WAR 01'22 to 01/29 ***The***Winds**of***WAR***

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[Due to the seriousness of the past week's events in the Mid East; I am putting last week's WoW link here:[/color]

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?397535-01-16-to-01-21-***The***Winds***Of-***WAR***



Confronting Iran in a Year of Elections

By DAVID E. SANGER
Published: January 21, 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/s...-in-a-year-of-elections.html?_r=1&ref=opinion

A DEMOCRATIC president running in a bitterly disputed presidential race faces a fateful national security decision: whether to approve an airstrike to thwart an adversary bent on becoming a nuclear-weapons state.

Conservative hawks deride the president as weak. In the West Wing, advisers debate the risks: a strike could lead to open conflict, but doing nothing would change the balance of power in a volatile, war-prone region.


The president was Lyndon B. Johnson, and less than three weeks before Election Day in 1964, the Chinese rendered the White House discussion moot by setting off their first nuclear test. “China will commit neither the error of adventurism, nor the error of capitulation,” the government of Mao Zedong told the world that morning, heralding the first Asian nation to get the bomb.

Johnson defeated Barry Goldwater in the election anyway, after a campaign in which — oddly enough, given the attack being contemplated — he tarred the Arizona conservative as a warmonger in the infamous black-and-white “daisy” television spot, featuring a young girl counting the petals of a flower, unaware of impending nuclear doom.

Historical analogies are always dangerous when it comes to presidential elections and nuclear geopolitics, so comparisons to the Obama administration’s calculus in the escalating confrontation with Iran calls to mind the caution that history doesn’t repeat, it rhymes. The election-year nuclear brinkmanship game was tricky enough in the cold war; the Chinese test was partly a warning to the Soviet Union, and Washington had even considered inviting Moscow to join in any strike.

But think of the multipolar chess President Obama is now playing. Every country involved in the dispute over Iran’s possibly acquiring nuclear weapons is calculating how the American presidential election plays to its agenda. The politics of soaring oil prices loom over any threat of military conflict, even a brief skirmish in the Strait of Hormuz. And with global economic turmoil a reality and leadership changes possible or certain this year in the United States, Russia, China and France, the game gets even more complex.

Start with the Iranians themselves. They have studied China’s example, and the case of Pakistan, which faced severe economic sanctions — urged foremost by the United States — for its pursuit of the bomb. But in both cases, once those countries conducted a test, the world adjusted to the new reality. Less than a half century later, China is the world’s second largest economy, and no one messes with it. As soon as the Sept. 11 attacks happened, the sanctions against Pakistan disappeared; suddenly the United States cared about cooperation in hunting down Al Qaeda more than it cared about Pakistan’s dangerous export of bomb technology, including to Iran.

“From the perception of the Iranians, life may look better on the other side of the mushroom cloud,” said Ray Takeyh, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. He may be right: while the Obama administration has vowed that it will never tolerate Iran as a nuclear weapons state, a few officials admit that they may have to settle for a “nuclear capable” Iran that has the technology, the nuclear fuel and the expertise to become a nuclear power in a matter of weeks or months.

No one can get inside the head of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but Mr. Takeyh notes that his pattern of behavior over the past decade has been to push the nuclear program ahead “systematically but cautiously,” slowly raising the temperature but until now avoiding major crises. Several years ago the Western allies said Iran could not resume enriching uranium; it resumed. Then the “red line” was drawn around enriching at a much higher level of purity, which gets Iran closer to bomb-grade fuel. But Iran has been doing that for nearly two years now. And the latest violation, just two weeks ago, was beginning production in a deep underground facility that is far less vulnerable to bombing.

That moves the calculus to Israel. It used to declare that it would never permit Iran to go past “the point of no return,” an ill-defined line beyond which Iran could rapidly produce a bomb. There’s continuing debate about where that line is, but former Israeli intelligence officials say Iran is long past it. Yet so far, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been constrained by the United States, which argues that cyberattacks, sabotage and sanctions have been more effective at slowing Iran’s program, without creating an international furor.

The outbreak of a public debate in Israel over whether to strike soon clearly shook the Obama administration. Under pressure from American officials, Israel’s defense minister, Ehud Barak, said on Wednesday that a decision on a possible strike on Iran was “very far off.” Mr. Netanyahu’s government may calculate that if Israel is going to attempt a strike, doing so during the presidential campaign, when it would have the sympathy of many American voters, is the only way to avoid a major backlash from Mr. Obama, with whom Mr. Netanyahu has a tense relationship. Elliott Abrams, President George W. Bush’s hawkish Middle East adviser, wrote recently that if Israel attacked “Mr. Obama would be forced to back it and help Israel cope with the consequences. It might even help the president get re-elected if he ends up using force to keep the Strait of Hormuz open and Israel safe.”




IT might — or it might not. The Iranians know they have little to gain from a confrontation that spins out of control; they don’t want to take on the Fifth Fleet in the Strait of Hormuz. But threats, small attacks on refineries and harassment of shipping can send the price of oil soaring, with economic effects no leader wants in election season. Sure, Americans don’t want Iran to get the bomb. But are they willing to pay $6 a gallon to prevent it?

Instability scares the Chinese, too, but gives the Russians an opportunity. For years China resisted sanctions on Iran, since it buys so much Iranian oil. Now it sees that escalating sanctions are inevitable, so it is busy hedging its bets, looking for alternative sources (with help from the Obama administration) while delaying a crisis. “They are a little late to the game,” one of Mr. Obama’s aides said. “We have been telling them this was coming for two years now. But they are only now believing it.”

Russia is also looking to buy time, but as a significant oil producer, it benefits from a sustained crisis — as long as it stays at a low boil. The Russians have proposed a lengthy negotiating plan with Iran, one that would take years to complete. Washington sees it as a ploy that would drag out talks and give Iran time and political cover to get the bomb.

And then there are the Europeans and the Arab states. During the Bush administration they feared any tough sanctions, convinced that if they failed, President Bush would order a strike on Iran. They misread the politics in Washington; after invading Iraq, Mr. Bush was in no position to get into a conflict with another Middle Eastern country suspected of seeking nuclear weapons.

Now, exactly three years into the Obama administration, the situation has reversed. Europe is finally as eager for sanctions as Washington has been; it is preparing for an oil embargo on Iran. The United States has not purchased oil from Iran for many years, but Mr. Obama has stopped short of advocating a global total embargo, which could lead to confrontations at sea. The hard line taken by President Nicolas Sarkozy of France and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany has been the surprise in the latest chapter in the long-running Iranian nuclear crisis. Their operating assumption is that if the economic cost is high enough, the supreme leader will fold. Few in Washington are persuaded, but most go along with the assumption because the more forceful alternatives are too unpleasant to contemplate.

By comparison, solving the Iranian hostage crisis during the presidential election of 1980 looks almost simple. Hours after Jimmy Carter left office and the more hawkish Ronald Reagan came in, Iran freed the hostages taken at the American Embassy. When Mr. Obama or his opponent is sworn in on Jan. 20, 2013, no one expects Iran’s nuclear complex to be packed up and shipped out.






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January 22, 2012

Iran’s dangerous game in Iraq

by Ali Hussein Bakeer*
http://www.sundayszaman.com/sunday/newsDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=268962

In his December speech welcoming the troops home from Iraq, US President Barack Obama said, “We are leaving behind a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq, with a representative government that was elected by its people.”


In reality, none of this is true on the ground. Iraq today is a very fragile country. Its sovereignty is questionable, it cannot depend on itself and, according to Iraq’s military Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Abu Bakr Zebari, it will not be able to protect its borders or airspace before 2020. Because of this, Iran is seen as a big winner as it is well positioned to fill the vacuum.


Historically, Iraq and Iran are rival empires and states. After its independence, Iraq was considered the keeper of the western gate of the Arab world. Although smaller in size and having less capabilities than Iran, Iraq managed to counterbalance Tehran and block Iranian influence and expansion in the Arab world for decades.

However, the invasion of Iraq by coalition forces and the toppling of Saddam Hussein’s regime in 2003 broke the balance, not only paving the way for Iran to expand its influence in Iraq but boosting its ambition to form a Shiite Crescent (spanning Iran-Iraq-Syria-Lebanon and the coasts of the Arab Gulf).

Modes of influence

Since 2003, Iran has tried to enhance its influence in Iraq, and as expected, it managed to achieve that on many levels. Politically, most of the ruling Shiite elite in Baghdad are pro-Iran. Tehran is able to exert great influence on the Iraqi political process through pro-Iran Shiite political parties such as Hezb Al -Daawa (or Islamic Dawa Party), the Islamic Supreme Council and the Sadrists.

Before toppling Saddam, the volume of trade between Iraq and Iran was nonexistent. After the US invasion, Iran became Iraq’s top trade partner, and the volume of trade between them reached about $8 billion in 2010, most of it to Iran’s benefit. One can even see the Iranian rial in Al-Basrah province.

In terms of security forces, the Al-Quds Force, an Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) unit responsible for Iran’s covert and foreign dirty operations, is working effectively on Iraqi soil. Moreover, Tehran managed to train, fund and arm many Shiite militias, most of which were integrated into the Iraqi “National” Army and sensitive positions in Iraq’s national security apparatus.

Iran’s new goals in Iraq

During the pre-withdrawal period, Iran had four goals in Iraq: to make sure that a new friendly allied regime is in power in Baghdad, advance Iranian interests, unite Shiites under its umbrella and to deepen the US crisis.

Driven by its natural tendency to expand and fearing the implications of the Arab revolutions right now, Iran is trying to quickly fill the vacuum, fortify its position and advance its influence after the US withdrawal. Taking into consideration the very possible regime change in Syria and thus the loss of its most important, valuable and effective ally over decades in the Middle East, not to mention the catastrophic implication of this on the Iranian agenda and influence in the whole region, Tehran is focusing on new goals in Iraq.

One of the most important goals right now for Tehran in light of regional developments is to strengthen the preventive security zone built outside its soil to defend itself. It is obvious in light of the Syrian case that Iran is trying to push for a Shiite bloc (Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon). Preventing the return of a strong, stable, independent and Arabic Iraq will also be a priority for Iran, because history tells us that an Iraq with these characteristics will be the strategic obstacle to the mullahs’ regime and Iranian influence in the region.

Fueling sectarian strife

The most dangerous thing is that Iran’s policies may open a new internal and regional battle in Iraq, especially if Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki continues to advance the Iranian agenda and its regional policies.

Al-Maliki, who came to power through a US-Iranian deal instead of Ayad Allawi -- the nationalist Shiite who was widely supported by the Iraqi Sunnis and endorsed by regional Arab countries like Saudi Arabia -- is fearing that the withdrawal will make him weak.

Backed by Iran and supported by the US, al-Maliki is now trying to secure his position by monopolizing power and isolating the Sunnis. On the first day of the US withdrawal, al-Maliki accused Sunni Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi of being involved in terrorist acts and ordered him to be put on trial. Moreover, al-Maliki fired Saleh al-Mutlaq, Sunni deputy prime minister, although he did not have the right nor the constitutional powers to do so, threatening openly to form a de facto sectarian Shiite government if the Sunnis opposed his policies.

Such acts are expected to trigger a sectarian conflict if continued. The Sunnis who were rejecting federalism have started to ask for it in order to avoid al-Maliki’s discriminatory and isolating policies practiced against them.

Coming battle in Iraq

On a regional front, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, especially Saudi Arabia, will not accept an “Iranian” Iraq used against them. Al-Maliki, who financially supported Bashar al-Assad’s regime, lately expressed fear of Turkey’s role in the region.

So unless a change in the Iraqi government happens very soon, and a national, independent and really representative government comes to power in Baghdad, Iran will continue pursuing its agenda, and regional powers will try to step in to balance Iranian influence.






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Obama flaunts record on Israel, Iran

By HILARY LEILA KRIEGER, JPOST CORRESPONDENT
01/22/2012 01:53
http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=254591

WASHINGTON – US President Barack Obama defended his record on Israel and Iran at a fundraiser in New York Thursday night, pushing back against a frequent line of Republican attacks.

“We’re not going to tolerate a nuclear weapon in the hands of this Iranian regime,” Obama told about 100 predominantly Jewish supporters who each paid at least $5,000 to attend.


“We’ve been able to organize folks like China and Russia that previously would have never gone along with something like this,” he said. “And it’s been so effective that even the Iranians have had to acknowledge that their economy is in a shambles.”

Obama also declared that since he’d been in office he has unequivocally said Israel’s security is nonnegotiable, and that he will do everything to make sure Israel is able to thrive and prosper as a secure Jewish state.

He said the two countries now had the strongest military cooperation that they have ever had.

“That’s not my opinion, by the way, that’s the Israeli government’s opinion.” Obama allies have been highlighting videos that show Israeli political leaders making similar statements.

And while many in the American Jewish community have been concerned about how changes in Arab governments due to the Arab Spring could affect Israel, Obama reassured his audience.

“We are pushing hard on countries like Egypt to make sure that they continue to abide by the peace treaties that have served both countries well.”

Republicans have tried to use Obama’s posture towards Israel and Iran against him, believing they see an opening for a winning strategy among a constituency that has historically voted overwhelmingly Democrat.

Israel and other issues of foreign policy took a back seat at the Republican debate held Thursday, the last before Saturday’s primary in South Carolina.

The Anti-Defamation League strongly condemned the column.

