker, a former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in the United States and a leading expert on North Korea's nuclear program.

Such estimates are notoriously hard to make both because of the scarcity of intelligence about North Korea and uncertainty about how high a success rate Pyongyang might want for such missiles.

John Schilling, a contributor to the "38 North" North Korea monitoring project, said Pyongyang might have missiles capable of limited strikes on the U.S. mainland by the end of Trump's term, but "it will most likely be a bit later than that."

"I doubt that any missile they could put into service by the end of 2020 will be very reliable, but perhaps it doesn't have to be - one or two successes out of six launches against the U.S. would be a political game-changer to say the least," Schilling said.

(Additional reporting by Timothy Ahmann, David Brunnstrom and John Walcott in D.C. and Josephine Mason and Judy Hua in BEIJING; Writing by Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Sandra Maler, Peter Cooney and Paul Tait)
 

Housecarl

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Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/ori...e-post-war-assad-future-russia-hezbollah.html

Iran in crosshairs as Syrian war winds down

A new wave of violence seems to be shaking the fragile truce in Syria. On March 19, opposition groups launched a surprise attack on Damascus in apparent coordination with a separate offensive in the countryside of Hama province. The escalation was not solely aimed at the Syrian regime, but also at the two international de facto "caretakers" of the Syrian crisis, Russia and Turkey.

Summary⎙ Print As a resolution to the Syrian conflict grows closer, it is becoming clear that Iran is increasingly in the crosshairs of the Damascus regime's opponents and their backers.

Author Ali Hashem
Posted March 31, 2017

According to an Arab diplomatic source in Beirut who spoke to Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity, the aim of the opposition attacks has been to remind all the parties involved in the Syrian war that no one is totally in control. In this regard, the source said, “The US and the GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council] states were completely absent for the past 6 months, from the US [presidential] election until the Saudi deputy [crown prince and apparent] heir, Mohammad bin Salman, visited Washington. The visit was probably the turning point.”

The source indicated that Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies in Syria wanted to hang back after the election of Donald Trump to see whether the new US president had a clear strategy with respect to the war-torn country. The diplomat told Al-Monitor, “Many thought that Saudi Arabia had given up on the Syrian issue and that Turkey is the opposition’s caretaker. This is not the case. It was only temporary, to unify the [anti-regime] stance, and for sure, now is the right time to say there’s a new strategy.”

This new Saudi-US strategy is most likely geared toward influencing the attempts by Russia and Turkey to reach a broader and lasting cease-fire and forge a new political path under Ankara and Moscow's auspices. For the opposition, the new strategy likely raises the prospect of causing complications. For President Bashar al-Assad's regime, it might not directly affect the talks. In Iran's case, however, the strategy will likely boost its military’s position, which sees greater significance in advances on the battlefield than at the negotiating table, given its experiences of the past few years.

An Iranian military source who spoke to Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity said, “We’ve been reading the whole landscape, and it’s clear to us that the backers of the terrorist groups want to give them some time to breathe and return stronger. They aren’t ready to talk, and they have differences among themselves.”

The Iranian source added, “The Russian ally has its own vision, which sometimes does not correspond with ours — especially when it comes to trusting countries and groups that have already been tried before and always failed the test.”

In this vein, Hossein Amir Abdollahian, a former Iranian deputy foreign minister for Arab and African affairs, accused opposition groups in Syria of exploiting the political talks led by Russia, Iran and Turkey and those in Geneva to empower their positions on the battlefield, pointing to the recent attacks in Damascus and Hama province. Abdollahian, now foreign policy adviser to Iranian parliament Speaker Ali Larijani, told Al-Monitor, “After changing their names, these groups went to the talks while their comrades are in the [battle]field committing crimes. Recognizing these groups and acquitting them [of their actions on the battlefield] will harm the path of the political solution.”

Rumors of disagreement between Iran and Russia over which strategy to pursue in Syria has been the subject of several reports during the past few months, even as the two countries appear to be moving ever closer. On March 27, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani arrived in Moscow for a two-day visit for meetings with Russian President Vladimir Putin and other senior officials.

Added to this equation, however, is Israeli pressure on Russia to try to limit Iran’s power and influence in Syria. On March 20, Chagain Tzuriel, the director general of Israel’s Intelligence Ministry, said, “There is a need for Russia and other powers to work to avoid the threat that Iran ends up with military, air and naval bases in Syria." Tzuriel’s call for Iran’s expulsion from Syria, along with the potential for a direct clash of interests between Iran and Russia, has been raising questions in Tehran about how the Syrian war might end, including who will emerge the primary victors.

For Iran, as noted March 16 in Al-Monitor, there is simply no option but to win the war. In this equation, there is no choice but to keep Assad in power. Russia, however, may define victory differently, with a focus on preserving the Syrian state rather than its figurehead.

As such, a Syrian official source who spoke to Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity noted that in dealing with Iran and Russia, Damascus is exerting a genuine effort to reach a compromise. He said, “Both are partners in the victory we are achieving against the terrorist organizations and the regional and international powers backing them. Yet each has [its own] objectives and visions. The Iranians are very skeptical with respect to the negotiations path, as they think the talks are being exploited to impose conditions that will target them. Meanwhile, the Russians believe that the [battle]field [situation] will have a minor impact on the final outcome of the war.”

In Iran, the conventional wisdom among those handling the Syrian file is that the major powers in the region and around the globe — the same powers that have been backing the opposition in the fight to topple Assad — have a clear objective: to force Iran and Hezbollah out of Syria. An Iranian official who shares this concern told Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity, “Israel and the United States are pressuring the main players to reach a compromise at any price, whereas if Iran loses its gains in Syria, the main arms route to Hezbollah will no longer exist. It’s all about the security of Israel.”
 

Housecarl

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Hummm....I wonder how long they can keep it up?....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...tch_cold_war-era_patrol_intensity_111084.html

Russian Submarines Match Cold War-era Patrol Intensity

By Associated Press
April 02, 2017

MOSCOW (AP) — Russian submarines have increased combat patrols to the level last seen during the Cold War, the navy chief said Friday.

Adm. Vladimir Korolyov said that Russian submarine crews spent more than 3,000 days on patrol last year, matching the Soviet-era operational tempo.


"It's an excellent level," he said in remarks carried by state RIA Novosti news agency.

The Russian military had fallen on hard times after the 1991 Soviet collapse when it was forced to scrap many relatively new ships and keep most others at harbor for lack of funds. The military has revived its strength thanks to a sweeping arms modernization program amid tensions with the West over Ukraine.

Korolyov spoke after attending the launch of a new Yasen-class nuclear-powered attack submarine called the Kazan. He hailed the new ship as the most modern in the world, emphasizing its low noise level making it hard to track it.

"It represents the cutting edge of nuclear submarine design," Korolyov said in televised remarks.

The navy plans to commission seven Yasen-class submarines that are armed with torpedoes and long-range Kalibr cruise missiles, which for the first time have been tested in combat during the Russian campaign in Syria.

Video
 

Housecarl

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http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...gon_expands_warfighting_authority_111086.html

Pentagon Expands Warfighting Authority

By Lolita C. Baldor
April 02, 2017

WASHINGTON (AP) — Week by week, country by country, the Pentagon is quietly seizing more control over warfighting decisions, sending hundreds more troops to war with little public debate and seeking greater authority to battle extremists across the Middle East and Africa.

This week it was Somalia, where President Donald Trump gave the U.S. military more authority to conduct offensive airstrikes on al-Qaida-linked militants. Next week it could be Yemen, where military leaders want to provide more help for the United Arab Emirates' battle against Iranian-backed rebels. Key decisions on Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan are looming, from ending troop number limits to loosening rules that guide commanders in the field.


The changes in Trump's first two months in office underscore his willingness to let the Pentagon manage its own day-to-day combat. Under the Obama administration, military leaders chafed about micromanagement that included commanders needing approval for routine tactical decisions about targets and personnel moves.

But delegating more authority to the Pentagon — and combat decisions to lower level officers — carries its own military and political risks. Casualties, of civilians and American service members, may be the biggest.

The deepening involvement in counterinsurgency battles, from the street-by-street battles being fought in Iraq right now to clandestine raids in Yemen and elsewhere, increases the chances of U.S. troops dying. Such tragedies could raise the ire of the American public and create political trouble with Congress at a time when the Trump administration is trying to finish off the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria and broaden efforts against similarly inspired groups.

Similarly, allowing lower level commanders to make more timely airstrike decisions in densely populated areas like the streets of Mosul, Iraq, can result in more civilian deaths. The U.S. military already is investigating several bombings in Mosul in mid-March that witnesses say killed at least 100 people. And it is considering new tactics and precautions amid evidence suggesting extremists are smuggling civilians into buildings and then baiting the U.S.-led coalition into attacking.

Alice Hunt Friend, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, cited yet another concern: Military operations becoming "divorced from overall foreign policy" could make both civilian leaders and the military vulnerable to runaway events.

"Political leaders can lose control of military campaigns," she warned.

But top military leaders say they need to be able to act quicker against U.S. enemies. And they've been staunchly supported by Trump, who has promised to pursue Islamic extremists more aggressively and echoed the view of Pentagon leaders that the Obama administration's tight control over military operations limited effectiveness.

Explaining his request for more leeway in Somalia against al-Shabab militants, Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, head of U.S. Africa Command, told Congress this month that more flexibility and "timeliness" in decision-making process was necessary.

Approved by Trump on Wednesday, it was hardly the first military expansion.

The Defense Department has quietly doubled the number of U.S. forces in Syria. It has moved military advisers closer to front lines in Iraq. It has publicly made the case for more troops in Afghanistan.

The White House is tentatively scheduled this coming week to discuss providing intelligence, refueling and other assistance to U.A.E. as it fights Houthi rebels in Yemen, according to officials who weren't authorized to speak about a confidential meetings and demanded anonymity.

Some changes are happening with little fanfare. While there is limited American appetite for large-scale deployments in Iraq and Syria, additions are coming incrementally, in the hundreds of forces, not the thousands.

The result may be confusing for the public. Trump hasn't eliminated Obama's troop number limits. Thus, the caps of 503 for Syria and 5,262 for Iraq are still in effect.

But the military is ignoring them with White House approval and using an already-existing loophole to categorize deployments as temporary. For example, several hundred Marines and soldiers were recently sent to Syria to assist U.S.-backed Syria forces, including in the fight to retake IS' self-declared capital of Raqqa. All were deemed temporary so not counted against the cap.

On Friday, the Pentagon said that officially there are 5,262 U.S. troops in Iraq even as officials privately acknowledge at least a couple thousand more there.

It's still early in the Trump administration. And as the White House juggles complex details of several military campaigns, it is dealing with tax reform, its health care repeal failure, partisan infighting and expanding investigations into possible Russian ties to his presidential campaign. Observers say the expanding military power may reflect the administration's limited "bandwidth" at the moment.

But the military wants some decisions quickly.

Iraqi forces are trying to complete the recapture of Mosul, IS' stronghold, and more American advisers closer to the battle can help. U.S.-backed fighters are closing in on Raqqa and the Pentagon is pushing to accelerate the effort. Conducting both operations at the same time, the Pentagon argues, will put a lot of pressure on IS.

Associated Press writer Josh Lederman contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Small Town Attack: ‘African, Arab’ Men Use Stolen Tools to Terrorise Locals (Germany)
Started by Millwright‎, Yesterday 01:10 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...Use-Stolen-Tools-to-Terrorise-Locals-(Germany)

Explosion at Metro (underground) Station, St Petersburg, Russia
Started by Marthanoir‎, Today 05:45 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...ro-(underground)-Station-St-Petersburg-Russia

---

Trump: If China Doesn't Take Care of N Korea, 'We Will'
Started by China Connection‎, Today 05:22 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...If-China-Doesn-t-Take-Care-of-N-Korea-We-Will

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https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/countering-beijings-manoeuvres-south-china-sea/

Countering Beijing’s manoeuvres in the South China Sea

3 Apr 2017|Ross Babbage

Last month it appeared that the Chinese were again on the move in the South China Sea.

The provincial administrator of Beijing’s land claims in the region told Chinese state media that work would soon begin on an ‘environmental monitoring station’ on Scarborough Shoal, a large reef system just 140 nautical miles west of Subic Bay, well within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone.

Former Philippines National Security Advisor, Roilo Golez, explained that China planned to build an airfield, a radar facility, a government administrative centre, living quarters and a resort on the fragile coral atoll. The immediate reaction of Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte was to express his frustration at being powerless to stop China’s island building on Manila’s door-step. ‘We cannot stop China from doing this thing,’ Duterte said.

During the last decade the Chinese have effectively seized over 80 percent of the South China Sea, an area about the size of Western Europe from Poland’s eastern border to the English Channel. The Chinese claim almost all of the waters from Hainan in the north to Indonesia and Malaysia in the south. This area carries over half the world’s merchant shipping, it is a key military transit route, an important fishery, and its seabed holds valuable oil and gas reserves.

In five years the Chinese have built 12 militarily significant facilities in the South China Sea including three major fighter bases towards the centre of the sea, each with protected facilities for 24 fighter-bombers. The facilities apparently planned for Scarborough Shoal would extend this network to provide the Chinese with radar coverage over much of the Philippines strategic heartland, including Subic Bay naval base.

Beijing is applying Chinese domestic law to all claimed areas and it has harassed and arrested numerous foreign fishing and other vessels. Beijing appears intent on turning most of the South China Sea into something approaching an internal waterway. China’s announcement on Scarborough Reef posed acute dilemmas for Manila and Washington .

The full extent of what happened next is yet to be revealed. However, the Philippines lodged a formal protest in Beijing and it appears likely that Washington also expressed strong views in private indicating that unless China changed course, the issue would sour Xi Jinping’s visit to Washington. In the face of this gathering storm, a Chinese government spokesman suddenly denied that Beijing had announced any plan to build facilities on Scarborough Shoal.

