WAR 2-11-2017-to-02-17-2017_____****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

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https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/rs-28-sarmat-future-us-nuclear-triad/

The RS-28 Sarmat and the future US nuclear triad

16 Feb 2017 | Malcolm Davis

Russian media recently claimed that the Federation’s new intercontinental ballistic missile will be able to penetrate even America’s most effective defence systems—but are they right? Russia claims the new RS-28 Sarmat heavy ICBM, being introduced as part of its nuclear modernisation, can wipe out an area ‘the size of Texas or France’. They may be referring to the missile being able to deliver nuclear weapons via the South Pole rather than the traditional ‘over the north pole’ route. It may also be typical Russian grandstanding in an effort to intimidate. Whilst the RS-28 will certainly get US planners thinking about nuclear modernisation, it seems unlikely that such hyperbole will have US leaders rushing for the nuclear bunkers.

For starters, the US missile early warning systems means it is not blind to its southern approaches, as it has radars on the east and west coasts that provide coverage out to 5,500 km along the southern approaches to North America. In addition, the US maintains effective space-based missile early warning systems which detect launches. There’s no way the Russians would be able to attack with sufficient surprise to catch US nuclear forces on the ground or to decapitate the US political leadership. In any case, the US always keeps sufficient numbers of ballistic missile submarines at sea to ensure devastating retaliation.

The Russians claim their aim is to circumvent US missile defences. Yet going the long-way round over the South Pole seems unnecessary given US national missile defence efforts are designed to respond to limited attacks from nuclear armed rogues like North Korea, and potentially in the future, Iran. The US national missile defence capability has just thirty US ground-based interceptors (GBI) deployed in Alaska and California and their effectiveness is very questionable. They could not prevent a large scale Russian nuclear attack. So building large, heavy ICBMs to get around almost non-existent missile defence systems—whichever way the warheads fly—seems a curious thing to do and it suggests the Russians themselves lack a clear rationale for deploying such a weapon. As my colleague, Rod Lyon, has noted, such a missile generates destabilising dynamics that forces the Russians to fire first in a crisis.

The real significance of the RS-28 Sarmat is the effect it will generate on debates over US nuclear force modernisation. It’s likely to begin deployment next year when debate over replacing the aging US Minuteman III force will be gathering pace with the Trump Administration. In characteristic fashion President Trump has tweeted that the US must ‘greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear capability’, amid intense debate within US nuclear circles on issues such as the wisdom of maintaining a ‘launch on warning’ posture, and the continuing relevance of land-based ICBMs. It’s not clear exactly what Trump’s nuclear tweet may mean in the real world of US force structure planning, not to mention budgetary considerations, however Russian nuclear force modernisation is directly relevant to US nuclear policy choices.

If the US decides to stick with the ‘triad’, that comprises land-based ICBMs, manned bombers and ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) carrying ballistic missiles, the RS-28 deployment could force the US to take another look at mobile land-based missiles, last considered during the MX basing studies in the Reagan era, rather than continuing with the current vulnerable silo-based weapons. After all, it is the vulnerability of the silo-based ICBMs that mandates a rapid response ‘launch on warning’ posture to ensure a credible US deterrent. That increases the risk of inadvertent nuclear war, particularly if Russia’s persistence with heavy MIRVed ICBMs accentuates escalatory pressures in a crisis.

Minimising the risk of nuclear decapitation of one or two legs of the triad (the SSBNs are largely invulnerable), or against political leadership and nuclear command and control, must be a key consideration in this debate. Given this, it may be simpler to take this opportunity to break with the traditional structure of a triad, and go instead towards a ‘dyad’ of relatively invulnerable SSBNs and bombers, with the introduction of around 100 B-21 Raider bombers from the late 2020s. Getting rid of the land-based ICBMs reduces pressure for the US to maintain the risky ‘launch-on-warning’ posture because most of the US warheads will be safely tucked away on submarines at sea that are virtually impossible to find or track. Furthermore, the manned bombers could be dispersed reducing their vulnerability too. There are also measures the US could take to protect its political leadership, further reducing the RS-28’s ability to deliver an effective first strike against the US.

