WAR 07-02-2016-to-07-08-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
(222) 06-11-2016-to-06-17-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...17-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(223) 06-18-2016-to-06-24-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...24-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(224) 06-25-2016-to-07-01-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...01-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-nato-meeting-idUSKCN0ZI0GO

World | Sat Jul 2, 2016 7:35am EDT
Related: World

NATO-Russia Council to discuss air safety on July 13: RIA cites Russian Defence Ministry

The NATO-Russia Council (NRC) will meet on July 13 to discuss air safety measures over the Baltic Sea and other issues, RIA news agency cited a statement by the Russian Defence Ministry as saying on Saturday.

Permanent representatives will attend the meeting.

Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu also said that Russia is starting work on a set of measures to improve aviation safety over the Baltic Sea, including a measure that would require Russian military aircraft to fly with transponders, or devices used for identification, turned on.

There have been a number of close encounters between Russian and Western aircraft over the Baltic Sea in recent months, and the former Soviet Baltic states have called on NATO to step up air defenses in the region.

(Reporting by Lidia Kelly)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-finland-nato-putin-idUSKCN0ZH5IV

World | Fri Jul 1, 2016 2:16pm EDT
Related: World, Russia

Putin hints Russia will react if Finland joins NATO

NAANTALI, Finland | By Denis Dyomkin and Tuomas Forsell

President Vladimir Putin suggested on Friday Russia could move its troops closer to the Finnish-Russian border if Finland joins NATO and called for measures to improve conflict prevention over the Baltic.

Finnish armed forces "would become part of NATO's military infrastructure, which overnight would be at the borders of the Russian Federation", Putin said after meeting Finnish President Sauli Niinisto.

"Do you think we will keep it as it is: our troops at 1,500 (kilometers, 900 miles) away?"

Putin's first visit to Finland since the Ukraine crisis erupted in 2014 comes amid increased Russian and NATO activity in the Baltic region, and with the militarily neutral Finland and neighboring Sweden increasing their co-operation with NATO. It also comes a week before a NATO summit in Warsaw.


Related Coverage
› Avoid flights over Baltic Sea with transponders off: Finnish President

"NATO perhaps would gladly fight with Russia until the last Finnish soldier," Putin said.

"Do you guys need it? We don't. We don't want it. But it is your call."

Airspace over the Baltic has been the arena for a rash of close encounters between Russian and Western aircraft in recent months, and the former Soviet Baltic states have called on NATO to step up air defenses in the region.

Putin and Niinisto called for measures to improve security, with the Finnish president urging that no military planes should fly over the Baltic with identification devices switched off.

"We all know the risk with these flights and I have suggested that we should agree that transponders are used on all flights in the Baltic Sea region," Niinisto said.

Putin said Russian planes flew at times with identifying transponders off, but NATO planes did it much more often.

He said Russia would talk to NATO about increasing mutual trust and improving conflict prevention at the Russia-NATO council meeting that will take place after the NATO summit.


(Reporting by Denis Dyomkin and Tuomas Forsell; Writing by Lidia Kelly; Editing by Andrew Roche)
 

Housecarl

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Talk about a FUBAR.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/taiwan-mistakenly-launches-supersonic-anti-ship-missile-china/

AP/ July 1, 2016, 4:35 AM

Supersonic missile misfired in China's direction; 1 dead

Last Updated Jul 1, 2016 7:38 PM EDT

TAIPEI, Taiwan - Taiwan's military said it mistakenly fired a supersonic anti-ship missile Friday that hit a fishing boat, killing one and injuring three people, on the day rival China was celebrating the Communist Party's anniversary.

The 500-ton patrol boat Chinchiang was undergoing an inspection inside a military base when the Hsiung Feng III missile was fired and landed about 40 nautical miles (75 kilometers) away in waters off the islands of Penghu near Taiwan, the official Central News Agency said.

The Defense Ministry said the missile penetrated a nearby Taiwanese fishing boat, killing its captain and injuring three crew members.

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A preliminary investigation showed that missile operators likely failed to follow proper procedures, CNA said.

A full investigation was under way, while the navy sent a helicopter and boats to search for the missile, the report said.

The firing coincided with Beijing's celebrations of the 95th anniversary of the founding of the ruling Communist Party. Chinese President Xi Jinping, also the party's top leader, delivered a speech Friday calling for peaceful development of relations between Beijing and Taipei.

Tensions across the strait have escalated since Tsai Ing-wen of a pro-independence party was elected president earlier this year. Tsai has refused to endorse the concept of a single Chinese nation, and Beijing cut off contact with Taiwan's liaison office when she was inaugurated in May.

Beijing sees Taiwan as a renegade province after a civil war, although the island has functioned as an independent country and does not acknowledge Beijing's claim of authority over it.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.chinapost.com.tw/editorial/taiwan-issues/2016/07/02/470979/Missile-misfiring.htm

Missile misfiring underscores military, cross-strait problems

The China Post news staff
July 2, 2016, 12:10 am TWN

The misfiring of Hsiung Feng III missile has again underscored the lack of discipline among Taiwan's troops and the risk posed by the lack of communication across the strait. There are many questions that the military must answer.

The misfired missile from a Navy ship anchored at its Kaohsiung base hit a Taiwan fishing boat operating near Penghu, killing its captain and injuring three others.

The incident comes closely on the heels of the brutal killing of a stray dog by some soldiers, which sent the general public jumping on the military.

The Ministry of National Defense (MND) blamed the misfiring of the missile on personnel failing to observe procedures, but it must be asked how things could have gone so wrong.

Some former navy officials pointed out that there are a few tightly controlled safety steps to firing a Hsiung Feng III missile. Then it must be asked why each of these safety steps failed.

Hsiung Feng III is equipped with a self-destruction mechanism that can be triggered to destroy the missile if it is misfired.

The MND disclosed that it took about two minutes for the missile to reach and hit the fishing boat after it was launched, and it admitted that the self-destruction mechanism was not triggered.

So why then was it not triggered? Were the personnel on board the Navy ship panicking and unable to react as required? Or were they even unaware that the missile had been fired?

It could have been worse had the missile flown across the central line dividing the Taiwan Strait towards the mainland, which could have triggered a military response from China's People Liberation Army (PLA).

Some media reports claimed that unusual radar activity was detected from the Chinese side as soon as the missile was fired. Taiwan's military dismissed the reports, but it is the nation's genuine concern whether both sides can avoid a cross-strait conflict from being triggered by a mistake or accident.

President Tsai Ing-wen was still abroad on an official visit when the incident occurred. The Presidential Office said the president was immediately informed of the incident, and she instructed the National Security Council and the MND properly handle it.

The proper handling of the incident should involve not just an investigation into the cause of the misfiring and compensations for the victims. It must also involve communication with Beijing to convince that it was not a deliberate act of provocation.

Because of Tsai's refusal, however, to embrace the "1992 Consensus," China has cut off a cross-strait hotline — a communication channel that would be so crucial to preventing tensions from building up on misunderstanding, such as the misfiring of a missile.

President Tsai might be relieved to see that the incident did not develop into a major cross-strait crisis despite the lack of communication with Beijing. But there is no room for complacency.

Tsai is faced with a tough task reforming Taiwan's Armed Forces who are low in morale, lack discipline, and yet are supposed to defend the country mainly from the military power across the strait.

And let's not assume that only Taiwanese troops would make such an incredible mistake. There is always a possibility of the PLA misfiring one of its hundreds of missiles targeting Taiwan due to human error or a system glitch.

Therefore, it is important that Taipei and Beijing resume the cross-strait hotline, and build up a military mutual trust mechanism to prevent misunderstanding. But it remains to be seen how Tsai can break the cross-strait stalemate and rebuild communication with Beijing.
 

Housecarl

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http://fox59.com/2016/07/02/white-house-reveals-number-of-civilian-deaths-from-drone-strikes/

White House reveals number of civilian deaths from drone strikes

Posted 8:12 AM, July 2, 2016, by CNN Wire, Updated at 08:10am, July 2, 2016

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s administration estimated Friday that between 64 and 116 civilians have died during the years 2009-2015 from U.S. drone strikes outside of Iraq and Afghanistan.

In the same time span, the administration said between 2,372 and 2,581 militants had been taken out by drones.

The information was released as part of an effort by Obama to introduce more transparency into a controversial military tactic that he has defended as necessary to fight terror.

Human rights groups, however, were unsatisfied by the government’s disclosed figures, which came in far lower than independent estimates of civilian causalities.

The numbers released Friday included deaths outside established war zones. The administration didn’t specify which countries were included, though the military and CIA are believed to have carried out strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and various countries in Africa.

Officials said the disclosure, made in the final months of Obama’s presidency, was meant to institutionalize a rigorous reporting process for the next commander in chief.

To that end, Obama signed an executive order Friday tasking future administrations with working in a uniform way to ensure that civilians aren’t killed by drones. The order also requires the administration to disclose yearly the civilian deaths from strikes.

Agencies “shall maintain and promote best practices that reduce the likelihood of civilian casualties, take appropriate steps when such casualties occur, and draw lessons from our operations to further enhance the protection of civilians,” Obama wrote in the order.

Administration officials expressed confidence that Obama’s successor would uphold his order.

“I have no doubt that the next president will get the same advice from military commanders,” one official said.

Some human rights groups dismissed what they asserted was a woefully low estimate of the true number of civilian deaths from U.S. drone strikes.

“Although we welcome this release, it’s hard to credit the government’s death count, which is lower than all independent assessments,” said Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Security Project. “The government continues to conceal the identities of people it has killed, the specific definitions it uses to decide who can legitimately be targeted, and its investigations into credibly alleged wrongful killings.”

“The American public can’t be confident that the government is using lethal force legally and wisely with a disclosure that’s so limited as to be virtually meaningless,” Shamsi said.

Counts of civilian drone deaths have always caused controversy, given the difficulty in investigating the aftermath of strikes and unreliable reporting from on-the-ground sources.

While the CIA drone program is widely reported upon and even referenced by government officials, it remains classified and individual strikes aren’t typically confirmed by the agency.

That’s left outside groups — like the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, the Long War Journal and the New America Foundation — to piece together reports of strikes to account for civilian deaths. Their counts range from 200 to 1,000 civilian deaths.

But distinguishing between militants and civilians is often difficult and has caused discrepancies. While some civilian deaths are clear-cut — as when a 2014 U.S. strike on a wedding party in Yemen killed 12 — others involve targets whose identities are less clear.

The administration on Friday acknowledged the gap between its own figures and those of the outside groups.

Calculating the number of deaths caused by U.S. strikes is “more art than science,” according to one official.

“We acknowledge these assessments may be imperfect,” another official said, noting the complex calculation method is one of the reasons why the administration released a range of deaths, rather than a firm number.

At the same time, the government insisted in its report that other counts of civilian causalities were flawed, citing “the deliberate spread of misinformation by some actors, including terrorist organizations, in local media reports on which some non-governmental estimates rely.”

Friday’s disclosures follow policy reforms Obama unveiled in 2013 that he said would bring a new legal framework to the use of drone technology.

But that hasn’t done much to quiet the outrage from human rights groups, who say Obama has expanded a legally questionable killing regime.

“What little the Obama administration has previously said on the record about the drone program has been shown by the facts on the ground, and even the U.S. government’s own internal documents, to be false,” said U.S. human rights group Reprieve in a statement made before the White House report’s release.

“It has to be asked what bare numbers will mean if they omit even basic details such as the names of those killed and the areas, even the countries, they live in,” the group wrote Thursday.
 

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http://www.eurasiareview.com/02072016-the-current-north-korean-issue-analysis/

The Current North Korean Issue – Analysis

By Modern Diplomacy July 2, 2016
By Giancarlo Elia Valori*

Pending the periodical transformation of the North American political system, the Korean issue is surfacing again. It is a complex issue which is crucial to the strategic balance in Southern Asia. Moreover, it is precisely in the Korean region that the US (and also the European) balances with China and the Russian Federation are determined.

Since February 2016, Russia has always had excellent relations with the North Korean regime, but exactly in that phase the United States called for sanctions against North Korea within the UN Security Council. These sanctions have been primarily designed to damage the economic and strategic interests Russia has in the region.

Russia voted in favor of the sanctions, but I do not believe it can go beyond that level of warning against North Korea.

Russia is no longer willing to accept the nuclear and military autonomy of North Korea, which is now seen as a free rider in the Asian context.

The Russian Federation, however, wants to preserve the North Korean regime, which prevents the important Korean peninsula from falling under the US influence. Certainly it does not want military pressure against North Korea, which could endanger its security structures in Central Asia and the Pacific region.

Nevertheless Russia will certainly continue to preserve the high volume of trade with North Korea, amounting to one billion dollars a year – trade which is also based on the ruble.

It is also likely for the UN Security Council to block the project of an “Asian trading house” between Russia and North Korea, open to the other Asian countries and viewed by Russia as an axis for its penetration into Southern Asia.

China is no longer interested in keeping a North Korean system which puts pressures only on South Korea and the United States, but it plans to keep on using North Korea as the Southern pivot of its Belt and Road Initiative southwards and westwards.

This is the reason why China needs to “punish” Kim Jong-un (President Xi Jinping has not yet paid a visit to Pyongyang), but also to use him so as to avoid the Americanization of the terrestrial-maritime hub of the Yalu River and the Yellow Sea, which is essential for China’s military autonomy.

In this context, North Korea conveys two different sets of messages to Western countries and South Korea: the will of a slow but peaceful reunification and the rejection of the dismantling of its regime according to the techniques of the “orange revolutions” or the internal coup and even conventional war.

Finally, the North Korean regime shows its intention not to give up its nuclear-missile arsenal, which could also be managed by an agreement to be defined and reached from scratch.

The signs exist in the North Korean narrative and they only need to be interpreted with strategic wisdom, without regarding the North Korean regime as “irrational” or “unreasonable” or, even worse, run by an unpredictable leader.

Kim Jong-un is not an irrational man. He has a clear and reasonable plan in mind, but he wants to discuss it with reliable partners that do not wish, first and foremost, the destruction of his regime and his country.

Basically North Korea wants the United States to sit around a peace negotiating table which can definitely acknowledge its regime and define close and stable cooperation with South Korea.

The North Korean reaction to the South Korean block of the “reunification package” in Parliament and of the June 15 joint event of the whole Korean Nation, must be interpreted in this sense.

The celebration to be held in Kaesong, North Korea, did not take place due to the unilateral choice made by South Korea’s government.

Hence South Korea wants to play its own autonomous and independent role in the Asian region and fully exploit its new excellent relations with China and the Russian Federation, as well as probably wait for an implosion of the North Korean regime so as to do what West Germany did with East Germany, by incorporating it into its industrial system, almost at zero cost, while also avoiding competition thanks to the parity between the West German mark and the East German mark.

The South Korean President, Park Geun-hye, has gladly accepted the sanctions imposed by the United States on North Korea last February and has particularly emphasized that the economic crisis will tend to make North Korea implode if it does not give up its nuclear program.

Nevertheless it is precisely this military-civilian nuclear system which will enable North Korea to negotiate – maybe directly with the United States – a slow but stable softening of the regime and its return into the mainstream of the world-market.

I do not believe that Russia and China intend to support the US design of a controlled collapse of North Korea, which would destabilize the Chinese province of Liaoning and the whole Yalu River delta, as well as the 78 islands on the river controlled by China.

Russia has no interest in the collapse of the North Korean regime, but it does not even intend to support the US and South Korean pressures to definitively intimidate North Korea.

China has accepted the UN Security Council Resolution 2270 sanctioning Pyongyang. It has also set aside, for posterity, Kim Jong-un’s execution of his uncle Jang Song-Thaek, the privileged channel for relations with China. Finally it does not wish to witness an increase of North Korea’s nuclear technological potential – a system which could even threaten China in the future.

Nevertheless it does not want to run out of cards to be played in the debate on the future of the Korean peninsula, where the United States already have South Korea and China could remain without a point of reference in the region.

Currently winds of war are also blowing on the Korean peninsula.

On June 17 last, North Korea reported the preparation of a long-range military exercise in the US Andersen base in Guam, consisting of a formation of B-52H strategic bombers equipped with nuclear weapons.

Currently the presence of American forces in South Korea amounts to 28,500 soldiers and officers, while the South Korean Armed Forces have a staff of 3,600,000 units with 700,000 active soldiers.

According to the latest data available, North Korea’s armed mass is approximately 1.2 million units.

All analysts agree that a conventional war between South and North Korea would end quickly and easily with the North Korean defeat, since North Korea has almost no air force and has less advanced and refined weapon systems than South Korea’s, possibly supported directly by US forces.

However, it is precisely for this reason that North Korea has developed its nuclear system, so as to make the final attack on its regime difficult or impossible.

Furthermore, on June 13 last, the US nuclear submarine “Mississippi” was spotted in the South Korean port of Pusan.

Also this presence has been interpreted – and not fully unreasonably – as the direct threat of an act of war against North Korea.

The reactions of North Korean nuclear counterattack on the US system are related to the missile control over the Andersen base in Guam and over the other North American bases in the Pacific and to a series of precise counteractions: particularly the use of the KN-08 missile, which can reach the US territory, all the bases of the South Korean Armed Forces, the US bases in the Pacific and the Japanese territory.

Basically North Korea does not want the negotiations to be based on the threat of a conventional war or a US nuclear counterattack to a limited action of North Korea against South Korea.

In this case there is no “proportionality of force” or “reaction,” while the North Korean strategic objective is to be integrated permanently and stably into the market-world without losing its own political autonomy.

Is it possible? I think so. Kim Yong-un’s aim is to bring the United States around the final negotiating table.

Hence the United States could seek support from Russia – which does not want the collapse of North Korea, but its strategic downsizing – and from China, which has no interest in a hypernuclearized North Korea (but the North Korean bombs are often “made in China”) nor in a region experiencing a free-fall economic collapse along its borders.

Hence a new strategic equation is possible, not waiting for the crisis in North Korea as a good opportunity to seize, but managing the soft landing of North Korea in the new system of Asian equilibria.

About the author:
*Professor Giancarlo Elia Valori is an eminent Italian economist and businessman. He holds prestigious academic distinctions and national orders. Mr Valori has lectured on international affairs and economics at the world’s leading universities such as Peking University, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Yeshiva University in New York. He currently chairs “La Centrale Finanziaria Generale Spa”, he is also the honorary president of Huawei Italy, economic adviser to the Chinese giant HNA Group and Khashoggi Holding’s advisor. In 1992 he was appointed Officier de la Légion d’Honneur de la République Francaise, with this motivation: “A man who can see across borders to understand the world” and in 2002 he received the title of “Honorable” of the Académie des Sciences de l’Institut de France.

Source:
This article was published by Modern Diplomacy

TOPICS:ChinaEast AsiaForeign PolicyMilitaryNorth KoreaSouth KoreaUnited States.

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About the Author

Modern Diplomacy

The Modern Diplomacy is a leading European opinion maker - not a pure news-switchboard. Today’s world does not need yet another avalanche of (disheartened and decontextualized) information, it needs shared experience and honestly told opinion. Determined to voice and empower, to argue but not to impose, the MD does not rigidly guard its narrative. Contrary to the majority of media-houses and news platforms, the MD is open to everyone coming with the firm and fair, constructive and foresighted argumentation.
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1 Comment on "The Current North Korean Issue – Analysis"


Hari Sud | July 2, 2016 at 10:42 am | Reply


Korea was artificially divided and kept apart by US military presence and huge propaganda. If US were to leave Korea, there will be one Korea sooner than later. All artificial hostility will disappear. It happened twenty years back when hostile east and west Germany combined. The same could happen in Korea. The key is US departure from Korean Peninsula.



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Housecarl

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Dhaka firefight in Bangladesh restaurant: Gunmen and police in shootout
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...estaurant-Gunmen-and-police-in-shootout/page2


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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/02/asia/bangladesh-dhaka-shooting/

Dhaka cafe attack ends with 20 hostages dead, 13 rescued

By Saeed Ahmed, Madison Park and Farid Ahmed, CNN
Updated 10:17 AM ET, Sat July 2, 2016

Dhaka, Bangladesh (CNN) — [Breaking news update, published at 10:15 a.m. ET]

At least 11 of the 20 hostages who were killed in an hours-long attack at a cafe in Bangladesh's capital over the weekend have been publicly identified.

At least nine of the dead were Italian nationals, Italy's Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni said Saturday.

The nine, according to the Italian foreign ministry, were: Adele Puglisi; Marco Tondat; Claudia Maria D'Antona; Nadia Benedetti; Vincenzo D'Allestro; Maria Rivoli; Cristian Rossi; Claudio Cappelli; and Simona Monti.

At least two others were college students in the United States.


One was Indian citizen Tarushi Jain, 19, who was studying at the University of California at Berkeley, according to India's minister of external affairs, Sushma Swaraj.

The other was Abinta Kabir, of Miami, Florida, who was a student at Emory University's campus in Oxford, Georgia, the school said.

Kabir was in Dhaka visiting family and friends, the university said.

"The Emory community mourns this tragic and senseless loss of one of our university family. Our thoughts and prayers go out on behalf of Abinta and her family and friends for strength and peace at this unspeakably sad time," the university said.

[Original story, published at 9:51 a.m. ET]

Bangladeshi troops stormed an upscale bakery in Dhaka's diplomatic enclave Saturday morning, ending an 11-hour siege by militants who killed 20 hostages and two police officers, officials said.

It was the deadliest and boldest act of terror in a country that has become increasingly numb to ever-escalating violence by Islamist militants.

The victims -- most of them foreigners -- were among roughly three dozen people taken hostage when attackers stormed the Holey Artisan Bakery on Friday evening with guns, explosives and other, sharp weapons Friday evening, authorities said.

Who are the terror groups jostling for influence in Bangladesh?

Related Article: Bangladesh: The terror groups jostling for influence

Some guests and workers managed to escape, jumping from the bakery's roof. Others crouched under chairs and tables as the gunmen fired indiscriminately, witnesses said.

Early Saturday morning, military commandos moved in. By the end, 13 people had been rescued and 20 were dead at the restaurant, officials said. Two police officers had been killed in a gunfire exchange earlier in the standoff, authorities said.

Six terrorists were killed and one was captured alive, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said.

Exactly who was behind the attack is unclear.

ISIS claimed responsibility through its media branch, Amaq. But a U.S. official told CNN it was more likely that al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent conducted this attack. The official said AQIS has demonstrated a more capable presence in Dhaka over the past few months than ISIS, and so far, all of its attacks in the nation have been in the capital.

Not all of the names of the dead were immediately released. One was Indian citizen Tarushi Jain, 19, who was studying at the University of California at Berkeley, according to India's minister of external affairs, Sushma Swaraj.

One Japanese national and two Sri Lankans were among the hostages rescued, officials from both nations said.

The rescued Japanese national was having dinner with seven other colleagues from Japan, who are missing, said Koichii Hagiuda, the deputy chief Cabinet secretary.

Japan has sent Vice Foreign Minister Seiji Kihara, along with a team of terrorism experts, to Dhaka.


Workers jump from roof

Witnesses described chaotic scenes when the gunmen raided the Holey Artisan Bakery.

Cafe worker Shumon Reza said he saw six to eight gunmen enter the bakery. He escaped as they came in.

"They were shooting in the air. They didn't shoot or hit anybody. Just to create fear," Reza told Boishakhi TV.

"The guests were all lying on the ground under the chairs and tables. And we (the employees) escaped in whichever safe way we could. Some went to the roof, others went to other safe spots."

Shortly after, Reza said, the attackers started throwing explosives, one after another.

"We thought it wasn't safe anymore and jumped from the roof," he said.

In his office nearby, Ataur Rahman said he heard a series of gunshots as people raced for cover. Some yelled that the gunmen were shouting, "Allahu Akbar!"

Diego Rossini, one of the cafe employees, escaped up the stairs from the kitchen to the terrace, and hid there with 10 other people. Once the attackers started getting closer, Rossini jumped toward adjacent buildings along with the other people.

Rossini told CNN en Español that he was hiding between the restaurant and the building next door when police rescued him.


Attack shocks nation

Hostage situation in Dhaka

Photos: Hostage situation in Dhaka


Even in a country that has become increasingly numb to Islamist attacks, the Holey Artisan Bakery standoff was particularly jolting in its brazenness.

It was not so much that the attack took place in a public place, in full view of a horrified public. Such public attacks have happened before -- American blogger Avijit Roy was hacked with machetes outside Bangladesh's largest book fair.

It was not even that the targets were foreigners. That, too, has happened before -- more than once.

It was the time and the location that revolted many everyday Bangladeshis.

The gunmen went into the bakery on a Friday, the holiest day of the week in Islam, and at a time when the devout would be sitting down to break their fast in the holy month of Ramadan.

And they targeted not a bar or a club -- the kinds of venues fundamentalist Muslims rail against -- but a bakery.

Why did it happen at the bakery?

It's more likely because of the bakery's location: Gulshan.

Gulshan is one of Dhaka's most affluent neighborhoods. Perhaps more importantly for the attackers, it's a diplomatic enclave. Most of the embassies and high commissions have a presence in Gulshan.

Residents in the neighborhood expressed shock because the upscale neighborhood was considered safe with buildings behind walls, gated driveways and security guard booths.

Holey Artisan Bakery had become a popular destination for expats and diplomats, and attackers may have chosen it hoping for maximum global impact.

"They wanted maximum exposure. They got it," said Sadrul Kabir, a Gulshan resident.

Is ISIS behind the attack?

Though there was the reported ISIS claim of responsibility, the U.S. State Department said Friday that cannot be confirmed. Spokesman John Kirby said the State Department is assessing information.

ISIS has claimed responsibility for a number of past attacks in Bangladesh through its media affiliates, but the government has consistently denied the terror group's presence in the country. Other attacks have been claimed by local Islamist groups.

"We don't want these terrorists in Bangladesh," the Prime Minister said. "This type of situation is a first in Bangladesh, until now they were committing individual murders. But now suddenly they created this type of situation. What they did here was a very heinous act."