Many observers will assume that the crisis has been defused. Well, not quite. While Beijing was professing its innocence, Kyodo News in Taiwan revealed the views of officers of the Chinese South Seas Fleet reported in an internal PLA journal. These Chinese officers reportedly wrote that Beijing had secured the central leadership role in the South China Sea and other players couldn’t match its military supremacy in the region. The article argued that the PLA should brace for ‘endurance warfare’ to secure strategic advantages with patience and long-term planning. Over time, the balance of power had tilted toward China.

What should Washington and other allied capitals make of these developments? All indications are that Beijing’s goals in the South China Sea are unchanged but, as a tactical ploy, it wishes to avoid any immediate escalation of tensions. Renewed Chinese action on Scarborough Reef can be anticipated.

The White House appears to have three main options.

First, Trump could adopt a minimalist approach. He could restate the Obama administration’s interest in seeing all regional disputes resolved peacefully and in accordance with international law and turn a blind eye to the Philippines’ plight.

Even though many senior Americans are frustrated by the dysfunctionality and corruption in Manila, this option seems unlikely. Walking away from the Philippines would do enormous damage to alliance credibility globally and would run counter to the known strategic stances of key administration officials.

Second, Trump could adopt a holding position, whilst simultaneously seeking to protect Philippine sovereignty and alliance credibility. He could, for instance, convey his concern about Chinese plans to Xi Jinping. US aircraft and ships might also conduct patrols in the area in a manner similar to those ordered by President Obama early last year.

To add further weight to this option, the President could state explicitly that Washington’s treaty with the Philippines covers Scarborough Shoal and that US forces will work with the Philippines Armed Forces to maintain security for all Philippines sovereign territory. This second option would be unlikely to threaten Chinese cooperation in other spheres where Washington needs Beijing’s support, such as in restraining North Korea’s nuclear missile programs.

A third option would be for Washington to conclude that it has little choice but to respond to Beijing’s sustained expansionism and competitive behavior by developing a competitive strategy of its own. This would likely be a long-term approach that would include a range of diplomatic, information, economic, geo-strategic, immigration, legal, military and other measures. They would be tailored over time to constrain Beijing’s assertiveness, encourage responsible international behavior, and protect the core interests of the US and its allies.

Beijing’s actions are forcing the Trump administration to make tough choices. There is a great deal at stake for everyone in the Western Pacific.

AUTHOR
Ross Babbage is CEO of Strategic Forum in Canberra and a non-resident senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington DC. Image courtesy of Pixabay user LincolnGroup.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.lawfareblog.com/what-i-learned-reading-islamic-states-propaganda-instruction-manual

FOREIGN POLICY ESSAY

What I Learned from Reading the Islamic State’s Propaganda Instruction Manual

By Charlie Winter
Sunday, April 2, 2017, 10:00 AM

Editor’s Note: The Islamic State has long issued a steady torrent of sophisticated propaganda to demonize its enemies, inspire its followers, and advance its cause in general. How does the Islamic State think about its own propaganda efforts? Through serious sleuthing and impressive analysis, Charlie Winter of the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation has unearthed the Islamic State’s media guide for its own operatives and explains to us its three-pronged strategy.

***

Two years ago, the Islamic State published a video about its propaganda operations. The 12-minute clip, which was produced by its Wilayat Salahuddin Media Office, celebrated strategic communication in a manner that was unprecedented. It framed offensive and defensive “information jihad” as an aspect of the Islamic State’s warfare that was easily as important as any of the material battles it was waging at the time.

The video wasn’t just interesting because of its hyperbolic exaltation of propaganda—there was something else, too. Right at its outset, a young man—one of the Islamic State’s media officials—was shown casting his eyes over a pocket-sized booklet titled Media Operative, You Are a Mujahid, Too. It was the self-proclaimed caliphate’s field guide for information warfare, a document that I’d heard rumours about, but never actually seen. After this video finally confirmed its existence, I spent months trawling through encrypted chatrooms and password-protected forums looking for it, but to no avail. Until, that is, 2016, when its second edition finally appeared on of the Islamic State channels I monitor on Telegram.

If the international community is ever to meaningfully challenge the so-called caliphate’s information supremacy, it must begin by better comprehending the strategic logic that underpins it.
Media Operative makes for fascinating reading. The authors use the 55-page Arabic-language monograph to wax lyrical about information warfare, offering theological exhortation and strategic advice in equal measure to their target audience, the media operatives employed by the group to document battles, produce radio shows, photograph schools, and film ultraviolence. Its authors don’t just contend that information warfare is instrumental to jihad—part and parcel of Islam for over a thousand years—they give advice as to how Islamic State media operations should actually be constructed. In so doing, they shed light on the very essence of its propaganda strategy, a tripartite approach to communication that has given the group an edge over its rivals and transformed its war against the rest of the world.

If the international community is ever to meaningfully challenge the so-called caliphate’s information supremacy, it must begin by better comprehending the strategic logic that underpins it. To that end, I put together a research paper on the matter, using the Media Operative document’s innumerable insights as a lens through which to dissect its component parts.

Broadly speaking, the Islamic State has three information principles. First, present an alternative narrative, a comprehensive offer of existence; second, counter the “intellectual invasion” being conducted by the mainstream news media; and, third, launch propaganda “projectiles” against the enemy. Combined, these three facets form the foundations of the group’s propaganda strategy.

The Islamic State Alternative

Regarding the first principle, the authors write that the Islamic State brand must be implicitly positive, an offer of an attractive lifestyle as well as an outright rejection of the status quo. “The Islamic ummah [community of believers] today,” they write, “is waiting for you to lead it by its hands to the sharia and rid it of the inferiority and injustice from which it suffers.” If presented with the “right” information and the “correct” narrative, they contend, Muslims everywhere will inevitably end up rallying around the caliphate’s banner.

In this pursuit, the authors repeatedly call upon media operatives to transmit “to the simple people a true picture of the battle without exaggeration and with no lies” to “paint a brighter picture” of the jihad without dwelling on any one issue. It is this idea that underpins the Islamic State’s remarkably comprehensive utopian propaganda, which ranges from depictions of grazing livestock, bustling markets, and sunsets, to dentistry clinics, mosques, and public amputations. According to Media Operative, propaganda must simultaneously address and water down the negative aspects of living under the Islamic State, while also conveying a rose-tinted image of its positive facets. In this way, the Islamic State can sell itself as a utopia to which Salafi-jihadists can go to live as heroes, rather than an insurgent group to which new adherents go to die as martyrs.

Undermining the Global Conspiracy

The next component consists of propaganda that directly “responds to the frenzied media campaign” and “deceptive ways” of the “enemy,” and “exposes the deviances of secularists and hypocrites, responding to those who dishearten, alarm or discourage the Muslims [and] call for tolerance and coexistence with the unbelievers.” In other words, it is propaganda explicitly designed to counter and discredit narratives about the Islamic State promoted by its opponents in the West and in the Muslim world.

The authors note that, while a positive central narrative is a necessary foundation upon which to build the caliphate brand, this counter-propaganda is an “especially critical” complement to it “given the rise and acceleration of the propaganda war that the Crusaders—led by America and its allies—are waging against the Islamic State today.” Media operatives are obliged to work to form a reservoir of arguments and rebuttals with which to repudiate claims made about the organization. In recent weeks, this kind of media has been more salient than ever, chiefly appearing as a way for the group to navigate through its seemingly inevitable undoing in Mosul.

With this in mind, the “monotheist media operative” who “says what is just and true in an era in which there are few companions of the truth and even fewer sincere ones,” is regarded as being on the intellectual frontline, charged with working constantly to counter the “daily lies and professionalized falsification” of the modern mainstream media.



Media Projectiles

The final prong of the Islamic State strategy—media “projectiles” —is regularly referenced in the document. These “weapons” are “anything that angers the enemies of Allah,” from ultraviolent videos like the Mohammed Emwazi beheadings to statements and videos put out in the wake of terrorist operations.

If launched effectively, they assert, “media weapons [can] actually be more potent than atomic bombs.”
The authors explain that these explicit and incendiary messages can “shatter the morale of the enemy,” noting that a well-conceived media “bomb” has the power to complement, and sometimes even substitute for, military operations. Indeed, if launched effectively, they assert, “media weapons [can] actually be more potent than atomic bombs.” Not only do media attacks offer a way to “intimidate and threaten with violence,” they can make the Islamic State’s adversaries act irrationally by “infuriating them” and ensnaring them in ill-conceived knee-jerk responses.

To this end, the Islamic State uses offensive information warfare to attack not only military targets, but civilian ones, too. After all, in its eyes, there is no such thing as civilian status beyond the caliphate’s boundaries. Thus, its media “missiles”—be they video executions or mass-mediated terrorist attacks—are calibrated to strike disengaged publics as much as they are towards hitting engaged militaries.

This form of propaganda has emerged as one of the most important components of the Islamic State’s asymmetric arsenal and, through it, portions of the global media and even some within the analyst and academic community unwittingly end up being co-opted as conduits for Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s media puppeteers.

***

By stripping away the field guide’s exhortative veneer, it is possible to illuminate the strategic underpinnings of the Islamic State’s staggering outreach success, not to mention forecast what might happen in the months and years to come.

While many interpret the group’s dwindling territorial prospects, diminished recruitment of new members, and disintegrating leadership as indicators of its impending demise, it would be wrong to imagine a post-Islamic State world at this time.

The organization has systemically used propaganda to cultivate digital strategic depth and, due to this, the caliphate’s ideas will be able to exist long after its proto-state collapses. In years to come, this resilience will enable the Islamic State to prolong—and perhaps even worsen—the terrorist menace it already presents.

-

Charlie Winter is a senior research fellow at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation, which is based at King's College London. He studies terrorism, insurgency, and innovation, with a focus on online and offline strategic communication. He is also an associate fellow at the International Centre for Counter Terrorism in The Hague.
charliewinter
 

Housecarl

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?514643-If-Nuclear-Deterrence-Fails-What-s-The-Plan

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http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...r_deterrence_fails_whats_the_plan_111094.html

If Nuclear Deterrence Fails, What's The Plan?

By Loren Thompson
April 03, 2017

Military history is full of instances where leaders failed to grasp information vital to their survival. U.S. nuclear strategy may be this generation's most glaring example of failing to see the obvious.

The obvious problem is that some of the ways in which nuclear war might begin can't be deterred. An irrational adversary. An accident. A breakdown in the nuclear chain of command. A miscalculation in the midst of some regional crisis that leads to uncontrolled escalation.

You'd think that after 70 years of dealing with nuclear weapons, the U.S. government would have come up with some way of coping with such scenarios. It hasn't. U.S. strategy is focused mainly on discouraging rational actors in full control of their arsenals from contemplating nuclear use. Because the other eventualities that might lead to a nuclear exchange have not yet materialized, policymakers and the public are lulled into believing the problem is covered.

We know that's the case, because nobody talks seriously anymore about defending the American homeland against a nuclear attack. Not even Republicans, the traditional friends of missile defense. We know it's the case for another reason too -- if our strategy depends solely on the threat of retaliation to avert armageddon, then the only options we will have when deterrence breaks down might make the situation worse than it needs to be.

Imagine, for example, that Russia seizes the Baltic states, NATO decides it must forcibly take them back, and at some point Moscow concludes that local use of nuclear weapons is necessary to bolster its tactical position. That decision would be encouraged by Russian military doctrine, Moscow's sizable arsenal of non-strategic weapons, and awareness of how the West would likely respond to nuclear use. But with tensions running high and only one Russian missile-warning satellite currently functional, big mistakes could be made.

So the situation escalates. Current U.S. nuclear strategy, being offensively based, would offer a host of options for destroying various Russian assets. What it would not provide is some means of mitigating the destructive potential of Russian weapons in a East-West exchange. The Ground-based Midcourse Defense currently deployed on the U.S. West Coast could intercept a handful of intercontinental warheads, but after its 44 interceptors are exhausted -- or disabled -- the U.S. would have only offensive options left.

In other words, its only options would involve escalating further. By the time the war ended, maybe only a few hours later, much of America might be gone. This is what can happen when a nation neglects vast expanses of the strategic landscape in order to focus on the challenges that are manageable. In fact, we are so absorbed in deterring cold, calculated nuclear attacks that we have convinced ourselves trying to defend against other, equally plausible, threats would be dangerous.

Things would look a lot different if we constructed our nuclear strategy on the assumption that one day deterrence will fail, rather than relying on the current, ahistorical belief that it can last forever. Nothing lasts forever. One day a new Hitler arises, and this time he has nuclear weapons. Or internal revolt puts parts of the Russian arsenal in the hands of elements intent on East-West conflict. Or a regional crisis like the Baltic example escalates to levels neither side expected.

In those circumstances, our possession of a secure retaliatory force would be cold comfort. What we would want would be active defenses of the American homeland. There is currently nothing in U.S. strategic plans that would provide defenses remotely adequate to the challenge.

None of this is an argument against modernizing the existing strategic arsenal. That is long overdue, and needs to proceed expeditiously -- including upgrades to the aging communications links that permit positive control of nuclear forces in a crisis. President Trump directed a nuclear posture review in January aimed at assuring the U.S. maintains a "modern, robust, flexible, resilient, ready" nuclear deterrent that is "appropriately tailored to deter 21st-century threats and reassure our allies." Of course we must have that.

But the very next sentence in the president's national security memorandum directing the nuclear posture review called for a ballistic missile defense review that would lead to greater emphasis on protection of the homeland, and we aren't hearing anywhere near as much about that review as we are about of the review of offensive forces. If we are to have a strategic posture capable of coping with all eventualities, missile defense needs to receive as much attention as sustaining a secure retaliatory force, because like I said -- you can't deter some threats.

The logical place to start would be by expanding the current Ground-based Midcourse Defense system to a third site on the East Coast. Although the current West Coast locations could intercept a handful of incoming warheads from Russia, having an East Coast site would give the system a "shoot-look-shoot" capability analogous to a layered defense. A follow-on addition could equip warships off U.S. coasts with similar interceptors, thereby fielding a more survivable second perimeter to compliment the existing system.

The San Antonio-class amphibious warship currently being built for use in Marine amphibious ready groups could easily be adapted to this mission, equipped with enough interceptors to counter hundreds of incoming warheads. Although we can't know in advance what scale of attack defenders might need to cope with, the logic of layered defenses is inescapable: if each part of a system with two layers is 90% effective, then only one in a hundred warheads actually reaches America.

