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Statement Of President Barroso On Outcome Of WTO Global Trade Talks In Bali

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By President Barroso

I’m delighted at the news this morning of the global trade deal in Bali. This will give a real boost to the global economy.

Potential gains for the global economy could be as high as $1 trillion. Trade costs for mature economies will see reduced by 10%, the deal will help developing countries save around 325 billion euros a year and the agreement will bring vital help to the poorest people across the globe in the least developed countries.

The WTO is back on track and delivering reform. This is the first comprehensive WTO deal since 1995 which will deliver improvement on trade facilitation, development issues and agriculture, including food security.

The European Commission, on behalf of the European Union, has greatly contributed to this successful outcome. I would like to pay tribute to the central role that Commissioner de Gucht and his team have played to make this deal happen.

The article Statement Of President Barroso On Outcome Of WTO Global Trade Talks In Bali appeared first on Eurasia Review.


MTV Developing ‘Shannara’ Best-Selling Fantasy Novels Adaptation

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MTV is looking for its own Game of Thrones. The Viacom-owned cable network is teaming with Jon Favreau and Smallville duo Al Gough and Miles Millar to adapt Terry Brooks’ international best-selling fantasy novels Shannara, The Hollywood Reporter said.

From Sonar Entertainment, the development deal comes with a straight-to-series commitment, so should network brass like the script, the fantasy drama would bypass the traditional pilot stage.

The Shannara series first started in 1977 with The Sword of Shannara and encompasses multiple trilogies and a prequel, totaling 25 books, with Brooks most recently publishing Witch Wraith in July. Another three books are due to be published in 2014.

Shannara takes place thousands of years after the destruction of our civilization. The story centers on the Shannara family, whose descendants are empowered with ancient magic and whose adventures continuously reshape the future of the world. Should the project go to series, producers — including Brooks, Favreau, Gough, Millar and Dan Farah — plan to base the first season on The Elfstones of Shannara. The second title in the series, published in 1982, spent 16 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list and is credited with cementing the series in the fantasy world. The series has more than 26 million copies in print in the U.S. alone, according to Random House imprint Del Rey, which has published the series since the start.

The Shannara books are estimated to be the highest-selling un-adapted fantasy book series in the world. Brooks is considered to be the second-highest-selling living fantasy author, trailing only Harry Potter mastermind J.K. Rowling.

Favreau will direct and executive produce the project alongside Gough and Millar. The Smallville duo will write and executive produce if the project goes to series.

The article MTV Developing ‘Shannara’ Best-Selling Fantasy Novels Adaptation appeared first on Eurasia Review.

UN Inspectors To Visit Iran Arak Nuclear Plant

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Inspectors from the UN nuclear agency have arrived in Tehran to visit a nuclear facility that has long been off-limits to outside experts.

As the Associated Press reported citing the semi-official Mehr news agency, two inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency will visit the heavy water production plant in the central city of Arak tomorrow (December 8). It did not give any further details.

Iran agreed last month with the IAEA to allow expanded UN monitoring at the country’s nuclear sites, including the Arak facility.

That agreement was not part of a separate interim deal which Iran also struck last month with world powers. The six-power deal commits Tehran to freeze its nuclear programme for six months in return for limited relief from economic sanctions.

The article UN Inspectors To Visit Iran Arak Nuclear Plant appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Chinese Power Play: ADIZ Is Direct Challenge To Its Neighbors – Analysis

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By Seth Cropsey

China’s establishment of an Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) over most of the East China Sea on November 23 erases any doubt about the international community and the U.S.’s long-standing efforts to persuade China to become a “stakeholder” in the international order. These efforts have failed at a major juncture of what constitutes international order: the right of innocent passage through international waters and airspace.

China has been contesting territorial claims of various of its neighbors in the South and East China Seas for years now — with Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Japan, to name a few. But China’s newly declared ADIZ should not be confused with an attempt to increase security. It is, rather, a power play aimed at establishing the subordination of neighboring states, extending China’s territorial reach in other disputed areas, and the narrowing of legitimate South Korean and Japanese Air Defense Identification Zones which are now intersected by China’s, and about which no previous dispute existed.

The contest with Japan over the Senkaku Islands, located in the East China Sea, is a proximate cause of China’s most recent action. The newly announced Chinese Air Defense Identification Zone is a polygonal shape that extends eastwards from a point north of Shanghai deep into the East China Sea and parallels the Chinese coast at a distance of about 400 miles closing back toward the mainland just north of Taiwan. China will require aircraft that pass through this zone to identify themselves or face what government spokesman Qin Gang said was “an appropriate response according to the different circumstances and the threat level that it might face.” This is a not-so-veiled warning that China may use military force to assert its claim. The Chinese have no legal basis to make this demand of aircraft that transit international waters. It is as though the U.S. were to extend the limit of North American airspace by several hundred miles and demand that aircraft — including commercial aviation — that pass through it identify themselves or risk being forced to land, or more dire consequences.

The implication for China’s claim of sovereignty over the international waters of the South and East China Seas is plain enough. If allowed to stand, Beijing will have advanced the objective of resolving in its favor territorial disputes with its neighbors as it succeeds in changing the heretofore accepted international definition of a sovereign state’s waters, that is — for most security purposes — 12 miles distant from its coast’s low-water line, and 24 miles for purposes of customs, immigration, and sanitary laws and regulations. The Senkaku Islands are about 350 kilometers east of China’s coast.

Japan’s leaders have been sufficiently alarmed by China’s increasing assertiveness in the region to act. They have good cause. China’s first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, laid down by the Soviet navy and purchased from Ukraine, was commissioned a little over a year ago. Beijing plans to build its own carriers in the future. The maiden flight of China’s first stealth drone, called Sharp Sword, took place on November 21. The most current U.S. Defense Department report on Chinese military developments is abundant with reports on new classes of Chinese submarines, modernized tactical fighters, surface ships, and missiles. Tokyo is increasing its military expenditures, enlarging its submarine fleet, and this past summer launched its largest warship since World War II, the 19,500 ton helicopter carrier Izumo. The West Pacific arms buildup does not stop in East Asia. Australia is expanding its conventional submarine force as domestic analysts argue about whether the staying power of nuclear-powered submarines makes more sense. Southeast Asian states are adding to or in some cases creating amphibious capability.

Not a small part of the Asian arms race rests on America’s allies’ judgment about the Obama administration’s so-called pivot to Asia. In speech, the pivot is encouraging. The hitch is the large cuts in the U.S. defense budget that will reduce the size, power, reach, and presence of U.S. forces.