“There is absolutely no excuse, no justification, no rationalization for this kind of rhetoric. It doesn’t even belong in fiction. These are irresponsible and extremist words. It is outrageous and beyond the pale. An apology cannot possibly repair the damage,” National Director Abraham Foxman said.

Former speaker of the US House Newt Gingrich was received well by the audience, and his performance was seen as giving added momentum to his bid to unseat front-runner Mitt Romney, former governor of Massachusetts.

Polls show Gingrich taking a significant bite out of Romney’s lead, which had been in the double digits until recent days. Romney has also been damaged by results reversing his win of the Iowa caucuses and putting it in the hands of Rick Santorum, former Pennsylvania senator, and Rick Perry’s decision to drop out.

Perry, the governor of Texas, was fighting Gingrich and Santorum for the support of Christian conservatives, who have been largely wary of Romney, and his endorsement of Gingrich could help the latter prevail.

Frank Newport, Gallup’s editor-in-chief, was quoted on MSNBC describing Romney’s lead as “collapsing.”

The latest Gallup national poll shows Romney leading Gingrich by 30 percent to 20%, but Romney had recently been leading Gingrich by 23 points.





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‘Game over’ for Hizbollah, says Lebanese politician

January 22, 2012
http://gulftoday.ae/portal/7792bd62-00b7-4687-9973-94dfc91f2aad.aspx

BEIRUT: Lebanese Forces party leader Samir Geagea has said that the Iranian- and Syrian-backed Hizbollah must understand “the game is over.”


“In my opinion, events in the region, starting with Syria and ending in Iran, are capable of creating an appropriate atmosphere for the brothers in Hizbollah to be convinced that the game is over and they have to surrender their arms to the state ,” Geagea told the Egypt-based Rose Al Yusef newspaper.

Last week, Geagea told the pro-Hizbullah Al Safir newspaper “I believe that it is in Hizbollah’s best interest to quickly begin repositioning itself internally.”

“If I were in their shoes... I would take an immediate and brave step — which could be difficult,” he admitted, “but is nevertheless necessary, to engage in serious and direct negotiations with the main (Lebanese) parties... so as to reach a historic compromise on arms and all other pending issues — because we must admit that Lebanon cannot continue to exist without the Shiites.”

Geagea, along with his allies in the March 14 coalition, has repeatedly called on Hizbollah to disarm and disband its fighting force, saying Hizbollah’s arms present an obstacle to the establishment of a state capable of defending itself.






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Be Well

may all be well
"Game Over For Hezbollah" - I never read "good" news on these threads (hardly ever) but that is darn GOOD news!
 

Amberglass

Inactive
I think Stephen Harper was trying to send Canadians a message a few days ago. It was a very interesting interview he had with Peter Mansbridge.


http://ca.news.yahoo.com/iran-frightens-harper-says-021531627.html


It's beyond dispute Iran is developing nuclear weapons and lying about it, Prime Minister Stephen Harper told CBC News chief correspondent Peter Mansbridge on Monday.
In an exclusive interview, Harper says the evidence, some from the International Atomic Energy Agency, is overwhelming that Iran has a nuclear weapons program.
“I think there is absolutely no doubt they are lying. Absolutely no doubt,” Harper said of Iran's claims its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.
An IAEA report last fall said some of Iran's clandestine activities could be for no other reason than a nuclear weapons program.
"And that, I think, is just beyond dispute at this point," Harper said. "I think the only dispute is how far advanced it is."
Last November, following the IAEA report, Canada, the U.S. and the U.K. imposed new sanctions on Iran's banking and oil and gas industries.
Harper says it's scary to hear what the Iranian regime says.
"I’ve watched and listened to what the leadership in the Iranian regime says, and it frightens me.
"In my judgment, these are people who have a particular, you know, a fanatically religious worldview, and their statements imply to me no hesitation about using nuclear weapons if they see them achieving their religious or political purposes. And … I think that’s what makes this regime in Iran particularly dangerous."
Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird has referred to Iran several times as the world's greatest threat to peace and security.
Harper says there's a "growing consensus" among world leaders, at least privately, that Iran's regime is dangerous, but there's no agreement on how to handle it. He pointed to a comment by U.S. President Barack Obama that all options are on the table and said he and Obama have talked about "the full range of questions around these issues."
"While there’s, I think, a growing belief of a number of governments that my assessment is essentially correct, I think there’s still big uncertainty about what exactly to do.
"Trade sanctions are something that just about everybody agrees on at some level, and everybody is doing at some level, but beyond that, these are not easy questions for the world."
RELATED CONTENT
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Just one question needs to be asked. Where is the money going to come from for another war? Obama is out to totally bankrupt you. Once you start this war fuel prices will got up big time. China is heavily invested in Iran and will be out to get even with you. This they can do by dumping their dollar holdings. Russia will be hurt and in addition loose face. World War Three will be a nuke war without doubt.
 
Just one question needs to be asked. Where is the money going to come from for another war? Obama is out to totally bankrupt you. Once you start this war fuel prices will got up big time. China is heavily invested in Iran and will be out to get even with you. This they can do by dumping their dollar holdings. Russia will be hurt and in addition loose face. World War Three will be a nuke war without doubt.

CC:

Pard. You'd better hope (and pray) that the US (if we go to blows w/China). That we do have the money to fight a conventional war.

Because ole buddy; the Minute Man missle sites are already in place. and the missles (and their war heads are already paid for).

*Remember; the United States has already used weapons of mass destruction ONCE! And "second place" in any kind of war SUCKS!

TFD


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BFP Breaking News:
:siren:The New Desperate Concoction for War on Iran:siren:


By Sibel Edmonds
boilingfrogspost.com
Sunday, Jan 22, 2012
http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/Article_64271.shtml

War Architects Have Written a New Script-
This Time with Azerbaijan in the Lead Actor Role

The imperial establishment’s desperation to militarily go after and take over the last ‘real’ domino – Iran, has truly reached a peak, and with that desperation comes a new farfetched and fantastical scenario. Last time the script of their scenario was written based on a Saudi Diplomat actor. It was only three months ago when the puppet mainstream media jumped in with a made-up, dubious, far-reaching, murkily and vaguely-sourced story of the thwarted Iranian plot to kill the Saudi Ambassador in US. Here are a few excerpts from CNN’s fabulous-ized headline story that played around the clock for days, beating the war drums for its masters:


U.S. agents disrupted an Iranian assassination-for-hire scheme targeting Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States, U.S. officials said Tuesday…The Saudi ambassador was not the only intended target, U.S. officials said. The suspects also discussed attacking Israeli and Saudi embassies in Washington and possibly Buenos Aires, Argentina, a senior U.S. official said.



Of course CNN was not the lone wolf in the intense broadcasting and dissemination of this Washington script. The rest of the MSM puppets followed the same trend: Washington Post, New York Times, FOX … Not only that, the pseudo-alternative con outlets did exactly the same thing. Just check out the verbatim dissemination by Huffington Post and other ‘popular’ so-called alternatives. Thankfully we had enough facts, critical thinkers, and independent news fronts to expose all the holes in that concocted story:

A close analysis of the FBI deposition reveals, however, that independent evidence for the charge that Arbabsiar was sent by the Qods Force on a mission to arrange for the assassination of Jubeir is lacking. The FBI account is full of holes and contradictions, moreover. The document gives good reason to doubt that Arbabsiar and his confederates in Iran had the intention of assassinating Jubeir, and to believe instead that the FBI hatched the plot as part of a sting operation.



So that scenario script kinda failed. Of course the other long-cooking concoction on Iran’s nuclear weapons development has not gotten the establishment hawks far either. Even the mainstream has been grudgingly admitting the holes-filled allegations on dangerous nuclear weapons armed Iran!

You’d think all the debunked allegations and failed attempts would give the imperial hawks a bit of a pause to come up with a better concoction. At least go away for a while and rethink their strategy; no? Obviously not. Desperation can do amazingly stupid things to greed-driven, wild-eyed and blood-thirsty bullies in pursuit of expanded turf. They just came out with a new concocted scenario and allegations. This time their lead actor happens to be Azerbaijan.

Our soon-to-be-NATO member intimate ally regime in Central Asia, Azerbaijan, claims it has allegedly exposed an Iranian assassination plot and Iranian terror cell in its capital city-Baku [All Emphasis Mine]:


Azerbaijan’s National Security Ministry (MNS) says it has uncovered a terror group that was plotting to assassinate public figures, RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service reports. The ministry said on January 19 that the group was planning terrorist acts and had illegally acquired firearms, military supplies, and explosives.

The APA news agency quoted the MNS as saying that Azerbaijani citizens Rasim Aliyev, Ali Huseynov, and Balaqardash Dadashov — the latter of whom is living in Iran — coordinated efforts to acquire firearms and explosives.It said those materials were brought illegally to Azerbaijan from Iran.

The MSN said Dadashov was in contact with Iranian special service bodies and ordered the assassination of prominent foreigners living in Baku. It claims that Dadashov promised Aliyev — his brother-in-law — $150,000 for his work.The MSN said Dadashov had told his accomplices that he would discuss their plans with Iranian secret services.



Now, interestingly the first place/source to start to disseminate our script writers’ new concocted scenario involving another ‘Iranian Plot’ was no other than … yes, you guessed it: Radio Free Europe. Check out this news’ origination by this long-propaganda machine of our global imperial pursuits here. The second source to pick up on it was no other than a Soros-Funded site on Central Asia here. Guaranteed: the other MSM outlets will be having a field day with this new propaganda. In fact, they’ve been hot on another related side story with the same actor written by the same writers. I kid you not; here it is: Azerbaijan claims that the recent cyber attacks that destroyed its government and news websites originated in … Iran! Let’s check out the headline on this today at …Business Week:

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — Cyber attacks that destroyed government and news websites in Azerbaijan this week mostly originated in Iran, government minister Ali Abbasov said. An investigation by Abbasov’s Ministry of Communications and Information Technology found that of 25 attacks, 24 came from Iran and one from the Netherlands, Abbasov told reporters in the Azeri capital, Baku, today.



For the last few months the empire’s nuclear weapons allegations against Iran have produced very little results; they haven’t really stuck. Most likely the Saudi Prince-Ambassador Assassination Plot-Scenario was outsourced to a not very competent or bright Hollywood producer-director; it failed big time and it certainly was embarrassing to all secondary actors such as the FBI. The empire still hasn’t invaded Iran. The Caspian Sea is waiting, and so many are drooling. It must be time for a new scenario. A new script. A brand new actor. Welcome Azerbaijan, a thickening new assassination plot, a scary terror cell in Baku, and savvy Iranian cyber-terrorists obsessed with this dingy little country’s dingier-littler government and news websites.






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Iraq tells neighbours not to intervene

Posted: 22 January 2012 2045 hrs
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world/view/1178397/1/.html

BAGHDAD: Iraq on Sunday criticised neighbouring Turkey, Iran and unnamed Arab countries for trying to "intervene" in Baghdad's month-long political crisis and not respecting its sovereignty.

The statement, posted on the foreign ministry's website, comes amid tensions between Baghdad and Ankara in particular over Iraq's claims that Turkey was interfering in internal Iraqi affairs.


It said that since the start of the year, statements from "senior officials in neighbouring countries reflect their attempts to intervene in the internal affairs of Iraq and the lack of respect for Iraqi sovereignty and the government elected by the people of Iraq."

The statement, posted in English and Arabic, continued: "Iraq did not and will not be a follower. It will never be a pawn in the others' game nor will it be an arena of clearance between the other parties."

"Therefore, we call upon the friendly neighbour, especially Turkey, Iran and some Arab countries to respect the sovereignty and independence of Iraq."

The statement was an apparent response to remarks from the head of Iran's elite Quds Force Qassem Suleimani, since clarified by Tehran's foreign ministry, that Iraq and southern Lebanon were controlled by Iran.

"Iran is now also present in southern Lebanon and Iraq," he said, in quotes published by Iranian news agency ISNA. "In fact, those areas are in a way influenced by the Islamic republic of Iran's performance and thinking."

Al-Arabiya TV's website had earlier reported that Suleimani claimed south Lebanon and Iraq were "subject to the control" of Iran, but Tehran has issued a denial.

Iraq and Turkey have also been at loggerheads over Baghdad's claim that Ankara was intervening in Iraqi affairs when Turkish premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan telephoned Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on January 10.

Maliki has since criticised Turkey for its remarks, and the two countries have called in each others' respective ambassadors to express their displeasure.

Iraq has been mired in a political crisis since US forces withdrew from the country on December 18, pitting the Shiite-led government against the main Sunni-backed political bloc.






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China's crude-oil imports from Iran up 30%

January 22, 2012 - 16:47 AMT
http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/89175/

PanARMENIAN.Net - China's crude-oil imports from Iran last year were up 30% from 2010, to 27.76 million metric tons, China's General Administration of Customs reported Saturday, January 21. That works out to about 557,000 barrels a day.


China's overall crude imports were up just 6.1%.

Beijing has steadfastly defended its relationship with Iran, the No. 3 supplier of crude to its energy-hungry economy, as the U.S. and Europe try to increase pressure on Iran over its nuclear activities, according to The Wall Street Journal.

China's imports from Iran could decline in the months ahead due to a dispute over commercial issues between China International United Petroleum & Chemicals Co., known as Unipec, and National Iranian Oil Co. Unipec has skipped imports of about 220,000 barrels a day from Iran in January and further delays could affect February orders as well.