But experts said Bangladesh is a target for terrorists.

"In the case of ISIS and its connection to international terrorism in Bangladesh, they have mentioned the country several times in Dabiq, their online journal," said Sajjan Gohel, the international security director at the Asia Pacific Foundation. "They talked about the fact that they were going to carry out more attacks, they were going to increase the tempo, and they were calling for volunteers from Bangladesh to join them."

Is Bangladesh the next ISIS hotspot?

Related Article: Is Bangladesh the next ISIS hotspot?

Home to almost 150 million Muslims, the country had, until recently, avoided the kind of radicalism plaguing others parts of the world. But in the last two years, a wave of murders across Bangladesh have killed secular writers, academics and religious minorities.

The string of targeted murders has sparked debate about the involvement of ISIS.

In response to growing criticism, the Bangladeshi government launched an anti-militant drive last month, rounding up and arresting hundreds. But many of those detained are believed to be ordinary criminals and not Islamic extremists.

CNN's Farid Ahmed reported from Dhaka, and Saeed Ahmed and Madison Park wrote the story. CNN's Steve Almasy, Barbara Starr, Sabrina Khan, Yoko Wakatsuki and translator Sudip R. Khan contributed to this report.
 

Possible Impact

TB Fanatic
US May Form Military Alliance in Pacific
in Response to New Russian Base


17:45 02.07.2016(updated 18:06 02.07.2016)
http://sputniknews.com/military/20160702/1042341173/us-alliance-russian-base.html

A new naval base on the Kuril Islands will bolster Russia’s military
presence in the Pacific region. Some players will not be happy about
this move, a military expert said.


1040907613.jpg

© Flickr/ Peter
Construction of Russian Navy Pacific Fleet Base on Kuril Islands
to Start in 2016

Russia will start this year construction of a new Pacific Fleet base on
Matua in the Kuril Islands chain. In May, the Defense Ministry along
with the Russian Geographical Society sent a research expedition
to Matua Island.

A new Russian facility would disfavor some regional actors, Ivan
Konovalov, head of the Center of Strategic Environment, told Radio
Sputnik.

"A new base will be a headache for the United States. President Barack
Obama announced a strategic shift to the Pacific. This is why Washington
will not be happy about a new Russian base in the region," he said.

At the same time, the base will not affect relations between Moscow and
Tokyo, especially over Japan’s claims to the so-called Northern Territories
in the Kuril chain.

1026623121.jpg

© Sputnik/ Alexander Liskin
Why Russia Needs New Naval Base on Kuril Islands

The expert suggested that the initiative would force the US to strengthen
its naval force in the Pacific. "The Americans see that when an airfield
is built on Matua Russia’s long-range aviation would significantly
increase its capabilities in the region. I think there will be some response
from the US.


For example, it may strengthen its military force in the region.
Washington may also intensify military cooperation with Japan
and South Korea," he said.

Konovalov assumed that a new military alliance in the Pacific
may be established.

"The military and political situation would change, taking into account
standoff between Japan and China and tensions between the US and China.

A new military alliance may be established, including Australia.
It would comprise Washington’s allies, but not members of NATO.
This scenario is possible," he suggested.

 

Possible Impact

TB Fanatic
I See You: Russian-Made Sunflower Radar
is Capable of Detecting F-35 Jets


17:40 02.07.2016
http://sputniknews.com/science/20160702/1042341025/russia-podsolnukh-radar-f35.html


The Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II is the most advanced aircraft in
the Pentagon's arsenal, but Russia's powerful over-the-horizon Podsolnukh
(Sunflower) radar
is capable of detecting and tracking the stealth fifth-
generation plane or any other fighter jet that was designed to avoid
detection, Svobodnaya Pressa reported.

The Podsolnukh short-range over-the-horizon surface-wave radar
is developed by Moscow-based OJSC NPK NIIDAR. The Russian Defense
Ministry plans to deploy several of these systems in the Arctic, as well
as on Russia's southern and western borders.

The radar is capable of detecting sea surface and air objects at
a maximum distance of 500 kilometers (over 310 miles) at different
altitudes in line of sight and over the horizon.

The Podsolnukh "can simultaneously detect, track and classify up
to 300 sea and 100 aerial targets in an automatic mode," the Global
Security website detailed.

There is an additional advantage that this type of radars brings to
the table. "Short-wave stations see stealth fighter jets as clearly
as WWII-era aircraft,"
Svobodnaya Pressa observed, referring to
cutting-edge planes that have been created to avoid detection by
radars or sonars, like the F-35.

The Podsolnukh has more to offer. The system could be put online
in ten days and needs a team of just three people to stay operational,
the media outlet explained. It does not need much power, it is easy to
operate and it does not have much equipment.

The radar stations have to be placed 370 kilometers apart to receive
complete coverage. Sea- and shore-based OTHR systems are becoming
increasingly popular in coastal nations, who want to protect their
exclusive economic zones from piracy, smuggling and illegal fishing.

They also have military application. The radars could are capable
of issuing alerts in case of an invasion or subversive activity.

Three Podsolnukh stations are operational in Russia at the moment.
They are located in the Sea of Okhotsk, the Sea of Japan and
the Caspian Sea.


 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-arms-idUSKCN0ZJ0GF?il=0

World | Sun Jul 3, 2016 7:52am EDT
Related: World

German arms exports almost doubled in 2015: report

German arms exports almost doubled last year to their highest level since the beginning of this century, a German newspaper said on Sunday, citing a report from the Economy Ministry that is due to be presented to the cabinet on Wednesday.

Newspaper Welt am Sonntag said the value of individual approvals granted for exporting arms was 7.86 billion euros ($8.75 billion) last year compared with 3.97 billion euros worth of arms exports in 2014.

It said the Economy Ministry had pointed to special factors that boosted arms exports such as the approval of four tanker aircraft for Britain worth 1.1 billion euros.

It also pointed to the approval of battle tanks and tank howitzers along with munitions and accompanying vehicles worth 1.6 billion euros for Qatar - a controversial deal that the report said was approved in 2013 by the previous government.

The Economy Ministry declined to comment on the report.

In February German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel said preliminary figures showed that Germany had given approval for around 7.5 billion euros worth of arms shipments in 2015.

The Federal Office for Economics and Export Control (Bafa), a subsidiary of the economy ministry, is responsible for licensing arms export deals and Gabriel had promised to take a much more cautious approach to licensing arms exports, especially with regard to the Middle East.

Germany is one of the world's main arms exporters to EU and NATO countries and has been cutting its sales of light weapons outside those states.

Last year the government rejected 100 applications for arms export approvals – the same number as in the previous year, Welt am Sonntag reported. It said Berlin had given 12,687 applications the green light in 2015 – 597 more than in the previous year.

($1 = 0.8978 euros)

(Reporting by Michelle Martin; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southchinasea-ruling-idUSKCN0ZJ117

World | Sun Jul 3, 2016 7:38pm EDT
Related: World, China, United Nations, South China Sea

Ahead of key court ruling, Beijing in propaganda overdrive

HONG KONG/LONDON | By Greg Torode and Mike Collett-White


As an international tribunal prepares to rule on Beijing's territorial claims in the South China Sea, officials in Washington, Tokyo and Southeast Asia are on tenterhooks.

Yet, in the words of one senior Chinese official, Beijing does not care.

On July 12, the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague will rule on a case brought by the Philippines against China over its territorial claims and actions across the disputed waters and vital global trade route.

Beijing claims some 90 percent of the South China Sea, and the Philippines is challenging it under a United Nations maritime convention.

"We do not know, we don't care, in fact, when this arbitration decision will be made, because no matter what kind of decision this tribunal is going to make, we think it is totally wrong," China's ambassador to the UK, Liu Xiaoming, told Reuters at a recent lunch in London.

"It has no impact on China, on China's sovereignty over these reefs, over the islands. And it will set a serious, wrong and bad example. We will not fight this case in court, but we will certainly fight for our sovereignty."

Beijing's plans to ignore the ruling would represent both a rejection of the international legal order and a direct challenge to the United States, which believes China is developing islands and reefs for military, as well as civilian purposes in a threat to stability.

It would also significantly raise the stakes over dispute, according to lawyers, diplomats and security experts.

How Washington handles the aftermath of the ruling is widely seen as a test of its credibility in a region where it has been the dominant security presence since World War Two against an increasingly assertive China.

China in turn sees this as a matter of defending its territorial and political sovereignty against the United States.

Other nations laying claim to disputed areas of the South China sea felt emboldened to challenge China because they felt they had the United States on their side, Liu said.

"They probably believe that they have America (behind them) and they can get a better deal with China. So I'm very suspicious of America's motives."

So while Beijing scoffs at the imminent decision, it is also making an international PR effort to get its view heard.

Beijing has organized meetings with diplomats and journalists and has expressed its views in a slew of editorials and academic papers around the world.

"Manila has no leg to stand on," said one report in the China Daily's inaugural New Zealand edition.

Asian and Western diplomats said their Chinese peers were raising the issue constantly, and at all levels.

"It's relentless. We haven't seen anything like this in years," said one Asian-based Western envoy.

China says more than 40 countries back its position that such territorial disputes should be handled through bilateral discussions not international arbitration, although only a handful of countries have publicly voiced their support.

Both Chinese and Western analysts say the ruling is not just about the territorial claims in the South China sea, but speaks to broader Sino-U.S. tensions over China's rise.

"This is about exposing Washington's declining primacy," said Zhang Baohui, a mainland security expert at Hong Kong's Lingnan University. "China gains reputational power by showing the U.S. that it can't dictate Chinese actions."



ARGUING THE CASE

The law under which the Philippines has made its claim is the UN's Convention on the Law of the Sea, known as UNCLOS, which outlines what can be claimed from different geographic features such as islands and reefs. China is a signatory of the convention, one of the first international agreements it helped negotiate after joining the UN.

But Beijing says the issue is beyond the remit of UNCLOS and The Hague court because China has undisputable, historic rights and sovereignty over much of the South China Sea.

China's claims are expressed on its maps as the so-called nine dash line, an ill-defined U-shaped demarcation drawn up after the defeat of Japan in World War II.

Manila's case is based around 15 points that challenge the legality of China's claims and its recent reclamations on seven disputed reefs in the fishing and energy rich region.

It also seeking support for the Philippines' right to exploit is 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ).

Sources close to Manila's legal team said they are confident of favorable rulings on enough points to create significant pressure on China's future moves in the waterway.

Many of Manila's arguments in court last November were couched in arcane legal terms, but to drive home the point about the scale of China's on-going building works, lawyers used a slide show.

Amsterdam's sprawling Schiphol airport was shown fitting neatly into China's new runways on Subi Reef.

"We knew the judges had all used Schiphol," said one source close to Manila's case. "We think they got the point."



UNITED RESPONSE?

Ahead of the vote, the UK, Australia and Japan are among countries that have joined Washington in stressing the importance of freedom of navigation and respect for the rule of law.

U.S. officials have also been pressing Southeast Asian nations to forge a united front on the issue, with limited success so far.

Vietnam, which has made a submission to the panel not ruled out taking its own legal action, on Friday called for a "fair and objective" ruling from the tribunal.

The G7 and EU groupings have stated that ruling must be binding, despite China's objections, while Vietnam gave a submission to the court supporting its jurisdiction.

Legal experts say that while the ruling is technically binding, no body exists to enforce UNCLOS rulings.

Concerns are growing among regional military and government officials that, regardless of the ruling, Beijing could launch fresh military action and re-building efforts to buttress its claims.

China may deploy fighter jets or missiles to its new facilities on the Spratlys, create an air exclusion zone or starting fresh reclamation work on shoals occupied within the Philippines, U.S. and regional military officials say.

Beijing says the reefs are Chinese territory and it is entitled to station "self-defense" equipment on its holdings as it sees fit to counter U.S. provocation.

In Washington, concern is particularly acute over whether China attempts to make permanent its sea-borne presence near the Scarborough Shoal, near the Philippines, by building on the reef.

Liu outlined various civilian developments completed and underway in the South China Sea. He said there were also military facilities being built, adding:

"I was asked why China is also building military facilities. You should ask the Americans. They made us feel threatened. It's not we (who) are threatening the Americans. They are so close to us."

The United States has been increasing its own military presence in the region where Malaysian, Vietnam, Brunei and Taiwan also have claims. France has also proposed to European countries that they take part in joint South China Sea patrols.

U.S. responses could include accelerated freedom-of-navigation patrols by U.S. warships and overflights by U.S. aircraft as well as increased defense aid to Southeast Asian countries, according to U.S. officials speaking on the condition of anonymity.

Liu said Beijing wanted to resolve the disputes through bilateral negotiations.

"We are not going to war with these countries, we do not want to have a fight with them," he said. "But we still claim our sovereignty over these islands."


(Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom and Matt Spetalnick in Washington.; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Alessandra Galloni.)

---

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southchinasea-china-philippines-idUSKCN0ZK06E

World | Mon Jul 4, 2016 1:09am EDT
Related: World, China, South China Sea

China offers Philippines talks if South China Sea court ignored: China Daily


China is ready to start negotiations with the Philippines on South China Sea-related issues if Manila ignores an arbitration ruling expected next week on their long-running territorial dispute, the official China Daily reported on Monday.

The Philippines brought the case to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague and a ruling is expected on July 12. The case contests China's claims to the bulk of the South China Sea, a body of water through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year. China has said it plans to ignore the Court's ruling which would represent a snub of the international legal order.

The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei have overlapping claims with China in the area. Beijing has rejected the arbitration case, claiming the court has no jurisdiction and saying it wants to solve the issue bilaterally. In recent weeks it has ramped up its propaganda campaign downplaying the outcome of the case.

Negotiations between China and the Philippines could cover "issues such as joint development and cooperation in scientific research if the new government puts the tribunal's ruling aside before returning to the table for talks", the China Daily said.

China's main, government-run English newspaper did not name its sources but identified them as "close to the issues between the two countries".

"Manila must put aside the result of the arbitration in a substantive approach," it quoted one source as saying.

China's Foreign Ministry last month said the two countries had agreed in 1995 to settle disputes in the South China Sea "in a peaceful and friendly manner through consultations on the basis of equity and mutual respect".

China and the Philippines have held many rounds of talks on the proper management of maritime disputes, though have had no negotiations designed to settle the actual disputes in the South China Sea, it said.

In the arbitration case, the Philippines is contesting China's claim to an area shown on its maps as a nine-dash line stretching deep into the maritime heart of Southeast Asia, covering hundreds of disputed islands and reefs.

"Objectively the tribunal has no jurisdiction over the dispute," Sienho Yee, a law professor at the China Institute of Boundary and Ocean Studies at China's Wuhan University, told Reuters in a government-arranged interview on Friday.

"Negotiation has been agreed upon as the way to resolve the dispute," he said.


(Reporting by John Ruwitch; Additional reporting by Megha Rajagopalan in Beijing; Editing by Ben Blanchard and Christian Schmollinger)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/03/o...e-in-peaceful-countries.html?ref=opinion&_r=1

The Terrorists the Saudis Cultivate in Peaceful Countries

Nicholas Kristof
JULY 2, 2016

PEJA, Kosovo — FIRST, a three-part quiz:

Which Islamic country celebrates as a national hero a 15th-century Christian who battled Muslim invaders?

Which Islamic country is so pro-American it has a statue of Bill Clinton and a women’s clothing store named “Hillary” on Bill Klinton Boulevard?

Which Islamic country has had more citizens go abroad to fight for the Islamic State per capita than any other in Europe?

The answer to each question is Kosovo, in southeastern Europe — and therein lies a cautionary tale. Whenever there is a terrorist attack by Muslim extremists, we look to our enemies like the Islamic State or Al Qaeda. But perhaps we should also look to our “friends,” like Saudi Arabia.

For decades, Saudi Arabia has recklessly financed and promoted a harsh and intolerant Wahhabi version of Islam around the world in a way that is, quite predictably, producing terrorists. And there’s no better example of this Saudi recklessness than in the Balkans.

Kosovo and Albania have been models of religious moderation and tolerance, and as the Clinton statue attests, Kosovars revere the United States and Britain for averting a possible genocide by Serbs in 1999 (there are also many Kosovar teenagers named Tony Blair!). Yet Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries poured money into the new nation over the last 17 years and nurtured religious extremism in a land where originally there was little.

The upshot is that, according to the Kosovo government, 300 Kosovars have traveled to fight in Syria or Iraq, mostly to join the Islamic State. As my colleague Carlotta Gall noted in a pathbreaking article about radicalization here, Saudi money has transformed a once-tolerant Islamic society into a pipeline for jihadists.

In a sign of the times, the government last year had to turn off the water supply in the capital temporarily amid fears of an Islamic State-inspired plot to poison the city’s water.

“Saudi Arabia is destroying Islam,” Zuhdi Hajzeri, an imam at a 430-year-old mosque here in the city of Peja, told me sadly. Hajzeri is a moderate in the traditional, tolerant style of Kosovo — he is the latest in a long line of imams in his family — and said that as a result he had received more death threats from extremists than he can count.

Hajzeri and other moderates have responded with a website, Foltash.com, that criticizes the harsh Saudi Wahhabi interpretation of Islam. But they say they are outgunned by money pouring in from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain to support harsh variants of Islam through a blizzard of publications, videos and other materials.

“The Saudis completely changed Islam here with their money,” said Visar Duriqi, a former imam in Kosovo who became a journalist who writes about extremist influences. Duriqi cites himself as an example: He says he was brainwashed and underwent an extremist phase in which he called for imposing Shariah law and excusing violence. Those views now horrify him.

This is not a Kosovo problem, but a global problem. I first encountered pernicious Saudi influence in Pakistan, where the public school system is a disgrace and Saudis filled the gap by financing hard-line madrasas that lure students with free tuition, free meals and full scholarships for overseas study for the best students.

Likewise, in traditionally moderate, peaceful countries like Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger in West Africa, I’ve seen these foreign-financed madrasas introduce radical interpretations of Islam. In the Balkans, Bosnia is particularly affected by Gulf support for extremists.

I don’t want to exaggerate. I saw fewer head scarves on my trip through Macedonia, Kosovo and Albania than I do in New York City, and any jihadist would tear his hair out at seeing women with bare heads and shoulders, not to mention shorts.

There are still pillars of pro-American feeling and ecumenism (there is great reverence among Albanian Muslims for Mother Teresa, who was Albanian). Moreover, after a series of arrests of radical imams in Kosovo and Albania, the situation may have stabilized, and jihadists no longer seem to be traveling to Syria from here.

But the world needs to have tough conversations with Saudi Arabia about its role. It’s not that it is intentionally spreading havoc, more that it is behaving recklessly; it has made some painstaking progress in curbing extremist financing, but too slowly.

It’s particularly dispiriting because much of the extremist funding seems to come from charity: One of the most admirable aspects of Islam is its emphasis on charity, yet in countries like Saudi Arabia this money is directed not to fight malnutrition or child mortality, but to brainwash children and sow conflict in poor and unstable countries.

I asked Hajzeri, the imam, whether he was worried by foreign threats to Islam, like the Danish cartoonist who mocked the Prophet Muhammad. “Cartoonists can just hurt our feelings,” he snorted. “But damaging the reputation of Islam? That’s not what the cartoonists are doing. That’s what Saudi Arabia is doing.”
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world...tackers/ar-AAi3LSa?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp

After Slaughter, Bangladesh Reels at Revelations About Attackers

The New York Times
By JULFIKAR ALI MANIK and GEETA ANAND
4 hrs ago

DHAKA, Bangladesh — Bangladesh’s capital city reeled in shock on Sunday as clues began to flood social media about the privileged backgrounds of the half-dozen attackers believed to have butchered 20 patrons of a restaurant during a bloody siege here late last week.

The six attackers were killed when the army stormed the Holey Artisan Bakery to end an 11-hour siege early Saturday.

The police declined to name the young men because nobody had shown up as of Sunday night to identify their bodies, but friends and relatives recognized photographs that were posted on a messaging app by the Islamic State, along with praise for the violence.

The men, all in their late teens or early 20s, were products of Bangladesh’s elite, several having attended one of the country’s top English-medium private schools as well as universities both in the country and abroad.

Among them was the son of a former city leader in the prime minister’s own Awami League, the governing party.

“That’s what we’re absolutely riveted by,” said Kazi Anis Ahmed, a writer and publisher of the daily newspaper The Dhaka Tribune. “That these kids from very affluent families with no material want can still be turned to this kind of ideology, motivated not just to the point of killing but also want to be killed.”

That children of the country’s upper classes appear to have joined militant Islamists in an act of such brutality highlighted the radicalization among the largely moderate Muslim population here, a process that has accelerated in recent years.

The attackers intended to kill foreigners, whom they shot and then hacked with sharp weapons, blaming them for hampering the progress of Islam, one of the hostages later said.

For more than three years now, Islamist militants have murdered atheist bloggers, members of religious minorities and others. The Islamic State and a regional branch of Al Qaeda have claimed responsibility for the killings, although the Bangladeshi government continues to insist that local groups were responsible.

The involvement of the Islamic State appeared increasingly more likely during the latest attack, with the organization not only claiming responsibility but later posting the photographs of the men believed to have carried it out.

Some of the rescued hostages remained in police custody on Sunday evening, including a Bangladeshi couple and their two school-aged children who witnessed the massacre, their relatives said.

The country was in the midst of a two-day mourning period declared by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, but in the homes of the young men who had been identified as the attackers on social media, families struggled with grief, shame and disbelief.

On Sunday, the police telephoned Meer Hayet Kabir, an executive with a foreign company in Dhaka, asking him to go to the military hospital morgue to identify a body that was possibly that of his 18-year-old son, Meer Saameh Mubasher.

He said he just could not bear to make the trip.

“How will we arrange a funeral for him in these circumstances?” he asked in an interview in his family’s apartment in a wealthy neighborhood close to the diplomatic district. “Who will come?”

“I will have to apologize to the whole world on behalf of my son,” he said.

Mr. Kabir had already been in close touch with the police since Mr. Mubasher disappeared on Feb 29.

The young man was a student at Scholastica School, one of the top private schools in Dhaka. He left home for a tutorial class, which he did not attend, and never returned.

Mr. Kabir said he had made the rounds of police and security officials in the capital since then, seeking help. He gave them a picture of his son, describing him as quiet and pious, someone who prayed five times a day and frequented the local mosque.

Mr. Kabir’s close relatives believe Mr. Mubasher was radicalized either by people he met at a mosque or in school. “I believe some Islamist group recruited my boy” and brainwashed him, Mr. Kabir said.

At least two other young men who appear in the photographs posted by the Islamic State had also attended the Scholastica School, a senior government official said. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the investigation.

That official said that several of the men pictured had studied in Malaysia, at least one at Monash University, and that at least one other had studied at North South University, a private college in Dhaka where several others convicted in the hacking death of a blogger in 2013 were students.

The families of other attackers had also reported them missing, the official said.

Among them was a son of a former city Awami League official who disappeared at the end of December, said Biplob Kumar Das, deputy commissioner at the Dhaka Metropolitan Police.

Mr. Das said police officers searching for the young man, who was in his early 20s, had linked him with militant groups but had not been able to apprehend him. He confirmed that one of the photographs posted by the Islamic State resembled him.

Mr. Kabir said the family was unaware that Meer Saameh Mubasher was being radicalized, except, in retrospect, for one clue. The young man had liked to play the guitar, his father said, but about three months before his disappearance, he stopped.

When Mr. Kabir asked why, his son replied, “Music is not good,” reflecting an Islamist belief that music and dancing are bad influences.

Until now, he had hoped that Mr. Mubasher would reappear one day soon, like some others who disappear into Islamic groups for a time and then come back.

“How can I believe my kin who has humanitarian qualities can be part of these brutal killings?” he asked.

Gowher Rizvi, an adviser on foreign affairs to Ms. Hasina, said the police continued to believe that local groups were behind the militant attacks, and initial indications are that the restaurant siege was also orchestrated by homegrown militants.

Yet Mr. Rizvi said Bangladesh was also willing to consider whether international groups might be involved, although investigators had not seen evidence of external coordination in the Friday attack or the others of the past three years.

Mr. Kabir was steeling himself to make the dreaded trip to the morgue on Monday morning to confirm whether his son was among the dead attackers.

He had been staring at the pictures of the five young men in red-and-white-checked kaffiyehs, trying to convince himself that Mr. Mubasher was not among them.

While he recognized the chubby cheeks, wide nose and big smile in the picture, Mr. Kabir said, there was also something unfamiliar about it.

“I can tell you my boy was really a good humanitarian soul,” he said. “Such a soul cannot do something cruel like this.”
 

vestige

Deceased
That children of the country’s upper classes appear to have joined militant Islamists in an act of such brutality highlighted the radicalization among the largely moderate Muslim population here, a process that has accelerated in recent years.

.... and is soon going to go geometric.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.voanews.com/content/china-military-aid-afghanistan/3402178.html

China Delivers First Batch of Military Aid to Afghanistan

Ayaz Gul
July 03, 2016 10:01 AM
Comments 1

ISLAMABAD — Afghanistan has received its first batch of Chinese military equipment as part of Beijing’s commitment to provide millions of dollars of assistance to help Kabul fight terrorism.

The shipment on board a Russian cargo plane arrived Sunday in Kabul where Chinese Ambassador Yao Jing handed it over to Afghan National Security Advisor Hanif Atmar.

The cargo apparently contained among other things logistical equipment, parts of military vehicles, ammunition and weapons for the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF).

Jing said Beijing wants to have regular and normal state-to-state relations with the Afghan government and the Afghan people, which includes military cooperation.

“Afghanistan is our close neighbor and a very important neighbor to China… So, this is the beginning of our regular military-to-military exchanges and cooperation,” Jing said.

Atmar declined to discuss further details or value of the Chinese equipment, saying such military matters required secrecy. He said the assistance shows a joint resolve against terrorism facing Afghanistan and China.

