WAR 04-02-2016-to-04-08-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://www.militarytimes.com/story/...n-north-korea-nuke-reprocessing-lab/82631370/

U.S. website: Steam seen at North Korea nuke reprocessing lab

Matthew Pennington, The Associated Press 6:51 p.m. EDT April 4, 2016

WASHINGTON — Satellite imagery indicates activity at a North Korean laboratory that could separate plutonium for nuclear weapons, a U.S. website that monitors sensitive sites in the isolated country said Monday.

The website, 38 North, said that during the past five weeks, exhaust plumes have been seen two or three times at the radiochemical laboratory complex at Nyongbyon, which is North Korea's known nuclear facility.

That suggests buildings there are being heated, but it's unclear for what activity.


MILITARYTIMES

Seoul: North Korea fires missile, tries to jam GPS signals


The lab is where North Korea separates weapons-grade plutonium from waste from a nuclear reactor. The North announced in 2013 its intention to refurbish and restart nuclear facilities, including the reactor, which was shut down in 2007 under aid-for-disarmament negotiations it later withdrew from. The reactor has been the source of plutonium for the North's small arsenal of weapons.

In February, U.S. Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told Congress that North Korea has been operating the reactor long enough that it could begin recovering material for nuclear weapons "within a matter of weeks to months." He was speaking after North Korea had conducted its latest nuclear test explosion in January and then a long-range rocket launch weeks later.

The website said the exhaust plumes are unusual and it had not observed any on commercial satellite imagery during the winter.


MILITARYTIMES

U.S. joins with South Korea, Japan in bid to deter North Korea


"The plumes suggest that the operators of the reprocessing facility are heating their buildings, perhaps indicating that some significant activity is being undertaken, or will be in the near future. Whether that activity will be additional separation of plutonium for nuclear weapons remains unclear," says the analysis by satellite imagery specialists William Mugford and Joseph Bermudez.

North Korean expelled U.N. nuclear inspectors from Nyongbyon in 2009, so it is very difficult to confirm what is happening there.

Daniel Russel, the top U.S. diplomat for East Asia, declined Monday to comment about potential reprocessing activities by North Korea, saying it was an intelligence matter. But he told the Institute for Korean-American Studies that North Korea is facing unprecedented international isolation and "no amount of fissile material" will improve its strategic position.

North Korea has developed two ways to produce fissile material for bombs: enrichment of uranium and separation of plutonium. U.S.-based experts have estimated that North Korea may already have about 10 bombs, but that could grow to between 20 and 100 by 2020.

Tensions are running high on the divided Korean Peninsula. The U.N. Security Council has imposed stiffer international sanctions on North Korea, and since the start last month of annual South Korea-U.S. military drills, the North has threatened nuclear strikes on Seoul and Washington and warned it will test a nuclear warhead and ballistic missiles capable of carrying it.
 

Housecarl

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http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2016/04/05/0200000000AEN20160405000651315.html

(LEAD) 'Suspicious activity' at N. Korea's nuclear complex: 38 North

2016/04/05 06:47

(ATTN: UPDATES with quotes from senior U.S. diplomat in last 3 paras)

By Chang Jae-soon

WASHINGTON, April 4 (Yonhap) -- Recent satellite imagery shows "suspicious activity" at North Korea's nuclear complex in what could be a sign that Pyongyang might be trying to harvest weapons-grade plutonium from spent nuclear fuel, a U.S. website monitoring the North said Monday.

The website 38 North said in a report that the satellite imagery has shown "exhaust plumes" from a thermal plant used to heat the Yongbyon nuclear complex's Radiochemical Laboratory, where spent nuclear fuel rods are reprocessed to extract plutonium.

"During the past five weeks, exhaust plumes on two, possibly three, occasions were observed at the Radiochemical Laboratory's Thermal Plant," the report said, adding that the activity is "unusual" since exhaust plumes have rarely been seen there and none has been observed on any examined imagery this past winter.

"The plumes suggest that the operators of the reprocessing facility are heating their buildings, perhaps indicating that some significant activity is being undertaken, or will be in the near future," it said.

It remains unclear whether the activity will be additional separation of plutonium, the report said.

But last month, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said in a worldwide threat assessment report that the North had restarted its five-megawatt reactor at Yongbyon and has since run it for long enough to harvest plutonium "within a matter of weeks to months."

The graphite-moderated reactor has been the source of weapons-grade plutonium for the communist nation. The small reactor is capable of producing spent fuel rods that, if reprocessed, could give the regime enough plutonium to make one bomb a year.

The reactor has provided Pyongyang with weapons-grade plutonium that the regime used in its first three nuclear tests, in 2006, 2009 and 2013. The North conducted its fourth nuclear test on Jan. 6, claiming it successfully detonated a hydrogen bomb.

Meanwhile, 38 North also said that the North is making progress in construction of a light water nuclear reactor at the Yongbyon complex, though it is still unclear whether the reactor will become operational within this year.

Should the reactor become operational, it could serve as a new source of fissile material for nuclear weapons.

Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Russel declined to comment on the amount of fissile material in the North's possession, citing intelligence matters. But he stressed that neither nuclear materials nor missiles would make the regime more secure.

"There's no amount of fissile material that will improve North Korea's strategic position. There is no improvement to its delivery system that will make North Korea safer, or provide for its security," Russel said during a seminar hosted by the Institute for Corean-American Studies (ICAS).

"The notion that the DPRK is deterring some malevolent hostile power that's bent on its destruction is absurd. It is not borne out by reality and I've ventured to argue that not even the DPRK's leadership really believes it," he said.

jschang@yna.co.kr

(END)
 

Housecarl

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http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2016/04/03/new-threats-rose-as-u-s-apathy-became-policy/

The Great Debate

New threats rose as U.S. apathy became policy

By Garry Kasparov
April 4, 2016
Comments 7

The 21st century has been marked by two complementary trends in global security: the rise of new and unexpected threats and the return of old ones. Terrorist organizations have adapted modern technology to deadly purpose and paired it with global ambition. Nineteen well-trained individuals killed more Americans on 9/11 than the entire Japanese fleet killed in Pearl Harbor. Our ubiquitous smartphones and social networks turned out to be agnostic tools, serving both good and evil. They are boons for economic empowerment and cultural exchange, but also allow terror movements to recruit internationally, creating a homegrown terror threat that no border wall or refugee ban will prevent.

The old menaces of the 20th century have reappeared in updated forms. Communism as a political ideology is as bankrupt as ever, but the aggressive despotism that enforced it for decades before the fall of the Iron Curtain and the Soviet Union has returned to the world stage, due largely to Russian President Vladimir Putin. The United States, a global hegemon alternately over-eager or reluctant, has reacted in dramatically inconsistent ways to the new threats while mostly ignoring the resurgence of the old ones.

The checks and balances that frustrate every president domestically do little to prevent the commander-in-chief from wielding the power of life and death all over the world. The overwhelming military might of the United States is inherently agnostic as well. It can be used to attack or to defend, to protect innocent lives or to take them, to remove dictatorships or to support them.

The use of this fearsome power is guided by the American constitution and the founding American values of democracy and freedom. But it is up to the occupant of the White House to follow the Constitution and to live up to those values. The executive has found countless ways to evade checks on his authority, from signing “agreements” instead of treaties, to escalating foreign “police actions” instead of declaring war. American values have been applied selectively as well, as decades of relative unity in containing the Communist threat has given way to a neo-isolationist trend in both major American political parties. Instead of debating how the U.S. should act on the world stage, today’s presidential candidates are arguing about whether or not the U.S. should act at all. The specter of the 2003 Iraq War looms over every potential American action.

Such reflection is commendable, but in the seven years of the Obama administration we have seen that inaction can also have the gravest consequences. Inaction can fracture alliances. Inaction can empower dictators and provoke terrorists and enflame regional conflicts. Inaction can slaughter innocent people and create millions of refugees. We have the horrific proof in Syria, where Barack Obama’s infamous “red line” has been painted over in blood.

Leadership in a crisis is essential because collective response is nearly always a collective disaster. Social psychology documented the “bystander apathy effect” in the 1960s, a phenomenon in which the more people who witness a crisis together, the less likely any one of them is to help. Studies showed that while 70 percent of people alone will help a stranger in distress, the number drops to 40 percent when other people are in the room. Inaction is not only deadly, it’s contagious, and it applies to nations as well as to individuals.

The solution to this sort of paralysis on a nation-state level is to have strong global institutions and treaties that are binding and clear. For example, an agreement between countries to guarantee mutual defense or an organization that is bound to intervene to stop a genocide. In theory, contractual commitments and shared moral obligations will override the bystander effect. In practice, the fear of taking action is so strong that the leaders of the free world find excuse after excuse to ignore their commitments and their values.

These excuses range from feigned ignorance to legalistic pedantry to rhetorically reducing the national and international interests that must be protected. Hundreds of thousands slaughtered in Rwanda? We didn’t know. The Budapest Memorandum guarantees Ukrainian territorial integrity? Check the fine print, we’re technically not bound to defend them. Russian jets are crossing into Turkish territory? The North Atlantic Treaty Organization begs member nation Turkey not to invoke the mutual defense clause. Iraq and Syria are exploding into civil war? It’s a Middle Eastern problem. The civil wars are churning out terrorist groups and refugees reaching the West? It’s a European problem. Islamic State sympathizers killed 14 people in San Bernardino, the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil since 9/11? Our anti-IS strategy is the right one.

Obama and his fellow neo-isolationists are well aware that few are condemned and fewer are convicted of having the power to prevent a tragedy but refusing to do so, while a single death resulting from intervention will be denounced. A quarter-million deaths, a dozen terror attacks, a million refugees, these are politically acceptable consequences of inaction, but a single casualty from action, even attempting to prevent those horrors, is considered politically unacceptable. That is the ghastly arithmetic of appeasement in the 21st century.

Knowingly declining to prevent a murder, or a genocide, cannot carry the same moral charge as committing one, but it is nonetheless a crime. When America, the world’s wealthiest and most powerful nation, is content to play the role of a just another apathetic bystander, it is a crime with a powerful ripple effect. Recently, Freedom House released its latest Freedom in the World report, finding “an overall drop in freedom for the ninth consecutive year.” It is no coincidence that this has happened as history’s greatest defender of freedom, the United States, has abdicated that role.

I reject the tired premise of whether or not the United States should be the “global policeman.” Global leadership is what is required, not a cop on patrol who occasionally shoots — or carpet bombs — a few bad guys. Leadership means inspiring, aiding, and influencing — using force only when necessary. A robust American foreign policy depends on constantly reinforcing alliances, on deterring dictators and protecting their victims, and on targeting terrorists and their supporters at the source. It requires institutions that will promote democracy and liberty and pressure friends and foes alike to adopt these values. It must be a strategy that will last for decades, not change with the wind. You can’t be America First unless you have a global strategy that is built to last.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-militants-idUSKCN0X12G7

World | Mon Apr 4, 2016 7:02pm EDT
Related: World, Syria, Iraq

Islamic state militants use mustard gas in attack on Deir Zor airport: Syrian state TV


Islamic State militants attacked Syrian army troops with mustard gas in an offensive against a Syrian military airport in the eastern province of Deir al-Zor that borders Iraq, state media said on late Monday.

Syrian state media did not disclose how many casualties were sustained in the latest drive by the hardline fundamentalist Sunni militants to capture the heavily defended airport located south of Deir al Zor city, whose main neighborhoods are under the militants control.

"The terrorists fired rockets carrying mustard gas," a statement said on state owned Ikhbariyah television station.

Deir al-Zor is a strategic location. The province links Islamic State's de facto capital in Raqqa with its fighters in Iraq.

Reuters could not independently verify the media reports.

Amaq news agency, which is close to the militants, had earlier said Islamic State fighters had launched a wide scale attack on Jufrah village near the airport in which it said two of its suicide bombers rammed their vehicles into army defenses causing "tens of dead".

"The battles continue on more than front and posts and we pray to Allah (God) victory for his Mujahdeen (holy warriors)," an official statement by the militants said.

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitor which tracks violence across the country, said the militants had advanced with heavy aerial strikes aimed at repelling their offensive.

The Syrian army backed by heavy Russian air strikes was able last January to drive back the hardline militants from several villages near the airport but has so far failed to dislodge them.

Separately, the Observatory said fighting flared on several frontlines in the major northern city of Aleppo which is divided between government and rebel held sectors.

Rebel shelling of Kurdish YPG outposts in Sheikh Maqsoud neighborhood caused several casualties, the monitor said.

The Syrian army had earlier said that at least four hundred al Qaeda affiliated Nusra Front led militants fully equipped with heavy arms staged a major attack on army outposts in the Aleppo countryside.

The army statement also said at least eight civilians were killed in mortar attacks by rebels on residential areas of Sheikh Maqsoud with scores injured.

A fragile "cessation of hostilities" truce has held in Syria for over a month as the various parties to the conflict try to negotiate an end to Syria's civil war.

But the truce excludes Islamic State and the al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front. Air and land attacks by Syrian and allied forces continue in parts of Syria where the government says the groups are present.


(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi; Editing by Bernard Orr)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-politics-tactics-idUSKCN0X12IA

World | Mon Apr 4, 2016 8:31pm EDT
Related: World, Brazil

Brazil impeachment battle rests on a handful of votes

BRASILIA | By Anthony Boadle

With neither side commanding enough firm support in the battle to impeach Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff, the outcome of a crucial vote in Congress this month may boil down to a handful of no-shows and abstentions.

Brazil's lower house is due to vote within two weeks on a committee report about whether Rousseff, the country's first female president, broke fiscal laws to secure her 2014 re-election.

With her allies wavering following mass protests against her scandal-hit government, Rousseff risks losing the impeachment vote in the 513-seat lower house. The Eurasia consultancy calculates the odds of her defeat at 60-70 percent.

If the Senate agrees to put her on trial, Rousseff would be suspended from office. Financial markets favor her impeachment on hopes her substitute, Vice President Michel Temer, would introduce more-business-friendly policies.

Yet polls suggest her opponents have not secured the 342 votes - two-thirds of the chamber - they need to take impeachment to this stage.

Nor does Rousseff's Workers' Party and its allies have the 171 votes or abstentions needed to block it. Each abstention favors Rousseff by reducing the chances her opponents obtain two-thirds of the chamber.

Brasilia-based consultancy Barral M Jorge Associates estimates the government has 115 firm votes against impeachment versus 213 in favor, with the rest of the votes undecided or not publicly stated, analyst Gabriel Petrus said.

With the government's fate in the balance, both sides are using every means at their disposal to eke out an advantage. Rousseff's team is working overtime to build a new coalition, offering jobs in her embattled government in exchange for votes.

"The government is scraping the bottom of the barrel, offering jobs in ministries and money for public works in congressional districts," said Darcisio Perondi, a lawmaker from Rio Grande do Sul state and a fierce Rousseff opponent.

Government officials have denied offering public works spending in return for votes or abstentions.

UNCERTAINTY

Meanwhile, lower house Speaker Eduardo Cunha, a bitter rival to Rousseff, is seeking to favor impeachment by holding the roll-call vote on a Sunday, when most Brazilians will be at home and can follow which way lawmakers vote on television.

Polls show more than two-thirds of Brazilians support impeachment, after Brazil's worst recession in decades and a sweeping corruption scandal at state oil company Petrobras drained Rousseff's support.

Congressmen say Cunha plans to start the voting with southern states, where anti-Rousseff sentiment runs strongest, so momentum for impeachment piles pressure on uncertain lawmakers, especially from the northeast, a bastion of Workers' Party support, who would vote last.

Rousseff suffered a blow last week when her main coalition partner, the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB), deserted her.

The PMDB expected smaller parties in the coalition to follow suit, boosting chances that Rousseff would be impeached by Congress and Temer, leader of the PMDB, would take over until the end of her term in 2018.

The Progressive Party, the Republic Party, the Social Democratic Party and the Brazilian Republican Party - with 142 seats in the lower house - signaled they might abandon Rousseff but have held off as the government wooed them with cabinet posts.

Rousseff's negotiations have been complicated by several PMDB ministers who refused the instruction to resign, preferring to risk expulsion from the party.

Barral M Jorge consultancy estimates that up to 30 percent of the PMDB's 68 lawmakers could swing one way or the other, depending on how the vote unfolds.

Or they could just abstain, because they are unsure impeachment will succeed and are not prepared to commit themselves to an uncertain post-Rousseff scenario, said Petrus.

"The offer of jobs will lure some, but uncertainty over what comes next will keep others away, preferring not to back Dilma or a future Temer government that might not succeed," Petrus said. "Their absence will work in Rousseff's favor."


(Editing by Daniel Flynn and Andrew Hay)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.voanews.com/content/iran-deploys-army-commandos-syria/3268798.html

Iran Deploys Army Commandos to Syria

Mehdi Jedinia
April 04, 2016 2:36 PM
Comments 4

Iran is bolstering its military presence in Syria, deploying a top army unit to the country in what commanders call an advisory mission, according to state-run media.

Iranian Brigadier General Ali Arasteh, deputy chief liaison of the army's ground force, said the unit comprises "commandos" in a force from the 65th NOHAD — a Persian abbreviation for Airborne Special Forces Brigade.

"We are sending commandos from army's Brigade 65 and other units to Syria as advisers," Arasteh told the Tasnim news agency.

The first unit of 35 elite members, also known as Green Beret Forces, are stationed near Aleppo in northern Syria. They are offering training to Syrian regime rapid reaction units, sources in Iran and Syria told VOA.

The move bolsters an already robust Iranian military presence in Syria, analysts say.

The commandos will supplement an elite Iranian military fighting unit that has been supporting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces in the civil war against Syrian rebels and Islamic State.

Previous support

In the last two years, Iran has sent thousands of its Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to fight ground battles for the Syrian regime, joining with Iranian-backed Hezbollah fighters from Lebanon.

Tehran reportedly increased the number of IRGC personnel in Syria in the final months of 2015, sending as many as 3,500 militia fighters to the frontlines to defend Zeinab Shrine, a holy site for Shi'ite Muslims in the southern suburbs of Damascus.

In the Iranian military structure, the IRGC and the army are separate units and are sometimes seen as rivals, analysts say.

The IRGC is a paramilitary force formed after the Iranian Revolution in 1979 and is designed to protect the Islamic system. The army is considered less elite and focuses on internal and border controls, analysts say.

"IRGC is the trustworthy military wing of the regime after Iran's 1979 revolution, and [the] Iranian army has always [been] considered second to IRGC as it was inherited from the Shah regime," said Daryoush Babak, a former member of the Iranian special forces.

