WAR 10-20-2018-to-10-26-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I happen to be up and since a lot of stuff has been going on I figured I'd start this thread up again. Besides, it's good therapy to work on typing on a keyboard with both hands (so my apologies ahead of time for the typos...HC).

(338) 08-25-2018-to-08-31-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...8-31-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(339) 09-01-2018-to-09-07-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...9-07-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(340) 09-08-2018-to-09-14-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...9-14-2018___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ndum-on-independence-from-china-idUSKCN1MU090

World News October 20, 2018 / 1:19 AM / Updated 2 hours ago

Thousands rally in Taiwan, call for referendum on independence from China

Jess Macy Yu
3 Min Read

TAIPEI (Reuters) - Several thousand pro-independence demonstrators rallied in Taiwan’s capital on Saturday to protest against Beijing’s “bullying” and called for a referendum on whether the self-ruled island should formally declare independence from China.

The rally, one of the largest seen on Taiwan this year, was organized by a group called Formosa Alliance founded six months ago, and the protesters gathered near the headquarters of President Tsai Ing-wen’s Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

Kenny Chung, a spokesman for Formosa Alliance, described the turnout as “very successful”.

Relations with Beijing have deteriorated since Tsai came into office in 2016, with China suspecting that she wants to push for formal independence, a red line for Beijing.

China views Taiwan as a wayward province and has never renounced the use of force to bring democratic Taiwan under its control. This year, China increased military and diplomatic pressure, conducting air and sea military exercises around the island and persuading three of the few governments still supporting Taiwan to drop their backing.

Protesters said Tsai’s government should push back against Beijing, and advocated a referendum on independence to avoid being “swallowed up”. Some carried placards bearing the message: “No more bullying; no more annexation”.

The next presidential election is not due until 2020, but the ruling DPP will draw some indication of support from island-wide local elections that are set to take place in late November.

Tsai said last week she will maintain the status quo with Beijing, but she also vowed to boost Taiwan’s national security and said her government would not submit to Chinese suppression.

Beijing has already been irked by the Taiwanese government’s approval for a referendum next month to decide whether to enter future Olympics events as “Taiwan” rather than “Chinese Taipei”, the name agreed under a compromise struck in the late 1970s.

(This story has been refiled to change word in final paragraph to “approval” instead of “plan”)

Additional reporting by Yimou Lee, Fabian Hamacher and Judy Peng; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore
 
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...p-passage-through-taiwan-strait-idUSKCN1MU04F

October 19, 2018 / 9:53 PM / Updated 6 hours ago

Exclusive: U.S. weighs new warship passage through Taiwan Strait

Phil Stewart, Idrees Ali
5 Min Read

SINGAPORE/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States is considering a new operation to send warships through the Taiwan Strait, U.S. officials tell Reuters, a mission aimed at ensuring free passage through the strategic waterway but which risks heightening tensions with China.

The U.S. Navy conducted a similar mission in the strait’s international waters in July and any repeat would be seen in self-ruled Taiwan as a fresh expression of support by President Donald Trump’s government.

The U.S. military declined comment and U.S. officials who discussed the deliberations, which have not been previously reported, did so on condition of anonymity. They did not discuss the potential timing for any fresh passage through the strait.

China views Taiwan as a wayward province and has been ramping up pressure to assert its sovereignty over the island. It raised concerns over U.S. policy toward Taiwan in talks this week with U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in Singapore.

Even as Washington mulls ordering a fresh passage through the strait, it has been trying to explain to Beijing that its policies toward Taiwan are unchanged.

Mattis delivered that message to China’s Defense Minister Wei Fenghe personally on Thursday, on the sidelines of an Asian security forum.

“Minister Wei raised Taiwan and concerns about our policy. The Secretary reassured Minister Wei that we haven’t changed our Taiwan policy, our one China policy,” said Randall Schriver, a U.S. assistant secretary of defense who helps guide Pentagon policy in Asia.

“So it was, I think, a familiar exchange.”

Washington has no formal ties with Taiwan but is bound by law to help it defend itself and is the island’s main source of arms. The Pentagon says Washington has sold Taiwan more than $15 billion in weaponry since 2010.

U.S.-CHINA FLASHPOINTS
Taiwan is only one of a growing number of flashpoints in the U.S.-China relationship, which also include a bitter trade war, U.S. sanctions and China’s increasingly muscular military posture in the South China Sea.

Mattis told Wei on Thursday that the world’s two largest economies needed to deepen high-level military ties so as to navigate tension and rein in the risk of inadvertent conflict.

Some current and former U.S. officials say U.S. warship passages in the Taiwan Strait are still too infrequent, and note that a U.S. aircraft carrier hasn’t transited the Taiwan Strait since 2007, during the administration of George W. Bush.

When the last two U.S. warships, both destroyers, sailed through the Taiwan Strait in July, it was the first such operation in about a year.

Beijing, which has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control, responded to the July passage with a warning to the United States to avoid jeopardizing “peace and stability” in the strategic waterway.

It has also viewed U.S. overtures toward Taiwan with alarm, including its unveiling a new de facto embassy in Taiwan and passage of the Taiwan Travel Act, which encourages U.S. officials to visit the island.

Military experts say the balance of power between Taiwan and China has shifted decisively in China’s favor in recent years, and China could easily overwhelm the island unless U.S. forces came quickly to Taiwan’s aid.

China has also alarmed Taiwan by ramping up military exercises this year, including flying bombers and other military aircraft around the island and sending its aircraft carrier through the narrow Taiwan Strait separating it from Taiwan.

Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen said last week the island will increase its defense budget every year to ensure it can defend its sovereignty, including resuming domestic development of advanced training aircraft and submarines.

“At this time, China’s intimidation and diplomatic pressure not only hurts relations between both sides, but seriously challenges the peaceful stability in the Taiwan Strait,” she said in a National Day speech in Taipei on Oct. 10.

Her remarks came ahead of island-wide local elections in late November that are seen as a bellwether for her ruling party’s performance in presidential elections due in 2020.

Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
During the war with Japan, Australia traded with Japan with iron ore and no Japanese warships or suds attacked the shipping with the ore on it. Warships are warships.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://apnews.com/161f99932d814a88b1525ae6b047c626

3 charged in southern France extremist attack

15 minutes ago

PARIS (AP) — Three people have been charged in France over an Islamic extremist’s shooting rampage and supermarket hostage-taking earlier this year.

French regional media reported that the three are suspected of providing help to assailant Redouane Lakdim before his March attack in Carcassonne and the nearby town of Trebes. Four people were killed, including a police officer who traded himself for a hostage.

A judicial official said Saturday that the three were charged with criminal association with terrorists, and one was also accused of possessing arms in connection with a terrorist enterprise.

They were among six people arrested in raids this week. The other three were released. It was unclear why the arrests occurred so long after the attack.

Lakdim was fatally shot by police. His girlfriend was charged earlier this year.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Robert Menzies - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Menzies

Sir Robert Gordon Menzies, KT, AK, CH, QC, FAA, FRS was an Australian politician who twice ..... In 1938 his enemies ridiculed him as "Pig Iron Bob", the result of his industrial battle with waterside workers who refused to load scrap iron being ...
‎Early life · ‎Early career in federal ... · ‎Second term as prime ... · ‎Death and funeral


////////////////////////////////////////////////////////



Did you ever stop to wonder why the fellows on the job
Refer to Robert Menzies by the nickname Pig-Iron Bob?
It's a fascinating tale though it happened long ago
It's a part of our tradition every worker ought to know

Chorus
We wouldn't load pig-iron for the fascists of Japan
Despite intimidation we refused to lift the ban
With democracy at stake the struggle must be won
We had to beat the menace of the fascist Rising Sun

It was 1937 and aggressive Japanese
Attacked the Chinese people tried to bring them to their knees
Poorly armed and ill equipped the peasants bravely fought
While Australian water siders rallied round to lend support

Attorney General Menzies said the ship would have to sail
"If the men refuse to load it we will throw them into jail"
But our unity was strong - we were solid to a man
And we wouldn't load pig-iron for the fascists of Japan

For the Judas politicians we would pay a heavy price
The jungles of New Guinea saw a costly sacrifice
There's a lesson to be learned that we've got to understand
Peace can only be secured when the people lend a hand

Notes

Many thanks to Clem Parkinson for permission to add this song to the Union Songs collection

Clem sings the song on the MUA Centenary CD "With These Arms"


http://unionsong.com/u150.html
 

Housecarl

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https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...lia-shines-a-spotlight-on-americas-other-wars

Somalia airstrike shines spotlight on America's shadowy wars

by Jamie McIntyre | October 18, 2018 12:00 AM

America’s wars in Yemen, Somalia, and Niger are not secret, but they manage to fly under the radar for months at a time, unless something goes dramatically well, or terribly wrong.

Last year when U.S. Africa Command revealed that four U.S. special operations soldiers were killed in a fierce firefight after being ambushed in Niger, most Americans had no idea the U.S. had roughly 800 troops in the North African nation, more than were in Syria at the time.

This week, Africa Command issued a routine news release noting a previously announced U.S. airstrike was believed to have killed 60 al-Shabaab militants on Oct. 12, the largest body count in a single strike since last November, which killed an estimated 100 enemy fighters.

So far this year, the U.S. has conducted 27 strikes against Shabaab in Somalia, on pace to eclipse last year’s total of 31, according to a tally by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies’ “Long War Journal.”

In Yemen, a small number of U.S. special operations commandos are hunting members of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, called AQAP, who continue to plot attacks against the U.S. from ungoverned parts of the country. The commandos operate separately from a Saudi-led war aimed at defeating Iranian-backed Houthi rebels and installing a legitimate government.

The three “lesser” wars are rarely talked about by Defense Secretary Jim Mattis or other senior Pentagon leaders, and often the only official reminder that hundreds of U.S. troops are engaged in dangerous combat is when an official causalty notice is released. One of those came in June when it was announced Army Staff Sgt. Alexander Conrad was killed by enemy indirect fire in Somalia.

“Certainly in terms of public attention, they receive much less,” said Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a senior fellow with Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

These days, America’s counter-terrorism missions are pretty much fought the same way, whether they are against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or the Taliban in Afghanistan, or against other groups in Yemen, Somalia, and Niger.

Small numbers of highly-trained U.S. special operations troops provide arms and advice to local forces, accompany them to their targets, and call in U.S. air power if necessary.

Technically the American forces are not on the front lines. Instead they hang back while “partner forces” do the actual fighting.

It’s a strategy that started under President Barack Obama and has greatly expanded under President Trump.

“From 2006 onward there’s been a devolution of responsibility to local partners with the U.S. playing a more of a surgical role in terms of its strikes,” Gartenstein-Ross said. “So I think that it's the model of the future, but it's also the model I would say of at least the past 12 years."

The strategy is designed to keep U.S. troops out of the line of fire, because recent history has shown that the support of the American people declines as American casualties increase.

Still, as deaths in all the current operations underscore, there is no totally safe place in an active war zone. Support is also maintained if the conflict stays largely out of the news.

To that end, unlike the high-profile wars in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, the wars in Yemen, Somalia, and Niger don’t have operational names such “Inherent Resolve” (Iraq/Syria) or “Resolute Support” (Afghanistan), missions that also have their own webpages and public affairs operations to tout their successes.

Similarly, while U.S. Air Forces Central Command posts airstrike data for those missions, it posts nothing for Somalia and Yemen, two countries also in their area of responsibility.

And since the Defense Department discontinued weekly on-camera briefings nearly five months ago, not only is no one at the Pentagon talking about the shadowy wars, there’s nobody to ask either.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.project-syndicate.org/c...-toward-nato-membership-by-carl-bildt-2018-10

The End of Scandinavian Non-Alignment
Oct 17, 2018
Carl Bildt

Massive NATO exercises in Norway this fall will include forces from two key non-NATO countries: Sweden and Finland. With no time to waste, Scandinavia is finally breaking fully with the Cold-War era doctrine of neutrality, and embracing a more prudent and proactive defense policy.