For December, China's overall crude imports came to to 21.92 million tons, up 5.1% from a year earlier, customs data showed. At 5.18 million barrels a day, that was still short of analysts' estimates of between 5.5 million and 6 million barrels a day.

China's imports from Iran could decline in the months ahead due to a dispute over commercial issues between China International United Petroleum & Chemicals Co., known as Unipec, and National Iranian Oil Co. Unipec has skipped imports of about 220,000 barrels a day from Iran in January and further delays could affect February orders as well.

For December, China's overall crude imports came to to 21.92 million tons, up 5.1% from a year earlier, customs data showed. At 5.18 million barrels a day, that was still short of analysts' estimates of between 5.5 million and 6 million barrels a day.






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Who is killing Iran's scientists?

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By Alan Maass
Source: Socialistworker.org
Sunday, January 22, 2012
http://www.zcommunications.org/who-is-killing-irans-scientists-by-alan-maass

ANOTHER SCIENTIST has been murdered in Iran as part of a terrorist campaign targeting the country's nuclear program.

U.S. officials deny it, but the killings have the fingerprints of Washington and especially its devoted ally Israel all over them. "Does anyone doubt that some combination of the two nations completely obsessed with Iran's nuclear program--Israel and the U.S.--are responsible?" Salon.com's Glenn Greenwald asked rhetorically.


The 32-year-old Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan was killed by a car bomb on January 11, along with his driver. According to witnesses, two men on a motorcycle pulled up alongside Roshan's car and apparently attached a magnetic bomb to it--the device detonated seconds later. According to one report, Roshan, the deputy director of the country's uranium enrichment facility, was on his way to a ceremony to commemorate the second anniversary of the killing of another nuclear physicist, Massoud Ali Mohammadi.

In the two years between the killings of Mohammadi and Roshan, two other Iranian scientists have been assassinated and another injured in what the Israeli newspaper Haaretz snidely referred to as "[m]ysterious deaths and blasts linked to Iran's nuclear program."

Untargeted explosions--18 last year, according to National Public Radio--at sites allegedly associated with the nuclear program have claimed even more lives. In the most recent, seven people were killed in a blast last month at a steel mill in the city of Yazd.

The murders have been indiscriminate in other ways, too. Mohammadi, for example, was known to be a supporter of Mir Hussein Moussavi, the reformist political leader who ran for president in 2009 against the representative of Iran's ruling conservative elite, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

FOR THE record, U.S. officials deny that their forces have anything to do with the killings in Iran. But the Israeli government has all but admitted its part.

At the end of July, when he was asked if his country was involved in the assassinations, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak answered, "Israel is not responding"--but reporters noted the "smile on his face" as he said it. The German news magazine Der Spiegel later quoted an anonymous Israeli intelligence official attributing the murders to the spy agency Mossad.

Less than 24 hours before Roshan's murder, Benny Gantz, chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, told a committee of Israel's Knesset that Iran would face "continuing and growing pressure from the international community and things which take place in an unnatural manner."

If anyone is tempted to believe that Israel acted alone, against the wishes of the U.S., they should remember that the CIA is known to have targeted Iranian scientists in the past to recruit them as spies. According to one, Shahram Amiri, U.S. agents kidnapped him in an attempt get him to go along with their plans.

The latest murder comes as tensions have ramped up between Iran and the West.

The U.S. and its allies claim an International Atomic Energy Administration report issued in December contains evidence that Iran's nuclear program is aimed at building a nuclear weapon. The report doesn't say this at all--but this served as an excuse for the U.S. and Europe to push new economic sanctions. Iran responded at the end of December with a military display of force and threats that it could close the Strait of Hormuz, the entrance point to the Persian Gulf.

U.S. officials say Iran would be crossing a "red line" if, in the future, it attempts to close the shipping lanes. But there hasn't been anywhere near the same frenzy about an assassination campaign that is underway right now in Iran--and has been for several years.

On the contrary, some U.S. political leaders think Washington should be proud to claim involvement in the killings. Last October, Rick Santorum--now the leading contender among the Republican right for the GOP presidential nomination--declared:

On occasion, scientists working on the nuclear program in Iran turn up dead. I think that's a wonderful thing, candidly...I think we should send a very clear message that if you are a scientist from Russia, North Korea, or from Iran, and you are going to work on a nuclear program to develop a bomb for Iran, you are not safe.

Actually, Santorum is refreshingly honest about what it taking place in Iran--a campaign of murder designed to terrorize anyone connected with the country's nuclear program, in whatever capacity.

But terrorism is one word you won't find in the mainstream media's description of the assassinations.

By contrast, when the U.S. Department of Justice announced indictments in a fantastical plot--allegedly masterminded by Iran's Revolutionary Guard and organized by a failed Texas used-car salesman, with help from a Mexican drug cartel--to murder Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S., Attorney General Eric Holder claimed the Feds had foiled "an act of international terrorism." The corporate media repeated both his characterization and ludicrous allegations as established facts.

The double standards are glaring--and sickening. As Glenn Greenwald wrote:

Does anyone have any doubt whatsoever that if Iran were sending hit squads to kill Israeli scientists in Tel Aviv, or was murdering a series of American scientists at Los Alamos (while wounding several of their wives, including, in one instance, shooting them in front of their child's kindergarten), that those acts would be universally denounced as terrorism, and the only debate would be whether the retaliation should be nuclear, carpet-bombing or invasion?

As always, terrorism is the most meaningless--and thus most manipulated--term of propaganda; it's always what They do and never what We do.





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:shkr:
US aircraft carriers to deliver 'direct message to Iran'

Published: 22 January, 2012, 15:27
http://rt.com/news/aircraft-carrier-hormuz-iran-391/


In an apparent show of strength, Washington is deploying a second carrier strike group in the Gulf. US officials also confirmed their commitment to maintaining a global fleet of 11 aircraft carriers despite budget pressure to cut the fleet's size.

“That’s the reason we maintain a presence in the Middle East,” AP cited US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, as saying in a speech to about 1,700 sailors aboard the USS Enterprise. “We want them to know that we are fully prepared to deal with any contingency and it’s better for them to try to deal with us through diplomacy.”



Panetta added that the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise is on course for the Persian Gulf – and will steam through the Strait of Hormuz in a direct message to Iran, AP reports.


"We'll continue to make those messages clear. The most important way to make those messages clear is to show that we are prepared, that we are strong, that we'll have a presence in that part of the world," Panetta added.


The USS Enterprise, along with the other six ships in the carrier strike group, will deploy to the Middle East in March. It means the US will maintain two carrier strike groups in the Persian Gulf region. The warships are expected to support the country’s battle operations in Afghanistan, its anti-piracy efforts and other missions.


Meanwhile, Iran claims it is not concerned with the move, saying it is a part of routine activity.


"US warships and military forces have been in the Persian Gulf and the Middle East region for many years and their decision in relation to the dispatch of a new warship is not a new issue and it should be interpreted as part of their permanent presence," Revolutionary Guard Deputy Commander Hossein Salami was quoted by the IRNA news agency on Saturday.


Tensions escalated in the Gulf after Iran warned the US that it might block the Strait, which is a major transit route for global oil supplies, if the West places an embargo on its oil exports.


Tehran also urged Washington not to send carriers into the Gulf. In return, Washington said it would continue to deploy its ships in the region.


The USS Enterprise, along with the other six ships in the carrier strike group, will deploy to the Middle East in March. Therefore, the US will maintain two carrier strike groups in the Persian Gulf region. The warships are expected to support the country’s battle operations in Afghanistan, its anti-piracy efforts and other missions.


Next week the EU is set to agree an embargo on Iranian oil. The West expects the sanctions to force Iran to suspend the nuclear weapon activities it is allegedly practicing.






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:shkr::shkr:
:siren:‘Israel to Give Obama 12 Hours Notice on Attacking Iran’:siren:

Israel told visiting US Gen. Dempsey that Obama would get no more
than 12 hours notice before an attack on Iran, the London Times reports.


By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
First Publish: 1/22/2012, 10:19 AM
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/151965


Israeli officials told visiting USS Chief Joint of Staffs Martin Dempsey that it would give President Barack Obama no more than 12 hours notice if and when it attacks Iran, The London Times reported Sunday.

The Netanyahu government also will not coordinate with the United States an attack on the Islamic Republic, according to the report, the latest in a number of suposed scenarios concerning cooperation or lack of it between Jerusalem and Washington.


It is left to speculation whether the rumors are based on facts or are leaked by officials to mask the possibility of secret military coordination.

The London Times said its sources explained that that Israel fears that President Obama would try to torpedo an Israel attack if more notice were given because he is concerned that Iran will respond by blocking the Strait of Hormuz, sparking a rise in the price of oil that could cripple Western economies. If the attack were to occur in the next 10 months, it would put President Obama in a tight spot on the eve of his bid for re-election.

President Shimon Peres told Dempsey, "I am sure that in this fight [against Iran] we will emerge victorious. It is a fight that does not belong exclusively to the United States or Israel, but a global struggle to create a safe world for all peoples.”

Dempsey, on his first official visit to Israel, was wined and dined by Defense Minister Ehud Barak and IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gants, who went so far as to arrange an IDF orchestra rendition of song made famous by Frank Sinatra, one of Dempsey’s favorite singers.

Dempsey tried to play down the postponement of what was billed as the largest-ever joint military drill between the Israeli and American armies, involving thousands of U.S. Army soldiers.

Published reasons for the delay have ranged from budgetary constraints, logistical problems to a signal from Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu that he distrusts President Obama’s commitment to stop Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

Dempsey maintained that the delay, which was announced by Israel, will give both countries more time to prepare and “achieve a better outcome.”

The top American general left Israel on Friday, before the Sabbath began.






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Moscow warns against attack on Iran

Article | January 21, 2012 - 10:28pm
http://www.neurope.eu/article/moscow-warns-against-attack-iran


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov:
Attack on Iran would cause 'unpredictable chain reaction'


On 18 January, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned that an attack on Iran by Western powers could cause an unpredictable chain reaction throughout the region.

“It is impossible to list all the consequences [of an attack],” he said in an annual address. “But I have no doubt that it would pour oil on the still smoldering fire of Sunni-Shia confrontation, which would lead to a chain reaction.


"As for how likely such a catastrophe is, you need to ask those who constantly mention this as an option," he added. Lavrov also said that Russia would “do everything” in its power to prevent an attack on Tehran.

Lavrov also said that sanctions on Iranian oil exports being discussed by the European Union would “hurt” ordinary people and were more about stirring up unrest than nuclear non-proliferation. "This has nothing to do with a desire to strengthen nuclear non-proliferation," he said. "It's aimed at stifling the Iranian economy and the population in the apparent hope of provoking discontent."

Sanctions would also prove “an obstacle” to the revival of a dialog between Iran and the six world powers involved in negotiations on its nuclear program, Lavrov said.

On 18 January, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez discussed co-operation and agreed to defend the sovereignty of Iran and Syria against “foreign interferences” and from the siege of “colonial powers,” a press release from the Venezuelan Foreign Affairs Ministry read.

During a telephone conversation, Putin and Chavez agreed on the need to craft a common approach to defend “the independence and sovereignty of the Syrian Arab Republic and the Islamic Republic of Iran, against the harassment and interference by foreign powers”.

While Chavez has openly expressed support for Syrian President Bashar Assad, Moscow opposes any foreign intervention and the use of force against Syria as happened in Libya, and advanced that it will reject any United Nations resolution proposal that includes sanctions against the regime.

Putin pointed out as great achievements of 2011 the recent launching of the Russian-Venezuelan bi-national bank and the advance of technical-military co-operation. According to the Russian corporation for the export of military equipment, Venezuela in the last five years has spent $11 billion becoming the main client for Russian arms in Latin America.

Putin added that his government was making efforts to accelerate business investment in Venezuela in the Junin 6 block of the Orinoco Oil Belt.






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Syria troops pushed from capital suburb: activists

By BASSEM MROUE | AP
Published: Jan 22, 2012 16:33
http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article566703.ece

BEIRUT: Syrian security forces retreated Sunday from the center of one of the biggest Damascus suburbs after intense clashes with anti-government army defectors, activists said. It was the second area abandoned by government troops in less than a week as the 10-month-old uprising against President Bashar Assad becomes increasingly militarized.



The violence came as Arab foreign ministers began talks in Cairo to review a report by Sudanese Gen. Mohammed Ahmed Al-Dabi, the head of an Arab League observers mission, which technically expired on Thursday.

Arab League officials have said the 22-member organization was likely to extend the mission by a month and increase the number of observers in Syria despite complaints from the Syrian opposition that it has failed to curb the bloodshed in the country.

Members of the Syrian opposition have called for foreign troops to be dispatched to Syria to create safe zones for dissidents.

The opposition has urged the Arab League to refer the Syrian issue to the UN Security Council rather than continue trying to resolve it regionally.

Diplomacy has taken on urgency as opponents of Assad’s regime and soldiers who switched sides increasingly take up arms and fight back against government forces, raising fears the conflict is veering toward civil war after beginning with largely peaceful protests in March.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights’ head Rami Abdul-Rahman said government troops had pulled back early Sunday to a provincial headquarters and a security agency building in the Damascus suburb of Douma after hours of clashes, although they still controlled the entrances. The clashes broke out after Syrian troops opened fire at a funeral on Saturday.

