WAR 06-04-2016-to-06-10-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-idUSKCN0YT26N

World | Tue Jun 7, 2016 2:41pm EDT
Related: World

Venezuela security forces block new anti-Maduro protest

CARACAS | By Girish Gupta and Daniel Kai


Venezuelan security forces used tear gas to block hundreds of opposition protesters on Tuesday in the latest rally to demand a recall referendum to oust socialist President Nicolas Maduro.

Opposition leader Henrique Capriles, who is championing the push for a vote, was at the front of a crowd blocked by police and National Guard troops when they tried to begin a march to the national election board.

Officers fired several rounds of tear gas and sprayed an unidentified liquid on Capriles and others. Demonstrators chanted "I am hungry" and held up photos of jailed political activists.

"We are not giving up. Our enemy is Maduro. The problem is Maduro, not the National Guard," Capriles said at the scene.

Venezuela's opposition coalition won control of the National Assembly legislature in elections last December, thanks to public ire over a punishing economic crisis, and has vowed to bring down Maduro this year.

But ruling Socialist Party officials say there is now not time this year to organize the referendum, under the complicated norms and steps involved in getting to a vote. They say the opposition should have begun their drive in January instead of April, and included thousands of fraudulent signatures of dead people in an initial collection.

The opposition says a compliant election board, staffed mainly by Maduro loyalists, is deliberately dragging its feet on verifying a first batch of nearly 2 million signatures collected to begin the process.

"The election board is obeying strict orders from President Nicolas Maduro. We want (board president) Tibisay Lucena to see herself as a citizen, not a politician, and see the situation of the country," said one protester Maria Silva, 74.

"The children are dying of hunger and insecurity," Silva added.

Should Maduro, 53, lose a vote and leave office this year, a new presidential election would be held, but were he to exit in 2017, his vice president would take over. That would guarantee continuity for the ruling "Chavismo" movement - named for Maduro's late predecessor Hugo Chavez - for two more years.

As well as the opposition's street campaign, spontaneous demonstrations and looting are becoming more common amid worsening food shortages, frequent power and water cuts, and inflation that is the highest in the world.

Maduro, a former bus driver and long-serving foreign minister who narrowly won election to replace Chavez in 2013, accuses Capriles and other opposition leaders of promoting violence and seeking a coup with the help of the United States.


(Additional reporting by Eyanir Chinea and Diego Ore, writing by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Tom Brown)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Just thought I'd stick this here. It looks kinda cheesy to me but I bet that's all real gold leaf:


9m
Photo: Israeli PM Netanyahu meets with Vladimir Putin in Moscow and hails 'ties of great importance' - @netanyahu


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http://www.voanews.com/content/russia-israel-ties-grow-kremlins-influence-region/3366242.html

Russia-Israel Ties Grow With Kremlin's Influence in Region

Daniel Schearf
June 07, 2016 6:00 PM

MOSCOW — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's second meeting in Moscow with Russian President Vladimir Putin in less than two months Tuesday underscores increasingly closer relations between the U.S. ally and Russia as Moscow's influence grows in the Middle East.

Russia's military campaign in support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is showing no sign of ending, despite the Kremlin's March announcement of a partial withdrawal of forces. Moscow is stepping up relations with Iran as well, including military sales, following the nuclear deal to lift sanctions.

Israel's security concerns

But while most Western governments question Russia's intentions, Tel Aviv is more concerned about fighters from Iran and Lebanese Hezbollah, who also are supporting Assad in Syria.

Netanyahu wants Putin's security assurances that these groups, which vow Israel's destruction, will not acquire advanced Russian weapons being used in the Syria conflict via Moscow's ally in Damascus.

"Netanyahu can't but understand that even if Russia gives guarantees not to supply weapons to Hezbollah, it is not in a position to control the relevant links between Tehran and Damascus, whose special services have supplied, supply and will continue to supply the Party of Allah' with all that's necessary," said Sergey Balmasov of the Institute of the Middle East at the Russian International Affairs Council in emailed replies to VOA.

Both Russia and Israel have expressed satisfaction with a security agreement made on Netanyahu's last trip to Moscow.

"As the situation since the end of September 2015 shows, Moscow and Tel Aviv interact quite productively — Israel turned a blind eye to the repeated violations of its air space by Russian combat aircraft, while the Russians wouldn't see the Israeli air force hit the Iranians and Hezbollah," said Balmasov. "It is a kind of semi-official military technical cooperation."

Relations improving

Netanyahu's Moscow visit, his third in the past year, comes on the 25th anniversary of Israel-Russia relations and will be showcased by Russian authorities as another example of the West's failed isolation campaign.

Despite Russia's support for Damascus, and close ties with Iran, the Russia-Israeli relationship has been growing closer, even while tensions simmer between Moscow and the West.

"Israel's persistent consultations with Putin are just a reflection of the serious and gradually increasing cracks in the relationship between Israel and the United States," argued Balmasov.

Israel irked Washington and Brussels by staying neutral on Western sanctions against Russia over its annexation of Crimea and support for separatists in east Ukraine.

"Israel has some territories which U.S.A. does not consider Israeli territories which is very common to what is going on now with Russia," said senior researcher at the Oriental Studies Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences Dmitry Maryasis."It makes, maybe politically, the two countries closer to each other."

Israel in May appointed its first Russian speaking defense minister, Soviet-born Avigdor Lieberman, a right-wing politician who is considered close to Putin.

"Of course, the nomination of Avigdor Lieberman, who has long contacts with Moscow, including the time when he was a foreign minister, is a serious sign in relations between Israel and Russia," said Balmasov.

Limits of partnership

Despite Israel's neutrality on sanctions, trade with Russia shrank 32 percent in 2015, and the number of Russian tourists visiting Israel fell sharply, according to Russia's TASS news agency, a trend that both sides want reversed.

"In view of the quarrel between Russia and the West over Ukraine and Turkey and Syria, expressed in the sanctions war, Netanyahu intends to fill the niche left in the Russian market by the Turkish and European producers, especially agricultural," said Balmasov.

And although security cooperation between Russia and Israel is pragmatic and growing, analysts say it is not likely to reach the alliance level that Tel Aviv has with Washington anytime soon.

"Israel, of course, keeps in mind that Russia has close relations with Iran," said Maryasis. "And, Israel is not ready to cooperate in military with the country. If we speak for example about R&D and future technologies and so on — that the results of this R&D could be somehow found in Hezbollah camps or in Iran army camps."

And, like much of the world, Israel still has concerns and unanswered questions about Russia’s plans in Syria, said Balmasov.

“Accordingly, the Israelis need more certainty and understanding what the Russians really want in Syria: just to assert itself after the collapse of the USSR, to amuse [the] vanity of its leaders, or stay there for a long time?” he asked. “And if so, what is Israel to expect from its actions?”
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-turkey-blast-idUSKCN0YT0FB

World | Tue Jun 7, 2016 6:01pm EDT
Related: World

Car bomb targeting police kills 11, wounds 36 in Istanbul

ISTANBUL | By Humeyra Pamuk and Osman Orsal


A car bomb ripped through a police bus in central Istanbul during the morning rush hour on Tuesday, killing 11 people and wounding 36 near the main tourist district, a major university and the mayor's office.

The car was detonated as police buses passed, Istanbul Governor Vasip Sahin told reporters, in the fourth major bombing in Turkey's biggest city this year.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility but Kurdish militants have staged similar attacks on the security forces before, including one last month in Istanbul.

Security concerns were already hitting tourism and investor confidence. Wars in neighbouring Syria and Iraq have fostered a home-grown Islamic State network blamed for a series of suicide bombings, while militants from the largely Kurdish southeast have increasingly struck in cities further afield.

President Tayyip Erdogan vowed the NATO member's fight against terrorism would go on, describing the attack on officers whose jobs were to protect others as "unforgivable".

"We will continue our fight against these terrorists until the end, tirelessly and fearlessly," he told reporters after visiting some of the injured in a hospital near the blast site.

Sahin said the dead included seven police officers and four civilians and that the attack had targeted vehicles carrying members of a riot police unit. Three of the 36 wounded were in critical condition, he said.

The White House condemned the attack, and National Security Council spokesman Mark Stroh said in a statement, "This horrific act is only the most recent of many terrorist attacks against Turkey. The United States stands together with Turkey, a NATO ally and valued partner, as we confront many challenges in the region."

The bomb was planted in a rental car and was detonated by remote control, the Dogan news agency said, without citing its sources. It said four people had been detained.


Related Coverage
› U.S. ambassador condemns Istanbul attack, says stands 'shoulder to shoulder' with Turkey

The blast on the second day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan hit the Vezneciler district, between the headquarters of the local municipality and the campus of Istanbul University, not far from the city's historic heart. It shattered windows in shops and a mosque and scattered debris over nearby streets.

"There was a loud bang, we thought it was lightning but right at that second the windows of the shop came down. It was extremely scary," said Cevher, a shopkeeper who declined to give his surname. The blast was strong enough to topple all the goods from the shelves of his store.

The police bus that appeared to have borne the brunt of the explosion was tipped onto its roof on the side of the road. A second police bus was also damaged. The charred wreckage of several other vehicles lined the street.


Related Video

Video
Car bomb blast in Turkey


GUNSHOTS

Several witness reported hearing gunshots, although there was confusion as to whether attackers had opened fire or whether police officers had been trying to protect colleagues.

"We were told that it was police trying to keep people away from the blast scene," said Mustafa Celik, 51, who owns a tourism agency in a backstreet near the blast site. He likened the impact of the explosion to an earthquake.

"I felt the pressure as if the ground beneath me moved. I've never felt anything this powerful before," he told Reuters.

U.S. Ambassador John Bass condemned the "heinous" attack and said on Twitter the United States stood "shoulder to shoulder" with Turkey in the fight against terrorism.

Turkey has suffered a spate of bombings this year, including two suicide attacks in tourist areas of Istanbul blamed on Islamic State, and two car bombings in the capital, Ankara, which were claimed by a Kurdish militant group.

That has hit tourism in a nation whose Aegean and Mediterranean beaches usually lure droves of European and Russian holidaymakers. Russians stopped coming after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane over Syria last November.

The number of foreign visitors to Turkey fell by 28 percent in April, the biggest drop in 17 years.

"Business hasn't been very good anyway. We're now expecting fast check-outs and we think it will get worse," said Kerem Tataroglu, general manager of the Zurich Hotel, less than 300 meters from where Tuesday's blast happened.

While attacks by Islamic State have tended to draw more attention in the West, Turkey is equally concerned by the rise in attacks by Kurdish militants who had previously concentrated for the most part on the southeast.

The outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has waged an armed insurgency against the state since 1984, claimed responsibility for a May 12 car bomb attack in Istanbul that wounded seven people. In that attack, a parked car was also blown up as a bus carrying security force personnel passed by.


(Additional reporting by Murat Sezer, Ayla Jean Yackley, Ece Toksabay; Writing by Nick Tattersall, Daren Butler and David Dolan; Editing by Andrew Heavens, Toni Reinhold)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/07/politics/us-china-planes-unsafe-intercept/

U.S.: Chinese jet makes 'unsafe' intercept of Air Force plane

By Barbara Starr, CNN Pentagon Correspondent
Updated 3:49 PM ET, Tue June 7, 2016


(CNN) — A U.S. Air Force RC-135 reconnaissance aircraft flying Tuesday in international airspace over the East China Sea was intercepted in an "unsafe manner" by a Chinese J-10 fighter jet, several defense officials tell CNN.

The Chinese jet was never closer than 100 feet to the U.S. aircraft, but it flew with a "high rate of speed as it closed in" on the U.S. aircraft, one official said. Because of that high speed, and the fact it was flying at the same altitude as the U.S. plane, the intercept is defined as unsafe.

The officials did not know if the U.S. plane took any evasive action to avoid the Chinese aircraft or at what point the J-10 broke away. It is also not yet clear if the U.S. will diplomatically protest the incident.

Officials said the RC-135 was on a routine mission.

The Chinese Embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

News of the intercept comes as Secretary of State John Kerry and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew are in Beijing for the annual U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue. Lew is pressing China to lower barriers to foreign business and cut excess steel production, with limited success.

The intercept also occurred just days after Defense Secretary Ash Carter and top military officials returned from a regional security meeting in Singapore. At a press conference during that meeting, Carter said the U.S. would not be deterred from maintaining a military presence in the region reiterating "America's determination to, and resolve to, fly, sail, or operate wherever international law allows."

During that same press conference, Adm. Harry Harris, the head of U.S. Pacific Command, said military relations with China were improving.

RELATED: China: "We have no fear of trouble" over South China Sea

"We've seen positive behavior the last several months with China. Every now and then you'll have a -- you'll see an incident in the air that we may judge to be unsafe. Those are really, over the course of time, rare," Harris said.

Harris said China and the U.S. both will participate in a major upcoming military exercise.

But this latest intercept comes on the heels of another intercept by China last month.

In that encounter at least two Chinese J-11 tactical aircraft carried out an "unsafe" intercept of a U.S. EP-3 reconnaissance aircraft that was conducting a routine mission in international airspace over the South China Sea, according to U.S. officials. The Chinese jets came within 50 feet of the U.S. aircraft at one point during that incident.

At the time, Beijing said the U.S. EP-3 reconnaissance aircraft flew close to China's island province of Hainan and China's jets "kept a safe distance throughout, without taking any dangerous actions."

"It needs to be pointed out that American aircraft have constantly entered China's coastal waters conducting reconnaissance, which has posed a serious threat to China's maritime and air safety," Hong Lei, Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman, said.

CNN's Theodore Schleifer contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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http://nationalinterest.org/feature/america-needs-break-its-old-habits-russia-16475

America Needs to Break its Old Habits on Russia

Washington’s strategy is a relic of a bygone era.

Thomas E. Graham
June 6, 2016

The United States needs a new grand strategy for Russia. As the Ukraine crisis continues, there should be no doubt that the goal that had animated policy since the end of the Cold War—the slow but steady integration of Russia into the Euro-Atlantic community—is beyond reach. Russia is no longer interested, if it ever was. Its ambition is to fortify itself as an independent great power based in central Eurasia. It is sharpening its challenge to the U.S.-led world order.

American strategy was not without its successes. It enhanced Euro-Atlantic security and prosperity, at least until the George W. Bush administration overreached in pressing to bring Georgia and Ukraine into NATO. But the strategy was tragically flawed. Integration entailed Russia’s transformation into a free-market, democratic nation-state, which we never had the power to effect, try as we might. That depended on the choices of the Russians themselves. In retrospect, we erred fundamentally in putting the success of our grand strategy in the hands of another country with interests not congruent with ours and leaders determined to run it as they saw fit.

To formulate a new grand strategy, we need to see Russia clearly. Today, our debate is dominated by extremes, by those who see Russia as the top geopolitical threat and those who simply believe it does not matter much any longer. Each position ignores a basic truth.

To begin with, Russia does matter, as would any country with one of the world’s largest nuclear arsenals, a world-class scientific community to develop the military applications of advanced technologies, the world’s richest endowment of natural resources and a location abutting regions of undisputed strategic importance for the United States: Europe, the Middle East and East Asia. Moreover, even in reduced circumstances, Russia retains the habits and mindset of a global power. It has a first-class diplomatic corps, an increasingly capable military and the will to use both. It will remain a key element of the emerging world order for years to come.

At the same time, Russia faces formidable challenges that will limit the dimensions of any possible threat to the United States.

Geopolitically, for the first time in the modern age, it is surrounded by regions that are more dynamic than it is. To the east is China, to the west Europe—in disarray now, but with potential power that dwarfs Russia’s—and to the south a region overflowing with primal energy. Beyond Eurasia lies the United States, the preeminent world power by any measure.

This geopolitical predicament sets the contours of Russia’s own grand strategy. It seeks to reassert its primacy in the former Soviet space, its historical sphere of influence and the foundation of its geopolitical heft. It hopes to use China to counterbalance the United States strategically and the European Union commercially. It exploits the fissures in Europe to prevent the consolidation of a potential superpower. And it aspires to compel the United States to act like a normal great power, that is, one that, to advance its interests, must take into account those of other great powers, including first of all Russia.

Whether Russia can succeed in all these tasks is an open question. At the moment, it appears hard-pressed to maintain its position in the former Soviet space against encroachments from the West and China, let alone reliably extend its influence into other regions. One thing is certain, however: to succeed, Russia must restore its historical dynamism. Whether it can is another open question.

Today, the Russian state may retain the ability to mobilize the resources of society for its own purposes, including modernizing the military, but the structure of power impedes the unleashing of the country’s creative energies to generate the resources the state needs to pursue its great-power ambitions over the long term. Reforming that structure is, however, fraught with disaster in the minds of an elite with vivid memories of Gorbachev’s perestroika, which led, as Putin once said, to one of the greatest geopolitical catastrophes of the twentieth century, the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Together, the geopolitical puzzle and the domestic conundrum feed a sense of vulnerability. We see the signs in the steps the Kremlin is taking at a time of economic crisis—the creation of national guard subordinate directly and solely to Putin, the growing pressure an autonomous political actors—to preempt a repeat during the Duma elections this September of the unnerving unrest that erupted after the last ones in 2011. We see the signs in the repeated reminders that Russia is a nuclear power and the provocative strategic reconnaissance missions in Europe. The sense of vulnerability is only deepened by the possibility that Russia has entered a prolonged period of stagnation. Arguably, Russia is acting more assertively now because this may be its moment of maximal power vis-à-vis the United States and China, and thus the time to force the question of world order and secure Russia’s place as a great power in the twenty-first century.

What then should be the guiding principles for the next administration’s Russia policy?

The starting point is accepting that we have moved into a new era. There is no need for a reset or the pursuit of strategic partnership or the restoration of business as usual. Nor should we return to the harsh adversarial relationship of the Cold War, with a focus on containment. Rather, we should approach Russia based on a hard calculation of national interests and an unsentimental, nonideological assessment of how Russia might help us advance or thwart our goals. We should focus more on its external behavior and less on its internal politics. The relationship that will emerge will be a mix of competition and cooperation, of resistance and accommodation—in short, a normal relationship between major world powers.

In this broad framework, we should shape policy to reflect the differing roles Russia plays from the standpoint of American national interests, from region to region and issue to issue.

In Europe, for example, Russia has challenged our interests by violating the accepted norms of interstate relations and working to erode Europe’s unity. We need to resist. In East Asia, by contrast, Russia could be a partner in forging a flexible balance of power to channel China’s rise in ways that do not undermine core American interests. In the Middle East, with its recent actions in Syria and active diplomacy, Russia has forced its way to the table of the region’s geopolitical reckoning. Here Russia will be at times a partner, at times a rival as we try to resolve the Syrian crisis and, more importantly, forge an enduring equilibrium among the key regional powers. Meanwhile, despite dire warnings of a coming geopolitical confrontation, the Arctic can continue to be a zone of cooperation in safeguarding a fragile ecosystem and exploiting abundant commercial opportunities.

