WAR 11-21-2015-to-11-27-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
(190) 10-31-2015-to-11-06-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...06-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(191) 11-07-2015-to-11-13-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...13-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(192) 11-14-2015-to-11-20-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...20-2015_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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Hummm......That ought to go over well with the Sunnis.....

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http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151121/ml--iran-israel-988090d973.html

Iran Guard simulates capture of Al Aqsa Mosque

Nov 21, 2:40 AM (ET)

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iranian media are reporting that thousands of paramilitary forces from the country's powerful Revolutionary Guard have held a war game simulating the capture of Jerusalem's Al Aqsa Mosque from Israeli control.

The reports say the forces stormed and liberated a replica of the mosque. They say that 120 brigades of Basij, the paramilitary unit of the Guard, occupied hypothetical enemy positions during Friday's exercise in the holy city of Qom in central Iran.

The mosque, located at a compound holy to Jews and Muslims, has been at the heart of weeks of unrest between Israel and the Palestinians.

Iran, Israel's arch-enemy, frequently expresses solidarity with the Palestinians and holds an annual "Jerusalem Day" each year on the last Friday of the fasting month of Ramadan.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/637bf054-8e34-11e5-8be4-3506bf20cc2b.html

November 20, 2015 10:39 am

Satellite wars

Sam Jones

A new arms race in our skies threatens the satellites that control everything from security to communications

An unlikely memorial runs across the middle of the marketplace in Kettering — an otherwise unremarkable English market town. This slab of granite, set into the paving as part of a timeline of local history, reads “Russian Satellites: Grammar School Beats Nasa”. Etched into the stone is the distinctive outline of a sputnik orbiter.

Kettering Grammar School — like the space race — is long gone. But for a period it was on the front line of the extraterrestrial battle between Washington and Moscow. The Kettering Group — the school’s enthusiastic science masters and their eager pupils — became the world’s foremost amateur satellite sleuths, tracking secret Soviet launches and uncovering the location of a previously secret Russian cosmodrome from the workaday shire town.


On this topic
US and China set up ‘space hotline’


As the cold war passed into history, so did the group. Geoff Perry, the main teacher and leader, died in 2000. But some of his former pupils never lost their enthusiasm for tracking the orbits of satellites in the skies above us. In 2014, an email from one of them hit my inbox. Did I know much about satellites, it asked? Perhaps I should look into this curious new object?

“In May 2014 there was a regular Russian rocket launch that put four satellites up into orbit,” recalls Bob Christy, a former Kettering pupil. “But one of them wasn’t the same as the others.” Three — as had been publicly declared — were Rodnik communications satellites. The fourth, though, was something quite else. Officially it was classified on the Pentagon’s public space database as orbital junk. But then it began to manoeuvre. “It moved away from the others,” says Christy. “And then we watched it put itself on a trajectory to catch up again with the rocket booster that launched it. It was some kind of test.”

What exactly Norad 39765 — known also as Kosmos 2499 and Object 2014-28e — is has still not been publicly declared. The Russians do not even acknowledge its existence. But the activities of the mystery “ghost” satellite have given many in the defence and intelligence community pause for thought. “In the last year, the Russians, China and the US have all been testing these kinds of things,” says Christy. “People talk about them being inspectors, but if you have the ability to manoeuvre up to another satellite in space to inspect it, you also have the ability to destroy it.”
Kettering Grammar School's Bob Christy (right) and Derek Slater
©Alamy

Bob Christy (right) and Derek Slater of Kettering Grammar School tracking Soviet spacecraft Soyuz 11, June 6 1971

Indeed, as far as several seasoned analysts, intelligence officials and diplomats spoken to by the Financial Times are concerned, 39765 best makes sense in the context of one of Russia’s most secretive cold war ventures — a programme that is now being revived: Istrebitel Sputnikov. The satellite killer.

Space, military officials like to say, is the ultimate higher ground. Since the cold war ended, however, it has been a largely uncontested territory. In January 1967, the US, UK and USSR became the first signatories to the Outer Space Treaty. In it, they committed to keeping the moon free of military testing and not putting weapons of mass destruction into orbit. China joined the pact in 1984. Another 100 states are now signed up.

As a result, for three decades, space powers have been able to operate their own satellites with impunity. According to the Union of Concerned Scientists, there are at least 1,300 satellites now orbiting the Earth. Some have military purposes. Some are for civilian and commercial use. Most — 549 — are American. European powers are big players too. Russia has 131, the UK 40. But growing numbers are from rising countries. China now has 142 in orbit, India 33.


I don’t think there is a single G7 nation that isn’t now looking at space security as one of its highest military priorities and areas of strategic concern

- Senior European intelligence official

With all this activity, the pax caelestis is unlikely to hold for much longer. Sixty years after the space race began, an orbital arms race is again in development.

Military officials from the US, Europe and Asia spoken to by the Financial Times confirm in private what the Kettering Group and other amateur stargazers have been watching publicly. Almost every country with strategically important satellite constellations and its own launch facilities is considering how to defend — and weaponise — their extraterrestrial assets. “I don’t think there is a single G7 nation that isn’t now looking at space security as one of its highest military priorities and areas of strategic concern,” says one senior European intelligence official.

“The threat is increasing and this is a major concern,” says Frank Rose, US assistant secretary of state for arms control. “Both Russia and China are developing ASAT [anti-satellite weapon] capabilities to hold US systems at risk. Now, we don’t believe it’s in anyone’s interest to engage in a space arms race . . . We don’t want conflict in outer space. But be assured, we will be able to operate in a degraded space environment. We’ve made it clear that we will do what is necessary to protect the space assets of the US and our allies against potential attack.”

Satellites are fragile things: a nudge to their orbit, a tilt of their solar panels towards the sun, a laser blast directed at their sensors or a projectile casually fired into their path are all capable of wreaking permanent, irreversible damage. “We have plenty of vulnerabilities we need to work on and space is one of the most important,” says General Denis Mercier, Nato’s supreme commander, who is charged with adapting the alliance to deal with future threats. “It’s a domain that is going to be as important in modern warfare as any other. We have a responsibility and a necessity to work on it.”

An illustration of a hand grabbing a satellite©Justin Metz
Space, says Mercier, needs to be considered in the same breath as sea and air when it comes to defence. While developed societies are becoming more dependent on it than ever before for almost every aspect of their digital economies, their grip on the technologies that have given them global strategic dominance is slipping. And as more countries around the world look to maximise their military advantages, space is becoming the most obvious domain to contest.

“This is going to explode in the very near future . . . you already have 60-plus nations who are interested in space capabilities,” says Elizabeth Quintana, senior research fellow at the military think-tank Rusi. “And with that, there are a number that are developing very serious anti-space capabilities, most notably China and Russia. When you think that western militaries and societies are critically dependent on space, it is an area to be seriously concerned about.”


General Denis Mercier, Nato’s supreme commander

General Denis Mercier

‘Space is going to be as important in modern warfare as any other domain. We have a responsibility to work on it’

Everything that gives modern western forces their technological and tactical edge over rivals, notes Quintana, stems from space-based systems. These include precision weaponry, drone surveillance and sophisticated real-time battlefield communications. “Even our tanks,” one British military officer says, “depend on our satellites.”

The Reaper drones that destroyed al-Qaeda’s leadership would have been useless without satellites; the intelligence on Russian troop movements around Ukraine came from them; and the smart bombs that reduced Saddam Hussein’s military to rubble in 48 hours wouldn’t have hit their targets if they hadn’t been there. Even Barack Obama’s phone calls rely on a specific array of them — the Advanced Extremely High Frequency constellation.

But it is not just a military issue. “Space, cyber, hybrid warfare . . . they raise questions of our resilience,” says Mercier. And resilience, he adds, is something that societies, not just armies, need to address.

Western intelligence officials can reel off their concerns over what the loss of satellite communications could mean. There are all the things we currently depend on — from the navigation of aeroplanes to our ability to make phone calls. And then there are the things we are becoming ever more dependent on — driverless cars or internet-linked domestic appliances.
US’s first weather satellite TIROS 1
TIROS 1, the US’s first weather satellite, undergoing vibration testing at RCA in New Jersey, before its launch on April 1 1960

“In the US, for the military — particularly the air force and Darpa [Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency] — the National Security Agency and the state department, this is now a key area of concern,” says Anthony Cordesman, former Pentagon intelligence chief and now chair of strategy at the think-tank CSIS in Washington. “But the challenge in space is going to affect virtually every aspect of the country’s strategy . . . the absolutely critical point is that in a world where geoeconomics are as important as geopolitics and strategy, we need to worry about the spectrum of vulnerability. It is not just military assets that [weaponising] space is a problem for, but our entire societies.”

Almost every cutting-edge technology being adopted in highly developed economies increases their dependency on undefended satellites. According to one senior British government official, the UK’s intelligence assessment is that 67 per cent of the country’s economy is dependent in some way on space-based communications. A report produced for the US Department of Homeland Security in June estimated that at least $1.6tn of business revenues in America were “heavily influenced” by satellites.

“Space,” says assistant secretary Rose, “is vital to just about everything we do here on Earth.”

The original satellite killer programme was the brainchild of Vladimir Chelomey, the Soviet Union’s chief designer of aviation equipment. In 1960, the Soviets shot down an American spy plane, prompting Washington to reconsider its intelligence-gathering strategy. As the US turned to space, Moscow needed a means to stop it conducting its surveillance unimpeded.


Right now, a lot of the activities we are seeing are exploiting the grey areas . . . So maybe we’ll see an accidental collision. Or something being “misplaced” in orbit

- Elizabeth Quintana, senior research fellow at Rusi

By 1967, Russia’s programme was on a firm footing. A special directorate was formed within the general staff with responsibility for “space defence”. Russia performed its first fully functional anti-satellite weapon or ASAT test that year, launching a manoeuvrable payload into orbit where they used it to trial an attack. The principle was simple enough: a nimble, light kill-vehicle, capable of firing a heavy, non-explosive projectile at a designated object in space, and destroying it.

Over the next decade, 15 more ASAT payloads would be launched by the USSR. By the 1970s, the Russians were ramping up their testing further. They even sent special armoured satellites, loaded with sensors to measure shrapnel damage, into space to act as targets for their anti-satellite weapons.

For its part, the US spent the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s primarily focusing on ballistic missile technology. Systems were developed that were primarily designed to hit other rockets — but some had the capability to reach into space as well. In 1959, a Bold Orion missile was launched from a B-47 Stratojet but only made it within four miles of its satellite target.

For the next decade, the US experimented with using nuclear weapons to wipe out enemy satellite arrays but the programme never captured the imagination of the Pentagon’s military strategists. It wasn’t until the 1980s, when CIA intelligence unveiled the extent of Russia’s ASAT operations, that the US took the threat seriously. A programme rapidly developed a new generation of air-launched rockets that could strike targets in outer space. In 1985, the ASM-135 rocket was launched successfully for the first time from an F-15 jet to blow up Solwind P78-1. Three years later, the entire US ASAT programme was mothballed.

Telecoms satellites clustered in the orbit called geostationary ring©Justin Metz
Telecoms satellites clustered in the orbit known as the geostationary ring at an altitude of about 36,000km, April 2008

As both Washington and Moscow became keen to curb the excesses of their prohibitive arms race, Russia’s ASAT programme had also begun to wither. Major General Anatoly Zavalishin, the head of Baikonur cosmodrome, recalled the death-knell for the ASAT programme in his 1999 memoir. He told Mikhail Gorbachev he could conduct all his tests in secret, without the Americans discovering their activities. The Soviet premier, the general recalled, gave a polite and “resolute” refusal.

It would not be until 20 years later that satellite killing came back on the agenda — put there by a whole new power.

On January 11 2007, 865km above the Chinese mainland, a weather satellite was blown to smithereens by an object blasted into space from Base-27, the Xichang spaceport. Debris was sent hurtling around the atmosphere. More than 2,300 pieces of golf ball size or larger — each lethal to anything it hit — were released into orbit, according to Nasa. At least a third will circle the Earth until 2035. “Have you seen the film Gravity?” asks Quintana, referring to the hurtling mass of spoilage from an accidental collision that spells the undoing of Sandra Bullock and George Clooney. “It’s literally like that.”


Frank Rose, US assistant secretary of state for arms control

Frank Rose

‘We don’t want conflict in outer space . . . but we will do what is necessary to protect the space assets of the US’

Some scientists have even posited the possibility of a lethal shrapnel chain reaction as a result of future ASAT detonations. The detritus from one explosion could spread out to hit other satellites, which in turn would fragment, and so on. Eventually much — if not all — of the world’s critical satellite constellations would be inadvertently wiped out.

The Chinese insisted the project — known as SC-19 — was benign. “China will not participate in any kind of arms race in outer space,” foreign ministry spokesperson Liu Jianchao told Reuters. But the effect on both Washington and Moscow was nevertheless electric.

In the US, the National Security Council castigated China almost immediately. In private, the Pentagon put its own ASAT capabilities back on the high-priority list and on February 20 2008, it authorised Operation Burnt Frost. The USS Lake Erie launched a missile at USA-193, a national reconnaissance office satellite. The test was a success. The satellite, Washington said, was defunct, and posed a risk of crashing to Earth. Informed observers noted, though, that USA-193 would probably have disintegrated on re-entry anyway. The cost of launching a ballistic missile to intercept it instead was $100m.

Meanwhile, amid a broader plan to modernise the country’s decaying military, Russian media began referring to the country’s “latent” ASAT systems in 2009. In 2010, the plan to revive them was articulated. Oleg Ostapenko, the commander of Russia’s space forces, told Itar-Tass, the news agency, that the military was developing a new generation of “inspection and strike” weapons. “Our policy is that there should be no war in space,” he said. “But we are military people and we should be ready for everything.”
International Space Station
A BX-1 observation satellite by China in 2008 was positioned ‘dangerously close’ to the International Space Station (above)

China has gone on to push further and further with its efforts. In 2008, a highly manoeuvrable nano-satellite, the BX-1 — a 40cm cube — was positioned dangerously close to the International Space Station. Officially the BX-1 is for inspection and observation. But it also has potential as a weapon. Had it been directed to do so, it could have destroyed the space station and killed the astronauts on board.

Then in 2013, China launched the Dong Neng — another ASAT interceptor. It currently has three ASAT-capable vehicles positioned in space.

Firing rockets into the outer atmosphere is not the only way to destroy things in space. “ASAT until recently has been entirely kinetic, but what we’re seeing a lot more of now is a cyber component to the approach,” says Patricia Lewis, research director at the international security department of Chatham House. “If you can hack into a satellite’s control systems there are plenty of things you can do — turn the solar panels so they fry up in the sun, move the satellite into a destructive orbit, turn it into a weapon to smash other satellites with, or perhaps most insidious of all, you could just insert changes into the data it was transmitting back to Earth, so the operators would act on it and perhaps you could cause even more damage back on Earth that way.”

Launching a cyber attack on satellites has three key benefits. Most obviously, attacks do not have to result in an uncontrollable debris cloud in outer space. But perhaps more significantly, cyber is also far cheaper for would-be assailants and, if done well, it can be almost anonymous. This opens up a worrisome prospect for strategic planners — attacks that disrupt or spy on their countries’ infrastructure without the ability to respond and therefore without the prospect of deterrence.


Patricia Lewis, research director at the international security department of Chatham House

Patricia Lewis

‘If you can hack into a satellite’s control systems there are plenty of things you can do to cause damage back on Earth’

Last September, hackers broke into the data system of the US federal weather satellite network, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Information from the satellites is used in everything from daily weather reports to environmental emergency planning and ballistic missile flight navigation calculations. The control systems were protected, officials said, and no critical data were affected, but just two months before, US government inspectors warned in an official report that an NOAA satellite system breach “could have severe or catastrophic adverse effects”. According to two senior cyber security officials, the Chinese were responsible. But there has been no public US government response.

“Attacks on satellites,” says one US cyber security official, “are one of the fastest-growing areas of threat. The satellite network is like a great big open back door into almost every nationally important computer network or infrastructure out there.”

The US is spending billions improving its defences — primarily by building more capacity into its constellations and improving its tracking abilities. A $900m contract was awarded to Lockheed Martin in 2014 to develop a radar system capable of tracking objects as small as baseballs in space in real time. But there are also hints that the US may be looking to equip its satellites with active defences and countermeasures of their own, such as jamming devices and the ability to evade interceptions.

A purely offensive anti-satellite programme is in fast development as well. High-energy weapons and manoeuvrable orbiters such as space planes all open the possibility of the US being able to rapidly weaponise the domain beyond the atmosphere, should it feel the need to do so.

A NOAA satellite image of weather systems above Central America, August 13 2010©NOAA
A NOAA satellite image of weather systems above Central America, August 13 2010; the network’s data system was hacked in 2015

The 1967 Outer Space Treaty had one glaring omission: it has no limits on the use of conventional weapons. Even as militaries around the world work hard to build their space weaponry arsenals, many are now wondering whether the treaty needs to be broadened.

Just moments after President Obama’s inauguration in 2009, the White House website was updated with a raft of new policy measures, including a desire for a comprehensive international ban on space weapons and anti-satellite technologies. It was a remarkable volte-face for Washington, which, angered by the Chinese test of 2007, was already racing to redevelop its space might.

Now, with Russian and Chinese test activity peaking, Washington has become increasingly hawkish. Efforts by the state department to try to secure some kind of diplomatic agreement have been paralleled by a fast-track military development programme. There is no way to stop the weaponisation of space, US military chiefs say, except by maintaining the US’s overwhelming military superiority there. As relations with Moscow deteriorate, and friction between China and the US mounts over issues such as cyber espionage and the South China Sea, hopes of any kind of international treaty for space are fading fast.


