WAR 08-20-2016-to-08-26-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Sorry folks been reduced to lurking and commenting off of my smart phone the last few days due to my current "Monty Hall" schedule......

(229) 07-30-2016-to-08-05-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...05-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(230) 08-06-2016-to-08-12-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...12-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(231) 08-13-2016-to-08-19-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...19-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

-----

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.japantoday.com/category/...ain-for-new-tasks-under-revised-security-laws

SDF troops to train for new tasks under revised security laws

→National Aug. 20, 2016 - 07:15AM JST
Comments ( 12 )

TOKYO —

Japan plans to begin training its Self-Defense Forces in carrying out new missions abroad under revised security laws which took effect this past spring, a government source said Friday.

Training to begin as soon as next Thursday will be held within Japan, and focus on preparing SDF troops for two new missions—rescuing U.N. staff and other people under attack, and jointly defending with troops from other nations the barracks of U.N. peacekeepers if they are attacked.

Defense Minister Tomomi Inada is set to make a formal announcement next Wednesday, according to the source.

The new missions have become possible as the criteria for use of arms by SDF members were eased under the new laws.

The revised laws mark a major shift in Japan’s postwar security policy by explicitly enabling the country to engage in collective self-defense and by expanding the sorts of missions the SDF can engage in abroad. They will enter an operational phase through the drills, and as concern persists the changes could erode Japan’s postwar pacifism.

The laws became effective in March, but no new training has yet been conducted as the government was apparently concerned about a potential negative impact on public opinion ahead of last month’s House of Councillors election.

The sorts of new missions envisioned by the legal revisions could be assigned to an SDF unit set to join a U.N. peacekeeping operation in South Sudan in November, the source said. Japan has participated in the U.N. operation in that African country since 2012.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government is likely to make a final decision on whether to assign the new duties to the troops after assessing the situation in South Sudan, and whether the SDF unit is suitably prepared, the source said.

The training is expected to be closed to the public, the source said.


© KYODO
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.businessinsider.com/r-ja...efense-budget-amid-china-assertiveness-2016-8

Japan eyes fighter drone, seeks record defense budget amid China assertiveness

Reuters
Aug. 19, 2016, 3:30 AM
Comments 8
By Nobuhiro Kubo

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan aims to develop a prototype drone fighter jet in two decades with private sector help in a technology strategy that focuses on weapons communications and lasers, according to a document seen by Reuters.

The plan will be announced this month when the Defense Ministry also unveils its request for a record budget of 5.16 trillion yen ($51 billion) for fiscal 2017, as tension rises in the East China Sea and North Korea steps up its missile threat, government officials with direct knowledge of the matter said.

The military technology plan calls for first developing an unmanned surveillance aircraft in the next decade and then an unmanned fighter jet 10 years later, the document showed.

The rise of 2.3 percent over this year's budget of 5.05 trillion yen marks the fifth successive annual increase sought by the ministry, which is keen to stiffen Japan's defenses as North Korea upgrades its ballistic missile technology.

However, one security analyst said the spending was insufficient. "The security environment surrounding Japan is severe, due to neighboring North Korea and China," said Takashi Kawakami, a security expert at Japan's Takushoku University.

"I personally think it's not enough."

Japan will this month formally unveil budget requests for its defense and other ministries for the year ending March 2018.

The defense ministry's request covers the 100 billion yen cost to upgrade Japan's PAC-3 missile defense system, said one government source, who declined to be identified, as he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Such an upgrade would roughly double the missile system's range to more than 30 km (19 miles), other sources have said.

The budget proposal also includes the cost of production of the Block IIA version of the Standard Missile-3 system being jointly developed with the United States to shoot down missiles at higher altitudes, the source added.

The ministry will also allocate budget funds to acquire an upgraded version of the F-35 stealth fighter, made by U.S. company Lockheed Martin Corp, the source said.

The budget request also includes the cost of strengthening the coast guard in the southern islands of Miyakojima and Amami Oshima to allay worries over China's more assertive activities in the East China Sea, said the source.

Tension mounted this month after a growing number of Chinese coast guard and other vessels sailed near disputed islets in the East China Sea.

Japan, China and South Korea are in talks to hold a meeting of their foreign ministers next week.

($1=100 yen)

(Reporting by Nobuhiro Kubo; Writing by Kaori Kaneko and Linda Sieg; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Nick Macfie)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...hina-holds-confrontation-exercises-sea-japan/

Asia Pacific

China holds ‘confrontation’ drills in Sea of Japan

by Jesse Johnson
Staff Writer
Aug 20, 2016
Article history

China’s navy has conducted what it called “confrontation” exercises in the Sea of Japan, part of routine annual drills, state media said Friday.

The drills, which took place Thursday, come as China seeks to create a navy capable of force projection greater distances away from its shores.

They also come amid a heated dispute with Tokyo over the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea. China has in recent weeks ramped up its activity in the area surrounding the islets, which it also claims and calls the Diaoyus.

Friday’s report by the state-run People’s Liberation Army Daily did not cite the exact location of the exercises, saying only that they took place in a “certain area of the Sea of Japan.”

It said several of the vessels that took part in the drills were on their way home from the U.S.-hosted Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise held in Hawaii. This year, China took part in the massive exercise for just the second time.

“The precession strike against ‘enemy’ maritime strength jointly launched by warships and naval aviation force … was highlighted in the confrontation drill,” the report said, stressing that the exercise was carried out in compliance with international law.

“Exercises far out at sea in international waters are common among the world’s navies, and this year our navy has conducted many exercises far out in the western Pacific,” the report said.

“This exercise is part of annual training arrangements, is not aimed at any specific country, region or target, and accords with international law and practice,” it added.

A separate report by the official Xinhua News Agency cited an unidentified military source as saying that foreign aircraft had attempted surveillance during the drill and “were met with the proper response from the Chinese warships.”

Malcolm Cook, a senior fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore, said the exercises showed that “China is committed to developing a blue-water navy with a global reach and one that can counter the U.S. and Japan.”

“China has long feared being boxed in … and has increased naval exercises and voyages in and around the key choke points between China’s coast and the Western Pacific,” Cook said.

Tensions between China and Japan have mounted after a flotilla of Chinese coast guard ships and other vessels sailed near Senkakus this month.

Sino-U.S. relations have also seen rocky times after a ruling by a U.N.-backed court that effectively nixed China’s historical claims to much of the disputed South China Sea.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2016/0...ce-in-northern-afghanistan-officials-say.html

Afghanistan

Taliban make new advance in northern Afghanistan, officials say

Published August 20, 2016 · Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan – The Taliban seized a district on Saturday in the northeastern Kunduz province, where the insurgents briefly overran the provincial capital last year before being driven out by a counteroffensive, an official said.

Mohammadullah Bahej, spokesman for the provincial police chief, said the insurgents launched attacks from different directions on the district headquarters in Khan Abad. He says security forces are planning an operation to retake the area.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed that the fighters captured the entire district along with weapons and military vehicles.

Mohammad Yusouf Ayubi, head of the Kunduz provincial council, said hundreds of civilians have fled the fighting and warned that "if the central government does not pay attention to Kunduz, the Taliban will overrun Kunduz city as they did last year."

Afghan security forces are currently battling the Taliban in at least 15 of the country's 34 provinces, according to the Defense Ministry. In Kunduz the insurgents are threatening areas near the provincial capital of the same name.

The Taliban seized a district in the northern Baghlan province last week, and heavy fighting is underway in the southern Helmand and eastern Nangarhar provinces.

In the capital, meanwhile, a soldier was killed early Saturday by a sticky bomb placed on his vehicle, Kabul police said.
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
FUNG RED WAR ALERT: I was going to post this as a stand alone thread....however, it belongs here with H.C.'s info.

If the newshounds here at timebomb could keep this thread alive for the next several days, I'm sure that the info garnered will be very useful to the membership.

#1........Ukraine is ready to explode. A large number of Russian troops are on the border...combine that
the latest Russian antiaircraft weapons in Crimea....and we have the makings for a conflict.

#2........Nukes from Turkey in Romania (not good)

#3........Satellite launch of either a 'killer satellites array OR a guardian satellite killer just yesterday...
remember, the war will first begin in outer space as the opponents try and destroy our military
satellites AND our GPS satellites.

#4.........Syria & Turkey........need I say more??

#5.........Obama has sent a number of Stealth nuclear bombers to Guam (yesterday)

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

There's absolutely no doubt in my mind that we're headed for a world war.....NONE!!!!!!!!!!!!
 

Housecarl

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

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.newsweek.com/putin-steps-back-brink-war-ukraine-491426

Opinion

Putin Steps Back From the Brink of War in Ukraine

By Nolan Peterson
On 8/20/16 at 12:00 AM

This article first appeared on The Daily Signal.

Kiev, Ukraine—In a familiar cycle of brinksmanship, Russia and Ukraine once again edged toward the brink of open war last week, only for the bellicose rhetoric and military posturing to dissipate rapidly, leaving the conflict in eastern Ukraine no closer to a long-term solution.

Russia’s successor spy agency to the KGB, the Federal Security Service (FSB), claimed to have thwarted attacks on August 10 in Crimea, which Russian authorities pinned on the Ukrainian government.

In one incident, an FSB agent died during a raid on a terrorist cell. A Russian soldier also died in a separate, cross-border firefight, the spy agency said.

Following the alleged incursions by Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin sent a chilling message to Kiev, spurring fears of all-out war when he said Russia “would not let such things pass.”

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko denied Russia’s accusations, calling them “insane.”

“These fantasies pursue only one goal,” Poroshenko said in a statement emailed to journalists in Ukraine. “A pretext for more military threats against Ukraine.”

The United States backed up Kiev’s denials of involvement. “[The] U.S. government has seen nothing so far that corroborates Russian allegations of a ‘Crimea incursion’ and Ukraine has strongly refuted them,” U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt tweeted on August 11.

A war of words followed between Kiev and Moscow, edging the two countries to the brink of a military conflict more serious than the ongoing one in eastern Ukraine.

Heightening fears of all-out war were reports of Russian troop movements inside Crimea, north toward the Ukraine border, as well as the buildup of Russian forces on the border with Ukraine’s embattled southeastern Donbas region.

Consequently, Ukraine’s military went on high alert, and Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Nations requested an emergency closed-door session of the U.N. Security Council last week.

Meanwhile, the spat threatened to derail the interminable talks to ease tensions in the more than two-year-old conflict in eastern Ukraine. Putin said additional meetings among Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France—dubbed the “Normandy Four” format—were “senseless."

Russia has supported two pro-Russian separatist republics in the conflict with the Ukrainian government. According to Ukrainian and U.S. officials, as well as numerous media reports, Russian troops have participated actively in combat against Ukraine’s armed forces. Moscow, however, denies having deployed troops to fight inside Ukraine.

Tradecraft

Last week’s Crimean incident was textbook Kremlin tradecraft—manufacturing an event to justify a large-scale military intervention.

Ukrainian media highlighted past instances of such operations by Russia, including frequent references to a series of apartment bombings across Russia in 1999. Those bombings boosted public support in Russia for the Second Chechen War, as well as bolstering the profile of Putin, then prime minister.

U.S. government officials and media reports have since suggested Russia’s Federal Security Service was likely behind the 1999 bombings, which killed 300, as part of an effort to gin up support for military action in Chechnya.

Some in Ukraine speculated that last week’s Crimean provocation might have been a Kremlin gambit to delegitimize Ukraine’s post-revolution government in order to pressure Western countries to lift punitive sanctions against Russia.

“Russia will fail to undermine Ukraine’s reputation [in] the international arena and press for lifting sanctions with such provocative acts,” Poroshenko said.

The U.S. and the European Union placed sanctions on Russia after its illegal annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in March 2014.

Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, based in Crimea, launched a three-day “anti-sabotage” exercise in the wake of the alleged Crimea incursion. The exercise, in addition to reports of Russian troop movements, prompted Ukraine to place its troops in the east on the “highest level of combat readiness.”

Metrics

While the rhetoric escalated between Ukraine and Russia, various intelligence estimates suggested a Russian offensive against Ukraine was unlikely.

Field camps, which would be needed to deploy Russian troops into eastern Ukraine during an invasion, had not been built on Russia’s border with eastern Ukraine. Additionally, a civilian intelligence and security firm told The Daily Signal that Russian forces staged on the Ukraine-Russia border have fuel and ammunition for about one day of fighting—insufficient for a large-scale offensive.

Ukrainian officials, however, are not taking the Russian threat lightly.

Ukraine has about 100,000 troops deployed to its eastern territories. This is roughly on par with the 45,000 pro-Russian separatists and regular Russian troops deployed inside eastern Ukraine and the approximately 45,000 Russian troops staged across the border in western Russia.

Ukraine has about 10,000 troops deployed in southern territories near the Crimean border; Ukrainian officials estimate Russia has about 45,000 military personnel inside occupied Crimea.

So far, the war in Ukraine has remained quarantined to the embattled Donbas region and has not spilled over into open conflict between Russia and Ukraine. After two cease-fires, the prospect of open war between Russia and Ukraine has faded incrementally.

At times, however, it seemed the two countries were on the brink of a major conflict.

In August 2014, Putin told European Commission President José Manuel Barroso, “If I want to, I can take Kiev in two weeks.”

In September 2014, Kiev residents were instructed to use the city’s subway system as a bomb shelter. Spray-painted signs pointing to the nearest bomb shelter became common sights on the sides of buildings throughout the capital city as well as cities across the country.

Reborn Fears

Last week’s spat over the alleged terrorist plots in Crimea temporarily revived dormant worries of a major Russian offensive. Those worries paralleled a sharp uptick in the overall violence of the ongoing conflict in eastern Ukraine.

The war is at its most violent level in a year. The cease-fire signed in February 2015, called Minsk II, markedly reduced the overall intensity of the conflict. Yet the war never really ended.

Instead, it devolved into a static back-and-forth of artillery fire and small unit incursions, mostly fought from trenches and from within abandoned, bombed-out villages along front lines approximately 200 miles long.

Casualties, including military and civilian deaths, are still a weekly occurrence.

As part of the Minsk II cease-fire’s terms, heavy weapons and rocket systems are supposed to have been pulled back a prescribed distance from the front lines. Yet the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the multinational group charged with monitoring the cease-fire, says the banned weapons are still frequently used.

According to U.N. data, 57 percent of the conflict’s 73 civilian deaths in July were due to heavy weapons presumably banned from the conflict under the cease-fire’s terms.

A wave of fresh violence in the Donbas followed last week’s flare up in Crimea, which fed into fears of a larger offensive in the making.

On August 14, the Ukrainian military reported that combined Russian-separatist forces launched a barrage of more than a hundred 122 mm artillery shells within one hour at Ukrainian positions near the village of Lebedynske, outside the southern industrial city of Mariupol.

That same day, the Ukrainian military reported nine heavy armor attacks against its positions in the area around Mariupol, as well as separate artillery attacks and firefights northward along the length of the front lines.

Cooling Off

The crisis at the Crimean border brought the Ukraine war briefly back into Western media headlines and editorial pages. But as it dissipated, the war quickly was overshadowed by news from the Olympics, the U.S. presidential campaign trail and the fight against the Islamic State militant group (ISIS). Putin also added to the media noise drowning out the Ukraine conflict.

On August 9, the day before the Crimea incident, Putin hosted Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoðan for a meeting in Moscow. And on Tuesday, Russia launched airstrikes in Syria from an air base inside Iran.

Once again, Putin’s diplomatic and military moves left foreign affairs experts and military analysts reading the tea leaves to speculate about the Russian president’s larger strategy.

The perpetual worry in Kiev is that Western resolve to deter Russian aggression will cave in the face of the EU’s economic appetite to end punitive sanctions against Moscow and the U.S. desire to court Russian cooperation in military operations against ISIS.

One week on, the threat of a Russian offensive on Ukraine appears to have cooled off. On August 15, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Russia would not cut diplomatic ties with Ukraine over the Crimean incident.

“For now the main thing is not to give in to emotions, not to slip into taking some extreme actions, but to try to stabilize the situation with restraint and concentration,” Lavrov said following talks with his German counterpart, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg.

Lavrov and Steinmeier also discussed restarting the Normandy Four peace process, in an apparent move to walk back Putin’s threat to withdraw from the talks.
Nolan Peterson, a former special operations pilot and a combat veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, is The Daily Signal’s foreign correspondent based in Ukraine.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
FUNG RED WAR ALERT: I was going to post this as a stand alone thread....however, it belongs here with H.C.'s info.

If the newshounds here at timebomb could keep this thread alive for the next several days, I'm sure that the info garnered will be very useful to the membership.

#1........Ukraine is ready to explode. A large number of Russian troops are on the border...combine that
the latest Russian antiaircraft weapons in Crimea....and we have the makings for a conflict.

#2........Nukes from Turkey in Romania (not good)

#3........Satellite launch of either a 'killer satellites array OR a guardian satellite killer just yesterday...
remember, the war will first begin in outer space as the opponents try and destroy our military
satellites AND our GPS satellites.

#4.........Syria & Turkey........need I say more??

#5.........Obama has sent a number of Stealth nuclear bombers to Guam (yesterday)

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

There's absolutely no doubt in my mind that we're headed for a world war.....NONE!!!!!!!!!!!!

Regarding #3......

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...a-iv-blasts-off-military-satellites/88986688/

'Neighborhood watch' satellites headed to space

James Dean, Florida Today 6:40 a.m. EDT August 19, 2016
Comments 13

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A pair of military spacecraft designed to detect “space mines” and other potential threats to U.S. satellites were on their way to orbit early Friday.

A United Launch Alliance Delta IV rocket blasted off at 12:52 a.m. from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, rumbling into a clear night sky brightened by a nearly full moon.

On top of the 206-foot rocket were the second set of satellites forming a “neighborhood watch” that the Air Force hopes will discourage an adversary from trying to take out critical communications or surveillance assets in space.

“The space domain has increasingly become congested, contested, and competitive,” said Lt. Sarah Burnett, a spokeswoman for Air Force Space Command, in an email. “Some countries have clearly signaled their intent and ability to conduct hostile operations in space as an extension of the terrestrial battlefield.”


USA TODAY

Delta IV rocket to carry 'neighborhood watch' satellites


The two new satellites, along with two launched in 2014, will patrol a belt that wraps around the equator more than 22,000 miles up.

That’s a valuable region where military and commercial satellites match the speed of Earth’s rotation and so appear to fly in fixed positions high over the planet, in what are called geosynchronous or geostationary orbits.

The Air Force’s once-classified Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program, or GSSAP, plans to fly four satellites above and below the “GEO belt,” circling it and weaving from side to side to capture up-close views of everything flying there.

One concern is the potential for “space mines,” small spacecraft that could sneak up to a large national security satellite and disable it through an explosion or other means.

A report released this week by the National Academies, “National Security Space Defense and Protection,” cited an urgent need to develop policies and systems to better protect vulnerable space systems the military and many civilians depend upon.

The report cited efforts by Russia and China to develop anti-satellite systems, and the potential for non-state actors to gain access to them as space technology gets smaller and more affordable.

In addition to thwarting potential attacks, the new satellites, built by Orbital ATK, should help catalog natural or man-made debris that can be difficult to track from the ground. A collision with even a tiny piece of space junk could cripple a satellite.

The surveillance spacecraft also are able to inspect U.S. satellites experiencing problems, helping to diagnose problems and possibly to confirm if they were caused by internal failure or hostile action.

That type of inspection is known to have been performed on at least two Navy communications satellites, including one launched this summer from Cape Canaveral that has been stalled in the wrong orbit due to a propulsion system failure.

That same ability to approach close to spacecraft, however, could be interpreted by some nations as posing an offensive threat.

The Air Force disclosed the GSSAP program’s existence as a deterrent, but it does not reveal where the spacecraft are flying or what they are up to.

Burnett said the program is designed to safely rendezvous with spacecraft to resolve failures and “investigate disturbances in the space domain.”

“The U.S. is not seeking to weaponize space,” she said. “Our goal is to work with all responsible space-faring nations to ensure a safe, secure, sustainable, and stable space environment.”

Follow James Dean on Twitter at@flatoday_jdean and on Facebook at facebook.com/jamesdeanspace.

ETA: And there's this from a few days ago.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://spacenews.com/army-hoping-for-new-smallsat-imaging-and-space-situational-sensors/

Army hoping for new smallsat imaging and space situational awareness sensors

by Mike Gruss — August 18, 2016

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. – The U.S. Army is looking for small sensors that can help with imaging and space situational awareness as it continues to evolve its small satellite program.

The Army has launched 10 small satellites since 2010 including three experimental communications satellites for the Army’s Space and Missile Defense Command that launched in October as part of a National Reconnaissance Office mission. In addition, a small electro-optical imaging satellite known as Kestrel Eye, is expected to launch later this year or early next year from the International Space Station after it arrives via a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

In a presentation here Aug. 18 at the Space and Missile Defense Symposium, Julie Schumacher, deputy to the commander of the Army’s Space and Missile Defense Command/Army Forces Strategic Command, highlighted several technologies the service continues to seek out from industry as its small satellite program moves forward.

They include laser communication, small sensors for imaging and space situational awareness as well as high capacity electronics and processors that would reduce the size, weight and power required by those systems.

While the Army has several small satellites on orbit, Schumacher said Kestrel Eye and the communications satellites, known as the SMDC Nanosatellite Program, or SNaP, are technology demonstration projects and not a program of record at this time.

Each of the three SNaP cubesats weigh about 4.5 kilograms and are used to help develop radios that provide “beyond-line-of-sight communication for disadvantaged users in remote locations,” according to an NRO fact sheet. Those satellites cost about $500,000 each and have an expected design life of about two years in low earth orbit, Schumacher said. A full constellation would include as many as 30 satellites.

Kestrel Eye, whose launch date has been postponed several times since 2013, ran into development problems common for first-time efforts, Schumacher said. The goal of the Kestrel Eye demonstration is to task the satellite to take a picture of an image on the ground and have the image relayed back to a solider within the same satellite pass, often within 10 minutes.
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
Hummm......

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.newsweek.com/putin-steps-back-brink-war-ukraine-491426

Opinion

Putin Steps Back From the Brink of War in Ukraine

By Nolan Peterson
On 8/20/16 at 12:00 AM

This article first appeared on The Daily Signal.

Kiev, Ukraine—In a familiar cycle of brinksmanship, Russia and Ukraine once again edged toward the brink of open war last week, only for the bellicose rhetoric and military posturing to dissipate rapidly, leaving the conflict in eastern Ukraine no closer to a long-term solution.

Russia’s successor spy agency to the KGB, the Federal Security Service (FSB), claimed to have thwarted attacks on August 10 in Crimea, which Russian authorities pinned on the Ukrainian government.

In one incident, an FSB agent died during a raid on a terrorist cell. A Russian soldier also died in a separate, cross-border firefight, the spy agency said.

Following the alleged incursions by Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin sent a chilling message to Kiev, spurring fears of all-out war when he said Russia “would not let such things pass.”

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko denied Russia’s accusations, calling them “insane.”