“The military aid is just the beginning of our joint struggle against terrorism. I consider it a major change in China’s relations towards Afghanistan that China is standing with the Afghan people in the counterterrorism fight,” Atmar noted.

He said that a next shipment due later this year is expected to include more military equipment along with scanners for Afghan police to enable them to detect bombs such as vehicle-born improvised explosives devices. Afghan officials plan to install the scanners at four entry points to Kabul.

“Both China and Afghanistan, we don't have any ambitions ... But we do have our own duty to safeguard our own peace and the sovereignty. So, in this regard China and Afghanistan are on the same front. We will fight together,” Jing resolved.

China is also part of a Quadrilateral Cooperation Group or QCG, which also includes Afghanistan, Pakistan and the United States, working to bring about a peaceful end to the Afghan conflict. But the four-nation process has been unable to start peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban.

The increased Chinese involvement in the conflict-torn Afghanistan, critics believe, stems from concerns that continued instability in its immediate neighborhood could fuel problems in the far western Xinjiang region where Uighur Muslims are waging a low-level separatist insurgency against Chinese rule.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.spiegel.de/international...gle-between-merkel-and-juncker-a-1100852.html

Brexit Aftershocks: An Inside Look at the EU's Raging Power Struggle

In response to Brexit, European Commission President Juncker wants deeper EU integration. German Chancellor Merkel does not. SPIEGEL takes you inside the vast EU power struggle triggered by the UK referendum.

By SPIEGEL Staff
July 01, 2016 – 06:42 PM
Comments 27

For the last supper, quail salad is served. It's 7:30 on Tuesday evening, and the leaders of 27 European Union countries -- without British Prime Minister David Cameron -- are scheduled to meet the next morning. A whiff of nostalgia is in the air, even if everyone is angry with Cameron, who because of a power struggle in his party, didn't just gamble away his country's EU membership, but may ultimately have triggered a political meltdown in the proud United Kingdom.

Cameron is buoyant, doing his best to avoid appearing as the tragic figure he has now become. His counterparts from across the EU are tactful enough to keep quiet about what they really think of the outgoing British premier. They speak of Britain's historical accomplishments -- at a time when the country, after 40 years of EU membership, looks to be leaving the bloc.

Taavi Roivas, the youthful prime minister of Estonia, who always sat next to Cameron during European Council meetings, expresses his gratitude that British soldiers ensured his country's independence 100 years ago. French President François Hollande recalls how British and French soldiers fought side-by-side in World War I. The Irish prime minister notes that his country was at war with England for almost 1,000 years and that it was really only the EU that brought lasting peace.

And what about Cameron? He says that he wouldn't do anything differently if he had it all to do over again. It wasn't a mistake to hold the referendum, he tells the bewildered gathering, but the EU leaders refrain from contradicting him. Perhaps one important element of the European project is that it is no longer seen as necessary to respond to every folly. Only at the very end of the evening, when an EU diplomat is asked whether Cameron was presented with a departing gift, did he answer laconically: "He got a warm meal."

By the next morning, no one is thinking of Cameron anymore. He made history, if involuntarily, but history has now moved on from the British prime minister. The vote in favor of Brexit, after all, hasn't just convulsed British politics, it has also set the stage for the next monumental power struggle within the EU.

On one hand, that struggle is about the question as to how uncompromising the EU should be in hustling Britain out of the union. For those in favor of a strong and powerful EU, for those who always saw the UK as a bothersome obstacle in their path, the British withdrawal process can't proceed fast enough. Plus, French President Hollande and others want to use Britain as an example to show the rest of Europe how bleak and uncomfortable life can be when one leaves the house of Europe. Hollande, of course, has good reason for his approach: The right-wing populist party Front National has threatened to follow Cameron's example should party leader Marine Le Pen emerge victorious in next year's presidential elections.

Power Struggle in the EU

But there is more at stake than just the treatment of Britain during the Brexit negotiations. The more important question is how Europe will look 10 or 15 years from now -- the question as to whether the project of an "ever closer union," as optimistically formulated in the Treaty of Lisbon, will be continued. Or will Europe pivot back toward the nation-state, possibly even with the return of powers and competencies from Brussels to the governments of EU member states?

It is a power struggle between two opposing camps, both of which see Brexit as an opportunity to finally change Europe to conform to the vision they have long had for the bloc. The protagonists of an institutionalized Europe are Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and Parliament President Martin Schulz. On the other side stands the majority of Europe's heads of state and government, led by Angela Merkel, who has created an alliance on this issue with those governments in Eastern Europe with whom she was at such odds in the refugee crisis just a few months ago.

The battle for Europe's future begins early on Friday morning, not even two hours after the result of the Brexit referendum became clear. At 7:30 a.m., Schulz joins a conference call with Sigmar Gabriel, the leader of Germany's Social Democratic Party (SPD), of which Schulz is a member, and Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the German foreign minister and also a senior SPD member. Schulz begins by saying that his heart has been broken by the British vote, but then goes on to make clear what is at stake: "If we now allow the British to play games with us, the entire EU will fly apart," he says.

That sentence sets the tone. It is a strategy not just propelled by the fear that other EU member states could seek to follow the British example. The hope is to get rid of the British as quickly as possible since the country has long been one of the most adamant opponents to all forms of greater EU integration.

At 8:15 a.m., Merkel grabs for the phone in the Chancellery. She spent the morning following the referendum returns at home in her apartment and she is shocked by the result. She doesn't have a plan B and now Merkel wants to play for time so she can develop a strategy. In contrast to Schulz and Juncker, she doesn't believe that Britain's departure from the EU is a foregone conclusion. For Merkel, the British have always been an important ally in the fight against an overly powerful EU and against overly lenient fiscal policies of the kind favored by France and countries in southern Europe. On the other end of the line on Friday morning is Horst Seehofer, the powerful governor of Bavaria and head of the Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister party to Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU). Seehofer has a similar view of the situation to Merkel: Treat the British amicably, don't rush them and play for time. And immediately choke off all efforts aimed at "more Europe."

Stronger, More Independent EU

At 8:45, the SPD posts a position paper on its homepage called "Re-Founding Europe." It was written by Schulz and Gabriel before British voters headed to the polls for the Brexit referendum. In the Chancellery, it is interpreted as it is meant: as a challenge to Merkel's policies. Europe now needs the courage to "risk something grander," the paper reads. Merkel would like leadership in Europe to run through its member states. Schulz, though, like Juncker, would like to transform the Commission into a "true European government." "We need an ambitious and powerful thrust and not a timid patchwork," the paper argues.

Schulz and Juncker have long been working towards limiting the influence of European heads of state and government in the EU, wanting instead to develop a stronger, more independent union. That is the nucleus of a package they agreed to one late night in May 2014. The deal came following months of campaigning ahead of European parliamentary elections, with Juncker as the lead candidate for conservatives across the EU and Schulz in the same role for European Social Democrats. Juncker won and became Commission president while Schulz remained in his role as president of European Parliament. On that night in May, the two pledged to cease working against each other and to join forces to ensure greater powers for the EU -- and to ensure that the European Council, made up of EU member state leaders, loses influence. It was a pact against Merkel, who would like to have prevented Juncker from becoming Commission president.

At 1 p.m. on the Friday after the Brexit referendum, Merkel makes a statement to Berlin journalists in which -- in contrast to Schulz -- she does not demand a rapid British withdrawal. One shouldn't "draw quick and easy conclusions from the British referendum that could further divide Europe," she says.

From Merkel's point of view, the crisis is one for European member state leaders to address. She sees the idea of "more Europe" as being the intensification of cooperation between EU governments, not the transfer of yet more authority to Brussels.

After Merkel speaks with Juncker on the phone that weekend, her belief that the Commission president is more a part of the problem than a part of the solution doesn't change. The chancellor believes that Juncker's appetite for power is one of the reasons why the British have turned their backs on Europe.

Merkel coordinates her approach with her powerful finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, who in the past has always presented himself as a passionate European in contrast to Merkel, the technocrat. But now, the two are in agreement. Simply calling for "more Europe" plays into the hands of Euroskeptics, Merkel says at a previously planned Friday meeting of CDU and CSU leaders in Potsdam. Those who are now demanding more integration, particularly in the euro zone, didn't understand the message of Brexit, Schäuble believes.

No Pressure on Britain

Schäuble wants to present a plan for how the remaining 27 EU members can improve their cooperation and strengthen their cohesion. Included in his list of measures is the completion of the single market and the unhindered, cross-border movement of capital. Schäuble believes it is also necessary to establish common, EU-wide bankruptcy proceedings for companies. Member states should also reach agreement on how to achieve greater economic growth, he says, in addition to improving controls of the EU's external borders and coming up with a joint asylum policy. If not all 27 member states are willing to pursue such measures, Schäuble says that those prepared to move ahead together should do so.

On Sunday, Merkel meets with a handful of confidants, including Chancellery Chief of Staff Peter Altmaier. The group examines a variety of different eventualities, including a second British referendum and snap UK elections. Merkel and Altmaier want to do all they can to prevent Britain from leaving, with Merkel saying that the EU should avoid exerting too much pressure. "Policymakers in London should have the possibility to reconsider the effects of leaving," Altmaier says in an interview.

On the same day, Merkel holds a long conversation with François Hollande. The French president insists on a rapid decision from Britain -- he wants to get rid of them as quickly as possible. The EU, he says, must be extremely clear about what leaving the bloc entails. Hollande also believes that Britain's departure represents an opportunity both for himself and his country. Brexit would increase France's influence in the EU.

In contrast to Merkel, Hollande would prefer a strategy pursuing deeper European integration. Prior to his election, he promised to reshape the EU and to give it a "friendlier, warmer face." At the time, Merkel understood the message to be: "Allow us to take on more debt!"


'You're Lying to Us!'
On Monday, Merkel and Holland meet together in the Chancellery in Berlin along with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi. Their contrasting approaches to Brexit come up and, in the end, they reach a compromise: Proposals for further EU development in the areas of security, employment, youth and euro-zone cooperation should be presented by September, it says in their joint statement. The hope is that the plan will at least get them through the next several weeks.
When Merkel delivers her government statement to German parliament on Tuesday morning just before the beginning of the EU summit, her tone regarding how the UK should be approached is a bit more severe than in the preceding days. She emphasizes that there can be no secret negotiations with the British before the country officially applies for withdrawal and that London will not be allowed to "cherry pick." She remains true, however, to her utmost concern: that of giving Britain as much time as possible.

It has become apparent in Brussels too just how vigorously the battle is being fought between those who envision a more powerful EU and those in favor of a nation state-led Europe. The front leads through all countries and all parties. At 8:30 p.m., German members of the European People's Party -- the center-right group in European Parliament -- meet. The discussion is focused on the resolution to be passed by European Parliament on Brexit and the atmosphere is heated.

Herbert Reul, head of the German group, laments that the draft resolution was produced only by a small group under the leadership of Schulz and CDU member Elmar Brok. Brok is part of the EU establishment and has for decades been a proponent of taking advantage of EU crises to deepen European integration. Meeting participants complain that now is not the time for a new convention to pave the way for deeper European unity.

There is nothing about a new convention in the paper, Brok objects. "But it does mention treaty amendments," says CSU member Markus Ferber, and to make such changes, he adds, a convention is necessary. "You're only telling us half of the story," Ferber fulminates. "You're lying to us!"

On Tuesday evening, EU heads of state and government come together for what could be their last supper together with Cameron. On the following morning, they make clear to Juncker that they will be taking the lead in the exit negotiations with Britain. "But that is the Commission's responsibility," Juncker protests. "Jean-Claude, we have been elected, you haven't been," is the rejoinder from several prime ministers and heads of state.

Waiting Calmly

It's the age-old European battle over who possesses the greatest amount of democratic legitimacy -- and for the moment it doesn't look like momentum is in favor of Juncker's Commission and his partner Schulz's European Parliament.

Europe's government leaders agree on Wednesday that no changes should be made to European treaties and that there definitely should not be a convention. There also won't be any fundamental modifications made to the EU and no deepening of integration. "It is not the time for such things," says Merkel. It looks as though she has won this battle with the Schulz-Juncker tandem and that the concept of Europe as a collection of nation states has won this round.

The severe treatment of Britain demanded by some will also not be pursued initially. Instead, the EU will calmly wait, at least until September, to see how the situation in London develops. Europe is pausing for reflection instead of rushing to implement greater integration.

There remains, however, plenty of room for compromise. Jaroslaw Kaczynski, head of Poland's national-conservative Law and Justice party, which currently holds power in the country, doesn't want "less Europe" in all areas. When it comes to foreign and security policy, he would even like to see the EU play a more robust role. Kaczynski is in favor of the establishment of a European army and would like to see a strong European president with far-reaching authority. It is a demand that many governments in eastern and central Europe agree with.

By contrast, left-leaning governments, primarily in southern Europe, would like to see greater public investment. One idea to promote such investment envisions the establishment of a euro-zone budget, which would automatically grant greater powers to the Commission and the European Parliament, because such a budget would have to be managed and be subjected to parliamentary controls.

Finally, the refugee crisis has produced a third group with shared interests: Countries like Sweden and Germany took in a huge number of refugees in 2015 and are demanding the establishment of a joint asylum system, including the fair distribution of refugees throughout the EU. This too would essentially result in "more Europe."

An Irascible Juncker

It is true that people in almost all member states have become more skeptical of the EU. But it is also true that this skepticism has a variety of vastly different causes. If every EU member were prepared to make concessions to the concerns of others, everyone could emerge better off.

In mid-September, EU heads of state and government are to meet in Bratislava to consider what the EU's future priorities will be. Slovakia will hold the rotating EU presidency and the country's prime minister, Robert Fico, is a proponent of an EU made up of strong nation states, much like Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. He promises to be Juncker's next difficult adversary, although it looks as though the new situation in Europe has already left its mark on the European Commission president.

Wherever he makes an appearance these days, he seems to be under stress. The jocularity and nonchalance he otherwise exudes has vanished. Juncker these days is ill-tempered and irascible.

After the summit comes to an end, a reporter from Austrian public broadcaster ORF becomes the focus of his frustration. She asks a question about CETA, the already negotiated free-trade agreement with Canada. The day before, Juncker has told European leaders that he would like to enact the treaty without the involvement of national parliaments in EU member states -- thus feeding into all the stereotypes out there of an autocratic, elitist Brussels.

From a purely legal point of view, Juncker's approach is defensible, but the timing shows a stunning degree of tone deafness. He "doesn't really care," he answers in response to the ORF reporter's question about the treaty's legal character. "Stop with this Austrian fuss. As if I would take aim at Austrian democracy."

His friend Martin Schulz appears more philosophical about the backlash against his vision of Europe. On Wednesday afternoon, right after EU member state leaders left Brussels following the summit, he allows himself a moment to catch his breath. He is sitting in a black leather armchair in his office on the ninth floor of the enormous European Parliament building in Brussels. On a pedestal behind him are an EU flag and a statue of Willy Brandt.

In reference to Brexit, he quotes George Bernard Shaw: "Old men are dangerous: It doesn't matter to them what is going to happen to the world." He then addresses the Euroskepticism that he and Juncker have been confronted with in recent days. It doesn't faze him, he says. He was first elected to European Parliament 22 years ago, Schulz continues. Now, the EU is stumbling from crisis to crisis and he is supposed to refrain from thinking about Europe's future? Schulz finds the idea absurd. "Everyone always asks: Where are the visions for Europe? And then when you present one, you are told: Now isn't the time. So which is it?"

By Markus Feldenkirchen, Julia Amalia Heyer, Peter Müller, Ralf Neukirch, Christoph Pauly, Jan Puhl, Christian Reiermann and Christoph Schult


Related SPIEGEL ONLINE links:
Brexit on Ice: More Emotion Please, Angie (06/28/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/merkel-brexit-speech-lacks-passion-a-1100295.html
Europe Is Dead: Long Live Europe? (06/24/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international...e-as-britain-votes-to-leave-eu-a-1099726.html
Brexit Aftermath: Europe's Zero Hour Presents an Opportunity (06/24/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international...th-opportunity-for-improvement-a-1099608.html
The Brexit Shock: If We Don't Love Europe, We Will Lose It (06/24/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international...-t-love-europe-we-will-lose-it-a-1099602.html
Fear and Loathing in Britain: Brexit Is an Act of Deliberate Self-Mutilation (06/24/2016)
http://www.spiegel.de/international...of-self-mutiliation-by-british-a-1099533.html


© SPIEGEL ONLINE 2016
 

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Jul 5, 2016 @ 04:00 AM 544 views The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets

Turkey Makes Up With Russia: America Also Needs To End New Cold War With Moscow

Doug Bandow, Contributor
I write about domestic and international policy


Turkey and Russia have kissed and made up. Or at least done the diplomatic equivalent. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed his regret over the shoot-down of a Russian aircraft last November. Russian President Vladimir Putin began dropping his government’s retaliatory sanctions. There’s talk of possible cooperation over Syria.

Reducing tensions between the two is good for them and the region. As well as for the U.S. and NATO. A conflict between Moscow and Ankara over the Syrian civil war would be simple madness. Such a fight would be truly catastrophic if the U.S. and NATO were drawn in. Next America and Russia should restore their working relationship.

For centuries Turkey and Russia battled each other over territorial ambitions and Black Sea access. The Europeans backed the Ottoman Empire against the Russian Empire in the Crimean War. In World War I the Europeans split, with the Ottomans and Russians on opposite sides. Both “ancien regimes” then collapsed. Ankara stayed out of World War II but joined NATO during the Cold War, thereby winning the backing of both America and Europe against the Soviet Union.

Turkish ties with Moscow improved after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Ankara largely avoided the crossfire during the recent deterioration in the West’s relationship with Russia. Turkey is a major energy consumer and viewed Moscow as a useful counterweight to Europe, which criticized Erdogan’s growing repression. But everything changed with last fall’s downing of a Russian warplane which briefly flew over Turkish territory.

Ankara knew the plane meant Turkey no ill. President Erdogan was suspected of seeking to punish Moscow for backing the Syrian government, which he wanted to overthrow, and targeting Turcomen insurgents allied with Ankara. He may also have believed that triggering Russian retaliation would drag the rest of the alliance into the Syrian imbroglio on his side.

However, contrary to claims that Putin is the reincarnation of Joseph Stalin or Adolf Hitler, the Russian leader responded circumspectly. He imposed economic sanctions, added anti-aircraft weapons, and threatened retaliation for another incident. He also reinforced attacks on Syrian insurgents, including those backed by Ankara, and supported Kurdish forces, viewed by Turkey as terrorists tied to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). Yet Moscow carefully avoided triggering NATO intervention.

Turkey lost ground geopolitically. Although Washington and NATO voiced official support for Turkey, they expressed their irritation with Erdogan’s recklessness. “NATO cannot allow itself to be pulled into a military escalation with Russia as a result of the recent tensions between Russia and Turkey,” said Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn. Alliance officials reportedly warned Ankara against any action that could trigger conflict.

The Obama administration refused to consider targeting Moscow’s forces. Several Republican Party presidential candidates threatened to shoot down Russian aircraft while imposing a no-fly zone over Syria. However, few Americans—who had overwhelmingly rejected President Barack Obama’s proposal to intervene after the Assad government’s use of chemical weapons—backed such a mad idea. Triumphing over the GOP hawks was Donald Trump, who proposed a much more conciliatory policy toward Moscow.

Ankara found itself at odds with the U.S. in Syria as well. Washington focused on combatting the Islamic State, even working with the Kurds despite Erdogan’s rage. Moscow negotiated with the U.S. to forge a ceasefire agreement that moderated fighting in Syria. Overall, Russia came far closer than Turkey to attaining its objectives, fostering a revival of the Assad government’s military fortunes.

Erdogan faced other challenges. The economy slowed, reducing public tolerance of rampant corruption. The president retained support of a bare majority of the Turkish population, but political polarization fomented internal violence. Indeed, Ankara broke its ceasefire with the PKK for political advantage. Increasing authoritarianism at home—the government’s veritable declaration of war on the press and most anyone else criticizing Erdogan—brought greater international criticism, especially in Europe. Ankara’s earlier tolerance of Islamic State activities dissolved after a spate of terrorist attacks in Turkey, most recently at the Istanbul airport.

Ankara recently launched several diplomatic initiatives. It reached a controversial agreement with Europe to halt unauthorized migration further north. Moreover, Turkey normalized relations with Israel, strained since the latter’s 2010 attack on a Turkish vessel bound for Gaza, which killed several Turkish citizens. Now Ankara has retreated from its confrontation with Moscow.

Months ago Erdogan reportedly sought to ease tensions through private communication to Putin, but Moscow insisted on a public apology. So at the end of last month Erdogan wrote to offer his condolences to the family of the Russian pilot who died. The joint communique stated that Turkey did not intend to shoot down the Russian plane. Whether Erdogan’s note counted as an “apology” was disputed, but did not disguise the fact that Turkey had retreated. A Turkish spokesman indicated that the two governments “have agreed to take necessary steps without delay to improve bilateral relations.” Moreover, Ankara announced that it would prosecute a Turkish citizen fighting with ethnic Turkish rebels in Syria for the death of the pilot.

Resolving the dispute obviously benefits both Russia and Turkey. Moscow announced plans to drop travel and trade restrictions. The amount of money at stake is modest, but important symbolically. Moreover, the respective foreign ministers met to better diplomatic ties; a presidential summit apparently is in the offing. Although the nations’ differences over Syria are too great to easily bridge, any easing of tensions would also assist U.S.-Russian efforts to negotiate a settlement.

Resolving its differences with Moscow moves the Erdogan government back toward its earlier objective of having “zero problems” with its neighbors. That policy long ago faltered, as Turkish influence faded even close to home. Rebuilding its working relationship with Russia (and Israel) should enable Ankara to work more confidently to shape regional events, including policy toward Syria and the Kurds.

Moreover, Turkey and Russia share an interest in confronting terrorism. One of the three airport attackers was allegedly a Russian. And the assault reportedly was organized by another Russian, a Chechen. As many as 4000 Chechens may have gone to Syria to fight. Muslim Chechnya has become a fount of terrorist activity against Russians and others.

Washington also will benefit from rapprochement between Russia and Turkey. The U.S. is much less likely to find itself facing a call for military support from a NATO ally for a conflict fomented by the latter. America already has little control over events in Syria. Turkey threatened to pull Washington into another war.

Something akin to cooperation between Ankara and Moscow might also ease disagreements between America and Russia over regional policy. Turkish acceptance, however reluctant, of Assad’s continued role could moderate Washington’s insistence on his removal. A Turkish effort against the Islamic State on the ground in Syria could lead Washington to reduce its support for Kurdish groups. If the gap between Turkey and Moscow over Syria can shrink, so can that between Washington and Russia.

Ankara’s decision to offer concessions for détente with Russia also provides a model for the Obama administration. Moscow’s aggressive behavior toward Ukraine and Georgia is ruthless and unfortunate, but does not threaten America. Both of these troubled nations were long controlled by Moscow, first under the Russian Empire and next by the Soviet Union. Neither state ever was considered relevant let alone essential to U.S. security.

Further, Washington’s own hubris helped stoke Moscow’s paranoia. NATO’s absorption of former Soviet states and expansion to Russia’s border could not help but be seen as hostile in Moscow. Even worse were promising alliance membership to both Georgia and Ukraine and intervening in Kiev to help oust the elected, Russia-leaning president. One can imagine Washington’s reaction had Russia behaved similarly toward Mexico.

Moscow’s behavior is not justifiable, but it is understandable. And it does not presage an attack on the rest of Europe, let alone America. Putin wants his country to enjoy border security and be treated with respect. His actions in Georgia and Ukraine advance those ends. Swallowing Ukraine, seizing the Baltic States, or invading Poland would not. Going to war with America is not likely on his “to do” list.

In fact, there are many areas where Washington and Moscow could cooperate: Syria/Islamic State, North Korea, Iran, China, and terrorism. Even in Europe, Russia likely desires stability so long as the latter’s security remains undisturbed. Putin is no friend of the liberal Western order, but that doesn’t mean there are no shared interests. A U.S. promise to forswear NATO membership for Georgia and Ukraine could be the foundation for a more permanent deal to end Moscow’s support for violent separatism in Eastern Ukraine.

The Ankara-Moscow agreement highlights how countries may shift from near conflict to at least cold peace despite sharp differences over policy. It’s a very positive development. And one Washington should learn from. Putin is no democratic crusader, but he appears to be eminently practical. If Turkey and Russia can make up, so can Washington and Moscow.
 

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World | Tue Jul 5, 2016 1:30am EDT
Related: World, China, South China Sea

Chinese paper says should prepare for South China Sea armed clash

BEIJING | By Ben Blanchard


China should prepare itself for military confrontation in the South China Sea, an influential Chinese paper said on Tuesday, a week ahead of a decision by an international court on a dispute there between China and the Philippines.

Tensions have been rising ahead of a July 12 ruling by an arbitration court hearing the argument between China and the Philippines over the South China Sea in the Dutch city of The Hague.

In joint editorials in its Chinese and English editions, the state-run Global Times said the dispute, having already been complicated by U.S. intervention, now faces further escalation due to the threat posed by the tribunal to China's sovereignty.

"Washington has deployed two carrier battle groups around the South China Sea, and it wants to send a signal by flexing its muscles: As the biggest powerhouse in the region, it awaits China's obedience," it said.

China should speed up developing its military deterrence abilities, the paper added.

"Even though China cannot keep up with the U.S. militarily in the short-term, it should be able to let the U.S. pay a cost it cannot stand if it intervenes in the South China Sea dispute by force," it said.

"China hopes disputes can be resolved by talks, but it must be prepared for any military confrontation. This is common sense in international relations."

The newspaper is published by the ruling Communist Party's official People's Daily, and while it is widely read in policy-making circles it does not have the same mouthpiece function as its parent and its editorials cannot be viewed as representing government policy.

