WAR 09-03-2016-to-09-09-2016_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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Boeing Defense ‏@BoeingDefense 1h
"Father of B1-B Bomber" Sam Iacobellis - Aerospace industry icon - dies at 87
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-iacobellis-obit-20160906-snap-story.html
Cr2ekMqVIAAuyIK.jpg:small
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...stern-Hostages-by-Hours&p=6177439#post6177439

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...escue-american-u-hostages-in-afghanistan.html

AFGHANISTAN

Sources: US forces mounted unsuccessful mission to rescue kidnapped American U. in Afghanistan profs

By Lucas Tomlinson Published September 08, 2016 FoxNews.com

Video

U.S. special operations forces mounted an unsuccessful mission to rescue two American University of Afghanistan professors kidnapped in Kabul last month -- after an earlier mission was aborted when the White House withheld its approval -- defense officials with knowledge of the incident told Fox News.

Fox News is told the operation, which took place a few days after their Aug. 7 kidnapping, killed seven enemy fighters. But when the firefight ended, there was no sign of the hostages.

One of the hostages is American; the other is Australian.

It was not the first attempt by the U.S. military to rescue the two professors.

The first mission was aborted when the American rescue force could not obtain White House approval for the mission amid concerns about the intelligence, according to three defense officials. They were in the air heading to the target area at the time and had to return to their base in Afghanistan.

When approval was granted by President Obama the next day, the American assault force headed back to the area where they believed the two hostages were being held and engaged an enemy force at a compound believed to contain the hostages.

“It didn’t go the way it was supposed to go,” said one official.

The operation took place near Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan. It is not immediately clear if the hostages were ever inside the compound or moved before the second rescue attempt could take place, according to one official.

The initial mission was cancelled because the intelligence was not completely firm and there was not consensus among different government agencies, which prevented the White House from granting approval, one official told Fox News.

“They turned back that first night because they didn’t have authority. They could have gone without permission if they thought hostages' lives were in imminent danger,” according to one official.

The professors were kidnapped while driving in Kabul on Aug. 7. The Haqqani network, an Afghan insurgent group, is suspected.

Today, the U.S. intelligence community is “not confident” where the two hostages are, according to multiple officials.

One source told Fox News the delay in approving the first rescue attempt was due to the White House “bureaucracy.”

“I have not heard any of that,” said another official when asked by Fox News for comment. “For this operation, we didn’t get the president’s authority in time because the intelligence was not firm.”

“If the hostages are … in imminent danger, we go,” said the official. “That was not the case this time, so we went the next day.”

Administration officials confirmed the hostages were not at the location.

“We will not provide further information on this mission in order to protect the safety of hostages and operational security,” Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said in a statement, noting Obama authorized the mission at Defense Secretary Ash Carter’s recommendation. “Military hostage rescue operations are inherently sensitive and dangerous and careful deliberation went into this mission,” he added.

A senior administration official also said Obama approved the mission “soon after the Pentagon submitted their request.”

“The president's swift approval provided the U.S. military the authorization to conduct the operation in Afghanistan,” the official said. “When the operation was launched, we believed the hostages were present at the location but unfortunately, they were not. The U.S. government's hostage recovery enterprise continues to work towards ensuring the hostages' safe recovery.”

None of the U.S. special operations forces were killed or wounded during the exchange of gunfire with the enemy force.

In addition to the kidnapping of the two professors last month, American University in Kabul was attacked separately when gunmen and a suicide bomber attacked the school. The Taliban are suspected of carrying out the attack which killed at least 12.


Lucas Tomlinson is the Pentagon and State Department producer for Fox News Channel. You can follow him on Twitter: @LucasFoxNews
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
France: 3 muzzie women arrested, cop injured, over car loaded with gas cylinders.
Started by mzkitty‎, Today 01:44 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...op-injured-over-car-loaded-with-gas-cylinders.

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/08/world/france-arrests-gas-cylinders-notre-dame/

French officer injured in arrest of women in gas cylinders case

By Camille Verdier, for CNN
Updated 5:23 PM ET, Thu September 8, 2016

Paris (CNN)Three women who were planning an "imminent and violent" attack were arrested near Paris on Thursday, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said.

According to Cazaneuve, the women, whom he referred to as radicalized, were arrested in connection with gas cylinders found this week inside a car left in front of Notre Dame cathedral in Paris.

One police officer was injured in the shoulder when one woman attacked him with a knife in Boussy-Saint-Antoine, southeast of Paris, the minister told reporters. The injury was not life-threatening.

"I would like to express my gratitude to him and to his colleagues who had to open fire when faced with individuals armed with knives," Cazaneuve said.

One of the women also was hurt.

The minister said the unidentified women are 19, 23 and 39 years old.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...ca25ac-589e-4f36-bbd7-2c94dd7d1b64_story.html

Gaza was really looking forward to elections. Now voters feel robbed.

By William Booth and Hazem Balousha September 8 at 4:12 PM
GAZA CITY — For the first time in a decade, voters here were going to the polls next month. They were psyched.

But after Thursday’s decision to suspend the campaigns, many said they felt robbed. A new date has not been set, stoking a sense of chaos and paralysis.

A Palestinian high court ruled that municipal elections scheduled for next month must be postponed because of a dispute between the rival political parties that control the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The decision was yet another setback to Palestinian democracy.

“I’m seriously pissed off,” said Nirmeen Daban, 34, a stay-at-home mother. She blamed the squabbling political factions, which she said have dug deep divides between Gaza and the West Bank, forever pretending to be ready to reconcile but never doing it.

