WAR 09-12-2015-to-09-18-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
(180) 08-22-2015-to-08-28-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...28-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(181) 08-29-2015-to-09-04-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...04-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(182) 09-05-2015-to-09-11-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...11-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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I'll get the links put up for the "big" threads in a bit....HC
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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://news.yahoo.com/sweden-summons-russian-ambassador-nato-threat-143317899.html

Sweden summons Russian ambassador after NATO threat

AFP
13 hours ago

Stockholm (AFP) - Sweden's foreign ministry on Friday summoned Russia's ambassador after Moscow threatened retaliatory measures if the Scandinavian country joined NATO.

Viktor Tatarintsev "is expected to come today" at Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom's request, a foreign ministry spokeswoman said.

"We are an independent state and we make our own security policy decisions independently ... We do not accept threats and I have summoned the Russian ambassador to ask questions and get an explanation," Wallstrom told journalists.

She was reacting to comments by Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, who said Moscow would take "retaliatory measures" if Sweden were to join NATO.

"Swedish membership in NATO would have politico-military and foreign policy consequences, and would require retaliatory measures from Russia," she said during a weekly briefing in Moscow on Thursday.

"Defence and national security strategy is up to each sovereign state to decide. However, we still consider Sweden's policy of non-participation in military blocs to be an important factor for the stability of northern Europe," she said.

Sweden has a long-standing policy of military non-alignment, meaning it is not bound by any alliances and chooses to take part in military operations on a case-by-case basis.

The country is however part of NATO's Partnership for Peace programme and has contributed troops to its operations in Afghanistan, for example.

Swedish public opinion has long been opposed to NATO membership, though recent polls have shown an increase in support amid concerns over Russia's recent military resurgence.


View Comments (909) .
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Well this should stir things up on yet another front....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-09-...ed-to-raise-flag-outside-un-buildings/6769272

Palestinians to raise flag outside United Nations after strong support from General Assembly

The World Today
By Meredith Griffiths
Posted earlier today at 1:27am

Palestine's flag will fly at the United Nations headquarters for the first time after the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a Palestinian-drafted resolution.

The move was supported by 119 out of the 193 UN members states.

Australia was among the eight nations that voted against the resolution, which states the flags of non-member observer states like Palestine "shall be raised at UN headquarters in New York and UN offices."

Key points
•The UN General Assembly approves raising Palestinian flag at UN headquarters
•119 countries voted in favour, eight voted against, 45 abstained
•Palestinian ambassador Riyad Mansour says flag vote is a show of support for statehood

Israel, the United States and Canada also opposed the move.

Palestinian prime minister Rami Hamdallah called the vote a step towards the recognition of Palestine as a full member of the United Nations.

The Palestinian ambassador to the UN, Riyad Mansour, welcomed the move, saying it was a show of international support.

"Today's vote is a reaffirmation of the legitimacy of the national aspirations of the Palestinian people," he said, "Of their existence among the nations of the world and their right to self determination. To be a free people in control of their lives and their destiny in their own independent state."

"The General Assembly's adoption of this resolution will help to restore some hope to our people and leadership as they continue on the peaceful non-violent political legal path."

He added that the resolution would "fulfil the rights of the Palestinian people, achieve a just and sustainable peace and secure Palestine's rightful place among the community of nations."

Israel's representative to the UN, Ron Prosor, criticised the assembly for adopting the resolution.

"The assembly would vote to declare that the Earth is flat if the Palestinians proposed it," Mr Prosor said.

US ambassador Samantha Power said raising the Palestinian flag would not reconcile Israelis and Palestinians.

"We all know that a sustainable and just resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will be reached only through hard choices and compromise negotiated by the parties," she said.

"Raising the Palestinian flag outside the UN headquarters is not an alternative to negotiations, and will not bring the parties closer to peace."

European Union divided on issue

Most of the 28 EU member states abstained but 10 voted yes, including France, which has been spearheading a push to revive the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

"This vote is firstly a vote in favour of the two-state solution which must remain a compass for us all and is always that of France," said Francois Delattre, the French ambassador to the UN.

"France has made the choice of coherence, since 1982 before the Knesset president Mitterrand called for the creation of a Palestinian state.

"France since then has not diverged from that path, supporting at each state the enhancement of Palestine's status."

The UN General Assembly approved the de facto recognition of the sovereign state of Palestine in 2012.

The Palestinians had presented the flag resolution as a joint effort with the Holy See, both of which have non-member observer status.

But the Vatican said it would not co-sponsor the resolution and asked its name be removed from the text.

Before the vote, the Vatican said it had not decided whether to fly its flag next to Palestine's flag should the resolution pass.


From other news sites:
•BBC: Vote allows Palestinian flag to be raised over UN
•The Sydney Morning Herald: Vote lets Palestinian flag fly at UN headquarters
•Daily Telegraph: Palestine flag to fly over UN headquarters
•Daily Mail: UN strongly approves Palestinian proposal to raise flag
•CBC: Canada among small group of countries to oppose Palestinian flag at UN
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.chron.com/opinion/outloo...-The-Iran-charade-on-Capitol-Hill-6497103.php

Charles Krauthammer: Iran Charade on Capitol Hill

Charles Krauthammer says there are overlooked consequences in the Iran deal entitling the 'peaceful' program to international assistance.

By Charles Krauthammer
Published 7:18 pm, Thursday, September 10, 2015

Congress is finally having its say on the Iran deal. It will be an elaborate charade, however, because, having first gone to the U.N., President Barack Obama has largely drained congressional action of relevance. At the Security Council, he pushed through a resolution ratifying the deal, thus officially committing the United States as a nation to its implementation - in advance of any congressional action.

The resolution abolishes the entire legal framework, built over a decade, underlying the international sanctions against Iran. A few months from now, they will be gone.

The script is already written: The International Atomic Energy Agency, relying on Iran's self-inspection (!) of its most sensitive nuclear facility, will declare Iran in compliance. The agreement then goes into effect, and Iran's nuclear program is officially deemed peaceful.

Sanctions are lifted. The mullahs receive $100 billion of frozen assets as a signing bonus. Iran begins reaping the economic bonanza, tripling its oil exports and welcoming a stampede of foreign companies back into the country.

It is all precooked. Last month, Britain's foreign secretary traveled to Tehran with an impressive delegation of British companies ready to deal. He was late, however. The Italian and French foreign ministers already had been there, accompanied by their own hungry businessmen and oil companies. Iran is back in business.

As a matter of constitutional decency, the president should have submitted the deal to Congress first. And submitted it as a treaty. Which it obviously is. No international agreement in a generation matches this one in strategic significance and geopolitical gravity.

Obama did not submit it as a treaty because he knew he could never get the constitutionally required votes for ratification. He's not close to getting two-thirds of the Senate. He's not close to getting a simple majority. No wonder: in the latest Pew Research Center poll, the American people oppose the deal by a staggering 28-point margin.

To get around the Constitution, Obama negotiated a swindle that requires him to garner a mere one-third of one house of Congress. Indeed, on Thursday, with just 42 Senate supporters - remember, a treaty requires 67 - the Democrats filibustered and prevented, at least for now, the Senate from voting on the deal at all.

But Obama two months ago enshrined the deal as international law at the U.N. Why should we care about the congressional vote? In order to highlight the illegitimacy of Obama's constitutional runaround and thus make it easier for a future president to overturn the deal, especially if Iran is found to be cheating.

As of now, however, it is done. Iran will be both unleashed - sanctions lifted, economy booming, with no treaty provisions regarding its growing regional aggression and support for terrorists - and welcomed as a good international citizen possessing a peaceful nuclear program. An astonishing trick.

Iran's legitimation will not have to wait a decade, after which, as the Iranian foreign minister boasts, the U.N. file on the Iranian nuclear program will be closed, all restrictions will be dropped and, as Obama himself has admitted, the breakout time to an Iranian bomb will become essentially zero. On the contrary. The legitimation happens now. Early next year, Iran will be officially recognized as a peaceful nuclear nation.

This is a revolution in Iran's international standing, yet its consequences have been largely overlooked. The deal goes beyond merely leaving Iran's nuclear infrastructure intact. Because the deal legitimizes that nuclear program as peaceful (unless proven otherwise - don't hold your breath), it is entitled to international assistance. Hence the astonishing provision buried in Annex III, Section 10 committing Western experts to offering the Iranian program our nuclear expertise.

Specifically "training courses and workshops." On what? Among other things, on how to protect against "sabotage."

Imagine: We are now to protect Iran against, say, the very Stuxnet virus, developed by the NSA and Israel's Unit 8200, that for years disrupted and delayed an Iranian bomb.

Secretary of State John Kerry has darkly warned Israel to not even think about a military strike on the nuclear facilities of a regime whose leader said just Wednesday that Israel will be wiped out within 25 years. The Israelis are now being told additionally - Annex III, Section 10 - that if they attempt just a defensive, nonmilitary cyberattack (a Stuxnet II), the West will help Iran foil it.

Ask those 42 senators if they even know about this provision. And how they can sign on to such a deal without shame and revulsion.


Krauthammer's email address is letters@charleskrauthammer.com.

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nationalreview.com/corne...-different-universe-over-recognizing-islamist

Krauthammer’s Take: Obama Prefers Living ‘in a Different Universe’ over Recognizing Islamist Threat

By NR Staff — September 11, 2015

In a panel themed around how America has changed since 9/11, Charles Krauthammer said tonight that despite threats multiplying across the Middle East, President Obama “wants to live in a different universe.”

Likening the War on Terror to America’s generations-long Cold War struggle, Krauthammer said on Friday’s Special Report that the fight against communism was not won easily. “We remember the Cold War as this wonderful, great victory; we’re all united.”

“We weren’t,” he continued. ”It lasted almost half a century. We had a victory or two at the beginning, Turkey and Greece in the Truman days, and then it was a terrible slog – Korea, Vietnam with defeats, the Bay of Pigs.”

“Every president said, starting with especially Kennedy in 1961, it is a long twilight struggle,” Krauthammer continued.

In contrast, ”What we are getting here and what we got for the last six years with Obama is a president who said this war is unsustainable, it’s hurting us. It’s changing us in ways it’s got to end. … No surprise the country doesn’t want to continue the struggle.”

Noting that America faces threats not only from “al Qaeda or ISIS and the Sunni radicals,” but also Shiite Iran, Krauthammer said, ”It is organized country with a huge economy with oil and we have now, as of yesterday, made it into a major regional power which will acquire nuclear weapons.”

“This is a long twilight struggle and it looks as if we have leadership that doesn’t want to recognize it, and wants to live in a different universe,” he concluded.
 
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Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://original.antiwar.com/updates...cross-iraq-as-peshmerga-fight-to-gain-ground/

47 Killed across Iraq as Peshmerga Fight to Gain Ground

by Margaret Griffis, September 11, 2015

A video clip showing 18 Turkish kidnapping victims was released on Friday, and several political demands on Turkey were made in it. The video did not reveal, however, if the gunmen behind the abduction were connected to any known Shi’ite groups, of if they are a new organization.

At least 47 were killed and 97 were wounded across Iraq:

Thirteen Peshmerga members were killed and 47 were wounded in Daquq. Several bombs exploded as the troops were attempting to a secure a major road between Kirkuk and Baghdad. Nevertheless, 13 villages were reported recaptured in this operation.

Twelve militants were killed and 50 were wounded in clashes in Saniya.

In Qaim, eleven militants were killed in a convoy that was targeted by airstrikes.

At least eight militants were killed in the Ramadi area.

Three militants were killed in Garma.

Read more by Margaret Griffis•90 Killed across Iraq; Anbar Officials Wounded in Attack – September 10th, 2015
•Airstrike Takes Out Militant Base in Anbar; 139 Killed across Iraq – September 9th, 2015
•More Executions for Mosul; 189 Killed across Iraq – September 8th, 2015
•Scores of Children Kidnapped in Iraq as 47 People Are Killed – September 7th, 2015
•Female ISIS Members Gunned Down; 130 Killed Across Iraq – September 6th, 2015
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.eurasiareview.com/120920...duct-of-misplaced-military-policies-analysis/

Pakistan’s Nuclear Policy: Product Of Misplaced Military Policies – Analysis

By South Asia Monitor
Saturday, September 12th, 2015
By Gaurav Dixit*

Speaking at a seminar in Islamabad in 1999, Pakistan’s former foreign minister and a leading nuclear strategist Abdul Sattar insisted, “We shall not engage in any nuclear competition or arms race”. Six months later, he reiterated, “Our policy of minimum credible deterrence will obviate any strategic arms race.” A recent report published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Stimson Center, however suggests that Pakistan could become the third largest nuclear stockpile in the world within the next five to ten years, behind only the United States and Russia. The report further states that the fast development of its nuclear head is out of its fear of existential threat from India. The report certainly suggests the reversal of Pakistan’s nuclear doctrine as suggested by Abul Sattar, and is also sufficient to indicate how the new doctrine has been directed against the very basis of demand for nuclear weapons.

Pakistan is already ahead of India in numbers of nuclear warheads – some estimate it to be 120 compared to 100 possessed by India. It is expected that Pakistan could have 350 nuclear warheads sometime in the next decade. Pakistan has rejected the report as utterly baseless, and in fact termed it as diversionary tactics to deviate from the increase in India’s fissile material stockpiles due to number of nuclear deals with the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) countries.

What does it mean for Pakistan?

A report by non-profit organisation Raftar, funded by Britain’s Department for International Development (DFID), suggests that Pakistan is facing an “existential crisis” growing from poor tax collections and lacks resources to finance itself, and primarily relies on donor loans and aid for its development projects. Meanwhile, illiteracy and joblessness is growing, and as prominent writer Ahmad Rashid claims all this along with rise of Islamist fundamentalism has made Pakistan slide into a failed state status.

The only thing seems to be getting more powerful is the military and its expenditure.

Pakistan has increasing defence expenditure in real terms. Pakistan’s current defence expenditure is $7.7 billion, 18% of the country’s total budget. It makes Pakistan’s military spending as a percentage of its total budget as one of the highest in the world. Further stockpiling of nuclear warheads will require tremendous amount of financial investment. It would certainly require Pakistan to cut on other social and economic plans meant for development. Military expenditure in the past had a tough impact on other welfare expenditure. A country on the verge of being a failed state can hardly afford to focus on military and nuclear expenditure – which has the potential to embroil the country into unforeseeable internal conflict.

It is now up to Pakistan to address its ‘existential crisis’ or divert its resources to manage the assumed “existential threat”.

Nuclear stockpiling and concept of nuclear deterrence

Apart from various theories that have repudiated nuclear deterrence as merely an art of bargaining power for coercion and intimidation, with no logical consistency, and empirically inaccurate; the likes of George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, Sam Nunn, and Bill Perry, veterans of America’s Cold War security time, in a reversal of their earlier standpoint as believers in nuclear deterrence, claim that nuclear deterrence no more remains a persuasive strategic response to a world of potential regional nuclear arms races and nuclear terrorism than it was to the cold war.

A high degree of threat, they claim, arises from terrorist groups who have shown ambition to steal, buy or build a nuclear device. There is a potential security threat to both the nuclear arms and its material.

Pakistan nuclear facilities prone to terrorist attack

Pakistan nuclear facilities have faced a series of terrorist attacks since November 2007. The most significant attack was on May 22, 2011 on Mehran Naval Aviation Base in Karachi, in which 10 people were killed and two American surveillance planes destroyed. The other significant attack was on August 16, 2012 at the high-security Pakistan Aeronautical Complex at Kamra. The attack was the third on the airbase since 2007.

Pakistan’s nuclear security faces additional challenges, unique to Pakistan’s security environment – its military and intelligence is going through rapid religious indoctrination. A section of army is sympathetic to radical Islamist groups. There is a possibility that some insiders, particularly from military or intelligence establishment, may pass on the crucial material or document to the terrorist groups. The rapid development of nuclear heads will make it nearly impossible to keep it within the hands of selected few, raising the possibility of its leakage.

Conclusion

Pakistan’s obsession for higher number of nuclear warheads certainly defies, if any, the principles of credible minimum nuclear deterrence or proportionate deterrence and is driven more by surreal military supposition of threat than any rational deliberation.

Pakistan’s nuclear policy appears to be delusory and dangerous, a product of misplaced military policies, rather than a realistic appraisal of its domestic priorities. If it aims for some kind of geopolitical equilibrium by building large number of nuclear warheads to match India’s massive conventional power, it is only going to destabilise the security environment of South Asia. At the same time it will certainly raise some suspicion in India, undermine India’s confidence, raising the risk of a nuclear arms race.