Over the longer term, the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency can develop more exotic solutions such as lasers aimed at giving defenders a cost advantage over attackers. Once it becomes cheaper to add defensive forces than offensive forces, potential aggressors will have little motivation to engage in an arms race. But first we will need to abandon our current, ridiculous set of military spending priorities in which the U.S. spends dozens of times more money each year defending Afghanistan or Iraq than it does defending its own homeland.

Critics will say missile defenses of the American homeland can't work, that they are destabilizing, and that they cost too much. None of this needs to be true, but the obvious response to opponents of national missile defense is a simple question: "So on the day deterrence fails, what is your plan?" They don't have one.

Loren Thompson is chief operating officer of the Lexington Institute and taught nuclear strategy at Georgetown University.)
 

Housecarl

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http://nationalinterest.org/feature/how-pakistan-warped-geopolitical-monster-19978?page=show

How Pakistan Warped into a Geopolitical Monster

How long will America continue to allow Pakistan to undermine its overseas antiterrorism efforts?

Robert Cassidy
April 2, 2017

“Twenty U.S.-designated terrorist organizations operate in the Afghanistan-Pakistan subregion; seven of the twenty organizations are in Pakistan. So long as these groups maintain safe haven inside of Pakistan they will threaten long-term stability in Afghanistan. Of particular concern to us is the Haqqani Network (HQN), which poses the greatest threat to coalition forces operating in Afghanistan,” Gen. Joseph Votel said in his March 2017 posture statement before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

“The Taliban and the Haqqani network are the greatest threats to security in Afghanistan,” Gen. John Nicholson said in his February 2017 statement before the Senate Armed Services Committee on the Situation in Afghanistan. “Their senior leaders remain insulated from pressure and enjoy freedom of action within Pakistan safe havens. As long as they enjoy external enablement, they have no incentive to reconcile. The primary factor that will enable our success is the elimination of external sanctuary and support to the insurgents.”

After fifteen-plus years, the war in Afghanistan remains a strategic stalemate because defeating an enemy requires taking away its capacity and will. The coalition and Afghan forces have hit the enemy’s capacity year after year, but the Taliban’s will—their senior leaders, support, resources, rest, regeneration and arms—continue to benefit from sanctuary and support from Pakistan’s security establishment. In his testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee in February of this year, the theater commander, Gen. John Nicholson, stated that he believed the war in Afghanistan was a stalemate. It has been a strategic stalemate for at least the last ten years and arguably for the last fifteen years. The former top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Lt. Gen. John Vines, stated publicly as early as 2003 that the Taliban were benefiting from Pakistan’s sanctuaries to regroup. So despite suffering many losses in leaders and capacity inside Afghanistan year after year, the Taliban have not quit, and are resilient in regenerative capacity. Tactical and operational momentum have ebbed and flowed throughout the war. The coalition and its Afghan partners have made some errors, but they have improved and adapted during the course of the war. The Afghan security forces have grown in quantity and improved in quality, and have led the fight for several years. During the peak numbers of exogenous forces for the war in 2010–11, the coalition forces, along with their Afghan partners, achieved marked tactical gains and operational momentum. To be sure, coalition and Afghan forces have undertaken many counterterrorism and counterinsurgency actions that have punished, disrupted and displaced Taliban and Haqqani leadership and infrastructure year after year.

Yet these gains at the tactical and operational levels have been short-lived and have generally lacked meaning in the face of the most conspicuous impediment to strategic success: Pakistan’s sanctuary and support for the enemy. Killing, capturing, disrupting and displacing insurgent and terrorist enemies, fighting season after fighting season, absent genuine strategic momentum, have made this a perpetual war. It is beginning to seem like a Groundhog-Day war where fulfilling the purpose remains elusive. In theory, the purpose of war is to serve policy; in practice, if war is not linked to strategic rationale and momentum, the nature of war is to serve itself. Fighting year after year within the context of a strategic stalemate is essentially violence and war serving themselves and not policy.

General Nicholson has conceived a laudable idea for an operational method to help break the stalemate by about 2020. His idea is to invest in those forces that have demonstrated the best capacity to outfight the Taliban in most engagements: the Afghan Special Security Forces (ASSF) and the Afghan Air Force (AAF). In his recent Senate Armed Services Committee testimony, he explained his operational idea to grow the ASSF and AAF to build an overmatch in offensive capacity vis-à-vis the Taliban, to ultimately achieve tactical and operational momentum. The idea is to create an offensive punch that will outmatch the Taliban and break the stalemate. An offensive overmatch in the best Afghan security forces will create a tactical and operational capacity to hit the Taliban hard, disrupting, capturing and displacing their leaders and infrastructure. This concept will create operational momentum by taking away Taliban capacity and by increasing the Afghan government’s control over more key population areas. But tactical gains and operational momentum alone will not break the stalemate. Offensive punch and tactical overmatch will set the enemy back, but without strategic change in reducing the enemy’s external sanctuary, these gains will be impermanent. There were marked tactical gains and discernible operational momentum during the uplift of forces period in 2010–11, but they did not break the strategic stalemate because Pakistan continued to provide sanctuary and support.

Pakistan’s pathological strategic culture, which routinely provides succor and sanctuary to the Taliban, the Haqqanis and others, is the most significant impediment to strategic momentum and success in Afghanistan. Pakistan’s strategic pathologies and contradictions also present the gravest threats to security and stability in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Most official U.S. reports and testimonies on the situation in Afghanistan explicitly state, for the public record, that Pakistan’s sanctuary and support prevent the defeat of the Taliban. A reduction of this sanctuary and cessation of the sources of support for the Taliban in Pakistan is the strategic sine qua non for ending the war in Afghanistan with modest success. General Nicholson’s told the Senate Armed Services Committee in February that “multiple witnesses have appeared before this body and testified that insurgents cannot be defeated while they enjoy external sanctuary and support from outside of the national boundaries of the conflict area.” Pakistan’s failure to alter its strategic calculus, its sponsorship, its provision of physical and ideological support, and its regeneration of murderous Islamist armed groups, continues to pose a grave strategic risk for the war in Afghanistan. This war will not end, or it will end badly, unless the West and its regional partners bring the full weight of their collective national powers to break Pakistan of its pathological strategic behavior. Pakistan’s actions have been harmful to itself, to its purported friends and to peace and stability in South Asia.

Pakistan’s pathologies are rooted in the burdens of Pakistan’s history, geography and no-fault perfidy. In simplified form, these manifest themselves in four contradictions that have framed Pakistan’s strategic malfeasance and ineptitude. The first is the security-insecurity contradiction. For seven decades almost every major war or initiative that Pakistan’s security establishment started, arguably to improve the country’s security, essentially ended up undermining its security and destabilizing the region. Although Pakistan started its four wars with India, including the 1999 Kargil conflict, and generally got crushed in all of them, this was not the fault of the generals. After Pakistan’s humiliating defeat in the 1971 war with India over East Pakistan, Pakistan’s leaders pressed ahead to acquire nuclear weapons, ultimately alienating the United States and compounding Islamabad’s security predicament with India. Worse still, in pursuit of the mythical notion of strategic depth, the Pakistani army and its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Directorate have persistently promoted insurgents and terrorists in Afghanistan, Kashmir and India—to the ultimate harm of Pakistani security and regional stability.

The second contradiction is the friend-enemy delusion, whereby Pakistan pretends to be a friend and ally of the coalition while the country’s security establishment consistently behaves in a manner that is lethally inimical to the coalition and its Afghan partners. Pakistan remains the leading source for the key components of improvised explosive devices that continue to kill and maim friendly forces and civilians. Pakistan has provided and continues to provide sanctuary and support for the Taliban, Al Qaeda and other like-minded Islamist militant groups. The ISI continues to collude with a host of such groups—a list that likely includes the Taliban, the Haqqani network and Lashkar-e-Taiba—that support the fight in Afghanistan or the export of extremist attacks to America, Europe, India, Kashmir and elsewhere. A corollary to this friend-enemy delusion is that in the unlikely chance that the Taliban regain control of Afghanistan, it would augur badly for Pakistan’s security because of the increased potential for sanctuary and collusion by anti-Pakistan militants inside Afghanistan itself.

Experienced South Asia hands have also noted a patron-client contradiction that characterizes American relations with Pakistan. Pakistan narrates and carries out its relations with America as though it were a patron to the U.S. client. The truth, of course, is that the United States has supported Pakistan with more than $33 billion in economic and military support over the last fifteen-plus years, notwithstanding the U.S. funding that Pakistan benefited from in the decades before 9/11. However, many a senior U.S. interlocutor has tolerated and accepted this false narrative, thus perpetuating it. As an example, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Michael Mullen, visited and interacted with his Pakistani counterparts twenty-six times before recognizing the duplicity for what it was. The patron-client illusion is just one of a number of false narratives that Pakistan’s security elites weave with sublime eloquence. Among other mendacious talking points are that Pakistan is the tragic and faultless victim of U.S. betrayal and unreliability; that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons are at risk of nightmare scenarios; and that Pakistan has already done so much to counter the Islamist militants (its creations) that if we were to compel it to do more, then the country would be at risk of implosion.

The Frankenstein monster contradiction is the last pathology, one that others have observed. During the Soviet-Afghan War, the United States and particularly the CIA empowered and funded the government of Pakistan and the ISI, markedly empowering and enlarging the ISI monster and its Islamist zealot proxies. Indeed, Pakistan and its ISI armed and supported the most virulent strains of Islamist insurgents and terrorists during that war, directing efforts against the Soviets while siphoning and diverting funds toward their proxy militants in Kashmir and India. Once the Soviet forces departed in February 1989, the ISI continued to support its preferred, and the most nasty, jihadists in Afghanistan against the Soviet-sponsored Najibullah regime. In 1994, the ISI began to shift support to the newly emergent Taliban movement and then, in 1996, the ISI helped the Taliban overwhelm the rump Islamic State of Afghanistan, helped them take Kabul, and were directly involved in the brutal murder of Najibullah and his brother. Medieval, dystopian and draconian Taliban rule in most of Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001 was the apex of the Pakistani security establishment’s Afghan strategic depth idea. The ISI was also witting of the Al Qaeda leadership’s presence and of Osama bin Laden’s return. The 9/11 Commission Report offered this observation of the Taliban regime during that period: “Under the Taliban, Afghanistan is not so much a state sponsor of terrorism as it is a state sponsored by terrorists.” Pakistan was the most significant sponsor of a terrorist-sponsored state.

Before and after the U.S.-led invasion in 2001, Pakistan declared what it had to in response to American ultimatums, but quickly resumed its duplicitous and deadly games by supporting regeneration of the Afghan Taliban. Pakistan also worked with and through the Haqqani network, Lashkar-e-Taiba, and others of similar fanatical cloth, directing armed propaganda and terrorism in Afghanistan, India and Kashmir. Recent violent attacks inside Pakistan, conducted by offshoots of the monsters the ISI helped cultivate in the form of the Pakistani Taliban, Islamic State Khorasan Province and Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, are all evidence that Frankenstein’s monsters have turned inward on Pakistan. Again, according to its security establishment, Pakistan’s self-perpetuated pathologies are not to blame. Afghanistan and its American and Indian friends are at fault. The delusions and illusions continue.

The current predicament and stalemate also derive in some part from America’s strategic attention deficit. The harsh reality is that the United States has not been at war in South Asia for just over fifteen years; it has been indirectly or directly involved in the wars there for the last thirty-eight years. Yet the United States has applied an inconsistent, sometimes maladroit, unimaginative and naïve approach to Pakistan and to Pakistan’s involvement with the wars in Afghanistan.

For about the first eleven years, beginning just after the 1979 Soviet invasion, the U.S. approach might be characterized as strategic epilepsy, all on support for the Mujahideen factions. It was American policy to fund Pakistan’s ISI to support Islamist insurgents fighting the Soviets. Guns and money went to the most odious strains of Islamist proxies, to bleed the Soviets and erode their will, without thinking through the long-term implications.

For the next eleven years, from about the fall of 1990 to the fall of 2001, the United States exhibited strategic narcolepsy, a term coined by a political scientist at RAND Corporation. This meant generally ignoring South Asia while Pakistan continued to direct various Islamist fanatics and condoned, if not colluded in, a malignant symbiosis between the Taliban and Al Qaeda. Since 2001, the U.S.-led coalition has been fighting some of the same Islamist head loppers that American policy helped nurture.

The 9/11 attacks returned the United States to strategic epilepsy. With little strategic analysis and no credible long-term plan for peace, the U.S.-led war effort used small numbers of coalition forces and Afghan warlord militias to chase the Taliban and Al Qaeda into Pakistan, only to see the former regenerate and fight another day.

Missteps early in the war by the coalition and its Afghan partners—for example, the absence of a strategy, the reliance on warlords, the use of indiscriminate air power, an initial unwillingness to help rebuild and a toleration of venal Afghan leadership—all helped create grievances among the Afghans. These grievances catalyzed support to regenerate the Taliban in the Pashtun belt during the critical first five years of the war effort. But without the full support of Pakistan and its sanctuaries, the Taliban would have been marginalized.

The U.S. relationship with Pakistan since at least the 1950s has accommodated Pakistan’s narrative and the myth that Pakistan was either a steadfast anticommunist bastion during the Cold War, or a serious ally in the war against Al Qaeda, the Taliban and their ilk. In fact, Pakistani and American interests genuinely aligned only during the Soviet-Afghan War, and even then Pakistan’s behavior revealed machinations and mendacity regarding the generous U.S. funding to defeat the Soviets through jihadi proxies. The ISI used some U.S. funds and opium money to support proxies elsewhere and purportedly even to fund aspects of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program.

Conclusion

Pakistani strategic culture stems from pathological geopolitics infused with a Salafi jihadist ideology, suffused by paranoia and neurosis. The principal but not exclusive reason that Afghanistan has seen discernibly improved quality and quantity in its forces as well as fighting capacity, yet continues to face a strategic stalemate, is the Pakistani security elites’ malign strategic calculus. The Taliban would have been a marginal nuisance without the full support that Pakistan’s security establishment bestowed to pursue Pakistan’s imaginary notion of strategic depth on its western flank by asserting control over Afghanistan through its zealous proxies.