The satellite network is like a great big open back door into almost every nationally important computer network or infrastructure out there

- US cyber security official

“You won’t get the Pentagon to agree a treaty . . . but sooner or later Washington is going to have to realise something needs to be done,” says Lewis of Chatham House. “We are only increasing our dependence on space. The Pentagon is envisaging a world of single-country dominance, but these emerging technologies are equalisers. They reduce the gap and they make developed countries the most vulnerable . . . The state department know that. They know the US can’t dominate and in the long run it’s a losing battle. By fighting it, all that happens is you push others to develop their capabilities faster than they might otherwise.”

A tangle of diplomatic efforts hobbles on. In Vienna, the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (Copuous) is negotiating a set of “long-term sustainability guidelines”, while in Geneva, the UN Conference on Disarmament is debating a proposal submitted jointly by Russia and China last year: the Treaty on the Prevention of Placement of Weapons in Outer Space (PPWT). In New York, the first and second committees of the UN General Assembly are jointly meeting — for the first time last month — to broadly tackle space security. A Russian resolution known as the “No First Placement” proposal (NFP) is currently under review.

There is significant opposition to all three. The Copuous proposal is too broad and outdated. The PPWT proposals are treated with scepticism by Washington and Europe because they ignore current existing ASAT capabilities, while the NFP rule has been dismissed as a Russian ruse. An international pledge for no first placement, one European diplomat joked, is the same thing as a Russian pledge for second placement.

Efforts are now turning on trying to strike some kind of agreement before any formal international accord. The EU has a proposal — but it is moving slowly. Discussions on a new “code of conduct” for space, proposed by the bloc, began in earnest in July.


Jacek Bylica, the EU special envoy for non-proliferation and disarmament

Jacek Bylica

‘What we are proposing is a set of traffic rules for space. But we are facing considerable scepticism’

“There is an urgent need for something cross-cutting and politically binding now,” says Jacek Bylica, the EU’s special envoy for non-proliferation and disarmament. “Negotiations on any treaty can carry on for decades — it has been decades since the last one was agreed. The problem we see too is that many of the initiatives at the moment are addressing the weaponisation of space in the future but not the real issue right now, which is existing anti-satellite technologies.

“What we are proposing is a set of traffic rules for space. It would be a political commitment . . . rules on principles for the operation of all objects in space. But we are facing considerable scepticism.”

The EU has its supporters elsewhere. Countries such as India and Brazil — both of which are increasingly dependent on civilian and commercial space activities for their economic development — want safeguards.

“We have to focus on the practical,” says US assistant secretary Rose. “We don’t like the PPWT. But we are prepared to work with [the Russians and the Chinese] when it’s in our mutual interests. We see a lot of merit in the EU [code of conduct] proposal, but they’ve had some challenges in the diplomacy there. There’s no silver bullet. But we need strategic restraint.”

As with any international effort at arms control, however, it may be that the only way to secure the consensus is for the threat to crystallise. Until a serious incident occurs, some rationalise, the chances of getting powerful militaries to start thinking about their limitations, rather than their capabilities, is slim.

“Whether someone would go for an in-space or missile attack, I don’t know,” says Quintana. “But right now in international conflicts, a lot of the activities we see are exploiting the grey areas. Incidents which are deniable, for example. So maybe we’ll see an accidental collision. Or something being ‘misplaced’ in orbit. Something that is an attack, but not something that anyone can necessarily respond directly to.”

“It might not be widely known about but it is critical,” says Bylica. “Our societies, our economies, they depend on this. For a long time our use of space was gradual — first it was for national security and then telecoms. But now everything uses it, from your GPS to your ATMs, to things you would never suspect, like gas pipelines. It’s a spectrum. And we are very vulnerable.”

Sam Jones is the FT’s defence and security editor

Illustration by Justin Metz

Photographs: Alamy; US Mission Geneva; NOAA
 

Housecarl

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http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-has-115-nuclear-weapons-says-us-think-tank/

Israel has 115 nuclear weapons, says US think tank

New report alleges Israel produced some 660 kg of plutonium at Dimona nuclear facility over past 50 years

By Times of Israel staff November 21, 2015, 4:44 am
Comments 12

Israel has amassed approximately 115 nuclear warheads since it developed its first nuclear weapon shortly before the Six Day War in 1967, according to a new report published this week by a US think tank.

The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) published a report on November 19 alleging that Israel possesses about 660 kilograms of plutonium, produced at the Dimona reactor since operations began in 1963, which would allow it to have an estimated 115 nuclear weapons today.

The author does acknowledge that the actual number is a closely guarded secret. Other studies have put the number of Israel’s number of nuclear weapons at between 80 and 200.

A single nuclear weapon has between three to five kilograms of plutonium, according to the ISIS study

“Based on the total production of plutonium, the median for the number of nuclear weapons is about 165 with a standard deviation of 33 and a full range of about 90-290 weapons. Likely, Israel did not build this many nuclear weapons. A reasonable assumption is that the number of deployed weapons is 30 percent lower, or 115 nuclear weapons as of the end of 2014,” the report, written by former UN nuclear inspector David Albright, says.

The study also alleges that “Israel has a wide range of delivery vehicles for its nuclear weapons.”

Since the 1960s when Israel developed the nuclear-capable Jericho ballistic missile with France’s help, it has developed “several improved missiles since then on its own, as well as nuclear-capable cruise missiles,” according to Albright who added that Israel “also has aircraft that can deliver nuclear weapons and “may have the capability to launch nuclear-tipped cruise missiles from its submarines.”

Israel maintains a policy of nuclear ambiguity, neither openly admitting nor denying that it possesses a nuclear program. It is also not a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Israel’s nuclear activities came into sharp focus in 1986 when Mordechai Vanunu, a technician from 1976-85 at Israel’s nuclear facility at Dimona, revealed overwhelming evidence of Israel’s nuclear program to Britain’s Sunday Times, including dozens of photographs, enabling nuclear experts to conclude that Israel had produced at least 100 nuclear warheads.

Charged with treason, he spent 18 years in jail and was released under very strict conditions in 2004.
 

Housecarl

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Hummm......

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http://www.forbes.com/sites/scottasnyder/2015/11/19/north-koreas-denuclearization-is-it-possible/

Nov 19, 2015 @ 04:22 PM

North Korea's Denuclearization: Is It Possible?

Scott Snyder, Contributor
I write about the Korean Peninsula and U.S.- Northeast Asia policy.

It is easy to become frustrated as one reviews the inventory of seemingly failed or inadequate policy recommendations for how the United States might more effectively deal with North Korea. But frustration cannot be allowed to turn into fatalism, and important interests should not fester unattended until they metastasize into an even larger problem that will inevitably require even more dramatic, bold, and costly responses.

North Korea’s efforts to develop nuclear weapons capabilities continue unchecked and complicate both military and diplomatic options for pursuing denuclearization. Michel Wallerstein showcases a clear inventory of North Korea’s continued efforts and the limited policy options for the United States, as do a range of papers for the Johns Hopkins University SAIS U.S.-Korea Institute’s nuclear futures project.

The inventory of possible measures for dealing with North Korea at this stage fall into four main categories:

1) The squeezers, who hope that tougher sanctions will force North Korea to give up its nuclear capabilities. For instance, Sue Terry, writing for the National Bureau of Asian Research, recommends that the United States “double down on sanctions by enforcing against North Korea the kind of sanctions that brought Iran to the negotiating table.” This approach mirrors the intent of several sanctions bills under consideration in the U.S. Congress.

2) The China firsters, who anticipate that private Chinese expressions of disgust and frustration with North Korea can be integrated into China’s official policy and be leveraged to achieve a grand bargain that results in the elimination of the North Korean threat, either through Chinese acceptance of Korean unification or replacement of the Kim Jong-un regime with a North Korean leadership that respects the boundaries imposed by China’s strategic interests. For instance, Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, has advocated that Beijing and Washington reach strategic consensus on Korean reunification. There is a broad consensus on the need to work with China in the U.S. policy community, but there is disagreement on what could realistically be achieved with such an approach.

3) The saboteurs, who hope to take advantage of North Korea’s pursuit of provocations, nuclear tests, and human rights violations to undermine international and domestic support for the Kim regime. Harvard University’s Jieun Baek argues for a combination of covert information operations to collaborate with internal dissidents, strengthening of nongovernmental organizations that train North Korean refugees in information dissemination and business skills, and training of North Korean defectors in journalism, information technology, and social media. There is also the temptation to weaken North Korea’s legitimacy through naming and shaming regarding the country’s human rights failings as exposed by the UN Commission of Inquiry on North Korean human rights.

4) Re-engagers, who see continued dialogue with North Korea as an essential step in “probing North Korea’s intentions.” A variant of this view recognizes that in the face of the seemingly impossible dream of denuclearization, the United States should open up dialogue with North Korea on other issues where there is a chance of constructive dialogue. Doug Bandow at the Cato Institute wants the United States to withdraw and empower the South Koreans to take the lead in dealing with the North, while Adam Mount and Van Jackson support a U.S.-ROK alliance-backed “South Korea first” policy in pursuit of dialogue with North Korea.

Most analysts pursue a combination strategy that employs all four levers to bring North Korea to denuclearize. In its policy of deterrence, pressure, and dialogue, the Barack Obama administration’s approach contains these elements, but thus far, not in a combination or weight that has been sufficient to make progress. My Policy Innovation Memorandum also seeks to strengthen both sanctions and engagement, but with a twist: why not take steps both to shape the environment so that North Korea recognizes that it must make a strategic choice and develop the benefits of such a choice with greater specificity, both through concrete studies of what North Korea can gain economically from integration and from development by the five parties in Six Party Talks (absent North Korea) of the tangible benefits that would accrue from a sincere return to the “action-for-action” approach that initially characterized the Six Party Process.

Resuming Six Party Talks without North Korea would have two important effects. It would spell out publicly the tangible benefits that would accompany denuclearization so as to stimulate a more active debate over denuclearization among Pyongyang’s elites, and it would provide a benchmark by defining a reasonable consensus among North Korea’s neighbors on the benefits that should rightfully accrue from denuclearization.

Some may argue that this proposal sounds like a last ditch strategy; others may prefer a different combination of the options outlined above. But one thing is sure: when North Korea’s nuclear weapons problem metastasizes from an important issue into an urgent issue, there will be even fewer feasible options available for consideration.

This article originally appeared on the Council on Foreign Relations’ Asia Unbound blog. See the original post here.
 

Lilbitsnana

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____

Hummm......That ought to go over well with the Sunnis.....

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Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151121/ml--iran-israel-988090d973.html

Iran Guard simulates capture of Al Aqsa Mosque

Nov 21, 2:40 AM (ET)

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iranian media are reporting that thousands of paramilitary forces from the country's powerful Revolutionary Guard have held a war game simulating the capture of Jerusalem's Al Aqsa Mosque from Israeli control.

The reports say the forces stormed and liberated a replica of the mosque. They say that 120 brigades of Basij, the paramilitary unit of the Guard, occupied hypothetical enemy positions during Friday's exercise in the holy city of Qom in central Iran.

The mosque, located at a compound holy to Jews and Muslims, has been at the heart of weeks of unrest between Israel and the Palestinians.

Iran, Israel's arch-enemy, frequently expresses solidarity with the Palestinians and holds an annual "Jerusalem Day" each year on the last Friday of the fasting month of Ramadan.


I was wondering if it had anything to do with the tension I have been reading about between Russia and Iran.

All of the explanations and concerns wandering if Russia was losing control on how Iran behaved, etc, I have seen so far didn't seem to add up; but include this then, it makes more sense.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I was wondering if it had anything to do with the tension I have been reading about between Russia and Iran.

All of the explanations and concerns wandering if Russia was losing control on how Iran behaved, etc, I have seen so far didn't seem to add up; but include this then, it makes more sense.

Yeah. I'm guessing at this point the Russians have their own "back-up plans" regarding Iranian relations akin to those that Eisenhower had with the Iranians back in 1956. They got in bed with them (on a much larger scale than Obama) so they have to deal with the cracker crumbs and spilled peanut butter in the bed sheets.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://johnbatchelorshow.com/schedules/friday-20-november-2015


Hour One
Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 1, Block A: Devin Nunes (CA-22), Chairman, House Select Intelligence Committee, in re: At Least 20 Dead, Including American, in Terror Attack on Hotel in Bamako, Mali Al Mourabitoun, an Islamist militant group, claimed it was jointly responsible for the attack, according to Mauritanian news agency Al Akhbar. The group announced it carried out the attack with al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), the news agency reported.
House Approves Tougher Refugee Screening, Defying Veto Threat The House voted overwhelmingly Thursday to drastically tighten screening procedures on refugees from Syria, seizing on the creeping fear stemming from . . .

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 1, Block B: Harry Siegel, New York Daily News, inre:http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20140417/POLITICS/140419882/bratton...

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 1, Block C: Mona Charen, NRO, in re: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/427388/obama-iraq-errors-made-isis-sunni-alliance

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 1, Block D: Jim McTague, Barron's, in re: http://articles.philly.com/2015-05-...m-entrepreneurship-bootcamp-veterans-services

Hour Two
Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 2, Block A: Gregory Copley, StrategicStudies director; GIS/Defense & Foreign Affairs; & author, UnCivilization, in re: Mali attack: 21 dead after terrorist raid on Bamako hotel Mali attack: 21 dead after terrorist raid on Bamako hotel ... forces respond to the hostage taking inside the Radisson Blu Hotel in Bamako.

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 2, Block B: Gregory Copley, StrategicStudies director; GIS/Defense & Foreign Affairs; & author, UnCivilization, in re: In Nigeria, a Market Braves Militant Attacks MAIDUGURI, Nigeria—Business is bustling at one of the most frequently bombed shopping centers on Earth. Monday Market has been hit at ..

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 2, Block C: Cam Simpson, Bloomberg, in re: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-to-cut-off-islamic-state-s-funds-have-failed (2 of 2)

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 2, Block D: Cam Simpson, Bloomberg, in re: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-to-cut-off-islamic-state-s-funds-have-failed (2 of 2)

Hour Three
Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 3, Block A: Michael E Vlahos, Naval War College, in re: France hits back at Russia over Syria bombing campaign France dismissed Russian suggestions on Friday its air strikes against oil installations in Syria were illegal, saying

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 3, Block B: Michael E Vlahos, Naval War College, in re: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guadalcanal_Campaign "Guadalcanal is no longer merely a name of an island in Japanese military history. It is the name of the graveyard of the Japanese army."—Major General Kiyotake Kawaguchi, IJA Commander, 35th Infantry Brigade at Guadalcanal

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 3, Block C: Liz Peek, Fiscal Times, in re: http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Colum...ationship-Military-Hurting-Fight-Against-ISIS

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 3, Block D: Joseph Callo, author, John Paul Jones, America's First Sea Hero, in re: Russia and America prep forces for Arctic war To be fair, Russia's Arctic coastline is many hundreds of miles longer than that of the United States. In theory, Russia's icebreakers are spread ...

Hour Four
Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 4, Block A: Tyler Rogoway, Foxtrot Alpha, in re: http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/look-inside-putins-massive-new-military-command-and-con-1743399678 / Seemingly pulled right from a James Bond movie, we got a glimpse this week of Russia’s new super military nerve center in action, called the National Defense Control Center (NDCC), as Russian heavy bombers made their combat debut in the Syrian conflict. This was also the first time the venerable Tu-95 Bears or the Tu-160 Blackjacks would see combat. (1 0f 2)

Friday 20 November 2015 / Hour 4, Block B: Tyler Rogoway, Foxtrot Alpha, in re: http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/look-inside-putins-massive-new-military-command-and-con-1743399678 / Seemingly pulled right from a James Bond movie, we got a glimpse this week of Russia’s new super military nerve center in action, called the National Defense Control Center (NDCC), as Russian heavy bombers made their combat debut in the Syrian conflict. This was also the first time the venerable Tu-95 Bears or the Tu-160 Blackjacks would see combat. (2 0f 2)

I strongly suggest listening to the audio of last night's show. The reason for the references to the Guadalcanal Campaign was for comparisons to the early war and the motivations for the invasion of the Solomon Islands as well as the Doolittle Raid and our current situation.

Also what has been recently discussed is the manner in which Erdogan has "played"/helped create the refugee situation to assist him in his recent election, undercut the Kurds and to push the EU into concessions. If the Turks weren't allowing the cross border trade with IS, they wouldn't be in as good of shape as they currently are.
Housecarl
 
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Housecarl

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http://www.nationalreview.com/article/427388/obama-iraq-errors-made-isis-sunni-alliance

ISIS Is Barack Obama’s Creation

After he sold Iraq down the Euphrates, a resistance became inevitable.

By Mona Charen — November 20, 2015


Throughout the last third of George W. Bush’s presidency, opinion leaders were obsessed with the question of mistakes. Among most members of the press and among Democratic office holders (even, or perhaps especially, those who had voted to approve the Iraq war), the appetite was strong to hold President Bush in a half-nelson until he admitted that the war had been a terrible mistake. When Jeb Bush entered the presidential race, he was quickly charged with fraternal guilt in the matter.

It isn’t unfair to ask policymakers to reflect on their misjudgments — or those of their predecessors — but there is a studied lack of interest in mistakes made by our current president.

Republicans have all been asked: “Knowing what we know now, was it a mistake to go into Iraq?” That’s an unserious way of putting the question. No decision is made with benefit of hindsight (“Knowing what you know now, Mrs. Lincoln, would you have attended the theater on April 14?”).

Perhaps President Bush was wrong to topple Saddam Hussein. I don’t think the verdict is clear. But excepting the original decision to invade, Mr. Bush’s errors were recognized and corrected before he left office. Barack Obama’s mistakes, by contrast, have been far more consequential and far more threatening to world order and American security than George W. Bush’s were. There is zero evidence that Mr. Obama even recognizes them, let alone that he plans to correct them. Nor have the Democratic candidates been asked about them.