"Despite its extraordinary strength and proven military capabilities, this unit has always been ignored by high-ranking military officials," he told VOA.

In recent weeks, though, Iran's army has looked to broaden its reach.

Countering IS

The army announced that it launched a rapid reaction force to counter IS, even though IS has not been a threat inside Iran.

Ahmad Reza Pourdastan, commanding officer of the ground forces of the Iranian army, said the unit will be permanently on high alert.

"This force is very agile and monitors all kind of threats as far as 40 kilometers of Iranian borders," Pourdastan told reporters last month. "This would be a very reliable force, able to deploy on a very short notice."

The addition of Iran's army into Syria signals that Tehran is attempting to expand its sphere of influence in Syria as Russian forces in recent weeks have withdrawn.

"The army has long desired to enter Syria, but was prevented by the IRGC, which jealously guards its monopoly over ‘export’ of the revolution," said Ali Alfoneh, a Washington-based IRGC analyst. "Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei, however, authorized the army to deploy advisers in Syria."

VOA's Sirwan Kajjo contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/t...ls-easter-attack-vows-kill-christians-n546806

Terror Group Gives Details of Easter Attack, Vows to Kill Christians

by Josh Meyer and Mushtaq Yusufzai
Apr 4 2016, 11:30 am ET

Video

The brutal Taliban faction that claimed responsibility for the deadly Easter Sunday attack in Pakistan has identified the suicide bomber to NBC News, provided exclusive details of his training, and vowed to keep killing Christians and other religious minorities.

In an interview, a spokesman for Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, an offshoot of the Pakistani Taliban, confirmed that a photograph posted on the group's Facebook page is that of the bomber in the March 27 Lahore attack.

The group identified him as Salahuddin Khorasani, and described him as a martyr who "carried out the attack on the eve of the Christian festival Easter." The bomber's name is likely an alias, as Khorasani — someone from Khorasan, an ancient name for Afghanistan — is a common nom de guerre for Taliban fighters.

The photo, which has not previously been published in the U.S., matches a police sketch based on eyewitness accounts.

The Easter bombing in a crowded park killed at least 73 people, most of them Muslims, injured more than 320 others and sparked a massive paramilitary crackdown in and around Lahore, the capital of Punjab province.

The spokesman, Ehsanullah Ehsan, also told NBC News that Jamaat-ul-Ahrar plans more "devastating" attacks that will target Christians and other religious minorities as well as government installations.

Ehsan said the group's operatives trained in remote Afghanistan and then brought the suicide bomber on a long journey across the border to blow himself up in a park filled with celebrating Christians.

Ehsan said the operatives "trained in Nangarhar province of Afghanistan and then members of their group from Punjab took him to Lahore for carrying out a suicide attack on an important position." His comments to NBC News are the first by the group to provide details of the attack.

The disclosure raises concerns about the sophistication and scale of Jamaat-ul-Ahrar's operations. The suicide bombing is believed to be the second most deadly by a Pakistani Taliban faction. In December 2014, gunmen attacked a Peshawar school and slaughtered 134 children.

And it places additional pressure on the Islamabad government, which has vowed to identify and arrest the perpetrators of the attack, to eradicate terrorism from Pakistan's soil and to plug the northern border with Afghanistan.

Nangarhar is an extremely rugged and violent province known as a hotbed of activity for the Taliban and al-Qaeda. It is just across the northern border from Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas and the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. That's about 400 miles from Lahore, which is near the northern border between Pakistan and India.

Ehsan said Jamaat-ul-Ahrar is using Afghanistan as a sanctuary to stage terrorist attacks in Pakistan. The group, which split from the broader Pakistani Taliban in mid-2014, has launched at least five bombings since December, and claimed responsibility for two attacks on Christian churches in Lahore in 2015.

Pakistani officials say their military crackdown on the Taliban forced a lot of militants to retreat across the border in recent years.

"Most of these local [Taliban] groups have migrated to Afghanistan … on account of aggressive pressure put upon them," Gen. Tariq Khan, a recently retired senior Pakistani Army officer who helped oversee that effort, told NBC News.

A senior U.S. intelligence official said Washington is concerned about Taliban groups using Afghanistan as a safe haven, especially because of their ability to move so easily back and forth across the porous border with Pakistan.

Ehsan said Jamaat-ul-Ahrar leader Maulvi Omar Khalid was seriously injured in NATO airstrikes in Nangarhar province two years ago, but that he recovered and is back leading the group.

"We decided to teach a lesson to the prime minister Nawaz Sharif for launching military operation against us," Ehsan said of the Lahore attack.

The spokesman also denied that Jamaat-ul-Ahrar has any affiliation with the Islamic State, even though it has in the past expressed support for the Syria-based terror group.

Last week, NBC News reported that U.S. intelligence officials didn't see any ISIS links to the Lahore attack but that both Washington and Islamabad are concerned that the group has fostered informal and often clandestine ties with Pakistani militants that may be tied to unprecedented levels of violence against religious minorities and other civilian targets.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/176123/
(fair use applies)

Tomgram: Dilip Hiro, Flashpoint for the Planet
Posted by Dilip Hiro
5:09pm, April 3, 2016.

Once upon a time, if a war was going to destroy your world, it had to take place in your world. The soldiers had to land, the planes had to fly overhead, the ships had to be off the coast. No longer. Nuclear war changed that equation forever and not just because nuclear weapons could be delivered from a great distance by missile. To use a term that has become commonplace in our world when discussing commerce, the prospect of nuclear conflict has globalized war and it’s a nightmare of the first order.

In the post-Cold War world, Exhibit A in that process would certainly be the unnerving potential for a nuclear war to break out between India and Pakistan. As TomDispatch regular Dilip Hiro, author most recently of The Age of Aspiration: Money, Power, and Conflict in Globalizing India, makes clear today, there is no place on the planet where a nuclear war is more imaginable. After all, those two South Asian countries have been to war with each other or on the verge of it again and again since they were split apart in 1947.

Of course, a major nuclear war between them would result in an unimaginable catastrophe in South Asia itself, with casualties estimated at up to 20 million dead from bomb blasts, fire, and the effects of radiation on the human body. And that, unfortunately, would only be the beginning. As Alan Robock and Owen Brian Toon wrote in Scientific American back in 2009, when the Indian and Pakistani arsenals were significantly smaller than they are today, any major nuclear conflagration in the region could hardly be confined to South Asia. The smoke and particulates thrown into the atmosphere from those weapons would undoubtedly bring on some version of a global “nuclear winter,” whose effects could last for at least 10 years, causing crop shortfalls and failures across the planet. The cooling and diminished sunlight (along with a loss of rainfall) would shorten growing seasons in planetary breadbaskets and produce “killing frosts in summer,” triggering declines in crop yields across the planet. Robock and Toon estimate that “around one billion people worldwide who now live on marginal food supplies would be directly threatened with starvation by a nuclear war between India and Pakistan.”

To say the least, it’s a daunting prospect at the very moment when the Obama White House has just ended the president's final Nuclear Security Summit with fears rising that Pakistan's new generation of small, front-line tactical nuclear weapons are "highly vulnerable to theft or misuse." Hiro, an expert on the South Asian region, suggests just why a nuclear war is all too conceivable there and would be a catastrophe for us all. Tom



The Most Dangerous Place on Earth
A Nuclear Armageddon in the Making in South Asia

By Dilip Hiro

Undoubtedly, for nearly two decades, the most dangerous place on Earth has been the Indian-Pakistani border in Kashmir. It’s possible that a small spark from artillery and rocket exchanges across that border might -- given the known military doctrines of the two nuclear-armed neighbors -- lead inexorably to an all-out nuclear conflagration. In that case the result would be catastrophic. Besides causing the deaths of millions of Indians and Pakistanis, such a war might bring on “nuclear winter” on a planetary scale, leading to levels of suffering and death that would be beyond our comprehension.

Alarmingly, the nuclear competition between India and Pakistan has now entered a spine-chilling phase. That danger stems from Islamabad’s decision to deploy low-yield tactical nuclear arms at its forward operating military bases along its entire frontier with India to deter possible aggression by tank-led invading forces. Most ominously, the decision to fire such a nuclear-armed missile with a range of 35 to 60 miles is to rest with local commanders. This is a perilous departure from the universal practice of investing such authority in the highest official of the nation. Such a situation has no parallel in the Washington-Moscow nuclear arms race of the Cold War era.

When it comes to Pakistan’s strategic nuclear weapons, their parts are stored in different locations to be assembled only upon an order from the country’s leader. By contrast, tactical nukes are pre-assembled at a nuclear facility and shipped to a forward base for instant use. In addition to the perils inherent in this policy, such weapons would be vulnerable to misuse by a rogue base commander or theft by one of the many militant groups in the country.

In the nuclear standoff between the two neighbors, the stakes are constantly rising as Aizaz Chaudhry, the highest bureaucrat in Pakistan’s foreign ministry, recently made clear. The deployment of tactical nukes, he explained, was meant to act as a form of “deterrence,” given India’s “Cold Start” military doctrine -- a reputed contingency plan aimed at punishing Pakistan in a major way for any unacceptable provocations like a mass-casualty terrorist strike against India.

New Delhi refuses to acknowledge the existence of Cold Start. Its denials are hollow. As early as 2004, it was discussing this doctrine, which involved the formation of eight division-size Integrated Battle Groups (IBGs). These were to consist of infantry, artillery, armor, and air support, and each would be able to operate independently on the battlefield. In the case of major terrorist attacks by any Pakistan-based group, these IBGs would evidently respond by rapidly penetrating Pakistani territory at unexpected points along the border and advancing no more than 30 miles inland, disrupting military command and control networks while endeavoring to stay away from locations likely to trigger nuclear retaliation. In other words, India has long been planning to respond to major terror attacks with a swift and devastating conventional military action that would inflict only limited damage and so -- in a best-case scenario -- deny Pakistan justification for a nuclear response.

Islamabad, in turn, has been planning ways to deter the Indians from implementing a Cold-Start-style blitzkrieg on their territory. After much internal debate, its top officials opted for tactical nukes. In 2011, the Pakistanis tested one successfully. Since then, according to Rajesh Rajagopalan, the New Delhi-based co-author of Nuclear South Asia: Keywords and Concepts, Pakistan seems to have been assembling four to five of these annually.

All of this has been happening in the context of populations that view each other unfavorably. A typical survey in this period by the Pew Research Center found that 72% of Pakistanis had an unfavorable view of India, with 57% considering it as a serious threat, while on the other side 59% of Indians saw Pakistan in an unfavorable light.

This is the background against which Indian leaders have said that a tactical nuclear attack on their forces, even on Pakistani territory, would be treated as a full-scale nuclear attack on India, and that they reserved the right to respond accordingly. Since India does not have tactical nukes, it could only retaliate with far more devastating strategic nuclear arms, possibly targeting Pakistani cities.

According to a 2002 estimate by the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), a worst-case scenario in an Indo-Pakistani nuclear war could result in eight to 12 million fatalities initially, followed by many millions later from radiation poisoning. More recent studies have shown that up to a billion people worldwide might be put in danger of famine and starvation by the smoke and soot thrown into the troposphere in a major nuclear exchange in South Asia. The resulting “nuclear winter” and ensuing crop loss would functionally add up to a slowly developing global nuclear holocaust.

Last November, to reduce the chances of such a catastrophic exchange happening, senior Obama administration officials met in Washington with Pakistan’s army chief, General Raheel Sharif, the final arbiter of that country’s national security policies, and urged him to stop the production of tactical nuclear arms. In return, they offered a pledge to end Islamabad’s pariah status in the nuclear field by supporting its entry into the 48-member Nuclear Suppliers Group to which India already belongs. Although no formal communiqué was issued after Sharif’s trip, it became widely known that he had rejected the offer.

This failure was implicit in the testimony that DIA Director Lieutenant General Vincent Stewart gave to the Armed Services Committee this February. “Pakistan’s nuclear weapons continue to grow,” he said. “We are concerned that this growth, as well as the evolving doctrine associated with tactical [nuclear] weapons, increases the risk of an incident or accident.”

Strategic Nuclear Warheads

Since that DIA estimate of human fatalities in a South Asian nuclear war, the strategic nuclear arsenals of India and Pakistan have continued to grow. In January 2016, according to a U.S. congressional report, Pakistan’s arsenal probably consisted of 110 to 130 nuclear warheads. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, India has 90 to 110 of these. (China, the other regional actor, has approximately 260 warheads.)

As the 1990s ended, with both India and Pakistan testing their new weaponry, their governments made public their nuclear doctrines. The National Security Advisory Board on Indian Nuclear Doctrine, for example, stated in August 1999 that “India will not be the first to initiate a nuclear strike, but will respond with punitive retaliation should deterrence fail.” India’s foreign minister explained at the time that the “minimum credible deterrence” mentioned in the doctrine was a question of “adequacy,” not numbers of warheads. In subsequent years, however, that yardstick of “minimum credible deterrence” has been regularly recalibrated as India’s policymakers went on to commit themselves to upgrade the country’s nuclear arms program with a new generation of more powerful hydrogen bombs designed to be city-busters.

In Pakistan in February 2000, President General Pervez Musharraf, who was also the army chief, established the Strategic Plan Division in the National Command Authority, appointing Lieutenant General Khalid Kidwai as its director general. In October 2001, Kidwai offered an outline of the country’s updated nuclear doctrine in relation to its far more militarily and economically powerful neighbor, saying, “It is well known that Pakistan does not have a ‘no-first-use policy.’” He then laid out the “thresholds” for the use of nukes. The country’s nuclear weapons, he pointed out, were aimed solely at India and would be available for use not just in response to a nuclear attack from that country, but should it conquer a large part of Pakistan’s territory (the space threshold), or destroy a significant part of its land or air forces (the military threshold), or start to strangle Pakistan economically (the economic threshold), or politically destabilize the country through large-scale internal subversion (the domestic destabilization threshold).

Of these, the space threshold was the most likely trigger. New Delhi as well as Washington speculated as to where the red line for this threshold might lie, though there was no unanimity among defense experts. Many surmised that it would be the impending loss of Lahore, the capital of Punjab, only 15 miles from the Indian border. Others put the red line at Pakistan’s sprawling Indus River basin.

Within seven months of this debate, Indian-Pakistani tensions escalated steeply in the wake of an attack on an Indian military base in Kashmir by Pakistani terrorists in May 2002. At that time, Musharraf reiterated that he would not renounce his country’s right to use nuclear weapons first. The prospect of New Delhi being hit by an atom bomb became so plausible that U.S. Ambassador Robert Blackwill investigated building a hardened bunker in the Embassy compound to survive a nuclear strike. Only when he and his staff realized that those in the bunker would be killed by the aftereffects of the nuclear blast did they abandon the idea.

Unsurprisingly, the leaders of the two countries found themselves staring into the nuclear abyss because of a violent act in Kashmir, a disputed territory which had led to three conventional wars between the South Asian neighbors since 1947, the founding year of an independent India and Pakistan. As a result of the first of these in 1947 and 1948, India acquired about half of Kashmir, with Pakistan getting a third, and the rest occupied later by China.

Kashmir, the Root Cause of Enduring Enmity

The Kashmir dispute dates back to the time when the British-ruled Indian subcontinent was divided into Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan, and indirectly ruled princely states were given the option of joining either one. In October 1947, the Hindu maharaja of Muslim-majority Kashmir signed an “instrument of accession” with India after Muslim tribal raiders from Pakistan invaded his realm. The speedy arrival of Indian troops deprived the invaders of the capital city, Srinagar. Later, they battled regular Pakistani troops until a United Nations-brokered ceasefire on January 1, 1949. The accession document required that Kashmiris be given an opportunity to choose between India and Pakistan once peace was restored. This has not happened yet, and there is no credible prospect of it taking place.

Fearing a defeat in such a plebiscite, given the pro-Pakistani sentiments prevalent among the territory’s majority Muslims, India found several ways of blocking U.N. attempts to hold one. New Delhi then conferred a special status on the part of Kashmir it controlled and held elections for its legislature, while Pakistan watched with trepidation.

In September 1965, when its verbal protests proved futile, Pakistan attempted to change the status quo through military force. It launched a war that once again ended in stalemate and another U.N.-sponsored truce, which required the warring parties to return to the 1949 ceasefire line.

A third armed conflict between the two neighbors followed in December 1971, resulting in Pakistan’s loss of its eastern wing, which became an independent Bangladesh. Soon after, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi tried to convince Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto to agree to transform the 460-mile-long ceasefire line in Kashmir (renamed the “Line of Control”) into an international border. Unwilling to give up his country’s demand for a plebiscite in all of pre-1947 Kashmir, Bhutto refused. So the stalemate continued.

During the military rule of General Zia al Haq (1977-1988), Pakistan initiated a policy of bleeding India with a thousand cuts by sponsoring terrorist actions both inside Indian Kashmir and elsewhere in the country. Delhi responded by bolstering its military presence in Kashmir and brutally repressing those of its inhabitants demanding a plebiscite or advocating separation from India, committing in the process large-scale human rights violations.

In order to stop infiltration by militants from Pakistani Kashmir, India built a double barrier of fencing 12-feet high with the space between planted with hundreds of land mines. Later, that barrier would be equipped as well with thermal imaging devices and motion sensors to help detect infiltrators. By the late 1990s, on one side of the Line of Control were 400,000 Indian soldiers and on the other 300,000 Pakistani troops. No wonder President Bill Clinton called that border “the most dangerous place in the world.” Today, with the addition of tactical nuclear weapons to the mix, it is far more so.

Kashmir, the Toxic Bone of Contention

Even before Pakistan’s introduction of tactical nukes, tensions between the two neighbors were perilously high. Then suddenly, at the end of 2015, a flicker of a chance for the normalization of relations appeared. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had a cordial meeting with his Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, on the latter’s birthday, December 25th, in Lahore. But that hope was dashed when, in the early hours of January 2nd, four heavily armed Pakistani terrorists managed to cross the international border in Punjab, wearing Indian Army fatigues, and attacked an air force base in Pathankot. A daylong gun battle followed. By the time order was restored on January 5th, all the terrorists were dead, but so were seven Indian security personnel and one civilian. The United Jihad Council, an umbrella organization of separatist militant groups in Kashmir, claimed credit for the attack. The Indian government, however, insisted that the operation had been masterminded by Masood Azhar, leader of the Pakistan-based Jaish-e Muhammad (Army of Muhammad).

As before, Kashmir was the motivating drive for the anti-India militants. Mercifully, the attack in Pathankot turned out to be a minor event, insufficient to heighten the prospect of war, though it dissipated any goodwill generated by the Modi-Sharif meeting.