On transnational issues, such as nonproliferation, international terrorism, energy security, climate change and pandemic diseases, there is much potential for cooperation, as long as we avoid exaggerating the extent to which our interests are shared. As recent experience in Syria has demonstrated, the United States and Russia understand the threat of terrorism in different ways, propose differing ways to counter it and accord it different ranks in their national priorities. On all other transnational issues, we encounter analogous divergences in interpretation, response and priority.

A major challenge will be crafting a coherent policy out of the various approaches to Russia on discrete issues. How do we structure Ukraine sanctions so as not to drive a weakened Russia into China’s arms in East and Central Asia? Are there ways we can engage Russia in the Middle East that do not jeopardize our interests there while helping to defuse tensions in Europe? As much as we might want to compartmentalize issues, we cannot, because for Russians everything is linked and trust is not divisible, and because a vast disparity in power tempts Russians to seek asymmetrical and unorthodox responses to the challenges they believe we pose to them. In these circumstances, Russia policy needs to be overseen by a senior official close to the president who can break down the bureaucratic stovepipes and integrate the various policy components of into a coherent whole.

The next administration will have its work cut out for it as it crafts a policy that needs to break with the grand strategy of the post–Cold War period and forge a new one. Effective policy will require complicated trade-offs within and across issues in a global context that is increasingly fluid. We will have to make tough choices. But it should not be beyond our capacity to formulate and execute such a nuanced policy. Moreover, that is the only path to a Russia policy that reliably advances America’s interests now and well into the future.

Thomas Graham, managing director at Kissinger Associates, was the senior director for Russian on the National Security Council staff 2004–07.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.newstatesman.com/world/2016/06/next-balkan-wars

6 June 2016

The next Balkan wars

Europe is facing a new, potentially violent crisis as territorial and ethnic tensions reignite in the troubled south-east of the continent.

By Timothy Less

After some years of peace, the western Balkans are again descending into instability. Across the region, people are taking to the streets, demanding the resignation of governments. Thousands are fleeing abroad in search of jobs and opportunities. A violent strand of Wahhabism is taking hold among the region’s Muslim population. Perhaps most worryingly of all, the threat of disintegration is returning, as malcontent minorities try to divide their states.

Bosnia has long been the most dysfunctional state in the region, wasted by civil war in the 1990s and afflicted by ethnic divisions ever since. The Serbs and Croats have never abandoned their goal of separation. Milorad Dodik, the president of Republika Srpska (Bosnia’s Serbian “entity”), is being squeezed by political rivals at home and investigated by police in Sarajevo for alleged money laundering. To shore up his position, he has threatened a referendum on independence for Republika Srpska, scheduled for 2018.

Not far behind is Kosovo, an impoverished plateau in the Šar Mountains. It is unrecognised by half of the world, run by a corrupt elite and saddled with an embittered Serb minority. After years of resistance, Kosovo’s Serbs have recently extracted the right to territorial autonomy from the country’s notional EU supervisors. This has provoked a ferocious backlash from Albanian nationalists, who have attacked the parliament and held a series of violent street demonstrations.

Meanwhile, Macedonia is in chaos following the leaking of tapes that led to accusations that the former prime minister Nikola Gruevski had spied on the population and had been involved in corruption, electoral fraud and outright criminality. This has outraged the unhappy Albanian minority, which blames its leaders for upholding an illegitimate government instead of its community rights. In response, this group is demanding the federalisation of the state, auguring its potential disintegration. In the Balkans, it all eventually comes back to nationalism.

While local factors go some way to explaining the turmoil, however, they don’t tell us why the region as a whole is experiencing such instability, or why events are turning for the worse. The key to understanding the malaise is to recognise the Balkans’ position as a borderland between great powers. Throughout history, when one of these powers has wielded hegemony in the region, or a concert of powers has agreed a settled division, peace has generally prevailed. When no single power has been dominant or, worse, when powers have competed for control, chaos has invariably ensued. The Ottoman era marked the longest period of peace in modern times. But when the empire went into decline in the 19th century, nationalists across the Balkans seized the opportunity for independence – first the Greeks, then the Serbs and finally all the rest, helped by an opportunistic Russia, which sought to destabilise its Ottoman rival.

Violence continued into the 20th century as the collapse of the European land empires untethered the region. The Balkan wars of the 1910s, in which emerging states such as Albania, Montenegro and Serbia fought to define their borders, were followed by two world wars, in which Austria, Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union all invaded the territory.

The western Balkans were finally pacified in the postwar period. Bulgaria and Romania passed to Soviet control and the two superpowers agreed to maintain a unified Yugoslavia as a strategic buffer between their respective spheres of influence. Wedged between Nato and the Warsaw Pact, with no room for manoeuvre, and a strongman, Tito, to maintain order at home, the locals put their enmities to one side.

With the end of the Cold War, the superpowers largely lost interest in the Balkans and released their grip on Yugoslavia. Romania and Bulgaria, free of ethnic entanglements, managed to find their balance. But the western Balkans were set adrift and violence returned as Serbs and others took up arms to forge a new order on the wreckage of the old multinational communist state.

Stability was eventually restored when the United States, which emerged as the undisputed superpower in the 1990s, imposed a new imperial settlement on the region. In Croatia, Washington helped the local army to crush the breakaway Republic of Serbian Krajina. In Bosnia, the US bombed Serbian positions, decisively tipping the balance of power in favour of the central government that had endured three years of military losses. In doing so, Washington was interested in promoting not only peace but also justice. After the brutality of the Serbian military campaign, with its terrorising and expulsion of other ethnic groups, basic morality determined that the Serbs be denied their wartime goal of independence from the rest of Bosnia.

The result was the Dayton Agreement of 1995, a delicate compromise in which Serbs (and Croats) agreed to remain part of a unified Bosnian state. In return, the Serbs were given a self-governing entity – Republika Srpska – on half of the territory of Bosnia, while Croats gained limited self-government within a new Muslim-Croat federation.

Having dictated the terms of Dayton, the US, in effect, became its guarantor, supported by its European allies. It established a huge civilian presence on the ground, intended to steer Bosnia towards a durable peace. The Office of the High Representative adjudicated in ethnic disputes, clamped down on nationalist rhetoric and focused the locals on questions of social and economic reform rather than borders and territory. If politicians refused to co-operate, they were removed from their positions or presented with criminal charges. Nato troops on the ground did the enforcing.

***

When conflict broke out in Kosovo between Albanian separatists and their rulers in Belgrade in 1999, the US similarly imposed itself on the territory, using overwhelming force to expel the Serbian army, before setting up a civilian mission, Unmik, to steer a unified country towards a sustainable peace, as it had done in Bosnia.

With stability in both of these countries still fragile, nationalist conflicts elsewhere in the western Balkans could not be allowed to jeopardise Washington’s unfinished efforts at multi-ethnic state-building. When Macedonia’s unhappy Albanian minority launched a short-lived insurgency in 2001, the US clamped down on it with a settlement that forced Albanians to abandon the goal of separation in return for limited self-government. Macedonia held.

A similar logic applied to other states in the region. Through the 2000s, the US extended its presence in Albania, slowed down the secession of Montenegro and, with the fall of Slobodan Milosevic in 2000, implanted itself in Serbia, where it demanded democratic reform and Western integration in place of a discredited nationalism.

In this respect, the late 1990s and early 2000s can be seen as marking a restoration of order in the western Balkans after the chaos of the immediate post-Yugoslav period. With Washington at the helm, buttressed by European manpower and money, nationalists and separatists were disempowered and multi-ethnicity became the watchword. Many locals were frustrated with the American-led settlement, whether they were minorities such as Bosnian Serbs and Macedonian Albanians, who had ended up living in someone else’s state, or Bosniaks and Macedonians, who opposed the territorial concessions granted to violent minorities.

Confronted with overwhelming American power and the absence of any other power to whom they could appeal, there was little that the peoples of the western Balkans could do to change things. Turkey was content, concerned above all with peace on its land route to the markets of Europe. And Russia, while sympathetic to the plight of the Serbs, had no wish to encourage separatism in places such as Chechnya by questioning the new order in the Balkans.

However, this attempt at order was not to last. Matters went into reverse in the second half of the 2000s when the US withdrew its forces from the region to concentrate on more pressing issues elsewhere in the world. Its parting shot was to engineer the independence of Kosovo in 2008. With the last piece in the Balkan jigsaw in place – at least as Washington saw it – the US left it to the EU to finish the job of transforming the region’s turbulent states into prosperous and stable polities.

In tactical terms, the EU adopted a different approach to the US, replacing the hard power of the American military with the soft power of inducement – not least because, without an army, the EU had no real stick to wield. What it offered instead was a compact known as “conditionality”. For its part, Brussels agreed to admit the western Balkans into the EU, with all the benefits that this entailed – money, trade, freedom to travel and the chance for the locals to be reunited with their ethnic kin in a borderless Europe. And, for their part, the locals were expected to meet the conditions for entry to the EU, as the central Europeans had done before them.

Almost from the start, however, things failed to go to plan because the locals wouldn’t knuckle down to reform. By definition, the states of the western Balkans were eastern Europe’s laggards, blighted by the legacies of war as well as nostalgia for Yugoslav-style socialism and the absence of any tradition of democracy, liberalism or free markets.

Sometimes, the EU pushed issues that were important in a Western context, such as prison reform or gender rights, but just not a priority for the locals, who were more concerned with establishing the territory of the state, or changing the state they lived in. At other times, the required reforms cut across the interests of the elites who were making fortunes running a rentier economy.

***

The most resistant state was Bosnia, where the conflict never truly ended and where each ethnic group used the integration process to advance its core political goal: centralisation in the case of Bosniaks, separation in the case of the Serbs. Brussels would push an area of policy – the environment, say – and recommend a new agency to oversee compliance. Bosniaks would insist on one agency (at the central level) and Serbs would insist on two (at entity level, including one for Republika Srpska). Invariably, this was where the process got stuck.

So while the policy of conditionality was intended as the mechanism for stabilising the region, its effect was the opposite. In the absence of reform, the region remained stuck in political limbo, beyond the EU’s outer frontier. The EU began to lose control with the onset of the eurozone crisis, which brought the teleological project of building a European superstate to a halt. As firefighting and crisis management became the norm, the EU ceased to enlarge. With so many problems to solve, the last thing Europe needed was to admit a collection of corrupt, impoverished and ethnically divided states, all with potential veto powers and a treaty obligation to adopt the euro.

Indeed, many of the EU’s problems seemed to emanate from the Balkans. Most obviously, there was Greece’s mismanagement of its economy, which posed a mortal threat to the survival of the euro*zone and, by extension, the EU. But as Europe descended into recession, the issue of migration from Bulgaria and Romania also became a crucial political topic – and remains so today, as migrants and refugees from the chaos in the Middle East use the Balkans as a conduit to Europe.

In this context, no one was surprised when, in 2009, the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, publicly concluded that the EU needed to pause its policy of enlargement. All of this had an impact on the region, which interpreted it as Europe’s drawbridge closing. To all intents and purposes, the EU had reneged on its bargain with the western Balkans, which traded the prize of membership for good behaviour. All that remained was the prospect that one day, years in the future, after multiple reforms, the states of the region might join the EU, if it was in any position to enlarge and if it even still existed.

This changed the balance of risks and opportunities for those aspiring to join. Why continue with reform, especially when this implied serious economic pain? Was the EU even a desirable place to be? Greece’s example was hardly encouraging, nor that of Croatia, which squeezed its way into the EU in 2013 only to become the new sick man of Europe. Then the UK began to consider exit – hardly a vote of confidence.

Across the region, the reform process slowed even further. States such as Macedonia and Serbia shifted their focus towards the emerging economies of Turkey, Russia and China. Internal stability began to decline, aggravated by the recession that the EU exported to the region. Albania, Macedonia and others experienced mass demonstrations. Separatists began to renew their challenge to the American-imposed order, led by the Bosnian Serbs.

This is not to say there hasn’t been formal progress towards joining the EU. In the past couple of years, almost every country in the western Balkans has taken a step closer. Bosnia and Kosovo have been offered stabilisation and association agreements, the first step on the road to membership. Albania has been recognised as an official EU candidate. Serbia has opened membership negotiations. Montenegro, the most advanced country in the region, has closed several negotiating “chapters”. However, this bureaucratic progress does not necessarily reflect progress on the ground – in some cases, it signifies the opposite.

More precisely, the integration process has become a pretence that suits all sides. The EU can pretend the project of integration continues even as the eurozone and migration crises rage. And regional governments can pretend they are steering their countries towards a better future, for which they are richly rewarded by Brussels.

It is possible that a tiny country such as Montenegro will scrape into the EU on the back of this make-believe and Serbia will make some progress. But for other Balkan states, their journey towards Brussels will be more like that of Turkey, the eternal European aspirant. In reality, the western Balkans is once again losing its mooring.

The waning influence of the West has created an opening for new external powers, such as Russia, which has adopted a more active policy in the Balkans since the onset of the “new cold war”. Unquestionably, Russia is now a major influence on the region, especially in the Christian Orthodox countries of Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Bulgaria and Greece. But its most significant involvement is in Bosnia.

In the past couple of years, Russia has feted Republika Srpska’s President Dodik, shielded Bosnian Serbs from accusations of genocide, called for an end to international supervision and, if media reports are correct, encouraged Bosnian Serbs to press their demands for independence.

Russia is not overtly trying to overturn the regional order. Instead, its aim is to bolster its alliances, deter the expansion of Nato and defend its economic interests in the Balkans. But regional disorder could still be the outcome. If Russia is cornered by the West over Ukraine, Moscow could trigger a serious regional crisis that embroils the EU and Nato, simply by giving a green light to the Bosnian Serbs.

A domino effect would then take hold. The departure of the Republika Srpska would open up the question of Serbia’s borders and encourage Kosovo’s Serbs to separate themselves completely from their country’s Albanian population. This would provoke Serbia’s Albanian minority, who live in an enclave adjacent to Kosovo, to make a similar break from Belgrade. Macedonia’s Albanians would then try to separate from their Slavic compatriots, fuelling the creation of a “Greater Albania”. Bosnian Croats would seek to integrate their territory with Croatia. And many in Montenegro would seek close relations with an expanded Serbian state. The West would undoubtedly refuse to recognise any of this to prevent the onset of violence but the facts on the ground would speak for themselves.

Any new Balkan conflict would draw in a wider cast of players. Russia would not sit by and let others determine the outcome of events; too much is at stake. The plight of Muslim Bosniaks and Albanians would draw in foreign jihadists, as happened in the wars of the 1990s – only in much greater numbers, given the upsurge in Islamism in Europe and the Middle East.

Meanwhile, several EU states would struggle to avoid entanglement. Croatia, which has recently adopted a more nationalist posture, would inevitably intervene in Bosnia on behalf of the Croat population. Bulgaria and Greece would take a keen interest in the fate of rump Macedonia after the departure of the Albanians.

All this leads to a sobering conclusion. As the EU loses its dominance in the Balkans, so the region’s unresolved nationalisms are returning to the surface on a bed of popular discontent. The Balkans have the potential to blow their problems back into Europe, entangling the EU in a new, potentially violent regional crisis. This may not happen tomorrow but, as the EU’s influence wanes, the day of reckoning draws ever closer.

Ideally, the EU would avert this possibility by fixing its internal problems, reviving the goal of enlargement and stabilising the region by means of integration, as has long been the plan. Yet, as matters stand, that looks like wishful thinking.

Timothy Less is the director of the Nova Europa political risk consultancy

This article first appeared in the 02 June 2016 issue of the New Statesman, How men got left behind
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.city-journal.org/html/jihad-goes-14468.html

books and culture

The Jihad Goes On

Two recent books look at the state of Islamic radicalism—and the U.S. response—15 years after 9/11.

Judith Miller
June 6, 2016
Arts and Culture
Comments 5

United States of Jihad: Investigating America’s Homegrown Terrorists, by Peter Bergen (Crown, 400 pp., $28)

Playing to the Edge: American Intelligence in the Age of Terror, by Michael V. Hayden (Penguin, 464 pp., $30)

In mid-April, President Barack Obama boasted that America and its allies were winning the fight against the Islamic State. In a rare visit to Central Intelligence Agency headquarters, Obama noted that though ISIS could still inflict “horrific violence,” America’s 11,500 air strikes had put the group on its heels. “We have momentum,” the president said, “and we intend to keep that.” Only days before, however, senior administration officials sounded gloomier about the state of the war. While American air strikes and other operations had killed 25,000 ISIS fighters in Iraq and Syria, incinerated hundreds of millions of dollars that ISIS had stolen from banks and seized from kidnappings and extortion, forced it to cut salaries by a third, and taken back some territory it had seized in Iraq and Syria, the terror group now had roots in 15 countries and continued to expand its reach in Europe, North Africa, and Afghanistan. Deputy Secretary of State Anthony Blinken told senators that despite the progress, America and its allies had failed to stop “the recruitment, radicalization, and mobilization of people, especially young people, to engage in terrorist activities.” In February, James Clapper, President Obama’s director of national intelligence, testified that ISIS remained not only the nation’s “preeminent terrorist threat,” but that al-Qaida and its affiliates were “positioned to make gains in 2016.” ISIS, he said later, was a “phenomenon.”

Is the threat of ISIS to Americans at home and abroad growing or waning? What has prompted its rise and that of like-minded militant Islamists? And most crucially, how can America and its allies defeat them and their seductive extremist ideology?

No shortage of books has appeared on the issue of Islamic terrorism since al-Qaida’s attacks on New York and Washington on September 11. The rise of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s al-Qaida in Iraq, which evolved into the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, is compellingly described in Black Flags, Joby Warrick’s riveting account of how ISIS, aided partly by the strategic errors of Presidents Bush and Obama, managed to seize and impose its barbaric, authoritarian rule on a territory the size of Great Britain. Published last year, the book won a Pulitzer Prize. It was a worthy successor to The Looming Tower, Lawrence Wright’s majestic 2006 account of the rise of al-Qaida. Now, new books by Peter Bergen, a CNN national security analyst and professor at Arizona State University who was the first reporter to interview bin Laden for an American broadcast network, and Michael V. Hayden, a former director of the National Security Administration and the Central Intelligence Agency, enhance our understanding of the spread of ISIS and like-minded jihadi groups; the appeal of the extremism underlying them; how law enforcement, intelligence agencies, and American Muslims have responded to the threat of Islamist terror; and how that appeal might be reduced.