The Iraq that President Obama inherited was, by his own reckoning, “sovereign, stable, and self-reliant.” Obama used those words when announcing the complete American withdrawal of forces in 2011. He went on to say that Iraq had “a representative government that was elected by its people.”

Not quite. There was a free and fair election in 2010, in which a moderate Sunni alliance led by a secular Shiite received a plurality. But the loser, Nouri al-Maliki, hijacked the election and took power. President Obama looked the other way, perhaps because he wasn’t interested in Iraq’s fate, or more likely because Maliki was Tehran’s man, and President Obama has consistently leaned toward Iran’s interests in the Middle East.

Obama stuck to his determination to withdraw every American from Iraq, thereby radically diminishing U.S. influence in the most explosive part of the globe. He also failed on the diplomatic front. He and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who had boasted so often that they would use “smart power” and “soft power” and wouldn’t “do stupid [stuff],” were guilty of something that looks a lot like stupidity in their handling of Maliki. As the Brookings Institution’s Kenneth Pollack told The Atlantic:

The message sent to Iraq’s people and politicians alike was that the United States under the new Obama administration was no longer going to enforce the rules of the democratic road. . . . [This] undermined the reform of Iraqi politics and resurrected the specter of the failed state and the civil war.

What came next was even worse. Acquiescing in the stolen election, Obama then backed Maliki even as Maliki brutalized Iraq’s Sunni minority. Jobs and salaries promised to Sunni groups who had cooperated against al-Qaeda when Bush was in office were never paid by Maliki. Dozens of Sunni leaders, many of them moderates, were driven from office, others were arrested, and some, including the staff of Iraq’s vice president, were tortured. Shiite militias were permitted free rein in Sunni regions of Iraq, committing rapes, murders, and arson. As one Sunni activist told the New York Times, he didn’t like ISIS, but “ISIS will be the only Sunni militia who can fight against the Shiites.”

All the while, President Obama could not bestir himself to utter a word of condemnation or warning to Maliki. On the contrary, he praised “Prime Minister Maliki’s commitment to . . . ensuring a strong, prosperous, inclusive, and democratic Iraq.”

Nor would Mr. Obama consider steps that would unseat Syria’s Bashar Assad — again, probably because Assad is Tehran’s man. And so ISIS has metastasized — a direct outgrowth of Obama’s decisions.

The Sunnis are key to defeating ISIS. They cooperated with the U.S. under President Bush. It was called the Sunni Awakening. Now they can read the signs — America is siding with the Shiites in Iraq, Syria, and Iran. That blunder has fed and nurtured ISIS to become something al-Qaeda could only dream about. If it weren’t for the Iran nuclear deal, we’d say it was Obama’s most catastrophic error.

— Mona Charen is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Copyright © 2015 Creators.com.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-to-cut-off-islamic-state-s-funds-have-failed

Why U.S. Efforts to Cut Off Islamic State's Funds Have Failed

It’s more than just oil.

by Cam Simpson, Matthew Philips
from Bloomberg Businessweek
November 19, 2015 — 1:00 AM PST

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Soldiers patrol a pedestrian shopping street in Brussels on Nov. 21.
Belgium Warns of Paris-Style Attack, Brussels in Lockdown little line above headline

** CORRECTS DATE ** Gas flares burn near an oil well on the outskirts of Masjed Soleiman, a city where some of the first modern oil wells were discovered and drilled in the Middle East, in Khuzestan province, some 725 kilometers (435 miles) southwest of the Iranian capital, Tehran, Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2007. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
Iran Is Seeking to Increase Output Within OPEC’s Existing Ceiling little line above headline

In this Feb. 18, 2015 photo, flames burn at an oil complex near El Tigre, a town located within Venezuela's Hugo Chavez oil belt, formally known as the Orinoco Belt. The Costa Rica-sized area is home to the worlds largest oil reserves and about half of Venezuelas current production. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
Global Oil Job Cuts Top 250,000 little line above headline

Weeks before the attacks that killed 129 people in Paris, U.S. warplanes resumed sorties above Syria and Iraq, targeting anew oil fields and other parts of a vast petroleum infrastructure that fuels—and funds—Islamic State, one of the richest terrorist armies the world has known.

These airstrikes were launched not because U.S. officials were prescient. They came after the Obama administration found and quietly fixed a colossal miscalculation. U.S. intelligence had grossly overestimated the damage they’d inflicted during airstrikes on the militants’ oil production apparatus last year, while underestimating Islamic State’s oil revenue by $400 million. According to U.S. Department of the Treasury officials and data they released in the wake of the Paris mayhem, the terrorist group is actually taking in $500 million from oil a year. What’s more, just a few hours before the first Islamic State suicide bomber blew himself up outside the Stade de France on Nov. 13, U.S. Army Colonel Steve Warren conceded at a press briefing that some American airstrikes disrupted IS oil operations for no more than a day or two.

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The Obama administration “misunderstood the [oil] problem at first, and then they wildly overestimated the impact of what they did,” says Benjamin Bahney, an international policy analyst at the Rand Corp., a U.S. Department of Defense-funded think tank, where he helped lead a 2010 study on Islamic State’s finances and back-office operations based on captured ledgers. He says the radical revision on oil revenue came after Treasury officials gained new intelligence on Islamic State’s petroleum operations—similar to the ledgers Rand used for its study—following a rare ground assault by American Special Operations Forces this May. U.S. forces, operating deep into the group’s territory in eastern Syria, targeted and killed an Islamic State “oil emir,” a man known by the Arabic nom de guerre Abu Sayyaf, Pentagon officials said at the time. (Treasury officials, who are charged with leading the administration’s war on Islamic State’s finances, declined to comment specifically on whether Abu Sayyaf’s ledgers were at the root of their new estimates, but the agency has said the figures are extrapolated from the militant group’s oil earnings from a single region in a single month earlier this year.)

It’s not clear how the U.S. got it so wrong, Bahney says, but he suspects that the latest round of airstrikes are directly related to the administration’s new math. “You have to go after the oil, and you have to do it in a serious way, and we’ve just begun to do that now,” he says. Yet even if the U.S. finally weakens the group’s oil income, Bahney and other analysts in the U.S., the Middle East, and Europe contend, Islamic State has resources beyond crude—from selling sex slaves to ransoming hostages to plundering stolen farmland—that can likely keep it fighting for years. In any case, $500 million buys a lot of $500 black-market AK-47s.

Islamic State got into the oil business long before it captured global attention through barbaric beheading videos in the summer of 2014. It seized Syrian border crossings to profit from oil smuggling. And it tapped a network that’s operated for decades, dating to at least the 1990s, when Saddam Hussein evaded sanctions by smuggling billions of dollars’ worth of oil out of Iraq under the United Nations’ Oil-for-Food program.

How Islamic State Makes Money Explained in Three Minutes

Most often refined in Syria, the group’s oil is trucked to cities such as Mosul to provide people living under its black banner with fuel for generators and other basic needs. It’s also used to power the war machine. “They have quite an organized supply chain running fuel into Iraq and [throughout] the ‘caliphate,’ ” says Michael Knights, an Iraq expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, using the militant group’s religiously loaded term for itself. Because the U.S. apparently believed the real money for Islamic State came primarily via selling refined oil, rather than crude, last year’s strikes heavily targeted refineries and storage depots, says Bahney. He and other experts say that strategy missed an important shift: Militants increasingly sell raw crude to truckers and middlemen, rather than refining it themselves. So while Islamic State probably maintains some refining capacity, the majority of the oil in IS territory is refined by locals who operate thousands of rudimentary, roadside furnaces that dot the Syrian desert.

Pentagon officials also acknowledge that for more than a year they avoided striking tanker trucks to limit civilian casualties. “None of these guys are ISIS. We don’t feel right vaporizing them, so we have been watching ISIS oil flowing around for a year,” says Knights. That changed on Nov. 16, when four U.S. attack planes and two gunships destroyed 116 oil trucks. A Pentagon spokesman says the U.S. first dropped leaflets warning drivers to scatter.

The terrorist army has diverse nonoil assets—ranging from hostages to fertile farms—and a sizable cash surplus

Beyond oil, the caliphate is believed by U.S. officials to have assets including $500 million to $1 billion that it seized from Iraqi bank branches last year, untold “hundreds of millions” of dollars that U.S. officials say are extorted and taxed out of populations under the group’s control, and tens of millions of dollars more earned from looted antiquities and ransoms paid to free kidnap victims.

The taxes bring in real money. One example: Islamic State allows policemen, soldiers, and teachers in its territory to atone for the “sin” of having worked under religiously inappropriate regimes—for a fee. Forgiveness comes in the form of a repentance ID card costing up to $2,500, which requires an additional $200 a year to renew, according to Aymenn Jawad al-Tami, a fellow at the Middle East Forum who closely follows the group.

Arguably the least appreciated resource for Islamic State is its fertile farms. Before even starting the engine of a single tractor, the group is believed to have grabbed as much as $200 million in wheat from Iraqi silos alone. Beyond harvested grains, the acreage now controlled by militants across the Tigris and Euphrates river valleys has historically produced half of Syria’s annual wheat crop, about one-third of Iraq’s, and almost 40 percent of Iraqi barley, according to UN agricultural officials and a Syrian economist. Its fields could yield $200 million per year if those crops are sold, even at the cut rates paid on black markets. And how do you conduct airstrikes on farm fields?

For his part, Bahney contends that the group’s real financial strength is its fanatical spending discipline. Rand estimates the biggest and most important drain on Islamic State’s budget is the salary line for up to 100,000 fighters. But the oil revenue alone could likely pay those salaries almost two times over, Bahney says. He also believes they’ve been running at a surplus. Bahney says that if the U.S. and its allies are going to diminish the threat from Islamic State, they must recognize that knocking out oil, while critical, isn’t enough. “They’ve built up quite a bit of excess cash flow in the last year,” he warns. “So they’re going to be able to keep this going for a while.”

—With Donna Abu-Nasr in Beirut and Larry Liebert in Washington
 

Housecarl

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http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2015/11/21/hic_sunt_dracones_108702.html

November 21, 2015

Hic Sunt Dracones: ISIS and the Law of Lawless Places

By David Dixon

The Latin phrase hic sunt dracones translates roughly to “here be dragons,” an apocryphal phrase attributed to Medieval mapmakers who used the phrase to mark unknown areas on their maps. Today these areas are not the unexplored seas, but the lawless, ungoverned spaces of the world.

Groups like Daesh have used these lawless areas to carve a self-proclaimed Caliphate and step up attacks on enemies outside their immediate area — a failed attack on a TGV train in France, bombings in Turkey and Lebanon that killed close to 150, a destroyed Russian Metrojet flight, and the most recentmassacre in Paris all within a three month span. Thus far, the attacks have raised the usual questions about intelligence failures, recruiting tools, and attackers disguised as refugees. These questions are necessary, but the fundamental truth of the situation remains something few seem willing to come to grips with, much less discuss — these attacks are largely predictable.

That violence in the world’s lawless, ungoverned backwaters leads to violence elsewhere should come as no surprise.

If the world community should have learned anything between September 10, 2001, and now it is that violence against the outside world is the natural, predictable result of territories without law and effective governance. That violence in the world’s lawless, ungoverned backwaters leads to violence elsewhere should come as no surprise.

Al Qaeda planned the most spectacular terrorist attack in history from the ungoverned caves and mountains of Afghanistan. Prior to that, Al Qaeda exploited seams in the international fabric and operated from the near-failed state of Sudan as bin Laden planned and plotted attacks on US embassies.

While there is much ambiguity in foreign policy, one thing is almost certain — lawlessness in one area leads to violence elsewhere. Call it the Law of Lawless Places.

Unchecked lawlessness allows Somali pirates to flourish. Lack of government control in Pakistan’s tribally “administrated” region allows militants to frustrate international efforts in Afghanistan and murder Shia Muslims elsewhere in Pakistan. Daesh plotters in Mosul have planned successful attacks in Baghdad and Kuwait. Armed militants of various stripes attack tourists, international peacekeepers, and the Egyptian Army from remote desert hideouts in the Sinai. Meanwhile, a resurgent Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula operates from the frontiers of Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

These examples are just from the past two decades. Go back even further in history and there are hundreds of examples. Antiquity had the Visigoths andVandals sacking Rome from the frontier. Medieval Europe coined the term “outlaw” to describe someone literally outside the boundaries and protections of law and society. During colonial times there were pirate harbors in the Caribbean and the Carolinas. The Enlightenment had the Barbary Pirates. The era of Manifest Destiny gave us Danite Enforcers and Regulators in the lawless American West. While there is much ambiguity in foreign policy, one thing is almost certain — lawlessness in one area leads to violence elsewhere. Call it the Law of Lawless Places.

While our national security and diplomatic institutions recognize this truism, our national security policy does not. Instead, the U.S. has pursued a policy that appears almost willfully blind to the fact that those who aspire to be the enemies of national and international order intuitively gather where that order is not present. The U.S. response to the rise of ISIS is the best example, although certainly not the only one.

Stable national and international systems do not blossom from the craters of thousand pound bombs.

The US has primarily responded to ISIS advances and Al Qaeda’s Khorasan Group with airstrikes. Setting aside the robust debate as to whether the airstrikes have been tactically or operationally successful, they have been unquestionably a strategic failure. Airstrikes do nothing to improve governance and nothing to bring the rule of law — or even justice — to Daesh-occupied Syria and Iraq. In fact, they have done much the opposite, instead encouraging our NATO ally Turkey to conduct airstrikes aimed at “terrorists” among our Kurdish friends and Russia to conduct airstrikes aimed at “terrorists” among our anti-Assad fellow travelers in Syria.

Far from helping bring about the regional stability necessary to stem the rise of extremist outlaw groups, daily airstrikes from a range of world powers at odds with one another contribute to the breakdown in the very structure that helps check the rise of violent groups in the first place. Stable national and international systems do not blossom from the craters of thousand pound bombs. Especially when those bombs are dropped in support of tactical or operational goals unhinged from any kind of strategy.

The US and its allies have two choices to solve this problem of lawless violence. They can either put troops on the ground, or pick a side already on the ground with a realistic chance to win — even if that means siding with Iran and Russia — and back them to victory. Until they do so, the international community can expect the bombings and horror to continue, because no amount of aerial bombardment will bring stability and governance to those places where the horror originates.

Just as the ancient mapmakers marked their unexplored areas with dragons, policy makers today ought to mark their maps where uncertainty and chaos reign. Until the ground is marked and delineated by properly functioning states, the dragons will always be there.

But they won’t stay there.

. . .


David Dixon is a former active duty Armor officer who now serves in the South Carolina Army National Guard. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the US Army, the South Carolina National Guard, the DoD, or the U.S. Government.

This article originally appeared at Strategy Bridge.
 

Housecarl

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http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151121/ml--mali_attack-jihadi_rivalry-glance-981882a190.html

A look at the rivalry between al-Qaida and IS

Nov 21, 2:27 PM (ET)
By JOSEPH KRAUSS

(AP) In this Friday, Nov. 13, 2015 file photo, victims lay on the pavement...
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CAIRO (AP) — The attack on a Mali hotel claimed by al-Qaida may have been partly aimed at asserting the global terror network's relevance as it faces an unprecedented challenge from the Islamic State group for leadership of the global jihadi movement.

Both groups are at war with the West and committed to the revival of an Islamic caliphate, but they are furiously divided over strategy and leadership, and have battled one another in Syria.

The attack on the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, which killed 19 people, came exactly a week after the IS group's carnage in Paris, which killed 130 people in the bloodiest attack on France in decades.

The Mali attack, claimed by al-Qaida and a North African outfit known as Al-Mourabitoun (The Sentinels), may have been aimed at disrupting a fragile peace process with armed groups in the country's north that had made progress in recent months.

(AP) In this Friday, Nov. 20, 2015 file photo, Mali troopers assist a hostage to...
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But experts also suggested it was aimed at reminding the world that the movement founded by Osama bin Laden has not been completely eclipsed by the IS group and its self-styled caliphate.

"Al-Qaida and its international affiliates have been surpassed by IS and needed to show that that they are still there," said Djallil Lounnes, an expert on radical groups in the Sahara who is based in Morocco.

The following is a look at the rivalry between al-Qaida and the Islamic State group:

ORIGINS

The Islamic State group began as al-Qaida in Iraq, a local affiliate that battled U.S. troops and carried out massive attacks targeting the country's Shiite majority. From the beginning there were tensions between the local group, led by the Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and al-Qaida's central leadership. In a 2005 letter obtained and publicized by U.S. intelligence, bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, objected to al-Zarqawi's brutality toward Shiite civilians, saying it would turn Muslims against the group. Al-Zarqawi was killed in a U.S. airstrike in 2006, but to this day is seen as the founder of the Islamic State group, which has eagerly embraced his brutal tactics.

---

RUPTURE

In 2013, Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi renamed his group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, proclaiming his authority in Iraq and neighboring Syria. Abu Mohammed al-Golani, the leader of the Nusra Front, al-Qaida's Syrian affiliate, rejected the move and swore allegiance to al-Zawahri, who ordered al-Baghdadi to confine his operations to Iraq.

Al-Baghdadi refused, and by 2014 the Nusra Front and the Islamic State group were battling each other across northern Syria. The split reverberated across the Muslim world, with al-Qaida affiliates in Yemen and North Africa remaining loyal to al-Zawahri while others pledged allegiance to the IS group.

---

DIFFERENCES

Both groups want to end Western influence in the Middle East and unite Muslims under a transnational caliphate governed by a harsh version of Islamic law. But they are bitterly divided over tactics.