STOCKHOLM – Having debarked from ports in western Sweden, military convoys from various NATO countries are crowding Swedish streets and prompting the police to issue traffic warnings. They are on their way to Norway, where some 50,000 soldiers, airmen, and seamen will come together for NATO’s largest military exercise in years. The operation – “Trident Juncture” – has a clear goal: to demonstrate the alliance’s ability to defend Norway against a foreign aggressor.

There is no need to name the potential aggressor. Obviously, it is not Sweden or Finland, both of which have contributed soldiers to the exercise. During the Cold War, Finland did occasionally come under Soviet pressure as the Kremlin sought to expand its room for maneuver. But it always remained firm in its commitment to defend its Nordic and Western identity.

Similarly, Sweden has always abstained from joining NATO, owing to its longstanding geopolitical neutrality, and out of solidarity with the Finns. And while Denmark and Norway did join the alliance, they long opted out of hosting foreign forces during peacetime.

But in recent years, Northern Europe’s security landscape has changed. In response to Russian aggression and revisionism, NATO has deployed battalion battle groups in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, as well as air force squadrons to police those countries’ skies. And in both Sweden and Finland, defense spending is increasing, and there is an ongoing debate about whether to upgrade the privileged partnership with NATO to full membership.

For its part, Sweden already acknowledges that its territory would fall well within the theater of NATO operations should a conflict arise in Northern Europe, and this realization has increasingly factored into its own security policy and defense preparations. The Swedish foreign-policy establishment understands that any threat to the sovereignty of the Baltic countries or Norway would also be a threat to Sweden’s security. Hence, Sweden is not just participating in Trident Juncture, but also developing a security partnership with Poland to see to the defense of the Baltic Sea area.

Sweden’s deepening partnership with NATO is a far cry from its Cold War-era doctrine of non-alignment. Back then, the custodians of neutrality would have shouted down any hint of collaboration with NATO and the West as an act of treason. The strategy was to persuade the Kremlin that no such thing could ever happen.

But, of course, it was always a charade. The Soviet Union had recruited enough high-level assets in the Swedish government to know about its secret ties to the West. Whatever the Swedish people were led to believe about their country’s neutrality, the Soviets knew it was a lie. Now the ruse is over: full-scale military integration with NATO is in the offing.

Still, full NATO membership remains a controversial issue in Sweden. In the old days, Swedish foreign policy was torn between two very different approaches. On one hand, Sweden was an extroverted activist, sounding more like a non-governmental organization than a nation-state; on the other hand, it maintained a hyper-realist “deep security” policy, albeit one that was talked about only in low voices behind closed doors. To this day, the same clash of cultures stands in the way of a rational debate about security policy.

As for Finland, it always had plenty of the second approach, but almost none of the first. And in the absence of much domestic disagreement, it has had an easier time adjusting to new geopolitical realities. For example, Finland has explicitly said that it considers NATO membership to be an important option for its security policy, which is something that the Swedish center-left has not yet been willing to countenance.

Nevertheless, with Trident Juncture, Swedes will see a Swedish-led brigade (comprising Swedish and Finnish units) join with NATO forces in a large-scale defense drill. They will witness the extent to which the Swedish, Finnish, and Norwegian air forces are already integrated. And they will watch as Finland leads naval exercises in the Baltic Sea.

In the years ahead, Sweden will continue to move closer to NATO. Joint exercises will lead to deeper operational alignment and the establishment of common deterrence capabilities for all of Northern Europe and the Baltic Sea area.

To be sure, today’s mobilization is not driven by an acute threat from Russia. But Russia’s aggressive effort to modernize its military all but requires the West to increase its own defense capacity in the region. We need to send a clear message that opportunistic acts of aggression will be answered, both now and in the future. By preparing a proper defense, we can ensure peace and stability in the region, which is a prerequisite for moving toward a more constructive relationship with Russia in the long run.

--

Carl Bildt
Writing for PS since 2009
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Carl Bildt was Sweden’s foreign minister from 2006 to October 2014 and Prime Minister from 1991 to 1994, when he negotiated Sweden’s EU accession. A renowned international diplomat, he served as EU Special Envoy to the Former Yugoslavia, High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina, UN Special Envoy to the Balkans, and Co-Chairman of the Dayton Peace Conference. He is Chair of the Global Commission on Internet Governance and a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on Europe.

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Housecarl

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Hummm….

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/art/why-wont-us-leave-afghanistan

Why Won’t the US Leave Afghanistan?

by William McHenry | Thu, 10/18/2018 - 12:33am | 0 comments

During the past few months, many foreign policy analysts have overlooked a series of troubling reports from America’s war in Afghanistan. In late July, the New York Times reported that the Trump administration has been pushing Afghan security forces to withdraw from “vast stretches of the country.” Moreover, in the last few weeks, the Afghan government sustained significant losses defending territory in four districts from the Taliban, and Kabul has stopped reporting the number of deaths of its soldiers because the losses in many districts have become unsustainable. Nonetheless, in what has become a familiar pattern, American troops were dispatched to help Afghan security forces eject the insurgents and re-establish control.

Taken together, these data points indicate that the United States’ new Afghanistan strategy under the Trump administration is in significant trouble. Indeed, it seems that the policy was designed to protect President Trump’s domestic political interests, but it fails to address the governance challenges needed to achieve long-term success in Afghanistan.

The original goal for the invasion of Afghanistan was to defeat Al Qaeda, but at a congressional hearing in June, a US general testified that “we [the United States] have decimated Al Qaeda.” Although the reason for going into Afghanistan has been met, President Trump himself has shed doubt over the likelihood and timeline of any additional success. In a speech outlining US strategy in Afghanistan, Trump stated that, “Someday, after an effective military effort, perhaps it will be possible to have a political settlement [in Afghanistan].” But, more importantly, he added: “nobody knows if or when that will ever happen.” Accordingly, what do US military planners hope to accomplish? And why do US political leaders fear withdrawing?

Some experts contend that the United States should remain in Afghanistan until this political settlement materializes by increasing the capacity of the Afghan security forces through arms sales and training exercises. Others suggest that the United States will maintain its military presence in the country to hedge against growing Chinese political and economic influence in Central Asia, and to deter Iran and Pakistan.

However, these arguments ignore the role that US domestic politics has played in the decision to commit the US military to the country for an indeterminate amount of time. The Trump administration decided on the strategy of continued military support without a definitive end because they feared the political consequences of withdrawal. Many previous US presidents have similarly found it is much easier to perpetuate conflict than it is to end it. For instance, throughout the Vietnam War, a series of US presidents did not withdraw military forces because of the potential domestic political consequences.

Indeed, not only are there significant political similarities between the Vietnam War and the War in Afghanistan, but there are also some similarities in the character of both conflicts. In both cases, the US military exit plan is predicated on increasing the capacity of local forces while seeking a peace settlement with the opposing military force and its neighbors. However, researchers Keith Darden and Harris Mylonas argue in the journal Ethnopolitics that “increasing the raw number of forces trained…does little, on its own, to build the capacity of the state or increase order.” Instead, these experts argue that this strategy is doomed to fail because the United States has unsuccessfully cultivated the loyalty of the Afghan population and the US-supported Afghan government has not established legitimacy across the country. More specifically, they note that stable governance is unlikely to be established until the Afghan government becomes more ethnically inclusive with the country’s many tribal identities.

However, the new US strategy under the Trump administration does not consider these governance issues. Instead, it is aimed at protecting the president’s political weaknesses as many previous administrations did during the Vietnam War. The administration’s new strategy to provide additional military support to the government in Kabul aims to ensure that it will survive the Trump administration’s first term, but it does not address any of the long-term nation-building challenges.

Former President Barack Obama also faced domestic political criticism for withdrawing all US military forces from Iraq. Although many factors beyond the lack of a US military presence contributed to the deterioration of the security situation in Iraq, removing US troops was consistently cited by the Republican Party as the reason that ISIS was able to conquer a significant portion of the country. There’s little doubt that President Trump is aware of this potential political issue as his campaign savaged the Obama administration for this decision. Furthermore, it is concerning that President Trump agreed to continue to provide military support to the Afghan government given that he has expressed considerable skepticism about this strategy, and more broadly, unlike many in his political party, he campaigned on a message of reducing US commitments in the region.

Nonetheless, President Trump seems to have accepted that the risks of withdrawal outweigh the costs of perpetuating a military commitment to a conflict without a coherent plan to end it. It is one of his more cynical foreign policy decisions, but it has many precedents throughout US history.

--

About the Author(s)

William McHenry

William McHenry is an Eastern Europe & Eurasia Fellow at Young Professionals in Foreign Policy (YPFP). He is the Program Associate for The Program on New Approaches to Research and Security in Eurasia (PONARS Eurasia). His work at PONARS Eurasia focuses on connecting scholarship to policy on and in Russia and Eurasia by fostering a community of rising scholars committed to developing policy-relevant and collaborative research. He received his Masters in International Affairs from the American University, School of International Service with a focus on Eurasia, and he holds a B.A. from Linfield College in Political Science. You can follow Will on twitter @wmchenry.
 

Housecarl

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Hummm….

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.voanews.com/a/nikki-haley-blasts-iran-over-alleged-use-of-child-soldiers/4621256.html

Extremism Watch

Haley Blasts Iran Over Alleged Use of Child Soldiers

October 19, 2018 7:16 PM
Mehdi Jedinia
Sirwan Kajjo

U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley strongly condemned Iran for its alleged recruitment and use of child soldiers in battlefields across the Middle East.

"The use of child soldiers is a moral outrage that every civilized nation rejects while Iran celebrates it," Haley said Thursday during a U.N. Security Council meeting.

Haley's remarks came two days after the U.S.Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control announced new sanctions targeting businesses that provide financial support to the Basij Resistance Force, a paramilitary force under the command of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

"Iran's economy is increasingly devoted to funding Iranian repression at home and aggression abroad," she said. "In this case, Iranian big business and finance are funding the war crime of using child soldiers. This is crony terrorism."

The latest sanctions are part of the U.S. efforts to pressure Iran economically for what the Trump administration has described as Iran's destabilizing role in the Middle East and its sponsorship of terrorism in the region.

The U.S. Treasury Department has listed a network of some 20 companies and economic entities that are believed to be funding the recruitment and training of child soldiers for the IRGC.

"Any company or individual that does business with this Iranian network is complicit in sending children to die on the battlefields of Syria and elsewhere," Haley said.
The network providing financial support to the Basij is known as Bonyad Taavon Basij.

"This vast network provides financial infrastructure to the Basij's efforts to recruit, train and indoctrinate child soldiers who are coerced into combat under the IRGC's direction," U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement earlier this week.
"The international community must understand that business entanglements with the Bonyad Taavon Basij network and IRGC front companies have real-world humanitarian consequences, and help fuel the Iranian regime's violent ambitions across the Middle East," Mnuchin added.

Iran's reaction
Tehran called the U.S. sanctions a violation of international law.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif wrote in a tweet on Wednesday that the latest U.S. sanctions violated two orders by the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

"Utter disregard for rule of law & human rights of an entire people. U.S. outlaw regime's hostility toward Iranians heightened by addiction to sanctions," Zarif said in a tweet.

Javad Zarif

@JZarif


US addiction to sanctions is out of control. Iranian private bank key to food/medicine import is designated because of alleged EIGHT degrees of separation w/ another arbitrary target. In comparison, all humans on planet are connected by SIX degrees of separation. You do the math.
9:43 AM - Oct 17, 2018
283
283 Replies
591
591 Retweets
2,347
2,347 likes

Bahram Qassemi, a spokesperson for Iran's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said on Thursday it's part of a psychological war waged by the U.S. against Iran.

"Such actions show the spitefulness of the U.S. government towards the Iranian people and are a clear insult to legal and international mechanisms," the state-run IRNA news agency quoted Qassemi as saying.