There is little doubt, however, that a repeat of the atrocity committed by Pakistani infiltrators in Mumbai in November 2008, leading to the death of 166 people and the burning of that city’s landmark Taj Mahal Hotel, could have consequences that would be dire indeed. The Indian doctrine calling for massive retaliation in response to a successful terrorist strike on that scale could mean the almost instantaneous implementation of its Cold Start strategy. That, in turn, would likely lead to Pakistan’s use of tactical nuclear weapons, thus opening up the real possibility of a full-blown nuclear holocaust with global consequences.

Beyond the long-running Kashmiri conundrum lies Pakistan’s primal fear of the much larger and more powerful India, and its loathing of India’s ambition to become the hegemonic power in South Asia. Irrespective of party labels, governments in New Delhi have pursued a muscular path on national security aimed at bolstering the country’s defense profile.

Overall, Indian leaders are resolved to prove that their country is entering what they fondly call “the age of aspiration.” When, in July 2009, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh officially launched a domestically built nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine, the INS Arihant, it was hailed as a dramatic step in that direction. According to defense experts, that vessel was the first of its kind not to be built by one of the five recognized nuclear powers: the United States, Britain, China, France, and Russia.

India’s Two Secret Nuclear Sites

On the nuclear front in India, there was more to come. Last December, an investigation by the Washington-based Center for Public Integrity revealed that the Indian government was investing $100 million to build a top secret nuclear city spread over 13 square miles near the village of Challakere, 160 miles north of the southern city of Mysore. When completed, possibly as early as 2017, it will be “the subcontinent’s largest military-run complex of nuclear centrifuges, atomic-research laboratories, and weapons- and aircraft-testing facilities.” Among the project’s aims is to expand the government’s nuclear research, to produce fuel for the country’s nuclear reactors, and to help power its expanding fleet of nuclear submarines. It will be protected by a ring of garrisons, making the site a virtual military facility.

Another secret project, the Indian Rare Materials Plant, near Mysore is already in operation. It is a new nuclear enrichment complex that is feeding the country’s nuclear weapons programs, while laying the foundation for an ambitious project to create an arsenal of hydrogen (thermonuclear) bombs.

The overarching aim of these projects is to give India an extra stockpile of enriched uranium fuel that could be used in such future bombs. As a military site, the project at Challakere will not be open to inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency or by Washington, since India’s 2008 nuclear agreement with the U.S. excludes access to military-related facilities. These enterprises are directed by the office of the prime minister, who is charged with overseeing all atomic energy projects. India’s Atomic Energy Act and its Official Secrets Act place everything connected to the country’s nuclear program under wraps. In the past, those who tried to obtain a fuller picture of the Indian arsenal and the facilities that feed it have been bludgeoned to silence.

Little wonder then that a senior White House official was recently quoted as saying, “Even for us, details of the Indian program are always sketchy and hard facts thin on the ground.” He added, “Mysore is being constantly monitored, and we are constantly monitoring progress in Challakere.” However, according to Gary Samore, a former Obama administration coordinator for arms control and weapons of mass destruction, “India intends to build thermonuclear weapons as part of its strategic deterrent against China. It is unclear, when India will realize this goal of a larger and more powerful arsenal, but they will.”

Once manufactured, there is nothing to stop India from deploying such weapons against Pakistan. “India is now developing very big bombs, hydrogen bombs that are city-busters,” said Pervez Hoodbhoy, a leading Pakistani nuclear and national security analyst. “It is not interested in… nuclear weapons for use on the battlefield; it is developing nuclear weapons for eliminating population centers.”

In other words, as the Kashmir dispute continues to fester, inducing periodic terrorist attacks on India and fueling the competition between New Delhi and Islamabad to outpace each other in the variety and size of their nuclear arsenals, the peril to South Asia in particular and the world at large only grows.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...Europe-claims-smashed-25-plots-past-year.html
(fair use applies)

Morocco spy chief warns ISIS are planning chemical attacks in Europe and claims to have smashed 25 plots in the past year
By Corey Charlton for MailOnline
Published: 05:23 EST, 4 April 2016 | Updated: 05:29 EST, 4 April 2016

  • Morocco's counter terror boss warns of growing chemical weapons threat
  • Abdelhak Khiame also revealed the details of a plot uncovered in February
  • A cell of 10 ISIS operatives smuggled weapons into Morocco from Libya
  • The terrorists were planning mustard gas attacks on four different cities
  • Mr Khiame warned ISIS would be planning similar style attacks in Europe

ISIS terrorists have tried to create chemical weapons abroad and are hoping to one day use them to attack Europe, it has been claimed.

Abdelhak Khiame, Morocco's head of counter terrorism, claims his unit has smashed 25 ISIS plots in his country in the past year alone - including one in February involving mustard gas.

The ISIS cell, which had smuggled in weapons from nearby Libya, was planning chemical attacks on four cities plus a suicide bomber strike.

He told The Sun: 'It's very possible that Daesh would use this process to target Britain and other EU countries.

'It already has brigades of children and we know they train them in their camps looking to use them in terrorist attacks in Europe. As for chemical weapons, we have seen here how easy they are to prepare.

'The substances used in the plot we dismantled in February in Morocco are available in shops all over Britain, all over Europe.'

Mr Khiame's Bureau Central d'Investigations Judiciares team, believed the group - which was caught in February - was trying to create mustard gas.

He also claimed it was just one of 25 plots it had smashed within the country in the past year alone.

Last month it emerged U.S. Special Forces had captured ISIS's chemical weapons chief - and he admitted the group was planning to use mustard gas in future attacks.

The operative's capture was confirmed by an American official, who said the interrogation had yielded 'good things'.

He was captured by special forces that the Pentagon recently deployed to conduct raids against ISIS. He is current detained in Iraq, one of the officials said.

According to CNN, the US military has conducted airstrikes against 'targets it believes are crucial to ISIS's chemical weapons program'.

Al-Afari, an expert in chemical and biological weapons, had formerly worked for Saddam Hussein's regime.

Pentagon spokesman Jeff Davis declined to confirm that US forces had captured an ISIS chemical weapons expert.

But he added: 'We know that ISIL has used chemical weapons on multiple occasions in Iraq and Syria.'

In February, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and CIA Director John Brennan for the first time openly accused ISIS of using chemical weapons, including mustard gas, in Iraq and Syria.

Sources close to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons confirmed last month that mustard gas was used in fighting in August in northern Iraq, without specifically blaming ISIS for the attack.

The group also confirmed mustard gas was used on August 21 in Marea in Syria, again without naming the perpetrator of the attack.

Mustard gas - also known as 'sulfur mustard' - can cause respiratory distress, momentary blindness and painful blisters.

It was first used by Germany in Belgium in 1917 and was banned by the UN in 1993.


MORE ON THIS STORY:


http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...turning-to-chemical-weapons-to-target-UK.html
(fair use applies)


Toxic jihad: Spy chief warns ISIS are turning to chemical weapons to target UK as terror cells make lethal gas

EXCLUSIVE by TOM WELLS in Rabat, Morocco
19:01, 3 Apr 2016

IS fanatics are turning to biological and chemical weapons to target Britain and Europe, a spy chief warned yesterday.

Abdelhak Khiame, Morocco’s head of counter-terrorism, told how his agents had smashed a plot to use mustard gas — and discovered terrorists had created a toxin so lethal it would be fatal even if touched.

The ISIS cell was planning chemical and biological attacks on four Moroccan cities plus a strike by a 16-year-old suicide bomber against a government building or tourist area.

Mr Khiame’s Bureau Central d’Investigations Judiciares intelligence team pounced 24 hours before the atrocities were meant to start.

And he warned they would have been a dry run for similar attacks on UK and European targets.

He said: “It’s very possible that Daesh would use this process to target Britain and other EU countries.

“It already has brigades of children and we know they train them in their camps looking to use them in terrorist attacks in Europe. As for chemical weapons, we have seen here how easy they are to prepare.

“The substances used in the plot we dismantled in February in Morocco are available in shops all over Britain, all over Europe.

“They can use very simple substances in order to develop these weapons and it is very easy.”

The Moroccan ISIS cell smashed in February had ten members and had built up an arsenal of weapons shipped in from Libya.

BCIJ agents believe the group was creating mustard gas.

But it was the contents of three jars found hidden at one property that caused the deepest alarm.

Inside were traces of the deadly Epsilon neurotoxin, a biological agent that is exceptionally lethal.

It causes brain tissue and nerve damage and can be used to contaminate food, water or even be sprayed into the air using aerosols.

Mr Khiame, 58, speaking from the BCIJ’s heavily fortified HQ in Morocco’s capital Rabat, said: “One of the substances we found was so dangerous that if it was applied to the door handle of a car and you touched it, you would die.

“The aim was to shake the people’s faith in the Moroccan authorities to protect them, but it failed.

“Yet the making of some of these toxins involved some substances, which I will not disclose, and a mouse and a lemon.

“They were left in a jar to concentrate and the toxic substance was created. That is how simple it was. It’s very simple and affordable for them to make these weapons. And that is deeply concerning.”

Mr Khiame’s remarks will trigger fears that ISIS is planning to switch tactics in the wake of the Brussels bomb blasts that left 32 dead and 340 wounded.

His elite unit is seen by Western security services as a key front-line player in the war on terror.

It was Mr Khiame who gave the French authorities vital information that led them to Paris attack plotter Abdelhamid Abaaoud, shot dead in a raid on his hideout in a suburb of the French capital.

The BCIJ is also involved in the Belgian bombing investigation. Several members of the Belgian ISIS cell responsible have links to Morocco.

They include Najim Laachraoui, 24, the bomb-maker killed in the airport blasts.

Mr Khiame’s team has also smashed 25 ISIS plots at home since being formed a year ago.

But he is concerned that Belgium and France are not doing enough to counter their home-grown IS menace.

He said: “Belgium is becoming the Daesh of Europe. We we don’t see Belgians wanting to go to Syria. They are happy to attack their own country.”

Mr Khiame said ISIS will attack any country that opposes its ideology. He added: “Terrorism has no religion and no nationality.

“So all the countries across the world are a target now.”

Mr Khiame said he hoped British people will remember IS is hated by most Muslims.

He said: “I fight terrorism every day because these people deface the covenant of Islam I believe in.”
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.lowyinterpreter.org/post...ve-militarisation-of-the-South-China-Sea.aspx

Is Beijing’s militarisation of the South China Sea really 'defensive'?

Collin Koh Swee Lean
4 April 2016 12:07PM

The latest buzzword of the South China Sea 'war of words', as observed in media reports, academic opinion and official press remarks is none other than 'militarisation'. But what does 'militarisation' mean?

The Merriam-Webster and Oxford dictionaries commonly define 'militarisation' as 'to give a military character or quality to something.' Alternative definitions include 'an act of making something operate in a manner similar to armed forces'; 'to equip or supply a place with military forces'; 'to adapt for military use'; and 'an act of deploying armed forces to an area.'

But such conceptual definitions aside, what matters ultimately is how each concerned party interprets militarisation: what it means, and what activities it encompasses. Suffice to say, virtually every nation-state engages in peacetime military buildup. 'Militarisation' becomes a policy-relevant concept in the context of geopolitical contestation, in this case, maritime territorial and jurisdictional disputes in the South China Sea. Naturally both claimants and non-claimants are concerned about activities taking place in the region.

Differing national takes on 'militarisation'

However, there is no common agreement over what 'militarisation' means. The focus of attention has been on China whose activities in the disputed waters, for example the building of artificial islands and facilities, have been widely described as militarisation. Beijing has parried such accusations, calling its buildup 'defensive' and instead describes Washington's activities, such as freedom of navigation operations and the recent Philippine-US bases agreement, as its own form of militarisation. Again, this is where one sinks into the quagmire reminiscent of the disagreements during Cold War-era arms control negotiations over what constituted 'legitimate' or 'defensive' military preparations.

At the most basic, claimants have already stationed military troops to garrison features they occupy. Vietnam for example has deployed marines, equipped with not just small arms but heavier weaponry such as anti-armour recoilless rifles and shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles. Taiwan withdrew marines from Itu Aba Island in the late 1990s, replacing them with coastguard personnel equipped with, notably, 81mm and 120mm mortars that give them more than a law enforcement role. For the longest time, various claimants such as the Philippines and Taiwan have flown military airlifters to those outposts.

Therefore, determining what counts as 'militarisation' amounts to a meaningless exercise using broad conceptual definitions. In fact, both claimant and non-claimants have already militarised the South China Sea. But the degree and extent of such activities, and the strategic and operational consequences they entail, are what matter most. Using this understanding, China's activities stand out. How 'defensive' are they? Beijing has upped the ante over the present scope of militarisation by deploying certain weapons systems that can potentially give it an edge over its South China Sea rivals.

China's double-pronged missile threat

In February this year, two batteries of HQ-9 surface-to-air missiles (SAM) were deployed to Woody Island, part of the Chinese-occupied Paracel Islands also claimed by Vietnam. What is so interesting about this system is its ability to engage targets at a 200 km slant range – which practically out-distances short-range missiles arming, say, Vietnam's garrisons. This mobile, quick-reaction SAM, which is said to be a reverse-engineered version of Russia's S-300, is capable of extending China's air defence coverage in the South China Sea. If deployed to Woody Island, the missile is able to provide effective air defence cover for the entire Paracels.

Given its mobility, the HQ-9 can also be readily deployed to the Spratlys, especially by airlift. The missile's presence on Woody Island reflects concerns about the protection of high-value military installations, such as airstrips. Therefore, if the HQ-9 is dispatched to the artificial islands where airstrips are built, it becomes possible to provide air defence coverage over most parts of the Spratlys. Nonetheless, aware of the HQ-9's limitations, Beijing has acquired the superior Russian-designed S-400 which possesses similar mobility, but touts a 400 km engagement range and enhanced ability to operate in marine environments.

In late March, imagery posted on China's Weibo blog suggests the deployment of YJ-62 anti-ship cruise missiles to Woody Island at around the same time as the HQ-9. This 300 km ranged, sea-skimming missile shares the self-contained, mobile, quick-reaction, better electronic counter-countermeasures (or anti-jamming) characteristics as the HQ-9. Its introduction to the South China Sea will trump those deployed by any other claimant. With its 300 kg warhead, one YJ-62 can inflict severe damages upon a warship displacing 7000 tons. Except for the US and Japan, Beijing's South China Sea rivals do not tout surface warships displacing above 5000 tons, plus many lack effective anti-missile self-defences, much less the means to destroy these coastal launchers once they enter the missiles' engagement envelope. While China will not be foolhardy to use these missiles to threaten vital sea lines of communications used by civilian shipping, it will certainly be keen to use the YJ-62 to impose a military shipping exclusion zone, plausibly covering both the Paracels and Spratlys.

A pessimistic outlook?

Those two different missile systems will complement each other and work in tandem with other Chinese military and coastguard assets operating in the South China Sea. Debating about 'permanent deployment' is moot because these mobile systems can be rapidly dispatched to the area at the onset of rising tensions in preparation for conflict, thereby increasing Beijing's ability to deter, defend and support offensive operations against its rivals.

With these systems, China enhances its ability to assert military control through denying access in and over the South China Sea. More importantly, given the threat these missiles pose to foreign aerial and naval assets, their deployment may prompt regional rivals to acquire both defensive and offensive countermeasures such as better electronic warfare systems, long-range air- and sea-launched standoff weapons, and specialist armaments for suppression of enemy air defences – thereby fuelling further militarisation of the South China Sea.

Given the differing national interpretations (and implementation) of 'militarisation', Beijing looks set to pursue its own brand of militarisation at its own comfortable pace and to the extent, calling such moves 'defensive' measures in any manner befitting its South China Sea interests.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://warontherocks.com/2016/04/moscows-mercenaries-in-syria/

Moscow’s Mercenaries in Syria

Mark Galeotti
April 5, 2016

As Syrian forces push their advantage against the Islamic State, it is increasingly clear that there are Russians on the ground with them. Some are Spetsnaz special forces, there for recon and forward air control, but others are mercenaries, working for a shadowy outfit in St. Petersburg. Increasingly, the Kremlin is waking up to the potential advantages of outsourcing combat missions to private contractors — but doing so in a very Russian way, in which “private” is still a euphemism for “deniable,” and where official intelligence agencies are still in control.

Much of the confusion about the scale and nature of Russia’s direct commitment on the ground probably reflects the presence of both state and private forces, with each having their own deniable components. Russian contractors appear to be operating T-90 tanks in combat and similar heavy equipment, and were at the fore of the recent drive to take Palmyra.

The force in question was disclosed last week in an investigative report in the independent Russian Fontanka news site. It is known as “Wagner,” after the call-sign of its commander, 46-year-old reserve Lt. Col. Dmitri Utkin. Until 2013 he was an officer in the 2nd Spetsnaz Brigade, based in Pskov, and on mustering out, joined the Moran Security Group, a registered private security company that specializes in maritime protection — especially providing guard contingents for ships sailing through pirate-infested seas.

Utkin, whose call-sign reflects his apparent “commitment to the aesthetics and ideology of the Third Reich,” according to Fontanka, was involved in Russia’s first, ill-fated foray into the world of pseudo-private military operations as part of the “Slavonic Corps,” briefly deployed into Syria in 2013. This was technically a Hong Kong-based company, generally regarded as an offshoot of Moran, because whereas private security companies (PSCs) — providing armed security for premises, people, and transports — are allowed under Russian laws, private military companies (PMCs) — actually involving themselves in mercenary combat operations — are not.

Two Slavonic Corps companies of Russian mercenaries were deployed to Syria, but it soon became clear that their paymasters, and the Syrian government, were unable to provide them with the equipment and support they had been promised. After a couple of inconclusive and mismanaged skirmishes against the Islamic State, they returned to Russia — where most were detained by Federal Security Service (FSB) officers for breaching Article 348 of the Russian Criminal Code, which bans mercenary service. This is despite the fact that Moran is run by FSB veterans, and FSB officers were involved in recruiting for the corps.

Hardly an impressive debut, but nonetheless there had for some time been some consideration of the possible value of PMCs as a further instrument of Russian statecraft.

Five years ago, Putin suggested that “such companies are a way of implementing national interests without the direct involvement of the state,” and in 2013 Deputy Prime Minister Dmitri Rogozin floated the idea that it was worth considering setting up such PMCs with state backing. At the time, though, there was considerable resistance within the defense ministry. Nonetheless, the passage that year of a bill that allows state energy corporations Gazprom and Transneft to maintain extensive security forces — which since 2007 had anyway legally been allowed to issue heavier and more lethal weapons than generally available to security officers — represented a first step towards creating the legal and practical basis for PMCs.