Bin Laden believed that attacking the "far enemy" of the United States would weaken its support for the "near enemy" of Arab autocracies and rally Muslims to overthrow them. Under al-Zawahri, local al-Qaida affiliates have sought to exploit post-Arab Spring chaos by allying with other insurgents and tribes, and by cultivating local support in places like Syria and Yemen, where they provide social services. For bin Laden, who was killed in a U.S. raid in Pakistan in 2011, and his successor al-Zawahri, the establishment of a caliphate was a vaguely defined end goal.

The IS group, on the other hand, began by seizing and holding territory in Syria and Iraq and spawning affiliates across the chaos-riddled Middle East. It declared a caliphate in the summer of 2014 and al-Baghdadi now claims to be the leader of the world's 1.6 billion Muslims, the overwhelming majority of whom have rejected his brutal tactics.

For the IS group, al-Qaida is both an anachronism, because the caliphate has already been reborn, and a renegade movement, since it has rejected al-Baghdadi's authority. Al-Qaida supporters dismissively refer to IS as "al-Baghdadi's group."

---

COMPETING ON CARNAGE

The assault on Paris was an implicit rebuke of al-Qaida, which hasn't carried off an attack on that scale in several years. If the Mali attack turns out to be a response of some kind, it could herald a new era of global competition between the two groups, each seeking to outdo the other with ever more devastating attacks.

---

Associated Press writer Paul Schemm in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151121/af-mali-attack-fd077fa1c1.html

Well planned Mali attack took advantage of security lapses

Nov 21, 12:46 PM (ET)
By BABA AHMED and ROBBIE COREY-BOULET

(AP) Tight security surrounds Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita as he visits the...
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BAMAKO, Mali (AP) — The heavily armed Islamic extremists who shot up a luxury hotel in Mali's capital, killing 19 people, timed their assault for the moment when guards would be the most lax, allowing them to easily blast their way past a five-man security team before turning their weapons on terrified guests, a security guard and witnesses said Saturday.

The timing suggested a well-planned operation that analysts say could be an attempt by al-Qaida to assert its relevance amid high-profile attacks by the rival Islamic State group.

The attack on the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako began at around 7 a.m. Friday morning when two gunmen, approaching on foot, reached the entrance where five guards who had worked the night shift were waiting to be replaced by a new team, said Cheick Dabo, one of the guards.

The guards had just finished the morning prayer and had put their weapons — a shotgun and two pistols — away in their vehicle when the militants struck.

(AP) Children stand behind a police barricade outside the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako,...
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"We didn't see the jihadists until they started firing on us. We weren't concentrating and we didn't expect it," he said.

Four of the guards were shot, one fatally, while Dabo himself managed to hide under a car.

Government critics have attacked the level of security at the hotel and in the country but Interior Minister Salif Traore said Saturday that there was little to be done in the face of such determined attackers.

"They were ready to die, so the level of security is hardly important," he told reporters. "The Radisson hotel had a level of security that was considered good."

Once inside, at least one of the assailants headed for the kitchen and restaurant, sparking pandemonium, said Mohammed Coulibaly, a cook at the hotel.

(AP) Soldiers from the presidential guard patrol outside the Radisson Blu hotel in...
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"I was busy cooking when a waitress started screaming at the door, 'They are attacking us, they are attacking us!'" Coulibaly said. "I asked everyone to go into the hallway, so everyone headed in that direction. Suddenly we heard the footsteps of the jihadists behind us and there was total panic and people were running in every direction."

Coulibaly said he then hid in a bathroom with one of the guests, but one of the assailants saw him through a window and started firing, prompting him to run to the kitchen where he was nearly overwhelmed by smoke.

"I realized that if I didn't leave the kitchen the smoke would kill me. So I waited until I didn't hear any noise and I ran from the kitchen and escaped the hotel through a window," he said.

By that point, the assailants were heading upstairs where they took dozens of hostages, launching a standoff with Malian security forces that lasted more than seven hours and claimed 19 lives in addition to their own. All but one of the victims were hotel guests.

Speaking to reporters briefly after visiting the hotel on Saturday, Mali President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita said the attack underscored the global threat posed by Islamic extremists, especially coming just one week after teams of attackers from the Islamic State group in Paris killed 130 people while targeting a stadium, a concert hall and cafes and restaurants.

(AP) Soldiers from the presidential patrol outside the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako,...
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"These people have attacked Paris and other places. Nowhere is excluded," Keita said.

Army Maj. Modibo Nama Traore said earlier Saturday that security forces were hunting "more than three" suspects who may have been involved in the assault. The government on Friday declared a 10-day nationwide state of emergency and three days of national mourning beginning Monday.

The Radisson attack was claimed by Al-Mourabitoun (The Sentinels), an extremist group formed by notorious Algerian militant Moktar Belmoktar, in a statement Friday that said it was carried out in cooperation with al-Qaida's "Sahara Emirate."

Belmoktar, an Algerian militant and former al-Qaida commander who has long been based in the Sahara, shot to prominence after his group carried out a January 2013 attack on an Algerian gas plant that resulted in the death of 39 foreign workers.

Jean-Herve Jezequel, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, said Al-Mourabitoun may be allying with al-Qaida in the face of the losses the extremists have suffered at the hands of French forces that intervened in Mali in 2013 after much of the north fell to radical Islamists.

(AP) French gendarmes walk to the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, Mali, Saturday, Nov. 21,...
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"Belmoktar may want to revive the alliance with al-Qaida maybe to reassert their position because they have lost a lot," he said. "They have lost a lot of leaders in the last three years because of the French military intervention."

The attack may also be a way for al-Qaida and its allies to assert itself in the face of the highly publicized string of attacks carried out by its chief rival in jihad, the Islamic State group.

While IS does not have a major presence in this region, its successes elsewhere in the world have resulted in local radical groups pledging allegiance to it.

"Al-Qaida and its international affiliates have been surpassed by IS and needed to show that they are still there," said Djallil Lounnes, an expert on radical groups in the Sahara based in Morocco. "The attack on the hotel was perfect — only foreign delegations in a highly secure area — so the message would be that we, al-Qaida, can strike high-quality targets, not just random civilians."

Among the dead in the Radisson attack were a 41-year-old American development worker, six Russian plane crew from a cargo company, and three senior executives from the powerful state-owned China Railway Construction Corp., officials said.

__

The story has been corrected to show that the official toll from the attack is 19 victims dead, rather than 20.

__

Corey-Boulet reported from Abidjan, Ivory Coast. Associated Press writer Paul Schemm in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia contributed to this report.
 

Housecarl

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

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/21/opinion/saudi-arabia-an-isis-that-has-made-it.html?_r=0

The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Contributor

Saudi Arabia, an ISIS That Has Made It

Lire en français (Read in French) »
By KAMEL DAOUDNOV. 20, 2015

Black Daesh, white Daesh. The former slits throats, kills, stones, cuts off hands, destroys humanity’s common heritage and despises archaeology, women and non-Muslims. The latter is better dressed and neater but does the same things. The Islamic State; Saudi Arabia. In its struggle against terrorism, the West wages war on one, but shakes hands with the other. This is a mechanism of denial, and denial has a price: preserving the famous strategic alliance with Saudi Arabia at the risk of forgetting that the kingdom also relies on an alliance with a religious clergy that produces, legitimizes, spreads, preaches and defends Wahhabism, the ultra-puritanical form of Islam that Daesh feeds on.

Wahhabism, a messianic radicalism that arose in the 18th century, hopes to restore a fantasized caliphate centered on a desert, a sacred book, and two holy sites, Mecca and Medina. Born in massacre and blood, it manifests itself in a surreal relationship with women, a prohibition against non-Muslims treading on sacred territory, and ferocious religious laws. That translates into an obsessive hatred of imagery and representation and therefore art, but also of the body, nakedness and freedom. Saudi Arabia is a Daesh that has made it.

The West’s denial regarding Saudi Arabia is striking: It salutes the theocracy as its ally but pretends not to notice that it is the world’s chief ideological sponsor of Islamist culture. The younger generations of radicals in the so-called Arab world were not born jihadists. They were suckled in the bosom of Fatwa Valley, a kind of Islamist Vatican with a vast industry that produces theologians, religious laws, books, and aggressive editorial policies and media campaigns.

One might counter: Isn’t Saudi Arabia itself a possible target of Daesh? Yes, but to focus on that would be to overlook the strength of the ties between the reigning family and the clergy that accounts for its stability — and also, increasingly, for its precariousness. The Saudi royals are caught in a perfect trap: Weakened by succession laws that encourage turnover, they cling to ancestral ties between king and preacher. The Saudi clergy produces Islamism, which both threatens the country and gives legitimacy to the regime.

One has to live in the Muslim world to understand the immense transformative influence of religious television channels on society by accessing its weak links: households, women, rural areas. Islamist culture is widespread in many countries — Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Mali, Mauritania. There are thousands of Islamist newspapers and clergies that impose a unitary vision of the world, tradition and clothing on the public space, on the wording of the government’s laws and on the rituals of a society they deem to be contaminated.

It is worth reading certain Islamist newspapers to see their reactions to the attacks in Paris. The West is cast as a land of “infidels.” The attacks were the result of the onslaught against Islam. Muslims and Arabs have become the enemies of the secular and the Jews. The Palestinian question is invoked along with the rape of Iraq and the memory of colonial trauma, and packaged into a messianic discourse meant to seduce the masses. Such talk spreads in the social spaces below, while up above, political leaders send their condolences to France and denounce a crime against humanity. This totally schizophrenic situation parallels the West’s denial regarding Saudi Arabia.

All of which leaves one skeptical of Western democracies’ thunderous declarations regarding the necessity of fighting terrorism. Their war can only be myopic, for it targets the effect rather than the cause. Since ISIS is first and foremost a culture, not a militia, how do you prevent future generations from turning to jihadism when the influence of Fatwa Valley and its clerics and its culture and its immense editorial industry remains intact?

Is curing the disease therefore a simple matter? Hardly. Saudi Arabia remains an ally of the West in the many chess games playing out in the Middle East. It is preferred to Iran, that gray Daesh. And there’s the trap. Denial creates the illusion of equilibrium. Jihadism is denounced as the scourge of the century but no consideration is given to what created it or supports it. This may allow saving face, but not saving lives.

Daesh has a mother: the invasion of Iraq. But it also has a father: Saudi Arabia and its religious-industrial complex. Until that point is understood, battles may be won, but the war will be lost. Jihadists will be killed, only to be reborn again in future generations and raised on the same books.

The attacks in Paris have exposed this contradiction again, but as happened after 9/11, it risks being erased from our analyses and our consciences.


Kamel Daoud, a columnist for Quotidien d’Oran, is the author of “The Meursault Investigation.” This essay was translated by John Cullen from the French.
 

vestige

Deceased
Daesh has a mother: the invasion of Iraq. But it also has a father: Saudi Arabia and its religious-industrial complex. Until that point is understood, battles may be won, but the war will be lost. Jihadists will be killed, only to be reborn again in future generations and raised on the same books.

The attacks in Paris have exposed this contradiction again, but as happened after 9/11, it risks being erased from our analyses and our consciences.



strange bedfellows

bump
 

Possible Impact

TB Fanatic
:siren: :siren: :siren:
NedoUkraïnka ‏@ValLisitsa 10m
Confirmed: terror act targeting Crimea
causes
emergency shutdown at two Ukrainian NUCLEAR power plants.



Damaged power lines in Kherson
threaten the stable operation
of Ukrainian nuclear power plants
- "Ukrenergo"


November 22, 2015
https://translate.google.com/transl...://www.radiosvoboda.mobi/a/news/27380318.html
(Google Translate)



469B5B0E-ED92-4FE0-A06D-9AB1D790565B_w250_r1_s.jpg

Damaged electrical siloviki around the Kherson region,
21 November 2015
The fall night in Kherson oblast electrical power lines that supply
electricity, including Crimea, led to emergency disabling Ukrainian nuclear
power plants.
This was stated by Deputy Director
national noyienerhetychnoyi Company "Ukrenergo" Yuri Kasich.


"All these events led to the need for additional emergency cut-off from
the mains two units at thermal power plants - the Dnieper and Vuhlehirska
and emergency relief nuclear power plants in Ukraine 500 MW
.

This Zaporizhzhya NPP and Southern. I note that such emergency
unloading plant - it is very dangerous
, "- he said.

Earlier "Ukrenergo" reported the agreement with the protesters blockade
of Crimea to repair damaged power lines, carried grounding.

At 9 am on November 22, in agreement with the protesters, power
engineering teams admitted to the place of damage for the purpose
of grounding the two lines to ensure the safety of people in the areas of
security lines.

November 20 in Kherson region as a result of the explosion, probably
anti-tank mines, destroyed two and damaged concrete pillars support
two high-voltage power lines, which is a power in the Crimea.

On Saturday, November 21, at the ruined electrical Chaplinka in Kherson
region between the participants of the blockade, which prevented
the start of repair work and the police there was a conflict,
there was a fight.

On the night of November 22 in the village near Kherson Chaplinka
explosions occurred. In the headquarters of the civil action regarding
the blockade of Crimea reported that "power line, which supplied electricity
to the Crimea, fell and can not be restored."

In Crimea, on November 22 in 00:25 happened disabling electricity coming
on the peninsula with the mainland Ukraine.

According to the Department of Energy of the situation regarding energy
supply Crimea at night on November 22 in Crimea without electricity were
almost 2 million people - were without electricity residential consumers
Crimea and Sevastopol (about 1,896,000 people).

At night on November 22 in the Crimea have introduced state
of emergency.

Crimea annexed by Russia. Member civil action by blockade Crimea,
Ukraine require the government "energy blockade" of the peninsula.



11/22/2015
In Crimea because of disabling light on November 23 announced a rest day
Several towns remained without electricity, there are problems with mobile
communications, communications, water, gas stations queue for fuel
further

11/22/2015
Enerhoblokada. Five questions about ethics, emotion and efficiency
The blockade must be applied without considering the moral and ethical
aspects, because the peninsula is responsible for Moscow, and it makes
no sense to simplify retention Crimea more

11/21/2015
Poroshenko promised to stop trade with Crimea - Chubarov
"The President said that instructs the government on Monday-Tuesday
a decision on the suspension of trade with the occupied Crimea» more

11/22/2015
In Crimea, started to turn off lights
Almost all of the Crimea was left without electricity.
Before it was blown up in the Kherson region elektroopory more

:siren: :dot5: It's Now Official, Moscow says "Terrorism"... :dot5: :siren:

De-energizing the Crimea - is an act of terrorism,
according to the Federation Council


13:59 11/22/2015 (updated: 14:01 11/22/2015 )
https://translate.googleusercontent...0.html&usg=ALkJrhj9LDmCOKhZxIqh3H5eBeI_hHK6AA
(Google Translate)

The Ukrainian government does not control anything in his country, and even
deliberately provoked activists such criminal actions as undermining the pylon,
said Franz Klintsevich.


MOSCOW, November 22 - RIA Novosti.
De-energizing the Crimea - is an act of terrorism,
the first deputy chairman of the Federation Council Committee
on Defense and Security, Franz Klintsevich
said to RIA Novosti ,
adding that Kiev authorities either did not control or, on the contrary,
provoked the situation.

On Friday, in the Kherson region have been undermined by an electricity
pylon, which deliver light to the Crimea and southern regions of Ukraine,
resulting in almost the entire peninsula was de-energized. In addition to
the repair crews arrived to Crimea blockade activists who want to prevent
the resumption of full deliveries of electricity to the peninsula.


© RIA Novosti. Vladimir Trefilov | Buy graphic
Restoration of power supply in the Crimea may take several days


"It's not a secret that the Ukrainian nationalists food blockade of the
Crimea are not limited to, and try to complement its blockade of energy.

In fact, it repeatedly stated themselves, - said the senator.
- Explosions pylons in the Kherson region, not far from the Crimean
border, almost the entire peninsula is de-energized.

This is - this act of terrorism. " According to him, one of the causes
of the incident is that the Ukrainian government does not control anything
in his country. "Or worse, she deliberately provoked activists of the
so-called blockade of the Crimea for such criminal acts, - added the MP.
- The specific culprits, of course, one look will not."

As previously stated by the press service of the Ministry of Energy
of Ukraine, as a result of damage to power lines stopped the supply of
electricity in two districts of the Kherson region and the Crimea,
blackout threatens 40% of consumers in the Kherson and Mykolaiv
regions.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Hasan Sari ‏@HasanSari7 17m17 minutes ago

�� #Russia's Putin arrives in #Tehran to attend GECF summit. @KremlinRussia_E #Iran"


Hasan Sari ‏@HasanSari7 10m10 minutes ago

�� URGENT: Putin lifts export ban on uranium enrichment equipment to Iran http://on.rt.com/6xa8 #Russia #US #IranDeal #Iran"



makes you wonder if a deal wasn't struck....


ETA: adding link to an article: http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/...Name=worldNews




Amir Taheri Retweeted
Beyond The Levant ‏@TheRealBTL 16h16 hours ago

]Beyond The Levant Retweeted Amir Taheri

Khameini and some IRGC already wary of Putins long term goals in Syria. Doubt he pushes the Assad "red line."

Beyond The Levant added,
Amir Taheri @AmirTaheri4
TEHRAN sources claim #Putin will Monday ask #Khamenei to accept ditching #Assad in a few months.Not sure this isn't trick to fool the West.
 
Last edited:

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Thanks for the work creating this thread!

Bump.

You are most welcome Thinwater. Please feel free to post any relevant findings here. All of us can use all the help we can get. :spns:

Meanwhile.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151123/eu--turkey-kurdish_party-74a5eb5681.html

Dent on Kurdish party in Turkey raises fear of attack

Nov 23, 4:11 AM (ET)

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — A dent reported on the bullet-proof rear window of Turkey's pro-Kurdish party leader's vehicle has caused fears that the politician may have been targeted for assassination.