It is also well-known for its extreme nationalist views.

China, which has been angered by U.S. patrols in the South China Sea, will be holding military drills in the waters there starting from Wednesday.

China's Defence Ministry said the drills are routine, the official China Daily reported.

Manila has sought to dial down tensions with its powerful neighbor ahead of the decision but resisted pressure to ignore the ruling.

"The reality is that nobody wants a conflict, nobody wants to resolve our conflict in a violent manner, nobody wants war,” Philippines Foreign Minister Perfecto Yasay, told ANC television on Tuesday.

"It is my understanding that the President would like to maintain stronger, better relationships with everybody, including China, including the United States, including Japan and all," Yasay said, adding that a "special envoy" was needed to help resolve the dispute.

U.S. officials have expressed concern that the Hague court ruling could prompt Beijing to declare an air defense identification zone, or ADIZ, as it did over the East China Sea in 2013, or step up the pace of reclamation and construction on its holdings in the disputed region.

What response China takes will "fully depend" on the Philippines, the China Daily added, citing unidentified sources.

"There will be no incident at all if all related parties put aside the arbitration results," one of the sources told the English-language publication.

"China has never taken a lead in ... stirring up regional tension," another of the sources added.

About $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year though the energy-rich, strategic waters of the South China Sea, where China's territorial claims overlap in parts with Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan.


(Additional reporting by Manuel Mogato in Manila; Editing by Michael Perry and Lincoln Feast)
 

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July 5, 2016

China Confirms Air Confrontation with Japan Over East China Sea

By AP

BEIJING (AP) — China's defense ministry confirmed that Chinese and Japanese fighter jets had a confrontation over disputed waters in the East China Sea last month, adding to concerns that such close encounters could lead to mishaps that threaten regional stability.

The two Chinese jets were only carrying out a routine patrol when two Japanese fighters approached at high speed, Beijing said Monday. The Chinese pilots took "tactical measures" before the Japanese planes fled, its statement said. No details on the measures were given.

"Such provocative acts by the Japanese jets could easily cause accidents in the air, harming personal safety on both sides and destroying the peace and stability in the region," the Chinese statement said. "We demand Japan to cease all provocative acts."

Yohei Haneo, a spokesman for the Japanese defense ministry, on Tuesday denied the Japanese fighters took any provocative actions during the encounter, saying the jets were scrambling against Chinese aircraft.

The June 17 encounter took place near a set of barren islets claimed by both countries, called Diaoyu islands by Beijing and Senkaku islands by Tokyo. China in 2013 set up an air defense identification zone that covers the islands and overlaps with Japan's claim of air space for defense.

The Japanese defense ministry said Tuesday that Japan scrambled against Chinese military planes about 200 times in April, May, and June, up from last year's 80 times in the same period. Tokyo has expressed concerns over China's increased military activities in the region.

In mid-June, a Japanese surveillance plane spotted a Chinese intelligence ship entering Japan's territorial waters, described then as the first report of a Chinese navy vessel doing so in more than a decade.

In that instance, Japan expressed concern to China that that incident and other recent Chinese military activity was escalating tensions.

Earlier last month, Japanese officials summoned China's ambassador to protest the sailing of a Chinese navy ship near the disputed islands.
 

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The Opinion Pages | Contributing Opinion Writer

After Brexit, Can Germany Lead Europe Alone?

By ANNA SAUERBREY
JULY 4, 2016

BERLIN — Whether Britain’s decision to leave the European Union turns out to be a disaster or just a bump in the road for Europe on its path to unification, one consequence is already abundantly, disturbingly clear: Brexit will cement Germany’s role as the Continent’s leader — a role that neither Germany nor anybody else is entirely comfortable with.

It has rarely felt this lonely at the center of Europe. With Britain leaving, Germany is losing an important partner within the European Union, as well as on foreign policy beyond it.

That is not to say that Britain was an easy partner in recent years. The mind reels at what Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, known for her cautious, step-by-step policies, must have thought of Prime Minister David Cameron tossing his country’s membership onto the gambling table in a bid to blackmail the European Union. Ms. Merkel is a committed Europeanist; Mr. Cameron called the union “too big, too bossy, too interfering.”

Still, given the nativist pressures rising in practically every country in Europe, Mr. Cameron counted as a pretty good partner. He was a strong supporter of the Berlin-led austerity politics during the financial crisis and the Greek crisis that followed.

He defended the refugee deal that Ms. Merkel devised with Turkey. And when the leaders of Germany, France and Italy called President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia to tell him to stop backing President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, Mr. Cameron eagerly jumped on the line.

And Mr. Cameron brought more than his personal support to the table. Britain has the largest military budget in Europe and a world-class diplomatic corps — not to mention an economy that, if not exactly firing on all cylinders, was on fire compared with much of the rest of the Continent.

Britain’s departure is a particularly hard blow to Germany since its other partners are weak or growing distant. The German-Polish relationship, once strong, has eroded since the nationalist Law and Justice Party came to power in Poland in 2015. Austria just missed electing the far-right Norbert Hofer as president.

And France — well, it’s complicated.

At first glance, the German-French axis, which acted as the European Union’s steel spine for decades, seems as strong as ever. Just a few hours after the victory of the British Leave campaign was announced, the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung quoted extensively from a joint paper by Jean-Marc Ayrault, the French foreign minister, and his German counterpart, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, about the future of Europe. “Europe needs guidance now,” it said. “It is Germany’s and France’s responsibility to provide that guidance.”

But France is a difficult partner, too. President François Hollande enjoys the trust of neither his people (only 13 percent, according to polls conducted in June) nor his Socialist Party. He is under immense pressure from the far-right National Front, which expects to win about a third of the vote in next year’s presidential election, and from France’s powerful unions, which oppose Mr. Hollande’s modest Anglo-German-style labor reforms. All of this — and a perpetually weak economy — leaves him unable to provide strong leadership within Europe, let alone abroad.

True, Brexit doesn’t require an end to British-German cooperation. But Britain faces a long period of turning inward, politically, as it deals with the implosion of its leading political parties, an empowered far right and the possibility of Scottish independence. For the foreseeable future, Germany stands alone — a role it not only did not seek, but also at times actively resisted.

In an essay for Foreign Affairs magazine published about two weeks before the British referendum, Mr. Steinmeier, the German foreign minister, disavowed any interest in Continental leadership by his country. “Circumstances have forced it into a central role,” he wrote. “Preserving that union and sharing the burden of leadership are Germany’s top priorities.”

The problem is that a core reason for the European Union in the first place was to constrain German power by dispersing leadership roles across the membership. But what happens when the future of the union depends, arguably, on a new assertion of German power?

Germany’s immediate reaction to the Brexit referendum has been to call for a new burden-sharing arrangement with what’s left of the old gang. On the Saturday after the vote, the foreign ministers of the European Union’s founding members — Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands — assembled at the Villa Borsig, the Brandenburg retreat of the German government. On Monday, Ms. Merkel summoned the president of the European Council, Donald Tusk; Prime Minister Matteo Renzi of Italy; and Mr. Hollande of France to Berlin.

The significance of the fact that she could summon her colleagues onto her own turf to discuss how they might share some of Britain’s newly discarded burden was lost on no one. Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the head of Poland’s Law and Justice Party, called the idea of convening only the union’s old guard “little thought through.” And Prime Minister Xavier Bettel of Luxembourg complained at the European Union summit last week about the formation of “small clubs” within the union.

Thus the dilemma. Germany cannot go it alone, and doesn’t want to. But without a strong partner to share the leadership, it has the unpalatable choice of letting power sit with a broad cast of unreliable partners, or creating a new inner circle. No one wants to give Law and Justice a seat at the table. But denying it will only strengthen national narcissisms in countries already troubled with euroskepticism, further splintering the Continent.

Which means that Germany may have to take command, after all. It’s a delicate task. But now that Germany finds itself on center stage, it might as well perform.


Anna Sauerbrey is an editor on the opinion page of the newspaper Der Tagesspiegel and a contributing opinion writer.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Note, latest KIA numbers are over 200....

Another muzzie mass murder -- BAGHDAD
Started by mzkitty‎, 07-02-2016 03:39 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?494483-Another-muzzie-mass-murder-BAGHDAD/page2


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://time.com/4392691/baghdad-bomb-attack-karada-isis/?xid=homepage

Latest Baghdad Bombing Underscores Iraq¡¯s Ongoing Nightmare

Jared Malsin @jmalsin
July 4, 2016
ª£ ª® ª¯ ªÁ ¤a
At least 157 people died in the latest attack

They were shopkeepers and families with children. One was a young man said to be a recent law school graduate. Another had just finished a PhD in microbiology, according to Iraqi reports. They found themselves in a shopping district of Baghdad¡¯s Karada neighborhood early Sunday morning when a suicide bomber detonated a truckload of explosives.

The death toll in the attack rose to at least 157 on Monday according to the Associated Press, making it one of the worst single attacks on civilians since the U.S. invasion in 2003. As rescue workers continue to search for bodies in the rubble, the attack raises memories of the darkest days of the sectarian civil war that ravaged Iraq in the years following the 2003 military invasion that toppled dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. The bombing underscores the ongoing nightmare for Iraq as it continues to grapple with political divisions, struggling institutions, and vast threats to its security.

Islamic State militants claimed responsibility for this weekend¡¯s bombing, which carried echoes of an earlier age in which ISIS¡¯ parent group, al-Qaeda in Iraq, and its leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, staged a series of indiscriminate attacks intended to provoke civil war. Zarqawi¡¯s tactics were so cruel and indiscriminate that even al-Qaeda¡¯s central leadership disapproved.

The bombing in Karada followed a similar format to previous attacks designed to unleash maximum carnage. A truck packed with explosives detonated on a busy street lined with shops. In claiming the attack, ISIS offered a sectarian motive, saying it targeted Shiite Muslims. The attack shattered an otherwise joyful moment: toward the end of the holy month of Ramadan, a time for giving gifts and staying up late.

¡°When you see these bombings you are very much reminded of the mid-2000s when Zarqari and his gang, al-Qaeda in Iraq were essentially doing this¡ª this was their style,¡± says Renad Mansour, a fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. ¡°A lot of Iraqis are saying, ¡®Oh wow are we back to that again?¡¯¡±

The bombing in Baghdad comes after pro-government forces reclaimed the city of Fallujah from ISIS last month, expelling the jihadist group from a key stronghold just outside the capital. The battle was another echo from the post-invasion period. In 2004, U.S., British, and Iraqi forces also retook the city from insurgents. It was during those years that the Sunni-dominated insurgency against the U.S.-led occupation metastasized into the sectarian civil war that in turn led to the creation of ISIS.

ISIS set itself apart from other jihadist groups by seizing control of a large area of land in home to hundreds of thousands of people Syria and Iraq. Now, the jihadists are losing on battlefields in both countries and in Libya, but they continue to make their presence felt by killing civilians across the planet. Separate attacks attributed to ISIS in Istanbul and Bangladesh last week underscored the group¡¯s global reach as it endeavors to remain relevant in spite of its shrinking landmass.

Pressure is mounting on the government of Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi to translate military success against ISIS into corresponding improvements in security. After Abadi visited the blast site on Sunday, angry protesters pelted his motorcade with debris. In May, Abadi¡¯s administration was shaken when supporters of the Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr stormed Baghdad¡¯s fortified Green Zone and entered the parliament building. The demonstrators denounced corruption and the inability of the state to maintain security amid ongoing ISIS bombings in the capital.

On Sunday, Abadi took steps to increase security, including banning police from using fake bomb detectors known as the ¡°magic wand¡± at checkpoints. The British businessman who sold the fraudulent devices to Iraq and other countries was sentenced to 20 years in prison in the UK in 2013, but according to Reuters, some of the devices remained in use years after the scandal became public.

Part of the challenge facing the Iraqi authorities is that ISIS relies on suicide bombers, often in cars or trucks, a tactic that is both extremely deadly and difficult to stop once it is in motion. Iraq has already suffered enormously from such attacks. Between 2003 and 2015, there were at least 2,027 suicide attacks in Iraq, killing at least 21,487 people, according to a University of Chicago database. Other databases place number of strikes (including both suicide and other attacks) far higher.

Analysts say ending those attacks in Baghdad will mean locating and apprehending ISIS sleeper cells that are believed to be hiding in the capital. That won¡¯t be an easy task. Iraq¡¯s security apparatus has fractured along political and communal lines, with multiple competing agencies and the rise of controversial, decentralized Shiite-led militias who are deeply involved in the fight against ISIS.

¡°It¡¯s very much a political problem. Haider al-Abadi is not in a position to coordinate all of the security and intelligence agencies inside the city of Baghdad let alone in the rest of Iraq,¡± says Mansour.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://in.reuters.com/article/israel-elal-idINL8N19R1PJ

Markets | Tue Jul 5, 2016 3:11pm IST

Swiss warplanes escort El Al jet after bomb threat

Switzerland sent warplanes to escort an Israeli El Al Boeing 747 flying over its territory on Tuesday after a bomb threat was made against the airliner, Israel's Airports Authority said.

The El Al jet, flying from New York, continued on its scheduled route to Tel Aviv, where it was due to land at 12:45 p.m. (0945 GMT). No emergency has been declared at Tel Aviv's Ben-Gurion international airport.

The Airports Authority said the Swiss air force had scrambled F-18 aircraft to escort the plane "because of a bomb threat". The Swiss Air Force said it had deployed an air police "hot mission" to accompany a flight through an emergency situation.

An El Al spokeswoman declined to give details about what she described as an anonymous threat or its credibility, or comment on why the airline, considered one of the most security-conscious in the world, had not opted for an emergency landing en route to Tel Aviv.

Alluding to the question of whether the airline had deemed the threat credible, she said: "You can understand on your own, if the plane is continuing on its way." (Reporting by Dan Williams and Tova Cohen; Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-nato-russia-kaliningrad-idUSKCN0ZL0J7

World | Tue Jul 5, 2016 6:47am EDT
Related: World, Russia

Russia's Baltic outpost digs in for standoff with NATO

KALININGRAD, Russia | By Lidia Kelly


On the curbside outside the civilian airport in Kaliningrad, Russia's Baltic Sea outpost, a group of about 20 servicemen in Russian navy uniforms lined up earlier this month, waiting for a bus to take them to their base.

"We are an additional reinforcement," one of the young men, who said he and his colleagues had flown in that day, told Reuters as they waited on the rain-soaked tarmac. He gave no further details.

Russia and NATO are each building up their military capability across eastern Europe, spurred by the conflict in Ukraine which has prompted officials on both sides to talk of the risk of a new, Cold War-style confrontation.

For Russia, a strategic centerpiece is here in Kaliningrad. A relic of the Soviet Union, it is a small piece of Russian territory sandwiched between NATO members Poland and Lithuania, allowing the Kremlin to project its military power into the alliance's northern flank.

During a three-day visit by Reuters earlier this month, there was ample visible evidence of Russia enhancing its military presence.

Trucks moved military equipment from a port to locations inland, small groups of servicemen flew in, work was under way to boost security near one base and extensive construction was taking place at another base housing a military radar system.

Reuters was able to see only a glimpse of what the Russian military is doing in Kaliningrad. Much of the region is off-limits to foreigners without a special permit and at one point men in civilian clothes ordered photos of military infrastructure deleted. The Russian defense ministry did not respond to questions about its deployments in Kaliningrad.

But much of the activity tallied with what military analysts and Western diplomats say Russia is doing: preparing to station new missiles in Kaliningrad and build a web of anti-aircraft systems that could challenge NATO aircraft over the Baltic states and parts of Poland.

Russia's military build-up will be on the agenda when leaders of NATO member states meet in Warsaw on July 8 for an alliance summit. Russia says it has been forced to respond because NATO is drawing closer to its borders.

"When it comes to threats in the (Kaliningrad) area, indeed we can talk of an increase in the intensity of Russia's aggression in recent days," Poland's Defence Minister Antoni Macierewicz told Reuters.

"These threats have a very important, dangerous role, always present in NATO's thinking – these are anti-access activities, which are a serious threat to the alliance.”


RADAR STATION

Kaliningrad was born after World War Two when Soviet troops occupied the German port of Koenigsberg.

The war left most of the city bombed to rubble. The remaining German population was expelled and the city annexed to the Soviet Union, resettled with Russians and renamed Kaliningrad in honor of a Soviet leader who died in 1946. After the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 it became a Russian exclave, with no land borders with other parts of Russia.

According to NATO planners, Russia is using Kaliningrad to pursue what is known as an anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) strategy for surrounding areas.

That involves a strategic layering of surface-to-air missiles to block off NATO's air access, if needed, to the three Baltic states and about a third of Poland.

Some Western officials believe the Baltic states, which have large ethnic Russian minorities, could be seized by Moscow, much as Russia took control of Ukraine's Crimea region two years ago. Moscow says it has no such intention, but needs to beef up its defenses because of NATO buildup in the Baltic.

Unlike Ukraine, the Baltic states are part of NATO, which means the alliance would be bound to act to protect them from any threat to their territory.

A European Union diplomat who focuses on security said Russia's strategy for adding anti-air capability in Kaliningrad "will only progress -- the process is centralized and well-coordinated."

"And the Russians spend the greatest amount of financial resources on those capabilities," the diplomat said. "The question is what is it intended for?"

The biggest construction works seen by Reuters were at the Pionersky Radar Station, on Kaliningrad's northern coast. The radar itself, whose range covers all of Europe and which gives early warning of air attack, became operational in 2014.

Now, the military is expanding the infrastructure around it. Trucks carrying sand and gravel could be seen driving into the base. Dump trucks, a truck-mounted crane and an excavator were parked nearby. Construction workers walked in and out of the base, some in camouflage trousers.

"The station is strategic for Russia, that's where a lot of work is going on," said a soldier based there.

Information posted on the website of Russia's Federal Agency for Special Construction, which carries out construction projects for the military, said work was underway to build barracks, a heating plant, canteens, a medical station, storage units, a firefighting station, a social club and sports facilities.

New buildings could be seen behind the gate into the base. Two local sources said the new accommodation could house up to several hundred service personnel.

Military activity could also be observed in the region's main city, also called Kaliningrad. Military trucks could be seen emerging from the Kaliningrad port - a civilian facility that has a military section - and heading to other parts of the region.

Several of the trucks were carrying small artillery pieces. Others had containers on the back, and in other cases the cargo was concealed beneath a tarpaulin.

At a third location, near the town of Svetlyi, a watchtower just off the road had been renovated, and a swathe of forest around it had been freshly felled to improve sight lines from the tower.

Two local sources familiar with the military set-up in the region said the watchtower was part of a chain of security to protect a military compound near Svetlyi that stored the arsenal of Russia's Baltic Fleet, headquartered at the nearby port of Baltiysk.


MISSILE PREPARATIONS

Russia is likely to deploy the Iskander-M ballistic missiles in Kaliningrad within the next two to three years, sources close to its military have told Reuters.

That deployment is part of a long-standing plan to modernize Russia's non-nuclear ballistic missile system, but Russia is likely to cast it as its response to NATO's own build-up.

In Kaliningrad, Reuters did not see any evidence of preparations to deploy the missiles.

However, two local sources, one with direct knowledge of the Baltiysk naval base, said that the infrastructure work to house an unspecified number of the Iskander missiles has been completed at the base.

Moscow's plan for Kaliningrad is not to flood it with troops and firepower, but to modernize its military infrastructure, said Vladimir Abramov, a Kaliningrad-based analyst who said he believed the West and Russia were equally to blame for their stand-off.

"The Kaliningrad contingent is being heavily upgraded qualitatively, not quantitatively," said Abramov. "Our general staff understands the folly of a large deployment here."


(Additional reporting by Anton Zverev in Moscow and Robin Emmott in Brussels, Wiktor Szary in Warsaw; Writing by Lidia Kelly; editing by Peter Graff and Anna Willard)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.euronews.com/2016/07/04/nato-eyes-more-russia-talks/

European Affairs
Brussels Bureau

NATO eyes more Russia talks

04/07 16:57 CET | updated at 04/07 - 09:38

NATO officials plan to hold more talks with Russia after an alliance summit later this week, the alliance’s secretary-general said on Monday.

Leaders will meet in Warsaw on Friday and Saturday where they will endorse a plan to station as many as four thousand troops in Poland and the Baltic states.

The move is intended to deter and contain a resurgent Russia after Moscow’s intervention in Ukraine.

Speaking in Brussels, Jens Stoltenberg said the alliance would hold further talks with Russia shortly.

“We are working with Russia to hold another meeting of the (NATO-Russia) Council shortly after the summit, where transparency and risk reduction should be an important topic,” he said.

The NATO-Russia Council last met in April, but both sides admitted to “profound disagreements” over Ukraine and a number of other issues.

Relations between the alliance and Moscow have hit their lowest point since the Cold War after the Ukrainian crisis first erupted over two years ago.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.business-standard.com/ar...ility-beyond-nato-borders-116070500364_1.html

NATO Warsaw Summit to focus on defense and stability beyond NATO borders

ANI | Brussels
July 5, 2016 Last Updated at 12:56 IST

Outlining the agenda for the Warsaw NATO Summit to be held on July 8 and July 9, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said NATO leaders will take key decisions to strengthen the Alliance's defense and deterrence and project stability beyond NATO's borders.

Stoltenberg told a press conference on Monday that since the Alliance's last summit in September 2014 in Wales, NATO has implemented the biggest reinforcement of its collective defense since the Cold War.

"We delivered a faster, a stronger, and a more ready Alliance. We now need to take the next steps. So at our Summit in Warsaw, we will agree to further enhance our military presence in the eastern part of the Alliance," said Stoltenberg.

According to NATO's press release, the group leaders will agree to deploy four robust, multinational battalions to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, reports Xinhua.

Further efforts to strengthen the Alliance's deterrence and defense include a tailored presence in the South-East, based on a multinational brigade in Romania.

Steps will also be taken to improve cyber-defense, civil preparedness and the ability to defend against ballistic missile attacks.

Stoltenberg said NATO is talking with Russia to hold another meeting of the NATO-Russia Council shortly after the Warsaw Summit.

"We remain open to dialogue with Russia. The NATO-Russia Council has an important role to play as a forum for dialogue and information exchange, to reduce tensions and increase predictability," he said.

Stoltenberg also disclosed that defense spending will also be discussed at the summit in addition to the discussions on projecting stability beyond border by helping local partners to defend themselves.

"We will agree to start training and capacity building inside Iraq, expanding our existing training for Iraqi officers in Jordan," he said.

The deployment of NATO AWACS surveillance aircraft to support the Global Coalition to counter Islamic State will also be approved at the meeting.

Stoltenberg further reiterated NATO's continued support for Afghanistan and continued funding of the Afghan forces until 2020.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.the-journal.com/article/...graphy-that-has-both-sides-feeling-surrounded

The Baltics' tangled geography that has both sides feeling surrounded

Michael Birnbaum
Article Last Updated: Tuesday, July 05, 2016 12:35am
Keywords: Associated Press, (c) 2016, The Washington Post.

JUODKRANTE, Lithuania - The accusation crackled through Lithuanian politics like a lightning bolt: A Russian military crew may have landed in a peaceful fishing settlement as part of an exercise, a senior Lithuanian lawmaker said, an apparent testament to the vulnerable nation's inability to defend itself.

Here in the Baltics, a region mostly encircled by Russia and its allies, many fear they could do little to stop a Kremlin invasion. And a growing number of officials are saying that small probes of Baltic security may have already begun.

The anxiety comes amid the biggest military buildup between East and West since the Cold War. Russia has shipped nuclear-capable missiles to its bristling Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad, and it has bolstered its conventional forces on the other side of the Baltics. Western military allies, meanwhile, have upped their presence in the area and plan to convene in Warsaw for a summit this week to deploy thousands more troops to the region. Officials say they are trying to dissuade any Russian temptation to test their willingness to defend the former Eastern bloc nations.

Because of the peculiar geography of the region, the deployments have made each side feel surrounded. Kaliningrad, a key Russian naval hub, was once German territory and was a Soviet war prize after World War II. It is disconnected from mainland Russia and bordered only by the NATO nations of Lithuania and Poland. That leaves Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia trapped between Kaliningrad and mainland Russia in a pincer that they fear could snap shut any moment.

The attention given to the alleged incident in the Lithuanian resort village of Juodkrante, a centuries-old settlement of 720 people surrounded by dunes and forest, is a measure of Baltic worries. No evidence has been offered publicly, but senior Lithuanian lawmakers who were briefed about their nation's classified annual security assessment have said that the intelligence data expresses it in terms of probability.

"The chances are that it happened," said Arturas Paulauskas, the chairman of the Lithuanian Parliament's national security and defense committee, in an interview with the Lithuanian broadcaster LRT. "Apparently, it was some kind of exercise, and they landed."

Contacted about the comments, Paulauskas said in an interview that he was speaking "hypothetically." But a second committee member, former defense minister Rasa Jukneviciene, said separately that the possible incident took place before 2015. Lithuanian Prime Minister Algirdas Butkevicius said that his country's "services acted in time and appropriately" and that he would have no further comment on the matter.

Lithuania never lodged any complaints about it with NATO, and some senior officials are skeptical that it happened at all. But the possibility has set Lithuania on edge ahead of the NATO summit, set to start in Warsaw on Friday. And the fears are a reminder of the poorly defended frontiers in all three Baltic nations. On Juodkrante's spit of land, Russia is separated from Lithuania by a sand dune. In Estonia, some villages in the border region are so undeveloped that the main way to reach them is on a road that snakes in and out of Russia. In Latvia, residents have long been careful when mushroom-picking in forests in the border area, for fear they would accidentally stray into Russia.

Lithuanian leaders say they worry about Russia's military buildup in Kaliningrad, where the Kremlin's powerful new S-400 antiaircraft systems have the potential to block NATO air access to half of Poland and most of the Baltics. Iskander nuclear-capable missile complexes have also been moved to Kaliningrad for exercises.