“They are playing with us,” Daban said. “They are like children. When they are not winning the game, they ruin the game.”

Gaza was into the very idea of elections.

To youths, it would be a first taste of participatory democracy in a society they see as run by old men and unaccountable committees, where the national parliament is an empty shell, where the most popular political leader, Marwan Barghouti, is serving multiple life sentences for his role in a deadly attack against Israelis.

[As Israel wants to bulldoze a ramshackle village, Europe provides life support]

Voter registration in Gaza had soared to over 80 percent of the adult population, far higher than in the West Bank.

It didn’t matter that the suspended vote was not for Palestinian president or parliament but for leaders to fill 3,818 seats on 416 municipal councils in cities and villages across the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

Even before official campaigns began, the people of Gaza were engaging in a full-throated debate, especially on social media.

An early take-away? It was now possible for Palestinians here to mock Hamas, deemed a terrorist organization by the outside world.

The October elections were going to be the first vote in 10 years that would have pit the militant Islamist movement Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, against its bitter rivals in Fatah, which runs the West Bank and is the party steered by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.


Opinion surveys have found that two-thirds of Palestinians want Abbas to resign. Hamas also has deep credibility issues here, having fought three wars with Israel with little to show but more deprivation and isolation.

But the Palestinian high court in the West Bank city of Ramallah decided Thursday to suspend the election after challenges were filed over decisions by Hamas judges to disqualify some Fatah candidates in Gaza.

The court was also calling for a postponement because of a legal challenge filed on behalf of Palestinians living in East Jerusalem, defending their right to vote.

Israel considers East Jerusalem a part of Israel and almost certainly would never permit Palestinian ballot boxes there. Palestinians consider East Jerusalem occupied territory and want it to serve as their capital in a future Palestinian state.

On the streets of Gaza City on Thursday, people expressed raw disappointment.

“I confess this was expected,” said Nour Atrash, 27, an accountant for a charity working in Gaza. “I never believed the election was going to happen. I always was expecting something to stop it.”

“Fatah and Hamas are not interested in democracy,” he said. “They believe in their interests only. They never care about people.”

The election had promised to be lively, with dueling videos and plenty of social media.

Last month, supporters of Hamas launched a remarkable social-media campaign with professionally produced videos, hashtags and slogans such as “A More Beautiful Gaza” and “Thank You Hamas.”

The videos, shot by professionals with camera dollies and aerial drones, show a prosperous Gaza of water parks, fancy hotels and upscale shopping malls, accompanied by an upbeat pop song.

Equally remarkable, activists and ordinary people in Gaza have apparently started feeling secure enough to poke fun at the Hamas campaign — pointing out that vast swaths of Gaza are not so beautiful but are instead strewn with rubble from the last Hamas-Israeli war, in the summer of 2014.

[Gaza’s last tiger leaves ‘the world’s worst zoo’]

Soon after the “Thank You Hamas” video went up, critics in Gaza began chewing it up.


In a Facebook post that went viral in Gaza, a local activist named Mohamed Gharib took apart the video, pointing out frame by frame that many of the sites featured as Hamas “achievements” were built before the group took control or constructed by private businesses or donor countries, such as Qatar.

The point being: What did Hamas really build?

“The most difficult job for any candidate or party on social media is to convince people, but it’s not like mainstream media with its one-way message,” said Saadi Hamad, executive director of Social Bee, an online marketing company. “There is a huge feedback on social media. The political factions in Gaza can reach people easily, but reaching is not enough.”

The pro-Hamas video showed florists and children with balloons — and interestingly did not blame the Israelis for all their problems. In fact, there were no Israelis at all.

An anti-Hamas video put up on YouTube in response shows Hamas militia beating civilians on the streets with clubs. Using the same “Thank You Hamas” slogan, the video shows wounded civilians, dead bodies, grieving mothers — and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh waving a victory symbol.

The makers of the videos have remained anonymous.

Many Israelis say that public criticism in Gaza leads inexorably to a midnight knock on the door, jail time or worse. Hamas has staged street executions of alleged traitors to the Palestinian cause after secretive trials. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has compared Hamas to the Islamic State.

Hamas keeps a tight rein on media in Gaza. Foreign journalists are peppered with questions at the border by Hamas security officers. Last week, Hamas detained a Palestinian investigative reporter, Mohammad Othman, for 24 hours.

The group Human Rights Watch last month charged that Hamas and Fatah are harassing and arresting journalists and activists who criticize authorities.

Yet the prospect of elections appeared to have opened the tap for criticism a bit, especially online but even on the streets.


Now that the elections have been suspended, hopes that such dissent can continue have dimmed.

“The elections gave us a chance and the idea that Palestinians might unite and this would lead to reconciliation between the factions,” said Atrash, the accountant. “But it hasn’t happened. The divide is deeper now. Life will be more hard, and both parties will blame each other without end.”

Read more:

Ten years after the last Lebanon war, Israel warns next one will be far worse

Israel-Palestinian peace initiatives are suddenly popping up everywhere

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

6 Comments
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.militarytimes.com/articles/400-additional-troops-deploy-to-iraq

400 additional troops deploy to Iraq

By: Andrew Tilghman, September 8, 2016 (Photo Credit: Jacob Silberberg/AP)
Comments 1

Hundreds of additional U.S. troops have flowed into Iraq during the past week as American and Iraqi forces there begin final preparations to launch an invasion of Mosul this fall.

