Pakistan

Saudi Arabia Gets Pakistani Military Support vs CIA Color Revolution, India Confirms Chinese Military Engineers in Kashmir, India’s Secret Services Join Hands With CIA to Destabilise Pakistan, Saudi Diplomat Shot Dead Two Days after Grenade Attack on Consulate in Karachi, “Pakistani Militants” Hit Anti-Submarine Warfare Base in Karachi, China “Asks” U.S. to Respect Pakistan’s Sovereignty, Islamabad Offers China a Naval Base on Indian Ocean, Russia Expels Israeli Military Attache for “Industrial Espionage”, Expelled Israeli Spy was after Russian-Arab Arms Deals, Moscow Says Washington May Extend Missile Shield to Bulgaria Turkey, Threatens Nuclear Build-up, Syrian Policemen Clash With Hundreds of Gunmen on the Turkish Border, 120 Members of the Security Forces Killed in Ambush, Armed Groups Flee to Turkey, Erdogan: Turkey Will Not Close its Borders to Syrian “Refugees”, Saudi Air Force to Take Part in Turkey’s Anatolian Eagle Exercise, CIA Now Thinks Greece Military Coup Possible, Britain Will Not Abandon Military Bases in Cyprus, Israeli Stealth Ships in Reconnaissance Missions against Iran’s Secret Nuclear Sites, Iraq’s Sadr Rallies Supporters against U.S. Troop Extension, Five U.S. Soldiers Killed in Attack on Base in Iraq, German Soldiers Killed, NATO General Wounded in Afghanistan Attack, Iranian Submarines Sent to the Red Sea


Prince Bandar of Saudi Arabia Gets Pakistani Military Support vs CIA Color Revolution,Bahrain-Yemen Destabilizations;Russia-Saudi-Pakistan-China Bloc Could Challenge Wall St. and City of London

Tarpley.net | April 20,2011
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India confirms Chinese military in PoK

Indian intelligence agencies now have credible evidence of their own that several hundred of the Chinese working in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir are People’s Liberation Army engineers. They are in the process of verifying if these Chinese military engineers are engaged in some sort of military construction like bunkers.

Continue Reading >> The Times of India | May 12, 2011
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RAW, RAMA join hands with CIA to destabilise Pakistan

The ongoing tussle between the ISI and the CIA has intensified while the Indian, Israeli and Afghani secret agencies have stepped in to support the American secret service, raising concerns about possibility of more attacks on Pakistan’s military and other strategic installations.

Continue Reading >> The Nation | May 25, 2011
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Saudi diplomat shot dead in Pakistan

Shooting comes two days after grenade attack on consulate in Karachi as tensions rise between Sunni and Shia populations.

Motorcycle-riding assassins have gunned down a Saudi diplomat in the Pakistani city of Karachi, four days after a grenade attack on the Saudi consulate there.

Continue Reading >> The Guardian | May 16, 2011
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Pakistani militants hit Karachi naval base in Bin Laden revenge attack

Pakistani commandos continued to battle with heavily armed militants at a naval airbase in Karachi on Monday after 10 hours of fighting triggered by a Taliban assault to avenge the death of Osama bin Laden.

Blasts were heard after dawn local time as the military stepped up its counterattack on insurgents inside the PNS Mehran base, just off one of the city’s busiest roads.

Continue Reading >> The Guardian | May 23, 2011
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China asks US to respect Pak’s sovereignty, independence

China on Thursday said the international community “must respect” Pakistan’s sovereignty, tacitly confirming reports that it has asked the US not to violate Islamabad’s territorial integrity, following the killing of Osama bin Laden.

Continue Reading >> The Economic Times | May 20, 2011
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Pakistan Offers China a Naval Base on Indian Ocean

China’s “good neighbor” Pakistan recently confirmed to the Financial Times (FT) that it has requested China to build a naval base at its China-financed southwestern port of Gwadar and hopes to see the Chinese navy maintaining a regular presence there.

Continue Reading >> Military.com | May 24, 2011
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Russia expels Israeli military attache for ‘industrial espionage’

The Kremlin has expelled a top Israeli diplomat, accusing him of illegally obtaining Russian military secrets in order to help Israeli companies win lucrative defence contracts.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Telegraph | May 19, 2011
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Expelled Israeli spy was after Russian-Arab arms deals, says FSB

The military attaché at the Israeli embassy in Moscow, who was unceremoniously expelled by the Russian government last week, was allegedly gathering intelligence on Russian arms exports to the Arab world.

Continue Reading >> Intelligence News | May 24, 2011
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Russia Says U.S. May Extend Missile Shield to Bulgaria, Turkey

[...] “Russia is deeply concerned that after Poland and Romania, elements of U.S. missile defense will emerge in the Czech Republic, Turkey, Bulgaria and some other NATO members,” the deputy chief of Russia’s general staff, Valery Gerasimov, told foreign diplomats today in Moscow. “In the future, it may create risks for Russian strategic nuclear forces.”

Continue Reading >> Bloomberg | May 20, 2011
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Russia threatens nuclear build-up over U.S. missile shield

Russia will need to speed up the development of its nuclear strike capabilities if the United States does not convince Moscow its missile defense system isn’t aimed at Russia, President Dmitry Medvedev said Wednesday.

Continue Reading >> CNN | May 18, 2011
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Syrian forces clash with hundreds of gunmen – TV

Syrian security forces clashed with hundreds of gunmen in the northwestern town of Jisr al-Shughour on Monday, state television said.

“They have managed to end a blockade over one of the neighbourhoods that was seized by the gunmen for a while and are now battling them to end the blockade on the other neighbourhoods,”

Continue Reading >> Reuters | May 18, 2011
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Syria armed groups flee to Turkey

The terrorist groups behind days of deadly clashes in a northwestern Syrian town have escaped to Turkey, reports say.

Hundreds of Syrian civilians have also crossed the northern border into Turkey to escape violence in the town of Jisr al-Shughour after Ankara announced that its doors are open to those seeking refuge.

So far, hundreds of Syrians have crossed the border and Turkish ambulances have moved into Syria, transferring those injured in the unrest to the other side of the border.

At least 120 Syrian soldiers were killed after armed groups attacked police and security stations in the town on Monday. Some 200 others were also injured in the clashes.

Dozens of civilians were also killed and injured during the exchange of fire. Syrian officials said the armed groups were hiding in houses and firing at soldiers and civilians alike, using residents as human shields.

According to the state TV, armed groups also took over parts of Jisr al-Shughour and torched several government buildings.

Continue Reading >> Press TV | June 8, 2011
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Royal Saudi Air Force to take part in Anatolian Eagle exercise

The Royal Saudi Air Force will participate in this year’s Anatolian Eagle military training exercise, which will begin next month in the central Anatolian province of Konya, a newspaper in Saudi Arabia has reported.

This year the participation of the Royal Saudi Air Force, which joined last year’s Anatolian Eagle exercise as an observer, will be a first. Jordan, Pakistan, Spain, the United Arab Emirates, the United States and Turkey are other participants in the exercise which will run June 13-24.

[...] In the fall of 2009, the Turkish military changed the Anatolian Eagle exercise, which is a joint international military exercise and which was to have included Israel, into a national military exercise, in a move widely seen as a way to exclude Israel.

A delay in the delivery of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to Turkey from Israel was linked to the tension sparked by this cancellation, which is contrary to popular speculation that the delay was due to Turkey’s disapproval of Israel’s devastating offensive against the Gaza Strip in the winter of 2008/2009.

Continue Reading >> Today’s Zaman | May 24, 2011
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CIA Now Thinks Greece Military Coup Possible

Despite last year’s 110 billion euro Greece bailout — from the European Union, the International Monetary Fund, and the European Central Bank — there remains serious concern that the periphery EU nation will be unable to continue its debt repayments. Due to the increasing severity of the problem, and the ongoing resistance to additional support, the Central Intelligence Agency has now issued a report warning on how worsening Greek unrest could bring rise to even a military coup.

Continue Reading >> Business Insider | June 1, 2011
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Britain says will not abandon bases in Cyprus

Britain said on Wednesday that the review of its military bases in Cyprus does not involve entirely abandoning them.

In remarks to mostly correspondents of Cypriot media, made public in Nicosia, a spokeswoman for the British Defence Ministry said the bases in Cyprus are very important for Britain from a strategic point of view. “Issues which will be reviewed are what we have now there, how do we use it, can we use it in a better way and with less spending, are changes needed and if yes which these changes should be,” the spokeswoman was quoted as saying.

Continue Reading >> Xinhuanet | May 26, 2011
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Israeli Stealth Ships in Raids on Iran

Cargo vessels owned by Israel’s richest man, who died on Friday, had been used to ferry elite Israeli forces for operations inside Iran, according to defence sources.

The death in Tel Aviv of Sammy Ofer, 89, came just days after the United States accused his company of breaching sanctions by selling an oil tanker to Iran. It has mystified Israelis why a company with close links to the government was allegedly breaching sanctions.

Military experts suggested the cargo ships had carried Black Hawk helicopters, hidden in modified containers, for use by commando teams in reconnaissance missions against Iran’s secret nuclear sites. Israel is conducting a massive intelligence operation to monitor Iran’s nuclear weapons programme.

Continue Reading >> The Progressive Mind | June 5, 2011
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Iraq’s Sadr rallies supporters against U.S. troop extension

Anti-U.S. Iraqi cleric Moqtada al-Sadr brought thousands of Shi’ite supporters onto the streets of Baghdad on Thursday in a show of force against any extension of the U.S. military presence in Iraq past a year-end deadline.

Sadr’s threats to revive his Shi’ite militia and protests by his Sadrist bloc are testing Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s fragile coalition government over the divisive issue of whether American troops should remain on Iraqi soil.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | May 26, 2011
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Five U.S. soldiers killed in attack on base in Iraq

The American military suffered the deadliest attack against its forces in Iraq in more than two years Monday when rockets slammed into a joint U.S.-Iraqi base in Baghdad, killing five U.S. troops and reviving concerns about security and the stability of the country’s unwieldy coalition government.

Continue Reading >> The Washington Post | June 6, 2011
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German soldiers killed, NATO general wounded in Afghanistan attack

Two German soldiers and the police chief of northern Afghanistan were killed in a suicide attack in Takhar province. General Markus Kneip, the German commander of NATO forces in the region, survived the attack.

Continue Reading >> DW-World | May 29, 2011
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Iranian subs to the Red Sea – riposte for nuclear watchdog’s indictment

The deployment of Iranian “military submarines” in the Red Sea, announced Tuesday June 7, was Tehran’s response to the latest International Atomic Energy Agency’s report accusing Iran of nuclear work with “possible military purposes.”

Continue Reading >> DEBKAfile | June 7, 2011


NATO Seeks to Disintegrate Libya and Plunder its Rich Oil Resources, Russia and China Concerned By Western Interference in Middle East and North Africa, Condemn the Idea of Ground Military Operation, Russian Special Forces Kill Top Militant in Breakaway Chechnya, Moscow Will Hold Large-Scale Naval Drills With Norway, China Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan Hold Counterterrorism Drill in the Breakaway Region of Xinjiang, the Scenario Called on the Three Countries to Coordinate a Manhunt for anti-China Separatists, Beijing Sees a Role amid Pakistan-U.S. Rift, Urges World to Back Pakistan in Terror Fight, Indian Prime Minister Plans Trip to Afghanistan


NATO Seeks to Disintegrate Libya

A senior Libyan politician warned of the NATO’s suspicious moves in his country, saying that the West is seeking to prolong the war in Libya in a bid to disintegrate the North African country to plunder its rich oil resources.

“We know that the NATO coalition seeks its own interests by prolonging the war and wants to divide the country into several parts, but the Libyan nation is opposed to this option,” Secretary-General of Libya’s National Movement Meftah Lamloum told FNA on Sunday.

Lamloum expressed his deep suspicion about NATO’s goals in Libya, and cautioned that the western countries are seeking to plunder the country’s rich oil resources.

He further opposed foreign military intervention in his country, and underlined that the crisis in Libya can only be settled by the Libyan people.

Since the revolution against Libyan ruler Muammar Qaddafi’s regime began in mid-February, hundreds have been killed and injured in clashes between Libyan revolutionaries and pro-Gaddafi forces.

Many civilians have reportedly been killed since the Western coalition unleashed a major air campaign against the Libyan regime forces on March 19 under a UN no-fly zone mandate.

The Western military alliance has refused to apologize for the deadly bombardments.

Meantime, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also cautioned that the West is using the conflict in Libya as an excuse to sell its arms productions.

“They (the West) have frozen (Libya’s) funds under the pretext of the war and right now they are selling their stockpiled armaments and they withdraw the money for these arms sales from the account of those killed (in the war),” President Ahmadinejad said in Tehran on Thursday.

Fars News Agency | May 8, 2011
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Russia, China concerned by western interference in Middle East

Russia and China are concerned about the situation in the Middle East and North Africa and will tighten cooperation in the region. The two countries’ foreign ministers made the decision during talks in Moscow.

Continue Reading >> Press TV | May 6, 2011
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Russia kills top al-Qaeda militant in Chechnya

Hot on the heels of the United States special forces operation that ended in the death of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden, Russia says its own forces have killed a top al-Qaeda militant in Chechnya.

Continue Reading >> Mail & Guardian Online | May 4, 2011
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Russia, Norway to hold joint naval drills next week

Russia and Norway will hold large-scale naval exercise Pomor 2011 on May 11-16, a spokesman for Russia’s Northern Fleet said on Friday.

The drills in the Barents and Norwegian seas will involve Russian Udaloy class destroyer Vice Admiral Kulakov from the Northern Fleet, Norwegian Fridtjof Nansen class frigate Helge Ingstad, coastal guard vessels and naval aircraft.

“The drills will include artillery firing at air and surface targets, anti-submarine warfare, an anti-piracy mission, and the freeing of an oil platform or a commercial ship from armed extremists,” Capt. 1st Rank Vadim Serga said.

Continue Reading >> RIA Novosti | May 6, 2011
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China, Central Asian states hold anti-terror drill

Security forces from China and two Central Asian neighbors practiced hunting down violent separatists in a counterterrorism drill along a border area where ethnic Muslim rebels have staged attacks against Beijing’s rule, the government said Saturday.

Friday’s one-day exercise involved forces from Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan as well as China and took place along their borders in the western Chinese region of Xinjiang, the government and media reports said.

The scenario called on the three countries to coordinate a manhunt for anti-China separatists who had set up a training camp on the Chinese side of the border, the China News Service said. Flushed out, the rebels hijacked a tourist bus that television footage showed black-suited tactical units storming, shattering the windows to get inside.

Continue Reading >> The Associated Press | May 7, 2011
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China sees a role amid Pakistan-U.S. rift

Renewed strains in relations between Pakistan and the United States following last week’s killing of Osama bin Laden have been seen in China as opening the door for closer engagement with Islamabad.

According to officials and analysts here, China is keen to further tighten its already close relationship with its long-term strategic ally, driven by the view that the country is going to play a crucial, even defining, role in Afghanistan, amid declining U.S. influence there.

Continue Reading >> The Hindu | May 8, 2011
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China urges world to back Pakistan in terror fight

China reaffirmed its support on Thursday for efforts by its ally Pakistan to combat terrorism after the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden by US forces, and urged the world to help Islamabad.

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu stopped short of directly criticising the daring raid by US special forces on Pakistani soil that ended with bin Laden’s death but said national sovereignty “should be respected” at all times.

Continue Reading >> AFP | May 5, 2011
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Eye on Afghan endgame, PM plans trip to Kabul

[...] Though Singh has been planning the visit to Afghanistan for sometime now, the recent developments there as well as the killing of Bin Laden have “brought a sense of immediacy to the whole thing”, sources explained.

Continue Reading >> Hindustan Times | May 7, 2011


No More Raids! Pakistan Warns U.S. of “Disastrous Consequences”, Urges Washington to Reduce its Forces, Warns India against “Misadventure”, Pakistani President to Visit Russia “at the Invitation of President Medvedev”, Iran Says it Will Continue to Build on Cooperation With Egypt, Dispatches 14th Fleet of Warships to Gulf of Aden, Israel Buys Dolphin Submarine, Keeps Eye on Rising Egyptian Threat, Changing Situation on Southern Border May Precipitate a Massive Military Buildup, Military Plan Includes Preparation for War on Multiple Fronts


No more raids! Pakistan warns US of ‘disastrous consequences’

Pakistan warned the US Thursday of “disastrous consequences” if it carries out any more raids against terrorists like the one that killed Osama Bin Laden, and hit back at international allegations it might have been harboring the Al-Qaeda chief.

Continue Reading >> Arab News | May 5, 2011
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Pakistan urges US to reduce its forces

Pakistan has called on the United States to reduce its military personnel in the country, following the deadly US attack on Osama bin Laden’s compound.

