WAR 04-16-2016-to-04-22-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?489721-In-the-War-with-ISIS-Don’t-Forget-About-Sun-Tzu

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http://www.thestrategybridge.com/the-bridge/2016/4/15/in-the-war-with-isis-dont-forget-about-sun-tzu

In the War with ISIS, Don’t Forget About Sun Tzu

Sebastian J. Bae · April 15, 2016

Carl von Clausewitz, the young Prussian strategist of the Napoleonic age, is a giant in the field of security studies. His seminal work, On War, is widely considered the definitive text in understanding the nature of war. His famous quote, “War is the continuation of politics by other means,” is generally considered the cardinal rule for war—it is often quoted and equally often ignored in practice. So, it is unsurprising that contemporary Western strategists and thinkers look towards Clausewitz for answers and insights, but is he the only choice?

In “What Would Clausewitz Do?,” Mark Perry explored how the Prussian strategist would tackle the challenge of the Islamic State (ISIS). Perry astutely emphasized the need for a clear, achievable political goal driving the war effort combined with a level-headed understanding of the war being fought. Clausewitz would be proud. However, Perry’s singular focus on the bare-fisted, no holds barred type of warfare is both mismatched to today’s socio-political climate and a woefully one-dimensional characterization of Clausewitz’s theory of war. Although frequently quoted, Clausewitz’s comprehensive theory of war is often misrepresented...or at least poorly understood in its entirety. Clausewitz provides the abstraction of absolute war as an intellectual baseline to highlight the utility and constraints of limited warfare in practice, as explained in Book One’s “Purpose and Means in War.” Contrary to popular representation, Clausewitz outlines a masterful theory of war where the grammar of warfare adapts and changes to the logic of politics—ranging from conventional warfare to counterinsurgency involving non-state actors. Thus, to reduce Clausewitz’s theory of war to a simplistic suggestion “to hit them, and relentlessly, before they hit us,” as Mark Perry suggests, is both inaccurate and provides a false strategic dichotomy.

That said, however, Perry’s characterization of Clausewitz highlights the need to incorporate both nuance and a wider range of voices in the crafting of strategy. Thus, modern strategists should not be limited to the 18th century Prussian strategist for answers, but also look to the 5th century BCE strategist, Sun Tzu.

Although historical sources disagree on the details of Sun Tzu’s life or even his existence, his work, The Art of War, is considered a masterpiece in the philosophy of war and strategy. For hundreds of years, The Art of War provided the foundations of military theory in China and continues to have tremendous influence today. Although separated by nearly 2,000 years, Clausewitz and Sun Tzu both stressed the importance of politics in warfare, the role of the commander, and the dynamic nature of war. Yet these strategists significantly differed in their approach to warfare. Clausewitz emphasized a deductive approach to the study of warfare by focusing on a theory that incorporated empirical experience. In contrast, Sun Tzu, reflective of his time, preferred a more inductive approach and understanding of warfare. But most importantly, while Clausewitz demonstrated skepticism regarding the value of intelligence in warfare, Sun Tzu advocated victory through the systematic use of intelligence, deception, and manipulation.

Like Clausewitz, Sun Tzu understood knowledge of the adversary’s disposition, position, intentions, and capabilities were paramount in achieving victory. However, unlike Clausewitz, Sun Tzu emphasized the use of various types of spies to gain what we would now call human intelligence. He adamantly advised, “Be subtle! Be subtle! And use your spies for every kind of business.” Thus, Sun Tzu’s campaign against ISIS would begin with an intense and systemic intelligence operation. Tragically, the current intelligence operation against ISIS has been marred by dysfunction and lapses. To many, the intelligence community has been unable to stay ahead of the curve, constantly reacting as we move from crisis to crisis, best characterized by the prevalence of ISIS attacks abroad. Not to completely disparage the efforts of the intelligence community, they have gathered valuable information on ISIS supply routes, finances, and movements. However, as Sun Tzu warns, “Knowledge of the enemy's dispositions can only be obtained from other men.” Although modern surveillance and imagery technology is invaluable, Sun Tzu, reminiscent of a classic spymaster, would argue there is no substitute for accurate human intelligence gathered by human agents on the ground. Aerial reconnaissance can provide useful target lists, but it cannot determine the real utility of each target nor can it give understanding of a commander’s personality or a city’s disposition. To Sun Tzu, meticulously preparing the battlefield through the diverse use of spies, including the recruiting double-agents and embedding agents in the adversary’s force, is the first step to long-term success.

Unlike his Prussian counterpart, Sun Tzu stresses deception, not military force, at the center of his war philosophy. The “Chinese character li (force) occurs only nine times" in The Art of War, reflecting Sun Tzu’s belief that victory was achieved through psychological dominance and not by materially destroying the enemy. Sun Tzu famously argues, “All warfare is based on deception.” Consequently, he would be appalled at the transparent nature of the current campaign against ISIS. For instance, Flightradar24 (FR24), an open-source flight tracker, allows anyone to track flights in real time, which has occasionally revealed locations of military operations. Robert Hopkins III, a former commander of intelligence-gathering aircraft, told Vice News that, “Looking at FR24 on a laptop and seeing a slew of KC-135s with the call sign ‘Quid’ orbiting off Cyprus is a good indicator that a strike package is on its way to Syria, no matter how good the operational security (OPSEC) of the strike aircraft might be.” Similarly, in response to the prevalence of social media use by service members, the U.S. Air Force started a campaign in 2015, entitled “Loose tweets sink fleets,” over concerns of proper OPSEC. Likewise, a Pentagon briefer mistakenly revealed to the media a spring offensive planned for April/May 2015 to retake Mosul from ISIS, an operation then indefinitely postponed. Perhaps, the U.S. military should take a page (or, more accurately, a bamboo strip) from Sun Tzu’s playbook and let their “plans be dark and impenetrable as night, and when you move, fall like a thunderbolt.”

Although Sun Tzu emphasizes deception over force, he does not discount the utility or need for force in warfare. He simply argues, “To fight and conquer in all your battles is not supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting.” Sun Tzu believed warfare was incredibly costly, both in terms of wealth and men. Therefore, he sought to leverage the minimum force to win key decisive engagements, striving to mitigate the heavy price of open warfare. Therefore, Sun Tzu would never approve of the U.S.’s plans to retake Mosul from ISIS in a bloody, direct offensive. When U.S.-Iraqi forces retook Ramadi in January 2016, the city was completely devastated by the ensuing battle. The campaign involved house-to-house engagements and was bogged down by bobby traps and improvised explosive devices (IEDs). Although Ramadi was nominally liberated, the city was essentially decimated. Sabah Karhout, the head of the Anbar provincial council, told The New York Times that “Ramadi is a city of ghosts” and the reconstruction would cost roughly $12 billion. Similarly, a direct offensive on Mosul would be another bloody rendition of a previous strategic mistake. U.S.-Iraqi forces may win on the battlefield, but the wholesale destruction will only feed the narrative of grievance advocated by ISIS. Therefore, Sun Tzu argued, “In the practical art of war, the best thing of all is to take the enemy's country whole and intact; to shatter and destroy it is not so good.” He understood post-war reconstruction would only incur additional costs for the state. One has only to look at the U.S.’s interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq, which total roughly $1.5 trillion in reconstruction efforts, to see the wisdom in his words.

Hence, instead of a direct offensive, Sun Tzu would advocate to “hold out bait to entice the enemy” and then “attack him where he is unprepared, appear where you are not expected.” At the moment, ISIS’s growth and appeal is rooted in the perception that the group is winning the war—fueled by grotesque public displays of violence and a savvy use of social media. Consequently, ISIS has dictated the terms of the war in every aspect, whether in the realm of public opinion or on the battlefield. Therefore, like Clausewitz, Sun Tzu would advise the coalition to attack softer yet strategically important targets such as the ISIS-controlled Omar oil field, which generates roughly $1.7 million to $5.1 million per month for ISIS. By recapturing ISIS-controlled assets, coalition forces would slowly, but steadily apply both political and military pressure on ISIS. Eventually, ISIS would be forced to seek new initiative in an offensive campaign of its own, whether out of logistical desperation or an ill-fated effort to regain its prestige. At that moment, coalition forces can dictate the terms of the engagement in terms of time, place, and manner. Therefore, instead of attacking headlong into a well-defended city, laden with traps and IEDs, the coalition can coax ISIS into a decisive engagement on its terms, best playing to its strengths instead of those of ISIS.

In the end, both Sun Tzu’s The Art of War and Clausewitz’s On War provide invaluable insight into the nature of warfare and strategy and rightfully belong on the bookshelf of any policymaker or strategist. Nevertheless, one must understand the two seminal works differ significantly in medium, context, methodology, and intended audience. The Art of War, written on thin bamboo strips, is designed as a manual of sorts for the battlefield commander, comprising only thirteen short chapters. Produced in ancient China, The Art of War valued deception and manipulation in an era that lacked industrialized military forces. In contrast, On War is a rigorous dialectic examination of absolute war in an effort to determine the nature of limited warfare in reality, which was heavily influenced by Clausewitz’s own experiences in the Napoleonic wars. Each has its place in the greater security literature. However, in an era where nuclear deterrence exists and large scale industrial warfare is vilified, it may be time for policymakers and strategists to dust off their copy of The Art of War and add new tools to the policy toolkit. Therefore, policymakers should seek to widen their perspectives – seeking to incorporate more voices in how to craft and execute strategy in modern times. Ultimately, the fact remains:

“The art of war is of vital importance to the State. It is a matter of life and death, a road either to safety or to ruin. Hence it is a subject of inquiry which can on no account be neglected.”

Sebastian J. Bae is a contributor to Best Defense at Foreign Policy and served six years in the Marine Corps infantry, leaving as a Sergeant. He deployed to Iraq in 2009. He earned a Masters in Georgetown University’s Security Studies Program, specializing in violent non-state actors, counterinsurgency, and humanitarian interventions. You can follow him on Twitter: @SebastianBae.
 

Housecarl

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http://warontherocks.com/2016/04/a-new-generation-of-unrestricted-warfare/

A New Generation of Unrestricted Warfare

David Barno and Nora Bensahel
April 19, 2016

In 1999, two Chinese colonels wrote a book called Unrestricted Warfare, about warfare in the age of globalization. Their main argument: Warfare in the modern world will no longer be primarily a struggle defined by military means — or even involve the military at all.

They were about a decade and a half before their time.

Colonels Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui argued that war was no longer about “using armed forces to compel the enemy to submit to one’s will” in the classic Clausewitzian sense. Rather, they asserted that war had evolved to “using all means, including armed force or non-armed force, military and non-military, and lethal and non-lethal means to compel the enemy to accept one’s interests.” The barrier between soldiers and civilians would fundamentally be erased, because the battle would be everywhere. The number of new battlefields would be “virtually infinite,” and could include environmental warfare, financial warfare, trade warfare, cultural warfare, and legal warfare, to name just a few. They wrote of assassinating financial speculators to safeguard a nation’s financial security, setting up slush funds to influence opponents’ legislatures and governments, and buying controlling shares of stocks to convert an adversary’s major television and newspapers outlets into tools of media warfare. According to the editor’s note, Qiao argued in a subsequent interview that “the first rule of unrestricted warfare is that there are no rules, with nothing forbidden.” That vision clearly transcends any traditional notions of war.

Unrestricted Warfare was an explicit response to the reigning Western military orthodoxy of the time. The preface is dated January 17, 1999, which the authors note was the eighth anniversary of the outbreak of the 1991 Gulf War. In many ways, their argument refuted many of the Western lessons drawn from that conflict: that wars could be short, sharp, and dominated by high-technology weaponry used with stunning precision to shatter an enemy’s armed forces in hours or days. By 1999, U.S. military thinking was dominated by the revolution in military affairs and network centric-warfare, which relied on advanced technologies to give the United States total battlefield dominance.

But Qiao and Wang argued that the battlefield had fundamentally changed. It was no longer a place where militaries met and fought; instead, society itself was now the battlefield. Future wars would inevitably encompass attacks on all elements of society without limits. Military battles resembling those of 1991 might become secondary elements of conflict — if they even occurred at all.

A lot has changed in the past 17 years. The United States has fought two long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and weathered the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, for example. But perhaps the most fundamental change to the way we live has been the explosive growth of the internet and our utter dependence on the cyber domain. When Qiao and Wang wrote their book, today’s cyber world was barely imaginable, and then only in the minds of visionaries and the most imaginative computer geeks. In 1999, AOL was still mailing those annoying cds with its software to every address in America, since almost three-quarters of American households did not have internet access the previous year.

Today, the United States, and increasingly the rest of the world, thoroughly depends on web connections built in cyberspace. The internet dominates all aspects of global trade, economics, communications, and even societies. And that makes Unrestricted Warfare even more relevant today than when it was published — because waging war without limits is now simpler and easier than even its authors could have envisioned. In 1999, the ability to assault all elements of an opponent’s society seemed to require the resources or sponsorship of a powerful nation state. Now, an increasingly interconnected world allows adversaries at keyboards — from states to terrorist groups to disgruntled citizens — to instantly vault oceans and continents to strike at any element of another nation and society without ever having to encounter defending military forces. A basement hacker in Sarajevo can target the City of London’s financial networks one moment and a Brazilian municipal power grid the next — and never change out of her pajamas.

The nation will always need military forces to defend against foreign military threats. But the U.S. armed forces — which remain the strongest and best-resourced in the world — provide virtually no defense against the cyber vulnerabilities that affect every American business and household. And the ever-expanding Internet of things (IoT) only increases those vulnerabilities. A very small example: One of your loyal Strategic Outpost columnists just joined the IoT by installing a Nest thermostat in her home. The next day, she woke up to a freezing house, and immediately wondered whether she’d already been hacked. One cold columnist does not signal a national security crisis, of course. But our massive and ever-growing national reliance upon the cyber domain fundamentally alters the nature of what must be defended for the nation to continue to function — and makes it far easier to conduct the type of unrestricted warfare that Qiao and Wang described 17 years ago.

These deep national and global vulnerabilities require us to think about conflict and warfare in a much more holistic way than ever before. We still think of warfare as primarily military in nature, channeling our 20th-century experience. But our adversaries can now bypass the military domain completely and can directly attack how we live our lives. And now, unlike in 1999, nearly anyone with a smart phone or laptop can join that fight.

In our inaugural Strategic Outpost column, we asked a provocative question: Is traditional warfare dead? Our conclusion today remains the same: No, it is not dead, but it is increasingly irrelevant for average Americans. The utility of military power is becoming increasingly limited, confined to foreign battlefields and directed against armed adversaries. In an age of unrestricted warfare, how will we protect our country and our increasingly cyber-centric way of life at home from those same adversaries who can attack and disrupt us without firing a shot? Against those who realize that they no longer need to build an army, navy, or air force to wage a potentially catastrophic war against the United States?

Seventeen years ago, Qiao and Wang warned us that these myriad new forms of non-military warfare were coming. Today we all now live on that battlefield — an unlimited zone of conflict that can reach each one of us in every aspect of our lives and work. The unconstrained notions of modern war articulated in Unrestricted Warfare have now arrived. Boundaries between soldiers and civilians, combatants and bystanders have all but disappeared in this dangerous new world. Providing effective national security in this unprecedented environment of mass exposure requires our policymakers to plan for unrestricted warfare. This growing and nearly boundless threat requires us to develop better policies, better deterrent capabilities, and far more developed defenses. We can’t wait for the first big attack of the next war to throw society into chaos — rethinking what war now means in our interconnected world demands the attention of our civilian and military leaders today.


Lt. General David W. Barno, USA (Ret.) is a Distinguished Practitioner in Residence, and Dr. Nora Bensahel is a Distinguished Scholar in Residence, at the School of International Service at American University. Both also serve as Nonresident Senior Fellows at the Atlantic Council. Their column appears in War on the Rocks every other Tuesday. To sign up for Barno and Bensahel’s Strategic Outpost newsletter, where you can track their articles as well as their public events, click here.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-afghanistan-blast-idUSKCN0XG0BO

World | Tue Apr 19, 2016 7:54am EDT
Related: World, United Nations

Afghan Taliban launch attack in central Kabul, killing at least 28

KABUL | By Josh Smith and Hamid Shalizi


A Taliban suicide bomb and gun assault on a government security building during Tuesday morning rush hour in central Kabul killed at least 28 people and wounded more than 320, in the most deadly single attack in the Afghan capital since 2011.

President Ashraf Ghani condemned the assault "in the strongest possible terms" in a statement from the presidential palace, located only a few hundred meters away from the scene of the blast.

The insurgency led by the Afghan Taliban has gained strength since the withdrawal of most international combat troops at the end of 2014, and the Islamist group is believed to be stronger than at any point since it was driven from power by U.S.-backed forces in 2001.

Police chief Abdul Rahman Rahimi said civilians and members of the Afghan security forces were among those killed and wounded when a suicide car-bomber detonated his explosives outside the wall of a National Directorate of Security (NDS) office.

Witnesses described chaotic scenes after the blast.

"I was here when a huge explosion happened," said Amir, who works in a nearby restaurant. "I saw three boys with severe heads injuries. My uncle was injured and my brother is missing, I don't know what happened to him."

It was the worst single militant strike in Kabul since 2011, when about 60 people died in a suicide blast outside a mosque, and will reinforce concerns in Afghanistan and the West that the country is being dragged into a worsening spiral of violence.

Rahimi said one attacker had tried to slip into the NDS building through a destroyed wall after the blast, but he was discovered and killed.


SMOKE, SIRENS

The Taliban said on their Pashto-language website that they had carried out the suicide bombing on "Department 10", an NDS unit responsible for protecting government ministers and VIPs.

They said a suicide car bomber blew up the main gate at the front of the office, allowing other fighters, including more suicide bombers, to enter the heavily guarded compound.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a separate statement that the attackers engaged in a gunbattle with Afghan security forces inside the building.

The Islamist group often exaggerates details of attacks against government and military targets.

A thick plume of black smoke was seen rising from the area near the sprawling U.S. embassy complex nearby immediately after the blast.

Warning sirens blared out for some minutes from the embassy compound, which is also close to the headquarters of the NATO-led Resolute Support mission.

The U.S. embassy and the NATO mission both said they were not affected by the blast.

The Taliban announced the beginning of their spring offensive on April 12, and fighting has raged around the symbolically important northern city of Kunduz since then, although the capital had been relatively quiet.

Kunduz, Afghanistan's fifth-largest city, fell briefly to the Taliban last September in the biggest blow to Ghani's government since NATO-led forces ended their combat operations at the end of 2014.

Taliban fighters have also been making territorial gains in the southern province of Helmand, further stretching Afghan forces who have struggled to contain an insurgency aimed at toppling the government and returning to power.

Tuesday's blast came days after a United Nations report said urban warfare had caused a spike in the number of deaths and injuries among women and children in Afghanistan this year.

The U.S. embassy said the attack underscored the harm the Taliban continued to inflict on the Afghan people.

"Afghanistan deserves peace and security, not attacks that victimize parents taking their children to school, workers on their morning commute, and people who have stepped forward to help defend their fellow citizens," it said in a statement.


(Additional reporting by Jibran Ahmed in PESHAWAR; Writing by Paul Tait; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Robert Birsel)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-europe-attacks-belgium-idUSKCN0XG166

World | Tue Apr 19, 2016 6:45am EDT
Related: World

Belgium says seen signs that Islamic State has sent more fighters to Europe


There are signs that more Islamic State inspired militants have been sent to Belgium and Europe, Belgian authorities said on Tuesday, maintaining the country's threat status at the second-highest level.