Since then, though, Moscow’s perspective has been transformed by its own experiences in Ukraine, and also its growing adventurism abroad.

In the Donbas, independent “militias” — which as often as not emerge from organized crime groups and similar structures — have often proved to be of limited real combat effectiveness. They offer a degree of deniability and allow Moscow to keep the war simmering, but at a serious cost in battlefield capacity, and have periodically had to be bailed out by regular Russian troops in combat with Ukrainian regulars. A perhaps even more important problem with them is control. The mysterious (well, not that mysterious) recent assassination of several maverick commanders, such as Alexander Bednov (known as “Batman”) and Alexei Mozgovoy, probably reflect Moscow’s efforts to reassert a degree of authority over the military forces of the rebellious regions.

Instead, the Donbas has been a testing ground for new state-controlled but notionally private initiatives, ranging from the Vostok Battalion, deployed in 2014, to a variety of other groups drawn from Cossacks, veterans, and adventurers, largely mustered by the FSB — or more usually, military intelligence, the GRU.

Utkin apparently commanded one such outfit in Luhansk, beginning in 2014. Indeed, he was blamed for being behind the killing of “Batman” on Moscow’s order. His unit was reportedly trained at the 10th Spetsnaz Brigade’s base at Molkino, in the south of Russia, and was far more carefully prepared and well paid than the typical adventurers in the Donbas.

So both the FSB and the GRU have now had experience raising and deploying deniable-but-controllable pseudo-private military contingents, and consider them to offer a reasonable balance between effectiveness and control.

Hence the “Wagner” group, which may comprise 400 effectives at present (from a reported peak of almost 900), is likely to be something of a testbed. It is not registered under Russian law, not least because PMCs are still not legal, and it has no official status.

Nonetheless, it is clearly in Syria with the blessing, and probably funding, of the Kremlin — likely through the GRU this time — and playing a significant role in the current ground fighting in and around Palmyra. Before then, having arrived in Syria in late 2015, they had primarily been deployed to protect key government installations and assist in the security of Russian bases. Now that the Syrian forces seem again better able to guard their own facilities, and the war has taken a more offensive turn, they are being used to stiffen and support Damascus’s forces. As a result they have also suffered “dozens” of combat losses according to Fontanka — compared with the mere seven official casualties Moscow has acknowledged from its own forces.

This year is likely to see the passage of a law finally legalizing PMCs in Russia. As a result, we can expect to see groups like “Wagner” — what we could call “hybrid businesses,” technically private, but essentially acting as the arms of the Russian state — cropping up in other war zones before too long.

Mark Galeotti is Professor of Global Affairs at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs and director of its Initiative for the Study of Emerging Threats. His most recent book is Spetsnaz: Russia’s Special Forces (Osprey, 2015).
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thecipherbrief.com/article/asia/effect-south-koreas-neighbors-1093

Expert Commentary
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The Effect on South Korea’s Neighbors

April 5, 2016 | Bruce Bennett

In the aftermath of the North Korean nuclear weapon test in January and its satellite launch/ICBM test in February, the United States and South Korea announced that they would begin formal talks on deploying the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) in South Korea.

The THAAD System

THAAD would join the existing U.S. and South Korean Patriot missile defenses that are intended primarily to stop short-range North Korean Scud missiles. THAAD is designed to intercept longer-range missiles like the North Korean NoDong that would be traveling at a much higher speed as they reenter the atmosphere. The NoDongs could well be the first missiles to carry North Korean nuclear weapons.

Thus far, the United States has acquired only five THAAD batteries. In order to maintain a rotation base in the United States required for training and personnel sustainment, it is difficult to deploy overseas more than one-third of the batteries in peacetime. Yet one battery has already been deployed on Guam. Once the sixth THAAD battery is acquired in 2016, a second overseas battery would be available for Korea.

South Korea does not possess the THAAD system and does not plan to deploy it. South Korea is focused on developing its own alternative to THAAD: the so-called long-range surface-to-air missile, or L-SAM, not due for deployment until after 2020.

Thus the discussion of deploying THAAD in South Korea is about deploying a U.S. THAAD battery with U.S. personnel, focused on defending U.S. forces in South Korea from North Korean nuclear weapon threats.

Reactions by South Korea’s Neighbors

For many years, China and Russia have viewed the developing U.S. regional missile defense system as aimed at them, and have therefore opposed this system. They have refused to recognize the U.S./allied need to defend against the very large North Korean missile force despite North Korea’s fiery threats of transforming South Korea, Japan, and the United States into a “sea of nuclear fire.” And they have seriously pressured South Korea not to join the US-led missile defense system.

China has led this opposition. “When pursuing its own security, one country should not impair other’s security interests,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said recently. “We believe that China’s legitimate security concerns must be taken into account and a convincing explanation must be provided to China,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi added. The Chinese ambassador to South Korea, Qiu Guohong, sought to leverage the THAAD deployment by reportedly threatening that THAAD deployment “could destroy [China-South Korea] bilateral relations in an instant.” This and other Chinese threats have worried South Koreans, because China is South Korea’s largest trading partner, carrying on more trade with the South than the United States and Japan combined.

But there are several inconsistencies in the Chinese position. Most notably, China often does not practice what it preaches. For example, it has provided no explanation to its neighbors regarding recent deployment of air/missile defense systems like the S-300 in the South China Sea or continued development and deployment of offensive missile systems like the DF-21 on the Chinese mainland.

China has also provided no convincing security rationale for its own objections to THAAD system deployment in South Korea. After all, the only Chinese offensive missiles that the THAAD missiles could intercept would be ones fired at Korea, and it would seem clear that Korea has the right to defend itself against such threats. In contrast, China’s silence on Russian S-400 missile defense system deployments (or even South Korea production of offensive cruise missiles that can reach China) is puzzling. Some Chinese commentators raise concerns regarding the THAAD radar’s range, which reaches well into China, but this is a modest addition to other observational means already deployed on satellites, aircraft, and ships.

More broadly, there are logical security arguments for China to favor THAAD deployment to South Korea. THAAD should enhance deterrence of North Korean provocations, including limited attacks, thereby helping to stop threats to regional instability from North Korea that China does not seek. Overall, China’s objections appear to be motivated more by politics than meaningful military security concerns.

A Diversionary Tactic?

If China’s objections are politically motivated, what political dynamics might be driving its behavior? One possible explanation lies in the political relationship between China and North Korea. China has been either unwilling (or more likely unable) to rein in its ally North Korea’s growing nuclear and offensive missile threats. China has had substantial motivation to do so, including the concerns of Chinese citizens living near the North Korean border, who are threatened by North Korean nuclear weapon tests.

In contrast, the United States successfully convinced South Korea to stop its nuclear weapon program in the 1970s. Had the United States not done so, Northeast Asia would arguably be far less stable today. This contrast is no doubt a troubling one for China given its great power ambitions. In this context, strong objection to THAAD could be seen as a useful diversionary tactic, drawing attention from China's failures to meaningfully influence North Korean behavior.

Likely Reactions

It is hard to determine how China (or Russia) will respond to THAAD deployment in South Korea. China could continue its current course and rhetoric, perhaps punishing South Korea economically. Alternatively, THAAD deployment could change the dynamic and terms of the debate, leading to greater Chinese pressure on North Korea to curb its nuclear and missile threats. Regardless, South Korea and the United States need to do a better job of explaining their defensive resolve and rationale to the Chinese government and people. Chief among their many arguments should be the danger of allowing the North Korean nuclear weapons program to continue its unfettered growth.

• South Korea
• missile defense
• United States
• North Korea
• China

The Author is Bruce Bennett
Bruce Bennett is a senior defense analyst at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation and a professor at the Pardee RAND Graduate School.
 

TammyinWI

Talk is cheap
Housecarl wrote:

Thanks TammyinWI,

I'm "getting there". Stopped in late last night at my regular diner, got a mixed scrabble with spinach, went to the Safeway, restocked on V8 "V Fusion" and Coricidin and back to bed until a little while ago when the cat said it was "breakfast time".


You are welcome, and I hope you are "out of the woods" now...cat probably is real glad if you are, too!

Back to the regularly scheduled thread...
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Housecarl wrote:

Thanks TammyinWI,

I'm "getting there". Stopped in late last night at my regular diner, got a mixed scrabble with spinach, went to the Safeway, restocked on V8 "V Fusion" and Coricidin and back to bed until a little while ago when the cat said it was "breakfast time".


You are welcome, and I hope you are out of the woods now...cat probably is real glad if you are, too!

Thanks TammyinWI,

Still a bit of a tinge of a throat, post nasal drip and cough. I figure one more day of "babying it"/"nukng it". Her furriness decided it was early breakfast time a couple of hours ago hence me being online instead of "out". I'm going to get myself together and venture forth for some comfort food (coffee, croissants, donuts, etc...) and hunker back down.
 

Possible Impact

TB Fanatic
200px-Reuters_2008_logo.svg.png


Russia's Putin creates national guard to fight terror, crime

Tue Apr 5, 2016 10:17am EDT
https://sg.news.yahoo.com/kurdish-rebel-supporters-lose-citizenship-erdogan-141017748.html
r

Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting on the preparations for
the upcoming Victory Day, marking the anniversary of the victory over Nazi
Germany in World War Two, at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, April 5, 2016.
Reuters/Alexander Zemlianichenko/Pool

Russia is creating a national guard to fight terrorism and organized
crime, President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday.

"The decisions have been taken, we are creating a new federal body of
executive power," Putin told a meeting with his key security officials in
the Kremlin.


The national guard will be created on the basis of the Interior Ministry's
troops, Putin said. He said that Russia's drug enforcement agency and
federal migration service would be now subordinate to the Interior
Ministry.


(Reporting by Denis Dyomkin; writing by Dmitry Solovyov; editing by Polina Devitt)
 

vestige

Deceased
Thanks TammyinWI,

Still a bit of a tinge of a throat, post nasal drip and cough. I figure one more day of "babying it"/"nukng it". Her furriness decided it was early breakfast time a couple of hours ago hence me being online instead of "out". I'm going to get myself together and venture forth for some comfort food (coffee, croissants, donuts, etc...) and hunker back down.

If stuff like this keeps popping up:

IS fanatics are turning to biological and chemical weapons to target Britain and Europe, a spy chief warned yesterday.

you may have to move up to whiskey and pass on the coffee.

(damn this cough)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I'm anticipating that the Syrian and "allied parties" response to this is going to be more than just "in kind" (regardless of past SAA behavior) when they feel the time is right.....What I want to know is what is the Administration going to do when, not if, IS uses this stuff on US personnel?.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.yahoo.com/news/deadly-gas-attack-syria-army-state-media-092754189.html

IS in deadly gas attack on Syria army: state media

AFP
April 5, 2016

Beirut (AFP) - The Islamic State group has mounted a deadly gas attack against Syrian troops at a besieged eastern airbase, state news agency SANA said, the latest report of the jihadists' use of chemical weapons.

SANA did not say precisely how many soldiers had been killed in the attack on the government-controlled airbase outside the divided eastern city of Deir Ezzor.

"Daesh (IS) terrorists attacked Deir Ezzor military airport with rockets carrying mustard gas, causing some people to suffocate," it reported late Monday.

It is the latest in a string of suspected mustard gas attacks by the jihadists in Syria and neighbouring Iraq.

On March 9, a suspected IS gas attack on the Iraqi town of Taza, south of Kirkuk, killed three children and wounded some 1,500 people, with injuries ranging from burns to rashes and respiratory problems.

While the chemical agents allegedly used by IS so far have been among their least effective weapons, the psychological impact on civilians is considerable.

A total of 25,000 people fled their homes in and around Taza last month, fearing another attack.

IS has been battling to capture Deir Ezzor airbase since 2014.

It provides the only supply route other than air drops to the government-held sector of the city, where more than 200,000 civilians are living under IS siege.

On Monday, an IS bombardment of two government-held districts of the city killed seven civilians, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Two suicide bombers also blew themselves up in the village of Jafra near the airbase, the Britain-based monitoring group said.

Deir Ezzor province is vital for the jihadists because it lies between their de facto Syrian and Iraqi capitals Raqa and Mosul.

In recent weeks, IS has faced intense pressure in Syria at the hands of both the Russian-backed army and US-backed Kurdish-led rebels.

An offensive by the army pushed the jihadists out of the ancient city of Palmyra late last month, opening up the possibility of a strike across the desert to relieve the siege of Deir Ezzor.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
If stuff like this keeps popping up:



you may have to move up to whiskey and pass on the coffee.

(damn this cough)

Holding up on the whiskey/brandy...taking too much Tylenol like products so don't want to FUBAR my liver...Besides there are antioxidants in coffee, even decaf.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.yahoo.com/news/death-toll-rises-64-karabakh-clashes-090029071.html?nhp=1

Azerbaijan and Armenian forces agree truce in Nagorny Karabakh clashes

Karen Minasian with Tofik Babayev in Terter and Simon Sturdee in Vienna
AFP
April 5, 2016

Stepanakert (Azerbaijan) (AFP) - Azerbaijan and Armenian separatists in Nagorny Karabakh on Tuesday announced a ceasefire after four days of bloodshed, as international powers scrambled to end the worst violence in decades over the disputed region.

The two sides said they had agreed to halt fighting from 0800 GMT after clashes since Friday left at least 73 people dead, but Armenia's defence ministry claimed there was still "sporadic shooting" going on.

Key regional powerbroker Russian President Vladimir Putin called the leaders of ex-Soviet Armenia and Azerbaijan after the ceasefire agreement and told them to "ensure" an end to the violence.

"Putin called on both sides to urgently ensure a complete cessation of military hostilities and respect for the ceasefire," the Kremlin said after Putin spoke to the two presidents separately by telephone.

On a visit to a hospital to meet wounded soldiers Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev said the conflict could still be resolved peacefully if Armenia's leadership "behaves sincerely at the negotiating table".

The "Minsk Group" of the US, French, and Russian ambassadors to the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which has long mediated Karabakh peace talks, urged both sides to respect the truce after meeting in Vienna.

The Minsk Group co-chairs "stressed that it is important to return to the political process on the basis of a sustainable ceasefire."

The US State Department welcomed the ceasefire and said it fully supported the work of the group.

"There is an established process here," US spokesman Mark Toner said. "We've had a complete breakdown, a violation, of the existing ceasefire. We now have a new one in place. It needs to be adhered to."

In a flurry of diplomacy the mediators are heading to the region to shuttle between the two warring sides, while Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev is set to travel to both Yerevan and Baku in the coming days.

Russia's foreign ministry also said that the top diplomats from Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan will focus on the conflict when they meet for planned talks in Baku on Thursday, RIA Novosti reported.

- Changing the frontline -

On the ground, an AFP photographer in the frontline Azeri town of Terter said that both sides appeared to have stopped shelling Tuesday afternoon after a night of sporadic artillery fire across the front.

At the Karabakh army checkpoint near the Iranian border, shelling halted as well around midday, another AFP photographer said.

The fragile truce comes after Azerbaijan's army claimed to have snatched control of several strategic locations inside Armenian-controlled territory, effectively changing the frontline for the first time since an inconclusive truce ended a war in 1994.

But Yerevan said the Azeri side no longer held any Armenian territory.

"Even if certain Armenian positions were at some point taken by Azeris, now they are all returned under Karabakh's control," Armenia's defence ministry spokesman Artsrun Hovhannisyan told AFP.

Azerbaijan's ambassador to the United States, Elin Suleymanov, told AFP Armenia had provoked the conflict to overshadow Baku's successful diplomacy.

Last week Aliyev received a warm welcome to Washington at President Barack Obama's Nuclear Security Summit.

Suleymanov dubbed this "one of the most positive days" in US-Azerbaijan relations and thanked Secretary of State John Kerry for backing Azerbaijan's territorial integrity.

"So, history shows that every time something like this happens, there is a provocation that overshadows that success," he complained.

"This time with the summit just finished and President Aliyev still in transit back home -- he hadn't even landed -- when the escalation began."

In updated death tolls Tuesday evening, Azerbaijani authorities told AFP 31 soldiers and two civilians on their side had died. Rebel Karabakh officials said 35 Armenian fighters and five civilians were killed.

- Regional fears -

Both sides accused each other of starting the latest outbreak which has sparked concern of a wider conflict that could drag in Russia and Turkey.

While Moscow has sold arms to both sides, it has a military alliance with and a base in, Armenia and far closer ties to Yerevan.

Turkey -- which is locked in a feud with Moscow after Ankara downed a Russian warplane in Syria in November -- has pledged its full support for traditional ally Azerbaijan, with Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu vowing to stand by Baku "until the apocalypse."

Washington refused to comment on NATO ally Turkey's rhetoric, but Toner insisted that the Minsk process "does not include taking sides or picking one side over another."

Security alliance NATO called on all sides to "show restraint and prevent any new escalation."

Separatists backed by Yerevan seized control of mountainous Nagorny Karabakh, a majority ethnic Armenian region lying inside Azerbaijan, in an early 1990s war after the Soviet Union crumbled that claimed some 30,000 lives.

The sides have never signed a peace deal despite the 1994 ceasefire and sporadic violence on the line of contact regularly claims the lives of soldiers on both sides.

Energy-rich Azerbaijan, whose military spending exceeds Armenia's entire state budget, has repeatedly threatened to take back the breakaway region by force.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20160406000376

Korea in debate about developing own nuclear weapons: CRS report

Published : 2016-04-06 10:40
Updated : 2016-04-06 10:40

South Korea is in a debate about developing its own nuclear weapons, despite the United States' assurances to extend its "nuclear umbrella" to protect the Asian ally, a congressional report said Tuesday.

The Congressional Research Service also said in the report on U.S.-South Korea relations that such a move by the South could result in a series of negative consequences, including economic sanctions on Seoul and a nuclear arms race in the region.

"In the wake of North Korea's recent nuclear weapon test and satellite launch, South Korea has re-engaged in a debate about developing its own nuclear weapons capability, notwithstanding Seoul's reliance on the U.S. nuclear 'umbrella,'" the report said.

The report also noted that an opinion survey after North Korea's third nuclear test in 2013 indicated growing support in South Korea for developing an indigenous nuclear capability "amidst doubt that the United States would use its nuclear weapons to protect South Korea."