But at least for now, the Obama administration has acted wisely in the face of China’s East China Sea announcement. B-52s launched from Guam on Monday the 25th and, without informing Chinese authorities, entered what China just days before claimed as its Air Defense Identification Zone. China did nothing. Freedom of navigation, both at sea and in the air above, is established by asserting the right of innocent passage. When Muammar Qaddafi declared his “Line of Death” marking off as Libyan territory the international waters of the Gulf of Sidra, American naval vessels challenged him and Libya initiated military force to uphold its claim. They were unsuccessful. Use—in the Libyan case, the U.S.’s forcible use—prevented abuse. Libya tried again in 1989 and lost again. The wrongful claim was not renewed.

China made no such mistake during Monday’s B-52 foray. But it will take more than a single flight of B-52s to prevent China from making good on its claims over international airspace. The Obama administration deserves credit for its swift action on Monday. It will earn greater respect from China as well as from our Asian and Pacific allies if the U.S. continues to assert its traditional insistence on freedom of navigation in the world’s commons.

Seth Cropsey is a Senior Fellow at Hudson Institute. Previously, he served as Deputy Undersecretary of the Navy during both the Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations.

The article Chinese Power Play: ADIZ Is Direct Challenge To Its Neighbors – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Was Anything Achieved By PM Singh Not Being In Colombo? – Analysis

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By Vikram Sood

By next year, we will have in our armoury nuclear capable Agni-V missiles capable of hitting targets 5000 kms away. We already have an aircraft carrier that is the size of three football fields, is 20 stories high and can cover 600 nautical miles in a day. We are the proud owners of the Chandrayan mission to Mars and have the Brahmos missile which is the world’s fastest cruise missile and can be launched from submarines, land or eventually be tested for launching from our Sukhoi SuMk30 aircraft. India is the largest country, with the largest population, the largest and paramilitaries in the sub-continent backed by the third largest GDP (in PPP terms) in the world. And one day, the country aspires to be a permanent member of the UNSC. All this should give us immense confidence in handling our relations with other countries. Yet, when it comes to handling affairs with our neighbours, we seem to be diffident and indecisive.

The latest in this are our relations with Sri Lanka, a neighbour where an Indian Prime Minister last visited in 1998 and that too to attend the SAARC conference. There has not been a bilateral visit all these years, an adequate reflection of our attention span. There was an opportunity to visit the island nation earlier this month for the CHOGM conference and convey our message but we snuffed it. The reason for our absence was not because the CHOGM in its present form has become a quaint and irrelevant fossil but because we let sectional interests over ride national interests. We were driven by competitive electoral opportunism of regional politics and New Delhi’s inability to ride above short term interests and take care of the country’s long term interests.

The decision not to go to the conference after weeks of indecision would be defensible if it were in the national interests but becomes inexplicable to the host nation in the context of bilateral relationships. So when President Rajapakse remarked that he understood why PM Manmohan Singh was unable to come, we all knew what he understood what he meant. In bilateral relations, local conditions and local sentiments in either country do matter but they cannot be allowed to become over riding factors. In that sense a foreign policy cannot be allowed to become ‘federal’ where the regional parties for their local political battles seek to influence national foreign policies to the extent that has happened in this case.

Considering that some of us are forever keen to talk to Pakistan, to the point of almost wooing them, it is strange logic that we continue to ignore Sri Lanka. Not talking to neighbours has a negative impact; it is like a silly tantrum by an aged aunt at a wedding who is sulking about an imagined insult. No one pays attention to such sulks and is no substitute to being there at the venue, as the major power of the region and saying your piece. A one-on-one meeting in Colombo with the Sri Lankan President could have been used to convey precisely the concerns we have in Tamil Nadu. Not being there conveys nothing.

The main political protagonists in Tamil Nadu today were perfectly willing, in May 2009, to ignore Sri Lankan Army’s action against the LTTE that culminated in the killing of Prabhakaran. The terror of the LTTE had been crushed by the Sri Lankan Army with discreet assistance from the Indian Armed Forces and intelligence. There was a mutual national interest in ensuring success of this action by the Sri Lankan Army. It was a brutal war as all terrorism and counter terrorism is. At that time, Tamil Nadu leaders like Karunanidhi went on a fast unto death that lasted all of six hours in sympathy with the Sri Lanka Tamils. That was the extent of empathy for Sri Lankan Tamils and very little has changed except for the forthcoming elections in India and political gamesmanship in the run up that has now become common in india.

However, elections will not be won or lost because of events in Sri Lanka but Sri Lanka could be lost because of our electoral politics. Our absence at this juncture is akin to a public snub to Sri Lanka and the vacuum that we create and show little intention or urgency to fill, can only be filled by one country – China. This will happen incrementally, one thing at a time as powers seek to protect their growing commercial interests with military power.

(The writer is a Vice President at Observer Research Foundation, Delhi)

Courtesy: Mid Day, November 26, 2013

The article Was Anything Achieved By PM Singh Not Being In Colombo? – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Why Are More Than 250 Activists Facing Trial In Burma? – OpEd

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By Francis Wade

The New York Times released a timely op-ed this week warning that investment in Burma could aid the military, whose power the reform drive is ostensibly aimed at diluting. “A central policy of the regime is to attract foreign investment into the impoverished country,” it said. “At issue now is whether Myanmar’s transition will be more than a ploy to draw in foreign money to fatten the military.”

It’s a pertinent question to ask now as increasing numbers of western firms eye ventures in the country. The army still wields great clout over the economy through military-owned outfits like the Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings (UMEH), a vast and shady conglomerate with its roots in junta-era Burma. A quarter of the annual state budget goes to the military – any investment in Burma will inevitably contribute to this.

Seemingly being overlooked is an ancillary story to the debate over responsible business practice. In the past few weeks, courts in Burma have found more than a dozen people guilty of breaking Article 18, the bill enacted last year (to some loud clapping from abroad) to allow, and govern, peaceful protest. Some have been given months-long jail terms with labour, others have been fined. A number of the people were protesting sensitive economic ventures, like the Letpadaung copper mine in northern Burma, or criticising delicate matters like the arrest of a land rights activist, or poor workplace standards.

Increasing numbers of these stories are emerging – the woman who has been threatened with arrest for refusing to leave her land, on which a huge Japan-backed industrial zone is to be developed; the seven-month sentences yesterday given to activists peacefully protesting the Kachin conflict.  What seems to have gone largely unnoticed is that despite Article 18 and the government’s accompanying pledge to allow space for activism, protestors continue to be criminalized – in fact we’re in the thick of a major but silent crackdown on activists, with 253 people currently awaiting trial on politically-motivated charges, according to data compiled by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners. The specific charge pinned on many of them is that they did not consult with the government prior to protesting.

When Article 18 was enacted last year, it was this point that critics highlighted as a cause for concern. The clause essentially gives the government ultimate control over freedom of speech, which is antithetical to the main purpose of protests – to hold the state to account. A government that curtails that right cannot be considered democratic.