Belgium's alert level was cut to three from the maximum of four just two days after the March 22 attacks which killed 32 people at the airport and on the metro in Brussels. It has remained at that level since.

"There are indications that Islamic State has sent fighters to Europe and Belgium, the threat level which is currently at three will not go down," a spokesman of Belgium's crisis center said.

By maintaining the level three status, authorities indicate that an attack is possible and likely
.

Prosecutors detained two men seen on security footage alongside the metro and airport suicide bombers on April 8, meaning all known Brussels bombings suspects are dead or in custody.


(Reporting by Robert-Jan Bartunek; editing by Philip Blenkinsop and Dominic Evans)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.politico.com/story/2016/04/obama-saudi-arabia-britain-germany-222106

Obama's big damage-control tour

Visiting three major allies, the president is likely to face as many jeers as cheers.

By Michael Crowley
04/18/16 07:08 PM EDT

President Barack Obama will drop in on three of America's most important allies this week, possibly for the last time. But he isn't expecting an adoring reception in any of them.

The U.S. relationship with all three nations is distressed, and Obama will be doing more than a little damage control.

In Saudi Arabia, where he lands on Wednesday, Obama will try to soothe anger over his nuclear deal with Iran and his increasingly public complaints about the Saudi kingdom. In London, he’ll make amends for comments about British foreign policy that rattled the teacups at 10 Downing Street. And in Germany, he’ll confront one of Europe's most anti-American moods and lingering bitterness over NSA spying in Berlin.

U.S. officials say Obama’s agenda will be proactive, bolstering efforts against the Islamic State, helping Europe deal with its refugee crisis and shoring up NATO — “a very consequential series of engagements,” as deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes put it last week.

But Obama will also spend much of his time on the defensive.

The tensions will be highest during Obama’s first stop, in Saudi Arabia. Obama's relationship with the Saudis has been rocky since his first, awkward visit to Riyadh in mid-2009. Things have only deteriorated since over Obama's policy in Syria and his nuclear deal with Iran, which Saudi leaders see as the first step towards a larger U.S. thaw with their country’s mortal enemy.

People who have recently spoken to Saudi officials say that Riyadh’s annoyance with Obama has spiked since last month’s publication of a much-discussed Atlantic magazine article on Obama's worldview, which described the president as “clearly irritated that foreign-policy orthodoxy compels him to treat Saudi Arabia as an ally.”

Obama also told the magazine that Saudis will need to learn to "share" the Middle East with their archrival Iran.

"This is kind of an awkward visit for Obama in the wake of his confessions in The Atlantic," said David Ottoway, a Middle East scholar at the Wilson Center in Washington. "These are fighting words back in Riyadh, so I’m sure they’re going to ask him about what he means by these comments — and they will defend themselves."


Justices divided on Obama immigration actions
By Josh Gerstein and Seung Min Kim


The same Atlantic article also caused a fuss in London — hardly a capital accustomed to jibes from Washington — thanks to some less-than-reverential Obama comments about British Prime Minister David Cameron.

The magazine reported that Obama had recently insisted to Cameron that Britain contribute its “fair share” to NATO’s budget (an agreed-upon minimum of 2 percent of British GDP) or endanger the famed “special relationship” with Washington; Obama partially blamed Cameron for the chaos of post-Gaddafi Libya, saying the British leader became “distracted” by other issues when he should have been playing a leading role in rebuilding the country; and he cited Cameron’s “failure” to win parliamentary approval for action supporting Obama’s 2013 air strikes in Syria as a key reason why Obama aborted his planned military action.

Obama officials quickly sought to mitigate the damage, issuing statements and tweets about the value of the "special relationship." But London wasn't buying it.

"Britain's 'special relationship' with the US comes under threat," declared the Daily Mail. “Obama Savages Cameron on Libya,” blared London’s Independent." Obama leaves Iraq in a mess, disengages from the Mid East, does nothing in Syria, Libya or Palestine & then blames us. Not much of a legacy," tweeted Alan Duncan, a senior member of Cameron's Conservative Party.

Rhodes noted that, since the "fair share" conversation between Obama and Cameron, the UK has increased its defense spending to 2 percent of GDP, meeting its NATO commitment. He called Britain "the opposite of a 'free rider,' " a label Obama also seemed to apply to Britain in the article.

Obama can offer his own views when he holds a Friday press conference with Cameron at 10 Downing Street after lunch with Queen Elizabeth II. Obama is also likely to weigh in — at the press conference and at a town hall with young Britons the next day — on the country's upcoming referendum on whether to withdraw from the European Union, a proposal which Obama opposes.

But Obama's position on a so-called "Brexit" is also the subject of acrimony. More than 100 members of parliament have signed a letter telling Obama to, in effect, butt out. "It has long been the established practice not to interfere in the domestic political affairs of our allies and we hope that this will continue," the letter declares.


Deputy National Security Adviser For Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes briefs the media on Feb. 18.


Obama aide: Saudi Arabia paid 'insufficient attention' to extremist funding
By Eliza Collins


The centerpiece of Obama's trip will be a stop in Hanover, Germany, where his relationship with German Chancellor Angela Merkel is strong — the Atlantic described her as "one of the few foreign leaders Obama respects" — but where America's relationship with the German people is not.

Obama will try to address that with a speech on Monday that Rhodes said will "step back" and "review" the relationship, which has been tested by recent revelations of U.S. spying in Germany, including NSA monitoring of Merkel's personal phone, and disdain towards what many Germans see as a militaristic U.S. foreign policy: A June 2015 Pew Research Center poll found that Germans have only a slightly positive attitude of the U.S. overall, with just 50 percent viewing America favorably and 45 percent unfavorably.

Though well above the 31 percent favorable rating the U.S. enjoyed at the end of the Bush era, that is by far the most negative view of America among the major European nations Pew polled. And it means Germany views the U.S. only slightly more favorably than does China, where Pew found the U.S. registering a 44-49 favorable-unfavorable rating.

It is also something of a letdown for Obama in a country where he drew a crowd of 100,000 when he spoke at Berlin's Brandenberg Gate as a presidential candidate in the summer of 2008.

"I know my country has not perfected itself," Obama said in that speech. "At times, we've struggled to keep the promise of liberty and equality for all of our people. We've made our share of mistakes, and there are times when our actions around the world have not lived up to our best intentions."

That's a theme Obama will likely return to when he addresses the German people — as he works to assuage one of several disgruntled allies in the coming days.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.defenceweb.co.za/index.p...-into-tripoli-&catid=54:Governance&Itemid=118

Cautious steps as Libya's new government moves into Tripoli

Written by Reuters, Tuesday, 19 April 2016

Troops in balaclavas guard the gate and foreign diplomats arrive daily with offers of aid at Tripoli's Abusita naval base, where Libya's new U.N.-backed government has begun trying to bring a chaotic country under its control.

Even just beyond Abusita's well-guarded walls, though, Tripoli is not always a welcoming city.

Since they arrived by ship last month after attempts to fly into Tripoli were blocked, Prime Minister Fayez Seraj and his deputies have edged cautiously into a capital still controlled by a mosaic of armed brigades.

Seraj is under huge pressure from Libyans impatient to put insecurity and economic uncertainty behind them, after years of fighting among rival units of former rebels who vied for power after the 2011 fall of Muammar Gaddafi.

Western allies are also keen for a stable Libyan partner to help them contain the growing reach of Islamic State militants and block the flow of illegal migrants across the Mediterranean.

READ MORE
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"We will start operating and working once we see things are settled and we are not creating any bloodshed," Ahmed Maiteeg, a deputy prime minister of the Government of National Accord (GNA), told Reuters.

The GNA has secured at least six ministerial buildings in Tripoli, he said. Others remain under the control of various semi-official armed groups whose loyalty is often uncertain.

Seraj's U.N.-backed government is an attempt to bring together an alliance that took over Tripoli in 2014 to form its own self-declared government, and an eastern administration set up by the recognised parliament in the far east of the country.

So far it is still trying to broaden its support, talking to opponents both in the capital and in eastern Libya, where it is seeking a vote of approval by the recognised House of Representatives.

"We're reaching out to all sides," Maiteeg said. "This is a government of accord, so we're trying to be as flexible with everybody as possible."

But the GNA's ability to move deeper into Tripoli will depend on the city's numerous armed brigades, who are often on the payroll of ministries or city councils but whose political alliances are difficult to read.

So far the capital has been relatively calm.

The coalition of brigades known as Libya Dawn, which brought the National Salvation government to power in Tripoli in 2014, has fractured. Attempts to block the GNA have so far failed - including the closure of Tripoli's airspace to prevent GNA leaders from flying in.

Hashem Bisher, commander of the powerful First Division brigade, said as many as 80 percent of armed groups now supported the GNA.

In Martyrs' Square, where Bisher's men are present and where protests used to be exclusively pro-Dawn, two modest demonstrations rallied peacefully for and against the GNA on Friday.

BEHIND THE SCENES

Abdurrahman Swehli, a pro-GNA politician recently elected to head a re-formed version of Tripoli's parliament, said the arrival of the unity government's leaders had gone "much better than expected" on March 30.

"We were working behind the scenes for weeks and the crunch came on that Wednesday," he said. "I was worried."

Swehli said the risk of violence was diminishing daily and there was "no chance" the brigades could "continue as before without anyone controlling them".

But retaining and expanding support from brigades, let alone bringing them under political control, will be a delicate task.

Armed groups have switched allegiances rapidly, and often act with autonomy in parts of the city they control. They have inserted their men into ministries and guard the streets with checkpoints and heavy artillery.

In the past, armed brigades allied with rival political leaders have invaded parliament, take over ministries and even kidnapped a prime minister, claiming to act in the name of the revolution.

Personal or property disputes often erupt into battles, and the nighttime hours can be punctuated by heavy gunfire.

Bisher acknowledged the expectation of "security breaches" had delayed a handover at some ministries, and that one pro-GNA brigade had pushed for exclusive control at the prime minister's office, against the wishes of the new government's leaders.

He said his men were ready to join the police, but could not yet integrate fully because of continuing insecurity.

"The problem is that if we give up our weapons, who will defend us?" he said.

Adel Algeryani, the political chief of another armed brigade, the Libyan Revolutionaries' Operations Room (LROR), said some groups wanted to see GNA leaders address the concerns of hardline Tripoli opponents including Libya's Grand Mufti.

He said a recent statement put out in the LROR's name promising a "long war" against the GNA had been a fake. But he would wait to see if the GNA could get more political and popular backing before committing to support it.

"I will try to push my friends to go as much as possible to the grey area," he said, describing advice to the group's members to avoid committing fully to supporting the new government. "Don't be involved now – wait and see."
 

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http://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...to-libya-without-a-commons-vote-a6990676.html

British troops could be sent to Libya without a Commons vote

Mr Hammond said it would be for 'the Libyan people to recapture their country from Isis'

Charlie Cooper Whitehall Correspondent |@charliecooper8 | 4 hours ago | 4 comments

British troops could be deployed to Libya without a vote in Parliament amid warnings that even a UK training mission would be seen as Western intervention.

On a visit to Tripoli, the Foreign Secretary, Phillip Hammond, said that because troops would only be acting to train Libyan forces, rather than operating a combat mission, MPs would not be given a vote as they were ahead of recent military action in Iraq and Syria.

Mr Hammond has travelled to Libya to offer his support to the fledgling Government of National Accord, led by prime minister Fayez Sarraj.

The new UN-backed government is attempting to restore order to a country that has been fought over by a number of armed groups, including ISIS fighters, since the fall of Colonel Gaddafi in 2011.

Mr Hammond said it would be for “the Libyan people to recapture their country from the Daesh [ISIS] invaders”.

He said he hoped other militias would “come inside the tent” of the national government, allowing the UK and allies to support a military training programme.

But such a “non-combat” mission for UK troops would not require a House of Commons vote he said.

It has been reported, but not officially confirmed by the Government, that special forces troops are already operating in Libya.

Senior Conservative MP Crispin Blunt, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee, has warned that even a training mission would “inevitably be seen as Western intervention” in Libya and would risk British troops coming under attack from “various militia and Islamic State”.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, a former British diplomat in Libya also warned that any kind of military intervention by the West risked “adding fuel to the fire” of the country’s internal conflict.

Joe Walker-Cousins, former head of the British Embassy Office in Benghazi said: “The country is weaponised to an extent that has never been seen before and we’re trying to push some sort of representative government in an environment where any group, if they don’t like what’s happening, will be able to pick up arms and use them to effect.”
 

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http://www.dw.com/en/libya-parliament-in-two-minds-over-un-backed-government/a-19197583

Libya parliament in two minds over UN-backed government

Libya's parliament has postponed a vote of confidence on a UN-backed unity government. The international community sees the proposed government as the best hope for Libya, but parliament remains split.

Date 19.04.2016

The internationally-recognized parliament was to have met Monday in the eastern city of Tobruk, but failed to take place because of "big differences," AFP reported.

A house divided

Formed under a power-sharing deal agreed by some members of parliament in December, the Government of National Accord (GNA) under prime minister-designate Fayez al-Sarraj, has been working to assert its authority but needs formal endorsement from parliament and support from a rival administration.

Libya has been in turmoil since the 2011 ouster and killing of dictator Moamer Kadhafi. It has had two rival administrations since a militia alliance took over Tripoli in mid-2014, setting up its own authority and forcing the elected parliament to flee to Tobruk. The head of the Tripoli administration, Khalifa Ghweil, has refused to recognise the authority of the Sarraj government, which he deems illegal.

The GNA on Monday took over the ministries of housing and public works and social affairs in Tripoli. The takeover of a third ministry - youth and sports - has reportedly been delayed, although deputy premier Ahmed Maiteeq said the government would begin running the three ministries regardless of the result of the confidence vote.

International concern

The international community led by the EU is concerned by the expansion of the Islamic State group in Libya, where the jihadists have set up a bastion just 300 kilometres (185 miles) from Italy across the Mediterranean.

In the past five days of violence between pro-government forces and armed groups in the country's second city, Benghazi, has reportedly left 26 loyalist soldiers dead.

Meanwhile, at least eight African migrants, and possibly as many as 27, died after an overcrowded boat left the Libyan port of Sabratha.

EU to step back in?

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini offered support Monday to Libya's new unity government to boost the economy and security, including expanding the mandate of its "Sophia" navy operation that is combating people-smugglers operating off the Libyan coast.

Sophia currently only operates in international waters as it does not have authority from either Libya or the UN to move closer to the coast, making it easier for people-smugglers to operate. Sophia has so far rescued 13,000 migrants at sea since it started in mid-2015.

The EU has prepared an aid package of 100 million euros ($113 million) for economic, humanitarian and development issues in Libya. It has also said it is ready to help train the police and coastguard and fight terrorism.

The EU's defence and foreign ministers held a video conference with Sarraj Monday during which French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said: "Ensuring security for the Libyans is a vital question for them, but also a vital question for countries in the region" and "for European countries."

Meanwhile, British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond was in Tripoli Monday, following visits last week by foreign ministers of Italy, France and Germany for talks on the new administration. He said Britain was committing an extra £10 million ($14 million) to help the GNA "strengthen political institutions, the economy, security, and justice."


UN resolution needed?

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier suggested that any steps to curb arms trafficking should form the basis of a UN Security Council resolution, noting that intelligence services had indications that Islamic State forces in Libya were being "supported with smuggled weapons coming across the Mediterranean."

There are reportedly differences about how to proceed, with Britain, France, Italy and Spain eager to act quickly. Meanwhile, Sweden says it might also require a UN Security Council resolution if the mission is to try to stop arms smuggling and Security Council member Russia said it was unlikely to back such a request any time soon.

The EU's move could mark the start of the bloc's return to Libya five years after it waged an air campaign to help rebels oust Muammar Gaddafi, but then left the country to descend into anarchy.

jbh/jil (AFP, dpa, Reuters)


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http://www.newsweek.com/rousseffs-impeachment-means-years-mayhem-449137

Opinion

Rousseff’s Impeachment Means Years of Mayhem

By Marieke Riethof On 4/19/16 at 7:42 AM

Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff in June 2013. The author writes that the current impeachment process against her involves disturbing trends, like the fact that no fewer than 35 out of the 38 congressional deputies who voted in favor of impeachment are themselves under investigation for corruption.

Ueslei Marcelino/reuters

Opinion
This article first appeared on The Conversation.

The lower house of Brazil’s National Congress has voted overwhelmingly to impeach President Dilma Rousseff for allegedly covering up the scale of the country’s budget deficit, sending the case to the upper house.

As the vote was taken, anti-government demonstrations on São Paulo’s Avenida Paulista and outside the Congress held aloft a giant inflatable rubber duck, emblazoned with the message “I’m not going to pay the duck”—meaning paying for something when you shouldn’t have to.

The duck, which has appeared at every pro-impeachment rally, has come to symbolize not only the movement against Rousseff’s ruling Workers' Party but also wider discontent with government policies. In response, one particularly telling pro-government cartoon depicted the opposition as a “Trojan duck,” hiding years of uncertainty and a painful austerity agenda behind its innocent appearance.

However, the color and noise at both pro- and anti-government protests masks a lack of consideration for the longer-term political implications of Rousseff’s impeachment, a process dominated by short-termism, personal political leverage and political gain.

After the government’s failed last-minute attempt to block the process in the Supreme Court, the Brazilian Congress’s Chamber of Deputies, the lower house, voted in favor of impeachment on April 17 after days of heated debates.

The extent to which the vote will resolve the political crisis is highly questionable, while it also reveals the fundamental divisions and deep-seated problems of Brazil’s fragile democracy.

The country has become further divided, as symbolized by the “wall of impeachment” erected in front of the Congress to separate pro- and anti-government protesters. Hundreds of thousands of Brazilians took to the streets ahead of the vote, but this is not a straightforward story of a virtuous political class attempting to remove an unpopular president, given the public outcry.

Although Rousseff’s approval rating increased from 10 percent to 13 percent in early April (and from 29 percent to 37 percent if we include neutral opinions), these much-cited figures hide a high level of public dissatisfaction with Brazilian politicians and politics. Almost a quarter of Brazilian demonstrators cited “politicians in general” as the object of their protests, whether they were in favor of the government or not.

It has become clear that Brazilians are rejecting not only Rousseff but most other potential presidents too. And that makes for a deeply uncertain political future.

The Mood? Throw Them All Out

Even before Vice President Michel Temer jumped the gun and leaked his presidential acceptance speech ahead of the impeachment vote, surveys found that only 16 percent of Brazilians wanted to see him govern the country—not much higher than Rousseff’s still-catastrophic ratings.

Tellingly, almost two-thirds of Brazilians now believe that Temer should also be impeached, and 78 percent agree that the speaker of Congress, Eduardo Cunha, should leave office as a result of corruption allegations.

That much was on display as the impeachment vote started: Anti-impeachment deputies unveiled a “Fora Cunha” (Out With Cunha) banner, and others explained their support for a “no” vote by pointing to Cunha, arguing that the impeachment vote was being presided over by another corrupt figure.

All the while, the separate corruption investigations into the state oil company Petrobras have been rumbling along, and while they have yet to touch Rousseff herself, they have already engulfed a slew of senior figures.

The impeachment debate has revealed just how many politicians are implicated in that particular scandal, and more besides: No fewer than 35 out of the 38 congressional deputies who voted in favor of starting the impeachment process in the first place are under investigation for corruption.

Opinion polls show that Brazilians have not only become increasingly concerned about corruption but are also losing trust in democratic institutions. Confidence in the presidency has dropped from 69 percent in 2010 to 22 percent in 2015, but the least trusted are political parties, at 17 percent.