The size of the U.S. force in Iraq and Syria now tops 4,400, up from about 3,900 last week, defense officials said.

President Obama authorized several troop increases for Iraq earlier this year but those troops did not deploy immediately. The latest uptick brings the current footprint closer to the legal cap of 4,647.

Air Force Col. John Dorrian, a top spokesman for U.S. forces in Iraq, declined to say what those troops are doing but said preparations are underway to potentially launch the Mosul invasion this fall.

“There's a tremendous amount of work going on to set conditions, including the logistics detail that would be required in order to go after Mosul. And then we continue to hammer the enemy with strikes, including both artillery and airstrikes,” Dorrian told reporters Thursday at a press briefing.

MilitaryTimes
ISIS destruction of Iraqi base could hinder Mosul operation

Intelligence estimates suggest between 3,000 and 4,500 Islamic State militants are prepared to defend Mosul. The Iraqis are planning to gather between eight and 12 brigades for the invasion.

The U.S. forces in Iraq are authorized to provide combat advice to brigade- and battalion-level Iraqi forces and possibly fly U.S. attack helicopters to provide close-air support for Iraqi troops.

Army Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, the commanding general in Iraq, told the Wall Street Journal this week that the invasion of Mosul will begin in October.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Note that the NPT has a "loop hole" that allows non-nuclear weapons states to have weapons grade Pu and U on hand for naval nuclear power plants. Having an SSN force would allow the RoK to have a very short break out capability...HC

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...ing-nuclear-powered-submarines/1251473348269/

South Korea think tank proposes acquiring nuclear-powered submarines

By Elizabeth Shim Contact the Author | Sept. 8, 2016 at 11:42 AM

SEOUL, Sept. 8 (UPI) -- A South Korean think tank is proposing Seoul retain nuclear-powered submarines in response to North Korea's sub-launched ballistic missile provocations.

The Yeouido Research Institute, an organization affiliated with South Korea's ruling Saenuri party, stated nuclear submarines could be used to deter Pyongyang's submarine-launched ballistic missiles, local newspaper JoongAng Ilbo reported Thursday.

The think tank's recommendation of "strengthening anti-submarine warfare capabilities" follows a North Korea SLBM launch, most recently on Aug. 24.

"So far surveillance of North Korea submarines has been conducted by reconnaissance satellite, but because real-time tracking is difficult, in order to detect and destroy [North Korean incursions] a careful review of the need for nuclear submarine ownership is necessary," the think tank said in its statement.

The nuclear submarine issue was previously raised by ruling party majority leader Chung Jin-suk.

There is worry in Seoul, however, that the acquisition of the subs could raise concerns in the United States.

A defense ministry official who spoke on the condition of anonymity told the JoongAng there is "no evidence" the United States could prevent South Korea from maintaining nuclear-powered submarines but Washington could place "pressure" on Seoul if South Korea chose to acquire the submarines.

The think tank report also suggested the establishment of a "red line" or limit against additional North Korea nuclear tests, the "redeployment" of U.S. tactical nuclear weapons in South Korea if Pyongyang conducts its next nuclear test and the pursuit of military intelligence sharing with Japan, a plan known as the Japan-Korea GSOMIA, that was canceled in 2012.

North Korea's SLBM test was at the center of a Pyongyang news article on Wednesday, according to Yonhap.

Workers' Party newspaper Rodong Sinmun stated the SLBM test marked a "major turning point" in the "200-day battle," a mass mobilization movement in North Korea.

"Through the great success of the SLBM launch we have unleashed a frightening terror upon the imperialist reactionaries who are mad for a new nuclear war provocation," Pyongyang stated.

Like Us on Facebook for more stories from UPI.com
Related UPI Stories
U.S. Air Force test-fires intercontinental ballistic missile across Pacific
North Korea defections to South Korea climb 15%
U.N. Security Council issues joint statement on North Korea missile tests
 

Housecarl

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

Uh oh.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://38north.org/2016/09/punggye090816/

New Activity Near All Three Portals at the Punggye-ri Nuclear Test Site

By 38 North
08 September 2016

A 38 North exclusive with analysis by Joseph S. Bermudez and Jack Liu.

Summary

Recent commercial satellite imagery from August 27 shows new activity at the Punggye-ri nuclear test site. Notably, a small number of mining carts are visible on or near the tailings piles at both the North and West Portals; the tailings pile at the West Portal has expanded and new tracks for mining carts have been laid; and a small building has been erected to the southwest of the South Portal. Overall, this activity indicates that maintenance and minor excavation operations have resumed at Punggye-ri. However, it is unclear if this activity is directly related to preparations for a fifth nuclear test.

North Portal

Commercial satellite imagery from August 27 showed the continued presence of a new 6-meter by 9-meter net canopy that was erected immediately south of the support building at the North Portal a few weeks earlier. This canopy is clearly intended to obscure the presence of equipment or activity. Additionally, there are a number of objects, likely mining carts, located on the tailings pile to the east of the portal. None of these were visible in imagery from July 7, while only a few were visible in imagery from August 4. The tailings pile itself, however, appears unchanged.

Figure 1. Canopy still in place and mining carts near the North Portal.

Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
West Portal

At the West Portal, the northwest corner of the tailings pile has expanded somewhat during the past four weeks and new tracks for mining carts have been laid on its crest. Three to five mining carts are visible immediately south of the support building, indicating that minor excavation operations have resumed.

Figure 2. The tailings pile at the West Portal has expanded and new mining cart tracks have been laid.

Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Main Administrative Area

No significant activity is noted at the Main Administrative Area as of August 27. The supplies or crates that were stacked in front of the greenhouse in an August 4 image are no longer present, but what appear to be several new small crates are present at the north end of the main courtyard.

Figure 3. Supplies or crates seen around the Main Support Area.

Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
South Portal

At the entrance to the South Portal, there a number of small crates or pieces of equipment visible in the August 27 image. Additionally a new small building was erected, approximately 60 meters to northeast of the portal between July 8 and August 4.

Figure 4. Crates or equipment seen near the South Portal.

Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Image includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.
Figure 5. New building erected new the South Portal.


Image before includes material Pleiades © CNES 2016. Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image, all rights reserved. Image after © 2016 DigitalGlobe, Inc. All rights reserved. For media licensing options, please contact thirtyeightnorth@gmail.com.

Command Center Area

There is no significant activity at the secured Command Center, although this facility and adjacent support area appear well-maintained.

Found in section: Satellite Imagery
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
M5.3 Explosion - 15km ENE of Sungjibaegam, North Korea
Started by Creeper‎, Today 06:04 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...xplosion-15km-ENE-of-Sungjibaegam-North-Korea


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thediplomat.com/2016/09/5-3-...ted-in-north-korea-likely-fifth-nuclear-test/

5.3 Magnitude Quake Detected in North Korea, Likely Fifth Nuclear Test
If confirmed, 2016 would become the first year to see multiple nuclear tests by North Korea.


By Ankit Panda
September 09, 2016

At 9:30 a.m. on Friday, a 5.3 magnitude seismic event was detected nearby North Korea’s Punggye-ri nuclear testing site, suggesting that the country has carried out its fifth nuclear test. The United States Geological Survey reported the depth of the quake at 0 kilometer, strongly suggesting that this is a nuclear test.

The test makes 2016 the first year since North Korea began testing its nuclear devices underground to see more than a single nuclear test. North Korea previously tested nuclear weapons in January 2016, February 2013, May 2009, and October 2006. The 5.3 magnitude quake would put the expected yield of this test roughly in the 6 to 9 kiloton range and is roughly comparable with the February 2013 and January 2016 tests. North Korea claimed that its January test this year involved a thermonuclear device, a claim that most nuclear experts doubt.

Friday’s test also coincides with the country’s September 9 Foundation Day. North Korea has made a habit of carrying out major tests of weapons systems and nuclear weapons on significant dates. This year’s first nuclear test, for example, roughly coincided with Kim Jong-un’s birthday. North Korea additionally had recently dispatched a senior diplomat involved in nuclear talks to China, its historical partner and benefactor. Though reports did not specify a reason for the visit, Choe Son Hui, the North Korean diplomat, could have given Beijing notice of an impending test.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...e2c50a-743d-11e6-9781-49e591781754_story.html

Asia & Pacific

These North Korean missile launches are adding up to something very troubling

By Anna Fifield
September 9 at 4:00 AM „³


SEOUL ¡X North Korea is touting technological progress in its nuclear program, saying after a nuclear test Friday that it can now produce ¡§smaller, lighter and diversified nuclear warheads of higher strike power.¡¨ But it is also making strides in its missile program, analysts say ¡X advances that could enable it to outsmart missile defense systems, which could make the missiles more attractive to potential customers.

North Korea conducted what it called a ¡§nuclear warhead explosion test¡¨ Friday. The country has conducted only five nuclear tests since its program began, but this is the third since Kim Jong Un took power at the end of 2011 and its second this year alone.

Under Kim¡¦s leadership, North Korea has also sharply accelerated the pace of missile testing, with almost two dozen launches this year alone. While many of this year¡¦s tests have not been successful and there are still many unknowns about North Korea¡¦s nuclear and missile programs, there have still been noticeable ¡X and concerning ¡X improvements.

¡§It seems like North Korea is trying to qualitatively improve its missiles and develop options to evade or fool U.S. missile defenses,¡¨ said Kelsey Davenport,, director for nonproliferation policy at the Arms Control Association. ¡§If this continues unchecked, they could develop an inter-continental ballistic missile that could pose a threat to the United States in the next decade.¡¨

In its most recent salvo, North Korea launched three medium-range missiles Monday as China, which had joined the international condemnation of last month¡¦s submarine-launched ballistic missile, was hosting the G20 summit in Hangzhou.

The rockets flew about 600 miles ¡X putting Hangzhou within range. But they were sent in the other direction, falling inside Japan¡¦s air defense identification zone.

Arms control experts have since been poring over photos of the launches released by the North Korean media. Video footage, complete with stirring revolutionary music, shows three missiles being launched in the space of a minute from trucks parked on a highway south of Pyongyang.

The location is within the security belt protecting Kim and the other regime elites in the capital, said Michael Madden, editor of the North Korean Leadership Watch website. That meant the drills could be simulating the collapse of the state or the presence of hostile forces within the country, he said.

3D interactive graphic

SCUD ER by JamesMartinCNS on Sketchfab

Graphic: Produced by the Center for Nonproliferation Studies for the Nuclear Threat Initiative

But it was the modifications to the missile that surprised the rocket scientists at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, Calif. It appears that North Korea has extended the distance a short-range Scud can fly, essentially turning it into a medium-range missile, which the North Koreans call the Rodong.

That means that a longer-range missile could be wheeled out on an existing Scud transporter ¡X obviating the need to produce new trucks. Syria is among the countries thought to have bought short-range Scuds from North Korea, in about 2000.