"Although U.S. policymakers have reiterated their 'ironclad commitment' to defend South Korea and have publicized B-52 and B-2 long-range bomber flights over the Korean Peninsula, some South Koreans have pointed to the failure of the United States and others to stanch Pyongyang's growing nuclear capability as justification for Seoul to pursue its own nuclear arsenal," the report said.

"Analysts point to the potential negative consequences of such a move for South Korea, including economic sanctions, diminished international standing, and the potential to encourage Japan and others in the region to follow suit, leading to a dangerous arms race in Asia," it said.

Pyongyang's nuclear and missile tests reignited calls in South Korea for its own nuclear armament, with some leading members of the country's ruling party arguing that it makes no sense to rely on the U.S. "nuclear umbrella" as the North's nuclear arsenal grows.

But the government dismissed the idea, saying it runs counter to the principle of a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula.

Adding fuel to the debate was a suggestion from U.S. Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump that South Korea and Japan could be allowed to develop nuclear weapons for self-defense in response to the North's nuclear and missile threats.

The White House flatly rejected the idea as directly contrary to long-standing U.S. policy.

U.S. President Barack Obama also openly criticized Trump, saying the remarks about a nuclear South Korea "tell us that the person who made the statements doesn't know much about foreign policy or nuclear policy or the Korean Peninsula or the world generally."

The CRS report, meanwhile, said that U.S. officials are also concerned about the "possibility that a small-scale North Korean provocation against South Korea is more likely to escalate than it was previously, due in part to South Korea's stated intention to respond more forcefully to an attack."

"U.S. defense officials insist that the close day-to-day coordination in the alliance ensures that U.S.-ROK communication would be strong in the event of a new contingency," it said.

The report also said that Seoul's decision to begin official talks with the U.S. about the potential deployment of the THAAD missile defense system could be part of an effort to "convince China to place more pressure on North Korea, according to analysts." (Yonhap)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Obama administration 'concerned' about Iranian ballistic missile tests: State Department
Started by Dennis Olson‎, Today 11:30 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...nian-ballistic-missile-tests-State-Department


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://townhall.com/tipsheet/guyben...oring-the-spirit-of-our-nuclear-deal-n2143399

Smart Power: Iran Isn't Really Honoring the 'Spirit' of Our Nuclear Deal, Obama Says

Guy Benson | Apr 05, 2016
Comments 65

Behold, the perfect 'Smart Power' presidential pull quote in light of Justin's two updates yesterday, wherein the US Navy interdicted an Iranian weapons shipment destined for Shiite rebels in Yemen, and one of the regime's generals instructed the American government to take its criticism of Iran's rogue ballistic missile tests and shove it. Your thoughts, Mr. President?


President Obama on Friday criticized Iranian leaders for undermining the “spirit” of last year’s historic nuclear agreement, even as they stick to the “letter” of the pact. In comments following the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, Obama denied speculation that the United States would ease rules preventing dollars from being used in financial transactions with Iran, in order to boost the country’s engagement with the rest of the world. Instead, Obama claimed, that Iran’s troubles even after the lifting of sanctions under the nuclear deal were due to its continued support of Hezbollah, ballistic missile tests and other aggressive behavior. “Iran so far has followed the letter of the agreement, but the spirit of the agreement involves Iran also sending signals to the world community and businesses that it is not going to be engaging in a range of provocative actions that are going to scare businesses off,” Obama said at a press conference. “When they launch ballistic missiles with slogans calling for the destruction of Israel, that makes businesses nervous.”


The extremely controversial nuclear accord, which was opposed by a substantial bipartisan majority in Congress, enshrines the anti-American, terrorism-financing regime's nuclear program as internationally-blessed, effectively guaranteeing that Iran will become a nuclear threshold state as soon as Western-imposed restrictions begin to automatically sunset over the next 15 years. There is also some dispute over whether Iran has, in fact, abided by the letter of the agreement so far. Some analysts say the regime's illegal missile tests violate one element of the deal, critics have raised suspicions about Iranian activity around an infamous nuclear site, and the regime managed to increase its uranium stockpile while enrichment was ostensibly halted during the interim agreement. Regardless of whether Iran has technically abrogated the agreement (as they've threatened to do), and ignoring the regime's long pattern of cheating on international sanctions (including their flagrant contravention of UN missile restrictions), nothing within the deal required Iran to clean up its act on terrorism abetment or regional meddling. Obama himself has admitted that some of the $100 billion-plus that is unfrozen under the accord's sanctions relief provisions will be used to underwrite terror and foment chaos. Both predictions have already been vindicated, with the State Department recently reporting that Iran's state sponsorship of international terrorism remains "undiminished." During the height of the public debate over Obama's unilateral and unpopular plan, the president angrily accused domestic "crazies" of making "common cause" with 'death to America'-chanting zealots. By alleging that Iran is failing to live up to the spirit of his supposed diplomatic masterstroke, is Obama treading dangerously close to the sort of alleged pro-fanatic solidarity he once decried? Meanwhile, here's Iran trolling the Obama administration with charges that America isn't honoring the agreement:


Iranian officials on Monday accused the United States of violating the recent comprehensive nuclear agreement by working behind the scenes to stop American companies from conducting business with Iran, according to regional media reports. Iran has been complaining for months that it is not being granted enough sanctions relief under the agreement. These complaints have reportedly pushed the Obama administration to consider offering Iran greater concessions, including access to the U.S. dollar and American financial markets. However, Iranian officials continue to insist that the Obama administration is violating the deal. Sadeq Amoli Larijani, Iran’s judiciary chief, “warned” the United States in remarks on Monday, claiming that the administration’s current actions violate the agreement. “The Americans are now acting in violation of the nuclear agreement,” Larijani was quoted as saying on Monday before high-ranking Iranian officials.


The Free Beacon's Adam Kredo also reports that Congress has launched an investigation into whether the White House misled the legislative branch about the terms of the deal, amid allegations that US officials have been stealthily editing the agreement after the fact. Moving the goalposts would seem easier under an agreement that isn't legally binding and hasn't been formally signed. The White House has been hedging on Iran's fealty to the deal for weeks:

Mark Knoller
✔ ýý@markknoller

No guarantee Iran won't violate nuclear deal, says @PressSec, "but we'll know if they do," citing most intrusive monitoring procedures.

10:44 AM - 8 Mar 2016

11 11 Retweets
3 3 likes

I'll leave you with this flashback. He's been right about almost everything:

Video: Bibi's Speech to Congress...
https://youtu.be/5heLUyvDW7k
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-politics-rousseff-idUSKCN0X21MN

World | Tue Apr 5, 2016 7:59pm EDT
Related: World, Brazil

Brazil justice orders impeachment process for VP, heightens crisis

BRASILIA | By Alonso Soto and Anthony Boadle


A Supreme Court judge ordered Brazil's Congress on Tuesday to start impeachment proceedings against Vice President Michel Temer, deepening a political crisis and uncertainty over leadership of Latin America's largest country.

Justice Marco Aurelio Mello told the lower house to convene an impeachment committee to consider putting Temer on trial on charges he helped manipulate budget accounting as part of President Dilma Rousseff's administration.

Another committee is already analyzing similar charges against Rousseff, a leftist who is scrambling for support to defeat an impeachment vote in the lower house as early as mid-April.

Mello, who has a record of controversial decisions that later have been overturned by the full court, criticized the shelving of a request to impeach the vice president by lower house Speaker Eduardo Cunha, who in December launched impeachment proceedings against Rousseff on the same grounds.

Cunha said he will appeal against Mello's unprecedented ruling, which raises questions about the future governance of a country mired in political turmoil, a severe economic recession and an institutional crisis that is increasingly being handled by the judiciary.

Because Temer is next in line for the presidency if Rousseff was impeached, the possibility of his ouster complicates the calculation that lawmakers must make if they vote to oust Rousseff. If one is guilty of the charges, the ruling suggests, the other is guilty too.

"This takes away some of the momentum for her impeachment," said Sonia Fleury, a political scientist at the Getulio Vargas Foundation, a business school and think tank in Rio de Janeiro. "Her opponents will now have to rethink their strategy."

Fleury said it is unlikely, however, that the 11-member court will reverse Mello's decision.

Brazil's currency, the real BRL=, extended losses following the ruling, frustrating investors who hope a Temer administration would be more market-friendly and pull the economy out of what could be its worst recession in a century. Cunha, a party colleague of Temer's and the third in line for succession, is himself embroiled in a corruption scandal related to the kickback probe around state-run oil company Petrobras (PETR4.SA) and faces ethics committee hearings.

Temer on Tuesday stepped aside as the head of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB), the large, ideologically amorphous party that until last week was the main coalition partner for Rousseff's Workers' Party.

By stepping down, analysts said, Temer removed himself from the awkward position in which his party has been questioning the legitimacy of a Rousseff government that he is still part of.

"Temer is trying to distance himself from the PMDB to avoid accusations of influencing political decisions aimed at destroying president Rousseff," said Augusto de Queiroz, a political scientist with Brazil's congressional research service.

Temer's resignation and Mello's ruling that he should be subject to impeachment proceedings further muddied the waters of Brazil's crisis and made it harder to predict how and indeed whether Rousseff's opponents will succeed in unseating her.

Consultancy Eurasia said Rousseff's impeachment was still likely but cut the odds to 60 percent from a 60-70 percent range. "It is becoming a bit more difficult to anticipate the precise manner in which Rousseff will fall," Eurasia said on Tuesday in a note to clients.

The impeachment committee will decide on Monday whether Rousseff committed an impeachable crime, and its recommendation is expected to sway lower house lawmakers who are still undecided.

If impeachment fails to get two thirds of the votes in the lower chamber, some of Rousseff's opponents hope Brazil's top electoral court will annul her election for allegedly being funded by Petrobras bribe money. That would also oust her ticket partner Temer.

One of Temer's closest aides, PMDB Senator Valdir Raupp, proposed on Monday that Congress call a snap presidential election in October to end Brazil's political impasse. Others have echoed the suggestion.

On Tuesday, Rousseff made light of that possibility, suggesting lawmakers themselves agree to end their terms early.

Rousseff has repeatedly denied that she doctored Brazil's budget to hide a massive deficit before her 2014 re-election and has gained ground politically by repeating in almost every speech that what she says is her groundless impeachment is the equivalent of staging a coup d'etat against a democratic government.

Rousseff, who is negotiating the support of smaller parties in return for government jobs vacated by the PMDB, said she would not announce a new Cabinet until after the impeachment vote expected in about 10 days.


(Additional reporting by Lissandra Paraguassu; Editing by Guillermo Parra-Bernal, Andrew Hay and Leslie Adler)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southchinasea-china-idUSKCN0X3048

World | Tue Apr 5, 2016 9:27pm EDT
Related: World, China, South China Sea

China begins operation of lighthouse on artificial island in South China Sea

China has begun operating a lighthouse on one of its artificial islands in the South China Sea near which a U.S. warship sailed last year to challenge China's territorial claims.

China claims most of the energy-rich waters of the South China Sea, through which about $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year. But neighbors Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims.

China's transport ministry held a "completion ceremony", marking the start of operations at the 55-metre (180-ft) high lighthouse on Subi Reef, where construction began in October, state news agency Xinhua said late on Tuesday.

The U.S. guided missile destroyer USS Lassen sailed within 12 nautical miles of Subi Reef in late October, drawing an angry rebuke from China, which called it "extremely irresponsible".

Subi Reef is an artificial island built up by China over the past year or so.

Before Chinese dredging turned it into an island, Subi was submerged at high tide. Under the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, 12-nautical-mile limits cannot be set around man-made islands built on previously submerged reefs.

China says much of its construction in the South China Sea is designed to fulfil its international obligations in terms of maritime safety, search and rescue and scientific research.

Xinhua said the lighthouse, which emits a white light at night, "can provide efficient navigation services such as positioning reference, route guidance and navigation safety information to ships, which can improve navigation management and emergency response".

The South China Sea is an important maritime area and major fishing ground, it added.

"However, high traffic density, complex navigation condition, severe shortage in aids and response forces have combined to threaten navigation safety and hindered economic and social development in the region."

China has lighthouse projects on two other reefs in the area - Cuarteron Reef and Johnson South Reef.


(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
And if they're really doing it things will come to a head in the very near future.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/china-announces/2667198.html

China announces restrictions on trade with North Korea

China on Tuesday banned imports of gold and rare earths from North Korea as well as exports to the country of jet fuel and other oil products used to make rocket fuel.

Posted 05 Apr 2016 17:20
Updated 06 Apr 2016 07:55

BEIJING: China on Tuesday (Apr 5) banned imports of gold and rare earths from North Korea as well as exports to the country of jet fuel and other oil products used to make rocket fuel, a move in line with new United Nations sanctions on Pyongyang.

The Security Council unanimously passed a resolution in early March expanding UN sanctions aimed at starving North Korea of funds for its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes after Pyongyang conducted a fourth nuclear test in January and launched a long-range rocket in February.

The mining sector is a key part of North Korea's economy, which is already largely cut off from the rest of the world. Experts believe revenue from the sector helps underwrite North Korea's military expenditures.

The ministry said it would also ban coal shipments from North Korea, although it made exemptions consistent with sanctions, including uses intended for "the people's well-being" and not connected to nuclear or missile programmes.

North Korea delivered around 20 million tonnes of coal to China last year, up 27 per cent on the year, overtaking Russia and Mongolia to become China's third biggest supplier, behind Australia and Indonesia.

An exception was made for coal originating in third countries and supplied via North Korea's port of Rason. Landlocked Mongolia, looking for alternative supply routes for its commodities, has already signed an agreement with the port that gave its exporters preferential treatment.

Export bans on jet and rocket fuel included exemptions for "basic humanitarian needs" in conjunction with inspections, and for civilian passenger jets flying outside of North Korea. Other restricted minerals include vanadium and titanium, both used in steel alloys.

Independent experts have frequently questioned China's resolve to enforce sanctions against North Korea, whose economy is heavily dependent on its neighbour. China has said it will enforce the measures "conscientiously".

US State Department officials have expressed optimism the sanctions will be more effective than earlier attempts to curtail North Korea's nuclear programme, pointing to China's apparent willingness to support them.

China disapproves of North Korea's nuclear programme, although, as its sole major ally, it has supplied large quantities of aid off the books for decades.

- Reuters
 

Housecarl

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https://www.yahoo.com/news/us-considering-moving-sinai-troops-media-012934792.html?nhp=1

US considering moving Sinai troops: media

April 5, 2016
Comments 18

Washington (AFP) - The US military is considering pulling troops from a base in the northeastern part of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, partly because of the increasing threat from Islamic State group jihadists, CNN reported.

The Obama administration may order the movement of some US and international troops into the southern Sinai, and is discussing such a move with Egypt and Israel, CNN said.

The two Middle East countries signed a peace deal in 1979, agreeing that a Multinational Force and Observers (MFO) mission would monitor compliance.

Some 700 US troops are part of that mission, CNN said.

Most of the peacekeepers are stationed at El-Gorah camp, near the Gaza Strip.

Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis declined to confirm or deny the CNN report.

"We remain fully committed to the objective of the MFO mission and the maintenance of the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt," he told AFP.

"We are in continuous contact with the MFO and adjust force protection capabilities as conditions warrant."

Officials worry the threat of an IS group attack targeting US forces in the region is increasing.
 

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http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_Po_detail.htm?lang=e&id=Po&No=118156&current_page=

Defense Minister: N. Korea Ready to Conduct 5th Nuclear Test

Write : 2016-04-06 19:07:45 Update : 2016-04-06 19:33:58

Seoul's Defense Minister Han Min-koo says North Korea is ready to conduct a fifth nuclear test any time at the order of its young leader Kim Jong-un.

In a joint interview with Defense Ministry correspondents on Wednesday, Minister Han said that the South Korean military is closely observing North Korea's nuclear test tunnels where another test appears to be possible any time.

The minister said that the North may choose one of the two options of exploding a warhead at an underground nuclear facility or experiment with just a detonator without putting nuclear materials in its test device.

Han strongly urged the North to halt further nuclear tests and missile launches, warning that if the North continues provocation, it would walk the path of destruction as it faces stronger sanctions from the international community and deeper isolation.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-belgium-blast-eu-parliament-idUSKCN0X326P

World | Wed Apr 6, 2016 3:16pm EDT
Related: World

One of Brussels bombers had worked in EU Parliament: spokesman

One of the Islamic State suicide bombers who killed 32 people in Brussels on March 22 had worked as a cleaner for a short period in the European Parliament six years earlier, a spokesman for the EU assembly said on Thursday.

In 2009 and 2010, "one of the perpetrators of the Brussels terrorist attacks worked for a period of one month for a cleaning company which was contracted by the European Parliament at the time," spokesman Jaume Duch Guillot said in a statement which did not name the individual.

An EU official said the person was Najim Laachraoui, a 25-year-old Belgian who prosecutors said blew himself up in the airport attack and is also suspected of making suicide vests for last November's Paris attacks in which 130 people died.

At the time of his temporary work in the parliament, he had no criminal record, the parliament's spokesman said.


(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by Paul Taylor)
 

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http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...et_up_more_small_outposts_in_iraq_109232.html

April 6, 2016

Pentagon: U.S. may set up More Small Outposts in Iraq

By Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon will consider opening more small military outposts that would provide artillery support and other aid to Iraqi forces as they prepare to retake the northern city of Mosul from Islamic State militants, a senior military officer on the Joint Staff said Wednesday.

Rear. Adm. Andrew Lewis, the vice director for operations, said there may be situations where the U.S. would either open a base or reopen one that was used in the earlier Iraq war. Those outposts, he said, would be behind the front lines, and would be used the way U.S. Marines are operating out of what has been known as Fire Base Bell, outside Makhmour.

Last month fewer than 200 Marines set up the outpost and provided targeting assistance and artillery fire for the Iraqis. It was the first time such a base had been established by the U.S. since it returned forces to Iraq in 2014.

Initially military officials said the base was set up purely to provide force protection for Iraqi forces and U.S. advisers at the nearby Iraqi base in Makhmour.

But soon after, the Marines were firing illumination rounds to help the Iraqi forces locate IS fighters, and also firing artillery rounds in support of the operation, as Iraqi troops took control of several villages on the outskirts of Makhmour, southeast of Mosul. The Marine remained well behind the front lines.

Lewis said that setting up another similar base as the Iraqi forces move toward Mosul is "dependent on what's happening on the ground" and in the military campaign.

"As Iraqi security forces progress toward isolating Mosul, there may be a situation in which there is another base," he said, adding that it could be a former U.S. outpost and would be used to provide artillery fire from behind the front lines.