Conversely, the Brazilian preference for democracy has been growing steadily, from 35 percent in 2003 to 54 percent in 2015, which is similar to the Latin American average. These figures suggest that the typical Brazilian supports democracy but is highly skeptical about the democratic credentials of the country’s politicians.

This ambiguity is also apparent in public opinion about former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the likely front-runner in the next presidential elections.

Lula is simultaneously the most hated and most popular political figure in Brazil today. In early April 2016, 40 percent of Brazilians thought he was the best president Brazil had ever had, with Fernando Henrique Cardoso (1995-2002) a distant second. However, another opinion poll showed that 55 percent of those surveyed said they would never vote for Lula but also rejected his main competitors with just as much disdain.

That there is a strong base of support for Lula, who’s clearly positioning himself for another presidential run, might be surprising in light of the corruption scandals, particularly to those waving inflatable Lula dolls in a prison outfit at public demonstrations.

But his popularity indicates that many Brazilians have benefited from his government’s social policies, which lifted millions out of poverty. That’s also borne out by a regional divide in his support: Disapproval rates are much lower in the north and northeast, where incomes are generally lower.

But even if he could win an election, Lula’s chances of getting Brazilian politics under control are very slim indeed. While the decisive vote in the lower house to impeach Rousseff smacks of consensus and discipline, the country’s political culture is becoming ever more fractured and turbulent.

Brazil is teetering on the precipice of constitutional chaos, and all the while the public is in full revolt against politicians’ ingrained corruption and venality. But even the protest movements themselves are fractured and contradictory, and no clear answers to their calls for political reform are forthcoming.

Whatever the immediate future holds for all the lead characters, Brazilian politics will be messy and unpredictable for a long time yet.

Marieke Riethof is a lecturer in Latin American politics at Britain’s University of Liverpool.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-afghanistan-blast-evening-idUSKCN0XG20A

World | Tue Apr 19, 2016 11:06am EDT
Related: World, Afghanistan

Second blast hits Kabul following deadly suicide attack

A large explosion was heard in central Kabul several hours after a suicide attack on a building of the national security agency killed dozens of people and wounded hundreds more in the Afghan capital earlier on Tuesday.

Sirens could be heard but it was not immediately clear what had caused the blast or whether there were any casualties.


(Reporting by James Mackenzie; Editing by Paul Tait)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-northkorea-china-idUSKCN0XG22B

World | Tue Apr 19, 2016 11:31am EDT
Related: World

China frustrated over North Korea but limiting action: U.S. general

China is frustrated over North Korea's behavior, including its nuclear advances, but is unwilling to apply pressure that could threaten the viability of North Korea's regime, the U.S. general nominated to lead U.S. forces in South Korea said on Tuesday.

General Vincent Brooks, now the commander of the U.S. Army Pacific, also said he was "not optimistic" about the direction North Korea was headed, noting leader Kim Jong Un's willingness to execute and sideline senior officials.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
 

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...g-in-Jerusalem.-Update(2)-21-reported-injured

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http://jpupdates.com/2016/04/18/breaking-news-bus-explosion-in-jerusalem-at-least-20-wounded/

Bomb Rips Through Jerusalem Bus, Leaving 21 Wounded

04/18/2016 5:15 PM by JP Newsroom

(AFP). A bomb blast ripped through a bus in Jerusalem on Monday and sparked a fire, wounding at least 21 people, Israeli police said, in an apparent escalation in a wave of violence.

Details were still emerging, but police said a bomb had exploded on one bus in a relatively isolated area of Jerusalem, with the flames spreading to another one as well as a car.

Israeli domestic security agency Shin Bet referred to the explosion as a “terror attack”.

The bombing was expected to lead to a sharp increase in security ahead of Jewish Passover celebrations beginning Friday night.

If confirmed as a Palestinian bombing, it would both reverse a decline in a wave of violence that erupted in October and mark an escalation, with most of the attacks having been stabbings.

“A professional examination of police sappers has proven that a bomb exploded on the back part of the bus, resulting in the wounding of passengers and the burning of the bus,” a police statement.

“In addition, another bus and car were damaged.”

An AFP journalist at the scene said one bus was completely burnt out while another was partially burned, with a large contingent of firefighters battling to extinguish the blaze.

Police said 21 people were injured, with medics reporting at least two hurt seriously. Police were investigating whether any of the wounded were behind the bombing.

Initially police said the explosion was on an empty bus, with people on a bus and car nearby wounded by the ensuing fire, correcting later to say it was the bus with passengers that was hit by the bomb.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said “we’ll find whoever prepared this explosive device”.

“We’ll reach the dispatchers and those behind them. We’ll settle the score with these terrorists. We’re in an ongoing struggle against terror, knife terror, shooting terror, bombs, rockets and tunnel terror.”

The Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, which rules the Israeli-blockaded Gaza Strip, welcomed the attack as “a natural response to Zionist crimes”, but there was no claim of responsibility for the bombing.

– Security implications –

The blast struck in an area of the city without any major buildings or homes and which is not heavily used by pedestrians.

The location was on Moshe Baram Street close to the so-called Green Line dividing mainly Jewish west Jerusalem from mainly Palestinian east Jerusalem.

Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat called on residents to be vigilant, “but continue with your plans”.

“It’s part of the deep understanding that if it’s a terror attack, they want to deter us from our normal life, and what we must do… is go back to normal life as fast as possible,” he said.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said that on a day “frightened citizens returning from their daily routine are being rushed to hospital — it is clear to us all, that the struggle against terrorism is ceaseless.”

“We will pursue and we will reach all those who wish us harm, until quiet is assured,” he said in a statement.

The explosion comes with tensions high following a wave of violence that began in October that has killed 201 Palestinians and 28 Israelis.

Most of the Palestinians killed were carrying out knife, gun or car-ramming attacks, according to Israeli authorities.

The last bomb targeting a bus in Jerusalem dates back to 2011, when a British tourist was killed.

In Tel Aviv, a bomb exploded on an empty bus in 2013 in what Israeli authorities called a “terrorist” attack.

Suicide bombings were frequent during the second Palestinian intifada between 2000-2005.

Daniel Katzenstein, a first responder with the United Hatzalah medical service, said when he arrived on the scene “we saw a pile of smoke that was reminiscent of the bus bombings in the early 2000s”.

“There were many people far too dangerously close to the bus when it was burning. Our first task was to get them to a safe place and to begin to treat them,” he said.

Speaking before the bomb was confirmed, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said “if it was a terrorist attack, the implications are very great in terms of security on the ground”.

Attacks have steadily declined in recent weeks, though there have been concerns the Passover holiday could lead to a new surge in violence.

Many analysts say Palestinian frustration with Israeli occupation and settlement building in the West Bank, the complete lack of progress in peace efforts and their own fractured leadership have fed the recent unrest.

Israel blames incitement by Palestinian leaders and media as a main cause of the violence.

(This story update is the latest report by AFP.)

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http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/04/19/biden-slams-netanyahu-hours-after-jerusalem-attack.html

Middle East

Biden slams Netanyahu hours after Jerusalem attack

Published April 19, 2016 · FoxNews.com
Comments 10996

Vice President Joe Biden said Monday night that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government was leading the country "in the wrong direction" hours after a bus bombing in Jerusalem wounded at least 21 people.

In a speech to the Israel advocacy group J Street, Biden criticized Palestinian leaders, but saved his harshest words for Israeli officials.

"I firmly believe that the actions that Israel's government has taken over the past several years -- the steady and systematic expansion of settlements, the legalization of outposts, land seizures -- they're moving us, and, more importantly, they're moving Israel in the wrong direction," Biden said.

Biden did single out Palestinian leaders, including Mahmoud Abbas, for declining to condemn specific acts of terrorism carried out against Israelis. The vice president said he didn't know whether Monday's explosion was a terrorist attack, but added that the U.S. condemns "misguided cowards" who resort to violence.

Israeli officials have called the bombing of an empty bus parked near other vehicles a terror attack, with Netanyahu linking it to the ongoing wave of attacks in which Palestinians have targeted Israelis in Jerusalem.

"We will settle accounts with these terrorists," Netanyahu said in a speech following the bombing. "We are in a protracted struggle against terror -- knife terror, shooting terror, bomb terror and also tunnel terror."

The fact that the bulk of Biden's criticism was reserved for Netanyahu reflected diminishing patience within the White House as President Obama's term nears an end. Tension between the longtime allies has been compounded by deep disagreements over Iran and a strained relationship between the two leaders.

Biden, who met in March with both Netanyahu and Abbas, said he came away from that trip discouraged about prospects for peace anytime soon. Still, he said the U.S. is obliged to guarantee Israel's security and to "push them as hard as we can" toward a two-state solution despite "our sometimes overwhelming frustration with the Israeli government."


"There is at the moment no political will that I observed from either Israelis or Palestinians to go forward with serious negotiations," Biden said.

As if to underscore the point, Israeli and Palestinian officials had a testy exchange at the United Nations Monday at a Security Council open meeting on the Middle East.

“Are you ready right now to denounce terror against innocent Israelis?” Israeli Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon demanded of his Palestinian counterpart, Riyad Mansour.


Mansour refused, shooting back, “Shame on you! You are the occupier.”

"Shame on you!" Danon replied. "Instead of denouncing terror, you are encouraging it!"

Biden's remarks to J Street, a dovish group that frequently criticizes Netanyahu, came at the height of a campaign season in which candidates have been scrutinized over their adherence to traditionally stalwart U.S. support for Israel.

Ahead of Tuesday's primary in New York, Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders has sparked controversy by saying the U.S. should be even-handed and mustn't always say that Netanyahu is right.

In another dig at Netanyahu and his Likud Party, Biden singled out for praise Stav Shaffir, a young member of Israel's parliament and a Netanyahu critic from the left wing of Israeli politics.


"May your views begin to once again become the majority opinion in the Knesset," Biden said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 

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China Flight Tests New Multiple-Warhead Missile

DF-41 launch comes amid heightened tensions over S. China Sea

BY: Bill Gertz
April 19, 2016 5:00 am

China conducted another flight test of its newest and longest-range intercontinental ballistic missile last week amid growing tensions with the United States over the South China Sea.

Pentagon officials told the Free Beacon the flight test of the new road-mobile DF-41 missile took place Tuesday with two multiple, independently targetable reentry vehicles, or MIRVs, that were monitored in flight by U.S. military satellites and other regional sensors.

Officials did not say where the test took place. Past DF-41 launches were carried out from the Wuzhai Missile and Space Test Center in central China.

The latest flight test followed an earlier, rail-based canister ejection test of a DF-41 on Dec. 5.

U.S. Strategic Command commander Adm. Cecil Haney said Jan. 22 that China’s multiple warhead missiles are part of a significant investment in both nuclear and conventional forces.

“China is re-engineering its long-range ballistic missiles to carry multiple nuclear warheads,” Haney said in a speech.

The flight test came around the same time that a high-ranking Chinese general made an unusual visit to a disputed South China Sea island. Also, the missile test occurred three days before Defense Secretary Ash Carter visited the aircraft carrier USS Stennis as it sailed in the South China Sea.

Pentagon officials said the visit to Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratly Islands by Gen. Fan Changlong was timed to the Carter visit to the region. Fan is vice chairman of the Central Military Commission, the most powerful military organ under the ruling Communist Party of China.

The Pentagon has said China is covertly building military bases on disputed islands in the sea. Beijing has accused Washington of militarizing the sea by deploying warships and bolstering regional alliances.

Disclosure of the DF-41 test follows a newsletter report last month that stated China is nearing deployment of the new ICBM.

Kanwa Asian Defense reported last month that the new ICBM is in the final testing phase, and its expected deployment area will be near Xinyang in Henan province, in central China.

From that location, the missile would be capable of striking the United States in around 30 minutes, either through a polar trajectory or over the Pacific.

An earlier flight test of the DF-41, also with two dummy warheads, was carried out Aug. 6.

The new missile poses a significant strategic threat because it is larger than other road-mobile ICBMs and the new JL-2 submarine-launched ballistic missile.

The DF-41 is assessed by U.S. intelligence agencies to be powerful enough to deliver between six and 10 warheads up to 7,456 miles—far enough to reach every corner of the United States from launch areas in eastern China.

Rick Fisher, a China military affairs analyst, said the latest launch is the seventh reported flight test of the DF-41, an indication the ICBM will soon be deployed with the newly-renamed PLA Rocket Forces.

“As with previous MIRV tests, the PLA has used a small number of reentry vehicles to mask the real capability of the DF-41, which is estimated to be able to loft up to 10 warheads,” said Fisher, senior fellow at the International Assessment and Strategy Center.

The congressional U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission stated in its most recent annual report that China is developing maneuvering re-entry vehicles, or MARVs, in addition to multi-warhead missiles.

“Because MARV-equipped warheads are capable of performing preplanned flight maneuvers during reentry, they are more difficult to intercept and better able to penetrate adversary missile defenses,” the report said.

Fisher said he expects China to sharply increase the number of warheads in its arsenal as a result of the shift to multiple-warhead missiles.

China also has begun retrofitting older, single warhead DF-5 ICBMs with MIRVs, according to defense officials, who said the uploading was detected over the past several months.

China is currently engaged in a large-scale buildup of nuclear forces and missile delivery systems that include new missiles and a hypersonic glide vehicle—a weapon that can maneuver to avoid missile defenses in delivering nuclear or conventional warheads.

“There will initially be two types of DF-41s, a road and rail mobile version, indicating the PLA could be fielding several brigades of this ICBM,” Fisher said.

“In addition, there may be a new MIRV equipped version of the older DF-31, called the DF-31B.”

China also is expected to add multiple warheads to its new submarine-launched missile, called JL-2C or JL-3.

“The DF-41 program appears to be in the advanced stage of research and development,” said Mark Stokes, a former Pentagon specialist on the Chinese military.

Stokes said the DF-41 appears to be a modified variant of the post-boost stage of the DF-5B ICBM that has been placed on a larger solid rocket motor.

If the design is certified by the manufacturer, the DF-41 could be deployed within five years.

“The first unit equipped with the DF-41 could be expected to have at least six launchers in its inventory,” Stokes said.

Fisher said it is evident the Obama administration policy of reducing nuclear weapons “is not going to be reciprocated by China, Russia, North Korea or Iran.”

“But what is much worse is that China and Russia are increasingly coordinating their military forces against the Untied States and that China’s program of enabling North Korea and Iran to become nuclear missile powers is nearing completion,” he said.

To deter nuclear attack from hostile powers, the United States should rapidly expand its warhead stockpile by at least 1,000 warheads, Fisher said.

“In addition, the U.S. must quickly reintroduce tactical nuclear forces back to the Navy and Army to enable more assured deterrence of North Korea and Iran,” he said.

A Pentagon spokesman did not respond to emails and telephone calls seeking comment.

Asked last month if China would soon deploy the DF-41, Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Sr. Col. Yang Yujun told reporters in Beijing, “I don’t have any information to release here.”

In a Dec. 31 response to the Dec. 5 rail-mobile ejection test of the DF-41, Yang said “Scientific tests within the Chinese territory are conducted according to plan.”

A Chinese regional government website first disclosed the existence of the DF-41 on Aug. 1, 2014. The Shaanxi Province Environmental Monitoring Center official website reported the “China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation 4th Institute 43 Study Department DF-41 missiles” office had been closed.

The study office was said to be involved in developing composite materials used in the missiles. The office is in charge of building solid fuel rocket engine casings, missile canister launchers, and nozzles made from high-strength composite material.

The closure was said to be an indication that DF-41 development had advanced considerably.

The posting was removed days later, after Western news reports mentioned the post.
 

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http://www.slate.com/articles/news_...hment_and_the_democracy_crisis_in_brazil.html

Interrogation
Interviews with a point.
April 19 2016 9:38 AM

“A Very Dangerous Thing for Democracy”

A Brazilian journalist on the impeachment and corruption scandals that are tearing her country apart.

By Isaac Chotiner
Comments 45

When Brazil’s president, Dilma Rousseff, was impeached by the lower house of Parliament on Sunday night over accusations of improper budgetary maneuvers, it only intensified the crisis that has engulfed the country over the past several months. Dilma—as she is known—was elected in 2010, and re-elected four years later on the Workers’ Party, or PT, ticket.* Her former boss and predecessor, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva—known as Lula—had been a broadly popular figure known for his outreach to the poor, and for engendering the hatred of a good chunk of the country’s middle class. But he too now finds himself enmeshed in corruption investigations, which have overtaken much of the PT, involve the state oil company Petrobras, and threaten the administration’s survival. A vote in the upper house is forthcoming.

What makes Brazil’s predicament even more complicated is that many of those in the opposition and members of the judiciary who have gone after the PT have their own skeletons in their closets, and have long resented PT rule. Many analysts—not to mention Dilma herself—have therefore called the goings-on in the country an attempted coup. Nevertheless, Dilma’s approval ratings have collapsed, and the end of the worldwide commodities boom has left Brazil’s economy limping.

To discuss the current situation, I called up Daniela Pinheiro, a Brazilian journalist (currently on a fellowship at Stanford) who has reported extensively on politics and corruption in the country. We talked on Monday about Dilma’s shortcomings as a politician, the cleavages in Brazilian society, and why Brazilian democracy may be permanently harmed by the impeachment drive. The conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Isaac Chotiner: Do you see this as an attempted coup, or do you have a different take?

Daniela Pinheiro: I absolutely agree with the idea that this is a coup. Many Brazilians, including myself, woke up today with a bad taste in our mouth. Sunday was a very bad day, and set a very dangerous precedent for our democracy. Her impeachment is based on financial and economic misconduct. She is accused of using money from public banks to cover budget gaps. But she was judged for another reason. Sixty percent of the people accusing her are facing charges of corruption. It is outrageous. Unbelievable.

So what was this other reason she was judged?

In my opinion [laughs], in my humble opinion, it began when Lula came to power. Brazilian elites never accepted a blue-collar worker as a commander in chief. Brazilian social dynamics have changed so much since the PT came to power. It was very, very disturbing for the elites. For the first time, poor people had access to a privileged world, a world that was restricted to a very few people. Housewives began to sit next to their housekeeper on planes. It was very disturbing for elites.

With Dilma, there is another problem. She is a terrible politician. She is arrogant. She is stubborn. She never listens to anybody. She thinks she knows more than anyone else. She refuses to talk with other politicians. During the process, she hasn’t reacted properly. She never, never admits that she is wrong. It upset many people. In economic policy, she made many mistakes.

Her approval ratings are so low now. She must have lost the working-class support that Lula and she once had.

Yeah. You know why? Three years ago, or four years ago, people in the middle class were gaining comforts that were then lost. The economy has shrunk. Inflation has soared. It has affected the core of Brazilian families.

You have written about the corruption scandals of Lula and the PT. So even though you are calling this a coup, it does seem like many of these allegations have some truth to them.

The thing is the impeachment is not about corruption. The vote wasn’t about corruption; it was about financial and economic misconduct. The people who voted have other interests. It is a very dangerous thing for democracy. But there is proof this government was corrupt. But that’s not what was voted on. They are separate things. There is no evidence that Dilma is corrupt. Lula has been investigated, but there is nothing against her personally. There is a lot of evidence that the PT got a lot of bribes from a construction firm that was a major election sponsor

Actually, many of the people who were in charge with the corruption scheme at Petrobras were fired by her.

What did you make of Dilma offering Lula a Cabinet position so he could avoid prosecution? That seemed shady.