Pakistan has nurtured and relied on a host of Islamist insurgents and terrorists. It is home to the world’s highest concentration of terrorist groups. Of the ninety-eight U.S.-designated terrorist groups around the world, twenty operate in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. The ISI has maintained links with Al Qaeda, its longtime Taliban allies and a host of other extremist groups inside Pakistan. It is possible for Pakistan to become a genuine U.S. strategic partner only if it ceases its support of proxy terrorists and insurgents. The fact that America has paid Pakistan in excess of $33 billion for Pakistan’s malice and treachery since 9/11 is repugnant and ridiculous.

The United States and the coalition must desist in the illusion that Pakistan, one of the foremost ideological and physical breeders of Islamist terrorists, is an ally or a friend. It is neither. Pretending that Pakistan is an ally in the war against Islamist militants, one that would act in ways to help defeat Islamist networks in the border tribal areas, has made the West complicit in and partly responsible for Pakistan’s machinations.

Since this war began, the United States has on a number of occasions stipulated that Pakistan must curb all domestic expression of support for terrorism against the United States and its allies; demonstrate a sustained commitment to, and make significant efforts towards, combating terrorist groups; cease support, including support by any elements within the Pakistan military or its intelligence agency, for extremist and terrorist groups; and dismantle terrorist bases of operations in other parts of the country. Clearly, Pakistan has not complied with these stipulations and continues to do the converse, serving as the most significant supporter and employer of Islamist insurgents and terrorists.

The United States and its coalition allies have not crafted a Pakistan strategy that uses their substantial resources to modify Pakistan’s strategic calculus. An effective Pakistan strategy must use the full weight of the United States and other regional actors to compel Pakistan to alter its strategic conduct and to stop supporting terrorists.

Investing in and increasing the Afghan Special Security Forces and the Afghan Air Force to create overmatching offensive capacity, to then build tactical and operational momentum, will help assert influence over key population areas and take away Taliban capacity, but this will be ephemeral if not coupled with strategic momentum. To break the strategic stalemate, the coalition should cast off its illusions about Pakistan. For far too long, Pakistan has been viewed and treated as an important non-NATO ally in the war against Al Qaeda and the Taliban, but it is essentially an abysmal ally, a veritable foe, because it acts in ways inimical to coalition troops, our and the aims of the Afghan state. After fifteen-plus years of Pakistan’s perfidy, it is essential to go heavy on sticks and light on carrots to break Pakistan of its pathologies and their pernicious effects in Afghanistan. Sticks and fear will work where carrots, cash and cajoling have not. The United States and the coalition must consider tapping into the Pakistan establishment’s fear, honor and interests. The United States fears that the Pakistani state will collapse, implode or fracture are overstated. Pakistan is hard and resilient in deep and broad ways.

The following stipulations, steps and ultimatums, in order of escalation, are the way to break Pakistan of its pathologies and break the stalemate: 1) stop paying for malice; 2) end major non-NATO ally status; 3) state intention to make the line of control in Kashmir permanent; 4) shut down ground lines of communications via Pakistan; 5) declare Pakistan the state sponsor of terrorism that it is; 6) issue one last ultimatum to Pakistan to end sanctuary for insurgents and not impede success; 7) invite the Indian Armed Forces into Afghanistan for security operations in the Pashtun eastern and southern regions; and 8) as a last resort, reciprocate Pakistan’s malice and perfidy. Uncontested sanctuary contributed to the Soviet Union’s defeat in Afghanistan, and it continues be the single biggest obstacle to defeating the Taliban and the most significant cause of the stalemate.

It is difficult, if not impossible, to win in counterinsurgency when the insurgents benefit from what is essentially unimpeded sanctuary. What’s more, if the Taliban were to revive an Islamist emirate in Afghanistan, there is every reason to forecast a future with more attacks against the West, planned and orchestrated with increasing scope and intensity from Afghanistan’s and Pakistan’s tribal areas.

Col. Robert Cassidy, Ph.D., U.S. Army, is the author of three books and a host of articles about irregular warfare and Afghanistan. He has served in Afghanistan four times. The works of practitioners-scholars Fair, Gregory, Husain Haqqani, Zalmay Khalilzad, Ahmed Rashid, Rubin and the Schaffers informed this article. These views are from the author’s studies and service in the region and do not reflect the views of the U.S. Army, the U.S. Naval War College, or the U.S. Department of Defense.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/calling-north-koreas-bluff-and-chinas-too/

Calling North Korea’s Bluff—and China’s Too

Trump can shame his pussyfooting predecessors.

By EAMONN FINGLETON • April 4, 2017

It is rare for the Financial Times to get excited about the news, but yesterday it devoted most of its front page to an exclusive interview with Donald Trump. The betting is that the story is even bigger than the paper realizes.

Trump’s key point is that he wants China’s full cooperation in a decisive move to shut down North Korea’s on-again-off-again nuclear-weapons program. He said: “China has great influence over North Korea. And China will either decide to help us with North Korea, or they won’t. And if they do, that will be very good for China, and if they don’t, it won’t be good for anyone.”

Trump is on to something. If he plays this right, not only will he dispose of a bizarre problem that has repeatedly discombobulated American East Asian policy over the last three decades, but he can show up several of his predecessors as intellectually challenged milquetoasts. In the process he will turn the tables on innumerable critics who see him as a clueless—if not positively dangerous—foreign-policy neophyte.

At the heart of the North Korean controversy is a Chinese double game. On the one hand, Chinese leaders pretend to be as eager as their American counterparts to shut down the North Korean nuclear program. On the other hand, they never seem to use their influence in Pyongyang to clinch the deal.

Yet it is hard to exaggerate the extent of Beijing’s influence. If the CIA Factbook is to be believed, at last count the Chinese supplied more than 76 percent of all North Korea’s imports and bought more than 75 percent of its exports. The North Koreans are heavily dependent on China for, among other vital supplies, their oil. Their moribund industrial sector would grind to a halt without copious supplies of spare parts and indeed entire machines sourced through China.

Then there are North Korea’s external air links. The vast majority of foreign visitors reach Pyongyang via four Chinese airports: Beijing Capital, Shanghai Pudong, Shenyang, and Dandong.

Trump seems to be offering Beijing a choice: either apply effective pressure on Pyongyang or stand aside while the United States takes a hands-on approach. That latter option would appear—at least for negotiating purposes—to include the threat of American military action.

The chances are, however, that it won’t come to that. If Trump holds tight, Beijing will blink first. After all, Pyongyang’s antics have long since ceased to be a joke. If press reports are to be believed, the North Korean missile program has lately made such strides that the Kim Jong-un regime may be able to deliver a nuclear strike to the U.S. mainland by 2020. While more thoughtful analysts may question that timeline, the reality is that North Korea’s repeated boasting of its intention to build missiles with such a capability leaves Beijing with little room for maneuver.

Once Beijing’s cooperation is secured, Pyongyang would surely have to comply, not only dismantling its program but opening up to United Nations inspections.

Even if on further study it turns out that that program is not nearly as advanced as is widely believed, it is past time Washington swatted this irritating gnat. The truth is that the constant resurfacing of this issue has long since gotten in the way of Washington’s ability to think straight about the larger East Asian region.

One problem is that North Korea’s most egregious antics always seem to coincide with efforts by Washington to pry open the mercantilist markets of the larger East Asian economies. That has repeatedly proved disproportionately unfortunate. The fact is that once the Pentagon takes the controls, trade policy gets short shrift. Always the story is that Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan are vitally needed allies—yet allies whose loyalty somehow hangs on the weakest of threads. Any attempt to talk turkey with them on trade would somehow endanger the entire East Asian order.

Even where China is concerned, the Pentagon tiptoes around the subject of trade. This despite the fact that U.S. imports from China, at $474 billion in 2016, represented more than three times U.S. exports to China.

In reality, the size of America’s China trade deficit—$361 billion in 2016—is Trump’s biggest stick in negotiating with Beijing. As Trump has repeatedly pointed out, China needs America far more than America needs China.

It is time an American president understood this.

Eamonn Fingleton is the author In the Jaws of the Dragon: America’s Fate in the Coming Era of Chinese Hegemony (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2008).
 

Housecarl

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http://www.theaustralian.com.au/new...n/news-story/548dc42a5a83a25ff1d3b304c8ac6afe

North Korea war ‘may be only option’

MICHAEL EVANS, RHYS BLAKELY
The Times
12:00PM April 4, 2017
87 Comments

The US is “rapidly and dangerously” edging closer to taking military action against North Korea’s nuclear missile program, a former general close to President Trump says.

Jack Keane, a four-star general who declined a role in the cabinet, said: “A pre-emptive strike against launch facilities, underground nuclear sites, artillery and rocket response forces and regime leadership targets may be the only option left on the table. We are rapidly and dangerously moving towards a military option.”

Mr Trump is trying to work out how to defuse what his advisers say is his biggest foreign threat — the prospect of Kim Jong-un developing a nuclear missile capable of reaching Los Angeles.

At the weekend he told The Financial Times: “If China is not going to solve North Korea, we will.”

The comments set an uncompromising tone for his first meeting with President Xi of China, North Korea’s sole ally in Asia. Mr Trump will host Mr Xi at his Florida country club on Thursday, at which trade and Pyongyang’s evolving atomic arsenal will dominate their agenda. Mr Trump’s aides have refused to say that military action against North Korea is off the table. His priority will be putting pressure on China to co-operate with the strictest economic sanctions ever imposed on North Korea, say officials.

They believe that Mr Kim is on course to develop the capability to hit the continental US with a nuclear missile within four years. In January, before his inauguration, Mr Trump said on Twitter: “North Korea just stated that it is in the final stages of developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching parts of the US. It won’t happen!”

MORE: ‘Ready to act alone on N Korea’
MORE: Kim’s devastating war
However, any pre-emptive military strike against North Korea’s nuclear capabilities would risk retaliation against Seoul, which is within range of North Korean artillery.

US troops in Guam, Japan and South Korea would also be targets. Twenty years ago — before Pyongyang acquired nuclear weapons — the military commander of US forces in South Korea estimated that a war with the North would cost a million lives.

In Washington analysts doubt whether the “irreversible disarmament” of North Korea, which was the aim of the Obama and Bush administrations, remains feasible. Long-term containment is seen by some as more realistic. Last week Michael Morell, a former deputy director of the CIA, wrote: “We need to change the fundamental objective of our policy, because North Korea will never willingly give up its [nuclear] program.”

Yesterday Theresa May distanced the UK from Mr Trump’s threat of action. Speaking on a flight to Jordan, the British prime minister said that it was “crucial” to work through the UN security council. Britain would “encourage China to look at this issue of North Korea and play a more significant role in terms of North Korea ... I think that’s where our attention should focus.”

The White House has expedited a review of US options on North Korea in time for Mr Xi’s visit. Potential steps include increasing pressure on China to use its leverage over Mr Kim, through so-called secondary sanctions on Chinese businesses and individuals who deal with the North Korean nuclear program. The US could also fine Chinese banks. Covert operations, including cyberattacks on nuclear facilities — a tactic used by the US against Iran — are possible.

Most ordinary people in South Korea favour negotiations with the North. US security analysts have urged Mr Trump to offer Mr Kim incentives to freeze its nuclear program. Diplomatic progress could be rewarded with a reduction of military exercises between the South and the US. China, it is said, would be more likely to back a strategy combining pressure with negotiation. Talks could be convened between China, North Korea, South Korea and the United States to negotiate a treaty formally ending the Korean War.

Last May Mr Trump said that he could hold negotiations with Mr Kim. “Who the hell cares? I’ll speak to anybody,” he said. “There’s a 10 per cent or 20 per cent chance I could talk him out of having his damn nukes, because who the hell wants him to have nukes?”

The US has also hinted at increased humanitarian support for North Korea’s crumbling economy. In January Washington sent $1 million in aid to North Korea. The aid, which was sent on Barack Obama’s final day in office and announced during Mr Trump’s first week in the White House, was the first US humanitarian assistance to the North since 2011.

At the weekend, however, tensions rose. On Friday the US issued fresh sanctions against a North Korean business and 11 agents working in Russia, China, Vietnam and Cuba, accusing them of seeking to procure components for the country’s nuclear and missile programs. On Saturday North Korea said that the US was flirting with war by conducting “madcap” military drills in the region.

General Keane was sceptical that diplomacy and sanctions would work to disarm Mr Kim. “Our last three presidents spanning over 20 years have failed to stop the North Korean nuclear program,” he said.

He was asked to serve in the Trump cabinet but declined, citing the recent death of his wife, but is still an influential voice and lobbied Mr Trump to appoint James Mattis as defence secretary. He discounted the possibility of using Beijing. “Our attempts to leverage China [in the past] have failed miserably,” he said.

Victor Cha, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank in Washington, said: “Kim Jong-un has shown no interest in dialogue with any partners, including China, South Korea, Japan, Russia and the United States — in the US case, despite numerous attempts by the previous administration to establish contact.”

The Trump team, General Keane said, would be the fourth White House administration to try to coerce China to force North Korea to denuclearise. “Hopefully they will succeed. North Korea’s reckless march towards war, destabilising the Korean peninsula and the Trump team’s commitment to stop them may finally be the nexus that is indeed persuasive to the Chinese to get serious about North Korea,” he said.

However, he said: “Sanctions have not worked against North Korea and I doubt more sanctions will and I don’t believe sanctions against China will work any better.”

The Times
 

Housecarl

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http://www.scout.com/military/warrior/story/1693945-air-force-details-future-of-nuclear-weapons

Air Force Reviews Vendor Bids to Build New ICBMs Engineered With High-Tech Upgrades

KRIS OSBORN
Yesterday at 11:26 AM

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Air Force plans to build at least 400 new high-tech ICBMs intended to preserve millions of lives by ensuring annhiliation of anyone choosing to launch a nuclear attack. The idea is to prevent major power wars.