“These fantasies pursue only one goal,” Poroshenko said in a statement emailed to journalists in Ukraine. “A pretext for more military threats against Ukraine.”

The United States backed up Kiev’s denials of involvement. “[The] U.S. government has seen nothing so far that corroborates Russian allegations of a ‘Crimea incursion’ and Ukraine has strongly refuted them,” U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt tweeted on August 11.

A war of words followed between Kiev and Moscow, edging the two countries to the brink of a military conflict more serious than the ongoing one in eastern Ukraine.

Heightening fears of all-out war were reports of Russian troop movements inside Crimea, north toward the Ukraine border, as well as the buildup of Russian forces on the border with Ukraine’s embattled southeastern Donbas region.

Consequently, Ukraine’s military went on high alert, and Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Nations requested an emergency closed-door session of the U.N. Security Council last week.

Meanwhile, the spat threatened to derail the interminable talks to ease tensions in the more than two-year-old conflict in eastern Ukraine. Putin said additional meetings among Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France—dubbed the “Normandy Four” format—were “senseless."

Russia has supported two pro-Russian separatist republics in the conflict with the Ukrainian government. According to Ukrainian and U.S. officials, as well as numerous media reports, Russian troops have participated actively in combat against Ukraine’s armed forces. Moscow, however, denies having deployed troops to fight inside Ukraine.

Tradecraft

Last week’s Crimean incident was textbook Kremlin tradecraft—manufacturing an event to justify a large-scale military intervention.

Ukrainian media highlighted past instances of such operations by Russia, including frequent references to a series of apartment bombings across Russia in 1999. Those bombings boosted public support in Russia for the Second Chechen War, as well as bolstering the profile of Putin, then prime minister.

U.S. government officials and media reports have since suggested Russia’s Federal Security Service was likely behind the 1999 bombings, which killed 300, as part of an effort to gin up support for military action in Chechnya.

Some in Ukraine speculated that last week’s Crimean provocation might have been a Kremlin gambit to delegitimize Ukraine’s post-revolution government in order to pressure Western countries to lift punitive sanctions against Russia.

“Russia will fail to undermine Ukraine’s reputation [in] the international arena and press for lifting sanctions with such provocative acts,” Poroshenko said.

The U.S. and the European Union placed sanctions on Russia after its illegal annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in March 2014.

Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, based in Crimea, launched a three-day “anti-sabotage” exercise in the wake of the alleged Crimea incursion. The exercise, in addition to reports of Russian troop movements, prompted Ukraine to place its troops in the east on the “highest level of combat readiness.”

Metrics

While the rhetoric escalated between Ukraine and Russia, various intelligence estimates suggested a Russian offensive against Ukraine was unlikely.

Field camps, which would be needed to deploy Russian troops into eastern Ukraine during an invasion, had not been built on Russia’s border with eastern Ukraine. Additionally, a civilian intelligence and security firm told The Daily Signal that Russian forces staged on the Ukraine-Russia border have fuel and ammunition for about one day of fighting—insufficient for a large-scale offensive.

Ukrainian officials, however, are not taking the Russian threat lightly.

Ukraine has about 100,000 troops deployed to its eastern territories. This is roughly on par with the 45,000 pro-Russian separatists and regular Russian troops deployed inside eastern Ukraine and the approximately 45,000 Russian troops staged across the border in western Russia.

Ukraine has about 10,000 troops deployed in southern territories near the Crimean border; Ukrainian officials estimate Russia has about 45,000 military personnel inside occupied Crimea.

So far, the war in Ukraine has remained quarantined to the embattled Donbas region and has not spilled over into open conflict between Russia and Ukraine. After two cease-fires, the prospect of open war between Russia and Ukraine has faded incrementally.

At times, however, it seemed the two countries were on the brink of a major conflict.

In August 2014, Putin told European Commission President José Manuel Barroso, “If I want to, I can take Kiev in two weeks.”

In September 2014, Kiev residents were instructed to use the city’s subway system as a bomb shelter. Spray-painted signs pointing to the nearest bomb shelter became common sights on the sides of buildings throughout the capital city as well as cities across the country.

Reborn Fears

Last week’s spat over the alleged terrorist plots in Crimea temporarily revived dormant worries of a major Russian offensive. Those worries paralleled a sharp uptick in the overall violence of the ongoing conflict in eastern Ukraine.

The war is at its most violent level in a year. The cease-fire signed in February 2015, called Minsk II, markedly reduced the overall intensity of the conflict. Yet the war never really ended.

Instead, it devolved into a static back-and-forth of artillery fire and small unit incursions, mostly fought from trenches and from within abandoned, bombed-out villages along front lines approximately 200 miles long.

Casualties, including military and civilian deaths, are still a weekly occurrence.

As part of the Minsk II cease-fire’s terms, heavy weapons and rocket systems are supposed to have been pulled back a prescribed distance from the front lines. Yet the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the multinational group charged with monitoring the cease-fire, says the banned weapons are still frequently used.

According to U.N. data, 57 percent of the conflict’s 73 civilian deaths in July were due to heavy weapons presumably banned from the conflict under the cease-fire’s terms.

A wave of fresh violence in the Donbas followed last week’s flare up in Crimea, which fed into fears of a larger offensive in the making.

On August 14, the Ukrainian military reported that combined Russian-separatist forces launched a barrage of more than a hundred 122 mm artillery shells within one hour at Ukrainian positions near the village of Lebedynske, outside the southern industrial city of Mariupol.

That same day, the Ukrainian military reported nine heavy armor attacks against its positions in the area around Mariupol, as well as separate artillery attacks and firefights northward along the length of the front lines.

Cooling Off

The crisis at the Crimean border brought the Ukraine war briefly back into Western media headlines and editorial pages. But as it dissipated, the war quickly was overshadowed by news from the Olympics, the U.S. presidential campaign trail and the fight against the Islamic State militant group (ISIS). Putin also added to the media noise drowning out the Ukraine conflict.

On August 9, the day before the Crimea incident, Putin hosted Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoðan for a meeting in Moscow. And on Tuesday, Russia launched airstrikes in Syria from an air base inside Iran.

Once again, Putin’s diplomatic and military moves left foreign affairs experts and military analysts reading the tea leaves to speculate about the Russian president’s larger strategy.

The perpetual worry in Kiev is that Western resolve to deter Russian aggression will cave in the face of the EU’s economic appetite to end punitive sanctions against Moscow and the U.S. desire to court Russian cooperation in military operations against ISIS.

One week on, the threat of a Russian offensive on Ukraine appears to have cooled off. On August 15, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Russia would not cut diplomatic ties with Ukraine over the Crimean incident.

“For now the main thing is not to give in to emotions, not to slip into taking some extreme actions, but to try to stabilize the situation with restraint and concentration,” Lavrov said following talks with his German counterpart, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg.

Lavrov and Steinmeier also discussed restarting the Normandy Four peace process, in an apparent move to walk back Putin’s threat to withdraw from the talks.
Nolan Peterson, a former special operations pilot and a combat veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, is The Daily Signal’s foreign correspondent based in Ukraine.

The fuse is lit......worldwide. There's no backing down now. An event could happen anywhere in the world which would impact the Russian forces in Ukraine instantaneously.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://warontherocks.com/2016/08/the-crimean-crisis-and-russias-military-posture-in-the-black-sea/

The Crimean Crisis and Russia’s Military Posture in the Black Sea

Michael Kofman
August 19, 2016

There’s something afoot in the Black Sea basin. Last week Moscow accused Ukraine of attempting a terrorist attack in Crimea, alleging that a firefight took place on August 7 and 8 between a supposed team of infiltrators and border guards of the FSB, Russia’s internal security service. The details of the incident remain murky. It was clear that something had happened when Russia closed a key crossing point on the peninsula early last week, internet providers blocked web access in northern Crimea, and rumors swirled of military movements as a state of emergency was imposed by security services.

Some have rushed to judgment, claiming this is an elaborate pretext for a renewed invasion of Ukraine, but so far these fears seem out of step with the evidence we have. If Russia is preparing to escalate its involvement anywhere, it is likely in Syria – not Ukraine. The Kremlin does have something in mind though. This mini-crisis in Crimea appears to be part of a larger political game with the West over Ukraine set to unfold in the coming months.

Stranger than Fiction

On Wednesday, Russia’s FSB leveled an official accusation against Kyiv and Russian President Vladimir Putin made a public statement to the same effect, denouncing Ukrainian authorities and blaming them for an attempted provocation. According to Russia’s press service, about ten individuals have been arrested in Crimea for being involved in the plot. Their version of events points to two separate shootouts on August 7 and 8 with a group of individuals from Ukraine armed with explosives and intent on sabotage or terrorist acts.

The story has subsequently evolved. According to Russia’s Kommersant paper, those captured have already confessed to plotting terrorist attacks against Crimea’s tourism sector. Further, it was not border guards, but an FSB special forces detachment known as Vympel that first engaged the supposed infiltrators on August 7 and subsequently unraveled a network of Ukrainian collaborators in Crimea. This led to a search for the remaining “saboteurs” and a subsequent fight took place on Ukraine’s border, with soldiers from Russia’s 247th Airborne unit who were stationed nearby.

Ukraine’s Defense Ministry at first denied the incident, stating that Russian accusations “do not correspond to reality. Ukraine did not commit any armed provocations in Crimea or any other area. None of Ukraine’s Defense Ministry intelligence staff was detained in occupied Crimea.” Given the simmering conflict between the two countries this is hardly the first case of back and forth recriminations. Typically, Kyiv has the benefit of the doubt in the West given Russia’s track record of duplicity and obfuscation.

Subsequently, the head of Ukraine’s military intelligence claimed that the firefight in question did take place, but was between Russian soldiers and Russian border guards. Though this claim did little to improve on Ukraine’s earlier denials, and also raised the question of why official statements were being made by its defense and intelligence services. Other Ukrainian papers carried accounts of drunken Russian airborne soldiers being responsible for the shooting. The information war — the battle of narratives intrinsic to the confrontation between these two countries — has already overtaken the facts.

There are now many versions of what transpired: some Russian sources present tales of up to 20 Ukrainian infiltrators, supported by an armored personnel carrier, engaging in a firefight on the Crimean border. One Ukrainian account holds that Russian soldiers shot each other and then tried to desert. Both stories are well-situated in the realm of the unbelievable.

Russian authorities have arrested several individuals, most notably a former Ukrainian soldier now turned truck driver, Evgeny Panov, who they accuse of working for Ukraine’s military intelligence. His family claims he was kidnapped from within Ukraine. His friends say he disappeared for three days. A spokesperson for Ukraine’s military intelligence contradicted this story, saying that Panov crossed into Crimea of his own accord, and in his own car, through an official checkpoint. There is already enough intrigue here for a novel.

More arrests followed as Moscow claimed to be unraveling a support network for Ukrainian operations in Crimea. It’s hard to say which scenario is less likely, a truck driver turned Ukrainian military intelligence operative extraordinaire, or the Russian FSB driving for hours into Ukraine just to kidnap him and construct this complex ruse. Most likely neither is true. If this is a pretext for war, Rube Goldberg could not have made it more convoluted.

Pieces Moving on the Board

Vladimir Putin’s tone and demeanor during his speech was a remarkable departure from the overall tenor of his comments this year in dealings with Ukraine: “There is no doubt that we will not let these things pass,” he said. Despite a steady escalation of violence over the summer, Russian public rhetoric toward Ukraine did not appreciably shift until the events of last week. Russia’s Southern Military District, which borders eastern Ukraine and the Caucasus, began conducting troop movements, while the Black Sea Fleet in Crimea announced a series of military drills. Russia’s National Security Council met recently, further underlining the seriousness with which Moscow is taking this incident. Meanwhile, Moscow canceled a planned meeting of the Normandy group, which had been due to convene during the upcoming G20 Summit in September to discuss progress in implementing the Minsk ceasefire (or lack thereof).

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has placed military units in the south on alert, while a number of Russian units might be moving to the Kerch strait on the mainland, the main transfer point to Crimea. At least two battalions’ worth of equipment went to Crimea via train, and Bastion-P coastal defense units are active across from the peninsula (although these could also be new units training for Russia’s Pacific Fleet whose presence is coincidental). The situation has been fluid, with Russian military movements naturally interpreted as a harbinger for military escalation. Though some newspapers indicate that despite public statements of concern, Ukrainian troops have hardly increased their readiness levels near Crimea.

Russia certainly has a track record of employing drills to mask and enable offensive military operations, including its February 2014 exercises that turned into the seizure of Crimea. However, most of the current activity is likely in response to the security alert on the peninsula, with other troop movements planned well in advance, given that this year’s strategic-operational exercise, Kavkaz-2016, will be held in the Southern Military District. Scheduled for September, Kavkaz-2016 will involve most of the military units in the region near Ukraine and simultaneous drills in other districts. Assuming the entire episode is not an elaborate ruse, part of the Russian response is likely based on security concerns. While the rest is no doubt in line with an intense schedule or readiness checks and troop rotations set for August and September.

A steady uptick in violence between separatist and Ukrainian forces along the line of control has eroded any pretense of the Minsk ceasefire holding. This summer, Ukrainian and separatist forces have spent months advancing against each other in the no-man zones between their respective lines in a game of escalation and retaliation. Ukrainian forces have clawed back territory on the margins and artillery exchanges continue to intensify. A recent attempt by unknown forces on the life of Plotnitsky, the titular head of the Lughansk People’s Republic, only added to the tensions. Yet last year saw an identical chain of events unfold, with violence escalating over the summer and a significant skirmish taking place in August. A Russian invasion did not happen then, and there is little evidence that one will happen now, as I explain below.

Right Idea, Wrong Battlespace

An escalation in the conflict may seem inevitable, but there is little to indicate that the Russian military is planning an operation against Ukraine. While more alarmist circles have already begun a predictable cycle of panic over the prospect of renewed Russian invasion, military analysis tells us this is unlikely. The announced drills should not be a cause for worry, yet. For one, the Black Sea Fleet is busy managing the supply line to Syria and providing its ships to the Russian naval squadron in the Mediterranean. The Fleet’s exercises seem to consist largely of its two multi-purpose corvettes decamping towards Syria (the two ships just conducted a series of land attack cruise missiles strikes in support of Assad’s forces fighting around Aleppo). The Russian Ministry of Defense announced the exercise was not to be held in the Black Sea itself but in the Eastern Mediterranean. If Russia intends to invade Ukraine from Crimea, it may want to bring a few of those ships back from the Syrian coast.

Colonel-General Dvornikov, formerly in charge of Syrian operations, was just promoted to take command of the Southern Military District. His immediate task is preparation for the annual exercise, even as the perilous turn of events in the battle for Aleppo demands increased Russian attention. Syrian regime forces there have been dealt a tactical defeat. Russian bombers continue to pound Aleppo and the outskirts of Palmyra, where the Islamic State is resurgent. A counter-offensive in Aleppo led by the jihadist group once known as Jahbat al-Nusra thwarted Syrian efforts to encircle the city and deal a critical blow to what is left of the opposition. In other words, much of the Russian military’s bandwidth for offensive operations is being taken up by commitments in Syria, which is placing increasing demands on its forces.

Pentagon spokesperson Gordon Trowbridge said, “We don’t necessarily see any evidence of troop movements that are so large that we are concerned about those on their own.” Other officials privately imparted that not only were there no indications of Russian military activity indicative of an impending invasion, but instead forces were rotating into Crimea to “relieve an equal number, which have since departed.” It is easy to construe announcements to establish new units (many of which not even scheduled until the end of this year or late 2017), long planned exercises, and a host of garrison construction efforts for some sort of massed invasion force. We should keep our powder dry until these unit formations actually materialize.

Russia seems to be planning a new set of strikes, but in Syria. Perhaps most indicative of Russian intentions is the recently filed request for cruise missile overflights through Iranian and Iraqi airspace. Russian bombers and fighters recently arrived at Hamadan airfield in Iran, and struck targets in Syria for the first time from Iranian soil. The Caspian Flotilla has also begun “drills” positioning itself in preparation for missile strikes. The Southern Military District and the Black Sea Fleet are waist deep in managing a military operation in Syria and a series of force movements that don’t seem to have much to do with Ukraine.

Russia has a busy schedule in August and September, packed with multinational exercises and readiness drills. Russia’s S-400 has recently arrived in Crimea to replace existing S-300PM systems in one of the air defense regiments. However, this system is not scheduled to become operational until the end of August, just before the Kavkaz-2016 event. Over the past two weeks Russian forces, and senior military leadership, have been participating in the International Army Games, a series of events hosted across several military districts in Russia and Kazakhstan. Cooperation-2016, a small exercise held with Russia’s Caucasus and Central Asian allies in the CSTO, just began near St. Petersburg. The evidence against a sudden renewal of hostilities is quite solid, including even Ukrainian intelligence assessments that Russian forces have not substantially increased in size on the eastern front.

Kremlin Schemes

It’s hard to conceive of any military objectives Moscow may have in Ukraine today that it had failed to accomplish in 2014 and 2015. The prospect for a land corridor to Crimea is just as unsound from a military perspective as it was back in 2014. Seizing and defending over 300 kilometers of real estate, including several cities, would involve occupying a substantial portion of Eastern Ukraine. We should not indulge in long-discredited land bridge theories as potential Russian operational objectives in Ukraine. The distance between Crimea and Russia has not grown shorter. Instead the Russian bridge across the Kerch Strait is steadily becoming a reality, and the energy link already became active last fall.

There is cause for vigilance any time Russia launches troop movements or declares new exercises, but there is not yet any reliable indication that Russia intends to send more forces. Russia has already invaded Ukraine, and if Moscow desired to suddenly renew the war, its leadership would not need an elaborately constructed pretext: Russian troops would already be past Ukrainian lines.

However, there are plenty of political ends Russia may seek to attain by publicizing and pinning this alleged terrorist attack on Ukraine’s leaders. Moscow looks to threaten the Minsk negotiation process itself, a framework in which European players and the United States are heavily vested. Putin’s comments appeared largely aimed at the West when he said, “But I would like to turn to our American and European partners,” adding “I think it is clear now that today’s Kiev government is not looking for ways to solve problems by negotiations, but is resorting to terror.” This was a statement to the effect that Kyiv is scuttling the Minsk deal. In other words, Moscow is questioning the viability of the Minsk process. Russia is using this incident to besmirch Ukraine and pressure it to start implementing the political terms of the deal.

Kyiv might actually welcome a collapse of the Minsk agreement, having maintained almost from the start that the deal as signed is unworkable, or at the very least undesirable. Although the separatists have not abided by the terms of the ceasefire, Europeans have been pushing Ukraine to fulfill its side of the bargain for over a year now without much success. Russia is banking on the fact that U.S. and European leaders have no alternative plan for freezing this conflict, and will further lean on Kyiv to start giving Moscow what it wants rather than see the Minsk framework publicly unravel. Russia’s objective remains an official reintegration of the separatist regions back into Ukraine via constitutional reforms that give them a fair amount of autonomy and amnesty for the separatists. This influence hook into Ukraine domestic politics and strategic orientation is Russia’s “on paper” price for freezing the conflict, and has been since Ukraine was forced to sign the second Minsk agreement.

In any scenario, Moscow is testing the waters to see how much support Ukraine truly enjoys in the West. Ukraine’s leadership has been moving at near-glacial speed on political reforms and is regularly criticized of recidivist behavior by domestic and international observers. A domestic political crisis this winter had stalled progress on Minsk and the reform agenda. While the United States voiced public support for Ukraine last week, Moscow is probing to see how much European will has eroded and whether Kyiv’s leaders have run out of sympathy in Berlin. This episode could well be a prelude for a more interesting game set to unfold later in the year.

In a recent meeting in Russia between the German and Russian Foreign Ministers, Sergey Lavrov said that there was no need for emotional measures, and Russia will not break diplomatic relations with Ukraine, for now. This was a coy threat wrapped inside the semblance that Russia is being reasonable in its response. Russia’s price for not blowing up this episode further is for European counterparts to “motivate” Ukraine into implementing its side of the Minsk deal. The Crimean incident is part of a game to create additional leverage in discussions within the Normandy group on the state of the ceasefire.

Given that the clock is winding down on the Obama administration, Russia may want to make the best use of the coming months. In June, U.S. National Security Adviser Susan Rice suggested that the U.S. administration is looking for the Minsk deal to begin implementation by the end of this year. No doubt the U.S. president wants to leave a legacy of having successfully frozen this conflict with a sustainable ceasefire in place. Instead, the fighting has simmered unstably for over a year while the process has drifted aimlessly to the dissatisfaction of all concerned. Moscow seems less intent on collapsing the ceasefire outright; instead it needs to give impetus to a moribund deal to secure its long sought after objective. At the very least if Minsk is judged a failure come the next round of sanctions renewal, Russia would very much like Ukraine to be the one baring the blame.



Michael Kofman is a Research Scientist at CNA Corporation and a Fellow at the Wilson Center’s Kennan Institute. Previously he served as Program Manager at National Defense University. The views expressed here are his own.

Update: This article originally stated, “The Fleet’s exercises seem to consist largely of its two multi-purpose corvettes decamping towards Syria, no doubt carrying land attack cruise missiles.” Since this article was finalized last night, the two ships conducted a series of land attack cruise missiles strikes in support of Assad’s forces fighting around Aleppo and the text has been updated to that effect.
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
Is World War 3 Possible? Definitely, But Let's Pray Not!

Written by Nathan McDonald (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-08-18/world-war-3-possible-definitely-lets-pray-not







Is World War 3 Possible? Definitely, But Let's Pray Not! - Nathan McDonald





The free world continues to spin out of control. Everyday we are hearing more and more news that would typically tank markets and make people's hair recede three or four inches in fear. Yet, it's not happening yet in this upside down world. In fact the markets have never been better and continue to experience new highs. Happy days right? Wrong, as usual - this is all a farce.




Perhaps if you're a global elite who has been able to fully take advantage of this artificial surge in higher stock prices and cheap money, then you are waking up with a smile on your face knowing that soon you will be dumping stocks on some unlucky fool. Unfortunately, if you are part of the majority who has never fully recovered from the 2008 crisis then you are in an entirely different camp.




Even worse, if you are in the camp of those who proudly calls themselves "awake" - such as many of us in the precious metals community, then you know that things are not peachy at all and have to live with the burden of this knowledge. The world is spiraling out of control as terrorism runs amuck, corruption reigns and a massive global conflict brews in plain sight.




The latter point is the one that makes me the most worried. It appears to many, including myself, that the United States, the current global power in the world is actively poking two of the fastest growing powers in the world, Russia and China. What is even scarier is how close these two formidable forces have become, largely because of foolish policies enacted by our inept leaders.




One prominent person that is very aware about the dangers the world now faces is Ron Paul , who is highly thought of as one of the most honest politicians (two words that typically don't go together) to ever exist and one of the most respected names in the liberty movement.




Yesterday I wrote about how the United States is once again pushing the world towards a potential conflict with Russia as tensions in Crimea erupt once again. Yet as Ron Paul points out, the United States is also instigating trouble with China.




He believes that the United States interventionism that we are seeing in the South China sea could lead to a massive conflict with China. The pot is boiling and as Ron Paul points out, a mistake could easily be made by either side.