Yeah. They were trying to come up with a solution. Lula has some accusation that he accepted favors from the construction company. The most outrageous thing is that the men who are in charge of the [impeachment] process are a bunch of criminals. They have real evidence against them. The speaker of the lower house, Eduardo Cunha, may go on trial for corruption involving $40 million. The vice president [and next in line], who is no longer a Dilma ally, is also accused of corruption. I always think of House of Cards. This guy, Cunha, is worse than Frank Underwood because he is real. Everything you see on television you can see live in Brazil right now.

How do you get out of this mess if both sides are corrupt—even if Dilma is not personally—and they are all going after each other? What is the solution?

There is no solution in the short run. There is no solution. The decision they made Sunday is a terrible thing, and it will take generations to fix that. I was very surprised to see the low level of the congressmen we have. I didn’t realize that until yesterday. They have to say their votes out loud. The quotes they made, the sentences they said—we have a Frank Underwood surrounded by corrupt, evangelical zealots. And this is the major part of the Congress now. It is very scary. I don’t see good things happening.

What would you say to average Brazilians who are out in the streets protesting corruption and hate Dilma?

I would say, “Yeah, I think she is a very bad politician and maybe she deserves to be out of power. But we have to have another election.” People are celebrating something very weird and dangerous. What are they celebrating? I don’t know.

What is most likely to happen now?

We will have the Olympics in four months, and people will be watching. I am sure these guys, these professional politicians, will do everything they can to pretend things are going well, but I think it will all be the same or worse very soon.

So you don’t think Dilma will survive?

No, no. I think she is out. The government has no legitimacy. She has 8 percent approval. It is almost impossible.

What should happen with Lula?

One of the fears is that if this new group came to power they would actually try to stop the investigations because they are all involved. They are in the same kind of trouble. But if the investigations go forward, he is in bad shape. The case against him is compelling.

Do you think corruption in Brazil has gotten worse, or has it always been like this and is now coming to the surface?

It’s coming to light now. It is in the DNA of politicians, unfortunately.

*Correction, April 19, 2016: This article originally misstated when Dilma Rousseff was first elected president of Brazil. It was in 2010, not 2014. (Return.)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
:siren:

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...ry-deal-with-america-and-threatens-us-warpla/

Russia 'breaks' military deal with America and threatens US warplanes over Syria

By David Blair, Chief Foreign Correspondent
19 April 2016 • 2:08pm

Russia has broken an agreement with the US by allowing its warplanes to carry out “simulated attacks” on American jets over Syria, according to a new analysis.

Last week, the US accused Russia of “aggressive” and “unsafe” manoeuvres after two Su-24 strike aircraft flew within 30ft of an American destroyer in the Baltic. Across Europe, Russian fighters and bombers have been intercepted while probing the air defences of Nato countries.

The US and Russia held military-to-military talks last year designed to prevent incidents of this kind from occurring over Syria. The result was a memorandum of understanding last October, stating that all Russian and American jets would stay a safe distance away from one another and communicate in English via recognised radio channels.

But a new analysis from Chatham House says that Russia has routinely broken this agreement. While striking the enemies of Bashar al-Assad’s regime on the ground, the Russian air force has also carried out “aggressive and provocative manoeuvres against Western aircraft in Syria,” said Keir Giles, an associate fellow of the Russia and Eurasia Programme at Chatham House.

The October agreement between America and Russia unravelled within weeks. Last November, the US Air Force deployed 12 F-15 jets to Incirlik air base in southern Turkey. Half of these were F-15C Eagles, designed for air-to-air combat.

Russia appears to have viewed the arrival of these warplanes as a potential threat to its own air force. While over Syria, the F-15s became a particular target for Russian pilots who “took the opportunity to practise aggressive manoeuvring against US aircraft, including positioning for simulated attacks,” said Mr Giles.

Two jets have already been lost over Syria: a Russian bomber was shot down by Turkey last November and a Turkish reconnaissance aircraft destroyed by Syrian air defences in 2012. A similar incident involving the Russian and US Air Forces – or the warplanes of any Nato country, including Britain – would risk a grave international crisis.

Last month, President Vladimir Putin announced a partial Russian withdrawal from Syria. But about 20 of the Kremlin’s jets are still based in the country, where they continue to mount regular raids against Assad’s enemies.

This force represents half of Russia’s peak deployment of about 40 fighters and bombers. In addition, Russia has sent up to 20 helicopters to the country, most of which are still there.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-corruption-g-idUSKCN0XH0AB

World | Wed Apr 20, 2016 12:38am EDT
Related: World, China

China suspends G20 anti-corruption task force: sources

HONG KONG | By Michelle Price


China suspended an international anti-corruption task force earlier this year after taking over the G20 presidency, according to six individuals in the group, who called it a setback to global efforts to crack down on shell companies used to conceal assets.

The so-called "Business 20" Anti-Corruption Taskforce, comprising businesses and civil society groups, had been drawing up G20 policies for increasing transparency of offshore financial structures, among other work, but the body was scrapped in late January because Chinese companies declined to participate, according to the sources.

China is one of several countries under pressure to share data on paper companies after the "Panama Papers", documents from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, revealed how the rich and powerful use such structures to avoid taxes and in some cases conceal ill-gotten gains. They were published by German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung and more than 100 other international news outlets.

The B20, the G20's business outreach arm, and its various task forces are by convention led by companies from the nation holding the presidency.

The state-run China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), this year's head of the B20, did not provide an explanation for suspending the anti-corruption task force and did not respond to several emails, faxes and phone calls requesting comment.

But three people who had worked on the task force, who represented international, U.S. and European institutions, said the trade group could not persuade a Chinese company to take on the role of leading the task force, even though around 150,000 Chinese businesses are effectively state-run.

The sources cited the CCPIT as saying a one-off anti-corruption convention to be held later this month would be a sufficient substitute, despite strong counter-lobbying from international businesses and NGOs.

"It's a disappointing indictment on the environment in China that no company was willing to step forward," said one of the sources. "This is a critical agenda and we had built up momentum, and this decision has taken the wind out of the sails."

The Chinese foreign ministry did not respond to requests for comment.


RELUCTANT TO HELP

China has been trying to get increased international cooperation to hunt down suspected corrupt officials who have fled overseas since President Xi Jinping began a war against deeply-rooted graft more than three years ago.

But Western countries have been reluctant to help, not wanting to send people back to a country where rights groups say mistreatment of criminal suspects remains a problem, and also complaining China is unwilling to provide proof of their crimes.

Some of the participants on the task force however said they believed the Chinese government wanted to sharpen its focus this year, and remained committed to clamping down on corruption.

"We are very happy with the functioning of the anti-corruption work-stream within the B20 process," said Andrew Wilson, global communications director at the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), which had several executives on the task force.

According to the B20 2016 official web site, anti-corruption efforts would comprise a forum to "continue previous efforts toward enhancing anti-corruption international cooperation, assisting anti-corruption efforts at enterprises and increasing anti-corruption dialogue between G20 and B20."

A section on the page called "Taskforce Structure" was left blank.

The three sources and three other people on the task force said they had continued their work behind the scenes in the expectation Germany, the next G20 president, will revive the body. A spokesman for Germany's finance ministry who deals with G20 matters declined to comment. A spokesman for Bundesverband der Deutschen Industrie, Germany's representative body within the B20, also did not comment.


(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm......

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/04/19/saudi-arabia-takes-out-10bn-in-bank-loans.html

Saudi Arabia takes out $10bn in bank loans

Simeon Kerr and Elaine Moore
10 Hours Ago
Financial Times

Saudi Arabia is raising $10bn from a consortium of global banks as the kingdom embarks on its first international debt issuance in 25 years to counter dwindling oil revenues and reserves.

The landmark five-year loan, a signal of Riyadh's newfound dependence on foreign capital, opens the way for Saudi to launch its first international bond issue. It comes as the sustained slump in crude encourages other Gulf governments, such as Abu Dhabi, Qatar and Oman, to tap international bond markets.

The oil-rich kingdom, which last weekend blocked a potential deal among oil producers to freeze output and bolster prices, has burnt through $150bn in financial reserves since late 2014 as its fiscal deficit is set to widen to 19 per cent of gross domestic product this year.

Strong interest in the loan, especially from Asian banks, came despite rating agency downgrades on Saudi creditworthiness since the oil price collapsed. The government raised the amount it wanted to borrow from $6bn-$8bn to $10bn after the deal was oversubscribed.

"The deal is very successful, with very competitive pricing," said Elyas Algaseer, deputy regional general manager at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi. "There was immense market appetite."

Saudi Arabia may now raise its first global bond in the wake of the loan deal, bankers said. Institutions that loaned the most would be set to benefit from a mandate to help Riyadh raise the bond.

"The loan is a way for Saudi Arabia to test the waters and set up an international borrowing profile," said Ewen Cameron Watt, chief investment strategist at BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager. "This is paving the way for the kingdom to transform from a creditor nation into a debtor nation. It's a significant moment of change in debt markets."

The strategy of raising debt overseas aims to slow the drawdown of foreign reserves and reduce pressure on local banks, which have been supporting state related companies and buying Saudi domestic bonds for almost a year.


Read More from The Financial Times:
Efforts to reshape US-Saudi relations in focus during Obama's visit
Saudi housing crisis proves taxing
Saudi Arabia clips the wings of feared religious police


The lead lenders, each pledging around $1.3bn, include Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, HSBC and JPMorgan, bankers say. Lenders were required to lend at least $500m to participate.


Mr Algaseer declined to comment on the pricing, but other bankers close to the deal said it had priced at around 120 basis points over US dollar Libor.

The loan is Saudi Arabia's first international debt issuance since 1991, when it raised around $1bn in the aftermath of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.

Bankers are now confident that Saudi state-related companies will also seek to raise funds, using the sovereign loan, and later bond, as a benchmark.


Saudi Arabia's minister of Oil and Mineral Resources Ali al-Naimi is surrounded by journalists at an OPEC meeting.
Saudi Arabia vs Iran: Blame game begins after Doha


Saudi Arabia, Arab man standing next to gas burning off from oil well.
Iran v Saudi Arabia's showdown in Doha


Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the king's powerful son who overseas economic reform, is set to publicize his "vision for Saudi Arabia", a template for shifting the kingdom into a post-oil era, in Riyadh on April 25.

The "vision" is expected to give more details about the privatization of state oil company Saudi Aramco, the creation of a sovereign wealth fund and other reforms to boost jobs and investment.

JPMorgan, which has decades of experience banking for Saudi Aramco, has been working with the state oil company since late last year on a plan for an initial public offering, people aware of the matter said.

Saudi Aramco is still evaluating how to organize any flotation, which could either list a portion of the holding company, or a collection of downstream assets, on the Saudi stock exchange. But Prince Mohammed has said he intends to float less than 5 per cent of the holding company by 2018.

The Saudi fundraising comes amid broader debt issuance as neighbouring oil economies also tap international markets.

Abu Dhabi has mandated Bank of America Merrill Lynch, JPMorgan and Citigroup to hold investor meetings this week ahead of the UAE capital's third international bond.

"Abu Dhabi's strong fundamentals should support strong demand for any issuance and provide a benchmark for corporates looking to raise debt," said Ms Malik.

Qatar, which last year raised a loan of more than $5bn, has sent out a proposal request to lenders to manage an international bond issue, bankers said, and Lebanon has announced a sale of two bonds worth $1bn.

HSBC and JPMorgan declined to comment.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
I thought this was interesting enough for its own thread, but will also add it here too as news for this week.

http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/po...-visit-attack-raul-castro-labels-us-as-enemy/
(fair use applies)

Cuba officials call Obama's visit an ‘attack,’ Raul Castro labels U.S. as 'enemy'
Published April 19, 2016
Fox News Latino

Weeks after President Barack Obama’s historic trip to Cuba, officials from the Communist island have ramped up their attacks on the U.S.

On Monday, Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez called Obama's visit "an attack on the foundation of our history, our culture and our symbols."

"Obama came here to dazzle the non-state sector, as if he wasn't the representative of big corporations but the defender of hot dog vendors, of small businesses in the United States, which he isn't," Rodriguez said.

The foreign minister’s response came days after Cuba President Raul Castro said that the United States is "the enemy" and warned Cubans to be vigilant about the United States' efforts to undermine the Communist revolution, according to Reuters.

The remarks came at the Cuban Communist Party's twice-a-decade congress, held over the weekend, where some of Cuba's most powerful officials criticized the creaking inefficiency of its state-controlled economy, tarred its vibrant private sector as a potential source of U.S. subversion.

The comments illustrated the conundrum faced by a Cuban government simultaneously trying to modernize and maintain control in a new era of detente with Washington.

Rene Gonzalez, a former intelligence agent held in the United States in a case resolved by the declaration of detente with Washington, made an unusual call for the consideration of political reform in Cuba.

Saying the party had focused excessively on the economy for 10 years, he said, "Let the party call for a broad public discussion that goes beyond concepts of economic development."

"Let's arrive at the eighth party congress for the first time in human history with a consensus on that human aspiration that some call democracy, and that's possible through socialism," Gonzalez said.

State media did not indicate whether his proposal was included in any of the formal documents put up for a vote during the congress.

Aged 55 and 58, respectively, Diaz-Canel and Rodriguez are members of the generation expected to move into the highest ranks of power in Cuba as early as Tuesday when the congress' vote is announced.

Castro said Saturday that he was proposing an age limit of 60 for election to the Central Committee and 70 for lower-ranking but important posts in the party.

Castro is 84 and his second secretary, hardliner Jose Ramon Machado Ventura, is 85.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...-year-pattern-tightening-noose-islamic-state/

World

Sending more U.S. troops to Iraq follows two-year pattern of ‘tightening the noose’ on the Islamic State

by Robert Burns
AP
Apr 20, 2016

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama’s decision to send still more American troops to Iraq, and to put military advisers closer to the front lines against the Islamic State, fits a pattern of ever-deepening involvement in a country whose war Obama exited with supposed finality in December 2011.

From the initial contingent of 170 U.S. soldiers who entered Baghdad as advisers in June 2014, after the Islamic State overran much of northern and western Iraq and seemed poised to threaten Baghdad, the troop total jumped to 1,550 six months later. It topped 3,000 in April 2015 and then edged higher. The latest increase, announced Monday by Defense Secretary Ash Carter, pushes the authorized total above 4,000. More increases seem likely.

What the Pentagon calls “tightening the noose” on the militants, critics call indecisive steps with limited chance to succeed.

One of the most vocal critics of Obama’s Iraq policy, Republican Sen. John McCain, dismissed Carter’s announcement that the U.S. would send another 217 troops to Iraq in support of the Iraqi security forces’ preparation for an assault on the Islamic State stronghold of Mosul. “Grudging incrementalism,” McCain called it.

Patrick Martin, an Iraq specialist at the Institute for the Study of War, is skeptical that the U.S. approach is sufficiently aggressive. “The addition of 217 advisers . . . is not going to be nearly enough to actually make a significant difference on the ground in the near future,” he said in an interview.

On the other hand, the U.S. offer to fly Apache attack helicopters in support of an Iraqi advance toward Mosul is a significant move, Martin said, noting that it would be the first time the Iraqis have accepted that kind of support since U.S. forces returned to Iraq in 2014.

Obama’s approach in Iraq has been tempered not just by his pledge to end U.S. military involvement there after he took office in 2009 but also by the Iraqis’ own political failings, which even now cast doubt on the durability of any battlefield victories that U.S. troops can help the Iraqis achieve. In 2007, at the peak of the Iraq war, the U.S. had about 170,000 troops there.

Rather than commit large ground combat units to Iraq or Syria, Obama in 2014 opted for providing a support role on the ground, backed by bombing from the air.

Obama was on his way Tuesday to Saudi Arabia to encourage Persian Gulf Arab countries to contribute more to the battle in Iraq.

Nearly two years later, the Islamic State has been weakened and squeezed but remains a credible threat. It not only holds territory in Iraq and Syria but also has spread to Libya and Afghanistan while launching deadly attacks in Paris and Brussels.

On a visit to Baghdad this week, Carter described the decision to deploy another 217 soldiers as “more of the same,” in the sense that it aligns with the U.S. strategy of providing more support to Iraqi forces as they gain momentum, while not doing the fighting for them.

“Our strategic approach makes sure that the defeat of ISIL is lasting,” he said, using a common acronym for the Islamic State. “It is to enable capable and motivated local forces to sustain the defeat. We are committed — I am committed — to doing more to accelerate that defeat. We want to do it as fast as we possibly can.”

It has taken this long to bring Mosul within the Iraqis’ gun sights because they have been slow to leverage U.S. training, partly because of sectarian conflict and political gridlock in Baghdad. Four months ago the Iraqis recovered Ramadi after collapsing there in May 2015, which prompted Carter to question their will to fight. They still lack essential ingredients for battlefield success such as close-air support for maneuvering ground forces, and it is not clear they will retake Mosul before 2017, even with additional American support.

Most of the additional 217 troops would be army special forces, who have been used throughout the anti-Islamic State campaign to advise and assist the Iraqis. For the first time, the advisers are authorized to assist the Iraqis at battalion level, meaning with smaller Iraq combat units likely to be closer to the front lines.

The extra U.S. troops also would include trainers, soldiers to provide security for the advisers, and maintenance teams and crews for the Apache attack helicopters that Carter said the Iraqi government has agreed would be needed to provide close-air support for ground forces in a Mosul assault. The U.S. also will provide additional sets of mobile artillery, known as HIMARS, to support Iraqi ground forces as they advance toward Mosul.

And those are unlikely to be the last additions to the U.S. military presence. Lt. Gen. Sean MacFarland, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, told reporters Monday that the focus for now is on getting the Iraqis to fully isolate Mosul and set the right conditions for recapturing it.

“The next step of that, obviously, is to actually clear the city,” MacFarland said. “And when we get to that step, that will be another conversation that we’ll have” about U.S. support.

For now, he said, “We’re going to employ these additional authorities and capabilities and see how far it takes us. And then if it doesn’t take us all the way, we’ll come back and have another discussion and ask for more if we need to.”

Asked whether this was incrementalism, MacFarland said, “I would prefer to call it a step-by-step approach. We’re on the first step right now.”
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://news.antiwar.com/2016/04/19/turkish-troops-kill-32-isis-suspects-in-iraq-fighting/

Turkish Troops Kill 32 ISIS Suspects in Iraq Fighting

Turkish Tank Came Under Fire Near Mosul

by Jason Ditz, April 19, 2016

Iraqi government complaints about Turkey having a military presence in their country remain unresolved, but today those Turkish troops were engaged in a significant exchange of fire with ISIS forces, leading Turkish officials to claim 32 ISIS suspects killed.

The incident, in the town of Bashiqa (near Mosul), started when a Turkish combat tank, deployed as part of the “training” operation, came under fire from ISIS fighters. Turkish troops responded by blowing up a building in the area, killed 10 “ISIS fighters” during the firing. 22 other people fled the building, and were also killed as “suspects.”

Turkish officials have claimed massive ISIS death tolls in previous incidents as well, claiming to have killed 362 ISIS fighters in cross-border shelling into neighboring Syria. This, however, is the most significant exchange they’ve been involved with in Iraq.

Turkey says the troops in the area around Mosul are “training local forces” to fight ISIS. Turkish troops have also made deals to train Kurdish Peshmerga forces in Iraq, deals which have sparked arguments with the Iraqi central government.

Last 5 posts by Jason Ditz•ISIS Captures Industrial District of Major East Syrian City - April 19th, 2016
•Sen. Graham Blocks 9/11 Lawsuit Bill Amid Saudi Threats - April 19th, 2016
•US Paying Iraqi Kurds to Fight in Mosul - April 19th, 2016
•Kerry Meets Iran FM to Talk With US Compliance in Nuclear Deal - April 19th, 2016
•Biden: Overwhelming US Frustration With Israel - April 19th, 2016
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2016/04/economist-explains-11

The Economist explains

Why Pakistan has failed to take back power from the army

Apr 20th 2016, 2:28 by J.B.