Selahattin Demirtas' bodyguards noticed the dent on Sunday and informed police. The party said it was a failed assassination attempt.

However, the regional governor's office said on Monday that no residual evidence of a firearm was found on the window and ruled out an attack on Demirtas or his vehicle. The investigation was continuing.

Demirtas' People's Democratic Party is on edge after supporters were targeted in deadly attacks blamed on a local Islamic State cell in July and October. Party officials have said Demirtas has received death threats.

Demirtas tweeted in Kurdish: "Death is God's command."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
More on Putin's trip to Tehran.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151123/ml--iran-russia-be39798896.html

Russia's Putin in Iran for talks set to focus on Syria

Nov 23, 6:56 AM (ET)
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

(AP) This photo made from the footage taken from Russian Defense Ministry official web...
Full Image

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Russia's President Vladimir Putin was in Tehran on Monday for talks with Iranian leaders expected to focus on the Syrian crisis and an international peace plan intended to end the conflict.

The visit comes as Russia, the United States, France and others are talking about possible joint action against the Islamic State group following the terror attacks in Paris and the downing of a Russian passenger jet in Egypt. Putin's trip also comes on the heels of agreement on an incomplete peace plan that calls for talks between Assad and his foes.

Moscow and Tehran have been the key backers of Syrian President Bashar Assad throughout his nation's civil war, which has killed over 250,000 people and turned millions into refugees.

Russia has shielded Syria from international sanctions, and on Sept. 30 it launched an air campaign against the Islamic State group and other insurgents, while Tehran has sent military advisers to shore up Assad.

(AP) In this Friday, Nov. 20, 2015 file photo, Russian President Vladimir Putin...
Full Image

Putin, on a one-day visit to attend a gas exporting nations' summit, is set to meet with Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Hassan Rouhani. Assad's fate will likely dominate the agenda.

The peace plan put forward by 17 nations a day after the Paris terror attacks sets a Jan. 1 deadline for the start of negotiations between Assad and the opposition.

The proposal, which seems to draw heavily on a recently circulated Russian initiative, states that "free and fair elections" would be held according to a new constitution within 18 months. To clarify the timeline, the State Department said last week that the clock starts once Assad's representatives and opposition figures begin talks on a constitution. The vote would determine a new parliament, though not necessarily a new president.

The plan says nothing about Assad's fate, and does not say which of Syria's many opposition factions would take part in the negotiations.

Russia and Iran both have bristled at demands for Assad to step down, saying his future must be decided by the Syrians as part of the peace process. But some have speculated that Moscow could be prepared to see Assad phased out of power as part of a deal that would guarantee stability in Syria and protect Russia's interests there. Tehran is widely seen as taking a more rigid stance.

Shiite Iran has staunchly backed Assad, who belongs to Syria's Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, seeing him as a bulwark against its archrival, Saudi Arabia, and other Sunni monarchies of the Gulf. Tehran has sent more advisers to Syria in recent weeks, reportedly including Gen. Qassem Soleimani, who heads the elite Quds Force of the Revolutionary Guard. Iran says it has sent advisers but no combat forces.

Taking advantage of the Russian airstrikes, the Iranians and Hezbollah have spearheaded the ongoing Syrian offensive intended to win back some ground after a string of losses earlier this year. Moscow has closely coordinated its air campaign with Tehran, with Russian warplanes flying over Iran and Iraq to avoid the airspace of Turkey and other NATO members.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
And we're sending this bunch $1.5 billion worth of more munitions.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151123/ml--saudi-death_sentence-598ac2c73a.html

Palestinian to appeal Saudi death sentence for poetry

Nov 23, 6:00 AM (ET)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A relative of the Palestinian artist sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia for apostasy says his defense lawyers plan to appeal.

Saudi Arabia's Al-Watan news website quoted Ashraf Fayadh's brother-in-law, Osama Abu Raya, as saying the verdict announced Tuesday is an initial sentence. Defense lawyers have until mid-December to file the appeal.

Fayadh was arrested in January 2014. Al-Watan reported that he was charged with blasphemy, spreading atheism and having long hair, along with other charges.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said Monday that Fayadh has denied the charges, which stem from a published book of his poetry and from a complaint lodged by a man who accused Fayadh of making blasphemous statements during a heated discussion at a cafe.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm......Considering how "up tight" the Japanese are, that this happened at all is a real big deal.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151123/as--japan-shrine-blast-e51b904234.html

Blast at Japan's controversial war shrine injures no one

Nov 23, 3:46 AM (ET)
By YURI KAGEYAMA

(AP) Media people stand by at Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo, Monday, Nov. 23, 2015, following...
Full Image

TOKYO (AP) — An explosion Monday damaged a public restroom at a controversial shrine in Tokyo that honors Japanese war dead, with police suspecting foul play. No one was injured.

The Yasukuni shrine, which honors 2.5 million Japanese war dead, including executed war criminals, has been the target of criticism from China and South Korea, which suffered from Japan's World War II atrocities and aggression.

Tokyo police said in a statement that they received a call about an explosion and smoke at Yasukuni. They said they suspected a "guerrilla" attack, implying some kind of subversive activity, but declined to elaborate.

Firefighters were also called to the scene and found the ceiling and walls of the restroom had been damaged, said an official at the Tokyo Fire Department, who spoke on condition of anonymity. But the fire was out by the time they arrived.

(AP) Police officers stand guard outside the south gate of Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo,...
Full Image

It was unclear what caused the explosion, but a timing device and wirings were found near the spot of the explosion, according to Kyodo News service. Police will be reviewing footage on security cameras for clues, TBS TV news said. Footage on TV Asahi showed a bomb squad in protective gear entering the shrine premises.

The person in charge of media at Yasukuni was not immediately available for comment.

The shrine is a focal point for lingering tensions with Japan's neighbors over the country's aggression before and during World War II. Some Japanese lawmakers have insisted on making official visits in the name of patriotism, while other lawmakers say such visits glorify Japan's historical mistakes.

Emperor Akihito has not visited Yasukuni. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has also avoided making official visits over the last two years.

While views on the shrine have divided the Japanese public, it holds emotional significance for some because during the war soldiers promised each other they would reunite at Yasukuni if they died.

The shrine has a grandiose gate, giant cherry trees and a museum that pays homage to those who died in Japan's wars, including kamikaze pilots.

Many families and tourists visit Yasukuni. Monday was a national holiday, and shrine officials said the grounds remained open for the rest of the day.

---

Follow Yuri Kageyama at twitter.com/yurikageyama

Her work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/yuri-kageyama
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151123/as--bangladesh-war_crimes-439028370d.html

Bangladesh angry over Pakistan's criticism of executions

Nov 23, 6:51 AM (ET)

NEW DELHI (AP) — Bangladesh has accused Pakistan of interfering in its internal affairs by criticizing the execution of two opposition leaders for alleged war crimes during the country's 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.

Bangladesh Junior Foreign Affairs Minister Shahriar Alam said a "strongly worded protest note" was handed to Pakistan's envoy on Monday saying the criticism was unacceptable.

Pakistan's Foreign Ministry earlier said the men's trials were flawed and that it was "deeply disturbed" by their executions on Sunday.

Bangladesh was on high alert Monday against any violence in response to the hangings, with thousands of security personnel patrolling the cities. There has been international concern about the legal process that led to the executions.

Bangladesh was the eastern part of Pakistan until the 1971 war in which it became independent.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151122/as--asia-summit-c079ec58b5.html

SE Asia creates economic community, but challenges remain

Nov 22, 4:20 AM (ET)
By VIJAY JOSHI and EILEEN NG

(AP) ASEAN leaders from left, Philippine President Benigno Aquino III, Singapore's Prime...
Full Image

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Thirteen years after mooting the idea, Southeast Asian leaders on Sunday formally created a unified economic community in a region more populous and diverse than both the European Union and North America, and one that hopes to compete with China and India.

The 10 leaders in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations signed a declaration during their summit establishing the ASEAN Economic Community, as part of a larger ASEAN Community that aims for political, security, cultural and social integration.

The summit's host, Prime Minister Najib Razak of Malaysia, hailed the ASEAN Community as a "landmark achievement," and urged members to accelerate integration. "The region is primed to expand exponentially," he said.

The community, known by its acronym AEC, is already a reality and many of its fundamentals have been applied in the region, including the removal of tariff barriers and visa restrictions. It has also led to greater political and cultural cooperation.

(AP) Leaders from left to right, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Indonesian President...
Full Image

AEC will bolster income and employment, and provide the region with stronger economic muscle in facing the other giants, said Michael G. Plummer, a professor of international economics at the Europe Center of Johns Hopkins University, based in Bologna, Italy.

"ASEAN integration will help balance the economic power of China and India," Plummer said. "Individually, ASEAN countries are, perhaps, too small to be important players in the economic and security game, but as an integrated group of more than half a billion people, they would be in the major league."

But there is a long way to go before the AEC becomes fully functional after becoming a legal entity on Dec. 31. The region's diversity can sometimes be a hindrance. ASEAN has 630 million people, speaking different languages, following various faiths and governed by various systems, including rambunctious democracies, a military dictatorship, quasi-civilian, authoritarian, monarchy and communism.

"The AEC is arguably the most½a0}ambitious economic integration program½a0}in the developing world," Plummer said. "But implementation of the AEC is increasingly uphill. Much remains to be done and the region faces many challenges in finishing. The AEC is a process."

It falls short in more politically sensitive areas such as opening up agriculture, steel, auto production and other protected sectors. ASEAN citizens will be allowed to work in other countries in the region, but will be limited to jobs in eight sectors, including engineering, accountancy and tourism. This accounts for only 1.5 percent of the total jobs in the region, and host countries still can put up constitutional and regulatory hurdles restricting the inflow of talent.

(AP) Indonesia's Prime Minister Joko Widodo, center, and Myanmar's President Thein Sein,...
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Intra-regional trade has remained at around 24 percent of ASEAN's total global trade for the last decade, far lower than 60 percent in the European Union.

ASEAN members also struggle to resolve diplomatic flare-ups among each other such as border disputes between Cambodia and Vietnam, or Indonesia's inability to fight annual forest fires that spew noxious haze for months over Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand.

Plummer said progress has been slow in services liberalization. Cross-border flow of investment is also restricted by large exclusion lists and caps on foreign ownership.½a0}Government procurement and curbing monopolies by state-owned enterprises are highly sensitive and untouched, he said.

Although the four poorer economies — Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam — have until 2018 to bring down tariffs, economic integration could further reinforce income equalities in the region, he said.

AEC "is not the finished article. Neither is it officially claimed to be. There is much work to be done," said Mohamad Munir Abdul Majid, chairman of a council that advises ASEAN on business matters. "There is a disparity between what is officially recorded as having been achieved ... and what the private sector reports as their experience."

There are also other hurdles, such as corruption, uneven infrastructure and unequal costs of transportation and shipping. A wide economic gulf divides Southeast Asia's rich and middle income economies — Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Brunei, Thailand and the Philippines — and its four less developed members, Communist Vietnam and Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia.

The AEC was envisaged in 2002 — and a blueprint created in 2007 — to face competition from China and India for market share and investments. While China's economic growth is expected to slow to an average of 6 percent annually over the next five years, India's expansion is likely to pick up to 7.3 percent in the same period, according to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development.

The AEC is one of the three pillars of the ASEAN Community, which was created by the signing of the declaration Sunday. The other two pillars are political-security and socio-cultural.

After the ASEAN summit, the 10 leaders huddled with heads of state from four other Asian countries as well as President Barack Obama, Russian Prime Minister Dimitri Medvedev, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and New Zealand Prime Minister John Key for a two-hour East Asia Summit.

They were expected to discuss wider issues, including terrorism.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151121/lt--venezuela-poverty-b51768037a.html

Study: Poverty in Venezuela at 73 percent of households

Nov 20, 7:36 PM (ET)

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — A study estimates poverty in Venezuela has hit an all-time high of some 73 percent of households.

The report says that's up from about 27 percent in 2013 and 48 percent in 2014.

It was prepared by researchers at three Venezuelan universities on the basis of surveys with 6,000 people in the nation of 30 million.

Poverty rates plummeted during the first years of Venezuela's 16-year-old socialist revolution under the late President Hugo Chavez. But they have risen more recently as the country struggles with raging inflation, a deepening recession and falling prices for oil — Venezuela's main source of foreign income.

The study was released Friday, before Venezuela holds legislative elections next month.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
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Tomgram: Pepe Escobar, The New Great Game Between China and the U.S.

Posted by Pepe Escobar at 4:44pm, November 22, 2015.
Follow TomDispatch on Twitter @TomDispatch.

In Washington, voices are rising fast and furiously. “Freedom fries” are a thing of the past and everyone agrees on the need to support France (and on more or less nothing else). Now, disagreements are sharpening over whether to only incrementally “intensify” the use of U.S. military power in Syria and Iraq or go to “war” big time and send in the troops. The editor of the right-wing Weekly Standard, Bill Kristol, is already calling for 50,000 American troops to take the Islamic State’s “capital,” Raqqa. Republican presidential candidate Senator Lindsey Graham, who has been urging that another 20,000 troops be dispatched to the region for months, offers this illuminating analogy to sports: "I'm looking for an away game when it comes to ISIL, not a home game. I want to fight them in their backyard."

And don’t forget that increasingly angry sideline discussion about the Obama administration's plan to let 10,000 Syrian refugees, carefully vetted for up to two years, trickle into the country. Alternatives proposed include setting up even harsher, more time-consuming vetting processes to insure that few of them can make it, allowing only certified, God-fearing Christian Syrians in while -- give a rousing cheer for the “clash of civilizations” -- leaving Muslims to rot in hell, or just blocking the whole damn lot of them.

In such an atmosphere of rancor and pure war-hawkishness, it’s increasingly hard to remember what a more peaceable world looked and sounded like. That’s why TomDispatch’s peripatetic reporter Pepe Escobar, who roams Eurasia, especially the region he long ago dubbed Pipelineistan, is like a breath of fresh air. He reminds us that there are still places where people are talking about -- gasp! -- building up infrastructure in a big way, not defunding it and letting it crumble into dust; places where leaders are intent on thinking about how to unify worlds through commerce and trade, not smash them to smithereens via air power and drones. Maybe that’s just what it means to live in the heartland of a rising power, rather than a declining one.

His focus is China and don’t get me wrong, that country’s no bowl of cherries. Even if not at American levels, it’s pouring money into its military and elbowing its neighbors in nearby waters, as you might expect of a bulking-up regional power. Still, it’s got a dream that its leaders are actually happy to promote and it’s not a warlike one that highlights an ever-more heavily militarized world either. That in itself should count for something. But let Pepe Escobar fill in the details on a Chinese dream of full-time construction across Eurasia that, transposed to this continent, would once have sounded American indeed. Tom


Will Chess, Not Battleship, Be the Game of the Future in Eurasia?
Silk Roads, Night Trains, and the Third Industrial Revolution in China
By Pepe Escobar

The U.S. is transfixed by its multibillion-dollar electoral circus. The European Union is paralyzed by austerity, fear of refugees, and now all-out jihad in the streets of Paris. So the West might be excused if it’s barely caught the echoes of a Chinese version of Roy Orbison’s “All I Have to Do Is Dream.” And that new Chinese dream even comes with a road map.

The crooner is President Xi Jinping and that road map is the ambitious, recently unveiled 13th Five-Year-Plan, or in the pop-video version, the Shisanwu. After years of explosive economic expansion, it sanctifies the country’s lower “new normal” gross domestic product growth rate of 6.5% a year through at least 2020.

It also sanctifies an updated economic formula for the country: out with a model based on low-wage manufacturing of export goods and in with the shock of the new, namely, a Chinese version of the third industrial revolution. And while China’s leadership is focused on creating a middle-class future powered by a consumer economy, its president is telling whoever is willing to listen that, despite the fears of the Obama administration and of some of the country’s neighbors, there’s no reason for war ever to be on the agenda for the U.S. and China.


Given the alarm in Washington about what is touted as a Beijing quietly pursuing expansionism in the South China Sea, Xi has been remarkably blunt on the subject of late. Neither Beijing nor Washington, he insists, should be caught in the Thucydides trap, the belief that a rising power and the ruling imperial power of the planet are condemned to go to war with each other sooner or later.

It was only two months ago in Seattle that Xi told a group of digital economy heavyweights, “There is no such thing as the so-called Thucydides trap in the world. But should major countries time and again make the mistakes of strategic miscalculation, they might create such traps for themselves.”

A case can be made -- and Xi’s ready to make it -- that Washington, which, from Afghanistan to Iraq, Libya to Syria, has gained something of a reputation for “strategic miscalculation” in the twenty-first century, might be doing it again. After all, U.S. military strategy documents and top Pentagon figures have quite publicly started to label China (like Russia) as an official “threat.”

To grasp why Washington is starting to think of China that way, however, you need to take your eyes off the South China Sea for a moment, turn off Donald Trump, Ben Carson, and the rest of the posse, and consider the real game-changer -- or “threat” -- that’s rattling Beltway nerves in Washington when it comes to the new Great Game in Eurasia.

Xi’s Bedside Reading

Swarms of Chinese tourists iPhoning away and buying everything in sight in major Western capitals already prefigure a Eurasian future closely tied to and anchored by a Chinese economy turbo-charging toward that third industrial revolution. If all goes according to plan, it will harness everything from total connectivity and efficient high-tech infrastructure to the expansion of green, clean energy hubs. Solar plants in the Gobi desert, anyone?

Yes, Xi is a reader of economic and social theorist Jeremy Rifkin, who first conceived of a possible third industrial revolution powered by both the Internet and renewable energy sources.