The commander of U.S. Strategic Command, Air Force Gen. John E. Hyten, said the United States has about the right numbers of nuclear weapons, but they need to be modernized.

A Pentagon statement said the General asked reporters to imagine what the world was like in the six years preceding the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. “In those six years, the world in conflict killed somewhere between 60 million and 80 million people,” he said. “That’s about 33,000 people a day, a million people a month.”

The world has seen bloody conflicts -- Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm, Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom were awful, but nowhere near the level of carnage the world had experienced, he said.

“The submarines are the most survivable element of it; the ICBMs are the most ready; the bombers are the most flexible,” he said. “When you put those pieces together, it gives our nation the ability to withstand any attack and respond if we are attacked, which means we won’t be attacked.”

The Future of ICBMs
The Air Force is now evaluating formal proposals from three vendors competiting to build hundreds of new, next-generation Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles designed to protect the US homeland well into the 2070s and beyond, service officials said.

Submissions from Northrop, Boeing and Lockheed are now being reviewed by Air Force weapons developers looking to modernize the US land-based nuclear missile arsenal and replace the 1970s-era Boeing-built Minuteman IIIs.

If one were to passively reflect upon the seemingly limitless explosive power to instantly destroy, vaporize or incinerate cities, countries and massive swaths of territory or people -- images of quiet, flowing green meadows, peaceful celebratory gatherings or melodious sounds of chirping birds might not immediately come to mind.

After all, lethal destructive weaponry does not, by any means, appear to be synonymous with peace, tranquility and collective happiness. However, it is precisely the prospect of massive violence which engenders the possibility of peace. Nuclear weapons therefore, in some unambiguous sense, can be interpreted as being the antithesis of themselves; simply put – potential for mass violence creates peace – thus the conceptual thrust of nuclear deterrence.

It is within this conceptual framework, designed to save millions of lives, prevent major great-power war and ensure the safety of entire populations, that the U.S. Air Force is now vigorously pursuing a new arsenal of land-fired, Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles, or ICBMs.

In an interview with Scout Warrior several months ago, Lt. Gen. Jack Weinstein, Deputy Chief of Staff for Strategic Deterrence and Nuclear Integration, cited famous nuclear strategist Bernard Brodie as a way to articulate the seismic shift in thinking and tactics made manifest by the emergence of nuclear weapons.

Considered to be among the key architects of strategic nuclear deterrence, and referred to by many as an “American Clausewitz,” Brodie expressed how the advent of the nuclear era changes the paradigm regarding the broadly configured role or purpose of weaponry in war.

Weinstein referred to Brodie’s famous quote from his 1940s work “The Absolute Weapon: Atomic Power and World Order.” --- "Thus far the chief purpose of our military establishment has been to win wars. From now on, its chief purpose must be to avert them. It can have almost no other useful purpose.”

The success of this strategy hinges upon the near certainty of total annihilation, should nuclear weapons be used. ICBMs are engineered to fly through space on a total flight of about 30 mins before detonating with enormous destructive power upon targets.

“If another nation believes they can have an advantage by using a nuclear weapon, that is really dangerous. What you want to do is have such a strong deterrent force that any desire to attack with nuclear weapons will easily be outweighed by the response they get from the other side. That's the value of what the deterrent force provides,” Weinstein said in an exclusive interview with Scout Warrior.

Althought Weinstein did not take a position on the pior administration's considerations about having the U.S. adopt a No First Use, or NFU, nuclear weapons policy, Air Force Secretary Deborah James has expressed concern about the possiblity, in a news report published by Defense News. Limiting the U.S. scope of deterrence, many argue, might wrongly encourage potential adversaries to think they could succeed with a limited first nuclear strike of some kind.

Ground-Based Strategic Deterrence
It is within the context of these ideas, informing military decision-makers for decades now, that the Air Force is in the early stages of building, acquiring and deploying a higher-tech replacement for the existing arsenal of Minuteman III ICBMs.

Weinstein pointed out that, since the dawn of the nuclear age decades ago, there has not been a catastrophic major power war on the scale of WWI or WWII.

“When you look at the amount of people who died in WWI and then the number of people who died in WWII, you're talking about anywhere between 65 and 75 million people. WWI killed about 1.8 percent of the world's population. WWII killed 2.8 percent of the world's population. “What you want is to have a really strong capability so that they're used every day to prevent conflict. If you use one, then you've failed,” Weinstein said.

Weinstein added that, in total, as many as 45 million people died during WWII.

“All you need to do is look at pictures of what Dresden looked like and what Stalingrad looked like. These are major powers fighting major powers,” he said.

Nevertheless, despite clear evidence in favor of deploying nuclear weapons, modernizing the US arsenal has long been a cost concern and strategic liability for US strategic planners. In fact, Weinstein said there is concern that both Russian and Chinese nuclear arsenals are now more modern and advanced than existing U.S. Minuteman IIIs.

The new effort to build ICBMs, what the Air Force calls “Ground Based Strategic Deterrence,” aims to construct durable, high-tech nuclear-armed missiles able to serve until 2075.

The new weapons will be engineered with improved guidance technology, boosters, flight systems and command and control systems, compared to the existing Minuteman III missiles. The weapon will also have upgraded circuitry and be built with a mind to long-term maintenance and sustainability.

“Solid rocket fuel ages out after a period of time. You need to have an upgraded guidance package for sustainability and warfighting requirements. Looking at the current technology, it has moved faster than when these were first developed. Civilian industry has leapfrogged so we want the ability to use components that have already been developed,” Weinstein added.

Northrop Grumman and Boeing are among the major vendors planning to compete for the opportunity to build the new weapons; the Air Force released a formal Request For Proposal to industry at the end of last month.

Citing a Congressional Research Service report, a story in National Defense Magazine says the GBSD the program is expected to cost $62 billion from 2015 through fiscal year 2044. That breaks down to about $14 billion for upgrades to command-and-control systems and launch centers, and $48.5 billion for new missiles, the report says.

In keeping with the NEW START Treaty, the US plans to field 400 new missiles designed to replace the aging 1960s-era Minuteman IIIs.

The new ICBMs will be deployed roughly within the same geographical expanse in which the current weapons are stationed. In total, dispersed areas across three different sites span 33,600 miles, including missiles in Cheyenne, Wyoming, Minot, North Dakota and Great Falls, Montana.

“If you look at the ICBM field, it's 33,600 square miles. That's how big it is. We sometimes say it's the size of the state of Georgia. It was developed that way for a specific reason. You didn't want them too close together. You wanted it so if the adversary were to attack at one time, you'd still have ones that would survive,” Weinstein explained.
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2017/0...mical-attack-in-syria-city-activists-say.html

At least 58 dead in suspected chemical attack in Syria, hospital reportedly hit

Published April 04, 2017 FoxNews.com

At least 58 people were killed in a suspected chemical attack in a rebel-held Syrian town, and some medics treating the wounded were later struck by rubble when an aircraft reportedly bombed a hospital.

A hospital in Syria's northern Idlib province was hit soon after the area was bombarded with a suspected chemical agent, an AFP correspondent reported.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said there were 11 children among the dead.

Mohammed Rasoul, the head of a Syrian ambulance service, told the BBC that first responders found people choking in the streets.

"Our team is still there, moving patients from one place to another because of overcrowded hospitals," he said. "I am speaking to my team and they are doing fine, but the situation over there is very bad and most of those who are suffering are children."

The media center published footage of medical workers appearing to intubate an unresponsive man stripped down to his underwear and hooking up a little girl foaming at the mouth to a ventilator.

There was no comment from the government in Damascus or any international agency in the immediate aftermath of the attack.

It was the third claim of a chemical attack in just over a week in Syria. The previous two were reported in Hama province, in an area not far from Khan Sheikhoun, the site of Tuesday's alleged attack.

Tuesday's reports came on the eve of a major international meeting in Brussels on the future of Syria and the region, to be hosted by the EU's High Representative Federica Mogherini.

The Syrian American Medical Society, which supports hospitals in opposition-held territory, said it had sent a team of inspectors to Khan Sheikhoun before noon and an investigation was underway.

The Syrian activists had no information on what agent could have been used in the assault. They claimed the attack was caused by an airstrike carried out either by the Syrian government or Russian warplanes.

It was also not immediately clear if all those killed died from suffocation or wounds sustained in the airstrikes.

Makeshift hospitals soon crowded with people suffocating, activist said.

Mohammed Hassoun, a media activist in nearby Sarmin -- also in Idlib province where some of the critical cases were transferred -- said the hospital there is equipped to deal with such chemical attacks because the town was also struck, early on in the Syrian uprising. The Sarmin hospital is about 50 kilometers (31 miles) away from the scene of the attack.

"Because of the number of wounded, they have been distributed around in rural Idlib," he told The Associated Press by phone. "There are 18 critical cases here. They were unconscious, they had seizures and when oxygen was administered, they bled from the nose and mouth."

Hassoun, who is documenting the attack for the medical society, said the doctors there have said it is likely more than one gas.

"Chlorine gas doesn't cause such convulsions," he said, adding that doctors suspect sarin was used.

Hussein Kayal, a photographer for the Idlib Media Center, said he was awoken by the sound of a bomb blast around 6:30 a.m. When he arrived at the scene there was no smell, he said.

He found entire families inside their homes, lying on the floor, eyes wide open and unable to move. Their pupils were constricted. He put on a mask, he said. Kayal said he and other witnesses took victims to an emergency room, and removed their clothes and washed them in water.

He said he felt a burning sensation in his fingers and was treated for that.
A Turkey-based Syrian man whose niece, her husband and one-year-old daughter were among those killed, said the warplanes struck early, as residents were still in their beds. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared for the safety of family members back in Syria.

The province of Idlib is almost entirely controlled by the Syrian opposition. It is home to some 900,000 displaced Syrians, according to the United Nations. Rebels and opposition officials have expressed concerns that the government is planning to mount a concentrated attack on the crowded province.

Claims of chemical weapons attacks, particularly the use of the chlorine agent, are not uncommon in Syria's conflict. The worst attack was what a U.N. report said was an attack by toxic sarin gas in August 2013 on the Damascus suburb of Ghouta that killed hundreds of civilians.

The Syrian Coalition, an opposition group based outside the country, said government planes carried out the airstrike on Khan Sheikhoun, south of the city of Idlib, the provincial capital.

It said the planes fired missiles carrying poisonous gases, killing dozens of people, many of them women and children. The coalition described the attack as a "horrifying massacre."

Photos and video emerging from Khan Sheikhoun show limp bodies of children and adults. Some are seen struggling to breathe; others appear foaming at the mouth.

A medical doctor going by the name of Dr. Shajul Islam for fears for his own safety said his hospital in Idlib province received three victims, all with narrow, pinpoint pupils that did not respond to light. He published video of the patients on his Twitter account.
Pinpoint pupils, breathing difficulties, and foaming at the mouth are symptoms commonly associated with toxic gas exposure.

The opposition's Civil Defense search-and-rescue group, which released photos showing paramedics washing down victims, has not published a casualty toll.
The activist-run Assi Press published video of paramedics carrying victims from the scene by a pickup truck. The victims were stripped down to their underwear. Many appeared unresponsive.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch has accused the Syrian government of conducting at least eight chemical attacks using chlorine gas on opposition-controlled residential areas during the final months in the battle for Aleppo last year that killed at least nine civilians and injured 200.

Also, a joint investigation by the United Nations and the international chemical weapons watchdog determined the Syrian government was behind at least three attacks in 2014 and 2015 involving chlorine gas and the Islamic State group was responsible for at least one involving mustard gas.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.yahoo.com/news/israel-fears-iranian-crescent-middle-east-162010062.html

World

Israel fears 'Iranian crescent' in Middle East

AFP 19 hours ago

Jerusalem (AFP) - Israel fears an "Iranian crescent" may be forming in the Middle East because of Tehran's influence in Syria and its connections with regional Shiite groups, an intelligence official said Monday.

The comments from Chagai Tzuriel, director general of Israel's intelligence ministry, illustrate his country's growing concerns over its arch-foe Iran's involvement in the conflict in neighbouring Syria.

Iran's support for Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah, which also backs Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, also concerns Israel, as does Tehran's influence in Iraq and its support for groups such as the Huthi rebels in Yemen.

"I think that... Israel believes that if Iran bases itself for the long run in Syria it will be a constant source of friction and tension with the Sunni majority in Syria, with the Sunni countries outside Syria, with Sunni minorities outside the region, with Israel," Tzuriel told foreign reporters.

"And I think that may be only the tip of the iceberg," he added. "We're talking here about the creation of an Iranian crescent."

Part of it, he said, involved worries that Iran could complete a "land bridge" through Iraq, Syria and Lebanon to the Mediterranean.

Israel has sought to avoid being dragged into the six-year Syrian conflict, but has acknowledged carrying out strikes to stop advanced weapons deliveries to Hezbollah, with whom it fought a devastating war in 2006.

Last month, in the most serious incident between the two countries since the Syria war began, Israeli warplanes struck several targets there, drawing retaliatory missile fire.

Israel used its Arrow interceptor to destroy what was believed to have been a Russian-made SA 5 missile, and Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman threatened to destroy Syria's air defence systems "without the slightest hesitation" if it happened again.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has held a series of talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in recent months on how to avoid accidental clashes in Syria.

A "hotline" has been set up between the two countries, but Intelligence Minister Yisrael Katz has said Moscow is not notified in advance of an Israeli strike.

Russia backs Assad in Syria, but Israeli officials say they are confident they can continue to coordinate with Moscow despite their differing interests.

Comments (375)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
North Korea has fired an unidentified projectile
Just popped up on the twitter feed here. BNO News‏Verified account @BNONews 59s60 seconds ago BREAKING: North Korea has fired an unidentified projectile - Yonhap
Started by*eXe‎,*Today*03:15 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...th-Korea-has-fired-an-unidentified-projectile


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-defense-northkorea-china-idUSKBN1762MO

Edition:
United States

World News | Tue Apr 4, 2017 | 6:03pm EDT

Any check on North Korea has to involve China: U.S. general

Any effort to curb North Korea's weapons program will need to involve China, a senior U.S. military official said on Tuesday, just days after President Donald Trump said Washington might deal with Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs on its own if need be.