Continue Reading >> Press TV | May 5, 2011
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Pakistan warns India against ‘misadventure’

Taking a serious view of assertions made by the Indian military leadership since the U.S. operation in Pakistan to nab al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, the Pakistan Army on Thursday warned that any “misadventure of this kind will be responded to very strongly.” Earlier in the day, Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir said mimicking U.S. unilateral action in Pakistan would result in a “terrible catastrophe.”

Continue Reading >> The Hindu | May 5, 2011
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President Zardari to visit Russia

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari will pay an official visit to the Russian Federation between May 11 and 14 at the invitation of President Medvedev, the foreign ministry announced yesterday.

Continue Reading >> Gulf News | May 5, 2011
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Iran says it will continue to build on cooperation with Egypt

Iran’s foreign minister Ali Akbafr Salehi said on Wednesday that his country will resume collaboration with Egypt, and will continue to do so once the two nations have established embassies in each other’s countries.

Continue Reading >> Al-Masry Al-Youm | May 5, 2011
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Iran Dispatches 14th Fleet of Warships to Gulf of Aden

The Iranian Navy dispatched its 14th flotilla of warships to the Gulf of Aden to protect the country’s cargo ships and oil tankers against Somali pirates.

Continue Reading >> Fars News Agency | May 1, 2011
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Israel buys Dolphin submarine

Israel will purchase its sixth Dolphin submarine from Germany at the expense of $1 billion, officials announced Thursday, despite constant objections by the IDF echelon.

Continue Reading >> Ynetnews | May 5, 2011
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Israel Keeps Eye on Rising Egyptian Threat

[...] Jerusalem Post military correspondent Yaakov Katz said the changing situation on Israel’s southern border may precipitate a massive military buildup.

Continue Reading >> The Christian Broadcasting Network | May 4, 2011


Washington Provoking China and Russia in Mediterranean Sea, the Main Objective Behind Engineering the Libyan War and Syrian Unrest is to Remove the Two Major Powers from the Region, Pakistan and China Holding Joint Military Exercises, Osama Bin Laden Supposedly Found Hiding Near top Pakistani Army Base, U.S. and Saudi Arabia Trying to Wean China off Iranian Oil, China Focuses on Stability Says Pakistan Made “Important Contributions” to International Fight against Terrorism, Vladimir Putin “Dumbfounded” Over NATO Operation in Libya, Moscow Concerned Over U.S. anti-Missile Base in Romania, Will Deliver 3 Combat Helicopters to Peru


U.S. Provoking China and Russia in Mediterranean

The United States is at the risk of a war with China and Russia as its main objective behind engineering the Libyan war and Syrian unrest is to remove the two major powers from the Mediterranean, a senior former U.S. official has warned.

“Washington is all for invading Libya and is putting more and more pressure to intervene in Syria because we want to… clear China and Russia out of the Mediterranean,” Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, who served as an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration, said during an interview with Press TV on Tuesday.

Continue Reading >> The Journal of Turkish Weekly | April 28, 2011
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Pakistan, China to hold joint military exercises

Pakistan and China will hold two joint military exercises in 2011, a Pakistani senior military leader said Tuesday.

The two exercises, one army drill and one air force one, will be held to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between Pakistan and China, said General Khalid Shameem Wynne, chairman of Pakistan’s Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee.

Continue Reading >> China Daily | February 23, 2011
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Frenemies: U.S. ally in hot seat after bin Laden found in Pakistani army town

U.S. officials have left little doubt that they did not sufficiently trust their counterparts in Pakistan to keep quiet on the plan to send a team of U.S. special forces and CIA operatives into the country on Sunday to kill Osama bin Laden. And now that the whole world knows U.S. forces found and killed bin Laden in a large, conspicuously fortified compound in an affluent Pakistani military town less than forty miles from the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, American officials are likewise making it clear that they don’t fully buy the Pakistani government’s see-no-evil line on bin Laden’s whereabouts. It’s hard for Pakistani military leaders in particular to make a credible case that they were shocked–shocked!–to learn bin Laden was right there under their noses; the Pakistani army, after all, has a college in Abbottabad about 800 yards away from the compound where bin Laden was found and killed.

Continue Reading >> Yahoo News | May 2, 2011
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How U.S. trying to wean China off Iranian oil

The United States collaborated with Saudi Arabia to increase crude oil supplies to China at the expense of Iran, U.S. diplomatic cables show. The move was designed to hurt Iran and win Beijing’s support for sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear programme.

China has long worried that oil supplies from Iran could be choked off if Beijing sides too closely with the West over Tehran’s disputed nuclear activity, which opponents say is intended to give it the means to assemble nuclear weapons. Iran insists its nuclear programme is peaceful.

But as Saudi deliveries of crude increased to China over the past years, so has Beijing’s support for U.N. sanctions against Tehran — although Chinese state oil conglomerates have been moving into the vacuum created by the withdrawal of most major players from the Iranian oil patch.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | May 2, 2011
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China focuses on stability in Pakistan

China has indicated it will deepen cooperation with Pakistan on counterterrorism issues and back its long-term strategic ally’s efforts to maintain stability, in the wake of renewed international concern over the country’s efforts to clamp down on terrorist groups on its soil following Osama bin Laden’s killing.

Continue Reading >> The Hindu | May 3, 2011
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China says Pakistan made “important contributions” to international fight against terrorism

China on Tuesday said Pakistan has made “important contributions” to the fight against terror worldwide following the U.S. announcement of Osama bin Laden’s death.

“We noticed that the Pakistani Foreign Ministry has pledged not to allow its territory to be used for terrorist attacks against any country and it will continue to support the world’s anti-terror efforts,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu told a regular media briefing.

Jiang said the south Asian country is at the anti-terror front-line, and its anti-terror resolve is unwavering and its action powerful.

Continue Reading >> Xinhuanet | May 3, 2011
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Putin says ‘dumbfounded’ over NATO operation in Libya

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin continued on Wednesday to criticize NATO military operations in Libya, saying that he was “dumb-founded” over how easy decisions are made to use force against countries.

When asked by a Swedish journalist, Putin, who is currently on a visit in Stockholm, said “this happens despite human rights and humanity concerns which the civilized world is believed to advocate,” apparently referring to reports about NATO planes bombing civilian objects in Libya.

“Don’t you think that there is a serious controversy between words and practice of international relations?” he said, adding that this “misbalance” should be eliminated.

Continue Reading >> RIA Novosti | April 27, 2011
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US antimissile base to be deployed in Romania

The US and Romania have agreed on the deployment of US missile defence elements on Romanian soil.

Continue Reading >> Voice of Russia | May 3, 2011
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Russia to deliver 3 combat helicopters to Peru

The Peruvian Air Force will receive next week three Russian combat helicopters intended for military operations in remote areas of the country.

Continue Reading >> Andina | May 4, 2011


U.S. Mulls Keeping 10.000 Troops in Iraq, Admiral Mullen: No Iraq Request for Keeping U.S. Troops, Rare Suicide Blasts Near Baghdad’s Green Zone Targeted at Convoys Carrying Iraqi Defense and Political Leaders, Saudi Arabia Determined to Lead the Gulf Region on the Road to a Confrontation With Iran, Gulf Council Taking Steps Towards the Establishment of a Diplomatic and Military Confederation, Gulf Troops to Stay in Bahrain “till Iran Threat Gone”, Saudi National Security Adviser Gets Pakistani Military Support, Pakistan Ready for Middle East Role, Two Army Divisions Kept on Standby for Deployment to Saudi Arabia, Over 1000 Ex-Army Personnel Recruited for Service in Bahrain, Saudis Offering to Widen Huge U.S. Arms Deal to Keep Washington on the Kingdom’s Side, Buying Advanced Nuclear-Capable Missiles in China, Iranian President: “America is Trying to Sow Discord among Shi’ites and Sunnis… They Want to Create Tension Between Iran and Arabs… But their Plan Will Fail”, Ties Remain Strained But Turkey Israel Keep on Trading


U.S. Mulls “Keeping 10.000 Troops in Iraq”

US and Iraqi officials are looking into keeping 10,000 US troops in the country beyond a year’s end deadline for a complete withdrawal, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

The talks are politically sensitive for both countries, with Americans keen to end their involvement in Iraq and Iraqis concerned that prolonging the troop presence could fuel sectarian tensions and protests.

Continue Reading >> AFP | April 22, 2011
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No Iraq request for keeping U.S. troops: Admiral Mullen

Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on a visit to Baghdad that Iraq would need to begin talks very soon if it wanted to alter that plan in order to avoid “irrevocable logistics and operational decisions we must make in the coming weeks.”

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has said the country’s police and army are ready and U.S. troops will not be needed beyond the year’s end.

Maliki said in a statement released on his website late on Thursday that the government was keen to develop relations with the United States, particularly with regards to training and arming its security forces.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | April 22, 2011
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Rare Suicide Blasts Near Baghdad’s Green Zone Kill 11

The first major attack in months at an entrance to the heavily fortified Green Zone killed 11 and wounded at least 19 on Monday as talk in the capital increased about whether Iraqi leaders would ask U.S. troops to stay beyond a year-end deadline to leave.

Suicide bombers simultaneously detonated two cars packed with explosives at a security checkpoint crowded with Iraqi parliament staffers. Iraqi police said the attacks appeared to be targeted at convoys carrying Iraqi defense and political leaders, including a military commander who survived the second attempt on his motorcade this month.

The speaker of the Iraqi parliament said the other blast seemed to be aimed at one of his advisers. The adviser also survived, but six Iraqi army officers and bodyguards for both dignitaries were killed, as were the two bombers.

The four-square-mile green zone houses the largest U.S. embassy in the world and thousands of American soldiers and contractors. None was injured in Monday’s attack. The gate where the bombings occurred is most frequently used by Iraqi politicians and military officers and their staffs and by the Iraqi media.

Continue Reading >> The Washington Post | April 18, 2011
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Saudis Give up on U.S., Instigate Direct Gulf Action against Iran

After giving up on US and Israel ever confronting Iran, Saudi Arabia has gone out on a limb against the Obama administration to place itself at the forefront of an independent Gulf campaign for cutting down the Islamic Republic’s drive for a nuclear bomb and its expansionist meddling in Arab countries, DEBKAfile’s Middle East sources report.

Two US emissaries sent to intercede with Saudi King Abdullah – US Defense Secretary Robert Gates on April 6 and National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, who arrived in Riyadh six days later – were told that Saudi Arabia had reached a parting-of-the ways with Washington, followed actively by Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman.

Abdullah said he could not forgive the Americans for throwing former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to the wolves in Cairo and for the unrest they were promoting against Arab regimes.

Saudi Arabia was therefore determined to lead the Gulf region on the road to a confrontation with Iran – up to and including military action if necessary – to defend the oil emirates against Iranian conspiracies in the pursuit of which the king accused US-led diplomacy of giving Tehran a clear field.

[...] Iran has taken two steps in response to the Saudi-led Gulf challenge: Thousands of Iranian students, mobilized by the Revolutionary Guards and Basijj voluntary corps have laid the Saudi embassy in Tehran to siege for most of the past week, launching stone and firebomb assaults from time to time, but so far making no attempt to invade the building.

Then, Saturday, April 16, the Iranian foreign ministry summoned the Pakistani chargé d’affaires to warn him sternly against allowing Saud Arabia and Bahrain to continue conscripting Pakistani military personnel. Tehran claims that by offering exorbitant paychecks, Riyadh has raised 1,000 Pakistani recruits for its military operation in support of the Bahraini king and another 1,500 are on their way to the Gulf.

Iran also beefed up its strength along the Pakistani border to warn Islamabad that if it matters come to a clash with Saudi Arabia, Pakistani and its military will not escape punishment.

Continue Reading >> DEBKAfile | April 19, 2011
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GCC Taking Steps Towards Confederation

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are discussing setting up a Gulf confederation, a Kuwaiti daily said.

The Gulf confederation will have a unified foreign, defence and security policy, but each of the six countries will remain independent and sovereign, Al Seyassah daily reported on Tuesday.

Turning into a confederation will help the Arab states confront challenges and threats from Iran to their security, sovereignty and independence, the paper said, quoting highly placed Gulf sources that it did not name.

Continue Reading >> Gulfnews | April 12, 2011
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Gulf Troops to Stay till Iran Threat Gone: Bahrain

Saudi and UAE forces will only leave Bahrain when an Iranian threat to Gulf Arab countries is judged to be over, Bahrain’s foreign minister said on Monday, hinting that Gulf troops could be there for some time.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | April 18, 2011
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Pakistan ready for Middle East role

With a broad Sunni Muslim bloc of countries lining up against an emerging Shi’ite crescent in the Middle East, Sunni-majority and nuclear-armed Pakistan could play an important – albeit somewhat reluctant – role.

A step in this direction is Pakistan’s decision to keep two army divisions on standby for deployment to Saudi Arabia in the event of trouble there. This followed a visit by Saudi Prince and secretary general of the National Security Council Prince Bandar Bin Sultan to Pakistan.

Earlier, Pakistan’s Fauji Foundation, an armed forces entity, organized the recruitment of over 1,000 ex-army personnel for service in Bahrain’s National Guard. The small Persian Gulf state, which is headquarters to the United States 5th Fleet, is suppressing protests with the help of Saudi invasion forces.

[...] Iranian media have broadcast stories predicting a strong Pakistani role in the Gulf region; this resulted in Iranian-sponsored agitators in Bahrain killing several Pakistani workers for “collaborating with the Sunni rulers of Bahrain”.

Continue Reading >> Asia Times | April 2, 2011
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Saudis “Offer to Widen Huge U.S. Arms Buy”

As Saudi Arabia’s confrontation with Iran swells amid claims Tehran is exploiting political turmoil in the Arab world, Riyadh reportedly has offered to expand its $60 billion arms deal with Washington to keep it on the kingdom’s side.

Continue Reading >> UPI | April 19, 2011
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Saudi Arabia and China Now More Than Just “Good Friends”

US National Security Adviser Tom Donilon is the second high-ranking American official to visit Riyadh in less than a week. He landed Tuesday, April 12, just six days after US Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Saudi King Abdullah ended a stormy interview which failed to bridge the widening gap between Washington and Riyadh.

[...] Bandar recently paid a secret visit to China and clinched terms for CSS-3 DF-3 ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear warheads to replace the hardware Saudi Arabia bought from China in the 1980s.

Continue Reading >> The Wall Street Shuffle | April 15, 2011
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Iran Eyes Mediation Role in Bahrain

“America is trying to sow discord among Shi’ites and Sunnis… they want to create tension between Iran and Arabs… but their plan will fail.” Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad in a speech on Monday to mark national Army Day.

Continue Reading >> Asia Times | April 21, 2011
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Ties Remain Strained, but Turkey, Israel Keep on Trading

Just as diplomatic relations between Israel and Turkey appear to have hit rock bottom, bilateral trade between Israel and Turkey have reached an all-time high, indicating that commercial interests can trump political differences.

Continue Reading >> The Jerusalem Post | April 17, 2011


Sudan Has “Irrefutable Proof” Israel Behind Air Strike on Iran-Backed Hamas Operatives, Iraqi Prime Minister Orders a Pre-Dawn Raid on Iranian Opposition Camp, Iraqis Resist Longer U.S. Occupation, Iran’s Envoy Renews Opposition to U.S. Permanent Bases in Afghanistan, Blast at Iran’s Main Energy Pipeline Hub Caused By “Sabotage”, Israelis “Visit” Iraq, Terror Bureau Warns Them Not To, Ahmadinejad: Enemies Seeking to Disintegrate Jordan to Save Israel, First Visit To Egypt By Iranian Official Since Mubarak’s Resignation, Israeli Embassy in Cairo Under Siege, Saudi Arabia in Crisis: Kingdom Projects Calm Raises Military Salaries, U.S. Defense Secretary Has “Warm” Meeting With King Abdullah, U.S. National Security Advisor Visiting Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, Gulf Cooperation Council Calls for Cancellation of Arab Summit in Iraq, Washington Wants Status Quo in Bahrain and Yemen, Israel Worried By “Weakening” U.S., Intimidated By Close Ties Between Tehran and Central Asia, Israeli Leaders Back away from Showdown With Hamas in Gaza Strip, Bahrain Touted Intelligence Ties With Israel, Pakistan’s ISI Chief Visits U.S. in Patch-up Trip, Pakistani Naval Ship Arrives at UAE Port, Pakistani President Receives UAE Foreign Minister, Interior Minister in Abu Dhabi, Islamabad Poised to Dispatch Army to Saudi Arabia


Sudan Has “Irrefutable Proof” Israel Behind Air Strike

Sudan said Sunday it had irrefutable evidence that Israel carried out the air strike on its Red Sea coast last week that killed two people and destroyed the car they were travelling in.

Tuesday’s attack was carried out by two AH-64 Apache helicopters, around 15 kilometres (nine miles) south of Port Sudan, Sudan’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

They flew in from the Red Sea and unleashed a barrage of Hellfire missiles and machinegun fire on the car after having jammed the local radar system, the statement added.