The end result may be that the big Russian ICBM will have few targets left to hit. So the RS-28 Sarmat may ironically force badly needed US nuclear posture change that strengthens US deterrence, and leaves the Russian nuclear forces less credible.

AUTHOR
Malcolm Davis is a senior analyst at ASPI. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/ori...n-turkish-general-versus-qasem-soleimani.html

Will Raqqa be site for clash of titan generals?

In this tale of two men, both are national heroes backed by unmatched political and popular support while commanding the best-equipped, most elite armed units in Iraq and Syria. More topically, both are now closely following the developments at al-Bab and preparing for their aftermath.

Author: Metin Gurcan
Posted: February 15, 2017
Translator: Timur Göksel
Comments 13

One of the two people I am talking about is already a well-known social phenomenon: Gen. Qasem Soleimani, known as “Iran’s sword in the Middle East.” Since 1988, he has been commanding the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. His every visit to Iraq and Syria becomes a social media event, with all his pictures and statements going viral.

Born in 1957 in a mountain village of Kirman province in southeast Iran, he worked in construction for a while and then joined the Revolutionary Guard. His official education is limited to elementary school.

The star of Soleimani, who proved his loyalty to the Iranian regime and revolution with his success in putting down the 1979 Kurdish uprising at Mahabad, truly shone in the Iran-Iraq War. Currently, the Iranian security bureaucracy is managed by generals who, like Soleimani, proved themselves in that war while amassing significant combat experience. The links between these generals set the course in Iran’s domestic politics and now also Iran’s policies in Iraq and Syria.

Even a brief Google search will yield enough information on Soleimani's reputation and achievements to impress anyone. For some, he is the shadow commander of Iran. For others, he is the conqueror of Aleppo — lately, he has been called "the architect of the victory at Mosul.”

But today Soleimani has a rival in Iraq and especially in Syria: Lt. Gen. Zekai Aksakalli, commander of the Turkish Special Forces (TSF), who is directly attached to the chief of general staff.

Aksakalli has been commanding the TSF, the Turkish military’s most elite unit, since 2013. His already impeccable reputation skyrocketed during the July 15 abortive coup, when he avoided capture by the coup plotters, then played a major role in thwarting the attempt. Because of his major success and the gratitude felt toward him, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general in July, even though rumors had circulated that he was going to retire in August.

Aksakalli was born in the eastern Turkish city of Erzurum in 1962. After finishing high school, he enrolled in the Army War Academy, where he made global achievements in cross-country track competitions. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 1984 and spent most of his career in commando units and combating the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) with the Special Forces Command, and then training the Azerbaijani military. He first became visible in the media in November 2014 when he visited the Azerbaijan-Armenia border. Photos of him aiming a sniper rifle became a hit in Turkish media. He was next seen on a national TV channel the night of the coup attempt, when his unyielding opposition to the coup attempt won the public’s admiration and confidence. Next, in August, we saw Aksakalli at Jarablus, Syria.

At Jarablus, Aksakalli was wearing standard military field fatigues with no rank insignia so he would appear to be a regular trooper to anyone looking through a scope from a distance. This month, Aksakalli was photographed observing the al-Bab region through binoculars, but this time he was dressed in military-type civilian clothes, as Soleimani does.

Today under Aksakalli, the TSF maintains about 15 liaison offices in Iraq’s Bashiqa, Zakho, Dahuk, Kanimasi and Bamerni. He is effectively in charge of the entire Operation Euphrates Shield.

Both commanders hail from modest rural backgrounds and have charismatic personalities. They don't have academic degrees and don’t conceal their nationalist inclinations. Both are supported by their own headquarters staff members who have been loyally serving them for a long time. Both are adored by the public and can count on full political support for their activities, especially in Syria. Both are tough soldiers who overcame many adversities in their military careers but also acquired impressive combat experience.

Both men excel in motivating their subordinates. They are experts in unconventional warfare. Their photos add to their charisma, but neither is a good orator. Both are strongly anti-US, and they see the United States as the source of all regional problems. However, that doesn’t make them pro-Russia, as their nationalist-independent ideologies are not a secret. Both prefer to be in the field instead of talking politics in Ankara and Tehran, constantly accessible to the media. Neither is really comfortable with rigid civilian political control. For example, in November, when the parliamentary inquiry commission on the coup attempt invited Aksakalli to come to Ankara to testify, he refused, saying, “I am fighting in Syria.”