"It's becoming a threat. Because they're trying to use it as a strategic forward post," said Lithuanian Foreign Minister Linas Linkevicius. "Needless to say, we are really concerned about the concentration of troops."

The geographical proximity of Kaliningrad to the Baltics has become a major challenge for NATO. Klaipeda, a Lithuanian port city that is key to NATO defense, is just 28 miles from the border. The city is home to a liquefied natural gas terminal and a new electricity link to Sweden, both of which Lithuania is using to make the Baltics less dependent on Russian energy.

When the undersea electricity cables were being laid last year, Russia's Baltic Fleet decided to hold military exercises for nearly a full month, precisely in the construction area.

"Our goal is to be as little dependent as possible on our eastern neighbors," said Karolis Sankovski, the director of the Strategic Infrastructure Department at Litgrid, the grid operator that runs the new cable, which started transmitting electricity in February. "The period of laying the cable coincided with the period of training for the Russian marines," he said, shrugging his shoulders.

The U.S. guided-missile destroyer, the USS Donald Cook, was on its way to the port of Klaipeda in April when it was buzzed by Russian fighter jets. When the incident happened, it was about 40 miles from Russia's main Baltic naval port, according to the Russian Defense Ministry.

In Juodkrante, many residents can easily remember an older era of Cold War border fears, although then they were sitting inside the Soviet Union looking out, not next to Russia staring in. The Curonian Spit on which Juodkrante sits was a resort area for the nomenklatura, or bureaucratic elite. And because it was so close to the military installations in Kaliningrad, ordinary Soviet citizens needed special permission to travel there.

"At 10 p.m., the border guards would go on tractors on the beach," said Darius Jasaitis, the mayor of the tourist-focused municipality that includes Juodkrante. "They would check, and if they found a footprint, they would sound an alarm."

The Soviet-era fear was Swedish submarines. Juodkrante residents now joke that they are keeping an eye out for Russian ones from the intricate carved-wood porches that look onto the lagoon that separates them from mainland Lithuania.

"We local people think that nothing happened," Jasaitis said. "But we've been talking about it. Probably we should create an attraction. Put in a stone and say, 'Here's where the boat landed.' "

Russian leaders say they feel just as vulnerable about NATO's expansion as the Baltics do about Russia.

"We make no secret of our negative attitude to the NATO policy of moving its military infrastructure closer to our border and involving other states in its military activities," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said last month. "Serious and honest politicians know full well that Russia will never attack any NATO member."

In Kaliningrad, many residents say they would rather get back to ordinary relations with their neighbors, since they are surrounded by the European Union and NATO.

"Every person here wants Kaliningrad to be a window to Europe and not a target for cannons," said Konstantin Doroshok, an opposition-minded member of Kaliningrad's regional parliament.

Some of those who work on the sea in Baltiysk, Kaliningrad's main naval port, take a calm view of NATO, even if they see no immediate end to troop buildups.

"They're saying that Russians will conquer Lithuania. We don't need it. Don't worry about it. Russia has so much land," said Konstantin Bezpalov, 63, a ship engineer who was making repairs one recent afternoon aboard a ship that ferries sailors to and from their boats.

But he said he understands the logic of escalation, even if there is no clear end to it.

"If Lithuania says you must bring more NATO troops, then of course we need more troops," he said.
 

tiger13

Veteran Member
“shall maintain and promote best practices that reduce the likelihood of civilian casualties, take appropriate steps when such casualties occur, and draw lessons from our operations to further enhance the protection of civilians,” Obama wrote in the order.
And so the King shall order, "Do as I say, not as I do..." F#ck him...
 

Housecarl

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http://www.europeanleadershipnetwor...ll-the-russian-bear-roar-or-whimper_3937.html

After the Summit, will the Russian bear roar or whimper?

By £ukasz Kulesa
Research Director
Tuesday 5 July 2016

Compared with the drama of the UK referendum, the Warsaw NATO Summit may turn out to be a pretty dull affair. It seems that there is now a basic agreement on all major deliverables. That includes the forward-deployed NATO force in Poland and the three Baltic States, which is to be the most visible part of NATO’s updated deterrence posture. Russia will be discussed intensely and strongly criticized, but towards the end of the Summit the leaders will most likely agree on a variation of the good old two-track policy, with immediate emphasis on deterrence but also openness to some sort of dialogue with Moscow.

The interesting part may begin immediately after the Summit ends. How will Russia respond to NATO decisions in the political, military, or other areas? How should NATO then react to the statements and actions coming from Moscow?

Judging by official Russian pronouncements, the decisions coming out of Warsaw on strengthening deterrence will be received as openly hostile acts, bringing NATO troops and infrastructure, including the dreaded Missile Defence, closer to Russian territory and thus endangering Russia’s security. Any additional NATO pronouncements on closer cooperation with Finland and Sweden, as well as on assistance to Ukraine and Georgia, will be seen as adding insult to injury.

It is unlikely that NATO decisions, which will certainly be labelled as ‘aggressive’ and ‘escalatory’, can be left without a response by Moscow. Yet, up to this point, the Russians have been rather vague about the details of their reaction. President Putin recently spoke cryptically about the need to “devote particular attention to the tasks we must address in order to increase our country’s defence capability”, but also stated that “we are not going to let ourselves get intoxicated by these military passions”. Other Russian officials vowed “completely asymmetrical” response to NATO deployments or, alternatively, rather symmetrical strengthening of the conventional military potential of the Western Military District as deterrence against NATO.

It seems most likely that the Russian response would essentially involve the measures which have been either already announced as a part of the military modernization and re-alignment of Russian posture in the Western part of the country, or would boil down to adjustments of the previous plans. Such measures may include setting up new armoured divisions and armies in the Western military district, deployment of additional forces in the Arctic, re-armament of the Kaliningrad-based missile brigade with Iskander systems, introduction of new surface ships and submarines in the Baltic and Black Sea Fleet, or beginning of production of new nuclear-armed missiles for the strategic forces. With the magic touch of Russian propaganda, these long-planned moves can be re-packaged and unveiled as a response to the Warsaw Summit’s decisions. If an additional dramatic twist is required, Russian can declare that it is no longer bound by the 1997 NATO-Russia Founding Act, claiming that it has been ‘broken’ by the Warsaw decisions on forward deployments.

While such a reaction would bring new tensions to Russian-NATO relations (just imagine the press reports stemming from Kaliningrad deployment of Iskander missiles), it might – perversely – signal a readiness to stabilize the relationship with NATO. The Russian leadership will loudly claim that it is protecting the sanctity of its borders and is strengthening its defence against the ‘aggressive plans’ of the Alliance. But these moves would not necessarily signify a counter-escalation to NATO deployments. In Moscow, they would be seen as a necessary response, completing the latest action-reaction cycle of the confrontation rather than initiating a new one. In the logic of a tit-for-tat exchange, to which the Russians subscribe, it would be a way to match the NATO moves unveiled in Warsaw, and not to double down on the confrontation with the West.

It would be thus essential to ‘read’ Moscow’s response to Warsaw bearing in mind the Russian security policy, existing modernization plans and the specifics (read: nastiness) of the Russian anti-NATO propaganda. Only then can we determine whether we are witnessing Russian actions that genuinely challenge our security, or rather an elaborate piece of window dressing, or ‘pokazukha’. If the latter is the case, we should stay calm, remain united in implementing the decisions taken in Warsaw, and keep exploring the possible instruments and procedures for confidence-building with Moscow.

However, things can get much worse, as Russia can make two mistakes while interpreting the results of Warsaw. The first mistake would be to read too much into the Summit outcome and assume that the Alliance is gearing up for a confrontation, with subsequent NATO decisions on additional deployments of forces (including nuclear weapons) closer to Russia and on adding new members from Eastern Europe and Scandinavia in the pipeline.

The other mistake would be to treat the Summit decisions too lightly. Russia may look at a long and torturous process of assembling the package of forces for forward-deployed NATO battalions, take note of the German Foreign Minister’s recent quip criticizing NATO’s “symbolic tank parades on the Alliance’s eastern border”, add to it the perspective of elections in the U.S., and conclude that NATO’s unity on Russia and deterrence resolve is rather shallow, and may be broken if more pressure is applied.

The consequences of making either of these erroneous conclusions can be severe. Whether fuelled by heightened security concerns, or by the desire to gain the upper hand politically over the Alliance, Russia may decide to take the path of a significant transformation of its military posture in the Western part of the country, going beyond the ‘default’ response options mentioned above. Transfer of nuclear warheads from central storage sites to non-strategic aviation tactical missiles brigades, Black Sea or Baltic Sea Fleet bases may be one such potential game-changer. Mass deployment of INF-prohibited land-based cruise missiles, or relocation of newly formed armoured divisions to the border with NATO territory may have similar effect. Confronted with such a response, NATO states would most likely conclude that their deterrence posture is being overtaken by the new developments, and move to approve additional measures to reinforce Article 5 commitments in the East.

If the Russian leadership analyses the situation and the context of the decisions taken in Warsaw rationally, it will notice that most of NATO members display no particular willingness to go beyond the reinforced ‘tripwire’ arrangements for the allies bordering Russia. Proposals to significantly boost the NATO military presence in the Baltic and Black Sea areas and re-dress the regional forces imbalances are hotly discussed within the think tank community and supported by the allies in the region. However, the political and military leadership of the Alliance remains cautious, realizing the problems with political feasibility and practical sustainability of such regional military surges. But the situation may change if Moscow overplays its response to Warsaw. It would be unfortunate if Russia misreads the message of restraint from the Alliance, and decides that escalating the confrontation serves its interests better than gradual stabilization of the relationship.



The opinions articulated above represent the views of the author(s), and do not necessarily reflect the position of the European Leadership Network or any of its members. The ELN's aim is to encourage debates that will help develop Europe's capacity to address the pressing foreign, defence, and security challenges of our time.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-“No-First-Use”-Policy-is-a-Bad-Very-Bad-Idea

Hummm......

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http://www.nipp.org/2016/07/05/payn...a-no-first-use-policy-is-a-bad-very-bad-idea/

Issue No. 408 July 5, 2016

Once Again: Why a “No-First-Use” Policy is a Bad, Very Bad Idea

Dr. Keith B. Payne

Keith B. Payne is the president of National Institute for Public Policy, head, Graduate Department of Defense and Strategic Studies, Missouri State University (Washington area campus) and a former deputy assistant secretary of defense.

The Obama Administration reportedly is seriously considering adopting a “No-First-Use” (NFU) nuclear policy.[1] A prospective NFU policy would be a US commitment never to be the first to use nuclear weapons—as opposed to existing policy that retains some ambiguity regarding when and if the US would use nuclear weapons. An NFU policy would eliminate that ambiguity for US adversaries. It sounds warm and progressive, and has long been a policy proposal of disarmament activists. NFU has, however, been rejected by all previous Democratic and Republican administrations for very sound reasons, most recently by the Obama Administration in 2010. The most important of these reasons is that retaining a degree of US nuclear ambiguity helps to deter war while adopting an NFU policy would undercut the deterrence of war.

How so? Under the existing policy of ambiguity, potential aggressors such as Russia, China, North Korea or Iran must contemplate the reality that if they attack us or our allies, they risk possible US nuclear retaliation. There is no doubt whatsoever that this risk of possible US nuclear retaliation has deterred war and the escalation of conflicts. In fact, the percentage of the world population lost to war has fallen dramatically since US nuclear deterrence was established after World War II.[2] That is an historic accomplishment.

The fatal flaw of the warm and progressive-sounding NFU proposal is that it tells would-be aggressors that they do not have to fear US nuclear retaliation even if they attack us or our allies with advanced conventional, chemical, and/or biological weapons. They would risk US nuclear retaliation only if they attack with nuclear weapons. As long as they use non-nuclear forces, a US NFU policy would provide aggressors with a free pass to avoid the risk now posed by the US nuclear deterrent.

Promising potential aggressors that they can use modern conventional, chemical or biological weapons against us or our allies without fear of possible US nuclear retaliation will encourage some to perceive greater license to do precisely that. Numerous historical case studies demonstrate without a doubt that some aggressors look for such openings to undertake their military moves to overturn a status quo they deem intolerable. They do not need to see a risk-free path to pursue aggression, only a path that allows them some vision of success, however improbable that vision may seem to others. The great advantage of current US nuclear policy is that the US nuclear deterrent helps to shut down the possibility that would-be aggressors contemplate such paths.

A US NFU policy would be particularly dangerous at a time when both Russia and China may be armed with chemical and biological weapons and are pursuing expansionist policies in Europe and Asia, respectively, to overturn the status quo.[3] Russia is by far the strongest military power in Europe. It has moved repeatedly against neighboring states since 2008, forcibly changing established borders in Europe for the first time since World War II and issuing explicit nuclear first-use threats in the process. Only several months ago, Russia reportedly rehearsed the invasion of Norway, Finland, Sweden and Denmark in a military exercise involving 33,000 troops.[3] In Asia, China is the strongest military power and is expanding its reach against US allies, including by building and militarizing islands in the South China Sea. At a time when key US allies face unprecedented threats from powerful neighbors, the US should not reduce the calculation of risks Russia and China must confront in their respective expansionist drives by adopting a US NFU policy. Indeed, saying so should be considered a breathtaking understatement in a world in which aggressors still exist, as do advanced conventional, chemical and possibly biological weapons, and another world war using “only” such modern non-nuclear weapons could cause death levels far beyond the 80-100 million souls lost in World Wars I and II.

In addition, the Obama Administration declares nuclear nonproliferation to be its highest nuclear policy goal.[5] Yet, US adoption of an NFU policy would mean that the United States could no longer assure allies with its nuclear umbrella. No longer would their foes confront the deterring risk of US nuclear retaliation should those foes consider a devastating conventional, chemical or biological attack on US allies and partners. Pulling down the US nuclear umbrella so precipitously would compel some allies and partners who have foregone nuclear weapons in the past, on the basis of the promised US nuclear deterrence umbrella, to consider acquiring their own nuclear weapons. This could include South Korea and Japan. As such, additional nuclear proliferation is virtually an inevitable consequence of a US NFU policy.

Now is not the time for US adoption of an NFU policy; the risks of doing so are too great. Such was the unanimous conclusion of the bipartisan Congressional Strategic Posture Commission in its 2009 report: the United States, “should not abandon calculated ambiguity by adopting a policy of no-first-use,” because doing so “would be unsettling to some U.S. allies. It would also undermine the potential contributions of nuclear weapons to the deterrence of attack by biological weapons.”[6] In 2010, the Obama Administration’s Nuclear Posture Review explicitly agreed with this conclusion. Why change now? Since then, global security threats facing the United States and allies have only increased, as, correspondingly, have the reasons for continuing the decades-long Republican and Democratic consensus against an NFU policy.

[1]. Bruce Blair, “How Obama Could Revolutionize Nuclear Weapons Strategy Before He Goes,” Politico.com, June 22, 2016, available at http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/06/barack-obama-nuclear-weapons-213981.

[2]. Richard Mies, “Strategic Deterrence in the 21st Century,” Undersea Warfare, No. 48 (Spring 2012), p. 17, available at http://www.public.navy.mil/subfor/underseawarfaremagazine/Issues/PDF/USW_Spring_2012.pdf.

[3]. On Russia and China’s compliance with the Biological Weapons Convention see, U.S. Department of State, 2015 Report on Adherence to and Compliance With Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2015), State.gov, available at http://www.state.gov/t/avc/rls/rpt/2015/243224.htm; On Russia and China’s compliance with the Chemical Weapons Convention see, U.S. Department of State, Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2005), pp. 54, 55, 58-61, available at http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/52113.pdf.

[4]. David Blair, “Russian Forces ‘Practiced Invasion of Norway, Finland, Denmark and Sweden,’” The Telegraph, June 26, 2015, available at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...ion-of-Norway-Finland-Denmark-and-Sweden.html.

[5]. U.S. Department of Defense, Nuclear Posture Review Report (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Defense, 2010), pp. iii-iv, available at http://www.defense.gov/Portals/1/features/defenseReviews/NPR/2010_Nuclear_Posture_Review_Report.pdf.

[6]. William J. Perry and James R. Schlesinger, The Final Report of the Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States (Washington, D.C.: United States Institutes of Peace Press, 2009), p. 36, available at http://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/America's_Strategic_Posture_Auth_Ed_0.pdf.



The views in this Information Series are those of the authors and should not be construed as official U.S. Government policy, the official policy of the National Institute for Public Policy or any of its sponsors. For additional information about this publication or other publications by the National Institute Press, contact: Editor, National Institute Press, 9302 Lee Highway, Suite 750 |Fairfax, VA 22031 | (703) 293-9181 |www.nipp.org.

© National Institute Press, 2016

National Institute for Public Policy · 9302 Lee Highway, Suite 750 · Fairfax, VA 22031-1214
Phone (703) 293-9181 · Fax (703) 293-9198

© 2016 National Institute for Public Policy. All Rights Reserved.
 

Housecarl

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The United States Of Europe: Germany And France Hatch A Plan To Create An EU Superstate
Started by China Connectioný, Today 03:39 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...rance-Hatch-A-Plan-To-Create-An-EU-Superstate

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-europe-war-commentary-idUSKCN0ZL2FM

Blogs | Wed Jul 6, 2016 8:41am EDT
Related: Commentary

Commentary: Risk of war returns to Europe

By Peter Apps


A century ago this weekend, my great-grandfather – a corporal in the Liverpool-recruited King’s Regiment – was waiting to go “over-the-top” at the Somme.

Sent to pick up the company rum ration before the assault, he wound up drinking it and woke up after the action – or at least, that’s the story he told the family after World War One was over.

Perhaps his superiors were in an unusually forgiving mood. Or perhaps, like many others, he was just looking for a way to avoid retelling his experiences. By the end of the first day, the Allies had suffered almost 60,000 casualties for precious little ground. By the time the offensive was canceled later in the year, there were more than 800,000, over half of them fatalities.

With the two world wars increasingly passing from living memory, it’s becoming easier to forget just how much they dominated the lives of almost every family on the continent.

Quietly, though, that is changing. When NATO states meet in Warsaw at the end of the week for the annual heads of government meeting of the alliance, they will be doing so amid the most serious tensions with Moscow since 1989.

Virtually no one, it must be said, thinks that either side is anything other than very keen to avoid a devastating conflict. Europe remains home to more than half the world’s nuclear weapons. No one doubts that should a third major war overwhelm the continent, it would almost certainly be worse than any of those that preceded it.

And yet, a growing number believe, the risk is quietly increasing. In May, retired British General Sir Richard Shirreff – who served as NATO’s Deputy Supreme Allied Commander at the time of the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014 – wrote a book explicitly suggesting all-out war with Russia could happen as soon as next year.

On the surface, the book is a novel – but Shirreff has underlined in multiple interviews, including with this reporter, that he views it a highly plausible scenario. His former NATO boss, U.S. Admiral James Stavridis, underlines the point in a hard-hitting introduction.

In Shirreff’s book, all sides are essentially operating from a position of weakness. His unnamed Russian president – clearly modeled on Vladimir Putin – initiates hostilities with both Ukraine and the NATO member Baltic states of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia to distract from economic woes at home, particularly a falling oil price.

Western leaders, meanwhile, overplay their limited military hand. Politicians on both sides have their eyes as much on their domestic politics as anything else. The result is a chain of errors with potentially devastating consequences.

These real-world tensions have been a long time coming. Even in the 1990s, Russian opinion – both within the military and political elite and wider country – was incensed at what felt like growing Western disdain and encroachment into what Moscow had long seen as its exclusive sphere of influence. Restoring what Russia sees as its self-respect has been at the heart of Vladimir Putin’s rule.

In Crimea in particular, Moscow showed itself adept at what military thinkers increasingly call “hybrid warfare”, using political manipulation and deniable forces – particularly troops without insignia – to achieve effects without resorting to conventional force. It is an area, some Western officials say, where Russia has developed a considerable lead over the West.

The lesson of the last decade, however, has also been that when it does choose to escalate to all-out military action – as it did in Georgia in 2008, Ukraine in 2014 and Syria last year – it tends to do so with much greater force and speed than Western analysts anticipated.

The problem, of course, is that no one really knows what the best way of avoiding conflict is. For Shirreff and many others, particularly in NATO’s more exposed eastern states, the answer is assertive deterrence, putting enough military forces in the region to make any conventional Russian assault difficult.

Much of that is already happening, at least up to a point. The United States has dramatically ramped up its military activity in Europe since 2014, sending tanks, special forces and other personnel to frontline states as well as making high profile deployments of heavy military equipment. That includes the return of U.S. Army tanks to Europe as well as visits by state-of-the-art F-22 Raptor stealth fighters and aging Cold War-era workhorses such as B-52 heavy bombers and A-10 “tank busters”.

Baltic, Nordic and Eastern European nations are ramping up defense spending – albeit several steps behind Moscow, which has poured oil revenue into its military over the last decade with the specific aim of being able to deliver overwhelming force in its very immediate neighborhood. Already, some estimates suggest, Russia has more than enough firepower to swiftly overwhelm local and NATO forces in its immediate neighborhood.

As in Ukraine and Georgia, the most likely flashpoints look to be regions with large ethnic Russian populations – essentially, the border districts of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. The governments of those countries have already stepped up development and political efforts in those regions to reduce the risks – but some analysts worry NATO’s activities may end up overly militarizing the situation.

As non-NATO members, neither Ukraine nor Georgia could count on Western military support when they wound up fighting Russia in 2008 and 2014. The Baltic states are a different matter – under NATO’s founding charter, an attack on one is an attack on all.

During the Cold War, NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe [SACEUR] – always the senior U.S. officer who also commands all U.S. forces on the continent – had operational control of European NATO forces facing Russia. That is no longer the case, however, meaning many decisions now also require political authorization from member states. It’s the sort of messy situation that would make handling of confrontation much more difficult.

Russia has placed its nuclear arsenal at the center of its strategic approach to this kind of confrontation. According to Western experts, its recent military exercises have relied heavily on what it calls a single “de-escalatory nuclear strike”.

It’s a very simple – but possibly phenomenally dangerous – concept. The theory is that if Russian forces are engaged with an enemy like NATO, once they have won the conventional battle they would launch a single nuclear strike with the aim of intimidating the West into standing down and accepting the results.

In major exercises in 2013 that simulated an invasion of one or more of the Baltic states, the scenario appeared to end with a nuclear strike on Warsaw, NATO officials say. More recently – perhaps worrying that such an approach might make a NATO nuclear response inevitable – Russian exercises have tended to target a single purely military target, for example a NATO flotilla of warships.

A strike like that could kill thousands if not more – and what would happen next is almost impossible to predict. Putin might well hope such an action might fraction NATO, leaving countries hopelessly divided on how to respond. Already, opinion polls suggest German voters in particular would be reluctant to fight to defend NATO allies, while U.S. presidential contender Donald Trump has explicitly questioned the long-term survival and purpose of the alliance.

In the era of social media and 24-hour news, however, it’s equally easy to imagine a furious U.S. electorate demanding a savage retaliation. In the post-Cold War world, after all, the United States has become used to doing what it wishes. Nor, as the UK’s referendum has shown, is European politics currently particularly predictable.

Miscalculation is not inevitable. But it is arguably becoming more likely.

Just over a century ago, shortly before the Somme, future Prime Minister Winston Churchill was a battalion commander on the Western Front. He found himself in a briefing on the perceived lessons of the Battle of Loos, a bloody and unsuccessful earlier engagement that used the same tactics.

“I wanted to say ‘Don’t do it again,’” he wrote to his wife after. “But they will.”


(Peter Apps is Reuters global affairs columnist, writing on international affairs, globalization, conflict and other issues. He is founder and executive director of the Project for Study of the 21st Century; PS21, a non-national, non-partisan, non-ideological think tank in London, New York and Washington. Before that, he spent 12 years as a reporter for Reuters covering defense, political risk and emerging markets. Since 2016, he has been a member of the British Army Reserve and the UK Labour Party. Follow Peter Apps on Twitter @pete_apps)
 
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nato-russia-baltics-defense_us_5776aca3e4b0a629c1a9e515

POLITICS

NATO’s Uneasy New Reality: Could It Still Stop Russia?

Not fast enough, some experts say, even as Vladimir Putin probes its defenses.

07/06/2016 04:05 am ET

One Monday afternoon in June, several hundred American, British and Polish troops parachuted into central Poland. Last month’s jump was just practice, part of an extended NATO rehearsal for a defense of northern Europe against Russia.

But in a real crisis — if those soldiers were called to defend the Baltic states — they could be dropping into a death trap.

The mile-long drop zone in north-central Poland was just 180 miles from the major Russian military base at Kaliningrad, well within range of Russian missiles designed to shoot down aircraft like the lumbering C-17s that slowed to drop the paratroopers. Once on the ground, the lightly armed soldiers would likely be targeted by swarms of Russian drones and blasted by long-range Russian artillery, as Ukrainian troops were just last year.

The allied paratroopers were practicing to secure a land corridor and a river crossing so that a column of lightly armored U.S. Stryker vehicles could then race to help defend Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia from Russian incursion. Those Strykers that survived massed artillery and rocket barrages would have to funnel into Lithuania along a 60 mile-wide stretch of the border, squeezed between Belarus, a Russian ally to the south, and the guns of Kaliningrad to the north. It’s known locally as the Suwalki Gap.

In U.S. military terms, a kill zone.

War games like these are increasing in scope and intensity, as NATO’s northern flank is once again a global flash point.

The Western alliance’s Baltic members lie in the shadow of a newly aggressive Russia, rearmed and ready to take advantage. Those three countries were once part of its Cold War empire, and Russian President Vladimir Putin considers them “our historic territory.” But now NATO is committed to come to their aid if summoned. President Barack Obama specifically swore to defend them.

Any clash would raise the risk of unplanned escalation and the implicit threat of nuclear weapons. So shoring up NATO’s border defenses is on the agenda as alliance leaders gather for this week’s summit in Warsaw — along with terrorism, the tidal wave of refugees and Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.