Abdul-Rahman had no information on casualties from the clashes but said security forces at an entrance checkpoint shot dead one man who was passing by on Sunday.

The Observatory said more clashes broke out between defectors and Syrian forces later Sunday “in what appeared to be an attempt to storm” Douma, a heavily populated suburb.

Syria-based activist Mustafa Osso confirmed that security forces had abandoned Douma, but said he had no information about clashes in the area.

Central Damascus has for most of Syria’s 10-month uprising been under the tight control of forces loyal to Assad, but its suburbs have witnessed intense anti-regime protests. Abdul-Rahman said it was not clear if the withdrawal was a tactic for the regime forces to regroup and strike back.

Last week, army defectors took control of the mountain town of Zabadani on the western edge of the capital, near the border with Lebanon. Zabadani is still out of government control and army defectors control all its entrances.

Osso said it is highly unlikely defectors are trying to take over Douma because it is easy for the regime to retake residential areas unlike Zabadani where defectors can fight from hideouts in the rugged mountains.

The conflict in Syria has marked the most serious challenge to Assad, who took over from his father in 2000. The UN estimates some 5,400 have been killed since it began in March.

Also Sunday, state-run news agency, SANA, said an estimated 5,255 Syrian prisoners have been released over the past week under a recent amnesty, raising the total freed since November to more than 9,000.

On Saturday a string of explosions struck a police truck transporting prisoners in a tense area of northwestern Syria killing at least 14 people, state media and an opposition group said. Government troops also battled defectors in the north in fighting that left 10 people dead.






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Syria rebels seize area near capital after gunbattle

By Bloomberg Sunday, 22 January 2012 8:11 AM
http://www.arabianbusiness.com/syria-rebels-seize-area-near-capital-after-gunbattle-441705.html

Syrian rebels seized parts of the town of Douma near the capital Damascus on Saturday and then withdrew to their hideouts, activists said.

Night-time gunbattles and explosions rocked Douma, 14km northwest of the capital, activists said. Douma has been a centre of protests in the 10-month revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.


The head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the fighters retreated to their hideouts once they had pushed state forces outside of Douma.

"It seems they chose not to hold on to the territory, most likely because it could offer the regime an excuse to storm the area," Rami Abdelrahman said.



The fighting posed no direct threat to Damascus itself but may be seen as too close for comfort to the government, which has launched a heavy crackdown since unrest began in March.

One resident said the move marked the first time rebels, who call themselves the Free Syrian Army, held territory in Douma for an extended period of time.

"No one can get in or out of Douma right now. This is the first time the rebels do anything more than hit-and-run attacks. Tonight they started making barriers in the streets," an activist living in Douma said by Skype.

The fighting began on Saturday afternoon, after security forces killed four people when they fired on a funeral march for a slain protester. Ensuing clashes left dozens wounded, activists said.

Activists on Skype from Douma and the neighbouring town of Harasta said troops were gathered outside the rebellious suburb.

Another resident in Douma said she had not heard of the temporary takeover of the suburb but had heard a large explosion.

"One of the explosions was so loud it felt like the whole city shook," another activist said on Skype.







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Close to 100 dead in Syria clashes

Published January 22nd, 2012 - 07:40 GMT
http://www.albawaba.com/news/close-100-dead-syria-clashes-409788
At least 96 people were killed on Saturday during violent clashes between insurgents and government forces in Syria. Some 60 dead had been found in the morgue of a hospital in the province of Idlib, reported a representative of the opposition.


According to Abu Omar, a Syrian dissident from the region Idlib, the victims were found in the morgue after being shot dead by security forces. They were detained for days and tortured to death, said Abu Omar. Among the victims were many women and children, he added.

There were other victims, according to opposition reports in a raid on a bus carrying prisoners in the province of Idlib. Also in the regions of Homs, Hama and Daraa some 10 people had been killed by security forces.

The state news agency Sana reported also that government troops have killed in the area around Tel Kalakh, near the Lebanese border, three people. It was claimed they were armed terrorists who had tried to smuggle weapons from Lebanon to Syria. The nationalities of those killed were not disclosed.

Meanwhile, the army deserters took control late Saturday the town of Duma near Damascus. This came after fierce battles with security forces. However, after few hours the deserters withdrew from the town.






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DUBAI, January 22, 2012

Israel, U. S. brainstorm Iran options

Atul Aneja
http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/article2823208.ece

Israel and the United States appeared to have shelved any decision on using force against Iran, hoping to take stock of possible joint military options against Tehran later this year.


Visiting U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey has held talks with the top rung of Israel’s military and political relationship, at a time when Washington has publicly opposed any unilateral Israeli military strikes against Iran. Yet, the possibility of joint military operations against Iran had risen dramatically after Israel and the United States had publicised during the heat the of the Strait of Hormuz crisis, their decision to hold combined military exercises on an unprecedented scale. During the course of its naval exercises, Vilayat-90, Iran had announced its intention to close the international oil transit passage of the Strait of Hormuz, in case the West blocked its energy trade.

However, the proposed high profile manoeuvres between Israel and the U.S. have now been postponed to later this year — a step that has significantly lowered military tensions in the Persian Gulf area. “We have many interests in common in the region in this very dynamic time and the more we can continue to engage each other, the better off we’ll all be,” Gen. Dempsey was quoted as saying.

The visit to Israel by the top U.S. military commander also follows the delivery of a letter to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei from President Barack Obama where he has combined his warning to Iran against closing the Strait of Hormuz, with an offer for talks that could lead to reconciliation; Iranian officials were quoted as saying.

Earlier, top U.S. officials, including defence secretary Leon Panetta had urged Israel not to attack Iran on its own. But signalling that the Gen. Dempsey was not in Israel to read out the riot order, Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said on January 18, 2012 that the U.S. General’s trip was not directed at curbing Israel from attacking nuclear facilities in Iran.

With the next round of Israel-U.S. military exercises scheduled for the second-half of this year, there is enough time for the interplay of diplomacy and economic coercion, enforced through sanctions against Iran to play its part, analysts say. In Paris, French President Nicolas Sarkozy also said that instead of war, sanctions should be the way forward on Iran. "Military intervention would not solve the problem, but it would unleash war and chaos in the Middle East," Mr. Sarkozy said while offering New Year’s greetings to members of the diplomatic corps.





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CGTech

Has No Life - Lives on TB
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:shkr:
US aircraft carriers to deliver 'direct message to Iran'

Published: 22 January, 2012, 15:27
http://rt.com/news/aircraft-carrier-hormuz-iran-391/


In an apparent show of strength, Washington is deploying a second carrier strike group in the Gulf. US officials also confirmed their commitment to maintaining a global fleet of 11 aircraft carriers despite budget pressure to cut the fleet's size.

“That’s the reason we maintain a presence in the Middle East,” AP cited US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, as saying in a speech to about 1,700 sailors aboard the USS Enterprise. “We want them to know that we are fully prepared to deal with any contingency and it’s better for them to try to deal with us through diplomacy.”



Panetta added that the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise is on course for the Persian Gulf – and will steam through the Strait of Hormuz in a direct message to Iran, AP reports.


"We'll continue to make those messages clear. The most important way to make those messages clear is to show that we are prepared, that we are strong, that we'll have a presence in that part of the world," Panetta added.


The USS Enterprise, along with the other six ships in the carrier strike group, will deploy to the Middle East in March. It means the US will maintain two carrier strike groups in the Persian Gulf region. The warships are expected to support the country’s battle operations in Afghanistan, its anti-piracy efforts and other missions.


Meanwhile, Iran claims it is not concerned with the move, saying it is a part of routine activity.


"US warships and military forces have been in the Persian Gulf and the Middle East region for many years and their decision in relation to the dispatch of a new warship is not a new issue and it should be interpreted as part of their permanent presence," Revolutionary Guard Deputy Commander Hossein Salami was quoted by the IRNA news agency on Saturday.


Tensions escalated in the Gulf after Iran warned the US that it might block the Strait, which is a major transit route for global oil supplies, if the West places an embargo on its oil exports.


Tehran also urged Washington not to send carriers into the Gulf. In return, Washington said it would continue to deploy its ships in the region.


The USS Enterprise, along with the other six ships in the carrier strike group, will deploy to the Middle East in March. Therefore, the US will maintain two carrier strike groups in the Persian Gulf region. The warships are expected to support the country’s battle operations in Afghanistan, its anti-piracy efforts and other missions.


Next week the EU is set to agree an embargo on Iranian oil. The West expects the sanctions to force Iran to suspend the nuclear weapon activities it is allegedly practicing.






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It does make me wonder... Enterprise is due to be decommisioned after this last deployment of 2012... are they sending her there since she is the one carrier they can 'afford' to lose....? Could be way off the mark on this... but you do wonder...
 

CGTech

Has No Life - Lives on TB
and also, they already have the Vinson and Lincoln battlegroups in the Arabian Sea... why are they sending a 3rd Carrier Battle Group? (or is the Vinson being rotated out?)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
It does make me wonder... Enterprise is due to be decommisioned after this last deployment of 2012... are they sending her there since she is the one carrier they can 'afford' to lose....? Could be way off the mark on this... but you do wonder...

It would make some sense from the standpoint of an attritionable unit (but not the crew). But that's putting a lot more on the table than having a DDG doing speed runs back and forth through the Straits.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.businessweek.com/news/20...ts-north-after-islamist-attacks-kill-176.html

Bloomberg
Nigerian President Visits North After Islamist Attacks Kill 176
January 22, 2012, 12:30 PM EST
By Mustapha Muhammad and Ardo Hazzad

Jan. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan visited the sites of bombings in the northern city of Kano as the death toll from attacks in the region reached 176.

The militant Muslim group Boko Haram, which is fighting for sharia rule in country’s mainly Muslim north, claimed responsibility for blasts that struck eight government buildings on Jan. 20 killing at least 165 people, its spokesman, Abu Qaqa, said by phone. Another 11 people were killed when suspected Islamist gunmen attacked a bank, a police station and a hotel in the northeastern town of Tawafa Balewa today, police said.

“Any terrorist attack on one person is an attack on all of us,” Jonathan told reporters in Kano, saying his government will strengthen security in the city and the country. “We must join hands to fight, the terrorists can’t win Nigeria.”

Authorities in Africa’s top oil producer blame Boko Haram, whose name means “Western education is a sin,” for bombings and attacks in the mainly Muslim north and the capital Abuja over the past year. The group claimed the Christmas Day bombing of a church near Abuja that killed 43 people and the Aug. 26 suicide-bombing of the United Nations building in the capital that killed 24 people. Islamic militants pose a worse threat to the country than the 1967-1970 Biafra civil war, Jonathan said on Jan. 8.

Government buildings in Kano, the biggest city in northern Nigeria, including a regional police office, a smaller station, the immigration office and a building used by the state security police, came under bomb and gun attacks by militants, police said. Jonathan, who had declared a state of emergency in parts of four states in the northeast region on Dec. 31 to battle the insurgency.

“It’s another declaration of intent and another indication of a problem that’s getting bigger, not smaller,” Antony Goldman, head of PM Consulting, which specializes in risk analysis in West Africa, said in a phone interview from London. The attacks represent a “significant challenge for the government.”

Pattern of Attacks

Shehu Sani, president of the Civil Rights Congress, whose members helped to carry dead and wounded to hospitals, confirmed the fatalities in a phone interview. The dead included journalist Enenche Akogwu, Lagos-based Channels Television said in a statement.

Two churches in the northeastern city of Bauchi were damaged by overnight explosions, following a pattern of attacks on churches this year claimed by the militant group, Police Commissioner Ikechukwu Aduba said by phone today from the city of Bauchi.

Among the dead in the attack on Tafawa Balewa, 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of Bauchi, were two soldiers, a policeman and eight civilians, Police Commissioner Okechukwu Aduba, told reporters in Bauchi, capital of Bauchi state. “Ten unexploded improvised explosive devices were recovered from the scene and six suspects were arrested,” he said.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he’s “appalled at the frequency and intensity of recent attacks in Nigeria.” The African Union also condemned the attacks. The group will support the Nigerian government to end all such incidents, its chairman, Jean Ping, said in an e-mailed statement yesterday.

--With assistance from Donna Abu-Nasr in Manama and Dulue Mbachu and Chris Kay in Abuja. Editors: Dulue Mbachu, Francis Harris

To contact the reporters on this story: Mustapha Muhammad in Kano at mmuhammad5@bloomberg.net; Ardo Hazzad in Bauchi at ahazzad@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net

More From Businessweek

* Iran Says Only Negotiations Can Resolve Nuclear Standoff
* Boko Haram’s Deadliest Attack Kills 165 in Northern Nigeria
* Egypt’s Islamists Dominate First Parliament of Post-Mubarak Era
* Egypt’s Islamists to Dominate First Post-Mubarak Parliament
* Egypt Revolt Loses Legitimacy as Brotherhood Ignores Women Abuse
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...police-state/2012/01/22/gIQAlSFkIQ_story.html

Human Rights Watch details Iraq crackdowns, warns of ‘budding police state’

By Dan Morse, Sunday, January 22, 9:17 AM
Comments

BAGHDAD — Iraq “cracked down harshly” on freedom of expression and assembly in 2011 by intimidating, beating and detaining activists and journalists, Human Rights Watch said Sunday in announcing its World Report 2012.