The key commonality here is that many of these charges have targeted individuals and groups whose protests threaten to spotlight highly sensitive issues like the extractives industry, the Kachin conflict, meager salaries and workplace abuse of factory employees, etc – in short, the issues that are most sensitive to the government and military and its close network of business tycoons and prized foreign investors. As the brutal crackdown on the Letpadaung mine protestors showed last year, the government is willing to allow reforms to move forward until they begin to eat into the interests of this nexus. Protection of their interests currently appears to override what should be key elements of the transition.

Some will argue that things have improved for activists – what would have been decades-long sentences three years ago are now far shorter. Yet that position neglects to acknowledge the implications of the continued criminalization of protest, something that statistics prove is still happening on a worrying scale. This has important consequences, particularly if, as the New York Times warns, it stops a light being shone on the military’s continued clout over the economy and political arena. This however is evidently the precise aim of the crackdown.

The article Why Are More Than 250 Activists Facing Trial In Burma? – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

NSA Tracks Billions Of International Cellphones Daily On Reagan’s Orders

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The National Security Agency has publicly admitted to tracking the locations of literally billions of international cell phones under a 1981 executive order. To allay the fears of US citizens, it said the program only targets international phones.

Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden first leaked the information that such a practice happens up to 5 billion times each day, and functions by scooping up streams of data from fiber-optic cables, The Washington Post reported.

Explaining why this is perfectly legal in American eyes, the spy agency’s spokeswoman, Vanee Vines, referred in a statement to Executive Order 12333, which dates back to President Ronald Reagan and governs the country’s entire foreign espionage program.

The initiative does not violate the US Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which outlines a fraction of the agency’s powers. Instead, the tracking is overseen by various congressional committees – not the FISA court.

Oftentimes, President Barack Obama and the US intelligence community would justify foreign snooping on the premise that it is overseen by all three branches of the US government – the executive, legislative and judicial. But the catch is that any legal changes made to foreign spy programs under the FISA would most likely not affect the existing executive order in any way.

“It is not ubiquitous,” Vines said Friday in defense of accusations that Americans are also being targeted. “The Agency’s EO 12333 collection is outward-facing. We are not intentionally acquiring domestic information through this capability.”

Recent revelations about the NSA shed light on a very far-reaching spying and wiretapping program that encompasses all manner of communications – foreign and domestic, civilian and world leaders. This included call logs, phone numbers, time and date and location.

However, Vines said that the NSA “does not know and cannot track the location of every cell phone,” underling also the importance of such activities in that they have been “used in some of the most dangerous parts of the world, including war zones, where terrorists are actively planning to do harm to the nation.”

Catherine Crump, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, explained that “the NSA claims its collection is incidental, but there is no question it’s deliberately engaging in the mass collection of cell phone location data that it knows will inevitably sweep up information on a huge number of innocent Americans. And, all of this is happening without any supervision by a court,” she said, as cited by the AP, in reference to the complete lack of oversight by a specialized panel of federal judges.

She painted a bittersweet picture. “Unfortunately, this program is just one of many in which the NSA monitors countless innocent individuals to identify the tiny fraction who may be of interest. Fortunately these programs are now being brought into the light, and it’s time for Congress and the courts to exercise meaningful oversight of our intelligence agencies.”

Additionally, “FISA authorization would be required for the intentional collection of domestic metadata,” Crump said, reiterating that the program targets everyone else.

The article NSA Tracks Billions Of International Cellphones Daily On Reagan’s Orders appeared first on Eurasia Review.

The Children Of Syria: Absolute Losers Of The Civil War – OpEd

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By Sinem Özge Demir

Owing to the 3-year civil war in Syria, almost half of the population have been displaced and 2.3 million of them had to take refuge in neighboring countries. According to the estimations of the United Nations (UN), more than half of Syrian refugee population consists of children. The present situation of this refugee groups, who are struggling to survive in neighboring countries, has attracted attention not only in Turkey but also in the whole world.

Nowadays, while we are witnessing one of the biggest humanitarian tragedies of the modern history, a report which was published by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is rather remarkable. Report about the children refugees in Jordan and Lebanon, firstly says a great many of these children who are observed to have psychological stress on them live either alone or away from their families. In addition to those, they cannot have education and they are forced into working illegally and under harsh conditions. Another significant detail that was noted by the UN researchers is that some of those children in Lebanon and Jordan who can frequently give aggressive or emotional reactions, want to go back to their countries to fight.

The second issue that was stated in the report is that the children refugees, most of whom don’t have families or have grown up in broken families, are usually the ones who have to earn money for their household, in other words, they are the breadwinners. It is stated in detail in the UN report that these children who have started to work at a very young age, are made to work in unhealthy and even dangerous environments, for very long hours and low wages.

The third and most crucial part of the report is the education issue. The researchers note that nearly half of the refugee children in Jordan haven’t received any education so far. In Lebanon, this number is expected to reach at 200,000 by the end of the year.

The last and very complicated issue stated in the report is the birth certificate issue. Although the best precaution against “statelessness” in situations like war is to have a birth certificate; according to the UN report, from January 2013 to October 2013 only 68 babies were given that certificate in Jordan. On the other hand, in Lebanon, the situation is not very different from Jordan; 77 % of the new born 781 babies don’t have birth certificates and then a citizenship.

Similar problems were previously stated in Brookings&USAK joint report, Turkey and Syrian Refugees: The Limits of Hospitality. November 2013 dated report on Syrian refugees in Turkey noted that, solely 10 percent of non-camp refugee children have access to education in Turkey. A lot of them forced to work for low paid-jobs, and a huge amount of children is begging in streets. USAK&Brookings report was also warning about “stateless children” of Turkish man-Syrian woman marriages. There is no chance for those to become a citizen of Turkey or Syria because of the unofficial nature of these marriages. In many cases, Syrian women have no passport or identity document, so the children. Researchers are worried about a lost generation.

As a result, it is obviously seen in the published report that the biggest group who have been seriously damaged by civil war is the children, who are supposed to be the decision makers in the future of Syria.

The article The Children Of Syria: Absolute Losers Of The Civil War – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Kamachatka Volcano Spews Out 6km High Ash Cloud

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The highest active volcano in Russia has thrown out an enormous ash cloud up to six kilometers high, the Emergency Services Ministry said Saturday.

The Klyuchevskoi volcano in the tectonically active Kamchatka region in Russia’s Far East has been erupting sporadically since August.

“We have observed the latest ash eruption from the Klyuchevskoi volcano,” the local branch of the Emergency Services Ministry said in a statement. “The ash cloud is moving in a north-east direction.”

The highest mountain in the Kamchataka region, Klyuchevskoi has erupted in 2005, 2008, 2010 and 2012, spewing out lava and ash over the surrounding area.