On Sunday, Trump said in an interview with the Financial Times, that China has great influence over North Korea and that "China will either decide to help us with North Korea, or they won’t. And if they do that will be very good for China, and if they don’t, it won’t be good for anyone."

Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are meeting in Florida on Thursday and Friday.

On Tuesday, General John Hyten, the head of U.S. Strategic Command, said it was difficult to see a solution to North Korea that did not involve China.

"Any solution to the North Korean problem has to involve China," Hyten said at a U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee hearing.

"I am a military officer, my job is to provide military options to the president ... but I look at it from a strategic perspective and I can't see a solution that doesn't involve China," Hyten said.

It is not clear whether Trump's comments will move China, which has taken steps to increase economic pressure on Pyongyang but has long been unwilling to do anything that may destabilize the North and send millions of refugees across the border into China.

It is also unclear what the United States might do on its own to deflect North Korea from the expansion of its nuclear capabilities and from the development of missiles with ever-longer ranges and the capacity to deliver atomic warheads.

North Korea has been testing rocket engines and heat-shields for an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) while developing technology to guide a missile after re-entry into the atmosphere following a liftoff.

Once fully developed, a North Korean ICBM could threaten the continental United States.

Also In World News
Scores reported killed in gas attack on Syrian rebel area
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The reclusive state has conducted five nuclear tests and a series of missile launches in defiance of United Nations resolutions.

Trump's national security aides have completed a review of U.S. options to try to curb North Korea's nuclear and missile programs that includes economic and military measures but leans more toward sanctions and increased pressure on Beijing to rein in its reclusive neighbor.

(Reporting by Idrees Ali)

Next In World News

White House official: North Korea is test for U.S.-China relations
WASHINGTON U.S. President Donald Trump will discuss how to rein in North Korea with Chinese President Xi Jinping later this week in what a senior White House official said on Tuesday was a test for the U.S.-Chinese relationship.

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CARACAS Venezuelan security forces quelled masked protesters with tear gas, water cannons and pepper spray in Caracas on Tuesday after blocking an opposition rally against socialist President Nicolas Maduro.

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Housecarl

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Hummm....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.stratfor.com/weekly/asias-dilemma-chinas-butter-or-americas-guns

Asia's Dilemma: China's Butter, or America's Guns?

By Rodger Baker
APR 4, 2017 | 08:00 GMT

Flying into Singapore's Changi Airport, one is struck by the fleet of ships lined up off shore, the tendrils of a global trade network squeezing through the narrow Malacca Strait. Singapore is the hub, the connector between the Indian Ocean, South China Sea and Pacific. Since the late 1970s, with little exception, trade has amounted to some 300 percent of Singapore's total gross domestic product, with exports making up between 150 and 230 percent of GDP. Singapore is the product of global trade, and the thriving multiethnic city-state can trace its trade role back centuries.

Having arrived in Singapore from Auckland, the contrast was stunning. It's not that New Zealand isn't heavily integrated into global trade networks — some 50 percent of its GDP is based on trade, and since its early days as a British colony it has been heavily dependent on distant trade partners. But whereas Singapore sits at the center of trade flows, New Zealand is at the far fringes, a remote outpost that has come to represent the leading edge of free trade agreements and calls for globally agreed-upon trade rules.

Given the significance of trade to the two, it is perhaps no wonder that New Zealand and Singapore were both part of the P3 countries (alongside Chile) that initiated Pacific trade talks in 2002, which emerged three years later as the first iteration of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), adding Brunei as the fourth founding signatory. Only a decade earlier, in the 1990s, trans-Pacific trade had exceeded trans-Atlantic trade, marking a shift in global patterns established for several centuries. Trade is the lifeblood of the Asia-Pacific, and even with rising examples of nationalism, the globalized world is still seen here as a greater benefit than risk. Whereas colonialism was exploitative, globalism is seen as the provision of opportunity for growth and national strength.

It is interesting that the theme of the "easternization" of the global system — the assertion that China is set to usurp the leadership role of an inward-turning United States — is not nearly as pronounced in the region as it is in the West. With regard to Singapore and New Zealand, one could argue that British heritage and history may play some role, but discussions with businessmen and policymakers from countries around the region seem less focused on the so-called Asian Century than on ensuring that global multilateral trade pacts remain the norm. Asia may trade primarily within Asia, but that doesn't mean it has any interest in being isolated from the rest of the world. And aside from assertions in some sectors in China (perhaps reminiscent of similar ideas espoused in Japan in the 1980s and early 1990s), there is little expectation that Asia is ready to take the lead, except perhaps in the promotion of open trade.

Growing Angst in the Asia-Pacific
Perhaps the most common theme I encountered in discussions in New Zealand and Singapore, and with individuals from around the region, was the future of the global trade environment — specifically, the implications of a potential trade war (or even a minor spat) between the United States and China. Like many countries in the Asia-Pacific, both Singapore and New Zealand have adapted to a basic post-Cold War regional status quo, one where economics center on China and regional security centers on the United States. But with the Brexit underway, the TPP gone, the United States flirting with a more nationalist rather than globalist trade policy, and China expanding its military activity throughout the region, there is growing angst that this unofficial balance will no longer be sustainable.

This is particularly pronounced among members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the 10 Southeast Asian countries (nearly all post-colonial entities) that have for decades sought to strengthen their hand internationally through cooperation and shared negotiations. Nearly a quarter of ASEAN trade is within the bloc, but better than 19 percent is with China and Hong Kong. Overall, Asia and the West Pacific account for more than 66 percent of ASEAN's total trade. Just 10 percent is with the European Union and 9.4 percent with the United States. While economics is regional, security looks abroad. Two ASEAN members, Thailand and the Philippines, are formal treaty alliance partners with the United States, and several others have established or developing defense relations. There is little real complaint from the ASEAN states (or from countries including South Korea, Japan, Australia and New Zealand) of the United States' unofficial role as guarantor of freedom of navigation in the seas in the region. But there are growing challenges with China's expanding military activity and evolving assertion of its own role as the rightful regional security hegemon.

So long as China was largely seen as a beneficial trading partner and a source of investment, but fairly innocuous when it came to involvement in local politics or security, the dualistic approach toward Washington and Beijing was seen as not only acceptable, but preferential. China's economic heft balanced the United States' military heft, and vice versa. A slight sense of competition for regional friends between Beijing and Washington could be exploited to ASEAN's benefit, and even South Korea, Australia and New Zealand — close U.S. partners — saw merit to the system. China would increase its offer of preferential investments or trade access, Washington would counter with offers of more trade but also keep China's broader regional ambitions in check. This semi-equilibrium has been breaking down over the past several years, with two apparent case studies being the Philippines and South Korea.

When Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte took office last year, he challenged the country's defense relationship with the United States, arguing that close ties with Washington had undermined Philippine relations with Beijing without providing security against China's occupation and construction on disputed islets. Essentially, the Philippines lost economic opportunities with China yet failed to benefit from security guarantees by the United States. It was the worst of both worlds. Duterte has since pursued a policy far different from that of his predecessor, Benigno Aquino III, who doubled down on the relationship with the United States and took a largely confrontational attitude toward China. This is not to say that Manila has simply accepted the dual economic and security role for China in the region. It continues to assert its own rights, is expanding economic and security ties with Japan, and continues to engage with U.S. military forces in the region — and in the Philippines itself.

South Korea is another case study in the dualistic policy of tying the economy to China and security to the United States, perhaps more overtly than most other countries in the region. South Korea has free trade agreements with both the United States and China. A quarter of South Korean exports go to China, a number that nears 30 percent when adding in Hong Kong. This compared with 14 percent to the United States. Meanwhile, China accounts for 21 percent of South Korean imports, while the United States accounts for just 10 percent. And China's role in the overall Korean supply chain, particularly with electronics, is masked in these baseline numbers. But when it comes to defense, the balance is entirely one-sided. The United States maintains 28,500 troops on the Korean Peninsula and retains operational control of South Korean forces in the Combined Forces Command, should hostilities with the North break out.

South Korea's decision to host the U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile system triggered a strong outcry from China. Beijing began complaining even before Seoul and Washington entered formal discussions about the deployment, and since a decision was made it has used unofficial measures to strike at the South Korean economy. Tourism flows to South Korea have slowed, Korean cultural and entertainment exports and tours in China have been curtailed, and Korean businesses are facing boycotts, spools of red tape and bureaucratic sluggishness. Washington, in return, has accelerated the pace of THAAD deployment, hoping to complete the placement of the systems before early South Korean elections, which are likely to bring a progressive candidate to power — one who could revisit the THAAD agreement.

A Broken Consensus
With U.S. participation in the TPP off the table, and U.S. defense seen as either insufficient to address regional concerns or, going to the other extreme, exacerbating economic challenges with China, there is a growing sense throughout Asia that the United States is simply not able to be counted on as a counterweight to China, at least not for the next several years. China's expanded military capability and activity is only reinforcing these views. The consensus forming is that the status quo balance between Chinese economy and U.S. security has already broken down. China's expansion was not effectively countered, whether by the so-called U.S. pivot (or re-balance) to Asia or by U.S. engagement with ASEAN and regional trade initiatives. For many in the region, it is not a question of what they prefer, but rather an acknowledgement of the shifting regional realities. When a country the size of China begins to assert its own interests, changes to the existing regional structure are inevitable.

The discussion now is about options. Simply accepting that China will be a regional hegemon is unlikely for most countries in the region. Even the Philippines, which has seen such a dramatic shift in its public policy, is looking for a balancer to China's regional power and influence, possibly in Japan. And South Korea is re-thinking its overreliance on the Chinese economy. Some countries that were in the expanded TPP are looking to maintain momentum even without the United States, hoping that together they can either shape China's economic behavior or perhaps lure the United States back into at least a modified version of the trade agreement down the road. ASEAN is pressing for the long-delayed Code of Conduct with China to try to curtail China's apparent expansionist tendencies. But few individually or together have the overall heft of the United States.

In Singapore and New Zealand, two countries that have successfully navigated their dual relations with Washington and Beijing for some time, there is a fear that they may be forced to choose. If a trade war breaks out between the United States and China, it will not be only about trade; it will be about regional relationships, about interpretations of the rights of passage through the South China Sea, about the options for dealing with North Korea — in short, about the whole of Asia-Pacific stability. China is facing deep structural challenges as it undertakes the painful transition from an export-based economy to a consumption-based one, and it will consider any strong U.S. economic action to be a clear attempt to disrupt the transition and contain China. The United States sees each further step by China to assert its military capability through the South China Sea as a clear challenge to a core interest of freedom of navigation and control of the seas.

Stuck between these two powers lie the Asia-Pacific countries, adapting to the changing balance of power and fearing a dramatic break in the pattern. Their ability to play both sides, to use the bookend powers of the Pacific Ocean as counterweights, may prove untenable if the there is a substantial slide in U.S.-China relations toward the negative. Few in the region are eager to choose sides, all are assessing their limited options, and the pervading hope is that somehow Washington and Beijing will continue their uneasy dance, leaving Asia-Pacific countries space enough to cheer both on.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://sofrep.com/78547/in-burkina...-unit-is-aiding-homegrown-jihadist-terrorism/

In Burkina Faso, officials worry a former elite military unit is aiding homegrown jihadist terrorism

SOFREP Original Content
BY TRAVIS ALLEN 04.05.2017#WORLD NEWS

Officials in the African nation of Burkina Faso believe members of a former elite presidential security unit are offering their expertise to an increasingly violent Islamist insurgency in the country.

In addition to offering their knowledge and expertise, some believe they are also participating in attacks against civilians and government targets, as part of a growing trend of violent Islamic extremism that has bloomed in the past few years in this part of Africa.....(rest of article is behind membership wall...HC)
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
https://sofrep.com/78630/proxies-guerillas-delaying-armageddon/

Proxies and guerillas: Delaying armageddon

BY SOFREP 04.05.2017#EXPERT ANALYSIS

Guerrilla warfare is nothing new. Neither is proxy war. China’s history of using indirect methods to erode and undermine their enemies without battle goes back to the earliest treatises on warfare written by the general T’ai Kung. (Sun Tzu’s admonition that supreme excellence is found in victory without fighting has nothing to do with pacifism or diplomacy; it is about using politics, economics, and espionage to precipitate the enemy’s collapse before armies ever took to the field.) Alexander waged a vicious counterinsurgency in Sogdiana (now Afghanistan) after the fall of Darius.

But the twentieth century, post-World War II, saw guerrilla warfare and proxy war elevated to levels no one had seen before. Faced with nuclear weapons on both sides and the graphic illustration of what those weapons could do following Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the U.S. and the Soviet Union embarked on a 45-year proxy war waged against allies and interests with covert action, guerrilla uprisings, and coups.

In the process, the techniques of such shadow warfare have been codified and refined. From Mao Zedong’s “On Guerrilla Warfare” to Carlos Marighella’s “Minimanual of the Urban Guerrilla” to Che Guevara’s “Guerrilla Warfare,” the techniques of waging guerrilla war are easily accessible, and were often disseminated by the Soviets. Many of these guerrilla wars were successful, as well, by using politics and information warfare to get even the West on the same side as the communist guerrillas. ZIPRA and ZANLA in Rhodesia are a classic example.

The Soviets and Cubans weren’t the only ones to support guerrilla proxies against their adversaries, either. The U.S. did it; just look for “Clandestine Operations Manual for Central America,” a guide to (primarily) the political-indoctrination portion of guerrilla warfare, specifically oriented for the Contras.

Not only that, but it was through the U.S. collaboration with Pakistani ISI that some of the more extreme Islamist literature and Salafist ideology began to spread. The U.S. considered radical Islam a promising proxy weapon to use against the Soviet Union. Zbigniew Brzezinski advocated for appealing to Islam by way of encouraging “dissidence” within the Soviet Union. How much the people supporting the preaching of jihad against the atheistic Soviets understood about what they were backing is unclear; it appears doubtful they comprehended the consequences.

What we face today, the growing normalization of guerrilla and proxy war, the cellular nature of threats that makes transnational and regional threats into a hydra of small groups united by agenda and knowledge rather than hierarchy and organization, is the unintended consequence of the steps taken to fight the Cold War.