It is well-known that Soleimani has been having persistent disagreements with civilian decision-makers in Tehran over the status, functions and responsibilities of Shiite militias in Iraq.

Meanwhile, the biggest difference between the two commanders is that they are commanding in Syria and Iraq the elite forces of two rival countries and their allied indigenous armed militias — making them rivals in the field. Although there has not been any armed confrontation between the national units and local militias they command, developments in northern Syria signal that this probability is not too far off.

Their military careers are not similar. Aksakalli is a uniformed military man who served in conventional units of the Turkish army, obedient to the chain of command with strict field discipline. Soleimani, however, frequently takes personal initiatives and achieved amazing status as a paramilitary civilian who could solve problems by himself.

Although it may sound much too speculative at this point, I think one way or another the paths of Aksakalli and Soleimani will eventually cross for the first time in northern Syria, particularly around Raqqa. If Turkey heads toward Raqqa after the capture of al-Bab, will there be clashes between the Shiite militias commanded by Soleimani and the Sunni Free Syrian Army elements controlled by Aksakalli?

I admit, it may difficult to answer now. But six months ago I was laughing off such an eventuality, and now I am seriously scratching my head over it.


Metin Gurcan, Columnist
Metin Gurcan is a columnist for Al-Monitor's Turkey Pulse. He served in Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Iraq as a Turkish military adviser between 2002-2008. Resigned from the military, he is now an Istanbul...
 

Housecarl

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http://www.military.com/daily-news/...-up-6-brigades-advise-foreign-militaries.html

Army Stands Up 6 Brigades to Advise Foreign Militaries

Military.com | Feb 16, 2017 | by Matthew Cox
Comments 24

The U.S. Army announced Thursday the creation of six new brigades designed to take on the service's growing mission of training and advising foreign militaries.

The first of six planned units known as Security Force Assistance Brigades, or SFABs, as well as the new Military Advisor Training Academy will be established at Fort Benning, Georgia, starting in October, according to an Army press release
The brigades are the service's first permanent units whose core mission is conducting security cooperation activities, allowing quick response to combatant commander requirements, the release states.

Until now, the service has been deploying combat units to train, advise and assist security forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and other partner nations. The new units are designed to enhance the readiness of the Army by reducing demand for existing brigade combat teams to conduct security force assistance operations, preserving BCT readiness for full-spectrum contingency operations, according to the release.

The new units have an added benefit of serving as the framework of a brigade combat team that could rapidly expand if needed to meet future requirements, according to Lt. Gen. Joseph Anderson, Army chief of operations.

"The SFABs can serve a dual purpose," Anderson said. "They are the day-to-day experts combatant commanders need to train, advise and assist our partners overseas, but they can serve also as a standing chain of command for rapidly expanding the Army."

These specialty units will be designed on the infantry and armored brigade combat team, or BCT, model and consist of approximately 500 senior officers and noncommissioned officers who will have the proven expertise to train and advise foreign security forces from small units up through ministerial levels, according to the release.

The Army will also create a Military Advisor Training Academy at Benning to properly train and resource the new brigades with the skills and expertise needed to conduct advise and assist functions, as well as develop or refine policies and procedures.

The academy will provide the foundational training for all six brigades planned to be created across the service. As the Army's proponent for brigade-level Security Force Assistance, the Maneuver Center of Excellence will oversee the academy.

"SFABs will benefit the Army by providing trained and accessible resources for support to missions such as foreign internal defense, stabilization operations, security force assistance and counterinsurgency operations," Anderson said.

-- Matthew Cox can be reached at matthew.cox@military.com.

-----

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http://www.military.com/daily-news/...ers-return-home-secretive-africa-mission.html

Fort Bragg Soldiers Return Home After Secretive Africa Mission

The Fayetteville Observer, N.C. | Feb 13, 2017 | by Drew Brooks
Comments 25

More than 80 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division quietly deployed in late September.