Measures welcomed
Some Iranian rights activists have welcomed the U.S. move, however, and described it as a positive step to discipline the Iranian government for its actions in the region.

"Any action focused on children's rights is important because it highlights the importance of protecting children's rights and puts the issue of child soldiers under the spotlight," Hamed Farmand, a Virginia-based children's rights activist, told VOA. "Any international action with the purpose of condemning child soldiers is widely appreciated but it needs more action than just financial sanctions on some institutes involved in it."

A 2017 Human Rights Watch report accused Iran of committing war crimes by recruiting and sending Afghan refugee children "as young as 14" to fight in Syria.

The New York-based organization also has documented how the IRGC has recruited Afghan immigrant children living in Iran to fight in Syria along Syrian regime troops.

Maryam Nayeb Yazdi, also an Iranian human rights activist, said there should be an effective mechanism to force Iran to improve its human rights record.

"To change the behavior of the Iranian government, the international community needs a human rights-focused approach and must take multiple actions simultaneously," she said during a recent Geneva Summit on Human Rights and Democracy.

Effects of sanctions
But Sadegh Hosseini, a Tehran-based analyst, said U.S. sanctions on the Basij force actually are indirect punishment inflicted on the Iranian people.

"Sanctioning the Basij could affect many Iranians who have voluntarily become members of it or have joined it in the past," he said.

He told VOA "the purpose of this embargo is unclear but many Iranians who have bank accounts with those financial institutes could be affected, since many of them receive their employment salaries only through accounts at those targeted banks."

Other experts say that following the U.S. withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, the U.S. Treasury Department has stepped up its efforts on this front because it is the main pillar that can block Iran's sale of oil and impose banking restrictions on the country.

"The latest move by the [U.S.] Treasury to sanction Iran's Basij Resistance Force is an important part of that campaign," said Farhang Jahanpour, a professor of international law at Oxford University.

"So far, other signatories to the [nuclear deal] have refused to go along with American sanctions on Iran, but many major European companies have cut back or have completely ended their dealings with Iran in fear of U.S. retaliation," Jahanpour added.

Behnam Ben Taleblou, a researcher at the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said the recent designations were different from previous measures "because they focused on the role of select financial institutions in generating revenue that was ultimately used to benefit the Basij."

"The [U.S.] Treasury Department's willingness to go after the entities in the Basij financial support network highlights the challenge of doing due diligence in Iran, as well as signals to the international community that the U.S. is serious about putting the squeeze on all elements of the Iranian economy tied to the IRGC," Taleblou added.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.insightcrime.org/news/analysis/mining-massacre-signals-eln-expansion-venezuela/

Mining Massacre Signals ELN Expansion Into Venezuela

Analysis
Written by Venezuela Investigative Unit - October 19, 2018

The recent massacre of seven people in one of Venezuela’s mining regions may confirm that the Colombia guerrilla group ELN is expanding its criminal activities into the south of Venezuela, encroaching on the gold mining territory of local mafias.

On October 14 on the border with Guyana, alleged members of the National Liberation Army (Ejército de Liberación Nacional – ELN) are believed to have ambushed a group of miners in the town of El Bochinche, located in the municipality of Sifontes in Bolívar state.

The first reports came from six miners who survived the attack. Only later did Venezuelan armed forces discover seven bodies near the mine, according to media outlet El Pitazo.

All of the victims whose bodies were recovered had been shot execution-style. Local residents reported 16 disappearances.

So far, the Venezuelan government has not offered an official version of events.
There have been repeated massacres in the mining areas of Bolívar state, mostly due to rivalries between criminal gangs called either “syndicates” (sindicatos) or “pranatos,” the latter of which is a type of mafia that originated in Venezuela’s prison system and whose leaders are called “pranes.” Mining pranatos have successfully established themselves and now set the standard for all illegal businesses thriving on the unchecked pilfering of Venezuela’s mineral deposits.

SEE ALSO: What Is Behind Killings in Venezuela Illegal Mining Regions?

What is different about this incident is the alleged role of the ELN. Bolívar’s representative in the National Assembly, Américo De Grazia, was one of the first to confirm it.
“The indigenous and mining communities have been reporting the presence of the ELN in El Bochinche to us since November 2017,” he told InSight Crime.

Colombian President Iván Duque has also mentioned the likelihood of the ELN transferring some of its criminal enclaves to Venezuelan territory — with the “support” of Nicolás Maduro’s government. This week, he shut down any possibility of dialogue with the guerrilla group if their criminal activities continue.

InSight Crime Analysis

While it is believed that the ELN has expanded into Venezuelan territory, it remains difficult to determine just how well established it is. But its alleged presence more than 1,500 kilometers from the Colombian border could mean it is poised to enter into another war — this time for gold — and its first battles would be with the criminal gangs operating along the borders with Guyana and Brazil. The ELN could be making headway into Venezuela in search of new opportunities to expand its criminal economies.

SEE ALSO: Venezuela: A Mafia State?

Congressman De Grazia explained that approximately 100 armed and uniformed members of the ELN have allegedly settled in El Bochinche, where the latest attack on miners took place.

“They seized the Hermanos Hernández logging operation and installed a camp there,” he added.

De Grazia also alleged that the ELN and government authorities in the mining areas have formed an alliance as part of a corruption network that reaches all the way to Caracas and involves top military and civil officials.

“The government of President Nicolás Maduro is very satisfied with the work the ELN has done. They appreciate that they’ve displaced the pranatos in controlling illegal mining. The government thinks of the ELN as serious people with whom they can negotiate. That’s why they’re acting with impunity. They moved towards Cedeño [a municipality in Bolívar state] and took over the coltan and diamond mining. Now for about a year we’ve seen them fighting over the gold mines at the other end of the country, on the border with Guyana,” the politician told InSight Crime.

SEE ALSO: ELN en Venezuela

Javier Tarazona, director of non-governmental organization Fundaredes, has been following the ELN’s expansion into Venezuela. He agrees with De Grazia regarding the potential shift in “criminal governments” in the country’s mining regions.

“The government has lost control of the mining pranato and is appealing to the greater fire power that the ELN may have. It’s operating as an armed branch of the ruling party to keep the illegal mining profits coming in,” Tarazone said.

Illegal mining is a criminal economy that the ELN has already been exploiting in Colombian territory. The current situation in Venezuela — in part because authorities seem to lack the will to intervene — makes it easier for the group to fill its coffers and strengthen its criminal structures with the resources it gets from gold mining. Add to this the pressure the Colombian government is putting on the guerrilla group by ending the ceasefire, and seeking refuge on the other side of the border may seem like an attractive option for the ELN now more than ever.

RELATED ARTICLES

Colombia’s ELN, Ex-FARC Mafia Recruiting Hungry Venezuela Migrants

Attacks on Multinationals in Colombia: Signs of New Criminal Era

Colombia President Duque’s 5 ‘Hot Potatoes’

ELN and EPL Conflict Intensifies at Colombia-Venezuela Border

Colombia and Venezuela: Criminal Siamese Twins
 

Housecarl

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https://warroom.armywarcollege.edu/podcasts/foreign-fighters-and-insurgencies/

Podcasts

FOREIGN FIGHTERS ARE NOT FOREIGN TO INSURGENCIES

By David Malet and Jacqueline E. Whitt October 16, 2018

Foreign fighters are “individuals who are not citizens of a state where there is a conflict but who travel to that state to become part of the non-government forces participating in insurgencies,” according to our guest speaker Dr. David Malet of American University. Although it is only recently that scholars have taken an interest in people willing to travel to faraway places and fight, foreign fighters have been an integral part of many insurgencies over the past two centuries. These fighters are not mercernaries as they are unlikely to be paid well (or paid at all), so what drives them to participate? Is it ideology or something else? Does the nature of the conflict matter? David Malet presents a number of cases from the 1800s onward and finds the answer to be quite complex. WAR ROOM Podcast editor Jacqueline E. Whitt moderates.

Run time 28:51
Podcast: Download

Dr. David Malet is an assistant professor in the School of Public Affairs, American University. Jacqueline E. Whitt is Professor of Strategy at the U.S. Army War College and the WAR ROOM Podcast Editor. The views expressed in this presentation are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. Army War College, U.S. Army, or Department of Defense.
 

Housecarl

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The False Genealogy of Terrorism: How Islamic Extremists and Their Critics Misconstrue the Roots of Jihadist Ideology

Oct 19, 2018 GSSR Middle East, Terrorism, The Forum
By: Krystel Von Kumberg

Though Islamic terrorism is not a rootless phenomenon, it also should not be viewed as a legitimate enterprise based on a coherent doctrine. Extremist groups, and even some of their critics, have distorted the teachings of historical figures, blending together different thinkers such as ‘Abd al-Halim Ibn Taymiyya with Al-Qaeda and ISIS. Jihadists have a surprisingly weak knowledge of key Islamic texts. It is therefore important to scrutinize Islamic ideology as part of a comprehensive counterterrorism strategy. Scholars can expose the dissonance and discrepancies that undermine the alleged ties between ancient Islamic theologians and modern terrorist groups. In doing so, the appeal of radical jihadist ideology could potentially be contained.

The 9/11 Commission Report, for instance, epitomizes the jihadist movement’s genealogical myth, as it aligns historical Islamic thinkers with modern terrorists. The report claims that Bin Laden and al-Qaeda “draw on a long tradition of extreme intolerance within one stream of Islam,” that of Ibn Taymiyya. [ii] “The stream is motivated by religion and does not distinguish politics from religion…distorting both.” [iii] The report concludes that because modern terrorists believe this interpretation of Islam, no constructive “dialogue” can take place between jihadists and the West. [iv] Bin Laden, whose 1996 fatwa called for all Muslims to “expel the infidels…from the Arab Peninsula,” would agree with this assertion. [v]

Islamic terrorists exploit warped extremist views, allegedly derived from past religious scholars, to justify their actions. For example, ISIS’s magazine Dabiq calls Ibn Taymiyya the “Sheikh of Islam.” [vi] Ibn Taymiyya is quoted as having stated, “Allah said, and fight them until there is no fitnah and until the religion, all of it, is for Allah.” [vii] According to ISIS’s interpretation, Ibn Taymiyya called for a continual jihad – thereby giving modern Muslim terrorist groups a powerful pretext for waging war with the West.

Ibn Taymiyya, a scholar of Islamic law, often portrayed by both extremists and their critics as the “spiritual father of (Sunni) revolutionary Islam,” has to be understood within his historical context. [viii] During his lifetime, the Islamic world was being torn apart. The Abbasid Caliphate collapsed; the Tartar’s took control of Iraq, Iran and Khurasaan; and the Mamluk Turks ruled in Egypt, Sudan, Syria and Hijaz. [ix] Forced to flee Damascus at the age of six, Ibn Taymiyya became a refugee living under Mongol rule [x] A parallel between the Mongols and Western civilization does exist. As John Esposito argues, “Muslim history provides the clearest antecedents and paradigms for what is going on today.” [xi] Western values are perceived as penetrating the Islamic faith, allowing terrorists to “exploit the authority of the past…to justify and inspire their call for a jihad against Muslim governments and the West.” [xii] Furthermore, Ibn Taymiyya’s Mardin fatwa arguably provides legitimacy for inter-Muslim conflict, and has thus become an inspirational model for Muslim terrorists to exploit. As Mary Habeck argues, Ibn Taymiyya stretched the meaning of jihad, concluding that “the Islamic nation [should] fight all heretics, apostates, hypocrites, sinners, and unbelievers…until ‘all religion was for God alone.’” [xiii]

Paul Heck, however, illustrates that the definition of jihad has not been fixed since the 13th century, but has evolved over time. Therefore, the notion of jihad as a political revolution cannot be attributed to Ibn Taymiyya. Rather, jihad, for Ibn Taymiyya, meant “a struggle for the social and moral formation of the public order by bringing advice or counsel…to those holding the trust of public office.” [xiv] Moreover, Abd Al-Hakeem Carney argues that Ibn Taymiyya’s “clear distinction between Siyasah (public law) and Shari’ah (divine law)” demonstrates his “acceptance of the separation between religious and political law” — a notion that is the very antithesis of how modern jihadist terrorist’s conceive of a “Shari’a state.” [xv] Moreover, modern jihadists do not discriminate between targeting members of the military and civilians. [xvi] Contrastingly, Ibn Taymiyya respected the sanctity of civilian lives, stating that “those who do not constitute a defensive or offensive power, like the women, the children, the monks, old people, the blind and the permanently disabled” should not be harmed. [xvii]

Both al-Qaeda and ISIS overlook Ibn Taymiyya’s vision for an Islamic identity and twist his principles of jihad. Unfortunately, too many Western critics fall into a similar trap, mistakenly associating the teachings of ancient Islamic scholars with modern jihadist groups. However, linking the teachings of historical figures with modern terrorists actually legitimizes and exacerbates the threat it aims to counter. [xviii] Islamic theologians, such as Ibn Taymiyya, certainly inspire modern extremists. But if the contradictions between these old texts and terrorists’ actions can be demonstrated and disseminated, it would provide a much firmer foundation for an effective counter-narrative that can effectively discredit jihadist ideology.