But managing this confrontation with Russia, with its powerful Cold War antecedents, is more than a matter of troop strength. The inevitable disputes will require delicate handling and steady nerves in the Kremlin and the White House. Western leaders, including the next president — possibly Donald Trump — will have to find ways to reassure the Baltics without provoking Moscow into a mounting crisis.

BalticsMap.png

http://big.assets.huffingtonpost.com/BalticsMap.png

A decade ago, it seemed like a low-risk commitment to absorb the Baltic states and other Eastern European nations into NATO with the promise to defend them at any cost. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia was struggling with its own political and economic woes. With little direct threat, the United States had withdrawn the bulk of its Cold War military forces from Europe, and most NATO countries had reduced their own defenses.

Then, while the U.S. and NATO were busy in Iraq and Afghanistan, Putin rebuilt his military into a powerful high-tech force. Two years ago, he used it to grab the semi-autonomous region of Crimea. Last year Russian forces seized a chunk of Ukraine in a display of combat power that stunned American generals.

That was “a real wake-up call,” Army Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster told a congressional committee in April.

McMaster runs the Army’s most elite think tank, the Army Capabilities Integration Center, and he’s leading a crash study of the Russian military threat and how the U.S. should respond. He told Congress that the Russians have the ability to jam and blind U.S. military communications. He said the networks of Russian missiles and artillery could put at risk the aircraft on which the U.S. relies to counter enemy air defenses and jam enemy communications, attack tank formations and support friendly ground troops. Russia’s long-range artillery, he said, is “more lethal” than anything the U.S. can field.

In an extraordinary admission, McMaster told the Senate Armed Services Committee that the United States and its European allies can no longer assume they have superiority in the air, on land or at sea. “What we’ve seen broadly here is that we cannot rely on maintaining dominance in any domain,” he said.

The Pentagon’s top brass were particularly struck by one 2014 incident, described in an account by Phillip Karber and Joshua Thibault for the Potomac Foundation, a Washington area think tank. In July of that year, Russia attacked two Ukrainian tank battalions with long-range artillery and multiple rocket-launchers firing smart top-attack munitions and enormously powerful thermobaric warheads. “This intensely concentrated fire strike lasted only a few minutes,” they reported, “yet inflicted high casualties and destroyed most armored vehicles, rendering both battalions combat-ineffective.”

If Putin ran the same lightning land-snatch in the Baltic states, his forces could smash through NATO defenses and occupy at least two Baltic capitals within 60 hours, according to a series of war games conducted by the Rand Corporation, the nonpartisan defense think tank. That would leave U.S. and European leaders with two bad choices, Rand concluded: Do nothing, effectively ceding parts of NATO to Russia, or escalate into an all-out “bloody counter-offensive” that could lead to the brink of a nuclear exchange.

Already, Putin is accusing NATO of reckless provocation. The Russian president recently signed off on a new military strategy clearly aimed at countering the Western alliance, which he accuses of encroaching on Russian sovereignty and creating “a threat to the national security” to his country.

In a June 22 speech he drew a parallel between the 1941 Nazi invasion of Russia and the recent NATO exercises. “NATO is stepping up its aggressive rhetoric and its aggressive actions close to our borders,” he said. In response, he said Russia was “obliged” to strengthen its defenses, placing three new divisions in the region nearest the Baltics.

The Russian Embassy in Washington did not respond to repeated requests to discuss these issues.

Pushback from Washington has been firm. The White House has proposed tripling the U.S. budget for NATO defense, to $3.4 billion in 2017, which would enable the Army to add a heavy armored brigade and an F-15 tactical fighter squadron in Europe and to beef up special forces and anti-submarine patrols.

“We don’t seek a cold, let alone a hot, war with Russia,” Defense Secretary Ash Carter said on May 3. “We don’t seek to make Russia an enemy. But make no mistake, we will defend our allies.”

Moscow’s actions and rhetoric, he added, raise “troubling questions about Russia’s leaders’ commitments to strategic stability, their respect for norms against the use of nuclear weapons, and whether they respect the profound caution that nuclear-age leaders showed with regard to the brandishing of nuclear weapons.”

Western concern is rising high enough that at this week’s summit, NATO leaders are expected to approve a plan to bolster the alliance’s defenses by stationing a battalion in each of the three Baltic states and one in Poland. That’s four new battalions, roughly 4,000 troops overall.

Russia will likely respond, perhaps by carrying out its old threat to install nuclear-capable short-range Iskander ballistic missiles in Kaliningrad, well within range of the Baltics. Moreover, those additional NATO troops, expected to be drawn from U.S. and European armies, will face at least 22 full-strength Russian battalions across the border.

“That isn’t going to stop a determined Russian advance,” Steven Pifer, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, told HuffPost. “But it would build a pretty robust tripwire. The Russians would have to consider that they’d kill a lot of Americans.”

For anxious countries like Estonia, having an American or European battalion on local soil would be enormously reassuring, underscoring that an attack on their country would bring an armed response from NATO. The message to Russia is that “if you cross that line, you are at war against 28 countries,” said Eerik Marmei, Estonia’s ambassador to Washington.

Still, the clear imbalance of forces disturbs senior combat leaders like Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges. He commands all U.S. Army forces in Europe, and over his career, he has watched the gradual withdrawal of most U.S. forces from the continent.

“When I was a young lieutenant in [Cold War] Germany, we had 300,000 troops and the mission was to deter Russia and reassure the allies,” he told HuffPost. “Now I have 30,000 troops and the mission is to deter Russia and reassure the allies.”

What he’s seen the Russians do in Ukraine over the last few years sharpens his concern. “They have massive amounts of artillery and rockets, cluster munitions. … It’s a very, very lethal battlefield. And there’s a significant increase in electronic warfare, jamming. And dropping drones out of the sky,” he said. “Things are a bit more dangerous.”

Not long ago — when Hodges was a fresh lieutenant — the East-West border region was the most heavily armed place on earth, where generals joked that one more tank, one more artillery shell, one more nuclear warhead might cause the whole thing to tilt and slide into the ocean.

Indeed, for centuries, the tectonic plates of empire and alliance have ground against one another here, generating rivalries that regularly erupted in violence. During the past century alone, German, Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires, as well as the Nazi Third Reich, clashed in brutal upheavals that killed millions, smashed nations to pieces and generated animosities that burn to this day.

Since the Cold War sputtered to an end a quarter-century ago, the focus of four American presidents and the U.S. defense establishment has shifted to the turbulent Middle East, Iraq and Afghanistan. They hoped, too, to sustain a cordial relationship with the Kremlin.

Behind Russia’s borders, though, Putin was planning and preparing to reassert its power.

“Russia never went anywhere. We just quit paying attention,” Gen. Mark A. Welsh, the U.S. Air Force chief of staff, remarked at a Council on Foreign Relations conference in May.

Until recently, American and allied military forces were assumed to be easily superior to the Russians, who were weakened by post-Cold War neglect. Exercises like the one that recently brought paratroopers to Poland rarely took place — they seemed relatively unnecessary.

Now the U.S. military is racing to catch up, dusting off big-war skills it hasn’t used since 9/11.

Artillerymen, who were widely diverted to serve as infantry troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, are back to practicing artillery skills. At the Army training center in the Mojave Desert, battalions have abandoned counterinsurgency training and turned instead to major tank battles and coordinating maneuvers with artillery, airstrikes and electronic warfare.

And after 15 years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, where there was no threat from the sky, American troops are relearning how to protect themselves from spy drones and attack jets. For the first time in a generation, the paratroopers involved in the recent NATO exercise jumped wearing green-and-black camouflage face paint. Once on the ground, they slung camouflage nets over their positions and practiced “jumping” their command post frequently to avoid detection.

But that won’t be enough, according to the Rand war games, in which senior U.S. military officers and defense officials played the roles of Russian and NATO commanders. In various realistic scenarios, they found that American paratroopers “can put up stout resistance when dug into urban terrain.” But “these forces likely could not be resupplied or relieved before being overwhelmed.”

“By and large,” the Rand study said, “NATO’s infantry found themselves unable even to retreat successfully and were destroyed in place.”

A recent study by the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College came to the same conclusion: NATO, it said, “lacks the capability to defeat a surprise Russian conventional attack into the Baltic States or Eastern Europe.”

Such conclusions were met with skepticism aboard the C-17s that carried the 82nd Airborne paratroopers from Fort Bragg, North Carolina, to Poland.

“Everybody here has read the Rand report,” Maj. Robert Lodewick told HuffPost, dismissing the idea that the division is unprepared.

“Know your enemy, respect your enemy — but we’re clearly not scared of them,” Col. Anthony G. Judge, the division’s operations officer, said as he prepared to jump into Poland to set up the assault command post.

If the Russians were to block signals from GPS satellites, which provide data for U.S. military navigation and targeting, paratroopers are trained to fight from paper maps. “We can fight digitally,” said Capt. Daniel Oberrender, an intelligence officer. “But we really fight with maps — we are an analog force.”

To guard against being left electronically blind and mute, the paratroopers carry multiple satellite and FM encrypted communications systems hardened against jamming. “Is it reasonable that they could shut us down? No,” said Lt. Col. Patrick Roddy, commander of the 82nd Airborne’s 1st Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, whose troopers jumped into Poland. “If we get jammed, we quickly go to another system.”

The 82nd Airborne and other units train extensively with the Air Force and the Pentagon’s cyber war agencies, using electronic warfare and strike fighters to take out enemy missile sites and ensure that the C-17s can get safely into contested airspace to deliver the paratroopers and their weapons.

Once they’re on the ground, language and cultural differences can hamper coordination among soldiers from multiple nations as they maneuver in the dark with lethal weapons (using blanks, for this exercise). “If our communication situation isn’t locked down tight, it will all fall apart,” Roddy warned his soldiers before they jumped.

Managing the larger NATO-Russia confrontation presents far greater challenges even in peacetime, let alone during a crisis.

How much should the allies beef up their military defenses at the risk of provoking an unwanted response from the Kremlin? At what point during a period of growing tension does it make sense to reassure the Baltic states by sending in paratroopers? If Russia makes even vague threats to shoot down the incoming C-17s, should Washington go ahead and risk the soldiers’ lives? Or back down? Or threaten to escalate and take out Russia’s anti-aircraft missile sites?

A more likely crisis might begin with the kind of creeping Russian aggression that Moscow will deny and that falls short of the kind of overt attack that would trigger a NATO response. It might look like what happened in Crimea in February 2014, when Kremlin-backed partisans engineered pro-Russian demonstrations and clashed with counter-demonstrators, sparking demands that Putin act to protect the Russian-speaking population. Within a week, Russian special forces, called Spetsnaz, had snuck in to seize key government facilities, and more troops followed.

Defense Secretary Carter has referred to this kind of escalating political intervention, especially Russia’s use of unidentified paramilitary troublemakers, as the “little green men” scenario. (It’s also brilliantly dramatized in the Norwegian series “Occupied.”)

The provocateurs might find willing listeners among the many native Russians living in the Baltics — over 1 million, according to the final Soviet census in 1989.

Ambassador Marmei noted that roughly a quarter of Estonia’s population is Russian-speaking, although he said they are thoroughly integrated into Estonian society. Still, he acknowledged the difficulty of dealing with low-level Russian intimidation and political meddling that could lead to direct intervention.

“It’s one thing if a tank crosses your border,” he told HuffPost. “But if you have Spetsnaz infiltrating and starting uprisings somewhere, how do you deal with that? Where do you draw the line? When is it Article 5?” he said, referring to the NATO common defense clause.

“There is this gray area that NATO has not been very good in dealing with,” he added. Marmei did not specifically mention the alliance’s fumbling response in Ukraine, but the implication was hard to miss.

Part of Russia’s current strategy, according to the nonprofit Institute for the Study of War, is to continue “a campaign of information warfare against the Baltic States paired with political pressure and military provocation,” such as snap military exercises simulating massive attacks into those countries.

“Right now we see a lot of intimidation by Russia,” Marmei said, including flights by military aircraft along the Baltic Sea corridor. Although that’s a major route for commercial air traffic, he said the Russians often fly with their identifying transponders turned off, making it impossible for air controllers to track them.

“We tell the Russians, ‘Please turn on your transponders.’ But they don’t,” Marmei said. “How do you deal with these situations if the other party doesn’t want to listen?”
 

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http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...itary-bases-in-latest-messages/4881467743736/

North Korea threatens U.S. military bases in latest messages

The missives are an indication Kim Jong Un is cementing the authority of his regime.

By Elizabeth Shim Contact the Author | July 5, 2016 at 3:17 PM

SEOUL, July 5 (UPI) -- North Korea has increased the number of threats it has issued against the United States, but it has also sent 95 emails and faxed messages to the South requesting a joint conference on unification in August.

Pyongyang's state-controlled news agency KCNA said Tuesday the United States and Japan launched a "criminal joint nuclear attack training exercise" in May, citing the presence of B-52 Stratofortress bombers near South Korea in June.

The United States is set on "maximizing" the risk of nuclear war on the Korean peninsula and therefore is in no position to advocate denuclearization, Pyongyang said.

An article published Saturday in the Workers' Party Rodong Sinmun read, "Even if our sovereignty and right to exist are interfered with at the slightest, we will turn the U.S. imperialist military bases into seas of fire."

North Korea propaganda outlet DPRK Today has also uploaded videos of medium-range ballistic missile launches, and simulations of attacks against the U.S. mainland or U.S. military bases, Yonhap reported.

Ahn Chan-il, a North Korean defector and head of the World Institute for North Korea Studies, said the rising verbal attacks are a sign the Kim Jong Un era has officially begun, and to mark the period of his rule, Pyongyang is "showing off" its foreign and South Korea policy.

Threats, however, have also been accompanied by overtures to Seoul, calling for talks on unification to commemorate the 71st anniversary of independence from Japanese colonial rule.

According to the unification ministry, the government has received 95 messages calling for talks, but the North must first show a willingness to stop provocations and move toward denuclearization, Seoul said.

Video
 

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http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2016/07/06/natos_100_billion_defense_budget_gap_109525.html

July 6, 2016

NATO's $100 billion Defense Budget Gap

By Justin T. Johnson
Comments 7

NATO has a $100 billion problem. That’s the gap between what NATO countries have committed to spend on defense and what they actually spent in 2015. With global threats on the rise, $100 billion per year would mark a major increase in NATO’s ability to defend itself and maintain the peace in Europe. Closing this gap must be a top priority for NATO.

Leaders of all NATO countries will soon gather in Warsaw for a major summit. NATO faces major challenges, both from the east and from the south. Russia’s aggressive actions have raised serious questions about the strength of NATO. Cyber-attacks are increasing. Immigration and terrorism are intertwined and could destabilize some NATO members. And Iran’s ballistic missile capability continues to threaten Europe.

In response to rising threats, at the last NATO summit (two years ago in Wales) the leaders of all 28 countries committed to moving toward spending at least 2 percent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on defense. 2 percent of GDP has been a goal for NATO for some time, but never before had all the NATO leaders officially agreed to embrace it at the highest levels.

Unfortunately, only five countries met this goal in 2015: Estonia, Greece, Poland, the United Kingdom and the United States. According to NATO’s numbers, in 2015 all of the NATO members except the U.S. spent a combined $251 billion on defense. If all of those countries met the 2 percent commitment, that would equal a combined $356 billion on defense in 2015.

In other words, NATO members are spending $105 billion less per year on defense than they have committed. Non-U.S. NATO defense spending is 30 percent short of where it should be.

$100 billion more per year on defense would buy a great deal of capabilities and capacity for NATO at a time when both are critically important. For comparison, NATO’s numbers show that in 2015 Germany and the U.K. spent a combined $99 billion on defense. According to numbers from IISS, Germany and the U.K. have 333,000 people in their combined militaries. Their combined navies have 34 principal surface combatants and their combined Armies have 533 main battle tanks. Their combined air forces have 489 capable aircraft and they both have numerous enabling and supporting organizations.

Germany and the U.K. are already two of the major contributors of military power to NATO. Adding $100 billion per year to NATO’s total defense spending would be equivalent to adding a military the size of the two countries combined. In a rough sense, a 30 percent increase in total defense spending should produce approximately the same amount of increase in military capability and capacity.

While the majority of NATO countries are below the 2 percent of GDP guideline, five NATO countries make up the bulk of $100 billion gap. If Germany, Italy, Canada, Spain and the Netherlands all spent 2 percent of GDP on defense, they would add $80 billion to total NATO defense spending. In 2015, all five of these countries spent close to 1 percent of their GDPs on defense, from the low of Spain’s 0.89 percent to Germany’s high of 1.18 percent of GDP. While some of these five are talking about defense spending increases, none of the current proposals would bring any of them anywhere close to 2 percent of GDP.

All five of these countries are in NATO’s top 10 countries in total GDP (i.e., the wealthiest members of NATO), but they are also in the bottom half of NATO countries in terms of percentage of GDP dedicated to defense. No other countries in NATO’s top 10 in GDP spend less than 1.6 percent of their GDP on defense.

Five Countries Would Add $80 Billion to NATO’s Defense Spending if they Spent 2% of GDP:


Country

Actual % of GDP spent on defense

Actual 2015 defense spending

2% of GDP

Gap


Germany

1.18

$39.74 B

$67.15 B

$27.41 B


Italy

0.95

$18.27 B

$36.32 B

$18.04 B


Canada

1

$15.76 B

$31.05 B

$15.29 B


Spain

0.89

$10.82 B

$23.99 B

$13.18 B


Netherlands

1.16

$8.95 B

$14.77 B

$5.82 B


For policymakers seeking to increase NATO’s military strength, these numbers show at least two things. First, if all NATO members met the 2 percent of GDP goal, NATO’s military strength would be dramatically increased. $100 billion per year will buy a significant amount of military capacity and capability. But these funds should also be coordinated amongst NATO allies to ensure that the right capabilities are being developed across the alliance.

Second, these numbers show that five countries should be called on in particular to step up their commitments to collective security. It is unacceptable that these five countries are some of the wealthiest but are not sufficiently contributing to NATO.

NATO’s future is strong, if NATO members make the right policy and budget choices. As the Warsaw Summit draws near, member countries that are below the 2 percent guideline should be strongly urged to increase their defense spending. A strong NATO is vital for a strong, safe and free Europe.


Justin T. Johnson is Senior Policy Analyst for Defense Budgeting Policy in the Center for National Defense at The Heritage Foundation.
 

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http://www.ibtimes.com/north-korea-...south-korea-accept-pyongyangs-demands-2389790

North Korea Offers Denuclearization Plan If US, South Korea Accept Pyongyang's Demands

By Suman Varandani @suman09
On 07/07/16 AT 6:56 AM

North Korea has offered a denuclearization plan for the Korean Peninsula if the United States and South Korea accept Pyongyang's demands, Rondong Sinmun newspaper reported Thursday. The report comes a day after the Obama administration slapped sanctions on Kim Jong Un and other North Korean officials over human rights abuses in the reclusive country.

A North Korean government spokesman said that "a major breakthrough is possible" if the U.S. and South Korea give Pyongyang guarantees on five matters, which include providing information about Washington's nuclear weapons deployed in South Korea and pulling out nuclear weapons from bases there, TASS news agency reported, citing Rondong Sinmun.

Pyongyang also demanded a U.S. guarantee that it will not deploy offensive nuclear weapons in South Korea and neighboring countries and will not use them against North Korea.

Neither the U.S. nor South Korea "have any reasons to turn down these fair demands of Pyongyang if they are really interested in solving the nuclear problem of the Korean Peninsula," the spokesman said in a statement, adding that if Washington and Seoul implement these demands, North Korea "will take reciprocal measures promoting denuclearization of this region."

If the demands are not met, Pyongyang will continue to build up its nuclear forces both in terms of quality and quantity, the statement read.

Earlier this week, North Korea criticized the U.S. for its joint military drills with South Korea held between June 13 and 20.

The U.S. sent two B-52 Stratofortress equipped with long-range nuclear air-to-ground missiles, to fly over the skies near South Korea during the drills, which also included the Japanese Air Self-Defense Force. Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said that Japanese planes took part in the exercises targeting North Korea.

Last month, the North Korean foreign ministry accused the U.S. of continuing its “hostile acts” against Pyongyang and pushing it to strengthen its nuclear deterrence against Washington. The foreign ministry said that the country “will continue taking a series of steps for bolstering up the nuclear deterrent for self-defense both in quality and quantity to cope with the ever-escalating U.S. hostile acts against the former.”
 

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http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/07/07/the-military-industrial-complex-of-pakistan/

July 7, 2016

The Military-Industrial Complex of Pakistan

by Nauman Sadiq

Before the signing of the Iran nuclear deal last year, BBC’s defense correspondent, Mark Urban, published a report [1] that Pakistan’s military has made a clandestine deal with Saudi Arabia that in the event of Iran developing a nuclear weapon, Pakistan would provide ready-made nuclear warheads along with delivery systems to Saudi Arabia.

Moreover, it should be remembered that Pakistan’s military and the House of Saud have very deep and institutionalized links: thousands of Pakistani retired and serving army officers work on deputations in the Gulf states; furthermore, during the ‘80s Saudi Arabia lacked an efficient intelligence set-up, and Pakistan’s ISI virtually played the role of Saudi Arabia’s foreign intelligence service.

In recent years Pakistan’s defense production industry with Chinese help has emerged as one of the most sophisticated military-industrial complex in the region. Not only does it provides state-of-the-art conventional weapons to the oil-rich Gulf states, but according to a May 2014 AFP report [2], Pakistan-made weapons were also used in large quantities in the Sri Lankan Northern Offensive of 2008-09 against the Tamil Tigers.

Notwithstanding, from the massacres in Bangladesh in 1971 to the training and arming of jihadists during the Soviet-Afghan war throughout the ‘80s and ‘90s, and then launching ill-conceived military operations in Pakistan’s tribal areas under American pressure, which led to the displacement of millions of Pashtun tribesmen, the single biggest issue in Pakistan has been the interference of army in politics. Unless we are able to establish civilian supremacy in Pakistan, it would become a rogue state which will pose a threat to the regional peace and its own citizenry.

Regarding the Kashmir dispute, there can be no two views that the right of self-determination of Kashmiris must be respected; and I am also of the opinion that Pakistan should lend its moral, political and diplomatic support to the Kashmiri cause; but at the same time I am strongly against the militarization of any dispute, not just Kashmir.

The insurgency in Kashmir erupted in the fateful year of 1984 of the Orwellian fame; when the Indian armed forces surreptitiously occupied the whole of Siachen glacier, including the undemarcated Pakistani portion. Now we must keep the context in mind: those were the heydays of the Cold War and the Pakistan military’s proxies: the Afghan so-called ‘Mujahideen’ were winning battle after battle against the Red Army, and the morale of the Pakistan army’s top brass was touching the sky.

Moreover, Pakistan’s national security establishment also wanted to inflict damage to the Indian armed forces to seek revenge for their humiliation in the Bangladesh War of 1971, when India took 90,000 Pakistani soldiers as the prisoners of war. All they had to do was to divert a small portion of their Afghan jihadist proxies towards Kashmir to incite the insurgency.

Here we must keep in mind that an insurgency anywhere cannot succeed unless the insurgents get some level of support from the local population. For example: if a hostile force tries to foment insurgency in Punjab, they wouldn’t succeed; because Punjabis don’t have any grievances against Pakistan. On the other hand, if an adversary tries to incite insurgency in the marginalized province of Balochistan and tribal areas, they will succeed because the local population has grievances against the heavy-handedness of Pakistan’s military.

Therefore, to put the blame squarely on the Pakistani side for the Kashmir conflict would be unfair. Firstly, India treacherously incorporated the princely State of Jammu and Kashmir in the Dominion of India in 1947, knowing fully well that Kashmir had an overwhelming Muslim majority and in accordance with the “Partition Principle” it should have become a part of Pakistan. Even now, if someone tries to instigate an insurgency in the Pakistani part of Kashmir, I believe, that they wouldn’t succeed; because the Kashmiri Muslims associate themselves with Pakistan. The Indian-occupied Kashmir has seen many waves for independence since 1947, but not a single voice has been raised for independence in the Pakistani part of Kashmir.

Secondly, India re-ignited the conflict by occupying the strategically-placed Siachen glacier in 1984. Even now, Pakistan’s position is quite flexible and it has floated numerous proposals to resolve the conflict. But India is the new regional “policeman” of the US and also the strategic partner of the latter against China; that’s why, India’s stance, not just on Kashmir but on all issues, is quite rigid and haughty now; because it is negotiating from a position of strength. However, diplomacy aside, the real victims of this intransigence and hubris on both sides have been the Kashmiri people and a lot of innocent blood has been spilled for no good reason.

Coming back to the topic, for the half of its 68 years long history Pakistan was directly ruled by the army and for the remaining half the security establishment kept dictating Pakistan’s foreign and security policy from behind the scenes. The outcome of the first martial law (1958-71) was that Bengalis were marginalized and alienated to an extent that it led to the dismemberment of Pakistan; during the second decade-long martial law (1977-88) our so-called “saviors” trained and armed their own nemesis, the Afghan and Kashmiri jihadists; and during the third martial law (1999-2008) they made a volte-face under American pressure and declared a war against their erstwhile proxy jihadists that lit the fires of insurgency in the tribal areas of Pakistan.

Although, many liberal political commentators in Pakistan nowadays hold an Islamist general, Zia-ul-Haq, responsible for the jihadist militancy in our tribal areas; however, it would be erroneous to assume that nurturing militancy in Pakistan was the doing of an individual scapegoat named Zia; all the army chiefs, including Aslam Beg, Asif Nawaz, Waheed Kakar, Jahangir Karamat and right up to General Musharraf, upheld the same military doctrine of using jihadist proxies to incite militancy in the hostile neighboring countries, like Afghanistan, India and Iran, throughout the ‘90s.