*Gaurav Dixit is an independent researcher on conflict situations in South Asia. He can be contacted at gauravdixit04@gmail.com
 

Housecarl

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http://www.eurasiareview.com/120920...en-hulusi-akar-a-perfect-strategist-analysis/

New Head Of Turkey’s Army Gen. Hulusi Akar: A Perfect Strategist – Analysis

By JTW
Saturday, September 12th, 2015
By Yavuz Yener

The first week of August always attracts enormous media attention in Turkey. It is the time when the Supreme Military Council (SMC, or YAª in Turkish) convenes. This Council meeting determines the promotions and retirements of the military’s top officers. In legal terms, the SMC is responsible for setting the agenda of the Turkish Armed Forces (TAF), NATO’s second largest army. On the civilian side, the prime minister, who is accompanied by the minister of defense, chairs the three-day long meetings. The Chief of General Staff, the Chiefs of Land, Air and Naval Forces, the Commandant of the Gendarmerie, and all other incumbent generals and admirals serve as the military members of the council.

Different from its preceding sittings, the SMC convened this year without having a government. Although the AK Party won the elections on June 7 with an overwhelming majority, it did not win enough seats to form a single-party government. Since then, a coalition government has been pending. Despite uncertainties regarding the future of the country, the SMC named General Hulusi Akar the Chief of General Staff, or Commander of TAF. Now everybody is wondering, who is this person? Traditionally, the head of the army is considered to be a very critical figure in Turkey, and despite the recent changes in civil-military balances in the country, the military is still a very important actor. So, we must have a look at the General’s personality and accomplishments to analyze what he can bring to TAF’s future.

Hulusi Akar: The Perfect Strategist

Born in 1952, Gen. Hulusi Akar is an infantryman. He is particularly experienced in logistics, planning, and intelligence. He also served as Head of the Turkish Military Academy between 2002 and 2005 while he was still a major general. The new Commander of the Turkish Armed Forces is highly regarded by both military personnel and civilians. Before being appointed as Chief of General Staff, he was the Commander of the Turkish Land Forces. When I asked some military officers who spent time under Gen. Akar’s command about their opinion of Turkey’s new top military official, they all noted his intelligence and wisdom. One senior army officer said:

He is not the kind of general that frightens you so badly that you cannot even make eye contact. There are still many generals who prefer to command their forces by frightening them, but their numbers are decreasing, and General Akar is definitely not one of them. You listen to him not because he is intimidating or because you are obliged to, but because he inspires you when he starts speaking. You respect and admire him when you hear his erudite words.

Another officer cited a modified Turkish proverb used by many infantrymen in the army to illustrate Gen. Akar’s wisdom and cunning. “Su uyur, düºman uyumaz” is the original proverb, meaning that even if water falls asleep, your enemy never will. “Su uyur, Hulusi akar” is their adjusted version, meaning that even if water falls asleep, Hulusi will continue flowing. Furthermore, as Commander of the Land Forces, he paid numerous visits to military stations and bases in critical locations across Turkey to boost the morale of his soldiers. Some soldiers call him “Seri Paºa” implying that he is good at making quick decisions by omitting trivial details. Some others define him as a man who thinks like a civilian, but acts like a soldier.

Despite all these words of praise and celebration, one question naturally comes to mind when thinking about this appointment in the context of Turkey. Will Gen. Akar intervene in politics? Most likely, the answer is no. He worked closely with his predecessor, Gen. Necdet Ozel, who strove very hard to keep his institution in line with democratic norms. Indeed, keeping in mind that Gen. Akar has even been considered to be Gen. Ozel’s protégé, it is highly unlikely that a major conflict will emerge between Gen. Akar and the new government. In fact, Gen. Ozel has engaged with those on the political frontlines since 2011, working very closely with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his predecessor Abdullah Gul on several occasions. Like Gen. Ozel, Gen. Akar has gained a reputation for being cooperative and open-minded. Understanding the concerns of politicians and the institutional perceptions of the military, he has been the perfect strategist, bridging the gap between policy and military affairs. Although it would be imprudent to predict that there will be no disparities or controversies between the military and politicians in the upcoming period, Gen. Akar is expected to stand by democratic values and the rule of the law.

The future of TAF under Akar’s command

The dry aspect of civil-military relations aside, the real question involves the future of TAF. Since the late 2000s, the Turkish military has found itself in the process of a major transition that has been arduous and very costly, albeit necessary. Incarnating nationalist taboos and committing political wrongdoings for decades, the military has been harshly criticized for not having focused on its real job. Many military officers may not accept such excoriations, but considering the level of sophistication of the issues that are being debated by major world militaries, it is apparent that TAF falls far behind global trends. Now that the conflict between generals and politicians has been resolved, TAF has to start addressing its urgent problems. This is the area in which Gen. Akar and his staff will face their true test.

At this point, some uncertainties are striking. Can Turkey have a strong area defense capacity? Can TAF modernize the rest of its archaic, Cold War era weapons systems? Can it elevate the number of armored and mechanized forces? What about counter-insurgency (COIN)? Can we finally turn our 40-year-old COIN experience into a coherent doctrine or system of training so sophisticated that it can offer considerable expertise to the world’s major armies? Can TAF experiment with its new weapons systems procured from Turkey’s industrial base?

Good things may be on the horizon for Turkey when it comes to these challenges. The military is evolving mentally and materially. It has already started planning and preparing for the next 20 years, adapting to the changing threat environment. The number of personnel in the army with a master’s or doctoral degree is increasing. One source, for instance, states that there are over 60 TAF personnel studying abroad at a graduate-level, predominantly in Western countries. Gen. Akar himself worked laboriously on developing military cooperation with the U.S. and British militaries. Most recently, Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army Gen. Raymond T. Odierno hosted Gen. Akar last January in Fort Myer. Moreover, new procurement deals are likely to follow in the future, allowing military equipment to be modernized with the maximum participation of Turkey’s national defense industrial base. Moreover, the Turkish Cyber Defense Command was launched in 2013 to act as the military’s vanguard against cyber threats. Gen. Ozel started most of these initiatives, and his successor is likely to follow suit.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://aranews.net/2015/09/turkey-renews-anti-pkk-strikes-amid-reports-of-civilian-casualties/

Turkey renews anti-PKK strikes amid reports of civilian casualties

September 12, 2015
Middle East & World

DUHOK – Turkish air forces have bombed positions of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in northern Iraq, the army said in a statement on Friday.

Airstrikes hit mountainous areas in northern Iraq, including Qandil, Avashin and Zap.

Turkish authorities said its strikes hit locations of the PKK rebels. However, Kurdish sources in northern Iraq reported that Friday’s strikes also caused civilian casualties.

This comes amid continues siege imposed by Turkish military and security forces on the southeastern town of Cizre under the pretext that PKK holds positions inside the town.

Dozens of people have been killed during a Turkish military operation in Cizre since a curfew was enforced on the town a week ago.

On Thursday, the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP) said in a statement that 21 civilians have died over a week of Turkish curfew.

Selahattin Demirtas, the co-chairman of the HDP, has been leading fellow deputies and dozens of supporters on a march to Cizre to end the curfew and draw attention to the plight of its 120,000 residents.

Turkey started airstrikes on PKK positions in July, killing more than 900 Kurdish rebels. This coincided with a fierce response by the PKK whose attacks have killed some 100 Turkish forces in two months.

The ongoing clashes have shattered a peace process begun by President Tayyip Erdogan in 2012 to end a conflict that has killed at least 40,000 people over three decades.

Reporting by: Eyaz Ciziri

Source: ARA News
 

Housecarl

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http://www.dw.com/en/turkey-to-lift...e-after-reports-of-civilian-deaths/a-18710280

Turkey to lift curfew in cut-off city of Cizre after reports of civilian deaths

Turkish authorities are due to lift a curfew imposed on the city of Cizre in support of a military operation against Kurdish rebels. Civilian deaths have been reported and the city's mayor has been removed.

Date 12.09.2015

The Turkish military operation in the city of 120,000 people on the border with Syria and close to Iraq was a key part of attacks against Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants.

Warplanes struck 64 PKK targets in raids on northern Iraq, dropping 80 bombs, according to state media.

"The curfew that has been in place since September 4 will come to an end on Saturday September 12 at 7:00 am (0400 UTC)," Sirnak region governor Ali Ihsan Su said in a statement. During the curfew, outsiders had not been allowed to enter the city in what Kurdish activists described as a blockade.

Interior Minister Selami Altinok said up to 32 PKK militants had been killed in Cizre up to Thursday. He claimed just one civilian had died in the clashes.

Representatives of the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) have been trying to visit the city and reported that the civilian death toll in fighting was 21, including children. The Firat news agency claimed that two children, aged 10 and 15, were shot dead overnight for breaking the curfew.

Cizre's mayor, Leyla Imret, was removed from office by the Interior Ministry after being placed under investigation for "terrorist propaganda" and "inciting violence."

Rights concerns

Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Nils Muiznieks called for independent observers to be allowed into Cizre after receiving what he called "very distressing information" from the city.

Muiznieks said the situation "combines an exceptionally severe interference with the human rights of a very large population and a near-complete information blackout."

As reports emerged of residents running out of drinking water and food, Amnesty International demanded Turkish authorities allow residents to access basic supplies: "An indefinite, round-the-clock curfew is a disproportionate restriction, as is blocking all access to the city," the rights group said in statement.

jm/bw (EFE, AFP)

DW recommends

Turkey bars pro-Kurdish lawmakers besieged town of Cizre

Turkish officials have stopped a group of pro-Kurdish members of parliament from entering the town of Cizre. Lawmakers claim some 21 civilians have been killed in a government military operation there. (10.09.2015)


Turkish military crosses into northern Iraq, launches ground assault on PKK

Turkey has launched a "short-term" operation in northern Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish militants. Separate attacks earlier killed at least 18 Turkish police officers as violence continues to escalate. (08.09.2015)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.gdnonline.com/Details/23115/Turkey-Russia-talks-‘frozen’

Turkey-Russia talks ‘frozen’

International Business
Sat, 12 Sep 2015

Istanbul: Talks between Russia and Turkey on building a new gas pipeline between the two countries are currently frozen amid differences over the price of Russian gas imports, a Turkish official said yesterday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the plan for the Turkstream pipeline in a shock move in December 2014, saying it would replace Russia’s now junked South Stream joint venture with EU firms.

However, despite the fanfare of the announcement, construction of the pipeline has never properly got under way, leaving analysts suspicious over the feasibility of the project.

“I am not saying the sides have walked away from the table. I am saying that the talks are frozen,” Turkish media quoted energy ministry assistant under-secretary Sefa Sadik Aytekin as saying on the sidelines of a conference in Istanbul.

He said that talks were “deadlocked” because of preconditions imposed by Russian gas giant Gazprom for the reduction Turkey wants in the price of Russian gas imports.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/09/12/15/china-building-combat-capable-air-facility-reef

China building combat-capable air facility on reef

Alexis Romero, The Philippine Star
Posted at 09/12/2015 9:11 AM

MANILA, Philippines - China is building a combat-capable air facility on Zamora (Subi) Reef in the South China Sea in a development seen to jeopardize the Philippines’ possession of nearby Pag-asa Island.

Satellite photos published last Thursday by the website The Diplomat showed China is subgrading for a runway at a width of about 60 meters.

The website said the extent of subgrading at Zamora Reef is about 2,200 meters “with obvious preparations for a longer span underway.”

“As pointed out by analysts, these military facilities and others newly constructed by China in the Spratlys would increase Beijing’s capacity to enforce an air defense identification zone in the South China Sea, if it were to declare one,” The Diplomat report said.

The projects are also expected to significantly improve the People’s Liberation Army Navy’s capability for anti-submarine warfare, the website added.

Military historian Jose Custodio said the Philippines is in danger of losing Pag-asa Island because of the facility being built by China. The Philippine-occupied island is just 12 nautical miles from Zamora Reef.

“If they (China) are able to operate this (facility), they can seal off the area and conduct a blockade. The Chinese can prohibit an aircraft from landing on the island,” Custodio said.

Pag-asa, the second largest island in the disputed Spratlys chain, is being occupied by about 200 civilians and Filipino soldiers. China is claiming the Philippines illegally occupied the area, which it calls Thitu Island.

The Philippine government has been conducting supply missions to support the residents of Pag-asa, which is located within Kalayaan, a fifth class town of Palawan.

Custodio said China could use its military muscle to pressure the Philippines to give up Pag-asa. He said it would be difficult for the government to maintain Pag-asa once China’s base becomes operational.

“(Zamora) can unhinge our presence there,” Custodio said.

“If they (military facilities) become operational, how will it affect us? Will we continue to provide supplies or withdraw?” he added.

Sought for comment, defense department spokesman Peter Galvez said the photos published by The Diplomat have “much similarity” with the images they have monitored.

The news website’s photos were taken by commercial satellite imaging company Digital Globe last Sept. 3.

The Diplomat said the size of China’s landfill at Zamora could accommodate a runway 3,300 meters long and a parallel taxiway like that of Kagitingan (Fiery Cross) Reef.

The online report said no laying of pavement has been observed so far but a section of the north rim of the reef is being widened by extending a large retaining wall into the sea and backfilling the enclosed water area with sediment.

“Elsewhere, dozens of bulldozers, cranes, trucks and tracked excavators are redistributing and compacting hundreds of acres of sand,” The Diplomat report said.

Aside from Zamora, China is also building structures in Panganiban (Mischief), Kagitingan (Fiery Cross), Kennan (Chigua), Mabini (Johnson South), Burgos (Gaven) and Calderon (Cuarteron) Reefs, areas that are also being claimed by the Philippines.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.washingtonpost.com/busin...e9472e-588b-11e5-b8c9-944725fcd3b9_story.html

Chinese activity in South China Sea poses complications for Obama

By Steven Mufson September 11 at 6:29 PM 
Comments 7

China appears to be taking new steps to lay down airfields on two reefs in a disputed area of the South China Sea on the eve of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s Sept. 24 arrival in Washington for a state visit.

Commercial satellite photos taken Tuesday for the Center for Strategic and International Studies show that China is flattening, rolling and putting gravel on an area the size of a military runway on Subi Reef, a once-submerged shoal that Beijing has built up into an area suitable for a military base. The flattened area is about 200 feet wide and nearly 1.4 miles long but is expected to grow and be covered with asphalt, say China experts who have examined the satellite photos.

On Mischief Reef, China has also completed, and started pouring fill into, a retaining wall in a space nearly two miles long — part of a process that is identical to what was done earlier on Subi Reef and Woody Island, where an airfield has been completed, the experts say.

The new construction seems certain to strain the meeting between Xi and President Obama, whose national security adviser, Susan E. Rice, was recently in Beijing. The United States has urged China to stop work in the region, and Beijing said in August that it would halt reclamation. But the satellite photos show that construction continues.

While the Tuesday commercial satellite photos were taken for CSIS, a separate Sept. 3 satellite photo posted on the Diplomat news Web site Thursday evening showed the same developments.


Photos: New satellite imagery of Chinese island-building View Graphic 

“When the Chinese government said it had mainly finished the work, it clearly hadn’t,” said Michael J. Green, a senior vice president at CSIS and former senior director for Asian affairs at the National Security Council under President George W. Bush.

“This is a challenge for the White House,” Green added. “How do they talk about this? Do they say, ‘Don’t militarize these islands,’ knowing that the Chinese will do it anyway? Do they say, ‘Don’t continue construction,’ when it’s obvious that it will continue anyway?”

Green said Chinese officials have told him in private that they intend to militarize the reefs and islands with planes, antiaircraft weapons and naval vessels. He said that would allow the People’s Liberation Army air force to have “overlapping air control over the South China Sea, and not just from one airfield but from three.” He said that “it won’t stop the U.S. policy of asserting freedom of navigation, but it makes it a lot more complicated operation.”

The White House did not comment Friday.

“We note China’s August statement that it has halted its reclamation. At the same time, China has also stated its intent to further construct facilities, including for the purpose of military defense,” said Cmdr. Bill Urban, a Pentagon spokesman. “It’s not clear to us that they’ve stopped, and we will continue to watch that situation very closely.”

But “the only way to ease tensions is to stop unilateral, destabilizing actions,” he added. “China’s stated intentions with its program, and continued construction, will not reduce tensions or lead to a meaningful diplomatic solution.”

Mounting political criticism

China claims sovereignty over the entire South China Sea, while its neighbors — Vietnam, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan — have rival claims. The Obama administration has urged China to settle those claims peacefully through the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

The new construction comes as political criticism in the United States has mounted over Xi’s visit. Several Republican presidential hopefuls have said that the state dinner with Xi should be canceled because of disagreements over the South China Sea, cyberspace hacking, new restrictive laws on nongovernmental organizations operating in China, theft of intellectual property, and continuing disagreements over human rights.