“Iraq is quickly slipping back into authoritarianism as its security forces abuse protesters, harass journalists and torture detainees,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Despite U.S. government assurances that it helped create a stable democracy, the reality is that it left behind a budding police state.”

Many of the problems reported by Human Rights Watch occurred before Dec. 18, when the final U.S. troops left the country. The group reported similar problems last year.

But in its new report, the organization also highlights recent incidents.

In the weeks leading up to the U.S. withdrawal, Iraqi security forces rounded up hundreds of Iraqis accused of being former Baath Party members, according to Human Rights Watch. Most of them “remain in detention without charge,” the group said.

This month, according to Human Rights Watch, Iraqi authorities were able to curtail anti-government demonstrations by flooding weekly protests with pro-government supporters and undercover security agents.

“Dissenting activists and independent journalists for the most part said that they no longer felt safe attending the demonstrations,” Human Rights Watch said.

A spokesman for Iraq Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki described the report as one-sided and deeply flawed. “The Human Rights Watch organization has relied on sources that are inaccurate, biased and not factual,” said Ali Hadi al-Moussawi.

He questioned whether the group conducted “any actual field research or made any visits to places and institutions where human rights are presumably violated.”

The spokesman also played down the demonstrations in Baghdad, saying they involved relatively few participants. “Their number is gradually decreasing, and they do not reflect strong opposition to the government,” Moussawi said.

The World Report 2012 documents human rights abuses worldwide, according to Human Rights Watch, which ticked off the following examples: violations of the laws of war in Libya and Afghanistan; the plight of political prisoners in Vietnam and Eritrea; the silencing of dissent in China and Cuba; Internet crackdowns in Iran and Thailand; killings by security forces in India and Mexico; election-related problems in Russia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo; mistreatment of migrants in Western Europe; neglectful maternal health policies in Haiti and South Africa; the suppression of religious freedom in Indonesia and Saudi Arabia; torture in Pakistan and Uzbekistan; discrimination against people with disabilities in Nepal and Peru; and detention without trial in Malaysia and by the United States.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://english.alarabiya.net/views/2012/01/22/189904.html

Last Updated: Sun Jan 22, 2012 19:18 pm (KSA) 16:18 pm (GMT)
Oil confrontation between Iran and Saudi
By Abdul Rahman al-Rashed
Sunday, 22 January 2012

Iranian government must be disappointed because oil prices have not soared as a result of the successive sanctions slapped by the U.S. and Europe against Tehran. Can you imagine Iran, the OPEC member, is sanctioned and oil prices has not changed much?

In a market which is already nervous due to the deficiency of the Libyan crude since last year, Iran was hoping for an oil price hike that can force its rivals to retreat from the boycott.

Iranians tried its usual tricks, to scare weak markets. They made public threats of closing the Strait of Hormuz, the main passageway for quarter of the world oil exports. Yet prices did not go up. They publicly warned Saudi Arabia -- the world's biggest oil-exporter -- against attempting to fill any expected gap in oil demand when the world stops buying Iranian crude. Even such warnings did not raise the oil prices. Moreover, according to my information, Iranian authorities dared to send their boats, with men armed with machine guns on board, to the waters near the Saudi oil-production areas; but yet prices did not go up!

I believe that even if Iran committed any foolish military action, exceeding the warnings and provocations; there are enough oil-production capabilities to meet the market demands. Even if Tehran closed the Strait of Hormuz, most Saudi oil could be transferred and exported by pipelines to the Red Sea, and Emirati oil to the Arabian Sea. Even if prices go up, it would be for a temporary period that would not last long, Saudis still can pump more.

Iran has no right to be angry at other oil producers. OPEC -- with Iran among its member states -- has agreed on total production quota by which any member can fill the gap when there is one.

The Saudi cabinet did right -- although angering Iran -- when it underscored its stand two weeks ago and stated that boycotting the oil imports from any source is a domestic affair that concerns each country separately. In other words, if the Europeans decide to boycott the Iranian crude, then it is up to them, and that it is their right to seek alternatives from Algeria or the UAE for example. We should not forget that that the oil-exporting countries have faced numerous risks as a result of the unjustified increases in oil prices, similar to what Tehran is trying to do today. Raising oil prices would primarily affect poorer countries. Even big economies such as India and China, which are not part of the dispute, have hastened to seek assurances from the Gulf states over the oil supply. That's exactly the issue addressed by the Saudi cabinet when it stated that it was concerned with "the stability of the international petroleum market, with regards to supply and demand as well as prices."

There might be a war of words, but definitely there is no conspiracy against Iran on the part of the Gulf states, with the aim of imposing a blockade on Tehran. However, there are Iranian attempts to involve the oil-producing countries, especially Gulf states, in its planned game to disrupt the market. This won't be allowed by the Gulf states, whether Iran issues official warnings or send warships to their water shore. Iran should solve its own problems and should bear all the consequences of its decisions.

Tehran decided to escalate over its nuclear program. The western powers decided to confront Iran economically and not through military action. Why would Saudi Arabia, or the rest of the OPEC member states, choose to support Iran on the expense of their economies? Along the past three decades, Iran have dedicated its wealth for one project, namely the military excellence. On the contrary, the six Arab countries facing Tehran, namely the GCC states, have chosen to spend its money on economic development. What we see today, is just the normal outcome of the two choices. Iran wants to make use of its oil in boosting its military and political ambitions. On the other hand, the Gulf Arabs are preoccupied with selling their crude, oil extracts and petrochemicals for social and industrial development.

Similar to Saddam Hussein's Iraq, Iran has the better natural and human resources than the Gulf states; yet it chose to move on the same path chosen by failed states such as Cuba, North Korea, Assad's Syria and Qaddafi's Libya. Those countries agree on one notion; namely power and foreign confrontation.


(The writer is the General Manager of Al Arabiya. The article was published in the London-based Asharq al-Awsat on Jan. 21 and was translated by Abeer Tayel)
 

Housecarl

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http://www.alaskadispatch.com/artic...ear-iran-nukes-campaign-politics-revived-call


Nation-World
Regime change: How fear of Iran nukes, campaign politics revived the call
Howard LaFranchi | The Christian Science Monitor | Jan 22, 2012

Less than a decade after “regime change” became the rallying cry that defined the principal objective of the war in Iraq, the concept is gaining steam once again.

This time it’s about Iran.

But this time around, proponents of regime change envision not a boots-on-the-ground war but ever-tightening economic sanctions as the preferred means of toppling what many in the US view as an outlaw leadership.

Sanctions, primarily a cut-off of Iran’s oil income, would cause such disarray and social unrest, the thinking goes, that the Iranian people would rise up and do away with the root cause of the Iranian crisis, the country’s leaders.

Others scoff at the idea of an externally induced revolution as wishful thinking, but say the rise of regime change rhetoric reflects the climate of a post-Iraq US election year where everyone wants to sound tough on Iran without endorsing an Iraq-style solution.

The idea that regime change is the only viable and lasting solution to the challenges posed by Iran – its advancing nuclear program, its sharpened brinkmanship over the Strait of Hormuz, its support for Islamist extremist movements around the world – has received growing attention and support from Republican presidential candidates vying to out-tough one another on Iran policy.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich is the most vocal proponent of the “It’s the regime, stupid,” position, advocating regime change in foreign-policy debates and elaborating on how he would accomplish the goal: by “cutting off the gasoline supply to Iran and then, frankly, sabotaging the only refinery they have.”

Front-runner Mitt Romney and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum also wave the regime-change card.

For some experts, Iran must take some responsibility for fomenting the shift in the Iran discussion. “Iran has done its part to encourage the regime-change talk by brandishing the threat to close the Strait of Hormuz,” says Christopher Preble, vice president for defense and foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute in Washington.

The Obama administration is also playing a role by using expressions like “tightening the noose” to describe what stronger sanctions are designed to do to Iran, some Iran experts say.

Adding to the frenzy is recent US legislation that targets any country, friend or foe, that continues to purchase Iranian oil through Iran’s central bank, and a proposed European Union (EU) embargo on imports of Iranian oil that could be approved as early as Monday.

An EU embargo on Iranian oil would represent a significant step, since Europe buys about 20 percent of Iran’s oil. European officials say the move may be the last option for forcing Tehran to “change course” before military action, which the Europeans want to avoid.

“If we want to avoid this dilemma of either the Iranian bomb or bombing Iran, then we have to go very far to force them to change course,” says one senior European diplomat in Washington.

The Europeans are not talking about regime change, but their new toughness is boosting those in the US who believe seriously toughened sanctions could be the key to what they say should be the goal: toppling the Iranian regime.

Taking a cue from the Arab Spring and the toppling of Arab tyrants by popular movements, some regional experts say an Iranian population infuriated by increasingly dire economic conditions could do the same. A “tsunami of sanctions” could be implemented “in a way that gives rise to the sort of popular economic discontent that led to the uprisings in the Arab world a year ago,” write two specialists with Washington’s Foundation for Defense of Democracies, Reuel Marc Gerecht and Mark Dubowitz, in a recent Bloomberg opinion piece.

“Through sanctions,” they add, “a democratic counterrevolution in Persia might be born.”

Others say sanctions alone won’t work, no matter how tough they are. John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, is all for regime change in Iran but he says induced economic hardship won’t do it: Iran has too many high-powered friends – Russia and China to start with – and he points to North Korea, which he says has preferred to starve its own population rather than give up its nuclear stockpile.

Still other experts say regime change is not the magic formula for preempting a nuclear Iran, since the Iranian population shows every sign of supporting the country’s nuclear program.

The journalist and author Robert Wright, writing in the Atlantic, notes that polls have shown that strong majorities of Iran’s Greens, who took to the streets to protest the 2009 elections, and other pro-opposition segments of the population are adamant that Iran should not give up its nuclear program “regardless of the circumstances.”

Further noting that the Iraqi government that has resulted from a regime-change war can hardly be accused of “hew[ing] to our policy guidelines,” Mr. Wright adds that, “when you induce regime change by tightening sanctions to the choking point, you don’t get to micro-manage the transition.”

That may be true, but the premise of the regime-changers seems to be that, just as Iraq’s government today, even if not exactly what the US would choose, is better than Saddam Hussein, so would a post-mullahs Iranian government almost certainly be preferable to what now rules in Tehran.

“It’s not so much that we don’t want a nuclear Iran, it’s that we don’t want this Iran to become a nuclear power,” says Michael Hayden, former CIA director and National Security Agency director under George W. Bush.

General Hayden, who places Iran at the top of his “list of five things to worry about,” says Iran earns that ranking not simply because of its nuclear program but because of the threat nuclear proliferation poses and because of the Iranian regime’s track record (of sponsoring international terrorism, for example).

Speaking Thursday at a discussion sponsored by Washington’s Center for the National Interest, Hayden said Iran can be seen to be operating under two clocks: one the nuclear clock, which sanctions aim to slow down, and another clock determining the pace of political change in Iran.

Hayden said he’d like to be able to turn back the second clock to June 2009, the height of Iran’s aborted “green revolution,” to see “where that might have led.”

The objective is to “slow down one clock long enough to allow the other to catch up,” Hayden says. “If you can slow it down long enough, maybe the direction of Iran changes.”
 

Housecarl

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http://tribune.com.pk/story/325571/the-bomb-iran-saudi-arabia-and-pakistan/

The Bomb: Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan

So what happen*s if Iran goes nuclea*r, and Saudi Arabia wants to follow?
By Pervez Hoodbhoy
Published: January 22, 2012

Once upon a time Iran was Pakistan’s close ally — probably its closest one. In 1947, Iran was the first to recognise the newly independent Pakistan. In the 1965 war with India, Pakistani fighter jets flew to Iranian bases in Zahedan and Mehrabad for protection and refuelling. Both countries were members of the US-led Seato and Cento defence pacts, Iran opened wide its universities to Pakistani students, and the Shah of Iran was considered Pakistan’s great friend and benefactor. Sometime around 1960, thousands of flag-waving school children lined the streets of Karachi to greet him. I was one of them.

The friendship has soured, replaced by low-level hostility and suspicion. In 1979, Ayatollah Khomenei’s Islamic revolution, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, set major realignments in motion. As Iran exited the US orbit, Pakistan joined the Americans to fight the Soviets. With Saudi money, they together created and armed the hyper-religious Pashtun mujahideen. Iran too supported the mujahideen — but those of the Tajik Northern Alliance. But as religion assumed centrality in matters of state in both Pakistan and Iran, doctrinal rifts widened.

These rifts are likely to widen as the US prepares for its withdrawal from Afghanistan. Iranians cannot forget that in 1996, following the Soviet pullout from Afghanistan, the Taliban took over Kabul and began a selective killing of Shias. This was followed by a massacre of more than 5,000 Shias in Bamiyan province. Iran soon amassed 300,000 troops at the Afghan border and threatened to attack the Pakistan-supported Taliban government. Today, Iran accuses Pakistan of harbouring terrorist anti-Iran groups like Jundullah on its soil and freely allowing Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and its associates to ravage Pakistan’s Shia minority. Symptomatic of the grassroot-level change, Farsi is no longer taught in Pakistani schools.