Unlike most missions undertaken by conventional Army forces, this one came with nearly no fanfare. There was no announcement the troops would be leaving. And officials on Fort Bragg, as well as families of the soldiers, were instructed to keep the mission quiet.

Deploying on little notice, the soldiers -- with the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade -- briefly trained at Fort Bragg and Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point before leaving for Africa to support Combined Joint Task Force -- Horn of Africa.

Over the weekend the soldiers returned to Fort Bragg, welcomed by family and friends at Green Ramp, and broke their silence.

For the past five months, the detachment of 85 soldiers provided aviation, personnel recovery and casualty evacuation capabilities to the Combined Joint Task Force -- Horn of Africa mission, which spans an area roughly the size of the eastern United States.

Comprised of soldiers from F Company, 2nd Assault Helicopter Battalion and B Company, 3rd General Aviation Support Battalion, the detachment included the Army's last pathfinder unit and crews that fly and serve with the 82nd Airborne Division's CH-47 Chinook helicopter company.

The mission ends an era for the pathfinders of F Company -- representing the last time the unit was called to action before its inactivation later this month.

"This was the last hurrah," said Sgt. Justin Whitney, one of the deployed pathfinders. "But at least we got a hurrah in."


The first of four Air Force C-5 Galaxy aircraft carrying the detachment and the soldiers' equipment -- including four CH-47 Chinooks -- landed at Fort Bragg's Pope Field late Saturday. Inside the hulking plane were 25 soldiers and two of the bus-sized helicopters.

They were greeted by dozens of family and friends, many carrying balloons and homemade signs.

Col. Erik Gilbert, commander of the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade, and Col. Michael Fenzel, deputy commander for support of the 82nd Airborne Division, welcomed the soldiers.

"Back last fall, with very short notice -- less than six weeks' notice -- these troopers were told they might have to go to the Horn of Africa," Gilbert said.

The soldiers, in some cases, weren't able to say where they were going or what they would be doing, he said, explaining how the mission was kept a secret.

But with the soldiers home, and others returning over a span of several days, Gilbert said he could finally say the detachment provided critical, at times lifesaving support.

"You guys have represented the battalion, this brigade and more importantly this division with pride," he said. "We're all very, very proud of what you've accomplished."

Maj. Brad Deloach, who commanded the deployed detachment, said being in the 82nd Airborne Division -- and having part of the Global Response Force mission -- helped prepare the soldiers and their families for the short notice deployment.

The Global Response Force requires that part of the 82nd Airborne Division be ready to deploy anywhere in the world with little notice. Parts of the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade are constantly a part of that mission, in addition to their duties in supporting other missions around the globe.

"The families understand the GRF mission and they understand it's the 82nd Airborne," Deloach said. "It's anywhere in the world."

Once notified of the mission, officials quickly pulled the team together, merging the Chinook company with the pathfinders.

The new detachment trained together at Fort Bragg and Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point to prepare for their unique mission, which included working with Navy personnel based on ships off the coast of Africa.

While deployed, the soldiers were based at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, and filled a mission previously undertaken by Air Force pararescue units. They provided support to soldiers, Marines, sailors, airmen and international troops who serve as part of the combined joint task force.

That headquarters supports several missions in East Africa with a mix of conventional and special operations forces, countering violent extremist organizations, protecting U.S. personnel and facilities, promoting regional stability and developing partner forces on the continent.

Once deployed, Deloach said the biggest challenges came in traversing such a large area -- aviators had to know where every fuel stop was to ensure they could make it to their mission -- and staying on alert.

"It's a mental adjustment," he said of constantly being on call for five months.

But Whitney, one of the deployed pathfinders, said the mind-set was not too different from what his unit is used to.

"We're always ready to go," he said. "We're out the door in 15 minutes if needed. That's the lifestyle."

American pathfinder units were created in World War II by Gen. Jim Gavin, former commanding general of the 82nd Airborne Division. The units, formed from soldiers of the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, were tasked with jumping ahead of larger groups of paratroopers to mark drop zones and pinpoint enemy positions.