The Senate Armed Services Committee plans to hold hearings Thursday featuring testimony by David Shear, assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific security affairs, and Adm. Harry B. Harris Jr., head of the U.S. Pacific Command.


“If China is building two additional airfields at Subi and Mischief reefs, it demonstrates two things,” Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain (R-Ariz.) said in a statement. “First, that the reclamation has continued despite Beijing’s claims to the contrary. And second, it shows Beijing’s clear intention to militarize the Spratly Islands with airpower using three different man-made islands.” Several of the disputed reefs are within the Spratly Islands.

“Along with radars and surface-to-air missiles, this will give China the capability to enforce an air defense identification zone, and hold the waters of the South China Sea at risk should it choose to do so,” McCain continued.

The construction also coincides with an unprecedented voyage by five Chinese navy ships through the Bering Sea, close to Alaska’s shores the same week Obama was visiting the state. A U.S. expert on the Chinese military, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect working relationships, said the ships were probably on their way back from exercises held with Russian vessels in the Mediterranean.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Sept. 3 that “these ships were operating in international waters, and there is no indication that their activities were threatening to the United States in any way.”

‘Great wall of sand’

The Pentagon has taken the lead criticizing China’s activities in the South China and East China seas. Although other countries have occupied atolls in the area, China’s size and ambitions have dwarfed those actions.

Earlier this year, Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter sharply criticized China’s activities, noting the large amount of commercial shipping in the South China Sea. Construction on the reefs also endangers the area’s marine ecosystem, environmental groups say.

“China is changing the facts on the ground, literally, by essentially building man-made islands on top of coral reefs, rocks and shoals.” Adm. Harris said in a July meeting at the Aspen Security Forum. “I believe that China’s actions to enforce its claims within the South China Sea could have far-reaching consequences for our own security and economy, by disrupting the international rules and norms that have supported the global community for decades.”

In March, Harris said that “China is creating a great wall of sand” and warned that its “pattern of provocative actions” was “inconsistent with international law.” He said, “It’s no surprise that the scope and pace of building man-made islands raise serious questions about Chinese intentions.”

Harris and other Pentagon officials have said the United States should conduct freedom-of*-navigation operations by flying or sailing within the 12-nautical-mile limit that constitutes a state’s territorial sea. That limit does not apply to Subi Reef, they say, because the reef is not only disputed but was also submerged and therefore not territory at all.

But they are at odds with the White House, which is said to oppose any such measure now.

“We cannot continue to restrict our Navy from operating within 12 nautical miles of China’s reclaimed features,” McCain said. “This sets a dangerous precedent that grants de facto recognition of China’s man-made claims.”“What does the administration do when Xi Jinping comes to town?” asked Green of CSIS. “I think it’s unlikely that the Chinese side will back down and stop construction.”


Missy Ryan contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://atimes.com/2015/09/irans-foreign-minister-to-visit-china-to-discuss-nuclear-deal/

Iran’s foreign minister to visit China to discuss nuclear deal

By AT Editor on September 11, 2015 in Asia Times News & Features, China, Middle East
(From Reuters)

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif will visit Beijing next week to discuss Iran’s nuclear agreement and efforts to boost ties with China, China’s foreign ministry said on Friday.

China and Iran have close diplomatic, economic, trade and energy ties, and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has been active in pushing both the United States and Iran to reach agreement on the nuclear issue.

China had long railed against unilateral sanctions imposed on Iran by the United States and Europe, though it has supported U.N. ones, and had denounced threats of force.

Zarif will travel to China on Sept. 15 at the invitation of Wang, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a news conference.

News of the visit came a day after a Republican-backed effort to kill the Iran nuclear agreement was narrowly blocked in the U.S. Senate, clearing the way for its implementation.

Under the deal, agreed in July, sanctions imposed by the United States, European Union and United Nations will be lifted in return for Iran agreeing to long-term curbs on a nuclear program that the West has suspected was aimed at creating a nuclear bomb.

In July, Chinese President Xi Jinping told U.S. President Barack Obama that China would work with the United States and others to ensure the implementation of the agreement.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Well, what is there to say? If they won't provoke us, let's provoke them? :popcorn1:


posted for fair use
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2015/09/11/61/0301000000AEN20150911009700315F.html

Nuke test, missile launch by N. Korea may lead to loudspeaker broadcasts

2015/09/11 20:24


SEOUL, Sept. 11 (Yonhap) -- A nuclear test or a test-launch of long-range missiles by North Korea would constitute an "abnormal situation," in which South Korea would be compelled to resume its loudspeaker broadcasts against the North under a recent inter-Korean deal, the chief of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said Friday.

"North Korea's nuclear test and long-range missile launch should be deemed as an abnormal situation," JCS Chairman Choi Yoon-hee said in a parliamentary audit, indicating that Seoul will resume its propaganda broadcasts under such a situation.

As South and North Korea struck a breakthrough deal to defuse sharply escalated military tensions last month, Seoul agreed to suspend its broadcasts critical of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in return for Pyongyang expressing "regret" over the wounding of two South Korean soldiers by North Korean land mines.

The South agreed to the suspension under the condition "unless an abnormal situation occurs," implying that the broadcast operations could restart if North Korea launches military provocations.

No official definition of the phrase has been given so far.

"What constitutes an abnormal situation has not been defined, but personally I believe such situations should be seen as one," Choi noted.

North Korea is reportedly preparing for a test of a long-range missile in October as part of celebrations for the 70th anniversary of the founding of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea.

pbr@yna.co.kr



posted for fair use
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2015/09/11/0301000000AEN20150911009851315.html


(LEAD) S. Korea mulls test-launch of ballistic missile under development

2015/09/11 21:20

(ATTN: ADDS background in last 2 paras)

SEOUL, Sept. 11 (Yonhap) -- South Korea is considering a test-launch of a ballistic missile with a range of 800 kilometers, the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said Friday, unveiling the test plan of the missile the country is developing to guard against North Korea's advancing missile threats.

"We are reviewing a plan to do a launch into the international sea south of the Korean air defense identification zone (KADIZ) and the island of Ieodo," Maj. Gen. Yang Byung-hee of the JCS said during a parliamentary audit.

His comments were in response to New Politics Alliance for Democracy Rep. Kim Kwang-Jin's query, "Do we have space to launch an 800 km-range missile?"

It was the first time the military has suggested a test-launch plan for the missile, which the country has been developing to cope with North Korea's advancing nuclear and missile capacities.

The remarks indicate the military is close to completing the development of the ballistic missiles.

A missile with that range would fly south of Ieodo, a South Korean-controlled submerged rock in the Yellow Sea, if it was launched from the military's test site along the west coast in South Chungcheong Province.

Following its agreement with the U.S. to extend the range of local ballistic missiles in October 2012, the South Korean military has developed and tested another ballistic missile, the Hyunmoo-2B, in June, which has a range of 500 km.

pbr@yna.co.kr

(END)
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Michael Horowitz ‏@michaelh992 5m5 minutes ago

#Breaking Egyptian PM and his cabinet submitted their resignation, which was accepted by the President via @AssetSourceApp
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Nothing but headlines and one-line statements from news media so far.

nana note: With so many of the youth leaning towards the Muslim Brotherhood right now, and the elections were already scheduled for Oct thru November...I don't have a real good fealing about this. I see the MB coming in thru the back door if the laws still ban them from office (I can't remember if still in effect). Bad juju for Israel if MB comes back.



Hany Rasmy ‏@hany2m 48s49 seconds ago

#Egypt cabinet submits resignation, president accepts: statement | Reuters - http://go.shr.lc/1MipDq7

ETA: adding short little news clip
posted for fair use

Thomson Reuters
Egypt cabinet submits resignation, president accepts - statement
Sat Sep 12, 2015 9:55am GMT


CAIRO, Sept 12 (Reuters) - Egypt's Prime Minister Ibrahim Mehleb submitted the resignation of the cabinet on Saturday and President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi accepted it, a statement from the presidency said.

Sisi told the cabinet to remain in a caretaker role until a new cabinet was formed, the statement said. (Reporting by Asma Alsharif; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL5N11I06420150912

Nicholas Linn ‏@NicholasJLinn 1m1 minute ago

BREAKING: #Egypt's Prime Minister resigns



The Big Pharaoh ‏@TheBigPharaoh 1m1 minute ago

The Big Pharaoh retweeted AJE News

Cabinet to remain operating till parliament elections. #Egypt


The Big Pharaoh added,
AJE News @AJENews
BREAKING: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi accepts resignation of cabinet. More soon at http://aljazeera.com
Emily Crane Linn ‏@EmilyCrane4 1m1 minute ago

Prime minister might not be only resignation: "@EduardCousin: State media report pres #Sisi accepted resignation of entire cabinet #Egypt"


Ahmad a ‏@123_ahmad_321 2m2 minutes ago

Time to redefine the term stability. #sisi #Egypt #coup


ETA2:

Michael Horowitz ‏@michaelh992 4m4 minute ago

#Egypt PM's resignation forces the whole cabinet to resign so this is likely meant to force the resignation of the cabinet rather than PM

Michael Horowitz ‏@michaelh992 1m1 minutes ago

PT: And indeed PM who just resigned was tasked with forming new cabinet #Egypt
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
IIRC one of them just got busted on corruption charges. Might be a "confidence building" exercise for the public at large.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
IIRC one of them just got busted on corruption charges. Might be a "confidence building" exercise for the public at large.

It was multiple ones.

Still, I have a bad feeling; will have to wait til November to see how it all turns out.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
hmm, we could see riots or worse again by year end. I hope HC is right and I am wrong.


Mostafa Shouman ‏@mostafa_shouman 58s58 seconds ago

#Egypt cabinet resigns before the parliamentary elections,political instability expanded on risk of a new government post parliament.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
It was multiple ones.

Still, I have a bad feeling; will have to wait til November to see how it all turns out.

hmm, we could see riots or worse again by year end. I hope HC is right and I am wrong.


Mostafa Shouman ‏@mostafa_shouman 58s58 seconds ago

#Egypt cabinet resigns before the parliamentary elections,political instability expanded on risk of a new government post parliament.

I hear you Lilbitsnana. We're just as likely to see the fighting in Sinai spread into the urban north of Egypt and southern rural part of the Nile Valley; akin to Syria now.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
The Nagoul ‏@NAGOUL1 7m7 minutes ago

`#Breaking: #Egypt's entire cabinet has just resigned due to serious #corruption allegations involving 9 ministers. #MidEast


Youssef Cherif ‏@Faiyla 3m3 minutes ago

#Egypt's prime minister Ibrahim #Mahlab sacked days after his return from #Tunisia. A corruption trial may follow.


Marwa Farid ‏@MarwaMfarid 2m2 minutes ago

#Sisi assigns Sherif Ismail, the Minister of Oil in Mehleb’s cabinet to form a new government #Egypt
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Here's more on the situation in Cairo......

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-09-12/egypt-government-resigns-presidency-says/6771186

Egypt's government resigns, presidency says

Updated 10 minutes ago

The Egyptian government has submitted its resignation to president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the presidency said, days after the agriculture minister was arrested over corruption.

"The prime minister (Ibrahim Mahlab) handed the government's resignation to the president who accepted," a statement said without giving a reason for the resignation.

It said Mr Mahlab was asked to stay on as caretaker prime minister until a new government is formed.

More to come.

AFP

_____


For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/egypts-government-resigns-amid-corruption-probe-104323026.html#EDnTJLg

Egypt's government resigns amid corruption probe

Associated Press
By NOUR YOUSSEF | Associated Press – 28 minutes ago.

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt's Prime Minister Ibrahim Mehleb and his Cabinet have resigned after coming under fire for a series of controversial statements and a corruption investigation that led to the arrest of the agriculture minister last week.

The office of President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi said Saturday that he had accepted the resignation but that the ministers would continue to serve until a new body is appointed.

Agriculture Minister Salah el-Din Helal was detained Monday after tendering his resignation amid an investigation into allegations that he and others received over $1 million in bribes.

The Egyptian government has long been plagued by corruption allegations. El-Sissi routinely emphasizes that he is fighting corruption.

Mehleb walked out of a press conference in Tunisia earlier this week after being asked about the corruption allegations.
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

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

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.updatednews.ca/2015/09/12/north-korea-reduced-its-food-rations-again-in-july-says-fao/

Published On: Sat, Sep 12th, 2015

Asia

North Korea reduced its food rations again in July, says FAO

A U.N. agency said North Korean authorities reduced daily food rations in July because food production has declined in the country.

The Food and Agriculture Organization told Voice of America North Korea has been distributing food rations of 250 grams per day since mid-July. That amount is less than half the FAO’s recommended amount for rations, and represents a 21 percent decline from a three-year average of 317 grams daily per person.

State food rations in North Korea fluctuate from month to month, but the historical average for rations in North Korea has been 390 grams. The FAO said North Korea’s goal is to provide 573 grams of food daily per person – slightly below the U.N. recommended amount of 600 grams.

The ongoing drought in North Korea has had a serious impact on food production, and yields from double cropping have decreased. Food produced from double or multiple cropping constitutes 8 percent of North Korea’s grain production, but it is an important food source during an annual austerity period that takes place between May and September.

According to FAO, North Korean wheat and barley yields had dropped 32 percent between 2014 and 2015 to 36,083 tons, and potato output was down by 20 percent to 232,889 tons. Both crops are important food sources for North Koreans.

Yonhap reported the FAO said North Korea reached out to the agency in August for assistance with recovery after a devastating flood destroyed agriculture – and that the U.N. is considering allocating other funds toward the recovery of North Korean farms in the aftermath of the disaster.

UPI
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thehill.com/policy/defense/253462-gop-rep-iran-deal-starts-middle-east-nuclear-arms-race

GOP rep: Iran deal starts Middle East nuclear arms race

By Cory Bennett - 09/12/15 06:00 AM EDT

The President Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran “puts the Middle East at the starting line of a nuclear arms race,” House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-Texas) said Saturday.

“It will leave Iran with the ingredients for a bomb and the infrastructure to build it,” McCaul said in the GOP’s weekly address. “And it will give Iran a cash windfall, freeing up over $100 billion to fuel the regime’s global campaign of Islamist terror.”

McCaul’s comments come one day after the House voted to reject the deal, which would limit Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for scaling back sanctions.

President Obama and most congressional Democrats have backed the pact, arguing that while not perfect, the agreement is the best hope for stalling Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

Senate Democrats on Thursday blocked a resolution disapproving the Iran nuclear deal, making the House’s Friday vote largely symbolic.

But that hasn’t stopped Republicans from continuing to fight the deal, which they insist will fill Iran’s coffers while failing to create a robust nuclear inspection regime.

One day after the 14th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, McCaul recounted the rise of Islamist extremists worldwide, with Iran playing a leading role.

“Radical Sunni groups — from [the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria] to al Qaeda — are spreading like wildfire across the globe,” he said.

“But we cannot forget,” he added, “Iran remains the world’s leading sponsor of terrorism.”

McCaul argued the pending nuclear deal — which the U.S. negotiated with China, France, Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom — will aid Iran’s support of terrorist groups.

He also said it will also allow the regime to bolster its military program.

"Incredibly, the agreement also fails to curb Iran’s intercontinental ballistic missiles, which the Ayatollah says, in his own words, they will now 'mass produce,’ ” he said. “These weapons are designed to hit our country and to attack our allies.”

Although Senate Democrats have made it highly unlikely Republicans will be able to dismantle the deal, congressional GOP leaders insist they haven’t given up.

“It will be all Iran next week,” Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) told reporters before the vote Thursday.

“There are going to be more votes,” he added. “There will be other opportunities for people to change their mind next week, hopefully after they hear from their constituents.”

McCaul implored his fellow lawmakers to oppose the deal, despite the long odds.

“My colleagues who understand the threat from Iran — including Democrats and Republicans — will continue to stand against this agreement, for the sake of our nation’s security and in defense of the free world."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...art-secret-deal-with-irans-quds-force-leader/

Russian build-up in Syria part of secret deal with Iran’s Quds Force leader

By Jennifer Griffin, Lucas Tomlinson
·Published September 11, 2015
·FoxNews.com

As the Pentagon warily eyes a Russian military build-up in Syria, Western intelligence sources tell Fox News that the escalated Russian presence began just days after a secret Moscow meeting in late July between Iran's Quds Force commander -- their chief exporter of terror -- and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Fox News has learned Quds head Qassem Soleimani and Putin discussed such a joint military plan for Syria at that meeting, an encounter first reported by Fox News in early August.