On the other hand, Saudi Arabia’s footprint in Pakistan has grown steadily since the early 1970s. Pakistani leaders, political and military, frequently travel to the Kingdom to pay homage or seek refuge. The dependency on Saudi money grew. After India had tested its Bomb in May 1998 and Pakistan was mulling over the appropriate response, the Kingdom’s grant of 50,000 barrels of free oil a day helped Pakistan decide in favour of a tit-for-tat response and cushioned the impact of sanctions subsequently imposed by the US and Europe. The Saudi defence minister, Prince Sultan, was a VIP guest at Kahuta, where he toured its nuclear and missile facilities just before the tests. Years earlier Benazir Bhutto, the then serving prime minister, had been denied entry.

The quid pro quo for the Kingdom’s oil largesse has been soldiers, airmen, and military expertise. Saudi officers are trained at Pakistan’s national defence colleges. The Pakistan Air Force, with a high degree of professional training, helped create the Royal Saudi Air Force and Pakistani pilots flew combat missions against South Yemen in the 1970s. Saudi Arabia is said to have purchased ballistic missiles produced in Pakistan.

So what happens if Iran goes nuclear, and Saudi Arabia wants to follow?

For all its wealth, Saudi Arabia does not have the technical and scientific base to create a nuclear infrastructure. Too weak to defend itself and too rich to be left alone, the country has always been surrounded by those who eye its wealth. It has many universities staffed by highly paid expatriates and tens of thousands of Saudi students have been sent to universities overseas. But because of an ideological attitude unsuited to the acquisition of modern scientific skills, there has been little success in producing a significant number of accomplished Saudi engineers and scientists.

Perforce, Saudi Arabia will turn to Pakistan for nuclear help. This does not mean outright transfer of nuclear weapons by Pakistan to Saudi Arabia. One cannot put credence on rumours that the Saudis have purchased nuclear warheads stocked at Kamra air force base, to be flown out at the opportune time. Surely, this would certainly lead to extreme reaction from the US and Europe, with no support offered by China or Russia. Moreover, even if a few weapons were smuggled out, Saudi Arabia could not claim to have them. Thus they could not serve as a nuclear deterrent.

Instead, the Kingdom’s route to nuclear weapons is likely to be circuitous, beginning with the acquisition of nuclear reactors for electricity generation. The spent fuel from reactors can be processed for plutonium. Like Iran, it will have to find creative ways by which to skirt around the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty – which forbids reprocessing spent fuel. But it doubtless takes heart from the fact that the US forgave India for its nuclear testing in 1998, and eventually ended rewarding it with a nuclear deal. Saudi Arabia had unwillingly signed on to the NPT in 1988. Its position then was that it would be happy to sign up but only if Israel did the same. That, of course, never happened. But Saudi Arabia had no option but to follow the US diktat.

The Kingdom’s first steps towards making nuclear weapons are being contemplated. In June 2011, it said that 16 nuclear reactors were to be built over the next 20 years at a cost of more than $300 billion, each reactor costing around $7 billion. Arrangements are being made to offer the project for international bidding and the winning company should “satisfy the Kingdom’s needs for modern technology”. To create, run and maintain the resulting nuclear infrastructure will require importing large numbers of technical workers. Some will be brought over from western countries, as well as Russia and former Soviet Union countries.

But Saudi Arabia will likely find engineering and scientific skills from Pakistan particularly desirable. Since many are Sunni Muslims, the Pakistanis would presumably be sympathetic with the Kingdom’s larger goals. Having been in the business of producing nuclear weapons for nearly 30 years under difficult circumstances, they would also be familiar with supplier chains for hard-to-get items needed in a weapons programme. And because salaries in Saudi Arabia far exceed those in Pakistan, many qualified people could well ask for leave from their parent institutions at the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, Kahuta Research Laboratories, and National Development Complex.

Good sense dictates that Iran stops its pursuit of the Bomb. But whether it does or not, Pakistan should stay out of the Iran-Saudi nuclear rivalry. Over and above all this, Israel and the United States must stop threatening to bomb Iran.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 23rd, 2012.

The writer currently teaches physics and political science at LUMS. He taught at Quaid-i-Azam University for 36 years and was head of the physics department. He received a doctorate in nuclear physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
 

Housecarl

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http://thedailynewsegypt.com/global-views/accepting-the-inevitable-a-nuclear-iran.html

Accepting the inevitable: A nuclear Iran
By Mamdouh G. Salameh
January 22, 2012, 4:21 pm

The only sanctions able to hurt Iran are those that ban its crude oil exports, but getting the international community to agree on such sanctions is virtually impossible. The international political and economic repercussions of these sanctions would be so huge that they are not worth pondering. Even if, by the very unlikely chance, such sanctions were agreed upon by the United Nations Security Council, Iran's retaliation would be immediate and destructive.

Iran could easily mine the Strait of Hormuz in the face of the 17 million barrels of oil a day (mbd) exported by the Arab Gulf oil producers. This would push the price of oil to more than $150-$200 a barrel (it is currently about $100 a barrel). The biggest loser, of course, would be the biggest oil consumer — namely the United States, which imports 12-14 million barrels of oil every day. This would spell an economic catastrophe for the United States in particular and the world-at-large. And, in a blatant act of defiance, Iran could even sabotage Saudi oil installations in Ras Tannura and the eastern region of Saudi Arabia, thus plunging the world into the largest oil crisis in its history. That is why sanctions against Iran will not work.

Likewise, a naval blockade to enforce sanctions would prove futile and could lead to a war between the United States and Iran, with disastrous implications for the Middle East and US interests in the Gulf.

Like sanctions, war will not work either. A war could not deter Iran from pursuing its nuclear program and seeking nuclear weapons. Such a war could only be waged by the United States or Israel or both jointly. The flaw in this approach is that Iran unfortunately holds all the trump cards, meaning that it could inflict so much damage on the aggressor as to make the war untenable. Moreover, the United States and Israel can't win such a war without themselves using nuclear weapons to destroy Iran, something also unthinkable.

Israel could attack Iran's nuclear installations in a more limited strike, but the damage would only delay Iran's nuclear program, not stop it outright. The retaliation from Iran would be so devastating as to make Israel's war with Hezbollah in 2006 look like child's play. You may recall that Israel got a bloody nose at the hands of Hezbollah, with Iran-supplied rockets raining down on Israel and forcing 500,000 Israelis from the north of Israel to flee to the interior. One can only imagine what Iranian missiles targeting Israeli cities could do.

The United States has neither the appetite nor the forces for another war in the Middle East, particularly after its debacle in Iraq. US generals are scared witless of Israel dragging them into war with Iran, a war they know they cannot win (short of destroying Iran with nuclear weapons as they did with Japan in World War II).

US military doctrine has always been that the US will only go to war with overwhelming power and a certainty that it will win the war. Case in point is the invasion of Iraq and, previously, the invasion of tiny Granada where the US used the might of a superpower against a country that did not even have an army.

Being forced into a war with Iran is a completely different matter. Iran's retaliation against the United States would be to plunge the world into the biggest oil crisis it has ever witnessed. Moreover, Iran would use its Shiite supporters within Iraq to destabilize the country in the aftermath of the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq.

For these reasons, neither sanctions nor war against Iran will force it to relinquish its nuclear program and its pursuit of nuclear weapons. Moreover, the Iranian regime feels it is so well-entrenched that a regime change is virtually impossible.

The flaw in the arguments used by the United States, Israel and the European Union against Iran's nuclear program is the apparent double standard. How can the US expect to persuade Iran to relinquish its nuclear program when America has acquiesced to India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea acquiring nuclear weapons? The US has even signed a nuclear partnership pact with India.

I am all for a nuclear-free Middle East. If Iran manages to develop nuclear weapons, then Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates might also try to buy a ready-made nuclear bomb from Pakistan. Egypt and Syria might try to develop their own nuclear weapons with the help of North Korea or Pakistan or even China. A nuclear race in the Middle East will enhance the probability of a wider war in the region.

The pursuit of a nuclear-free Middle East, on the other hand, would test the sincerity of the United States about non-proliferation, not only where Iran is concerned but also for Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea. If the United States wants to pursue a nuclear-free Middle East, it has first and foremost to persuade Israel to relinquish the nuclear warheads that it has. The problem is that the United States does not want Israel to give up its nuclear weapons. Even if it did, the US has no power to force Israel to give up its weapons and Israel will never succumb to pressure in this regard. And therein lies the rub.

Were France, for instance, to table a resolution to the Security Council aimed at declaring the Middle East a nuclear-free region, the permanent members and other non-permanent numbers would have to vote on it. The test for the United States would be whether or not to support the resolution, knowing full well that the resolution would affect Israel's status as a nuclear state. This would be the real test and I bet my money on a veto vote by the United States.

Iran is determined to acquire nuclear weapons and will face down the United States, the European Union, Israel and the world community to do it. The US and its allies can do nothing militarily, economically or with sanctions to stop Iran. I believe the US and its allies, including Israel, will end up acquiescing to a nuclear Iran. Who knows, they might even form an "unholy alliance" made up of the US, Israel and Iran to siphon the oil and energy resources of the Arab gulf countries, something reminiscent of the US invasion of Iraq.

Iran looks with envy at the great oil resources of its Arab neighbors across the Gulf and hopes that one day it can get its hands on them or at least derive some share from this great wealth. A nuclear Iran desperate for oil could grab some of the gas and oil assets of its Gulf neighbors. It could also hold its Gulf neighbors hostage by threatening to block their oil exports through the Strait of Hormuz unless they share their wealth. The United States would certainly not come to the defense of its Arab allies against a nuclear Iran.

Iran is a hegemonic power by nature. Under the administration of US President Richard Nixon, it received the support and cooperation of the United States to establish itself as policeman of the Gulf. A nuclear Iran aspires to assume that role again independently from the United States. This is where a clash of national interests between the United States and Iran could arise.

Mamdouh G. Salameh is an international oil economist, a consultant to the World Bank in Washington DC, and a technical expert for the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) in Vienna. This commentary is published by DAILY NEWS EGYPT in collaboration with bitterlemons-international.org.
 

Housecarl

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http://business-standard.com/india/news/much-manoeuvringiran-trade-issue/462573/

Much manoeuvring on Iran trade issue
Jyoti Malhotra / New Delhi Jan 23, 2012, 00:58 IST

The US has asserted its power in the ongoing oil crisis with Iran, persuading unlikely allies such as India, China, Japan and the European Union to either impose a total embargo on trading till Iran reverses its nuclear programme or significantly limiting exposure to Iranian crude.

Both India and China have already rejected the US’ sanctions moven, with foreign secretary Ranjan Mathai emphasising that India would only accept United Nations’ sanctions and Chinese premier Wen Jiabao insisting the oil trade not be linked to political ends.

But Delhi is also plotting how not to upset the Americans, its most valuable ally, while protecting its large oil requirements from Iran, worth 12 per cent of the country’s total oil imports. One idea is to have the Central Bank of Iran open an account in UCO Bank which has no financial links with the US, through which payments to Iran can be made. But since Iran will only lift a certain amount of rupees in return for its sales, and since talks with Russia’s Gazprombank to act as third-party intermediary are still ongoing, officials say India will likely end by reducing exposure to Iranian crude and move its oil dependence to Saudi Arabia.

India, in fact, looks like it will go the China and Japan way in dealing with the Iran crisis: Refuse to bow to US pressure in public, but privately look for ways to reduce exposure to Iran, thereby enabling the US president to give these countries a waiver under his domestic sanctions law.

As with China
The Chinese have already moved in that direction. As Wen Jiabao was asserting his country’s economic independence through his tour of the Arab world last week, his also country slashed its oil purchases from Iran to half of what it had bought in January 2011. According to the oil trade newsletter, Foreign Reports, China reduced its oil purchase to 285,000 barrels per day from 550,000 barrels per day in January, though December’s purchases from Iran were 30 per cent higher than what it had been a year before.

It seems China ordered the cut – even as Wen Jiabao was warming up to Arab sheikhs in Qatar and Saudi Arabia — because Iran refused to give it much of a discount on sales, amounting to a mere 50 cents per barrel. According to Foreign Reports, the Iranians feared that if they gave in to the Chinese, other countries like India and Japan would follow.

Note, in fact, what Wen said when he returned from his six-day Arab tour. As he rejected US demands that Iran be punished for its oil trade – and ignored American sanctions on the state-run Zhuhai Zhenrong Corp, said to be Iran’s largest supplier of refined petroleum products — he also showed solidarity with the US in his open criticism of Irann’s nuclear programme.

“China adamantly opposes Iran developing and possessing nuclear weapons,” Wen said, warning Iran that any impending closure of the Straits of Hormuz, an important geographical choke-point through which 30 per cent of the world’s oil supplies pass, could have serious consequences.

Significantly, the Chinese premier used his Arab tour to position China on both sides of the argument. In pro-US Qatar, Wen came out in favour of not linking trade with politics, telling a news conference that Iran’s oil trade constituted normal trading activity. “Legitimate trade should be protected, otherwise the world economic order will fall into turmoil,” he said.

Onwards in Riyadh, Wen signed a $10-billion agreement to construct an oil refinery in Yanbu, a Shia-dominated part of Saudi Arabia. Meanwhile, the Saudis have announced they are willing to pump an additional two million barrels a day — and along with Iraq and Libya, now preparing to pump a million barrels every day — promise to compensate for the 2.2 million barrels per day Iran sells to its international customers, so that the price of oil could be maintained at $100 per barrel.

Saudi Arabia is the largest oil supplier for both India and China. China is also the largest buyer of Iranian oil, followed by India and Japan.