Whitney said it was an honor to be part of the final pathfinder mission. But it's also bittersweet knowing the pathfinder company will be inactivated following a Feb. 24 ceremony on Fort Bragg.

The Army is inactivating its pathfinder units as part of a larger force transformation.

For families, one of the biggest challenges was keeping the secrecy of the mission.

Dana Whitney said the questions about her husband never stopped.

"'Where's he at? What's he doing?'" were common questions, she said. In response, she could say little more than, "'He's gone. I can't say.'"

Dana said families were even instructed not to put their soldier's rank on care packages sent overseas. They also had to be careful on social media.

"We had to tiptoe around what we said to people," she said. "It made it a little more stressful, but thankfully he was still able to talk to us."

As Dana waited, the couple's 4-year-old daughter, Ruby, made her father an early Valentine.

"I am excited, I am anxious, I am nervous -- everything rolled into one," Dana said. "I don't know if I can actually put it into words."

Nearby, Sara Boswell was anxiously waiting to reintroduce 5 1/2-month-old Leo to his helicopter pilot father, 1st Lt. Marcus Boswell.
Leo was 2 weeks old when his father left for Africa.

The last five months had been tiring, Sara said. But the family spoke often, and Sara said she was excited to show her husband how much their son has grown.

"He's safe. He's happy. I can't even think straight right now," she said. "I'm overwhelmingly proud of him."

Deloach's parents, John and Georgie of Chapin, South Carolina, said they were proud of what their son and his soldiers were able to accomplish, but even happier to have him home.

Georgie said her son was well-trained and confident, and she had no doubt the unit would return to Fort Bragg proudly.

She said the secrecy of the mission was a blessing in disguise -- the less she knew, the less she worried.

Waiting at Green Ramp with Deloach's wife, Rebecca, and their children, the family said they were excited to get their soldier back.

"What a beautiful day," John said. "We would love to have him 15 minutes away and see him every day, but we're prouder of what he does, what his family means to him and what he does for this country."
 

Housecarl

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Death toll goes further up:


Preston Phillips Verified account þ@PrestonTVNews 1m1 minute ago

#breaking: ISIS suicide bomber kills 75, hurts more than 200 in Pakistan. 20 women, 9 kids. 2nd deadly ISIS attack today, 1st in Baghdad.

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http://www.reuters.com/article/pakistan-blast-int-idUSKBN15W0NQ

Asia | Fri Feb 17, 2017 | 10:31am EST

Pakistan crackdown after suicide attack claimed by Islamic State

By Syed Raza Hassan | SEHWAN SHARIF, Pakistan

Pakistani security forces killed dozens of suspected militants on Friday, a day after Islamic State claimed a suicide bombing that killed more than 80 worshippers at a Sufi shrine, the biggest in a spate of attacks this week across the country.

The bombing at the famed Lal Shahbaz Qalandar shrine in southern Sindh province was Pakistan's deadliest attack for two years, killing at least 83 people and highlighting the threat of militant groups such as the Pakistani Taliban and Islamic State.

The nationwide crackdown was swift.

"Over 100 terrorists have been killed since last night and sizeable apprehensions also made," the military said in an operations update on Friday evening.

With authorities facing angry criticism for failing to tighten security before the shrine bomber struck, analysts warned that the wave of violence pointed to a major escalation in Islamist militants' attempts to destabilise the region.

"This is a virtual declaration of war against the state of Pakistan," said Imtiaz Gul, head of the independent Centre for Research and Security Studies in Islamabad.

With pressure growing for action, Pakistan demanded that neighbouring Afghanistan hand over 76 "terrorists" it said were sheltering over the border.

The bombings over five days have hit all four of Pakistan's provinces and two major cities, shaking a nascent sense that the worst of the country's militant violence may be in the past.

A series of military operations against insurgent groups operating in Pakistan had encouraged hopes that their leaders were scattered.

"But this has led to a degree of complacency within our civil-military leadership that perhaps they have completely destroyed these elements, or broken their back," Gul said.

If so, that impression has been shattered in recent days.

BLOOD AND TEARS
At Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, the white marble floor was still stained with blood on Friday, and a pile of shoes and slippers was heaped in the courtyard, many of them belonging to the dead.