The US-made helicopters were not owned by any country in the region except Israel, said the statement.

While Israel has refused to comment on the raid, officials there have previously expressed concern about arms smuggling through Sudan, which has close ties with the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.

Continue Reading >> AFP | April 11, 2011
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Iraqi Soldiers “Kill 23″ in Raid on Iranian Protest Camp

Iraqi soldiers reportedly killed 28 Iranian exiles at an illegal protest camp.

Prime minister Nouri al-Maliki ordered a pre-dawn raid at Camp Ashraf, near the two nations’ border, it was claimed last night.

The site is the base of the People’s Mujahedeen Organisation of Iran – Tehran’s main opposition group.

London-based Iranian exiles claimed more than 200 people were injured but the Iraqi government denied anyone had been killed.

A spokesman said: “Our forces did not use weapons. and the situation is now calm. We warn against violating laws in that area.”

The Daily Mirror | April 9, 2011
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Iraqis Resist Longer U.S. Occupation

President Barack Obama has given his approval to a Pentagon plan to station U.S. combat troops in Iraq beyond 2011, provided that Iraqi Premier Nouri al-Maliki officially requests it, according to U.S. and Iraqi sources.

But both U.S. and Iraqi officials acknowledge that Maliki may now be reluctant to make the official request. Maliki faces severe political constraints at home, and his government is being forced by recent moves by Saudi Arabia to move even closer to Iran.

Continue Reading >> Consortiumnews | April 8, 2011
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Iran’s Envoy Renews Opposition to US Permanent Bases in Afghanistan

A senior Iranian envoy on Tuesday reiterated the regional states’ strong opposition to the establishment of US permanent military bases in Afghanistan, describing the move as no help to the improvement of the security conditions in the war-torn country.

Continue Reading >> Fars News Agency | April 12, 2011
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Iran official says pipeline blast caused by ‘sabotage’

A large explosion at Iran’s main energy pipeline hub Friday was caused by sabotage, an influential member of Parliament said Sunday.

The blast, which sent balls of fire into the air outside the Shiite religious center of Qom, targeted three major gas pipelines. The explosion comes amid an increase in mysterious blasts, assassinations and other incidents in the Islamic Republic, including a similar blast Feb. 11 that temporarily halted north-south gas transportation in the country. All pipelines are now back in operation, officials say.

Continue Reading >> The Washington Post | April 10, 2011
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Israelis Visit Iraq, Terror Bureau Warns Them Not To

The National Security Council Counter-Terrorism Bureau (NSCCTB) has issued a warning to Israelis not to travel to Iraq.

An NSCCTB warning described “the phenomenon of Israelis visiting Iraq, including the Kurdish area in the northeast, the area around Baghdad and southern Iraq.”

Continue Reading >> Israelnationalnews | March 28, 2011
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Ahmadinejad: Enemies Seeking to Disintegrate Jordan to Save Israel

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned about enemies’ plots against Muslim nations, saying that they are seeking to disintegrate Jordan to save the Zionist regime from its present complicated situation.

Continue Reading >> Fars News Agency | April 7, 2011
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First Visit To Egypt By Iranian Official Since Mubarak’s Resignation

The Iranian news agency Fars said that Iranian envoy to the U.N. Mohammad Khazai has arrived in Cairo for a two-day visit, during which he will meet with top Egyptian officials.

This is the first visit by an Iranian official to Cairo since the resignation of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

The MEMRI Blog | April 12, 2011
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Israeli Embassy in Cairo Under Siege

The western press and even Al Jazeera have failed to report today’s demonstrations in Tahir Square, Cairo accurately. Thousands of Egyptians marched from the square to the Israeli Embassy, demanding that the current military government end diplomatic relations with Israel in wake of the recent assault on Gaza by the IDF.

Continue Reading >> Sabbah | April 9, 2011
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Saudi Arabia in crisis: Kingdom projects calm, raises military salaries

[...] King Abdullah has decided to promote all military officers as well as raise their salaries. Officials said the measures would include personnel in the military and the National Guard.

“Our focus should be on protecting the kingdom’s security,” Saudi Deputy Defense Minister Prince Khaled Bin Sultan said.

Continue Reading >> World Tribune | April 7, 2011
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Gates Has “Warm” Meeting With Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates met with King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz and other top Saudi officials Wednesday, at the start of his third trip to the tumultuous region in the past month.

“We had a very good meeting,” Gates told reporters traveling with him, after speaking with the king for 90 minutes. “It was an extremely cordial, warm meeting. I think the relationship is in a good place.”

Continue Reading >> The Washington Post | April 6, 2011
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U.S. National Security Advisor to Visit Saudi Arabia

U.S. National Security Advisor Tom Donilon will travel to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates from April 11 to 13, to meet with key leaders in each country and discuss regional issues.

In Riyadh, he will meet with King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz; in Abu Dhabi he will meet with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. “The National Security Advisor’s visit underscores the importance of our relationship with these two key partners” a White House statement said Sunday.

Associated Press of Pakistan | April 11, 2011
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GCC Calls for Cancellation of Arab Summit in Iraq

The Six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states have asked the Arab League to cancel Arab summit scheduled to take place in May, Bahrain’s foreign minister said on Tuesday.

Continue Reading >> Gulf News | April 12, 2011
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“U.S. Wants Status Quo in Bahrain, Yemen”

With the current unrests in Bahrain and Yemen, Press TV’s U.S. Desk asked Wayne Madsen, Investigative journalist, author, and syndicated columnist about the U.S. role in Bahrain and Yemen.

“I think what we are seeing played out in Bahrain is of course is that the Obama administration will stop at nothing to ensure the security and the continuation of the royal regime there because the only thing that means anything to the Obama administration is the U.S. naval base, the headquarters of the U.S. 5th fleet which has been a base for a number of years so the legitimate concerns of the opposition in Bahrain are being overshadowed by military concerns,” Madsen said.

He continued, “As far as Yemen is concerned, I think the Obama administration is hoping for a soft landing. Obviously based on what White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said very recently that it was time for [Yemeni] President Saleh to leave the scene I think the real interest is to me to make sure that whatever government comes in to Yemen, is one that is going to maintain a security relationship with the United States and its so called war on terrorism.”

Madsen went on to add, “The worst case scenario for the Obama administration but one that I think will play out is we will see the reestablishment of the independence of the former People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen or South Yemen which was forced into this unification with the North, in a very bad deal. The South Yemenis have legitimate concerns and want to see their independence restored.”

“However, we do know that the previous government of South Yemen was Socialist in its viewpoint and that is something that the Obama administration will fight very hard against. The other issue of course is the Zaidis the Houthi tribes’ people in the far north of North Yemen, again, the Obama administration does not want to see the emergence of any sort of autonomous Zaidis country or province so they’ll do everything necessary to ensure that the status quo is maintained in Yemen,” Madsen concluded.

Continue Reading >> Press TV | April 7, 2011
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Israel Worried By “Weakening” U.S.

Israel is troubled by the perception the US is an “empire of the past” and wants a resurgent America to lead a decisive confrontation with Iran, a top official has said.

“America is tested” at a pivotal moment in the history of the Middle East, said Israel’s Deputy Prime Minister, Dan Meridor, who is also the Minister for Intelligence and Nuclear Energy.

The Arab world was watching the US closely: “They look to America. If America does not seem to be able to contain the Iranian threat, will they go with Iran?”

“This is of world-order magnitude,” he told the Herald in an interview. Israel, which depends on the US as its security guarantor, itself appears to have new doubts about US judgment.

Mr Meridor said he was “surprised” at the Obama administration’s treatment of a longstanding US ally, Egypt’s former president: “Was it necessary to immediately empower the demonstrators against him and let [Hosni] Mubarak go? It’s seen by all the allies of America in the Arab world. I don’t know where the tide of history will go and I’m not sure they know.”

Continue Reading >> The Sydney Morning Herald | April 12, 2011
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Israel Intimidated by Close Ties Between Tehran, Central Asia

The Zionist regime warned Israelis to stay out of Tajikistan, Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan after Tehran and Central Asian capitals accelerated consolidation and improvement of their intimate ties and cooperation in various grounds.

Continue Reading >> Fars News Agency | April 12, 2011
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Israeli Leaders Back away from Showdown With Hamas

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak were expected at long last to instruct new chief of staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz to take effective military action to put a stop to the missile misery inflicted on hundreds of thousands of Israeli civilians month after month, year after year – or so the victimized communities believed.

[...] But Sunday, April 10, they learned that their government had succumbed to a “ceasefire” deal that would perpetuate the harassment: Hamas and the Jihad Islami agreed to desist from attacking Ashdod, Beersheba, Ofakim and Netivot, Palmachim and Kiryat Gat, the towns at the outer edge of their range, but permitted to keep up their regular mortar and missile fusillade against the communities abutting on the Gaza Strip.

Continue Reading >> DEBKAfile | April 10, 2011
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Bahrain Touted Intelligence Ties With Israel: WikiLeaks

ahrain’s King Hamad boasted of his ties with Israel’s intelligence services and told his government to stop referring to the Jewish state as the “Zionist enemy,” a leaked US cable from 2005 showed.

The cable, which was given exclusively to Israel’s Haaretz newspaper by the whistleblower website WikiLeaks, was written after talks between the king and Washington’s ambassador to Bahrain, William Monroe, in February of that year.

“He revealed that Bahrain already has contacts with Israel at the intelligence/security level (i.e. with Mossad) and indicated that Bahrain will be willing to move forward in other areas,” Monroe wrote, referring to Israel’s spy agency.

Continue Reading >> AFP | April 8, 2011
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Pakistan’s ISI Chief Visits U.S. in Patch-up Trip

The head of Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) is visiting his counterpart at the CIA, the agency said on Monday, in an attempt to patch up an alliance considered crucial to winning the war against al-Qaida and the Afghan Taliban.

Continue Reading >> The Times of India | April 11, 2011
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Pakistan Naval Ship Arrives Abu Dhabi

Pakistan naval ship PNS Badr arrived at Mina Zayed Port in Abu Dhabi on Sunday, on a goodwill visit to the UAE.

PNS Badr will be in Abu Dhabi till March 24. It is being commanded by Captain Faisal Mir.

During the stay, Captain Faisal, along with his team would be visiting various operational and training institutes of the UAE Navy, said Zahida Parveen, Pakistan’s Press Counsellor, in a statement. “The goodwill visit of PNS Badr will be important in further development and strengthening of the historical and friendly relation between Pakistan and the UAE,” Zahida said.

Khaleej Times | March 21, 2011
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Pakistani President Receives Abdullah Bin Zayed

President of Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari received here this evening UAE Foreign Minister Shaikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

Continue Reading >> Khaleej Times | April 7, 2011
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Saif bin Zayed meets Pakistani Interior Minister

Sheikh Saif bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior yesterday met Rehman Malik, Interior Minister of Pakistan on the sidelines of ID World Abu Dhabi 2011 summit.

Continue Reading >> Emirates News Agency | April 5, 2011
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Pakistan Poised to Dispatch Army to Saudi Arabia

Pakistan is prepared to move two army divisions into Saudi Arabia to protect the kingdom in the event of any outbreak of trouble, such as what has happened in Bahrain, Yemen, Egypt, Libya and other Middle East and North African nations.

It also is ready to help recruit ex-Pakistani military personnel for Bahrain’s national guard, the sources report.

Continue Reading >> WorldNetDaily | April 7, 2011


Indian Army Commander: China’s Presence in Pakistan-administered Kashmir “Increasing Steadily”, China’s First Aircraft Carrier May Be Nearly Ready, Photos Released Days Before Robert Gates Visit to Beijing, Taiwan Inaugurates Missile Ships amid Buildup Vow to Offset the Perceived Military Threat from China, Former Minister of Railways Executed for Act of Sabotage and Espionage Charges in North Korea, Pyongyang Strengthens Submarine Drills Near Border, Threatens Action for US-South Korea Military Exercises, Sri Lankan Army Commander in Indonesia Defence Relations to Be Enhanced, Iran’s Oil Exports to China Increased 62%, Tehran Moscow Underline Increasing Cooperation in Oil Gas Fields, Russia Begins Refuelling Iran Nuclear Plant, China and Russia Fingered in German Industrial Espionage, Washington Gears for High-Stakes Sea-Based Missile Defense Test, With Eye on South China Sea U.S. Might Place Troops in Australia, Russia to Continue Military Conscription for Next 10-15 Years


China’s Presence in PoK “Increasing Steadily”: Army Commander

China’s presence in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) is “increasing steadily” and its troops are “actually present” along the Line-of-Control, a top Army commander said, adding the Chinese footprints are “too close for comfort” for India.

“Chinese presence in Gilgit-Baltistan and the Northern Areas is increasing steadily… There are many people who are concerned about the fact that if there was to be hostility between us and Pakistan, what would be the complicity of Chinese. Not only they are in the neighbourhood but the fact that they are actually present and stationed along the LoC,” Northern Army commander Lt Gen KT Parnaik said here last week while addressing a seminar.

He said China’s links with Pakistan through PoK “lends strength” to the “nexus” between the two countries which is a cause of “great security concern” for India.

“As part of (China’s) ‘strings of pearls’ policy, Chinese footprints are too close for comfort,” Parnaik added.

The Army commander said such a nexus between the Chinese and Pakistani military “jeopardises our regional strategic interests in the long run and and facilitates speedy and enhanced deployment of Pakistan armed forces to complement China’s military operations and thus outranks India.”

He said China has been found to be involved in the construction of numerous roads and and several hydro-power projects inside PoK.

Beijing is laying a web of roads that run across areas as distant from each other as Skardu in PoK and Kunming in China near Myanmar border.

China has already constructed roads connecting all its highways to logistic centres and major defence installations that dot the border with India and the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in south-eastern Jammu and Kashmir.

The Times of India | April 5, 2011
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Chinese Warship May Be Nearly Ready

The Chinese state news agency has posted photographs of an aircraft carrier under reconstruction that appears to show the warship near completion. Captions with the photos said that the work would end soon and that the carrier was expected to sail later this year.

[...] Xinhua’s headline with the photos said: “Huge warship on the verge of setting out, fulfilling China’s 70-year aircraft carrier dreams.” One caption said: “A few days ago, domestic online military forums consecutively published photographs of the Varyag aircraft carrier being reconstructed at China’s Dalian shipyard. From the pictures, we can see that this project is entering its final stage.” The caption noted that construction on the ship’s bridge was almost done, with the exception of a radar system.

[...] The appearance of the photos came just days before Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates visited China. Military officials tested the fighter while Mr. Gates was in Beijing, which led to a puzzling and awkward diplomatic moment between Mr. Gates and President Hu Jintao.

Continue Reading >> The New York Times | April 7, 2011
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Taiwan Inaugurates Missile Ships amid Buildup Vow

Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou inaugurated a squadron of missile boats Thursday as he pledged to continue the island’s military buildup to offset the perceived military threat from China.

The fleet of 10 locally manufactured missile boats joined the navy following a ceremony presided over by Ma at the northeastern naval base in Suao.

Ma, the initiator of detente with the island’s giant neighbour, said tensions with the mainland have eased significantly since he came to power in 2008 but insisted Taiwan needed a deterrent against Beijing which claims the island as part of its territory.

Continue Reading >> AFP | April 7, 2011
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Two Former Ministers Executed in North Korea – Seoul Newspaper

[...] The newspaper reported that the North Korean former minister of railways, who occupied the post in 1998-2000, was executed over the blast case at a railway station in April 2004. This explosion was qualified as an act of sabotage targeted against a special train of a North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, who was on the way back from China.

The minister was accused of classified information leakage. The routes and the schedule of Kim’s trips were accessible only for his bodyguards and secretaries, as well as the railway minister.

Continue Reading >> ITAR-TASS | April 4, 2011
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N. Korea Strengthens Submarine Drills Near Border

North Korea has intensified submarine drills near the tense Yellow Sea border with South Korea, putting Seoul defence officials on alert, a report said Thursday.

JoongAng Ilbo newspaper, citing a Seoul military source, said the North had been staging exercises involving five or six submarines at the Bipagot submarine base on its west coast since last month.

They feature the signature 325-tonne submarines as well as the new and bigger Shark-class submarines called K-300, it said.

“It’s highly unusual for them to beef up submarine drills in March so we’re intensely monitoring the situation,” said the source.

Continue Reading >> AFP | April 7, 2011
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N. Korea Threatens Action for US-SKorea Drills

North Korea warned Friday that its military would not remain a “passive onlooker” if South Korea and the United States continued joint military drills, state media reported.

The threat came from Ri Yong-Ho, a vice marshal of the North’s armed forces, at a meeting attended by top government, military and party officials in Pyongyang.

Continue Reading >> AFP | April 8, 2011
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SL, Indonesia Defence Relations to Be Enhanced

Sri Lankan Army Commander Lieutenant General Jagath Jayasuriya’s official visit to Indonesia has resulted in further strengthening the longstanding and excellent defence relations between the two nations and their armed forces.