"Their mission is to provide fires and support of Iraqi forces, just like we do with airplanes, just it's surface-to-surface fires (versus) air-to-surface fires," he said. "Same concept, very accurate."

He added that additional security measures have been put in place at Fire Base Bell since an attack on the outpost several weeks ago.

Marine Staff Sgt. Louis F. Cardin of Temecula, California, was killed by rocket fire in that attack. The Marines at the fire base are part of the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit, which has been based on the USS Kearsarge, an amphibious assault ship that has been deployed in the region.

Pentagon officials have said they are on a temporary, short-term deployment into Iraq.

During the years of the Iraq war, U.S. forces set up a number of small forward operating bases or combat outposts around the country.

Lewis also noted there has been a recent name change for Fire Base Bell. It's unclear why the military changed names, but the new name — the Karasoar Counterfire Complex — reflects the Iraqi location and appears to focus more on its security mission rather than a combat role.
 

Housecarl

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Hummm......

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http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...ting-counterfeit-Chinese-bills/2891459966113/

Report: North Korea circulating counterfeit Chinese bills

By Elizabeth Shim | April 6, 2016 at 3:05 PM

HONG KONG, April 6 (UPI) -- North Korea could be counterfeiting Chinese currency and the fake bills are in circulation in several Chinese cities.

North Korea is deploying "three killer weapons," and one of them is counterfeit currency, Hong Kong-based Phoenix Television reported.

Pyongyang is also using other illegal means, weapons and drug trafficking, to earn money in Russia and Japan, according to Phoenix.

The Hong Kong television network reported North Korea also has "world-class" counterfeiting technology capable of manufacturing U.S. dollars and Japanese yen, in addition to the yuan.

In the Chinese city of Dalian, falsified bank notes were identified as North Korean, Chinese state news website Global Times reported March 28.

Fake new 100-yuan bills were also being circulated in the Chinese city of Shaoxing in Zhejiang Province starting in November 2015. Many experts have speculated those bills are also of North Korean origin.

Lu Chao, director of the Border Studies Institute at the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences, said there have been several instances of North Korea counterfeiting currency, and it's "already been proved" North Korea has counterfeited U.S. dollars.

North Korea has made a "risky decision" if it has decided to counterfeit the new Chinese yuan currency, and it reflects the country's struggles in the wake of recent United Nations Security Council sanctions, Lu said.

Du Ping, a commentator for Phoenix TV, said North Korea could be undertaking "unimagined feats" in response to economic sanctions.

The currency has made its way into China through cross-border tourism and merchants.

Vendors at North Korea's unofficial markets prefer to transact in the Chinese yuan and not the North Korean won for trade, according to defectors.

China is North Korea's closest economic partner, but Beijing has denounced Pyongyang's decision to pursue the development of nuclear weapons.
 

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http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/ori...-clashes-pkk-erdogan-kurdish-war-impasse.html

Why Erdogan can't end PKK war

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s personal agenda precludes a negotiated settlement with the Kurds, and a military solution remains just as out of reach.

Author Kadri Gursel
Posted April 5, 2016
Translator Timur Göksel
Comments 20

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's months-long war against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) has become unbearably destructive and deadly, and the violence is threatening to spill over into western Turkey. The general picture emerging is that the PKK cannot be eliminated militarily and no negotiated settlement with the organization is foreseeable.

In this context of impasse, Turkey is trying to manage a crisis that becomes deeper and harder to control. The growing casualty toll among security forces is but one dimension of the crisis. During the last week of March, 21 soldiers and police were killed in the urban warfare raging in the southeast. Most of them were killed by PKK-made roadside bombs, in booby-trapped buildings, by vehicle-borne bomb attacks and by sniper fire. According to official figures, fatalities among security forces since July have exceeded 420.

The situation is obviously extremely disturbing for Erdogan, who is seen as the proprietor of this war. He took on the PKK militarily and used the campaign to his political advantage. He persuaded voters that he and his Justice and Development Party (AKP) were the only ones who could cope with the PKK terror threat, which the public suddenly perceived as its No. 1 problem as the Nov. 1 elections approached.

But now, Erdogan finds he cannot deliver his promised solution. The terror threat shows no sign of easing and the number of combat deaths increases daily. Erdogan is to trying to persuade the public to accept the security forces' fatalities by constantly invoking the significance of "martyrdom" in Islam. He never misses an opportunity to emphasize how the PKK is suffering disproportionate casualties.

Speaking March 18 in Ankara, he said Turkey had suffered more than 300 casualties since the war began. He added, “But do you know what we have gained? We have demonstrated once again to friend and foe that this is our land. This is a magnificent gain that can be compared only with the Battle of Gallipoli.” He said in a March 25 speech, “The number of our martyrs has passed 300. But the number the terrorists have lost is at least 10 times as much.”

Erdogan has turned his accolades of martyrdom into his standard rhetoric in the war against the PKK. While talking of the Turkish republic, whose borders are defined by treaties, he is taking a risk when he says, “For a land to be a country, it needs the blood of martyrs.” Is he unaware that the Kurdish separatists, who have lost many more people, could adopt the same narrative?

This is Erdogan’s style. When he undertakes a tough challenge, he always says, “We will go to the end.” Is it possible for the Turkish forces to "go the end" of the war by totally eliminating the PKK? Is it possible, given the realities of the Middle East, to find a military solution to Turkey’s Kurdish problem, similar to Chechnya and Sri Lanka? Given the balance of power that heavily favors Ankara, it is possible — but only theoretically.

If Turkey tries to see this military battle through to the bitter end, we can visualize the result. Take the destruction and death of the past eight months and multiply it by as much as 10. Terrorism would increase in major western Turkish cities. It is not far-fetched to predict tens of thousands of fatalities, and the destruction of even more Kurdish-populated towns. The number of displaced Kurds could exceed a million people. Another wave of migrants would flood Europe via Turkey, and Turkey's economy would suffer severely.

Such a war could, of course, spill over to Syria and Iraq, and Turkey could find itself confronting major powers. The PKK has sizable popular support bases in all countries where Kurds live. It is well-organized, has developed alliances with major powers and has no shortage of manpower. As such, it is able to absorb severe blows.

Could "going to the end" in the Kurdish war mean the end of Erdogan's regime, or even the end of Turkey? A military solution is practically impossible.

Then, what about a political solution? Never mind a political settlement — is it possible even to agree to a cease-fire with the PKK? In the current circumstances, that goal, too, is out of reach. One can achieve a cease-fire only through negotiations. But as long as Erdogan’s main political ambition is his executive presidency, it seems impossible to conduct overt or covert negotiations with the PKK.

In 2016, Erdogan will submit to the parliament a draft constitution that calls for an authoritarian presidency. If the draft goes through parliament, we will have a constitutional referendum. If not, Erdogan’s game plan calls once again for early elections. While passing through these phases, Erdogan cannot reach an accord with the PKK without risking the nationalist votes he badly needs. He would also jeopardize his plan to keep the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party below the 10% vote threshold in an early election.

Because of all this, one must accept the reality that Turkey will continue to live in a civil war environment of great risks. As long as the war rages, the cost of a potential political settlement will continue to rise, regardless of whether Erdogan attains his ideal presidency — which actually means a dictatorship.

The PKK is raising the bar. In a March 29 radio message, PKK military chief Murat Karayilan told his followers to escalate the fighting. He listed Kurdish autonomy and the release of imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan as essential to resolving the war.

Cemil Bayik, co-chair of the Union of Kurdish Communities, the highest political structure of the PKK, told The Times of London in mid-March that the movement's basic goal is to smash Erdogan and the AKP.

Erdogan is using his war against the PKK as a tool for his presidential agenda, bringing the country to the threshold of a crisis. It is urgent to sever the link between the war and his presidential agenda, but Erdogan himself remains the major obstacle to that goal.


Kadri Gursel

Columnist

Kadri Gursel is a columnist for Al-Monitor's Turkey Pulse. He wrote a column for the Turkish daily Milliyet between 2007 and July 2015. He focuses primarily on Turkish foreign policy, international affairs and Turkey’s Kurdish question, as well as Turkey’s evolving political Islam. On Twitter: @KadriGursel

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Housecarl

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http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/north-korea-nuclear-warhead-reach/2016/04/06/id/722666/

CNN: N Korea Has Nukes That Can Reach US Military Bases
By Greg Richter | Wednesday, 06 Apr 2016 07:07 PM

North Korea has a nuclear warhead capable of being fitted on a mid-range missile that could reach U.S. military bases in Asia, CNN reports.

While the United States is skeptical of North Korea's claims, South Korean intelligence and some American analysts believe the communist nation is telling the truth, CNN's Jim Scuitto reported Wednesday on "The Lead with Jake Tapper."

North Korea's Rodong ballistic missile is capable of delivering a one-ton warhead up to 1,200 miles, which puts South Korea, Japan and U.S. military bases in Asia within reach of a nuclear strike, Scuitto said.

"We believe they have the ability to mount a nuclear warhead on a Rodong," an unnamed South Korean official told foreign reporters. "Whether they will fire it like that is a political decision."

"We know that they've said they have that capability and we have to take them at their word," Pentagon Spokesman Captain Jeff Davis said of the claim. "But we have not seen them demonstrate it."

Video

North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un posed for photos that his government claimed was with the warhead.

Pyongyang has made a series of nuclear tests and claimed earlier this year to have successfully miniaturized a nuclear weapon. An underground test in January was followed by four missile tests and a space launch, likely intended to be a path toward intercontinental ballistic weapons that could reach the United States.


Related Stories:
Planes, Boats Hit by North Korea GPS Signal Jamming
China Restricts Trade with North Korea over Nuclear Tests
 

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http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2016/04/07/0200000000AEN20160407000700320.html

(EDITORIAL from Korea JoongAng Daily on April 7)

2016/04/07 07:12

China must stay the course

With China enforcing UN sanctions against North Korea in a robust way, the international community’s pressure on the rogue state is gaining momentum. China’s Ministry of Commerce on Tuesday posted on its website 25 items that Beijing banned in its trade with the North. Following the guidelines established by the Commerce Ministry and the General Administration of Customs, China’s enforcement of a mini-embargo came into full force 33 days after the UN Security Council passed its toughest-ever resolution and four days after Chinese leader Xi Jinping told President Park Geun-hye that China will execute the sanctions completely.

According to the guidelines, China cannot import coal, gold and rare earth elements from North Korea and also cannot export several key items, including aviation fuel. China took a meaningful step to abide by the guidelines stipulated in the latest Security Council Resolution 2276. More importantly, Beijing has officially announced follow-up measures to put those sanctions into action.

Some pessimists are raising questions about the efficacy of Chinese sanctions by pointing out exceptions in the guidelines applicable to the export and import of goods for the good of the North Korean people, but not the military or nuclear program. But in order for banned products to be eligible for exceptions, importers or exporters must submit a letter of guarantee signed by their CEOs to the commerce and foreign affairs ministries as well as the Security Council Sanctions Committees. In other words, abuse of the exceptions is not so easy. Whether China has implemented the sanctions faithfully will be determined by a report Beijing is supposed to submit to the Sanctions Committees after 90 days.

Seven items — including coal and iron ore — specified in the embargo list accounted for 44.9 percent of North Korea’s total exports, and 97 percent of them went to China. Given the North’s overreliance on China for exports, the sanctions will inflict immense damage on its floundering economy. Fortunately, Beijing has officially — and for the first time — announced a list of embargoed items in a bid to do its part as a credible member of the international community.

The move by Xi can be seen as a signal that China will not embrace its ally as in the past. Yet the North still appears to be in a state of autohypnosis. It says it’s used to international sanctions. The recalcitrant regime in Pyongyang must wake up and take a path toward denuclearization. China must strictly follow the UN sanctions until the North gives up its nuclear ambitions once and for all.

(END)
 

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http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2016/04/07/0200000000AEN20160407000600320.html

(EDITORIAL from Korea Times on April 7)

2016/04/07 07:11

Counter-jamming NK

: Provocative GPS interference needs response in kind

North Korea has been interfering with our global positioning system (GPS) for days now.

So far, some aircraft and fishing vessels have been affected because Pyongyang is shifting its target areas but its influence reaches far south of Seoul and large swaths of the East and West Seas. It is said that the North keeps the jamming at low intensities. Now, the damage is limited to nonfatal inconveniences because the vessels have to switch to using their compass or aircraft must turn off their GPS and use other navigational systems.

Experts, however, don't rule out the possibility that small airplanes which rely only on GPS might stray into North Korean airspace. The government quickly dismissed such a possibility because pilots of these planes can also navigate without the aid of instrumentation. It's a naïve response. This jamming interference should be reported to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a U.N. body, to determine how it can endanger flights.

The North's jamming should be taken seriously on two counts. First, it is no less a provocative act as firing big guns at residents and garrison troops on Yeongpyeong Island or torpedoing the ROK Navy frigate Cheonan, both North Korean attacks that caused significant casualties.

As prompted after the Cheonan attack, more forceful rules of engagement have been reaffirmed by President Park Geun-hye, allowing the military to react in kind or make a response that causes much stronger damage to the North. This type of "eye for eye, tooth for tooth" is called for, considering the North appears to be sending out feelers to check out the ROK-U.S. readiness for conflict as the toughest-ever U.N sanctions for its nuclear and missile tests are starting to bite. The U.N. Security Council should also be kept informed about the latest developments.

Therefore, the lack of response could give the North the wrong idea, encouraging it to mount more provocations or delay a move back to the negotiating table. Thus far, the military says that it is keeping an eye on the North, at the risk of being criticized for not having sufficient counterattack plans and failing to evolve its contingency strategy, although the latest jamming provocations are the fourth by the North since the first such provocation in 2010. We want to give the military the benefit of the doubt because it may not want to disclose all information regarding capabilities and counter-plans and hope that the military enhances its readiness.

Reports have it that protective measures against the North's jamming are limited due to legal constraints. Now is the time to consider which of these barriers should be removed in order to provide adequate protection. There are, however, military measures available to let the North know that it can't get away with this. One is jamming its air defense systems by employing Wild Weasels or EA Intruders aircraft equipped with equipment to jam surface-to-air missile radar and, if necessary, destroy them with missiles. Of course, it requires careful judgment not to overdo this.

On a broader scale, the military should try to understand the ulterior purpose of the North's jamming provocations and fathom the true depth of its electronic warfare capabilities. The modern tools of war rely heavily on electronics so it is only natural to make an accurate estimate about its capabilities. However it may sound like a plot of a Hollywood movie, disturbing news is that the North may be developing electro-magnetic pulse weapons to neutralize the enemy's warfare capabilities at an initial stage of war.

As with any life-or-death matter, the military should fully prepare itself for the latest North Korean challenge under the worst-case scenarios ― amplifying the intensity of interference many times or using this tactic as a prelude to a bigger provocation. We don't want to find out later how high a price we should pay for our lack of military readiness, do we?

(END)
 

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Japanese Gov't Legal Watchdog - No specific ban on Nuclear Weapons in Constitution
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...ecific-ban-on-Nuclear-Weapons-in-Constitution


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http://thediplomat.com/2016/04/japans-nuclear-weapons-conundrum/

Japan's Nuclear Weapons Conundrum

Even while Japan pushes for a world free of nuclear weapons, it recognizes the importance of a nuclear deterrence.

By Mina Pollmann
April 06, 2016

Since 1967, when then-Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Sato introduced the “three non-nuclear principles,” Japan has existed in a state of contradiction when it comes to the question of nuclear weapons’ place in the world: while Japanese leaders call for the global abolition of nuclear weapons, they simultaneously acknowledge the importance of nuclear deterrence and Japan’s reliance on the U.S. nuclear umbrella.

Consider this strikingly vivid example: In 1974, when Sato was preparing to accept the Nobel Peace Prize for his non-nuclear principles, which is Japan’s policy to not manufacture, possess, or introduce nuclear weapons, he asked then-U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger whether the five nuclear powers would consider renouncing the pre-emptive use of nuclear weapons.

Kissinger rejected the proposal, saying, “If we were to renounce the first use of nuclear weapons, there would be a great danger for Japan,” specifically vis-à-vis the Soviet Union and China. Sato apparently acquiesced to this view, as he did not float the idea in his acceptance speech. The next year, in 1975, the United States officially announced it would extend the “nuclear umbrella” to Japan.

Four decades later, Japanese leaders again are spearheading the initiative to rid the world of nuclear weapons. And this time, the United States has shown greater reciprocity toward Japan’s more limited ambitions.

When the Group of Seven’s (G7) foreign ministers gather in Japan later this week, it will be the first time that a U.S. secretary of state will visit the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, dedicated to the victims of the 1945 atomic bombing. Explaining the significance of this event, Japan’s Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida remarked to journalists, “For the purpose of building momentum for realizing a world free of nuclear weapons, it is very important for world leaders to visit an A-bomb site and see firsthand the realities of atomic bombing.”

Kishida, a Hiroshima native who will chair the upcoming G7 foreign ministers meeting, has also expressed his desire to announce a “Hiroshima declaration,” which would promote nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation efforts. Items that could be worked into such a declaration include a call for visits to cities hit by atomic bombs and greater transparency for nuclear forces.

However, among Japan’s political elites, there remains a hard-nosed realism that begrudgingly accepts the utility of nuclear weapons. This realism has surfaced in the recent debate over their constitutionality.

On March 18, Yusuke Yokobatake, director-general of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau, told the Upper House Budget Committee that, even though domestic and international laws limit the use of nuclear weapons, Japan’s Constitution does not necessarily ban nuclear weapons.

Shinzo Abe’s Cabinet further clarified its position in a written statement provided on April 1. Even though the government continues to uphold the three non-nuclear principles, the statement argued that Article 9 does not prohibit the country from possessing the minimum armed forces needed for self-defense, and there is no distinction between nuclear and conventional weapons when it comes to this minimum requirement.

“Even if it involves nuclear weapons, the Constitution does not necessarily ban the possession of them as long as they are restricted to such a minimum necessary level,” the statement said. In this, Abe’s Cabinet is not necessarily breaking new ground, as it conforms to then-Prime Minsiter Takeo Fukuda’s position, articulated as far back as 1978.

But even as Japanese lawmakers rhetorically reaffirm Japan’s right to unilaterally do what it must to defend itself, in practice, Japan will continue to rely on the United States to be its ultimate trump card. It is the U.S. commitment to Japan’s defense that has, in Obama’s words, “prevented the possibilities of a nuclear escalation and conflict” in this particularly fraught part of the world.

These conflicting desires – a desire to see a world free of nuclear weapons, and a desire to be protected from potential aggressors with nuclear capabilities through robust nuclear deterrence – will coexist in Japan for the foreseeable future.
 