Outside, protesters shouted slogans at police, who they said had failed to protect the shrine.

"I wish I could have been here and died in the blast last night," a devastated Ali Hussain told Reuters, sitting on the floor of the shrine.

He said that local Sufis had asked for more security after a separate bombing this week killed 13 people in the eastern city of Lahore, but said: "No one bothered to secure this place."

Anwer Ali, 25, rushed to the shrine after he heard the explosion, and described seeing dead bodies and chaos as people fled the scene.

"There were threats to the shrine. The Taliban had warned that they will attack here, but authorities didn't take it seriously," Ali said.

Sindh police chief A.D. Khawaja said on Friday that the death toll had reached 83 people with scores more wounded.

The attacks have once again raised questions over the influence of Islamic State in Pakistan, a nuclear-armed nation of 190 million people that has tense relations with its neighbours India and Afghanistan.

In the past two years, Islamic State has worked to build its "Khorasan province" encompassing Afghanistan and Pakistan, often helped by local radicals.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's foreign policy adviser Sartaj Aziz blamed Jamaat-ur-Ahrar (JuA), a Pakistani Taliban faction that has been linked to Islamic State, for the attack.

Most of the other recent attacks have been claimed by factions of the Pakistani Taliban, which is waging its own fight against the government but whose ranks have also cooperated with and sometimes defected to Islamic State.

That has led some observers to question whether the growing prominence of Islamic State actually represents a new threat - since its fighters were already operating under different names to attack government, army and minority faith targets, among others.

However, the increasing number of attacks claimed by Islamic State has raised pressure on authorities to show they are capable of containing the renewed violence.

Islamic State also said it was behind another shrine attack, in southwestern Baluchistan province, that killed at least 52 people last November. In October, it said it carried out an assault on a police training college, killing 59.

The shrine attack has heightened tensions with Afghanistan, after Pakistani officials said some militant leaders took shelter over the border. The accusation echoes similar criticism from Kabul aimed at Islamabad.

In a telephone call with Afghanistan's national security adviser, Aziz expressed concern that JuA was operating from Afghanistan and that Kabul had failed to act against them, according to a statement from his office.

On Friday, border crossings were closed and Afghan diplomats were summoned to military headquarters in Islamabad and given a list of 76 "most-wanted terrorists" that Pakistan demanded be captured and handed over, the army said.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Friday condemned the shrine attack on Twitter, calling Islamic State "a common enemy of Afghanistan & Pakistan".

(Additional reporting by Mehreen Zahra-Malik in ISLAMABAD, Haji Mujtaba in MIRAN SHAH, Jibran Ahmad in PESHAWAR, Gul Yusufzai in QUETTA and Saud Mehsud in DERA ISMAIL KHAN; Writing by Kay Johnson; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Louise Ireland)

Related Coverage
VIDEO: Pakistan mourns victims of shrine blast
Pakistan's Sufis defiant after Islamic State attack on shrine kills 83
 

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-turkey-idUSKBN15W0PQ

World News | Fri Feb 17, 2017 | 8:14am EST

Turkey says almost taken Syria's Bab, war monitor cites heavy toll

By Tulay Karadeniz and Angus McDowall | ANKARA/BEIRUT

Turkey's military said on Friday it was close to taking Syria's al-Bab from Islamic State, but a war monitor said the jihadists still controlled 90 percent of the town itself and that shelling and air strikes had killed dozens of civilians in recent days.

Al-Bab, an Islamic State stronghold 30 km (20 miles) from the Turkish border, has been a prime target since Turkey launched an incursion last August to push the jihadists from its frontier and prevent gains by a Kurdish militia also fighting them.

Taking control of the town would deepen Turkish influence in an area of Syria where it has already effectively created a buffer zone and allow Turkish forces to press on towards Raqqa, Islamic State's de facto capital in Syria.

"The operation to gain complete control of the al-Bab region has neared its end and the resistance of the Daesh terror group has largely been broken," the Turkish military statement said, using an Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

However, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based organization that monitors the war using a network of contacts, said Turkey's "Euphrates Shield" forces had not made much progress.