There is no more diligent chronicler of Islamic extremism than Bergen. In United States of Jihad, he tries not only to explain how some 330 American citizens arrested on terrorism-related charges since 9/11 joined al-Qaida, ISIS, and other Islamist terror groups, but also to assess the effectiveness of President Obama’s counterterrorism campaign against what he calls “Binladenism,” the violent extreme of the Islamist spectrum. With impressive access to intelligence and law-enforcement officials, Bergen guides readers through the evolution of the threat and the continuing debates among analysts. His sources have strong views about whether the gravest Islamist threat to the homeland comes from al-Qaida or ISIS, or from homegrown terror perpetrated by radicalized young American Muslims acting largely on their own.

As it turns out, Bergen argues, both views have merit. While al-Qaida organized and directed the deadliest-ever attacks in England and an abortive attack to bring down seven American and Canadian jets leaving Heathrow Airport—a plot that could have produced 9/11-scale carnage in North America—so-called “lone wolves” have been the source of “all deadly jihadist attacks in the United States since 9/11,” he writes. This preoccupies Bergen because such homegrown terrorists are, in many ways, “ordinary Americans.” Four out of five are U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Their average age is 29; more than a third are married and have children; 12 percent have spent time in jail (as compared with 9 percent of all American males); 10 percent had mental issues, a lower incidence than in the general population. Over 40 percent had a social media presence, either to post jihadist content or to use the Internet operationally. Those drawn to ISIS and the war in Syria are even younger than previous generations of American jihadists; their average age is 25, four years younger than al-Qaida recruits. Teenage girls—the youngest 15—make up one of six recruits. Jihadism has become “as American as apple pie,” said Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born leader of al-Qaida in Yemen who was, until his drone death in 2011, the most influential extremist cleric in the English-speaking world.

Despite this jarring assessment, Bergen echoes President Obama’s conclusion that Islamic terrorism poses no “existential” threat to America. And he repeats the invidious comparison between American deaths in car accidents and those from domestic terrorism, noting that in any year since 9/11, Americans are 12,000 times more likely to die in traffic mishaps than in terrorist attacks. True enough—more Americans die each year slipping in bathtubs than are killed by terrorism, too. But cars and bathtubs, unlike jihadists, are not trying to kill Americans.

Bergen seems ambivalent about law enforcement’s counterterrorism efforts. He applauds the FBI’s dramatic psychological and bureaucratic shift from prosecuting terrorists who have already killed to preventing the next attack, but he scoffs at some of their efforts. While al-Qaida’s core group in Pakistan has mounted six plots and its Yemen branch has staged two, he observes, the FBI has engineered 30 sting or “disruption” operations, many involving “hapless deadbeats” whose “cockamamie” schemes had “never gotten past the drawing room stage.” Some of the disrupted plots that Bergen describes clearly involved mentally unstable people. But before 9/11, FBI agents or police officers might well have dismissed the notion that 19 foreign extremists, armed mainly with box cutters, speaking little English, and mostly ignorant of life in America, could board U.S. passenger jets and fly them into iconic buildings.

Bergen also criticizes the New York Police Department for conducting alleged “fishing expeditions” after 9/11, which, he claims, violated the rights of the city’s Muslims. Associated Press reporters won numerous prizes, including the Pulitzer, for writing more than 30 stories on the NYPD’s ostensibly overzealous surveillance. Bergen concedes that the NYPD’s monitoring of mosques and other sites open to the public was probably legal. (In January 2016, the NYPD settled two lawsuits without admitting wrongdoing or paying anything for alleged violations of privacy or civil rights.) He also acknowledges that Michael Sheehan, who served after 9/11 as the NYPD’s top counterterrorism official, had disclosed the broad outlines of the department’s surveillance in his own 2008 book, Crush the Cell (still required reading for those interested in the NYPD’s counterterrorism program). Since 2001, according to Sheehan, the NYPD had been searching for Islamist extremists on “college campuses, in coffee houses, and in book stores.” But contrary to Sheehan’s claim that the NYPD’s effort is the nation’s most effective, Bergen believes that it “didn’t yield much of anything.” Perhaps the NYPD was unwilling or unable to disclose the specifics of its achievements to Bergen. The disruption of 16 documented plots against the city, however amateurish some might have seemed, suggests that the department has been doing something right.

Bergen finds hope in the interfaith dialogue between Muslims, Christians, and Jews, and in Muslim-American clerics who encourage fellow Muslims to denounce extremism among their own. And he’s positively enthusiastic about a program run by the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit that focuses not on detecting signs of Islamist radicalization, as the NYPD has tried to do, but on what it calls a “pathway to violence.” The bureau has developed “universal indicators of someone who might engage in violence,” along with “inhibitors that might keep that individual from doing so,” whether they’re jihadis or neo-Nazis. While Bergen clearly prefers this approach, he is fair-minded enough to quote the FBI’s Art Cummings, a former Navy SEAL who helped develop the bureau’s counterterrorism strategy. Frustrated by the backlash against law enforcement, Cummings noted that the jihadi plots under investigation were “one hundred percent Islamic.” “When the Japanese start killing Americans in acts of terrorism,” Bergen quotes him, “we’ll start investigating the Japanese.”

If Bergen downplays the strategic threat posed by radical Islamists, Michael Hayden sees a movement growing ever stronger. In Playing to the Edge: American Intelligence in the Age of Terror, he defends the intelligence community’s efforts to protect the homeland after 9/11. “We’re actually pretty good at the spy stuff,” he writes. “We need to preserve that capacity . . . our first line of defense.” For Hayden, intrusive surveillance that goes to the limit of what precedent and law allow will be indispensable to keep the nation safe.

Hayden’s account is fascinating, if a bit acronym-heavy. He describes not only the shadowy world of intelligence collection and disruption—a “noble enterprise,” he calls it—but also his battles with reporters and legislators on Capitol Hill. While Bergen is a journalist, Hayden, a retired four-star general, is a policymaker who has led two of the nation’s most vital surveillance and counterterrorism agencies. Asked by two presidents to do whatever it takes to prevent the next 9/11, he has become an intelligence evangelist. Hayden sees his memoir as part of his mission to convince an increasingly skeptical public that controversial programs undertaken after 9/11 on his watch were justified and unfairly assailed—often by legislators who defended them in private only to profess outrage after journalists disclosed them. (He takes special aim at Democratic California senator Dianne Feinstein, who headed the Senate Intelligence Committee when her party had a majority.) But Hayden acknowledges that public trust in the nation’s intelligence agencies is indispensable, having learned firsthand that the most sophisticated technology is only as good as the public’s willingness to use it.

Hayden takes pride in having revamped the NSA, the nation’s largest and most powerful spy agency. His opening chapter describes how a software failure knocked out the NSA’s entire collection system for 72 nail-biting hours in January 2000. He was determined to eliminate “antiquated technology” and a “leaden bureaucracy,” he writes. He got money from Congress to purchase equipment and upgrade outmoded collection capabilities, and eventually cut a third of NSA’s 450 internal panels and managerial fat. By December 2005, thanks partly to an unprecedented program to sweep up personal data called “Stellarwind”—the now-notorious collection of “metadata”—the NSA was “cranking out ten potential leads per day,” he claims, “about one in ten of them high confidence.” Though an acting attorney general would later refuse to reauthorize Stellarwind on constitutional grounds—Congress eventually put the program on firmer legal footing—Hayden argues that the NSA’s collection of telephone numbers, times, dates, and locations (though not the content) of the calls of millions of Americans was legal and justified, and that it helped identify who was communicating with terrorists abroad. Launched by President George W. Bush, the program was expanded under President Obama.

Reinventing the CIA in the spring of 2006 proved a tougher challenge. If the NSA needed to be “shaken up” in 1999, the CIA needed to be “settled down,” he writes. Having failed to prevent 9/11 or to find and kill Osama bin Laden, and having botched its assessment of the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, the agency was demoralized. Congress was also blasting the CIA for holding suspected terrorists at “black sites,” for water-boarding at least three of those suspects, and for subjecting others to different forms of “enhanced interrogation techniques,” a euphemism Hayden uses throughout the book to describe actions that many would call torture. Meanwhile, Congress had humiliated the CIA by creating a new top intelligence agency to improve cooperation and information exchange among the 16 intelligence agencies.

Hayden tries debunking congressional and journalistic claims about what the CIA had done before he assumed command. He aims much of his ire at legislators whose moral indignation conveniently surfaced after reporters disclosed the humiliation and inhumane treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, which included confinement in cramped boxes, shackling in painful positions, forced nudity, and other abuses. While he seems resigned to the steady leak of classified information and the fact that “nothing stays secret,” he clearly relishes skewering Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning, along with some reporters who broke those stories, questioning at times not only their methods but their motives. Critics have hit back. Senator Feinstein, for one, has posted a 38-page rebuttal of Hayden’s claims about the value of information extracted through what many Americans consider torture. Others have challenged the effectiveness of such programs as Stellarwind.

Hayden’s basic argument is that fighting terrorism requires America’s intelligence and the national security community to play at “the edge” of what the law allows and that the “past policies” subsequently criticized by many “were not mistakes at all, but were a central reason why the country had not suffered an attack.” He offers little evidence to support these claims, however. He also emphasizes the importance of aid from allies—including Israel’s assassination of Iranian scientists, which he seems to confirm, and Saudi Arabia’s jihadi rehabilitation center, which he calls the world’s “best.”

Hayden is no fan of President Obama. If Bergen more or less endorses the president’s approach to combating terror, Hayden suggests that Obama’s response to ISIS has been too little, too late, and portrays him as indecisive, “more Hamlet than Patton.” Yes, it was President Obama who increased the drone strikes that Hayden supervised. Such strikes made killing terrorists easier and less “politically dangerous,” he says. But the terrorists’ information—about plots against Americans at home and abroad—died with them.

Mark Bowden and other critics (one suspects Bergen would be among them) argue that revoking the more odious practices at the “edge” has not led to more terrorist attacks in the U.S. Apart from the Boston Marathon bombing and the attack in San Bernardino—both significant intelligence failures—this observation is true. But former NYPD counterterrorism chief Sheehan warns that the danger could grow if America becomes complacent. Jihadists, he argues, have shown an uncanny knack for surviving and adapting. If ISIS, or even demented lone wolves inspired by it, manage to steal, buy, or make dirty bombs or sophisticated chemical or biological weapons, they could transform a modest terror attack into a strategic blow to America’s psyche. Just because Saddam Hussein turned out not to have WMD doesn’t mean that ISIS and like-minded groups have abandoned their goal of acquiring them. Read together, Bergen and Hayden’s books suggest that neither panic nor complacency serves the nation well, and that the search for effective ways of defeating terror groups abroad and limiting their appeal at home must continue.

-

Judith Miller is a City Journal contributing editor. Her latest book is The Story: A Reporter’s Journey.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
EU Vows To Use New Powers To Block All Elected ‘Far Right’ Populists From Power
Started by imaginativeý, 05-25-2016 04:27 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...lected-‘Far-Right’-Populists-From-Power/page2

Possible electoral fraud in Austrian presidential election
Started by Be Wellý, 05-26-2016 03:44 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...toral-fraud-in-Austrian-presidential-election

Far-right on edge of power as Austria votes for president
Started by thompsoný, 05-22-2016 11:01 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-edge-of-power-as-Austria-votes-for-president

--

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Posted for fair use.....
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...6a85d4-2d68-11e6-b9d5-3c3063f8332c_story.html

Europe

Austrian right party challenges presidential vote results

By George Jahn | AP June 8 at 7:05 AM

VIENNA — Austria’s right-wing party on Wednesday announced that it is legally challenging the result of last month’s presidential election due to what it said were a host of irregularities that potentially led to its candidate’s narrow loss.

Freedom Party leader Heinz-Christian Strache spoke of a “massive number of irregularities and mistakes” that needed to be investigated.

“We are not poor losers,” he told reporters, declaring that the challenge was launched to secure “the pillars of democracy.”

Freedom Party candidate Norbert Hofer was leading after polls closed May 22. But final results after a count of absentee ballots put former Green party politician Alexander Van der Bellen ahead by only a little more than 30,000 votes.

The final count showed Van der Bellen with 50.3 percent, compared to 49.7 percent for Hofer.

Strache said that the law was contravened in one way or the other in 97 of a total of 117 electoral districts, including the sorting of absentee ballots before the arrival of electoral commission officials. He said that of the more than 700,000 such ballots, more than 570,000 were affected.

“Hofer could have become president without these irregularities and mistakes,” he said. “You don’t have to be a conspiracy theorist to get an exceptionally bad gut feeling in the face of such mishaps or strange developments.”

The challenge could result in at least a partial recount if Austria’s Constitutional Court rules in favor of the party. Freedom Party officials said the court was looking at three requests to probe the alleged irregularities — one from Strache, another from the party and a third from an unnamed “voter and citizen.”

The outcome of the challenge has relevance beyond Austria’s borders, with elections viewed Europe-wide as a proxy fight pitting the continent’s political center against its growing populist and Euroskeptic movements.

Van der Bellen’s win was cheered by the continent’s established parties, while Europe’s right hailed Hofer’s strong showing as a major political surge by one of its own.

___

Associated Press video journalist Philipp Jenne contributed.
 

Housecarl

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For those who thought the UN was basically useless to start with....

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-yemen-security-saudi-un-idUSKCN0YT2UT

World | Tue Jun 7, 2016 9:58pm EDT
Related: World, United Nations, Saudi Arabia, Yemen

U.N. chief faced funding cut-off, fatwa risk over Saudis: sources

UNITED NATIONS | By Louis Charbonneau, Michelle Nichols and Yara Bayoumy


Muslim allies of Saudi Arabia piled pressure on U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon over the blacklisting of a Saudi-led coalition for killing children in Yemen, with Riyadh threatening to cut Palestinian aid and funds to other U.N. programs, diplomatic sources said on Tuesday.

The United Nations announced on Monday it had removed the coalition from a child rights blacklist - released last week - pending a joint review by the world body and the coalition of cases of child deaths and injuries during the war in Yemen.

That removal prompted angry reactions from human rights groups, which accused Ban of caving in to pressure from powerful countries. They said that Ban, currently in the final year of his second term, risked harming his legacy as U.N. secretary-general.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the sources said Ban's office was bombarded with calls from Gulf Arab foreign ministers, as well as ministers from the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), after the blacklisting was announced last week. One U.N. official spoke of a "full-court press" over the blacklisting.

"Bullying, threats, pressure," another diplomatic source told Reuters on condition of anonymity about the reaction to the blacklisting, adding that it was "real blackmail."

The source said there was also a threat of "clerics in Riyadh meeting to issue a fatwa against the U.N., declaring it anti-Muslim, which would mean no contacts of OIC members, no relations, contributions, support, to any U.N. projects, programs."

A fatwa is a legal opinion used in Islamic Sharia law. In Saudi Arabia fatwas can only be issued by the group of top, government-appointed clerics and are sometimes commissioned by the ruling family to back up its political positions.

Responding to the allegations, Saudi U.N. Ambassador Abdallah Al-Mouallimi said "we don't use threats or intimidation," and Riyadh was "very committed to the United Nations."

Mouallimi denied any threat of a possible fatwa.

“That’s ridiculous, that’s outrageous,” he said, adding that the meeting of Saudi clerics was to approve and issue a statement condemning the blacklisting of the coalition.

On Monday Mouallimi described the annual U.N. report on states and armed groups that violate child rights in war as "wildly exaggerated" and demanded that it be corrected.

The main Saudi complaints were that the U.N. had not based its report on information supplied by the Saudi-backed Yemeni government and accused the world body of not consulting with the coalition. U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric, however, said on Tuesday that the Saudis had been consulted.

Several diplomatic sources said that the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) would be hit especially hard if the blacklisting were upheld. Saudi Arabia was the fourth biggest donor to UNRWA after the United States, European Union and Britain, having supplied it nearly $100 million last year.

Coalition members Kuwait and United Arab Emirates are also key donors for UNRWA, together supplying nearly $50 million in 2015.

In addition to Saudi Arabia, Dujarric said that Jordan, United Arab Emirates and Bangladesh contacted Ban's office to protest the listing of the coalition. Diplomats said Egypt, Kuwait and Qatar also complained to Ban's office.

The Saudi-led coalition includes Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Senegal and Sudan.

There was no indication that the United States or any other Western Saudi allies encouraged the U.N. to reverse the blacklisting of the coalition.

The U.N. report on children and armed conflict said the coalition was responsible for 60 percent of child deaths and injuries in Yemen last year, killing 510 and wounding 667.

U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said he was not aware that the United States had contacted the U.N. about the report.

"We take very seriously the protection of children in armed conflict in Yemen ... and continue to urge all sides in the conflict in Yemen to protect civilians and comply with their obligations under international humanitarian law," Toner said.

Dujarric said the removal of the coalition was pending a review of child casualties in Yemen and could be reversed, though Mouallimi said the deletion was "irreversible and unconditional."

Jordan's U.N. Ambassador Dina Kawar described her country's complaint to the U.N. chief.

"The report was accusing the coalition and of course we are a part of it," she said. "So my (foreign) minister did contact the secretary-general and did voice his opinion that the report was biased and that they need to look into it."

Bangladesh's mission told Reuters that their foreign minister contacted Ban's office prior to the reversal while on an official visit to Saudi Arabia.

One diplomatic source familiar with the situation said the Saudi fury was to be expected, adding that "the SG's (secretary-general's) reaction to the pushback was disappointing."

Several diplomats cited the U.N. decision not to blacklist Israel last year over child casualties in the Gaza Strip after the Israeli and U.S. governments lobbied Ban hard, saying that it was clear the current U.N. chief was vulnerable to threats.

Another diplomatic source said the recent spat between the U.N. and Morocco over Ban's use of the term "occupation" to describe Morocco's presence in the disputed territory of Western Sahara had set a bad precedent.

He noted that when Morocco demanded the expulsion of dozens of civilian staff in the U.N. peacekeeping mission there earlier this year, the U.N. Security Council failed to rally behind Ban with a strong show of support. That, he added, set a dangerous precedent for the world body's 193 member states.

"The message was clear," the diplomatic source said. "If you get tough with the secretary-general, the Security Council isn't going to come to his aid."


(Additional reporting by Angus McDowall in Riyadh, Yara Bayoumy, Lesley Wroughton and David Alexander in Washington; Editing by Andrew Hay)
 

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http://www.wsj.com/articles/americas-nuclear-deterrence-challenge-in-asia-1465318715

Opinion | Commentary

America’s Nuclear-Deterrence Challenge in Asia

The NATO playbook can help keep South Korea and Japan from pursuing bombs of their own.

By Evan Braden Montgomery
June 7, 2016 12:58 p.m. ET
6 COMMENTS

In the shadow of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, U.S. President Barack Obama spoke recently about the danger of nuclear proliferation and the dream of a world without nuclear weapons. To arrest the spread of such weapons, however, the United States may need to reinforce its nuclear-deterrence commitments in East Asia, where both South Korea and Japan could face mounting pressure to go nuclear.

Two trends are raising the odds that U.S. allies might rethink their commitment to nonproliferation. A nuclear-armed North Korea has become a more serious threat to South Korea, Japan and the U.S., and this threat will only increase as Pyongyang builds more weapons and better missiles to deliver them.