Other developments
Japan, whose dependence on energy from North Africa/West Asia has become much greater since the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster, has promised US officials that it would reduce exposure to Iranian crude in return for a waiver from the sanctions. Both Japan and India, increasingly close allies, hope that if they show both intent and action in reducing their relationship with Iran, the US president will be persuaded to issue them a waiver on trade with Iran.

Meanwhile, the European Union’s foreign ministers are meeting in Brussels tomorrow to formalise their total trade embargo with Iran, having persuaded countries like Greece and Italy to fall in line, even as they seek to protect Iran’s debts worth ¤2.2 billion to the EU.

The EU is hoping to persuade India to see the light as well, with Germany’s national security adviser, Christoph Huesgen, raising the subject in his meetings with Indian counterpart Shivshanker Menon about 10 days before. Huesgen and Menon know each other well not only because of Menon’s presence at Munich’s well-known annual security conference, but also because they constantly confer over positions they must take as current members of the Security Council.

Still, it isn’t as if both sides have hardened their positions to such an extent that they are not willing to talk. According to the Washington Post, a back-channel between the US and Iran is already on track. In Turkey last week, Iranian foreign minister Ali Akbar Salehi told a TV interviewer that, “Iran has never in its history tried to prevent, to put any obstacles in the way of this important maritime route”. He was referring to a possible compromise over the Straits of Hormuz, which Iran had earlier threatened to block if the US went ahead with its sanctions. The Americans are probably not taking the bait yet, but at least some things are now clear: There’s some way to go before Iran’s oil trade reaches a flashpoint.

_____

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Housecarl

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Hummm....

For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://bdnews24.com/details.php?id=216528&cid=3

'No more shortcut to power'
Sat, Jan 21st, 2012 4:12 pm BdST

Dhaka, Jan 21 (bdnews24.com)—Prime minister Sheikh Hasina again pointed the finger at the BNP on Saturday for conspiring the military coup and said that analysis of their statements and speeches make many things clear.

"If you have anything to say, come to parliament. There will be no more usurping power in Bangladesh by taking shortcuts, God willing," she said, addressing the opposition leader Khaleda Zia at a discussion in Ganabhaban.

On Thursday, Bangladesh army said in a media briefing that it foiled a plot by some hardline officers who were plotting to disrupt the democracy with the assistance of some non-resident Bangladeshis.

Thanking the military for frustrating the attempt to overthrow her elected government, Hasina said, "As a result, they and the country both have been saved."

Apparently referring to BNP chairperson Khaleda's remarks at a Chittagong rally on Jan 9 that 'even army personnel are being abducted', army spokesman, brigadier general Muhammad Masud Razzaq had said on Thursday, "Even a large political party sang along imaginary, misleading and propagandist news to bring allegations, which created unexpected and provocative debate among the army and conscious citizens."

"An analysis of their [opposition party] speeches and statements will make a lot of things to the people," Hasina pointed out, reiterating her stance that the main opposition is conspiring against the government.

The prime minister added that those who have come to power in the past using the military have harmed the armed forces through the coups and murders that they carried out.

The discussion organised to bring together Noakhali district Awami League and associate organisations was also attended by executive council members of the ruling party and leaders of all units in the district.

bdnews24.com/jk/rn/bd/1551h
 

Housecarl

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Also apply this article to the Red and Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf.....

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http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap...wyvAcw?docId=a6740b9d74124d2089647b5fd65f6744

Battle for control of Asia's seas goes underwater

By ERIC TALMADGE, Associated Press – 3 days ago

YOKOSUKA, Japan (AP) — It's getting a bit more crowded under the sea in Asia, where Andrew Peterson commands one of the world's mightiest weapons: a $2 billion nuclear submarine with unrivaled stealth and missiles that can devastate targets hundreds of miles (kilometers) away.

Super high-tech submarines like Cmdr. Peterson's USS Oklahoma City have long been the envy of navies all over the globe — and a key component of U.S. military strategy.

"We really have no peer," Peterson told The Associated Press during a recent port call in Japan.

But America's submarine dominance in the Pacific is facing its biggest challenge since the Cold War. Nearly every Asian country with a coastline is fortifying its submarine fleet amid territorial disputes stirred up by an increasingly assertive China and the promise of bountiful natural resources.

Submarines are difficult to find and hard to destroy. Even fairly crude submarine forces can attack surface ships or other targets with a great deal of stealth, making them perfect for countries with limited resources. The threat of such an attack is a powerful deterrent in Asia, where coastal defenses are vital.

"This is shaping up as an intense arms race," said Lyle Goldstein, an associate professor at the China Maritime Studies Institute of the U.S. Naval War College. "This arms race is not simply China versus the rest — though that explains much of it — because there are other rivalries here as well."

China is pouring money into enlarging and modernizing its fleet, and India is planning to get a nuclear-powered attack submarine — the INS Chakra — on a 10-year lease from Russia as early as this month.

Australia is debating its most-expensive defense project ever — a submarine upgrade that could cost more than 36 billion dollars.

Japan is adding another eight to its 16-boat fleet. South Korea is selling them to Indonesia. Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Taiwan and even Bangladesh either now have or are planning to acquire subs.

North Korea, which has a large fleet of mini-subs, allegedly put them to deadly use in 2010 — killing 46 South Korean sailors in the worst clash since their war ended in 1953.

The trend has a momentum of its own — once one country gets submarines, its neighbors are under pressure to follow suit, lest they give up a strategic advantage. But the rush to build up submarine forces also underscores a growing awareness of the region's potential riches.

Roughly half of the goods transported between continents by ship go through the South China Sea, accounting for $1.2 trillion in U.S. trade annually. The area has vast, largely untapped natural resources — including oil reserves of seven billion barrels and an estimated 900 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

"The geostrategic significance of the South China Sea is difficult to overstate," said a report this month by the Center for a New American Security, a private think tank based in Washington DC. "To the extent that the world economy has a geographical center, it is in the South China Sea."

With the decline of Russia, the U.S. remains the top nation with a significant capability to operate submarines in the open seas — a crucial advantage if Washington wants to maintain its role in keeping key sea lanes and chokepoints like the Malacca Strait, which connects the Indian Ocean to the western Pacific, free for commercial trade.

The U.S. Navy's blue water superiority is likely to continue for the foreseeable future. Peterson, the Oklahoma City skipper, said the Navy's workhorse Los Angeles-class subs remain a cut above the rest. "The beauty is that they are still the state of the art."

But, closer to shore, China is challenging the status quo.

"China has put a major emphasis on submarines, with the result that the PLA Navy submarine force is now, along with the Chinese missile forces, one of the sharpest arrows in China's quiver of military capabilities," Goldstein said.

China now has more than 60 subs in its navy, including nine that are nuclear-powered, according to the Pentagon's annual overview last year.

Its mainstay boats are diesel-powered Song-class vessels, but it also is developing more advanced nuclear-powered attack and ballistic submarines, including the Jin class that would carry missiles with a range of 4,600 miles (7,400 kilometers). Nuclear-powered subs can operate longer submerged than their diesel counterparts.

China has a long way to go to match the U.S. Navy — the advanced Jin subs, for example, would have to be well into the Japan Sea for the continental United States to be within their range — and Goldstein said that Beijing's threat has been overblown.

To keep its edge, however, the United States now has more submarines in the Pacific than in the Atlantic. With the military missions in Iraq and Afghanistan wrapping up, the Obama administration has also announced a "pivot to the Pacific" strategy that will likely further boost U.S. naval resources in the region.

Even so, China is just one player in an increasingly complicated game.

"Everybody's buying subs, but not for the same reasons," said Owen Cote, associate director of MIT's Security Studies Program.

The Pacific is dotted by scores of disputed islands, and who controls what part of the seas is a potentially explosive question. Japan has rival claims with China, South Korea and Russia. A half dozen countries claim rights to the remote Spratly Islands.

"Vietnam and the other states abutting the South China Sea want to have the option to contest a Chinese decision to resolve the various boundary issues that divide them by force," Cote said. "The Chinese have an interest in using submarines in preventing U.S. surface ships from intervening on behalf of one of these neighbors in such a conflict."

As regional navies get stronger, so does the potential for armed clashes.

"It poses the prospect of changing the balance of power across the Asia-Pacific — in fact it already has," said Hugh White, Australian National University's professor of strategic and defense studies. "This is a very maritime part of the world. Anyone with a submarine has a clear capability of disrupting commercial shipping."

White said the development of submarine forces by multiple Asian nations is already inhibiting the ability of China and the United States to project their naval power, and posing new issues for smaller navies caught in the middle.

"There are questions about whether the U.S. will continue to assume its security role," he said. "This is a big debate in Australia right now. Do we aim to be able to act independently of the U.S.? To what extent do we want to be able to operate against a major player like China, or more locally against Indonesia?"

Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Analysis:
Iran's softer Gulf words don't mean nuclear shift


By Robin Pomeroy | Reuters – 16 mins ago...
http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-irans-softer-gulf-words-dont-mean-nuclear-193100287.html

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran has stepped back from a threat to close the Strait of Hormuz, but while its softened rhetoric appears to be aimed at de-escalating military tensions, it does not indicate any change of stance on its nuclear program.

"Iran's leadership has a strong sense of self-preservation," said Robert Smith, a consultant at Facts Global Energy. "The comments can likely be interpreted as a sign of cooler heads prevailing."


A senior commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps said on Saturday the likely return of U.S. naval vessels to the region was "not a new issue and ... should be interpreted as part of their permanent presence.

That was a significant shift from earlier this month when Tehran said the USS John C. Stennis aircraft carrier, which left at the end of December during Iranian naval maneuvers, should not return - an order interpreted by some observers in Iran and Washington as a blanket threat to any U.S. carriers.

Only a few weeks ago Tehran was threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz, used by a third of the world's seaborne oil trade, if new sanctions cripple its oil exports - exactly the effect Washington and Europe are aiming for.

European Union foreign ministers are set to meet on Monday to agree a ban on importing oil from Iran and sanctions signed by U.S. President Barack Obama on New Year's Eve aim to make it impossible for countries around the world to buy Iranian crude.

Iran's First Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi, who had said Iran would not allow "even one drop of oil" through the strait if oil sanctions are imposed, was less fiery in remarks reported on Sunday.

"Today they (the West) have launched a new game against Iran but it is clear that we will resist against their excessive demands," the official IRNA news agency quoted him as saying.

But while Iran may be reining in its most hawkish rhetoric, and calling for a resumption of talks with world powers that stalled a year ago [ID:nL6E8CI1Q1], it is no closer to offering concessions on the nuclear issue that could lead to an easing of sanctions.

OIL IMPACT

One Western diplomat in Tehran compared Iran's offer of talks to its position before the last round of sanctions were imposed in mid-2010.

"They were saying then: 'Let's have talks,' but it wasn't followed up by any kind of concrete commitment," he said, adding that, despite several public declarations of goodwill, Tehran has yet to deliver a reply to a letter Ashton sent to Tehran on October 21 letter offering to resume talks.

"Iran is not softening its stance," said Meir Javedanfar, Iran analyst and co-author of "The Nuclear Sphinx of Tehran."

"It's changing its strategy after realizing that its ill-timed and exaggerated threat to close the Strait of Hormuz in case of sanctions caused more damage to its stance and position than anyone else."

The change in Iran's rhetoric could add to the bearish direction of oil prices which were down on Friday due to signs of reduced demand.

"The result of Iran softening its stance, amongst other factors, will contribute to an easing of oil markets," Smith said, adding that the impact will be limited.

"If recent events are any indication, the markets have listened to Iran's rhetoric so many times that its impact has become quite muted compared to the reactions of, say, five years ago."

While the likelihood of imminent naval clashes in the Gulf may have receded, Iran could yet see through its threat of closing Hormuz in the event of an Israeli air strike on its nuclear facilities, Javedanfar said.

"Iran could still block the strait of Hormuz in case of a preemptive strike against it.

"This is a scenario which nobody could or should ignore, despite the fact that the recent threat to close the strait in case of sanctions turned out to be a bluff."






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Housecarl

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Well this is going about as predicted.....

For links see article source....
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http://www.realclearworld.com/news/...s_storm_libyan_government_hq_in_benghazi.html

January 22, 2012
Protesters storm Libyan government HQ in Benghazi
Mohammad Al Tommy

BENGHAZI, Libya (Reuters) - Protesters stormed the Benghazi headquarters of Libya's ruling National Transitional Council (NTC) Saturday while its chairman was still in the building.

People in Benghazi, birthplace of the revolt which forced out former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, have been protesting for weeks to demand the sacking of Gaddafi-era officials and more transparency about how the NTC is spending Libyan assets.

The attack is a serious blow to the self-appointed but internationally recognized NTC, and underscores growing discontent over the way it is running the country.

Many of those who fought in the nine-month civil war that ended with the capture and killing of Gaddafi in October are unhappy with cash compensations promised by the government, saying it does not cover their basic needs.

On a Saturday, hundreds of young men, many wounded from the war, rallied outside the NTC's headquarters.

When Abdul Jalil, NTC chairman, came out in an attempt to address the crowd, some protesters hurled empty plastic bottles at him, prompting security forces to fire tear gas.

"Go away, Go away," the protesters chanted as Abdul Jalil spoke. He then went back into the building but he is believed to have been pulled to safety from a back door when the crowd charged into the building.