"The Russians are no longer advising, but co-leading the war in Syria," one intelligence official said.

The Quds Force is the international arm of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, involved in exporting terrorism to Iran's proxies throughout the Middle East including Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen.

Intelligence sources told Fox News that -- in addition to the previously reported arrival of nearly 50 Russian marines, 100 housing units and armored vehicles delivered by a stream of massive Antonov-124 Condor military transport aircraft and two Russian landing ships in Syria -- the Russians have delivered aviation, intelligence and communications facilities to deploy a powerful offensive force.

Officials who have monitored the build-up say they've seen more than 1,000 Russian combatants -- some of them from the same plainclothes Special Forces units who were sent to Crimea and Ukraine. Some of these Russian troops are logistical specialists and needed for security at the expanding Russian bases.


More on this...

Russian transport planes seen flying into Syria


"Imagine how the Americans came to Iraq and Afghanistan. It's the same kind of build-up. They bring everything, they build everything they need," the intelligence official said.

The shadowy Iranian commander Soleimani visited Moscow from July 24-26 -- just 10 days after the nuclear deal was announced, despite a travel ban and U.N. Security Council resolutions barring him from leaving Iran. He met with Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Putin to discuss arms deals. But Fox News has since learned that the Russian and Iranian leaders were also discussing a new joint military plan to strengthen Syrian President Bashar Assad, a plan that is now playing out with the insertion of Russian forces in Syria.

There are indications that Soleimani is not only involved in the Russian build-up in Syria, but may be leading the operation, though he has not been seen in Syria recently.

The Russians want to protect their interests in Syria. When the Syrian civil war began in 2011, the Russians had $4 billion in outstanding arms contracts with the Syrian government. The Russian Navy has maintained a base in Syria since the 1970s. This week, an image also surfaced purporting to show Nusra Front fighters standing by a Russian-supplied aircraft at a captured Syrian air base.

U.S. defense sources tell Fox News that most of Russia's heavy military equipment has arrived by sea onboard Russian amphibious transport ships. Those ships began arriving in the Syrian port of Tartous in recent days. U.S. officials have confirmed a total of eight military cargo planes from Russia landed in the past few days outside Latakia, a port city on the Mediterranean, becoming an almost daily occurrence.

Onboard those vessels: Russian armored vehicles, tanks, helicopters, unmanned drones that can be armed and used for intelligence gathering. Western intelligence sources also confirm that the Russians have sent a mobile air traffic control system, communication/listening units, and pre-built housing units.

Fox News has learned that the Russian units include members of the Airborne Rifle brigade, the equivalent of U.S. Army Rangers.

The reason that the Iranians are increasingly concerned about Assad's future is that they do not want a situation in which the Islamic State makes its way to Lebanon unchallenged, posing a threat to Iran's proxy Hezbollah, according Western sources. This makes the Iranians natural allies of the Russians.

Iran, these sources say, wants Syria to serve as its buffer zone between ISIS and Hezbollah.

Few think Russia's military build-up denotes an intent by Russia to join the U.S.-led anti-ISIS coalition. Despite downplaying the reports last week, the State Department and Pentagon are now so concerned by Russia's presence that Secretary of State John Kerry called his Russian counterpart twice this week to express his misgivings about the escalating conflict.


Jennifer Griffin currently serves as a national security correspondent for FOX News Channel . She joined FNC in October 1999 as a Jerusalem-based correspondent.

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

Housecarl

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

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015...cs-labour-corbyn-insigh-idUSKCN0RC0EZ20150912

World | Sat Sep 12, 2015 9:59am EDT
Related: World

Karl Marx admirer Corbyn rides socialist wave to lead Britain's Labour Party

LONDON | By William James

Uncorking the spirit of British socialism was the masterstroke that handed Jeremy Corbyn the Labour Party's top job but he now faces a much bigger challenge -- convincing voters that an admirer of Karl Marx should be Britain's next prime minister.

Virtually unknown just months ago, the 66-year-old won the crown of Britain's second largest political party with 59.5 percent of the votes cast in an internal party vote.

A vegetarian who initially did not expect to win the contest, Corbyn has struck a chord with many Labour supporters by repudiating the pro-business consensus of former Labour leader Tony Blair and offered wealth taxes, nuclear disarmament and ambiguity about EU membership.

The victory gives Corbyn a mandate to take the 115-year old party back to its socialist roots and throw out the political rulebook that says British elections can only be won with the support of the center ground.

"We challenge the narrative that only the individual matters, and the collective is irrelevant," Corbyn said at his last campaign rally on Thursday, drawing cheers from a crowd crammed into every corner of a former church in north London.

"Instead we say the common good is the aspiration of all of us," said the anti-war campaigner, who is an admirer of "Communist Manifesto" author Karl Marx and Hugo Chavez, the late Venezuelan leader who delighted in berating the United States.

Often dressed in the style of a university lecturer -- complete with several pens visible in his shirt pocket -- Corbyn has promised to renationalize privately-owned industries, print money to fund large-scale infrastructure investment, and raise taxes on businesses and the rich.

He rarely uses the first person 'I' - a trait that advisers say reflects his desire to lead Labour without what he calls "top-down control-freakery" - code for the tight control exercised when Tony Blair was Labour leader from 1994-2007.

"Things can and they will change," Corbyn, said in a victory speech which began with criticism of the British media and ended with a vow to achieve justice for the poor and downtrodden.

He swiftly left the Labour event to attend a meeting in support of refugees on London's Trafalgar Square.


CORBYN'S BET

Corbyn has tapped an appetite for change, drawing back veterans of the party's 1980s hard-left heyday and giving some disillusioned young voters born during or after the 1979-1990 Conservate premiership of Margaret Thatcher their first taste of a mainstream socialist cocktail.

"His opposition to austerity is the thing for me. He's the only one to openly say that what's going on with this Conservative government is an ideological decision, and it's not something that has to happen," said Sam Peach, a 22-year old first-time Labour voter at a Corbyn rally in Edinburgh.

The surprise success of Corbyn's campaign, funded, he says, by his personal credit card until donations began flowing in, has drawn dire warnings that Labour will be annihilated at 2020 elections by a public that in May re-elected Cameron on a pledge to cut spending.

"The party is walking eyes shut, arms outstretched over the cliff’s edge to the jagged rocks below," warned Blair in one of three increasingly desperate pleas to voters to stop the Corbyn surge before the result was announced.

But, pleas from senior centrist Labour figures to elect 'ABC' (Anyone But Corbyn) backfired.

"Actually what has happened is that the grass roots of the campaign have simply become more resilient and more enthused by every attack," said Neil Findlay, a Labour member of the Scottish parliament who organized the Corbyn campaign in Scotland. "It has been utterly counterproductive."

Corbyn's campaign eclipsed those of his three rivals - Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper and Liz Kendall - drawing sell-out crowds on a 99-stop tour of Britain that capitalized on dissatisfaction at Britain's political and economic status quo.

One Labour lawmaker, who did not want to be named, said he backed Burnham, but that he had been unable to persuade the rest of his family to do the same. They all voted for Corbyn.

Perhaps unsurprisingly for someone who travels around London by bicycle and buses, supporters often use words like 'normal' when describing his appeal.

"I wasn't interested in the Labour leadership contest at all until I saw him and listened to what he had to say," said Joe Reynolds, a carpenter living in London, and one of many queueing without tickets in the hope of getting into a Corbyn rally.

"The man seems genuine. He wants to stand up to big business and the corporations and look after the general mass of people."


'I'LL HAVE A GO'

First-elected in 1983 to represent a North London constituency, Corbyn's political career has reached a high that few, including the man himself, saw coming.

In June, Corbyn was persuaded by a small contingent of hard-left lawmakers to run in the leadership contest sparked when Ed Miliband's resigned after a heavy election defeat.

They felt their political views and those of the party's grassroots were under-represented by the other three candidates.

"He said 'alright, alright, alright, I'll have a go'," Corbyn's campaign manager John McDonnell told supporters at a rally, recounting the meeting where Corbyn eventually agreed to stand after other contenders had ruled themselves out.

The leadership bid was almost scuppered before it had truly started. Faced with a midday June 15 deadline, Corbyn's team were scrambling to find the 35 lawmakers they needed to get his name on the ballot paper.

McDonnell said there were just 10 seconds to go when the last nominations came through.

Corbyn says the there were actually two minutes to spare - the kind of earnest response that has spawned a parody account on Twitter dedicated to mocking his apparent lack of humor.

Such was the low probability initially given to a Corbyn victory, many nominations came from lawmakers who were backing other candidates but lent Corbyn their support in the interest of widening the debate over the party's future.

"I can't say I regret it," Neil Coyle, the 33rd lawmaker to nominate Corbyn, told Reuters. "It would have been a disservice to prevent him."

Coyle voted for Cooper. But the scramble for nominations highlighted concerns about whether Corbyn could bring the leftists together with the rest of the party to form an effective opposition to Cameron, he said.

"How is it that he's been in parliament since 1983, and yet he can't find 35 MPs (lawmakers) to put him on the ballot paper who genuinely think he'll do a good job?"

Whether he can hold his own party together let alone launch a serious challenge to win power will be the immediate issue. Within minutes of his election, a number of lawmakers said they would no longer serve in the party's senior team.

"I'll always be a critical friend of Jeremy's because I'm not entirely won over that the 'left' message is sufficient to win government in this country," said David Lammy, a Labour lawmaker.

"The big question is whether a broader offer to the left is enough to win in England," he said.

Conservative finance minister George Osborne, likely to be Corbyn's main opponent at the 2020 election, shares the view that his victory is a backward step for Labour.

"For most of my childhood and early adult life, a succession of Labour Party leaders reformed the constitution of the Labour Party. Neil Kinnock did, John Smith did, Tony Blair did, to make sure that it was more rooted in what the British people wanted," Osborne told the weekly magazine the New Statesman.

"If they want to go back to the 1980s, let them. The Conservative Party is not doing that."


(Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Angus MacSwan)
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/09/13/us-yemen-security-idUSKCN0RD06420150913

World | Sun Sep 13, 2015 3:40am EDT
Related: World

Exiled Yemeni government pulls out of planned peace talks

SANAA

Yemen's exiled government said on Sunday it would no longer attend U.N.-mediated peace talks with its Houthi adversaries.

Loyalists of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi have been battling the Iran-allied militia across the country since late March, when the group forced him and his administration to flee to Saudi Arabia.

A mainly Gulf Arab coalition led by Saudi Arabia intervened in the conflict, mounting hundreds of air strikes on the Houthis and backing ground forces they hope will force the group accept an April U.N. Security Council resolution calling on them to recognize Hadi and quit Yemen's main cities. The Houthis took control of the capital Sanaa in September 2014.

"(The government) confirmed it would not take part in any meeting until the coup militia recognize international resolution 2216 and accepts to implement it unconditionally," the official state news agency Saba said.

Hailing the now-scuppered talks on Friday, the U.N. Security Council had urged the parties to refrain from preconditions and "unilateral actions".

Peace talks in June failed to end the fighting, which has brought the country to the brink of famine, killed more than 4,500 people and led to a security vacuum that has strengthened Al Qaeda's Yemen branch.

On Saturday night, a suspected U.S. drone strike killed at least five al Qaeda fighters gathered inside a military base outside the eastern coastal city of Mukalla, local security officials said. The group has partly controlled Mukalla since the army withdrew from the area in April.

A mid-level commander in the organization, Othman al-Sanaani, was killed in the strike, the sources said.

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has carried out attacks against the Yemeni state for years of bomb, plotted to blow up U.S.-bound airliners and claimed responsibility for a January attack in Paris on a French magazine that killed 12 people.


(Reporting By Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Noah Browning; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
 

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http://www.janes.com/article/54144/german-army-considers-wheeled-rapid-response-brigade

German Army considers wheeled rapid response brigade

Sebastian Schulte, Bonn - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
10 September 2015

The German Army is considering the option of creating a wheeled response element for rapid reaction and force deployment, sources told IHS Jane's .

Given the extent of projected combat and organic support elements, IHS Jane's understands that the rapid response formation would very likely be up to brigade-sized. The new formation would be expected to deploy in both symmetric and asymmetric threat environments and be able to hold its own against tracked and armoured vehicles. The new formation would constitute a German contribution to NATO's Framework Nations Concept, where smaller armies can plug their capabilities into an organisational backbone provided by a larger, framework nation.

"What we are talking about are first conceptual considerations," a source close to the concept phase told IHS Jane's . "The idea is to be able to fully deploy this force anywhere in mainland Europe in up to 48 hours, making full use of the existing rail and road infrastructure. Also, this is not a rehash of the old tracks vs wheels battle. A brigade sized wheeled rapid response element could be a door opener for heavy forces."

Given the reality of limited personnel available, the new formation would most likely be carved out of existing army structures, with attached unit rotation not being out of the question.

While it's too early for fixed numbers, based on current estimations there could be a requirement for about 100 vehicles. IHS Jane's understands that the main vehicle platform for the new formation could be based on the so-called 'PuBo', a Boxer Multirole Armoured Vehicle 8x8 chassis featuring an adapted 30 mm cannon-armed turret of the Puma tracked infantry fighting vehicle currently in development by German industry. For operations against hardened and armoured targets, the PuBo could be armed with the multi-purpose, light guided missile system, the Bundeswehr's variant of the Rafael Spike-LR fire-and-forget anti-tank guided missile.
 

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http://english.alarabiya.net/en/vie...deast-prestige-after-U-S-creative-chaos-.html

Russia aims to restore its Mideast prestige after U.S. ‘creative chaos’

Monday, 14 September 2015
Raghida Dergham

Russian diplomacy aims to settle conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa, and has a roadmap for specific measures to contain terrorism in the region, for which it is seeking international blessing and a mandate from the U.N. Security Council to lead on these issues. The time of rivalry between Moscow and Washington, over who leads in the Middle East, is over.

At one point, the two countries came together to jointly sponsor the Middle East peace process, and later established the Quartet, which also included the U.N. and the EU in addition to the United States and Russia. The Quartet, however, proved to be little more than an empty façade.

United States steps back…

Today, in light of the clear U.S. withdrawal from the daily management of the Middle East’s crises and Washington’s reduced interest in playing any leading role on these issues, Moscow has found an opportunity to take charge and fill the vacuum, with a view to restore Russia’s leading position in the entire Middle East. The approach chosen by the Russian leadership is interesting, particularly since the objectives of Russia’s policies have been called into question.

There is a view that holds that U.S. diplomacy is indifferent to any Russian gains in the Middle East, which the United States has arguably decided to forsake, with the exception of what its alliance with Israel requires. This view holds that the United States has decided to do so following the discovery of large reserves of oil in its territories, and its decision to pivot east towards China and its neighbors.

The other view believes the United States has provisionally stepped back from its leadership position to relieve itself of blame and responsibility, and at the same time implicate Russia in crises, bloody conflicts, and the quagmires of civil, religious, and sectarian wars.


“Some of Russia’s battles intend to restore its prestige after having been excluded and insulted – as Moscow believes – in the wake of the Arab Spring.”
Raghida Dergham
… And Russia steps forward

Regardless of which view is correct, Russia seems determined to fight several battles across the Middle East. Some of the battles intend to restore Russia’s prestige and vindicate Moscow against having been excluded and insulted – as Moscow believes – in the wake of the Arab Spring. Others are to implement its vision for the Middle East and its influence and interests there.

In a concept note entitled “Maintenance of International Peace and Security: Settlement of Conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa and Countering the Terrorist Threat in the Region,” Russia has told U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon it intends to convene a session for the Security Council at the level of ministers on Sept. 30. According to the Russian document, submitted by Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, the aim of the ministerial session to be chaired by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is to adopt a presidential Security Council statement that stresses the urgent need to take action to resolve and prevent conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa, and identify possible additional steps to address terrorist threats in the region.

The Russian approach is essentially based on linking conflicts in the Middle East to terrorism.

The issues mentioned by the Russian document begin with the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The Russian document points out that failure to reach a solution to the conflict boosts radicalization in the Arab street, and creates favorable conditions for the spread of terrorist ideas.

The roots of the current tragedy in Iraq, according to the Russian paper, go back to the US invasion in 2003. Those events “have brought the country to a split-nation situation with parts of its territory becoming strongholds of international terrorism, and have given rise to an extremely dangerous trend of inter-religious confrontation.” What is urgently needed, according to the document, are “consistent collective efforts by the international community supported by the Iraqi government in combating ISIS, al-Qaeda, and other groups associated with them to eliminate the challenge of terrorism.”