Army sources say that it also provided opportunity to explore further defence cooperation between the two countries.

Continue Reading >> Daily News | April 6, 2011
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Iran’s Oil Exports to China Increased in 2011

The Islamic Republic of Iran’s crude oil exports to China increased 62 percent in the first two months of 2011, Xinhua reported.

In January-February 2011, Iran’s crude exports to China increased 62 percent compared to the same period last year.
During the mentioned time, China has totally imported 45.73 million tons half of which has been supplied by the countries in the Middle East.

Iran’s crude oil exports to China reached 4.11 million tons during the two months. Iran has been second biggest crude supplier to China.

Saudi Arabia exported 8.19 million tons of oil to China and it was ranked first supplying 20 percent of the Asian country’s oil demand during the same period.

Mojnews | April 6, 2011
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Tehran, Moscow Underline Increasing Cooperation in Oil, Gas Fields

Iranian Deputy Vice-President for Economic Affairs Ali Aqa Mohammadi and Chief Executive of Russia’s Gazprom Company Alexei Miller in a meeting in Moscow underscored the necessity for the further promotion of mutual cooperation between the two countries in the oil and gas sectors.

Continue Reading >> Fars New Agency | April 7, 2011
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Russia Begins Refuelling Iran Nuclear Plant

Russia on Friday resumed loading fuel into Iran’s first nuclear power plant after it had to be removed because of an apparent technical fault, news reports said.

Continue Reading >> AFP | April 8, 2011
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China and Russia Fingered in German Industrial Espionage Alert

Industrial espionage by China and Russia is becoming easier thanks to computer hacking, officials warned German business leaders on Thursday, adding that police need data logs to track computer break-ins.

A conference heard that the annual cost to German companies of data theft was at least 20 billion euros (nearly 30 billion dollars).

[...] “Russia and China are the main sources of so-called industrial espionage in Germany,” Schroeder said.

Continue Reading >> Monsters and Critics | April 7, 2011
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U.S. Gears for High-Stakes Missile Defense Test

The United States is preparing for its first test of a sea-based defense against longer-range missiles of a type that officials say could soon threaten Europe from Iran.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | April 7, 2011
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With Eye on South China Sea, U.S. Might Place Troops in Australia

American troops might soon find themselves serving in Australia as the United States looks for better access to the South China Sea, the source of much friction between China and many other Pacific nations.

During testimony on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, Adm. Robert Willard, the commander of the U.S. Pacific Command, said Australians would like to see an increase of U.S. military activities Down Under.

[...] U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said he has a group studying the idea of U.S. troops rotating through existing Australian bases, but he doesn’t want to create any new permanent bases in the Pacific. And he remained diplomatic when asked whether such a plan would be about keeping China in check.

[...] The United States and Australia have been on the same side of every major war since World War I. Australia has the largest group of troops from a non-NATO country fighting in Afghanistan.

Continue Reading >> CNN | April 8, 2011
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Russia to Continue Military Conscription for Next 10-15 Years – Medvedev

The Russian Armed Forces will continue using a mixture of conscripts and contracted recruits for the next 10-15 years, President Dmitry Medvedev said on Monday.

Russia is in the process of reforming its armed forces by shifting the focus away from a largely inefficient body of conscripted soldiers toward a smaller professional army.

Continue Reading >> RIA Novosti | April 4, 2011


CIA Operating Inside Libya, U.S. Agents are Helping Guide Air Strikes and Determining the Allegiances of Rebel Forces, Egypt Supplies Libyan Insurgents With Weapons at Washington’s Instigation, Egyptian Special Forces Secretly Pouring into Libya to Back the Rebellion, Cairo Keen to Cozy up to Iran and Hezbollah, Stalls Reopening of Natural Gas Pipeline to Israel, Iran and Saudi Arabia Cold War Entering a New Era, Saudi Arabia Virtually Annexes Bahrain, Willing to Swap Gesture Favoring Coalition Operation in Libya for Recognition of its Takeover of Bahrain, Will Build a Missile-Naval Base Opposite Iran, Israeli and Saudi Leaders in a Discreet Meeting in Moscow, Israel Holding Secret Talks With Russia in Bid to Thwart Recognition of Palestinian State, Facebook Drops Palestinian Uprising Page after Israel Protest, Israel’s Military Intelligence Monitoring Foreign Left-Wing Organizations “Aiming to Delegitimize Israel”, Saudi Foreign Minister in Ankara, Visit Linked to Bahrain Events, Bahrain Foreign Minister in Turkey to Discuss Turmoil, Turkey Seizes Rifles on Grounded Iranian Plane, Turkey to UN: We Seized illegal Iran Arms Shipment en Route to Syria, Turkey to Dispatch a Naval Force to Libyan Waters, Will Assume Control of Benghazi Airport, Turkish Prime Minister Cancels Brussels Trip, Visits Iraq and Kurdish Autonomous Region, Turkey Hosts Joint “Urban Warfare” Exercises With Troops from Afghanistan and Pakistan, Trust in Turkey’s Ruling Party Diminishing among European Circles, Unprecedented Wave of Popular Protest Hits Syria, Damascus Deploys Troops, Accuses “Armed Groups” of Seeking to Incite Sectarian Strife, Israeli Army: Syria May Provoke Israel to Distract from Domestic Unrest, Bomb Rocks Jerusalem Bus Stop, Seven Estonian Tourists Kidnapped Hours after Entering Lebanon through Syria, Church Blast in the Same Lebanese Region, Israel Discloses Map Detailing Hezbollah Tunnel Network in Lebanon, Syria Releases Egyptian-American Accused of Espionage


CIA Operating Inside Libya

U.S. agents are helping guide air strikes and determining the allegiances of rebel forces

Since the conflict in Libya began, Barack Obama has promised not to put U.S. “boots on the ground” in the country. CIA agents presumably sport some other kind of footwear, then, because there are dozens of U.S. spies already in Libya, working with rebel forces and attempting to learn more about them, with the ultimate aim of determining whether the U.S. should arm the rebellion. Weeks ago, Obama signed a secret “presidential finding” that authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to provide weapons to the anti-Gadhafi forces, but so far no weapons have been shipped, and officials in Washington continue to weigh the consequences of such a move. British Special Forces and agents with the MI6 intelligence agency are also operating inside Libya.

The Mark News | March 31, 2011
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Egypt Supplies Libyan Insurgents With Weapons, Reports American Newspaper

Egypt has began, at Washington’s instigation, sending arms shipments to insurgents fighting against Gaddafi’s forces in Libya, said on Friday the Wall Street Journal.

This information was obtained from a member of the National Transitional Council which represents the insurgents and US officials, indicated the American newspaper.

The newspaper further noted that this is the first time a confirmation is obtained on sending arms including light rifles and ammunition from a foreign country to Libyan revolutionaries who have recently been defeated by government forces, much better equipped.

The US had expressed its disappointment at the unavailability of Arab countries to solve regional problems and critics against Western countries engaged to help settle these issues.

According to a US official quoted by the Wall Street Journal, the dispatch of Egyptian arms shipments started a few days ago. However, he stressed that Washington has not put in place a clear official policy on this score, even if it knows.

The official considered that the quantity of weapons as too small and too late to have influenced the balance of power in favor of the insurgents.

Afrique Avenir | March 19, 2011
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Egyptian Special Forces Secretly Storm Libya

Crack special forces troops have been secretly pouring into Libya to back the rebellion against Colonel Gaddafi.

The elite troops moved in as the defiant tyrant vowed to “fight to the last man and woman” – and warned that “thousands will die” if the West intervenes.

[...] Intelligence sources have told us that post-Mubarak Egyptian troops have been allowed into Libya by Tunisian soldiers – showing increasing Arab-backing for the anti-Gaddafi revolt.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Mirror | March 3, 2011
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Egypt Keen to Cozy up to Iran, Hizballah

[...] Egypt’s new foreign minister, Nabil al-Arabi, told reporters in Cairo on Tuesday that he intends to reestablish ties with the regime of Iranian strongman Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Islamic overseers.

“We will turn over a new leaf with all states, including Iran,” said al-Arabi.

The minister said he was not yet sure if Egypt would be opening an embassy in Tehran anytime soon, but was keen to begin promoting friendly relations with the Islamic Republic.

Asked about Lebanon’s Hizballah terrorist militia, which more or less runs that country, al-Arabi indicated he had no problem with the group, and would not oppose official ties between Hizballah and Egypt.

“Hezbollah is part of Lebanon’s composition, and we see this as an internal matter,” he said. “If any party wishes to have ties with Egypt there will be nothing preventing us from talking.”

Continue Reading >> Israel Today | March 30, 2011
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Egypt Stalls Reopening of Natural Gas Pipeline to Israel, Once again

Egyptian company Eastern Mediterranean Gas hints closure is political, asks U.S. government for help

Egyptian authorities refused to allow the reopening of the natural gas pipeline to Israel yesterday, which was closed a month ago after a terrorist bomb damaged part of the pipeline. Sources at the Egyptian company Eastern Mediterranean Gas, which supplies Israel with the Egyptian gas, hinted the issue is not actually technical − but political.

Some of the owners of EMG, which sells gas to Israel, asked the American and Thai governments to push the Egyptian government to resume the flow of gas to Israel. The reopening was scheduled for today, after three previous postponements.

Continue Reading >> Haaretz | March 4, 2011
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Iran and Saudi Arabia Cold War Has Entered a New Era

Saudi Arabia fears Iranian influence – its Bahrain intervention has echoes of the Soviet reaction to the 1956 Hungary uprising.

Democracy is arriving in the Middle East, albeit slowly. But what is making progress at a much faster pace is the cold war between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Some described the fall of the Mubarak government, preceded by the fall of the Ben Ali regime in Tunisia, as the Middle East’s Berlin Wall moment. The parallels with the cold war in Europe do not end there. There are also similarities between the entry of Soviet forces into Budapest in November 1956 to put down a popular uprising and the Saudi decision to send forces into Bahrain on 14 March this year.

The Soviets were worried that communist Hungary might fall into the hands of their western cold war adversaries, and thus felt it necessary to send their forces to put down any such initiative. The new Saudi strategy is based on similar calculations. They sent their forces into Bahrain because they felt that if the Shia uprising succeeded, it could turn the country from a Saudi friend into an ally of Iran.

The Saudi decision to risk the lives of its own soldiers in Bahrain is a sign of how seriously they view the situation. It is a departure from the old strategy, where the Saudis paid others to do their fighting for them – as with the Saudi financing of Saddam Hussein’s war against Iran between 1980 and 1988.

As far as the Saudis are concerned, the gloves are off and this means that the Middle East’s version of the cold war is intensifying.

The Iranian government is furious as well. Publications such as the pro-Ahmadinejad Raja News have accused the Saudis of creating a “bloodbath” in Bahrain. Others, such as the Tehran-based Asr Iran, have called for the creation of a Hezbollah movement in Bahrain. Meanwhile, the Association of Independent Student Unions in Iran has declared its readiness to go to Bahrain in order to confront government and Saudi forces there.

This fury is now turning into warnings. President Ahmadinejad has already cautioned the Saudi royal family that they should “learn from Saddam’s fate”.

The Saudis should now start preparing themselves for Iran’s response, because the Iranian government is not going to let this pass quietly.

Continue Reading >> The Guardian | March 24, 2011
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Saudi Arabia Virtually Annexes Bahrain, Will Build a Missile-Naval Base Opposite Iran

Saudi Arabia ranges defenses against Iran, is willing to swap gesture favoring coalition operation in Libya for recognition of its takeover of Bahrain.

Continue Reading >> DEBKAfile | April 1, 2011
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Israeli and Saudi Leaders in Moscow as Palestinians Ramp up Missile Strikes

[...] In Moscow, DEBKAfile’s exclusive sources report that Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was working to set up a discreet meeting between two visitors – Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal, failing which he will try and bring the Saudi Intelligence chief Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz, who arrived with the foreign minister, together with the Israeli leader.

Muqrin has met Israeli leaders in secret before, including the former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

[...] DEBKAfile’s Jerusalem and Moscow sources note that this is the point at which Israel’s declining security situation becomes relevant to a possible Israeli-Saudi dialogue.

Neither Jerusalem nor Riyadh is at ease with the US role in favor of the popular uprisings against veteran Arab regimes – and most particularly the US-UK-French military intervention in Libya. Both find this policy detrimental to the national and security interests of America’s foremost Middle East allies.

They also share resentment for the benefits accrued from this wave of unrest by Tehran and the effect it has had to turn world attention away from its progress toward manufacturing a nuclear bomb.

The Saudi king and Israeli prime minster are apprehensive, on the strength of their intelligence input, that Iran will eventually seize control of the popular uprisings in Arab lands, especially Egypt.

Riyadh alone took a substantial precautionary step against this menace by sending military units into the Bahrain on Feb. 14 to pre-empt the Iranian-backed Shiite threat to King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa and the tiny kingdom’s financial and oil assets at the back door of the rich eastern Saudi oil center.

Continue Reading >> DEBKAfile | April 1, 2011
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Israel Holds Secret Talks With Russia in Bid to Thwart Recognition of Palestinian State

Isaac Molho, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s senior adviser and top negotiator on the Palestinian channel, made a secret trip to Moscow on Wednesday and met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. The purpose of the visit was to dissuade Russia from supporting the European Union’s intention to present in two weeks’ time a plan for the establishment of a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders.

Continue Reading >> Haaretz | April 1, 2011
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Facebook Drops Uprising Page after Israel Protest

Facebook on Tuesday removed a page calling on Palestinians to take up arms against Israel, following a high-profile Israeli appeal to the popular social-networking site.

The page, titled “Third Palestinian Intifada,” had more than 350,000 fans before it was taken down. It called on Palestinians to take to the streets after Friday prayers on May 15 and begin an uprising. “Judgment Day will be brought upon us only once the Muslims have killed all of the Jews,” a quote from the page reads.

Facebook said the page began as a call for peaceful protest, even though it used the term “intifada,” which has been associated with violence in the past.

“However, after the publicity of the page, more comments deteriorated to direct calls for violence,” said Andrew Noyes, Facebook’s public policy communications manager. He said the creators of the page eventually made calls for violence as well.

“We monitor pages that are reported to us and when they degrade to direct calls for violence or expressions of hate — as occurred in this case — we have and will continue to take them down.”

In a letter last week to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Israeli Cabinet Minister Yuli Edelstein said the page included “wild incitement.” Edelstein applauded Facebook for removing the page, saying he hoped the action would be an example to others and deter similar postings in the future.

Continue Reading >> The Associated Press | March 28, 2011
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Military Intelligence Monitoring Foreign Left-Wing Organizations

Military Intelligence is collecting information about left-wing organizations abroad that the army sees as aiming to delegitimize Israel, according to senior Israeli officials and Israel Defense Forces officers.

Continue Reading >> Haaretz | March 21, 2011
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Saudi Foreign Minister to Visit Turkey

Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia, Prince Saud al-Faisal on Thursday will arrive in Ankara, reported the website of CNN Turk TV channel, which links the visit to Bahrain events.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan will meet al-Faisal after returning from Russia. According to the report, the foreign minister of Turkey, Ahmet Davutoglu will also attend the meeting.

On Wednesday, Davutoglu spoke with foreign ministers of Iran, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain by phone, Anadolu Agency reported.

Officials said that Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi called Davutoglu, stating that Davutoglu and Salehi discussed “developments in the region”.

Davutoglu called foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia and Bahrain and phone conversations mainly focused on developments in Bahrain, officials said.

Anti-government protests began in Manama, Bahrain in February. Demonstrators have been demanding the ouster of King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa as well as constitutional reforms, with hundreds camping out peacefully in the capital’s Pearl Square since February 14th.

Bahraini forces imposed a curfew and started to intervene in the protesting group on Wednesday. At least six people were reported to have been killed in Manama during attacks by Bahraini forces against the anti-government protesters in the capital. In response to this, Iran recalled its ambassador from Bahrain.

Troops from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) member states were dispatched to Bahrain at the country’s government’s request to help quell the uprising by majority Shiite Muslims against the Sunni leadership.

Trend News Agency | March 17, 2011
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Bahrain FM to Visit Turkey to Discuss Turmoil

Bahraini Foreign Minister Sheikh Khaled bin Ahmad Al-Khalifa will visit Turkey on Tuesday to discuss unrest in his country sparked by a Shiite-led opposition movement, Turkey’s foreign minister said, AFP reports.

Turmoil in the Gulf kingdom “could produce a potential to create an international conflict… and spread Shiite-Sunni tensions across the region,” Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in an interview with CNN Turk television Monday.

Turkey is in contact also with Saudi Arabia and Iran to ease tensions, he said.

“On the one side, we are advising Bahrain to put in practice democratisation reforms as soon as possible, and on the other side we are advising Iran, Saudi Arabia and the other related parties to show restraint,” he added.

Tension has escalated between Gulf states and Iran as Tehran condemned the deployment of Saudi-led Gulf troops in Bahrain last week, followed by a bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests in the Shiite-majority country.