The Emergency Services Ministry said in the statement that a red aviation warning was in place around Klyuchevskoi and cautioned tour companies not to take tourists near the volcano.

The article Kamachatka Volcano Spews Out 6km High Ash Cloud appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Tracking Central Asians’ Trails To Jihad In Syria

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By Ron Synovitz and Elenora Beishenbek

(RFE/RL) — Mekhribbon has lived a mother’s nightmare since she last spoke to her son by telephone during the summer.

She hadn’t seen him since 2011, when he and five friends left their ethnic Uzbek village of Suzak in southern Kyrgyzstan for migrant work near Moscow.

From that last call, Mekhribbon learned that all six young men had left Russia to join Al-Qaeda and wage jihad in Syria against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

“He sent some money after the first month, then he disappeared,” Mekhribbon says. “The last phone call he made was about five months ago. It was a very long number. Nobody answered when we tried to call him back. Then we asked police — security officials — to help us. We gave them the phone number my son called from when he told me ‘I will come back,’ and that’s all.”

Parents of the others also contacted Kyrgyzstan’s State Committee for National Security after receiving similar phone calls from Syria. They don’t know where their sons are now, but fear they’ve been killed. And they are asking about the trail that took their sons from their tiny Central Asian village to Syria’s civil war.

Recruited In Moscow

Kyrgyz authorities tell RFE/RL that their investigation revealed the six were recruited by Russian-speaking Salafist jihadists — Sunni Muslim militants — after their arrival in Moscow, and were sent to Syria via Turkey.

But the recruiters, thought to be from Russia’s North Caucasus region, are just one branch of an international network used by Al-Qaeda to bring fighters into Syria — not just from Central Asia, but from across the world.

Rand Corporation senior adviser Michael Jenkins testified to the U.S. Congress in November that there are now 6,000 to 8,000 foreign rebel fighters in Syria. According to Jenkins, most came from nearby Arab countries, with significant numbers also coming from North Africa and Europe. “For those that have been identified as Al-Qaeda linked, it appears to be that their funding is coming from private donations — primarily in the [Sunni Muslim] Gulf monarchies,” he said. “[The donors] are wealthy individuals.”

By comparison, relatively few militants in Syria are from Central Asia. But during 2013, Central Asian jihadists have become more prominent among Al-Qaeda fighters in Salafi jihadist groups such as Jabhat al-Nusra.

Their path of radicalization and recruitment to Syria is complex and shadowy.

Security officials in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan claim the process starts with small, closed Salafi Muslim groups that attract the unemployed or disaffected into their communities.

Russian and Central Asian authorities often direct the blame at highly visible Salafist groups such as Hizb ut-Tahrir and Tabliq-i Jamat. But those groups publicly disassociate themselves from Sunni jihadists.

Terrorism expert Jacob Zenn of the Washington-based Jamestown Foundation is not convinced those Salafist groups have direct links to Al-Qaeda. “Hizb ut-Tahrir itself is not necessarily a violent actor. And I see very little evidence of Hizb ut-Tahrir carrying out violent attacks, even though governments often accuse them of doing that,” Zenn says.

Zenn, who has testified to the U.S. Congress on the issue, says there is a difference between Salafist ideologists and more radical jihadists. But he agrees that adopting Salafist ideology is a first step toward radicalizing those who join Al-Qaeda:

“One of the growing trends is for jihadists to attract people from Salafist ideology and tell them that they need to make the rest of the world adopt that ideology,” Zenn says. When you have groups like Hizb ut-Tahrir and similar groups, such as Tabliq-i Jamat, bringing people into Salafist ideology, in many cases, it makes it easier for jihadists to then recruit them because they are already one step closer towards the ultimate goal of turning them into violent actors.”

Zenn says Salafist ideology is making inroads in places like southern Kyrgyzstan. But he says Central Asian jihadists are usually recruited and radicalized after they travel abroad to places like Turkey, Sunni-majority Persian Gulf states, Afghanistan, Pakistan, or even Russia.

Orynbasar Kamataev, from Zhetisay in southern Kazakhstan, thinks that is what happened to his son Nurlan.

‘Religious Education’

Kamataev was shocked in October when he recognized his grandchildren in a video from Syria released by Kazakh jihadists in Al-Qaeda’s “Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.”

Kamataev says his son was not particularly religious several years ago.

But after the Almaty construction firm that employed Nurlan went bankrupt, Kamataev believes his son joined an unregistered Salafist group that operates beyond the control of Kazakhstan’s state-run Islamic administration.

“His behavior changed within two or three months,” Kamataev says. “It was 2012 if I’m not mistaken. He started to pray and he would hold the Koran and read it day and night. I scolded him and said: ‘Why don’t you stop that? You can pray if you want. But why are you doing it day and night? Are you going to become a mullah?’”

“He replied that he’d had bad luck and now believes in God, and so on. Since then, he has refused to talk to me and gradually stopped all contact with us.”

Kamataev says Nurlan took his wife and three children to the Middle East after the Salafist group in Kazakhstan helped him get work there. Then Kamataev’s grandchildren turned up in the Al-Qaeda video from Syria.

Relatives of a dozen other Kazakh jihadists in that video have told RFE/RL similar stories. The Kazakh recruits all told relatives that they were traveling to Turkey, Saudi Arabia, or Qatar for employment or to receive “religious education.” Once out of Kazakhstan, their radicalization appeared to intensify.

For Salafi jihadists from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), the road to Syria has been different.

Until 2011, Ravshan waged jihad as an IMU fighter in Afghanistan and alongside Pakistan’s Taliban in South Waziristan. But after Syria’s civil war broke out, Ravshan — who would only give his first name — became disgruntled with “waging Salafist jihad” against Sunni Muslim Pakistani soldiers.

He says it was better to fight in Syria against Alawites and pro-Assad Iranian Shi’ite militias because he considers them “impure Muslims” who have deviated from the original practices of Islam.

Ravshan also says he was quickly recruited by Al-Qaeda’s Al-Nusra Front after arriving in Turkey.

Now, after losing a leg to an artillery shell at Aleppo in July, Ravshan is back in Turkey where he maintains ties with the Al-Qaeda network that sent him into Syria.

Three other former IMU fighters from Uzbekistan’s Ferghana Valley have told RFE/RL similar stories about being recruited by the Al-Nusra Front after traveling to Turkey.

They say their initial contacts with the group came through an Internet-savvy Uzbek Salafist in Turkey’s Hatay Province who uses an iPad to communicate with potential recruits from Europe, North America, Russia, and Central Asia.

Written and reported by Ron Synovitz in Prague, with additional reporting by Elenora Beishenbek in Kyrgyzstan, Shuhrat Babajanov in Turkey, and RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz, Kazakh, Uzbek, Turkmen, and Tajik services.