Syria, Libya and Yemen

The conflict in Syria, according to the Russian vision, is in turn a conflict against terrorism, because the bloody conflict has created fertile ground for the “caliphate” to establish itself in parts of the country. What is needed, according to the Russian approach, is a political solution based on the Geneva communique, as well as through the joining of efforts of Syrian parties and regional and international community “to achieve the objective of addressing the large-scale terrorist threat on the basis of rejection of double standards and respect for the principle of sovereignty of states.”

Libya continues to suffer from the repercussions of what happened in 2011, always according to the Russian document, in reference to the NATO intervention in the country that deposed the regime of Muammar Gaddafi. The problem in Libya today, argues the paper, is linked to terrorism, and the solution requires establishing a national consensus government with adequate international support to enable the army and security structures to repel the escalating terrorist threat.

Meanwhile, again according to the Russian paper, there has been a serious deterioration of the situation in Yemen, requiring an urgent cease-fire and a political process under the UN auspices, as well as prompt steps to improve the humanitarian situation stemming from the need to address the terrorist threat in that country.

Russia won’t go it alone


“Moscow does not propose to bear alone the burden of fighting terrorism in the Middle East. Nor does Moscow present itself as the sole sponsor for solutions to conflicts.”
Raghida Dergham
Yet Moscow did not propose to bear alone the burden of fighting terrorism in the Middle East. Nor does Moscow present itself as the sole sponsor for solutions to conflicts. It is saying there is a need for “a comprehensive analysis of the nature of conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa, to set directions for a collective work on the basis of the UN Charter.”

Russia, as stated in the Russian paper, believes that the Security Council must play the key role in coordinating collective approaches, and should determine ways to address the full range of security-related challenges in the Middle East and North Africa. The paper spoke about modern realities that call for a comprehensive approach to preventing conflicts, including measures to eliminate the root causes of conflicts. It also called for a common understanding of the causes of grave security crises in the region and the political factors aggravating the crisis.

As per the Russian vision, interference into domestic affairs of sovereign states, use of force without the authorization by the U.N. Security Council, transfers of arms to non-state actors adherent to radical ideology, aggravate the situation in the region and raise the level of terrorist risks.

Everything in Moscow’s eyes should therefore be focused on fighting terrorism by non-state actors but not terrorism of any other kind. Governments are exempt from this charge of terrorism in the name of sovereignty, and must remain above accountability for the same reason, according to Russia. Russia thus believes that the collective efforts of the international community must focus first on supporting legitimate governments in their war with terrorism on their territories, without any double standards.

According to Moscow’s vision and the new dialogue it is calling through the Security Council, the talks must analyze conflicts in the Middle East and their evolution in the wake of the Arab Spring. This moment marks the rise of Islamist movements, with Western support, as Moscow believes.

Security Council

Not long ago, Russia obstructed the Security Council, preventing it from tackling the Syrian crisis. From the outset, Russia clung to Bashar al-Assad, using the veto four times with its strategic ally China. The other countries of the BRICS group, namely India, Brazil, and South Africa, adopted the same policy.

Practically speaking, Moscow aborted the Geneva process mainly because it called for establishing a transitional governing body with executive powers, including security powers.

Today, Russia wants to activate the role of the Security Council, but on the basis it has chosen. Practically, Moscow wants to lead with Security Council authorization, after the United States stepped down from leading, and appears now willing to tacitly support Russia in the lead.

Moscow does not conceal its support for the Assad regime. In fact, it protests using the term the “regime” instead of the “government” of President Bashar al-Assad. Russia does not conceal that it has supplied Syria with weapons and military equipment, and today, in response to reports saying Russian forces have deployed to Syria, it says it has not made that decision “yet.”

Russia has not changed its position. What is new is that it is trying to combine two tasks: Preserving the regime in Damascus, including keeping Assad in power for the time being, and the military support this requires; and sponsoring a new political approach based on partnership with Syrian and regional actors in the war on terrorism, first and foremost.

Those who have changed their stance are the Western powers, particularly Security Council members such as the United States, Britain, and France, although some still say they want Assad to step down. What is new on their front is that they seem willing to accept the creative arrangements that combine the commitment of Moscow, Iran, and China to Assad, and the Western position which says – gently – that it wants Assad to step down at the right time.

Washington’s ‘creative chaos’

Washington adopted “creative chaos” to bring about change in the Middle East and North Africa. And Russia is now taking advantage of the West’s interest in creative understanding and arrangements.

Europe is working on “creative” solutions to the threats to it and its security – as it believes – resulting from the influx of thousands of refugees. Europe has forgotten its role in Libya, when it rushed to invade, leaving hundreds of thousands of casualties and opening the country to terrorism, while refusing to lift the arms embargo on the legitimate government to repel the terrorist threat.

Europe and the United States did not seriously challenge the obstructionism of Russia and China on Syria, and their decision to refrain from engaging contributed to the human tragedy there. Washington decided that Syria is not a priority and focused on reaching an agreement with Iran instead, refusing to use the tools it has to influence the regime and Tehran's support for it.


“Moscow believes that Washington approves its leadership position. ”
Raghida Dergham
Now, thousands of displaced persons and refugees are crossing the borders to Europe, which has been forced to receive them, while the United States refuses to do the same, fearing terrorism.

That terrorism, which will be a joint priority for the United States and Russia, is their way of reducing the conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa. The difference is that Russia has a project and roadmap outlying its goals in the region, while Washington’s project is to be absent and to refrain from engaging.

Whether it is furtherance or implication, Moscow believes that Washington approves its leadership position. Russia is prepared to exploit every opportunity to restore its prestige, in the aftermath of what it sees as the insult of the Arab Spring by design from Washington.

This article was first published in al-Hayat on Sept. 11, 2015 and translated by Karim Traboulsi.
__________________
Raghida Dergham is Columnist and Senior Diplomatic Correspondent for the London-based Al Hayat, the leading independent Arabic daily, since 1989. She writes a regular weekly strategic column on International Political Affairs. Dergham is also a Political Analyst for NBC, MSNBC and the Arab satellite LBC. She is a Contributing Editor for LA Times Syndicate Global Viewpoint and has contributed to: The New York Times, The Washington Post, The International Herald Tribune and Newsweek Magazine. She serves on the Board of the International Women's Media Foundation, and has served on the Advisory Council of Princeton University's Institute for Transregional Studies of the contemporary Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia. She was also a member of the Women's Foreign Policy Group. She addressed U.N. General Assembly on the World Press Freedom Day when President of The United Nations Correspondents Association for 1997 and was appointed to the Task Force on the Reorientation of Public Information by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan. She moderated a roundtable of 8 Presidents and Prime Ministers for UNCTAD at Bangkok in 1991. Dergham served as Chairman of the Dag Hammarskjold Fund Board in 2005. She tweets @RaghidaDergham.

Last Update: Monday, 14 September 2015 KSA 10:05 - GMT 07:05

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in the opinion section are their own and do not reflect Al Arabiya News's point-of-view.
 

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http://www.realcleardefense.com/art...bid_to_close_gitmo_riles_pentagon_108461.html

September 13, 2015

Obama's Bid To Close Gitmo Riles Pentagon

By Lolita C. Baldor


The Obama administration's struggling quest to close the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is mired in state and federal politics. Frustrated White House and Pentagon officials are blaming each other for the slow progress releasing approved detainees and finding a new prison to house those still held.

Defense Secretary Ash Carter is facing criticism from some administration officials who complain that he has not approved enough transfers, even though 52 Guantanamo detainees are eligible. Carter's predecessor, Chuck Hagel, was forced from the Pentagon job in part because the White House felt he was not moving quickly enough to send detainees to other countries.

Two officials said the White House is frustrated because President Barack Obama discussed the issue with Carter when he was hired this year to lead the Defense Department, and they believed Carter was on board with the White House's plans to act faster.

Other U.S. officials note that Carter has approved some transfers and is pushing his staff to move quickly to get more to his desk. But many other proposed transfers are slogging through the bureaucracy, under review by a long list of defense, military, intelligence and other administration offices. The transfers cannot be approved unless officials believe the detainees will not return to terrorism or the battlefield upon release and that there is a host country willing to take them.

During his two years as Pentagon chief, Hagel approved 44 detainee transfers. Carter, in his first seven months, has transferred six.

Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook issued a statement Saturday saying that Carter shares Obama's commitment to closing the detention facility ?responsibly and has been working "deliberately and diligently" on a comprehensive plan.

"Working with our interagency partners and Congress, his top priority has been and will continue to be the safety and security of the American people," Cook said.

Obama has promised to close the facility since he was a presidential candidate in 2008. He said it ran counter to American values to keep people in prison, many without criminal charges or due process.

Opponents have argued the detainees are essentially prisoners of war.

From a peak of 680 prisoners, 116 remain. Finding acceptable places for them has been an intractable problem.

"Finding a solution for these individuals involves complicated negotiations with international partners, extensive consultations with the leaders of the national security and legal organizations and final approval by me," Carter told reporters.

A key player in the process is Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Dempsey, who spent more than three years as a commander in Iraq, continues to be very cautious in his recommendations for transfers. His opinions carry a lot of weight.

According to U.S. officials familiar with the process, Carter recently notified Congress of two transfers, and has four whose files are ready to go to Capitol Hill, likely later this month. Congress has 30 days to review the transfers before they are made public.

A number of U.S. officials familiar with the ongoing discussions spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the subject publicly.

The movement of detainees is only part of the challenge. A greater hurdle will be finding a U.S.-based prison to house the 64 detainees considered too dangerous to be sent to another country. Congress has opposed any effort to bring detainees to America, so Obama's long-stated goal of closing Guantanamo before he leaves office in January 2017 is more likely to die on the steps of Capitol Hill.

Aware of those objections, the White House last month stalled Pentagon efforts to send a plan to Congress outlining several U.S. prisons that could be upgraded and used for the detainees. Early drafts of the plan included some rough estimates of the costs and the time needed for renovations.

U.S. officials said the administration was worried that sending the plan to Congress could affect the crucial vote on the Iran nuclear deal by infuriating lawmakers who do not want the detainees moved to the U.S. or who adamantly oppose having them in a prison in their state or district. The resolution of disapproval of the Iran deal failed in the Senate, handing Obama a victory on that issue.

Three to five civilian facilities are being eyed as potential sites, officials said. A Pentagon team has gone to military facilities in South Carolina and Kansas to develop better estimates of construction and other changes that would be needed to house the detainees as well as conduct military commission trials for those accused of war crimes.

The visits to the Navy Consolidated Brig in Charleston, South Carolina, and the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas triggered immediate outrage from lawmakers and governors there.

Republican Govs. Nikki Haley of South Carolina and Sam Brownback of Kansas have threatened to sue the administration if detainees are brought to either state.

Both the House and Senate have pending legislation that would maintain prohibitions on transferring detainees to U.S. facilities. The Senate legislation allows the restrictions to be lifted if the White House submits a plan to close the facility and it's approved by Congress.

GOP Sen. John McCain of Arizona, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, has made it known he would consider a comprehensive plan to close Guantanamo, but said it must include answers to a number of tough legal and policy questions, including whether detainees held in the U.S. would have additional rights.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has opposed using the Charleston brig because it is in a populated area.

Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., has said flatly that, "Not on my watch will any terrorist be placed in Kansas."

Carter has acknowledged the challenge of getting a U.S. facility approved by Congress, but has insisted that some lawmakers have indicated a willingness to consider a plan.

"This would be a good thing to do if — if we can all come together behind a plan to do it," Carter told reporters. "Our responsibility is to provide them with a plan that they can consider that is a responsible one."
 

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http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-09-14/syria-at-peace-to-imagine-it-think-of-bosnia-

Middle East

To Imagine Syria at Peace, Think of Bosnia

Comments 10
Sept 14, 2015 12:01 AM EDT
By Marc Champion

It took a temporary partition to end the war that tore apart Bosnia in the 1990s. Why not do the same for Syria?

In one sense, a partitioned Syria is already visible, its contours drawn by the front lines of the civil war. President Bashar al-Assad has retreated from territory that was too difficult for his overextended forces to hold, giving up the attempt to reimpose nationwide control. (That doesn't mean he's on the run. Iran and Russia have made it clear they won't let that happen.)

Kurds hold the area near the Turkish border, having driven out Islamic State.

Quicktake Sunni-Shiite Divide

The competing factions in areas held by Sunni Arab rebels make for a more complicated picture, but a map of how the front lines looked this summer shows the outlines of a potential partition of Syria into three parts. The red designates regime control. The yellow is Kurdish. The green and black are Sunni Arab, including the area now controlled by Islamic State. (The white is sparsely populated desert.)

08-3942688-8-sentyabrya-2015-g.


Source: The Arab Source

Fabrice Balanche, a researcher at the Group for Research and Studies on the Mediterranean and Middle East in Lyons, France, has been mapping Syria's ethnic and religious communities since long before the war. He was pilloried in 2011 for saying that Western confidence in the inevitability of Assad's demise was misplaced, and that civil war and Syria's disintegration would result. He is, if anything, less sanguine today:


We have a de facto partition, but nobody wants to recognize this partition. In Damascus, there are posters everywhere about a unified Syria. The opposition say no we don’t need a partition. But we will have one.

Balanche thinks the war will continue, grinding out the shape of a divided Syria, because the determination of Iran, Israel, Jordan, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the U.S. to secure their interests remains stronger than any desire to end the fighting. But what if, as with the Dayton accords in 1995, it was possible to get the outside powers together with their clients within Syria, and complete that process by negotiation, instead?

Dayton split Bosnia into entities in which Muslims, Orthodox Christian Serbs and Catholic Croats would more or less govern and police themselves, while creating a federal shell around them to be filled as trust was restored. It was an imperfect solution, yet it ended the bloodshed.

In a similarly cantonized Syria, Balanche reasons, the regime would want to control the whole Israeli and Lebanese border, as well as Damascus, Homs and the coastal Alawite heartland. Assad would have to give up Hama, a predominantly Sunni city with a deep distrust of the regime, as well as the surrounding Sunni villages.

There would then be some tougher issues to deal with. For example, the rebels are entrenched in the suburbs of the capital, Damascus, yet the regime would insist on holding the city. Similarly, Assad would want to hold onto Aleppo, Syria's largest and (before the war) wealthiest city; it's now mostly under rebel control and cut off from the regime's heartland. Either there would have to be a trade, or neutral zones established and secured by a heavily armed international peacekeeping force of the kind successfully deployed in eastern Croatia at the end of the Yugoslav war.

Similarly, rebels hold some pockets surrounded by regime-controlled territory along Syria's border with Lebanon. The regime holds the seacoast north of Lebanon, part of which is mainly Sunni, a fact that would be unacceptable to rebels who would want their entity to have access to the sea. The war is slowly resolving these issues as each side focuses its military resources on what it wants most, but it could take years, Balanche says.

Any partition would be messy, but the final Dayton arrangement wasn't tidy, either:

syria map 2


Source: Library of Congress

A one-stop peace deal like Dayton is unlikely in Syria, for two reasons. First, there was no combatant in Bosnia like Islamic State, a group so radical that it simply cannot be at the negotiating table or be left to survive under a settlement. Second, the world was different in 1995. Although Russia supported Serbia, the U.S. was so dominant that it could corral the international community behind the solution it wanted. That's no longer the case.

Still, a Dayton-style agreement among the outside powers could simplify the Syrian conflict even without purporting to end the war right away. That could provide the basis for addressing two obstacles to any settlement: Islamic State and the conflicting interests of the war's international sponsors.

Once no longer under attack by Assad, Sunni rebels working with the U.S. and others would be able to focus on seizing their assigned territory from Islamic State, which they already fight on a second front. Given determined air support, weapons and intelligence, they could probably prevail. The endurance of coalitions of fighters working with the U.S. and Jordan is one of the few positive recent developments in Syria, at a time when quixotic U.S. attempts to train and equip an all-new force has faltered.

"A lot of people say the Kurds are the only ones who have taken territory from IS," says Christopher McNaboe, who manages the Syria Mapping Project at the Carter Center in Washington. "That isn't true. The opposition took a lot, and has been fighting IS a lot." An excellent report published Sept. 2 describes how some of the rebel forces have begun to exceed low international expectations in southern Syria.

An agreement that assures each of the outside powers that their clients would retain control in their designated territories could also go a long way to allowing Iran, Saudi Arabia and others to compromise, because the war would no longer be zero-sum.

It's impossible to say exactly what each country would demand, but here are some probable minimums.