Focus Information Agency | March 22, 2011
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Turkey Seizes Rifles on Grounded Iranian Plane

The Turkish authorities have seized rifles on a Syria-bound Iranian plane, grounded since the weekend, and questioned its seven-man crew, police and judicial sources said Tuesday.

The cargo plane, a civilian Ilyushin, was ordered to land in Diyarbakir, in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish southeast, on Saturday night on suspicion that it had military or illicit cargo on board.

The plane had declared a cargo of spare car parts, but the inspection resulted also in the discovery of a box containing automatic rifles, a police source told AFP, without providing further details on the guns.

The crew was taken to a police station for questioning and argued that the weapons were on board as part of routine security measures, declining to give additional information.

Continue Reading >> AFP | March 22, 2011
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Turkey to UN: We Seized illegal Iran Arms Shipment en Route to Syria

Turkey has informed a UN Security Council panel that it seized a cache of weapons Iran was attempting to export in breach of a UN arms embargo, according to a document obtained by Reuters on Thursday.

Security Council diplomats said the report of the seizure from an Iranian cargo plane reflected positively on Turkey, which some U.S. and European officials say has taken a lax approach to implementing international sanctions against Iranian financial institutions.

The report to the council’s Iran sanctions committee, which oversees compliance with the four rounds of punitive steps the 15-nation body has imposed on Iran over its nuclear program, said a March 21 inspection turned up the weapons, which were listed as “auto spare parts” on the plane’s documents.

The plane was bound for Aleppo, Syria, and was given permission to pass through Turkish airspace provided it made a “technical stop” at Diyarbakir airport.

Continue Reading >> Haaretz | March 31, 2011
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Turkey to Take Over Benghazi Airport

Turkey has said it will help with distributing humanitarian aid to Libya and has suggested it could play a part in mediating between rebels and the government of Muammar Gaddafi.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the country’s prime minister, said Turkey would take over the running of Benghazi airport to take responsibility for distributing humanitarian aid from the rebel-held eastern city.

The AFP news agency also quoted an official as saying Turkey was responding to a request from fighters in Libya, saying civilian and technical personnel would be sent out.

Ankara has already sent a ferry carrying a medical team, two ambulances and two tonnes of medical supplies to Libya in an attempt to help treat wounded people.

Cemil Cicek, the deputy prime minister, said Turkey was planning to take around 450 injured people from the rebel-held port of Misurata to Turkey for treatment.

Last week, the Turkish parliament also approved the dispatch of a naval force to Libyan waters as the government moved reluctantly to join the military campaign in the north African country.

Continue Reading >> AlJazeera | March 28, 2011
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Turkish PM Cancels Brussels Trip amid Criticisms Over Press Freedom

The Turkish prime minister has canceled his April 1 trip to Brussels to avoid criticisms from EU officials over the deterioration of press freedom, the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review has learned from diplomatic sources.

[...] Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was scheduled to meet with top EU officials, including Herman van Rompuy, president of the EU Council, and Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission. A joint press conference was also expected during the Brussels talks.

Continue Reading >> Hurriyet Daily News | March 28, 2011
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Turkey’s Erdogan in First Visit to Iraq Kurd Region

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan was welcomed on Tuesday as the first Turkish leader to visit Iraq’s Kurdish region, on a trip laden with significance born of Turkey’s own history of conflict with its Kurdish minority.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | March 29, 2011
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Turkey Hosts Military Exercise with Pakistani, Afghan Troops

Turkey has hosted joint “urban warfare” exercises with troops from Afghanistan and Pakistan, comprising sniper and anti-tank units from the three countries.

The number of troops was small — apparently 128 — but the meaning of the exercise was more political than operational. Turkey has long been NATO’s point of contact for relations with Pakistan, and Washington and Brussels have been trying to get Turkey to help build relations between the militaries of Afghanistan and Pakistan. So this exercise — agreed upon at a summit between the three countries in December — is a step in that direction.

Continue Reading >> Eurasianet | March 30, 2011
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Signs of an Axis Shift in EU’s Trust in Turkey’s Ruling Party

Trust in Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, appears to be diminishing among European circles due to growing concerns about fundamental freedoms.

[...] The views of EU institutions vis-a-vis Turkey have seen a clear shift, according to Demir Murat Seyrek, a senior policy adviser for the European Foundation for Democracy.

Continue Reading >> Hurriyet Daily News | March 31, 2011
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Unprecedented Wave of Popular Protest Hits Syria

After Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen, a wave of unprecedented anti-regime protests has now hit Syria, a country known for its iron grip on security matters.

[...] Daraa, a southern town that is home to large tribal families, has been the focal point of the rallies, the latest in a string of uprisings against long-running autocratic regimes across the Arab world.

Continue Reading >> Ahram Online | March 23, 2011
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Syria Deploys Troops after Clashes

Syria has deployed security forces to the northern city of Latakia after violent protests left at least 12 people dead and more than 150 injured amid calls for reform.

[...] Syrian authorities have accused “armed groups” of seeking to incite sectarian strife in the city, which has seen violent clashes between pro-reform protesters, security forces and government supporters.

Continue Reading >> AlJazeera | March 28, 2011
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IDF: Syria May Provoke Israel to Distract from Domestic Unrest

[...] The IDF is also preparing for the possibility that Damascus might use Hezbollah or other militant organizations in Lebanon to heat up that front to divert attention from events in Syria.

Continue Reading >> Haaretz | March 23, 2011
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Bomb Rocks Jerusalem Bus Stop

A bomb struck a crowded bus stop in central Jerusalem Wednesday, killing one woman and wounding more than 20 other people in what authorities said was the first major Palestinian militant attack in the city in several years.

The bombing brought back memories of the second Palestinian uprising last decade, a period in which hundreds of Israelis were killed by suicide bombings in Jerusalem and other major cities.

The Denver Post | March 23, 2011
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Lebanon: Estonian Tourists Kidnapped in Bekaa Valley

Seven Estonian tourists have been kidnapped while cycling in the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon.

The army has now begun searching for the group, who had entered Lebanon legally from Syria earlier in the day.

They were in the town of Zahle when they were seized by men in a car and two vans.

It is not clear whether the kidnapping is politically motivated. The Bekaa Valley is a stronghold of the Islamist Hezbollah movement.

During Lebanon’s civil war, at least 88 foreigners were taken hostage between 1984 and 1990, including the journalist John McCarthy and peace envoy Terry Waite.

The Bekaa Valley is known for lawlessness, drug trafficking and feuds between the powerful clans which control the region’s hashish plantations.

The tourists’ abandoned bicycles were found near the industrial complex in Zahle where they were abducted.

BBC News | March 23, 2011
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Bomb Explodes at Zahle Church, None Hurt

A bomb exploded Sunday at a church in the eastern town of Zahle, causing severe damage but injuring no one, in an act denounced by politicians and religious leaders as an attack on Lebanon’s stability.

A security source told The Daily Star that a device containing 2 kilograms of TNT exploded inside Saidat al-Najat church at 4.15 a.m. Sunday morning, in a detonation performed via cellphone.

“This is the first time this kind of bomb has been used [in Lebanon], whereby the individual can detonate the bomb from anywhere,” the source said.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Star | March 28, 2011
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Israel Releases Map of Hezbollah Bunkers in Lebanon

Washington Post obtains map detailing bunkers, arms caches, surveillance sites in south Lebanon. IDF official: We want to show world that Shiite group has turned villages into fighting zones.

Continue Reading >> Ynetnews | March 30, 2011
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Syria Releases Egyptian-American Accused of Espionage

Syrian authorities have released an Egyptian-American man one week after detaining him on espionage concerns and showing him in what was billed as a televised confession on state TV.

Muhammad Radwan was released to the Egyptian Embassy in Damascus on Friday.

Continue Reading >> CNN | April 1, 2011


Russia Set to Buy 500 Combat Vehicles from France Meant for the Federal Border Guards, Poland Intelligence Officials : 300 Foreign Diplomats in Country are Spies, U.S. Intelligence Chief Describes China and Russia as “Mortal Threats”, U.S. Vice President in Moscow, Meets Putin and Russian Opposition, Calls for “Political Modernization”, Urges Russia to Improve its “Business Climate”, Russia Warns U.S. Against Afghan Bases, Iran Opposes Long-Term U.S. Military Presence in Afghanistan, Afghan President : U.S. Apology for Afghan Deaths “Not Enough” Civilian Casualties By Foreign Troops “No Longer Acceptable” Decision on Permanent U.S. Bases Must Be in Afghan Hands Account for Neighbor Concerns, Afghan President’s Cousin “Mistakenly Killed” in an Overnight Raid By Nato Troops, U.S. Defense Secretary Warns Allies About “Precipitous” Exit from Afghanistan


Russia Set to Buy 500 Combat Vehicles from France

Russia is in talks with French military manufacturer Panhard on the purchase of 500 light armored vehicles for its border guards, a Russian military think-tank said on Friday.

“Negotiations are being held on [the purchase of] 3.1-ton light armored vehicles Vehicule Blinde Leger on a 4×4 wheel platform,” the Center for the Analysis of the World Arms Trade said on its website, citing Panhard Chairman Christian Mons.

The contract could amount to $260 million, the statement said.

The vehicles are meant for the Federal Security Service border guards.

Russia is also continuing talks with France on a $2 billion contract to buy Mistral class helicopter carriers for the Russian Navy.

RIA Novosti | March 11, 2011
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Poland Intelligence Officials Says 300 Foreign Diplomats in Country are Agents

Poland’s leading intelligence agency believes there are about 300 foreign spies working in the country.

The Internal Security Agency gave the figure Thursday amid efforts to enact a law that would make any espionage illegal in Poland.

In a separate report the agency said Poland expelled a Pakistani from the country in April 2010 for trying to conduct logistical work for a terrorist group.

The news agency PAP quoted the head of the security agency, Krzysztof Bondaryk, as saying that the man was suspected of ties to the Pakistan-based Islamist rebel group, Lashkar-e-Toiba, which is believed to be behind the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India.

The Canadian Press | March 10, 2011
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U.S. Intelligence Chief Alarms Senators By Calling China, Russia “Threats”

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper caused a stir Thursday during an appearance before the Senate Armed Services Committee when he described China and Russia as “mortal threats” to the U.S.

His remarks, coming in response to a question from Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV), caused concern among senators of both parties.

Continue Reading >> NPR | March 10, 2011
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U.S. Vice President Meets Putin, Russian Opposition

In a speech wrapping up his two-day visit to Moscow, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden has reiterated Washington’s support for Russia’s accession to the World Trade Organization (WT) because it will lead to greater trade between the two countries.

But Biden also urged Russia to improve its business climate, saying fears of abuse of property rights and other legal abuses are a “fundamental obstacle” for many potential investors.

Speaking at Moscow State University, Biden said that “it’s better for America and I believe better for Russia to be able to trade with each other under predictable and transparent rules.”

The vice president added that the Kremlin’s drive to modernize the economy will not succeed without “political modernization.”

Continue Reading >> Radio Free Europe | March 11, 2011
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Russia Warns US Against Afghan Bases

Russia has warned the US against setting up permanent military bases in Afghanistan, saying the move could undermine peacemaking efforts and anger neighbors.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has confirmed US plans to set up permanent bases in the war-torn country to enable US troops to stay in Afghanistan beyond the 2014 deadline.

Karzai says the US officials are in talks with the Afghan government in this regard.

“This information makes one think and raises questions,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

“Why will US military bases be needed if the terrorist threat in … Afghanistan is ended?”

“Will Kabul be able to combine negotiations on a long-term American military presence with the reconciliation process? How will Afghanistan’s neighbors view the deployment of a foreign country’s military bases near their territory?” Moscow questioned.

Continue Reading >> Press TV | February 19, 2011
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Iran Opposes Long-Term US Presence in Afghanistan

Iran’s interior minister spoke out against a long-term US military presence in Afghanistan Tuesday, as the American Defense Secretary Robert Gates visited his country’s troops in the warring country.

“(Iran) is definitely against the the deployment, presence of foreign forces and establishment of US permanent bases in Afghanistan,” Mostafa Mohammad Najjar told a press conference in Kabul.

“The permanent bases would further complicate the conditions in the region and in Afghanistan.”

The minister’s Afghan counterpart, Besmullah Mohammadi, praised Iran as a neighbour who “has always helped in reconstruction and ensuring security in Afghanistan.”

Continue Reading >> AFP | March 8, 2011
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U.S. Apology for Afghan Deaths “Not Enough” : Karzai

Afghan President Hamid Karzai told General David Petraeus, the commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, on Sunday his apology for a foreign air strike that killed nine children last week was “not enough.”

At a meeting with his security advisers at which Petraeus was present, Karzai said civilian casualties by foreign troops were “no longer acceptable” to the Afghan government or to the Afghan people, Karzai’s palace said in a statement.

Civilian casualties caused by NATO-led and Afghan forces hunting insurgents have again become a major source of friction between Karzai and his Western backers.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | March 8, 2011
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Karzai : Decision on Permanent US Bases Must Be in Afghan Hands, Account for Neighbor Concerns

Afghanistan’s president says any decision on a permanent U.S. military presence in the country must be made by Afghans and take into account the concerns of neighboring countries.

President Hamid Karzai said Saturday that a number of American officials have raised the issue of establishing permanent U.S. bases in the country. He didn’t say whether any formal requests had been made.

Karzai didn’t rule out the possibility of the U.S. establishing permanent bases. But he says any decision should be made in the context of Afghans assuming greater authority over the country, and not being subject to “foreign influence.”

He added that the decision would need to take into consideration the views of Afghanistan’s neighboring countries that include Iran, Pakistan and China.

Newser | February 19, 2011
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Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s Cousin Mistakenly Killed By Nato Troops

A relative of Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai was mistakenly killed by Nato troops yesterday.

Yar Muhammad Khan was at his home near Kandahar when he was shot dead in an overnight raid.

Nato says it is investigating and the president’s brother Ahmad Wali Karzai, head of Kandahar provincial council, said: “There were operations taking place near his house. He was killed by mistake.”

The victim, said to be the president’s cousin in his 60s, apparently left the house at night carrying a weapon.

His death comes just days after President Karzai lashed out at US-led forces over the accidental killing of nine boys in Kunar province.

A spokesman yesterday said: “The president once again calls on Nato forces to avoid killing civilians.”

The Daily Mirror | March 11, 2011
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Defense Secretary Robert Gates Warns U.S. Allies About “Precipitous” Exit from Afghanistan

Speaking at a NATO meeting, Robert Gates says, ‘There is too much talk about leaving and not enough talk about getting the job done right’ in Afghanistan. His remarks are seen as an attempt to keep allies from using a planned U.S. drawdown as a pretext for withdrawing large numbers of troops.

Continue Reading >> Los Angeles Times | March 11, 2011


Danish Warship Extends Operations Off the Coast of Somalia, Italian Air Force Deployed in Afghanistan Trains in Israel for Desert Combat, U.S. Military’s Africa Command Gets New Leadership, U.S. Carrier Group to Join Exercise With South Korea, Chinese Navy Arrives in Pakistan for Naval Exercise, Chinese Naval Fleet Will Sail to the Gulf of Aden, U.S. Resident Arrested for Passing on Defense-Related Projects to China, Japan Regrets China Gas Drilling, Russia Hopes to Make $9.5 Bln in Arms Sales, French Nuclear Submarine Put Under British Command in the Far North “to Monitor the Russians”


Danish Warship Extends Operations Outside Somalia

Denmark’s largest warship, Esbern Snare, will continue its hunt for pirates off the coast of Somalia for another three months, reports public broadcaster DR.

Lene Espersen, the foreign minister, announced the news this morning after a meeting with the Parliamentary Foreign Policy Committee.

[...] Esbern Snare is part of the international Operation Ocean Shield anti-piracy effort and was due to have ended its mission with the force on March 1.

The warship’s journey home to Denmark was, however, temporarily postponed when a yacht with seven Danish passengers was hijacked by Somali pirates on February 24.

This is not the first time that Esbern Snare has been told to prolong its mission. The vessel was to have returned to Denmark in December 2010, but was ordered to continue its mission until March 1.

Continue Reading >> The Copenhagen Post | March 9, 2011
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Italian Air Force Trains in Israel

The Italian air force will continue to use facilities in Israel to train its pilots for desert combat and to defend themselves against surface-launched threats, according to Israeli sources.

With the Italian air force’s continued deployment in Afghanistan, it believes Israel offers the best training for the environment it will encounter.

Continue Reading >> Flight Global | March 8, 2011
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U.S. Military’s Africa Command Gets New Leadership

The U.S. military command responsible for humanitarian aid and any prospective military responses to the violence in Libya is swearing in a new commander.

He is Army Gen. Carter Ham, a former commander in Iraq and most recently the top U.S. Army officer in Europe.