Islamic State still controls 90 percent of al-Bab town itself and Turkish shelling and air strikes had killed 45 civilians, including 18 children, during the past 48 hours, the Observatory said.

Turkish officials have repeatedly said that the al-Bab operation was taking longer than anticipated because of numbers of civilians still in the town and the care being taken not to harm them. It dropped leaflets on the town as long ago as December urging civilians to seek shelter.

Turkey believes a string of Islamic State gun and bomb attacks, including a mass shooting at an Istanbul nightclub on New Year's Eve, were planned from al-Bab and Raqqa, and has said clearing the town of militants is a national security priority.

STRAINED ALLIANCE
The military statement came as U.S. Marine Corps General and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Joseph Dunford visited the Incirlik air base in southern Turkey, used by the U.S.-led coalition in the fight against Islamic State.

Turkey is part of that coalition but relations with NATO ally Washington have been strained by U.S. support for the Kurdish YPG militia in the fight against Islamic State.

Turkey views the YPG as a hostile force and an extension of the PKK, a Kurdish militant group that has waged an armed insurgency against the Turkish state for over three decades.

"It is time the U.S. leadership made clear who they are cooperating with in their Syria policy," a senior Turkish government official told Reuters, when asked about the possibility of U.S. combat troops being deployed to Syria under President Donald Trump.

"U.S. soldiers are present in Syrian territory, and we saw the results. They trained the PKK-YPG, which we call a terrorist organization, gave them weapons and supported terrorist groups."

President Tayyip Erdogan has said the next target for the Turkish offensive should be Raqqa but that Arab forces, not the YPG, should be involved.

The Syrian Democratic Forces, an alliance dominated by the YPG, is in the middle of a multi-phased operation to encircle Raqqa, backed by air strikes and special ground forces from the U.S.-led coalition.

(Additional reporting by Orhan Coskun and Ece Toksabay; Writing by Nick Tattersall; Editing by Daren Butler and Angus MacSwan)

Related Coverage
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U.S., Russia military ties depend on Syrian opposition stance: source
Russia calls Romania 'a clear threat' and NATO outpost: Ifax
Russia tells White House it will not return Crimea to Ukraine
 

Housecarl

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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-usa-g-idUSKBN15W0TL

World News | Fri Feb 17, 2017 | 10:39am EST

China says common interests outweigh differences with U.S.

The common interests between China and the United States far outweigh their differences, China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi told U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Friday in their first face-to-face meeting since Tillerson took up his job.

U.S. President Donald Trump angered Beijing in December by talking to the president of Taiwan and saying the United States did not have to stick to the "one China" policy, under which Washington acknowledges the Chinese position that there is only one China and Taiwan is part of it.

In a phone call with Chinese leader Xi Jinping last week, Trump changed tack and agreed to honor the "one China" policy, a major diplomatic boost for Beijing, which brooks no criticism of its claim to self-ruled Taiwan.

However, several areas of disagreement between the two countries, such as currency, trade, the South China Sea and North Korea, were not mentioned in public statements on the telephone conversation.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry statement released after Wang met Tillerson on the sidelines of a meeting of foreign ministers of the G20 top economies in the German city of Bonn, made no specific mention of where the two disagree.

Wang said the Xi-Trump call was extremely important, and that the two countries should promote even better relations.

"China and the United States have joint responsibility to maintain global stability and promote global prosperity, and both sides' joint interests are far greater than their differences," the statement paraphrased Wang as saying.

The two countries should increase mutual trust, deepen cooperation and ensure that under Trump they make even greater contributions to global peace and prosperity, Wang added.

The two also had a "deep exchange of views" on the North Korean nuclear issue, the statement said, without giving details.

Tillerson on Friday urged China to do all it could to moderate North Korea's destabilizing behavior after Sunday's ballistic missile test by Pyongyang, Tillerson's spokesman Mark Toner said after the Wang meeting.