PAKISTAN's civilian and military elite are forever jetting off to Dubai. But the routine Emirates flight that took off from Karachi last month was notable for the presence of Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's former president, sitting in the well-upholstered seats in the front. For three years he had been banned from travel while facing a charge of high treason, initiated by the government, and numerous other cases launched against him after he returned from self-exile in 2013. But the government finally agreed to let him travel abroad, supposedly for medical reasons. That prime minister Nawaz Sharif, the victim of Mr Musharraf’s 1999 coup, finally agreed to take the ex-army chief off the “exit control list” was the final, humiliating confirmation that the government has failed to claw power back from Pakistan’s almighty military.

Although once a creature of a former military ruler, Mr Sharif had become convinced the generals must be sent back to barracks by the seven years he spent in exile in Saudi Arabia and London following the toppling of his second government. In May 2013, when Mr Sharif returned to power for the third time, it seemed he might just succeed. He had won a landslide election victory. The army’s reputation was still tarnished by the Musharraf years and other humiliations, including the discovery that former al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden had been hiding in spitting distance of the army’s officer training academy. The decision to order a special prosecution of Mr Musharraf (not for the 1999 coup but for a short period of emergency rule in 2007) was a bold move. For an ex-army chief to appear in court, let alone be convicted of a capital offence, would have been a historic assertion of civilian power.

The army fought back with a series of security and health scares to frustrate efforts to bring Mr Musharraf to court—although he did finally make an appearance in February 2014. Soon afterwards the ruling party was caught in the crossfire of a fight between the army and Geo, a broadly pro-government channel that publicly accused the military’s spy master of plotting the attempted assassination of one of its top journalists. More important was the appointment of a new army chief in November 2013. Not only is General Raheel Sharif untainted by the Musharraf years but he has gradually eclipsed the prime minister in public esteem after launching a major military campaign against domestic militants that led to a slump in terror attacks. He was also credited with saving Mr Sharif’s government by refusing to back the mass street protests by opposition groups that hit Islamabad in the autumn of 2014.

Realising he cannot govern without the army Mr Sharif appears to have accepted a joint-rule with his (unrelated) namesake. But although the two Sharifs confer regularly and often appear together at public events, continuing friction is inevitable. The relationship took a dive last month after the Taliban bombing of a Lahore park that killed 72. General Sharif seized the opportunity to try and take control of security of Mr Sharif’s home province of Punjab. The prime minister is still resisting, for now.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Merde.....

North Korea threatens pre-emptive nuclear strikes against U.S., South Korea
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...clear-strikes-against-U.S.-South-Korea/page10

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...ssful-South-Korean-source-says/4021461118442/

North Korea SLBM launch successful, South Korean source says

By Elizabeth Shim Contact the Author | April 19, 2016 at 10:45 PM

SEOUL, April 19 (UPI) -- A submarine-launched ballistic missile North Korea tested in early April may have been successful, despite early reports the device may have failed during testing.

The projectile was launched from 20 meters below water from a 1,800-ton Sinpo-class submarine, South Korean news network Channel A reported.

A South Korean military official said the SLBM flew about 200 meters vertically, off the eastern coast of North Korea near the port city of Sinpo.

In previous reports, South Korean sources had claimed the SLBM launch, which took place April 6, was likely a failure.

Moon Geun-sik, a former South Korean Navy captain, told Channel A satellite imagery was used by the military to acquire the information.

Last August, Moon had said North Korea's deployment of a large fleet of submarines could be seen as a way of creating a distraction when launching a simultaneous attack against major ports and facilities in South Korea.

Experts have said North Korea could be preparing a fifth nuclear test, but according to U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Russel, the United States stands ready to enact more powerful sanctions against Pyongyang, South Korean newspaper Herald Business reported Tuesday.

According to Russel, in the event of a fifth nuclear test, new sanctions could block the flow of dollar remittances from North Korean overseas workers.

Related UPI Stories
•Foreign envoys ignore North Korea's invitation to 7th Party Congress
•Frank Calzon: Cuba caught camouflaging cocaine with molasses
•North Korea has miniaturized nuclear weapons, Seoul researchers say
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/04/19/reut...ilitary-ambitions-of-big-spending-saudis.html

SPECIAL REPORT-Yemen's guerrilla war tests military ambitions of big-spending Saudis

Angus McDowall , Phil Stewart and David Rohde
9 Hours Ago

Saudis@

RIYADH/WASHINGTON, April 19 (Reuters) - Six years ago, Saudi and American officials agreed on a record $60 billion arms deal. The United States would sell scores of F-15 fighters, Apache attack helicopters and other advanced weaponry to the oil-rich kingdom.

The arms, both sides hoped, would fortify the Saudis against their aggressive arch-rival in the region, Iran.

But as President Barack Obama makes his final visit to Riyadh this week, Saudi Arabia's military capabilities remain a work in progress - and the gap in perceptions between Washington and Riyadh has widened dramatically.

The biggest stumble has come in Yemen. Frustrated by Obama's nuclear deal with Iran and the U.S. pullback from the region, Riyadh launched an Arab military intervention last year to confront perceived Iranian expansionism in its southern neighbour.

The conflict pits a coalition of Arab and Muslim nations led by the Saudis against Houthi rebels allied to Iran and forces loyal to a former Yemeni president. A tentative ceasefire is holding as the United Nations prepares for peace talks in Kuwait, proof, the Saudis say, of the intervention's success.

But while Saudi Arabia has the third-largest defence budget in the world behind the United States and China, its military performance in Yemen has been mixed, current and former U.S. officials said. The kingdom's armed forces have often appeared unprepared and prone to mistakes.

U.N. investigators say that air strikes by the Saudi-led coalition are responsible for two thirds of the 3,200 civilians who have died in Yemen, or approximately 2,000 deaths. They said that Saudi forces have killed twice as many civilians as other forces in Yemen.

On the ground, Saudi-led forces have often struggled to achieve their goals, making slow headway in areas where support for Iran-allied Houthi rebels runs strong.

And along the Saudi border, the Houthis and allied forces loyal to former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh have attacked almost daily since July, killing hundreds of Saudi troops.

Instead of being the centrepiece of a more assertive Saudi regional strategy, the Yemen intervention has called into question Riyadh's military influence, said one former senior Obama administration official. "There's a long way to go. Efforts to create an effective pan-Arab military force have been disappointing."

Behind the scenes, the West has been enmeshed in the conflict. Between 50 and 60 U.S. military personnel have provided coordination and support to the Saudi-led coalition, a U.S. official told Reuters. And six to 10 Americans have worked directly inside the Saudi air operations centre in Riyadh. Britain and France, Riyadh's other main defence suppliers, have also provided military assistance.

Last year, the Obama administration had the U.S. military send precision-guided munitions from its own stocks to replenish dwindling Saudi-led coalition supplies, a source close to the Saudi government said. Administration officials argued that even more Yemeni civilians would die if the Saudis had to use bombs with less precise guidance systems.

Saudi officials see the intervention as a qualified success, halting Iranian expansionism in Yemen and bringing their opponents to the negotiating table. They compare it to the 1991 Gulf War when a military threat was addressed overwhelmingly by military power.

They said Saudi-led forces have stabilised large parts of the country and allowed its government under President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to remain viable. They also dispute the number of civilian deaths and have announced investigations into the strikes.

Among many of their fellow Gulf Arabs, who believe they face a broader struggle against Iran, the war continues to be popular. At a forum in Riyadh this week the mostly young audience started to cheer when speakers said the campaign had demonstrated a new self reliance.

Spokesman for the Saudi-led Arab coalition, Brigadier General Ahmed al-Asseri, said the main goal of degrading Houthi capabilities had been achieved. Coalition-backed Yemeni forces had paused after taking ground north of Sanaa at the request of the U.N. and to encourage talks, he said.

Prince Sultan bin Khaled al Faisal, a former Saudi special forces officer and now a senior fellow at the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies in Riyadh, said the intervention had succeeded.

"You cannot say there is no progress," he said. "The enemy is on the back foot. They are surrounded in every single city that they are in and they are blockaded from the sea."

SELLING STUFF

The United States has been helping equip and train Saudi armed forces since U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt and Saudi King Abdulaziz Al Saud struck an oil-for-security alliance in 1945.

"Our tanks are American. Our infantry vehicles are American. Our jet fighters are American," said Asseri, the Saudi general. "Our command and control system is American so having these people working with us is normal."

Some of the largest beneficiaries of the alliance have been U.S. defence contractors. Vinnell Arabia, now a Northrop Grumman subsidiary, has received multimillion-dollar contracts to train Saudi Arabia's National Guard since 1975, for instance, including a five-year contract worth up to $550 million in 2010.

In an effort to counter Iran, U.S. arms sales grew under President George W. Bush administration and even more under the Obama White House.

The primary goal of the huge 2010 sale was to defend against Iran, according to both American and Saudi officials. The Obama administration also saw a chance to turn Saudi Arabia into a regional military power that could act as a stabilising influence in the Middle East.

Saudis emphasise their own interests rather than those of the United States. "Saudi Arabia chooses and buys its weapons according to its own strategic planning, needs and interests, not those of anyone else," said Prince Sultan. "The whole premise that we bought weapons to play a role for someone else is false."

Whatever the motivation, between 2009 and 2015, IHS Jane's estimates that General Dynamics delivered $5 billion worth of weaponry to Saudi Arabia, Boeing $2.9 billion and Raytheon $2.5 billion.

European defence contractors profited, as well with Eurofighter, a European consortium, delivering $5.6 billion in arms to Saudi Arabia and U.K.-based BAE Systems delivering $2.9 billion during the same period, according to Jane's estimates.

Current and former U.S. officials said one of the reasons arms sales to Saudi Arabia had faced little opposition in Washington was the deal's failure might have resulted in Saudi Arabia buying arms from Russia or China. They also said the sales boosted U.S. defence contractors as the Obama administration cut military spending in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"We sold them that stuff," said one U.S. official, "because that's what creates jobs in America."

ADVANCING STEP BY STEP?

Even with more weaponry, the Saudi-led coalition has struggled in Yemen. That's been apparent in its bombing campaign from the start.

"Initially there was far too much reliance on the (Riyadh-backed) Yemeni government for intelligence and far too little effort to confirm it," said a Saudi with knowledge of the campaign. He said targeting rules had improved in the second half of last year.

But Brigadier General Samir Haj, a Yemeni and the official spokesman for the government's military forces, told Reuters that the coalition has "joint military operations rooms in Aden and Riyadh which work together with the coalition countries to coordinate targets for both air strikes and battle operations on the ground."

Problems with targeting are particularly embarrassing because they were also issues during the border war between Saudi Arabia and the Houthis in 2009-2010, U.S. embassy cables released by WikiLeaks show. A cable dated Feb. 7, 2010 noted one instance in which Saudi jets aborted an air strike on a target supplied by the Yemeni government because it turned out to be the headquarters of a senior general and rival of then president Saleh.

Six years on, errors are still occurring. Just last month, two American-made laser-guided bombs struck a market and killed at least 97 civilians, 25 of them children, along with 10 Houthi fighters, according to Human Rights Watch investigators who reached the site of the bombing. U.N. investigators who reached the site reported 96 civilian dead, including 24 children.

Asseri said the coordinates had been provided by coalition-backed Yemeni forces fighting in that area, and the bombs had struck a gathering of Houthis, not civilians.

U.S. officials said the United States does not provide detailed targeting information to the Saudis in Yemen. "We're giving them broad intelligence of the area," said a third U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

American officials said they have repeatedly tried to find ways to improve Saudi targeting. As well as the extra precision-guided bombs, the Pentagon sent U.S. military lawyers to train their Saudi counterparts on how to ensure the legality of coalition strikes. They say the Saudis have American software designed to help them determine whether certain munitions might cause destruction beyond the target.

Matthew Spence, who served as the Obama administration's Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defence for the Middle East from 2012 to 2015, said it takes time for any country to learn how to use advanced weapons systems. "It's going to be an imperfect process that advances step by step," Spence said.

Michael Knights, an expert on the conflict in Yemen at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said the fact that the Saudi military had been able to maintain a year-long intervention in a country as complex as Yemen has surprised some observers.

"They're able to maintain operational tempo for a year," Knights said. "These are things that if you'd asked somebody about this two years ago, they would say there's no way Saudi can do that."

But investigations by the U.N., Human Rights Watch exposed scores of Saudi missteps. A January report by a U.N. Security Council panel of experts found that the Saudi-led coalition had carried out attacks that appeared to violate international humanitarian law 152 times, including 41 strikes on residential neighbourhoods, 22 on medical facilities and 10 on marketplaces. U.N. investigators also found at least 38 violations by Houthi and Saleh forces.

The Saudis "are dropping bombs with a large payload on a house in the middle of a residential neighbourhood," said Belkis Wille, Human Rights Watch's Yemen researcher, who just spent three weeks in the country investigating civilian deaths. "If you do that, you are bound to cause collateral damage. Using these kinds of bombs in this context is indiscriminate."

Asseri, the Saudi-led coalition spokesman, has repeatedly questioned such investigations, saying they are often carried out remotely or with guidance from locals employed by the Houthis, and that they have made little effort to engage with the coalition or Yemen's government.

U.N. officials said they have a team of 19 investigators stationed inside Yemen who visit the sites of attacks on their own. They said the team members, both foreigners and Yemeni nationals, follow a thorough methodology that U.N. human rights investigators use worldwide and are not taken to sites by Houthis.

"We collect our information direct from the scene of incidents and from witnesses and victims," said Rupert Colville, spokesman for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. "We are careful to avoid manipulation by any of the warring parties."

Asseri said the Saudi air force uses the same procedures as those of the U.S. air force to assess targets, and checks information against images from drones and a no-hit list. He said munitions were selected to avoid causing harm beyond the selected target.

U.S. officials said they have urged the Saudi-led coalition to better distinguish between military targets and civilians. Asseri said a Saudi colonel with a doctorate in law has been appointed to run an investigative commission into civilian deaths and is now selecting members.

BORDER PROBLEMS

One of the stated goals of the Saudi-led campaign was to protect the kingdom's borders. In many ways, though, the war has made them less secure.

The mountainous western stretch of the Yemeni border, which runs from the Red Sea to the Empty Quarter desert, is rife with smuggling and illicit crossings. The Houthis had not attacked Saudi Arabia along the frontier since 2010.

Beginning in July 2015, though, when the coalition regained complete control of Aden after three months of brutal street fighting and airstrikes, the Houthis and Saleh's forces began to launch near daily attacks across the border.

The assaults have killed and injured around 400 civilians inside Saudi Arabia, the coalition said. Diplomats say around 400 Saudi soldiers and border guards have died. The coalition said it will not release figures on the number of military casualties until after the campaign, though Asseri did not dispute the broad number.

The rugged border areas held by the Houthis - steep mountains scattered with boulders and pitted by gullies and deep, scrubby valleys - are ideal for guerrilla warfare.

Saudi officials said they had been hampered by the decision not to take territory inside Yemen, which they feared would feed Houthi propaganda that Riyadh's war goals were territorial. "It is the most difficult thing to conduct a static defence," said Asseri.

Between July 2015 and the beginning of the tentative truce last month, an average of 130 mortars, shells and rockets were fired at Saudi Arabia's frontier every day, the coalition said. The Houthis and their allies also staged frequent incursions, overrunning villages, pushing several kilometers into Saudi territory and laying large numbers of explosive devices, according to both Western and Saudi officials.

Houthi-aligned media have posted dozens of video clips showing Yemeni fighters in Saudi territory or attacking Saudi targets. In February, the Houthi-aligned al-Masirah television station, which broadcasts from Lebanon, reported on daily attacks along the border, often accompanied by video or photographs. It listed sniper killings of Saudi soldiers, mortar and anti-tank rocket attacks on Saudi border posts and military vehicles, ambushes, infiltrations and guerrilla raids.

The Saudis have evacuated around a dozen villages, shuttered hundreds of schools in the region and closed the airport of Najran, a provincial capital that lies a few kilometers from the border.

Riyadh concedes it underestimated the number of Houthi ballistic missiles. Days into the conflict, Asseri said the Houthis' ability to fire rockets at Saudi Arabia had been neutralised. But the Houthis continued to fire Scuds at the kingdom until well into 2016.

Asseri said the Houthis hid weapons in schools and evacuated embassies. Riyadh believes Iran sent weapons to Yemen by plane before the war and by ship afterwards, he said. Houthis have denied that.

Riyadh used to enjoy an extensive network of patronage and influence in Yemen that gave it an unrivalled understanding of the workings of its complex neighbour. But those networks were run by the late Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz, a veteran defence minister, and deteriorated as his own health began to fail just over a decade ago.

The Saudi with knowledge of the campaign said the performance of the army had been patchy and varied greatly from one unit to another. He and other Saudi and Western officials said the kingdom's forces on the border have been hampered by their lack of battlefield surveillance technology, which meant they were often unable to watch threats emerge in real time.

Riyadh has partly addressed that by buying drones from China, Western and Saudi officials said. As well, the Royal Saudi Land Forces, which were trained for desert warfare, are beefing up their mountain training, first started after the 2009-10 war.

EXPEDITIONARY FORCE

A few days before operations began in Yemen last year, Riyadh tried to bring together a broad Muslim military alliance. But none of its most powerful Muslim allies - Egypt, Pakistan or Turkey - ended up taking leading roles.

Asseri said Riyadh never requested big numbers of ground troops from them, believing that a large-scale land operation would be counterproductive.

Turkey chose not to participate from the start. Pakistan's parliament voted to remain neutral, but only after its flag had been displayed alongside those of other coalition countries. It later committed a ship to help enforce a partial blockade, Asseri said. And Egypt eventually committed a naval expedition to the coalition.

That left Saudi Arabia itself to produce ground forces along with several thousand troops from other Gulf neighbours, principally the United Arab Emirates. Morocco carried out airstrikes and Sudan committed two companies of troops late in the war.

Saudi Arabia decided to entrust ground operations inside Yemen to local fighters backed by Gulf Special Forces and air strikes. But many of these fighters were untrained and disorganised.

Asseri said that as the war has progressed they have been organised into a more coherent army.

The lack of a professional ground operation hurt, say military experts. Asseri said using a large foreign army would have created the impression of an invading force and encouraged militant attacks. He pointed to the recapture of Aden in July as evidence that only small numbers of foreign troops were needed for specific operations.

But the inexperience has shown in incidents such as a Houthi rocket strike in September in Marib. A senior Saudi officer told Reuters forces in Marib had been positioned too close together and near a munitions store, causing a high number of deaths.

Asseri acknowledged that procedures had not been followed in Marib.

"This is their first fight," he said. "You learn the hard way."

(Additional reporting by William Maclean in Dubai, Warren Strobel in Washington and Mimi Dwyer in New York; Edited by Simon Robinson)

by Taboola
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Housecarl

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http://freebeacon.com/national-security/north-korean-missile-exploded-failed/

North Korean Missile Exploded, Damaged Launcher in Failed Test

U.S. commander says threats from Pyongyang increasing

BY: Bill Gertz
April 20, 2016 5:00 am

North Korea’s first attempt to test-launch a new intermediate-range missile last week failed after the Musudan blew up shortly after launch, causing a huge fireball that damaged the mobile launcher, according to American defense officials.

“We’re still assessing the specifics of it but I can tell you that it was a fiery, catastrophic attempt at a launch,” Pentagon spokesman Navy Capt. Jeff Davis told reporters Friday. “It was not successful.”