SPOILS OF WAR

Protesters threw stones and metal bars at the building, breaking its windows, before storming the headquarters. One protester left the building carrying a set of loudspeakers and screaming: "Spoils of war!"

Angry protesters also damaged a Toyota Land Cruiser used by Abdul Jalil.

"A large number of wounded people were unhappy because the National (Transitional) Council has not met their demands," said 30-year-old Tareq al-Gheryani as he watched people attacking the NTC's headquarters.

"People are not happy with the council because it has also given government posts to people who are known to have links with Gaddafi."

Interim government officials say it is impossible for them sack hundreds of officials merely because they served under Gaddafi, but stress that those proved to have been involved in human rights abuses or financial fraud will be fired.

The NTC is grappling with problems, including the disbanding of dozens of powerful militias that effectively control the country. The ministries of interior and defense want to integrate them into a military and police force, but militia chiefs have shown little interest in surrendering their arms.

Thursday, Abdul Hafiz Ghoga, vice president of the NTC, was roughed up by university students in Benghazi. He was surrounded by a crowd and jostled before he was pulled away to safety.

(Reporting by Mohamad Al-Tommy; Writing by Mahmoud Habboush and Christian Lowe; Editing by Andrew Roche)
Reuters
 

Housecarl

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http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,15683868,00.html

Arab World | 22.01.2012
Libyan deputy leader steps down after angry protests


NTC Vice-chairman Abdel Hafiz Ghoga
Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Ghoga said an "atmosphere of hatred" had arisen
The deputy chief of Libya's National Transitional Council has stood down after a series of angry protests against the administration. Demonstrators say the interim body has failed to live up to expectations.


The deputy leader of Libya's National Transitional Council stood down on Sunday after angry protests led to the storming the council's headquarters in the city of Benghazi.

Vice-chairman Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, one of the highest-profile members of the administration, said that a national consensus that led to the uprising against former leader Moammar Gadhafi had given way to an "atmosphere of hatred."

"My resignation is for the benefit of the nation and is required at this stage," Ghoga told Al Jazeera television. "My resignation shows that the NTC is a tribune for fighting for a cause and not a governing body. We are not looking for posts," he said.

Rebels in Bengahzi during the conflictBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Benghazi was the center of opposition to Gadhafi throughout the Libyan uprising

Late on Saturday, a crowd demanding the resignation of senior NTC members forced their way into the body's headquarters in Benghazi, seizing computers and furniture. Protesters accuse the body of corruption and not moving swiftly enough to introduce reforms.

Suspicion over Gadhafi ties

Ghoga, who had served as the NTC's official spokesman, is unpopular with many Benghazi residents because of his belated defection from the Gadhafi regime. The city served as the rebels' base throughout the uprising.

Opposition to the council has been stirred by concerns that many members have links to Gadhafi, while former rebels were being sidelined.

NTC Chairman Mustafa Abdel Jalil on Sunday suspended some members of the council pending investigation into corruption and links with the country’s former strongman.

An announcement was also made on Sunday that details of Libya's new election law would be delayed by a week, to be made public on January 28.

The law will establish a system under which Libyans will vote for the 200 members of a new national congress, to be elected before June 23.

Author: Richard Connor (AP, AFP, Reuters)
Editor: Kyle James
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use.....
http://www.boston.com/news/world/mi...bya_suspends_transitional_government_members/

Libya suspends transitional government members
By Rami Al-Shaheibi
Associated Press / January 22, 2012

BENGHAZI, Libya—The head of Libya's transitional government on Sunday suspended delegates from Benghazi, the city that kicked off the movement that toppled ruler Moammar Gadhafi last year.

The suspension the latest sign of discord within the body that led the anti-Gadhafi uprising but has struggled to establish an effective government to replace his regime.

The move follows protests in Benghazi accusing the body of corruption and not moving fast enough on reform. It was prompted by street protests and rejected by the delegates.

The announcement came the day after protesters stormed the National Transitional Council offices in Benghazi and carted off computers, chairs and desks while Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, head of the NTC, was holed up inside.

Abdul-Jalil told The Associated Press he suspended the six representatives from Benghazi, the main city in eastern Libya. They can continue to serve only if approved by the local city council.

Abdul-Jalil said he appointed a council of religious leaders to investigate corruption charges and identify people with links to the Gadhafi regime.

The body's deputy head, Abdel-Hafiz Ghoga, resigned in protest over the suspensions. Ghoga, known for his polished language and expensive suits, was a prominent spokesman during the eight-month civil war that ended with Gadhafi's capture and killing in October.

Another delegate, Fathi Baja, called the move "illegitimate" and said he would stand down only if the people of Benghazi asked him to. Baja, a well known critic of Gadhafi even before the uprising, also criticized the appointment of religious leaders, saying that when he was criticizing Gadhafi, "they were calling on people to obey the leader."

Also Sunday, the head of the committee tasked with preparing the country's election law said its release would be delayed for one week. The final law, which was set to be announced Sunday, will be made public on Jan. 28, said Othman al-Mugherhi.

The committee published a draft law earlier this month and said it would solicit comments from Libyans. Al-Mugherhi said the delay will allow the committee to consider these comments while drafting the final law.

The law will spell out how Libyans will elect the 200-members national congress, which will oversee the drafting of a constitution. The body is supposed to be elected before June 23.

Al-Mugherhi also announced the formation of a 17-member electoral commission to oversee the vote. The body contains professors, judges, lawyers and men and women representing non-governmental organizations, he said.

Under Gadhafi's rule, Libya had no working parliament for four decades.
© Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
 

Housecarl

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Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.examiner.com/drug-cartel...-corps-withdraws-all-volunteers-from-honduras

Amid violence...Peace Corps withdraws all volunteers from Honduras
Dave Gibson
January 20, 2012

On Monday, as Honduran authorities continued to unearth dozens of bodies from a mass grave along the Caribbean coast, all 158 Peace Corps volunteers in left the country and headed back to the United States. The volunteers were working on AIDS prevention, water sanitation as well as many project aimed at helping the country’s impoverished youth.

The sad event marked the first time the Peace Corps has been withdrawn from Central America since civil wars in the region disrupted the group’s humanitarian missions in El Salvador in 1979 and in Nicaragua in 1980.

The withdrawal was actually announced in late December amid growing violence from Mexican drug cartels as well as from Salvadoran gang MS-13 which is believed to be responsible for the latest grisly discovery as well as for two other mass graves in the area.

While the U.S. government has refused to cite the violence for the reason behind the withdrawal, Honduras President Porfirio Lobo told reporters that the Peace Corps volunteers had been affected by the spreading crime.
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Peace Corps volunteers have increasingly become targeted by local gangs.

-On December 3, 2011, 27-year-old Lauren Robert from Texas was shot and robbed on a bus in the city of San Pedro Sula.

-On January 24, 2011 a volunteer was robbed and raped while hiking near Duyure in southern Honduras.

In addition to the withdrawal, the Peace Corps has also suspended training new volunteers for El Salvador and Guatemala.

The Mexican drug cartel known as Los Zetas have set up extensive cocaine smuggling operations in Honduras.

In February 2010, Honduras intelligence officials reported officials that Los Zetas had hired a regional gang known as Barrio 18 to kill the country’s security minister. The cartel has established control over human smuggling and weapons trafficking in the country as well.

In 2011, the government of Guatemala declared a “state of siege” in that country’s northern state of Peten. Los Zetas gained control of that state as well as two others in 2008.

Salvadoran President Mauricio Funes recently stated that Los Zetas have been working with Barrio 18 as well as MS-13 gangs.

According to Mexico’s Civic Council on Public Security and Criminal Justice, San Pedro Sula, Honduras saw 159 homicides per 100,000 residents in 2011, making that city, the most violent in the Western hemisphere…a title previously held by Juarez, Mexico.

In October 2011, the United Nations reported that Honduras had the highest homicide rate in the world with 6,200 killings, or 82.1 murders per 100,000 inhabitants.

While Honduras is now considered to have the highest murder rate in the world, the entire region of Central America is coming under the control of the drug cartels.

Until Monday, the Peace Corps had a continuous mission in Honduras since 1963.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.metro.co.uk/news/888084-islamist-leader-killed-in-secret-drone-strike

By Fred Attewill - 22nd January, 2012

Islamist leader killed in secret drone strike
British-raised al-Qaeda operative Bilal al-Berjawi has been killed in a US drone strike in Somalia.

Bilal al-Berjawi was travelling around the outskirts of Mogadishu when his car came under fire from the unmanned aircraft.

‘Good riddance, and I hope the al-Shabab leadership will come to their senses and cease the hostility in Somalia,’ UN representative Omar Jamal said after al-Berjawi’s death on Saturday.

Al-Shabab’s chief spokesman said: ‘This foreigner is a martyr. Thank God, that is why he came to Somalia.’

Al-Berjawi was of Lebanese descent but brought up in west London. He fought in Afghanistan before joining insurgents in Somalia from about 2006.

Also known as Abu Hafsa, he was an associate of the late al-Qaeda commander, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, who directed the 1998 bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

He helped oversee recruitment, training and tactics for al-Shabab, which is fighting the weak UN-backed government.

It is thought there are several hundred foreign fighters in Somalia, mainly clustered in training camps around the stronghold of Kismayo.

Militants have fought a five-year campaign to remove the government and take control of south and central Somalia.
 

Housecarl

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Posted for fair use......
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/The+making+of+a+Kenyan+terrorist+commander+/-/1056/1312182/-/7ny7hk/-/

Sheikh Ali: The making of a Kenyan terrorist commander
By NYAMBEGA GISESA engisesa@yahoo.com
Posted Sunday, January 22 2012 at 20:07

Before he released a video declaring war against Kenya on behalf of Somalia militant group Al-Shabaab, few Kenyans had heard of Sheikh Ahmed Iman Ali.

Last week, Al-Shabaab appointed Sheikh Ali as the de facto leader of Kenyan Al-Shabaab fighters in Somalia. Recently, Sheikh Ali called for revenge attacks against Kenya.

Interviews with those who know Sheikh Ali, a former chairman of Muslim Youth Centre (MYC) in Pumwani, Nairobi, say he has been controversial since his days at Jomo Kenyatta University of Science and Technology where he graduated with a degree in engineering.

Born either in 1973 or 1974, Sheikh Ali presents security agents with something new in the fight against terrorism.

Those who know him say he was a charming preacher with a fanatical following among various Kenyan communities.

Financial support

He is said to have the ability to attract financial support and followers from countries like the US and Europe.

Britons Natalia Faye Webb and Jermaine Grant arrested in Kenya over claims of links to terrorism were reportedly close to him. His mix of scripture and vitriol made him differ with Imams close to him.

They say he was propagating the idea of forcing people to join Islam through his insistence that “through violence they can understand Islam.”

In 2007, he masterminded the ouster of an executive committee of Pumwani Riyadha Mosque when he led the youth in throwing out five officials over alleged corruption and mismanagement claims.

It is not clear when he graduated from the university but his associates gave 2001 as the probable year.

The university refused to divulge the details saying that such information was “highly confidential” even when the Nation insisted that it could help avert possible terrorist attacks especially in establishing the links he made as a student.

“It is a matter of national security. Anti-terror police came here and said that we should not give out information about him,” a senior official at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Science and Technology told the Nation.

After university, he worked for Shell and Mobil as an engineer. Al-Shabaab said that they had raised Sheikh Ali’s status to “Supreme Amiir.”

They say that he was following in the footsteps of Fazul Mohammed, the former leader of Al-Qaeda’s operations in East Africa.

Fazul also served as a senior leader in Al-Shabaab. Sheikh Ali formed MYC in 2006 under the slogan “preference for others” to provide the youth with religious counselling.

A report by the UN Somalia and Eritrea Monitoring Group indicates that Sheikh Ali was central in the recruitment of non-Somalis in Nairobi to join Al-Shabaab fighters in Somalia.

The report says Al-Shabaab “has extensive funding, recruiting and training networks within Kenya” and has “established connections with jihadist groups across the continent.”

The UN investigation that focused on the youth centre claims that the organisation was involved in the recruitment of Al-Shabaab operatives.

Officials of MYC have since distanced themselves from Sheikh Ali and the recruitment of Kenyans to join Al-Shabaab.

“Officially, the MYC Constitution defines the group as a ‘community based-organisation’ that aims to provide youth with religious counselling... In practice, members of the group openly engage in recruiting for Al-Shabaab in Kenya,” the report claims.

It continues: “Ahmed Iman’s success in recruiting fighters and mobilising funds for the cause, appear to have earned him steady ascendancy within Al-Shabaab. The Monitoring Group believes that he now intends to conduct large-scale attacks in Kenya.”

A fortnight ago, Al-Shabaab released a propaganda video declaring war against Kenya. The video was reportedly released by Sheikh Ali. (READ: Al-Shabaab declares Jihad against Kenya)

Senior leader

In the recording entitled ‘If they seek your help in religion, it is your duty to help them’, he says war should now be waged in Kenya in response to the military operation in Somalia.

“Kenya has declared war against Somalia and Jihad should now be waged inside Kenya which is legally a war zone,” Sheikh Ali says in the video.

The video, which was initially posted on YouTube, has since been withdrawn although it can still be viewed on other social media networks.

One of his most controversial roles that propelled him to the public limelight as a terror mastermind was as secretary of the Pumwani Riyadha Mosque building committee, which is embroiled in claims of funding terrorist activities.

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