Direct confrontation with the Soviet Union became too dangerous once the Russians demonstrated that they had nuclear weapons. The doctrine of mutually assured destruction forced both sides to find other means of enforcing their interests and projecting power that wouldn’t tip either side over the edge into open war. Even if the war started purely conventionally, with tanks trading fire in the Fulda Gap, it was believed that any such confrontation would inevitably escalate to a nuclear exchange.

So steps were taken to isolate both sides from their proxies, even where the war was especially hot. The Soviets supported revolutionary/Marxist groups all over the world, from the Cuban-backed rebels in South America to the Vietcong, Pathet-Lao, and Khmer Rouge in Southeast Asia, and the likes of ZANLA, ZIPRA, and the ANC in Africa. Again, this support was to varying degrees, often going through Cuban or other proxies. The U.S. supported the Contras in Nicaragua, attempted (albeit half-heartedly) to overthrow Castro using Cuban exiles, and supported the Mujahideen through Pakistani ISI.

The end result has been twofold. One, the genie is out of the bottle. The techniques have been shown to be successful and the information to put them into practice is readily available. As a result, any group with enough of a grievance and an audience provided by modern telecommunications can begin an insurgency. Global networking allows them to communicate with and gain support from any other groups or players, national or non-state, that have an interest in either their cause or the destabilization that their violence and disruption causes.

Two, the success of proxy and guerrilla war has resulted in it becoming the default method of power projection for any would-be global player (aside from the U.S., in many cases). Russia supports militias and rebels in eastern Ukraine, Iran supports Hezbollah and sends IRGC Qods Force operatives all over the world to pursue covert warfare against the Islamic Republic’s enemies, and China wages economic and cyber warfare while occasionally lending well-concealed support to criminal and insurgent groups to further their own interests.

Disorder spreads. Conflicts continue to crop up in East Asia, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe. Global networking is inspiring lone-wolf Islamists such as the shooters in Australia and France. And the groundwork was laid in an attempt to avoid nuclear Armageddon.


This article previously published by SOFREP 02.14.2015 by Pete Nealen.
 

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http://www.foxnews.com/world/2017/04/06/afghanistan-dangles-lithium-wealth-to-win-trump-support.html

Afghanistan dangles lithium wealth to win Trump support

Published April 06, 2017
Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan – The Afghan government is trying to grab the attention of President Donald Trump and gain greater U.S. support by dangling its massive and untouched wealth of minerals, including lithium, the silvery metal used in mobile phone and computer batteries that is considered essential to modern life.

But tapping into that wealth, which also includes coal, copper, rare earths and far more that estimates say could be worth from $1 trillion to $3 trillion, is likely a long way off.

Security has worsened in Afghanistan the past year, with Taliban insurgents seizing territory and inflicting increasing casualties on Afghan forces. The regions with the greatest lithium deposits, for example, are currently too dangerous to enter.

So far, Trump's policy on Afghanistan remains unknown.

He has said little about America's longest-running war, beyond saying on the campaign trail that he wishes the United States were not involved in Afghanistan. Last month, the top U.S. military commander called for an increase in American forces to help bring security, a call Kabul enthusiastically backed. But the White House has not said which direction it will go — toward beefing up the American role, drawing it down further or something else entirely. There are currently around 8,400 U.S. troops in the country, involved in training Afghan forces and in counter-terrorism operations.

Kabul clearly hopes the promise of mineral wealth will entice Trump into making a greater commitment.

"Afghanistan can be an appropriate place for U.S. industry, and specifically the mining sector, to look at opportunities for investment" because so few potential deposits have been mined, said Mohammad Humayon Qayoumi, chief adviser to Afghan president on infrastructure, human capital and technology.

"Afghanistan has always been interested in the U.S. investing in many areas, specifically the mining area. Within mining, there are some areas that are strategic materials such as lithium," Qayoumi told The Associated Press.

President Ashraf Ghani spoke with Trump in December, and they discussed the mineral wealth. "There was a quite good matter of interest from President Trump's administration," Qayoumi said. The two leaders spoke again in February for the first time since the inauguration in talks that focused on the security situation.

A White House official said the U.S. sees sustainable economic development as "essential" to Afghanistan's stability, including in the mining sector. He said the U.S. will work with Afghan businessmen and officials on reforms that "enhance private sector development" and contribute to development. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

Mineral resources have been touted as potentially transformative for Afghanistan, a key to lifting it out of poverty and bringing major wealth for development.

Interest was particularly spiked by a 2007 report by the U.S. Geological Survey and the Afghan government that found the country's deposits of a wide variety of minerals were much larger than had been known from surveys decades earlier by the Soviets.

The mountainous, land-locked nation has huge, largely untouched reserves of copper, iron ore, chromite, mercury, zinc, gems, including rubies and emeralds, as well as gold and silver. Particularly alluring is its lithium, crucial to laptop and cellphone batteries.

But getting those minerals out of the ground — and doing it in a way that actually benefits the country as a whole — has been elusive.

The war has scared away investors. Also, corruption is rife, and many of the mines that do exist are controlled by local warlords who reap the profits. The Taliban are believed to earn millions from illegal mining.

In 2016, anti-corruption watchdog Global Witness warned that the mining sector was fueling the war. It pointed to lapis lazuli — a blue stone found almost exclusively in Afghanistan — saying local strongmen, lawmakers and Taliban insurgents were all in a violent competition over control of the mines, earning $20 million a year from illegal mining and in the process destabilizing northeastern Badakhshan province.

Integrity Watch Afghanistan said in a 2015 report that the great majority of more than 300 mining contracts awarded so far "may have been exploited by local strongmen under the protection of warlords." It examined five mines and estimated the government was losing tens of millions of dollars from those mines alone because of corruption that means taxes, rents and royalties are not collected.

The main lithium deposits are in three regions — Ghazni province in the east and Herat and Nimroz provinces in the west. Herat and Nimroz are the scene of regular fighting between Afghan forces and the Taliban, and the arears of Ghazni where the lithium is located have a strong Taliban presence.

The government's mines and petroleum ministry has also been in disarray. The minister's post has been empty for nearly a year since the resignation of Daud Shah Saba, who often complained of "powerbrokers" controlling the mineral resources. Finally, last week, the government named Nargis Nehan, a prominent rights and anti-corruption campaigner, as acting minister.

Introducing her, Second Vice President Sarwar Danesh vowed action to reform the sector, "sever the hands of traitors" controlling minerals and bring "balanced development."

Wahidullah Shahrani, who served as mines and petroleum minister from 2010 to 2013, said that at that time there was a major push by the government and international partners to lay a path for developing the sector. They worked out a clear timeline and strategy. Lithium was identified as a priority.

But since then, the security situation has dramatically worsened as U.S. troops — numbering more than 100,000 in 2011 — began to withdraw and hand over the fight against the Taliban to Afghan forces. Multiple areas that were once considered safe have fallen into turmoil.

Shahrani said the priority now is for the ministry to clean up management of the mineral sector and draw up a plan going forward.

The U.S. can play a major role in helping that.

"The government of Afghanistan right now doesn't have either the financial or the technical resources," he said.

___

Associated Press Writer Mathew Pennington in Washington contributed to this report.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-missiles-idUSKBN17808S

WORLD NEWS | Thu Apr 6, 2017 | 3:20am EDT

Little progress reining in North Korea, U.S. commander says before Trump-Xi summit

By Tim Kelly and Ju-min Park | TOKYO/SEOUL

Diplomatic and economic measures taken to rein in North Korea's missile program have not had the desired effect, a senior U.S. military commander said on Thursday after the North's latest test triggered a flurry of calls among world leaders.

U.S President Donald Trump led calls with leaders and senior officials from Japan and South Korea on Thursday to discuss the latest provocation from Pyongyang, hours before Trump begins a much-anticipated summit with Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping.

"Up to this point I think it is fair to say ... that economic and diplomatic efforts have not supported the progress people have been anticipating and looking forward to," U.S. Pacific Fleet Commander Admiral Scott Swift said in Tokyo, where he was meeting Japanese Self Defence Force commanders and foreign ministry officials.

North Korea's nuclear and missile programs will be high on the agenda when Trump and Xi meet at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida later on Thursday, with anger in Beijing simmering over the deployment of an advanced U.S. anti-missile system in South Korea.

Analysts have said Wednesday's launch of a ballistic missile from North Korea's east coast probably took place with the Trump-Xi summit in mind as the reclusive state presses ahead in defiance of United Nations resolutions and sanctions.

In a phone call with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Thursday, Trump again said that all options were on the table when it came to North Korea's continued missile tests.

Swift said a military response remained among those options.

"That decision would be up to the president," he told reporters. "The military was always an option."

Tensions on the Korean peninsula and the Trump-Xi summit began to worry markets on Thursday, with the dollar and Wall Street shares slipping.

"The market is only starting to factor in recent developments regarding North Korea, and it now wants to figure out the geopolitical implications of the U.S.-China summit," said Shusuke Yamada, a senior strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Tokyo.

"DANGEROUS PROVOCATION"

Abe said the two leaders had agreed that North Korea's latest ballistic missile launch was "a dangerous provocation and a serious threat".

He told reporters at his Tokyo residence he was watching to see how China would respond to Pyongyang after Xi meets Trump.

The White House said in a statement after the Abe call Trump "made clear that the United States would continue to strengthen its ability to deter and defend itself and its allies with the full range of its military capabilities".

Trump has repeatedly said he wants China to do more to exert its economic influence over its unpredictable ally in Pyongyang to restrain its nuclear and missile programs, but China denies it has any overriding influence on North Korea.

On Sunday, Trump held out the possibility of using trade as a lever to secure Chinese cooperation, while suggesting Washington might deal with Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs on its own if need be.

Any launch of objects using ballistic missile technology is a violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions. The North has defied the ban, saying it infringes on its sovereign rights to self-defense and the pursuit of space exploration.

ALSO IN WORLD NEWS

For Trump, Mar-a-Lago is place to break the ice with China's Xi
Trump says chemical attack in Syria crossed many lines

In another call on Thursday, Trump's national security adviser H.R. McMaster told his South Korean counterpart that Washington remained committed to the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system in South Korea.

South Korea and the United States say the sole purpose of the THAAD system is to defend against missile launches from North Korea but China says the system's powerful radar could penetrate into its territory.

The United States began deploying the first elements of the THAAD system in South Korea last month, despite angry opposition from China.

South Korean officials said McMaster discussed the North's latest missile launch and the Trump-Xi summit in a call with his counterpart in Seoul, Kim Kwan-jin.

"Both sides agreed to pursue ... plans in order to substantially strengthen the international community's sanctions and pressure on North Korea," South Korea's presidential Blue House said in a statement.

" ... both agreed to push forward the deployment of THAAD by U.S. forces in Korea," it said.

U.S. officials said the missile launched on Wednesday appeared to be a liquid-fueled, extended-range Scud missile that only traveled a fraction of its range before spinning out of control.

They said it flew about 60 km (40 miles) from its launch site near Sinpo, a port city on the North's east coast where a submarine base is located.

As well as a growing list of ballistic missile launches, North Korea has also conducted two nuclear weapons tests since January 2016. (For a graphic on North Korea's missile launches, see: tmsnrt.rs/2m9l4oj)

(This story has been refiled to correct spelling of Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategist's first name to Shusuke in paragraph 10)

(Additional reporting by William Mallard, Kiyoshi Takenaka and Shinichi Saoshiro in TOKYO Eric Beech in WASHINGTON; Editing by Paul Tait)
 

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http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/china-ventures-america-s-backyard-latin-america-n740001

NEWS
APR 5 2017, 11:39 PM ET

China Ventures Into America’s Backyard: Latin America

by JANIS MACKEY FRAYER

BEIJING — With President Donald Trump pledging to scrap or renegotiate trade deals as part of his "America First" strategy, the door has been left open for China to push ahead with its own agreements. And nowhere are those efforts more apparent than in Washington's own backyard: Latin America.

President Xi Jinping, who will be meeting Trump for the first time in Florida on Thursday, has already made three trips to the region since early 2013 — and business is booming.

While trade between the U.S. and Latin America has doubled since 2000, China's trade with the region has multiplied 22 times, according to OECD economist Angel Melguzio. In fact, Beijing is now the biggest trading partner for the major economies of Brazil, Chile and Peru — and Argentina, El Salvador and Guatemala are well-placed to profit from China's booming demand for global food.

The U.S. remains Latin America's biggest trading partner, but with Trump vowing to dismantle the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and build a wall on the Mexico border, China could hold the advantage.

Meanwhile, China lends the region a lot of money — around $30 billion in 2015, up from $231 million in 2005. And the funds largely come with no strings attached.

"China stands to supplant the United States in economic and political influence over time," Gustavo Arnavat, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), told NBC News. "My assumption is that their influence will be even more significant in another decade."

Many in Latin America feel that the U.S. increasingly focused on other regions, such as the Middle East, under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. During these administrations, Latin American economies looked for ways to diversify economically and help address the widespread need for infrastructure.

Enter China.

Margaret Myers, a program director with the Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based think tank, has tracked China's investment in Latin America since the 1990s. Her database reveals that China has signed a slew of deals in everything from energy to fighter jets to infrastructure.

"President Trump's Latin America policy is still unclear," Myers said. "Limited or unproductive policy … could leave space for additional engagement from China and other partners."

When Trump suggested the U.S. may pull out of NAFTA to keep jobs in America, neither China nor Mexico wasted much time in announcing a new auto partnership.

China's JAC Motors has invested over $200 million in a factory in Mexico's central Hidalgo state with Giant Motors, a company backed by billionaire investor Carlos Slim. The newly-minted joint venture plans will produce SUVs for the Latin American market.

"We don't depend on NAFTA at all, not for exports or for supplies," Giant's chief executive Elías Massri told the Financial Times. "For us, this is where the opportunity lies."

Another sign of Beijing's growing clout is its backing for a planned waterway in Nicaragua that aims to compete with the Panama Canal, long a symbol of U.S. dominance in the region. The new 170-mile facility aims to be to twice as deep as its famous rival and form an important new trade route, although construction is not fully underway.