Studies into violent radicalisation; Lot 2: The beliefs ideologies and narratives (London: The Change Institute, 2008), 76.
[ii] The 9/11 Commission Report (2004), https://www.9-11commission.gov/report/911Report.pdf, 362.
[iii] Ibid.
[iv] Ibid.
[v] Michael G. Knapp, “The Concept and Practice of Jihad in Islam,” Parameters 33, no. 1 (2003): 90.
[vi] Anon, “The Laws of Allah or the Laws of Men,” Dabiq Magazine (2015): 63.
[vii] Ibid.
[viii] Michael Doran, “The Pragmatic Fanaticism of al Qaeda: An Anatomy of Extremism in Middle Eastern Politics,” Political Science Quarterly 117, no. 2 (2002): 179.
[ix] ‘Abd Al-Halim Ibn Taymiyya, Governance according to Allaah’s Law in Reforming the Ruler and his Flock, trans. Maktabah al-Ansaar (Birmingham: England, 2001), 3.
[x] Ibid.
[xi] John L. Esposito, Unholy War (Riyadh: International Islamic Publishing House, 2010), 28.
[xii] Ibid.
[xiii] Mary Habeck, Knowing the Enemy (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008), 21.
[xiv] Paul L. Heck, “Jihad Revisited,” Journal of Religious Ethics 32, no. 1 (2004): 95-128.
[xv] Abd Al-Hakeem Carney, “The Decentralization of Power in Islam,” Religion, State and Society 31, no. 2 (2003): 206.
[xvi] The 9/11 Commission Report, 47.
[xvii] Abd Al-Halim Ibn Taymiyya, Ibn Taymiyya on Public and Private Law in Islam, trans. Omar A. Farrukh (Beirut: Khayats, 1966), 140.
[xviii] Richard Jackson, “Constructing enemies: ‘Islamic terrorism’ In Political and Academic Discourse,” Government and Opposition 42, no. 3 (2007): 424.
 

danielboon

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Not good

In Latest Provocation To Beijing, US Plans New Warship Passage Through Taiwan Strait

by Tyler Durden
Sat, 10/20/2018 -
In Washington's latest attempt to provoke Beijing, the United States is planning to send warships through the Taiwan Strait according to Reuters, a mission meant to ensure "free passage" through the strategic waterway and which will further heighten political tensions with China. Reuters sources did not discuss the potential timing for any fresh passage through the strait.

The last time the US conducted a similar crossing under the "free passage" umbrella, China responded angrily over what it saw was the latest US incursion in its geopolitical sphere of influence and a fresh mission would only exacerbate the state of affairs between the two superpowers; meanwhile any repeat would be seen in self-ruled Taiwan as a fresh expression of support by President Donald Trump’s government.




China, which views Taiwan as a wayward province, has been ramping up pressure to assert its sovereignty over the island and it raised concerns over U.S. policy toward Taiwan in talks this week with U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in Singapore.

Ironically, even as Washington mulls ordering a fresh passage through the strait in a show of support for Taiwan and defiance of China's growing sphere of influence, it has been trying to explain to Beijing that its policies toward Taiwan are unchanged. Mattis delivered that message to China’s Defense Minister Wei Fenghe personally on Thursday, on the sidelines of an Asian security forum.


"Minister Wei raised Taiwan and concerns about our policy. The Secretary reassured Minister Wei that we haven’t changed our Taiwan policy, our one China policy. So it was, I think, a familiar exchange" said Randall Schriver, U.S. assistant secretary of defense who helps guide Pentagon policy in Asia. While Washington has no formal ties with Taiwan, it is bound by law to help it defend itself and is the island’s main source of arms, a topic near and dear to president Trump's heart: Washington has sold Taiwan more than $15 billion in weaponry since 2010.


Sparring over Taiwan has been just one of a growing number of flashpoints in the U.S.-China relationship, which also include a bitter trade war, U.S. sanctions and China’s increasingly assertive military posture in the South China Sea.



In response to Chinese concerns about US interference in the region, Mattis told Wei on Thursday that the world’s two largest economies needed to deepen high-level military ties so as to navigate tension and rein in the risk of inadvertent conflict.

Meanwhile, some U.S. officials told Reuters that the US has not been aggressive enough when it comes to Taiwan, and say U.S. warship passages in the Taiwan Strait are still too infrequent, noting that a U.S. aircraft carrier hasn’t transited the Taiwan Strait since 2007, during the administration of George W. Bush.


Last year, two U.S. warships, both destroyers, sailed through the Taiwan Strait in July; it was the first such operation in about a year.


The U.S. Navy destroyer Benfold, one of the two destroyers sent through the Taiwan Strait on July 7, 2018
Predictably, Beijing - which has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control - responded to the July passage with a warning to the United States to avoid jeopardizing “peace and stability” in the strategic waterway. China has also viewed U.S. overtures toward Taiwan "with alarm", including the unveiling a new de facto embassy in Taiwan and passage of the Taiwan Travel Act, which encourages U.S. officials to visit the island.

Military experts say the balance of power between Taiwan and China has shifted decisively in China’s favor in recent years, and China could easily overwhelm the island unless U.S. forces came quickly to Taiwan’s aid.

China has also alarmed Taiwan by ramping up military exercises this year, including flying bombers and other military aircraft around the island and sending its aircraft carrier through the narrow Taiwan Strait separating it from Taiwan.

Meanwhile, in more delightful news for US weapons producers and exporters, Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen said last week the island will increase its defense budget every year to ensure it can defend its sovereignty, including resuming domestic development of advanced training aircraft and submarines. Not that any of that will help it defend against the world's largest opulous army.


“At this time, China’s intimidation and diplomatic pressure not only hurts relations between both sides, but seriously challenges the peaceful stability in the Taiwan Strait,” she said in a National Day speech in Taipei on Oct. 10.

Her remarks came ahead of island-wide local elections in late November that are seen as a bellwether for her ruling party’s performance in presidential elections due in 2020.

Separately, on Saturday several thousand pro-independence demonstrators rallied in Taiwan’s capital on Saturday to protest against Beijing’s “bullying” and called for a referendum on whether the self-ruled island should formally declare independence from China.

Whatever Taiwan's fate, the upcoming deliberate US provocation over what China views as its key national interest will only serve to further deteriorate relations between the two nations which are already engaged in both currency and trade war, a relationship in which some have been asking what will be the "accidental" catalyst that escalates the ongoing war between the two superpowers into its "kinetic" https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018...ans-new-warship-passage-through-taiwan-strait
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Thanks H.C for starting the thread glad to have you back

You're welcome!

Getting off of my "smart phone" and back on my laptop typing with both hands had been a goal, and is showing me how much more work I'm going to need to put in before I go back to work!
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
You're welcome!

Getting off of my "smart phone" and back on my laptop typing with both hands had been a goal, and is showing me how much more work I'm going to need to put in before I go back to work!

I too am happy you are back HC.

YOU ARE GOING TO BE BUSY...WAR IS CLOSE....VERY CLOSE.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.voanews.com/a/bolton-he...d-fears-us-leaving-nuclear-deal-/4621596.html

USA

Bolton Headed to Russia Amid Fears US Leaving Nuclear Deal

October 19, 2018 8:48 PM
Agence France-Presse

WASHINGTON — U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton will meet Saturday in Moscow with Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, amid reports that Washington will tell Russia it plans to quit a landmark nuclear weapons treaty.

The visit comes ahead of what is expected to be a second summit between presidents Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump this year.

Bolton, who will also meet Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev, announced the visit to Moscow in a tweet, saying he would "continue discussions that began in Helsinki," referring to a summit held in July.

The New York Times said the Trump administration plans to inform Russian leaders in the coming days that it is preparing to leave the three-decade-old Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, known as the INF.

The newspaper said the U.S. accuses Russia of violating the deal, signed in 1987 by president Ronald Reagan, by deploying tactical nuclear weapons to intimidate former Soviet satellite states that are now close to the West.

US-Russia ties are under deep strain over accusations that Moscow meddled in the 2016 presidential election, as well as tension over Russian support for the Syrian government in the country's civil war, and the conflict in Ukraine.

However, Washington is looking for support from Moscow in finding resolutions to the Syria war and putting pressure on both Iran and North Korea.

No new summit between Trump and Putin has been announced, but one is expected in the near future.

The two leaders will be in Paris on Nov. 11 to attend commemorations marking the end of World War I.

A senior Trump administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said another potential date would be when the presidents both attend the Group of 20 meeting Nov. 30-Dec. 1.

"There are a couple possibilities, including the G-20 in Buenos Aires or the Armistice Day parade in Paris. At the G20 is probably more likely," the official said. "President Trump's invitation to Putin to visit Washington, D.C., still stands."
 

Housecarl

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https://www.realcleardefense.com/ar...fforts_to_fight_the_islamic_state_113911.html

Assessment of Current Efforts to Fight the Islamic State

By Ido Levy
October 22, 2018

Ido Levy has a BA in government specializing in global affairs and counter-terrorism from the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya in Herzliya, Israel. He is currently pursuing a Master in Public Policy at Georgetown University. He has researched Middle Eastern Affairs at the Institute for National Security Studies and radicalization at the International Institute for Counter-Terrorism, where he has publications on the subject. He is an editor at Georgetown Public Policy Review and has written op-eds for Jerusalem Post, The Forward, and Times of Israel. He can be found on Twitter @IdoLevy5. Divergent Options’ content does not contain information of an official nature nor does the content represent the official position of any government, any organization, or any group.

Text: As of mid-2018, IS has lost most of the territory it had conquered four years ago. At its height, IS controlled a territory about the size of the United Kingdom made up of areas of Iraq and Syria, including Iraq’s second-largest city Mosul[1]. As of April 2018, IS maintains small enclaves in southern and eastern Syria[2]. IS continues to carry out sporadic attacks, using borderlands, mountains, and deserts as havens. Syrian, Iraqi, and Russian military forces, Kurdish militias, Shi’a militias, and forces of a U.S.-led international coalition are now continuing the fight to defeat IS permanently.

In many of its former territories, IS has transitioned to an insurgent campaign. Over the past year, IS has conducted many attacks in northern Iraq, as well as Baghdad and Mosul[3]. The Iraqi military, together with predominantly Shi’a militias collectively called the Popular Mobilization Units, has responded by launching several operations in northern Iraq and training elite forces to guard the border with Syria[4]. Iraqi forces have made incursions into Syria to strike IS targets[5].

A mostly Kurdish militia called the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) is leading the fight against IS’s enclaves in eastern Syria. U.S. and French special operations are supporting SDF efforts while Russian forces carry out their own attacks against IS. Another terrorist organization, an al-Qaeda offshoot called Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, is also fighting IS in Syria. At the same time, IS’s former capital, Raqqa, has seen an upsurge in attacks by IS[6].