(Reporting by Philip Wen, Ben Blanchard and Christian Shepherd; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Toby Chopra)

Related Coverage
China tells U.S. common interests outweigh differences
U.S. urges China to use 'all tools' to moderate North Korea's behavior
 

Housecarl

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http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world...-bombers/ar-AAn2F4q?li=AA4Zpp&ocid=spartanntp

11 dead as Nigerian troops repel Boko Haram suicide bombers

By HARUNA UMAR and ISMAIL ALFA ABDULRAHIM, Associated Press
2 hrs ago

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — Battling multiple bombers strapped with suicide vests, Nigerian troops and civilian self-defense fighters on Friday repelled the fiercest Boko Haram extremist attack in months on the key northeastern city of Maiduguri. Nine bombers and two civilians were killed, according to witnesses, soldiers and police.

The United Nations said the attackers targeted refugees in the city that is the birthplace of the Islamic uprising and the headquarters of the military campaign to halt it.

Friday's targets were a site hosting more than 9,000 refugees and a garage where some have gathered to get transportation home, Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for the U.N. secretary general, told reporters in New York. "These are not the first attacks affecting the most vulnerable people."

Residents in Maiduguri awoke to mighty explosions around midnight. Three female suicide bombers blew themselves up at a truck station, detonating vehicles at Muna Garage on the city's eastern outskirts, according to police Deputy Superintendent Victor Iskukwu.

Two civilians died in the blasts and seven self-defense fighters were wounded, witness Ayuba Ibrahim told The Associated Press.

"Most of the trucks that were loaded with goods for export to Chad and the border communities were destroyed, along with commodities worth millions of naira," Ibrahim said.

One blast occurred as people were trying to board the trucks, said resident Isa Mamman.

The attack also targeted a military checkpoint, according to Ahmed Satomi of the Borno State Emergency Management Agency.

Soldiers later fired at gunmen on motorcycles escorting other suicide bombers, killing at least six of the bombers.

The ambush shows "an increased boldness on the part of a rejuvenated Boko Haram," SBM Intelligence risk analysts said Friday, adding that the extremists' ranks have been bolstered by an "influx of hardened fighters from the Sahel and Libya."

A multinational force last year drove Boko Haram out of towns and villages in northeast Nigeria, but attacks and suicide bombings continue.

Boko Haram's seven-year Islamic uprising has killed more than 20,000 people and driven 2.6 million from their homes, creating the worst humanitarian crisis on the continent with millions facing starvation.
___
Michelle Faul in Johannesburg contributed.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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http://www.dw.com/en/finland-to-ramp-up-troop-levels-amid-heightened-russian-tensions/a-37592578

Finland to ramp up troop levels amid heightened Russian tensions

Finland's government has announced plans to strengthen its military by raising troop levels and increasing defense spending. Helsinki cited concerns over actions by neighboring Russia as a reason for the beef up.

Date 16.02.2017

Worried about increasing East-West tensions in the Baltic Sea, Finland announced plans on Thursday to increase its wartime troops by 20 percent, from 230,000 to 280,000.

Finland - which is not a NATO member but has compulsory military service - cut its army down from 350,000 troops to 230,000 in 2012.

The troop boost will "improve the capability to defend the entire territory of the country," the government wrote in a defense report. Finland shares a 1,340 kilometer (830 mile) border with Russia.

"Russia aims to strengthen its great-power status, and it has expressed the goal of a sphere-of-influence based security regime," the report said.

The Nordic country also plans to replace its aging naval fleet and its 62 Hornet fighter jets during the next decade.

The government also said it wants to add 55 million euros ($58.6 million) to its annual military spending of 2.4 billion euros ($2.56 billion). However, Helsinki said it want to greatly increase annual defense spending by 150 million euros ($160 million) starting in 2021.

The measures are part of a defense policy report that the government will present to parliament next month.

Finnish Finance Minister Petteri Orpo said the investments would raise the country's defense expenditure to 1.5 or 1.6 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) by the 2020s.

Currently, the country's defense budget is around 1.4 percent of its GDP.

In October 2016, Helsinki signed a bilateral defense cooperation deal with the US.
Finland stepped up its military cooperation with neighboring Sweden following Russia's annexation of Crimea and the conflict in eastern Ukraine.

Finland's decision to increase its defense measures follows the arrival of NATO troops from the United States and Germany in several other Baltic states.
rs/kl* (AFP, Reuters)

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Date 16.02.2017
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