Thus, the deliberate promotion of Islamic radicalism and militancy in the region was not the doing of an individual general; rather, it was the well-thought-out military doctrine of a rogue institution. The military mindset, training and institutional logic dictates a militarist and offensive approach to the foreign and domestic affairs. Therefore, as a matter of principle the khakis must be kept miles away from the top decision-making organs of the state.

Regardless, the annual budgetary allocation for defense roughly amounts to a quarter of the federal budget, but Pakistan army also operates its own business empire: from myriads of industries like Fauji Fertilizers and Askari bank and cement to the most lucrative real estate business carried out by the Defense Housing Authority (DHA). All the major cities of Pakistan are dotted with numerous sprawling military cantonments and DHA’s colonies for the officers of the Pakistan armed forces.

The profits earned from this business empire are not included in the aforementioned budgetary allocation. Apart from that, Pakistan army has also been getting $1.2 billion every year from the American Coalition Support Fund for the last decade or so, for its partnership with the US in the latter’s dubious “war on terror” policy. If we add up all that, our East India Company really is a white elephant. And I don’t mean ‘East India Company’ in a metaphorical sense; they literally are Pakistan’s indigenous colonizers.

The army officers have their own separate barricaded colonies and cantonments where the natives aren’t allowed to enter. They operate their own network of schools, colleges and universities for the children of the army officers. They also run their own hospitals like the Combined Military Hospitals in all the major cities of Pakistan. The British colonizers in India also established separate colonies and cantonments, missionary schools and hospitals like the Holy Family and Lady Reading etc. In more than one ways Pakistan army is like the British East India Company.

The rule of law, more than anything, implies supremacy of the law: that is, all the institutions must work within the ambit of the constitution. The first casualty of the martial law, however, is constitution itself, because it abrogates the supreme law of the land. All other laws derive their authority from the constitution, and when the constitution itself is held in abeyance then only one law prevails: the law of the jungle. If the armed forces of a country are entitled to abrogate “a piece of paper,” known as the constitution under the barrel of a gun, then thieves and robbers are also entitled to question the legitimacy of civil and criminal codes, which derive their authority from the constitution.

It’s high time that all the political forces and civil society of Pakistan present a united front against the foreign and as well as the domestic enemies. Pakistan armed forces are the friends of Pakistan within their constitutionally-ordained limits, but outside of those limits they are the worst enemies of Pakistan. Determining the domestic and foreign policy of Pakistan is the sole prerogative of Pakistan’s elected representatives; and anyone who thinks that they can twist the ‘national interest’ to suit his personal or institutional interests is a traitor who shall be judged harshly by the history.

Sources and links

[1] Saudi nuclear weapons ‘on order’ from Pakistan: BBC’s defense correspondent, Mark Urban.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-24823846

[2] Pakistan-made arms were used against Tamils in Sri Lanka:

http://newsweekpakistan.com/the-war-that-wasnt-live/
 

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http://mosaicmagazine.com/essay/2016/07/the-great-arab-implosion-and-its-consequences/

The Great Arab Implosion and Its Consequences

Who or what will replace a century of failed Sunni Arab dominance? What, if anything, can the West do to help shape the future?

Essay

Ofir Haivry
July 5 2016

About the author

Ofir Haivry is vice-president of the Herzl Institute in Jerusalem and head of its National Strategy Initiative.

In 2007, in a seminar room in Jerusalem, a day-long session was devoted to Israeli regional strategic perspectives. I was among the participants together with several other scholars, a former Israeli interior minister, a future Israeli defense minister, and two future Israeli ambassadors to the U.S. At a certain point, the talk turned to various scenarios for the regional future and the opportunities or dangers each of these entailed for Israel. When the possible breakup and partition of Arab states like Iraq or Syria was raised, the near-unanimous response was that this was simply too fantastic a scenario to contemplate.

Now we live that scenario. The great Sunni Arab implosion that began with the 2011 “Arab Spring” was unforeseen in its suddenness, violence, and extent. But some, both inside and outside the Arab world, had long suspected that, sooner or later, a day of reckoning would indeed arrive. (Among Westerners, the names of Bernard Lewis and David Pryce-Jones come most readily to mind.) Today, those in the West who acknowledge this great collapse for what it is will be better able to face the emerging realities. But the first and most important step is to recognize that there is no going back.


I. Creating the Modern Middle East


The current mayhem in the Middle East displays so many moving parts as to obscure basic trends and processes. Events are multiple, alliances are fragile and fissiparous, and even with a scorecard it’s often impossible to tell the players or to keep them apart.

Still, efforts have been made, by participants as well as by onlookers, to make sense of the whole. One such effort, prompted by the 2003 American invasion of Iraq and the toppling of Saddam Hussein, was mounted by King Abdullah of Jordan a little over a decade ago. In the power vacuum created by the U.S. action, Abdullah discerned the potential emergence of a “Shiite Crescent,” spearheaded by a newly energized Iran and extending in a hegemonic arc from Tehran northeast through Iraq to Syria and Lebanon (the latter courtesy of Iran’s proxy Hizballah), and south all the way to Bahrain. In an update just this past January, a confidant of the Saudi royal family, referring to Iran-backed fighters in Yemen on the kingdom’s southern border, upgraded the Shiite crescent to a “Shiite Full Moon.”

To be sure, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and other Sunni or Sunni-related powers, alarmed not only by Shiite aggression but also, if not more so, by America’s withdrawal from the region, have been taking measures to fight back. But the very term “powers” in relation to these states has become a misnomer. For if there is a single prime mover of the dizzying kaleidoscope of events we have been witnessing in the last years, it is the crumbling of a century-old Sunni Arab regional order and, no less piercingly, the entire worldview that upheld it. In a world where Sunnis vastly outnumber Shiites, this is a crisis of epic proportions.

Understanding the causes and the extent of this collapse is critical to thinking clearly about the political landscape that will emerge from the debris and how it may or may not be influenced by the actions of outside forces. For that purpose, a little history is in order.

The modern Middle East was created when Britain and France penciled new borders to replace the defeated Ottoman empire. Superseding the centuries-old Ottoman hegemony would be the hegemony of the Sunni Arabs.

The modern Middle East was created a century ago when the Sykes-Picot agreement between Britain and France, subsequently revised and supplemented, penciled new borders to replace the defeated Ottoman empire. Behind the particular lines in the sand delineating one or another concocted political entity stood one basic assumption: superseding the centuries-old Turkish hegemony would be the hegemony of the Sunni Arabs.

This assumption was put forward most explicitly in the 1915-16 correspondence between Sharif Hussein of Mecca and Sir Henry McMahon, the British high commissioner in Egypt. As Hussein described it, Britain would recognize a new Arab nation, or in his words “an Arab Caliphate of Islam,” dominated by the Arabic-speaking Sunnis who then as now formed a regional plurality and in some areas a distinct majority. These would come to dominate all non-Arab and non-Sunni groups in the core areas of the Mesopotamia-Levant crescent and the Arabian peninsula; later on, the North African littoral would be added. That position of dominance was in turn expected to be capable of repelling any incursions by geographically adjacent non-Arab powers like the Turks, the Persians, or the Ethiopians.

After World War I, this scheme led to the drawing of borders aimed at ensuring Sunni Arab predominance everywhere except for the two small enclaves of Jewish Palestine and Christian Lebanon. The borders put the overwhelmingly Kurd areas of northern Mesopotamia under Arab rule in Syria and Iraq; the Shiite Arab majorities around the Persian Gulf under the rule of Sunni or Sunni-related dynasties in Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia; the Christians of northern Mesopotamia and the southern Nile regions under the Muslim regimes of Syria, Iraq, and Sudan. An Arab identity was thus impressed on the region, complete with a founding myth of an original Sunni Arab “Golden Age” running from Muhammad through the early caliphs to Muslim Spain, then derailed by evil Crusaders, heretical Shiites, and devious Turks, and now triumphantly restored.

In this narrative, identities other than the Sunni Arab one were to be regarded as aberrations from the ideal of the “Arab world.” There followed campaigns to impose a unified language on the whole region, erasing the teaching and use of the Kurdish, Berber, and Aramaic tongues and to dissolve Christian, Alawite, Druze, and Shiite identities into an Arab nationalist ideal, itself a somewhat secularized version of the Sunni Arab one.

Naturally, many in the region resented the wholesale obliteration of their culture and identity. But there were also some among the minorities who embraced it with relish, seeing in the Arabized vision of history a welcome parallel to what they regarded as the successful experiments in national integration practiced in Republican France and the Soviet Union. It was not incidental, for example, that most of the main figures behind the creation of the pan-Arab nationalist Ba’ath party were not Sunnis but rather Christians, Alawites, and Druze. The identification of Arab nationalism with the Sunni Arab golden age reached the point where the Hafez Assad regime in Syria would officially declare its own Alawite sect to be a part of mainstream Islam (which it certainly is not), and the otherwise secularist regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq would inscribe the Islamic invocation “Allahu Akbar” on the national flag.

Yet all such attempts at integration and nation-building failed miserably. After centuries of rule by Turkish overlords or European imperial satraps, no real Sunni Arab political tradition or ruling class existed anywhere. Dynasties exerting quasi-autonomous rule over some areas, like the Hashemites and Saudis in Arabia or the Alouites in Morocco, essentially presided over makeshift tribal coalitions rather than actual or embryonic states. A phrase attributed to the Egyptian diplomat Tahseen Bashir (1925-2002) put the matter pithily: “Egypt is the only nation-state in the Arab world; the rest are just tribes with flags.” But even Egypt, purportedly the exception to the rule, lacked an Arab political tradition or ruling class, having been founded in 1811 by an Albanian military dynasty that surrounded itself with largely non-Arab and non-Muslim functionaries and was propped up both militarily and financially by Britain.

After centuries of rule by Turkish overlords or European imperial satraps, no real Sunni Arab political tradition or ruling class existed anywhere.

Nor was this glum political landscape offset by any notable economic, social, or cultural assets. Almost everywhere, the majority comprised poor and illiterate subsistence farmers; in the few urban centers of significant trade or manufacturing, like Aleppo, Alexandria, and Algiers, the elites were preponderantly non-Sunni or non-Arab.

All of these evident shortcomings were pointed out at the time by many of those involved in setting up the new regional order. No less than François Georges-Picot himself described the Arabs as “a myriad of tribes”; Sir Arthur Nicholson, then-head of the British Foreign Office, similarly characterized them as “a heap of scattered tribes with no cohesion or organization.” For the most part, however, such views were set aside both by infatuated Western romantics like T.E. Lawrence “of Arabia” and by great-power calculators like Picot and Nicholson themselves. The latter, ignoring or suppressing the contrary evidence of their eyes, promoted a totally unrealistic picture of the benefits that the new dispensation was bound to confer upon these societies.

This is hardly to deny the existence of certain native writers, activists, thinkers, and journalists—dissidents, we might call them today—who agitated for modernizing, Westernizing, and liberalizing their societies, and who made up what some optimistically called the Arab “Renaissance”(al-Nahda). But they could hardly compensate for the inherent feebleness of political structures whose perdurance depended on outside powers mainly preoccupied with carving up the region into effective zones of influence.


II. The Pan-Arab Delusion


Between the end of World War I and the end of World War II, virtually all Arab “states” were either direct colonies of or effectively controlled by some European power. After World War II, as old-style colonial power waned and Arab regimes gained effective independence, their inherent debilities emerged even more starkly, leaving them reliant for survival upon cruel political repression or massive oil revenues, often buttressed with continuing great-power support in the now-updated form of the U.S. and the USSR.

Having neglected to foster political coalitions, intermediary institutions, and the growth of civil society in the years between the great wars, these regimes, even as they publicly adopted some version of the Arab nationalist ideology and pan-Arab identity, continued to rest either upon narrow tribal or sectarian loyalties (as in the case of the royal dynasties of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf, plus North Africa), upon direct army rule (Egypt since 1952, Sudan since 1969), or upon a combination of the two (Muammar Ghaddafi’s Libya, Ali Abdullah Saleh’s Yemen, Hafez Assad’s Syria).

Even in those few locales where centuries of Ottoman or colonial rule had bequeathed a more open and diverse society, clan domination and military repression rapidly became the rule. Wave after wave of political oppression, economic expropriation, and religious persecution—the last conducted not by frenzied Islamists but by the ostensibly secular Gamal Abdel Nasser, Ghaddafi, Saddam, and the Algerian National Liberation Front—squeezed out the most dynamic and creative communities: Jews certainly, but also Armenians, Greeks, and populations of European descent as well as many other Christian groups. The inevitable result was the further impoverishment of social, cultural, and educational capital. The remaining non-Sunni Arabs—like the Egyptian Copts, Sudanese Christians, and Iraqi Shiites—were completely downtrodden, or else transformed themselves into quasi-military sects like the Alawites in Syria, the Kurds of Iraq, and the Shiites in Yemen and southern Lebanon.

As the 20th century progressed, Arabic-speaking societies actually lost ground relative to the world’s other emerging regions save only sub-Saharan Africa. By the 1980s, the dirt-poor South Koreans and Taiwanese, without any significant local political traditions or natural resources, had successfully pulled themselves into the ranks of developed and democratic nations. By the 2000s, not only China and India but also Muslim-majority societies like Indonesia and Malaysia had made substantial strides in the same direction. Meanwhile, Algeria, Egypt, Syria, and Iraq, beginning from a more advanced point than most of their Asian counterparts, were squandering endless opportunities and falling woefully behind. They stumbled into the 21st century completely exhausted, as well as economically and culturally bankrupt.

For all the profuse revenues gushing into their coffers, the oil-rich Arab countries patently failed to create even a single significant industry apart from the petroleum business.

As for the oil-rich Arab countries, for all the profuse revenues gushing into their coffers, they patently failed to create even a single significant industry apart from the petroleum business (itself largely Western-built and -operated), a single educational or research institution of note, a single admirable political or social experiment. Most of the oil revenue, moreover, went to funding extravagant lives for the ruling circle, pervasively inefficient and corrupt economic structures, and a gargantuan security apparatus aimed at crushing all internal dissent. With their populations veering increasingly between inert acceptance of the massive government bribes thrown at them and the allure of moral regeneration in the form of blood-and-fire Islamism, these regimes, too, though still financially solvent, courted bankruptcy of one kind or another.

And the grand pan-Arabic identity? Without exception, its one sustaining focal point became hatred of Israel, portrayed by regimes across the region as the tiny pebble preventing the mighty Arab machine from functioning smoothly. Everywhere, regime failure was laid at the door of the “Zionist Entity.” In the Arab narrative (dutifully adopted by many in the West as well), the Jewish nation served as the main culprit and lightning-rod for the stubborn refusal of the great Arab project to ignite.

With the end of the cold war some 25 years ago, great-power involvement in the region began to retreat. The process was sealed with the election of Barack Obama in 2008, who as much as announced explicitly that the U.S. had no further stomach for boots on the sand—and a year later committed America to withdraw its military presence from Iraq by the end of 2011. In turn, this withdrawal played a central role in precipitating the explosion of the Arab Spring and its aftermath, including the consequent attempts by peripheral powers like Iran and Turkey to have a crack at regional domination, not to mention the recent re-entry of Russia, ever on the lookout for spoils, into an arena where it once held and then lost sway.

III. After the Arab Spring


On the eve of the 2011 Arab Spring, Arab regimes could be roughly divided into two main groups. The larger group comprised the self-styled Arab “republics,” from Algeria to Yemen and from Syria to Sudan, led in every case by a dictatorial strongman (usually a former general, sometimes with his son as co-regent), formally ruling by way of a secular party and ideology but actually representing clan or tribal loyalties. After enjoying their heyday in the 1960s and 70s, all such regimes had gradually become social and economic basket cases, politically sclerotic and mired in corruption and brutality.

The second grouping was the monarchies, even more uniformly tribal in nature, their legitimacy propped up either by alleged descent from the prophet Muhammad (the kings of Morocco and Jordan) or by oil revenues sustaining a mercenary army and a massive welfare system (the Gulf sheikhdoms). In the Saudi case, these were augmented by the self-conferred title of “guardian of Islam’s two holiest cities.”

Long before 2011, widespread simmering resentment and opposition were making themselves felt among non-Arab and non-Sunni groups from the Berbers of North Africa to the Kurds in northern Mesopotamia.

Long before 2011, widespread simmering resentment and opposition were making themselves felt among non-Arab and non-Sunni groups from the Berbers of North Africa to the Kurds in northern Mesopotamia. And there was internal Arab opposition as well, to both republics and monarchies. This tended to be mainly Islamist in ideology, and was itself roughly divided between a populist version and a literalist version. In the 1980s and 90s, both would foment serious armed insurgencies in places like Syria and Algeria, though they never succeeded in toppling existing Arab governments.

The populist challenge was led by the Muslim Brotherhood, which consistently won every (partially) open election ever held in an Arabic-speaking country. Repeatedly it reached the threshold of power in Egypt, Algeria, and Jordan, only to be violently crushed by the regime. But in the early 21st century its fortunes began to turn. Hamas, a local branch of the Brotherhood, successfully wrested control of Gaza from the Palestinian Authority, and the Brotherhood also came to enjoy the strategic support of Qatar, the minuscule but fabulously wealthy oil sheikhdom intent on buying insurance from Islamist threats at home by funding Islamists abroad.

The other, seemingly minor Islamist challenge arose from groups usually identified as Salafist. These advocated an austerely literalist interpretation of 7th-century Islam that made Brotherhood-style Islamism look liberal by comparison. Lacking any interest in politics and elections, the Salafists instead tend to hold a highly hierarchical view of society, placing at the top an undisputed Emir or, ideally, the all-Muslim Caliph.

Numerically small, but ruthlessly efficient in meting out violence and chaos, the Salafist current was composed of many competing groups, of which the most famous in the first decade of this century was al-Qaeda. Bereft of state sponsorship after 2001, when the U.S. toppled the Taliban regime of Afghanistan, Salafist Islamism nevertheless continued to enjoy the private support of many wealthy Arabs who regarded it as a rebooted version of the fanatical Wahhabi Islam of early Saudi Arabia (allegedly diluted by decades of power-sharing with the corrupt Saudi dynasty). In time, a virtually unknown sub-group, originally named al-Qaeda in Iraq and the Levant, would swiftly outpace its predecessor, rising to Islamist superstardom first under the brand of Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and later as Islamic State or IS, period.


During the two decades preceding 2011, successive developments in Somalia, Iraq, and Sudan should have served as warning signs of the fundamental fragility of Arab states.

In Somalia, the 1991 fall of strongman Siad Barre was followed by internecine warfare that resulted in the eventual collapse of central authority, leaving the country hopelessly divided, to this day, between clans and militias.

In Iraq, the American invasion of 2003 succeeded in ousting Saddam and the Baath regime. But since nothing resembling a stable and unified Iraqi state ever existed or could be assembled to replace them, the country soon became effectively partitioned into three ethno-religious zones: Shiite, Sunni, and Kurdish.

In Sudan, after a series of disastrous internal conflicts, the strongman Omar El-Bashir averted total collapse only by acquiescing in early 2011 to the spin-off of the oil-rich southern third of the country as independent, Christian-majority South Sudan. The remaining Sudanese state, although now almost wholly Muslim, barely survives after a genocidal conflict between the Arabic-speaking eastern parts of the country and the non-Arabic-speaking populations of the westerns regions of Darfur and Kordofan.

So powerful was the grip of the “Arab” myth on most minds that the many warning signs went unheeded. When the day of reckoning did arrive in 2011, it exploded spectacularly.

Continued.....
 

Housecarl

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So powerful, however, was the grip of the “Arab” myth on most minds inside and outside the region that these and other signs went unheeded. When the day of reckoning did arrive in 2011, it exploded swiftly and spectacularly, as local demonstrations turned into political chaos.

At first, each regional Arab group attempted to confront the challenge on its own terms, believing it could not only weather the storm but come out on top. From Saudi Arabia to Syria, many Arab regimes, even while confronted with growing dissent at home, proved eager to fan the flames of conflicts elsewhere, including in neighboring states; soon enough, however, they reaped the whirlwind at home, with localized conflicts coalescing into a regional crisis. As one regime after another became dangerously destabilized or collapsed, a domino effect developed that would gradually finish off, forever, the whole Sunni Arab order.

The first domino to fall, with a spectacular thud, was the largest: the demise of most of the so-called Arab “republics” in which dwelled the vast majority of Arabic-speakers. In Somalia and Iraq, as we have seen, both regime and state had disintegrated in the 1990s and 2000s. Within two years of 2011, they were joined by the collapse of regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and Yemen—in the last two cases, pulverizing the country in the process. In Syria, the Assad regime now survives only as an Alawite rump in the western third of the country thanks to massive Iranian and Russian intervention, with the rest of the state shredded by warring factions.

Only two old-style “republics” endure today: Algeria and Sudan. Neither is much more than a hollow shell, having barely outlasted the civil wars of the 1990s and 2000s at the cost of hundreds of thousands dead (and the partition of Sudan). They are now rickety barrack states, economically bankrupt, devoid of any coherent ideological justification and constantly on the brink of terminal collapse

Two further regimes on the “republican” model still stand in Lebanon and the Palestinian Authority (PA), but these have long been more semi-autonomous entities than real states, and are themselves effectively partitioned: Lebanon since the 1970s among various sects, the PA since 2007 between Hamas-ruled Gaza and the Abbas-ruled areas of the West Bank.

That leaves Tunisia and Egypt, the two places where breakdown has not led to complete state disintegration. Both are now desperately attempting to revive the old system.

Tunisia, encouraged by its small size and overall uniform population, went out on a limb with the first real attempt at Arab democracy. It has held two successive and relatively free elections—by regional standards, an enormous political success. But with corruption rampant and the economy in the doldrums, the country remains extremely unstable and permanently on the verge of renewed unrest.

Egypt went the opposite way: the army initially allowed free parliamentary and presidential elections, which ended by replacing the decrepit Mubarak regime with the Muslim Brotherhood. A military coup headed by General Sisi was then staged in 2013. Built on little more than fear and loathing of the Brotherhood, the Sisi regime is mired in contradictions and virtually bankrupt, making it precariously dependent on foreign financial backing as well as the personal appeal of its president. If (or rather, when) one of these fails, the country will swiftly plunge into renewed chaos.

In short, no Arab “republic” is now stable enough to be confident of survival for more than a couple of years.

In short, no Arab “republic” is now stable enough to be confident of survival for more than a couple of years.


The next domino is the Arab monarchies. Less identified with Arab nationalism and better positioned to appeal to the sensibilities of devout Muslims, these outlasted the first onslaught of the 2011 crisis but at the price of increased internal discord. In Morocco, the king had to concede a share in governance to the local Muslim Brotherhood, and sooner or later the two are headed for a showdown; meanwhile, a revolt led by the Polisario Front is simmering in the western Sahara, which Morocco has occupied since 1975. In Jordan, which is now flooded with Iraqi and Syrian refugees and faces growing Islamist unrest, the king endures only by virtue of massive Saudi and Western aid. Most smaller monarchies, from Kuwait to the UAE, wouldn’t last a fortnight without Saudi military and political backing, and in Bahrain the regime withstands Shiite restiveness only through the direct deployment of Saudi troops.

Which brings us to Saudi Arabia itself, the linchpin and most potent of the monarchies. The Saudis, still heavily influenced by their centuries-old alliance with Wahhabi fanaticism, at first believed the regional crisis could actually work to increase their power, and therefore bankrolled Islamist insurgents in Libya, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen. They soon discovered that their Islamist clients not only failed to advance but in most cases fell prey to even harder-line Islamist factions aligned with al-Qaeda or IS. The effort left the Saudis both overstretched abroad and facing turmoil at home, the latter including rebelliousness in the kingdom’s Shiite-majority regions and the attraction of many Saudi Sunnis to al-Qaeda and IS. More recently, a bumbling military intervention against the Shiite Houthis in neighboring Yemen has led to increasing friction with Iran and intensified repression of the Shiite population at home.

The apparent solidity of the Arab monarchies is thus very much a façade. All are reeling from shock, even as the oil revenues on which they have traditionally relied to finance the massive bribery of their populations have been drastically depleted by the recent fall in prices.

The third domino is the populist-Islamist regimes and movements, which fully expected not only to benefit from the 2011 uprisings against the republics and monarchies but indeed to take over. At first, that certainly seemed possible. In Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya, the Brotherhood won majorities or pluralities in relatively free elections; in Yemen, it formed part of the coalition replacing the Saleh regime; in Syria, Brotherhood-aligned groups led the anti-Assad insurgency. Gradually however, problems accrued on all fronts. In Yemen the post-Saleh regime was ousted by Shiite Houthi rebels; in Syria the anti-Assad forces came to be dominated by Salafist militias; in Libya the state fractured into several pieces, with the Brotherhood-dominated government controlling only the western third around the capital of Tripoli; and in Tunisia a Brotherhood-inspired party only precariously dominated the government until being ousted in 2014. As for Egypt, the Brotherhood’s glittering prize, the government led by Mohammad Morsi was toppled, as we’ve seen, after a scant year in power, and the ferocious repression that followed has crushed the movement, at least temporarily.

So the populist Islamists are also reeling everywhere. Their main sponsors, Turkey and Qatar, are themselves facing internal failure and are beleaguered by rising Iranian influence. Abandoning the drive to install Brotherhood regimes, they appear instead to be closing ranks with the monarchies in a last-ditch Sunni grand coalition—about which, more below.

Fourth come the Salafist Islamists, seemingly the greatest beneficiaries of the general collapse. To many Sunni Arabs, indeed, this is the only force capable of defending them from the Kurds, Shiites, and Christians who have lately risen against their erstwhile oppressors. Despite recent losses, Islamic State still straddles the deserts of eastern Syria and western Iraq, with smaller “provinces” in the Sinai desert and in central Libya; for their part, al-Qaeda-aligned Islamists head rebel-held regions in northern and southern Syria as well as eastern Yemen.