Once again this is just one more reason why we should be preparing now - not next month, not next week, but now. Sadly, we continue to move down this path of uncertainty, all we need to do is open our hearts and minds to the flood of bad information that is bombarding us on a daily basis.




Little can be done if this a global conflict sparks. Let's pray that it never comes to this as the destruction of property and lives will be of biblical proportions.
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
Headlines from this site:

Updated August 20, 2016 - 12:31 AM EDT

US Warplanes Confront Syrian Military Jets

After Bombings, Many Syrian Towns Afraid to Allow New Hospitals
Civilians Flee as Syrian Military, Kurds Clash Over Key City
Russian Warships Fire Cruise Missiles Against Aleppo Rebels

US Pulls Most of Staff Involved in Saudi War on Yemen

Contractors See Hostility Toward Russia as Opportunity

US to Give Afghan Army 6,000 Guns for 'Urgent Need'

Turkey: CIA Obviously Knows Gulen Was Behind Coup

US Army Fudged Its Accounts by Trillions of Dollars
Viewpoints

http://www.antiwar.com/
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
Lastly, this disturbing news:

Pentagon can’t account for $6.5 trillion of taxpayer money – IG report
RT ^ | 08/20/16

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3461245/posts

Posted on Saturday, August 20, 2016 4:18:04 AM by Enlightened1

The Pentagon failed to account for $6.5 trillion in its financial statement, a recently-recovered Inspector General’s report on the 2015 fiscal year said. It reveals the audit of the Department of Defense was “materially misstated.”

The army failed to provide “accurate, complete, timely and well-supported” documents that could have explained the use of trillions of dollars in quarterly and yearend adjustments.

The US military made $2.8 trillion in wrongful adjustments in one quarter alone in 2015, and $6.5 trillion for the year, but could not provide anything that would detail what it spent the money on.

There were a total of 64,321 journal voucher (JV) adjustments made in the third quarter and 142,355 by the yearend, but only 7,083 of them were supported with detailed documentation of transactions.

The IG has also found that 16,513 of 1.3 million records were “removed” from the Pentagon’s budget system during the third quarter of the 2015 fiscal year.

“Without support for why these records were removed, we could not determine whether the records continued valid transactions,” the IG said, adding that the Defense Finance and Accounting Service Indianapolis (DFAS Indianapolis) could not explain why the files were removed.

At the same time, data that Army General Funds (AGF) cited in its financial reports in both the third quarter and yearend “were unreliable and lacked an adequate audit trail,” which are necessary to confirm “accuracy, completeness and timeliness” of transactions, the Department of Defense Inspector General found.

(Excerpt) Read more at rt.com ...
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events

How do you lose over 6 Trillion dollars? Sounds to me either there is A LOT of looting going or the money is being sent somewhere illegally.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
:dot5:

Hummm.......

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/...ploy-arab-states-reports-160820061102379.html

News Iran
3 hours ago

Reports: Iran forms Liberation Army to deploy abroad

Fighters to be drawn from local population where Iran is involved in conflict, says Revolutionary Guard Corps leader.

Iran has formed what it calls the Liberation Army whose units will be deployed in Arab countries, according to reports.

Currently, Iran is involved in multiple conflicts where Shia and Sunni Muslims are locked in a power struggle, notably Syria and Yemen.

Mohammad Ali Al Falaki, who heads the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said in an interview published on Friday by Al Mashriq news that Iran is fighting on three fronts: Iraq, Syria and Yemen.

Iran "created the Liberation Army in Syria under the leadership of Qassem Soleimani", said Falaki, who leads forces in Syria.


Inside Story: The Islamic Revolution turns 35


Soleimani is the head of the Revolutionary Guard Corps' elite Quds Force.

It was not clear how large the Liberation Army would be.

"The forces that belong to this army are not Iranians only. In any place where there is a fight, we organise and supply the army from the people of the area," said Falaki.

With regard to Syria, he said: "It is not wise for our Iranian forces to be directly thrown into war in Syria. Therefore our role should be limited to train, supply, and prepare the Syrians to fight in their areas."

In January, Al Jazeera reported that Iran was recruiting tens of thousands of Afghan Shia fighters to step up the country's efforts in the Syrian war, offering them salaries to join the war on the side of the government of President Bashar al-Assad.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
#14 sounds like Reagan's Rapid Deployment Force.

More like the US SF/indigenous forces irregular warfare model....The difference is that the Iranians won't politically maniacal their forces in the field in any way near the US has in doing this sort of thing.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Well this is going to flip out the PTB in Berlin and the EU.....Man kann "Freikorps" sagen?...

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-europe-attacks-germany-afd-idUSKCN10V0A5

World News | Sat Aug 20, 2016 6:18am EDT

German right-wing leader backs citizens' right to arm themselves

The leader of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has spoken out in favor of people arming themselves with guns and self-defense devices following a series of violent attacks last month.

The anti-immigrant AfD has won growing popular support in Germany due in part to Europe's migrant crisis, which has seen more than 1 million refugees arrive over the past year, and it now has seats in eight of Germany's 16 state assemblies.

After two Islamist attacks and a shooting rampage by a mentally unstable teenager last month, Germans are on edge and the AfD is expected to make a strong showing in votes next month in Berlin and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

"Many people are increasingly feeling unsafe. Every law-abiding citizen should be in a position to defend themselves, their family and their friends," Frauke Petry told the Funke Media Group in an interview published on Saturday.

"We all know how long it takes until the police can get to the scene, especially in sparsely populated places," she said.

Known for her fiery speeches to AfD supporters, Petry sparked an uproar earlier this year when she called for German police to be allowed to use firearms against illegal migrants.

Petry rejected calls to toughen up gun laws, saying this would affect respectable citizens and not those who acquire weapons in the so-called "dark net", which is only accessible via special browsers.

Instead, she criticized "ruinous cuts" on police and said the state at lost its monopoly on the use of force in places.

Germany has some of the most stringent rules around gun control in Europe. Firearm owners must obtain a weapons licence for which applicants must generally be at least 18 years old and show they have they have a reason for needing a weapon.

Nonetheless, sexual assaults on women in Cologne at New Year and three fatal attacks have added to the feeling of vulnerability and prompted Germans to stock up on scare devices.

The number of Germans applying for so-called "small firearms license", which are required to carry around blank guns and pepper spray, jumped 49 percent in the first half of 2016 to 402,301, according to federal statistics.

However, permits for firearms fell to 1.894 million as of the end of June compared to 1.898 million a year earlier.

(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Dominic Evans)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-idUSKCN10V0GD

World News | Sat Aug 20, 2016 10:39am EDT

Kurds versus Syrian army battle intensifies, complicating multi-fronted war

By Angus McDowall | BEIRUT

Fighting between the Syrian army and Kurdish forces intensified late on Friday and into Saturday, creating the risk of yet another front opening in the multi-sided civil war.

The two sides have mostly avoided confrontation during the five-year conflict, with the government focusing its efforts against Sunni Arab rebels in the west, and the Kurds mainly fighting Islamic State in northern Syria.

In an indication of their reluctance to escalate further, pro-government media said on Saturday they had held preliminary peace talks.

After the fighting broke out this week, government warplanes bombed Kurdish-held areas of Hasaka, one of two cities in the largely Kurdish-held northeast where the government has maintained enclaves.

Fighting there could complicate the battle against Islamic State because of the Kurds' pivotal role in the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces' (SDF) fight against the group.

On Friday, warplanes from the U.S.-led coalition flew what the Pentagon called protective patrols around Hasaka to prevent Syrian jets from targeting U.S. special forces, who are operating on the ground with the SDF, the first sorties of their kind in the war.

Ground fighting intensified late on Friday when Kurdish YPG fighters battled Syrian forces, whose air force flew sorties over the city, Kurds and monitors said.

"The clashes continue in areas inside the city today. There were military operations," a Kurdish official said.

Many inhabitants of Kurdish areas fled on Friday and at least 41 people have been killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a U.K.-based war monitoring group, said.

"There are efforts to cool things between the army and the Asayish (YPG-affiliated forces), and a first meeting was held aimed at a ceasefire," Sham FM, a pro-government radio station, reported.


COMPLICATING FACTOR

As well as complicating the war against Islamic State, fighting in Hasaka could create problems for the government's campaign in the city of Aleppo, where Kurdish forces have been accused of coordinating with the Syrian army against rebels backed by Turkey.

The YPG, or People's Protection Units, have close ties with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in Turkey, against which Ankara has waged a three-decade counter insurgency. Turkey fears the Kurds' drive against Islamic State is partly aimed at carving out a Kurdish region along its own southern border.

On Saturday, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said Turkey would take a more active role in Syria in coming months to stop it being torn along ethnic lines - an apparent reference to the YPG gains in northern areas.

Local fighters backed by the SDF, of which the YPG militia form an integral part, said on Saturday they would not advance further north - towards the Turkish border - having secured the city of Manbij, 250 km (155 miles) west of Hasaka, from Islamic State, an announcement that may have been aimed at assuaging Turkish fears.

Syria's army has blamed the YPG for the Hasaka fighting and described it as a branch of the PKK, a characterization the group rejected on Saturday.

In Aleppo, fighting continued near the mouth of a corridor that rebels opened this month into besieged areas they control.

Jakob Kern, the Syria director of the United Nations' World Food Programme, said opposition-held areas had been inaccessible for weeks and food was running perilously short.

"In the east of Aleppo, the food will last a maximum of two weeks, probably until the end of August," Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger quoted him as saying on Saturday.

Russia, the main military backer of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, said on Thursday it was willing to support weekly 48-hour ceasefires to allow aid to reach besieged areas.


(Additional reporting by Michael Shields in Geneva; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-s...tm_medium=referral&utm_source=morefromreuters

Commentary | Fri Aug 19, 2016 5:24am EDT

Commentary: In Syria, Russia and the United States fight for the Middle East

By Peter Apps

Two years into Washington’s war against Islamic State, it may finally be winning. At the same time, however, its influence over events in the broader Middle East seems perhaps terminally in decline.

What happens in the coming months and years in Syria will be key to the future shape of the region. No country has challenged U.S. policymakers more – and the Obama administration has faced heavy criticism.

This month, however, has seen what feels like the first good news for the United States from Syria since the uprising began.

In early August, U.S.- backed Syrian forces seized back the town of Manbij. Footage of jubilant locals embracing those they see as liberators has been flashed around the globe, providing exactly the kind of propaganda victory Washington needed.

Manbij could open the door for an offensive against the true militant heartlands. Islamic State is losing ground, money and support. It may soon be stripped of remaining strongholds in Raqqa, Syria, and Mosul, Iraq.

But the battle for the future of Syria – and, indeed, the Middle East – is much more complex than the fight against Islamic State. And there are powerful forces – particularly Vladimir Putin’s Russia, Iran and what remains of Bashar al-Assad’s government – that also want to call the shots.

The United States and Europe long struggled to find an approach to Syria, undecided on how hard to push against Assad and how much to back – or trust – the opposition. Moscow, in contrast, has always known which side it was on.

This week, Russia shocked U.S. analysts by moving long-range bombers to Iran, flying through Iraq airspace to strike targets in Syria. It was the first time Iran’s rulers had allowed their military bases to be used by a foreign power at least since the 1979 revolution, a dramatic sign of the growing Russia-Iran axis.

The strikes came against the backdrop of a much broader escalation by the Syrian government and its allies that some reports suggest has included a handful of chemical strikes. In Aleppo, the UN says an upsurge in fighting in recent weeks has killed hundreds and markedly worsened the already catastrophic humanitarian situation.

In many respects, the relatively small town of Manbij is a sideshow compared to some of the larger, longer running battles and sieges. But for the United States, it was a major achievement. The victors were, on paper at least, the “moderate Syrian opposition,” an entity the United States has been desperately hoping would come into existence for years. Given its unsuccessful and wasteful early attempts at building that opposition, this victory is no small deal.

The reality was always somewhat more complex – according to some accounts, up to 60 percent of Syrian Democratic Fighters are Kurdish. While the group also includes Sunni and Assyrian fighters, it’s not the kind of pan-Syrian force the West would really like to see. It is, critics say, essentially dominated by the Syrian Kurdish YPD – which means its successes are viewed with suspicion by neighboring Turkey – no fan of Kurdish separatism – and Iraq.

Whether the United States can grow enough moderate local forces to significantly alter the larger conflict remains unclear. Eventual peace will likely come down to a negotiated deal that must involve both local Syrian actors and their international backers.

The broader geopolitics now seem clear. Moscow has put itself firmly on the side of the Shi’ite-run Tehran-Damascus axis. At the same time, however, the United States is drifting further from its key Sunni regional partners, particularly Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

That’s not necessarily a criticism of President Barack Obama – history handed him a nightmarish situation. The more robust interventionist approach of the George W. Bush administration was no more effective – and in many respects a lot more costly. Obama has had his share of successes, in particular, avoiding war with Iran. Most importantly, the kind of military operation the United States is currently pursuing in the region is much more sustainable.

Broadening U.S. military and diplomatic focus beyond the Middle East was, after all, one of Obama’s earliest ambitions. The United States is much less dependent on Middle Eastern energy. It also has growing responsibilities and worries elsewhere, not least in confronting a rising China and resurgent Russia.

It is in its growing confrontation with Moscow, however, that things get complicated.

In Russia, the United States now faces a rival great power that is willing to take the kind of decisive action to alter the course of events in the Middle East that had previously been limited to Western states.

Neither Moscow nor Washington, it’s clear, have any enthusiasm for the kind of troop-heavy missions the West tried in Iraq and Afghanistan. These are very different conflicts, fought largely by local forces with support and advice from powerful outside sponsors.

Despite what some in the United States might want, there is little appetite in Washington for expanding strikes to deliberately weaken Assad’s forces. Such action might, in any case, merely prolong Syria’s nightmare. Attacking anything belonging to nuclear-capable Russia, of course, is not on the table at all. It would just be too risky.

There’s clearly a significant moral gap between the unrestrained brutality of Putin and Assad and Washington's more limited approach, moderated as it is by a desire to keep down unnecessary casualties and collateral damage. Still, the West doesn’t have nearly as much moral high ground as it might like to believe. Washington is seen still turning a blind eye to the actions of its allies – for example, in Saudi Arabia’s increasingly bloody Yemen intervention.

Whoever wins the U.S. presidency in November will want to put their own mark on America’s role in the Middle East. Where things stand in Syria when they take office, however, will hugely influence their options.

That means plenty for all sides to fight for in the weeks and months to come. Don’t expect things to get any simpler anytime soon.


About the Author

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

The views expressed in this article are not those of Reuters News.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/art..._russias_expansion_water_scarcity_109720.html

August 20, 2016

Weekly Recon - Russia, Iran & China in Syria; Russia's Expansion; Water Scarcity

By Blake Baiers

Good Saturday morning and welcome to Weekly Recon. On this day in 1954, President Eisenhower approves a National Security Council paper titled “Review of U.S. Policy in the Far East.” This paper supported Secretary of State Dulles’ view that the United States should support Diem, while encouraging him to broaden his government and establish more democratic institutions. Ultimately, however, Diem would refuse to make any meaningful concessions or institute any significant new reforms and U.S. support was withdrawn. Diem was subsequently assassinated during a coup by opposition generals on November 2, 1963.

Russia/Iran/China - Syria Nexus - The Pentagon reported on Friday that Syrian Su-24 bombers had dropped bombs near U.S. special operations forces the previous day. In the heat of the moment, communications channels set up to de-escalate the conflict appear to have broken almost immediately. Troops on the ground attempted to contact the Syrian pilots over the radio, but did not receive a response. U.S. military officials then attempted to use the emergency line with Russia, asking their counterparts to serve as intermediaries to get the planes called off. The Russians appear to have declined.

As a result, the U.S. dispatched its own fighter aircraft to defend its troops on the ground. Before they could arrive, the Syrian planes had left the area. The situation mirrors a similar incident from June when Russian planes bombed U.S. baked rebels near the Iraq border and U.S. fighter jets were to late to intervene. The Pentagon issued a formal warning to the Assad Regime in hopes of stopping such incidences.

Then, on Friday afternoon, two Su-24s again flew in the same vicinity near U.S. SOF troops, but were intercepted by U.S. F-22s. Such flights are likely to continue, and the episode highlights the difficulties of maintaining open lines of communication. Other signs show that the war has no sign of slowing.

Russia has announced that its Khmeimim Airbase near Latakia is to be expanded and converted into a permanent fixture. On Friday, Russian naval vessels fired cruise missiles against rebel targets on the mainland from the Mediterranean, which really proves that Russia has a verified strike capability throughout the entire Middle East and Black Sea regions.

Iran stepped up its open support this week by hosting Russian bombers at an airbase within its borders to launch airstrikes on rebel groups in Syria. Iran has tacitly supported the Assad regime and Shiite groups in the country, but this is the first large-scale strategic military support they have contributed to their coalition.

China appears to be joining as the final piece of a sort of triumvirate. The Chinese military has announced that it will be supplying training for Syrian personnel, as well as humanitarian aid. This will be the Middle Kingdom’s first step into the conflict, and possibly open the door for greater involvement in future joint-operations.

Ukraine – Full Scale War? - While many in the U.S. were paying attention to Ukraine because of Paul Manafort’s ties do former president and Putin-puppet, Viktor Yanukovich, the Russian military was accused of amassing at the border and slipping troops and air defense systems into the country. It has been reported that Buk missile launchers have been moved back into Ukraine for the first time since one was used to shoot down Malaysia Airlines MH17. Russian soldiers are reportedly armed with Tor-M2U missiles, used on low flying planes, drones, and helicopters. While Ukraine prepares for an all out war, Putin appears to be doing his best to dispel those fears while still appearing strong. He is in Crimea during military exercises, and just a week after a reported “terrorist attack” has left both Russia and Ukraine on edge. The coming days will be a battle of wits, as neither side wants to be the first to fire the shot that sparks a war.

Moldova - Another Russian Invasion? - Russia’s Eastern European military movements were not confided to Ukraine this week, as Russian troops took part in military exercises in Transnistria, the separatist region of eastern Moldova. The drills drew immediate ire from the Moldovan government, who fear that the sliver of land that has effectively been under rebel control since 1992, might become the next Crimea. Russia was supposed to remove all of its troops from Transnistria by 2002, but has failed to do so. With the eyes of the world elsewhere (Rio, Syria, South China Sea, Ukraine, etc.), Moldova looks anxiously to the east.

The Rising Global Threat of Water Security - The Cipher Brief ran a series on Friday covering the topic of water security in the Middle East. Amit Pandya of Stimson Center notes, ““roughly two thirds of the Arab World’s surface water supplies originate outside the region” or require extensive cooperation between regional countries to manage.” This proves problematic when, “The countries of the Arab Gulf…have some of the highest water use per capita numbers in the world despite possessing few renewable water sources.” Desalination could be an answer. Israel has shown some promise in what has historically been an extremely difficult process, but this has come at some costs. Amit Pandya finds that the issue needs to be addressed in the region as a resolvable issue, and that all nations needs to work together to understand that water is a resource that must be better managed. This is highly optimistic, as water has played a large role in fueling strife in the region. For example, a long-term drought in Syria helped fuel the beginnings of its civil war during the Arab Spring, and President Morsi threatened to bomb an Ethiopian dam when he felt it was risking Egypt’s water security. In a region holding on at the edges, the cooperation needed to implement the recommendations of the Cipher Brief series may be hard to garner.

Furthermore, the Middle East is not alone in its water insecurity. Africa, with its booming birth rate and own dwindling water supply, is at major risk.

Asia, too, could see armed conflict as the result of water security issues. China controls the flow of water into much of Southeast Asia. China’s dam building projects have essentially choked the Mekong River, which provides most of the water for the Indochina Peninsula. Cal Wong wrote at the Diplomat that, “The Mekong River is the lifeblood of Southeast Asia.” China has agreed in recent months to open its damns to allow water to flow. This is vital because the majority of fresh water in Southeast Asia originates from China’s Tibetan Plateau and Xinjiang region. A drought has already scorched the region, and China’s blocking of the flow of water is changing traditional ways of live along the Mekong. As tensions in the South China Sea continue to rise, their effects may be felt more on the mainland. If China were to completely cut off the Mekong in retaliation for actions the South China Sea, it could be a casus belli, as the Morsi example shows.


SEND RCD YOUR INPUT: Please send your tips, suggestions and feedback to bbaiers@realcleardefense.com or on Twitter at @BlakeBaiers. Make sure to follow us on Twitter at @RCDefense.

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Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.businessinsider.com/taking-down-zetas-cartel-leaders-alarming-violence-mexico-2016-8

Taking down Zetas cartel leaders has had an alarming effect on violence in Mexico

VICE News
Nathaniel Janowitz, VICE News
15h
Comments 13

His spacious house and lawn in the northern Mexican city of Ciudad Victoria are surrounded by tall walls, and stand in a gated community with more high fences and security guards.

But even here, sitting on his couch surrounded by family photos and Catholic imagery, this owner of a big business still doesn't feel safe.

"Nobody trusts anyone," he said. "This house, 10 years ago, it didn't have a fence. All the neighbors' kids used to come play here."

But just in the past year, the businessman said, he has attended the funerals of four murdered close friends. He said he has also sent all his children to live in safer places. Like almost everybody you talk to in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas, the businessman will only discuss security issues if his name is kept out of print, for fear of reprisals by criminals.

Tamaulipas, just over the border from Texas, has been central to the government's efforts to contain drug-trafficking cartels, ever since then-President Felipe Calderón launched a major military-led strategy against organized crime nearly a decade ago. His successor Enrique Peña Nieto is continuing that approach.

A particularly intense offensive against the notoriously bloody Zetas cartel, based in the state, successfully took down most of the group's leaders between 2012 and 2015. But putting these infamous criminal bosses in prison, or in the ground, has done little to make the state safer. In fact, residents of Ciudad Victoria, the state capital, say things have never been this bad in Tamaulipas, as factions of the Zetas fight to fill the vacuums the government's strategy has left.

How bad things are was driven home in March when a narcomanta — a banner left in a public place with a message from the cartels — claimed that one faction of the Zetas would begin killing civilians if the government did not halt extradition proceedings against two incarcerated leaders. Since then, other narcomantas have reiterated the threat, and murders have increased.

"The way of life has changed completely here in Victoria," said a small-business owner, in a hushed voice. Nervous about talking in a public place, he asked to move to a secure location. "It's worse than it's ever been."

The man admitted he pays protection fees to local cartels so they leave his business alone, but he still lives in fear. The family keeps in constant contact via a WhatsApp group at all times, with all its members noting where they are going, with whom, and when they will arrive. They are are all too aware of what can happen. The man said one of his uncles was killed by the Zetas in 2015 for no apparent reason.

"They arrived at his house, armed, pulled him out, took him away, and later killed him," he said. "Why? Who knows."