Meanwhile, China’s modernization of its military is turning the tables on Japan, which was once the stronger power. By fielding a variety of weapons systems that could deny the U.S. access to the Western Pacific in case of a conflict, Beijing is also making it much more difficult for Washington to defend its ally.

To this point, South Korea and Japan have been content to take shelter under the U.S. nuclear umbrella. But Seoul may soon start to fear that the U.S. could be sidelined during a crisis, especially if U.S. territory falls within missile range of the North Korean nuclear arsenal. Tokyo may similarly conclude that a small arsenal of its own is the only way to offset a deteriorating military balance, particularly if Washington’s posture in the region becomes increasingly vulnerable. Should either neighbor begin to seriously explore the nuclear option, the other would be much more likely to follow suit.

The U.S. nuclear umbrella could thus begin to fray. Nuclear proliferation would lead to greater volatility in one of the world’s most strategically and economically vital areas. With the addition of South Korea and Japan, East Asia would become home to five nuclear powers (including Russia) with a variety of historical grievances and contemporary disputes, any of which might provide the spark that sets off a crisis.

How might Washington head off this possibility? One option is to take a page from NATO’s playbook and share the roles, risks and responsibilities of nuclear operations with its allies in East Asia.

During the Cold War, Europe was doubtful the U.S. would use nuclear weapons to defend the Continent, as that would mean risking nuclear retaliation from the Soviet Union. To enhance the credibility of the U.S. nuclear umbrella, NATO developed mechanisms that coupled America to its partners.

These included the Nuclear Planning Group, which allowed any alliance member to participate in high-level discussions on nuclear issues. Even more important, nuclear-sharing arrangements permitted select alliance members to host U.S. nuclear weapons on their territory and to employ them with U.S. authorization.

These mechanisms not only enhanced deterrence against the Soviet Union. They also convinced allies such as West Germany to forgo their own nuclear weapons and rely on the U.S. instead.

Both of these institutions are still in place today. But similar structures have never existed in South Korea and Japan, where the U.S. once based nuclear weapons but always kept them in its own hands. That might need to change if U.S. allies in East Asia begin to seriously consider acquiring nuclear weapons. If Seoul and Tokyo had a clearer window into how the U.S. intended to conduct nuclear operations, and a direct role in those operations at least under certain conditions, then both might be willing to forgo nuclear weapons programs of their own.

Paving the way for upgraded extended-deterrence relationships will require thinking through a number of complex issues. For instance, while it might be tempting to pursue trilateral mechanisms that more clearly mimic those in NATO and could bind South Korea and Japan more closely together, lingering tensions between these two neighbors, along with differences in their threat perceptions, probably mean that bilateral mechanisms would be best.

And should it prove too difficult politically for these allies to store nuclear weapons on their territory, the U.S. could consider a neutral location such as the island of Guam, where U.S. nuclear weapons have been kept in the past and where South Korean and Japanese forces could be deployed when necessary.

Finally, the U.S. will need to preserve and eventually replace those tactical nuclear weapons it still retains, which have coupled Washington to its allies in Europe and might eventually play a similar role in East Asia.

The growing military challenges posed by North Korea and China will unavoidably demand a response in East Asia. The question is whether America can reassure its allies in the region with its nuclear umbrella—or whether it will leave its friends to fend for themselves and risk further proliferation.

Mr. Montgomery is a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.
 

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...73ed3c-2806-11e6-8329-6104954928d2_story.html

Asia & Pacific

North Korea¡¦s military buildup isn¡¦t limited to its nukes

By Anna Fifield June 7 „³
Comments 6

TOKYO ¡X North Korea¡¦s pursuit of nuclear weapons technology has been well demonstrated so far this year, with January¡¦s nuclear test and numerous launches of missiles designed to deliver such weapons.

But even as Kim Jong Un¡¦s regime presses ahead with its nuclear program, it is investing considerable resources in upgrading its conventional facilities, according to satellite imagery.

¡§Lots of people say that if they have a nuclear deterrent, they won¡¦t need conventional weapons,¡¨ said Curtis Melvin, a researcher at the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University who has an encyclopedic knowledge of North Korea¡¦s geography. ¡§But under the Kim Jong Un era, there has been a big increase in spending on the economic and conventional military side.¡¨

Kim, who took over the running of the state after his father¡¦s death at the end of 2011, has promoted a ¡§byungjin,¡¨ or ¡§simultaneous push,¡¨ policy of pursuing nuclear weapons advancement and economic growth at the same time.

This year¡¦s nuclear test and the emphasis on the economy suggest that this policy is still very much the priority. But this doesn¡¦t mean that North Korea is taking its foot off the conventional-weapons pedal.

¡§When the Respected Leader Kim Jong Un came here last year, he said that we should continue to build munitions with our bare hands,¡¨ Ryang Ae Kyong, a guide at the Pyongchon revolutionary site, a former munitions factory, told journalists visiting Pyongyang last month. (She also told them that Kim Jong Il, the current leader¡¦s father, shot three bull¡¦s eyes there the first time he fired a rifle.)

Using satellite images, Melvin has spotted significant construction work at the October 3 shipyard near Wonsan, a port city on North Korea¡¦s east coast, with land being extended and a bridge being built between a Korean People¡¦s Army naval base and the shipyard. It appeared that the bridge will carry a new railway line, he said.

Last year Kim visited the dockyard, which was built in 1947 under his grandfather, Kim Il Sung, as North Korea¡¦s first base for warship repair. ¡§He stressed the need for the dockyard to update its production processes in line with the requirement of the age of knowledge-based economy so as to successfully carry out the task of repairing warships and contribute to the modernization of warships,¡¨ state media reported about Kim¡¦s visit.

[ North Korea leader hails nuclear and missile advances ]

There are signs that air-force runways are being resurfaced and new airfields are being built, although many of these are private airfields for Kim, who pilots his own light aircraft.

Melvin has also spotted a new driver-training facility, apparently for special forces, at Iha-ri, not far from the western border with South Korea.

Joseph S. Bermudez, an expert on North Korea¡¦s military capabilities who also monitors satellite imagery, said that most of the changes he¡¦s seen involve rebuilding bases at new or current locations. Still, there is evidence of considerable investment.


¡§There is no indication that North Korea is reducing the size of its conventional armed forces,¡¨ Bermudez said. ¡§I think they¡¦re pushing ahead on both fronts.¡¨

This has been combined with noticeable personnel changes that emphasize competence over political flunkyism.

¡§I get a sense that when Kim Jong Un came to power, he looked around and said, ¡¥We have all these old guys running things who haven¡¦t been in the field for 15 or 20 years. We need people who know what they¡¦re talking about,¡¦ ¡¨ said Bermudez.

Over the past year, younger people with relevant experience have been elevated to run conventional military units, he said.

¡§I don¡¦t want to say it¡¦s a meritocracy ¡X it¡¦s not ¡X but there appears to be a push towards more competent people,¡¨ Bermudez said. ¡§Before, you had leaders of special forces who couldn¡¦t run a mile. Now, we see artillery division commanders that actually have an artillery background.¡¨

[ North Korea announces five-year economic plan, its first since the 1980s ]

While moving personnel around might be easy, large-scale infrastructure projects are not, especially for a country under increasingly tight international sanctions.

South Korea¡¦s central bank has estimated that the North¡¦s economy is growing by 1 or 2 percent a year, a level too low for the amount of spending that is taking place.

¡§There¡¦s no way they can be doing all of this on 1 percent growth,¡¨ said Melvin, who runs the North Korea Economy Watch blog. ¡§There¡¦s been a massive increase in public spending on both the economic side ¡X like factories and entertainment facilities ¡X and on the military side.¡¨

That¡¦s without mentioning the efforts to develop nuclear weapons and longer-range ballistic missiles.

Still, even as it has developed nuclear weapons, Pyongyang has for decades kept a conventional insurance policy against the high-tech firepower of the United States and its ally in South Korea: heavy artillery lined up along the demilitarized zone that separates North and South Korea, giving it the ability to devastate Seoul, just 30 miles away, if an invasion were to occur.

The Defense Department¡¦s latest report on North Korea¡¦s military capabilities noted Pyongyang¡¦s calculated moves on the non-nuclear side.

¡§North Korea is making efforts to upgrade select elements of its large arsenal of mostly outdated conventional weapons,¡¨ the report said. ¡§It has reinforced long-range artillery forces near the DMZ and has a substantial number of mobile ballistic missiles that could strike a variety of targets in [South Korea] and Japan.¡¨

Read more

North Korea¡¦s one-percenters savor life in ¡¥Pyonghattan¡¦

I went to North Korea and was told I ask too many questions

A model farm ¡X with few farmers ¡X in North Korea
 

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http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense/2016/06/07/us-names-india-major-defense-partner/85571518/

US Names India 'Major Defense Partner'

Joe Gould, Defense News 7:19 p.m. EDT June 7, 2016

WASHINGTON — The United States and India have reached a new series of agreements on climate change, nuclear power and national security Tuesday, including a new status for India as a "Major Defense Partner" to the US.

Following a meeting between President Obama and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday, the White House released a joint statement acknowledging the US-India defense relationship as a "possible anchor of stability," and heralding new technology sharing "at a level commensurate with that of its closest allies and partners."


DEFENSE NEWS
India-China Talks Come Soon After Agreement With US


The leaders reached an understanding under which India would receive license-free access to a wide range of dual-use technologies in conjunction with unspecified steps that India has committed to take to advance its export control objectives, the statement read.

Under the India’s "Make In India" initiative and the expansion of the co-production and co-development of technologies under the Defense Technology and Trade Initiative (DTTI), the two nations are starting DTTI working groups to include agreed items covering naval, air and other weapons systems.


DEFENSE NEWS
US Senator: Modi Visit Heralds Defense Pact


The leaders announced the finalization of the agreements on aircraft carrier technology cooperation, and the finalization of the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA), which has been a decade in the making. They also announced US-India cooperation on maritime security, affirming their support United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and settlement of territorial disputes by peaceful means.

Obama and Modi's meeting was the seventh since Modi took power in 2014.


DEFENSE NEWS
Modi Visit Underlines Changed India-US Relationship


Modi will address a joint meeting of Congress on Wednesday.

Email: jgould@defensenews.com

Twitter: @reporterjoe
 

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http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense/commentary/2016/06/08/strait-hormuz-danger-navy/85599208/

The Strait of Hormuz in Danger

Peter Huessy, Special to Defense News 12:35 p.m. EDT June 8, 2016

Every day, two-thirds of all oil consumed world-wide passes through seven ocean choke points. The most vital of these, the Strait of Hormuz, is the gateway to the Persian Gulf’s oil shipment ports, and is bordered by Iran, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates.

General Hossein Salami, deputy commander of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard, recently said Iranian forces will close the Strait of Hormuz if the United States “threatens” Iran. In the past, similar threats by Iran have largely been dismissed. Why? Because America and its allies believe the presence of a strong U.S. navy in the region makes such threats empty.

But should the threat now be taken seriously? Unfortunately, the U.S. Navy’s ability to keep the Strait open is weaker than in the recent past, and Iranian military capabilities are measurably stronger.

It is not as if we had no warning of the problem. In a Pentagon wargame in 2002 to test U.S. ability to keep the Strait open, the U.S. Navy failed spectacularly. A carrier and ten cruisers were “sunk” as a retired U.S. Marine general carried the day for the Red Team, simulating Iranian unconventional tactics to great effect.

Despite the recent surge in U.S. oil production, there would still be serious economic impacts on the United States from a cut-off of oil transiting the Strait of Hormuz. If the Strait was blocked for an extended period, oil prices would spike and the US economy would likely be thrown into recession.

The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s primary maritime energy choke point. Through that narrow waterway passes more than 17 million barrels of oil – more than a third of all maritime-traded oil -- each day. And ocean-going oil accounts for nearly two-thirds of all oil used daily in the world, between 93-96 million barrels, of which the U.S. uses 19.3 million barrels.

History is instructive. Every major oil-price hike for the past four decades, including those in 1973, 1979, 1991, 2001, and 2008, was shortly followed by a rise in American unemployment and an economic recession.

Five years ago, Admiral Habibollah Sayari, then the Iranian navy commander, said closing the strait was "as easy as drinking a glass of water." At that time, most military analysts were unimpressed. Max Boot and Bradley Russell with the Council on Foreign Relations, shrugged off the threat, retorting, “Actually it would be about as easy as drinking an entire bucket of water in one gulp.”

They added that “Iran tried this trick before and failed miserably,” referring to April 18, 1988, when President Reagan ordered the U.S. Navy to end Iranian naval harassment in the Gulf. Operation Praying Mantis was launched, the Navy’s biggest surface combat action since World War II, and Iranian attacks on Persian Gulf shipping ceased.

Fast forward to 2016. Could Iran now successfully close the Strait of Hormuz? New factors suggest the answer to that question is “Yes.”

As noted earlier, a wargame, “Millennium Challenge 2002,” proved the U.S. would have great difficulty in keeping the Strait open. And since that fiasco, the U.S. fleet’s weapons, tactics and strategy have only been marginally improved. The fleet has shrunk to 272 combatant ships even in the face of analysis that a robust maritime security strategy can only be implemented with a fleet of at least 350 ships.

For example, just five of our 10 carrier battlegroups are now operational and only two are regularly available. According to the Navy Times, “The tense waters of Asia-Pacific or the Middle East could go for weeks or months without a U.S. aircraft carrier patrolling there.”

On the other hand, Iran has improved its military assets over what they had on hand in 2002, including vast numbers of sophisticated missiles that can reach U.S. and Arab bases far from the Gulf.

And there is more to worry about than the Strait of Hormuz. Iran-backed Houthis are destabilizing Yemen. If Yemen were to become a puppet state it would give Iran control of the Bab-el-Mandeb and the Suez Canal, through which 7.3 million barrels of oil pass daily.

Would U.S. support of a regional Arab coalition be able to counter these Iranian objectives? Yes, but only if we implement a cooperative regional strategy that includes bolstering U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy conventional capabilities, battle planning with our allies to keep the straits open, deploying additional missile defense systems, adopting a regional counter-Iran strategy, and executing an Iranian denuclearization plan that jettisons the failed Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

JCPOA, the Iranian “nuclear deal,” is seen by many as a way for the United States to assist Iran’s push for regional power. As Dennis Ross writes: “Iranian regional hegemony, especially as Iran’s behavior in the Gulf has been more aggressive, not less so, with regular Iranian forces joining the Revolutionary Guard now deployed to Syria, wider use of Shiite militias, arms smuggling into Bahrain and the eastern province of Saudi Arabia, and ballistic missile tests.”

Without America as a partner, our Gulf allies cannot stand up to growing Iranian terrorism that is bolstered by $150 billion provided by JCPOA, funds equivalent to at least 50 times more per capita than what the U.S. provided 17 European nations under the Marshall Plan at the end of World War II.

Americans are often asked to make a choice between guns and butter, between military spending and social welfare programs. In the Middle East we need more guns to secure the butter today, because Russian President Putin and Middle Eastern leaders understand the logic of coercion. It’s that simple.

As Dr. Henry Kissinger remarked years ago, “The exercise of diplomacy without the threat of force is without effect.”

Peter Huessy is president of his own defense consulting firm, GeoStrategic Analysis, and senior defense consultant at the Air Force Association.
 

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http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/jun/7/chinas-imperialism-on-the-south-china-sea/

Home\Opinion\Commentary

China’s imperialism on the South China Sea

Nothing less than bold action will stop Chinese aggression

By James A. Lyons - - Tuesday, June 7, 2016

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

China’s determined efforts over the past two decades to seize control of almost the entire South China Sea is nothing short of classic aggressive imperialism. What’s remarkable is that it has been done without basically firing a shot, using the Chinese People’s Liberation Army concept of “military soft power.” This tactic is designed to defeat the enemy without fighting. Make no mistake: China views the United States as the enemy. Under President Obama’s strategy to fundamentally transform America, our country doesn’t confront our enemies, it embraces them. China has the perfect enemy.

When the United States withdrew its forces from the Philippines in 1992, this created a vacuum, which presented China with an unprecedented opportunity to expand its influence and territorial objectives. In 1993, China announced its illegal claims to almost the entire South China Sea as part of its territorial waters. The claim is based on China’s questionable Nine-Dash Line maritime claim and includes large sea areas of internationally recognized economic zones belonging to Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan and Japan.

There is no question that what China has accomplished over the past two decades — both economically and militarily — has been remarkable. When I took the first U.S. Navy Task Force back to mainland China on Nov. 3, 1986, 37 years after the Communists seized power in 1949, its navy was nothing more than a coastal navy, and not a threat to anyone. However, since then, China — with a double-digit increase in its military budget — has dramatically modernized its military forces and specifically built a navy designed to confront the U.S. Navy. More recently, Chinese President Xi Jinping is in the process of transforming China’s military force’s mission from just a defensive posture and regional power to one that will potentially be capable of challenging the United States globally.

As we have seen, China has instituted an aggressive reclamation program, creating man-made islands out of shallow reefs and inlets to reinforce its South China Sea claims. Since 2014, China has reclaimed more than 3,200 acres. Airfields and other permanent facilities have been built on these islands. The islands, in effect, have become stationary aircraft carriers. China has already deployed significant air, naval and missile forces to its newly reclaimed stationary carriers.

It should be noted that while China is a signatory to the United Nation’s Law of the Sea Treaty, it has stated that any sea area it “unilaterally” claims as its territorial waters is excluded from arbitration and will not be submitted to any treaty tribunal for resolution. However, the Philippines challenged China’s claims over the South China Sea in 2013 by stating that the Nine-Dash Line maritime zone is illegal because it violates the 2006 U.N. Law of the Sea Treaty that sets out exclusive zones and territorial waters. China refused to participate in the challenge based on their previous unilateral declarations and its questionable claims that go back to the Ming Dynasty.

Nonetheless, the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague is about to issue a ruling, which is anticipated to be unfavorable to China. The Chinese ambassador to the Netherlands, Wu Ken, stated, “China will not accept an invalid arbitral award. Abuses of international law and its hegemonic mentality have no place in any SCS dispute!” This is typical Chinese information warfare.

In a separate action, according to a June 1 article in Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post, China appears ready to impose air defense identification zones on the South China Sea — zones similar to the one they have in the East China Sea. One source said the timing of any declaration would depend on security conditions in the region, particularly the U.S. military presence, operations and diplomatic ties with regional countries (read: Vietnam). Here we have the classic case of China, the aggressor, presenting itself as the “victim” because the U.S. military is exercising its traditional “freedom of navigation and right of innocent passage” under recognized international law. China has chosen to view these legitimate operations as a challenge to China’s illegal claims in the region and, therefore, we are forcing China to declare air defense identification zones to protect its sovereignty. What nonsense.