The article Tracking Central Asians’ Trails To Jihad In Syria appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Interview: Kim Jong Un ‘In Firm Control’ After Uncle’s Ouster

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is believed to have ousted his uncle Jang Song Thaek, long regarded as the second most powerful man in North Korea, and ordered the execution of two of Jang’s close confidants. There has been widespread speculation about the possible reasons behind Kim’s abrupt purging of Jang, often seen as the young leader’s protector and mentor. Changsop Pyon of RFA’s Korean Service interviewed Bruce Klingner, senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, about Kim’s possible motivations and his challenges ahead. Klingner, formerly an intelligence analyst with the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency for 20 years, has been writing extensively about Korean affairs since he joined Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based think tank, in 2007.

Q: Since the South Korean intelligence agency revealed on Dec. 3 that Jang was abruptly ousted from power, there has been lots of speculation and informed analysis about why Kim Jong Un took such a sudden action at this time. What is your take?

A: With all of the purges in North Korea, there is an uncertainty as to whether it shows that a weak and embattled Kim Jong Un is striving to fight off various factions for attempted purges, or alternatively that a strong and confident Kim Jong Un is removing potential sources of challenge, or simply that he’s consolidating his power. I think it tends to be the latter. I think that Kim Jong Un is in firm control, and that he has the ability to remove even the most senior-level officials.

Q: Does it mean that Kim Jong Un doesn’t care at all about even family members when they stand in the way of his quest for absolute power?

A: Right. And that’s consistent with Kim Jong Il and Kim Il Sung. They removed family members and they exiled family members, so it really is power politics taken to the extreme in North Korea. Remember Kim Jong Il removed Jang Song Thaek three times from power. So, even under Kim Jong Il, Jang Song Thaek didn’t have immunity or exceptionally strong power. Again, he was purged three times by Kim Jong Il. No one is safe other than the leader himself.

Q: Some suggest Jang’s sacking might mean Kim’s trying to further consolidate his power. What are your thoughts on Kim’s motivations?

A: Jang Song Thaek has often been referred to as the second most powerful man in North Korea, and yet this is the fourth time he’s been purged. The other times he eventually returned to power. But clearly even if the second most powerful man is repeatedly purged, it shows that no one is safe. He was three times purged under Kim Jong Il and now apparently under Kim Jong Un. Whether it was because of his corruption as sometimes seen in the past, or whether it was because he was seen as a potential challenger, we are not sure. It may simply be that Jang Sung Thaek was not of the Kim family other than through marriage, so even his power base would eventually be eroded once Kim Jung Un assumed more and more direct control of government.

Q: Some analysts interpret Jang’s purge as the outcome of a fierce rivalry between those favoring reforms led by Jang and the hardliners led by Gen. Choe Ryong Hae, director of the powerful Army General Political Department. Do you think Kim removed Jang with the help of Choe?

A: I don’t think it’s with the help of anybody. We knew right from the beginning when Kim Jong Un assumed power that he was very reliant on Jang Song Thaek and Kim Kyong Hui. But over time we suspected that eventually he would be seen either as a rival or at least as an alternative power base. It was predicted that his purge would likely happen after Kim Kyong Hui died. But if she’s still alive, Kim moved more quickly than one might have expected.

Q: Is there any possibility that Kim might see his power weakened or eroded without his long-time right-hand man Jang?

A: No. I see it rather as a further consolidation of Kim Jong Un’s power. I think the weakest he was was immediately after his father’s death. And yet even then we didn’t see signs of struggles for power or competing factions or even references to a council ruling North Korea. Right from the beginning it was Kim Jong Un who was the anointed one. He acquired six all-important titles in positions in the government. With each of these titles he assumed greater control of the government, and it made it harder for any potential challenger to go against Kim Jong Un because that would go against the constitution and the government itself. So, with all the purges we are uncertain what the reasons are. But it could be those either seen as potential challengers or simply people with a great deal of power [are those] Kim Jong Un wants to undermine. Or it could be various [people] fighting for control for access to Kim Jong Un—not a challenge to Kim Jong Un, but fighting amongst rivals. And I don’t think it’s in any way a fight between ideological differences over reforms.

Q: Despite personal sufferings and purges in the past, Jang eventually came to power after some time during Kim Jong Il’s days. Do you think Jang could make a comeback at some point in the future?

A: It could happen. Even under Kim Jong Un, we saw the chairman of the ministry of defense was removed and then came back as the chairman of the general staff. Jang Song Thaek does seem to have many lives. Like a cat, perhaps he has nine lives. He’s already used up three of them. So he may come back, and he’s shown a remarkable ability to come back in the past, but we are not sure. I think even as we’re uncertain as to what the purges mean, the really important point is to focus on North Korean policy rather than getting lost in the labyrinth of the Byzantine power of rivalries in North Korea. North Korea continues to show resistance to political reform, and despite rumors of economic reform we’ve seen nothing significant. We’ve certainly seen no moderation in North Korean behavior since Kim Jong Un came in office.

Q: Surprisingly enough, Kim took the bold step to purge not only Jang but other top-level government and military officials including Gen. Lee Yong-ho since he assumed power. Does this indicate that he has mastered the brutal power politics that date back to Kim Il Sung’s days in North Korea?

A: He’s reportedly purged hundreds of officials and executed a number of them. Since he remains in power, it shows that he’s weathered any kind of backlash against those purges. So, I think he seems to have mastered power politics. But there are still questions as to whether he’s mastered the ability to run his country economically to improve the conditions of his people as well as to implement foreign policies that do not threaten his neighbors.

Q: Jang’s gone now, and the outside world is getting curious to know what the future holds for Kim Jong Un. Do you see any political vulnerability for Kim’s power?

A: Well, Kim Jong Un will likely remain in power for quite some time. He has taken steps to remove real or perceived challengers. If even Jang Song Thaek is removed from power, then it shows that Kim Jong Un is confident enough to take out the most senior level officials in his quest to absolutely consolidate his power. So, contrary to some people’s predictions that Kim Jong Un would not last long, I think we’ll likely see him in power for quite some time.

The article Interview: Kim Jong Un ‘In Firm Control’ After Uncle’s Ouster appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Mali: World Bank Approves Funds To Boost Infrastructure, Economic Productivity, Climate Resiliency

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The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors has approved US$121.42 million in grants to support the Government of Mali as it works to rehabilitate basic infrastructure and restore productive economic activity, and address climate change impacts while building resiliency in communities that have been impacted by the country’s recent crisis.

“Mali is now on the path to recovery as key milestones have been reached towards the resolution of the recent political and security crises,” said Ousmane Diagana, World Bank Country Director for Mali. “We are delighted to support the Government’s plans and actions to rebuild infrastructure and promote climate change resiliency. Today’s projects will contribute towards reducing the vulnerability of the many communities and families affected by the multiple impacts of the crisis.”