In sum, although IS has begun employing insurgent tactics in its former territories, anti-IS forces have almost defeated the “territorial caliphate[7].” One authority on IS, Graeme Wood, has claimed that IS “requires territory to remain legitimate[8].”

Indeed, as William McCants has noted, many did join IS to fulfill the reestablishment of the caliphate, the Islamic empire governed by sharia, or Islamic law[9]. Through this lens, it is only a matter of time until IS loses all of its territory and disintegrates.

Despite the collapse of the territorial caliphate, the aspirational caliphate is still alive and well. In their expert accounts of IS, both McCants and Wood note IS has differentiated and perpetuated itself within the jihadist movement through its intense awareness of an imminent apocalypse. Al-Qaeda, another organization seeking the restoration of the caliphate, scoffed at apocalyptic notions, maintaining that the gradual buildup of an Islamic army and embedding of jihadist agents around the globe toward slowly reestablishing the caliphate was the paramount endeavor. The founders of IS, convinced of the nearness of Judgement Day, contended that there was no time for gradualism, that rectitude demanded swift and bold action in the present (this also serves as justification for IS’s particularly brutal tactics). For IS, the caliphate became the bridge between the present and the end times, a place where “true” Muslims could live righteous lives free of corrupt un-Islamic influences in the present. At the same time, these soldiers of Islam could work to expand the empire, inspiring greater numbers of true Muslims and petrifying nonbelievers. This forceful division of the world between the righteous and the evil could prepare the world for Allah’s judgement.

IS’s vision suggests it does not need territory to remain viable. Ori Goldberg, a scholar who researches Islamist ideologies, notes that the pursuit of an Islamic empire “in its own right” is “particularly difficult” with regard to IS. He claims that IS rather seeks the “hollowing out” of the world, or to cause people to be so terrified that they abandon their “convictions” and live in fear[10]. In essence, while sowing fear among the nonbelievers is one half of IS’s creed, the other is to cement the believers’ righteousness. This two-pronged endeavor does not necessitate holding territory, though territory can help advance it.

In practice, this view entails that IS can continue to function ideologically and materially in the absence of territory. Those IS members who believe in the group’s apocalyptic creed will fight to the last. Those who emphasize the group’s territoriality may second-guess their participation, though might also believe they can retake their lost territories. Of course, there are many other reasons people joined IS – attraction to violence, grievances against a home country, excitement, money. However, the apocalyptic core survives with or without territory and will serve as motivation to carry on insurgencies in Iraq, Syria, and elsewhere.

Overall, the ground war against IS is advancing steadily toward completion while IS insurgencies are gaining momentum in former IS territories. These insurgencies will hinder efforts to rebuild Iraq and Syria while straining their security forces and budgets. IS’s apocalyptic vision will serve as the basis for insurgent morale.

This article appeared originally at Divergent Options.
Endnotes:
[1] Johnston, I. (2014, September 3). The rise of Isis: Terror group now controls an area the size of Britain, expert claims. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...he-size-of-britain-expert-claims-9710198.html
[2] McGurk, B. (2018, May 10). Remarks at Herzliya Conference. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.state.gov/s/seci/2018/282016.htm#Map
[3] Sly, L., &, Salim, M. (2018, July 17). ISIS is making a comeback in Iraq just months after Baghdad declared victory. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...ac54a6-892c-11e8-9d59-dccc2c0cabcf_story.html
[4] Schmitt, E. (2018, May 30). Battle to stamp out ISIS in Syria gains new momentum, but threats remain. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/30/world/middleeast/isis-syria-battle-kurds-united-states.html
[5] Reuters (2018, June 23). Iraq says it bombed a meeting of Islamic State leaders in Syria. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/23/world/middleeast/iraq-syria-isis.html
[6] Sengupta, K. (2018, July 3). Amid a fractured political and military landscape, Isis are quietly regrouping in Syria. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...-regrouping-islamic-state-assad-a8429446.html
[7] See McGurk.
[8] Wood, G. (2015, March). What ISIS Really Wants. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/03/what-isis-really-wants/384980/
[9] McCants, W. (2015). The ISIS apocalypse: The history, strategy, and doomsday vision of the Islamic State. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
[10] Goldberg, O. (2017). Faith and politics in Iran, Israel, and the Islamic State: Theologies of the real. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
 

Housecarl

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https://www.militarytimes.com/news/...tm_term=Editorial - Navy - Daily News Roundup

Your Military

Two Navy warships transit Taiwan Strait

By: Tara Copp and Carl Prine  
6 hours ago

The U.S. sailed two guided-missile warships through the Strait of Taiwan Monday, in what Taipei’s ministry of defense described as a routine passage through international waters.

Officials in Beijing have yet to comment on passage of the American destroyer and cruiser, but in the past the Chinese government has taken a hard line against Navy vessels transiting the waterway separating mainland China from Taiwan.

China claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has vowed to conquer it by force, if necessary.

“USS Curtis Wilbur [DDG 54] and USS Antietam [CG 54] conducted a routine Taiwan Strait transit on Oct 22, in accordance with international law. The ship transit through the Taiwan Strait demonstrates the U.S. commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific. The U.S. Navy will continue to fly, sail and operate anywhere international law allows,” said U.S. Pacific Fleet spokesman Cmdr. Nate Christensen in an email to Navy Times.

Part of the Ronald Reagan Carrier Strike Group, the Ticonderoga-class Antietam visited South Korea’s Jeju Island last week, following its maneuvers with Royal Thai Navy vessels in the South China Sea.

Pentagon spokesman Army Col. Rob Manning said it “was certainly not the department’s intent to raise tensions” on Monday, adding that were was “coordination and contact with the appropriate nations” for the transit.

He would not specify which nations were contacted.

Although lawful, the transit of American warships through the strait remains a significant statement in support of freedom of navigation for all nations, not only near Taiwan but in other contested areas of the western Pacific such as the South China Sea.

From July 7–8, the Japan-based destroyers Mustin and Benfold transited the Taiwan Strait, too.

However, the latest transit of the strait comes amid rising tensions between Taipei and Beijing.

Taiwan officials wasted no time in publicly posting the announcement that the American warships was sailing near the southern tip of the island, which broke apart from the mainland following the 1949 civil war.

The Navy research vessel Thomas G. Thompson arrived last Monday in the southern Taiwan port of Kaohsiung to refuel and swap out crew members, a visit China considered provocative.

On Wednesday, Beijing’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said that China had expressed "our solemn concerns to the U.S. side” over the visit.

Why China turned down a Hong Kong port call for a US Navy ship
China on Tuesday demanded the U.S. cancel a $330 million sale of military equipment to Taiwan, warning of “severe damage” to bilateral relations and mutual cooperation if Washington fails to comply.
By: Christopher Bodeen, The Associated Press

Beijing remains at loggerheads with Taiwanese president Tsai Ing-wen, who during an Oct. 10 National Day address warned China to stop being a “source of conflict” in the region.

Her words came a day after Taiwanese forces conducted war games on the northern part of the island.

China cut off contact with Tsai’s government shortly after her 2016 inauguration and has turned up diplomatic, economic and military pressure to isolate Taiwan globally.

Monday’s movement through the strait also came only three weeks after a Sept. 30 freedom of navigation operation in the South China Sea.

The crew of the destroyer Decatur reported that they were forced to dodge a Chinese Luyan-class warship when they sailed near Gaven Reef. The Chinese vessel came within 45 yards of the Decatur’s bow before the American warship veered off to prevent a collision, officials said.

Although occupied by fortified Chinese troops, the twin reefs are claimed also by Vietnam, Taiwan and the Philippines.

US military posture in Asia could change if China declares another Air Defense Identification Zone
The U.S. military posture in Asia could be forced to change if China set up another Air Defense Identification Zone in the region, a senior national security official said this week.
By: Kyle Rempfer

In an op-ed published Monday in the Global Times, a tabloid aligned closely with the Chinese Communist Party, Chen Xiangmiao — a researcher at the National Institute for South China Sea Studies — defended Beijing’s “needs to safeguard territorial sovereignty and maritime jurisdiction in the area and ensure secure corridors for energy import and freight transport" against the actions of “aggressive” U.S.

“Judging by the current circumstances, China has no other choice than taking countermeasures, including increasing military deployment in the region," he wrote.

U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis was supposed to visit China earlier this month, but the trip was cancelled over Beijing’s quibbles about these incidents and an escalating trade war spurred by American tariffs on Chinese goods.
 

Housecarl

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Hummm….

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https://www.militarytimes.com/flash...y-to-soon-begin-joint-patrols-in-north-syria/

Flashpoints

US, Turkey to soon begin joint patrols in north Syria

By: Lolita C. Baldor, The Associated Press  
1 day ago

AL-UDEID AIR BASE, Qatar — Turkish and American troops could begin conducting joint patrols in a matter of days around the northern Syrian city of Manbij within the coming days, the top U.S. commander for the Middle East said Sunday.

Army Gen. Joseph Votel, head of U.S. Central Command, told reporters traveling with him that the soldiers' training is expected to last "several more days," and then will transition to combined patrols.

The Manbij patrols are part of a road map that Ankara and Washington agreed on in June to defuse tensions amid Turkish demands for the withdrawal of a U.S.-backed Kurdish militia that freed the town of Manbij from the Islamic State group in 2016.

--

US starts training Turkish troops for joint Syria patrols
The U.S. has now begun training Turkish troops, marking the final step before the two countries begin conducting joint patrols likely later this month around the strategic northern Syrian city of Manbij, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Monday.
By: Lolita Baldor

--

The U.S. and the Turks have been conducting independent patrols along the border, and joint patrols are considered a way to tamp down potential violence between the various groups there.

"We're right on track with where we want to be," Votel said. "We've been through a very deliberate and mutually agreed upon training program."

He said the platoons will include security personnel. He did not provide details on the size of the units or how many U.S. and Turkish forces will be involved in the program. U.S. platoons can often include a couple dozen soldiers.

The initial instruction of Turkey's military trainers began at the beginning of the month, then all the troops were brought together for training to ensure they can all communicate, work together and operate with the same military tactics and procedures, particularly if there is an attack or other incident.

The training had been delayed a bit while equipment was brought in and the two countries worked out the details of how the operations would be conducted.

Manbij has been a major sticking point in the strained relations between the U.S. and Turkey. Ankara considers the U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish militia, the People's Protection Units, or YPG, a terror group that is linked to a Kurdish insurgency within Turkey.

--
Turkey accuses US of failing to abide by deal on Syrian town
Turkey’s president in remarks published Friday accused the United States of failing to abide by a deal for a U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish militia to withdraw from a town it had liberated from Islamic State militants in northern Syria.
By: The Associated Press

--

The patrols will add to the security of the are, Votel said, adding that right now Manbij is stable and "we want to double down and consolidate our gains."

In July, the Manbij Military Council, which administers the town, said the YPG units once stationed there had completed their withdrawal. Turkey’s Foreign Ministry called reports of the alleged withdrawal “exaggerated” and said they didn’t “reflect the truth.”
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
From CNN....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/t...me-to-their-senses/ar-BBOKfOh?ocid=spartanntp

Trump threatens nuclear buildup until other nations 'come to their senses'

By Eli Watkins and Maegan Vazquez, CNN 3 hrs ago

President Donald Trump told reporters Monday that the United States would increase its nuclear arsenal until other nations "come to their senses," threatening an arms race days after he said he would withdraw the US from a Cold War nuclear treaty.

"Until people come to their senses, we will build it up," Trump said from outside the White House.

Trump announced over the weekend that he intended to pull the US out of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia and accused Russia of violating the deal.

Some observers, including Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Bob Corker, have said the announcement could be a move to push Russia into compliance, and Trump, in his comments on Monday, said he hoped to include China in the arrangement.

Trump repeated on Monday that Russia had not adhered to the Cold War-era treaty and said his vow to increase the US nuclear stockpile included a posture against China as well.