Ham is taking charge of Africa Command, succeeding Army Gen. William Ward, who is retiring. Defense Secretary Robert Gates is presiding at the change-of-command ceremony.

Africa Command, created in 2008, is responsible for U.S. military operations in most of Africa, including Libya – which has no formal military-to-military relations with the United States.

The Washington Post | March 9, 2011
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U.S. Carrier Group to Join Exercise With South Korea

The United States says a naval strike group led by the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan has entered the western Pacific Ocean and will join an ongoing military exercise with South Korea.

The U.S. military said Wednesday that the giant carrier is accompanied by a guided missile cruiser and a destroyer squadron. The ships will join in the annual Foal Eagle exercise which began early last week involving about 200,000 South Korean and 13,000 U.S. troops.

South Korea has described the drill as a routine defense exercise, but North Korea says it will respond to any provocation by turning South Korea’s capital, Seoul, into a “sea of fire.”

China strongly objected last year when the United States announced plans to send another aircraft carrier, the USS George Washington, into the Yellow Sea for an earlier joint exercise with South Korea.

Continue Reading >> Voice of America | March 9, 2011
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Chinese Navy Arrives in Pakistan for Naval Exercise

The Chinese naval fleet, comprising the Wenzhou missile frigate and Maanshan missile frigate, arrived in the southern Pakistani port of Karachi on Monday to participate in the “Aman 2011″ multi-national naval exercise.

Chinese Navy fleet commander Colonel Han Xiaohu said China has participated in the naval exercises to promote exchanges and cooperation with other navies and jointly safeguard security and stability at sea.

Upon completion of this exercise, Wenzhou and Ma’anshan will sail directly to the Gulf of Aden as the 8th Chinese naval escort taskforce to undertake the escort mission there.

Organized by Pakistan, the “Aman” multi-national maritime military exercise is held once every two years since 2007.

This year’s exercise will be held from March 8 to March 12 at the open sea near Karachi.

Chinese Military Attaché Senior Colonel Wang Jiliang said the “Aman 2011″ exercise on the Indian Ocean is mainly directed against piracy, terrorism and other non-traditional security threats. It aims to strengthen coordination and cooperation in search and rescue and helicopter operations in the sea.

People’s Daily | March 8, 2011
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U.S. Resident Arrested for Passing on Sensitive Military Data to China

Federal agents arrested on Tuesday a Chinese-born permanent resident of the U.S. for allegedly passing on sensitive defense-related data to China.

Sixing Liu, a 47-year-old former employee of a New Jersey-based technology company, allegedly exported hundreds of documents related to his firm’s defense-related projects, according to reports.

Continue Reading >> International Business Times | March 9, 2011
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Japan Regrets China Gas Drilling

Japan has expressed regret in connection with China’s efforts to develop gas fields in the East China Sea.

As reported by the Japanese Asahi newspaper citing a spokesperson for the Chinese oil and gas company, China has begun drilling off the Shirakaba gas field.

According to Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano, the drilling runs counter to an agreement on the joint production of gas in the East China Sea signed in 2008.

The Voice of Russia | March 9, 2011
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Russia Hopes to Make $9.5 Bln in 2011 Arms Sales

Rosoboronexport, said on Wednesday it expects to make up to $9.5 billion in arms sales this year.

“Rosoboronexport’s portfolio [of orders] is about $38.5 billion; this is the target we hope to meet in three years,” company head Anatoly Isaikin said.

Last year Russian arms exports totaled $8.6 billion.

RIA Novosti | March 9, 2011
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Interview With Admiral Pierre-François Forissier Chief of Staff of the French Navy

[...] “Récemment, le Charles-de-Gaulle était dans l’océan Indien, et une frégate britannique s’est jointe au groupe aéronaval français. Un sous-marin français est passé sous commandement britannique dans le grand Nord, pour surveiller de plus près les Russes.

[...] “Recently, the Charles de Gaulle (Aircraft Carrier) was in the Indian Ocean, and a British frigate joined the French carrier battle group. A French submarine has come under British command in the Far North, to monitor the Russians.”

Continue Reading >> Le Télégramme | March 5, 2011


Fierce Fighting in Libya, Oil Jumps Above $106, Bets on $200 Oil Increase as Protests Spread to Saudia Arabia, U.S. Could Tap Strategic Oil Reserves as Gas Prices Surge, Asian Countries from China to India Might Not Be Able to Sustain the Growth Pace, India Most at Risk in Asia, U.S. Treasury Secretary to Visit Germany, Will Meet With European Central Bank President and German Finance Minister, Saudi Arabia Bans All Protests Following Several Small Gatherings of Demonstrators Demanding Change, Thousands of Troops Mobilized to Quell Growing Revolt, Iran Will Earn $110Bn from South Pars Gas Field, 300 CIA Contractors “Working” in Pakistan, Number of U.S. Department of Defense Contractors in Afghanistan at a Record High, Robert Gates in Kabul for Talks on Permanent Military Bases


Oil Jumps to Near $107 Amid fierce Libya Fighting

Oil prices climbed to near $106 a barrel Monday as intense fighting between Libyan government forces and rebels appeared to be turning into a civil war and raised the prospect of a prolonged cut in crude exports from the OPEC nation.

[...] Over the weekend, supporters and opponents of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi fought in several cities, heightening fears that the country is headed for a protracted conflict. Libya’s oil output has fallen by at least 1 million barrels per day from 1.6 million since the uprising began last month.

Continue Reading >> The Associated Press | March 7, 2011
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Saudi Arabia’s “Day of Rage” Lures Record Bets on $200 Oil : Chart of Day

Options traders are betting more than ever that crude oil is heading to $200 a barrel as some websites call for a “Day of Rage” in Saudi Arabia and anti- government protests spread in the Middle East and North Africa.

[...] Saudi Arabia produced 9.71 million barrels a day in 2009, one-third of OPEC output and almost six times as much as Libya, according to BP Plc’s Statistical Review of World Energy. Websites have called for a nationwide “Day of Rage” on March 11 and March 20, Human Rights Watch said Feb 28. Protests in five of the kingdom’s eight immediate neighbors have prompted King Abdullah to boost spending on housing, social welfare and education to curb unrest in his country.

“The price of oil is going to go up, whether you like it to or don’t,” said Juerg Kiener, chief investment officer at Swiss Asia Capital Ltd. in Singapore. “If Saudi Arabia fails, then I say you have a fire in the house. They gave out $30 billion of money so maybe they’ll buy time. But I don’t see the problems disappearing.”

Continue Reading >> Bloomberg | March 7, 2011
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U.S. Could Tap Oil Reserves As Gas Prices Surge

The U.S. government reiterated that it could tap its strategic oil reserves in order to safeguard economic growth as surging gasoline prices increase pressure for action.

While longstanding U.S. policy is to release reserves only in the event of a significant and immediate supply shortage, some analysts say the Obama administration may feel compelled to try to tamp down prices that are being fueled both by outages in Libya and concern unrest could spread in the Middle East.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | March 7, 2011
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India Most at Risk as Higher Oil Bites Asia

If crude oil prices stay high for an extended time — and that remains a big if — Asian countries from China to India might not be able to sustain the growth pace that has driven the global economy. While projections based on uncertainties such as oil prices and the Middle East’s future must come with big caveats, in some worst-case scenarios inflation could double and growth rates halve in parts of Asia. That would deprive the world of a growth driver just as developed countries start to get back on track.

If high prices persist, “Without a doubt, Asia could take a hit. It faces a big problem — and that will be a problem for everybody,” said Sanjay Mathur, an Asia economist in Singapore for RBS.

In a report, Mathur and RBS economist Erik Lueth estimated that at $120 a barrel, the oil price would shave off 1.5 percentage points off growth this year for Asia ex-Japan. Their baseline, with $80 a barrel oil, is for 8.2 percent growth, which drops to 6.7 percent for $120 a barrel.

On Monday, New York crude reached its highest level since September 2008. At 0645 GMT, it was up $2.02 to $106.44 a barrel.

Reuters | March 7, 2011
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U.S.’ Geithner to Meet Trichet, Schaeuble in Germany

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner will meet with European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet and German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Tuesday during a brief trip to Frankfurt and Berlin, the Treasury said on Monday.

Geithner also will meet with German Bundesbank President Axel Weber while in Frankfurt on Tuesday morning.

Reuters | March 7, 2011
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Saudi Arabia Bans All Protests

Saudi Arabia has banned all protests following several small gatherings of demonstrators demanding change in the conservative kingdom.

The country’s Interior Ministry announced Saturday on state television that security forces would use what it called “all measures” to prevent any attempt to disrupt public order.

The ban follows a series of protests by minority Shi’ite Muslims, calling for the release of prisoners they said were being held unjustly. Media reports say police made a number of arrests during these events.

Most of Saudi Arabia’s Shi’ite minority lives in the country’s oil-rich east. This region borders the kingdom of Bahrain, which has been the scene of protests by majority Shi’ites against their Sunni rulers. Saudi Shi’ites – like their Bahraini bretheran – complain that their Sunni-controlled government discriminates against them.

Opposition activists in Saudi Arabia have made public calls on Facebook for two organized rallies, one on March 11 as a “Day of Rage,” and the other on March 20.

Continue Reading >> Voice of America | March 5, 2011
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Saudis Mobilise Thousands of Troops to Quell Growing Revolt

Saudi Arabia was yesterday drafting up to 10,000 security personnel into its north-eastern Shia Muslim provinces, clogging the highways into Dammam and other cities with busloads of troops in fear of next week’s “day of rage” by what is now called the “Hunayn Revolution”.

[...] The opposition is expecting at least 20,000 Saudis to gather in Riyadh and in the Shia Muslim provinces of the north-east of the country in six days, to demand an end to corruption and, if necessary, the overthrow of the House of Saud. Saudi security forces have deployed troops and armed police across the Qatif area – where most of Saudi Arabia’s Shia Muslims live – and yesterday would-be protesters circulated photographs of armoured vehicles and buses of the state-security police on a highway near the port city of Dammam.

[...] Saudi security officials have known for more than a month that the revolt of Shia Muslims in the tiny island of Bahrain was expected to spread to Saudi Arabia.

Continue Reading >> The Independent | March 5, 2011
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“Iran Will Earn $110Bn from South Pars”

Iran will earn USD 110 billion annually upon the complete launch of the remaining phases of the South Pars gas field, Oil Minister Massoud Mirkazemi says.

“Every phase of the South Pars will produce 25 million cubic meters of natural gas and some 40,000 barrels of condensates per day,” he was quoted as saying by the Oil Ministry’s news website Shana on Monday.

Mirkazemi noted that USD 60 billion would be allocated to developing the upstream sector of Asalouyeh and South Pars in the Fifth Five-Year Economic Development Plan (2010-2015), which is part of long term roadmap for sustainable growth.

The process of developing gas production projects in the South Pars Special Economic Energy Zone has been divided into 28 phases.

The gas field is located in the Persian Gulf in the border zone between Iran and Qatar. Its reserves are estimated at 14 trillion cubic meters of gas and 18 billion barrels of gas condensates.

South Pars covers an area of 9,700 square kilometers, of which 3,700 square kilometers (South Pars) is in Iranian territorial waters and 6,000 square kilometers (North Dome) is in Qatar’s territorial waters.

The oil minister also said as South Pars gas field is a joint project with Qatar; it needs more investment in order to speed up the completion of the project.

Press TV | March 7, 2011
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300 CIA Contractors Working in Pakistan

Around 300 American CIA contractors are present in various parts of Pakistan, the revelation of which has further deepened the diplomatic row between Islamabad and Washington over the fate of the American killer of two Pakistanis ‘Raymond Davis’ arrested in Lahore in January this year, a security official revealed here yesterday.

The presence of dozens of CIA-linked Americans is not the only matter of deep concern for Pakistani security agencies but what is alarming is that these Davis-like “dubious characters” are also indulging in some highly-objectionable activities. Davis was for instance trying to make inroads into jihadi organisations linked to Kashmir, such as the defunct Lashkar-e-Tayyaba.

Gulf Times | March 8, 2011
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Number of DoD Contractors in Afghanistan at a Record High

The number of private security contractors employed by the Department of Defense in Afghanistan has reached a new record high, according to DoD statistics in a recently updated report (pdf) from the Congressional Research Service.

In Afghanistan, as of December 2010, there were 18,919 private security contractor (PSC) personnel working for DOD.

Continue Reading >> Secrecy News | March 6, 2011
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Afghan Analyst : Gates in Kabul for Talks on Permanent Military Bases

An Afghan military analyst cautioned that the Monday visit to Kabul by the US Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, aimed at military goals, including establishment of permanent US military bases in the war-torn country.

Gates arrived on a surprise visit to Afghanistan on Monday to meet with US troops and Afghan leaders. A number of media reports tried to connect the visit to the recent killing of civilians in foreign forces’ air attacks.

[...] In February, Afghan President Hamid Karzai confirmed that the Obama Administration has been in secret talks with him to formalize a system of permanent military bases across the war-torn country.

[...] During his visit, Gates claimed that both the US and Afghan governments agree the American military should remain involved in Afghanistan after the planned 2014 end of combat operations to help train and advise Afghan forces.

A soldier asked Gates about a long-term military presence, and Gates noted that Washington and Kabul have recently begun negotiating a security partnership.

Continue Reading >> Fars News Agency | March 7, 2011


Sectarianism as a Political Instrument in Europe and the Middle East : Financial Crisis in Europe, Angela Merkel, David Cameron, Nicolas Sarkozy : “Multiculturalism Has Failed”, Rich-Poor Divide Marginalized, European-Foreigner Divide Emphasized, Unemployment Tacitly Blamed on Ethno-Religious Groups in Europe, Muslim Immigrants Stigmatized to “Motivate” Undecided Right-Wing Voters, Renewed “Chatter” About a Possible U.S. Military Attack on Iran, Sunni-Shia Divide Necessary to Create a U.S.-Israeli-Arab Alliance Against Iran, Minorities are Imposing Cultural and Religious Buffer Zones in the Middle East (Lebanon), Opposing Religious Extremism, Calling for More Secular Societies (Egypt, Cyprus, Pakistan, Iran), Priest Found Dead Christian Copts Demonstrate in Upper Egypt, Christian Town in Northern Iraq Offers Refuge for Hundreds of Terrified Christian Families Who Fled Attacks in Baghdad and Mosul, Christian Cabinet Minister Shot Dead in Pakistan, Polish Priest Murdered in Tunisia, Christian “Exodus” from the Middle East


Merkel’s CDU Loses Power in Hamburg, Suffers Worst Postwar Defeat in State

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party suffered its worst defeat in Germany’s richest state since World War II, the first of seven state elections this year that threaten to limit her scope to tackle Europe’s debt crisis.

The loss in Hamburg, the city-state of Merkel’s birth, underscores the challenge she faces trying to balance public opposition to bailouts for debt-wracked states against pressure from investors and fellow euro countries to lead the way in stemming the debt contagion.

Continue Reading >> Bloomberg | February 21, 2011
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French Foreign Minister Resigns

Beleaguered French foreign minister Michèle Alliot-Marie has resigned after weeks of criticism over her links with the former regime in Tunisia.

She was replaced by the defence minister, Alain Juppé, a former prime minister convicted in a corruption scandal six years ago, in an unplanned but widely predicted government reshuffle.

Continue Reading >> The Guardian | February 27, 2011
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Religious Tension Builds in Germany’s Relationship With Turkey

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan sparked anger in Germany on February 27 as he suggested that Turks resist assimilation and learn Turkish, not German, as their first language.

“You must integrate, but I am against assimilation,” Erdogan told Turkish immigrants during a visit to Germany.

“No one should be able to rip us away from our culture,” he said.

The day before, Erdogan was quoted in the Rheinische Post saying that forced integration is against international law as it requires immigrants to suppress their culture and heritage.

His comments come as Germany is re-thinking its position on immigration and multiculturalism. Last year German Banker Thilo Sarrazin stirred the controversy by publishing a best-selling book claiming that Muslims and their failure to assimilate were the cause of many of the nation’s problems.

Continue Reading >> The Trumpet | March 3, 2011
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Renewed “Chatter” About a Possible U.S. Military Attack on Iran

WMR’s sources in the national security establishment are reporting on “chatter” that they are hearing about a possible U.S. military attack on Iran in the autumn, with October or November the likely months.

Although such chatter about U.S. military action against Iran has been heard before, the current talk comes amid two significant developments.

First, U.S.-backed regimes in the Middle East and North Africa have either already been ousted or are in danger of being overthrown. With U.S. clients Bahrain and Saudi Arabia under domestic pressure, talk of a U.S. attack on Iran, which would be popular with the Bahraini and Saudi regimes, tends to bolster those regimes.

Second, WMR has been informed that U.S. oil companies are drilling 1200 new oil wells in west Texas to raise U.S. domestic oil production. The companies have been told by the government that they have a 12 to 18-month window to drill new wells and a 24-month window to achieve maximum oil production. In the event of a U.S .military attack on Iran, oil exports from the Persian Gulf would be severely impacted.