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http://nationalinterest.org/blog/th...lan-destroy-america-japan-taiwan-battle-15704

The Buzz

This Is China's Master Plan to Destroy America, Japan and Taiwan in Battle

Robert Beckhusen
April 6, 2016
Comments 138

On most days, China’s high-speed rail network is for hauling millions — yes, millions — of commuters, vacationers and tourists around the country.

But on May 14, 2015, one section of the growing network served a very different purpose. A People’s Liberation Army brigade from the Lanzhou military region boarded a high-speed train and set off for Xinjiang — 300 miles to the west.

The exercise was a rapid and clever way to move troops around the huge country, something which Beijing is struggling to handle. China has the largest ground army and the longest land border in the world, which abuts 14 nations … more than any other country except Russia.

One of these countries — India — is one of Beijing’s rivals and the two countries have two ongoing border disputes. Myanmar to the south — and Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan to the west — are potentially unstable. Then there’s the border with North Korea.

It all adds up to lots of potential crises along the border. The result is that Beijing wants its army to have the ability to respond to lots of varied and potential crises. Hence high-speed trains.

China’s army is starting to move fast.

***

The Lanzhou brigade’s trip — which included its equipment — was the first time a military unit had ever traveled along the high-speed rail line to Xinjiang. The western province is home to an insurgency fought between the state and ethnic Uyghur Muslim militants.

The state-owned Chinese military newspaper Jiefangjun Bao anesthetically described the exercise as part of “the military’s power projection and combat readiness force movement on to the ‘contemporary train’ of civil-military integration.”

This is an oblique reference to China using civilian infrastructure for military purposes. China has the largest high-speed rail network in the world — defined as rail lines with trains traveling above 120 miles per hour.

China has six high-speed lines — and the one to Xianjiang is the newest, having opened in 2014. But Beijing will more than double its high-speed lines in the 2020s.

The trend toward increasing dual-use by the military is also on the rise.

“A lightly equipped division could be moved on the Wuhan-to-Guangzhou line — about 600 miles — in five hours, a fairly rapid mobilization in military terms,” the state-owned China Youth Daily reported in 2014.

U.S. Army researchers have taken an interest in this. “Earlier, troops traveled on highways during maneuver drills,” O.E. Watch, the Army’s Foreign Military Studies Office newsletter, noted last June. “This new mode of transportation is an improvement. With troops now able to step out of their barracks and onto the high speed train, troop movement will be significantly faster.”

One of reasons China wants its military to move by rail is because wars erupt much faster today. During the 1991 Persian Gulf War, the United States quickly rushed more than 500,000 troops into Saudi Arabia in just a few months.

The outcome of the war — a lopsided victory for the U.S. and its allies on the ground — had a profound effect on Chinese military thinking and doctrine.

Since then, the biggest changes for the Chinese military have been in the air and at sea. “The PLA began to emphasize air power more than ground power, and in particular, investigated the potential for long-range precision strike,” Robert Farley of the Patterson School noted at The National Interest.

China’s Second Artillery Corps (recently renamed) — responsible for the maintenance and deployment of nuclear weapons — also received considerable attention. The Second Artillery began adopting new precision-strike weapons for attacks beyond China’s borders.

In the event of a rapidly deteriorating crisis, the Second Artillery would have to speed toward the problem. This is where high-speed rail comes in.

According to the China Youth Daily report, the Corps could rush its cruise missiles along the high-speed rail lines toward the coast in the event of a conflict with Japan or Taiwan.

Now we know that China would probably send thousands of additional ground troops, too.

This piece first appeared in WarIsBoring here.

---

From the WarIsBoring posting.....

1-Q38Gk9GYlbvHyibX4Iwqiw-1024x881.png

http://cdn.warisboring.com/images/20151001230120/1-Q38Gk9GYlbvHyibX4Iwqiw-1024x881.png
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.economist.com/news/leade...de&spv=xm&ah=9d7f7ab945510a56fa6d37c30b6f1709

Chinese politics

Beware the cult of Xi

Xi Jinping is stronger than his predecessors. His power is damaging the country

Apr 2nd 2016 | From the print edition
Comments 856

“IF OUR party can’t even handle food-safety issues properly, and keeps on mishandling them, then people will ask whether we are fit to keep ruling China.” So Xi Jinping warned officials in 2013, a year after he became the country’s leader. It was a remarkable statement for the chief of a Communist Party that has always claimed to have the backing of “the people”. It suggested that Mr Xi understood how grievances about official incompetence and corruption risked boiling over. Mr Xi rounded up tens of thousands of erring officials, waging a war on corruption of an intensity not seen since the party came to power in 1949. Many thought he was right to do so.

Today, however, China is enduring its biggest public-health scandal in years. Tens of millions of dollars-worth of black-market, out-of-date and improperly stored vaccines have been sold to government health centres, which have in turn been making money by selling them to patients.

Mr Xi’s anti-graft war has often made little difference to ordinary people. Their life—and health—is still blighted by corruption. In recent days there have also been signs of discontent with Mr Xi among the elite: official media complaining openly about reporting restrictions, a prominent businessman attacking him on his microblog, a senior editor resigning in disgust.

Mr Xi has acquired more power than any Chinese leader since Mao Zedong. It was supposed to let him get things done. What is going wrong?

Credibility gap

In fairness, Mr Xi was bound to meet with hostility. Many officials are angry because he has ripped up the compact by which they have operated and which said that they could line their pockets, so long as corruption was not flagrant and they did their job well.

But Mr Xi has also found that the pursuit of power is all-consuming: it does not leave room for much else. In three and a half years in charge, he has accumulated titles at an astonishing pace. He is not only party leader, head of state and commander-in-chief, but is also running reform, the security services and the economy. In effect, the party’s hallowed notion of “collective” leadership (see article) has been jettisoned. Mr Xi is, one analyst says, “Chairman of Everything”.

At the same time, he has flouted the party’s ban on personality cults, introduced in 1982 to prevent another episode of Maoist madness. Official media are filled with fawning over “Uncle Xi” and his wife, Peng Liyuan, a folk-singer whom flatterers call “Mama Peng”. A video, released in March, of a dance called “Uncle Xi in love with Mama Peng” has already been viewed over 300,000 times. There have been rumours recently that Mr Xi feels some of this has been going a bit far. Some of the most toadying videos, such as “The east is red again” (comparing Mr Xi to Mao), have been scrubbed from the internet.

Many would take that as a sign that the personality cult is little more than harmless fun. Mr Xi is no Mao, whose tyrannical nature and love of adulation were so great that he blithely led the country into the frenzy and violence of the Cultural Revolution. Although some older Chinese squirm at a style of politics so reminiscent of days long past, there is no suggestion that China is on the brink of another such horror.

But Mr Xi does not need to be as extreme as Mao for his concentration of power to cause harm. He has been fighting dissent with even more ruthlessness than he has been waging war on graft. Not since the dark days after the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 has there been such a sweeping crackdown on critics of the party. Internet censors have been busy deleting messages posted on social media by outraged citizens in response to the vaccine scandal. These have included posts reminding Mr Xi of his words in 2013 about the party’s fitness to rule. Police have also been investigating the appearance early in March of an anonymous letter on a government-affiliated website calling on Mr Xi to resign (raising, among several transgressions, the personality cult and his stifling of the media). Some 20 people have been arrested. Yet this work is never-ending. Even now citizens are pushing back. With the help of the internet, no matter how heavily it is blocked and censored, their voices keep crying out.

No liberal, Xi

By cracking down and puffing himself up, Mr Xi is neither buying himself security nor helping to keep China stable. He is using the party’s own thuggish investigators to take on graft. But they have a greater interest in settling political scores than in ensuring laws are applied fairly. That gets in the way of good administration, if only because officials are scared of spending money in case it attracts a probe. By cowing the media, Mr Xi created a press reluctant to challenge officials by exposing the dodgy-vaccine trade as soon as it was discovered at least a year ago. By the time such scandals eventually come to light, they pose even greater threats to the party’s, and Mr Xi’s, credibility.

Mr Xi has pledged to give market forces a “decisive role”, and put “power in a cage” by establishing the rule of law. But he is providing neither the country with prosperity and freedom, nor reassuring the rest of the world with stability. Abroad, anxieties about him keep growing: his muscular efforts to assert control in the South China Sea have been driving countries across Asia closer to the American camp.

Earlier in Mr Xi’s rule, observers had wondered whether, after establishing himself, he would turn to carrying out the reforms that he says he wants. But hopes are fading that a big reformist push will ever materialise. Mr Xi appears to have little time for the politically irksome business of making the party follow the law, closing down loss-making state-owned firms, or bringing about much-needed social changes, such as scrapping restrictions on access by rural migrants to urban public services. The task of preserving his power is a full-time job.

In the past 66 years of Communist rule in China, the most troubled times have usually come about when tensions break out within the elite. Mr Xi’s style of rule is only serving to stoke them. The more Mr Xi tries to fight off enemies using scare tactics and brute force, the more enemies he is likely to make.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Last night's John Batchelor Show was discussing this.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.breitbart.com/jerusalem/...-major-escalation-poses-international-threat/

Analysis: Use of Antiaircraft Missiles in Syria A Major Escalation, International Threat

by Aaron Klein
6 Apr 2016
Comments 58

TEL AVIV – Amid reports that a Syrian jet was shot down by rebels utilizing an antiaircraft missile, questions immediately arise as to where exactly the jihadi and moderate groups fighting Bashar al-Assad’s regime may have obtained such weaponry.

The possession of antiaircraft missiles by terror-tied rebel groups would not only mark a major escalation in the Syrian civil war, it would represent a significant threat to international air traffic amid the risk of the proliferation of such missiles.

The Syrian army said on Wednesday that its plane was shot down by rebels with an antiaircraft missile and video footage of the falling aircraft seems to be consistent with this kind of an attack.

Al-Qaeda-affiliated rebels from the Al-Nusra Front reportedly captured the pilot alive and brought him to their headquarters. He has since been identified as Col. Khaled Saeed, and he appeared in an Al-Nusra propaganda video confirming his capture.

The event marks the second time the Syrian government says it was attacked in recent weeks by rebels deploying antiaircraft missiles. The Syrian military last month said one of its warplanes was shot down in western Syria in March.

The L.A. Times provided some background on the rebels’ attempts to obtain anti-aircraft weapons:

Earlier in the war, rebel groups managed to obtain some shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles from Syrian Army depots and from the government of Qatar. They have long argued that they need a reliable supply of the missiles, known as man-portable air-defense systems.

The United States, Saudi Arabia, and other backers have rejected their pleas amid concern that the missiles could fall into the hands of Islamist militants and be used against Western targets.

So just how did the rebels suddenly obtain the missiles? Were they transferred by an Arab government that opposes the Assad regime or Syria’s Russian backers?

Did NATO-member Turkey, already in hot water for brazenly shooting down a Russian warplane, pass antiaircraft missiles to rebels as part of Ankara’s obsessive bid to counter the Syria-Russia axis? Turkey, concerned by Syria’s recent gains against the Islamic State and other rebel forces, is known to be one of the main suppliers of more extremist elements among the anti-Assad rebels.

There is also the possibility that antiaircraft weapons were obtained by Syrian rebels from elements that looted Moammar Gadhafi’s reserves of Man-Portable-Air-Defense-Systems, or MANPADS. The largest terrorist looting of MANPADS took place immediately after the 2001 U.S.-NATO military campaign, strongly pushed by Hillary Clinton, that toppled Gadhafi’s regime in Libya.

NATO failed to immediately protect the reserves of MANPADS.

As I reported at the time:

Gadhafi had hoarded Africa’s biggest-known reserve of MANPADS, with a stock said to number between 15,000 and 20,000. Many of the missiles were stolen by militias fighting in Libya, including those backed by the U.S. in their anti-Gadhafi efforts. There were reports of a Western effort to secure the MANPADS, including collecting some from rebels in Libya.

Aaron Klein is Breitbart’s Jerusalem bureau chief and senior investigative reporter. He is a New York Times bestselling author and hosts the popular weekend talk radio program, “Aaron Klein Investigative Radio.” Follow him on Twitter @AaronKleinShow. Follow him on Facebook.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/07/asia/secular-bangladeshi-writer-murdered/

Secular Bangladeshi writer murdered in the street

By Sugam Pokharel, Ivan Watson, and Yuli Yang, CNN
Updated 5:37 AM ET, Thu April 7, 2016

New Delhi (CNN) — Machete-wielding attackers struck in the capital of Bangladesh Wednesday night, killing 26-year-old secular writer Nazimuddin Samad.

Samad, described by Bangladesh police as a masters student at Jagannath University, is the sixth secularist writer or publisher to have been murdered in Dhaka in the last 16 months. Police called the murder a pre-planned attack.

"He was on his way back home from his evening classes when he was circled by a group of three to four people," Senior Assistant Police Commissioner Nurul Amin of the Dhaka Police, told CNN.

"First the attackers hacked Samad with machetes, then shot him."

Police say the attackers then fled the scene on motorcycle. No arrests have yet been made.

Bloody repression

The murder is certain to add to fears among intellectuals and writers who have dared to challenge religious thought in Bangladesh, a majority Muslim country with a sizable Hindu religious minority.

The constitution in Bangladesh defines Islam as the state religion. But it also includes a clause promising to defend the "principle of secularism."

Imran Sarker, who leads a blogging and online activist network in Bangladesh, described Samad as a "very active secular activist."

"He was very vocal on issues of religious fundamentalism, war crimes, minority issues, corruption and injustice against women," Sarker told CNN.

"He used to regularly post notes on Facebook expressing his views."

Murdered blogger's stepdaughter: Dad taught me to be informed, bold, unafraid

Tributes

Friends and supporters took to social media to express their grief, and tributes for, the young writer.

"Rest in Power, Nazimuddin Samad," one Facebook post said. "There is no end to this brutality."


On Twitter, the U.N. Special Rapporteur Karima Bennoune said that extremism "is a human rights issue."



Mukto Mona, an English- and Bangladeshi-language website which frequently challenges and criticizes religious beliefs, added its voice to the tributes.

"Nazimuddin was a courageous freethinker; he was vocal in his support for a secular and humane Bangladesh," the post reads.

The 'sin' that could get you killed in Bangladesh

Victim had 'gone into hiding'

"This is terribly shocking," said Gulam Rabbi Chowdhury, a childhood friend and former high school classmate of Samad. Chowdhury said Samad went into hiding for several months last year because he feared for his life.

Mukto Mona posted excerpts of an exchange between a writer who expressed concern for Samad's safety.

"I am also scared... scared of getting killed," Samad responded in writing, according to a post published on Mukto Mona.

"But what else can I do? It's better to die rather than living by keeping my head down."

Mukto Mona's founder, a US-based Bangladeshi writer named Avijit Roy, was murdered by machete wielding attackers outside an annual book fair in Dhaka in February 2015.

Press freedoms groups have been sounding the alarm about the campaign of violence against writers in Bangladesh.

"Bangladesh has been ravaged by a spate of bloody attacks on bloggers and other writers who espouse secular viewpoints," said Karin Deutsch Karlekar, director of Freedom of Expression Programs at PEN America.

The group urged the US government and other countries to provide shelter to writers at risk of being attacked.

Sugam Pokharel reported from Delhi, India. Ivan Watson and Yuli Yang reported from Hong Kong.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?488934-There-Are-Going-to-Be-More-Cold-Wars

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2016/04/07/there_are_going_to_be_more_cold_wars_109234.html

April 7, 2016

There Are Going to Be More Cold Wars

By Christine M. Leah

Russia's prime minister recently accused NATO of restarting the Cold War amid increased military maneuvers and troop deployments to countries neighboring Russia. On 10 February 2016, Stanford’s CISAC tweeted this regarding former U.S. Secretary of Defense William Perry:

“Perry, regarding Russia: We are now in a period comparable to the dark days of the Cold War. How could we have let that happen?”

The end of “the Cold War” in 1991 was welcomed with relief by almost all parties to the conflict. It was thought that such a confrontation could never happen again. The reality is different. The term “Cold War” is misleading. Contrary to the remarks made by former Secretary Perry and Prime Minister Medvedev, it should come as no surprise at all that new tensions have emerged with Russia. This is merely the nature of the international system – geopolitical tensions, especially between great powers, are inevitable. British futurist writer H.G. Wells wrote in an article titled “The War That Will End War,” published in The Daily News on August 14, 1914—and yet major power war broke out in Europe in 1939. The end of “the Cold War” was welcomed with relief by almost all parties to the conflict. But considering military history more broadly, there is, au contraire, no reason not to expect more Cold Wars. Nuclear weapons are now an intractable element of international security (and especially great power rivalries) and thus, there are going to be many more “Cold Wars”. We may as well get smarter about managing them.

Indeed, since the end of the Cold War, the role of nuclear weapons in the deterrence debate has generated considerable intellectual confusion. This is due to a number of reasons, a central one being the tendency of many scholars, public policy figures, and peace activists (such as global nuclear zero advocates) to associate these weapons with the Cold War. The dissolution of the Soviet Empire in 1989, and with it the end of the Cold War, gave new impetus and seeming credibility to anti-nuclear movements around the world. However, we should not forget that it was an interesting historical coincidence that the Cold War and the nuclear age emerged at roughly the same time. So when the Cold War ended, it only seemed logical to many that the nuclear age, too, had ended.

Scholars in the 1990s would dub this period the “post-Cold War era” of international relations. One in which the U.S. had more or less uncontested conventional military power and was able to intervene militarily in conflict-ridden zones such as Iraq without having to tread lightly around its superpower rival, where new prominence was given to the importance of “non-traditional” security issues, and where NATO would increasingly focus on “out-of-area” operations, such as interventions in Kosovo. Nuclear weapons had almost no discernible role to play in this new international context. Thus, nuclear strategy, funding for weapons systems, and intellectual work on deterrence were all sidelined in favor of peace and conflict studies, the study of globalization, the role of gender in international security, and constructivist discourse on international relations more broadly.

The events of September 11, 2001, would usher in yet a new paradigm shift. The terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center in New York was the first “strategic” attack against the U.S. homeland in its history, bringing a new sense of vulnerability that had not existed before. The response of then President George W. Bush was to adopt a strategy of pre-emption: to abandon deterrence almost entirely and focus instead on rooting out rogue regimes and terrorists abroad that would hurt the U.S. and its allies. Hence the interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq against al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein, which have both now converged and expanded into an on-going war against the Islamic State. Nuclear deterrence between great powers was even further marginalized in international security. During this period it became easy for nuclear abolitionists and analysts like Scott Sagan to get attention for their focus on the risks of nuclear terrorism as their main argument for abolition. But the possibility of terrorists acquiring and detonating a nuclear device has been an excuse used by many not to focus on the role of nuclear weapons in deterrence. Instead, more intellectual effort and finances were devoted to preventing nuclear terrorism and nuclear trafficking, especially in the Middle East and Central and Eastern Europe.