"It's a threat to whoever you want," Trump said. "And it includes China, and it includes Russia, and it includes anybody else that wants to play that game. You can't do that. You can't play that game on me."

Trump noted that China was not a party to the agreement, but said, "They should be included."

Russia has denied it is in violation of the treaty, and former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev -- who signed the deal with US President Ronald Reagan in 1987 -- said the US announcement was "very irresponsible."

Despite threatening to spend vast sums to increase the US nuclear arsenal, Trump said ultimately he hoped to bring the country back onto the path of reducing its weapons stockpiles.

"We have more money than anybody else by far," Trump said. "We'll build it up until they come to their senses. When they do, then we'll all be smart, and we'll all stop. And by the way not only stop, we'll reduce, which I would love to do. But right now, they have not adhered to the agreement."
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Russia pledges to 'restore' military balance if US quits nuclear arms pactMOSCOW: Russia said on Monday (Oct 22) it would be forced to respond in kind to restore the military balance with the United States if President Donald Trump carried through on a threat to quit a nuclear arms treaty and began developing new missiles.

But Moscow signalled it may be willing to give some ground, with a senior official telling Trump's national security adviser that Russia was ready to address U.S. concerns about how the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty was being implemented.

Trump drew a warning of "military-technical" retaliation from Moscow after saying on Saturday that Washington would withdraw from the Cold War-era pact which rid Europe of land-based nuclear missiles.

Signed by then-President Ronald Reagan and reformist Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the treaty required the elimination of all short and intermediate-range land-based nuclear and conventional missiles held by both countries in Europe.

Its demise could raise the prospect of a new arms race, and Gorbachev, now a frail 87-year-old, has warned that unravelling it could have catastrophic consequences.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called Trump's withdrawal plan a matter of deep concern for Moscow. "Such measures can make the world more dangerous," he told reporters on a conference call.

Despite repeated Russian denials, U.S. authorities believe Moscow is developing and has deployed a ground-launched system in breach of the treaty that could allow it to launch a nuclear strike on Europe at short notice.

Trump said the United States would develop equivalent weapons unless Russia and China agreed to a halt in development. China is not a party to the treaty.

Peskov said President Vladimir Putin had repeatedly warned that the demise of the treaty would compel Moscow to take specific military steps. "Scrapping the provisions of the INF treaty forces Russia to take measures for its own security because what does scrapping the INF treaty mean?" said Peskov.

"It means that the United States is not disguising, but is openly starting to develop these systems in the future, and if these systems are being developed, then actions are necessary from other countries, in this case Russia, to restore balance in this sphere."

BOLTON IN MOSCOW

U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton had talks in Moscow with Nikolai Patrushev, the Secretary of Russia's Security Council, and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

In comments released after his meetings, Bolton denied Russian allegations the United States was using the threat of treaty withdrawal to blackmail Russia.

Washington had not yet taken any decision on deploying missiles in Europe targeting Moscow in the event that the INF treaty is scrapped, Russia's RIA news agency quoted him as saying.

Bolton said Russia was violating its commitments under the pact, an allegation Moscow has denied.

In any case, he added, a bilateral treaty no longer met today's realities because unlike in the Cold War, multiple states are now developing intermediate range nuclear missiles. Those states, he said, include China and North Korea.

"The next step is consultations with our friends in Europe and Asia," Bolton was quoted as telling Ekho Moskvy radio station, adding that consultations with Russia would continue.

Russia's Security Council said Patrushev had emphasised Moscow's view that the INF treaty should be retained, and tearing it up would undermine international arms control.

"The Russian side ... confirmed their readiness to work jointly in the interests of removing mutual grievances about the implementation of the agreement," it said in a statement.

EUROPEAN ALARM

The INF treaty required the United States and the Soviet Union to forgo all nuclear ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with a range of 500-5,500 km, eliminating an entire category of weapon.

As a result the Soviet Union scrapped hundreds of SS-20 missiles armed with nuclear warheads. Many of them had been pointed at Europe.

NATO's decision to station Cruise and Pershing nuclear missiles in Europe provoked waves of protests in the 1980s from campaigners who felt this would turn Europe into a potential nuclear battlefield.

The European Union called the INF treaty "a pillar of European security architecture" which had resulted in the destruction of almost 3,000 nuclear and conventional warheads and continued to play an important non-proliferation role.

"The United States and the Russian Federation need to remain engaged in constructive dialogue to preserve the INF Treaty," Maja Kocijancic, the EU's spokeswoman for foreign affairs and security policy, said. "The world doesn't need a new arms race."

French President Emmanuel Macron spoke to Trump on Sunday to stress the importance of the treaty, his office said on Monday. The German government regretted Trump's decision, saying NATO would now have to discuss the development.

China also condemned Trump's move, saying it was wrong to pull out of the treaty unilaterally.


Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...alance-if-us-quits-nuclear-arms-pact-10853062
 
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danielboon

TB Fanatic
China slams US move to pull out of nuclear missile treatyOctober 22, 2018 11:58 AM


China slammed the Trump administration's announcement that it planned to pull out a Reagan-era anti-missile treaty, saying on Monday that the move was being done to counter Beijing, not Moscow, as the White House has claimed.

“I want to stress that it is completely wrong to use China as an excuse for pulling out of the treaty,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters Monday in Beijing. “We hope relevant countries can cherish the hard-won achievements over the years, prudently and properly handle issues related to the treaty through dialogue and consultation, and think twice about withdrawing from the treaty.”

President Trump said this weekend he wants to pull the U.S. out of the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, which covers land-based, mid-range missiles. The administration alleges that Russia has been violating the terms of the deal by developing new cruise missiles. A New York Times report citing anonymous administration sources said the move was being done to allow the U.S. to counter China's efforts to build up arms in the Pacific.

U.K. Defense Secretary Gavin Williamson said Saturday that it would back the U.S. on the matter. "We will be absolutely resolute with the United States in hammering home a clear message that Russia needs to respect the treaty obligation that it signed." https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...us-move-to-pull-out-of-nuclear-missile-treaty
 
Last edited:

danielboon

TB Fanatic
NATO to show military muscle in massive Norway exercises OSLO (AFP) -
Some 50,000 troops will kick off NATO's biggest military exercises since the Cold War on Thursday in Norway, a massive show of force that has already rankled neighbouring Russia.

Trident Juncture 18, which runs until November 7, is aimed at training the Alliance to mobilise quickly to defend an ally under attack.

The head of NATO's Allied Joint Force Command, US Navy Admiral James Foggo, said the exercise was intended to "show NATO is capable to defend against any adversary. Not a particular country, anyone."

Russia, which carried out its biggest ever military exercises in September in the Far East, has not been officially identified as the intended adversary, but it is on everyone's minds after the 2014 Ukraine crisis.

"Russia doesn't represent a direct military threat to Norway," Norwegian Defence Minister Frank Bakke-Jensen told AFP.

"But in a security situation as complicated as we have today... an incident elsewhere could very well heighten tensions in the North and we want to prepare the Alliance in order to avoid any unfortunate incidents," he added.

The exercises come after President Donald Trump has repeatedly complained that other NATO members do not contribute enough money to the 69-year-old alliance, although Defense Secretary Jim Mattis reassured allies of America's "iron-clad" commitment earlier this month.

- 'Sabre-rattling' -

While the exercises will take place at a respectful distance from Norway's 198-kilometre (123-mile) border with Russia in the Arctic, Moscow has expressed anger over the manoeuvres.

Russia was already touchy over the fact that -- independently of Trident Juncture 18 -- the United States and Britain have been increasing their troop presence in the Scandinavian country to acclimatise them to combat in the chilly Arctic.

And tensions between Moscow and Washington have flared in recent days after Trump announced he was abandoning a Cold War-era nuclear treaty, a move which Russia warned could cripple global security.

When at full strength, 700 US Marines will be on rotation on Norwegian soil.

"The main NATO countries are increasing their military presence in the region, near Russia's borders," Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said, slamming "the sabre-rattling".

"Such irresponsible actions are bound to lead to a destabilisation of the political situation in the North, to heighten tensions," she said, vowing Moscow would "take the necessary retaliatory measures to ensure its security."

Under President Vladimir Putin, the Russian army has already beefed up considerably in the Arctic.

Military air bases have been built or refurbished, and new radar and anti-aircraft missile systems have been installed.

In addition, the backbone of the Russian navy, the Northern Fleet, is due to receive five new warships, five support vessels, and 15 aircraft by the end of the year, according to Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu.

- Military 'choreography' -

"Russia's military strength has pretty much returned to what it was during the Cold War," Francois Heibsbourg of France's Foundation for Strategic Research (FRS) told AFP.

"In a way, NATO is also in the process of returning to what it was."

"It's a pretty mechanical engagement," a "return to a kind of choreography", he said. But Trident Juncture 18 is "in no way destabilising," he added.

The exercises, involving NATO's 29 members plus Sweden and Finland, are nonetheless imposing, with substantial means deployed.

The 50,000 troops will be backed by 10,000 vehicles, 250 aircraft and 60 ships, including a US aircraft carrier.

"The core exercise area is 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) from the Russian border, and air operations could take place up to 500 kilometres away from the border," Norwegian Lieutenant General Rune Jakobsen said.

"There should not be any reason for the Russians to get scared or see this as anything other than a defensive exercise."

Two Russian and two Belarus military observers have been invited to watch the manoeuvres.

The British contingent hit the road for five days to travel to the exercises.

"It demonstrates ... to our NATO allies that we're prepared to move across Europe when needed and to show that we have the capability to do so," Major Stuart Lavery told AFPTV. https://www.france24.com/en/20181023-nato-show-military-muscle-massive-norway-exercises
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
China expresses concern to U.S. over Taiwan Strait warship operation BEIJING (Reuters) - China’s Foreign Ministry on Tuesday said it has expressed deep concern to the United States after Washington sent two warships through the Taiwan Strait in the second such operation this year.Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying made the comments at a daily news briefing in Beijing.

China claims democratic and self-ruled Taiwan as its own. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...uld-escalate-tension-with-china-idUSKCN1MX0E7
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Trump's missile treaty pullout could escalate tension with China WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. withdrawal from a Cold War-era nuclear arms treaty with Russia could give the Pentagon new options to counter Chinese missile advances but experts warn the ensuing arms race could greatly escalate tensions in the Asia-Pacific.U.S. officials have been warning for years that the United States was being put at a disadvantage by China’s development of increasingly sophisticated land-based missile forces, which the Pentagon could not match thanks to the U.S. treaty with Russia.

President Donald Trump has signaled he may soon give the Pentagon a freer hand to confront those advances, if he makes good on threats to pull out of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, which required elimination of short- and intermediate-range nuclear and conventional missiles.

Dan Blumenthal, a former Pentagon official now at the American Enterprise Institute, said a treaty pullout could pave the way for the United States to field easier-to-hide, road-mobile conventional missiles in places like Guam and Japan.

That would make it harder for China to consider a conventional first strike against U.S. ships and bases in the region. It could also force Beijing into a costly arms race, forcing China to spend more on missile defenses.

“It will change the picture fundamentally,” Blumenthal said.

Even as Trump has blamed Russian violations of the treaty for his decision, he has also pointed a finger at China. Beijing was not party to the INF treaty and has been fielding new and more deadly missile forces.

These include China’s DF-26 intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM), which has a maximum range of 4,000 km (2,500 miles) and which the Pentagon says can threaten U.S. land and sea-based forces as far away as the Pacific island of Guam. It was first fielded in 2016.

“If Russia is doing it (developing these missiles) and China is doing it and we’re adhering to the agreement, that’s unacceptable,” Trump said on Sunday.

John Bolton, White House national security advisor, noted that recent Chinese statements suggest it wanted Washington to stay in the treaty.

“And that’s perfectly understandable. If I were Chinese, I would say the same thing,” he told the Echo Moskvy radio station. “Why not have the Americans bound, and the Chinese not bound?”