The test failure on Friday represents a setback for North Korea’s largely untested long-range nuclear missile forces that include launch pad-based Taepodong-2 missiles, and two road-mobile systems, the KN-08 and Musudan. The Pentagon last month also confirmed that a newer long-range mobile missile, the KN-14, was unveiled during a recent military parade. North Korea also is developing submarine-launched nuclear missiles.

U.S. strategic defense surveillance systems, both airborne and space-based, closely monitored the Musudan test and videotaped the explosion during the attempted launch from a beach on North Korea’s east coast.

In addition to damaging the launcher, the explosion may have injured or killed North Korean missile technicians near the site.

Two road-mobile Musudan launchers were set up for the test, but the second was not fired after the explosion, officials familiar with reports of the launch said.

The missile is estimated to have a range of up to 2,500 miles, enough to hit the western Pacific island of Guam, a key strategic military base in the Pentagon’s new pivot to Asia.

Army Gen. Vincent K. Brooks, nominee for commander of U.S. Forces Korea, told the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday that the North Korean missile program is advancing despite testing and other problems.

Asked by Committee Chairman Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.) about North Korea’s intercontinental ballistic missile program, Brooks said: “At the present time, Senator, I think that they’re struggling with getting the program up and operational.”

“But it’s very clear through the parades that they’ve done, what systems they have and some of the attempted launches that they have not had success in, over time, I believe we’re going to see them acquire these capabilities if they’re not stopped,” the four-star general said.

One diplomatic source familiar with reports of the test failure said the likely cause of the explosion, which occurred within five to six seconds after launch, was a faulty fuel system or turbo pump failure.

The Musudan intermediate-range ballistic missile is an indigenous variant of the Russian SS-N-6 submarine-launched ballistic missile, known by Moscow as the R-27, that the North obtained covertly from Russia sometime in the 1990s.

The missile blew up about 300 feet above the ground.

“The North Koreans seemed to just believe it would succeed because the R-27 SLBM of former Soviet Union was one of the most tested nuclear warhead delivery systems ever produced, and North Korea had already done a lot of ground tests,” the source said. “However, a real launching test is totally different from the ground test.”

Western intelligence agencies do not know the ultimate cause of the launch failure. “And the North Koreans probably don’t either,” the source said.

Brooks, the likely next commander of U.S. Forces Korea is currently commander of U.S. Army Forces Pacific.

In his written statement to the committee, Brooks disclosed that the threat posed by North Korea under its current leader Kim Jong Un is increasing.

“Kim Jong Un’s assumption of power following his father’s death in December 2011 has led to a more aggressive and unpredictable North Korea,” Brooks stated. “He exercises complete dominion over his subordinates in a humiliating and brutal fashion including purges, public demotions and re-promotions of military leaders, and brutal public executions.”

According to Brooks, the North Korean missile arsenal includes several hundred short-range Toksa and Scuds and medium-range Nodongs.

“The developmental IRBM, Musudan, though untested and potentially unreliable as a weapon, could also be launched at targets in the region,” he stated, adding that the KN-08 “is capable of targeting the U.S.”

The test in February of a Taepodong-2 space launcher “significantly contributes to North Korea’s long-range ballistic missile development, since they have many shared technologies,” he said.

North Korea has also been developing a submarine-launched ballistic missile since at least May 2015. The new SLBM “highlights its commitment to diversifying its missile forces and nuclear delivery options, while strengthening missile force survivability,” Brooks said. “If this system becomes operational, it will have a security impact to the Pacific region.”

Last week, Adm. Bill Gortney, commander of the U.S. Northern Command, told a House hearing that the U.S. intelligence community assesses a “low probability” North Korea can deploy a successful road-mobile missile with a nuclear warhead capable of reaching the United States.

“As the commander accountable for defending the homeland, I choose to assess that he does have that capability,” Gortney said. “And I think it’s the prudent course of action; it’s what I think the American people would like me to base my readiness assessment on to be prepared to engage it.”

Gortney, who is in charge of ground-based interceptors in Alaska and California, said his forces are ready to engage any North Korean missiles fired toward the country.

North Korea has not tested the “end-to-end” long-range missile capability, although the space launcher placed a satellite in orbit, Gortney told the House Armed Services subcommittee on strategic forces.

“But the re-entry vehicle that needs to go with it, the solid rocket metal fuel, we need to see that end-to-end test,” Gortney said Thursday. “But I’m not waiting for that end-to-end test on my assessment.”

The Musudan and KN-08 also posed greater threats because of the road mobility.

“Previously, when North Korea assembles a rocket, we have intel that we can detect through all forms of intel,” Gortney said. “Whenever you get into a road-mobile target, it’s very, very difficult to be able to track, quickly set up, and shoot. Most of my career I dropped bombs for a living and mobile targets are what always cause me to pause. And that’s exactly why this is a tough challenge for us.”

During the Senate hearing Tuesday, Brooks said he was “very concerned” by reports of joint missile development cooperation between North Korea and Iran.

The military’s plan to counter North Korean missiles is under development and called the “4D Strategy” for detect, defend, disrupt, and destroy North Korean missile threats.

Brooks said the Army’s advanced missile defense system, Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, is needed in South Korea, and talks have been underway for deployment.

Under pressure from China, South Korea delayed deploying the system until February when the North Koreans conducted a Taepodong-2 flight test.

North Korea also is continuing to build nuclear weapons and has conducted four underground tests, in 2006, 2009, 2013, and in January.

South Korean news reports this week stated that increased vehicular traffic at a North Korean nuclear test site indicated another nuclear test blast is being readied.

“It’s my opinion that North Korea is moving in the wrong direction and the changes that we’ve seen are all provocative and more dangerous,” Brooks said during the hearing, noting North Korea’s “willingness to draw blood, to sink vessels, to fire some of their numerous artillery systems into population areas, to put land mines outside of Republic of Korea camps.”
 

Housecarl

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http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...ian-casualties-air-war-against-isil/83190812/

New rules allow more civilian casualties in air war against ISIL

Tom Vanden Brook, USA TODAY 7:24 p.m. EDT April 19, 2016
Comments 117

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has approved airstrikes that risk more civilian casualties in order to destroy Islamic State targets as part of its increasingly aggressive fight against the militant group in Iraq and Syria, according to interviews with military officials and data.

Since last fall, the Pentagon has delegated more authority to the commander of the war, Army Lt. Gen. Sean MacFarland, to approve targets when there is the risk that civilians could be killed. Previously, authority for missions with the potential to kill innocents had been made by the higher headquarters of U.S. Central Command. Seeking approval from above takes time, and targets of fleeting opportunity can be missed.

Six Defense Department officials, all speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to describe how Islamic State targets are selected and attacked, described a sliding scale of probable civilian casualties based on the value of the target and the location. For example, a strike with the potential to wound or kill several civilians would be permitted if it prevented ISIL fighters from causing greater harm.

Before the change, there were some limited cases in which civilian casualties were allowed, the officials said. Now, however, there are several targeting areas in which the probability of 10 civilian casualties are permitted. Those areas shift depending on the time, location of the targets and the value of destroying them, the officials said.

The riskiest missions require White House approval, said one official, who is closely involved with current targeting plans.

David Deptula, a retired three-star Air Force general who led its intelligence and surveillance efforts, said easing the restrictions was a necessary but insufficient step toward defeating the Islamic State, or ISIL.

"The gradualistic, painfully slow, incremental efforts of the current administration undercut the principals of modern warfare, and harken back to the approach followed by the Johnson administration," said Deptula, who now leads the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.

The officials all say commanders go to great lengths to avoid killing innocents. They attack at night, for example, when buildings are less likely to be occupied. They select bombs that spew fewer deadly fragments and direct laser-guided bombs away from targets when civilians stray too close to ground zero. Military lawyers oversee operations to ensure laws of war are followed.

The increased tolerance for civilian casualties dovetails with the revised strategy Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced in October — the focus on recapturing Ramadi, Iraq, mounting more raids to capture or kill ISIL leaders and adding pressure to Raqqa, Syria, the capital of ISIL's self-proclaimed state.

Among the issues commanders consider before attacking is the target’s “non-combatant value.” A value of zero means it can be hit with no chance of civilians being killed — think of an ISIL machine gun emplacement in the desert.

The value rises in urban areas such as Ramadi, which Iraqi forces, backed by U.S.-led airpower, seized from ISIL in late December. Pockets of Ramadi and other areas of intense fighting have had non-combatant values of 10 or more, meaning that attacking them carries the probability of 10 civilian deaths, said the most senior of the six Defense officials. The area could be as small as a city block and permission to hit it could last for a matter of hours.

MacFarland, who took command in September, has also focused on ISIL’s source of income and stores of cash — oil infrastructure and banks. Black-market oil had been a key source of illicit income need to finance its operations and pay fighters. Civilians work on oil rigs or visit banks, forcing commanders to weigh the strategic value of destroying them with the probability that civilians will be killed.

Military planners can mitigate the risk by dropping leaflets, as they did last fall, warning drivers of tankers with illicit oil to flee before blowing them up. A bank could be struck at night, with the least-lethal bomb, at an angle that minimizes damage to nearby buildings, the senior official said.

The more aggressive approach has been reflected in the bombing statistics released by the Pentagon.

In November, pilots in the U.S.-led coalition had dropped 3,227 bombs in Iraq and Syria, a record number for a single month and more than twice as many as they had used in November 2014. Since then, the totals for bombs dropped per month eclipsed the previous year. In March, pilots dropped 1,982 bombs compared with 1,685 in March 2015, an 18% increase.

Minimizing civilian casualties

Although the military acknowledges publicly that its airstrikes have killed or wounded 26 civilians by accident, two officials, one currently involved in targeting and one former senior officer, say more innocent civilians may have died from the more than 40,000 bombs that have been dropped since the war began in August 2014.

By destroying nearly 6,000 buildings with bombs since the war began it’s a virtual certainty that the civilian toll is higher than 26, said a senior Defense official who is briefed daily on the war’s developments. Even if it is 10 times higher, the official said, it would be exceptionally low and reflects the U.S. military’s commitment to protecting the innocent.

Central Command, which oversees the war, investigates reports of civilian casualties. Claims, even tweets, are matched against missions flown to determine if coalition aircraft had conducted bombing runs nearby. Video from drones and other aircraft track every bomb dropped, one of the six Defense officials said. If the report is deemed credible, investigators assess whether strikes comply with the laws of war and that proper precautions were taken.

One such incident occurred on July 4, 2015, near Raqqa, Syria. Airstrikes destroyed 16 bridges there. A bomb also killed a civilian driving a tractor trailer.

Civilian deaths caused by Iraqi military operations, which occur jointly with the American-led bombing effort, are not counted, the senior official said.

In more than 15 years of bombing Afghanistan and Iraq, the Obama administration has put a premium on avoiding civilian casualties. The laws of war, military professionalism and the American public's aversion to killing innocents demand care and precision. Also, destroying the lives and property of non-combatants is considered self-defeating when the protection of local civilians is a priority.

White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said President Obama is “justifiably proud of the great lengths we’ve gone to to avoid civilian casualties — certainly greater lengths than our adversaries in this conflict.”

The White House, Earnest said, is still working on a promised report on civilian casualties.

Airstrikes are considered deliberate or dynamic. A deliberate strike can be planned for — a bank in Mosul for example. With time, commanders can choose the best time and weapon to minimize chances civilians will be harmed. Commanders, one official with experience in targeting said, are in a rush to get it right — not just to strike. No civilians were hurt or killed in the more than 100 tons of explosives dropped over two months of fighting, the senior official said.

A complicating factor for commanders is the urgency of the time-sensitive mission, also known as a dynamic target. For example, an ISIL militant attacking Iraqi troops from a rooftop machine gun nest in Ramadi is a legitimate, dynamic target. Commanders must judge if killing him puts residents on lower floors at risk of injury or death.

Soon after bombing extended to Syria in September 2014, commanders had pinpointed the seven buildings in Raqqa that ISIL used for headquarters, said a recently retired senior officer involved in targeting. The buildings, legitimate military targets, were deemed off limits because they were too close to civilians to be destroyed without wounding or killing innocent bystanders, the former officer said.

Targeters pore over hours of video from spy aircraft of potential bomb sites to determine when civilians are least likely to be nearby, the former officer said. Determining the "pattern of life" at the target can trigger the decision to bomb or not to bomb.

ISIL leaders have complicated targeting by flying their black flags over residential buildings, inviting airstrikes so that they can blame the U.S.-led coalition for killing civilians, the senior official said.

USA TODAY
Leaflets prompt ISIL truckers to flee

The vast majority of strikes in Iraq and Syria belong in the dynamic category. It’s difficult to determine if innocent civilians have been trapped in buildings damaged or destroyed in dynamic strikes, the senior official said.

The calculation for civilian casualties changes based on the strategic value of a target and the local population’s sensitivity to foreign military presence, said the recently retired officer said.

During the surge in Iraq beginning in 2007, the non-combatant value for some targets was as high as 26 people, said the former officer. In Afghanistan, during the surge of troops there in 2010, the value was nine.

Contributing: Gregory Korte

USA TODAY
Air campaign shifts to ISIL's cash and oil
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-afghanistan-blast-idUSKCN0XG0BO

World | Tue Apr 19, 2016 7:54am EDT
Related: World, United Nations

Afghan Taliban launch attack in central Kabul, killing at least 28

KABUL | By Josh Smith and Hamid Shalizi


A Taliban suicide bomb and gun assault on a government security building during Tuesday morning rush hour in central Kabul killed at least 28 people and wounded more than 320, in the most deadly single attack in the Afghan capital since 2011.

President Ashraf Ghani condemned the assault "in the strongest possible terms" in a statement from the presidential palace, located only a few hundred meters away from the scene of the blast.

The insurgency led by the Afghan Taliban has gained strength since the withdrawal of most international combat troops at the end of 2014, and the Islamist group is believed to be stronger than at any point since it was driven from power by U.S.-backed forces in 2001.

Police chief Abdul Rahman Rahimi said civilians and members of the Afghan security forces were among those killed and wounded when a suicide car-bomber detonated his explosives outside the wall of a National Directorate of Security (NDS) office.

Witnesses described chaotic scenes after the blast.

"I was here when a huge explosion happened," said Amir, who works in a nearby restaurant. "I saw three boys with severe heads injuries. My uncle was injured and my brother is missing, I don't know what happened to him."

It was the worst single militant strike in Kabul since 2011, when about 60 people died in a suicide blast outside a mosque, and will reinforce concerns in Afghanistan and the West that the country is being dragged into a worsening spiral of violence.

Rahimi said one attacker had tried to slip into the NDS building through a destroyed wall after the blast, but he was discovered and killed.


SMOKE, SIRENS

The Taliban said on their Pashto-language website that they had carried out the suicide bombing on "Department 10", an NDS unit responsible for protecting government ministers and VIPs.

They said a suicide car bomber blew up the main gate at the front of the office, allowing other fighters, including more suicide bombers, to enter the heavily guarded compound.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a separate statement that the attackers engaged in a gunbattle with Afghan security forces inside the building.

The Islamist group often exaggerates details of attacks against government and military targets.

A thick plume of black smoke was seen rising from the area near the sprawling U.S. embassy complex nearby immediately after the blast.

Warning sirens blared out for some minutes from the embassy compound, which is also close to the headquarters of the NATO-led Resolute Support mission.

The U.S. embassy and the NATO mission both said they were not affected by the blast.

The Taliban announced the beginning of their spring offensive on April 12, and fighting has raged around the symbolically important northern city of Kunduz since then, although the capital had been relatively quiet.

Kunduz, Afghanistan's fifth-largest city, fell briefly to the Taliban last September in the biggest blow to Ghani's government since NATO-led forces ended their combat operations at the end of 2014.

Taliban fighters have also been making territorial gains in the southern province of Helmand, further stretching Afghan forces who have struggled to contain an insurgency aimed at toppling the government and returning to power.

Tuesday's blast came days after a United Nations report said urban warfare had caused a spike in the number of deaths and injuries among women and children in Afghanistan this year.

The U.S. embassy said the attack underscored the harm the Taliban continued to inflict on the Afghan people.

"Afghanistan deserves peace and security, not attacks that victimize parents taking their children to school, workers on their morning commute, and people who have stepped forward to help defend their fellow citizens," it said in a statement.


(Additional reporting by Jibran Ahmed in PESHAWAR; Writing by Paul Tait; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Robert Birsel)

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-afghanistan-blast-idUSKCN0XH0SZ

World | Wed Apr 20, 2016 6:05am EDT
Related: World, Afghanistan, United Nations

Death toll from blast in Afghan capital Kabul rises to 64

The casualty total from Tuesday's major attack in Kabul has risen to 64 killed, more than double the total previously estimated by police, and 347 wounded, Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said.

He said on Wednesday most of those killed in the attack, which hit a security services office in the heart of the government and diplomatic area of the Afghan capital, were civilians.

The attack, which was quickly claimed by the Taliban, was the deadliest single incident of its kind in Kabul since 2011 and came only days after the Islamist insurgent movement announced the start of its annual spring offensive.

It began at around 9.00 a.m. (0530GMT), in the middle of the morning rush hour, when a suicide bomber in a vehicle packed with explosives blew himself up in front of an office of a department of the National Security Directorate.

In a pattern similar to major attacks in Kabul and other Afghan cities, the bombing was followed by one or more gunmen who engaged in an extended shootout with security forces.

The attack underlined concerns raised in a United Nations report this week, which said an increase in urban warfare had caused a spike in civilian casualties during the first three months of the year.


(Reporting by Mirwais Harooni; Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Paul Tait)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I wonder how many of these subs are along our coast?

bump

So far none from North Korea. The 1500 ton displacement boat that did the test was the first ship built. The similar Golf class SSDs of the old Soviet Navy were twice the displacement for those kinds of patrols. Along with everything else there was noted renovation work being done at the shipyard that this SSB is based reportedly beyond the work needed to support the test program, so there is a good possibility that they may be preparing to start production of new submarines; of what size hasn't been discussed. The current boat could be a real threat to the region at a minimum.
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

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http://www.spiegel.de/international...ish-opposition-leader-demirtas-a-1087857.html

Kurdish Opposition Leader Demirtas: 'Erdogan Wants a Caliphate'

Kurdish opposition leader Selahattin Demirtas, 43, says that his HDP party wants a cease-fire in the ongoing battle between Turkish troops and Kurds in southeastern Turkey. But, he says, Turkish President Erdogan isn't willing to listen.

Interview Conducted by Maximilian Popp
April 19, 2016 – 11:17 AM

SPIEGEL: German Chancellor Angela Merkel is hoping that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will be able to solve Europe's refugee crisis. Is he able to?

Demirtas: I wish he could. But I fear he is creating much larger problems. If the Turkish government continues its war against the Kurds, then millions of Turkish citizens could seek asylum in Europe.

SPIEGEL: Would Angela Merkel have been better off not negotiating with Erdogan?

Demirtas: No, but she has to be careful not to disregard European principles. She can't remain silent when a country seeking to join the EU bombs its own towns and cities.

SPIEGEL: Skirmishes between the Turkish military and the PKK, the outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party, have cost thousands of lives since last summer. You claim that Erdogan is solely to blame.

Demirtas: My party, the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), has called on both sides to lay down their weapons. The Turkish government and the PKK negotiated for peace for two and half years. Erdogan overturned the negotiating table.

SPIEGEL: The government says it is exclusively pursuing terrorists.

Demirtas: The war is primarily focused on civilians that Erdogan suspects of supporting the PKK. Almost 400,000 people have had to leave their homes. The southeast of Turkey resembles Syria.