The number of murders in Mexico surged in the first few years of Calderón's offensive against the cartels, and then dropped off somewhat at the end of his six-year term and during the first couple of years of President Peña Nieto's government. But now the killing is getting worse again. According to official figures there were 10,301 murders between January and June this year. This was 15 percent more than the number killed during the same period in 2015, though the average of 57 murders a day is still 10 percent lower than it was when they reached a peak in 2011.

Many of the worst atrocities over the decade have come at the hands of the Zetas in Tamaulipas, such as the 2010 massacre of 72 unarmed, poverty-stricken, and helpless Central American migrants in the town of San Fernando.

The Zetas formed in the state in the late 1990s, when deserters from Mexican military and police units were recruited by the then leader of the Gulf Cartel, Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, to be his personal bodyguards. They were led by Arturo Guzmán Decena, alias Z-1, whom the military killed in 2002.

There are many origin stories attached to the cartel's name. One of the more common cites the idea that nothing comes after the Z. The name instills so much fear that there are parts of the country with heavy Zeta influence where the population avoids saying it out loud, preferring phrases such as "those of the last letter."

Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano, known as Z-3, oversaw the rise of that reputation after he took over from Z-1 and led the group towards increasing independence from the Gulf cartel.

In 2010, a Zetas-Gulf split triggered one of the worst turf wars in all of Mexico, with many of the biggest battles fought in Tamaulipas. That, in turn, prompted an especially focused law-enforcement effort to take down the Zetas' leaders.

The Mexican Navy killed Z-3 in 2012. This left the cartel in the charge of Miguel Treviño Morales, aka Z-40. When he was arrested in 2013, power passed to his brother, Omar Treviño Morales, or Z-42. His capture in 2015 is widely blamed for the current internal split that triggered the current wave of violence in Ciudad Victoria, where the Zetas have traditionally maintained particularly tight control over both criminal activity and the local authorities.

"One group wants to control Victoria, and the other doesn't want to let it go," said a Tamaulipas state police officer, born and raised in Ciudad Victoria, who previously served in the Mexican military. "Before they answered to one jefe, one patrón."

The state police officer, who also asked for anonymity for fear of reprisals, identified one of the warring Zetas factions as the Cartel del Noroeste, or the Northeastern cartel, which is allegedly led by Kiki, also known as Kiko, Treviño, a nephew of Z-40 and Z-42. The other is named Grupo Bravo, also known as Vieja Escuela Z — old school Zetas. The names may give the impression that the fight is between old and new leaders, but the rivalry has more to do with the groups' different territorial bastions and the lack of major figures to keep them together.

"What's happening, it's like ants," the cop said of the so-called kingpin strategy at the heart of the offensive launched by Calderón in 2006 and continued by Peña Nieto. He said that when you exterminate the "queen ant" and don't follow up, the insects regroup and return to their anthill — either that, or others take the queen's place.

The result in Ciudad Victoria, he added, was that he has never before felt as afraid for his friends and family as he does now, with the cartel's broadcast threats to kill civilians.

"It's terrorism, in all senses of the word," he said.

The March manta threatening to kill random civilians unless extradition proceedings against the Treviño brothers were stopped summed up the way the kingpin strategy has failed the people of Ciudad Victoria.

While the United States and Mexican government celebrate captures and extraditions of high-profile capos, there's no shortage of mid-level gangsters ready to take their place and hang poorly written letters to presidents. The March manta named, in badly ungrammatical Spanish, the young nephew Kiko as the "lider maximo," who has made it clear he's ready to murder for his demands.

That ominous threat did not appear in local newspapers. It spread through social media, or by word of mouth, in Ciudad Victoria. Journalists are too afraid to print it.

"It's very frustrating," said a reporter for a local Tamaulipas newspaper.

The paper, she said, has stayed away from printing security-related stories ever since the violence escalated after the Zetas-Gulf cartel split in 2010. At the moment, she said, her paper barely reports on the state government briefings detailing the numbers and locations of people killed. She added that in the gruesome photographs of the same incidents that are often posted online, there are often more bodies than the officials say in those briefings.

"People wanted to know why we weren't publishing and telling the truth about what's happening," she said. "It wasn't because we didn't want to publish what we knew. It just wasn't worth our lives."

The reporter said it would have been tantamount to suicide to try and find out why gunmen killed 11 members of a single family — four children, five women, two men, and the family dog — in July. One of the women and her two children were US citizens visiting family in Ciudad Victoria. Eight other people were killed and 24 others injured by gunfire on that same weekend.

The Northeastern cartel claimed responsibility for the massacre in a manta signed by Z-40. The text claimed the massacre was retaliation for governor Egidio Torre Cantu's failure to provide the protection that came with accepting cartel bribes.

"Please come pick up the dead civilians that I left for you," the manta mocked. "I will continue ordering attacks on the civilian population in Ciudad Victoria."

Days later gunmen killed five members of another family in Ciudad Victoria. Authorities encountered the bullet-strewn bodies of the grandmother, mother, her two sons, and her four-month-old baby girl.


A teacher in Ciudad Victoria claimed one of the murdered children was a student in the middle school where he works, although not in his class. He said his students, aged 13 to 15, struggle under the constant pressure of the violence, as well as recruitment drives by the criminal groups.

The teacher said that sometimes he has trouble getting to work because of the danger on the streets. Once at the school, he said, he worries that some of the students are working for the cartels.

"The problem is that you can't be strict, you're afraid of the student," he said. "Because you don't know who they are, or their parents, or their neighbors."

The deep distrust that permeates the city means many avoid going out after dark, and everybody watches what they say in all but the tightest social circles.

"We're up against the wall in a really complicated situation," said the businessman with the gated house, blaming the current wave of violence on the "power vacuum" created by recent governorship elections that had weakened existing corruption deals and created an opportunity for outside groups to attempt an invasion.

Not that he sees any way out of such deals. He said he was just holding on to the hope that such political collusion could be negotiated without damaging the civilian population, and chuckled at the idea that any government could make Tamaulipas cartel-free.

"All of us are hopeful that the new government will have a good arrangement with one of the groups of bad guys," he said, "so that the cartels let us work and let us live."

Read the original article on VICE News. Check them out on YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram. Copyright 2016. Follow VICE News on Twitter.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/21/w...ghanistan-teeters-toward-taliban-control.html

ASIA PACIFIC

Afghan Troops Hold Off the Taliban in Kunduz

By NAJIM RAHIM and FAHIM ABED
AUG. 20, 2016

KUNDUZ, Afghanistan — The northern Afghan city Kunduz was on the verge of falling to the Taliban on Saturday, as residents began to flee, and a key district nearby was overrun by insurgents, Afghan officials and local residents reported.

Late Saturday, however, it appeared that disaster had been narrowly averted, at least temporarily, military leaders in Kabul said.

Fighting here had reached the eastern edge of the city early Saturday, as insurgents captured the nearby Khanabad District. There was also heavy fighting on the city’s northern side, and residents said the city, Afghanistan’s fifth largest, was surrounded.

By the end of the day, government forces appeared to have stalled the Taliban advance, retaking Khanabad. “Kunduz will not fall to the Taliban,” Gen. Dawlat Waziri, a spokesman for the Ministry of Defense, said at a news conference.

Nonetheless, the government authorities began to transfer inmates from the Kunduz prison to the airport. The move was apparently aimed at preventing the Taliban from freeing the inmates as they did in September after capturing the city before losing it to the government.

Some officials and residents fled Saturday to the Kunduz airport. Last year, the airport area was the only part of this city that did not fall to the insurgents. It became the only holdout for government forces, backed by heavy support from American Special Forces who, with the aid of American air power, ousted the Taliban after more than two weeks of fighting.

The officials said the insurgents were trying Saturday to destroy a key bridge that would cut highway access from the northern city to Tajikistan. The only remaining road out of the city was the Kunduz to Baghlan highway, which was briefly blocked Saturday morning by the insurgents, but forced open by Afghan security forces in the afternoon.

Social media postings showed residents fleeing the city.

“We are in a very bad condition,” said Shamsulhaq, 30, a resident who, like many Afghans, uses only one name. “Our children are afraid of the sounds of heavy and light weapons.

“We don’t have any hope that the situation in Kunduz will get better,” Shamsulhaq continued. “Today entire government institutions like banks and other organizations were closed. Our children did not go to school. We don’t have water or electricity. All routes are blocked, so we cannot go anywhere.”

Many residents said badly needed air support and ground reinforcements had been slow to arrive, although officials promised that special forces were on the way.

After the government retook Kunduz last year, President Ashraf Ghani visited and promised to bring effective local government to the province. But many of his newly appointed officials were unable to take office as the Taliban had already returned.

Afghan officials said late Saturday that they had sent reinforcements, and that the defense here was being directed by the army’s deputy chief of staff, Murad Ali Murad, who was recently credited with holding off a Taliban takeover in Helmand Province.

General Waziri said 75 Taliban fighters had been killed on Saturday alone, as the tide turned in the government’s favor. “They will take their desire to recapture Kunduz to the grave,” he said.

Najim Rahim reported from Kunduz, and Fahim Abed from Kabul, Afghanistan. Rod Nordland contributed reporting from Cairo.
 

Housecarl

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

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-37143499

Syrian war: Turkey to play more active role

3 hours ago
From the section Middle East

Turkey says it will take a more active role in efforts to end the war in Syria and accepts President Bashar al-Assad as an interim but not long-term player.

But announcing the Turkish policy shift, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim insisted that Mr Assad "can't have a role in Syria's future".

"He is one of the actors today, whether we like it or not," Mr Yildirim said.

Fighting has continued in the city of Hassakeh, where Syrian government jets have bombed Kurdish areas for two days.

Hassakeh, 80km (50 miles) south of the Turkish border, is mainly controlled by the Kurdish YPG militia, but Mr Assad's government forces are trying to push them out.

Turkey is staunchly opposed to Mr Assad, but is also fighting the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) - an ally of the YPG.

Turkey does not want the Kurds to consolidate any territorial gains that could help the PKK.

"In the six months ahead of us, we shall be playing a more active role," Mr Yildirim said. "It means not allowing Syria to be divided along ethnic lines."

A future political settlement for Syria must not include Mr Assad, the PKK or "Daesh" - the so-called Islamic State (IS) group - he said.

_90752698_7f3d4a13-6e9e-42b1-a087-38510277ae19.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cp...2698_7f3d4a13-6e9e-42b1-a087-38510277ae19.jpg

Turkey v Syria's Kurds v Islamic State
What is left of Syria after five years of war?
Syrian Kurds declare federal system

Turkey is backing rebel groups fighting to oust Mr Assad, though it has not committed regular troops to the war in Syria. Turkey is hosting about 2.7m Syrian refugees.

Earlier this month Turkey patched up a bitter quarrel with Russia, whose air force is providing vital support for Mr Assad with daily air strikes against the rebels.

The UN Children's Fund (Unicef) on Saturday called for urgent action to help more than 100,000 children "trapped in the horror" of Aleppo, ravaged by intense fighting and heavy air raids by Syrian government and Russian planes.

The children's plight was symbolised this week by the pictures of Omran Daqneesh, an injured five-year-old boy rescued from the rubble in Aleppo. The images of him with a head wound, looking utterly bewildered and shocked, stirred international outrage.

The London-based Syria Solidarity Campaign reported on Saturday that Omran's 10-year-old brother Ali had died of his injuries, after the family home was hit by a bomb. Activists in Aleppo also reported Ali's death, al-Arabiya news said.

The YPG has emerged as a major fighting force in northern Syria in the past two years, becoming a key ally of the US-led coalition against IS.

Kurds made up between 7% and 10% of Syria's population of 24.5 million before the uprising against President Assad began five years ago.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Interesting.....(Not that it would work in the first place...)


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...mpts-to-derail-un-plan-to-ban-nuclear-weapons

Australia attempts to derail UN plan to ban nuclear weapons

Diplomats force a vote on a report to begin negotiations on a ban in 2017 that had been expected to pass unanimously

North Korea tests a surface-to-surface medium
North Korea tests a surface-to-surface medium long-range strategic ballistic rocket Hwasong-10 from an undisclosed location. The missile has a range of 1,000km. Photograph: KCNA/EPA

Michael Slezak
@MikeySlezak
email
Saturday 20 August 2016 23.07 EDT

Australia has attempted to derail a ban on nuclear weapons at a UN meeting on disarmament, by single-handedly forcing a vote on a report that had been expected to pass unanimously.

The report, which recommended negotiations begin in 2017 to ban nuclear weapons, was eventually passed by 68 votes to 22. An Austrian-led push for the treaty had reached a milestone on Friday, when the report was presented to representatives of 103 nations in Geneva.


Australia defends opposition to global push for nuclear weapons ban
Read more

Moves towards a ban have been pursued because many saw little progress under the existing non-proliferation treaty, which obliges the five declared nuclear states to “pursue negotiations in good faith” towards “cessation of the nuclear arms race … and nuclear disarmament”.

The proposal recommended a conference be held next year to negotiate “a legally binding instrument to prohibit nuclear weapons, leading towards their total elimination”.

The text was carefully negotiated, and compromise was attempted on contentious paragraphs.

Anti-nuclear campaigners involved in the process expected the report would pass without objection. But Australia surprised observers by objecting and forcing a vote.

The vote was accepted by an overwhelming majority, with 68 voting in favour, 22 against and 13 abstaining.

The next step will be for the proposal for negotiations to begin in 2017 will be tabled at the United Nations general assembly, after which it is likely formal negotiations will begin.

In an opening statement the Australian diplomat Ian McConville told the meeting: “A simple Ban Treaty would not facilitate the reduction in one nuclear weapon. It might even harden the resolve of those possessing nuclear weapons not to reduce their arsenals.”

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said on its website that it opposed a ban on nuclear weapons because although it “might seem to be a straightforward and emotionally appealing way to de-legitimise and eradicate nuclear weapons,” it would actually “divert attention from the sustained, practical steps needed for effective disarmament”.

But in 2015, documents obtained under Freedom of Information revealed Australia opposed the ban on nuclear weapons, since it believed it relied on US nuclear weapons as a deterrent.

“As long as the threat of nuclear attack or coercion exists, and countries like the DPRK [North Korea] seek these weapons and threaten others, Australia and many other countries will continue to rely on US extended nuclear deterrence,” said one of the briefing notes for government ministers.

The documents revealed however that Australia and the US were worried about the momentum gathering behind the Austrian-led push for a ban nuclear weapons, which diplomats said was “fast becoming a galvanising focus for those pushing the ban treaty option”.

Japan’s ambassador to the UN conference on disarmament expressed disappointment that a vote was required.

“We are deeply concerned that the adoption by voting will further divide the international disarmament community and undermine the momentum of nuclear disarmament for the international community as a whole,” he said.

Tim Wright, Asia-Pacific director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (Ican), said it was thought that Australia’s foreign minister, Julie Bishop, instructed her diplomats to disrupt the international gathering late on Friday afternoon by forcing a vote. While others then joined Australia to vote against the report, Australia was alone in forcing the vote to happen.

“Australia is resisting the tide of history. A majority of nations believe that nuclear weapons are unacceptable and must be prohibited. And now they are ready to negotiate a ban,” Wright said.

“Australia’s attempt to derail these important disarmament talks was shameful and outrageous. It provoked strong criticism from some of our nearest neighbours in Asia and the Pacific, who believe that the world should be rid of all weapons of mass destruction,” he said.

The acceptance of the report was seen as a major milestone by anti-nuclear campaigners.

“This is a significant moment in the seven*-decade*-long global struggle to rid the world of the worst weapons of mass destruction,” said Beatrice Fihn, executive director Ican. “The UN working group achieved a breakthrough today.”

“There can be no doubt that a majority of UN members intend to pursue negotiations next year on a treaty banning nuclear weapons,” said Fihn.

“We expect that, based on the recommendations of the working group, the UN general assembly will adopt a resolution this autumn to establish the mandate for negotiations on a ban on nuclear weapons in 2017.”

The Department of Foreign Affairs has been contacted for comment.
 

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http://nationalinterest.org/feature/egypt-cant-make-its-mind-about-irans-nuclear-program-17397

Egypt Can't Make Up Its Mind about Iran's Nuclear Program

Cairo’s stance has long been ambiguous.

Farhad Rezaei
August 18, 2016

In discussing the reaction to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, referred to by the Persian acronym Barjam, predicting the next move of key regional powers—notably Egypt—has been particularly difficult for proliferation scholars. As mentioned in my previous analysis, Israel and Saudi Arabia offered guarded acceptance of the deal, but reserved the right to reevaluate their decision should Iran fail to comply with the deal.

Israel has used an array of strategies to roll back Iran’s program, but it has not launched a preemptive attack on Iranian facilities because of intense divisions between the civilian and military leadership and a failure to secure American support. Saudi Arabia, a country that could have been expected to launch its own nuclear military program, according to the security model of proliferation, seems to have taken a low-key approach. The kingdom, under pressure from the United States, reluctantly accepted the JCPOA, but has worked on creating a hedging strategy should Iran abrogate the agreement.

Like Israel and Saudi Arabia, Egypt offered guarded acceptance, but reserved the right to reevaluate its decision should Iran fail to comply with the deal. Egypt has had a stormy relation with the Iranian regime. The two countries broke off diplomatic relations in 1979 and, despite several attempts at reconciliation, notably during the period of President Hosni Mubarak, they only resumed relations under President Mohamed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood in 2011. President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who replaced Morsi in 2014, has been much more critical. He has blamed Tehran for aiding the violent Muslim Brotherhood resistance and for helping to destabilize the Sinai Desert through the Iran-aligned Hamas forces in Gaza. Echoing Saudi grievances, Egyptian officials described Iran’s involvement in Yemen as not helpful.

Egypt’s attitude toward Tehran’s nuclear project has differed from that of Saudi Arabia and Israel in ways that make it complex and occasionally contradictory. Egypt’s ambivalence toward nuclear energy in general and nuclear weapons in particular goes a long way toward explaining this complexity. Gamal Abdel Nasser, who became president in 1954, was among the first Middle East leaders to consider nuclear power. He created the Egyptian Atomic Energy Commission in 1954, which is currently known as the Atomic Energy Authority, and negotiated a number of agreements with the Soviet Union, under which Egypt received the ETRR-1 two-megawatt light-water research reactor, located in Inshas.

After Israel unveiled the Dimona reactor in December 1961, Nasser stepped up its nuclear rhetoric. He announced that should Israel acquire nuclear weapons, “we would secure atomic weapons at any cost.” Indeed, Egypt tried to buy a heavy water–moderated reactor capable of producing plutonium, an alternative to the more arduous process of enriching uranium to weapon grade used in nuclear weapons. Reports at the time indicated that Nasser wanted the Soviet Union, China or India to supply Egypt with nuclear weapons. In line with his growing pan-Arabism, Nasser envisioned a pan-Arab nuclear force led by Egypt. The devastating loss in the Six-Day War in 1967, however, put Egypt’s nuclear ambition on pose.

Neither President Anwar Sadat nor Hosni Mubarak, who succeeded him in 1981, were nuclear enthusiasts. As a matter of fact, the Mubarak administration was even lukewarm toward civilian nuclear technology. After a number of failed attempts, following the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, negotiations to buy a nuclear reactor were terminated. Instead, in 1992 Egypt bought the ETRR-2 twenty-two-megawatt light-water reactor, which operates in the Nuclear Research Center in Inshas. According to the Nuclear Threat Initiative, Egypt experimented with uranium conversion and also the reprocessing of uranium and thorium. A storage facility in Inshas is said to contain three kilograms of uranium metal, some sixty-seven kilograms of imported uranium tetrafluoride, 9.4 kilograms of thorium compounds, one kilogram of uranium rods enriched to 10 percent, and very small quantities of domestically fabricated UF2, UF3 and UF4. Egypt imported most of the materials before joining the NPT, but failed to report them at the time. In addition, Egypt carried out experiments in nuclear reprocessing in a two-stage process. First, natural uranium was irradiated in its ETRR-1 and ETRR-2 research reactors. Second, the irradiated material was dissolved in nitric acid, which, as a rule, is used to recover plutonium-239. Nuclear reprocessing is controversial, because plutonium-239 is fissile and can be used to create an atomic bomb. Egypt denied that the process involved plutonium, but the IAEA cited Egypt for failing to declare the experiments in 2004.

Having decided that acquiring nuclear weapons was prohibitive for economic and political reasons, Egypt, which joined the NPT in 1980, decided to push for a Middle East Nuclear-Free Zone. Mubarak embraced this idea and made it the so-called WMD-Free Zone, the core of Egyptian nuclear policy. The subsequently renamed Middle East Nuclear Weapons–Free Zone (MENWFZ) movement became a major irritant in relations between Cairo and Jerusalem. Israel has not joined the NPT, and never acknowledged its arsenal. Known as ambiguity (amimut), this posture was a low-cost strategy to develop nuclear weapons without the censure of the international community. As a matter of fact, in the 1970s, the United States committed itself to shield Israel from pressure to join the NPT. But MENWFZ challenged this arrangement and the Egyptians pushed the United Nations to take up the initiative at the 1990 General Assembly meeting. During the 1995 NPT Review Conference, Egyptian representatives agreed to vote for the extension of the treaty in return for a promise to convene a separate meeting to discuss the Free Zone. Mohamed ElBaradei, the Egyptian diplomat who helmed the IAEA between 1997 and 2009, strongly encouraged this move. In his view, Western countries engaged in rank hypocrisy by turning a blind eye to Israel’s undeclared nuclear arsenal and its attack on the Syrian reactor in 2007, while harassing Iran. The nuclear chief was pleased with Egypt and other states in the Arab group that objected to the American drive to impose sanctions on Iran.

He also supported Egypt’s continued efforts to convene a special conference on a nuclear-free zone, which was backed by Tehran. During a high-profile visit to Washington in September 2006, former president Mohammad Khatami called for denuclearizing the Middle East. On September 17, 2009, Egypt and Iran scored a victory when the General Assembly of the IAEA passed a resolution calling on Israel to join the NPT and open its program for inspection. The companion resolution was a first-of-its-kind appeal for a Nuclear Weapons–Free Zone in the Middle East.

Egypt’s behavior was meant to constitute a point of misdirection—“the more Iran pursues nuclear capabilities, the more Cairo rails against Israel’s Bomb.” But for the Egyptians, the attack on the Syrian reactor in 2007 was conclusive proof of the double standards that ElBaradei had railed against. Al Ahram denounced “the synchronized silence of the Arab world” and castigated other countries for ignoring the attack on a sovereign country. Egypt registered its protest by voting against sanctions on Iran during the 2009 meeting of the IAEA Board of Governors.

As the leader of the 118-nation Non-Aligned Movement and the New Agenda Coalition—a group of eight influential countries, including Brazil and South Africa—Egypt has occupied a special position in shaping the nuclear agenda. Teaming up with Iran, it compelled the 2010 NPT Review conference to call for a special meeting in 2012 to discuss a regional WMD ban. Finland agreed to host the initiative, but, in November 2012, the United States intervened to postpone the gathering. America’s maneuvering outraged Egypt, where the MENWFZ has commanded substantial public support. According to a 2015 poll, 61 percent of the Egyptian public supported Iran’s right to nuclear weapons, even as 87 percent said Egypt should be developing its own arsenal. With 65 percent of the respondents lauding Morsi’s decision to reestablish diplomatic relations with Tehran, the poll also revealed Iran’s growing popularity in Egypt. After being declared in compliance of the NPT in January 2016, Iran has joined Egypt to push for a new conference, a stand that found support in the European Union and beyond.