Senior Chinese and U.S. officials are meeting this week in Beijing for the annual strategic and economic conference. As previously indicated, embracing one’s enemy to resolve serious strategic issues has never worked with a totalitarian regime, and it certainly will not work with China. The Obama administration’s responses to China’s aggression in the South China Sea have been weak and ineffective.

When China became displeased with U.S. actions, they moved quickly to show their displeasure by cancelling a recent carrier port visit to Hong Kong. We need to do the same. During the Beijing conference, we need to inform the Chinese that they have been disinvited to participate in upcoming June-July bi-annual Rim of the Pacific Exercise exercise. We should state in clear, unmistakable terms that this decision is based on their bullying of regional countries by building their questionable islands, as well as on their unprofessional action against our forces operating peacefully in the South China Sea. Having the Chinese participate in this exercise for our friends and allies has never made any sense. It provides the Chinese up-close intelligence-gathering opportunities to electronically fingerprint all our weapons systems, our tactics and operations.

To accompany our action, we should encourage the Philippines to give notice of impending immigration enforcement action against Chinese personnel and vessels. Further, U.S. and other allies should provide support to back up the Philippine action. Nothing less than bold action will stop Chinese aggression.

• James A. Lyons, a U.S. Navy retired admiral, was commander-in-chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet and senior U.S. military representative to the United Nations.
 

Housecarl

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Tel Aviv: 4 dead, 5 wounded in terror shooting attack.
Started by mzkittyý, Yesterday 11:59 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...ad-5-wounded-in-terror-shooting-attack./page2


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http://www.breitbart.com/jerusalem/2016/06/08/hamas-praises-hero-shooter-deadly-tel-aviv-attack/

Hamas Praises ‘Hero’ Shooter in Deadly Tel Aviv Attack


Gaza Hamas leader Ismail Haniya releases a dove during a rally of Hamas supporters to commemorate the 27th anniversary of the Islamist movements creation and to ask for the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip on December 12, 2014 in Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip.
MAHMUD HAMS/AFP/Getty

by Aaron Klein
8 Jun 2016
Comments 252

TEL AVIV – The Hamas terrorist organization is openly celebrating today’s murderous shooting attack in a crowded Tel Aviv civilian market.
Hamas’s Gaza leader Ismail Haniyeh praised one of the shooters as a “hero,” and tweeted that he prays for “mercy and light” for his soul. His tweet went out immediately after the attack, when initial reports said there was one assailant. It would emerge minutes later that there was a second shooter.

Also today, Hamas-affiliated media reported that Palestinians in Gaza and in the West Bank city of Hebron set off fireworks in celebration of the attack.

It was not immediately confirmed whether the fireworks were indeed in response to the attack or to celebrate Ramadan, which often ends each night with firecrackers and fireworks.

Nickolay E. Mladenov, UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, expressed “shock” that Hamas would praise the attack.


The two attackers today are reportedly relatives – either brothers or cousins, depending on the report – who hail from Yatta, a village south of Hebron. The Israel Defense Forces is reportedly deploying in Hebron in the wake of the attack.

At least three people were killed and five or more were seriously wounded in the terrorist shooting attack in Tel Aviv’s Sarona Market, an upscale food and shopping center in the heart of central Tel Aviv.

Sarona is located near one of the busiest intersections in Tel Aviv. It’s around the corner from an entrance to Israel’s Ayalon Highway and about three city bloccs from the Israel Defense Forces main headquarters in Tel Aviv.

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


Read More Stories About:

Breitbart Jerusalem, Middle East, Hamas, Palestinians, Ramadan, Tel Aviv, terrorism


FROM THE HOMEPAGE

GRAPHIC VIDEO: The Moment Two Palestinian Terrorists Open Fire on Unsuspecting Diners in Tel Aviv
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http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2016/06/09/natos_eastern_flank_could_be_powerful_111899.html

NATO's Eastern Flank Could Be Powerful

By Alina Inayeh, Ozgur Unluhisarcikli & Michal Baranowski
June 09, 2016

WARSAW—Tomorrow the foreign ministers of Turkey, Poland, and Romania will meet in Warsaw for the first time in this high-level trilateral format. The meeting will focus on the upcoming NATO summit in July, sending a strong sign of unity in the Alliance’s Eastern Flank, but its implications go beyond the immediate coordination of positions during the summit.

Poland and Romania are strong supporters of a robust NATO presence on what is called the Eastern Flank of the Alliance, from the Baltic to the Black Sea. Both countries are strong opponents of Russian domination in Eastern Europe and critics of its military and political aggression, and they are both trying to keep the flank high on NATO’s agenda. For its part, Turkey has been more preoccupied for the past few years with events in Syria and on NATO’s Southern Flank, making it a distant partner to both Poland and Romania. Yet, as Turkey’s relations with Russia have deteriorated, its attention seems to have been drawn north. Very importantly, all three countries host elements of the anti-missile shield, making them important NATO posts, and also targets of Russia’s vocal opposition to the shield and what it perceives as direct threats

The trilateral meeting between the Polish, Romanian and Turkish foreign ministers sends the immediate political message to NATO for equal attention to be paid to both flanks of the Alliance, east and south, and that security of all three seas (Baltic, Black and Mediterranean) and their regions is of equal importance. It also signals the unity of the Eastern Flank, from the Baltic to the Black Sea, ending speculations between a political rift between the northern and southern parts of the flank. These are important messages ahead of the summit, and will add to the force of demands and the height of expectations of the countries on the Eastern Flank.

Yet, if the three countries fall short of demanding an integrated NATO strategy against Russian aggression their effort will bear little effects.. Russia acts on both flanks of the Alliance, seeking to keep a stronghold on both, so a counteracting strategy has to include and consider both flanks. While both the occupation and illegal annexation of Crimea and Russian support to the Assad regime and securing its bases in Syria at first glance appear unrelated,they are actually synergetic both militarily, as Crimea is an excellent port to supply Russian bases in Syria, and geopolitically, as Russia maintains its influence in the vicinities of Europe, increasing the pressure on both the Alliance and the EU.

Security of the Black Sea needs to be another issue on the agenda of the three states. Turkey’s renewed interest in and concern about the Black Sea has been voiced unequivocally by its president, going as far as to say, ”The Black Sea has almost become a Russian lake. If we don’t act now, history will not forgive us.” Poland and Romania should use this interest to secure Ankara’s support for enhanced Black Sea security, which is currently heavily militarized by Russia. While seemingly less of a priority for Poland, preventing Russian dominance of the Black Sea is important to the security of the entire region. Russian ships stationed in Crimea may easily navigate to the Mediterranean, should they choose. All three countries, and the Alliance as a whole, face Russian challenge of Anti-Access Area Denial (A2AD) — from Kaliningrad in the Baltic, to Crimea in the Black Sea, to the Russian base in Syria on the Mediterranean. With powerful air-defenses, including the S-400, Russia is attempting to dominate and control the three vital seas for the Alliance, with profound consequences for Poland, Romania, and Turkey. A concerted push by the three flank countries can push the issue of countering the A2AD to the place of prominence it requires at the Warsaw NATO Summit and beyond.

Tomorrow’s meeting in Warsaw offers a real opportunity to turn an idea that has been sitting somewhat dormant into a powerful format of cooperation that would protect NATO's Eastern and Southern Flank from the Baltic, to the Black Sea, to the Mediterranean.


This article is reprinted with permission from The German Marshall Fund of the United States.
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-india-nuclear-idUSKCN0YV13Z

World | Thu Jun 9, 2016 6:56am EDT
Related: World, China

China leads resistance to India joining nuclear export club

VIENNA | By Shadia Nasralla and Francois Murphy

China is leading opposition to a push by the United States and other major powers for India to join the main club of countries controlling access to sensitive nuclear technology, diplomats said on Thursday as the group discussed India's membership bid.

Other countries opposing Indian membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) include New Zealand, Ireland, Turkey, South Africa and Austria, diplomats said.

The 48-nation NSG aims to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons by restricting the sale of items that can be used to make those arms.

India already enjoys most of the benefits of membership under a 2008 exemption to NSG rules granted to support its nuclear cooperation deal with Washington, even though India has developed atomic weapons and never signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the main global arms control pact.

Opponents argue that granting it membership would further undermine efforts to prevent proliferation. It would also infuriate India's rival Pakistan, which responded to India's membership bid with one of its own and has the backing of its close ally China.

"By bringing India on board, it's a slap in the face of the entire non-proliferation regime," a diplomatic source from one of a handful of countries resisting India's push said on condition of anonymity.

A decision on Indian membership is not expected before an NSG plenary meeting in Seoul on June 20, but diplomats said Washington had been pressuring hold-outs, and Thursday's closed-door meeting was a chance to see how strong opposition is.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry wrote to members asking them "not to block consensus on Indian admission to the NSG" in a letter seen by Reuters and dated Friday.

China, however, showed no sign of backing down from its opposition to India joining unless Pakistan becomes a member. That would be unacceptable to many, given Pakistan's track record -- the father of its nuclear weapons program sold nuclear secrets to countries including North Korea and Iran.

"China, if anything, is hardening (its position)," another diplomat said.

Most of the hold-outs oppose the idea of admitting a non-NPT state such as India and argue that if it is to be admitted, it should be under criteria that apply equally to all states rather than under a "tailor-made" solution for a U.S. ally.

Mexico's president said on Wednesday his country supports India's membership bid, but one Vienna-based diplomat said it still opposed the idea of it joining under conditions that did not apply equally to all.


(Editing by Catherine Evans)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-france-idUSKCN0YV15P

World | Thu Jun 9, 2016 7:10am EDT
Related: World

French special forces on ground in northern Syria: government source

French special forces are advising rebels on the ground in northern Syria in an offensive against Islamic State fighters for control of the border town of Manbij, the military said on Thursday.

An army spokesman said Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian had confirmed that France was providing weapons, air support and advice in the campaign aimed at driving Islamic State from territory along the Syria-Turkey border.

"We never go into details about anything to do with special forces, which are by their nature special. You won't get any details to protect these men's activities," army spokesman Colonel Gilles Jaron told a regular news briefing.

The French advisers are helping U.S.-backed Kurdish and Arab fighters of the Syria Democratic Forces that are trying to push IS militants out of their key stronghold between the Turkish border and the city of Raqqa, their headquarters in Syria.


(Reporting by Simon Carraud and John Irish; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Gareth Jones)
 

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World | Thu Jun 9, 2016 7:23am EDT
Related: World, Iraq

Baghdad bombings kill 25 as Falluja siege continues

BAGHDAD | By Ahmed Rasheed

Video


Two suicide bombings that killed about 25 people in Baghdad on Thursday were claimed by Islamic State, whose stronghold of Falluja near the capital is surrounded by Iraqi forces which are now advancing on the city.

The ultra-hardline Sunni insurgents said one attack was carried out with a car laden with explosives and the second with an explosive vest.

Iraqi forces began an offensive against Falluja, 50 km (32 miles) west of Baghdad, on May 23 after a series of deadly bombings hit Shi'ite districts of the capital. The troops yesterday began advancing against the militants inside the city, after completing its encirclement last week.

A police officer said a suicide car bomb had targeted a commercial street of Baghdad al-Jadeeda (New Baghdad), in the east of the capital, killing 17 people and wounding over 50.

A man wearing an explosive belt blew himself up at checkpoint near the barracks of Taji, just north of Baghdad, killing seven soldiers and wounding more than 20, he said.

Islamic State "has a long experience in establishing small multiple networks that have the ability to operate independently from each other," said Baghdad-based analyst and former army general Jasim al-Bahadli.

Falluja is a historic bastion of the Sunni insurgency, first against the U.S. occupation of Iraq, in 2003, and then against the Shi'ite-led authorities that took over the country.

Finance Minister Hoshiyar Zebari last week he expected that the recovery of Falluja would take time as the militants had dug tunnels and planted explosive devices in roads and houses to impede the military advance.



(Reporting by Kareem Hameed and Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Maher Chmaytelli; Editing by Alison Williams)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.voanews.com/content/al-shabab-attacks-military-base-in-somalia/3368568.html

AU: Over 100 Shabab Militants Killed in Base Attack

Abdulaziz Osman, Harun Maruf
Last updated on: June 09, 2016 7:15 AM


The African Union force in Somalia says soldiers killed more than 100 al-Shabab militants who attacked a military base Thursday.

Officials and residents say the militants set off a car bomb and then tried to storm the Ethiopian base in the village of Halgan, about 260 kilometers north of Mogadishu.

Colonel Joseph Kibet, a spokesman for the AU force AMISOM, told VOA's Somali service that Ethiopian and Somali government troops drove back the pre-dawn assault. "The initial reports say at least 110 militants were killed in the attack," he said.

The Somali Ministry of Defense says at least 120 militants were killed.

The chairman of the village, Guhad Abdi Warsame, told VOA that al-Shabab launched two attacks, one targeting a housing area for Ethiopian troops, the other a base for the Somali government. He said both attacks failed and that the attackers' "bodies lie in the village."

Residents have confirmed that Ethiopian and government troops are in control of Halgan.

Al-Shabab's claims

Al-Shabab's official radio station, Andalus, says the group killed 43 Ethiopian troops in the attack and destroyed the base. The group told Reuters that it has lost 16 of its fighters.

Residents said at least 5 civilians were killed during the crossfire.

Suicide car bombs coupled with assaults on bases have been the hallmark of al-Shabab raids against AU bases in Somalia over the past year.

Previous attacks killed 54 Burundian soldiers in Leego town, 19 Ugandans in Janaale and more than 100 Kenyans in El-Adde.

The AU force been stationed in Somalia since 2007 to fight al-Shabab. The group, which has pledged allegiance to al-Qaida, wants to overthrow the Somali government and turn Somalia into a strict Islamist state.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world...-submarine-near-uk/ar-AAgO90e?ocid=spartanntp

British Royal Navy Shadows Russian Submarine Near U.K.

Newsweek
Damien Sharkov
15 hrs ago

Britain’s Royal Navy has escorted a Russian submarine sailing toward the English Channel after locating it near British waters on Tuesday evening, the navy announced.

Russia has sporadically sent ships and aircraft toward NATO allied states since the Ukraine crisis, usually without ammunition on board but also without warning states whose territory they approach. Russia’s Baltic port of Kaliningrad has been particularly active in sending and welcoming ships and jets.

A British frigate warship was sent to shadow a Russian Kilo class submarine on Sunday after it was spotted in the North Sea, moving southwest on Sunday.

Frigate HMS Kent located the Stary Oskol submarine, escorting it off the eastern coast of the U.K. The navy noted that the Russian vessel was sailing on the surface likely headed toward the Dover Straits, between England and France.

The navy did not speculate what the purpose of the vessel was but noted such a manoeuvre was “not uncommon for that type of vessel.”

The submarine took part in Russian military exercises off the country’s northern coast at the beginning of the month according to Russian news agency Interfax and was due to rejoin its regular deployment place in the Black Sea.

British Defense Secretary Michael Fallon said: “This shows that the Navy is maintaining a vigilant watch in international and territorial waters to keep Britain safe and protect us from potential threats.”

Russia’s Ministry of Defense issued a statement to state news, playing down the significance of the encounter. Moscow officials said the ministry was “amazed” that any attention was paid to the submarine, sailing above water in a route travelled by many commercial vessels.

“It would be strange if the Royal Navy and NATO had not noticed the vessel, especially when, in the old maritime tradition, our sailors was saluted by the crews of merchants ships sailing the parallel or reverse route in the Barents Sea, Sea of Norway and the North Sea,” the ministry added.
 

Housecarl

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http://warontherocks.com/2016/06/theres-no-place-like-home-southeast-asias-security-priorities/

There’s No Place Like Home: Southeast Asia’s Security Priorities

Natalie Sambhi
June 9, 2016

As the old saying goes, whether elephants fight or make love, the grass still suffers. The big story from this year’s Shangri-La Dialogue was the reported rumble/romance between the United States and China. But what of the grass? Well, it’s still growing and it’s not just focused on the elephants. Southeast Asia offers a complex mix of rapid military modernization, middle class expansion, religious tensions, environmental pressures, natural disasters, and myriad political systems ranging from democracies to military dictatorships. And while many of the Southeast Asian speakers drew attention to the predictable laundry list of global security concerns (maritime disputes, North Korea’s nuclear program, cyber threats, and extremism), the subtle differences between their perceptions of security priorities bear greater attention.

Two speeches in particular stood out: the keynote address by Thailand’s Prime Minister Gen. Prayut Chan-o-cha and the speech given by Gen. (ret) Ryamizard Ryacudu, the Defense Minister of Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s largest state. What made these speeches unique was their articulation of domestic constraints, bringing to light what two relatively important states in the region , not directly involved with maritime disputes, are focused on. For Thailand and Indonesia, global security issues like extremism, maritime crime and even state fragility brought about by natural disaster matter, but they are seen through the prism of domestic political stability. As has been the case historically for both, securing the home front is paramount.

The beginning of Gen. Prayut’s speech unfolded as expected. He mapped out the interdependent nature of contemporary security challenges before calling for a security architecture that encouraged “equilibrium” (mentioned no less than 24 times) and greater cooperation. In his view, the United States, China and Japan are the most important players, followed by a second tier of India, Russia, Australia, South Korea and, in particular, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). He also listed what he believed to be the four common goals for global security – securing peace, achieving sustainable growth, sharing prosperity and preserving the planet – and the seven security challenges he felt should be discussed at Shangri-La – tensions in the East and South China Seas, the Korean peninsula, terrorism and extremism, the stockpiling of military arms, irregular migration, cyber security, and climate change and disaster mitigation.

In the final section of his speech, Prayut surprised the audience by addressing the issue of military rule head-on. Having taken power in May 2014 after six months of political crisis, Prayut explained that “it was necessary for the military to take control of the situation to prevent the escalation of violence and conflict, and to restore the rule of law and social order only for a while.” Thailand’s stability affects ASEAN and regional stability, he noted. On top of socio-economic disparities, food insecurity caused by drought, unrest in southern border provinces and irregular migration, Prayut stated that political conflict and poor governance caused by “democracy only in form but not in function” was Thailand’s key concern. Imploring the international community to understand his country’s situation, Prayut underscored that Thailand would return to democracy in accordance with a 20-year National Strategic Plan and a Roadmap, and it would uphold democratic processes and international obligations.