But in recent years, “hard” geopolitics has made a slow, but firm “return” to the chessboard of international relations. Both the ongoing crisis in Ukraine and increasing Chinese aggression in the Asia-Pacific, and new investments by these countries in modernizing their nuclear forces in particular, demonstrate that both the so-called post-Cold War era and the post-911 era were both something of an aberration in the grand scheme of military history. Tensions are again rising not only between the United States and Russia, but also between the United States and China. But just because the U.S.-USSR rivalry was our first experience of a nuclear geopolitical rivalry does not mean that another Cold War could not emerge. Besides, South Asia has also had its own, unique Cold War. Perhaps we have just reached an interesting point in history that is very similar to the years prior to the outbreak of the Second World War. Also, we should remember that in the grand scheme of the history of strategy, the nuclear age is still young.

Nuclear weapons were not merely weapons of the Cold War, as many nuclear abolitionists have argued. In addition, thinking about how to deploy them is often dismissed as “Cold War thinking”.[ii] For too long many academics and strategic analysts have been guilty of equating the nuclear age with the Cold War.[iii] Some have taken this a step further and argued that since the Cold War is over, that we should somehow get rid of these weapons. In other words, they assign the relevance of nuclear weapons to a particular historical period. Take, for instance, an op-ed written by Tom Nichols in 2015, in which he argued :

Why do we need a new [Long-Range Stand-off missile]? We don’t, unless you think America should be prepared for a protracted, all-out war with the old Soviet Union. The purpose of the old [Air-Launched Cruise Missile] was to allow U.S. bombers to get close enough to fire its cruise weapons from a distance as part of a campaign of suppressing enemy air defenses and other targets at the edge of enemy territory. As part of an over nuclear war-fighting strategy, it made sense—at least, it made sense if you believed in nuclear war-fighting strategies.[iv]

This view, and its premises, are fundamentally flawed. Nuclear weapons are not just weapons of the Cold War. For instance, they have played a role in deterring major war between India and Pakistan, a rivalry that had nothing to do with the Cold War. U.S. nuclear weapons have also contributed to reassuring allies in the Asia-Pacific that the U.S. will threaten retaliation on their behalf if they are attacked by a major regional power. To argue that nuclear weapons are weapons purely borne of, and only related to, the Cold War reveals a very short-sighted view of history, war, and warfare. It is akin to saying that muskets and cannons were merely weapons of the Napoleonic wars.

The literature on nuclear strategy was developed in an age that was characterized by the Cold War rivalry, a limited number of nuclear weapons states, with a focus on Europe, where U.S. allies were all grouped together in one land bloc, and where there was a near-monopoly of these weapons by historically world super powers or dominant regional powers. But this has been a short period in the grand scheme of history, and we will have to find new ways of managing nuclear weapons and deterrence in a variety of new contexts. The variety of roles will be different from that during the Cold War.

Indeed, the first Cold War was unusual in its political configuration of bipolarity as well as its weapons – nuclear weapons. And maybe this has left residual habits of thinking—strategic echoes, perhaps—that may be as hard to shift as the weapons themselves. Since 1945, nuclear weapons have had a profound impact on how both nuclear weapons states, and non-nuclear weapons states, think about their security. They have become so deeply ingrained in strategic thinking, that to “extract” nuclear weapons from international security would also mean getting rid of certain strategic concepts, including: deterrence, extended deterrence, as well as re-thinking how to “do” alliances with mainly conventional forces. Conventional arms control would also have to be re-conceptualized. It would also have to deal with the conundrum of ballistic missiles as a dual-use system: both a delivery system for WMDs but also an instrument of conventional attacks, as the Middle East has shown us. For instance, including the Egyptian and Syrian missile attacks on Israel in 1973 Yom Kippur War, the 1980–88 War between Iraq and Iran, the Afghan civil war 1988–91, and the 1991 Persian Gulf War, the Yemen Civil War of 1994. However, by this I do not mean that we should carry reliance on deterrence too far. Deterrence is provocative, it can produce an endless security dilemma, and there are other instruments of peace and international security that can complement the perceived role of deterrence. No country should depend too much on deterrence, as this tends to generate more “desperate”, or provocative behavior. North Korea is a classic case in point. Deterrence is never guaranteed. It often works, but it has limitations, and it does not provide total control over what happens. After all, it is the art of things that do not happen.

Another problem that weighs into these issues is American ahistoricism. In part because of their origins as rebels and creators of a “new world”, Americans have a unique strategic culture characterized by optimism, the impulse to transform the international system in the service of liberal democratic ideals, a tendency to reject the European tradition of power politics, and to cast wars as crusades against evil.[v] Such notions run counter to, and almost ignore the elements of Russian strategic culture, which is characterized by a combination of fear about vulnerability and an appetite for achieving security and status by expansion, a valuing of coercive power or status imparted by higher authority, and a tendency to resolve political disputes by struggle and intrigue, occasionally by force, but not by negotiations, bargaining, voting, or legal adjudication. In addition, there has always been an underlying Russian attitude that views foreign states or actors as either enemies, or subjects, or transient allies, or useful fools to be manipulated. In summary, defensiveness bordering on paranoia, on the one hand, combined with assertiveness bordering on pugnacity, on the other.[vi]

This is not to say that one experience of nationhood, and the associated attitudes towards foreign policy, is better than another. But it should not come as any surprise that such different worldviews should lead to clashes. Of course NATO expansion under former U.S. President Bill Clinton irked the Russians. Of course ballistic missile defense installations in Central Europe would make Russia feel more vulnerable. Of course Russia would seek to “re-expand” its influence by annexing Crimea. If American policymakers had appreciated Russian strategic culture better in the 1990s, the current Ukraine crisis might have been averted. And we might not find ourselves in the current climate where Russia threatens to use nuclear weapons to “de-escalate” a conflict.

In summary, if one carefully studies and understands history, instead of ignoring it, then it should come as no surprise that we may, in fact, be in a new Cold War. And the other reality

is that nuclear weapons will continue to be a central feature of great power strategic relations. There will be more Cold Wars. So far we have been lucky in managing them. But we should never become complacent and ignore geopolitical sensitivities of other great powers.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


https://mobile.twitter.com/StanfordCISAC/status/697584365665021952


[ii] See, for instance, Ward Wilson, Five Myths About Nuclear Weapons (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Boston, 2013); Hans M. Kristensen, “Falling Short of Prague: Obama’s Nuclear Weapons Employment Policy”, Arms Control Association, (date not indicated). At: http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2013...gue-Obamas-Nuclear-Weapons-Employment-Policy; Barry M. Blechman, “Extended Deterrence: Cutting Edge of the Debate on Nuclear Policy”, Policy Forum Online, 13 August 2009, At: www.nautilus.org/faura/security/09066Blechman.html; Nick Ritchie, “Deterrence Dogma? Challenging the Relevance of British Nuclear Weapons”, International Affairs, Vol. 85, No. 1 (January 2009), pp.81-98; Catherine M. Kelleher and Scott L. Warren, “Getting to Zero Starts Here: Tactical Nuclear Weapons”, Arms Control Today, Vol. 39, No. 8 (October 2009), pp.6-12


[iii] See, for instance, Barry M. Blechman, “Extended Deterrence: Cutting Edge of the Debate on

Nuclear Policy,” Policy Forum Online, August 13, 2009. Available at: www.nautilus.org/fora/security/09066Blechman.html.


[iv] Tom Nichols, “The 1980s called. They don’t want their Cruise Missiles Back”, The National Interest, 3 November 2015. At: http://nationalinterest.org/feature/the-1980s-called-they-don’t-need-their-cruise-missiles-back-1423. See also, Tom Nichols, No Use: Nuclear Weapons and U.S. National Security (University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 2013).


[v] For an elaboration of these tendencies, see Thomas G. Mahnken, “United States Strategic Culture”, Report written for the Defense Threat Reduction Agency. 13 December 2006.


[vi] See, for instance, Fritz W. Ermarth, “Russia’s Strategic Culture: Past, Present, And… In Transition?”, Report Prepared for the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, 31 October 2006.





Dr. Christine M. Leah is a Postdoctoral Fellow with the Grand Strategy Program at Yale University. Previously, she was a Stanton Postdoctoral Fellow in Nuclear Security at MIT, a visiting fellow at the Rajaratnam School of International Studies, a summer research fellow at RAND, and a research intern at IISS-Asia, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, IISS-London, the French Ministry of Defense, and the UMP office of Mr. Nicolas Sarkozy. She is the author of Australia and the Bomb, and has published in Comparative Strategy, the Journal of Strategic Studies, Asian Security, the Australian Journal of International Affairs, The National Interest, the Diplomat, War is Boring, and with RSIS and RAND.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm...Goes to the raw numbers I quoted when the Ukraine mess started up. They're impressive but if you don't have the money to train "for real" and the political will to be seen as "serious" it's all moot....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2016/04/07/on_the_balance_of_forces_in_the_east_109233.html

April 7, 2016

On the Balance of Forces in the East

NATO doesn't need more guns, money, or aircraft. It needs them where they'd count.

By James Hasik


Two data sets stood out in my news flow this morning. Byron Callan, a member of the Atlantic Council and the senior defense investment analyst at Capital Alpha Partners, observed in note that global fixed-wing fighter and attack aircraft inventories have dropping for some time. Citing data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies' Military Balance, he noted that numbers worldwide have fallen 27 percent since 2003, from 20,845 to 15,280. Quantities are down more sharply for most European air forces, but the comparative counts for the five largest are revealing:


Country

∆ in fighter inventory since 2003

Inventory in 2015


France

–5%

320


Germany

–44%

235


Greece

–44%

232


United Kingdom

–54%

194


NATO top four total




981


Russia

–51%

860


This simple table bears a few observations. First, as the legions of the Armée de l’Air and the Aéronavale are in good shape, anyone whining about the French in this country can just stop. We can complain about Greek and British parsimony. We certainly should complain about German mismanagement, as the Luftwaffe’s fighter force is in poor serviceability. But the situation is hardly dire. Simply put, the air forces on the European side of NATO have the Russian Air Force and Naval Aviation outnumbered. With their Typhoons, Rafales, and late-model F-16s, they have the Russians rather outclassed too. Moreover, none of this counts the ground-based air defense missile forces: the Luftwaffe, the Hellenic Army, the Royal Netherlands Army, and the Spanish Army all have very capable MIM-104 Patriot missile batteries. The Poles too will be buying into Patriots of MEADS soon. No one should expect the Russian Air Force to last long against that array of force.

So Russia is seriously outgunned, except in two respects. The correlation of forces differs dramatically with both nuclear deterrence and local trouble-making. Vladimir Putin is a very smart guy, who so far has known not to seek a real brawl. Rather, he knows when he can commit a few squadrons to a bug hunt in Syria, or a few battalions to a stand-up fight inside Ukraine. The problem is that NATO’s strongest forces lie to the rear. Excepting Poland, no NATO member state on the eastern frontier of the alliance has military spending that can even locally rival Russia’s. Almost all are seriously increasing their budgets, but they have a long way to go. The Baltic States frankly can’t, as they lack the population to man strong forces. Using data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, the Polish Foreign Ministry offered today on Twitter (@NATOSummits) a useful map, which I will reproduce as another table:



Country

∆ in military spending since 2014

Spending this year (US $ B)


Estonia

+6.6%

0.457


Latvia

+13.7%

0.286


Lithuania

+32.7%

0.471


Poland

+21.8%

10.5


Slovakia

+16.7%

0.973


Hungary

+1.2%

1.0


Romania

+10.7%

2.5


Eastern frontier total




16.9


Russia

+7.5

66.4


Granted, spending is not power. In the news today too was the factoid that Saudi Arabia has surpassed Russia as having the third-largest military budget worldwide. Also on Twitter, Peter W. Singer (@peterwsinger) noted this morning that what’s “interesting is how little military capability [and] influence, relative to others in [the] top ten” of spenders, the Saudis actually have. The Russians, in contrast, have more than a little money, and they know what they’re doing.

NATO’s problem is not that it lacks troops, guns, aircraft, missiles or money. It’s that it lacks those things on the frontier, where revanchist Russians have been more than implicitly threatening the independence of member states. We’ll talk more about all this at the Atlantic Council on the morning of 14 April, when we host Lithuanian Defense Minister Juozas Olekas for a discussion on “Defending Europe's Eastern Flank”. See you then.

James Hasík is a senior fellow at the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security.

This article originally appeared at Atlantic Council.

___

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April 1, 2016

The Third Offset and NATO

By James Hasik

As Inside Defense reported earlier this month, current events have the US Army questioning its organization, wondering if it’s otherwise destined to be perennially late to the game. The Russian Army, after all, has gotten rather good at showing up unannounced on short notice. It would be bad enough, as Sydney Freedberg wrote for our Art of Future Warfare project, to find “Tallinn Burning” with the Chinese simultaneously causing trouble. That’s because the really ugly anti-access problem, a former Pentagon official assured us here the other day, would be getting back into Tallinn or Riga or Vilnius after a Russian invasion. So, as we should want to avoid needing to eject dug-in Russian troops from NATO territory, what more could be done? Rushing more troops forward faster may not be as useful as devising labor-saving means of seriously slowing the enemy’s advance. And the technical advances required to do that are entirely the sort of thing we should expect from the Pentagon’s Third Offset initiative.

The good news for this effort is that the Russian Army today is a small fraction of the size of the Red Army of the Cold War. Russia is also almost bereft of allies, as Belarus and that collection of frozen-conflict oblasts don’t really add much. Thus, NATO’s ground forces actually outnumber the Russians several times over. What NATO would seem to need is not more troops, but more troops forward, or that can get forward in a hurry. To be fair, the Balts themselves are increasing military spending, though slowly, as raising regiments takes time. The rest of NATO has been rotating small units in and out of the three republics. Last year’s ‘Dragoon Ride’ sent a squadron of 60 Stryker vehicles and 400 troops from the 2nd US Cavalry through Estonia, Lithuania and Poland, and some of those Strykers will soon be upgraded with 30 mm guns and Javelin missile launchers. Even more usefully, the US Army is planning to send an armored brigade to eastern Europe—. But that won’t happen until February 2017, and even then, single brigades moving up from hundreds of miles back may not matter.

This is because shipping tanks by ship is not going to save NATO’s eastern frontier on a Baltic timescale. The Polish government would be delighted, of course, to relocate US III Corps from Texas to positions east of Warsaw. But barring that development, could the force just fly in? The US Army maintains a lot of paratroopers, but they rarely drop into combat. When troops have jumped against strong opponents, things have historically gone badly—think Crete, Normandy, Market Garden, etc. Russians do like to bring armor and artillery to their battles, so we might want a more robust answer. The US Army’s September 2015 “Combat Vehicle Modernization Strategy” does call for the near-term purchase of some “Mobile Protected Firepower” vehicles—light, air-droppable tanks for the infantry brigades. The vehicles would feature enough armor to resist small arms, and an active or reactive protection system to defend against missiles and rockets. The Army has been talking about an off-the-self purchase for its immediate need, but it’s not obvious which air-portable vehicle it might choose. We’ve also been hearing about this initiative since 2013, so it’s not clear that the service will follow through.

The further problem is that anti-access thing. The Russian Navy might not survive long in the Baltic Lake, but the Russian Air Force and Naval Aviation could challenge any aircraft flying in, with both fighters and surface-to-air missiles. Even if the airfields around Kaliningrad (Königsberg) find themselves under constant artillery fire, Russian strategic depth is legendary. In such a scenario, NATO’s air forces shouldn’t expect to find serviceable airfields in the Balts, if just from a steady stream of Iskander missiles. Could the troops fly in low and fast, crossing the sea by rotorcraft? Perhaps the Army could find a place in Poland to garrison the force and bed down its aircraft. Perhaps the troops could stage from existing bases in Germany, so as not to offend Russian sensibilities. Perhaps the Army could even find a rotorcraft developer who can improve on the cargo capacity of the venerable H-47 Chinook, or the range and speed of the V-22 Osprey. After all, the first of the Army's Big Eight initiatives for R&D is vertical lift. But regardless of how much effort is expended, they’re still not likely to figure out how to move tanks effectively by air.

So what else? Is there an inexpensive way to slow a Russian invasion, so that Russian tanks can't just charge down the highways towards the cities and the coast? Could some approach account for the limited manpower in the Balts? That sounds immediately robotic, but start with the obvious stuff. At least Estonia and Latvia might consider planting dense belts of anti-tank mines along their borders with Russia. Some old-fashioned flame fougasse would make an impression too. Newer systems like the M7 multi-shot ‘Spider’ smart-mine could also be useful: each fires up to six grenades against advancing infantry, killing or at least hampering engineers as they try to clear lanes. The M7 is also a command-detonated weapon, so it meets not just Pentagon policy, but the more restrictive Ottawa Treaty to which all three Balts are party. Stepping on it does nothing, unless the remote triggerman decides to whack you.

Could this be taken much further? Of course. A massive unattended network of sensors might distribute monitoring and triggering to any of many, mobile command posts, so that no single strike could take down the defensive web. Think also of what could be accomplished with a landward version of the mobile naval mine. The latter is that variety of bottom-dwelling torpedo that waits for a ship with the wrong acoustic signature to wander above. A ground-based version might look like a automatic floor cleaner with an explosively-formed penetrator in the middle. Such a ‘Boomba’ could roll onto roads after the lead vehicles pass, targeting just the one—the fuel truck?—figured to cause the most damage.

Just make sure to lay wires, and not rely on radio commands. The Russian Army is very accomplished at electronic jamming, though cutting all those wires would at least be yet another task for advancing sappers. But something must be done to reduce the vulnerability of the Atlantic community's most exposed outpost. That whole Second Offset—what we used to call the precision revolution—was about offsetting local numerical superiorities. Too many anti-aircraft guns around the bridge? Send a single laser-guided bomb from miles away. Too many Russian tanks in the Fulda Gap? Drop planeloads of Sensor-Fuzed Weapons. When faced with the most challenging military problems at the edge of conventional influence, the Third Offset can mean the same today.

James Hasík is a senior fellow at the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security.


This article originally appeared at Atlantic Council.
 
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