Even as other major regional powers were signaling their opposition to the nuclear deal in the spring of 2015, the Egyptians renewed their push for a NWFZ, in conjunction with the debate about the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. During the May 2015 NPT Review Conference, Egypt urged a new deadline of March 2016 for a special MENWFZ conference, only to be vetoed by the United States. At the time, Tehran, which was anxious to see the JCPOA negotiations through, did not support Egypt. However, there are strong indications that Iran, which is said to be reinstated as a Non-Nuclear Weapons State within the NPT, would team up with Egypt to push for a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East. Mohammad Javad Zarif, the Iranian foreign minister, said as much in a Guardian op-ed entitled “Iran has signed a historic nuclear deal—now it’s Israel’s turn.” Ambassador Badr Abdel Ati, the spokesman for the Egyptian Foreign Ministry, stated: “We assess the agreement within the framework of Egyptian foreign policy’s general direction, which believes in a principal goal that is for the Middle East to be free of nuclear proliferation.”

Ironically, Egypt’s rapid demographic growth has renewed its interest in nuclear energy. Egypt has experienced periods of electricity shortages in recent years, because the Aswan Dam, which once supplied about half of the country’s electric output, now accounts for about 15 percent. In November 2015, Cairo signed an agreement with Russia for a nuclear power plant with four reactors of 1,200 megawatts each, to be located in El Dabaa on the Mediterranean coast. The complex is expected to go online in 2020 and is said to include a water desalination facility. President Sisi emphasized that the facility would be strictly peace-oriented, but some observers noted that it could hide a clandestine program should a decision to proliferate be made. In any event, the recent deal with Russia would make Egypt a regional leader in the field of nuclear technologies boasting a highly advanced generation-3+ plant. As a side benefit, the accord has cemented the growing closeness to Moscow, a premier supplier of nuclear technology and know-how.

Russia and the former Soviet Union also had a role in Egypt’s missile arsenal, which is headquartered in the Jabal Hamza facility. Egypt has a limited number of short-range ballistic missiles, based on Scud-B technology. There are uncorroborated reports that Egypt has some medium-range North Korean Nodong Scud B-100 models. With a range of up to five hundred kilometers, the missiles reflect the localized perception of threats. Egypt’s anti-ballistic defense system encompasses thirty-two American Patriot-3 missiles. As part of its 2014 deal with Russia, Egypt purchased the Bug 2 air-to-air missile and the Antey 2000 (S-300VM) anti-ballistic missile system.

The extent to which these developments could signal a hedging strategy is not clear. Egypt did not sign the Additional Protocol, and is free of other intrusive inspection regimes. But its past history and its leadership of the MENWFZ indicate a lack of interest in proliferation. In spite of its occasionally high-profile rhetoric, Egypt has never launched a sustained nuclear program, civilian or military. This behavior does not comport with the security model of proliferation, but may be explained by Sagan’s observation that some countries do not proliferate despite living in a “rough neighborhood.”

Rather than matching Israel’s arsenal, Egypt chose to engage in the MENWFZ movement, a decision that has colored its response to the JCPOA. The two countries are expected to join forces in launching another appeal to the General Assembly of the United Nations, where the nuclear-free zone idea has a large appeal.

Going beyond the issue of Iran, there has been an increase in concerns that the United States would be unwilling or incapable to guarantee its allies a protective nuclear umbrella. The presumptive Republican nominee for president has suggested that Japan and South Korea would need to fend for themselves. Fear of American abandonment may thus spur a new nuclear race in the Middle East and beyond.

Farhad Rezaei is research fellow at Middle East Institute, Sakarya University, Turkey. He is the author of the forthcoming Iran’s Nuclear Program 1979-2015: A Study in Nuclear Proliferation and Rollback (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016).
 

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https://www.lawfareblog.com/lone-wo...s-global-terrorism-recent-french-and-european

Terrorism

Lone-Wolf or Low-Tech Terrorism? Emergent Patterns of Global Terrorism in Recent French and European Attacks

By Corri Zoli
Wednesday, August 17, 2016, 11:54 AM

According to media reports, seven accomplices of Tunisian-borne French resident Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel—the man who drove a 20-ton truck into Bastille Day crowds in Nice—have been charged with aiding in “murder by a group with terror links” and violating weapons laws “in relation to terror groups.” The existence of such accomplices would seem to contradict initial news reports denying any link with terrorist organizations—a lack of connection that French authorities initially maintained, as well.

This disconnect between public narrative and fact pattern is prevalent in recent incidents, both in France and beyond. In a preceding incident, on June 13 in Magnanville, Larossi Abballa, a French citizen of Moroccan descent previously convicted in 2013 of criminal association to plan terrorist acts, used a knife to kill a police officer and his wife in front of their three-year-old child. While initial reports underscored the perpetrator’s solitary lone wolf status, less than a week later French prosecutors charged two other men—Charaf-Din Aberouz and Saad Rajraji, both convicted in 2013 of “being part of a French jihadist group”—for providing support to Abballa.

Accomplices—often discovered weeks after the media loses interest in a case—are not the only or best indicator of the durable links, ideological and material, that have animated a terrorist act. It is impossible to treat the 14,000+ terrorist attacks worldwide in the past year individually, but focusing on France, two January 2016 incidents involved similar suspects, tactics, and motives. First, a 29-year-old French national of Tunisian descent drove his car into soldiers protecting a mosque in Valence on January 1, and a Tunisian native, Tarek Belgacem, used a fake explosive vest and meat cleaver to attack police in the Goutte d’Or district on January 7, the one-year anniversary of the 2015 Charlie Hebdo killings. In both cases, news reports found the attackers “acting alone” with “no particular link to any movement.” Aside from the fake suicide vest, a symbolic weapon of contemporary irregular wars, Belgacem held more than 20 aliases from seven different countries, had migrated to the EU through Romania in 2011 by falsely posing as an asylum-seeker from Iraq or Syria, and lived at an asylum center in Recklinghausen, Germany. Both men, as per ISIS-dictated cliché, shouted a version of Allahu Akbar at imminent victims, amassed jihadi content on their electronic devices, and rationalized their acts by vague reference to global grievances against “Muslims” (excepting, of course, those they attacked).

Empirically-minded social scientists and legal scholars share an appreciation for “case facts,” a methodological impulse too often set aside in even expert commentary on recent attacks. In calling for “a better taxonomy of mass violence” after the Orlando shooting, Lawfare editor Benjamin Wittes made what should be a simple request: rather than seeking “confirmation” of one’s “particular worldviews” in ascribing motives in these “horrific” events—a “self-validating” exercise that affirms one’s “prior assumptions”—it is time to acknowledge these attacks both defy easy “categorization” and require us to put some effort into “reduc[ing] the story-telling and lesson-drawing impulse from all quarters in the description of these crimes” so as to “develop a more clinical, more Linnaean taxonomy for mass violence.”

In the spirit of that request for social scientific rigor, and with attention to “case facts,” this essay makes three data-driven suggestions to move past the lone-wolf terrorist concept, with implications for how we design better concepts for understanding and preventing contemporary terrorism in the future.


Category Confusion: Terrorism’s Strategic Embrace of Low-Tech Methods

First, it is time to do away with the confusing term “lone wolf” and instead recognize the distinct category of “low-tech terrorism.” This recognition is hovering on the edges of recent innovative analyses of “amateur terrorism” and the “lack of sophistication” of ISIS as a mark of its footprint in Europe. The term “lone wolf,” particularly when used in the public domain, misunderstands the fact that terrorism is at its core an act of strategic communication —a very loud message using the cheapest, often least sophisticated means and methods of attack: knives, homemade bombs, vehicles-as-weapons. This form of “low tech terrorism” combines weak organization with a strong message (i.e., public violence) as the defining feature of this form of political violence. This mismatch of message and organizational strength is one reason why strategic scholars categorize modern terrorism as a form of asymmetric warfare, in which the militarily weak can win wars, exert political influence, and exploit stronger adversaries’ vulnerabilities.

Creating terrorist messages is almost always a collaborative endeavor, and the current discussion often misses that lone-wolf actors are an exception, not the rule. Teamwork—even if not direct support, material or logistical—usually involves intensive ideological messaging, network building, and the leveraging of both. This work is increasingly done via online infrastructures and targeted recruitment strategies, as deradicalization professionals know. Terrorist acts can thus appear isolated, random, or even spontaneous, given the clandestine nature of these criminal activities—but that’s not because they actually are. The lone-wolf concept unfortunately feeds this myth.

As journalist Rukmini Callamachi shows in a recent essay, ISIS goes to great lengths to cover over its organizational links and its many specialized operational units—such as Emni, “dedicated to exporting terror abroad”— which contributes to ISIS’s strategic success in mounting since the June 2014 caliphate more than 140 attacks in more than 20 countries. Aside from encrypted communications, the German recruit whom Callamachi interviewed in prison “suggested that there may be more of a link than the authorities yet know,” as “undercover operatives” based in Europe often sit tight and instead use “new converts as go-betweens,” as these “clean men” (that is, not in European intelligence agency databases) “help link up people interested in carrying out attacks with [those] who can pass on instructions on everything from how to make a suicide vest to how to credit their violence to the Islamic State.”

Lone-wolf actors are often “clean men”—although they might still be committed, linked, or instructed by organizational operatives—because they are less likely to be tracked, especially in the West. The use of these individuals is operationally necessitated by countries with sophisticated intelligence and law enforcement sharing services. To adapt to this government capacity, ISIS targets and recruits those unknown to the system. For instance, French fighter Reda Hame, captured in France in three months before the August 2015 Paris attacks, told authorities that Paris attack planner Abdelhamid Abaaoud rushed to get him back into Europe to carry out an attack as his passport was due to expire, personally giving him “a crash course” in weapons training, telling him “getting weapons in France was not a problem,” and instructing him in choosing “an easy target, like a place where there are people,” such as “a rock concert in a European country.”

Consistent with this strategic logic is a third issue, best captured with the term “low-tech terrorism:” terrorists routinely transform everyday tools into low-tech weapons or attack vehicles—whether cars, trucks, scooters, or kitchen knives. Again, making everyday objects weapons and turning everyday places into settings for mass execution serves the core message-delivering function of terrorism, by heightening the horror of this violence, a tactic repeatedly pushed by ISIS operatives. This minimalist, “low tech” approach is seen not only in the tactical choice of weapons but also in all operational aspects of this form of political violence: building a movement by exploiting base, sectarian ethnic and religious differences; assembling seemingly unsophisticated, internationally dispersed cells and organizations; and relying on participants of convenience such as common criminals; the naïve, young, and alienated; and vulnerable people, including those with mental health issues.


Attention Must Be Paid: Linking Terrorism Case Facts

My second suggestion is for increased attention both to individual case facts as to how particular terrorist acts proceed, as well as a focus on the broader, global patterns of terrorism. Recent, case-specific data implies premeditation, organizational learning, and shared ideological commitments and contacts, which are all areas in which social scientists are increasingly working toward better research and understanding.

Recent attacks in France and elsewhere follow a highly conventional script in which operatives, no matter how plugged into a network they are, play a key role, not only in the attack itself, but in seizing the post-attack narrative. Actors announce rationales before, during, or after the violence—while the world is listening—by declaring group or leader allegiance, making martyr videos, or posting extremist content on social media. Each element in this genre of terrorist communiqué reveals group connectedness: organizational commitment for which one would die; awareness of a ready-made audience consuming such acts and expressing support, often in real time; solidarity statements over similar goals with others equally willing to die or kill for them; and willing participants who are not confused about the aims or means of an organization. This oft-repeated script is often disseminated verbatim by a breathless media and makes a farce of official statements of disconnected, solitary, and non-determined actors.

To make matters worse, authorities make absurd claims about everyday annoyances as key motivators for the lone-wolf actor—as if unrequited love or workplace aggravation are more pertinent factors causing terrorist-based mass murder than the global jihadist insurgency comprised of hundreds of competitor groups, the most savvy of which are keen to internationalize their message. By denying the obvious and implying that what is organized is actually random, these messages have the unintended effect of amplifying the terrorist message, thus undercutting public trust in security, a helpful outcome for terrorist groups aiming to destabilize strong states.

Beyond causing unintended policy consequences, the lone-wolf frame is also an empirical mistake because it rarely fits the fact patterns and does not reflect global trends. For instance, the terrorist dataset of record—the University of Maryland’s START Global Terrorist Data (GTD)—attests to increased jihadist attacks globally in the last decade plus, countless jihadist organizations practiced at using violence, and a broad range of attack vehicles and targets, much of which has implications for Europe. Actual instances of leaderless, self-starter, lone actor, or loosely connected terrorist actors—all terms to get around the limits of the lone-wolf concept—are an important part of terrorist and criminological inquiry and emergent data-collection efforts. Yet, on examination, those instances still turn on pathways to radicalization that involve groups, enablers, sympathizers, etc.

In the French context, the penchant for the lone-wolf narrative would seem anachronistic after the indisputably coordinated Paris attacks of Nov. 13, 2015, the worst mass-casualty terrorist attack in French history. In this case, three teams used trafficked guns, grenades, homemade IEDs, and suicide vests with identical detonators to attack eight Paris venues, killing 130 people and injuring 368 more. Given the attack’s multiple teams, scale, tactics, expertly-made explosives, leadership, and planning, much of it conducted inside Europe, one would think that traits of coordination, teamwork, committed operatives would shape subsequent attack narratives. And it no doubt heightened French consciousness as to their status as target and the severity of their homeland threat, with ripple effects across law enforcement agencies beyond the continent. All nine perpetrators were EU citizens of Arab heritage, most of whom travelled to Syria (among other conflict zones) and some of whom used refugee crowds to enhance their EU mobility, including Belgian-Moroccan attack leader Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who was missed at border checkpoints despite an international arrest warrant for terrorist-related charges.

While policymakers note the game-changing nature of the Paris attacks, France had been on high alert since the January 2015 Charlie Hebdo and Île-de-France attacks. In those linked attacks, French-Algerian brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi attacked Hebdo headquarters on January 7, killing 12 people and injuring 12 more, before escaping. Simultaneously, their close French-Malian friend Amedy Coulibaly synchronized three shootings in which he killed a jogger in Fontenay-aux-Roses on January 7, an unarmed police woman in Montrouge on January 8 (also severely injuring a street sweeper), and four patrons, after taking hostages, at the Jewish Hypercacher supermarket in Porte de Vincennes on January 9. After the Hebdo ambush, the brothers Kourachi, on January 9, stormed the printing offices of Creation Tendance Decouverte, taking one hostage during an eight-hour standoff with elite forces in which they were both killed. The attacks were inspired by different organizations—the Kouachi brothers received training in Yemen and were associated with Al-Awlaki and Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), while Coulibaly pledged bay’at to ISIS—but there are clear overlaps in the tactics, training, targets, and teamwork.

In the 10 months between the Hebdo attacks at the start of 2015 and the Paris attacks at year’s end, four additional high-visibility incidents occurred, as well as a spate of smaller or failed plots: the August 21 Thalys train attack and attempted mass shooting by Ayoub El Khazzan thwarted by US servicemembers; the June 26 Saint-Quentin-Fallavier beheading by Yassine Salhi who killed his employer, staked his severed head, covered it with a cloth of the Shahada, and used his van to ram gas cylinders to blow up the facility; the April 19 attack against two churches in Villejuif by Sid Ahmed Ghlam; and the February 3 stabbing by Moussa Coulibaly of three servicemembers guarding a Jewish community center in Nice.

Using the occurrence of seven fatalities or more as a data trend, this cluster of French attacks begins not with Charlie Hebdo but with the March 2012 Toulouse and Montauban attacks by French-Algerian petty criminal Mohammed Merah. Prior to that only two incidents in the 1980s and 1990s have similarly large fatalities. Merah consecutively killed (much like Coulibaly would later do) a paratrooper in Tolouse on March 11 and three paratroopers in Montauban on March 15, and then—on March 19, using a motor-scooter—he attacked Jewish schoolchildren at Ozar Hatorah, killing four civilians, including a rabbi and three children. Days later, on March 22, during a 36-hour siege at his apartment, Merah injured police using a wealth of trafficked firearms: three Colt 45s, an AK-47 assault rifle, an Uzi, a Sten, a Winchester 12-gauge pump-action shotgun, a 9mm Glock, and a Colt Python .357 Magnum revolver. In a country with restrictive gun laws, such a cache of weapons is a result of organized, illicit supply chains, something that again belies the familiar narrative of a single individual working alone.

Much is known about Merah’s criminal acts because he filmed them using a GoPro camera strapped to his body. The recording and desire to disseminate these attacks is a prime indicator of this actor’s alignment with the core communicative goal of terrorism and his commitment to a preexisting audience and community of supporters. Merah made a video of his crimes, setting murders to music and Quranic verses, and pitched it to the Al Jazeera news agency. However, in the aftermath of the attacks, news media and experts posited Merah as a solitary figure, disconnected from organized efforts, and even a victim of French immigration policies. Later developments from the investigation, less thoroughly covered in the media, found Merah had not worked alone. He made more than 1,800 calls to more than 180 contacts in 20 different countries, in addition to trips to the Middle East and Afghanistan. It appears he was a devotee of Al Qaeda, ISIS’s erstwhile competitor for extremist hearts and minds.

One of the most outspoken voices against Merah’s terrorist victory narrative turned out to be his older brother Abdelghani Merah, who wrote a book “to counter the hero-worship of Mohamed among some young French Muslims,” which he dedicated to the victims. In interviews, the elder brother recalls a climate of hate and anti-Semitism during their childhood, recording his sister praising her brother’s action in support of Bin Laden, and visiting his mother’s house for his brother’s wake only to find neighbors “congratulating” his mother: “Be proud. Your son brought France to its knees.” Worrying for his own son, whom he made sure had “a proper education” and a “good foundation” to “resist their doctrine,” Abdelghani was firm in responding that his brother was “no hero” but a “common assassin.”

Abdelghani anticipates an increasingly vocal and articulate group comprised of self-conscious community and religious reformers, dissidents, extremist defectors, among others, who are now beginning en masse to play a pivotal role in both resisting jihadist doctrine and in exposing tacit supporters (including those unwittingly educated into extremism) by challenging the terms of extremist debate and by raising sensitive issues from inside religious and ethnic communities. Figures such as Maajid Nawaz of the UK-based counter-extremist think tank Quilliam, among many others, are doing yeoman’s work in research, policy best practices, engaging hard-core extremists, and in educating confused members of the press, public, and government, who are often too quick to conflate Islam, Islamism, and jihadism, or recycle the lone-wolf narrative without realizing its costs, especially for young people coming into contact with jihadist extremist networks.


Toppling the Edifice: Targeting Terrorism’s Logistical Infrastructure

A third and final suggestion is to make ideological and material links the analytical bedrock for understanding and preventing future terrorism.

Terrorism is a regional and global problem, one built on a logistical infrastructure of ideas, resources, committed actors, and incentivized groups. In the case of the recent Nice attacks, three types of terrorist infrastructures were mobilized: (1) trafficked weapons involving crime networks and smuggling; (2) illicit money transfers involving organizations with a stake in the act and often deep pockets; and (3) online communications and social networks tied to Islamist ideology. In fact, the Bouhlel case highlights that contemporary terrorism relies not only on accomplices but on an increasingly multicultural and international infrastructure. This dual citizen of France and Tunisia used weapons from Albanian contacts; communicated his plans to a contact in Syria; sent images of his criminal conduct as well as money to connections in Tunisia; and scouted attack sites days before the attack, as per alleged instruction from Mideast operatives. He was known to law enforcement and likely to local communities, and both could have pushed back harder against Bouhlel, highlighting the fact that civic and civil society must do more to identify terrorist infrastructures and offer counternarratives to harmful ideas and unlawful practices. The same could be said for the recent Normandy attackers, Algerian-born Adel Kermiche and Abdel Malik Petitjean, who killed the elderly French priest Jaques Hamel, both were under law enforcement surveillance or supervision.

In order to identify such behavior at an early stage, it is essential to shift from unhelpful, media-friendly concepts to empirically based frameworks: to “low-tech” not “lone-wolf” terrorism; to case facts and fact patterns involved in individual and cross-case acts of terrorism; to the obvious symbols and conventions of message-driven forms of political violence; and to the ideological frameworks and logistics networks that fuel terrorist activities. We forget such organizational empirics at our peril.

Beyond giving us an accurate understanding, analysis based on case facts reduces the risk of unwittingly amplifying jihadist messages. Well-intentioned analysts—government officials, journalists, or law enforcement—occasionally find themselves serving precisely the strategic message-function for which many global terrorist organizations are designed. One example of this entanglement is the use of nebulous “Muslim grievances” to excuse or rationalize political violence, as if well-planned mass atrocities deliberately targeting noncombatants, the lion’s share of which afflict Muslim-majority states, are accidental. By falsely attributing terrorism to existing “grievances” instead of organizations, we are led to believe that individuals are committing acts of extreme violence largely on their own, without help from a global terrorist infrastructure. While the mechanisms of radicalization are complex, validating “grievance narratives” as an excuse for political violence has also crept into government explanations, again as if lack of employment, say, explains countless unspeakable atrocities deliberately committed against civilians worldwide.

The reality is that such grievance narratives are often supplied by terrorist ideologues who target western-based immigrant audiences for recruitment, especially those removed (by time, geography, or culture) from direct exposure to sectarian violence or structural (that is, legal) disenfranchisement. As social movement theorists like Quintan Wiktorowicz show, the heightening of real or perceived grievances is a pivotal first step in the radicalization process. Manufactured grievance narratives are designed to distort and direct individuals to groups with no capacity to remedy the grievance itself. And officials and experts in recent months have muddied the organizational waters by denying obvious terrorist links, obfuscating religio-political inspiration (no matter how fringe or iconoclastic), or piling a slew of speculative, ancillary motives on top of perpetrators’ expressed claims of terrorist organizational commitment.

The use of the flawed lone-wolf concept indulges such habits and it denies the collaborative, strategic logic of most acts of jihadist terrorism—thus adding to a climate of insecurity. Policy statements that refute terrorist actors’ own publically disseminated statements about their actions are especially caustic to public trust (as in the case of Orlando, Florida). Likewise, in describing organized low-tech tactics as lone-wolf incidents, authorities introduce a fear-inducing element of randomness and omnipresence into these events, with the idea that the normal frustrations of everyday modern life—workplace irritation, unemployment, unrequited love—are plausible vectors of extreme terrorist violence.