¡§This is a really nice upgrade,¡¨ said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program in Monterey. ¡§Countries looking to buy North Korean missiles are probably looking at this and thinking, ¡¥Ooooh, that¡¦s nice.¡¦ ¡¨

North Korea has been concentrating on developing road-mobile missiles that can be fueled in a shelter or tunnel, instead of on a traditional launchpad that can be detected by satellites ¡X and theoretically invite a preemptive strike.

Japan¡¦s self-defense forces did not detect Monday¡¦s launch in advance, the Nikkei newspaper reported, also saying this underscored the limits of Japan¡¦s traditional defense capability program.

In the past, when activity had been seen around the launchpad, Japan¡¦s self-defense forces would roll out Patriot Advanced Capability (PAC-3) interceptors at the defense ministry headquarters in Tokyo. But road-mobile missiles can be readied for launch in a matter of minutes, cutting the time available to respond.

Japan is ¡§very concerned¡¨ that North Korea has launched so many different missiles in such a short period, said Atsuya Tanimoto of the Japanese Defense Ministry¡¦s intelligence analysis office. ¡§North Korea is improving its technology,¡¨ he said.

https://youtu.be/aNqfwppMx_M
KOREAN CENTRAL TELEVISION

North Korea also appears to be looking for other ways to avoid interception, no doubt motivated by South Korea¡¦s recent decision to host a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) antimissile unit for the U.S. military. The battery is due to be deployed to a site south of Seoul next year.

But by firing the three missiles within the space of a minute, rather than over the usual course of an hour or so, North Korea appeared to be testing a way to make it more difficult to intercept incoming missiles, said Joseph S. Bermudez Jr., a military analyst affiliated with the Washington-based U.S.-Korea Institute at SAIS.

¡§This launch was probably designed to test not only operational readiness but to develop tricks to defeat antimissile defenses in Japan and South Korea,¡¨ Bermudez said.

¡§When you launch in a barrage at the same time, it complicates missile defense. So they¡¦ve shown they have not just the technological capability but the operational capability for simultaneous launches.¡¨

Furthermore, it appeared that missile tested Monday separates after launch ¡X making it harder for missile defense systems to intercept.

¡§When a solid warhead remains attached to the missile, it¡¦s easier to hit because it¡¦s a bigger target,¡¨ Lewis said. ¡§If you were in Egypt, staring at Israel, you might really like a warhead like this.¡¨

North Korea has not demonstrated any capacity to make a nuclear warhead small enough to attach to a missile, let alone the ability to deliver a nuclear-tipped missile to a target.

Still, the progress in its medium-range missile program follows observable advances in North Korea¡¦s quest to launch missiles from sea as well as from land.

[North Korea hails ¡¥greatest success¡¦ of submarine-launched ballistic missile]

North Korea was ridiculed for apparently Photoshopping a ballistic missile launch from a submarine in May. But last month it successfully launched a missile from a submarine near its east coast port of Sinpo. It flew about 300 miles toward Japan before falling into the sea.

This showed that its missile program might be progressing faster than originally expected, said John Schilling, an aerospace engineer who studies North Korea¡¦s missiles.

¡§However, this does not mean it will be ready next week, next month, or even next year,¡¨ he wrote in a commentary for the 38 North website.

But North Korea¡¦s submarine-launched ballistic missiles could be operational by the second half of 2018, he wrote.

Concurrent with making progress on its delivery systems, North Korea has also been refurbishing its old missile production infrastructure.

Kim visited the January 18 General Machinery Plant, which makes sensitive missile components, at the end of last year and joked that it looked so good, visitors might think they were in a resort.

[ U.S. policy on North Korea relies on China, and provokes it at the same time ]

International sanctions imposed through the United Nations, as well as direct sanctions from the United States, South Korea and Japan, have been designed to cut off North Korea¡¦s ability to buy parts for its nuclear and missile programs, as well as stanch financial flows.

But the steady rat-a-tat of missile tests suggests that North Korea has plenty of missile parts to play with.

Some American officials suggest that North Korea might be racing against the clock, trying to test and make as much progress as it can before the latest round of sanctions really bites.

While Bermudez warned against getting too excited about the most recent developments, saying they simply reinforce what had been seen previously, Lewis said the developments should disabuse anyone of the notion that North Korea was not serious about its missile program.

¡§They¡¦re testing at a really fast rate because the program is real,¡¨ he said.¡§The idea that this is a Potemkin missile program is just nonsense.¡¨

Read more

North Korea fires 3 missiles as G-20 continues in China

North Korean missile lands perilously close to Japan

North Korean missile test a failure, Seoul says

Today¡¦s coverage from Post correspondents around the world


3 Comments

Anna Fifield is The Post¡¦s bureau chief in Tokyo, focusing on Japan and the Koreas. She previously reported for the Financial Times from Washington DC, Seoul, Sydney, London and from across the Middle East. „J Follow @annafifield
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.newsweek.com/boko-haram-isis-abubakar-shekau-abu-musab-al-barnawi-496615?rx=us

World

What We Know About Boko Haram’s Factional War

By Conor Gaffey On 9/8/16 at 9:36 AM

For seven years, Boko Haram has terrorized northeast Nigeria and surrounding countries, killing tens of thousands and displacing millions.

Despite the Nigerian government claiming a “technical” victory over the militant group after retaking much of its territory, Boko Haram still has a massive capacity for inflicting destruction and casualties. In the first nine months of 2016, Boko Haram has been solely responsible for almost 400 deaths in the West African country, according to the Council of Foreign Relations.