The first International Development Association (IDA)* grant of $US100 million will support the Mali Government’s Reconstruction and Economic Recovery Project, and will contribute directly to the recovery objectives set by the Government in the 2013-14 Plan for the Sustainable Recovery of Mali (Plan pour la Relance Durable du Mali, PRED).

The Reconstruction and Economic Recovery Project will primarily focus on the rehabilitation of existing schools and education facilities, and also finance the infrastructure needs of local governments in the South that are host to internally displaced people affected by the crisis. This targeted support for service delivery will allow the conflict affected population to overcome the loss of productive assets and reinstate access to public infrastructure and services.

“The Reconstruction and Economic Recovery Project will promote engagement, dialogue and coordination among key stakeholders, especially at the community level in the planning and implementation oversight of investments, and in the process lay the foundations for greater social cohesion and local governance,” explained Zié Coulibaly, World Bank Senior Infrastructure Specialist and project Task Team Leader.

The second grant of US$21.42 million will fund Mali’s Natural Resources Management in a Changing Climate (NRMCC) project, designed to expand the use of sustainable land and water management practices in certain communities that are highly vulnerable to climate change impacts such as drought, land degradation, deforestation and flooding.

The NRMCC funding includes an IDA* contribution of US$12 million, an additional US$6.57 million from the Global Environmental Facility (GEF), and US$1.85 million from the Less Developed Countries Fund (LDCF). The Mali Government will provide US$1 million.

“The NRMCC Project will achieve its objective through the implementation of capacity building, biodiversity conservation and support to poverty reduction activities through an ecosystem-based adaptation approach,” said Maman Sani Issa, Senior Environmental Specialist and World Bank Task Team Leader for the project. “This ecosystem-based approach integrates conservation, restoration and the sustainable management of territories to enable people to adapt to climate change and ultimately to increase their resilience.”

*The World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA), established in 1960, helps the world’s poorest countries by providing loans (called “credits”) and grants for projects and programs that boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve poor people’s lives. IDA is one of the largest sources of assistance for the world’s 81 poorest countries, 39 of which are in Africa. Resources from IDA bring positive change for 2.5 billion people living on less than $2 a day. Since 1960, IDA has supported development work in 108 countries. Annual commitments have increased steadily and averaged about $15 billion over the last three years, with about 50 percent of commitments going to Africa.

The article Mali: World Bank Approves Funds To Boost Infrastructure, Economic Productivity, Climate Resiliency appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Saudi Arabia, Iran And The Nuclear Deal – OpEd

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Confused signals from the Saudi/Iranian front.

That the Middle East’s two Islamic ”superpowers” are competitors for the religious leadership of the Muslim world is well recognized. Saudi Arabia, a key Arab state, contains both Mecca and Medina within its borders and is the guardian of the Sunni tradition of Islam. Its lack of affinity with Iran is acute. The Islamic Republic of Iran is not an Arab but a Persian state, its native language is not Arabic but Farsi, and it proclaims itself the custodian of the Shi’ite branch of Islam.

The Sharia law that each claims as its legal framework varies considerably between the two. Iran’s version incorporates both the “Hadd” penal code of unalterable punishments for certain crimes and “jihad” – a call for Holy War which incorporates the obligation to convert the unfaithful.

For the past three decades, ever since the Islamic Republic of Iran began spreading its wings, the two states have pursued radically different political and religious paths. Iran has declared that Western-style democracies in general, and the United States and Israel in particular, are the devil incarnate. They and those who support them, from whatever source – even from within Islam – are legitimate targets for terrorist attack. On the other hand Iran supports all those who oppose these representatives of Satan – even Muslims from the normally derided Sunni sects. Thus Iran has armed, financed and sustained not only Shia-based Hezbollah in Lebanon, but Sunni, Muslim Brotherhood Hamas in Gaza.

Saudi Arabia has, in Iran’s eyes, been supping with the devil – and not with a particularly long spoon, for over the same period the Saudi monarchy has proved itself a major ally of the United States. For this reason Saudi Arabia and other Sunni Gulf régimes under its influence have been the object of Iranian-inspired plots aimed at destabilizing their governments. As a result Arab states across the Middle East have come to view Iran’s activities – especially their obvious ambition to achieve hegemony in the region through the development of a nuclear weapons capability – with acute suspicion.

But the politics of the Middle East are an ever-shifting kaleidoscope, and the old pattern is mutating before our eyes, initiated by the US’s perceptible change of gear in the region. Abandoning established political attitudes expected of Washington, the Obama administration has clearly decided to stake its reputation on embracing diplomacy and dialogue as the method of choice in tackling some of the intractable problems of the region, and absorbing the deleterious consequences.

Consequences there have been. The new approach – applied to the Israel-Palestine dispute, to Bashar Assad and his chemical weapons, to Iran and its nuclear development program, and now to the resolution of the Syrian civil war – has undoubtedly dented the US’s image in the Arab world. With the US on the back foot, Iran has clearly decided to extend to the Arab world in general the “charm offensive” deployed with such success against the West by President Hassan Rouhani and his foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif.

Writing in the Saudi-owned daily Asharq Al-Awsat, recently, Iran’s foreign minister Zarif said: “notwithstanding the focus on our interactions with the West, the reality is that our primary foreign policy priority is our region.” He then undertook a tour of Gulf states Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates in an attempt to persuade them that a deal between Iran and Western powers on Tehran’s nuclear program would enhance regional stability. Almost anything could be read into the notable omission of Saudi Arabia from his itinerary. but Zarif was careful to post on his Facebook page a note to the effect that he was ready for negotiations with Saudi Arabia whenever Riyadh was ready, adding that talks would be “beneficial for both countries, the region and the Muslim world.”

Had relations with the US not deteriorated as they have done, this extension of Iran’s charm offensive would surely have cut little ice in Saudi Arabia. In the changed circumstances, it has not been written off. Speaking on his return to Washington from a recent visit to the kingdom, Richard LeBaron, senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and former US ambassador to Kuwait, said that Saudi Arabia is expected “in the next few months” to begin diplomatic engagements with Iran to “test the waters.”

The former ambassador said that the kingdom is beginning to think through its options. “If they think the scenario is going to emerge where the United States is going to have improved relations with Iran, I think they’ll want to hedge their own bets and test Rouhani’s indication that he believes, for example, that improvement of relations with Saudi Arabia should be an Iranian priority.”

Soon after the interim agreement with Iran was announced in Geneva, the Saudi Arabian cabinet issued a statement welcoming its implications: “The government of the kingdom sees that if there was goodwill, this agreement could represent a preliminary step towards a comprehensive solution to the Iranian nuclear program. The kingdom hopes the agreement will be followed by further steps that would guarantee the rights of all states in the region to peaceful nuclear energy.”