--

Corri Zoli is Director of Research and Assistant Research Professor of International Security at the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism, a joint graduate research institute shared between the College of Law and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. Zoli’s research focuses on contemporary problems of warfare from an interdisciplinary law and policy perspective; social science and data-driven approaches to changing patterns of global conflict; and the role of the laws of war or international humanitarian law in contemporary conflict dynamics. Zoli’s work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the Andrew Mellon Foundation, the U.S. State Department, and a Google Global Impact Award; and her research has appeared in Foreign Policy, Harvard National Security Journal, and the Fletcher Forum of World Affairs, among other venues.
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.lawfareblog.com/lone-wo...s-global-terrorism-recent-french-and-european

Terrorism

Lone-Wolf or Low-Tech Terrorism? Emergent Patterns of Global Terrorism in Recent French and European Attacks

By Corri Zoli
Wednesday, August 17, 2016, 11:54 AM

According to media reports, seven accomplices of Tunisian-borne French resident Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel—the man who drove a 20-ton truck into Bastille Day crowds in Nice—have been charged with aiding in “murder by a group with terror links” and violating weapons laws “in relation to terror groups.” The existence of such accomplices would seem to contradict initial news reports denying any link with terrorist organizations—a lack of connection that French authorities initially maintained, as well.

This disconnect between public narrative and fact pattern is prevalent in recent incidents, both in France and beyond. In a preceding incident, on June 13 in Magnanville, Larossi Abballa, a French citizen of Moroccan descent previously convicted in 2013 of criminal association to plan terrorist acts, used a knife to kill a police officer and his wife in front of their three-year-old child. While initial reports underscored the perpetrator’s solitary lone wolf status, less than a week later French prosecutors charged two other men—Charaf-Din Aberouz and Saad Rajraji, both convicted in 2013 of “being part of a French jihadist group”—for providing support to Abballa.

Accomplices—often discovered weeks after the media loses interest in a case—are not the only or best indicator of the durable links, ideological and material, that have animated a terrorist act. It is impossible to treat the 14,000+ terrorist attacks worldwide in the past year individually, but focusing on France, two January 2016 incidents involved similar suspects, tactics, and motives. First, a 29-year-old French national of Tunisian descent drove his car into soldiers protecting a mosque in Valence on January 1, and a Tunisian native, Tarek Belgacem, used a fake explosive vest and meat cleaver to attack police in the Goutte d’Or district on January 7, the one-year anniversary of the 2015 Charlie Hebdo killings. In both cases, news reports found the attackers “acting alone” with “no particular link to any movement.” Aside from the fake suicide vest, a symbolic weapon of contemporary irregular wars, Belgacem held more than 20 aliases from seven different countries, had migrated to the EU through Romania in 2011 by falsely posing as an asylum-seeker from Iraq or Syria, and lived at an asylum center in Recklinghausen, Germany. Both men, as per ISIS-dictated cliché, shouted a version of Allahu Akbar at imminent victims, amassed jihadi content on their electronic devices, and rationalized their acts by vague reference to global grievances against “Muslims” (excepting, of course, those they attacked).

Empirically-minded social scientists and legal scholars share an appreciation for “case facts,” a methodological impulse too often set aside in even expert commentary on recent attacks. In calling for “a better taxonomy of mass violence” after the Orlando shooting, Lawfare editor Benjamin Wittes made what should be a simple request: rather than seeking “confirmation” of one’s “particular worldviews” in ascribing motives in these “horrific” events—a “self-validating” exercise that affirms one’s “prior assumptions”—it is time to acknowledge these attacks both defy easy “categorization” and require us to put some effort into “reduc[ing] the story-telling and lesson-drawing impulse from all quarters in the description of these crimes” so as to “develop a more clinical, more Linnaean taxonomy for mass violence.”

In the spirit of that request for social scientific rigor, and with attention to “case facts,” this essay makes three data-driven suggestions to move past the lone-wolf terrorist concept, with implications for how we design better concepts for understanding and preventing contemporary terrorism in the future.


Category Confusion: Terrorism’s Strategic Embrace of Low-Tech Methods

First, it is time to do away with the confusing term “lone wolf” and instead recognize the distinct category of “low-tech terrorism.” This recognition is hovering on the edges of recent innovative analyses of “amateur terrorism” and the “lack of sophistication” of ISIS as a mark of its footprint in Europe. The term “lone wolf,” particularly when used in the public domain, misunderstands the fact that terrorism is at its core an act of strategic communication —a very loud message using the cheapest, often least sophisticated means and methods of attack: knives, homemade bombs, vehicles-as-weapons. This form of “low tech terrorism” combines weak organization with a strong message (i.e., public violence) as the defining feature of this form of political violence. This mismatch of message and organizational strength is one reason why strategic scholars categorize modern terrorism as a form of asymmetric warfare, in which the militarily weak can win wars, exert political influence, and exploit stronger adversaries’ vulnerabilities.

Creating terrorist messages is almost always a collaborative endeavor, and the current discussion often misses that lone-wolf actors are an exception, not the rule. Teamwork—even if not direct support, material or logistical—usually involves intensive ideological messaging, network building, and the leveraging of both. This work is increasingly done via online infrastructures and targeted recruitment strategies, as deradicalization professionals know. Terrorist acts can thus appear isolated, random, or even spontaneous, given the clandestine nature of these criminal activities—but that’s not because they actually are. The lone-wolf concept unfortunately feeds this myth.

As journalist Rukmini Callamachi shows in a recent essay, ISIS goes to great lengths to cover over its organizational links and its many specialized operational units—such as Emni, “dedicated to exporting terror abroad”— which contributes to ISIS’s strategic success in mounting since the June 2014 caliphate more than 140 attacks in more than 20 countries. Aside from encrypted communications, the German recruit whom Callamachi interviewed in prison “suggested that there may be more of a link than the authorities yet know,” as “undercover operatives” based in Europe often sit tight and instead use “new converts as go-betweens,” as these “clean men” (that is, not in European intelligence agency databases) “help link up people interested in carrying out attacks with [those] who can pass on instructions on everything from how to make a suicide vest to how to credit their violence to the Islamic State.”

Lone-wolf actors are often “clean men”—although they might still be committed, linked, or instructed by organizational operatives—because they are less likely to be tracked, especially in the West. The use of these individuals is operationally necessitated by countries with sophisticated intelligence and law enforcement sharing services. To adapt to this government capacity, ISIS targets and recruits those unknown to the system. For instance, French fighter Reda Hame, captured in France in three months before the August 2015 Paris attacks, told authorities that Paris attack planner Abdelhamid Abaaoud rushed to get him back into Europe to carry out an attack as his passport was due to expire, personally giving him “a crash course” in weapons training, telling him “getting weapons in France was not a problem,” and instructing him in choosing “an easy target, like a place where there are people,” such as “a rock concert in a European country.”

Consistent with this strategic logic is a third issue, best captured with the term “low-tech terrorism:” terrorists routinely transform everyday tools into low-tech weapons or attack vehicles—whether cars, trucks, scooters, or kitchen knives. Again, making everyday objects weapons and turning everyday places into settings for mass execution serves the core message-delivering function of terrorism, by heightening the horror of this violence, a tactic repeatedly pushed by ISIS operatives. This minimalist, “low tech” approach is seen not only in the tactical choice of weapons but also in all operational aspects of this form of political violence: building a movement by exploiting base, sectarian ethnic and religious differences; assembling seemingly unsophisticated, internationally dispersed cells and organizations; and relying on participants of convenience such as common criminals; the naïve, young, and alienated; and vulnerable people, including those with mental health issues.


Attention Must Be Paid: Linking Terrorism Case Facts

My second suggestion is for increased attention both to individual case facts as to how particular terrorist acts proceed, as well as a focus on the broader, global patterns of terrorism. Recent, case-specific data implies premeditation, organizational learning, and shared ideological commitments and contacts, which are all areas in which social scientists are increasingly working toward better research and understanding.

Recent attacks in France and elsewhere follow a highly conventional script in which operatives, no matter how plugged into a network they are, play a key role, not only in the attack itself, but in seizing the post-attack narrative. Actors announce rationales before, during, or after the violence—while the world is listening—by declaring group or leader allegiance, making martyr videos, or posting extremist content on social media. Each element in this genre of terrorist communiqué reveals group connectedness: organizational commitment for which one would die; awareness of a ready-made audience consuming such acts and expressing support, often in real time; solidarity statements over similar goals with others equally willing to die or kill for them; and willing participants who are not confused about the aims or means of an organization. This oft-repeated script is often disseminated verbatim by a breathless media and makes a farce of official statements of disconnected, solitary, and non-determined actors.

To make matters worse, authorities make absurd claims about everyday annoyances as key motivators for the lone-wolf actor—as if unrequited love or workplace aggravation are more pertinent factors causing terrorist-based mass murder than the global jihadist insurgency comprised of hundreds of competitor groups, the most savvy of which are keen to internationalize their message. By denying the obvious and implying that what is organized is actually random, these messages have the unintended effect of amplifying the terrorist message, thus undercutting public trust in security, a helpful outcome for terrorist groups aiming to destabilize strong states.

Beyond causing unintended policy consequences, the lone-wolf frame is also an empirical mistake because it rarely fits the fact patterns and does not reflect global trends. For instance, the terrorist dataset of record—the University of Maryland’s START Global Terrorist Data (GTD)—attests to increased jihadist attacks globally in the last decade plus, countless jihadist organizations practiced at using violence, and a broad range of attack vehicles and targets, much of which has implications for Europe. Actual instances of leaderless, self-starter, lone actor, or loosely connected terrorist actors—all terms to get around the limits of the lone-wolf concept—are an important part of terrorist and criminological inquiry and emergent data-collection efforts. Yet, on examination, those instances still turn on pathways to radicalization that involve groups, enablers, sympathizers, etc.

In the French context, the penchant for the lone-wolf narrative would seem anachronistic after the indisputably coordinated Paris attacks of Nov. 13, 2015, the worst mass-casualty terrorist attack in French history. In this case, three teams used trafficked guns, grenades, homemade IEDs, and suicide vests with identical detonators to attack eight Paris venues, killing 130 people and injuring 368 more. Given the attack’s multiple teams, scale, tactics, expertly-made explosives, leadership, and planning, much of it conducted inside Europe, one would think that traits of coordination, teamwork, committed operatives would shape subsequent attack narratives. And it no doubt heightened French consciousness as to their status as target and the severity of their homeland threat, with ripple effects across law enforcement agencies beyond the continent. All nine perpetrators were EU citizens of Arab heritage, most of whom travelled to Syria (among other conflict zones) and some of whom used refugee crowds to enhance their EU mobility, including Belgian-Moroccan attack leader Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who was missed at border checkpoints despite an international arrest warrant for terrorist-related charges.

While policymakers note the game-changing nature of the Paris attacks, France had been on high alert since the January 2015 Charlie Hebdo and Île-de-France attacks. In those linked attacks, French-Algerian brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi attacked Hebdo headquarters on January 7, killing 12 people and injuring 12 more, before escaping. Simultaneously, their close French-Malian friend Amedy Coulibaly synchronized three shootings in which he killed a jogger in Fontenay-aux-Roses on January 7, an unarmed police woman in Montrouge on January 8 (also severely injuring a street sweeper), and four patrons, after taking hostages, at the Jewish Hypercacher supermarket in Porte de Vincennes on January 9. After the Hebdo ambush, the brothers Kourachi, on January 9, stormed the printing offices of Creation Tendance Decouverte, taking one hostage during an eight-hour standoff with elite forces in which they were both killed. The attacks were inspired by different organizations—the Kouachi brothers received training in Yemen and were associated with Al-Awlaki and Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), while Coulibaly pledged bay’at to ISIS—but there are clear overlaps in the tactics, training, targets, and teamwork.

In the 10 months between the Hebdo attacks at the start of 2015 and the Paris attacks at year’s end, four additional high-visibility incidents occurred, as well as a spate of smaller or failed plots: the August 21 Thalys train attack and attempted mass shooting by Ayoub El Khazzan thwarted by US servicemembers; the June 26 Saint-Quentin-Fallavier beheading by Yassine Salhi who killed his employer, staked his severed head, covered it with a cloth of the Shahada, and used his van to ram gas cylinders to blow up the facility; the April 19 attack against two churches in Villejuif by Sid Ahmed Ghlam; and the February 3 stabbing by Moussa Coulibaly of three servicemembers guarding a Jewish community center in Nice.

Using the occurrence of seven fatalities or more as a data trend, this cluster of French attacks begins not with Charlie Hebdo but with the March 2012 Toulouse and Montauban attacks by French-Algerian petty criminal Mohammed Merah. Prior to that only two incidents in the 1980s and 1990s have similarly large fatalities. Merah consecutively killed (much like Coulibaly would later do) a paratrooper in Tolouse on March 11 and three paratroopers in Montauban on March 15, and then—on March 19, using a motor-scooter—he attacked Jewish schoolchildren at Ozar Hatorah, killing four civilians, including a rabbi and three children. Days later, on March 22, during a 36-hour siege at his apartment, Merah injured police using a wealth of trafficked firearms: three Colt 45s, an AK-47 assault rifle, an Uzi, a Sten, a Winchester 12-gauge pump-action shotgun, a 9mm Glock, and a Colt Python .357 Magnum revolver. In a country with restrictive gun laws, such a cache of weapons is a result of organized, illicit supply chains, something that again belies the familiar narrative of a single individual working alone.

Much is known about Merah’s criminal acts because he filmed them using a GoPro camera strapped to his body. The recording and desire to disseminate these attacks is a prime indicator of this actor’s alignment with the core communicative goal of terrorism and his commitment to a preexisting audience and community of supporters. Merah made a video of his crimes, setting murders to music and Quranic verses, and pitched it to the Al Jazeera news agency. However, in the aftermath of the attacks, news media and experts posited Merah as a solitary figure, disconnected from organized efforts, and even a victim of French immigration policies. Later developments from the investigation, less thoroughly covered in the media, found Merah had not worked alone. He made more than 1,800 calls to more than 180 contacts in 20 different countries, in addition to trips to the Middle East and Afghanistan. It appears he was a devotee of Al Qaeda, ISIS’s erstwhile competitor for extremist hearts and minds.

One of the most outspoken voices against Merah’s terrorist victory narrative turned out to be his older brother Abdelghani Merah, who wrote a book “to counter the hero-worship of Mohamed among some young French Muslims,” which he dedicated to the victims. In interviews, the elder brother recalls a climate of hate and anti-Semitism during their childhood, recording his sister praising her brother’s action in support of Bin Laden, and visiting his mother’s house for his brother’s wake only to find neighbors “congratulating” his mother: “Be proud. Your son brought France to its knees.” Worrying for his own son, whom he made sure had “a proper education” and a “good foundation” to “resist their doctrine,” Abdelghani was firm in responding that his brother was “no hero” but a “common assassin.”

Abdelghani anticipates an increasingly vocal and articulate group comprised of self-conscious community and religious reformers, dissidents, extremist defectors, among others, who are now beginning en masse to play a pivotal role in both resisting jihadist doctrine and in exposing tacit supporters (including those unwittingly educated into extremism) by challenging the terms of extremist debate and by raising sensitive issues from inside religious and ethnic communities. Figures such as Maajid Nawaz of the UK-based counter-extremist think tank Quilliam, among many others, are doing yeoman’s work in research, policy best practices, engaging hard-core extremists, and in educating confused members of the press, public, and government, who are often too quick to conflate Islam, Islamism, and jihadism, or recycle the lone-wolf narrative without realizing its costs, especially for young people coming into contact with jihadist extremist networks.


Toppling the Edifice: Targeting Terrorism’s Logistical Infrastructure

A third and final suggestion is to make ideological and material links the analytical bedrock for understanding and preventing future terrorism.

Terrorism is a regional and global problem, one built on a logistical infrastructure of ideas, resources, committed actors, and incentivized groups. In the case of the recent Nice attacks, three types of terrorist infrastructures were mobilized: (1) trafficked weapons involving crime networks and smuggling; (2) illicit money transfers involving organizations with a stake in the act and often deep pockets; and (3) online communications and social networks tied to Islamist ideology. In fact, the Bouhlel case highlights that contemporary terrorism relies not only on accomplices but on an increasingly multicultural and international infrastructure. This dual citizen of France and Tunisia used weapons from Albanian contacts; communicated his plans to a contact in Syria; sent images of his criminal conduct as well as money to connections in Tunisia; and scouted attack sites days before the attack, as per alleged instruction from Mideast operatives. He was known to law enforcement and likely to local communities, and both could have pushed back harder against Bouhlel, highlighting the fact that civic and civil society must do more to identify terrorist infrastructures and offer counternarratives to harmful ideas and unlawful practices. The same could be said for the recent Normandy attackers, Algerian-born Adel Kermiche and Abdel Malik Petitjean, who killed the elderly French priest Jaques Hamel, both were under law enforcement surveillance or supervision.

In order to identify such behavior at an early stage, it is essential to shift from unhelpful, media-friendly concepts to empirically based frameworks: to “low-tech” not “lone-wolf” terrorism; to case facts and fact patterns involved in individual and cross-case acts of terrorism; to the obvious symbols and conventions of message-driven forms of political violence; and to the ideological frameworks and logistics networks that fuel terrorist activities. We forget such organizational empirics at our peril.

Beyond giving us an accurate understanding, analysis based on case facts reduces the risk of unwittingly amplifying jihadist messages. Well-intentioned analysts—government officials, journalists, or law enforcement—occasionally find themselves serving precisely the strategic message-function for which many global terrorist organizations are designed. One example of this entanglement is the use of nebulous “Muslim grievances” to excuse or rationalize political violence, as if well-planned mass atrocities deliberately targeting noncombatants, the lion’s share of which afflict Muslim-majority states, are accidental. By falsely attributing terrorism to existing “grievances” instead of organizations, we are led to believe that individuals are committing acts of extreme violence largely on their own, without help from a global terrorist infrastructure. While the mechanisms of radicalization are complex, validating “grievance narratives” as an excuse for political violence has also crept into government explanations, again as if lack of employment, say, explains countless unspeakable atrocities deliberately committed against civilians worldwide.

The reality is that such grievance narratives are often supplied by terrorist ideologues who target western-based immigrant audiences for recruitment, especially those removed (by time, geography, or culture) from direct exposure to sectarian violence or structural (that is, legal) disenfranchisement. As social movement theorists like Quintan Wiktorowicz show, the heightening of real or perceived grievances is a pivotal first step in the radicalization process. Manufactured grievance narratives are designed to distort and direct individuals to groups with no capacity to remedy the grievance itself. And officials and experts in recent months have muddied the organizational waters by denying obvious terrorist links, obfuscating religio-political inspiration (no matter how fringe or iconoclastic), or piling a slew of speculative, ancillary motives on top of perpetrators’ expressed claims of terrorist organizational commitment.

The use of the flawed lone-wolf concept indulges such habits and it denies the collaborative, strategic logic of most acts of jihadist terrorism—thus adding to a climate of insecurity. Policy statements that refute terrorist actors’ own publically disseminated statements about their actions are especially caustic to public trust (as in the case of Orlando, Florida). Likewise, in describing organized low-tech tactics as lone-wolf incidents, authorities introduce a fear-inducing element of randomness and omnipresence into these events, with the idea that the normal frustrations of everyday modern life—workplace irritation, unemployment, unrequited love—are plausible vectors of extreme terrorist violence.

--

Corri Zoli is Director of Research and Assistant Research Professor of International Security at the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism, a joint graduate research institute shared between the College of Law and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. Zoli’s research focuses on contemporary problems of warfare from an interdisciplinary law and policy perspective; social science and data-driven approaches to changing patterns of global conflict; and the role of the laws of war or international humanitarian law in contemporary conflict dynamics. Zoli’s work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the Andrew Mellon Foundation, the U.S. State Department, and a Google Global Impact Award; and her research has appeared in Foreign Policy, Harvard National Security Journal, and the Fletcher Forum of World Affairs, among other venues.

The brewing situation between the United States and Russia have opened the door for the reestablishment of relations between Moscow and Ankara including increased defense and strategic cooperation in Syria.
"It just remains to come to an agreement with Erdogan that we get the NATO base Incirlik as [our] primary airbase," Senator Igor Morozov, a member of the upper house’s committee on international affairs said reports the British newspaper The Times. He explained that the development would enable the Russian air force to engage in "constant bombing" of Daesh and other jihadist groups to bring the conflict to a resolution faster.
"You’ll see, the next base will be Incirlik," he told Izvestia after the Kremlin revealed this week that its bombers had started flying out of Iran to launch attack on Syria. "

http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201608...shortening

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IMHO, the next three months are going to be historic......
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
https://www.rt.com/news/356626-russia-turkey-incirlik-airbase/


Russia could use Incirlik airbase ‘if necessary’ – Turkish PM
Published time: 21 Aug, 2016 03:39Edited time: 21 Aug, 2016 05:22
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A military aircraft is pictured on the runway at Incirlik Air Base, in the outskirts of the city of Adana, southeastern Turkey. © AFP
A military aircraft is pictured on the runway at Incirlik Air Base, in the outskirts of the city of Adana, southeastern Turkey. © AFP
Ankara wouldn’t mind it if Russia used the Incirlik airbase for its anti-terror missions against Islamic State terrorists in Syria, Turkey’s Prime Minister Binali Yildirim hinted on Saturday, but acknowledged that no such requests have been made.
TrendsIslamic State, Syria unrest, Syria-Turkey

“Turkey opened Incirlik airbase to fight Daesh [Islamic State, formerly ISIS/ISIL] terrorists. It is being used by the US and Qatar. Other nations might also wish to use the airbase, which the Germans are also now using,” Yildirim told reporters on Saturday, as quoted by Anadolu news.
Read more
© Benoit Doppagne Turkey considering military ties with Russia as NATO shows unwillingness to cooperate – Ankara

“If necessary, the Incirlik base can be used,” the PM said when asked if Moscow could share the airfield as well. At the same time, he firmly denied recent media reports claiming that Moscow has been pressuring Turkey to lease Incirlik to the Russian air force, saying “this information is not correct.”

Amid unsubstantiated reports that Washington might be moving its nuclear arsenal out of Turkey and into Romania, which Bucharest has already denied, Izvestia Daily fueled the rumors by reporting that Russia might soon move into the Turkish base.

Given the recent rapprochement between Moscow and Ankara, the Russian publication cited upper house member Igor Morozov as saying that “it just remains to come to an agreement with Erdogan that we get the NATO base at Incirlik as [our] primary airbase.” According to the MP, Incirlik would give Moscow a strategic advantage and provide for a swifter conclusion to Russia’s anti-terrorist operation in Syria.

Meanwhile, Yildirim expressed doubt that Moscow would actually need to use the Turkish airbase, pointing out that Russia’s forces already have two local airbases from which to launch missions in Syria, and that being 100-150 kilometers closer to their targets would not provide any strategic advantage.

READ MORE: Iran commits Hamadan airbase to Russia for ‘as long as needed’

Most of Russia’s warplanes that carry out airstrikes on terrorists are based at the Khmeimim base in Syria and, since recently, Iran’s Hamadan base. The country’s Aerospace Forces also use airbases in Russia for long range strategic missions. Russia launched its anti-terrorist air campaign in Syria on September 30, 2015, at the request of Syrian President Assad.

However, if Moscow does indeed ask permission to use the Incirlik airbase, it would most likely tip the balance of Turkey’s defense strategy away from NATO, of which it has been a key member for decades.