In contrast, Indonesian Defense Minister Ryamizard, speaking in the session on making defense policy in uncertain times, presented a longer list of security concerns including terrorism, separatism and armed rebellion, natural disasters, incursions in border areas, piracy and poaching of natural resources, pandemics, drug trafficking, cyber war and information warfare (save for the order, identical to the list he presented at last year’s dialogue). The bulk of his speech, however, focused on three of those: terrorism, maritime security, and natural disasters. On terrorism, Ryamizard praised military operations in the Middle East as the right approach to weakening ISIL’s centre of gravity and logistics capability. However, he stated the threat posed by radical ideology on home turf was more significant; Ryamizard cited a recent survey that around 96 percent of Indonesians rejected ISIL’s ideology (95 percent in the actual study), which might sound good at first but it means that roughly 8 million Indonesians support it. As it does for much of Southeast Asia, the prospect of more experienced foreign fighters returning from the Middle East theatre poses a challenge to Indonesia. On maritime security, he called for respect for international norms and the U.N. Charter in the South China Sea, but also focused on maritime crime, human trafficking, smuggling, and narcotics. Pointing to the recent kidnapping of Indonesian sailors by Abu Sayyaf, he called for a “synergized approach” between Southeast Asia’s maritime security and counterterrorism bodies. On natural disaster relief, Ryamizard encouraged enhanced cooperation between states, including civil-military cooperation, to help ease the pressures caused by earthquakes or typhoons.

Opportunities and challenges for Southeast Asian security

From these speeches alone, it is clear that Southeast Asian states are grappling with numerous security priorities, many of which provide opportunities for greater cooperation in maritime security and disaster relief with external partners such as the United States, Australia, India, Japan, and South Korea. Both Prayut and Ryamizard acknowledge ASEAN’s centrality to Indo-Pacific security matters, but in practical terms, Thailand’s leadership is consumed with domestic politics while Indonesia, which has traditionally been the driving force behind ASEAN diplomacy, has been less enthusiastic about the grouping under President Joko Widodo. Potential exists here for external partners to strengthen cooperation with ASEAN, though the group’s principle of consensus-based decision-making will remain a perennial constraint.

Interestingly, where Indonesia’s military leaders have feared external interference is in domestic matters. Thailand’s prime minister appeared to encourage outside actors to support the resolution of internal issues. Recently in Indonesia, there has been an odd resurgence of the threat of Communism. Timed to undermine a symposium looking into the 1965 and 1966 killings of an estimated 500,000 to 1 million suspected Communists and their sympathizers, the military and police have warned that Communist forces could cause social instability. The idea dovetails nicely with pronouncements by the military chief of staff that Indonesia should fear “proxy wars.” Therefore, it’s worth understanding better what role each military prescribes for itself and how that affects relations with foreign, particularly Western, partners. While both Thailand and Indonesia recognize the global nature of security threats, make no mistake, their security priorities remain firmly at home.


Natalie Sambhi is a Research Fellow at the Perth USAsia Centre where she focuses on Indonesian foreign and defense policy. She is also host of Sea Control: Asia Pacific, a podcast series by the Center for International Maritime Security (CIMSEC).
 

Housecarl

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http://freebeacon.com/national-secu...ail&utm_term=0_b5e6e0e9ea-a927c22488-46005157

Russians Violating New START Arms Treaty

Moscow tried to deceive inspectors on missile cuts, U.S. says

BY: Bill Gertz
June 9, 2016 5:00 am

U.S. nuclear arms inspectors recently discovered that Russia is violating the New START arms treaty by improperly eliminating SS-25 mobile missiles, American defense officials said.

The violations were discovered during an on-site inspection carried out in Russia in April, said officials familiar with details of the inspection.

During the recent visit to a Russian missile base, U.S. technicians found critical components of SS-25s—road-mobile, intercontinental ballistic missiles—had been unbolted instead of cut to permanently disable the components.

Additionally, American inspectors were unable to verify missiles slated for elimination had been destroyed. Instead, only missile launch canisters were inspected.

As a result, inspectors were unable to determine if the missiles were properly eliminated as required by the 2010 arms treaty, the officials said.

Additionally, the inspectors found that Russian missile forces had improperly displayed missile components slated for destruction by failing to leave them in the open for monitoring by so-called national technical means of verification, a euphemism for spy satellites and other sensors used in monitoring arms accords.

On-site inspectors also reported they were unable to verify that Russia had completed all New START treaty cuts to launchers declared eliminated by Russia between 2011 and 2015.

“Russia will meet their treaty elimination goals by using empty launchers from retired and retiring missile systems,” said one official. “They’re basically cutting up launchers that don’t carry missiles anyway.”

Disclosure of the New START treaty violations is a further setback for the Obama administration’s arms control agenda. The administration has made arms agreements with Russian aimed at cutting nuclear forces a priority. Arms talks have been suspended since Moscow militarily annexed Ukraine’s Crimea in 2014.

Asked about the April verification problems, State Department arms verification bureau spokesman Blake Narenda declined to discuss the matter, citing treaty secrecy rules.

“The New START treaty forbids releasing to the public data and information obtained during implementation of the treaty,” Narenda said in a statement.

“This would include any discussion of the results of inspection activities undertaken by the United States or the Russian Federation,” he said. “However, both sides continue to implement the treaty in a businesslike manner.”

On Capitol Hill, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry said the potential New START verification problem highlights the larger issue of the Obama administration’s poor record in pressing Russia to abide by its treaty obligations.

“Whether it’s Russian violations of the Open Skies Treaty, the Biological and Chemical Weapons Conventions, or multiple violations of the INF treaty, this administration has proven singularly unconcerned with arms control compliance,” Thornberry told the Free Beacon.

“Never having been made to pay a price, why wouldn’t Putin conclude that violations of the New START treaty would go unpunished as well?” he said.

John Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and a former State Department undersecretary for arms control, said the latest Russian treaty issue raises questions about whether Moscow may have helped Iran to circumvent treaties.

“Russian denials, obstructionism, and outright deception are nothing new in their efforts to prevent effective verification of arms control treaties,” Bolton said. “And just imagine what Moscow has taught Tehran.”

Mark Schneider, a former Pentagon strategic nuclear policymaker, said the New START arms accord has serious verification shortcomings.

“The New START treaty is a verification disaster area and Russia has a long history of violating substantive and verification provisions of strategic arms control agreements,” said Schneider, a senior analyst at the National Institute for Public Policy.

Schneider, former Pentagon director for strategic arms control policy, said Russia has avoided complying with its treaty commitments. “They have violated all of the major arms control treaties and will continue to do so because we impose no penalties,” he said.

New START provisions for eliminating solid-fuel missiles like the SS-25 call for crushing the first stage rocket motor or cutting it in two equal parts.

“If Russia has not done this, the missiles would not have been removed from accountability,” Schneider said. “The requirement for cutting, crushing, or flattening is intended to prevent the reuse of the rocket motor casings to produce new missiles. There is no other reason to violate this provision of New START, except perhaps to sell them to rogue states.”

Schneider said the elimination procedures for New START are less stringent than under the earlier START accord that allowed inspectors to witness the elimination of all mobile ICBMs.

“This is not the case under New START,” he said. “For solid-fuel ICBMs, including mobile ICBMs, inspectors do not have the opportunity to observe eliminations. Instead, they are allowed to view a portion of the remains from eliminations.”

Mobile launchers under New START also are eliminated by cutting erector-launchers, leveling supports, and mountings from the mobile chassis and removing launch support equipment, including instruments.

Also, Russia is required under the treaty to display old mobile launchers for spy satellites to verify their elimination and to permit U.S. inspectors to verify the missile destruction within 30 days.

The Obama administration’s record for responding to arms cheating by Russia is weak. The State Department, which is in charge of monitoring treaty compliance, hid Moscow’s violation of the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty for several years to avoid upsetting its arms control agenda.

The INF violation was finally made public in 2014 after prodding from Congress in a State Department report that said the violation involved Russia’s development of illegal ground-launched cruise missiles.

According to the State Department web site, there have been four “Type 2” on-site inspections since February under New START. Type 2 inspections are those used for confirming missile eliminations like those used for the SS-25.

The location of the April treaty inspection could not be learned.

Known locations where Russia has deployed SS-25s at bases include Yoshkar-Ola, Vypolzovo, Irkutsk, and Barnaul, according to the Russian strategic nuclear forces blog.

In February, Secretary of State John Kerry hailed the fifth anniversary of the New START treaty as a “landmark” arms control accord.

“New START is more important now than when it went into effect. It gives us the confidence and level of oversight we need— and could not otherwise have— by allowing U.S. inspectors unprecedented access to Russian nuclear facilities,” Kerry said.

However, Russia has voiced less enthusiasm for the treaty. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said in April that New START will be an “end document” for U.S.-Russian arms control relations.

Asked if New START is a final accord, Ryabkov told Interfax, “Saying ‘final’ is not fashionable today. I would say that this document will obviously become an end document because, indeed, it has an end position on this scale of coordinates, where the time scale goes to the right and the quantity scale goes upwards, in other words, it is the quantity of weapons slated for limitation.”

The treaty calls for both Washington and Moscow to pare their nuclear arsenals to 700 deployed land-based and sea-based missiles and heavy bombers, 1,550 deployed warheads, and 800 non-deployed launchers and bombers.

Last Saturday, Anita Friedt, principal deputy assistant secretary of state for arms control verification and compliance, gave a speech that gave no suggestion there are problems with New START verification.

“Buttressed by this robust verification architecture, New START treaty implementation is proceeding well and both the United States and Russia are expected to meet the treaty’s central limits when they take effect in February 2018,” she said.

However, Friedt said New START verification measures, despite their intrusiveness, “may not be sufficient for effective verification in the future.”

The House fiscal 2017 defense authorization bill contains a provision that if passed would prohibit the Pentagon from spending any funds to implement New START until Pentagon officials reported to Congress about the treaty’s impact on critical defense capabilities.

The provision would block funding until the defense secretary and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff assessed the treaty’s impact on U.S. rapid reload of ballistic missiles and the impact of the treaty on U.S. deterrent strategy.

The bill also would require an assessment of the threat posed by non-treaty-limited nuclear or strategic conventional systems to the United States and American allies and of the risk posed by Russian arms violations. It would require an explanation of why continued treaty implementation is in U.S. national security interests.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/ori...esidential-guard-armed-forces-legitimacy.html

Is the West about to repeat its mistakes in Libya?

Is the international community about to help Libya fix itself and gain stability or will it repeat the same errors of judgment and commit more mistakes than it did five years ago? Those mistakes helped make Libya become more chaotic, more ungovernable and more destabilizing to its immediate and regional neighbors.

Author: Mustafa Fetouri
Posted: June 8, 2016
Comments 14

On June 7, Britain circulated a draft resolution at the United Nations to authorize European naval forces to intercept ships suspected of smuggling arms to the Islamic State (IS) in Libya. This appears to be counter to what was agreed to in a May 16 Vienna meeting in which major powers promised to help Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA) arm itself to confront IS. However, the latest draft resolution aims to tighten the noose around IS while calling for the easing of the arms embargo against the GNA.

After the May ministerial meeting, the United States, Russia, Italy, Germany and Libya’s neighboring countries, along with at least three regional organizations including the Arab League, European Union and the United Nations, agreed to lend further support to Libya’s fragile government and to translate this political support into on-the-ground material assistance.

However, careful reading of the meeting’s adopted final communique reveals that the international community is about to blunder again in the North African country, probably repeating some of its worst mistakes committed five years ago. In February 2011, leading world powers, including France and the United Kingdom, rushed to help what they called the Libyan revolution to topple Moammar Gadhafi, only to send the country into chaos and lawlessness. They supplied arms and training to rebel forces without any real concern about where such weapons could end up and who was being trained.

The communique highlights two issues of critical importance: the partial lifting of the United Nations arms embargo imposed on Libya in March 2011, and the granting of some legitimacy to the recently created Presidential Guard. This legitimacy can be granted by recognizing the Presidential Guard as legitimate militia-free, disciplined armed forces under the state control as claimed by the GNA, which created it just a few days before presenting the guard as such in Vienna.

Without any rigorous checking or proper mechanisms in place, those who met in Vienna declared their support for the Presidential Guard, stressing their readiness to “respond to the Libyan government’s requests for training and equipping the Presidential Guard and vetted forces from throughout Libya.”

Such a step will only complicate the military and political situation in Libya and push the various parties into further conflict, since neither side accepts the other as a legitimate legal army under government control. Gen. Khalifa Hifter does not recognize the newly created Presidential Guard as a legal Libyan army worth arming and training, and vice versa.

Which armed group is legitimately called a Libyan army is a big issue in Libya, since such categorization mean legal status and the ability to train and purchase arms openly. The Libyan Armed Forces, under the leadership of Hifter, was recognized as such by the only elected legislature in the country, namely the Tobruk-based parliament. Over the last two years, the Libyan Armed Forces has been battling terror groups, including IS and Ansar al-Sharia, in Benghazi. It finally liberated much of the embattled city earlier this year, enabling locals to return to their homes and businesses.

Before the GNA was created, Libya’s internationally recognized government repeatedly asked for the lifting of the arms embargo to enable the government to buy arms in legal manners — but to no avail. Recognizing the GNA as a legitimate government of Libya should not mean anything before it includes the armed forces. Hifter does not accept the GNA as a legal government in Libya because it did not gain the confidence of the parliament, as required by the Libyan Political Agreement that was brokered by the UN and signed in December.

Arming any group that declares loyalty to the GNA — even if recognized by the international community as such — does not make it legitimate in the eyes of major players on the ground, including Hifter and Tripoli’s Revolutionary Brigades, for instance. The Presidential Guard is composed of armed militias of mixed loyalties drawing mainly on the city-state of Misrata’s armed and powerful militias. Whether or not the Presidential Guard has fought IS does not mean it should be seen as the focal point for a future Libyan army, since many of its members are implicated in abuses and crimes including the mass murder of civilians. Attempts to integrate them and other militias into a state-controlled armed forces have so far failed, and ordinary Libyans see them as an illegal militia.

Seeking training for such militias just because they declared loyalty to the GNA does not make them an army, nor will it lead to discipline and professionalism required in any professional state army. Previous attempts to train such individuals proved to be useless despite the millions of dollars wasted on such programs. Individuals loyal to certain militias, which protect them, will find it difficult to accept being integrated into a legal and accountable state body in which they can be held responsible for their actions.

It is only a matter of time before the UN votes to partially lift the arms embargo on the newly created Presidential Guard. This will automatically lead to renewed conflict because Hifter and his forces — which include a large number of Libya’s former professional army — will consider that to be against them despite the success they have scored against terror groups in Benghazi.

The West, and particularly European Union countries, want the GNA to at least curb, if not stop, the flow of immigrants from Libya to the southern EU shores. To do that, they have promised at the ministerial meeting in Vienna to train Libya’s coast guard. But, again, training the so-called Libyan coast guard is no more than old militias being recycled through the GNA to convince major powers that they are indeed under state command.

In 2011, the West rushed to help destroy the former regime in the tribally divided country without any workable plan to restabilize the country afterward, the result of which has been chaos and conflicts across Libya ever since. The West invested heavily — at least politically — in the so-called Libyan revolution, naively believing that once Gadhafi was toppled, the Libyans would be able to sit together and reconcile their differences and move forward. This time, the West is about to repeat its errors by recognizing old militias as a new army, giving it legitimacy and recognition.
 

Be Well

may all be well
How could "the West" make Libya any worse at this point? even nuking it might not make it worse.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-afghanistan-reconstruction-idUSKCN0YV2DZ

World | Thu Jun 9, 2016 4:26pm EDT
Related: World, Afghanistan

Taliban gains in Afghanistan threaten costly U.S. reconstruction effort

WASHINGTON | By Idrees Ali


The United States has wasted billions of dollars in reconstruction aid to Afghanistan over the past decade, and now a renewed Taliban insurgency is threatening the gains that have been made, the U.S government’s top watchdog on Afghanistan said.

"The bottom line is too much has been wasted in Afghanistan. Too much money was spent in too small a country with too little oversight," John Sopko told Reuters. "And if the security situation continues to deteriorate, even areas where money was spent wisely and gains were made, could be jeopardized."

The nearly $113 billion Congress has appropriated for reconstruction since 2001, when U.S.-led forces invaded the country and toppled the Taliban regime, has long been plagued by corruption, waste and mismanagement, according to a series of reports from Sopko, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR).Appointed by President Barack Obama, Sopko has led the watchdog agency for nearly four years. He said the planned drawdown of U.S. troops could compound the reconstruction effort's problems and add to the amount that already has been wasted, which he estimated is in the billions of dollars.

USA-AFGHANISTAN-RECONSTRUCTION.jpg

http://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/rngs/2/75/171/USA-AFGHANISTAN-RECONSTRUCTION.jpg

According to Sopko's latest report, issued in April, U.S. reconstruction funding for Afghanistan includes projects for programs to combat the drug trade, build electric power lines, develop new industries, improve the banking and legal systems and modernize agriculture, which the report says "employs more than 50 percent of the labor force".

While he declined to comment on how many American troops he thinks should remain in Afghanistan, his new warning could increase the pressure on Obama to reconsider his timeline for reducing the U.S. force in Afghanistan from about 9,800 today to 5,500 by the time he leaves office in January.


NEW LEADER

Last month, the Afghan Taliban selected Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada as their new leader after the United States killed their former chief, Mullah Akhtar Mansour, in a drone strike in Pakistan. The Taliban are making steady battlefield gains against Afghan security forces and Akhundzada has vowed, in an audio recording, that there will be no return to peace talks.

Last week, more than a dozen retired U.S. generals and diplomats urged Obama to maintain the current level of troops in Afghanistan, warning that a reduction would undercut the morale of Afghan government forces and bolster the Taliban.

Nearly $951 million - less than one percent - of the aid money has been saved in "restitution, fines, forfeitures, recoveries, savings, civil settlements," and between 2015 and 2016, 107 people and companies have been barred from doing business with the U.S government for contractor misconduct, Sopko's office said."Our agency wasn't created until half the money or more was spent,” Sopko said.

About 60 percent of the $113 billion Congress has appropriated has gone to train and equip Afghan security forces. However, how effectively Afghan forces can fight the Taliban remains a big question, Sopko said, and if the security situation deteriorates further, it could threaten the ability of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani's government to provide services to citizens.

“If we can't get out there ... we can't see if the troops are getting shoes, or getting bullets, or getting grenades, or getting paid, and the security will have an impact on that,” Sopko said.


ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT

In May, a Brookings Institution report cited as evidence of greater insecurity a rise in deaths among both civilians and Afghan security forces, as well as persistent deficiencies in the army and police, including retention and support functions.

Pentagon officials said that while Afghan forces have made steady progress, there is room for improvement.

“Obviously in a perfect world we would love to see them further along, you know, than perhaps (what) they demonstrated last year,” said U.S. Army spokesman Brigadier General Charles Cleveland.

Large portions of Afghanistan’s territory, including the provincial capital of Kunduz and multiple districts of Helmand province, have fallen, at times briefly, to the Taliban over the past year and a half, and many other districts and provinces are under Taliban control.