It turns out that the Chinese leadership has no problem with the idea of harnessing cutting-edge Western soft power for its own purposes. In fact, they seem convinced that no possible tool should be overlooked when it comes to moving the country on to the next stage in the process that China’s Little Helmsman, former leader Deng Xiaoping, decades ago designated as the era in which “to get rich is glorious."

It helps when you have $4 trillion in foreign currency reserves and massive surpluses of steel and cement. That’s the sort of thing that allows you to go “nation-building” on a pan-Eurasian scale. Hence, Xi’s idea of creating the kind of infrastructure that could, in the end, connect China to Central Asia, the Middle East, and Western Europe. It’s what the Chinese call “One Belt, One Road”; that is, the junction of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the Twenty-First Century Maritime Silk Road.

Since Xi announced his One Belt, One Road policy in Kazakhstan in 2013, PricewaterhouseCoopers in Hong Kong estimates that the state has ploughed more than $250 billion into Silk Road-oriented projects ranging from railways to power plants. Meanwhile, every significant Chinese business player is on board, from telecom equipment giant Huawei to e-commerce monster Alibaba (fresh from its Singles Day online blockbuster). The Bank of China has already provided a $50 billion credit line for myriad Silk Road-related projects. China’s top cement-maker Anhui Conch is building at least six monster cement plants in Indonesia, Vietnam, and Laos. Work aimed at tying the Asian part of Eurasia together is proceeding at a striking pace. For instance, the China-Laos, China-Thailand, and Jakarta-Bandung railways -- contracts worth over $20 billion -- are to be completed by Chinese companies before 2020.

With business booming, right now the third industrial revolution in China looks ever more like a mad scramble toward a new form of modernity.

A Eurasian “War on Terror”

The One Belt, One Road plan for Eurasia reaches far beyond the Rudyard Kipling-coined nineteenth century phrase “the Great Game,” which in its day was meant to describe the British-Russian tournament of shadows for the control of Central Asia. At the heart of the twenty-first century’s Great Game lies China’s currency, the yuan, which may, by November 30th, join the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights reserve-currency basket. If so, this will in practice mean the total integration of the yuan, and so of Beijing, into global financial markets, as an extra basket of countries will add it to their foreign exchange holdings and subsequent currency shifts may amount to the equivalent of trillions of U.S. dollars.

Couple the One Belt, One Road project with the recently founded, China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and Beijing’s Silk Road Infrastructure Fund ($40 billion committed to it so far). Mix in an internationalized yuan and you have the groundwork for Chinese companies to turbo-charge their way into a pan-Eurasian (and even African) building spree of roads, high-speed rail lines, fiber-optic networks, ports, pipelines, and power grids.

According to the Washington-dominated Asian Development Bank (ADB), there is, at present, a monstrous gap of $800 billion in the funding of Asian infrastructure development to 2020 and it’s yearning to be filled. Beijing is now stepping right into what promises to be a paradigm-breaking binge of economic development.

And don’t forget about the bonuses that could conceivably follow such developments. After all, in China’s stunningly ambitious plans at least, its Eurasian project will end up covering no less than 65 countries on three continents, potentially affecting 4.4 billion people. If it succeeds even in part, it could take the gloss off al-Qaeda- and ISIS-style Wahhabi-influenced jihadism not only in China’s Xinjiang Province, but also in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Central Asia. Imagine it as a new kind of Eurasian war on terror whose “weapons” would be trade and development. After all, Beijing’s planners expect the country’s annual trade volume with belt-and-road partners to surpass $2.5 trillion by 2025.

At the same time, another kind of binding geography -- what I’ve long called Pipelineistan, the vast network of energy pipelines crisscrossing the region, bringing its oil and natural gas supplies to China -- is coming into being. It’s already spreading across Pakistan and Myanmar, and China is planning to double down on this attempt to reinforce its escape-from-the-Straits-of-Malacca strategy. (That bottleneck is still a transit point for 75% of Chinese oil imports.) Beijing prefers a world in which most of those energy imports are not water-borne and so at the mercy of the U.S. Navy. More than 50% of China’s natural gas already comes overland from two Central Asian "stans" (Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan) and that percentage will only increase once pipelines to bring Siberian natural gas to China come online before the end of the decade.

Of course, the concept behind all this, which might be sloganized as “to go west (and south) is glorious” could induce a tectonic shift in Eurasian relations at every level, but that depends on how it comes to be viewed by the nations involved and by Washington.

Leaving economics aside for a moment, the success of the whole enterprise will require superhuman PR skills from Beijing, something not always in evidence. And there are many other problems to face (or duck): these include Beijing’s Han superiority complex, not always exactly a hit among either minority ethnic groups or neighboring states, as well as an economic push that is often seen by China’s ethnic minorities as benefiting only the Han Chinese. Mix in a rising tide of nationalist feeling, the expansion of the Chinese military (including its navy), conflict in its southern seas, and a growing security obsession in Beijing. Add to that a foreign policy minefield, which will work against maintaining a carefully calibrated respect for the sovereignty of neighbors. Throw in the Obama administration’s “pivot” to Asia and its urge both to form anti-Chinese alliances of “containment” and to beef up its own naval and air power in waters close to China. And finally don’t forget red tape and bureaucracy, a Central Asian staple. All of this adds up to a formidable package of obstacles to Xi’s Chinese dream and a new Eurasia.

All Aboard the Night Train

The Silk Road revival started out as a modest idea floated in China’s Ministry of Commerce. The initial goal was nothing more than getting extra “contracts for Chinese construction companies overseas.” How far the country has traveled since then. Starting from zero in 2003, China has ended up building no less than 16,000 kilometers of high-speed rail tracks in these years -- more than the rest of the planet combined.

And that’s just the beginning. Beijing is now negotiating with 30 countries to build another 5,000 kilometers of high-speed rail at a total investment of $157 billion. Cost is, of course, king; a made-in-China high-speed network (top speed: 350 kilometers an hour) costs around $17 million to $21 million per kilometer. Comparable European costs: $25 million to $39 million per kilometer. So no wonder the Chinese are bidding for an $18 billion project linking London with northern England, and another linking Los Angeles to Las Vegas, while outbidding German companies to lay tracks in Russia.

On another front, even though it’s not directly part of China’s new Silk Road planning, don’t forget about the Iran-India-Afghanistan Agreement on Transit and International Transportation Cooperation. This India-Iran project to develop roads, railways, and ports is particularly focused on the Iranian port of Chabahar, which is to be linked by new roads and railways to the Afghan capital Kabul and then to parts of Central Asia.

Why Chabahar? Because this is India’s preferred transit corridor to Central Asia and Russia, as the Khyber Pass in the Afghan-Pakistani borderlands, the country’s traditional linking point for this, remains too volatile. Built by Iran, the transit corridor from Chabahar to Milak on the Iran-Afghanistan border is now ready. By rail, Chabahar will then be connected to the Uzbek border at Termez, which translates into Indian products reaching Central Asia and Russia.

Think of this as the Southern Silk Road, linking South Asia with Central Asia, and in the end, if all goes according to plan, West Asia with China. It is part of a wildly ambitious plan for a North-South Transport Corridor, an India-Iran-Russia joint project launched in 2002 and focused on the development of inter-Asian trade.

Of course, you won’t be surprised to know that, even here, China is deeply involved. Chinese companies have already built a high-speed rail line from the Iranian capital Tehran to Mashhad, near the Afghan border. China also financed a metro rail line from Imam Khomeini Airport to downtown Tehran. And it wants to use Chabahar as part of the so-called Iron Silk Road that is someday slated to cross Iran and extend all the way to Turkey. To top it off, China is already investing in the upgrading of Turkish ports.

Who Lost Eurasia?

For Chinese leaders, the One Belt, One Road plan -- an “economic partnership map with multiple rings interconnected with one another” -- is seen as an escape route from the Washington Consensus and the dollar-centered global financial system that goes with it. And while “guns” are being drawn, the “battlefield” of the future, as the Chinese see it, is essentially a global economic one.

On one side are the mega-economic pacts being touted by Washington -- the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership -- that would split Eurasia in two. On the other, there is the urge for a new pan-Eurasian integration program that would be focused on China, and feature Russia, Kazakhstan, Iran, and India as major players. Last May, Russia and China closed a deal to coordinate the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) with new Silk Road projects. As part of their developing strategic partnership, Russia is already China’s number one oil supplier.

With Ukraine’s fate still in the balance, there is, at present, little room for the sort of serious business dialogue between the European Union (EU) and the EEU that might someday fuse Europe and Russia into the Chinese vision of full-scale, continent-wide Eurasian integration. And yet German business types, in particular, remain focused on and fascinated by the limitless possibilities of the New Silk Road concept and the way it might profitably link the continent.

If you’re looking for a future first sign of détente on this score, keep an eye on any EU moves to engage economically with the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. Its membership at present: China, Russia, and four "stans" (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan). India and Pakistan are to become members in 2016, and Iran once U.N. sanctions are completely lifted. A monster second step (no time soon) would be for this dialogue to become the springboard for the building of a trans-European “one-belt” zone. That could only happen after there was a genuine settlement in Ukraine and EU sanctions on Russia had been lifted. Think of it as the long and winding road towards what Russian President Vladimir Putin tried to sell the Germans in 2010: a Eurasian free-trade zone extending from Vladivostok to Lisbon.

Any such moves will, of course, only happen over Washington’s dead body. At the moment, inside the Beltway, sentiment ranges from gloating over the economic “death” of the BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), most of which are facing daunting economic dislocations even as their political, diplomatic, and strategic integration proceeds apace, to fear or even downright anticipation of World War III and the Russian “threat.”

No one in Washington wants to “lose” Eurasia to China and its new Silk Roads. On what former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski calls “the grand chessboard,” Beltway elites and the punditocracy that follows them will never resign themselves to seeing the U.S. relegated to the role of “offshore balancer,” while China dominates an integrating Eurasia. Hence, those two trade pacts and that “pivot,” the heightened U.S. naval presence in Asian waters, the new urge to “contain” China, and the demonization of both Putin’s Russia and the Chinese military threat.

Thucydides, Eat Your Heart Out

Which brings us full circle to Xi’s crush on Jeremy Rifkin. Make no mistake about it: whatever Washington may want, China is indeed the rising power in Eurasia and a larger-than-life economic magnet. From London to Berlin, there are signs in the EU that, despite so many decades of trans-Atlantic allegiance, there is also something too attractive to ignore about what China has to offer. There is already a push towards the configuration of a European-wide digital economy closely linked with China. The aim would be a Rifkin-esque digitally integrated economic space spanning Eurasia, which in turn would be an essential building block for that post-carbon third industrial revolution.

The G-20 this year was in Antalya, Turkey, and it was a fractious affair dominated by Islamic State jihadism in the streets of Paris. The G-20 in 2016 will be in Hangzhou, China, which also happens to be the hometown of Jack Ma and the headquarters for Alibaba. You can’t get more third industrial revolution than that.

One year is an eternity in geopolitics. But what if, in 2016, Hangzhou did indeed offer a vision of the future, of silk roads galore and night trains from Central Asia to Duisburg, Germany, a future arguably dominated by Xi’s vision. He is, at least, keen on enshrining the G-20 as a multipolar global mechanism for coordinating a common development framework. Within it, Washington and Beijing might sometimes actually work together in a world in which chess, not Battleship, would be the game of the century.

Thucydides, eat your heart out.

Pepe Escobar is an independent political analyst who writes for RT and Sputnik, and is a TomDispatch regular. His latest book is Empire of Chaos. His next book, 2030, is out this month. Follow him on Facebook.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Nick Turse’s Tomorrow’s Battlefield: U.S. Proxy Wars and Secret Ops in Africa, and Tom Engelhardt's latest book, Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.

Copyright 2015 Pepe Escobar
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
China declares war on ISIS terrorists claim to have executed Chinese hostages
Started by China Connection‎, Today 12:24 AM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...rists-claim-to-have-executed-Chinese-hostages

If anything, Beijing is known for upping the game when least expected, particularly when there is advantage to be gained......

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http://www.ibtimes.com/china-steps-...edia-say-chinese-military-involvement-2195723

China Steps Up Security Checks In Beijing, But State Media Say Chinese Military Involvement In Middle East Unlikely Despite Hostage Death

By Duncan Hewitt †y@dhewittChina on November 23 2015 2:36 AM EST

SHANGHAI -- Chinese media say security has been tightened in the capital Beijing over the past week, following the attacks in Paris, with more checks on vehicles entering the city, and more police mobilized.

Tension over terrorism in China has been heightened by last week¡¦s report of the execution of a Chinese hostage by the Islamic State group in the Middle East, and the deaths of three Chinese citizens in Friday¡¦s attack on a hotel in Mali. However an official media commentary Monday suggested it was unlikely that China would become actively involved in any retaliatory military action in the Middle East.

The Beijing Youth Daily newspaper said Sunday that checks on every entrance point into Beijing had been stepped up over the past week, along with scrutiny of people on the city¡¦s streets. It said auxiliary police and armed police were both involved in what it called ¡§a show of force.¡¨ The report said more than a million cars and 1.6 million people have been checked in the Chinese capital this month. And it said more than a hundred people had been arrested in the sweep, though it did not suggest that they were necessarily being held on terror-related charges.

Security has already been tight in major Chinese cities since a series of attacks over the past two years, which authorities say are the work of separatists from the mainly Muslim region of Xinjiang in northwest China. These include a knife attack at a railway station in the southwestern city of Kunming in March 2014 that left 31 dead, and an explosion in Tiananmen Square in October 2013 that killed two tourists and injured 39.

But the apparent execution of Chinese hostage Fan Jinghui by ISIS in the Middle East, announced last week, and the killing of three executives of the China Railway Construction Corporation in Friday¡¦s attack on the Radisson Blue hotel in the Malian capital Bamako have added to a sense of vulnerability.

The official Global Times newspaper said Monday that questions were inevitably being raised as to whether ¡§China will join other countries in combating the IS head-on.¡¨ But the paper noted that Chinese diplomats had so far avoided the question, and suggested the government was likely to be ¡§extremely prudent¡¨ on the issue, since direct military participation could lead to a ¡§series of risks¡¨ for China.

¡§If China steps in to combat the IS, this may prompt its domestic terrorists to join international groups,¡¨ the Global Times added in an editorial, implying that this could potentially lead to more attacks on China. It also suggested China was not ¡§fully prepared¡¨ for military operations -- and said the government might ¡§find it hard to obtain full public support if its troops fight in the far away Middle East.¡¨ The editorial called for a coordinated United Nations anti-terrorism plan, in which it said China would ¡§proactively participate.¡¨ However it said Beijing could only ¡§make contributions based on its capacity.¡¨

The comments echo others prominently reported in Chinese media in recent days. While China¡¦s foreign ministry said last week that the country would spare no effort to bring the killers of Fan to justice, analysts say it is unlikely that the nation, which officially preaches a philosophy of non-intervention in other countries¡¦ affairs, would be willing to deploy its military against ISIS.

Chinese politics specialist Willy Lam, of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told International Business Times last week that China might respond to the recent attacks by stepping up its crackdown in Xinjiang, where officials say it has arrested hundreds of people this year, in what they say is a campaign against terrorists and religious extremists. And Chinese media have confirmed that Beijing appears to be increasing publicity about its battle with terrorism in Xinjiang. On Friday, official media finally confirmed reports that police had killed 28 suspects, in response to an armed attack on a coal mine in the region in September, which authorities say left 16 dead.

The reports of the police response gave some graphic detail, including the use of a flamethrower to flush the suspected terrorists out of a cave. This contrasts with the authorities¡¦ general policy of giving limited detail of unrest in Xinjiang. One Chinese media scholar told the Global Times authorities may now be hoping that providing more information would help ordinary people ¡§understand the necessity of the government's anti-terrorism policy,¡¨ and would also reassure them that the government was taking decisive action.

However the paper quoted experts as saying ¡§the government is also worried that such disclosures may provoke possible revenge and violence,¡¨ presumably against Muslims or other minority groups, though others said failing to provide information, as in the past, could lead to potentially dangerous rumors.

Analysts have also said that recent events could encourage China to take a tougher line in Xinjiang, where human rights groups have previously warned that the authorities' tough crackdown could alienate some Muslims.

In further evidence of the increased sense of urgency around counterterrorism in China, Shanghai-based expert Ni Lexiong told state media that the authorities in Beijing now have the capacity to monitor ¡§new communication channels, including the PlayStation 4 video game console.¡¨ But he also suggested that many Chinese companies and organizations currently lacked counter-terrorism awareness.

State media also quoted experts as saying the Chinese government should set up a ¡§more efficient information-sharing platform¡¨ to help Chinese enterprises evaluate risk when investing overseas.

On Friday, the Global Times called on Chinese citizens to avoid entering high-risk regions and ¡§strengthen their awareness of self-protection.¡¨
 

mzkitty

I give up.
4m
Iran's ambassador to Russia says Moscow has started procedure of supplying Tehran with S-300 anti-missile rocket system - Tasnim via @Reuters
End of alert
 

vestige

Deceased
Without elaboration… these were eye catchers:


Hasan Sari ‏@HasanSari7 10m10 minutes ago

�� URGENT: Putin lifts export ban on uranium enrichment equipment to Iran http://on.rt.com/6xa8 #Russia #US #IranDeal #Iran"

4m
Iran's ambassador to Russia says Moscow has started procedure of supplying Tehran with S-300 anti-missile rocket system - Tasnim via @Reuters
End of alert
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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Soldiers Capture 7 Suspected Members of Gang in Western Mexico

Caracas, Monday November 23,2015

MEXICO CITY – Seven suspected members of a criminal organization were captured by soldiers in the western Mexican state of Michoacan during an operation to support state security forces, the Government Secretariat said.