“It seems to us that NATO members behave in an evasive fashion on issues such as the exchange of technology and joint investments. Turkey intends to develop its own defense industry and strengthens its defense system,” Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told Sputnik earlier this week.

“In this sense, if Russia were to express interest, we are ready to consider the possibility of cooperation in this sector,” the FM added.

US nukes in Turkey vulnerable to ‘terrorists & other hostile forces’ – think tank https://t.co/OGJH1pV57p
— RT (@RT_com) August 15, 2016

Closer military cooperation between Ankara and Moscow was made possible after Turkish President Recep Tayip Ergodan met with “his friend,” Russian President Vladimir Putin, earlier this month. The meeting provided an opportunity for the leaders to improve bilateral relations between the two countries that hit rock bottom last November when Turkey’s Air Force shot down a Russian military jet over Syria.

READ MORE: 1,000s Turkish forces surround NATO’s Incirlik air base for ‘inspection’ amid rumors of coup attempt

Ankara’s apology and change of heart was likely prompted by the seemingly lukewarm support for the current Turkish president and government expressed by the US and its allies in the aftermath of a failed coup attempt last month.
Read more
Russian President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan © Sergei Karpukhin Putin: Russia ‘sincerely seeking’ to restore relations with Turkey

Fearing for the safety of the US’ nuclear arsenal in Turkey, a Washington DC-based think tank released a report on Monday urging American lawmakers to remove US nukes from the region.

Turning up the heat on Tuesday, EurActiv claimed that US forces have already begun to move their nuclear weapons from the Incirlik base in Turkey to the Deveselu base in Romania – a report that the Romanian Foreign Ministry has officially denied.

READ MORE: US nukes ‘safe and secure’ in Turkey, says Air Force chief

As Washington remains silent on the issue, Foreign Policy published an article entitled “No, the US Is Not Moving Its Nukes From Turkey to Romania” citing nuclear weapons expert Jeffrey Lewis, who pointed out that relocating the deadly arsenal is not possible, as Romania lacks the required infrastructure to provide safe storage for the bombs...........THIS IS NEWS TO ME....hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

Under NATO’s nuclear-sharing agreement reached during the Cold War in the 1960s, in order to deter a perceived threat from the Soviet Union, some NATO allies were authorized to store the B61 nuclear gravity bombs on their territories, while others committed to maintaining aircraft capable of delivering them. Open source estimates suggest that approximately 150-200 US “non-strategic nuclear weapons” are deployed in NATO countries including Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Turkey.
 

TammyinWI

Talk is cheap
Top US commander warns Russia, Syria (*fair use cited)


(CNN) — In the most direct public warning to Moscow and Damascus to date, the new US commander of American troops in Iraq and Syria is vowing to defend US special operations forces in northern Syria if regime warplanes and artillery again attack in areas where troops are located.

"We've informed the Russians where we're at ... (they) tell us they've informed the Syrians, and I'd just say that we will defend ourselves if we feel threatened," Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend told CNN in a telephone interview Saturday from his Baghdad headquarters.

Townsend is the first senior military commander to speak on the record about the US possibly challenging the Syrian Air Force in the wake of an incident just days ago.

Townsend, who took command this week, made the remarks following what defense officials described as an "unusual" incident Thursday in northern Syria in which the regime of President Bashar al-Assad used warplanes to attack an area near where US special operations forces were operating in support of Kurdish forces, which are the Americans' key ally in the conflict.

Several US troops had to be quickly moved, and US jet patrols over northern Syria have been beefed up.

RELATED: Aerial close encounter between US, Syrian fighter jets

Townsend also said in the interview that he plans to keep up the pressure on ISIS and laid out an ambitious military goal: He told CNN he hopes the US-led coalition can "defeat ISIL in Iraq and Syria in this next year."

Townsend emphasized he is aware that may be ambitious, but he added, "That's my goal. I am intent to do that."

When asked how he would define the defeat of ISIS, the general said it would be when the so-called caliphate no longer exists and does not control significant population centers.

"Do I think ISIL will be gone from Iraq and Syria?" he asked, using another acronym for ISIS. "No. But I want them out of the cities."

Townsend was blunt in discussing the senior leaders of ISIS.

"I want them dead or on the run in a hole somewhere in the desert, and significantly less of a threat," he said.

Meanwhile, ISIS is still planning global attacks, Townsend said, adding that the group's leader, Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, remains in charge and continues to issue orders that are communicated and followed.

Baghdadi and other ISIS leaders are being "actively hunted," Townsend said.

The US has long believed senior leaders are in and around the city of Raqqa in Syria, the ISIS-proclaimed capital of its caliphate. Townsend said local Arab and Kurdish fighters, trained by the US, could start moving into areas outside Raqqa in coming weeks.

(Picture & video at link)

http://www.cnn.com/2016/08/21/politics/us-warns-syria-russia-on-attacks/index.html
 

WisconsinGardener

Loony Member
I didn't read every word of this thread, so perhaps this has been mentioned already. Yesterday, on "Prophecy Today", they talked about two developments that they considered huge. The first was the U.S. counting of 100,000 Iranian or Iranian-backed troops in Iraq. It was their opinion that this was staging - that Iran is on the move.

Here's a link for that: US officials: Up to 100,000 Iran-backed fighters now in Iraq, http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...-100000-iran-backed-fighters-now-in-iraq.html

Here is a snip from the Fox News article
As many as 100,000 Iranian-backed Shiite militia are now fighting on the ground in Iraq, according to U.S. military officials -- raising concerns that should the Islamic State be defeated, it may only be replaced by another anti-American force that fuels further sectarian violence in the region.

The ranks have swelled inside a network of Shiite militias known as the Popular Mobilization Forces. Since the rise of Sunni-dominated ISIS fighters inside Iraq more than two years ago, the Shiite forces have grown to 100,000 fighters, Col. Chris Garver, a Baghdad-based U.S. military spokesman, confirmed in an email to Fox News. The fighters are mostly Iraqis.

Garver said not all the Shia militias in Iraq are backed by Iran, adding: “The [Iranian-backed] Shia militia are usually identified at around 80,000.”

According to some experts, this still is an alarmingly high number.
The second thing they talked about was heavy Russian bombers in Iran. Apparently, they are using a base in Iran to bomb in Syria. However, it was the opinion of the speakers that this ,too, might be staging for something more.

Here is a link for that: Military first for Iran as Russian bombers based on its territory launch air strikes on Syria http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/08/16/russian-bombers-launch-syria-strikes-from-iran/

Snip from the article:
Russian bombers began flying missions over Syria from an Iranian airbase on Tuesday, the first time the Islamic republic has allowed a foreign power to conduct military operations from its territory since the 1979 revolution.

Tu-22М3 long range bombers and SU-34 strike fighters flying from Hamadan airbase in Western Iran struck targets near Aleppo, Deir Ezzor and Idlib on Tuesday morning, the Russian ministry of defence said in a statement.

“Flying with full bomb loads from Iran’s Hamadan airbase, the aircraft carried out group attacks on Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra positions,” the ministry said. Jabhat al-Nusra is the former name of Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, a powerful rebel jihadist group previously affiliated with al-Qaeda.
 

Housecarl

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Started by China Connection‎, Yesterday 06:10 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...i-Jinping-Is-Eyeing-a-Return-to-Supreme-Power


-----

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realclearworld.com/artic..._that_may_haunt_the_obama_administration.html

The Syria "What If" That May Haunt Obama
By W. Robert Pearson
August 21, 2016

W. Robert Pearson is a former U.S. ambassador to Turkey and is currently a non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute. This piece has been published in collaboration with the Institute. The views expressed are solely those of the author.

On Aug. 21, 2013, the Syrian government murdered more than 1,400 innocent Syrians in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta -- including several hundred children -- in a nerve gas attack. What if the United States had decisively dealt with the Assad government after its chemical weapons attack? It certainly would have been a defining moment for every major participant -- Syria, Russia, Turkey, and the United States. That deadly attack and its aftermath may have profoundly affected U.S.-Turkey relations and the fate of the besieged Syrian city of Aleppo.

Rewind one year, to August 2012, and recall that it was President Barack Obama who said "We have been very clear to the Assad regime, but also to other players on the ground, that a red line for us is we start seeing a whole bunch of chemical weapons moving around or being utilized. That would change my calculus. That would change my equation.”


Syrian warplanes were nonetheless back in the air three weeks after the nerve gas attack. Facing opposition in Congress over an airstrike and some hesitation among its allies, the United States had welcomed a Russian proposal to negotiate the destruction of Syria’s chemical arsenal. Syria’s regime had escaped unscathed, and Russia had seized the diplomatic momentum on the Syrian issue.

It is difficult to gainsay President Obama’s decision. He had inherited two wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that he was trying to end. A third military campaign in Libya had seemingly ended in October 2011 with the capture and killing of former leader Moammar Gadhafi, only to be marred by postwar instability and the 2012 murder in Benghazi of Ambassador Chris Stevens. Since 2006, Washington and its P5+1 partners had been negotiating on a nuclear weapons agreement with Iran, and the president wanted that process to continue. Even so, Israel and some members of Congress seemed to prefer a new war with the Islamic Republic of Iran. That would be three wars fought and two more contemplated for the United States in the Middle East within a single decade.The first two alone had cost Americans up to an estimated $6 trillion, approximately one-third of the country’s annual GNP. The United States was in the midst of its worst economic downturn in 80 years and was facing a long, slow recovery. Finally, and importantly, most Americans were in no mood for another war. By a strict calculation of the pros and cons, the answer looked clear -- stay out of it.

However, Obama could have grounded the Syrian air force through pinpoint targeting, including by cratering runways, without large loss of life or collateral damage. The president could have shown that he understood very well the unique and moral role of the United States in international affairs. Against such American leadership, Syria could not have carried on its relentless air campaign, and Russia when deciding on its options would have been faced with a pre-emptive American move. U.S. policymakers could have then invited Russia to join Washington in seeking an end to the war, thereby maintaining a position of strength sufficient to convert the Syrian strike into an international effort to reach a settlement.

What actually followed is well-documented history. Seeing Washington’s strategic pause, within seven months of August 2013 Russia moved in March 2014 to occupy Crimea and then eastern Ukraine. Russia then entered the Syrian civil war militarily in September 2015, reversing the course of the conflict. Two months later, the downing of a Russian fighter jet by Turkey precipitated a war of words between Moscow and Ankara and significant economic loss for Turkey. Russia has now begun the process of resetting its relationship with Turkey, with the possible strategy of doling out economic favors to Ankara in exchange for more closely aligned views on Syria and on NATO’s role in the eastern reach of the alliance.

Turkey was deeply disappointed and frustrated by the American decision of August 2013. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had even called for a full intervention -- a Kosovo-style operation -- to rid Syria of Assad. For Turkey, August 2013 marked the beginning of the end for its stated goals in Syria:

- By the end of 2013, the refugee flow from Syria to Turkey was nearing 1 million, and some already were fleeing to Europe. Today there are 2.7 million refugees in Turkey, the equivalent of 8 to 10 million refugees in the United States.
- Ankara’s determined push for a no-fly zone to be enforced by the U.S. came to naught.
- In 2014, rumors surfaced of large movements of ISIS fighters travelling to Syria via Turkey. ISIS began capturing towns in Syria in late 2013 and seized Raqqa in January 2014.
- Two costly efforts by the United States to train moderate opposition fighters collapsed in complete embarrassment.
- Washington turned to the Kurds in 2014, who rapidly became America’s best allies in the country, infuriating Turkey.
- The United States, concluding that the Turks were entrenched in unattainable war aims, deepened their talks with Moscow, implying the likely survival of Assad for any postwar regime.

The seeming slowness of the United States in condemning the July 15 coup attempt in Turkey, coupled with rhetorical American missteps that implied to Ankara that Washington was more worried about Turkish generals than Turkish democracy may have helped confirm Turkish doubts about the overall U.S. concern about Ankara’s dilemmas. With the chance to simultaneously pressure America on Turkey’s extradition request for U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen and on military cooperation in Syria, as well as recoup sharp economic losses, Mr. Erdogan leaped at the opportunity to show up in St. Petersburg on Aug. 9.

Needless to say, Moscow will be interested in what Turkey is willing to offer in return for its favors. Movement on Syria along the lines of Russia’s war aims will figure prominently in the discussions Turkey and Russia will have. Iran has now begun to press its own “friendship” diplomacy with Turkey.

Would the consequences have been different if the United States had taken military action in August 2013? Could the decision three years ago have actually magnified harm to American interests today? Might the United States and Turkey have found more common ground? Leadership is not only about deciding what is specifically best for you; it’s also about visualizing the result and using all the tools available to push in that direction with friends and opponents. Events over the last three years may offer us a cautionary tale on the consequences of what happens after nothing happens. “Ex nihilo nihil fit” does not hold true in international affairs.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...o_is_syrias_fiercest_battleground_109721.html

August 21, 2016

Why Aleppo Is Syria's Fiercest Battleground

By AP

With rebels and government forces each promising to unite the divided city, Aleppo is once again a main battlefield in Syria's devastating civil war. Relentless shelling and airstrikes have killed more than 300 civilians in the city since rebels broke through a government blockade of the opposition-held east on July 31.

A look at Aleppo:

A SHATTERED HISTORICAL TREASURE

Syria's largest city and once its commercial center, Aleppo was a crossroads of civilization for millennia. It has been occupied by the Greeks, Byzantines and multiple Islamic dynasties. As one of the world's oldest continuously inhabited cities, Aleppo's Old City was added in 1986 to UNESCO's list of World Heritage sites.

But the civil war has damaged its landmarks, including the 11th century Umayyad Mosque, which had a minaret collapse during fighting in 2012, the 13th century citadel and the medieval marketplace, where fire damaged more than 500 shops in its narrow, vaulted passageways. Some historic sites have been used as bases for fighters.

Aleppo was one of the last cities in Syria to join the uprising against President Bashar Assad's government.

THE KEY TO VICTORY?

Because of its heritage and its economic potential, it is often said that whoever holds Aleppo wins the war. In fact, rebels hold other pockets around the country, but their defeat in Aleppo would mark a turning point in the conflict and deal a devastating blow to the movement to unseat Assad.

But Aleppo also sits just 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the Turkish border, making it the central theater to the Syrian-Turkish proxy war. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is an open critic of Syria's Assad and has shown strong support toward the rebels. Ankara enjoys wide influence in northern Syria, and most rebels' supplies flow across the shared border. In a national address in June, Assad vowed Aleppo would be Erdogan's "graveyard."

BREAKING THE SIEGE

In August, the International Committee for the Red Cross called the battle for Aleppo "one of the most devastating conflicts in modern times."

A photo of five-year-old Omran Daqneesh, who was rescued from the rubble of a missile-struck building, sitting alone in an ambulance, confused and covered in debris and blood, has become the haunting image of the unforgiving struggle.

Pro-government forces, supported by overwhelming Russian air power, had managed to encircle rebels and some 300,000 civilians in the city's eastern quarters in July, leading the U.N. to raise the concerns of catastrophic suffering if a protracted siege ensued.

But a fierce offensive led by thousands of rebels from outside the city broke the blockade on July 31, and fighting has only intensified since then. Both sides are bombarding their opponents indiscriminately, at a tremendous cost to infrastructure and human life.

The main Kurdish militia, known as the People's Protection Units, or YPG, controls several predominantly Kurdish northern neighborhoods.

The main insurgent groups in the city are the Nour el-Din Zenki brigade; the ultraconservative Ahrar al-Sham group; and the Al-Qaida linked Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, formerly known as the Nusra Front.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-israeli-palestinians-rocket-idUSKCN10W0HZ

WORLD NEWS | Sun Aug 21, 2016 6:39pm EDT

Gaza militant rocket hits Israel, Israel responds with air strikes, shells

Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip launched a rocket that landed in the Israeli border town of Sderot on Sunday and Israeli aircraft and tanks responded by shelling the Gaza town of Beit Hanoun, the army and police said.

The rocket caused no injuries or damage in Sderot, where it landed in a residential area, police said.

An Israeli shell during an initial retaliation damaged a Beit Hanoun water tower and there were no casualties, local residents said.

Multiple air strikes later in the evening hit at least 30 different sites in the Gaza Strip belonging to Hamas, the smaller Islamic Jihad and other militant groups and two people were lightly hurt, Gaza health officials said.

A music festival in Sderot attended by hundreds of Israelis was temporarily disrupted as people sought shelter, television footage showed.

The Israeli military said aircraft had attacked targets in the northern Gaza Strip and added that since the beginning of the year, 14 Gaza rockets had hit Israel.

Israeli army spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Lerner said in a statement that the military "remains committed to the stability of the region and operated in order to bring quiet to the people of southern Israel."

"When terrorists in Hamas' Gaza Strip, driven by a radical agenda based on hatred, attack people in the middle of the summer vacation, their intentions are clear - to inflict pain, cause fear and to terrorize," Lerner said.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said: "We hold (Israel) responsible for the escalation in the Gaza Strip and we stress that its aggression will not succeed in breaking the will of our people and dictate terms to the resistance."

Hamas controls the Gaza Strip and has observed a de-facto ceasefire with Israel since a 2014 war but some small armed cells of Jihadist Salafis have defied the agreement and have continued to occasionally launch rockets at Israel.

Israel has held Hamas responsible for all attacks originating in the coastal enclave.

More than 2,100 Palestinians, mostly civilians, were killed during the 2014 Gaza conflict. Sixty-seven Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel were killed by rockets and attacks by Hamas and other militant groups.

Despite the ceasefire, Hamas has vowed to continue to dig tunnels intended to infiltrate Israel, and while Hamas leaders stress they do not seek an imminent war, they see tunnels as a strategic weapon in any future armed confrontation.

(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi, Writing by Ori Lewis; Editing by Alexandra Hudson and Sandra Maler)

ALSO IN WORLD NEWS

Turkey's Erdogan blames child bomber for attack that killed 51
Iraq hangs 36 people sentenced to death for killing of troops in 2014
Syrian rebels prepare to attack Islamic State town from Turkey
Libyan forces say they capture mosque, prison from Islamic State in Sirte
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cnn.com/2016/08/21/middleeast/iraq-camp-speicher-massacre-executions/

Iraq executes 36 people for Camp Speicher massacre

By Thom Patterson, Ghazi Balkiz and Hamdi Alkhshali, CNN
Updated 12:11 PM ET, Sun August 21, 2016

Video

(CNN)Iraq has hanged 36 people for taking part in the massacre of as many as 1,700 men in ISIS-controlled territory in 2014, a local governor said.

The convicts were executed Sunday at Al-Hoot prison in Nasiriyah, said Yahya Al-Nasiri, governor of Dhiqar province.

The killings have come to be known as the "Speicher Massacre" because it took place at Camp Speicher -- a former US base near Tikrit -- after ISIS forces took control of the area.

ISIS released videos after the massacre that showed what seemed to be an endless line of Iraqi military recruits being marched at gunpoint. Later, ISIS posted images showing mass murders.

Human Rights Watch described the massacre as the "largest reported incident" where "ISIS captured more than 1,000 soldiers fleeing Camp Speicher ... then summarily executed at least 800 of them."

Related story: Mass graves found near Tikrit

Nasiri was present at the executions. He told CNN that the men were hanged "in the presence of some family members of the Speicher massacre victims, a legal committee, the minister of Justice and other security departments representatives."

More executions will follow, Nasiri said.

Related story: Iraqi court issues death sentences in 'Speicher Massacre'
Before Iraqi forces retook the base in 2015, so-called "Speicher families" waited nearly a year to find out what happened to their missing sons, brothers and husbands.

Related story: 'Where are our sons?'

Family members gave DNA samples to the Ministry of Health to help authorities identify the bodies.

US commander wants to defeat ISIS within a year

In June, CIA Director John Brennan testified before Congress that ISIS still has about 18,000-22,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria. He said ISIS has lost "large stretches" of territory in both of those countries, has experienced a reduction of finances and has struggled to replenish its ranks as fewer foreign fighters have been traveling to those countries.

The top commander of US troops in Iraq and Syria, Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, told CNN from his Baghdad headquarters Saturday that he plans to keep up the pressure on ISIS.

Related story: Iraqi forces retake airbase from ISIS

He laid out an ambitious military goal: for the US-led coalition to "defeat ISIL in Iraq and Syria in this next year."

Related story: US commander warns Syria and Russia

Townsend emphasized he is aware that may be ambitious, but he added, "That's my goal. I am intent to do that."

When asked how he would define the defeat of ISIS, the general said it would be when the so-called caliphate no longer exists and does not control significant population centers.

CNN's Arwa Damon and Barbara Starr contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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:dot5:

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2016/08/485_212418.html

Posted : 2016-08-22 10:47
Updated : 2016-08-22 11:52

N. Korea threatens pre-emptive nuke strike over Seoul's military drill

North Korea on Monday threatened to mount a "preemptive nuclear strike" on South Korea and the United States as the allies kicked off their annual military exercise aimed at countering Pyongyang's potential aggression.

The command and control exercise Ulchi Freedom Guardian, began its two-week run on Monday, involving tens of thousands of South Korean and U.S. forces.

This year's drill came amid unusually heightened inter-Korean tensions following the defection of a London-based North Korean senior diplomat to South Korea.

South Korea and the U.S. "should bear in mind that if they show the slightest sign of aggression on (DPRK's) inviolable land, seas and air ..., it would turn the stronghold of provocation into a heap of ashes through Korean-style preemptive nuclear strike," an English-language statement by the country's General Staff of the Korean People's Army (KPA), carried by the state-run Korean Central News agency, said.

"They should properly know that from this moment the first-strike combined units of the KPA keep themselves fully ready to mount a preemptive retaliatory strike at all enemy attack groups involved in Ulchi Freedom Guardian," the KCNA report said.

DPRK stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the official name of North Korea.

The statement said the exercise is "a clear manifestation of a vicious plot" to deprive the DPRK's army of their cradle by force of arms.

"The situation on the Korean Peninsula is so tense that a nuclear war may break out any moment," it also claimed.

It is the resolute determination and will of North Korea "to terminate the ever more reckless moves of the U.S. imperialists and the South Korean puppet forces for a nuclear war not temporarily but indefinitely," the latest statement said.

The statement said the KPA's such stances were made "upon authorization," indicating that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was behind the issuance of the latest threat.

South Korea's government, meanwhile, warned over the weekend that it is likely that the North may carry out some sort of provocation during or after the on-going military exercise that comes days after Seoul confirmed the defection of the North Korean embassy official last week. (Yonhap)

Park to preside over Cabinet meeting amid national emergency drills
 

Housecarl

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http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/s-korea-warns-of-possible-assassinations-by-north

S. Korea warns of possible assassinations by North

PUBLISHED 6 HOURS AGO

Pyongyang may attempt to kill defectors and abduct South Koreans abroad, says Seoul

SEOUL • South Korea is warning of possible North Korean assassinations and kidnappings in revenge for recent high-profile defections to the South.

With tensions also high before a large-scale South Korean-US military exercise starting today, the Unification Ministry in Seoul said yesterday that Pyongyang was bent on provocation.