Iran would want a friendly regime dominated by Alawites (a Muslim religious minority with connections to Shiite Islam) to control Damascus and a secure corridor from the capital's airport to Lebanon. Russia would want to know that its naval base at Tartus was secure, and that Syria as a whole would become neither a Sunni Islamist state nor a U.S. protectorate. Saudi Arabia would have to see Hezbollah leave Syria and Iran's influence squeezed. Israel would need to be sure the Syrian side of the Golan Heights wouldn't become a new playground for Hezbollah. Turkey would want a Sunni entity to control Aleppo and the north, and Kurdish autonomy limited.

Meeting all those requirements through partition would be tortuous. Without partition, though, an international consensus would be impossible. That, says Balanche, is why the rash of diplomatic initiatives on Syria that have emerged since the Iran nuclear deal "are rubbish."

Even with the international players on board, it would be a challenge to persuade Syria's combatants to limit their territorial ambitions. In the Yugoslav wars, everyone involved wanted at some level to carve territory up. In Syria, there is no such desire.

Other difficulties, however, are less insurmountable than they once seemed. For a long time, for example, a compelling reason to avoid talking about partition was that it would trigger ethnic cleansing, as each side tried to establish facts on the ground before negotiations began.

By now, large scale expulsions are unlikely because "ethnic cleansing has already happened," Balanche says. In rebel-held areas, Alawites and minority populations such as Druze and Christians have mostly fled, leaving an almost entirely Sunni population. Kurdish areas have also been largely emptied of Sunni Arabs.

Regime areas, by contrast, remain diverse; Alawites and Shiites make up just 13 percent of Syria's population and Assad's support relies on other minorities who fear Islamic State more than him. In addition, most internal displacement has been into regime-held territory. The government controls about 30 percent of Syria's territory but more than half the population, up to 12 million of the 18 million still in the country. Islamic State controls about 45 percent of territory, but only 2 million to 2.5 million people, according to Balanche's calculations.

A Carter Center map shows this clearly by marking only control of settlements, rather than shading whole areas:

syria map 3


Source: Carter Center Syria Mapping Project

As usual, only one country, the U.S., has the influence to persuade outside powers to accept partition, and to broker a cease-fire between Assad and the less radical rebels. At a time when Russia is building an air base at Tartus, and Turkey is escalating a war against Kurdish militants allied to those in Syria, it is surely the moment to try something that has at least a chance to reduce the bloodshed, no matter how hard it will be to succeed.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Marc Champion at mchampion7@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Jonathan I Landman at jlandman4@bloomberg.net
 

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http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-09-14/how-to-begin-to-end-the-syrian-war

Middle East
How to Begin to End the Syrian War

Comments 11
Sept 14, 2015 12:01 AM EDT
By Editorial Board

Europe's refugee crisis has refocused attention on the horrors of the war in Syria and should rekindle diplomatic efforts to end it. But any such attempt needs to reckon with a stark reality: The partition of Syria is already happening.

This is an outcome no side would have chosen when pro-democracy protesters took to Syria's streets in 2011. But at this point, the countries involved should use Syria's partition as a basis to reconcile their competing interests and break the international deadlock that feeds the war.

Quicktake Syria's Civil War

The flurry of Syria-related diplomatic gestures made since July, when Iran reached an international agreement on its nuclear fuel program, have amounted to nothing new. Russia proposed forming an anti-Islamic State coalition that would include Syrian President Bashar al-Assad -- which would help Assad survive as Syria's ruler. Saudi Arabia suggested ending its support for the rebels, if Iran and Hezbollah pull their troops out of Syria -- which would eliminate the support Assad needs to continue. Iran has promised a proposal of its own later this month, while the U.S. continues to support a power-sharing transition that seems unattainable.

The renewed willingness to talk is welcome, but it needs to be based on reality: No side in this war is in a position to win, and any proposal based on restoring central control across the country is illusory.

A soft partition could square some of these diplomatic circles and help freeze at least part of the conflict. Assad has already acknowledged that he can no longer control much of the country, and has instead consolidated his forces around a defensible heartland. Kurds have established control over the areas they dominate, and have driven out Islamic State.

The situation in Sunni-controlled areas is much more complicated, but not as hopeless as it's sometimes made out. A coalition of non-Islamist rebels supported by Jordan, the U.S. and other allies has established itself in southern Syria at the expense of both the regime and the al-Qaeda-linked Nusra Front.

Although an agreement to solidify this soft partition wouldn't immediately end the war, it could simplify and shorten it. It would give Assad's exhausted forces and those of the internationally acceptable opposition -- which have borne the brunt of Assad's aggression -- reason to honor a cease-fire. That, in turn, would make it possible for cooperating rebels to turn their undivided attention to seizing territory from Islamic State and the Nusra Front. With enough military, financial and political encouragement from their sponsors, these fighters should be capable.

Recognizing Syria's de facto partition would also enable outside powers to secure their core interests. It would make feasible a version of Russia's proposal to refocus the war on Islamic State, without that becoming code for an Assad victory. It would enable Iranian and Hezbollah troops to withdraw, satisfying Saudi Arabia. It would render more coherent, too, a U.S. policy that seeks to destroy Islamic State with the help of Sunni rebels -- rebels whose first concern has been to fight Assad.

Make no mistake: Reaching any kind of agreement would be enormously difficult. The conflict in Syria is at root a proxy war that pits Russia and Iran against the U.S., Turkey and the Gulf states -- with a wild card in the form of Islamic State. Russia is building a new air base in northern Syria, with a view to launching its own airstrikes. And inside the country, any formal partition remains a toxic concept. Even drawing lines for a cease-fire would be fraught, let alone resolving which side controls Aleppo, the Sunni suburbs of Damascus or the border with the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights.

Yet nothing else has worked. For months if not years, nothing of substance has even been attempted. Meanwhile, Assad's barrel bombs continue to fall on Syrian civilians, Islamic State keeps a base in Syria from which to menace Iraq, the turmoil spills over into Lebanon and Turkey, and refugees drown on their way to Europe.

Recognizing the reality of a partitioned Syria would be just a first step. But it may be the only way to get all sides to start working to end this war.

To contact the senior editor responsible for Bloomberg View’s editorials: David Shipley at davidshipley@bloomberg.net.
 

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Gang leaders in El Salvador testing limits of their power in L.A., rest of U.S.

By Matthew D. LaPlante
Posted: 09/12/15, 5:02 PM PDT | Updated: 23 hrs ago
5 Comments

Two were arrested by border agents in Texas. Another was found washing cars at a Santa Ana dealership.

The Salvadoran gang members were responsible, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials alleged, for the March assassination of Andrés Ernesto Oliva Tejada, a prosecuting attorney in the homicide unit of the Salvadoran Attorney General’s Office in the southeastern city of Usulután.

Within weeks of the killing, the suspects had made their way to the United States. And experts say this is far from the only case in which the epidemic violence in El Salvador is overflowing into nearly all points north — and especially in Los Angeles, where El Salvador’s two deadliest gangs were founded.

Gang leaders from Mara Salvatrucha, also known as MS-13, and the 18th Street gang have continued to consolidate their power over neighborhoods across Central America, along human smuggling routes and within the narcotics trafficking trade. They’re also increasingly reaching out to affiliated gangs — called cliques — in the United States, according to Special Agent Tony Rodriguez, the section chief for ICE’s National Gang Unit.

• Video: The heroes of El Salvador’s gang war

Many cliques already pay dues that help support the gangs in El Salvador, but Rodriguez said leaders have been emboldened by the weakness of the Salvadoran government and their growing power throughout other parts of Central America. Now, he said, MS-13 and 18th Street leaders in El Salvador, “are trying to put pressure on members to get more violent and more active” in the United States.

But there has been some push-back to those demands. “Members here are driven by their own concerns,” Rodriguez said.

As a result, he said, gang leaders in El Salvador have been sending lieutenants to assume leadership positions in the U.S. cliques.

So far, there is no clear connection between the breakdown of a truce between MS-13 and 18th Street in El Salvador and increased fighting between those gangs in the United States — but Rodriguez said that remains a concern.

The Salvadoran gangs — called maras — “are very ruthless,” he said.

“I would say the thing that makes them singularly dangerous more than most other gangs in the United States,” Rodriguez said, “is that they have a lot of command and control based in El Salvador.”

• Photos: Deadliest Days in El Salvador

Because of the connection to gang leaders in El Salvador — and the maras’ violent history — Los Angeles Police Department Officer Eli Villasenor remains wary of an increase in Salvadoran gang activity in Southern California.

Villasenor, who has spent 17 of his 21 years with the department working in street gang interdiction, said history has shown “a war over here in the United States will trickle down to El Salvador … and vice versa.”

Diana Negroponte, author of “Seeking Peace in El Salvador,” about the effort to rebuild the smallest country in Central America following its civil war, believes the rising supremacy of 18th Street and MS-13 in Central America “has already spilled over.”

“It’s spilled over into the maras’ control over human smuggling,” she said.

Negroponte, a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars who writes extensively on Central American issues, said maras along human trafficking routes have been increasing their involvement in the piso business — collecting tolls from smugglers passing with migrants throughout the region and inside the United States as well.

“So when we’re looking at this migration element, we’re looking at an industry which has become vulnerable to mara influence,” she said.

Many of the same people and travel routes are used for drug smuggling — and Negroponte said it’s becoming increasingly likely that the Salvadoran gangs will come into greater conflict with established powers in these criminal arenas.

“The interesting question now is whether the maras are now strong enough to confront the Zetas and the Gulf Cartels,” she said, naming two of the most powerful — and violent — narco-trafficking organizations in Mexico, both of which have long histories in Los Angeles.

The LAPD has previously acknowledged the presence of Zetas and Gulf Cartel operatives in the San Fernando Valley, the Westside, and central and South Los Angeles.

The cartels, Negroponte said, “have previously treated the Salvadorans as a nuisance, but that nuisance has now increased its leverage over the past year and a half.”
 

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http://news.yahoo.com/taliban-storm-afghan-prison-free-hundreds-inmates-officials-042353766.html

Taliban storm Afghan prison, free hundreds of inmates

AFP
By Rahmatullah Alizada
12 hours ago

Taliban insurgents in military uniform stormed an Afghan prison Monday, freeing hundreds of inmates after detonating a car bomb and killing four policemen in the country's largest jailbreak in years.

The brazen raid in the eastern city of Ghazni comes as the Taliban ramp up attacks on government and foreign targets despite being embroiled in a bitter leadership transition.

It was the Taliban's third mass prison break since 2008 and a major blow to Afghan forces facing their first fighting season without full NATO support.

"Around 2:30 am six Taliban insurgents wearing military uniforms attacked Ghazni prison. First they detonated a car bomb in front of the gate, fired an RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) and then raided the prison," deputy provincial governor Mohammad Ali Ahmadi told AFP.

The interior ministry said 355 of the prison's 436 inmates escaped. Most were Taliban and other militants.

It added that four Afghan police officers were killed and seven wounded in the raid, which left bullet-riddled bodies near the entrance of the prison.

Ahmadi said the raid came hours after inmates protested at government moves to shift up to 20 Taliban prisoners to Kabul -- a possible indication that the jailbreak was coordinated.

He added that daggers and knives carved out of furniture pieces were found on some of the inmates.

The Taliban, who launched a countrywide summer offensive in late April, claimed responsibility for the raid.

- Uptick in attacks -

"This successful operation was carried out at 2:00 am and continued for several hours. The jail was under Taliban control," spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement.

"In this operation, 400 of our innocent countrymen were freed... and were taken to mujahideen-controlled areas," it added.

The Taliban are known to exaggerate and distort their public statements.

In the last major Afghan jailbreak in 2011 nearly 500 Taliban inmates escaped from a prison in the southern province of Kandahar.

The Taliban at the time said they sprang the inmates through a one-kilometre tunnel that took five months to dig. The government described that incident as a security "disaster".

And in 2008 about 1,000 prisoners including hundreds of Taliban rebels escaped when suicide bombers blew open the gates of Kandahar city's main prison.

Taliban insurgents are stepping up their summer offensive despite a simmering leadership succession dispute after the confirmation of the death of longtime chief Mullah Omar.

Mullah Akhtar Mansour, a trusted deputy of Omar, was named as the insurgents' new chief in late July but the power transition has been acrimonious.

Afghan security forces, stretched on multiple fronts, are struggling to rein in the Taliban as NATO forces pull back from the frontlines.

NATO ended its combat mission last December and pulled out the bulk of its troops although a 13,000-strong residual force remains for training and counter-terrorism operations.

In other bloodshed this month unidentified attackers on September 5 shot dead 13 minority Shiite Hazaras after dragging them out of their vehicles in the northern province of Balkh.

The men were taken from two vehicles in a rare fatal attack targeting ethnic minorities.

Afghanistan's president the same day implored international donors for their continued support, saying the "wounded country" faced a host of security and economic challenges.

Donors have pledged billions of dollars over the past decade to reconstruct the war-torn nation.

But much of that money has been lost to corruption which permeates nearly every public institution, hobbling development and sapping already overstretched state coffers.


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http://news.yahoo.com/95-000-russian-troops-massive-military-drill-093902596.html

95,000 Russian troops in massive military drill

AFP
3 hours ago

Moscow (AFP) - Russia on Monday launched its largest military exercises of the year, Centre-2015, involving some 95,000 soldiers including ground troops, navy and airforce units.

The long-announced war games are "the most large-scale drill of 2015," the defence ministry said.

Russia has recently intensified snap checks of its military might, testing its capabilities from the Arctic to the Far East as relations with the West have plunged to a post-Cold War low over the Ukraine crisis.

Centre-2015 takes place at 20 sites across Russia's central military district, which reaches from the Volga River to the Ural mountains and Siberia in the east, while also including far northern Russia.

Troops from member states of the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO), made up of several ex-Soviet countries, are also involved in the exercise.

The defence ministry said the war games are aimed at testing the readiness of the military of the CSTO countries to "manage coalition groups of troops in containing an international armed conflict."

The troops will simulate "blocking and destroying illegal armed formations during joint special operations," the ministry said.

The drill begins as leaders are to arrive in Tajikistan for a summit of the CSTO that starts Tuesday.

The exercises running to September 20 include 20 naval ships and up to 170 aircraft, the defence ministry said.

President Vladimir Putin will observe the drills during one of the days, Russian daily Izvestia reported last week, without giving details.

The main action will take place in the Urals, in the Siberian Altai region and in the southern Astrakhan region and the Caspian Sea, the commander of troops in Russia's central military district, Vladimir Zarudnitsky told journalists, quoted by Interfax news agency.

In European Russia, 12,000 troops will take part in drills at military ranges in the Urals region close to Kazakhstan involving around 90 tanks as well as 20 artillery and rocket launcher systems.

Kazakh troops will also take part and a military delegation from Nicaragua will act as monitors, Zarudnitsky added.

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http://www.valuewalk.com/2015/09/vietnam-will-fight-china/

Vietnam Will Fight China, Other Nations Entering Its Waters Illegally

Posted By: Marie Cabural
Posted date: September 14, 2015 07:30:22 AM

Vietnam is ready to fight China and other countries illegally entering its territorial waters, according to a report from Vietnamese news agency Thanh Nien.

The report indicated that the Vietnamese government implemented a new rule authorizing its coast guard to use its weapons onboard to prevent any foreign vessel entering its territorial waters.

Political observers suggested that Vietnam’s decision was definitely a response to the concerns regarding China’s attempts to assert its claims on the disputed territories in the South China Sea.

The China-Vietnam oil rig standoff

The major friction between China and Vietnam happened in May last year when a Chinese deepwater oil rig (Haiyang Shiyou 981) entered the Vietnamese Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)—near the islands claimed by both countries. Vietnamese and Chinese vessels exchanged water cannon fires and rammed each other. Six Vietnamese sailors were injured during the incident.

The Chinese government removed the Haiyang Shiyou 981 oil rig after two months. Political observers considered the standoff between the two countries as the most serious development related to the territorial disputes since the Johnson South Reef conflict in 1988 when 70 Vietnamese soldiers died.

In June, this year, the Haiyang Shiyou 981 oil rig resumed its operations roughly 110 nautical miles east of the Vietnam coast and 72 miles south of the resort of the city of Sanya on China’s Hainan Island.

Last month, the Chinese Maritime Safety Administration announced that the oil rig would continue its ocean drilling operations slightly to the north from its position until October 20.

China and Vietnam agreed to handle disputes properly

Earlier this month, Chinese and Vietnamese leaders agreed to handle their disputes properly amid the increasing tension over the disputed territories in the South China Sea.

Chinese President Xi Jinping told Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang, “"We are in favor of properly handling disputes between both sides through dialogue, and expanding cooperation and common interests.”