Still, U.S. reconstruction money has helped Afghanistan make some strides in human development, according to experts and former senior U.S. officials, and the U.S. Agency for International Development said it is not concerned about the planned drawdown of U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

James Dobbins, the State Department special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan from 2013 to 2014, said despite some humanitarian gains in Afghanistan, the invasion has yet to achieve its objective, despite the billions of dollars spent.

"We went into Afghanistan to make it more peaceful, and so far we haven't succeeded,” Dobbins said.


(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by John Walcott and Howard Goller)
 

Housecarl

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http://wnax.com/news/030030-obama-approves-broader-role-for-u-s-forces-in-afghanistan/

Obama approves broader role for U.S. forces in Afghanistan

20 mins ago in National, World

By Phil Stewart

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama has approved giving the U.S. military greater ability to accompany and enable Afghan forces battling a resilient Taliban insurgency, in a move to assist them more proactively on the battlefield, a U.S. official told Reuters.

The senior U.S. defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the decision would also allow greater use of U.S. air power, particularly close air support.

However, the official cautioned: “This is not a blanket order to target the Taliban.”

Obama’s decision again redefines America’s support role in Afghanistan’s grinding conflict, more than a year after international forces wrapped up their combat mission and shifted the burden to Afghan troops.

It also comes ahead of Obama’s eagerly anticipated decision on whether to forge ahead with a scheduled reduction in the numbers of U.S. troops from about 9,800 currently to 5,500 by the start of 2017.

A group of retired generals and senior diplomats urged Obama last week to forgo those plans, warning they could undermine the fight against the Afghan Taliban, whose leader was killed in a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan last month.

Under the new policy, the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General John Nicholson, will be able to decide when it is appropriate for American troops to accompany conventional Afghan forces into the field – something they have so far only been doing with Afghan special forces, the official said.

The expanded powers are only meant to be employed “in those select instances in which their engagement can enable strategic effects on the battlefield,” the official said.

That means that U.S. forces should not be expected to accompany Afghan soldiers on day-to-day missions.

“This added flexibility … is fully supported by the Afghan government and will help the Afghans at an important moment for the country,” the official said.

AIDING AFGHAN OFFENSIVE

The decision is a departure from current U.S. rules of engagement in Afghanistan, which impose limits on U.S. forces’ ability to strike at insurgents.

For example, the U.S. military was previously allowed to take action against the Taliban “in extremis” – moments when their assistance was needed to prevent a significant Afghan military setback.

That definition, however, left the U.S. military postured to assist them in more defensive instances. The new policy would allow U.S. forces to accompany Afghans at key moments in their offensive campaign against the Taliban.

“The U.S. forces will more proactively support Afghan conventional forces,” the official said.

The Taliban control or contest more territory in Afghanistan than at any time since they were ousted by a U.S.-backed intervention in late 2001, and U.S. officials have acknowledged the uneven performance of Afghan security forces.

Large portions of Afghanistan, including the provincial capital of northern Kunduz and multiple districts of southern Helmand province, have fallen, at times briefly, to the Taliban over the past year-and-a-half. Many other districts and provinces are also under varying degrees of Taliban control.

The new authorities that Obama has given the U.S. military could give it greater leeway in addressing the shortcomings of Afghan security forces.

Still, experts warn that its hard to predict when Afghanistan will be able to stand on its own against the Taliban, not to mention the country’s enormous economic difficulties and fractious political system.

The U.S government’s top watchdog on Afghanistan told Reuters that the United States had wasted billions of dollars in reconstruction aid to Afghanistan over the past decade, and now a renewed Taliban insurgency was threatening the gains that had been made.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Leslie Adler and Paul Tait)
 

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http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2016/06/10/world/asia/ap-as-south-korea-china-fishing.html?_r=0

Asia Pacific

South Korea Sends Military Boats to Repel Chinese Fishermen

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JUNE 10, 2016, 4:36 A.M. E.D.T.

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea sent military vessels to repel Chinese fishing boats that were illegally harvesting prized blue crabs near the disputed sea boundary between the Koreas before the fishermen retreated Friday, South Korean officials said.

Four naval and marine boats entered neutral waters around South Korea's Ganghwa island to chase away about 10 Chinese boats, which by afternoon had escaped into North Korea-controlled waters, said a Defense Ministry official who didn't want to be named, citing office rules.

The operation was approved by the United Nations Command that governs the zone where fishing activity is prohibited.

Depending on weather and water conditions, the operation will resume Saturday and continue until the Chinese boats withdraw further, the Defense Ministry official said. The South Korean military and maritime police personnel who carried out the mission were accompanied by translators and two monitors from United Nations Command.

"United Nations Command takes its responsibility to maintain the armistice very seriously. We had a responsibility to act and we are doing that," Gen. Vincent Brooks, the U.S. commander of the United Nations Command, said in a statement on the decision to authorize the operation.

The governments of China and North Korea were notified before the operation started and the Chinese boats were warned in English and Chinese, said the Defense Ministry official, who didn't provide further details about the operation.

Days earlier, South Korean fishermen towed away two Chinese fishing boats catching crabs south of the sea boundary and handed them over to local South Korean authorities. North Korea said after that incident that South Korean fishing and naval vessels had invaded their territory.

Chinese fishing boats have been going farther afield to feed growing domestic demand for seafood as catches have decreased in waters close to China's shores. Seoul has called for Beijing to employ tougher measures against Chinese boats illegally fishing in South Korea-controlled waters, which has caused bad feelings between the neighbors.

South Korean authorities seized about 600 Chinese ships last year for illegal fishing and more than 100 this year as of May, most from waters off the western coast of South Korea, according to the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries.

China expressed anger in 2014 when a South Korean coast guardsman shot and killed a Chinese boat captain who had violently resisted the inspection of his ship for suspected illegal fishing. In 2011, a South Korean coast guard officer was killed in a clash with Chinese fishermen in South Korean waters.

The western waters off the Korean Peninsula have also seen violent clashes between the Koreas because Pyongyang doesn't recognize the sea boundary unilaterally drawn by the American-led U.N. command at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

The countries have fought three bloody naval skirmishes in the area since 1999, and last month North Korea threatened to fire at South Korean warships if they entered its waters, after the South's navy fired warning shots to chase away two North Korean ships that crossed the boundary.
 

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http://www.independent.ie/world-new...re-150-were-tortured-and-killed-34788142.html

Mexican drug cartel 'controlled prison where 150 were tortured and killed'

James Badcock
Published
10/06/2016 | 02:30

Members of the Zetas drug gang used a prison in northern Mexico as their private house of horrors where they tortured and killed kidnapping victims and underworld enemies, public prosecutors in the state of Coahuila have said.

Between 2009 and 2012, Piedras Negras prison became a virtual extermination camp, ruled with impunity by the notorious crime cartel as an operational base for its reign of terror in the US-Mexican border region.

After an investigation into the three-year period, authorities estimate that around 150 people were murdered inside the prison, with their bodies being burnt or broken down in acid-filled tanks before the remains were disposed of in a river some 20 miles away.

It is not clear to what extent the prison's official guards cooperated with gang members or whether they merely allowed them to act with impunity in exchange for keeping order among inmates. But prosecutors have revealed that Zetas's prison leaders dressed up in uniforms as the prison's de facto security force, wearing bulletproof vests and driving customised vehicles.

"We have received information that this place was governed autonomously by the Zetas," a spokesman for the Coahuila state prosecution force said after an investigation based on the testimony of 42 prisoners.

The leader of the bloodthirsty Zetas prison gang has been identified as Ramón Burciaga Magallanes, who is currently in another jail serving time for kidnapping. Besides Magallanes, prosecutors served arrest warrants on four other suspects. All five are accused of participating in just seven murders because the remains of seven victims have been found and identified within the prison compound.

The state prosecutor's office said that it was searching for more missing persons who "were taken to the prison to be killed".

Piedras Negras prison hit the headlines in September 2012, when 131 inmates escaped through the front door in what was reported as Mexico's biggest-ever jailbreak. That incident jolted state security forces from their passive stance and the prison was closed down later that year.

In February, 49 inmates were killed in Monterrey, where two rival Zetas leaders were fighting for control of a prison.

Irish Independent
 

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http://www.janes.com/article/61111/nato-looks-to-guard-against-a2-ad-tactics-practises-asw

Country Risk

NATO looks to guard against A2/AD tactics, practises ASW

Brooks Tigner, Brussels - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
09 June 2016

Guarding the Baltic and Black Sea areas and other international waters against anti-access/area (A2/AD) denial is a growing strategic imperative for NATO, says Vice Admiral James G Foggo, commander of the US Sixth Fleet and NATO's Naval Striking and Support Forces (STRIKFORNATO).

"There is a proliferation of weapons of asymmetric warfare [by Russia using] submarines, mines, anti-ship cruise missiles, and very sophisticated and accurate coastal radars," he said, adding that A2/AD tactics have been observed in the Black and Baltic Seas "and, more recently, in the eastern Mediterranean".

Foggo briefed reporters by teleconference on 8 June from his post on board the USS Mount Whitney , where he is leading NATO's multinational 'BALTOPS' maritime exercise, during 5-19 June.

Involving 6,100 maritime, ground, and air force troops from 17 countries, the exercise's scenarios are spread across Estonia, Finland, Germany, Poland, Sweden, and the Baltic Sea to test maritime interdiction, anti-submarine warfare (ASW), amphibious operations, and air defence.

"We are seeing an [emerging] anti-access/area denial strategy and we need to keep an eye on this because it can restrict commerce, the freedom of navigation, and sea lines of communication in international waters," he said.

He said lessons learnt from 'BALTOPS' 2015 frame the focus of the current exercise. "What came out of that is our desire to improve interoperability - specifically communications connectivity - and a common operating picture [in order] to expand our horizons in anti-submarine warfare," said Vice Adm Foggo.

Vice Adm Foggo and his fellow commanders repeatedly stressed the emphasis of BALTOPS on ASW where, for the first time in years, the event has three advanced-design diesel-electric submarines at its disposal: a Polish Type 207 (Sokol-class), a Portuguese Type 214 (Tridente-class), and a Swedish A 19 (Gotland-class) submarine.

"That's more than we've had for quite some time," said Rear Admiral Paddy McAlpine, UK Royal Navy and deputy commander of STRIKFORNATO.

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http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2016/06/10/turkeys_shifting_policy_on_syria_111902.html

Turkey's Shifting Policy on Syria

By Kamran Bokhari
June 10, 2016

Turkey is in the midst of a major shift in its policy on Syria. Ankara has long opposed the Syrian Kurds because it sees them as affiliates of the Turkish Kurdish separatist movement, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). But now it has reached a compromise with Washington, in which it is willing to accept a role for the Democratic Party of Syria (PYD) and its armed wing, the People’s Protection Units (YPG), in the fight against the Islamic State. The Turks will continue to view the Syrian Kurds as enemies. For now though, their relationship with the Americans and the threat from the Islamic State is a higher priority for them.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuþoðlu on June 7 claimed that Washington had guaranteed that Syrian Kurdish forces would not retain a presence west of the Euphrates River after U.S.-led operations against IS were over. Speaking to state-owned broadcaster TRT Haber, the top Turkish diplomat remarked: “If the YPG wants to give logistical support on the east of the Euphrates then that is different. But we do not want even a single YPG militant to the west [of Euphrates] especially after the operations. The U.S. has given a guarantee about this.”

On June 2, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoðan said that his country was assured that Arabs would lead the fight against IS in the northern Syrian area of Manbij, while the Kurds would largely play a logistical role.

It was only on May 30 that Turkey said it was ready for a joint operation with the United States against IS, but on the condition that the Syrian Kurds were not a part of it. We detected the beginning of this shift in Turkish policy when U.S. CENTCOM Commander Army Gen. Joseph Votel made a surprise visit to Turkey to ask Turkey to play a key role in the offensive against the Islamic State. Votel went to Turkey from Syria, where he had met with the PYD/YPG leadership.

Three days prior, Erdoðan hinted at a change in his country’s position when he said that Turkey had “neither the chance nor the right to turn our back on our region and the world.” He also added: “Who can say, claim or imagine that the things happening in Syria, Iraq and the Middle East have nothing to do with us?” These remarks were the first sign that Turkey was finally ready to fight IS.

The Turks had resisted U.S. pressure to play a lead role in the efforts against IS in Syria. Our view has been that Ankara would be dragged into Syria eventually, but we aren’t expecting Turkish troops to march into Syria in 2016.

The Turks cannot afford to have problems all along their periphery and a bad relationship with the Americans. Syria has been a growing challenge since it became clear that the Assad regime was not about to be toppled. But last November, Syria became far more complicated when the Turks shot down a Russian aircraft on the Syrian border.

This incident meant that Turkey had crises to its north and south. There was no way the Turks could be at loggerheads with Washington and Moscow simultaneously. Meanwhile, Turkey’s relations with Europe had also soured because of the migrant issue and because of its unwillingness to crack down on IS. A key reason the Turks have been hesitant to act against IS is the fear that doing so would empower the Syrian Kurds and by extension exacerbate the domestic Kurdish separatist movement. However, that concern became secondary to Turkey’s need to get out from under the pressures it was facing on all sides.

At the same time, IS was becoming a threat to Turkish security. The only way out was to mend relations with the Americans. The price for that was to get involved against IS. Besides, it was becoming clear that the Syrian Kurds were going to be the ground force against IS, which the Turks could not tolerate. Subjective preferences aside, the Turks also know that the Syrian Kurds are the only force right now that could strike at the heart of the IS caliphate.

The Islamist rebels that Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar are backing are focusing on fighting the Assad regime. Certainly the Turks do not want to insert their own troops, which would explain why they have agreed to the use of special forces. Therefore, they have gone from demanding that Arab fighters play the lead role while the Kurds act as an auxiliary force to saying they are willing to accept a Kurdish role in the fight against IS so long as the Kurds do not control any areas west of the Euphrates.

The fight against IS will not end anytime soon, so it is difficult to predict what will happen. At some point in the future, the Turks may deploy a large number of troops in this operation. They may not do this to fight IS, but they would likely do so to prevent the Syrian Kurds from enhancing the scope of Kurdistan, which is anchored in northeastern Syria.

Regardless of the fate of IS and the Kurds and the overall situation in Syria, the United States will likely get what it wants – for the Turks to play the lead role in managing war-torn Syria.


Reprinted with permission from Geopolitical Futures.
 

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https://www.buzzfeed.com/mikegiglio...llies-in-syria?utm_term=.sn7Xwzxkp#.fpbrQ9g5z

Russia Is Recruiting The U.S.’s Rebel Allies In Syria

Mike Giglio
BuzzFeed News Middle East Correspondent

Reporting From
Antakya, Turkey
posted on Jun. 9, 2016, at 7:01 p.m.

ANTAKYA, Turkey — The rebel commander was nervous. He had changed phone numbers and been difficult to reach before finally agreeing to meet in Antakya, a city near the border with war-torn Syria that has long swarmed with rebels, refugees, and spies. On the road to an out-of-the-way hotel, he told the driver to avoid the main route through town. “It’s better not to drive among all the people,” he said.

It was an open secret that the commander had once received cash and weapons from the CIA, part of a covert U.S. program that backs rebel groups against both ISIS and the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad.

When his battalion was eventually driven from Syria by its jihadi rivals, like a number of U.S.-backed groups, he pleaded with his U.S. handlers for better support, but it wasn’t enough. So he was, he said, “out of the game.”

Now, he said, sitting at a quiet table at the hotel, he had received an offer that could bring him back in — and potentially make him even stronger than before.

He was being recruited, he said, to work for the U.S.’s rival in Syria: Russia.

“They told me, ‘We will support you forever. We won’t leave you on your own like your old friends did,’” he said. “Honestly, I’m still thinking about it.”

The commander said that five years into a war that has killed some 400,000 people and created nearly 5 million refugees, Russia is recruiting current and former U.S. allies to its side. His revelation was confirmed by four people who said they, too, had been approached with offers from Russia and by two Syrian middlemen who said they delivered them.

The moves come as Russia ratchets up its involvement in Syria with troops and airstrikes. Russia says its military campaign is designed to target ISIS — in reality it has targeted all rebels, including some who are still backed by the U.S., while also wreaking havoc on civilians.

The secret outreach shows that as it works to muscle the U.S. out of Syria, Russia isn’t just bombing the U.S.’s current and former rebel allies — it’s also working to co-opt them, launching a shadowy campaign that seeks to highlight U.S. weakness in Syria. Ultimately, Russia could be hoping to help Assad win the war by dividing the opposition, driving a wedge between rebel groups and their traditional backers, and getting them to turn their guns on his enemies.

The commander said he found Russia’s offer appealing. Delivered by a Syrian agent who met him first in Antakya and then inside Syria, he said, the offer was this: Choose a rebel-held area in northern Syria and head there with his men, many of whom were trained as part of the CIA program. Russia would protect him — “from any group” and “any country” — with airstrikes, which he could personally call in. And it would give him all the money and weapons he would need.

In return, he would help to spearhead the fight against both ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra, the al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria that is one of the most potent forces battling the regime. Once the extremists were defeated, the commander, along with other rebel leaders who had come on board, would negotiate with the regime first to end the war and then to decide Assad’s fate.

Left unsaid was the fact that, in the meantime, Russia and the regime would continue working to wipe out anyone who opposed them.

This plan — whatever its chances of succeeding — represents an ideal outcome for Russia in Syria, preserving its influence in a country it considers an important client state while dividing the rebels and helping the regime to a military victory.

It would also mean a triumph over U.S. foreign policy. The Obama administration has publicly insisted for years, in concert with the opposition, that Assad must step down before the war can end — however, its allies have long criticized it for not doing enough to make that happen.

Having a former proxy switch sides to Russia, the commander knew, could anger the U.S. and its ally Turkey, which works with the U.S. to support rebels across its border. This notion fueled his paranoia — and at the hotel, he glanced nervously over his shoulder when other patrons walked by. He requested anonymity to reveal the details of a secret courtship still underway. “If I say yes, I will create a new enemy in the U.S. or Turkey,” he said.

Years of failed U.S. partnerships have left a long trail of angry rebels, and the commander suspected that there were others being tempted: “Russian intelligence knows all the groups who were fighting ISIS and dealing with the U.S. and not getting enough support.”

The four additional rebel leaders, all with current or past U.S. ties, said they had also been approached with similar offers, either via Russian officials or Syrian middlemen.

One of Moscow’s main aims, each of them said, was to outmaneuver the U.S. “Their goal is to take control in Syria and kick America out,” one of these rebel leaders said, requesting anonymity to protect his reputation and because he still works with the U.S.

He said he had traveled to Egypt to speak with Russian officials but declined their offer. It included the chance to be part of a military council with the regime along with “money, bullets, weapons, and all that I ask,” he said. “But if I put my hand in theirs it means I will destroy the revolution and the Syrian people along with it.”

The Russian foreign ministry directed requests for comment to the Russian defense ministry, which did not respond.