WMR has been told that oil storage containers are currently being built in west Texas to hold the oil extracted from the new wells. Within the last three months, a number of oil exploration and support services personnel have arrived in towns all over west Texas. More significantly, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) personnel have also arrived in west Texas in support of the oil drilling operations.

Milfuegos | February 24, 2011
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An Israeli-Arab Alliance: Inevitable Reality or Illusion?

In June, the Saudi government reportedly granted Israel use of Saudi airspace, should Israel decide to conduct air strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities. Combined with Iran’s burgeoning nuclear program, Turkey’s flexing of political and diplomatic muscle in the region, and Egypt’s recent tacit support of an Israeli warship’s passage through the Suez Canal, there are rumbles of tectonic shifts in the Middle East’s geopolitical plates.

Despite these moves, some political dynamics in the Middle East remain fixed. Israeli-Palestinian negotiations are stalled, and anti-Israel sentiment in the Arab street is rampant. However, a convergence of Israeli and Sunni Arab strategic imperatives, spurred by the regional emergence of Iran and Turkey, could pave the way for a tacit alliance of unlikely bedfellows.

[...] Strategic imperatives similar to those guiding Israel’s “alliance of the periphery” could now compel an “alliance of the interior” between Israel and its key Sunni Arab neighbors – Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates. The elevation of clandestine military and intelligence cooperation between Israel and its Sunni Arab neighbors could buffer Iran.

Continue Reading >> Foreign Policy Digest | July 1, 2010
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Iran-Turkey-Syria-Egypt Bloc Moves Closer With Profound Global Effect

[...] The fate of the societies of Christians and Jews in the Eastern Mediterranean and Red Sea region — in Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Cyprus, Greece, and Lebanon in particular — now becomes critically threatened. In particular, Egypt’s Christian population, which is now claimed to be at around 10 percent of the total but which in reality has been (and probably remains) larger, is likely to be severely compromised as Islamists gain political ascendancy over the traditionally moderate Egyptian Muslim society.

Continue Reading >> Oil Price | February 18, 2011
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Coptic Priest Found Dead in Assiut

A Coptic Priest was found killed in his home in the Southern City of Assiut on Monday. Reverend Dawood Boutros had been dead for two days before relatives found him after failing to get in contact with him for two days.

Following the announcement of his death, around 3,000 Copts protested in Assiut in front of the Priest`s house, chanting: “We sacrifice our life for the crucifix.”

[...] The Islamic group in Assiut, Gama`a Islamiya, a Salafist Group, issued a statement condemning the murder and called for restraint and not rushing to hurl accusations before the investigations take place. The group called upon everyone to stand together and to confront any targeting of any life or property of any Egyptian Muslim or Christian. It also called on all parties to be patient, calm, and reasonable, and not to rush to indict without evidence.

Continue Reading >> Bikya Masr | February 24, 2011
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Christian Town in North Iraq Offers Refuge

For hundreds of terrified Christian families who fled attacks in Baghdad and Mosul in recent months, an ancient Christian town in Iraq’s north has offered a safe haven from violence.

[...] While most families fled from the capital and Mosul, Iraq’s two biggest cities, others arrived here from the ethnically mixed oil city of Kirkuk and even as far south as the Shiite Muslim majority port city of Basra, according to Bishop Georges Casmoussa, Qara Qosh’s top Christian leader.

[...] Most fled to the Kurdish region, which is regarded as safer than the rest of the country, notably for the Christian minority. Turkey, just north of Kurdistan, has also seen an influx, with the UN refugee office there saying asylum applications from Iraqi Christians more than doubled in three months — from 183 in October to 428 in December.

Continue Reading >> AFP | February 28, 2011
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Christian Pakistani Minister Shot Dead in Islamabad

Pakistani Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti, who had called for changes in the country’s controversial blasphemy law, was killed in a gun attack in Islamabad Wednesday.

[...] On January 4 the governor of the most populous province of Punjab, Salman Taseer, who had strongly opposed the law and sought presidential pardon for the 45-year-old Christian farmhand, was gunned down by one of his bodyguards.

The anti-blasphemy law has its roots in 19th-century colonial legislation to protect places of worship, but it was during the military dictatorship of General Mohammad Zia ul-Haq in the 1980s that it acquired teeth as part of a drive to Islamize the state.

Liberal Pakistanis and rights groups believe the law to be dangerously discriminatory against the country’s tiny minority groups.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | March 2, 2011
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Polish Priest Murdered in Tunisia

Roman Catholic Salesian missionary Father Marek Rybinski was found dead with his throat cut in Tunis on Friday. The Tunisian interior ministry says it believes he was murdered by “fascist terrorists”.

[...] Police say that the priest is the second Christian religious figure to be killed during the social unrest which led up to and followed the ousting of President Ben Ali in January.

Continue Reading >> The News | February 19, 2011
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Tunisia Extends State of Emergency, Ends Curfew

The leader of Tunisia’s centuries-old Jewish minority told AFP meanwhile he had informed Ghannouchi (Islamist Leader) of an anti-Jewish demonstration by extremists outside the main synagogue in the capital Tunis.

“About 40 religious people gathered Friday in front of the main synagogue in Tunis and started chanting ant-Jewish slogans and inappropriate words,” Roger Bismuth told AFP.

Continue Reading >> AFP | February 15, 2011

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Exodus : The changing Map of the Middle East

[...] Across the Middle East, it is the same story of despairing – sometimes frightened – Christian minorities, and of an exodus that reaches almost Biblical proportions. Almost half of Iraq’s Christians have fled their country since the first Gulf War in 1991, most of them after the 2004 invasion – a weird tribute to the self-proclaimed Christian faith of the two Bush presidents who went to war with Iraq – and stand now at 550,000, scarcely 3 per cent of the population. More than half of Lebanon’s Christians now live outside their country. Once a majority, the nation’s one and a half million Christians, most of them Maronite Catholics, comprise perhaps 35 per cent of the Lebanese. Egypt’s Coptic Christians – there are at most around eight million – now represent less than 10 per cent of the population.

Continue Reading >> The Independent | October 26, 2010


Russia Demands Punishment for Japanese Radicals Who Desecrated Flag, to Build Bangladesh’s First Nuclear Plant, Mongolia to Build Railway Link to Russian Port to Avoid “Overdependence on China”, Russia Ratifies Deal with U.S. Allowing Transit for Military Equipment and Personnel Across Russia to NATO Forces in Afghanistan Easing Reliance on Convoy Routes through Pakistan, Former Pakistan Chief of Army Staff : Nuclear Scientist AQ Khan is “Next Target of U.S. Agents”, India Rated “High Risk” Economy for Investors, Chinese Envoy : Pakistan Can Be Economic Powerhouse, China and Pakistan to Enhance Military Co-operation, “Have Strategy to Invade India and Nepal”, Sarah Palin to Visit India, Bangladesh’s Army Chief in Sri Lanka on “Goodwill Visit”


Russia to Demand Punishment for Japanese Radicals Who Desecrated Flag

The Russian embassy in Tokyo is preparing a note to the Japanese foreign ministry demanding to launch criminal investigation into the recent desecration of the Russian flag, a diplomat said.

Japanese right-wing campaigners dragged the Russian flag along the ground outside the Russian Embassy in Tokyo on February 7, demanding the return of a group of disputed Pacific islands. The embassy sent a protest note to the Japanese Foreign Ministry just after the incident.

Later that day, the Russian embassy in Tokyo had also received an envelope containing a bullet and a letter which said “The Northern Territories are Japanese land.”

Continue Reading >> RIA Novosti | February 22, 2011
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Russia to Build Bangladesh’s First Nuclear Plant

Russia has agreed to build energy-starved Bangladesh’s first nuclear power plant, which will generate a total of 2,000 megawatt of electricity.

Bangladesh’s decades-old gas-fired power plants are unable to generate enough electricity for the country’s 150 million people. Businesses complain that the shortages interfere with production.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Telegraph | February 25, 2011
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Mongolia to Build Railway Link to Russian Port

Land-locked Mongolia will build a 1,000 km (620 mile) railway to enable it to export its vast but largely untapped mineral wealth via a Russian port.

[...] Analysts say Mongolia’s government plans to build the Russian route because it is worried about overdependence on China, its southern neighbour and a huge market for Mongolia’s resources.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | February 22, 2011
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Russia Ratifies Military Transit Deal with U.S.

Russia’s parliament approved a deal with the United States on Friday to allow transit for military equipment and personnel across Russia to the NATO force in Afghanistan, easing reliance on Pakistan as a transit route.

[...] Currently, about 80 percent of NATO’s supplies cross through Pakistan. But NATO has been trying to reduce its dependence on convoy routes through Pakistan where they are prey to Islamist militant attacks.

[...] The transit deal stops short of opening the Russian route for weapons for the NATO mission in Afghanistan, where Moscow fought a disastrous 1979-89 war which still haunts Russia and which killed 15,000 Soviet troops.

Russia’s NATO envoy has said the deal would not allow NATO to ship tanks or combat-ready armored personnel carriers (APCs) through Russian territory.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | February 25, 2011
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Former Pak Army Chief Claims Nuclear Scientist AQ Khan is “Next Target of U.S. Agents”

Former Pakistan Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General (r) Mirza Aslam Beg has claimed that the American agents’ network is spread throughout the country, and that their next target is disgraced Pakistani nuclear scientist Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan.

[...] Khan is known as the architect of Pakistan’s nuclear programme, and is accused of illegally transferring nuke know-how to China, North Korea and Iran.

Continue Reading >> Sify | February 26, 2011
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India Rated ‘Extreme Risk’ Economy for Investors

India – along with Russia, Indonesia, Nigeria and the Philippines – has been rated a ‘high risk’ growth economy for investors. In a ranking of 175 countries by the Global Risks Atlas 2011 released this week, Afghanistan, Somalia and Sudan have been dubbed ‘extreme risk’ nations because of weak governance, internal conflicts and regional instability.

Continue Reading >> Sify | February 25, 2011
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Pakistan Can be Economic Powerhouse : Chinese Envoy

Pakistan is a gifted nation that fulfils all the prerequisites to become an economic power, a diplomat said on Friday.

Addressing business community at the residence of Raza Khan, Chairman Coordination Committee of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI), Ambassador of China to Islamabad Liu Jian said that improved law and order coupled with continuity of enabling economic policies can attract huge investment in this great business destination.

[...] The ambassador said that the current bilateral trade volume between the two countries stood at $8.7 billion, up by $2 billion from last year, which is unsatisfactory as it can be increased manifold.

Continue Reading >> The News International | February 20, 2011
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China and Pakistan Pledge to Enhance Military Co-operation

[...] China attaches great importance and is devoted to pushing forward relations between the two militaries, Chen Bingde, Chief of General Staff of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, told visiting General Khalid Shameem Wynne, Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee of Pakistan.

China is willing to work with Pakistan to develop the mechanism of defense and security talks, deepen strategic cooperation and contribute to the peace, stability and common development in the region and the world, Chen said.

[...] The Pakistani army is willing to continue to strengthen friendly communication and cooperation with the Chinese army, and make more efforts to safeguard the two countries’ development and security interests.

Continue Reading >> Defence Professionals | February 24, 2011
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China, Pakistan Have Strategy to Invade India: Mulayam Singh

Alleging that China and Pakistan are having “a strategy to invade India,” Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav on Tuesday asked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to give an assurance to Parliament that the country is safe from a possible external aggression.

“China and Pakistan can invade India. They are having a strategy to invade India. The House must be assured that India is safe, when PM gives reply,” Yadav said in the Lok Sabha participating in a discussion on the motion of thanks to the President for her address to Parliament.

Referring to developments in Ladakh, Tibet and Arunachal Pradesh where China is allegedly building Army threatening India’s sovereignty, he said, “They are occupying one inch of territory every day. We could not regain our lost territory. They are claiming our land.”

The former defence minister said he was aware that China is ready to attack India.

“China is our No 1 enemy. It is time to save our country,” he said.

“Their armed forces are ready. They may invade at any time. Nepal would also be occupied,” Mulayam feared and called for a “Himalayan policy” to check a possible Chinese invasion.

[...] Criticising the country’s foreign policy, he said, it is in the hands of the US.

“Who are our friends? We don’t have any friends like USSR,” said the leader, whose party has 22 MPs who support the government from outside.

[...] He said both Nepal and Sri Lanka used to enjoy good relations with India in the past but that is not so now.

Continue Reading >> The Times of India | February 22, 2011
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Sarah Palin to Visit India Next Month

Republican leader Sarah Palin will make her first trip to India next month to attend a conference and speak on her vision of America.

Continue Reading >> The Economic Times | February 24, 2011
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Bangladesh’s Army Chief Here on Goodwill Visit

General Mohammed Abdul Mubeen, Bangladesh’s Chief of Army Staff, at the invitation of his Sri Lankan counterpart, arrives in Sri Lanka on Wednesday (23) on a five-day goodwill visit.

Continue Reading >> Ministry of Defence | February 22, 2011


China Suffers “Large-Scale” Economic Losses in Libya, Russia Fears Growing Unrest in North Africa Could Have a “Direct Impact” on North Caucasus, Moscow Orders Air Strikes in Kabardino-Balkaria Republic, Launches $650 Bn Rearmament Plan, Says S-300 Missiles Deliveries to Venezuela Pending, Plans New Arms Sales to Iran Despite Sanctions, Iran Voices Opposition to U.S.-Afghan Military Pact, Pakistani Intelligence Service Warns Relationship with CIA is at Breaking Point, Secret Meeting Held in Oman to Bridge ISI-CIA Rift, Admiral Mike Mullen Visits the U.S. Fifth Fleet’s Headquarters in Bahrain


China Says Suffers “Large-Scale” Economic Losses in Libya

China has suffered severe economic losses as a result of the political turmoil in Libya, it said on Thursday.

China’s Ministry of Commerce said in a statement on its website (www.mofcom.gov.cn) that as of Wednesday, 27 Chinese construction sites and camps in Libya had been “attacked and looted” amid unrest in the country after Muammar Gaddafi used the military to crack down on public revolt against his 41-year rule.

“China has suffered large-scale direct economic losses in Libya, including looted worksites, burned and destroyed vehicles and tools, smashed office equipment and stolen cash.”

Continue Reading >> Reuters | February 24, 2011
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Putin Says Fears Growing Islamic Radicalism in North Africa

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said on Thursday he fears the growing unrest in north Africa will strengthen radical groups, which could have a negative impact on Russia’s volatile North Caucasus region.

[...] The strengthening of radical movements “will affect other parts of the world, including the North Caucasus,” Putin said.

Russia has been fighting Islamist insurgents in the mainly-Muslim North Caucasus republics since the late 1990s. Terrorist attacks are common in the region and have spread to other areas of Russia, including Moscow, on numerous occasions.

Continue Reading >> RIA Novosti | February 24, 2011
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Moscow Orders Air Strikes In KBR As Medvedev Promotes Tourism In Region

Russian military aircraft struck targets in Kabardino-Balkaria where battles between the militants who killed a group of tourists last week and Russian forces have intensified, even as President Dmitry Medvedev promised that Moscow will continue to promote the development of tourism in that republic in advance of the Sochi Olympics.

Over the past week, following an attack on tourists visiting the republic, violence in Kabardino-Balkaria has escalated to the point that yesterday, Russian officials said that they not only had introduced additional forces to try to hunt down and eliminate the militants but had called in airstrikes against them (www.kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/181424/).

Continue Reading >> Eurasia Review | February 24, 2011
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Russia Launches $650 Bn Military Spending Drive

Russia launched a $650 billion rearmament plan Thursday to counter the West’s military dominance by adding eight nuclear submarines and hundreds of warplanes to its creaking armed forces.

Continue Reading >> AFP | February 24, 2011
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Russia Says S-300 Deliveries to Venezuela Pending

Deliveries of S-300 missile defense systems to Venezuela have been delayed, but will go ahead, an official at Rosoboronexport, Russia’s state-owned arms export monopoly, said on Tuesday.

In November, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said that Russia had agreed to lend his country over $4 billion to buy weapons.

Continue Reading >> RIA Novosti | February 24, 2011
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Russia Planning New Arms Sales to Iran Despite Sanctions

[...] Mikhail Dmitriyev, the head of the Federal Military-Technical Cooperation Service, told the Kommersant daily that the fourth round of sanctions that the UN slapped on Iran in June hurt Russia’s defense industry.

“But there are lines that we can pursue,” Dmitriyev said. “We will continue negotiating with Iran within the framework of these possibilities.”

Continue Reading >> My Fox Boston | February 24, 2011
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Iran Voices Opposition to U.S.-Afghan Military Pact

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehman-Parast on Tuesday warned that endorsement of any strategic treaty between Afghanistan and the US would undermine regional peace and security and further complicate the conditions in the region.

[...] Earlier in February, Afghan President Hamid Karzai confirmed that the Obama Administration has been in secret talks with him to formalize a system of permanent military bases across the war-torn country.