The final words may be more significant than at first appears, for Barry Pavel, another official with the Atlantic Council group, said that during their meetings in the kingdom they were told that if Iran reaches a nuclear capability, Saudi Arabia would go to the US “or other countries” to develop their own nuclear capabilities.” For “other countries”, read Pakistan.

Saudi Arabia has no diplomatic relations with Israel, yet the interim nuclear deal with Iran has projected the two nations into the same corner and resulted in shared concerns about the future. Various rumors have persisted, including joint meetings between the Gulf states and Israel and, most recently, an unconfirmed report from Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency that the intelligence services of Saudi Arabia and Israel are “co-conspiring to produce a computer worm more destructive than the Stuxnet malware to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program.”

The words that the poet Tennyson puts into the mouth of the dying King Arthur spring to mind:

The old order changeth, yielding place to new,
And God fulfils himself in many ways…

The article Saudi Arabia, Iran And The Nuclear Deal – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Hagel Says He’ll Focus On Troops In Afghanistan Visit

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By Karen Parrish

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel met shortly after his arrival in Kabul, Afghanistan today with senior Afghan leaders, but said his visit is aimed mostly at encouraging and thanking U.S. troops deployed for the holidays.

Hagel met with Afghan Defense Minister Bismullah Khan Mohammadi, Deputy Interior Minister Mohammad Ayub Salangi, and Gen. Sher Mohammad Karimi, the Afghan army’s chief of staff.

The conversation, he said, touched on progress in the Afghan national security forces, the coming elections, and confidence in “all the big issues,” including the still-unsigned bilateral security agreement between Afghanistan and the United States.

Hagel said he wanted to reassure the Afghan leaders of America’s continued assistance to their country despite the uncompleted agreement.

“We are continuing our support in every program in every way,” he told reporters traveling with him after the meeting. Both Afghanistan’s interests and the world’s will be served if Afghanistan’s security force and government institutions are sound, the secretary said.

“And it’s in our interests,” Hagel added.

He acknowledged, however, that confidence drains away “in every dimension” the longer the accord goes unsigned. The NATO International Security Assistance Force mission still wraps up at the end of 2014, he pointed out. NATO has said it will use the U.S.-Afghanistan agreement as a pattern for its own agreement with Afghanistan, and a gathering of defense ministers is set for late February in part to do just that.

“We had a good discussion about that,” Hagel said.

Meanwhile, the secretary said, he’s here “to spend a day with our troops,” thanking them and letting them know he understands that times can be tough for men and women away from home and from their families, especially during the holidays.

Hagel said he’ll tell service members, and will ask them to relay to their families, “that we’re thinking about them, we care about them, [and] we appreciate what they’re doing.”

Hagel said during his troop visits tomorrow he also will listen to local Afghan leaders and speak with military officials in the places he’ll visit.

The secretary said he’ll also congratulate Afghan forces on the recent loya jirga, or grand council, which brought about 3,000 representatives to Kabul in November to examine the bilateral security agreement. That gathering was unaffected by incidents, he said, which demonstrates the growing capabilities of Afghans in uniform.

The secretary said the council’s “overwhelming and clearly pronounced” recommendation was that Afghan President Hamid Karzai should sign the accord no later than the end of December. Karzai has so far refused to sign.

Mohammadi assured him today that the security agreement will be signed “in a timely manner,” Hagel told reporters.

“It is the people of Afghanistan who have spoken on this,” he said, “and it’s something that we and all of our ISAF partners realize is critical to our future and any enduring presence.”

In response to a question on whether he would meet with President Hamid Karzai, Hagel said he would not. “I never asked for a meeting with President Karzai — I never received an invitation to meet with him,” he added. “I didn’t expect a meeting with him; this trip is about the troops.”

Several members of the Obama administration have come to Kabul in recent weeks and months to emphasize that the agreement is central to continued U.S. and international assistance for Afghanistan, the secretary noted. He added that his trip this week has been long-planned for the sole purpose of “reaching out to our troops, thanking our troops, wishing them happy holidays.”

The secretary said he doesn’t believe he has much to add that hasn’t been discussed with the Afghan president.

“More to the point, I don’t think pressure from the United States is going to be helpful. … The people of Afghanistan spoke rather plainly and clearly and dramatically,” he said. “That’s not my role, to pressure presidents.”

The article Hagel Says He’ll Focus On Troops In Afghanistan Visit appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Hagel Outlines US Posture For Middle East At Manama Dialogue

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By Karen Parrish

In a speech before the Manama Dialogue security conference today, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel emphasized the strength of America’s presence in the Middle East and called for closer cooperation with the Gulf states.

The six-month interim agreement aimed at preventing Iran from producing nuclear weapons reached in November between Iran and the five permanent member of the United Nations Security Council — the United States, Russia, China, United Kingdom and France — plus Germany, Hagel said, will not alter U.S. presence or determination in the region.

“It is only a first step,” he said. “But it could be an important step. It halts any further expansion of Iran’s nuclear program, begins to roll it back in important ways, and provides sweeping access to verify … Iran’s intentions.”

The Defense Department will not adjust its forces in the region or its military planning as a result of the interim agreement with Iran, the secretary said.

“We have bought time for meaningful negotiation, not for deception,” Hagel said. “All of us are clear-eyed … about the challenges that remain to achieving a comprehensive nuclear solution with Iran.”

He noted that in Syria, international pressure and the threat of U.S. military action created an opening for diplomacy with Russia. That led to a U.N. Security Council resolution and the involvement of the Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons, which put inspectors on the ground in Syria to oversee the removal and destruction of the Assad regime’s chemical weapons.

“We remain on track to destroy Syria’s arsenal of chemical weapons,” the secretary said. “The United States is working closely with our key allies and the international community in this process and has offered its unique technical capabilities and technology to help dispose of these weapons. … Once the destruction is complete, a major chemical weapons threat will be eliminated. This will benefit the entire region and the world.”

Issues remain in Syria, Hagel said, but he vowed to work with regional partners to find a political settlement to the conflict.

“We must also confront the rise of violent extremist groups in Syria, and we must work together to ensure that our assistance to the opposition does not fall into the wrong hands,” he cautioned. The secretary noted that humanitarian assistance to the Syrian people remains a serious concern.

“The United States is the largest donor of humanitarian aid for displaced Syrians, and we will continue to support Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey as they provide refuge for victims of the conflict,” the secretary said. “The Syrian regime must also allow humanitarian assistance to reach the Syrian people.”

Hagel pointed out that the potent threat of U.S. military intervention helped to spur progress in resolving the nuclear and chemical weapons threats posed by Iran and Syria respectively, though each country continues to pose regional challenges.