GROWING THREAT
U.S. officials have so far relied on other capabilities as a counter-balance to China, like missiles fired from U.S. ships or aircraft. But advocates for a U.S. land-based missile response say that is the best way to deter Chinese use of its muscular land-based missile forces.

Kelly Magsamen, who helped craft the Pentagon’s Asian policy under the Obama administration, said China’s ability to work outside of the INF treaty had vexed policymakers in Washington, long before Trump came into office.

But she cautioned that any new U.S. policy guiding missile deployments in Asia would need to be carefully coordinated with allies, something that does not appear to have happened yet.

Mismanagement of expectations surrounding a U.S. treaty pullout could also unsettle security in the Asia-Pacific, she cautioned.

“It’s potentially destabilizing,” she said.

Experts warn that China would put pressure on countries in the region to refuse U.S. requests to position missiles there.

Abraham Denmark, a former senior Pentagon official under Obama, said Guam, Japan and even Australia were possible locations for U.S. missile deployments.

“But there are a lot of alliance questions that appear at first glance to be very tricky,” he cautioned.

Still, current and former U.S. officials say Washington is right to focus on China’s missile threat. Harry Harris, who led U.S. military forces in the Pacific before becoming U.S. ambassador to Seoul, said earlier this year that the United States was at a disadvantage.

“We have no ground-based (missile) capability that can threaten China because of, among other things, our rigid adherence ... to the treaty,” Harris told a Senate hearing in March, without calling for the treaty to be scrapped.

Asked about Trump’s comments, China’s foreign ministry said a unilateral U.S. withdrawal would have a negative impact and urged the United States to “think thrice before acting.”

“Talking about China on the issue of unilaterally pulling out of the treaty is completely mistaken,” spokeswoman Hua Chunying said. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...uld-escalate-tension-with-china-idUSKCN1MX0E7
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
John C. Stennis Carrier Strike Group Quietly Leaves for Deployment, Homeport Change The John C. Stennis Carrier Strike Group left Naval Base Kitsap last week for a deployment and an eventual homeport change with no public notice, a U.S. official confirmed to USNI News on Monday.

USS John C. Stennis (CVN-74) left the base in Bremerton, Wash., on Oct. 15 for deployment and a shift in homeport to the East Coast “without much fanfare,” according to a report in the Kitsap Sun.

The ship and its complement of more than 3,000 sailors are currently off the coast of California along with carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) and amphibious warship USS Boxer (LHD-4), USNI News has learned. The ships are operating in the training area off of Southern California and are expected to conduct a final exercise before the Stennis strike group heads toward the Western Pacific and the Middle East. Stennis is expected to deploy with Carrier Air Wing 9 based in Naval Air Station Lemoore, Calif.

The Navy is not publically acknowledging much about the deployment.

“Stennis is underway, operating in the 3rd Fleet area of operations. However, we don’t discuss future operations,” spokesman Cmdr. John Fage told USNI News in a Monday statement.
Screen-Shot-2018-10-22-at-1.05.58-PM.png
Following the deployment, Stennis will begin its four-year mid-life refueling and complex overhaul (RCOH) at Huntington Ingalls Industries Newport News Shipbuilding in Virginia.

The carrier had completed a planned incremental availability (PIA) at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Wash., last year and has been training with aircraft and ships ahead of the deployment for the last several months. The carrier returned to Bremerton in September after a qualification exercise off of San Diego before its most recent departure.Stennis’ move is part of a three-carrier shuffle that will put USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) in Washington for a planned maintenance period and shift USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) to San Diego.

The deployment of Stennis is the second major naval task group recently to deploy from the West Coast without any formal Navy acknowledgment. Earlier this year, the Essex Amphibious Ready Group deployed from Naval Station San Diego with the 13th Marine Expeditionary Group with about 5,000 sailors and Marines.

Several sources have told USNI News over the last several months that U.S. Pacific Fleet commander Adm. John Aquilino has instituted policies such as not announcing major ship movements aimed at changing public expectations as to the information they can expect on deployments.

The Navy as a whole has communicated less about ship movements in recent months, citing the need to remain unpredictable under the dynamic force employment model it rolled out in tandem with Secretary of Defense James Mattis’s National Defense Strategy that calls for U.S. forces to be strategically predictable but operationally unpredictable.

However, at least one member of Congress on the House Armed Services Committee thinks the public could get more information on the Navy’s global work without sacrificing security.

“Secretary Mattis is right to keep our adversaries on edge about where and when key ships will deploy,” Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wisc.) told USNI News in a Monday statement. “Within this new model, however, there is plenty of space for Navy leadership to communicate directly to the public about why these ships are deploying, the role they play in strengthening our national security, and why Americans should be proud of their Navy. Contextualizing deployments for the public does not have to be at odds with operational security.https://news.usni.org/2018/10/22/jo...230378937&mc_cid=3823d37871&mc_eid=9548401245
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Russia says US is increasing nukes in military planningAssociated Press |Published: 10.23.18 , 07:49
UNITED NATIONS—A senior Russian official voiced concerns Monday that Washington is increasing the role of nuclear weapons in its military planning as part of a stepped-up campaign by the Trump administration to ensure "US military superiority over the rest of the world," while he also denied US allegations that Moscow has violated an arms treaty.

Andrei Belousov, deputy director of the Foreign Ministry's Department of Nonproliferation and Arms Control, told the UN General Assembly's disarmament committee that Russia is "especially concerned" at the Trump administration's Nuclear Posture Review.


The policy review, released in early February, provides for "the creation of low-yield nuclear weapons that would lower the threshold of the use of nuclear weapons," Belousov said. He said it "also envisages a return to the concept of a 'limited nuclear war.'"https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5377572,00.html
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
EndGameWW3
EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3
‘Has the eagle eaten all the olives?’ Putin jokes with Bolton about US belligerence — RT World News

‘Has the eagle eaten all the olives?’ Putin jokes with Bolton about US belligerence — RT World News
rt.com
5:03 PM · Oct 23, 2018 https://t.co/QnCVwSvP4j?amp=1
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
EndGameWW3
EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3
‘Has the eagle eaten all the olives?’ Putin jokes with Bolton about US belligerence — RT World News

‘Has the eagle eaten all the olives?’ Putin jokes with Bolton about US belligerence — RT World News
rt.com
5:03 PM · Oct 23, 2018 https://t.co/QnCVwSvP4j?amp=1

Well there are definitely a lot of olive pits on the ground around the Bear and the Dragon...
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...le-out-ending-ban-on-nuclear-weapons-in-space

Pence refuses to rule out ending ban on nuclear weapons in space

by Travis J. Tritten | October 23, 2018 12:04 PM

Vice President Mike Pence declined to say Tuesday whether nuclear weapons should remain banned from space, saying that the ban is in the interest of the world but that President Trump is determined to project U.S. strength.

“I think that what we need to do is make sure that we provide for the common defense of the people of the United States of America, and that’s the president’s determination here,” Pence said during an appearance at the Washington Post. “I think it’s in the interest of every nation to continue to ban the use of nuclear weapons in space, but what we want to do is continue to advance the principle that peace comes through strength.”

The vice president visited the news outlet to talk about the administration’s plans for a new Space Force military service and he made the comment after being asked directly whether nuclear weapons should “always be banned from space.”

Vice President Mike Pence declined to say Tuesday whether nuclear weapons should remain banned from space, saying that the ban is in the interest of the world but that President Trump is determined to project U.S. strength.

“I think that what we need to do is make sure that we provide for the common defense of the people of the United States of America, and that’s the president’s determination here,” Pence said during an appearance at the Washington Post. “I think it’s in the interest of every nation to continue to ban the use of nuclear weapons in space, but what we want to do is continue to advance the principle that peace comes through strength.”

The vice president visited the news outlet to talk about the administration’s plans for a new Space Force military service and he made the comment after being asked directly whether nuclear weapons should “always be banned from space.”

During a recent trip to Brazil, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis underscored that the U.S. has no plans to put weapons into space, according to the Associated Press.
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Russia: Trump is starting 'an arms race'| October 24, 2018 11:50 AM


President Trump is initiating “an arms race” for a previously banned nuclear weapons and missile program by exiting a landmark treaty, according to a top aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"This is a very dangerous intention,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, per TASS, a state-run outlet. “In fact, it declares an intention to start an arms race and to build up military potential.”

John Bolton, the White House national security adviser, announced U.S. plans to withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty during a trip this week to Moscow. The 1987 pact, signed between the United States and the Soviet Union, bans the deployment of land-based missiles “with ranges of between 500 and 5,500 kilometers,” per the State Department. The decision followed years of U.S. complaints that Russia has violated the treaty by developing and deploying those weapons.

“The problem is there are Russian INF-violate missiles in Europe now,” Bolton told reporters Tuesday. “The threat is not American withdrawal from the treaty. The threat is the Russian missiles already deployed.”

Russia denies any such violations, leaving negotiations over the issue at a logjam. “How do you convince the Russians to come back into compliance with obligations they don’t think they're violating?” Bolton asked.

Peskov, standing by those denials, signaled that the open development of the intermediate range weapons could be in the offing. “In the context of such statements we will certainly give thought to our national interests and Russia’s national security first and foremost,” he said.

That’s what U.S. officials maintain they are doing. "It's better to win an arms race than lose a war," Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said last year.https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...ecurity/russia-trump-is-starting-an-arms-race
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Belgium chooses Lockheed's F-35 over Eurofighter: BelgaBRUSSELS/BERLIN (Reuters) - Belgium has chosen Lockheed Martin’s (LMT.N) F-35 stealth jets over the Eurofighter Typhoon to replace its aging F-16s, news agency Belga cited government sources as saying, in a move that would cement the U.S.-made war plane’s position in Europe.The country has been deliberating for months over a multibillion-dollar purchase of 34 new fighter jets, with the latest deadline for a decision being Oct. 29.

A defense ministry spokeswoman declined to comment on the government’s decision and did not confirm the end-October deadline.

Lockheed spokeswoman Carolyn Nelson did not confirm that a decision had been made but said the company remains confident that the F-35 is the right choice for Belgium.

“The F-35 offers transformational capability for the Belgian Air Force and, if selected, will align them with a global coalition operating the world’s most advanced aircraft.”

If confirmed, the decision will make Belgium the 12th country to buy the radar-evading F-35 jets and could help to strengthen the U.S. aerospace company’s position in forthcoming tenders in Switzerland, Finland and Germany.

The decision, the likely outcome of which was reported by Reuters last Friday, had been expected in July before the NATO summit in Brussels. The order for jets due for delivery from 2023 is estimated to be worth 3.6 billion euros ($4.14 billion). [nL2N1WV11Y]

Washington has extended the terms of the F-35 bid to Oct. 31 at Brussels’ request, U.S. sources said, adding that any further delay would trigger changes in pricing.

Lockheed has said its bid will give Belgian companies significant opportunities to contribute to the global F-35 enterprise.

EUROFIGHTER BLOW
Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel has previously said he would like to make the decision on the F-16 replacements before a national election in May and Defence Minister Steven Vandeput has said he hoped to settle the matter before he steps down at the end of the year.


A win for Lockheed would mark a setback for Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain, the four countries behind the Eurofighter program, who had mounted a strong lobbying campaign for the European war plane.

It is also likely to anger France, which did not submit a formal bid for the Rafale fighter built by Dassault Aviation (AVMD.PA) but had offered Belgium close defense cooperation to prevent a further spread of the F-35 in Europe.

Other European buyers of the F-35 include Britain, the Netherlands, Denmark, Italy, Turkey and Norway.

The Eurofighter is flown by Germany, Britain, Austria, Italy and Spain. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...eds-f-35-over-eurofighter-belga-idUSKCN1MW1J7
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm….Recall that when the US started deploying JDAM the Russians got pretty squirrely about it...well that advantage is becoming the norm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/orde...s-assumptions-on-extended-nuclear-deterrence/

Order from Chaos

As Russia and China improve their conventional military capabilities, should the US rethink its assumptions on extended nuclear deterrence?