The road for China has not been without obstacles.

Cultural divides put it under a magnifying glass with Latin American companies and government officials who may be reluctant to do business. Chinese business transactions have a reputation for being notoriously opaque. In Nicaragua, there have been protests against the proposed canal, which is being financed by Chinese tycoon Wang Jing.

But with Trump retrenching on trade pacts, Latin Americans are actively looking east to boost growth. A delegation of Mexican governors just finished a tour of China to drum up backing for projects ranging from gas and rail transport to modernization of airports and highways. They visited top government officials in Beijing and business leaders in Chengdu and Shanghai.

"We must broaden our horizons," Graco Ramirez, president of Mexico's National Conference of Governors, told Xinhua, China's state news agency. "This is a great opportunity to no longer only depend on the United States."

In addition to leveraging the soft power that comes with commercial ties, China's interests in Latin America are also strategic in promoting the "One China" principle. Since Chiang Kai-Shek's Nationalists fled to Taiwan at the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, Beijing has considered the island a breakaway republic. If any country wants diplomatic relations with Beijing, they must break official ties with Taiwan.

Related: Beijing Says One China Policy 'Non-Negotiable' After Trump

China's global clout has successfully alienated Taiwan, which enjoys diplomatic relations with only 20 countries in the world, including the Vatican.

But the majority of the countries that do recognize Taiwan are clustered in Latin America and the Caribbean, and Taipei's ties with Washington have allowed it to thrive despite being in the diplomatic wilderness. China's growing economic influence with these countries could impact their support for Taiwan.

It was no coincidence that Taiwan's newly-elected leader, Tsai Ing-wen, made a Latin American tour a diplomatic priority to shore up relationships.

"China's determination to raise its global profile should concern U.S. officials who appear to be either unaware or indifferent," said Arnavat of the CSIS. "They are now a major player that cannot be ignored."
 

Housecarl

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Hummm......

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-missiles-bargaining-idUSKBN17811R

World News | Thu Apr 6, 2017 | 2:00pm EDT

Is North Korea putting a nuclear-tipped bargaining chip on the table?

Video

By James Pearson and Ju-min Park | SEOUL

As the leaders of China and the United States sit down for a summit on Thursday, North Korea has made sure it also has something on the negotiating table: A nuclear-tipped bargaining chip.

North Korea launched a projectile on Wednesday, which U.S. officials said appeared to be a liquid-fueled, extended-range Scud missile that only traveled a fraction of its range before spinning out of control and crashing into the sea.

The launch was North Korea's latest in a long series of missile and nuclear tests that have accelerated in their variation and intensity over the last two years.

READ MORE FROM REUTERS:
Commentary: North Korea gives Donald Trump a nuclear crisis from hell
Commentary: North Korea's Kim knows exactly what he's doing

And now, experts agree, North Korea is closing in on the ability to hit the United States with a missile, a goal that for decades has been the subject of Pyongyang's vivid propaganda posters.

"They've been able to put a nuke on a missile for a while now," said Jeffrey Lewis of the California-based Middlebury Institute of International Studies.

"The stated purpose of the last test was to validate the nuclear weapon design that would arm all of North Korea's missiles," Lewis said of North Korea's September 2016 nuclear test - its fifth and largest to date.

Since then, North Korea has further ramped up its tests and rhetoric, emphasizing a consistent message: To create a nuclear device small enough to mount on an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), and fire it at the United States.

"If we push the button, the bombs will be fired and reduce the U.S. to ashes," an editorial in the ruling Workers' Party newspaper the Rodong Sinmun said on Wednesday.

North Korea now has the strength to "wipe out" the United States "in a moment" with an H-bomb, the editorial said.

"This is again our warning".
*
BARGAINING CHIP
From last year, North Korea took the rare step of publicizing images of its missile equipment tests, convincing analysts that Pyongyang's banned program was further along toward successfully testing an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) than first thought.

"The first few tests might fail, but that's not good news because they'll learn," said Lewis. "How long it takes to make it work is anyone's guess. Maybe a couple of years, maybe the first time".

North Korea has been pursuing its nuclear and missile programs at an unprecedented pace since last year, with an aim to expand its deterrence against Washington and diversify its line-up of nuclear-equipped missiles, another expert said. (See FACTBOX)

"They have been doing so many test launches last year and this year to develop systems to transport nuclear warheads," said Kim Dong-yub, a professor at Kyungnam University's Institute of Far Eastern Studies in Seoul.

"The whole thing is about expanding their deterrence and continuing to keep upgrading their missiles to deliver nuclear warheads," said Kim.

Related Coverage
FACT BOX North Korea's missile and nuclear tests

It was not clear if Wednesday's launch was deliberately timed to coincide with Thursday's summit between China's President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump in Florida, where North Korea is expected to be a prime topic of discussions.

Some experts think North Korea has tried to make sure the two world leaders are aware Pyongyang has a bargaining chip in any forthcoming moves to clam down on its weapons programs.

Cheong Seong-chang, a senior research fellow at Sejong Institute outside Seoul, said that could come in the form of another nuclear or ICBM test after the summit. Perhaps first with a low-level show of force - enough not to upset China - followed by a period of intensified weapons testing.

"Then, next month when a new (South Korean) government gets under way,*North Korea is expected to try to turn the situation around into a phase of appeasement and, use its moratorium of nuclear and ballistic missile tests to find middle ground with South Korea and the United States," Cheong said.

This year, North Korea officials, including young leader Kim Jong Un, have repeatedly indicated an ICBM test, or something similar, could be coming, possibly as soon as April 15, the 105th birthday of North Korea's founding president and celebrated annually as "the Day of the Sun".
*
*
(Editing by Bill Tarrant)
 

Housecarl

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https://uk.news.yahoo.com/north-korea-gets-money-nukes-193605050.html

North Korea Gets Money for Nukes by Hacking Banks around the World

Tom O’Connor
Newsweek
06 April 2017

North Korea has funded its development of nuclear weapons by stealing money from financial institutions around the world via state-sponsored hacks, top cybersecurity experts warned.

In a 58-page news report released Monday, Russian leading*cybersecurity*firm*Kaspersky revealed that Pyongyang utilized a secret government program called Lazarus to electronically remove funds from banks in 18 countries, according to CNN.*North Korea had previously been suspected by researchers of being behind several major thefts, including one last year in which up to $81 million was stolen from*Bangladesh's central bank account in New York, as well as other attempted heists in*Ecuador, the Philippines and Vietnam. Kaspersky reportedly supplied evidence*that Pyongyang was also directly responsible for hacks in over a dozen other nations and that the cash was likely used to fund*North Korea's nuclear weapons program.

Other nations affected by North Korea's*digital robberies included Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Gabon, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Kenya, Malaysia, Nigeria, Poland, Taiwan, Thailand, and Uruguay, said the report.*Kaspersky said the addresses used by attackers were carefully concealed by routing their signals through countries such as France, South Korea and Taiwan, but one fateful error allowed researchers to detect the North Korean signal, according to United Press International.

North Korea, which has been led by Kim Jong Un since his father's death in 2011, has suffered from years of economic sanctions since openly pursuing nuclear weapons in spite of U.N. Security Council resolutions. Pyongyang has routinely threatened to use the full extent of its nuclear arsenal in response to perceived hostilities by the U.S. and Washington's regional allies such as South Korea and Japan.

Defense experts have estimated North Korea to possess about 10 nuclear warheads, but have doubted its ability to attach them to long-range missiles capable of reaching the U.S. North Korea has launched a number of missiles recently, indicating it was working on such intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) technology. Tensions in the Asia-Pacific region have been heightened since President Donald Trump said he would take a tougher stance on Pyongyang than his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, and a series of military exercises held last month between the U.S. and South Korea*not far from North Korean territory.

A graphic looks at North Korea's nuclear and missile programs as of April 5, 2017. Center for Strategic and International Studies/Reuters

More from Newsweek
North Korea and Kim Jong Un Will Dominate the Meeting Between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping at Mar-a-Lago
North Korea's Kim Jong Un Willing to Use Nuclear Weapons to Counter Any U.S. Threat, Senior Defector Says
 

Housecarl

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Syria
Started by MetalMan‎, Yesterday 07:16 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?514796-Syria/page2

TRUMP LAUNCHES CRUISE MISSILE ATTACK ON SYRIA
Started by Dennis Olson‎, Yesterday 06:14 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...AUNCHES-CRUISE-MISSILE-ATTACK-ON-SYRIA/page11

Ron Paul: "Zero Chance" Assad Behind Chemical Weapons Attack In Syria; Likely A False Flag
Started by Jonas Parker‎, Yesterday 07:48 AM
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FUNG ALERT:Moscow Pulling Out of Deconfliction Agreement....Next Step...NO FLY ZONE.....
Started by doctor_fungcool‎, Today 01:39 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...fliction-Agreement....Next-Step...NO-FLY-ZONE.....

China Sides With Russia In Syrian War, Will Provide "Aid And Military Training" To Assad
Started by Possible Impact‎, Yesterday 12:12 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...Aid-And-Military-Training-quot-To-Assad/page3

The Four Horsemen - 04/03 to 04/10
Started by Ragnarok‎, 04-03-2017 03:07 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?514624-The-Four-Horsemen-04-03-to-04-10

---

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Posted for fair use.....
https://www.thecipherbrief.com/dead-drop

Anonymous, The Cipher Brief

FRIDAY APRIL 7, 2017

SINGAPORE SLING: Maybe we were right all along. In a Dead Drop on February 17 we predicted that Deputy National Security Advisor K.T. McFarland was not long for her job – because she was passed over as acting #1 when Mike Flynn was fired. Then a week later we reported that the White House put out word that her job was safe. NOW -- CNN is reporting that McFarland has been offered the job of U.S. Ambassador to Singapore – OR – might get a job at the State Department. The number of ambassadors nominated by the Trump administration can be counted on the fingers of one hand.

EMPTY EMBASSIES: Speaking of absent ambassadors, an article in Quartz last week estimated that more than half of the world’s population lives in countries where there currently is no U.S. ambassador. There are 57 countries and territories with a combined population of 3.9 billion people with no U.S. ambassador at the moment. The numbers would be worse – except for career (non-political) ambassadors who have been allowed to stay at their posts (for now.) It is not just that the Trump administration has been unable to get ambassadors confirmed – it has only nominated five potential ambassadors.

HOME ALONE IN THE PENTAGON TOO: Secretary of Defense James Mattis is rambling around the Pentagon with hardly any company of other senior officials requiring Senate confirmation. But it gets worse. There are hundreds of “Schedule C” slots for political appointees in the Department of Defense – people who do not require Senate confirmation but are appointed by the administration. Since so many confirmable positions remain unfilled – the underlying “Sked C’s” are also in limbo. We’re told that lots of bright young men and women are applying for these jobs – but there is no one at the senior ranks in the Pentagon to make decisions on whom to hire.

FRIED RICE? Reports that former National Security Advisor Susan Rice was behind the unmasking of Trump transition figures caught up in surveillance intercepts were either a likely illustration of politically motivated abuse of the intelligence process – if you believe former CIA analyst Fred Fleitz – writing on FoxNews.Com, or simply an example of Rice doing her job and the Trump administration “…misleading the American people on something that is common practice in the intelligence business,” if you believe former CIA (and FBI) analyst Phil Mudd on CNN.

ET TUTU MUDD? Mudd doubled down on his criticism of the White House handling of the “unmasking issue” by criticizing spin from administration spokesman Sean Spicer on CNN: “…Sean Spicer knows about intelligence what I know about ballet.”

NOT MENTIONING ANY NAMES, JUST SAYIN’: Former CIA Director John Brennan gave the “Dimbleby Lecture” on BBC-TV Wednesday night. He spoke about globalism, American exceptionalism, terrorism, cyber security and the quality of our political leaders. On the latter, Brennan suggested the world might be a better place if, before being allowed to run for high public office, individuals be required to pass a test demonstrating that they understood how government works and pass another test for “truth telling and responsible and courteous discourse.” The speech can be viewed here.

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

We learned on Newsmax.com that Scott Uehlinger, a CIA alumnus who says he is a retired CIA Station Chief who “spent twelve years of his career abroad in the former Soviet Union” has started a podcast called “The Station Chief.” We remember when Agency veterans were not allowed to utter the words “Station Chief.” Uehlinger also has an op-ed in The Hill which says the intel community was turned into a political weapon against President Trump.
NETWORK NEWS: Not a day goes by when members of The Cipher Brief Network aren’t making news. Here are just a few examples from this week:

Former CIA Deputy Director (and first class amateur magician) John McLaughlin is quoted in David Ignatius’ syndicated column about how misdirection, often used by magicians, is similar to the political techniques we are now seeing to distract the public from following the ball on the Russian election-meddling investigation.
Former CIA and NSA Director General Mike Hayden, speaking at a Johns Hopkins SAIS event, was quoted by the Yonhap News Agency as saying that North Korea is likely to be capable of striking Seattle with a nuclear weapon during President Trump’s term.
Former top CIA lawyer Robert Eatinger is quoted in Newsweek about why the CIA is increasingly worried about Chinese moles.
WHAT’S ON THEIR NIGHTSTAND? (Our contributors tell us about what they’re currently reading)

Michael Vigil, former Chief of International Operations, Drug Enforcement Administration:

"Ioan Grillo's Gangster Warlords. Ioan is one of the few journalists who truly captures the violence, treachery, and global nature of the illegal drug trade"

SECURITY QUOTE OF THE WEEK:

"Whether Xi succeeds in this quest to pack the ruling group may very well depend on his success in Mar-a-Lago. Why? If he can show everyone in Beijing that he tamed Trump, he will be seen as deserving of an indefinite tenure at the top of the ruling organization.

Many believe the Trump administration is particularly vulnerable to deals proposed by Xi, the master strategist, such as an utterly cynical Taiwan-for-North Korea trade or a North Korea-for-South China Sea arrangement. Even if Trump were amenable to a bargain of this sort—and there is no hard evidence that he is—it is hard to see how the Chinese leader could keep his end of the bargain."

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