Jose Enrique Valadez Aceves, suspected of being involved in “criminal activities for an organization based in the states of Jalisco and Michoacan,” was among those arrested in the operation in Quiringuicharo, a town outside the city of Ecuandureo, the secretariat said in a statement.

Valadez Aceves was arrested along with six other people on Thursday, the secretariat said.

Army troops seized six rifles, four handguns, 76 ammunition clips, 1,612 rounds of ammunition, two vehicles and communications equipment from the suspects.

Valadez Aceves may have been behind criminal activities in the cities of La Piedad, Yurecuaro, Tanhuato, Tangancícuaro, Ixtlan de los Hervores, Zamora, Tangamandapio and Villamar, all located in Michoacan, the secretariat said.

“The criminal organization he presumably belongs to is responsible for the attack on military personnel on Jan. 22 in the town of Munguia, municipality of Yurecuaro, where two soldiers were killed and two others wounded,” the secretariat said.

The suspects were turned over to federal prosecutors in Zamora, a city in Michoacan.

The secretariat did not identify the criminal organization that the suspects allegedly belong to, but the Los Guerrero gang, which is involved in drug trafficking, extortion rackets and kidnappings on the border between Jalisco and Guanajuato states, operates in the areas mentioned in the statement.

Los Guerrero, which has operated for about 35 years in the region, has joined the powerful Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion, which has expanded into Michoacan.

Michoacan has been plagued by a wave of drug-related violence unleashed by the Los Caballeros Templarios drug cartel in recent years.

The Caballeros Templarios cartel was created in 2010 by former members of the Familia Michoacana organization.

The cartel, which deals in both synthetic and natural drugs, commits murders, stages kidnappings and runs extortion rackets that target business owners and transport companies in Michoacan.

The first vigilante group was formed in Michoacan on Feb. 24, 2013, to fight the Caballeros Templarios.

President Enrique Peña Nieto sent troops and Federal Police units into Michoacan in January 2014 to end the conflict between the cartel and the vigilantes.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/giorgio-cafiero/saudi-arabia-and-pakistan_b_8617868.html

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan's Evolving Alliance

Posted: 11/23/2015 1:40 pm EST Updated: 37 minutes ago

In early November, Pakistan's chief of army staff, General Raheel Sharif, made an important visit to Saudi Arabia. The general met with King Salman and other top officials in Riyadh, where he stressed Islamabad's commitment to ensuring the safety and protection of Mecca and Medina, as well as Saudi Arabia's territorial integrity. The Saudi officials, in turn, called for peace and stability in Pakistan and praised the Pakistani military's efforts to fight terrorism in the ongoing Zarb-i-Azb campaign. Dignitaries from both sides issued a joint statement emphasizing their "responsibility towards Muslim ummah" and mutual fears stemming from the plethora of ongoing regional security crises.

The Saudi media credited General Sharif's two-day trip with ending a "somewhat cool" period in relations dating back to April, when the Pakistani parliament unanimously voted against joining Operation Decisive Storm (later named Operation Restoring Hope). Observers stated that the meeting marked the beginning of a "reset" in Saudi-Pakistani ties and an end to the friction caused by their disagreement over Yemen earlier this year. Given what is at stake in the region, both governments clearly have a vested interest in putting the alliance back on track. However, shifts in the Middle East and South Asia's geopolitical order raise questions about the alliance's long-term prospects.

A Unique Relationship

Saudi and Pakistani leaders have maintained warm relations throughout modern history. One former Saudi intelligence official called the relationship "probably one of the closest relationships in the world between any two countries." It is important to remember that the Saudi monarchy is credited with having saved current Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's life. In 2000, the kingdom provided him asylum after the Saudis convinced then-President Pervez Musharraf to release him from jail, where he had been held since the military ousted Sharif in 1999.

For decades, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan have maintained a unique alliance, rooted in Al Saud's self-anointed religious legitimacy, the strength and expertise of Pakistan's military, the two states' common geopolitical interests and the 1.5 million Pakistani laborers in the kingdom. The Saudis see Pakistan, which shares a 565-mile border with Iran and is the only Muslim nation with nuclear weapons, as a vital ally capable of serving as an effective counterweight to growing Iranian influence.

The kingdom came to the side of Pakistan in the late 1990s and provided the country with $2 billion worth of free crude oil after the U.S. imposed nuclear sanctions on Islamabad. In fact, Riyadh tacitly bankrolled Pakistan's nuclear weapons program. It is widely presumed that if Saudi Arabia were to decide to pursue a nuclear weapons program, Pakistan would help Riyadh achieve that status.

Since the 1960s, Pakistani soldiers have been permanently stationed in the kingdom and Islamabad has provided Saudi Arabia with much military aid, expertise and cooperation on regional affairs. In 1969, Pakistani pilots helped the Saudis attack South Yemen to counter rebel forces. During the 1980s, Pakistan deployed its troops to Saudi Arabia to protect the kingdom from the mutually perceived Iranian threat, while Riyadh collaborated with Islamabad and Washington to train and arm the mujahideen fighting in the Soviet-Afghan War (1979-1989). During the Gulf War of 1991, 11,000 Pakistani troops were in Saudi Arabia "protecting" holy sites. When Bahrain's uprising erupted in 2011, the Fauji Foundation (a Pakistani energy conglomerate linked to the military) recruited at least 2,500 former Pakistani servicemen to assist Gulf Arab security forces in suppressing Shi'ite demonstrators demanding equality in the Sunni-ruled island kingdom.

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan Agree to Disagree on Yemen

Despite this strong historical alliance, Pakistan decided against entering the fray in Yemen earlier this year for three main reasons. First, a high priority for Pakistan is to balance its relations with Saudi Arabia and neighboring Iran. Islamabad saw siding with Riyadh in Yemen--a flashpoint in the Saudi-Iranian geopolitical rivalry--as risky, given its potential to offset this delicate balance and poison the atmosphere for any possible improvement in relations with Iran. Second, many Pakistani Shiites staunchly opposed the Saudi campaign against Yemen's Zaydi Houthi rebel movement. Officials in Islamabad viewed Pakistan's entry into the conflict in Yemen as having the potential to ignite sectarian unrest and terrorism at home. Third, Pakistan's military was focused on Operation Zarb-i-Azb along the Afghan border and did not want to open a third front for Pakistan's already stretched military.

Despite the friction between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan stemming from their disagreement over Yemen, Riyadh is determined to prevent the conflict from creating too much space between itself and Islamabad. The Saudis face a host of setbacks internationally and domestically, and amidst these challenges the Saudi king saw much value in resetting Riyadh's alliance with Islamabad, letting it be known that Saudi Arabia and Pakistan can agree to disagree on Yemen and still maintain their "special relationship."

As the military campaign against the Houthis has thus far failed to achieve Saudi Arabia's stated objectives and appears to be a quagmire, Pakistani officials were wise to have resisted joining the Gulf Arab-dominated coalition in Yemen. Some analysts have even suggested that the Saudis may soon become grateful for Pakistan's decision to maintain a neutral stance, because it is possible that Islamabad could play a future role as peace broker in Yemen. Yet given the realities on the ground in Yemen, particularly pertaining to the growing power of militant Islamist extremists whose factions are unlikely to agree to any form of a negotiated peace agreement, any political compromise that can settle the Yemeni crisis appears merely a concept at this juncture.

China, Iran and India

As Islamabad and Riyadh explore deeper relations with other players in the region, the long-term trajectory of Saudi Arabia's alliance with Pakistan is difficult to predict.

Like the U.S., Pakistan recently has signaled its interest in making a pivot to Asia and away from the Middle East. China, which has wielded significant political and economic influence in Pakistan for many years, is financing and constructing an economic corridor linking Pakistan's port of Gwadar to China's Xinjiang province. The same month in which Pakistan refused to deploy troops to join the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, Islamabad promised Beijing 10,000 troops (5,000 of which came from the elite "Special Services Group") to protect Chinese laborers working on the construction of this corridor in Pakistan. It says a lot about Sino-Pakistani relations that the Chinese would agree to build the economic corridor under such security conditions. Unquestionably, Islamabad serves as one of Beijing's key strategic allies in its battle against India for economic and political supremacy in greater Asia.

Included in the $46 billion deal was the construction of a gas pipeline (to be completed as soon as 2017) linking the port of Gwadar to Iran's South Pars field. The pipeline is expected to cost $3 billion, of which $2 billion will finance the construction of a Liquefied Natural Gas terminal at the port of Gwadar. China, determined to create a modern-day Silk Road linking its eastern cities to the Persian Gulf, agreed to provide 85 percent of the funding for this pipeline with a loan; Pakistan has agreed to finance the rest. Clearly, energy-starved Pakistan is eager to explore deeper relations with energy-rich Iran, now that global powers and Tehran have signed the nuclear agreement and international sanctions are beginning to loosen. Yet in viewing Iran as a predatory state determined to wreak havoc across the Middle East, the Saudi rulers are most unsettled by Islamabad's deepening relationship with Tehran and question Pakistan's long-term reliability as a strategic ally. The Saudis have actively sought to counter Iranian influence in Pakistan. For example, earlier this year, WikiLeaks released documents exposing high-ranking Saudi diplomats' efforts to promote Saudi influence in Pakistan's universities and prevent Iranian scholars from making inroads at such academic institutions in Pakistan.

Further complicating the landscape is Saudi Arabia's deepening relationship with India. Although official diplomatic relations between the two states date back to 1955, Riyadh and Delhi's relationship received a major upgrade in 2006 when King Abdullah visited India and signed the Delhi Declaration, aimed at enhancing bilateral cooperation in security sectors. In 2010, India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and King Abdullah signed the Riyadh Declaration, establishing the basis for enhanced counterterrorism efforts between the two governments and the eventual signing of the extradition treaty. In 2012, following the visit of India's Defense Minister to the kingdom, Delhi reportedly helped Riyadh establish a jungle warfare college, aimed at training Saudi forces to combat al-Qaeda fighters near Saudi Arabia's southern border with Yemen.

The extent to which Indian-Saudi cooperation on security improved was illustrated in July 2012, when Saudi authorities arrested Zabiuddin Ansari, the Indian terrorist responsible for the 2008 Mumbai attacks. He was living in the kingdom with a Pakistani passport while seeking new recruits for a "massive attack" in India. Although Ansari's possession of a Pakistani passport would have normally led the Saudis to extradite him to Pakistan, officials in Riyadh extradited Ansari to India, which constituted a watershed moment in Indian-Saudi cooperation.

Although unlikely that India could ever replace Pakistan's role in Saudi Arabia's foreign policy strategy, growing Indian-Saudi economic ties could impact Riyadh's perception of Pakistan's strategic value as a long-term partner. In certain ways, trade with India appears much more promising to Saudi Arabia than with Pakistan. Even though Pakistan is largely dependent on the kingdom economically, bilateral trade is uneven. It mostly consists of Saudi exports to Pakistan, which is running a growing trade deficit with Saudi Arabia. Indian-Saudi trade is much larger, as well as much more balanced and diverse than the kingdom's trade with Pakistan. To maintain perspective, Indian-Saudi trade surpasses Pakistan's trade with Saudi Arabia and the five other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) members combined. However, the future of Indian-Iranian trade, now that international powers and Iran have signed the nuclear agreement, will undoubtedly influence the extent to which India turns to Saudi Arabia as an economic partner in the years ahead.

Conclusion

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are bonded by a special relationship. The Saudis have used their wealth to invest in advanced weaponry, yet for decades Pakistan's manpower and military expertise has played a pivotal role in the kingdom's security landscape. As underscored by General Sharif's meeting with the Saudi king in Riyadh earlier this month, which took place upon the conclusion of joint military drills, Riyadh and Islamabad continue to go to great lengths to remain engaged in each other's security.

The alliance's "reset" demonstrated that the Yemeni crisis is not the only issue which defines Saudi-Pakistani relations, and different strategies for reacting to the conflict did not end the "special relationship." Nonetheless, Pakistan's reasons for refusing to join Operation Decisive Storm are indicative of new geopolitical realities and new priorities for Pakistan's leadership which have perhaps compromised the two nations' previously held high level of trust. Moving forward, it is likely that the Gulf Arab monarchies--not only Saudi Arabia, but also the UAE--will raise further questions about Islamabad's commitment to GCC security in light of the Yemen disagreement. In fact, as ties between Pakistan and the UAE suffered from the fallout over Yemen last April, many analysts maintained that General Sharif's recent visit to Riyadh was in part aimed at reaching out to the Emirati leaders via Saudi Arabia, the GCC's powerhouse.

As Middle Eastern conflicts raise tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran, Pakistan will find it increasingly challenging to navigate through the turmoil while maintaining a meaningful balance in its relationships with Riyadh and Tehran. At the same time, Pakistan's own sectarian dynamics and wide resentment of Saudi Arabia on the part of large segments of Pakistan's population (who attribute their country's crises with Islamist extremism to the kingdom's influence over the span of several decades) lead many in Pakistan to see wisdom in a pivot from Saudi Arabia to the Far East. Of course, looming in the background is Riyadh's warming relationship with Delhi, a negative geopolitical development from Islamabad's perspective that could influence the future of Saudi-Pakistani relations.

Pakistan is therefore likely to continue exploring opportunities to deepen relations with non-Arab countries such as China and Iran while Indian-Saudi ties also grow. By the same token, Riyadh will want to avoid alienating Islamabad, as the Saudis face a host of growing domestic and regional security challenges in which Pakistan's manpower and diplomatic influence could well suit Saudi interests. Saudi Arabia and Pakistan will remain close allies, but despite the "reset" earlier this month, the evolving Saudi-Pakistani alliance will likely face unforeseen complications in the future.

This article was published by The National Interest on November 19, 2015

Giorgio Cafiero is the co-founder of Gulf State Analytics. Daniel Wagner is the CEO of Country Risk Solutions.
 

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http://in.reuters.com/article/2015/11/23/britain-defence-cuts-idINU8N11M01A20151123

Deals | Mon Nov 23, 2015 9:05pm IST
Related: Regulatory News

Britain says to boost defence spending, cut ministry jobs

LONDON

Nov 23 Britain said on Monday it would boost investment in defence and security to respond to a growing range of threats, but would also need to cut defence ministry civilian staff.

In a Strategic Defence and Security Review, the government said it would slash civilian staff by 30 percent and sell off large chunks of the ministry's estate to help pay for its security and defence plans over the next five years.

Replacing Britain's nuclear submarine fleet would cost 31 billion pounds ($47.04 billion), the review said, 6 billion pounds more than an earlier estimate. ($1 = 0.6590 pounds) (Reporting by Kylie MacLellan and Sarah Young, editing by Elizabeth Piper)

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Britain sells land, cuts civilian staff to buy defense hardware

By Thomas Penny, Benjamin Katz and Bloomberg
Bloomberg
November 23, 2015, 6:20 PM

LONDON - Britain's Ministry of Defence will sell off land, cut civilian staff and extend the lifespan of existing equipment in order to invest in new aircraft and vehicles for the army, navy and air force in response to growing threats including terrorism.

The government plans to make 11 billion pounds ($17 billion) in efficiency savings in the budget for the military and intelligence services, it said in its Strategic Defense and Security Review published on Monday. Prime Minister David Cameron announced the details to lawmakers in London.

Cameron set out an extra 12 billion pounds of spending on equipment for the armed forces. Companies including Boeing, Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics are set to benefit, with orders for nine Boeing P8 torpedo-fitted maritime patrol aircraft, a tripling of the pace of deliveries of the Lightning F-35 jet up to 2023, and the inclusion of almost 600 Scout armored vehicles in two new rapid-deployment "Strike Brigades" scheduled for operation by 2025.

"The bottom line of our national security strategy must be the willingness and capability to use force where necessary," Cameron told lawmakers in the House of Commons. "These investments are an act of clear-eyed self interest to ensure our future prosperity and security."

The review's publication came as the United Kingdom faces a long fight against terrorism following the downing of a Russian passenger jet and deadly attacks in Paris, both claimed by Islamic State. On Sunday, Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne announced a 30 percent increase in the counter-terrorism budget, and Cameron said that on Thursday he'll spell out plans to extend British bombing raids against Islamic State to Syria from Iraq.

The number of civilian staff at the Defence Ministry will be reduced by 30 percent by 2015, taking the number to 41,000. Surplus military bases will also be sold off to raise money and release land for 55,000 homes to be constructed. The process of deciding which bases to sell is continuing, the ministry said.

The estimated cost of four submarines for the replacement for Britain's Trident nuclear-weapons system has risen to 31 billion pounds from 25 billion pounds estimated last year, the review said, with the first boat entering service in the 2030s. A further 10 billion pounds has been set aside for contingencies. Defence Minister Philip Dunne was still using the 25 billion-pound estimate in answer to a lawmaker's question last month.

The regular army will not fall below 82,000 men and women and the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force will be given funding to add an extra 700 personnel between them, the review said. It also committed Britain to ensuring "that a career in the armed forces can be balanced better with family life."

Britain cut its commitment to BAE Systems's Type 26 warship program, opting to purchase eight instead of 13. The reduction will allow work to start on designing a cheaper and more exportable frigate with less capability.

"We will design and build a new class of light, flexible general-purpose frigates," Cameron told lawmakers. "These will be more affordable than the Type 26, which will allow us to buy more of them for the Royal Navy so that by the 2030s we can further increase the total number of Royal Navy frigates and destroyers."

The reduction is a blow to BAE, which has been trying to export the Type 26 design to Australia, Canada and Germany. Cameron also announced the construction of another two offshore patrol vessels as part of a new national shipbuilding strategy review due next year, bringing the total to be constructed by BAE up to five.

That will help bridge Britain's naval industrial capabilities until construction on the first Type 26 begins. The United Kingdom, which currently operates four OPVs, intends to bring that number to 6, possibly retiring three of the existing vessels.