Nigeria’s efforts to vanquish the Islamist group, however, may have received a boost by the growing reports of factionalism and infighting within Boko Haram, which is turning increasingly violent.

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In recent weeks, two rival factions in Boko Haram have clashed in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state, close to Lake Chad— one loyal to Abubakar Shekau, the group’s ostensible leader since 2009, and the other led by Abu Musab al-Barnawi, recently proclaimed as the group’s commander-in-chief in a publication of the Islamic State militant group (ISIS). Shekau’s faction, in particular, has suffered as a result—three of his fighters were killed on September 1 in an attack by Barnawi’s troops in Yele and Arafa, two villages in Borno, while an unspecified number were also killed in the nearby Marte district on August 31, AFP reported on Wednesday.

Though both factions remain shadowy and hard data—such as numbers of fighters—is difficult to come by, Newsweek reviews what we know about the division in the Nigerian militant group.

The Shekau Faction

Leader

An ethnic Kanuri born in Nigeria’s Yobe state who proclaims himself to be an Islamic theologian, Abubakar Shekau took over the leadership of Boko Haram following the death of the group’s founder Mohammed Yusuf in 2009. Shekau was designated a global terrorist by the United States in 2012 and is subject to a $7 million reward for information on his whereabouts. On several occasions, the Nigerian military and others have claimed to have killed the jihadi—most recently on August 23, when the Nigerian army said that Shekau had been “fatally wounded” in an airstrike that killed several other senior Boko Haram commanders. Despite such claims, Shekau—or at least people purporting to be the militant leader—has regularly resurfaced in video and audio statements, most recently in August to denounce the appointment of Barnawi as Boko Haram’s kingpin.

Tactics

Under Shekau’s leadership, Boko Haram was transformed from a band of radical preachers in northern Nigeria to the world’s deadliest militant group. Taking up arms following Yusuf’s death in 2009—which occurred in Nigerian police custody—Boko Haram has killed tens of thousands of people in the course of its insurgency. Boko Haram’s campaign of attacks led former Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan to impose a state of emergency in the northeast in early 2013, as the militants seized territory and displaced hundreds of thousands of people in its bid to create an Islamic caliphate. At its peak, the militants reportedly controlled an area similar in size to Belgium.

The group has become renowned for its indiscriminate and brutal attacks. Mosques, churches, markets and camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs) have all been attacked by Boko Haram militants. In many of its attacks, the extremist group has used children, particularly young girls, as suicide bombers—a UNICEF report published in April stated that one-fifth of the group’s suicide attacks were carried out by children, 75 percent of whom were girls.

Boko Haram has also used mass abductions as a tactic for bargaining with the Nigerian government. Perhaps the best-known incident in Boko Haram’s insurgency was the April 2014 kidnapping of more than 250 schoolgirls from Chibok, a town in northeast Nigeria. The vast majority of the girls remain in captivity, and Boko Haram released a video in August purporting to show scores of the girls. In the video, one of the captives is interviewed and urges the Nigerian government to release Boko Haram members from prison in exchange for the girls’ freedom.

Recent Developments

After more than a year without making a public appearance, Shekau was unusually active in August, releasing an audio statement followed by a video appearance several days later. The statements followed Barnawi’s designation to a position of leadership in Boko Haram by ISIS.

In his audio message, Shekau said he had been “deceived” about Barnawi’s appointment, denounced his opponent as an infidel and accused him of plotting a leadership coup. In the following video, Shekau described himself as the group’s rightful leader and vowed to continue the insurgency, while also stating that his group had “no desire to fight our Muslim brethren.” Shekau also continued to refer to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as “caliph,” indicating that the split between the two groups was more complicated than previously thought.

The Barnawi Faction

Leader

In an edition of an ISIS-linked magazine Al-Naba in August, Abu Musab al-Barnawi was purportedly designated as being in a leadership position in the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), as Boko Haram came to be known following its pledge of allegiance to ISIS— under Shekau’s authority —in 2015.

Several analysts have stated that Barnawi is the son of Yusuf, the founder of Boko Haram, and was previously a close confidant of Shekau within Boko Haram. Prior to the Al-Naba article, Barnawi was little-known in the international media but had made an appearance as a spokesman for the militant group in a January 2015 video.

Tactics

Barnawi indicated a potential amelioration in Boko Haram’s tactics in the Al-Naba interview. He stated that his intention was to focus the group’s attacks on Nigeria’s Christian population—the country is split roughly evenly between a majority-Muslim north and a largely-Christian south —speaking of “booby-trapping and blowing up every church we are able to reach, and killing all of those who we find from the citizens of the Cross,” according to a translation of the report by the SITE Intelligence group.

The statement appeared to be a denunciation of Shekau’s indiscriminate policy, which included blowing up mosques and targeting markets frequented by Muslims. In the reported clashes between Barnawi and Shekau’s respective factions, this point seems to have been re-emphasized: a citizen in the Monguno area of Borno, Mele Kaka, told AFP that Barnawi’s fighters had told villagers that they attacked Shekau’s faction “because they had derailed from the true jihad” by killing civilians and looting their property. Barnawi’s faction claimed that such actions “contravene the teachings of Islam and true jihad,” Kaka told AFP.