Pres. Xi also emphasized that their countries are both led by communist parties, and it is necessary for them to “enhance strategic coordination, exchanges, and cooperation.”
On the other hand, Pres. Sang said, "Vietnam hopes to strengthen political trust and personnel exchanges with China, properly handle differences and enhance win-win cooperation.”

Vietnam’s new rule could escalate conflict with China

Under Vietnam’s new rule, it coast guard will start using their weapons onboard to drive away any foreign vessel entering its waters without permission. Vietnamese coast guards will not stop until a foreign vessel is completely out of the country’s territorial waters.

Vietnam claimed that some Chinese vessels have been attacking its fisherman while fishing bear the Truong Sa (Spratly) and Hiang Sa (Paracel) islands. According to the Vietnamese government, the attacks became more frequent since the oil rig standoff.

Political analysts suggested the possibility of an escalation of the conflict between China and Vietnam related to the territorial disputes in the South China Sea.

The Chinese government is claiming the largest portion of the disputed territories including the Spratly and Paracel islands in the South China Sea. China identified the area as the “nine-dash line,” which stretches hundreds of miles south and east of Hainan province. Beijing said the Spratly and Paracel islands were part of its territory centuries ago. It is supporting its claims using a 1947 map.

Vietnam strongly rejected China’s historical claims and pointed out that China never had sovereignty over the island prior to 1940s. The Vietnamese government said it has documents to prove that the Spratly and Paracel islands were under its rule since the 17th century.

Vietnam is currently occupying 29 reefs in the Spratly Islands and intensified its military facilities in the territories. In May, satellite images showed that Vietnam did land reclamation in the disputed areas of Sand Cay and West London Reef.

On the other hand, China has a de-facto control over eight reefs in the Spratly Islands. In 2012, China created a new city called Sansha with an administrative body and headquarters in the Paracel Islands. The Chinese government said Sansha city is responsible for overseeing its territories in the South China Sea.
 

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http://thediplomat.com/2015/09/shou...hin-12-nautical-miles-of-chinas-fake-islands/

Should the US Navy Sail Within 12 Nautical Miles of China's Fake Islands?


Plus, North Korea and the Iran deal, Pakistan and Lashkar-e-Taiba, and more. Must reads.

By Ankit Panda
September 14, 2015

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1 Comment

A few must-reads to kick off your week:

Over at CSIS’s continuously excellent Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, James Kraska writes compellingly in favor of the United States having its naval assets conduct transit in innocent passage near China’s newly built man-made islands in the South China Sea. The issue was the subject of some debate between the U.S. Department of Defense and the White House earlier in the summer, and recent news of the People’s Liberation Army-Navy (PLAN) having lawfully traversed U.S. territorial waters around the Aleutian Islands near Alaska has brought the issue back to the fore.

Over at 38North, Carla Freeman reviews China’s current position on nuclear talks with North Korea, both within the framework of the long-stalled Six-Party Talks and other formats. Senior Chinese officials, including the foreign minister, Wang Yi, have hinted that the process toward the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action on Iran’s nuclear program could bear lessons for handling North Korea’s program. Freeman wraps up the varying opinions within China on the possibility that the Iran deal could bode positively for the North Korean issue, highlighting mostly skepticism among the Chinese expert community.

Over at India Today, Christine Fair has a trenchant and succinct catalog of how Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence manufactured a bevy of anti-India militant proxy groups, including Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group responsible for the devastating 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai that claimed scores of lives.

At POLITICO Europe, Tunku Varadarajan tells the odd tale of how Mohammad Zahoor, a Pakistani and “Ukraine’s richest expat,” became the owner of Ukraine’s Kyiv Post, a major Ukrainian English-language newspaper.

If you missed it, the New Yorker‘s Evan Osnos has a thoughtful piece on the reasons China felt it necessary to hold its September 3 parade commemorating victory in the “Chinese People’s Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and World Anti-Fascist War.”

Finally, check out our latest podcast, where I speak with SinoNK‘s Adam Cathcart about the current state of relations between North Korea and China (hint: they’re not great) and how Pyongyang and Beijing are managing this important bilateral relationship.
 

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http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/ori...-pkk-clashes-heading-to-turk-kurd-strife.html

Is Turkey heading toward civil war?

Author: Kadri Gursel
Posted September 13, 2015
Translator: Sibel Utku Bila

The fierce conflict between the Turkish security forces and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in the 1990s claimed some 40,000 lives, but it never devolved into a Turkish-Kurdish civil war. Although a number of bloody incidents took place in residential areas of western Turkey where Kurdish minorities lived, they were quickly contained before they could spread.

The first sign that real Turkish-Kurdish strife is possible came in October 2014, during the deadly street protests referred to as the “Kobani unrest.” During Oct. 6-8, Kurds across Turkey took to the streets to protest the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), which they held responsible for the siege of the Syrian Kurdish city of Kobani by the Islamic State (IS). In ethnically mixed, Turkish-majority cities, such as Gaziantep, Turkish crowds confronted the demonstrators. In fact, clashes in Gaziantep claimed four lives. Deaths from the unrest, which spilled over to 35 cities, totaled 50, and thousands of public and residential buildings, businesses, schools and vehicles were vandalized or destroyed.

Since Sept. 8, Turkey has been the scene of nationwide attacks on Kurds that are unprecedented since the PKK took up arms in 1984. The wave of violence erupted after two massive PKK bomb attacks killed 16 soldiers and 14 policemen on Sept. 6 and Sept. 8, respectively, spreading to almost all the provinces outside the Kurdish-majority regions of the southeast. Nationalist groups took to the streets, assaulting Kurdish civilians, Kurdish-owned businesses and offices of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), which had emerged as Turkey’s third-largest party in the June 7 elections, winning 13.1% of the vote and 80 seats in the 550-member parliament. The party’s offices in 56 provinces and districts were stoned, vandalized and torched. The attacks reached a peak late Sept. 8 when a mob of some 500 people stormed HDP headquarters in downtown Ankara, ransacking and burning part of the building.

Turkish nationalists, reported to have mobilized via social media, also attacked intercity buses carrying passengers to Kurdish-majority regions. Dozens of buses, singled out according to their license plates or company names, had their windows broken under hails of stones, while others were stopped and their passengers verbally and physically harassed. As a result, bus companies operating between the western regions and Diyarbakir, the largest city in the southeast, canceled services Sept. 9-10 to protest the violence.

Impoverished Kurdish workers struggling to make a living from seasonal agricultural jobs across the country were not spared beatings and harassment. Meanwhile, one of the worst nights of horror unfolded Sept. 8 in the central Anatolian city of Kirsehir, where more than 20 Kurdish-owned businesses and shops, including the city’s only bookstore, were torched. The local HDP office was vandalized, and vehicles bound for the southeast were stoned at the city’s bus terminal. According to witnesses, the assailants, who numbered in the thousands, carried lists of their targets. Kirsehir Gov. Necati Senturk blamed the violence on “provocateurs who mingled into an innocent demonstration to condemn terrorism.”

Indeed, the popular outrage the PKK has triggered by killing 30 members of the security forces in two days has presented provocateurs with a golden opportunity. Luckily, as of Sept. 10, the attacks on businesses and party offices had not resulted in any fatalities, but no doubt this good fortune cannot last forever. The danger of frenzied, gun-wielding Turks and Kurds confronting each other in the streets is very real, as the Kobani protests have already shown.

That said, the risk of an all-out confrontation appears for now to have been averted. HDP parliamentary whip Idris Baluken issued a poignant warning Sept. 9, stressing that simultaneous, organized attacks in dozens of cities cannot be explained as a coincidence. “We are hardly restraining our own base,” he said. “Everyone should well foresee the consequences if the masses confront each other.” Turkey’s Kurds are estimated to number at least 15 million, with half of them living in the country’s predominantly Turkish west. This alone offers a good idea of how bloody an ethnic conflict could be.

HDP offices and election bureaus had been targets of violence in the run-up to the June 7 polls, including the site of two bomb attacks. The HDP and the Kurdish movement in general showed restraint and stayed out of the streets. They maintained such discipline even after a bomb ripped through an HDP rally in Diyarbakir on June 5, killing four people and wounding 50. Kurdish street unrest at the time would have jeopardized the party’s chances of reaching the 10% threshold of votes required to enter parliament.

The HDP again faces the same risk if Kurds respond to provocations and take to the streets, contributing to a climate of all-out conflict ahead of the Nov. 1 snap elections. Failure by the HDP to surpass the vote threshold will very likely mean the AKP’s return to power as a single-party government.

The job of the provocateurs, meanwhile, has become much easier than in the run-up to June 7. The war with the PKK has resumed, triggering a contest for the nationalist vote between the AKP and the Nationalist Action Party (MHP), which translates into enmity against Kurds in the street. It is no wonder that a series of attacks against Kurds occurred during nationwide marches by Idealist Hearths, a group close to the ultranationalist MHP, held Sept. 8 under the slogan “Pay respect to martyrs, condemn terrorism.”

The on-and-off periods of cease-fire and fighting since 1999 seem to have greatly lowered the Turkish majority’s threshold of psychological resistance to violence. Turks have since become less tolerant of PKK attacks. The sudden resumption of bloodshed and the daily funerals of soldiers and police — just as hopes for a peaceful settlement had been raised, leading to a sense of relief that “it’s finally over” — seem to have intensified the trauma. This, in turn, is fanning the hatred.

A failure to immediately stop the violence against Kurds could have two major impacts on the restive community. First, the attacks against the HDP could lead Kurds to lose faith in politics as a means of contributing to the settlement of the conflict. This, in turn, would inevitably strengthen the inclination to use violence as a political tool and stoke separatist sentiment. Second, continued attacks on Kurds, their businesses and buses and a feeling that western Turkey is no longer safe for Kurds and their investments will accelerate psychological estrangement among Kurds, with the result again being a strengthening of separatist sentiment. The sense of estrangement will only grow stronger if Kurds also come to believe that the security forces are not doing enough to protect them.
 

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http://www.realclearworld.com/blog/2015/09/syria_germany_exodus_redemption_111426.html

Exodus and Redemption

Posted by Ronald Tiersky on September 14, 2015

Is there a useful analogy to make between the streams of Syrian refugees and the Biblical Israelites? After all, analogy is the weakest form of proof. It only means that this seems to be like that, and the notion can be mistaken, the comparison far-fetched.

At first judgment, nothing seems to justify comparing the two. Syrians now streaming into Europe are leaving their own country, a land where their roots as a civilization go back 3,000 years to the first Assyrian Empire. Syrians have always had a country, whereas the Israelites, later known as the Jews, did not until the creation of Israel in 1948. Old Testament Israelites, led by Moses, escaped from Ancient Egypt, where they were new arrivals, a tiny foreign people that had been enslaved by the pharaohs.

Yet there remains something right in the comparison of today's Syrians and Biblical Israelites. That something is the concept of Exodus; an enduring theme in the history of human civilization. Syria today represents the world's greatest humanitarian tragedy. It pales before what happened to the Jewish people in the Holocaust, but the Syrians fleeing their own country and their refugee camps in Turkey, Jordan, and elsewhere, constitute a contemporary Exodus. Resettling them is more than a policy issue of how to divide them among various European Union countries as a problem of burden-sharing.

Thinking of the situation against the story in the Bible inspires a sense of common humanity about the Middle Eastern morass, rather than seeing it as just a war against the Islamic State, the regime of Bashar al Assad, al-Qaeda, and other marauding bands of thugs as reported in the media. This is a story that could be recorded in some future great book, written not by God but by historians. Syrian Exodus (leaving aside the thousands of opportunistic, carpe diem refugees with other origins and reasons) is an escape from hell. If empathy prevails and analogy is admitted, it could influence modern Middle Eastern history. Secular antagonisms between Sunni and Shiite Muslims, and the Islamic State's murderous intention to pulverize stones, monuments, and people in an attempt to destroy everyone else in a Sunni Muslim conquest, will be seen for what it is: a dishonoring of Islam as a religion and of Muslims as a world community of believers. Perhaps even attitudes toward the Jews and Israel will be affected.

For the Syrians -- even for those who still remain -- their own country has become "Egypt." Dealing with their situation is not a matter of foreign and domestic policies. It's an international reckoning with historic collapse at the center of the Arab Muslim world. The consequences are geopolitical, geo-social, geo-emotional.

Syrians will be a new fact on the ground in Europe as well. For many months shunned by European governments, their appeal for asylum is suddenly being accepted as a humanitarian and moral duty impossible to ignore. Syrians will become small but perhaps significant minorities in a few European countries. Pope Francis, who has stepped out from papal reserve in so many ways, implores Europe's Catholics to welcome the migrants. European Union officials are no longer deadlocked; they must deal with what they can no longer avoid.

The issue of German Redemption

Then there is the significance of German leadership in accepting the Syrian asylum seekers into the European Union. For Germany in particular, government and civil society's welcoming of Syrian refugees continues the country's quest for redemption from the unspeakable crimes of their grandparents and great-grandparents. The German people's attempt at redemption is a secular cause played out on a Biblical scale, because the Holocaust was a crime against not only humanity, but against human civilization itself. For religious believers, it was a crime against God. In some sense, "Germany" may never redeem its crimes, but "Germany" is not today's German people, difficult as that may be for some people to accept.

Germans for decades shied away from international political leadership. Its leaders made of Germany's economic success and generosity in financing European integration (plus its unyielding political support of Israel) the basis of its international influence. During these decades Germany's foreign economic generosity was its foreign policy. With the French, Germany organized the complexities of the European Union's internal contradictions into a vision of Europe's renewal, the possibilities of resurrection. German money underwrote France's political leadership. The two countries produced leaders of vision on the scale of history: Konrad Adenauer and Charles de Gaulle; Helmut Kohl and François Mitterrand. Today no other country's political and business elites, not even those in France, are thinking as deeply as Germany's about how to move European integration forward in a strategy that combines national interests and Europe's necessities. Germany's partner countries want more rather than less German leadership, an astonishing international recognition of redemption. Germany's willingness to accept large numbers of refugees is only the most recent act of this attempt to prove that the "German problem" is history.

Accepting large numbers of refugees is also good for Germany itself. Along with Europe's other demographically withered countries, Germany, whose birth rate is among the lowest in the world, needs significant immigration to finance its future, while doubters and racism have rendered it thus far impossible. From the point of view of German interests, Syrians (and many opportunist refugees) are an educated population, willing, indeed desperate, for jobs and acceptance. Ties to the Syrian homeland will remain strong, but gratitude to Germany will be real. America's experience, despite current electoral posturing, shows that immigration is a boon to national vibrancy. Why not for Germany and Europe as well? Furthermore, a significant Syrian minority population will increase social pluralism, among other things diluting domestic focus on Germany's Turkish minority.

A few hundred thousand or even a few million new immigrants won't solve Germany's or Europe's demographic problems. But the irrepressible urgency of the current refugee crisis is accomplishing what politics failed to do -- lancing a boil, unlocking a self-defeating national stalemate. In contrast, Germany's reception of hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers fleeing former Yugoslavia's wars in the 1990s was not an economic necessity, because the demographic deficit was not so evident then. Taking in Croats, Serbs, Bosnians, and others was a political act of redemption and, for Germans themselves, an act of national catharsis. Yet strong internal opposition to immigrants did not abate.

Accepting Syrians inevitably increases the need for German leadership in Europe's response. Germany's government, led by the indomitable Mrs. Merkel, is stepping up to the task successfully. (It will accept at least 800,000 asylum seekers in the coming year, far more than any other EU country and probably not the end of what Germany will do.) The trouble with German redemption, however, is that dealing with a problem may not solve it but increase it. I often wondered during years of teaching European politics how long the German Problem would endure, at least in people's minds. When would redemption be complete? I don't know the answer, but at a certain distance from the event in history makes such questions irrelevant.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.nationalinterest.org/feature/why-fighting-through-auxiliaries-usually-fails-13818

Why Fighting Through Auxiliaries Usually Fails [1]

These are the top reasons enlisting auxiliaries to fight for us doesn't usually turn out well...

Burak Kadercan [2] [3]
September 14, 2015
Comments 9

The crisis over the so-called Islamic State (or, ISIS) has once again led policy makers and the national-security community to think very hard about relying on auxiliary forces, either paramilitary forces such as the Syrian Kurds’ People’s Protection Units [4] (YPG) or regional actors ranging from Turkey to Jordan (even the Assad regime or Iran), to deal with intricate challenges.

This is not surprising. While ISIS presents a challenge to the regional security and may potentially emerge as a breeding ground for terrorists with intentions to strike the West, the actual and potential costs of putting U.S. troops on the ground would be tremendous, not to mention a difficult sell to the domestic audiences [5] in the aftermath of Afghanistan and Iraq.