BAE also got a boost from a 10-year life extension for the RAF's Typhoon warplanes, built by the Eurofighter consortium of which the manufacturer is a part. The manufacturer also leads the construction of the replacement nuclear deterrent program and provides airframes and electronics for Lockheed's F-35 jets.

"Today's announcement provides clarity on the U.K. government's strategic priorities and provides continuity and stability for our business," BAE Chief Executive Officer Ian King said in a statement. "An increased budget for defense equipment overall includes significant investments in military aerospace, maritime, cyber and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities and ongoing support for defense exports."

---

Bloomberg's Svenja O'Donnell and Robert Hutton contributed.
 

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http://www.koreaobserver.com/s-koreas-nuclear-envoy-in-beijing-for-talks-on-n-korea-58938/

S. Korea’s nuclear envoy in Beijing for talks on N. Korea

November 24, 2015
•by Yonhap News

SEOUL, Nov. 24 (Yonhap) — South Korea’s chief nuclear envoy began a two-day trip to Beijing on Tuesday for consultations on ways to resume talks with North Korea.

Hwang Joon-kook, special representative for Korean Peninsula peace and security affairs, plans to hold talks with Wu Dawei, China’s point man on Korea, later in the day.

“The two sides will discuss the issue of restarting meaningful denuclearization talks and strengthening sanctions and pressure (on Pyongyang),” a government official said.

He stressed the importance of China’s “constructive role” in dealing with North Korea which can carry out provocative acts anytime.

The Foreign Ministry said Hwang’s trip to Beijing this time is intended for “routine consultations” between the two countries, but it comes amid signs that Pyongyang-Beijing ties are improving.

China sent Liu Yunshan, a high-level Chinese communist party official, to Pyongyang last month as a special delegate to a major anniversary event.

lcd@yna.co.kr

(END)
 

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http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...nnections-to-the-Islamic-State/8911448289389/

North Korea denies connections to the Islamic State

North Korea lashed out at the South’s spy agency, saying its main work was to encourage hostility and interfere with improvements in North-South relations.

By Elizabeth Shim | Nov. 23, 2015 at 9:49 AM

SEOUL, Nov. 23 (UPI) -- North Korea denied connections to the Islamic State on Monday while claiming South Korea's parliament had alleged Pyongyang has ties to the group also identified as Daesh, ISIS and ISIL.

Pyongyang's state-controlled media outlet Uriminzokkiri stated Seoul's National Assembly Intelligence Committee had said Nov. 18 that North Korea has possible ties to IS, but "they have not found concrete evidence." North Korea added the report was "slander and fabrications about the unitary people [of North and South Korea]," Yonhap reported.

On Nov. 17, North Korea had sent a message of condolence regarding the Paris attacks to French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius.

North Korea lashed out at the South's spy agency, saying its main work was to encourage hostility and interfere with improvements in North-South relations.

"The South Korea authorities are using the National Intelligence Service to push our two peoples to fight against each other by carelessly tossing around claims of connections to terrorist groups," Pyongyang said in the statement.

North Korea also said Seoul's opposition to Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program was "anti-North Korea" while the South engages in everyday exercises with "foreign forces" on an invasion of the North.

"Not only are the two-faced South Korean authorities throwing cold water on the improved atmospherics of North-South relations, but affairs could relapse to tensions that occurred prior to the August agreement," North Korea said, urging "an end" to the South's speculations about links to terrorist groups.

The claims could be true. North Korea has been a staunch ally of the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad, opposed by the IS, and the two countries have cultivated military ties for many years. Pyongyang helped Syria build a nuclear facility destroyed by an Israeli air raid in 2007, and in September Syria dedicated a park to former North Korean leader Kim Il Sung.

But under Kim Jong Un, the fate of North Korea's cadres is more uncertain than in previous regimes.

A source knowledgeable on the Kim leadership told Yonhap on Monday that Kim has purged more than 100 officials since assuming power in December 2011. On average, Kim has purged between 20-30 people per year.

Defections have increased among high-ranking officials, the source said, adding Kim has no respect for older officials, using derogatory terms when addressing them during direct confrontations.

Kim's power base is not stable, the source said.
 

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http://asia.nikkei.com/Politics-Eco...peculiar-Chinese-naval-ship-sails-near-islets

November 24, 2015 3:45 am JST

East China Sea

Tokyo on guard after 'peculiar' Chinese naval ship sails near islets

1123N-China-Navy_article_main_image.jpg

http://asia.nikkei.com/var/site_cac...ng-GB/1123N-China-Navy_article_main_image.jpg
A Chinese surveillance ship was seen sailing near disputed East China Sea islets earlier this month. (Courtesy of Japan Ministry of Defense)

TOKYO -- Japanese officials are pondering the meaning of a Chinese navy spy ship's passage near disputed East China Sea islets, a move some think is connected with Beijing's self-declared air defense identification zone (ADIZ) over that body of water.

A Japanese P-3C reconnaissance plane spotted the Dongdiao-class surveillance vessel, pennant number 855, on the evening of Nov. 11 south of the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands, which the Chinese claim and call the Diaoyu.

Chinese maritime police are not an uncommon sight in these waters, but this marked the first time that a People's Liberation Army Navy vessel was seen sailing there.

The ship gave an evasive response when asked the purpose of its passage. It left the area the following night.

Japan's Defense Ministry went public with the ship's "peculiar" activity. What caught officials' eye was its route. The vessel sailed one-and-a-half laps through the waters from east to west before departing westward.

Officials say it followed part of the boundary of China's East China Sea ADIZ, which Beijing unilaterally declared in 2013 and covers the islands, overlapping Japan's ADIZ. Such zones are meant to provide advanced notice of whether planes approaching territorial airspace come as friends or foes.

A government source speculates that China was "trying to flex its muscles." The move has made Japanese defense officials uneasy. Should Chinese warships return to the area regularly, Japan will have to step up its patrols, raising the risk of an inadvertent clash.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei insisted that the Chinese navy's activities are in complete accordance with international law, but he did not elaborate on the spy ship's purpose for sailing near the islands.

Officials within the Japanese government are not sure that the vessel was intentionally following the zone. With Beijing's intentions a mystery, Japan is expected to keep a closer watch on the area.

(Nikkei)
.
 

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http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151125/eu--tunisia-explosion-433ff608ce.html

Tunisia declares state of emergency after bus blast kills 12

Nov 24, 7:31 PM (ET)
By BOUAZZA BEN BOUAZZA and ANGELA CHARLTON

(AP) Ambulances and police vans are seen at the scene of a bus explosion in the center of...
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TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — Tunisia's president declared a 30-day state of emergency across the country and imposed an overnight curfew for the capital Tuesday after an explosion struck a bus carrying members of the presidential guard, killing at least 12 people and wounding 20 others.

The government described it as a terrorist attack. The blast on a tree-lined avenue in the heart of Tunis is a new blow to a country that is seen as a model for the region but has struggled against Islamic extremist violence. Radical gunmen staged two attacks earlier this year that killed 60 people, devastated the tourism industry and rattled this young democracy.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack against the presidential guard, an elite security force that protects only the president.

President Beji Caid Essebsi, who wasn't in the bus at the time, declared the state of emergency and curfew on the Tunis region. He convened an emergency meeting of his security council for Wednesday morning.

(AP) An ambulance rushes to the scene of a bus explosion in the center of the capital,...
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Speaking on national television, he said Tunisia is at "war against terrorism" and urged international cooperation against extremists who have killed hundreds around Europe and the Mideast in recent weeks, from Paris to Beirut to a Russian plane shot down over Egypt.

"I want to reassure the Tunisian people that we will vanquish terrorism," he said.

Police fanned out throughout central Tunis after Tuesday's explosion, and ambulances rushed to the scene, evacuating wounded and dead. Top government ministers visited the scene of the attack after it was cordoned off by police.

Interior Ministry spokesman Walid Louguini told The Associated Press that at least 12 were killed and 20 wounded in the attack.

Witness Bassem Trifi, a human rights lawyer, said the explosion hit the driver's side of the bus, describing a "catastrophic" scene.

(AP) An ambulance rushes to the scene of a bus explosion in the center of the capital,...
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"I saw at least five corpses on the ground," he told the AP. "This was not an ordinary explosion."

The attack came days after authorities visibly increased the security level in the capital and deployed security forces in unusually high numbers.

Earlier this month, Tunisian authorities announced the dismantling of a cell that it said had planned attacks at police stations and hotels in the seaside city of Sousse, about 150 kilometers (95 miles) southeast of Tunis. Sousse was one of the targets of attacks earlier this year.

State Department spokesman Mark Toner, speaking in Washington, said the U.S. government was still seeking details on what happened in Tunis, but added, "We strongly condemn the attack."

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, visiting Tunis earlier this month, pledged expanded economic and security support for Tunisia, whose popular uprising unleashed the democracy movements across the region in 2011 that became known as the Arab Spring.

Kerry said the U.S. and Tunisia would soon begin negotiations on a major loan guarantee and were discussing expanded military cooperation, including intelligence sharing and the possible use of drones to collect information about potential threats. A U.S. military team was expected in Tunisia around late November to begin those talks.

Tunisia is the only Arab Spring country to have solidified a new democracy, but it is facing serious economic and security challenges.

Tunisia's tourism industry has been hit especially hard this year. Shootings at a luxury beach hotel in Sousse last June killed 38 people, mostly tourists, while in March, an attack by Islamist extremists at Tunisia's famed Bardo museum near the capital killed 22 people.

The attack came two weeks before a group of Tunisians heads to Oslo to receive this year's Nobel Peace Prize, awarded to the country's National Dialogue Quartet for negotiations that rescued the country's fledgling democracy from a constitutional crisis.

Tunisia's influential Islamist party also denounced the explosion, and urged Tunisians to unite behind the security forces as they hunt for the perpetrators.

"Tunisia is targeted because it is a democracy and represents a model of moderate Islam," it said.

The U.N. Security Council "stressed that no terrorist attack can reverse the path of Tunisia towards democracy and its efforts towards economic recovery and development."

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the United Nations "will continue to stand with the people of Tunisia as they confront the scourge of terrorism and continue to consolidate and strengthen their democracy."

---

Charlton reported from Paris. Matthew Lee in Washington also contributed.
 

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http://apnews.myway.com/article/20151125/eu-russia-ukraine-1c15c54042.html

Russia halting gas supplies to Ukraine

Nov 25, 3:22 AM (ET)

MOSCOW (AP) — Russia's state-controlled gas company is halting supplies to Ukraine, its chief executive said Wednesday, less than two months after the two countries struck an EU-sponsored deal.

Gazprom's CEO Alexei Miller said Russia sent the last shipment to Ukraine at 10 a.m. local time on Wednesday and send no more because Ukraine has not paid in advance for future supplies.

Russia resumed gas shipments to Ukraine less than two months ago after the two countries signed an EU-brokered deal ensuring supplies through March.

Miller on Wednesday warned Ukraine and Europe of possible gas disruptions following the cut-off.

Ukraine's "refusal to buy Russian gas threatens a safe gas transit to Europe through Ukraine and gas supplies to Ukraine consumers in the coming winter," he said.

The Gazprom chief said Ukraine had been buying up gas to store for the coming winter in the past two months but said it was not enough to get it through the winter.

Past gas disputes between Russia and Ukraine have led to cutoffs. One standoff in 2009 caused serious disruptions in shipments EU countries in the dead of winter.

Temperatures in Ukraine where most homes rely on piped gas for central heating were below freezing Wednesday morning.

Russia's supplies to Ukraine recommenced in early October after Gazprom received $234 million out of a promised $500 million prepayment from Kiev. Under the deal, Russia lowered the price it charged Ukraine to the same level granted to neighboring countries, from $251 per 1,000 cubic meters to about $230.

Russia's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in March 2014 and its support for separatist rebels in the east soured relations between the two countries. Ukraine has since been trying to cut its dependence on Russia gas, buying from European nations which had bought it from Russia at a lower price.
 

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Militant attacks abroad a diplomatic quandary for China's Xi

Nov 25, 1:00 AM (ET)
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN

(AP) In this Nov. 20, 2015 file photo, Mali troopers assist a hostage, center, to...
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BEIJING (AP) — The killings of Chinese citizens by Islamic militants in Syria and Mali place President Xi Jinping in a quandary: How can Beijing respond effectively without betraying its strict stance against intervention?

The dilemma underscores the tension between China's desire to be seen as a leading global power and its desire to maintain its own independent foreign policy while shunning the U.S.-led Western liberal democratic political agenda.

How Xi will square that ideological circle and what concrete actions he'll take in response could mark an inflection point in Chinese diplomacy. More likely, analysts say, he'll stick to China's long-established neutrality while possibly taking limited behind-the-scenes measures to help in the global campaign against Islamic extremists.

"For China, intervention would be a real game-changer," said Australian National Security College expert Michael Clarke. "Frankly, I think Xi is in a very difficult position here."

(AP) In this Jan. 29, 2008 file photo, Chinese U.N. peacekeepers guard engineers...
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Regardless of what it chooses to do, China has increasingly found itself confronted by Islamic militant groups.

Three Chinese — all high-ranking executives with the state-owned China Railway Construction Corp.'s international group — were among the 19 victims of last week's attack on the Radisson Blu hotel in Mali's capital, Bamako. The al-Qaida-linked group known as Al-Mourabitoun — or The Sentinels — has claimed responsibility for the attack.

That followed the killing of 50-year-old Beijing native Fan Jinghui by Islamic State group extremists. Xi vowed to bring Fan's killers to justice, but China has offered no details on how it plans to do so.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters Monday that China was working to "increase our emergency reaction and early warning capabilities" to confront threats against overseas personnel and assets.

Calls online from the Chinese public dismissing Beijing's response and calling for action against militants have been suppressed by China's Internet censors. With more Chinese than ever traveling abroad for work, study and travel, the government has been under growing pressure to identify threats and ensure their safety through its consulates and embassies.

(AP) In this Nov. 14, 2014 file photo, a Chinese medical contingent of more than...
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Al-Qaida, and more recently IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, have also threatened China over what they call the oppression of the Muslim Turkic Uighur people native to the northwestern region of Xinjiang. China says it is fighting a separatist insurgency in Xinjiang, and has been eager to equate that fight with the international struggle against extremist groups including IS and al-Qaida. Some critics see little evidence of substantial links between China's Muslim Uighur groups and groups such as IS.

Chinese forces, some equipped with flamethrowers, recently concluded a 56-day operation to kill or capture 30 suspects in a deadly attack on a Xinjiang coal mine. China blamed the attack on insurgents it says were directly led by an unidentified overseas group.

A top Xinjiang official, Xi Hairong, this week warned that the continuing influence of "pan-Islamism and pan-Turkism thoughts" placed Xinjiang in "an active period for violent and terrorist activities and an acute period in the battle against separatists."

China says Uighur extremists have links to al-Qaida and that some have traveled to Syria to fight alongside IS, although Clarke and other outside observers question those claims.

And while China's campaign against Uighur extremism has been relentless, it has shown no appetite to apply such tactics when threatened abroad.

(AP) In this Monday, Sept. 28, 2015 file photo, China's President Xi Jinping...
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Under Mao Zedong, China was a frontline combatant in global ideological battles, contributing to insurgencies in Africa and vying with both the Soviets and the West for influence in developing nations.

However, since the 1990s Beijing has remained on the sidelines in most major global security crises, often abstaining at the United Nations Security Council or following Russia's lead in opposing actions such as the 2003 Iraq invasion.

Beijing felt especially burnt by its failure to oppose U.N. action in Libya that paved the way for NATO military action. When it came to Syria, Beijing was unmoving in its opposition to intervention, a stance it maintained even after Russia recently committed forces to defend the Syrian regime.

China's objection to humanitarian interventions also has roots in fears of foreign interference in its own domestic affairs, particularly in Xinjiang and Tibet, where Beijing is largely seen as an occupying power. China is also hyper-vigilant about the introduction of Western concepts of democracy and civil rights into its own society and lashes out at all criticisms of the one-party state's human rights abuses.

China has no particular affection for Bashar al-Assad, but doesn't want to be seen as potentially supporting Washington's position that he must give up power before IS can be defeated and the civil war ended, Clarke said. Uncertainty about how to rank the importance of its various foreign policy goals contributes to its inaction, he said.

(AP) In this Nov. 14, 2014 file photo, a Chinese medical contingent of more than...
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George Washington University professor David Shambaugh described the self-imposed limits on China's global political influence in his 2013 book "China Goes Global: The Partial Power." Chinese diplomacy, Shambaugh wrote, is "hesitant, risk-averse, and narrowly self-interested."

"China often makes known what it is against, but rarely what it is for," the longtime China watcher wrote.

Such attitudes dictate that, despite pressure on the government to respond to recent incidents, Beijing is unlikely to do so "in a meaningful way," said Phillip Potter, a foreign policy and international relations expert at the University of Virginia who studies Chinese security policy.

"I think we are much more likely to see some increase in behind-the-scenes cooperation, but certainly nothing that would rise to the level of the use of force against Islamic State," Potter said.

The Communist Party's heavy-handed control of the media and public discourse means it can tone down coverage of attacks on Chinese and limit domestic pressure to act, Potter said. Tight border controls and other measures also limit its reliance on outside powers to prevent radicalized Muslims from returning to carry out attacks like the ones in Paris this month, he said.

Still, Xi has expanded his global influence by pursuing a vigorous diplomatic agenda. To do nothing in the face of militant attacks abroad could be seen as a sign of weakness both at home and internationally.

Ultimately, Xi will likely opt for a low-key response, such as providing military aid to Iraq's beleaguered government, Clarke said.

"If China remains aloof, questions will continue as to whether China is in fact ready to play a global role."
 
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