SPIEGEL: A PKK splinter group killed 66 people in February and March in suicide attacks in Ankara. How should the government react?

Demirtas: The PKK is willing to put down its weapons. The government insists on violence. We, the HDP, are calling for a bipartisan parliamentary commission to be established to determine the necessary conditions for a lasting peace. It should include talks with the imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan and the PKK leadership in the Qandil Mountains and also listen to Kurdish civil society.

SPIEGEL: PKK leader Cemil Bayik has announced a military offensive in the spring. That doesn't sound like a readiness to negotiate.

Demirtas: The HDP supports those PKK voices calling for a cease-fire.

SPIEGEL: The EU classifies the PKK as a terrorist organization. Is that justified?

Demirtas: We, the HDP, view the PKK as an armed popular movement. That doesn't mean that we condone violence.

SPIEGEL: The PKK's attacks are focusing increasingly on civilians. Why are you so reluctant to call these acts terrorism?

Demirtas: I have condemned the attacks in Ankara as exactly that. But the Kurdish Freedom Falcons (TAK) claimed responsibility for the attacks. The government has thus far been unable to establish a connection between PKK and TAK.

SPIEGEL: Even HDP supporters are critical and say you should have distanced yourselves from PKK violence earlier and more decisively.

Demirtas: I did. Erdogan and his henchmen in the media didn't want to hear anything about it. They are consciously defaming me as a terrorist.

SPIEGEL: Not long ago, Erdogan was working towards a peaceful resolution to the Kurdish conflict. Why do you think he has changed course?

Demirtas: He's striving for absolute power in Turkey. Erdogan wants a caliphate. We Kurds are in his way. Erdogan can't stop us politically, so he is denouncing us as terrorists.

SPIEGEL: What role will the Kurds have in the new reorganization of the Middle East?

Demirtas: The Kurds are stepping onto the stage of world history. In northern Iraq, they are well on their way to an independent state and in Syria they are successfully fighting for federal rights. In Turkey, the Kurds are pushing for democratization.

SPIEGEL: Last winter you visited Moscow. Are you on the search for new partners?

Demirtas: We're speaking to all relevant actors in the region. We are not dependent on a single partner.

SPIEGEL: Observers accuse the Russian military of bombing Syrian schools and hospitals. Can Russia be a trusted ally for your party?

Demirtas: We cannot accept massacres of civilians under any circumstances. But hardly anyone has remained clean in Syria.

SPIEGEL: You met German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier in Berlin this week. What was your message to the German government?

Demirtas: We expect Germany to push more strongly for democracy and human rights in Turkey.

Related SPIEGEL ONLINE links:
Erdogan and the Satirist: Inside Merkel's Comedy Conundrum (04/15/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international...against-erdogan-critical-comic-a-1087445.html
With Friends Like These...: Erdogan's Assault on Freedom and Democracy (04/07/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international...-closer-to-autocracy-in-turkey-a-1085497.html
Erdogan's Tightrope Walk: How Turkey's Reform Project Ended in Isolation (04/08/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/erdogan-and-the-isolation-of-turkey-a-1086114.html
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/bangladeshs-battle-against-extremism/article8495206.ece

Opinion » Comment
April 20, 2016
Updated: April 20, 2016 00:41 IST

Battle for Bangladesh’s soul

K. Anis Ahmed
Comments 10

Despite the increasing odds, the country’s success in its fight against extremism should matter to the entire world.

“Offending religious sentiments shows a perverted mindset,” the Bangladeshi Premier, Sheikh Hasina, recently said at a celebration of the Bengali New Year on April 14. She was careful to add, however, that anyone “killing another person in response to what they have written is not Islamic”. The Prime Minister’s comments came just days after the killing of Nazimuddin Samad, a young social media activist, and capture the terrible duality facing this nation of 160 million, mostly Muslims, whose progressive aspirations are under threat from violent fringe elements like never before.

The killing of blogger Avijit Roy in February 2015 brought the level of threat to the world’s attention; a series of subsequent fatal attacks have heightened the concern, in part due to the targeting of self-described or alleged atheists. It is not surprising that in a mostly rural country with low literacy rates, there is little comprehension or sympathy for anything intellectually as rarefied as atheism. But by targeting young freethinkers — atheist or not — the Islamists pose as defenders of religion, placing their progressive opponents on the defensive.

Islamists v. secularists

This macabre scenario derives from an extended history of Islamist intrusion into Bangladesh. The importation of religion into politics occurred first during the military dictatorships of the 1970s and 1980s, and later under the auspices of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). The last tenure of BNP (2001-06) saw the rise of state-patronised militant outfits such as Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami Bangladesh and Jamat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh. In the interim, the influx of petrodollar funding for mosques and madrasas, and the presence of millions of Bangladeshi workers in West Asia, many of whom send back not just money but also conservative values, have fuelled reactionary attitudes.

The current Awami League government claims to be committed to secularism, and has boldly initiated the trial of war criminals who committed genocide and mass rape during the Liberation War of 1971, all in the name of religion. Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s leading Islamist party and firm ally of the BNP, has been hardest hit by these trials. Many of their leaders have been convicted of war crimes. Despite questions about due process, these trials remain hugely popular with a public tired of seeing the perpetrators of the most heinous crimes roam free, or occupy ministerial seats, as they did during BNP’s last tenure.

The trials, in conjunction with hard-line tactics employed by the Awami League since it came to power in 2009, have left the BNP and Jamaat in tatters. Ahead of the last elections in 2014, the desperate union of BNP-Jamaat resorted to unprecedented forms of violence, including petrol-bombing commuter buses. While Bangladeshi politics has always been full of clashes, such targeting of civilians was new, and when mainstream political parties start attacking their own electorate, extremist elements will take that as licence to go yet further.

Regardless of the history of contest between secularist and Islamist forces, many foreign observers, especially American officials and media, appear keen to flag a distant force such as Islamic State (IS) as a key factor in the new Islamist spike in Bangladesh; however, experts on the ground believe self-motivated local outfits such as Ansarullah Bangla are behind the recent attacks. All the murdered bloggers were active supporters of the war crimes trials, which suggests that Jamaat or its proxies may be targeting them. Furthermore, it is in the interest of the deeply beleaguered Jamaat to create instability in the country, preferably to the point of deposing the Awami League government.

Red herring, real questions

None of this is to discount the potency of a post-Jamaat wave of Islamism. The latest issue of the IS magazine, Dabiq, clearly lays out its intent to make inroads into Bangladesh. Yet any alliance with either al-Qaeda in South Asia or the IS is mainly a tactical move for publicity that suits both sides: the IS gets to project reach on the cheap, and the local thugs enjoy heightened exposure and menace value. Indeed, it is possible that local outfits will rebrand themselves as “IS” to gain greater mileage. The deeper reality is this: even if IS central were eliminated tomorrow, Bangladesh — like so many other places beset by jihadist groups — would still have home-grown Islamists to deal with. Bangladesh managed to contain the threat for nearly two decades; the first terror attacks in the country occurred back in the late 1990s. Hence, the debate over the existence of the IS in Bangladesh is a bit of a red herring. The real question should be: what more can Bangladesh do now to stave off the new surge in extremism?

The recent spate of killings is not without precedence: fanatics mounted sufficient protests for free-spirited poets like Daud Haider in the 1970s and Taslima Nasreen in the 1990s to go into permanent exile. Celebrated poet Humayun Azad was hacked to death by Islamists in 2004, just outside the same Ekushey Book Fair where Avijit Roy would meet his end in 2015. The relative complacency of many Bangladeshis, the moment a victim is revealed to be an “atheist”, exposes the brittle nature of its culture of tolerance.

Despite the increasing odds, Bangladesh’s success in its battle against extremism should matter to the entire world. Most Muslim nations that have been historically congratulated by the West for being “moderate” owed their relative progressivism to military, monarchic or even civil authoritarianism; for example, in the case of Turkey, Morocco and Malaysia. In contrast, secularism in Bangladesh has survived a tumultuous democracy, including periods when powers sympathetic to an Islamic tone were in charge. If Bangladesh were to survive as a secular nation, it could serve as a model of a Muslim-majority nation where faith and progressive ideals — tolerance and pluralism — could coexist.

Part of the problem is that Bangladesh is still at a stage of development where freedom of speech — like so many other fundamental rights, even habeas corpus — is treated as discretionary. And though the Awami League enjoys a reputation as the more liberal of the country’s two dominant parties, its record is not without blemish; it has promulgated a draconian cyber law that allows for detention without bail. Also, and less talked about in the light of the more headline-grabbing blogger killings, dozens of people disappear each year; a bane that did not exist in the 1990s but which has flourished since the early 2000s.

Bangladesh has sustained so far as a liberal society thanks to the strength and tenor of its ethno-linguistic culture. Examples of this are the millions of women who ignored the warning of Hefazat-e-Islam, a network of hard-line clerics allied with the BNP and Jamaat, to stay away from the festivities celebrating Pohela Boishakh (the secular Bengali New Year). Yet, heartening as such spirited displays are, culture alone cannot keep us progressive.

The less we do to challenge the inhuman arrogance of violent extremists, the more we are in danger of allowing the normalisation of intolerance. To reach our most profound ideals, we Bangladeshis, and our government, must avoid appeasement, and muster the courage once displayed by those who died for our language, and for our independence.

K. Anis Ahmed is a writer, and publisher of the Dhaka Tribune. He is also a co-director of the Dhaka Literary Festival.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
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http://www.thenation.com/article/why-do-neo-cold-warriors-want-another-proxy-fight-with-russia/

Why Do Neo–Cold Warriors Want Another Proxy Fight With Russia?

The recent conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is a case study in how anti-Putin rhetoric obscures what is really going on.

By Pietro A. Shakarian
Yesterday 5:56 pm

Earlier this month, intense fighting erupted between Azerbaijan and the Armenians of the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, who are supported by Armenia. The conflict dates back to 1988 when the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, then an autonomous region of Soviet Azerbaijan, used Mikhail Gorbachev’s glasnost to petition for the transfer of their region to the Soviet Armenian Republic. Large demonstrations were held in Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, and in Yerevan, the capital of Soviet Armenia. Clashes between Armenians and Azerbaijanis ensued, and after the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, the conflict exploded into a full-scale war. It ended with a Russian-brokered cease-fire in 1994.

Regional observers scrambled to make sense of the most recent violence in Nagorno-Karabakh. Most presented balanced and reasonable analyses of the clashes. However, there were also those who failed to take into account the historical and regional dynamics and instead relied on unfortunate Cold War-style anti-Russian rhetoric. They maintained that the recent hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh were nothing less than a plot personally cooked up in the Kremlin by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Such analyses have recently appeared in the media and unfortunately obscure the reality of a very complex part of the world, making it harder for the genuinely curious American observer to understand what is going on.

Writing in The Wall Street Journal, analyst Svante Cornell asserted that Putin instigated the recently hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh. Putin, he argued, sought to use the conflict “to try to undermine” the government of Azerbaijan. “Controlling that artery [Azerbaijan] is essential to Mr. Putin’s imperial project,” wrote Cornell, adding that the Russian leader “benefits from reminding both parties (and the West) of his ability to wreak further havoc in a region already marred by conflict, lest they toe his line.”

Similarly, in The Washington Post, Matthew Bryza, the former US ambassador to Azerbaijan, contended that Putin was “exploiting the situation” and “laying the foundation for future crises, while Washington watches.” He also implicitly alleged that Putin may have prodded a “local military commander” in Nagorno-Karabakh to “reignite the conflict in pursuit of narrow political interests.” This is an interesting theory from a man who, according to The Wall Street Journal, encouraged Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili in the lead-up to the 2008 war in Georgia.

Notably, Saakashvili joined Cornell and Bryza in arguing that the recent hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh “strongly resembles a trademark Russian provocation.” Not surprisingly, the beleaguered Saakashvili, who is wanted on criminal charges in Georgia and Russia, accused Putin of being personally responsible for the flare-up in Karabakh. “I always knew that Putin would use a lame duck status of the US administration for stirring up a major trouble,” he maintained. “Moscow had been preparing for the unfreezing of the Karabakh conflict for quite some time already.”

However, despite all this rhetoric and intrigue, does Moscow really want to wreak havoc in Nagorno-Karabakh? The answer is simply no.

To the contrary, Russia has a strong interest in maintaining stability in the region, not undermining it. A conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh has the ability to throw the entire Caucasus into a state of chaos, creating serious problems for Russian state security. Furthermore, it could potentially bring Russia into a direct confrontation with Turkey, and, consequently, NATO.

The allegation that Putin personally fomented unrest in the distant mountain valleys of Nagorno-Karabakh is far from reality. This assertion not only fails to take into account real security concerns of the Russian state, but it also implies that no real internal politics exist in Russia at all. In fact, Putin does not make decisions alone. He consults with both liberals and hardliners within his administration. He may be a strong leader with authoritarian tendencies, but he is certainly no Stalin.

Those supporting the “Russian instigation” thesis also overlook the agency of the other countries in the region. The narrative that Russia provoked the violence to undermine US–Azerbaijani relations implies that Moscow influenced Yerevan, its closest partner in the Caucasus, to attack Azerbaijani positions. However, the facts indicate that it was the Azerbaijani side that launched the attack against the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, not vice-versa. This is not surprising, given the fact that the fall in global energy prices has pummeled Azerbaijan’s petro-economy. Observers of the region assert that Azerbaijan’s autocratic president, Ilham Aliyev, was only too eager to turn the public’s attention away from the deteriorating domestic situation in the “Kuwait on the Caspian.”

Moreover, the Azerbaijani attack was vocally encouraged by Turkey, which unlike the US, EU, or Russia, never explicitly called for a cessation of hostilities. It is no secret that Ankara has sought closer ties with Baku in light of the broader Russo-Turkish confrontation over Syria and the Kurds. It has also used its lobbyists to convince Washington that Russia has been “weaponizing” Armenia against Turkey and NATO. These factors led to credible allegations of Turkey’s involvement in stirring up tension in the region. Indeed, Russian Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev recently suggested that Ankara had “add[ed] fuel to the fire” in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and US Secretary of State John Kerry also apparently took the allegations of Turkish involvement seriously. After an extended phone conversation, both Kerry and Lavrov “condemned attempts by certain ‘external players’ to whip up the standoff around Karabakh.” This clearly contradicts Cornell’s assertion that “the Obama administration apparently believes the Armenian–Azeri conflict exists in a vacuum, isolated from regional tensions” and that it “doesn’t take the region seriously.” It also belies Bryza’s argument that there was a “lack of cooperation” between Washington and Moscow on the issue.

Both Cornell and Bryza further dismissed Iran’s potential role as a mediator and a constructive player in the region. In fact, Tehran has been understandably concerned about a possible spillover of the conflict, especially after the accidental firing of missiles by Azerbaijani forces into Iranian territory during the most recent hostilities. This concern has prompted Iranian officials to call for an immediate cease-fire, aligning Tehran with Moscow, Washington and Brussels.

Overall, these commentators condemned Washington for failing to see that “America’s interests are fundamentally opposed to Mr. Putin’s” and that Moscow is “part of the problem, not the solution.” However, by virtue of history and geography, the reality is that Russia is part of the solution. It was Russia that brokered the 1994 cease-fire on Nagorno-Karabakh, and it was Russia again that brokered the April 5 cease-fire, which ended the most recent clashes.

The reality is simply that Russian and American interests on global security do overlap, not only in Syria or Iran, but also in Nagorno-Karabakh. No amount of lobbying or “caviar diplomacy” from Ankara or Baku can change that. •

Armed Conflicts:

Apr 18, 2016
The Global Epidemic of Child Warriors
By John Feffer

Apr 15, 2016
Time for a US Apology to El Salvador
By Raymond Bonner
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/gunmen-kill-policemen-polio-campaign-karachi-38533058

Gunmen Kill 7 Policemen During Polio Campaign in Karachi

By The Associated Press·KARACHI, Pakistan — Apr 20, 2016, 11:03 AM ET

Gunmen on motorcycles shot and killed seven Pakistani police officers involved in a polio vaccination campaign in two separate attacks Wednesday in the port city of Karachi, police said.

The slain officers had been deployed to protect health workers administering polio vaccinations. No health workers were harmed in the attacks in Karachi, the capital of southern Sindh province, local police official Mohammad Ijaz said.

Another senior police officer, Feroze Shah, said authorities had no plans to suspend the polio campaign despite the attacks.

Earlier, provincial Home Minister Suhail Anwar told the Pakistani Geo news network that the attacks that killed the seven officers were minutes apart. He said the attackers targeted police deployed in the city for the campaign to vaccinate children.

Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif strongly condemned Wednesday's "terrorist attack" Karachi. In a statement, he said police officers sacrificed their lives to secure the future of our coming generation.

Polio, which can cause paralysis and death, remains endemic in Pakistan.

Also Wednesday, the Pakistani army said troops had freed 24 police officers captured by a criminal gang earlier this month in the eastern Punjab province.

Army spokesman Lt. Gen. Asim Saleem Bajwa said the gang leader and his men surrendered during the police operation in Rajanpur district. The development came days after a notorious criminal gang, the Chutto, killed six policemen when police raided its hideout.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ssia-over-ukraine-dangerous-military-behavior

NATO Rebukes Russia Over Ukraine, `Dangerous' Armed Behavior

by James G Neuger
April 20, 2016 — 7:31 AM PDT
Updated on April 20, 2016 — 9:04 AM PDT

- U.S.-led alliance demands more Kremlin openness over war games

- First meeting in two years replays tensions of the last one


NATO scolded Russia for aggressive behavior that undermines Ukraine and magnifies the risk of accidental military confrontations elsewhere in Europe.

The first meeting of the two sides since June 2014 was conducted in the same spirit as the last one, with the U.S.-led alliance warning that Russia is tearing up the post-Cold War map and the Kremlin standing its ground.

“NATO and Russia have profound and persistent disagreements: today’s meeting did not change that,” North Atlantic Treaty Organization Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters Wednesday in Brussels.

The roundtable also reflected unease inside the 28-nation alliance over ties with Russia, with France and Germany more eager than one-time Soviet-dominated states in eastern Europe to keep open the channels of communication.

Alliance officials reported little progress in getting Russia to communicate in real time over its military drills and what Stoltenberg called “dangerous” fly-bys on NATO’s flanks. In the latest incidents in early April, Russian attack jets buzzed a U.S. warship and a reconnaissance plane in the Baltic region in separate encounters.

‘Deeply Disturbing’

Russia’s ambassador to the alliance, Alexander Grushko, declined to say how he responded to the appeal for more military-to-military contact. Speaking to reporters after the meeting, he also said the Kremlin has no direct control over the pro-Russian separatists who continue to hold wide swathes of eastern Ukraine.

“It was a decision of NATO to stop all projects of cooperation,” Grushko said. “We are open for dialogue and our position hasn’t changed.”

No date was set for another meeting, with both sides saying that they aren’t going back to “business as usual.” For the West, that means pressing ahead with the defensive buildup in eastern Europe as a form of low-cost deterrence, and pushing Russia to rein in the Ukraine rebels.

NATO’s Stoltenberg spoke of a “deeply disturbing” spate of recent cease-fire violations in Ukraine.

For its part, the Kremlin regards the eastern European reinforcements as U.S.-led aggression, an attempt to encircle or envelop Russia or, at the very least, to reinstate the “containment” policy of the Cold War.

Threats, Challenges

Underlying the tensions are “competing narratives” about the nature of power and the modern European order, which emerged in a brainstorming session by the European Leadership Network that brought together Western and Russian experts.