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General Thomas Waldhauser, the recently-appointed head of the U.S. military command center for Africa—known as AFRICOM—also claimed in June that Boko Haram’s ties with ISIS had fractured over its use of children as suicide bombers. “He’s [Shekau’s] been told by ISIL to stop doing that,” said Waldhauser, claiming that Shekau’s failure to cease such operations led to a split within Boko Haram.

Recent Developments

Barnawi has not been as active in the media as Shekau, although U.S.-based news site Sahara Reporters claimed that he released an audio statement in early August, in which he accused Shekau of living in luxury while his fighters starved. Nigeria’s military has apparently given little weight to the alleged appointment, with defense spokesman General Rabe Abubakar telling Newsweek after it was announced that any change in Boko Haram’s leadership “does not in any way affect us by any means.”

Boko Haram church

A security barrier marks the scene of a car bomb explosion at St Theresa Catholic Church outside Nigeria's capital Abuja on December 25, 2011. Barnawi has said he wishes to focus Boko Haram's attacks on Christians.

Afolabi Sotunde/Reuters
 

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Africa

Nigeria Facing 'a Famine Unlike Any We Have Ever Seen'

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEPT. 9, 2016, 12:06 A.M. E.D.T.

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — The whimpers from skeletally thin babies too weak to cry are a harbinger of worse things to come: A quarter of the children lucky enough to make it to this emergency feeding center are dying. They are the latest victims of Boko Haram's Islamic insurgency.

No one knows how many more children are dying of starvation in refugee camps and areas too dangerous to access because of the extremists' presence, according to Doctors Without Borders, which runs the emergency feeding center. The aid group first sounded the alarm of a humanitarian crisis of "catastrophic" proportion in northeast Nigeria as Boko Haram lost its grip on some areas and its victims began to emerge.

"These are kids that basically have been hungry all their lives, and some are so far gone that they die here in the first 24 hours," said Jean Stowell, an American midwife in charge of the center in Maiduguri, the biggest city in this largely Muslim region. The 110-bed center has quadrupled in size in recent weeks, but each time it expands it rapidly fills.

Nearly a quarter of a million children are severely malnourished because Boko Haram has disrupted trade and farming, U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Toby Lanzer warned at a meeting in Brussels on Thursday. About 2 million people in the region have not been reached, "and we can't assess their situation. We can estimate that it's awful."

With Nigeria in a recession and without speedy outside help, "we will see, I think, a famine unlike any we have ever seen anywhere," he said.

One million refugees from Boko Haram are crowded into camps in Maiduguri. Outside the camps, fresh produce is cruelly bountiful. Markets are filled with pineapples, oranges, cabbage, green beans, tomatoes and carrots. But most refugees cannot afford them, and Nigeria's government is investigating reports of officials stealing food aid.

Elsewhere, 1 million children are trapped in areas too dangerous to reach because of Boko Haram, the U.N. children's agency estimates. Its effort to reach some of them was put on hold in July when the extremists attacked a military-escorted humanitarian convoy on a major highway and a rocket hit the windshield of an armored car. A UNICEF worker was among three civilians wounded.

Boko Haram has been hostile to Western medicine. A Doctors Without Borders vehicle exploded a land mine on the same road in July; no one was seriously hurt. The organization had just brought the first aid to Bama, the region's second largest city, where they discovered that six people a day were dying of malnutrition and diarrhea.

Some children who make it out of such areas remain in danger.

In the steamy heat inside the feeding center, Hassana Mohammed tried to breastfeed a baby while comforting 18-month-old Yakubu, who was too weak to swallow and was irritated by the intravenous drip that fed him through his nose.

Mohammed's five children have known little but hunger and fear since Boko Haram killed her first husband when her eldest, 7-year-old Aisha, was just a month old.

"We've been on the run ever since, but Boko Haram was never far away," Mohammed said. "You will see some women dying in the bush during childbirth, and some dying on the way while running because of hunger. Some will run and leave their children for their safety, now many children were left in the bush to die."

The hardest thing now is finding food, she said. When aid workers made it to her refugee camp in Maiduguri, an informal collection of huts made of plastic sheeting and palm leaves, she received four handfuls of rice.

"It's supposed to last a week, but we run out after just a day or two," she said.

___

This report has been corrected to show that Jean Stowell is a midwife, not a doctor.

___

Associated Press reporter Andrea Rosa contributed to this report from Brussels.
 

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Shaping Operations Continue in Iraq, Syria as ISIL Leaders Targeted

By Cheryl Pellerin DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Sept. 8, 2016 — The past three weeks has seen continued shaping and clearing operations in Iraq, continued reduction of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s ability to move fighters in and out of northern Syria, and sustained pressure on ISIL’s command and control, the Operation Inherent Resolve spokesman said today.

Air Force Col. John Dorrian briefed the Pentagon press corps via teleconference on OIR operations, describing work being done to remove ISIL leadership figures.

Over the past 60 days coalition precision air strikes have targeted and struck more than a dozen ISIL leaders in Mosul alone, he said.

Strikes on ISIL Leaders

“These strikes have a disruptive effect on the enemy command and control, which is important in setting conditions for Mosul's liberation,” Dorrian said, noting that the strikes have been against military commanders, safe houses, weapons facilitators, vehicle-borne bomb attack coordinators, security commanders and operations and communication leaders.

On the precision strike announced last week against Abu Mohammad al-Adnani, widely known as ISIL’s No. 2 leader, Dorrian said coalition forces had been tracking him for a long time, knowing it was important to remove him from his role as ISIL's senior plotter for external terror attacks.