Continue Reading >> Fars News Agency | February 22, 2011
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Pakistani Intelligence Service Warns Relationship with CIA is at Breaking Point

Pakistan’s spy agency has warned that its relationship with the CIA came close to breaking point over the fate of an American agent arrested in Lahore, threatening a crucial alliance that underpins the war in Afghanistan.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Telegraph | February 24, 2011
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Oman Secret Meeting on ‘Davis’: Mullen Woos Kayani to Bridge ISI CIA Rift

The American military publication “Stars and Stripes” revealed the story that “Several of the most senior leaders of the U.S. military, the Afghanistan War, and the Pakistani armed forces held a daylong secret meeting Wednesday at a secluded luxury resort along the Omani shores of the Persian Gulf.

[...] Stars and Stripes reports that the meeting as “very candid and cordial, and very productive discussions.” euphemism for tough and business-like atmosphere. Those who attended, was a virtual “Who’s Who” of the US and Pakistani Military leadership.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Gen. David Petraeus, commander of International Security Assistance Force
Adm. Eric Olson, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command
Marine Corps Gen. James Mattis, commander of U.S. Central Command
Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, Pakistan’s chief of army staff
Maj. Gen. Javed Iqbal, director general of military operations.

It is amazing that the Big Elephant was absent from the conference room. General Shuja Pasha the head of the Pakistani ISI was not present in the meeting. The CIA was also absent from this high powered meeting. The news reports about a rift between the CIA and the ISI seem to be real. The relations between the two spy agencies have deteriorated dramatically since November, when Wikileaks confirmed that large numbers of U.S. special operations forces had been operating on the ground inside Pakistan’s borders. There are news reports that the Pakistan Embassy has issued more than 10,000 visas to Americans. The News, one of Pakistan’s largest newspapers is reporting that the Pakistan Embassy is under scrutiny for issuing more than 400 visas in a single day. The Washington Post says “The ISI is now scouring thousands of visas issued to U.S. employees in Pakistan.

[...] The Washington Post is reporting the ISI is ready to split with the CIA. One of the world’s most powerful spy agencies has now stopped all cooperation with the CIA.

[...] To make matters worse, two CIA contractors who were involved in the vehicular homicide of a Pakistani civilian have been spirited out of Pakistan by the US Embassy. The contractors can still be sued in a Civilian Court. Pakistani Courts have demanded that the US spies be returned and tried for murder.

Continue Reading >> Rupee News | February 24, 2011
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Top U.S. Military Officer Mullen Arrives in Bahrain

Top US military officer Mike Mullen arrived in Bahrain on Thursday, an AFP reporter said, as anti-regime protests gathered steam in the kingdom, where Washington’s Fifth Fleet is based.

[...] Mullen’s visit is part of a regional tour aimed at “reaffirming, reassuring and also trying to understand where the leaderships of these countries are going, and in particular in Bahrain.”

Continue Reading >> AFP | February 24, 2011


Afghan President : U.S. Seeking Permanent Military Bases, U.S. Postpones Meeting with Pakistan and Afghanistan, Threatens to Cut Aid to Pakistan, Pakistan Issues Arrest Warrant for Former President Exiled in London, U.S. National Who Trained London Suicide Bombers Released for “Exceptional Cooperation”, Former Senior Taliban Member Visits Britain for Secret Insurgency-Ending Talks


Afghan President Hamid Karzai has confirmed that the Obama Administration has been in secret talks with him to formalize a system of permanent military bases across the war torn nation, effectively pledging to keep the unpopular occupation a permanent aspect of life in Afghanistan.

Continue Reading >> Press TV | February 9, 2011
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U.S. Postpones Meeting With Pakistan and Afghanistan

The United States this weekend postponed high-level talks to be held in Washington with Pakistan and Afghanistan, a sign of the displeasure with Pakistan over the arrest of an American official accused of murder.

The talks scheduled for Feb. 23 and Feb. 24, held annually to discuss the war in Afghanistan, involve foreign ministers and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.

[...] The State Department did not give a precise public explanation for the postponement of the talks except to say that “in light of the political changes in Pakistan” the talks would not go ahead.

But American officials said the talks were postponed because it was unlikely they would produce anything worthwhile in the charged atmosphere between Pakistan and the United States.

Continue Reading >> The New York Times | February 13, 2011
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US Threatens to Cut Aid to Pakistan

US congress members have threatened to stop aid to Pakistan unless it releases an American detained over shooting deaths of two Pakistani men.

[...] Many observers have questioned whether Davis was an ordinary diplomat.

Three members of the US House of Representatives drove home the point on a visit to Pakistan, telling Yusuf Raza Gilani, the Pakistani prime minister, that congress was working on its budget and looking for areas to cut.

Continue Reading >> Al-Jazeera | February 9, 2011
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Pakistan Issues Arrest Warrant for Pervez Musharraf

A Pakistani anti-terrorism court has issued an arrest warrant for former military ruler Pervez Musharraf over the assassination of an opposition leader. [...] Mr Musharraf – who lives in self-imposed exile in London – denies the allegations. His spokesman, Fawad Chaudhry, said Mr Musharraf had no intention of returning to Pakistan for the hearing.

Continue Reading >> BBC News | February 11, 2011
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Terrorist Who Trained 7/7 Bomber Released After Five Years

A terrorist who was jailed for founding a training camp where the leader of the July 7 London suicide bombers were taught to make bombs has been released from prison after serving less than five years, it was claimed.

American Mohammed Junaid Babar walked free just four and a half years into a sentence that could have lasted as long as 70, prompting claims he may have been acting as an informant.

The decision to sentence him to “time served” due to what a New York judge termed his “exceptional co-operation” dating back to before his arrest led to suggestions Babar could have been helping US authorities even while helping to train the man who led the 2005 attacks on London.

[...] According to court documents Babar was sentenced to “time served” in court on December 10, six years after being arrested.

He had spent slightly more than four years in prison and two years on bail.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Telegraph | February 14, 2011
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Former Senior Taliban Member Visits Britain

A former high-ranking member of the Taliban has made the first visit to Britain by a member of the regime to take part in secret negotiations.

Mullah Abdul Salaam Zaeef, a member of the Taliban government before September 11, visited London last week amid closely controlled security.

Zaeef, who is still said to be close to Mullah Omar, the leader of the Taliban, attended a closed conference part funded by the Foreign Office to discuss peace proposals aimed at ending the fighting.

The Taliban leader arrived in Britain on Wednesday and stayed in a central London hotel. He was banned from speaking publicly by the terms of his visa but is thought to have held private meetings with British officials.

Britain is attempting to facilitate talks between Hamid Karzai, the Afghan President, and senior members of the Taliban.

A senior Foreign Office official said last month that senior members of the Taliban have been putting out “feelers” about making peace with the Western-backed government in Kabul.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Telegraph | February 13, 2011


Unprecedented “All Envoys Meeting” in U.S. State Department Headquarters


In an unprecedented move, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called together America’s ambassadors, consuls general, and special envoys to the State Department’s “Foggy Bottom” headquarters in Washington.

[...] The reason for the face-to-face meeting was primarily the result of a major compromise of secure U.S. diplomatic communications channels initiated by both outsiders and insiders who have decided to engage in a bit of “creative revolution,” mirroring to a lesser degree but with potentially as great an impact, the recent mass popular events on the streets of Tunis and Cairo.

[...] Other means of communicating sensitive information from overseas posts to Washington were apparently discussed in closed-door sessions from February 7 to 9. According to U.S. government insiders, it was not the WikiLeaks revelations that prompted Clinton to sound a general alarm, but the possibility that there could be future leaks directly to the Internet of higher classification State Department cables, Top Secret and higher Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) traffic, including details of CIA operations at U.S. embassies and consulates.

[...] The U.S. military-intelligence-diplomatic-corporate complex realizes that continued exposure of its secret documents jeopardizes the global hegemony the United States has created. The fall of U.S. and Western client-dictators in Tunisia and Egypt and an Anonymous campaign against the dictatorship of Yemen’s president Ali Abdullah Saleh has the FBI and Justice Department scrambling to protect America’s steadily faltering status as the world’s “only superpower” by engaging in an all-out war, in some cases using illegal methods, against a stealth-like “enemy” of high-tech hackers and activists. With the Middle East’s “Pax Americana-Judaica-Egyptica” regional construct losing Egypt as one of its three main pillars, the power structures in Washington and Tel Aviv are nervous and capable of doing anything to preserve the status quo.

Secretary of State Clinton clearly sees the writing on the wall as the American empire begins to fray at the edges. The arrest of Raymond Davis, who was working in Lahore, Pakistan, ostensibly assigned to the U.S. Consulate under the non-official cover of being an employee of Hyperion Protective Consultants LLC, was arrested by Pakistani authorities in Lahore for shooting to death two Pakistani men. The State Department is claiming that Davis enjoys diplomatic immunity and must be released to U.S. custody. However, Pakistan believes it has nabbed a CIA spy and the refusal of Pakistan to release Davis has set off a major diplomatic row between Islamabad and Washington.

To the north of Pakistan, Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai is claiming that the United States wants to establish permanent military bases in the country. Egypt’s revolution is stirring up popular opposition to what is perceived by many Iraqis as a corrupt U.S. puppet government in Baghdad led by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. U.S.-trained Iraqi police have responded to protests over the poor Iraqi economy and infrastructure by using non-lethal and lethal weapons against demonstrators. Most of Latin America has broken their political and economic chains to Washington and many Latin American nations have thumbed their noses at Washington and Tel Aviv by recognizing Palestine within its pre-1967 borders.

Continue Reading >> Strategic Culture | February 13, 2011


Moscow Airport Bombing Linked to North Caucasus, Suicide Bombers Reportedly Trained in Pakistan, Series of Bomb Blasts Rock Chechnya’s Capital, Russian Policemen Targeted, Car Bomb in Dagestan, Risk of Armenian, Azeri War on the Rise, Georgian Intelligence Chief “Advances Skills” in United States


Russia Says Moscow Airport Bomber from North Caucasus

The suicide bomber who killed at least 35 people at Moscow’s main airport Monday was a 20-year-old native of the North Caucasus.

Continue Reading >> Reuters | January 29, 2011
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Moscow Airport Bomb: Suicide Bombers Were Part of Squad Trained in Pakistan

[...] A newspaper close to Russia’s FSB security service published what it claimed was a warning to Moscow police issued in December that said there was credible intelligence that a suicide squad made up of three women and one man from Chechnya was headed to Moscow.

The memo said the team had spent time in Pakistan and Iran and that one of the women had a relative with a flat in Moscow that might be used as a bomb making factory.

Continue Reading >> The Daily Telegraph | January 26, 2011
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Series of Bomb Blasts Rock Chechnya’s Grozny

Four policemen and one local resident were injured in a series of blasts that rocked Chechnya’s capital on Tuesday, the republic’s investigation department told Itar-Tass on Wednesday.

Continue Reading >> Itar Tass | February 9, 2011
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Four Policemen Shot Dead in North Caucasus

Two masked gunmen have shot dead four traffic policemen in one of Russia’s restive North Caucasus republics, reports say.

The four policemen were sitting in a cafe on their lunch break when the attack happened in Kabardino-Balkaria.

Continue Reading >> BBC News | February 2, 2011
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Four Dead in Dagestan Car Bomb

Four people have been killed and six wounded in a car bomb explosion outside a cafe in the Russian region of Dagestan.

The attack is the deadliest to hit the Northern Caucasus region since Monday’s suicide bombing on a Moscow airport that killed 35 people and been blamed on fighters from the overwhelmingly Muslim area.

Continue Reading >> Al Jazeera English | January 27, 2011
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Risk of Armenian, Azeri War on the Rise

Escalating violence, a spiralling arms race and a slowdown in peace talks have increased the risk of war between South Caucasus enemies Armenia and Azerbaijan, a leading think tank said on Tuesday.

The International Crisis Group (ICG) said in a report that skirmishes between Armenia and Azerbaijan could easily spiral out of control, causing “devastating regional consequences.”

Continue Reading >> Reuters | February 8, 2011
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Obama Meets with Georgian President in US

[...] “They also discussed security challenges in the Caucasus and the work of (international) forces in Afghanistan, where brave Georgians stand shoulder to shoulder with American forces,” the White House said.

Continue Reading >> AFP | January 14, 2011
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Georgian Intelligence Service Head Advances Skills in United States

Georgian intelligence service head Gela Bezhuashvili has temporarily left his post, Georgian Presidential Spokesperson Manana Manjgaladze said at a briefing.

According to her, in six months, Bezhuashvili will return from the United States and again hold his post.

Continue Reading >> Trend | February 2, 2011


US Marines in Pakistan


The Pakistani government has admitted before a closed-door meeting of the parliamentary committee on defense that there are US marines in the country.

In November last year, the US media reported that Pakistan military permitted the US soldiers to be stationed in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan province which borders both Afghanistan and Iran.

Continue Reading >>

Press TV | January 13, 2011


George Friedman : The Republic and The Empire


Stratfor founder George Friedman discusses the theme of his forthcoming book, “The Next Decade,” and explains why the United States has to change the way it deals with today’s world.

Stratfor | January 7, 2011


Social Turmoil in Pakistan


Rahimullah Yusufzai: Assassination at a time of economic crisis, war and flooding.

TheRealNews | January 5, 2011


More False Flag Operations : A Paradigm Shift from “Islamist Terrorism” to “Leftist Anarchism”


The corporatists and fascists who have steered Europe into bankruptcy are now using their media assets to morph their favorite threat over the last two decades — Islamist terrorism — to a combined menace of Islamist terrorists teamed up with an international network of anarchists. The change of threat was necessary with corporatists and fascist-led governments in Europe besieged by workers and students who are militantly opposed to severe cuts in social spending that were dictated from supranational institutions in order to financially bail out greedy bankers and their lackeys in governments.

In Greece and Italy, where governments are under street pressure to resign over corruption and austerity moves, there are already signs that the paradigm shift from Islamist terrorism to leftist anarchism is already occurring, with highly-suspicious and likely false flag bombings taking place at embassies and other facilities.

Europe has seen such false flag terrorist attacks in the past blamed on leftist revolutionary groups like the Italian Red Brigades and the West German Red Army Faction, but actually carried out by a network of CIA and fascist operatives, supported by local police and intelligence agencies, to blame leftists for such attacks. The operation, known generally as “Gladio,” was a ploy to damage the reputation of the Communist parties of Western Europe in order that they were not invited to join in any leftist government coalitions, particularly in Italy and France.



Gladio has raised its head again in the last decade, especially in Turkey, where the Gladio successor, “Ergenekon,” has attempted coups and plotted and carried out false flag terrorist attacks in an effort to undermine the Justice and Development (AKP) government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Bombings at embassies in Athens and Rome followed massive street demonstrations directed at the Greek government’s draconian budget and pension cuts on behalf of the international banking elite and similar moves, as well as corruption, by the Italian government. European law enforcement, which now serves as a virtual arm of the European Union bureaucrats and their banking allies, is pointing to a network of anarchists who may be carrying out the bombings. The same psychological operation is being used to lump together all Muslim groups opposed to neocon European policies in the Middle East, as well as Israeli human rights violations, as somehow being linked to a worldwide network of Islamic “jihadists.”

Continue Reading >>

Opinion Maker | January 3, 2011


Nuclear Weapons Made Available to Saudi Arabia in Pakistan?


With an eye on the nuclear arms race led by its neighbor Iran, Saudi Arabia has arranged to have available for its use two Pakistani nuclear bombs or guided missile warheads, DEBKAfile’s military and intelligence sources reveal. They are most probably held in Pakistan’s nuclear air base at Kamra in the northern district of Attock. Pakistan has already sent the desert kingdom its latest version of the Ghauri-II missile after extending its range to 2,300 kilometers. Those missiles are tucked away in silos built in the underground city of Al-Sulaiyil, south of the capital Riyadh.

Continue Reading >>

DEBKAfile | December 30, 2010


Iran Considers Military Incursions in Pakistan


Iran is on the verge of emulating the U.S. tactic of shooting terrorists and insurgents inside Pakistan, according to the latest chatter in Iranian military and intelligence circles. Following the fatal suicide bombing in Chabahar on December 15 that killed and injured more than a hundred people during an important Shia ceremony, many military and security officials in Tehran have started talking openly about the need to cross the border and target Baluch insurgents on Pakistani soil. The suicide attacks on Iranian targets has worn Tehran’s patience thin. Iran usually blames such attacks on Israel, the United States, and other Western countries such as the United Kingdom. But after recent attacks in Zahedan and other locations in Sistan and Baluchistan, Iran has increasingly blamed Pakistan.

Continue Reading >>

Tabnak | December 26, 2010


China’s Ties with Pakistan Concern U.S. Officials


China’s Prime Minister Wen Jiabao’s recent visit to Pakistan and the trade deals struck during that trip show China has much greater influence over Pakistan than the U.S.

Newsy | December 19, 2010


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