Louay al-Hussein, a prominent politician who was a member of the regime-sanctioned opposition before fleeing Syria last year, said he had relayed offers of air support, cash, and arms to rebels from officials at “more than one” Russian embassy. “They want to win in Syria against the international countries [backing the opposition], including the U.S.,” he said of Russia. “Moscow wants to find a political solution — but first they want to win.”

Of his own motivation, he added, “I just want to stop the war.”

Russia’s intervention came at a time when the regime seemed in danger of losing, and it has regained the momentum for Assad. Hussein said he thought this gave Moscow leverage to force a potential political solution on the Syrian dictator. “The regime is now just a militia. It is no longer a political regime,” he said. “We don’t care what the regime says anymore — only what Russia says. They are the leaders in Syria right now.”

Another opposition politician who said he had acted as an intermediary, Anas al-Shamy, said that Russia had been working with “some groups that broke away from the Americans,” though he declined to name them. “This information is secret,” he said.

Spokespeople for the U.S. State Department, the CIA, and the Obama administration’s National Security Council declined to comment.

An official with another government that backs the Syrian opposition said he believed the U.S. was aware of the Russian outreach. “If I heard about it and you heard about it, you can bet the Americans also heard about it,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the subject. “This is a turf war.”

Russia’s tactic suggests that Moscow sees an opening to assert greater influence in Syria and undermine the U.S. along the way.

“I think the U.S. is less and less of an influential player in the civil war,” said Robert S. Ford, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington and U.S. ambassador to Syria from 2011 to 2014.

Ford played a key role in the last round of peace talks in Geneva, in March 2014, which were sponsored by the U.S. and Russia and ended without a deal. A new peace process that has been underway since the spring again looks on the verge of collapse, with Assad declaring on Tuesday that it had “failed,” vowing to take back “every inch” of the country.

Washington’s leverage in the talks has been limited, Ford said, as Russia steps up its involvement on the ground while the U.S. steps back. “They’ve pretty much ceded to Russian military action,” he said. “If the Americans wanted to reassert themselves in the process they would have [increased] arms supplies and encouraged the Turks and Saudis to do the same, but as far as I can tell they haven’t.”

Yet Ford added that Russia’s outreach to rebels also betrays its own weakness. “What it tells me is that the Russians don’t have an exit strategy from Syria, and they’re trying to find one,” he said. “And I think they understand that if they don’t win over some element of the moderate opposition, they’re not going to be able to get a political exit very easily.”

He added: “The Syrian war at this point has such a variety of groups and governments operating in it that there’s really not one country that can control where it’s going. I have the sense that the Russians are finding this much harder than they expected.”

Many of its Syrian allies say the Obama administration, seven months from leaving office, is only going through the motions in its efforts to end the war, and perhaps is even happy to let Moscow take charge. “The Americans are showing the Russians that they are weak in Syria and not invested,” said Obadah al-Kaddri, a Syrian politician working with the opposition’s U.S.-backed negotiating team in Geneva. “The U.S. aim is just to get the opposition to go to Geneva so they can go back and tell the American people and Congress that they tried.”

Kaddri traveled to Moscow for his own meetings with Russian officials this spring, hoping to broker an understanding between rebel groups and the Russian government. The Russians told him they had no love for Assad, he said, but wanted to keep Syria from disintegrating. He also recalled them saying that their attacks on moderate rebels had been cases of mistaken identity, pulling out a map and inviting him to show them where his rebel friends were based. He decided, in the end, that “the Russians are lying.”

Rebels should be wary of the Russian outreach, said Frederic C. Hof, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and former adviser to the Obama administration on Syria. “Russia has a track record, and if I were one of these rebel commanders, that track record would neutralize some of the sweet talk coming from the lips of a Russian operative,” he said. “The Russians have used Jabhat al-Nusra as an excuse for bombing anything they please. And they’ve not been shy about committing war crimes.”

Hof added that Russia may be more tied to Assad than its offers to rebels suggest. “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin sees Syria as a place where the alleged U.S. program of democratic regime change can be defeated decisively, and that is what he is selling to the Russian people,” he said. “Assad is his poster boy. He personifies the Syrian state that Putin says he’s going to save. Assad serves a purpose for Putin, and Assad knows it.”

Some rebels with U.S. ties confirmed they had been approached by Russia but said they had rejected the Russian outreach out of hand.

“The U.S. is supporting us and we are working for American intelligence,” said one rebel official who worked closely with the U.S. when his battalion was part of the CIA program, and requested anonymity due to security concerns. “How can we cheat American intelligence and start working for the Russians?”

“I would never do it. I would never sell my revolution,” said Abdullah Awdah, who was the military commander for Harakat Hazm, one of the most powerful U.S.-backed groups in Syria until it was driven from the country by extremists last year.

His U.S. contacts were aware of the Russian outreach, Awdah added. “We are in touch with Americans here, maybe directly or not directly, and they are upset with this [outreach],” he said. “We are just like a piece of paper, being passed between the big countries who are playing in Syria.”

Other rebel leaders were receptive at least to hearing the Russians out.

Mousa Humaidi, a 40-year-old ex-businessman from northern Syria, was a senior leader with the Syrian Revolutionaries Front, or SRF, and personally received many of the weapons shipments, including TOW anti-tank missiles, the U.S. sent the group in Syria, he said. The SRF was routed by Jabhat al-Nusra in late 2014 — and soon after, he said, he was approached by Russia via Syrian middlemen including the opposition politician Hussein. “Honestly I found that they are honest and good friends, because they support their friends,” he said. “Russia has more honor than America.”

Humaidi said he declined the offer, in part thanks to Russia’s attacks on moderate rebels and civilians. But he suggested that a seasoned commander could navigate the contours of a deal. Had he accepted, he said, he would have arranged for soldiers still loyal to him, who are currently being armed and trained by the the U.S., to cross into Syria from Turkey and defect. And he was confident he could have rallied his men to the cause. “I could do it if I wanted. I have my ways,” he said. “I was living with my fighters in Syria and I know how they think, what they want, and how to make them agree.”

At the hotel in Antakya, the commander was still weighing his options.

He and the Syrian agent had met first in Turkey and then in Syria, he said, where the man told him Russian jets were protecting them. When he said he needed time to think, he added, the man handed him $100,000.

On his phone were voice messages from the same Syrian agent, he said; the last one was six days old. “We want you, we want you,” a voice said in Arabic. “Go, my brother — we closed the old page. You go in person and manage the work.”

The commander knew that joining forces with Russia would mean a personal concession that the regime had won. On the other hand, he reasoned, Russia was at least offering, in contrast to the U.S., a way for the bloodshed to come to an end. “The Americans just want to buy time,” he said. “But the Russians are here to work.”

He headed back to the car, lost in thought. “I cannot decide,” he said. “It’s like walking down a dark tunnel, and you don’t know if you will find the light.”


With additional reporting by Munzer al-Awad from Istanbul and Antakya.
.

Mike Giglio is a correspondent for BuzzFeed News based in Istanbul. He has reported on the wars in Syria and Ukraine and unrest around the Middle East. His secure PGP fingerprint is 13F2 AD33 403F E72E 7C4E 5584 3E3B 2497 EEE9 DF7A

Contact Mike Giglio at mike.giglio@buzzfeed.com.
 

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http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/jun/9/obamas-anti-israel-policies-turn-russia-into-main-/

Obama’s antagonism sends Israel to protection of Russia

By L. Todd Wood - - Thursday, June 9, 2016

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

The Obama administration’s treatment of Israel has been, in a word, deplorable.

Everybody knows it. President Obama has enabled Israel’s archenemy, the Islamic Republic of Iran, to threaten its very existence. The White House has allowed Tehran to receive sophisticated anti-aircraft weapons systems from Russia, with more advanced weapons on the way, to frustrate proactive military strategies Israel uses to deal with threats she faces. Mr. Obama has even effectively set up a timetable for Iran to receive nuclear weapons.

All this while Iran’s leaders continue to call for the destruction of Israel and defiantly test ballistic missiles to deliver the eventual nuclear payloads. Heck, Bloomberg reports this week that Mr. Obama’s $1.7 billion bribe to Iran through last year’s nuclear deal is actually financing Iranian weapons purchases. In case you haven’t noticed, Bloomberg is not known as a right-wing news outlet.

The president has squandered American influence in the Middle East so badly that now Russian aircraft have been targeting Israeli aircraft, prompting hurried trips to Vladimir Putin’s court in Moscow by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu twice in recent months.

Changes in the “facts on the ground” in the Levant and the Fertile Crescent during the Obama presidency have been astounding, and not in a good way.

Hezbollah now has access to Russian arms depots in Syria and threatens to “turn its sight towards Israel” when the Syrian civil war is over. The Islamic State is metastasizing in Egypt and has its leaders garrisoned and protected in the Gaza Strip. Fresh acts of terrorism erupted in Israel just this week, with the White House offering little beyond words to its ally.

So can you hardly blame the Israeli government for looking north to the Russian Federation for a partnership with the new sheriff in town. Mr. Netanyahu travels to Russia for the third time in a year this September to kiss Mr. Putin’s ring. He has no choice.

Israel can no longer count on the United States for its ultimate security. America is no longer the protector of last resort. Israel simply cannot trust us, for yes, the United States of America, formerly Israel’s only true friend, is now conspiring for its demise through a policy that has simply enabled Iran.

Russia has a natural connection to Israel. Hundreds of thousands of Russian Jews are living in Israel, which is also a popular destination for Russian tourists. It’s a short flight, the security is good, the beaches and culture are fantastic. There are many dual citizens in Israel with Russian passports as well. Russians even serve in the Israeli Defense Forces.

“Russia is a global power, and our relations are getting closer,” Mr. Netanyahu said recently.

Don’t blame Bibi. He is simply acknowledging reality. The axis of Russia, Iran and Syria now dominates the Middle East. Perhaps Mr. Netanyahu is hoping Mr. Putin can control Hezbollah and prevent the terrorist group from following through on its promise to attack Israel. Perhaps he is hoping the Russian president will restrain Iran. Perhaps he is just acknowledging the red elephant in the room.

Yes, we still give Israel lots of military aid, but the special relationship is gone. Thank Mr. Obama and the Israel haters in the Democratic Party for that. And Bernie Sanders will see to it that that hostility is enshrined in the party’s platform at the convention in July in Philadelphia.

Remember the boos at the last Democratic convention when Israel was mentioned? A Hillary Clinton presidency will drive a stake into the heart of Israel’s special bond with America. Mr. Netanyahu is simply playing the cards he has been dealt.

Never forget: Israel is the only real democracy in the Middle East. It is the only place where Jews, Christians and, yes, Muslims worship openly and freely. I’ve been there many times. I’ve seen it. It is the only place where Arabs are really free. Isn’t it ironic that America, the former shining city on the hill, is actively weakening Israel’s security?

• L. Todd Wood is a former special operations helicopter pilot and Wall Street debt trader, and has contributed to Fox Business, The Moscow Times, National Review, the New York Post and many other publications. He can be reached through his website, LToddWood.com.
 

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https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-woman-...export-jet-engines-china-223336413.html?nhp=1

U.S. woman convicted of conspiracy to export jet engines to China

June 9, 2016

(Reuters) - A California woman was convicted on Thursday by a federal jury in Florida of conspiring to illegally export fighter jet engines, a military drone and technical data on the weapons to China, the U.S. Justice Department said.

Wenxia Man, 45, of San Diego, faces a maximum of 20 years in prison for violating the Arms Export Control Act, the department said in a statement. The engines are used in F-35, F-22 and F-16 U.S. fighter jets, and a drone capable of firing Hellfire missiles through a third country, it added.

Sentencing is set for Aug. 19.The Lockheed Martin F-35, powered by Pratt and Whitney engines, is the most advanced strike fighter in the United States arsenal. The General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper, powered by a General Electric turbofan engine, has been in wide use against targets in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Somalia and Libya.According to the grand jury indictment filed on Aug. 21, 2014, Man was a legal permanent resident of San Diego doing business as AFM Microelectronics, Inc. It said she worked with Xinsheng Zhang, a resident of China who was "acting as an official agent for the procurement of arms, munitions, implements of war, and defense articles on behalf of that country."

(Reporting by Eric Beech in Washington; Editing by Mohammad Zargham and Richard Chang)

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Housecarl

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https://www.yahoo.com/news/iraqi-troops-enter-southern-fallujah-014316458.html?nhp=1

Iraqi Troops Enter Southern Fallujah for First Time in 2 Years

June 8, 2016
Time


(NAYMIYAH, Iraq) — A column of black Humvees carrying Iraqi special forces rolled into southern Fallujah on Wednesday, the first time in more than two years that government troops have entered the western city held by the Islamic State group.

The counterterrorism troops fought house-to-house battles with the militants in the Shuhada neighborhood, and the operation to retake the city is expected to be one of the most difficult yet.

“Daesh are concentrating all their forces in this direction,” said Gen. Haider Fadel, one of the commanders of the counterterrorism forces, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State militants.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi promised a swift victory when he announced the start of the operation on May 22 to liberate Fallujah, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of Baghdad. But the complexity of the task quickly became apparent.

Although other security forces from the federal and provincial police, government-sanctioned Shiite militias and the Iraqi military have surrounded the city, only the elite counterterrorism troops are fighting inside Fallujah at this stage of the operation. And they are doing so under the close cover of U.S.-led coalition airpower.

“We expect to face more resistance, especially because we are the only forces entering the city,” Fadel said.

The Islamic State group has suffered setbacks on several fronts in the region where it captured large swaths of territory two years ago. In northern Syria, U.S.-backed rebels made a final push Wednesday in the town of Manbij — a key waypoint on the ISIS supply line to the Turkish border and its self-styled capital of Raqqa. And in Libya, forces loyal to a U.N.-brokered government have advanced deep inside the coastal city of Sirte, the main stronghold of the ISIS group’s local affiliate.

Fallujah is one of the last ISIS strongholds in Iraq. Government forces have slowly won back territory, although ISIS still controls parts of the north and west, as well as the second-largest city of Mosul.

The sky above Fallujah’s Shuhada neighborhood on Wednesday filled with fine dust and thick gray smoke obscuring minarets and communication towers as artillery rounds and volleys of airstrikes cleared the way for Iraqi ground forces.

At a makeshift command center, Iraqi forces coordinated the operation via hand-held radios, with Australian coalition troops stationed at a nearby base. One of the Australians listed the casualties among the militants.

“Two KIA (killed in action), one wounded with a missing arm — his right arm,” the unidentified Australian radioed after calling in an airstrike on Islamic State fighters.

A frontier city on the easternmost edge of Anbar province, Fallujah has long been a bastion of support among its mostly Sunni population for anti-government militants following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

It is symbolically important to both sides: Many of the Iraqi forces fought al-Qaida in Iraq — the predecessor to ISIS — in this same territory, and the city was the scene of some of the bloodiest urban combat with U.S. forces in 2004.

Its high value is one of the reasons ISIS has deployed well-trained snipers and built extensive networks of tunnels to defend it.

“We are having to fight two battles — one above the ground and one below,” said Iraqi Maj. Ali Hamel of the military’s intelligence wing.

While Fallujah’s sparsely populated northern outskirts were recaptured quickly by Iraqi forces, ISIS used the initial days of the operation to pull the majority of its fighters into the city center, taking about 50,000 civilians with them for use as human shields.

Once Iraq’s special forces began trying to punch inside the city limits, the pace of operations slowed.

In past battles with ISIS in places like Ramadi, Fadel said, one of the signs that the militants were losing their grip on territory was when civilians begin fleeing the city center.

“So far, we haven’t seen that” in Fallujah, he said. “Once we do, it will only be a matter of time.”

The Islamic State militants “had chosen their battle space,” a counterterrorism officer said, explaining how the group set up many defensive positions in the southern outskirts to try to bog down the Iraqi forces before they even had a chance to enter.

That southern neighborhood of Naymiyah, which was secured by Iraqi forces on Sunday, bears the scars of a protracted fight, a now-common sight in Iraqi territory that has been won back from ISIS.

Walls stood shredded by artillery fire, with almost every home either partially collapsed or pancaked. Craters from airstrikes left many main roads unusable. Convoys of armored Humvees were forced to use the neighborhood’s unpaved side streets instead, churning up the soft sand beneath their treads.

“We’re expecting another big fight like this one before Fallujah falls,” the officer said, explaining that he anticipated Iraqi forces would encounter another heavily fortified neighborhood. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief reporters.

On Wednesday evening, the prime minister visited the recently retaken territory.

Al-Abadi was joined by Lt. Gen. Abdel Wahab al-Saadi, the counterterrorism commander of the Fallujah operation.

It was al-Abadi’s fourth trip to the area since the operation began. Despite territorial victories against ISIS, theIraqi leader continues to grapple with a deepening political crisis and growing social unrest in Baghdad.


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Housecarl

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http://english.aawsat.com/2016/06/a...hran-withholding-armament-kurdish-forces-iraq

Middle East

Defense Ministry Sources: Tehran Withholding Further Armament for Kurdish Forces in Iraq

Dalshad Abdullah
1 hour ago 23

Irbil-Iran has been called out for stopping artillery supply convoys scheduled for delivery to Iraqi Kurdistan four months ago, sources at the Iraqi ministry of defense confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper.

Iraqi Kurdish lawmaker Shakhawan Abdulla accused the Iraqi ministry of defense of purposely hindering arms delivery to the Kurdistan region, which was the result of stockpiling weapons in Baghdad storages.

Abdulla told Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper that over five tons of weaponry promised to Irbil have not yet been delivered despite procedures being finalized.

The Iraqi ministry of defense had caved in under Iranian pressures for withholding arms delivery to Irbil.

The Kurdish lawmaker stated that the Iraqi Defense Minister Khaled al-Obaidi had personally stood behind suspending delivery.

“The minister of defense’s action comes despite his own family residing in Irbil, and is protected by the Peshmerga forces–the minister also belongs to Mosul which daily witnesses Peshmerga forces fighting against ISIS and freeing most towns; that alone should have served as a reason for the minister to do all that is possible in order to facilitate further armament of Peshmerga forces. Nonetheless he now serves as the main obstacle,” Abdulla added.

Abdulla pointed out that the main reasons behind the suspension of arms delivery is that Baghdad fears the very arming of the paramilitary group. He said that “the Iraqi government sees that arming Peshmerga forces will cause a future concern. There are no other evident reasons. Baghdad is well aware that the first ISIS defeat was served at the hands of the Peshmerga forces.”

MP Abdulla carried on explaining that the partiality Peshmerga forces experience is highlighted most by denying them their just portion of incoming artillery to Iraq.

Based on the cabinet distribution, the Iraqi Kurds would be entitled to twenty tons of arms from each incoming 100, nonetheless if battlefield ranges are taken into consideration, the Peshmerga’s portion would be somewhere around 30-40 tons given that they are currently fighting ISIS across a 1,100 km premise.
 
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