“Adnani was … responsible for spying, internal messaging and discipline as well as planning and directing the murder of innocent men, women and children in terror attacks around the world,” he added.

It has been widely reported that Adnani was killed in the strike but Dorrian said the coalition is still assessing the results of the strike.

“It's a rigorous process of intelligence gathering and analysis before we confirm the strike had its desired effect. When the professionals have gone through the relevant intelligence and that process is completed, we will inform you at once,” he added.

Iraq Operations

Over the past several weeks east of Mosul, Iraq, coalition forces supported peshmerga forces who were conducting Operation Evergreen II. The effort was designed to seize and control key terrain near the Gwer River Bridge, which crosses the Great Zab River, Dorrian said, adding that the operation was executed with 1,500 to 2,000 peshmerga with support from coalition and artillery strikes.

“The coalition used helicopters to lift the artillery into position and then exfiltrated the guns when the operation was complete. The firing solutions this offered provided maximum flexibility for the commander on the ground,” he said.

The operation was conducted Aug. 14-16 and took less than 48 hours to achieve its main goals, Dorrian said. It also liberated 12 villages and, he added, “a lot of people who were living under miserable conditions” under ISIL.

Also in Iraq, Iraqi forces and Counter Terrorism Service forces added Qayyarah to the list of cities liberated from ISIL, Dorrian said.

“In the last two weeks alone the [Iraqis] liberated an additional six villages in the area. The significance of these liberation battles is that the Iraqi security forces continue to gain control of key terrain and lines of communications, while [ISIL] continues to lose freedom of movement and the resources that come from controlling terrain,” he explained.

Qayyarah West Airfield, which will be a stepping stone and staging area for Iraqi forces, has been cleared and efforts are underway to develop the area to support upcoming operations to liberate Mosul, Dorrian added.

Partners in Syria

In Syria, after taking Jarabulus with its partnered forces, Turkey has announced that they've cleared the remaining border region from further infiltration by ISIL, Dorrian said.

This terrain was important as an route into and out of the region, he added, noting that ISIL’s loss of freedom of movement in this area improves security in Europe and around the world and severely impacts their ability to reinforce fighters in Syria and Iraq.

“ISIL is an adaptive and determined enemy,” the OIR spokesman said, “and the coalition will continue to support Turkey as our NATO ally, and their partner forces, as they continue to strengthen their lines and secure that border. The coalition will also continue working with our Syrian Democratic Forces partners in Syria to assure the latest progress continues to build momentum for a lasting defeat of [ISIL] in the region.”

The latest progress along with continuous airstrikes to dismantle ISIL command and control, financing and resupply routes set conditions for the eventual liberation of Raqqa, the city that ISIL considers its capital, he added.

Part of setting those conditions is continued work to assure that all counter-ISIL forces operating in Syria have opened their lines of coordination to deconflict operations in what has become a very crowded battle space, Dorrian said. “Unity of focus on [ISIL] over the coming days and weeks is imperative,” he added.

“Our allies, our coalition members and all of our partners have a unifying interest in defeating [ISIL],” Dorrian said. “We believe the improved coordination of armed activities in northern Syria will improve the safety of our forces.”

(Follow Cheryl Pellerin on Twitter @PellerinDoDNews)
 

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Brussels is moving closer towards creating an EU army post-Brexit

Oscar Williams-Grut
Sep. 8, 2016, 2:59 AM
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Top EU official Jean-Claude Juncker will next week set out plans for a closer military union among European Union member states, according to multiple reports.

The European Commission President wants a unified command for EU military operations, common investment for military hardware, and standardised military equipment for all member states, according to The Financial Times and The Times. Juncker will set out the plans in his "State of the Union" address next week.

Military integration of EU states is controversial, with Britain a vocal opponent of any steps towards the creation of an "EU army." There are also concerns that any EU defence operation could challenge NATO, the long-standing Western defence union which 22 EU members are part of.

Conservative MEP for the East of England Geoffrey Van Orden, his party’s defence spokesman, told the Telegraph: "“The US and indeed the UK are being misled if they imagine that such moves will enhance Nato – the key guarantor of our collective defence.

"On the contrary, the creation of EU defence structures, separate from Nato, will only lead to division between transatlantic partners at a time when solidarity is needed in the face of many difficult and dangerous threats to the democracies."

But a senior German government official told Reuters: "That is not about competing with NATO but we need a stronger Europe. If we wait for the Eurosceptics, then we will only go backwards."

Federica Mogherini, the EU’s head of foreign affairs, says that the pending Brexit opens up "political space" for the move.

The Times quotes Mogherini as saying: "We have the political space today to do things that were not really doable in previous years."

"It might sound a bit dramatic but we are at this turning point. We could relaunch our European project and make it more functional and powerful for our citizens and the rest of the world. Or we could diminish its intensity and power."

Mogherini apparently downplayed suggestion that this is the first step towards creating an "EU army," painting the project as an EU-wide terrorism defence initiative.

The Czech Republic and Hungary already support the plan, according to the Times, while Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has also reportedly backed the plan, according to the Telegraph. However, Poland and Slovakia are among the nations privately questioning the plans, according to the FT.

The plans will be discussed at a summit of 27 EU member states next week, which won't include Theresa May.

At the summit, Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said he will attempt a "counter-revolution" to shift power away from Brussels and towards former communist nations in the EU.

The Times quotes Orban as saying: "Brexit is a fantastic opportunity for us. We are at a historic cultural moment. There is a possibility of a cultural counter-revolution right now."
 
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