The Salafists’ rise is in truth a rearguard action. Instead of bringing about the promised empire stretching from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, they are successful only in the most homogeneous Sunni Arab zones.

But behind these local military successes, the Salafists’ rise is in truth a rearguard action. Instead of bringing about the promised Sunni Arab empire stretching from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, they are successful only in the most homogeneous Sunni Arab zones: usually, desert areas populated by tribes. By contrast, northern Syria and Iraq are now solidly controlled by anti-Islamist Kurds, southern Iraq is now a Shiite country, as is northern Yemen, and the western and southern regions of Syria are now rapidly approaching the status of, respectively, Alawite and Druze quasi-states. Even the Christians and Yazidis of northern Mesopotamia are carving out autonomous areas of their own.

Indeed, some Sunni Arab tribesmen, fearful of being overrun by Kurds and Shiites when the Islamists are ousted, are now lobbying the U.S. for aid in setting up a new Sunni Arab state that would supposedly unite western Iraq with eastern Syria and perhaps join with Jordan. Whatever one may make of such a scheme, which in effect relinquishes Sunni control over most of Mesopotamia and the Levant in favor of a homogeneous “Sunnistan” in the interior deserts, it signals the utter failure of the Salafist domino to bring deliverance to Arab Sunnis.


IV. Mapping the Future


If a Sunni Arab collapse of colossal proportions is under way, what then will replace the former regional system? In truth there are several contenders, but it will be some time before it is possible to see clearly the shape of things to come.

As mentioned early on, peripheral regional powers have been positioning themselves to enter the fray. One of them is Turkey, where the AKP party, a local version of populist Islamism, came to power in 2002. Sensing inherent Arab weakness and the power vacuum created by American (and, for a time, Russian) pullback from the region, Turkish national strategy was gradually redirected from its European orientation toward the sometimes explicitly articulated aim of replacing the Sunni Arab system with one—aptly dubbed “Neo-Ottoman”—in which Ankara would function as the new regional hegemon.

But Turkey increasingly seems to have bitten off more than it can chew. Far from successfully projecting power abroad, it is choking on the region-wide strife it has inadvertently introduced into its own home. Its populist-Islamist allies have been routed all across the Middle East, and even in nearby Syria the rebel groups it backed are in tatters while those it targeted for defeat now contemplate meting out vengeance inside Turkey proper. Meanwhile, the Kurds have established autonomous areas on Turkey’s doorstep in northern Syria and Iraq, and Kurdish unrest in southeastern Turkey itself is now dangerously close to a boiling point, bringing Ankara to the edge of civil war.

A no less and possibly more significant player is Iran, which ever since 1979, under its own Shiite brand of populist Islamism, has repositioned itself as a main contender for regional domination. Carefully cultivating downtrodden Shiite populations across the Middle East, Iran has successfully replaced their former Arab allegiances with a Shiite sectarian one. A pointed illustration of this shift is the recent report that Iran-supported Iraqi Shiite militiamen assaulting the IS-held Sunni Arab city of Fallujah had plastered their artillery shells with the name of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, the prominent Shiite Saudi cleric executed earlier this year by the Saudi regime.

Today, the Iranian regime’s tentacles are to be seen everywhere from Yemen’s Houthis (who actually belong to a different Shiite sub-sect) to Sunni populist organizations like Hamas, which it assists in anti-Israeli aggression. But the main Iranian effort has been directed at establishing Shiite hegemony in Iraq and Lebanon. If successful, this, combined with a strategic alliance with Alawite-controlled Syria, would indeed create the “Shiite Crescent” across Mesopotamia and the Levant feared by Jordan’s King Abdullah, driving a stake through the heart of the Arab world and establishing Tehran’s undisputed dominion from the Indian Ocean to the shores of the Mediterranean.

And success is by no means impossible: Iran’s military buildup, including its growing nuclear-threshold infrastructure, is today abetted by Russia—and, if opposed by the U.S. at all, only in the most desultory fashion. With the U.S. out of the great game, with Tehran’s Shiite allies on the rise in Iraq, Lebanon, and Yemen, and with the Syrian regime its virtual puppet, Iran has seemed to many unstoppable.

With the U.S. out of the great game, with Tehran’s Shiite allies on the rise in Iraq, Lebanon, and Yemen, and with the Syrian regime its virtual puppet, Iran has seemed to many unstoppable. But has it, too, overreached?

But is it really unstoppable—or has it, too, overreached? Iran’s dominance in Syria is now threatened by Bashar Assad’s deft embrace of the Russians, who have been only too happy to reciprocate. Meanwhile, direct Iranian involvement in so many of the ongoing regional conflicts has ignited an all-out Sunni backlash that could be very costly to combat. If a new administration in Washington should entertain second thoughts about abandoning the Middle East, even modest support to select anti-Iranian groups might easily ensnare Teheran and sap its already overextended resources.

One might also mention a third peripheral power, as yet far weaker than the first two. That is Christian-dominated Ethiopia, only lately emerging from the disastrous effects of decades of Communist rule. So far much less ambitious than either Turkey or Iran, Ethiopia has nevertheless gone a long way toward securing ascendance over its disintegrating Sunni neighbors of Sudan, Somalia, and tiny but strategically placed Djibouti, a formal member of the Arab League that controls the southern entrance to the Red Sea. Ethiopia’s gigantic Renaissance dam now being built on the Blue Nile is making downriver Sudan and Egypt completely dependent on upriver goodwill for the continued flow of vital waters. Egypt, formerly the regnant power in northeastern Africa, is now so weak that it cannot but bend to Ethiopian demands.

The one other significant—highly significant—power in the Middle East is Israel. As warring Arab groups concentrate on killing each other, Israel has mostly been sitting on the sidelines. Hardly anxious to expose itself needlessly to knee-jerk international condemnation for its alleged propensity to use “disproportionate” force, it engages in tactical strikes only when it identifies a clear and present danger. How long it will be able to maintain this posture without harming its strategic interests is as yet unclear.

What about the remaining Sunni powers? As hinted above, they are desperately trying to regroup by closing ranks and seeking outside assistance wherever they can find it. Saudi Arabia, the only major Arab country that is still solvent though bogged down on multiple fronts, has conceived a grand Sunni alliance. Formally declared last December, the Islamic Military Alliance to Fight Terrorism (IMAFT) consists of a coalition of 30-something countries, with the poorer ones supposed to supply the manpower while the oil sheikhdoms supply the funds.

In reality, however, there remain virtually no Arab countries capable of seriously contributing to the effort. For obvious reasons, Iraq and Syria have not been invited to join; Egypt has signed up, but, with Cairo still unsuccessful even at putting down an Islamist resurgence in Sinai, its contribution is mainly symbolic; Algeria, the lone surviving old-style “republican” regime, has opted out; and the “governments” of Yemen and Libya represent at best a fragment of the nations they allegedly rule.

The Saudis have tried to compensate for the missing Arabs by recruiting non-Arab Sunni African and Asian nations as well as Turkey and Qatar, erstwhile main sponsors of Islamist populism now scrambling to stop the forces they have helped to unleash. Even a decade ago, it would have been unthinkable, from the point of view of Arab honor, for Pakistanis, Turks, and Africans to be substituting for most major Arab countries in what is essentially a last-ditch attempt to save the Arab world from self-immolation. Even the fact that the coalition was created under a Sunni rather than an Arab banner acknowledges the crumbling of Arab identity.

Even a decade ago, it would have been unthinkable for Pakistanis, Turks, and Africans to be substituting for most major Arab countries in what is essentially a last-ditch attempt to save the Arab world from self-immolation.

And it should be clear by now that IMAFT’s chances of success are pretty much non-existent. Billed as a Sunni version of NATO, it is nothing more than a ramshackle parody, with nothing like either the resources or the resolve needed to create a common strategy or common action. Nor, ultimately, is anyone on the Sunni periphery of Africa and Asia willing to commit the manpower necessary to join the wars of the Arabs.

And war is what it would all come down to: war against Iran and its Shiite proxies around the region, against Russian intervention and Kurdish separatism, against Islamist and tribal groups ripping apart even wholly Sunni areas; war in Iraq and Syria, in Yemen and Libya, in Somalia and Sudan, and, perhaps sooner than later, war also in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon.

To fight and die in such godforsaken battlefields, only to prop up hopeless regimes like the house of Saud in Riyadh and the military clique in Cairo? Not an alluring prospect. Ironically, the only pan-Islamic Sunnis ready to serve the Sunni cause, regardless of odds, are the most resolute enemies of the existing Sunni regimes: that is, the militant Islamist groups like al-Qaeda and IS whose international recruits, from as far away as Paris, Chechnya, and China’s Muslim west, are killing and being killed in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen.


V. Options


Iraq, Syria, and Yemen have been partitioned, and Lebanon has long been de-facto partitioned. Libya will be partitioned if it is lucky, or, if not, it will follow Somalia into chaos. Saudi Arabia could be next, and so could Algeria.

To repeat: what will replace the old order? An Iranian hegemony is possible, but obviously unsafe and highly undesirable. A revamped Sunni Arab dominance is unlikely, as it would need to be established by a gigantic bloodbath and would be even more unstable than an Iranian order. Some kind of Islamist dominance is even less likely and even less desirable. Overflowing chaos for generations is a distinct possibility. But it does not have to be inevitable.

Curiously enough, within all the regional chaos and desuetude, another reality, largely ignored, is already emerging and reshaping the Middle East, redrawing the regional power balances and eventually the maps. This is the rise of newly armed, self-governing nations and tribes.

Within all the regional chaos, another reality is already emerging: the rise of newly armed, self-governing nations and tribes.

Whatever dominant powers, if any, emerge out of the current regional turbulence, they will have to deal with a de-facto Kurdistan possessing the largest undefeated armed force between Jerusalem and Tehran; with an Alawite-dominated western Syria unwilling to risk any reunion with the Sunni-dominated eastern provinces; with a consolidated Shiite southern Iraq; with an increasingly autonomous Druzistan in southern Syria; with a Yemen redivided into de-facto northern Shiite and southern Sunni countries; with Libya’s historical provinces of Cyrenaica and Tripolitania recreating their old division; with the possibility, as suggested above, of the Sunni tribes of western Syria and eastern Iraq coalescing into a desert Sunnistan with or without IS. Not to mention similar developments clearly brewing in Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Lebanon, and Jordan, as well as among the Berbers of Algeria and of course the Kurds of Turkey and Iran.

And what would all this entail for Western interests and for the regional policy of the U.S. (should it wish to have an active one)? There is no point in dreaming any longer of a grand deal with Iran, or of rebooting the good old days with Turkey, let alone resuscitating an Arab hegemony led by Egypt and the Saudis. As with the huge, decades-long effort by Great Britain to prop up the Ottoman empire, finally blasted in World War I, so with the increasingly forlorn effort by the U.S. to save the Sunni Arab regional order from collapsing, now finally revealed as a road to nowhere. One might as well attempt to restore the Balkans to the Habsburg empire or the Ottoman fold, or to resuscitate Yugoslavia.

With artificial regimes and borders gone, people in the region seek protection and solidarity in the old identities that have survived the Arab reverie: their nation, their religion, their tribe. These are the only building blocks upon which a new and stable system can be founded. The process will be long, complex, and fraught with difficulty, but it offers a prospect of strategic as well as moral coherence. A region redrawn along lines of actual self-definition would give voice to the communities on the ground that will become invested in its success and work for its stability.

For Western observers and policy makers, the principle should be to look with appropriately cautious favor on significant groupings that possess their own voice and some degree of self-government, while ensuring that in the event of their political defeat, they will not be exterminated—which is far more than any of the Arab world’s political systems ever offered anyone. Some of these groupings will evolve into robust independent nations, others into weak federal states or new tribal confederations. Some, cherishing the opportunity, will build thriving and prosperous democracies, and perhaps even become natural allies of the West and Israel. Others will undoubtedly, yet again, waste their opportunities, devolving into another round of petty and corrupt tribal entities—though with the advantage to themselves of ethnic and religious cohesiveness and to outsiders of being too small to entertain dreams of internal or external genocide. In the Middle East, again, not such a bad outcome.

Might there also be, one day, a new regional alliance truly similar to NATO or ASEAN in which, with the blessing and support of the U.S., Israel would be joined by all existing or newly independent entities willing to commit themselves to democracy and free markets, serving as a cornerstone for regional stability and prosperity? A shaky prospect at the moment, to say the least, and, assuming it even gets off the ground, a shaky enterprise to hold together. But so was NATO to begin with, until eventually the dividends of democracy and capitalism paid off.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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http://www.businessinsider.com/ital...-threatens-europes-stability-2016-7?r=UK&IR=T

Forget Brexit — Italy is poised to tear Europe apart

Will Martin
Jul. 5, 2016, 9:52 AM
Comments 15

Italy is on the cusp of tearing Europe apart but the economic and political crisis brewing in the nation is largely going unnoticed.

All eyes have turned to Britain's vote to leave the European Union as having the most drastic political and economic impact onto the 28-nation state but if you look at the country's economic data, bank issues, and the impending constitutional referendum coming up, Italy is like a bomb waiting to explode.

The Italian financial system, which to put it gently, is in a major state of flux right now. While Britain's EU referendum in June was seismic in terms of having economic and political repercussions across the bloc, there is another referendum of equal importance, coming up in Italy in October, and the result could fundamentally alter the state of the already delicate Italian economy.

Italians will have a say on reforms to its Senate, the upper house of parliament, in October. The proposed reforms are widespread, and if approved could improve the stability of Italy’s political set up and allow Prime Minister Matteo Renzi to push through laws aimed at improving the country’s economic competitiveness.

If denied, Renzi’s government will most likely fall, plunging Italy back into the type of political chaos last seen after the ousting of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, according to Deutsche Bank. That, Citi says, makes the referendum "probably the single biggest risk on the European political landscape this year among non-UK issues."

“If the referendum is rejected, we would expect the fall of Renzi’s government. Forming a stable government majority either before or after a new election could become extremely challenging even by Italian standards,” Deutsche Bank analysts led by Marco Stringa said in a note to clients in May. Fears that the reforms will be rejected have intensified since the eurosceptic vote won in Britain.

DB italy productivity
Italian productivity is shockingly poor Deutsche Bank


A political mess can quickly turn into a cornucopia of financial and economic disarray. According to estimates from business lobby Confindustria, if Renzi's reforms do not pass, it would push Italy into recession, lead to massive capital flight, and widen spreads on Italian debt.

Italy simply cannot afford any of those things at the moment.

Not only is the country in a state of economic and political turmoil — it has crushingly low productivity, a history of missing growth targets, and has generally underperformed the rest of Europe in recent years — but the country's banking system is also in the midst of serious, serious problems.

"One theme which could dictate near term direction for markets and which arguably Brexit has reignited and brought back to the forefront is the ailing and fragile state of the Italian banking sector," Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid noted in his daily Early Morning Reid on Tuesday.

The country's financial sector is plagued by an enormous surfeit of bad loans so great that the government was, in April, forced into rallying bank executives, insurers and investors to put €5 billion (£4.2 billion, $5.57 billion) behind a rescue fund for its weakest banks. The Atalante fund is designed to buy so-called bad loans from lenders and invest in their shares in the hope that the re-energized banks will lend more to businesses and spur growth.

However, Monte dei Paschi di Siena — the oldest bank in the world and weakest bank in Italy— is in possession of a bad loan book of around €47 billion (£39.9 billion) right now, and that has got the European Central Bank very worried. On Monday, the ECB's banking supervisor insisted that Monte dei Paschi must cut that book by €8 billion by the end of 2017, and by another €6 billion by the end of 2018.

“The bank has immediately initiated discussions with the European Central Bank in order to understand all the indications included in this draft letter, and to present its reasoning before the final decision, expected by the end of July 2016,” Monte Paschi said in response to the ECB's demands.

The news sent shares in all of Italy's banks substantially lower, with Monte dei Paschi understandably bearing the brunt of the falls. Shares dropped more than 8% on Monday to just 0.3 cents, valuing the bank at €1 billion, according to the Financial Times.

Here is the incredibly depressing chart from Bank of America Merrill Lynch:

Monte dei Paschi shares Bank of America Merrill Lynch

In total, the financial sector in the country has roughly €300 billion of 'bad' debt, which needs to be addressed one way or the other. This might not be such an enormous problem if it was not for the fact that, as previously mentioned, Italy's economy is chronically weak. This in turn affects the ability of the country's government to provide a viable bailout package for the banking sector. Government debt in Italy now stands at almost 140% of GDP, second only to Greece in eurozone in gross terms.

Online publication This is Money suggests that despite the assertions of Renzi that he is ready to provide assistance to bail out underperforming banks, Italy is actually around €35 billion short of having the required capital to do that.

There are now serious fears in Brussels, according to the Financial Times, that the Italian government will not be able to fund a rescue package for the banking sector.

Merkel Renzi Tsipras
Matteo Renzi with Greek PM Alexis Tsipras and German chancellor Angela Merkel REUTERS/Yves Herman


That has led to Italy going to Brussels for assistance, something that has so far been rejected, as it would be in contravention of EU rules.

"We have established specific rules as far as recapitalisation of the banks is concerned," German chancellor Angela Merkel said over the weekend.

"We can’t come up with new rules every two years. The Commission is ready to help, but so far it has not been convinced by what has been proposed by Italy."

Despite that rejection, Renzi — who is now known in some circles as the "Demolition Man" for his efforts to shake up the Italian political system — is reportedly ready to bypass the EU and act unilaterally to protect the financial system.

"We are willing to do whatever is necessary [to defend the banks], and do not rule out acting unilaterally, although that would only be as a last resort," a source "familiar with the government’s thinking" told the FT. Renzi himself has said he will not be "lectured by the schoolteacher."

While several suggestions have been made — including boosting the size of the Atlante fund, and launching a separate fund, a sort of spin-off to Atlante, that will look to specifically buy up bad loans issued during Italy's last recession — it currently looks like there won't be a concrete solution to the banking crisis any time soon.

Add to this the fact that any fix created could get totally dismantled if Renzi and his party lose the reform referendum and the government falls. The Italian financial system is teetering on a precipice without much hope of a solution. Brexit may be the biggest problem facing Europe right now, but Italy isn't far behind.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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Posted for fair use.....
https://www.yahoo.com/news/french-c...-paris-attacker-6-others-130320571.html?nhp=1

France sends brother of Paris attacker, 6 others to prison

PHILIPPE SOTTO and LORI HINNANT
July 6, 2016
7 Comments

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PARIS (AP) — A French court on Wednesday convicted seven young men who returned from weeks among the ranks of Islamic State extremists in Syria, including the brother of one of the suicide attackers who targeted Paris in November.

The defendants, aged 24 to 27, were sentenced to prison terms ranging from six to nine years for taking part in a group recruiting French jihadis to join a "terrorist group" in Syria in 2013-14 — namely the Islamic State group — and for participating in military training and other activities.

Karim Mohamed-Aggad, the older brother of one of the extremists who attacked Paris' Bataclan concert hall on Nov. 13, received a 9-year term, the harshest penalty among the seven, since the prosecutor said he was one of the ringleaders.

Mohamed-Aggad claimed he went to Syria only for humanitarian purposes and accused the French government of putting him on trial instead of his brother Foued, who returned to France with a Kalashnikov and suicide explosives strapped to his body in an operation that killed dozens in Paris.

Foued also went to Syria with the group.

In its ruling, the Paris court said while some of the defendants left Syria of their own free will, Karim Mohamed-Aggad was "in no hurry to return" to France and "showed a persistence in his active interest for jihadism."

After the verdict, Mohamed-Aggad's lawyer, Francoise Cotta, told reporters the ruling was "a decision of fear, returned in a France of fear, by a judge who is here to respond to the fear."

"He certainly suffered from his name," Cotta said.

Mohamed-Aggad learned about the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris that left 130 victims dead from a prison cell. From the beginning of the trial, he insisted that it should center on what he did in Syria, not what his younger sibling did in France.

"You choose your friends, not your family. My brother did what he did — and it concerns only him," Mohamed-Aggad said.

The group of 10 from the Alsacian city of Strasbourg, all from families with origins in North Africa, left for Syria in December 2013. Two of them died at a checkpoint soon after arriving. Foued, the youngest, stayed behind after everyone else bailed out, and returned later to France for the Nov. 13 attacks. The assault on the Bataclan, where he ultimately died, was the deadliest in a series of attacks that night.

All seven men on trial said it was a humanitarian desire, not religion, that spurred their departure for Syria. They insisted they had never used their guns, despite photos showing some of them sitting in a restaurant with Kalashnikovs on their laps.

Soon after arriving, the men testified, they realized they had made a mistake. They were collected by the Islamic State group, taking daily lessons in Shariah law and later weaponry. One said he was jailed and tortured by the extremists. Another said he realized that there was nothing humanitarian about what the extremists were doing in Syria.

"We found ourselves stuck there like idiots," said defendant Radouane Taher.

The seven made their way back to France singly or in pairs in March and April 2014. They were arrested in raids in May of that year.

During their trial, the seven men were separated into two docks in the courtroom. Mohamad-Aggad and three others, thickly bearded, smiled frequently and sometimes laughed aloud to the irritation of the judge. On the other side were the men who returned first, who wore neither smiles nor beards.

The judge and the prosecutor questioned all sharply on their motives for returning, especially Mohamad-Aggad, who at one point told his brother back in Syria: "You will reach Allah ahead of me, but I'll join you soon." Mohamad-Aggad said at the time he believed his sibling was going to carry out a suicide operation in the war zone.

"We risk our lives to come back from Syria. We're treated like apostates there. We come back, we're treated as terrorists," Aggad said on the first day of the trial.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Multiple Reports: 11 Cops shot at Dallas rally 4 Dead - 2 Snipers - Bomb Threat!
Started by The Travelerý, Yesterday 07:02 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...as-rally-4-Dead-2-Snipers-Bomb-Threat!/page17

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southkorea-usa-thaad-idUSKCN0ZO084

Business | Fri Jul 8, 2016 6:08am EDT
Related: World, South Korea, North Korea, Aerospace & Defense

South Korea, U.S. to deploy THAAD missile defense, drawing China rebuke

SEOUL | By Jack Kim


South Korea and the United States said on Friday they will deploy an advanced missile defense system in South Korea to counter a threat from North Korea, drawing sharp and swift protest from neighboring China.

The Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-missile system will be used only as protection against North Korea's growing nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities, the South's Defence Ministry and the U.S. Defence Department said in a joint statement.

Beijing said on Friday it lodged complaints with the U.S. and South Korean ambassadors over the THAAD decision.

China said the system would destabilize the security balance in the region without achieving anything to end the North's nuclear program. China is North Korea's main ally but opposes its pursuit of nuclear weapons and backed the latest U.N. sanctions against Pyongyang in March.

"China strongly urges the United States and South Korea to stop the deployment process of the THAAD anti-missile system, not take any steps to complicate the regional situation and do nothing to harm China's strategic security interests," the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Selection of a site for the system could come "within weeks" and the allies were working to have it operational by the end of 2017, a South Korean defense ministry official said.

The THAAD will be deployed to U.S. Forces Korea, "to protect alliance military forces from North Korea's weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile threats," the joint statement said. The United States maintains 28,500 troops in South Korea, a legacy of the 1950-53 Korean war.

"When the THAAD system is deployed to the Korean Peninsula, it will be focused solely on North Korean nuclear and missile threats and would not be directed towards any third party nations," the statement said.


Related Coverage
› China summons U.S., South Korean ambassadors over missile system


SEVEN SUMMITS

The decision to deploy THAAD is the latest move to squeeze the increasingly isolated North, which also includes a series of bilateral sanctions by Seoul and Washington as well as layers of U.N. sanctions.

South Korea has been reluctant to discuss THAAD openly given the opposition of China, its main trading partner and an increasingly close diplomatic ally. South Korean President Park Geun-hye and her Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping have held seven summit meetings since both took office in 2013.

Russia is also opposed to basing a THAAD system in South Korea. Its foreign ministry will take the deployment into account in Moscow's military planning, Interfax news agency quoted it as saying on Friday.

China worries the THAAD system's radar will be able to track its own military capabilities.

China "knows full well that the THAAD being deployed to South Korea is not aimed at it at all," said Yoo Dong-ryol, who heads the Korea Institute of Liberal Democracy in Seoul.

"It just doesn't like more American weapons system being brought in so close to it," he said.


TRUMP'S ARGUMENT

Built by Lockheed Martin Corp, THAAD is designed to defend against short and medium-range ballistic missiles by intercepting them high in the earth's atmosphere, or outside it. The United States already has a THAAD system in its territory of Guam.


Related Coverage
› China lodges protests with U.S., South Korean ambassadors over missile plans
› Russian military to take into account missile system in South Korea: Interfax

Each system costs an estimated $800 million and is likely to add to the cost of maintaining the U.S. military presence in South Korea - an issue in the U.S. presidential campaign. Republican candidate Donald Trump has argued that U.S. allies South Korea and Japan should pay more towards their own defense.

A joint South Korea-U.S. working group is determining the best location for deploying THAAD. It has been discussing the feasibility of deployment and potential locations for the THAAD unit since February, after a North Korean rocket launch put an object into space orbit.

The launch was condemned by the U.N. Security Council as a test of a long-range missile in disguise, which North Korea is prohibited from doing under several Security Council resolutions.

North Korea rejects the ban, saying it is an infringement on its sovereignty and its right to space exploration.

North Korea in late June launched an intermediate range ballistic missile off its east coast in a test that was believed to show some advancement in the weapon's engine system.

On Thursday, Pyongyang said it was planning its toughest response to what it called a "declaration of war" by the United States after the U.S. Treasury Department blacklisted leader Kim Jong Un for human rights abuses.

Also on Thursday, a U.S. official said the administration of President Barack Obama is asking other nations to cut the employment of North Korean workers as a way to reduce Pyongyang's access to foreign currency.


(Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom in Washington and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Tony Munroe and Bill Tarrant.)
 
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