Frank A. Rose
Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Since the end of the Cold War, U.S. presidents of both parties, beginning with George H.W. Bush, have sought to reduce the role of nuclear weapons in the nation’s defense strategy. They argued that this was possible due to the collapse of the Soviet Union and the United States’ overwhelming conventional superiority against any potential rival.

Author

Frank A. Rose
Senior Fellow, Security and Strategy - Foreign Policy

For example, the George W. Bush administration’s 2002 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) asserted that the establishment of a “New Triad” of military capabilities—comprised of offensive strike systems (both nuclear and non-nuclear), defenses (both active and passive), and a revitalized defense infrastructure—allowed the United States to “both reduce our dependence on nuclear weapons and improve our ability to deter attack in the face of proliferating WMD capabilities.” The Obama administration’s 2010 NPR struck a similar note. It stated: “The United States will continue to strengthen conventional capabilities and reduce the role of nuclear weapons in deterring non-nuclear attacks.”

Is it still relevant today to seek to reduce the role of nuclear weapons in U.S. defense strategy? Given Russia and China’s improved conventional military capabilities, I argue it may be time for the United States to rethink many of the assumptions that have underpinned its defense strategy since the end of the Cold War.

The return of great power competition
The Bush and Obama administrations’ NPRs were based on the assumption that the United States was unlikely to be involved in a major conflict with Russia or China, but that perception of the Russian and Chinese threat has changed. As Thomas Wright notes in his recent book, “All Measures Short of War: The Contest for the 21st Century and the Future of American Power,” “The United States is in competition with Russia and China for the future of the international order.” The Trump administration’s

National Security Strategy concurs with Wright’s assessment stating that “after being dismissed as a phenomenon of an earlier century, great power competition returned.”

Improving Russian and Chinese military capabilities
As part of this competition, over the past decade Russia and China have dramatically improved their conventional and asymmetric military capabilities. Though the United States currently possesses unmatched global military power projection capabilities, and spends substantially more on defense than Russia and China, there is little doubt that Russia and China have achieved conventional military parity or local superiority with the United States in certain regional contingencies in Eastern Europe and the Western Pacific.

A recent RAND Corporation report notes that Russian military investments over the past decade have significantly reduced the “once-gaping qualitative and technological gaps between Russia and NATO.” The report also asserts that Russia currently enjoys a favorable balance-of-forces, in short warning regional conflicts on its borders. The same can be said for Chinese conventional military capabilities in the Western Pacific. For example, during testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee in March 2018, Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency Lieutenant General Robert Ashley highlighted that China is continuing “to develop capabilities to dissuade, deter, or defeat potential third-party intervention during a large-scale theater campaign, such as a Taiwan contingency.” And an increasing number of independent defense analysts, including retired U.S. Admiral and former NATO Supreme Commander James Stavridis,

argue that China has essentially achieved military parity with the United States in East Asia.
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Russia and China are also devoting significant resources to develop disruptive technologies like offensive cyber and anti-satellite weapons, which are designed to exploit perceived gaps and vulnerabilities in U.S. defenses. As Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats testified before the Senate Select Committee in February 2018:
“Both Russia and China continue to pursue anti-satellite (ASAT) weapons as a means to reduce U.S. and allied military effectiveness…Military reforms in both countries in the past few years indicate an increased focus on establishing operational forces designed to integrate attacks against space systems and services.”

Coats also noted that both nations were continuing to develop offensive cyber capabilities designed to disrupt, degrade, and destroy U.S. and allied critical infrastructures.

Most importantly, the United States’ long-term technological advantage is eroding. From the 1950s through the mid-1980s the United States retained an overwhelming technological advantage in the development of key technologies such nuclear weapons, computer chips, and precision-guided munitions. This began to change in the late 1980s. As a recent New York Times article notes:
“In the late 1980s, the emergence of inexpensive and universally available microchips upended the Pentagon’s ability to control technological progress. Now, rather than trickling down from military and advanced corporate laboratories, today’s new technologies increasingly come from consumer electronic firms.”

And Russia and China are investing heavily in emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, cyber, and hypersonics. Indeed, Russian President Vladimir Putin has

said that whoever becomes the world leader in the artificial intelligence sphere will “become ruler of the world.”

Russian and Chinese objectives are clear: Create a more favorable military balance in Eastern Europe and the Western Pacific. Indeed, the 2018 U.S. National Defense Strategy (NDS) concedes that in the face of improving Russian and Chinese military capabilities, the U.S. “competitive military advantage has been eroding.” The NDS recommends a number of specific steps the United States could take to improve its conventional capabilities, such as: building a more lethal force; modernizing key systems like space, cyber, and missile defense; developing innovative operational concepts; and cultivating workforce talent. While implementing the proposals in the NDS would certainly improve U.S. conventional forces, they are unlikely to restore the overwhelming conventional military superiority that the United States once enjoyed.

Nervous allies
Russia and China’s improving military capabilities—coupled with their aggressive actions in Ukraine, the South China Sea, and the East China Sea—have created serious concerns among U.S. allies. These concerns are compounded by President Trump’s hyperbolic rhetoric and unpredictable behavior, which was on display at this summer’s G-7 and NATO summits. As a result, allies are beginning to seriously question the United States’ ability and willingness to meet its extended deterrence commitments. Recently, numerous allied leaders like German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron have spoken of the need for European nations to “take our fate into our own hands” when it comes to security.

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Additionally, serious allied strategists and defense thinkers like Paul Dibb, a professor emeritus at Australian National University, have begun raising concerns about China’s growing military capabilities and the Trump administration’s continued commitment to extended deterrence. In a recent article, Dibb writes that “prudent defense planning needs to accept that Beijing is developing to threaten us seriously,” and “because of the uncertainties surrounding America’s commitment to its allies, we may need to revisit the reassurance about extended nuclear deterrence that we have enjoyed since the creation of ANZUS in 1951.”

Implications for U.S. extended deterrence
How will the United States be able to maintain an effective extended deterrence posture given the above-mentioned challenges? From my perspective, the United States should take the following steps in response.

Don’t adopt a “no first use” of nuclear weapons policy. The United States should refrain from adopting a “no first use” or “sole purpose” nuclear declaratory policy. The Obama administration considered adopting such a pledge in the 2010 NPR, ultimately rejecting it, but agreeing to “work to establish the conditions” under which such a policy could be adopted. The administration reportedly revisited the issue in 2016, but rejected it again, citing the deteriorating security environment and allied opposition. In its 2018 NPR, the Trump administration wisely rejected it, arguing that adopting a “no first use” policy was not justified given the current security environment. As a 2017 Brookings report by my colleagues Robert Einhorn and Steven Pifer notes: “adopting sole purpose or no first use, especially at a time of heightened tension and threat, could erode confidence in the efficacy of the U.S. extended nuclear deterrent on the part of allies in Northeast Asia and Central and Eastern Europe.”

Improve U.S. conventional military capabilities. Ensuring that the United States maintains a modern and effective conventional military capabilities is a must. At the same time, given the evolution of military technology, we should recognize that it is unlikely the United States will be able to maintain the overwhelming technological edge it once held over potential adversaries. The United States should also work with allies and partners to help them improve their conventional military capabilities (e.g., precision strike, missile defense) and interoperability with the U.S. military.

Modernize and strengthen U.S. and allied theater nuclear forces and consultative mechanisms. The United States should modernize its theater-level nuclear forces to ensure effective deterrence against Russia and China. In particular, it should acquire the B-21 strategic bomber, the B-61-12 nuclear gravity bomb, and the Long-Range Stand-Off nuclear cruise missile. NATO allies should also continue their procurement of dual-capable aircraft as well as enhance the alliance nuclear training and exercise program. Finally, the United States should strengthen its consultations on extended deterrence with key allies through forums such as the Extended Deterrence Dialogue with Japan and the Deterrence Strategy Committee (DSC) with the Republic of Korea.

Enhance the resiliency of critical infrastructure. As the U.S. intelligence community has noted, Russia and China are developing asymmetric capabilities like offensive cyber and anti-satellite systems which are designed to negate U.S. advantages in information technology-enabled warfare. As a result, the United States and its allies must enhance the resiliency of their critical infrastructure.

Invest in emerging technologies. Emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, hypersonics, cyber, and quantum computing have the potential to fundamentally transform warfare. As previously noted, Russia and China are investing significant national resources and energy into the development of these new technologies. It is critical that the United States make investment in these new technologies a national priority.

Maintain open lines of communication with Russia and China. While the United States will need to develop effective military capabilities to deter, and if necessary prevail in a conflict with Russia and China, it also needs to maintain lines of communications with both nations, especially at the military-to-military level. The purpose of these contacts are twofold: reduce the risks of potential miscalculations; and provide forum for the United States to provide consistent deterrence messages.

Conclusion
The overwhelming conventional military superiority that the United States enjoyed since the end of the Cold War is coming to an end. Though it will likely maintain conventional superiority at the global level for some time to come, Russia and China have achieved military parity or superiority in a number of regional contingencies in Eastern Europe and the Western Pacific. Consequently, the United States must fundamentally reassess many of the assumptions that have underpinned its defense strategy since the end of the Cold War, especially the belief that the its overwhelming conventional military superiority could allow it to reduce the role of nuclear weapons its defense strategy.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
At some point this is going to go bright, loud and dumb.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ny-cost-to-prevent-taiwan-split-idUSKCN1MZ05L

World News October 24, 2018 / 6:48 PM / Updated 4 hours ago

China says army will act 'at any cost' to prevent Taiwan split

Ben Blanchard
3 Min Read

BEIJING (Reuters) - China’s army will take action “at any cost” to foil attempts to separate the self-ruled island of Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its own, the country’s defense minister said on Thursday.

Beijing has been infuriated by recent U.S. sanctions on its military, one of a growing number of flashpoints in ties with Washington that include a bitter trade war, Taiwan and China’s increasingly muscular military posture in the South China Sea.

On Monday, the United States sent two warships through the Taiwan Strait in the second such operation this year and the latest in a series of gestures made by the White House in support of democratic Taiwan.

“The Taiwan issue is related to China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and touches upon China’s core interests,” Chinese Defense Minister Wei Fenghe said at the opening of the Xiangshan Forum in Beijing, which China styles as its answer to the annual Shangri-La Dialogue security forum in Singapore.

“On this issue, it is extremely dangerous to repeatedly challenge China’s bottom line. If someone tries to separate out Taiwan (from China), China’s army will take the necessary actions at any cost.”

China-Taiwan relations have deteriorated since the island’s President Tsai Ing-wen, of the independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party, swept to power in 2016.

Beijing, which has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control, has also viewed U.S. overtures toward the island with alarm, such as a new de facto embassy there and passage of a law to encourage visits by U.S. officials.

China’s military ties with the United States are important and sensitive, Wei said, adding that China will never give up an inch of its territory.

Beijing opposed displays of strength and provocation in the South China Sea by “nations from outside the region” carried out under the pretence of protecting freedom of flight and navigation, he added.

The world’s two largest economies needed to deepen high-level ties so as to navigate tension and rein in the risk of inadvertent conflict, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis told his Chinese counterpart last week.

Mattis saw firsthand last month how mounting Sino-U.S. friction can undermine military contacts, when Beijing upended plans for him to meet Wei in October.

China has been angered by the U.S. sanctions on its military for buying weapons from Russia, and by what Beijing sees as stepped-up U.S. support for democratic Taiwan, which it claims as sacred territory.

China has also expressed concern after U.S. President Donald Trump said Washington would withdraw from a landmark Cold War-era treaty that eliminated nuclear missiles from Europe because Russia was violating the pact.

China is not a party to that treaty, but Trump has also suggested Beijing’s military strength played a role in his decision, which China has described as “completely wrong”.

Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Writing by Christian Shepherd; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Michael Perry
 
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