What is surprising is that the Western analysts and policy makers, even after so many experiences gone bad, keep convincing themselves that relying on and/or empowering local actors can help the United States and its allies avoid costly options, while at the same time solving the problem in the way they want it solved.

Take, for example, Afghanistan. As any fan of Sylvester Stallone’s Rambo 3 can tell us, the United States empowered the local “freedom fighters” in their struggle against the Soviet Union and then watched them emerge as the Taliban. To defeat the Taliban, the United States made heavy use of the so-called Northern Alliance, which in turn did as much damage as good to the long-term stability of the country. (By the way, why the Taliban is no longer running the country, it is still alive and kicking.)

In Iraq, the United States was able to energize the Sunni tribes, the so-called “Sons of Iraq,” in its struggle with Al Qaeda’s Iraqi branch (AQI) [6], only to see AQI evolve into something much more dangerous: ISIS, an organization that now draws its strength from numerous Sunni tribes that fought AQI only a few years ago.

What about Libya, or even pre-ISIS Syria? Providing material and air support was often applauded as a “smart” strategy that would lead to quick and cheap victories, only to turn sour down the road, usually with unintended consequences.

Two questions arise. First, why do policy makers and analysts, time after time, succeed in convincing themselves what usually does not work out will actually work out this time? Second, more importantly, why does fighting through auxiliaries usually fail?

The answer to the first question is three-fold. First, faced with the difficult choice of embarking a costly and risky strategy, policy makers and analysts want to believe that there is a cheap solution to be worked through local actors. Second, there is the discourse of “this matters more to the local actors, so they should bear the burden.” Third, this “cheap” method to deal with an intractable challenge usually appears to work in the short run.

So, why do such arrangements usually lead to long-term strategic failures? There are three answers, each following from the misleading assumptions strategists make to convince themselves and others that fighting through intermediaries is the way to go.

First, projecting military power can in fact be a cheap and effective method, but usually for imperial governance, not for the kind of state-building exercises that are often necessitated by the military interventions targeting insurgencies and terrorists. Second, local actors have not only their own incentives, but also conflicts amongst each other, a situation that then leads to outcomes not in line with the interests of the “donor” states. Third, fighting through auxiliaries causes a sudden and significant change in the balance of power in the relevant regions by empowering some local actors at the expense of others, setting the stage for long-term instability.

The first point is rarely taken into consideration. In the past, empires from the Ottomans to the British Empire effectively projected power and governed vast spaces by drawing on local intermediaries for centuries. They were able to do so for three reasons. First, before the spread of industrialization and the information revolution, it was simply easier to do so. Second, formal empires of the past were not ashamed of acting in imperial terms and committed centrally funded military forces to the areas they ruled for the long haul, which helped them keep rebellions and intracommunal violence in check. Third, they were not trying to build modern states; such empires only wanted to rule on the cheap.

Ruling on the cheap is not what the United States and its allies want. They simply want to degrade and destroy [7] an unrelenting enemy—in this case ISIS—and move on. The only problem with such an objective is that ISIS is a problem that cannot easily be divorced from the regional crisis that gave birth to it. ISIS was born out of civil war in Syria and failing state institutions in Iraq, not to mention the associated sectarian tensions. Dealing with the ISIS crisis requires not only destroying ISIS, but also addressing state failure in these two states, which is not a cheap task. Destroy ISIS today without addressing the crisis that has been empowering it and tomorrow you will be facing a new, and probably more “evolved,” enemy that feeds off of the same crisis. The evolution of AQI into ISIS is a case in point.

Put simply, projecting power through local auxiliaries can be an effective method to extend and sustain one’s imperial reach. But if one does not intend (or have the will) to act as an imperial power, it does not make much sense. The short-term results in the military domain and the following euphoria, assuming the enemy is destroyed, may deceive spectators into thinking that such a strategy actually works. But without addressing the “politics” of the ISIS crisis, what appears to be victory in the short term will set the stage for the next crisis in the long term.

Of course, as pessimistic as it sounds, the above analysis assumes that the military, if not political, ends (say, a decisive military victory against ISIS) can be achieved through auxiliaries. This is in fact an optimistic assumption. The case of ISIS should remind us that even forming an “effective” coalition of local forces itself is an enormous challenge. In particular, the second reason why fighting through auxiliaries usually does not work is the mismatch between the interests of the donor states and the auxiliaries, not to mention the conflicts of interest among the local actors. This mismatch and clash of interests, in turn, can lead to two outcomes: either the resulting coalition is deemed ineffective, or it fails to emerge in the first place.

For example, take Turkey. There is increasing pressure on Ankara to take a more active position over ISIS. However, Turkey’s interests are not necessarily in line with such a position. First, ISIS does not pose a direct threat to Turkey. In fact, if Turkey puts boots on the ground against ISIS, it will make itself a prime (and very vulnerable) target for terrorist attacks from ISIS. Second, Ankara stipulates the removal of the Assad regime as a condition for its more active participation. Third, Turkey is categorically against the empowerment of a Kurdish contingency in northern Syria and is worried about the rising influence of Iran in the region.

Apply the same exercise to the other potential local actors and you will see that it is not all that easy to summon an effective fighting force to tackle ISIS. So, what about the discourse of “the ISIS threat matters more to the local actors, so they should take care of it themselves, perhaps with our support,” which heroically assumes that the regional players “have to” do something about ISIS? The answer, ironically, is hidden in the question: The local actors may not share the West’s concerns and will tackle ISIS in the way (and to the extent) that fits their interests.

This ties into the third problem with fighting through auxiliaries. It might in fact be possible to motivate some local players by drastically empowering them. But such policies usually lead to a sudden and dramatic shift in the balance of power in the region, leading to long-term instability and even conflict (sometimes between actors that may be potential allies to the West, but adversaries or competitors to each other). Surprisingly, while international relations experts are concerned about the impacts of changing balances of power among great powers on world politics, they rarely consider how sudden shifts in regional balances of power can lead to instability and conflict.

Take the example of the Kurdish group YPG, which is now unanimously portrayed as the most willing and capable fighting force against ISIS. YPG, in return, is attracting material and air support from the United States, which amplifies the military capabilities of the Syrian Kurds, who have organic ties to the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK), an insurgent group that fought Turkey for over three decades and is formally considered a terrorist organization by United States [8].

The rise of YPG, however, is rarely put into perspective. True, YPG is fighting ISIS to protect the Syrian Kurds, but the organization is also pushing for a nationalist agenda, and both YPG and PKK are doing their best to take advantage of their newfound popularity and appeal in the Western world. Now, there is nothing wrong with this endeavor. But thinking strategically entails considering options in the context of the reactions of all relevant actors to particular developments. The empowerment of YPG is also shifting the balances of power in the region, with three potential consequences.

First, Turkey is deeply concerned with the emergence of an autonomous Kurdish polity on its southern border, especially one with organic ties with its nemesis, PKK. Second, YPG’s increasing military might, when combined with the fact that the Syrian Kurds took over a number of strategic towns where Sunni Arabs are the majority of the population, is fueling the ethnic tensions between Kurds and Arabs. For example, while Western audiences applauded the capture of Tal Abyad (a Sunni Arab majority town) by the YPG forces as a strategic success, the development also created suspicions among the Sunni populations in the region. Third, the rise of YPG (and PKK) also raises questions about the prospects of a greater Kurdistan, which would be a huge concern not only for Turkey, but also Baghdad and Iran.

Now, do the math. YPG alone cannot destroy ISIS and its West-assisted rise is alienating (and even infuriating) a multitude of actors including Turkey, the Iraqi government, some Sunni tribes and even Iran, who are all potential allies in the United States’ struggle against ISIS. This is a complicated picture that does not allow for a cheap and quick (and decisive) solution to a region-wide problem. Analysts may want to believe that there is one, but wishful thinking rarely makes for sound strategy.

Fighting ISIS through auxiliaries will remain a hotly debated topic. Note that the argument here is not that the United States should either “do it alone” or just learn to live with an ISIS-infested Middle East. It is that if the United States intends to fight ISIS through auxiliaries, its analysts should pay more attention to the question of why such endeavors usually fail to achieve their political objectives—which in this case I will assume to be, following Liddell Hart, establishing a better state of peace (if mainly for the United States) compared to what preceded such attempts—in the long run. If we can figure out why fighting through intermediaries usually fails in the long run, then we may have a chance at making sure that “this time” ends up being the exception.

Burak Kadercan is an Assistant Professor of Strategy and Policy at the United States Naval War College. He has a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Chicago and specializes in territorial and religious conflicts, the relationship between state-formation and production of military power, and empires. At the Naval War College, Kadercan lectures on the Islamic State as well as the legacies of the Ottoman Empire on present-day politics of the Middle East. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect those of the Naval War College, the Department of the Navy, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government.

Tags
iraq [9]Syria [10]Turkey [11]
Topics
Security [12]
Regions
Middle East [13] [3]

Source URL (retrieved on September 14, 2015): http://www.nationalinterest.org/feature/why-fighting-through-auxiliaries-usually-fails-13818

Links:
[1] http://www.nationalinterest.org/feature/why-fighting-through-auxiliaries-usually-fails-13818
[2] http://www.nationalinterest.org/profile/burak-kadercan
[3] http://twitter.com/share
[4] http://ypgrojava.com/en/
[5] http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/war-weariness-excuse_784895.html
[6] http://www.nctc.gov/site/groups/aqi.html
[7] https://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/201...a-we-will-degrade-and-ultimately-destroy-isil
[8] http://www.state.gov/j/ct/rls/other/des/123085.htm
[9] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/iraq
[10] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/syria
[11] http://www.nationalinterest.org/tag/turkey
[12] http://www.nationalinterest.org/topic/security
[13] http://www.nationalinterest.org/region/middle-east

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TDog • 21 hours ago

The author states that auxiliaries often fail because the power behind them lacks the will or intent to be an empire. What the author leaves out, perhaps for the sake of sparing the national ego, is a third and perhaps the likeliest option - the US lacks the intelligence to run an empire adequately.

England ran its empire through its foreign service - people for whom living in their area of expertise was considered a given. For the US, the assumption is that every Afghan or Iraqi is really just an American in funny clothes and that all they need to express their inner American is to be exposed to democracy and a lot of cash.

In short, we run our empire like the Marx Brothers run a railroad. Auxiliaries work and work quite well when local conditions and considerations are taken into account. Iranian proxies function quite well and it has nothing to do with the Iranian mindset being more "imperialistic" or them having more "will" to carve out an empire - it has everything to do with the fact that they know more than eight words of the local language, treat the locals like something other than children, and take into consideration something other than their own goals.

The author perhaps chose to blame our lack of success upon our lack of will in making an empire, but it's too late to play the blushing virgin because in case he didn't notice, the US already has an empire. Hundreds of bases over a hundred countries isn't our plan on internationalizing baseball - it signals our intent to control the destinies of nations other than our own and for our own benefit.

And that's where American proxies fail - they fail because they have come to the realization that fighting and dying so that we may continue the lifestyle to which we have become accustomed is rank stupidity. We fail because we haven't twigged on to that fact yet. The end result - our proxies tend to be ineffective, corrupt, and expensive.

see more

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EndDays > TDog • 2 hours ago

This Could Kick-Start WW3,

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FedUpWithWelfareStates > TDog • 6 hours ago

Astute observation(s): "...we run our empire like the Marx Brothers run a railroad." & "England ran its empire through its foreign service - people for whom living in their area of expertise was considered a given." Until the U.S. gets out from behind Embassy Walls & past the Front gate of OCONUS bases, our supposed Subject Matter Experts will NEVER truly understand the indigenous people of whom these SMEs love to write about, mainly based upon Google searches...

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PavlosX • 2 hours ago

1. This author thinks only in threes
2. He also co-mingles some of the first set of threes with the third set of threes
3. If you reduce all the useless verbiage, he is trying to say if you can't do it yourself, don't do it.

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deadman449 • 6 hours ago

The reason why we use local auxiliaries is that the government cannot afford to have many body bags politically. We have the money, but not the will to fight these wars. Only reason we had the will to go into Afghanistan and Iraq was because of 9/11. If there was another big terrorist attack, only then could USA government gain the political will to use the full might of the American military.
ISIS, while destructive in ME, is not really a threat to USA in any realistic terms. The worst part of the current conflict to the US and allies is the refugee problem. While ISIS makes entertaining news, they are in no way important to USA strategically..

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Randal • 11 hours ago

Makes some important points, but misses out a key aspect - one of the key reasons that using proxies to achieve US goals is that those proxies are immediately and inherently discredited by the fact of their being perceived as acting in the interests of their US paymasters.

The simple reality is that the superpower that is (largely correctly) seen as behind the regional status quo in the ME is never going to be regarded with anything less than suspicion (or even outright hatred) by those who have suffered in the establishment or maintenance of that status quo. Only those groups who expect to gain directly from US backing are willing to approve of the US reasonably wholeheartedly, and of course that support is bought at the cost of the immediate hatred of their enemies. And the fact is that the governments in the region that are part of that regional status quo largely created or sustained by the US for decades now mostly either have relatively little real popular legitimacy (the Gulf sunni monarchies, Egypt, Jordan), preside over peoples that are decidedly ambivalent about US activities in the region (Turkey, Iraq), or, in the case of Israel, is a regional pariah whose very creation is recognised as the source of many of the region's problems.

The only answer is: don't be an aggressively interfering imperial power (even in the kind of basically economically mediated neo-imperial terms that the US operates its empire).

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Bankotsu • 21 hours ago

Why not hire Russia to fight ISIS and kill both?

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Dan H > Bankotsu • 14 hours ago

We don't need to hire them. They're doing it for free.

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skydiver • a day ago

what makes you think ISIS "matters" more to regional actors? If that's the case, why is the good ol' US bombing ISIS, however half-heartedly, not Saudi, Turkey (we all know whom TUrkey is really bombing....), and why is there so much angst in the US about ISIS whereas you don't see corresponding mental trepidation in Saudi/Turkish media/think think cycles? End of cold war and the ensuing euphoria fundamentally poisoned the mind of US strategic community: ideology and assumption rarely are challenged. As a result, corresponding policies always go back the same: let's increase military budget and bomb everywhere and we WILL WIN!!!!!

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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http://news.yahoo.com/russia-positioning-tanks-syria-airfield-u-officials-144236303.html

Russia positioning tanks at Syria airfield: U.S. officials

Reuters
By Phil Stewart
4 hours ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Russia has positioned about a half dozen tanks at an airfield at the center of a military buildup in Syria, two U.S. officials said on Monday, adding that the intentions of Moscow's latest deployment of heavy military equipment were unclear.

Moscow has come under increased international pressure in recent days to explain its moves in Syria, where the Kremlin has been supporting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in a 4-1/2-year war.

The Pentagon declined to directly comment on the Reuters report, saying it could not discuss U.S. intelligence. But a spokesman said recent actions by Moscow suggested plans to establish a forward air operating base.

"We have seen movement of people and things that would indicate that they plan to use that base there, south of Latakia, as a forward air operating base," Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis told a news briefing.

One of the U.S. officials, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters, said seven Russian T-90 tanks had been observed at the airfield near Latakia, an Assad stronghold.

The two U.S. officials said Russia had also stationed artillery that appeared to be arrayed defensively to protect Russian personnel stationed there.

Reuters has previously reported that Russia had deployed about 200 naval infantry soldiers to the airfield, as well as temporary housing units, a portable air traffic control station and components for an air defense system.

In a sign of the pace of Russia's buildup, Moscow has been sending about two military cargo flights a day to the airfield over the past week, U.S. officials say.

A diplomatic source, speaking to Reuters in the region on condition of anonymity, said the Russians were working to improve the airfield."There have been trucks going in and out. It appears the runway is not suited to some types of aircraft yet and they have been doing some improvements," the diplomat said.

Russia has said it will continue providing military supplies to Syria and that its assistance to the Syrian army is in line with international law.

The United States is using Syrian airspace to lead a campaign of air strikes against Islamic State. A greater Russian presence raises the prospect of the Cold War superpower foes encountering each other on the battlefield.

So far, Russia has not sent combat aircraft or helicopter gunships to the airfield, the Pentagon said.

Both Moscow and Washington say their enemy is Islamic State, whose Islamist fighters control large parts of Syria and Iraq. But Russia supports the government of Assad in Syria, while the United States says his presence makes the situation worse.

The Syrian civil war, in which about 250,000 people have died, has caused nearly half of Syria's prewar population of 23 million to flee, with many thousands attempting to reach Europe.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart; additional reporting by Sylvia Westall in Beirut; Editing by Susan Heavey, David Alexander and Jonathan Oatis)

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