A ministry official told reporters that the defection to Seoul of North Korea's deputy ambassador to Britain and his family had put the North in "a very difficult situation".

Considering (North Korean leader) Kim Jong Un's character, it is very dangerous," the official said on condition of anonymity.

"It's highly likely that North Korea will make various attempts to prevent further defections and unrest among its people."

The official cited assassination attempts and terror attacks against defectors in the South as well as the abduction of South Koreans abroad as possible provocations.

He noted attempts to assassinate Mr Hwang Jang Yop, the North's chief ideologue and former tutor to previous leader Kim Jong Il, who defected to the South in 1997 and died of natural causes in 2010.

The official also said Mr Kim Jong Un had dispatched squads to the Chinese border "to harm South Koreans" following the defection in April of a group of North Korean overseas restaurant workers.

Deputy ambassador Thae Yong Ho was believed to have worked at the embassy in London for 10 years before his defection announced last week.

The South said he was driven by disgust for the Pyongyang regime, admiration for South Korea's free and democratic system and concerns for his family's future.

North Korea, in a vitriolic response last Saturday, claimed that the "human scum" had embezzled state funds, raped a minor and spied for the South and had fled "for fear of legal punishment for his crimes".

The 12 waitresses and their manager had been working at a North Korea-themed restaurant in China. They made headlines when they arrived in the South in April as the largest group defection for years.

While Seoul said they fled voluntarily, Pyongyang claimed they were kidnapped by South Korea's National Intelligence Service and waged a vocal campaign through its state media - including interviews with family members - for their return.

Seoul said last week that the 13 defectors were now free to settle in South Korean society after the intelligence service completed investigations into their case and allowed them to leave custody.

A spokesman for the North's emergency committee set up for "rescuing" abductees described that announcement as a "mean plot" aimed at "covering up the truth behind the group abduction".

"Keeping them hidden from the public... citing 'safety reasons' shows that the puppet govern- ment's announcement is a complete fabrication," he said. "We will continue fighting until we can rescue and bring back our female citizens."

Nearly 30,000 North Koreans have fled poverty and repression at home to settle in the capitalist South. But group defections are rare, especially by staff who work in the North Korea-themed restaurants overseas and are handpicked from families considered "loyal" to the regime.

Starting today, Seoul and Washington will begin their annual joint Ulchi Freedom Guardian (UFG) exercise involving tens of thousands of troops.

"With the start of the UFG drills tomorrow, we ask all citizens to be on guard for North Korean terror threats and cooperate with the government's efforts," said the Unification Ministry official.

The two-week drill is one of a number of annual joint exercises viewed by Pyongyang as provocative rehearsals for invasion.

A spokesman for North Korea's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea yesterday said Pyongyang's determination to retaliate "will only grow stronger" if such exercises continue.

"It is our firm position that we will mercilessly attack the threats of invasion and provocation from the enemies with our nuclear deterrence," the spokesman said in a statement on the North's official KCNA news agency.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.lowyinterpreter.org/post/2016/08/19/North-Korea-A-realistic-path-to-regime-collapse.aspx

North Korea: A realistic path to regime change

19 August 2016 8:22AM
Robert E Kelly
Comments 2

One of the great career mistakes a North Korea analyst can make is to predict Pyongyang's downfall, or (even worse) try to attach an actual date to that event. The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) manages to survive no matter how much the world throws at it, no matter how many times we on the outside confidently predict it will fall.

And it sure looks like it should fall. North Korea violates almost every expectation we have about successful (or at least stable) states in the contemporary era. Indeed, we often label it a failed state, which suggests that instability or breakdown are imminent or likely.

But one does not often see a credible pathway, one without huge changes in current circumstances, laid out for that implosion. Instead, I often find at conferences or in regional journalism a vague, almost teleological sense that North Korea's time is up, that it will naturally crumble, subject to 'historical forces' or something. The South Korean government is particularly prone to this sort of nebulous-but-confident speculation. Its presidents ritualistically suggest unification will happen soon. Lee Myung-Bak wanted a 'unification tax' for this imminent event, while Park Geun-Hye spoke of it as a soon-to-come 'bonanza.'

Even more fantastically, the South Korean left likes to speculate about a Korean federation paralleling relations in 'greater China' or even the EU. I have seen lots Powerpoint presentations over the years on what to do with the North Korean military or its nuclear weapons after unification and so on, but surprisingly few credible scenarios of how to actually get from here to there.

So rather than predict a date for North Korea's collapse, I want instead to lay out a credible pathway to change, if not necessarily collapse: a Chinese cut-off of North Korea igniting divisions in the regime's elite as Pyongyang factions fight over a declining budgetary pie.

There are other obvious possibilities: a war could break out (probably by accident, as a result of a North Korean provocation gone too far), and ignite a tit-for-tit spiral that escalates. North Korea would lose that war.

Andrei Lankov has also suggested that the ongoing flow of information into North Korea could ultimately create generational change. The young of today, exposed to the outside world, will inherit North Korea's institutions tomorrow and slowly change them. Or perhaps, North Koreans will themselves rise, as Eastern Europeans did in 1989 and Arabs in 2010. But all these scenarios involve huge changes, whereas mine tries to deal with the DPRK as it is now.

Rather than looking for a black-swan event like implosion or collapse, the possibility of regime splits at the top (leading to some sort of mild, perhaps rolling political change) is far more likely. Comparative political science often argues that authoritarian states are prone to change when divisions arise among elites. Often popular revolts catalyze these divisions. But North Korea has never had a popular protest in its history and there is precious little evidence of a civil society. So what other mechanisms might set the DPRK's elites against each other? As it is basically a gangster state, how about their money and goodies?

The current South Korean and US strategy is to slowly isolate North Korea in hopes of pushing it back toward the bargaining table. Sanctions have steadily increased; this year has seen the heaviest UN sanctions yet, plus the targeting of Kim Jong Un personally by the US. This has likely slowed the nuclear and missile programs, but North Korea's behaviour this year is arguably its worst since 2010. South Korea closed the Kaesong Industrial Complex, depriving North Korea of US$100 million in legal currency per annum. And Seoul is now seeking to peel away North Korea's 'third-worldist' friends, like Cuba and Namibia. This should make it harder for North Korea to evade sanctions and engage in the gangsterism that has provided cash to the regime for decades. This approach slowly shrinks North Korea's room for maneuver, and it wisely pursues low-hanging fruit first. Cutting off subsidies, thickening sanctions, and isolating North Korea step-by-step from its few remaining friends slowly backs it into a corner, where it survives almost exclusively on Chinese forbearance.

North Korea is greatly dependent on China. China accounts for roughly 90% of North Korean trade. Its banks hide the regime's slush funds. Informal cross-border networks help feed North Koreans where the state no longer can. It is the pathway over which luxuries like alcohol, HDTVs, and jet-skis travel to the Pyongyang 'court economy'. The closure of Kaesong, roll-up of other allies, and tough new sanctions on North Korean shipping increasingly leave China as North Korea's last major pipeline to the world economy.

Chinese cut-off would therefore be disastrous. It would dramatically reduce resources flowing into the country, especially the luxury goods that underwrite the governing bargain between the Kim family and the military. In the mid-1990s, Kim Jong Un's father promised the military extraordinary access to politics and the budget, in exchange, most analysts believe, for not overthrowing Kimist rule after the end of the Cold War. This was known as the 'military first policy' (son-gun), but it is better understood as a gangsterish bargain: the Korean People's Army (KPA) will not overthrow the Kims so long as they provide the goodies to the brass. Those benefits include living in Pyongyang in nice apartments with proper electricity, water, and so on; foreign luxury items like HDTVs, liquor, films, and automobiles; a blind eye to corruption and personal debauchery; and limited access to the outside world for elite families and their money.

Critically, this 'songun bargain' (my term) requires an outside pipeline. These luxuries are not substitutable domestically, no matter how hard the regime squeezes its population. Should the booze, jet-skis, clandestine shopping trips to Beijing, and so on be cut off, what are the benefits to the KPA standing by the Kims? The costs are clear and enormous; senior regime figures are marked men globally, individually subject to the whims of the Kim clan, cannot travel easily, will likely be lynched or executed should North Korea fall, and so on. Why carry these costs if the luxury benefits are not there?

Further, all sorts of other goods, such as hydrocarbons and machine parts, would dry up if China took sanctions more seriously. Fuel shortages already inhibit KPA training, for example. Factories would shut down.

In short, if the Chinese seriously shut the gate, there would eventually be a contracting budgetary and foreign-goods pie in the court economy at the top, which could set elites against each other over what was left. This would not happen immediately; there would be a 'pipeline effect' of several years, perhaps a decade. Extant reserves would cover initial losses. China would probably not seal off North Korea completely, even if it were offered a withdrawal of US forces from South Korea in exchange. North Korea would likely return to serious gangsterism in order to find funds, and the regime would first crack down even harder on its own people to find resources for the court economy.

But eventually the shortages (particularly in niche foreign goods, such as Kim Jong Un's favorite cigarettes) would feed through to the top. As resources shrank, it is easy to imagine a gangster regime, already built on predating its own people and the international community, falling into mafiosi gangland-style infighting over what was left.

If there will be no popular uprising to push North Korean elites toward fracture, maybe depriving them of the luxuries (the only benefit they accrue from the whole awful system) will. North Korea cannot survive on its own. It has always required a foreign patron; the only time it did not have one, it fell into a man-made famine. Worse, the regime's ideology is a preposterous quasi-theological monarchism that its elites almost certainly know is bunk. The military-first policy and well-known indulgence of the North Korean elite strongly suggest their cynicism. We also know that North Korea reacted sharply to the US pursuit of its illicit holdings at Banco Delta.

Exploiting this weakness for foreign cash and luxuries will, as ever, require Chinese cooperation on sanctions, plus a long-term effort to convince China that North Korea is greater threat to it than a unified Korea. This re-evaluation may be underway, and South Korea should China, however humiliating it may be. The road to Pyongyang still runs through Beijing.
 

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http://www.thestrategybridge.com/the-bridge/2016/8/17/reviewing-war-by-other-means

#Reviewing War by Other Means

Spencer Bakich · August 17, 2016

War by Other Means: Geoeconomics and Statecraft. Robert D. Blackwill and Jennifer M. Harris. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016.

There isn’t much grand about America’s post-Cold War grand strategy. Such is the consensus among the academic scholars, think-tankers, pundits, and many former national security officials who have chastised U.S. foreign policymakers for lacking strategic sophistication, or worse, failing to craft a coherent grand strategy at all.[1] For the last twenty five years, these critics claim, Washington has sought the wrong goals, under-resourced its efforts, and failed to anticipate the likely second-order effects of its policies.[2] In the main, these critical assessments have understandably focused on the military-security dimension of grand strategy. America’s national security policies since the mid-1990s cost much blood and treasure, degraded regional security environments, and inspired hostile reactions by other powers.[3]

In their well-crafted and important new book, War by Other Means: Geoeconomics and Statecraft, Robert Blackwill and Jennifer Harris join this discussion orthogonally, arguing that the United States has altogether abandoned the economic dimension of grand strategy. Since the mid-1960s, Washington has been gripped by a debilitating neoliberal (or, neoclassical economic) dogma that works as an ideological firewall separating the operation of markets from the pursuit of international political objectives. As a result, America’s substantial and diversified economic resources have been woefully underutilized as tools of grand strategy. At the same time, the United States’ most formidable challengers (China, Russia, and Iran) are all effective practitioners of economic statecraft. To secure its national interest in the years to come, Washington must relearn how to employ economic resources in the service of its geopolitical objectives. To do otherwise would cede the contest to states whose interests and actions will continue to undermine American security and prosperity.

War by Other Means is structured around three main themes. In the first three chapters, Blackwill and Harris examine economic statecraft generally, defining “geoeconomics” as “the use of economic instruments to promote and defend national interests and to produce beneficial geopolitical results; and the effects of other nations’ economic actions on a country’s geopolitical goals.”[4] The authors argue that rising powers now turn first to economic statecraft because it effectively buttresses their geopolitical objectives while mitigating the risk of armed conflict. Unlike past eras, state-capitalist challengers to the prevailing liberal order have many more economic instruments at the ready. Due to the expansion of global markets and their structural transformations over time, economic factors now impinge substantially on states’ geopolitical choices. By way of example, the authors note that “the fate of the European Union—perhaps the West’s greatest foreign policy achievement of the twentieth century and the closest U.S. foreign policy partner—for several years rested at least as much in the hands of bond markets as in European political capitals.”[5] In sum, the current international system entails new economic and financial challenges and opportunities, offering states many powerful geoeconomic assets to employ against targets large and small.

Among the most insightful sections in these early chapters is Blackwill and Harris’s in-depth examination of the geoeconomic instruments available to states, including: trade policy, investment policy, economic sanctions, cyber, foreign aid, monetary policy, and energy and commodity policies. Not content merely to catalog these policy tools, the authors offer a valuable discussion of the interrelations among them—noting where synergies can be found and where tensions may lie. Most important is the authors’ argument pertaining to the sources of geoeconomic effectiveness. Blackwill and Harris maintain that effectiveness is in part a function of four “geoeconomic endowments”: the ability to control outbound investments, the particular features of domestic markets, the influence over commodity and energy flows, and the centrality of the state in the global financial system. Beyond these structural attributes are the contextual features that must factor into a state’s decision making process: the number and types of geoeconomic targets, the goals sought, and the selection of the proper economic tools that can deliver those goals.

China’s geoeconomic approach to statecraft is the second general theme taken up by Blackwill and Harris. The PRC has demonstrated remarkable capacities to employ explicit and implicit economic coercion to orient weaker states’ foreign policies in ways that support Beijing’s geopolitical objectives, to hedge against the actions of other regional competitors (namely, India and Russia), and to mount a challenge to American preeminence in the global economy. Blackwill and Harris maintain that China’s approach is a soft strategy of economic domination through its investment, natural resource extraction, development, and monetary policies. Not only does this approach pose a direct challenge to the U.S., but the indirect economic and security threats are substantial. China has “… locked up significant quantities of global energy resources, grown the coffers of dictators unfriendly to the United States; lent new momentum to domestic proponents of China’s own military buildup, and arguably have increased the odds of resource-based conflict.”[6] All of this while staying out of other states’ wars.

Compounding these challenges to the U.S. are self-imposed constraints on America’s practice of geoeconomics, the subject of the book’s third theme. Despite their overall dissatisfaction with American geoeconomic performance, Blackwill and Harris’s account of America’s dismal track record can be read as cautiously optimistic. The U.S. is, after all, the largest of the world’s economies, centrally positioned in global markets, and of monumental importance, the beneficiary of technological and geological endowments that are spurring a revolution in its energy portfolio (their chapter “The Geoeconomics of North America’s Energy Revolution” is alone worth the book’s sticker price). Moreover, the United States has a rich history of successfully practicing geoeconomics. The purpose of the Marshall Plan, for example, was quintessentially geoeconomic. As George Kennan argued in 1947, American aid to the war-ravaged states in Western Europe should attempt to redress “the economic maladjustment which makes European Society vulnerable to exploitation by any and all totalitarian movements and which Russian communism is now exploiting.”[7] Despite this and many other examples from its past, Blackwill and Harris maintain that the American foreign policy establishment has long since forgotten that the U.S. was once an avid and successful practitioner of geoeconomics.

The authors point to two causes of this strategic amnesia: the presumption that military-security affairs constitutes the most important component of grand strategy, and the “…widely held world view that markets are somehow apolitical, to be kept free from geopolitical encroachments, and in any case not a proper arena for state power politics.”[8] These assumptions, Blackwill and Harris argue, were not held for most of America’s history (becoming prominent only at the time of the Vietnam War), are rejected by the states that are posing the most salient challenges to America’s position in the world, and undermine the United States’ ability to forge an effective grand strategy in response. To properly rebalance its grand strategy, the U.S. must redress a number of challenges: a bipartisan deficit in presidential leadership, the reflexive overuse of economic sanctions, and the transfer of bureaucratic authority of geoeconomic policymaking out of the State Department. Most importantly, the U.S. must cultivate the intellectual capacities within the foreign policy establishment necessary to reincorporate economics into grand strategy.

War by Other Means is a well-reasoned and important book that offers useful alternatives to stale nostrums that have long dominated American statecraft. Notwithstanding its strengths, the book’s analysis suffers at times by not engaging fully with the literature it challenges. For example, Blackwill and Harris contend that the economic dimension of statecraft has been largely buried by an overriding focus on military-security considerations since the 1960s. This view is not universally shared, however. According to both Christopher Layne and Andrew Bacevich, American foreign policy has long sought to keep “economic open doors” ajar, a policy objective requiring the conjoined use of military and economic resources to make states and regions amenable to American economic and geopolitical influence.[9] Economic open door logic was evident in America’s Cold War grand strategies and was later manifest in Washington’s response to the crises in the Balkans in the 1990s. Further, as Richard Haass points out, “The U.S. interest in the [Middle East] region’s oil is strategic, one of ensuring American and world access to adequate supplies, not tied in any way to gaining financial advantage.”[10] This strategic imperative informed the first Bush administration’s decision to wage war against Iraq in the Persian Gulf War in 1991. In sum, economic instruments and objectives are seen, in this line of reasoning, as mainstays of U.S. statecraft, working hand in glove with military power.

Further, Blackwill and Harris lament the removal of American economic instruments from its grand strategic toolbox. Not only has this contributed to the winnowing of the range of responses the U.S. can make in response to geopolitical challenges, but the widespread belief that economic logic is fundamentally apolitical has done real strategic damage. The authors are on solid ground in diagnosing the current problems confronting the U.S. Still, a case can be made that by giving markets a freer hand (liberal trade and financial policies), the American economy benefitted both absolutely and relatively vis-à-vis the Soviet Union in Cold War’s final years. In particular, liberal economic policies championed by the U.S. fostered globalized inter- and intra-firm alliances that enhanced the efficiency of supply chains, allowed for greater access to capital, distributed risk, and fostered innovation. The results were profound: a decrepit and uncompetitive Soviet economy forced the Kremlin into retrenchment and strategic reorientation toward the West. As Stephen Brooks and William Wohlforth pithily note, “globalization was not global: it took sides in the Cold War.”[11] Geoeconomics, as Blackwill and Harris understand it, was not explicitly practiced in this case. But in light of the international economic determinants of Soviet behavior in the late 1980s, it is difficult to argue that a wiser approach was on offer.

However one may quibble with its historical analysis, War by Other Means is fundamentally a book about present challenges and future responses. According to the authors, American policymakers must come to terms with a stark reality, that the “rules-based system… is delivering less and less in the way of strategic returns as rising powers (often through geoeconomic attempts of their own) undercut it.”[12] Furthermore, the present order does little to enhance U.S. strategic interests because it is flimsy and disproportionately advantages a growing China.

Yet to effectively make the case that an explicit and assertive brand of geoeconomic statecraft is necessary because the American-led liberal order is failing to deliver, that global architecture needed to be thoroughly analyzed and shown to be wanting. Specifically, Blackwill and Harris needed to tackle the arguments which understand the liberal international order to be both durable and powerful in its socializing effects on rising challengers. According to this view, the order fashioned by the United States and its allies in the aftermath of World War II is loosely rules-based, nondiscriminatory, and densely institutionalized. Within this order, rising powers can gain substantially—but in ways that powerfully shape their interests and limit their revisionist tendencies. In other words, because it has grown within the order, China can neither abandon it without substantial penalty nor induce others join an alternative Sino-centric order. As G. John Ikenberry notes, there is no illiberal alternative to the present order, “…on a global scale, such a system would not advance the interests of any of the major states, including China.”[13] While the terms of ownership of the order may need renegotiation, the underlying logic is stable and mutually beneficial.[14]

Furthermore, the existence of the liberal order adds to China’s current strategic dilemmas. As Edward Luttwak posited, the PRC’s simultaneous pursuit of economic growth, military expansion, and international political influence, will ultimately be met with a forceful geoeconomic reaction.[15] Should Beijing’s case of “great state autism” not be mitigated over time, other states will find intolerable Beijing’s selectively coercive and discriminatory brand of economic statecraft, and the existing liberal order more attractive. The upshot is that China’s economic statecraft may prove successful, but only for a time. Far better for the U.S. to demonstrate to China’s geoeconomic targets that the prevailing order offers them more benefits and less costs over the long term. The point is not to say that Blackwill and Harris are wrong in their descriptions of how China is using geoeconomics to challenge the U.S. Rather, that there are good reasons to believe that China is hemmed in by broad normative, institutional, and strategic features. In short, a more thorough analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of the prevailing liberal order would have benefited the authors’ arguments in a number of ways.

War by Other Means is a significant contribution to the literature on economic statecraft and grand strategy. Blackwill and Harris provide a great service by inviting their readers to look at America’s past, present, and future through the lens of geoeconomics.

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Spencer Bakich is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the Virginia Military Institute and the author of Success and Failure in Limited War: Information and Strategy in the Korean, Vietnam, Persian Gulf, and Iraq Wars.


Notes:

[1] For a sampling of the debate, see contributors to “Obama’s World,” Foreign Affairs, vol. 94, no. 5 (September/October 2015), 2-78; contributors to “Obama’s World: Judging His Foreign Policy Record,” H-Diplo/ISSF Forum, no. 14 (2016); Barry R. Posen, Restraint: A New Foundation for U.S. Grand Strategy (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2014; and Colin Dueck, The Obama Doctrine: American Grand Strategy Today (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015).

[2] Richard K. Betts, American Force: Dangers, Delusions, and Dilemmas in National Security (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013).; Robert M. Gates, Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War (New York: Knopf, 2014); and Vali Nasr, The Dispensable Nation: American Foreign Policy in Retreat (New York: Doubleday, 2013).

[3] Martin Indyk, "The End of the U.S.-Dominated Order in the Middle East," The Atlantic (March 13, 2016).

[4] Robert D. Blackwill and Jennifer M. Harris, War by Other Means: Geoeconomics and Statecraft (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016), 9.

[5] Ibid., 37-38.

[6] Ibid., 151.

[7] Ibid., 163.

[8] Ibid, 153.

[9] Christopher Layne, The Peace of Illusions: American Grand Strategy from 1940 to the Present (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006); Andrew J. Bacevich, American Empire: The Realities and Consequences of U.S. Diplomacy (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2002).

[10] Richard N. Haass, War of Necessity, War of Choice: A Memoir of Two Iraq Wars (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2009), 75.

[11] Stephen G. Brooks and William C. Wohlforth, "Power, Globalization, and the End of the Cold War: Reevaluating a Landmark Case for Ideas," International Security, vol. 25, no. 3 (Winter, 2000-2001), pp. 5-53.

[12] Blackwill and Harris, 186.

[13] G. John Ikenberry, "The Future of the Liberal World Order: Internationalism After America," Foreign Affairs, vol. 90, no. 3 (May/June 2011).

[14] G. John Ikenberry, Liberal Leviathan: The Origins, Crisis, and Transformation of the American World Order (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2011).

[15] Edward N. Luttwak, The Rise of China vs. The Logic of Strategy (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2012).
 
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