The relationship “is arguably at its lowest ebb since the mid-1980s and there is potential for it to get worse,” the ELN, a London-based think tank, said. “This could lead to a direct military confrontation, undermine worthwhile cooperation across Europe and could stifle attempts at global cooperation on a range of 21st century threats and challenges.”

While analogies to the superpower standoff make the rounds, the déjà vu is often overstated. Troop numbers on both sides are nowhere near the Cold War peak and the West sees Russia as a regional troublemaker, not the exporter of global revolution that it pretended to be in its Soviet guise.

Russia’s projection of force into Syria fits that pattern. So do the stepped-up military drills and tests of NATO’s air defenses in the Baltic region that have become commonplace since the seizure of Crimea and intervention in Ukraine in 2014 put President Vladimir Putin’s upgraded military on show.

In Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called the meeting at ambassadorial level a “good sign,” while pointing to “a whole series of sharp differences.” Speaking alongside her, President Dalia Grybauskaite of Lithuania, one of the Baltic republics often faced with Russian intimidation, said: “Channel of communication, yes, but not cooperation yet.”
 

Housecarl

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

I get the feeling that Beijing has got more than a RCT on alert. Even if that reported test of the DPRK IRBM failed spectacularly, their MRBMs are tested, are nuclear capable and can reach out more than enough to put some serious hurt on RoK, Japan and a significant chunk of Northern China including Beijing....

Contending-with-a-Nuclear-North-Korea_Fig3.jpg

http://www.npolicy.org/userfiles/image/Contending-with-a-Nuclear-North-Korea_Fig3.jpg

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...roops-along-North-Korea-border/9411461165635/

China deploying thousands of troops along North Korea border

Beijing’s military is worried North Korea could soon conduct its fifth nuclear test.

By Elizabeth Shim Contact the Author | April 20, 2016 at 11:32 AM

SEOUL, April 20 (UPI) -- China is deploying troops along its border with North Korea, as Pyongyang could be preparing a fifth nuclear test ahead of its Seventh Party Congress in May.

The Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy, a nongovernmental organization in Hong Kong, announced Wednesday that Beijing has dispatched 2,000 soldiers along the border, South Korean news service Newsis reported.

China has previously deployed troops along its border with North Korea.

In January after Pyongyang announced a "successful" hydrogen bomb test, China reportedly sent 3,000 soldiers to its northeastern region, and also sent troops during the North-South land mine provocation last August. In late 2013, China also dispatched troops in response to the execution of Kim's uncle-in-law Jang Sung Taek.

The center also said more Chinese military personnel were stationed at two major observation posts, and the guards are acting as lookouts 24 hours a day.

Some of the troops are responsible for measuring the radioactive material that could be emitted in the event of a North Korea nuclear test, the Center said.

Relations between Beijing and Pyongyang have deteriorated since Kim Jong Un fully assumed power in 2012. North Korea has continued to announce tests of nuclear weapons even as Beijing has repeatedly urged the country to work toward denuclearization.

According to the Hong Kong-based organization, the fraying ties could have been a driving force in a Chinese decision to stop providing fossil fuels to the North. That decision was made around the same time North Korea's Moranbong Band canceled its tour of China in December.

Kim had ordered the band's return in response to Beijing, the center stated.

North Korea movements at its Punggye-ri nuclear site have raised concerns regarding Pyongyang's plans for a test.

In Seoul, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken and Cho Tae-yong, deputy chief of South Korea's presidential national security office, agreed to strengthen pressure along different dimensions to force North Korea to change its nuclear strategy, Yonhap reported.

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•North Korea procuring Iranian missile technology, Israeli analyst says
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•North Korea has miniaturized nuclear weapons, Seoul researchers say
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://thehill.com/policy/defense/2...r-messaging-unconventional-warfare-strategies

House subpanel pushes 'unconventional warfare' in defense bill

By Rebecca Kheel - 04/19/16 03:52 PM EDT
Comments 2


A House subcommittee is pushing cyber and unconventional warfare in its portion of the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act.

The draft released Tuesday by the House Armed Services emerging threats and capabilities subcommittee calls for developing a strategy for unconventional warfare, such as enabling a resistance movement.

Included in the draft is a push for counter-messaging against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). The bill also specifically calls out threats from Russia and Iran.

“The committee remains concerned about the growing unconventional warfare capabilities and threats being posed most notably and recently by the Russian Federation and the Islamic Republic of Iran,” a summary of the draft reads.

“The committee also notes that most state-sponsors of unconventional warfare, such as Russia and Iran, have doctrinally linked conventional warfare, economic warfare, cyber warfare, information operations, intelligence operations, and other activities seamlessly in an effort to undermine U.S. national security objectives and the objectives of U.S. allies alike.”

Last year’s NDAA also called for a strategy on unconventional warfare. Since the Pentagon needs to coordinate with other agencies on the strategy, this year’s bill would call for progress reports should the Pentagon need more time deliver the strategy.

On cyber, the bill would give the Pentagon new emergency procurement powers to help recover from a potential cyber attack.

The Pentagon would also need to develop a new security clearance information technology system to replace the Office of Personnel Management system that was hacked.

The bill would also direct the comptroller general to look at how Cyber Command has progressed since it became operational six years ago.

For counter messaging, the bill would call for a comprehensive strategy. In addition to ISIS’ messaging, the committee is concerned about Russia’s messaging in Ukraine, according to the summary.

“Not only does the department need to consider how adversaries use such information strategies to support their operations and undermine our own,” the summary reads, “but the committee believes that the department should be developing an integrated strategy that can leverage, and when necessary combine with, allied and partner capabilities to maximize our messaging and its broader effects.”

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Rep. Doug Lamborn: House proposal reverses planned Army troop cuts

By: Tom Roeder • April 19, 2016• Updated: Today at 6:19 am

Planned Army troop cuts would be reversed under a measure that has the backing of the House Armed Services Committee.

U.S. Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colorado Springs, said the committee-backed plan would also block a Pentagon proposal to close military bases, boost space spending and halt proposed cuts to missile defense programs.

Lamborn, who sits on the committee, said Tuesday that blocking troop cuts is key to keeping the nation safe.

"We live in a dangerous world and American strength deters the bad actors," said Lamborn, who faces Democrat and GOP foes in his bid for a sixth term.

Related: US to send 200 more troops, Apache helicopters, to Iraq

The House version of the 2017 defense plan will head to the Senate for consideration.

The Army planned to cut its active-duty forces to 450,000 by 2017 as part of a Pentagon belt-tightening plan. That's down from a wartime height of 520,000 soldiers in 2012.

The House committee voted to hold Army rosters at 480,000 soldiers next year, according to an agreed version of the National defense Authorization Act released Tuesday.

Lamborn said stopping the cuts also means troop levels at Fort Carson will remain steady at about 24,500.

Other highlights from the House plan include as much as $5 billion in additional spending on military satellites and associated ground systems. The bill calls for development of new military weather and communication satellites.

In missile defense, the measure keeps $800 million that the Pentagon proposed to cut, while calling for a new national missile defense strategy and a study of expansion of missile defense programs to Europe.

The House also rebuffed Pentagon demands for a new Base Realignment and Closure Commission.

Lamborn said lawmakers are reluctant to close bases as threats grow in Europe, Asia and the Middle East. A string of earlier base closure rounds, most recently in 2005, make it increasingly difficult to part with Pentagon real estate, he said.

"The low-hanging fruit has already been picked," he said.

-

Contact Tom Roeder: 636-0240

Twitter: @xroederx
 

Housecarl

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http://www.wsj.com/articles/russia-moves-artillery-to-northern-syria-u-s-officials-say-1461153190

World | Middle East

Russia Moves Artillery to Northern Syria, U.S. Officials Say

Deployment is a sign Moscow and the Assad government are preparing for a return to full-scale fighting

By Adam Entous and Gordon Lubold
April 20, 2016 7:53 a.m. ET
72 COMMENTS

Russia has been moving artillery units to areas of northern Syria where government forces have massed, raising U.S. concern the two allies may be preparing for a return to full-scale fighting as the current cease-fire falters, U.S. officials said.

The recent Russian redeployments of the units and the forces that operate them have been accompanied by the return of some Iranian army forces to government-controlled areas close to the front lines, according to officials briefed on the intelligence. Russia, Iran and the Iranian-backed Lebanese Hezbollah movement have been Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s main supporters in the conflict.

U.S. concerns about the Russian military movements, and the negative impact they could have on the cease-fire and political negotiations in Geneva, prompted President Barack Obama’s call to Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday, officials said.

Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary, used unusually blunt language in describing the exchange between the two leaders, calling it an “intense conversation.”

Russian officials have voiced support for the partial cease-fire and the United Nations-mediated negotiations in Geneva, both in public and in private settings, according to U.S. officials.

Citing widening attacks by government forces, representatives of the main opposition broke off the latest round of indirect talks on Monday. Government forces have stepped up attacks in some areas in northern and central Syria in recent days, and one opposition negotiator on Tuesday described the truce as over.

Still, the cease-fire, which began Feb. 27, has held far longer than officials in Washington and in the region had expected. It has reduced the overall level of violence in Syria and brought about at least a temporary pause in the proxy fight between Russia, which has supported the Assad regime, and the U.S., which has supported the moderate opposition.

Mr. Obama and White House officials have warned in recent days that the cease-fire could collapse, without mentioning the Russian buildup. The White House declined to comment on the new intelligence. Russian officials in the U.S. didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

After the partial cease-fire took effect in late February, U.S. intelligence agencies tracked the movement of Russian artillery units south to areas where the Assad regime at the time was fighting Islamic State militants, particularly in the Tadmur and Palmyra areas.

Russian troops directly operate the artillery pieces, which have been used with devastating effect on the battlefield since last year, according to U.S. officials. Russia has also deployed advisers to support the Assad regime in its military campaign, officials said.

About two weeks ago, U.S. intelligence agencies began to detect the redeployment of artillery units to areas near the northern city of Aleppo, the opposition stronghold, and inside Latakia province, near where government forces have been gathering, according to a senior U.S. defense official.

The Russian artillery movements have increased in recent days, raising U.S. alarm about Moscow’s intentions, the official said.

U.S. intelligence agencies have indications that some of the newly-redeployed artillery pieces have been used in recent days in support of government forces, particularly in clashes with the Nusra Front, al Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria.

Both the Nusra Front and Islamic State were excluded from the cease-fire brokered by the U.S. and Russia in February.

U.S. officials say Russian forces in Syria have also stepped up the tempo of their air operations in support of the Assad regime in recent days. The Russians are currently conducting about a dozen airstrikes a day, compared with as many as 100 a day before the cease-fire took effect, according to the senior U.S. defense official.

Since the start of the truce, Obama administration officials have been divided over Mr. Putin’s seriousness about finding a political solution to the conflict and his willingness to have Mr. Assad leave office.

Another open question within the Obama administration has been over how much influence Moscow really has with the Assad regime.

U.S. officials pointed to recent statements from regime officials in Damascus about a planned offensive against rebel forces in their Aleppo stronghold in northern Syria. Russian officials told their American counterparts that the regime was bluffing about the offensive, but Moscow was noncommittal about getting Damascus to disavow the idea, either because the Russians knew Damascus wouldn’t listen or because they weren’t sure themselves what the Assad regime’s intentions were, or both, according to officials.

In private meetings with Russian officials, Central Intelligence Agency Director John Brennan has warned that the alternative to the current cease-fire could be a dangerous escalation on the battlefield, officials have said.

The CIA and its partners in the region have been drawing up a list of anti-artillery and antiaircraft weapons which could be provided to the moderate opposition if the cease-fire collapses and full-scale fighting resumes.

Write to Adam Entous at adam.entous@wsj.com and Gordon Lubold at Gordon.Lubold@wsj.com
 

Housecarl

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http://www.independent.co.uk/voices...s-are-behind-his-official-visit-a6992561.html

Voices
.
Obama knows 9/11 was linked to Saudi Arabia – its massive oil reserves are behind his official visit

Saudi Arabia's million barrel a day output, plus its strategic location in the Middle East, means the West must pay obeisance to the regional head-choppers

Robert Fisk | @indyvoices | 8 hours ago | 44 comments

Poor old Barack. Off he goes to Riyadh to talk to his so-called ally, Saudi Arabia. The Sunni Wahhabi kingdom long ago run out of patience with the US president, who befriended Shiite Iran and who failed to destroy the Alawite (read: Shiite) regime in Syria. So why is Obama even bothering coming to the Gulf? Does he have any friends left among the kings, emirs and princes of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the Emirates and Oman?

Obama won’t be entering the Saudi lions’ den. The Saudis were never as brave as lions – which is why they let the decidedly unprincely Osama bin Laden lead the Arab legion in Afghanistan – but the little cubs now trying to run the country are very angry.

The ambitious, ruthless deputy crown prince and defence minister, Mohamed bin Salman, launched the kingdom’s crazed war against the Houthi rebels in Yemen last year, convinced (without evidence) that Iran was arming them. The young Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubair – brilliant former Washington ambassador, a man with a silken, dangerously eloquent tongue – has no hesitation in denouncing Western weakness.

And, according to the New York Times, the Saudis have even threatened to sell billions of dollars of their US assets if Congress passes a bill allowing the Saudi government to be held responsible in American courts for the crimes against humanity of 9/11.

And that, indeed, is the foundation of the US-Saudi mess right now. Of the 19 hijackers involved in 9/11, 15 were Saudis, a fact diplomatically ignored in the years immediately following the attacks. The Saudis bankrolled the Taliban for many years.

The Americans believe – rightly – that Isis itself today receives much support from within Saudi Arabia, though they haven’t gone quite so far as to say the government is behind this. Saudi Arabia, in other words, is regarded in Washington as a very dodgy nation to be an ally.

But Obama’s got to pretend to King Salman (the crown prince’s Dad) that the US still stands four-square behind the kingdom’s security and sovereignty – he can hardly say he’s going to support Saudi ‘democracy’ for obvious reasons – and it’s clear that the country’s massive oil reserves, its million barrels a day output, strategic location and control of Sunni Muslim finances, means that the West has got to go on paying obeisance to all the regional head-choppers.

Be sure that when King Salman dies (and may he live for many years), David Cameron will once more lower the Union flag in mourning as he did for his predecessor.

The real problem is that – after years of fantasy in which, against all the evidence, the Americans persuaded themselves that the Saudis were a ‘force for moderation’ in the Middle East – the Obama administration has decided that Shiite Iran and the huge influence it exerts over the Shiite governments of Iraq and Syria (and over the Shiite Hizballah in Lebanon) is a better bet than the Sunni Salafists of Arabia. Hence the nuclear deal with Tehran’s new leaders, the end of sanctions against Iran and the slowly-dawning realisation among Sunnis that Washington is going to tolerate the continuation of Bashar al-Assad’s rule in Damascus.

Iran may, as it was under the Shah, become the policeman of the Gulf. The Saudis will have to share power with them. The US wants no more “free riders” (as Obama snottily described the Saudis) supporting Isis.

The Obama line, which will be peddled heavily this week, is that diplomacy rather than war must resolve the Sunni-Shia conflict; that America is not going to embark on any more military adventures in the Middle East (nor, one suspects, give much more support to Crown Prince Mohamed’s adventure in Yemen).

It would be good to know what the censored 28 pages of the official US 9/11 report said about the Saudis. Maybe Obama will mention that in Riyadh? Any more talk of withdrawing billions of US assets might just persuade the Americans to open the book and let us take a peek into those secrets.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.forbes.com/sites/timdais...cows-support-in-south-china-sea/#55cd03be623e

Apr 20, 2016 @ 04:26 AM 56,660 views

Backed Into A Corner: Friendless Beijing Seeks Moscow's Support In South China Sea

Tim Daiss, Contributor
Oil and gas markets journalist and geopolitical analyst based in Asia.

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- China is seeking Russian support in the disputed and increasingly volatile South China Sea

- Which super power will be the first to blink? The answer is neither one


China is seeking Russian support in the disputed and increasingly volatile South China Sea , even though Russia is not a claimant in the body of water. However, it is a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, as is China.

On Monday, China and Russia said that the South China Sea dispute should not be internationalized and called for its settlement based on negotiation and consultation, according to a report in China’s state-run media outlet Xinhua.

Of course, the problem with that joint statement is that to date China is not willing, nor will it be willing, to negotiate in the South China Sea unless other nations first consent to Beijing’s claim of historical ownership of the body of water.

On Tuesday, the drama continued. The Hong Kong-based The South China Morning Post reported that China is lobbying Russia for support in opposing international court proceedings launched by the Philippines over the South China Sea.

Philippines counters China’s claims

Long-time U.S. ally the Philippines filed a case against China in early 2013 with the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague less than a year after China’s controversial seizure of Scarborough Shoal, only around 140 miles from the Philippines and well within the Philippines’ 200-nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).

The Philippines is asking to Court to rule on several items: Whether China’s so-called U-shaped line that encompasses more then 80% of the South China Sea is compatible with the UN’s Convention of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), whether five of the eight features occupied by China should be considered submerged and therefore unable to generate a territorial sea or an EEZ, whether the remaining three features occupied by China are just rocks without a claim to an EEZ, and whether the Philippines is entitled to a full 200-nautical mile EEZ regardless of the existence of other occupied offshore features.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov during talks in Moscow that the two nations should join hands to oppose “internationalising” the disputes. “Both China and Russia should stay on guard against abuses of mandatory arbitration,” Wang said.

A communique after a meeting between Wang, Lavrov, and Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said that all related disputes in the South China Sea should be addressed through negotiations and agreements *between the parties concerned. Like Russia, India is not a South China Sea claimant, but typically questions the legitimacy of China’s claim to most of the South China Sea.

Friendless China

Just about friendless geopolitically, save its awkward relationship with the hermit kingdom North Korea and an often times big brother relationship with Cambodia, China’s attempt at gaining Russian support in the South China Sea is arguably a desperate but still calculated geopolitical move. No doubt, it’s designed to counter any adverse ruling by The Hague when it hears the Philippines’ case in May or June.

Moreover, since both China and Russia are permanent members of the UN Security Council, both countries can stop any UN attempt to help enforce a positive ruling for the Philippines.

Possible outcomes

The best that the Philippines can hope for, even with a favorable ruling from The Hague, will come in the court of worldwide public opinion. Moreover, if The Hague rules in favor of the Philippines, China will be backed into a geopolitical corner with no easy escape.

Beijing would not be able to honor any Hague ruling even if it wanted to. The Chinese masses indoctrinated in the 100-years of humiliation national narrative and with passions and nationalism reaching fever-pitch levels, would not tolerate it. No right thinking Chinese president, in the name of an international court, especially one founded and supported by Western powers, would agree to abide by its findings.

Even if The Hague gives a favorable ruling of only part of the Philippines’ case – a more likely scenario – China will still look like the proverbial bull in the China shop, no pun intended, and will appear increasingly as the bully and aggressor in Asia, picking on its smaller neighbors and defying the international order as it sees fit.

China certainly is in a no-win situation as far as The Hague proceedings are concerned, unless of course it rules against all of the Philippines’ claims, which is not likely given that Manila has a very strong case.

Unfortunately, for peace and stability in the Asia Pacific region, China will likely dig its heals in even deeper, seeking friends where it can, including from Russia led by strongman Vladimir Putin (no friend of world peace himself), and continue to defy the world.

Of course this is where the danger comes in.

China will not budge, other rival claimants, particularly Vietnam and the Philippines will continue to protest, while the U.S. will continue to send military aircraft and naval ships in the area to press its point for freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, in addition to placing more troops and military assets in the Philippines.

Thus, this forces the question: Which super power will be the first to blink? The answer is neither one , and that is what makes the South China Sea one of the most dangerous geopolitical flash-points of the first half of the 21-Century.

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