The secretary set out the U.S. presence here: ground, air and sea forces number more than 35,000 U.S. troops in the Gulf area, he said, including “more than 10,000 forward-deployed soldiers in the region, along with heavy armor, artillery, and attack helicopters, to serve as a theater reserve and a bulwark against aggression.”

The secretary said the United States has deployed its most advanced aircraft, including F-22 fighters, throughout the region “to ensure that we can quickly respond to contingencies. Coupled with our unique munitions, no target is beyond our reach.”

The United States also employs its most advanced intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets here to provide a continuous picture of activities in and around the Gulf, Hagel said.

“And we have fielded an array of missile defense capabilities -– including ballistic missile defense ships, Patriot [surface-to-air missile] batteries, and sophisticated radar,” he added.

To ensure freedom of navigation throughout the Gulf, the secretary said, the Navy routinely maintains a presence of more than 40 ships in the broader region, including a carrier strike group, and conducts a range of freedom-of-navigation operations.

“These operations include approximately 50 transits of the Strait of Hormuz over the past six months,” he noted.

The Navy has added five coastal patrol ships to U.S. 5th Fleet here this year, the secretary said, and has ramped up its minesweeping capabilities. DOD also will invest $580 million in a construction program to support expanding 5th Fleet capabilities, Hagel said.

“Yesterday, I visited the Navy’s new afloat forward staging base, the USS Ponce,” he said, calling the ship “a unique platform for special operations, as well as humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, in areas where we do not have a permanent, fixed presence.”

Hagel said during this trip, he also will meet with U.S. service members stationed at the Combined Air Operations Center in Qatar, “where we have representatives from our [Gulf Cooperation Council] partners training and working together.”

Hagel called for closer multilateral coordination among council members, the Persian Gulf states of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

He offered three avenues the United States would like to pursue toward that end:

– A unified focus on missile defense through the regional Air and Air Defense Chiefs’ Conference, which meets several times a year;

– Making the Gulf Cooperation Council as an entity eligible for the U.S. Foreign Military Sales program; and

– Convening a regular forum, beginning within six months, where U.S. and Gulf defense leaders come together annually to assess progress and threats in regional security.

These measures constitute “a natural next step in improving U.S.-GCC collaboration,” Hagel said, adding that foreign military sales “will enable the GCC to acquire critical military capabilities, including items for ballistic missile defense, maritime security and counter-terrorism.”

The secretary noted that during his last trip to the region, in April, “we finalized agreements worth nearly $11 billion that will provide access to high-end capabilities including F-15s, F-16s and advanced munitions such as standoff weapons.” These capabilities are the most advanced the United States has ever provided to the region, he said.

“We will continue to ensure that all of our allies and partners in the region – including both Israel and the Gulf States – have these advanced weapons,” the secretary pledged.

In the future, Hagel said, the Defense Department will place even more emphasis on building the capacity of regional partners to complement the strong, proven and enduring U.S. military presence in the region.

“Nations are stronger, not weaker, when they work together against common threats,” the secretary said. “Closer cooperation between the GCC and the United States is in all of our countries’ interests.”

This year’s Manama Dialogue, the ninth of its kind, drew hundreds of delegates from more than 20 countries. Other speakers at the gathering included representatives from Bahrain, the United Kingdom, the Gulf Cooperation Council, Egypt, Iraq, India, Qatar, Canada and Norway.

Yesterday, Hagel met here with Saudi Arabian Deputy Defense Minister Prince Salman bin Sultan to discuss regional issues, including Iran, Egypt and Syria. Assistant Pentagon Press Secretary Carl Woog said the secretary underscored in that meeting the strength of the bilateral relationship and noted that defense partnership is key in maintaining the long-standing ties between the two countries. Hagel said the United States remains committed to regional security and stability, a shared objective with Saudi Arabia, Woog reported.

The secretary indicated U.S.-Saudi defense cooperation is essential to maintaining the two nations’ shared priorities. He highlighted the Saudi purchase of F-15SA aircraft and advanced weapons as an example of future of improved interoperability and coordination between both militaries, Woog said. The defense secretary will visit Saudi Arabia on Dec. 9.

Hagel also met yesterday at the Safria Palace here with King Hamad al Khalifa of Bahrain.

Hagel and the king discussed the long history of the –U.S.-Bahrain bilateral relationship, Woog said. The secretary emphasized U.S. commitment to Gulf security, and the two exchanged views on shared regional security challenges, including Iran and the signed joint plan of action between the P5+1 and Iran.

The meeting included significant discussion of reform in Bahrain and the importance of political inclusiveness for long-term stability. The secretary thanked the king for hosting the U.S. 5th Fleet and for Bahrain’s ongoing security cooperation, Woog said.

The article Hagel Outlines US Posture For Middle East At Manama Dialogue appeared first on Eurasia Review.


The Work Of Fabrice Balanche On Alawites And Syrian Communitarianism: Review

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IMPRESSIVE SYRIA STUDIES BY FABRICE BALANCHE

Reviewed by Nikolaos van Dam

Fabrice Balanche is a well-known French scholar who wrote a lot about Syria, mostly in French. His best-known books are La région alaouite et le pouvoir syrien [The Alawi Region and Power in Syria] (Paris 2006) and Atlas du Proche-Orient Arabe [Atlas of the Arab Near East] (Paris 2012), which is to be published also in Arabic and English. Balanche is presently the Director of the Research and Study Group dealing with the Meditteranean and Middle East at the University of Lyon 2.

On 29 November 2013 Balanche obtained his “habilitation à diriger des recherches” (a kind of super PhD) at the University of Lyon 2, France. His theme was « Le facteur communautaire dans l’analyse des espaces syriens et libanais » [The factor of communitarianism in the analysis of Syrian and Lebanese spaces]. As a member of the jury during the “habilitation” session, I made the following comments on his academic work.

Fabrice Balanche deserves to be complimented for his two decennia long studies on the Middle East and Syria in particular.

Balanche did not originally intend to write specifically about communitarianism (communautarisme), but the issue, more or less unavoidably, crossed his path, due to the social realities with which he was confronted during his field studies in Syria. Officially the existence of communitarianism in Syria was denied by the Syrian regime, and in practice it was (and is) a subject surrounded by taboos. According to the official ideology of the ruling Ba’th Party, communitarianism was not supposed to exist; and as far as it did exist, the phenomenon was considered to be no more than a negative residue of obsolete old traditions (rawasib taqlidiyah), which needed to be banned and disposed of. The reality was, however, completely different, as is clearly demonstrated in Balanche’s studies.

Whereas communitarianism is officially a part of the Lebanese political system, its existence is officially denied in Syria’s contemporary political system. Nevertheless, social realities are rather similar in both countries, as explained by Balanche.

Studying “the factor of communitarianism in the analysis of Syrian and Lebanese spaces” was considered a very sensitive issue in Syria. It is not surprising, therefore, that Balanche did not get the required cooperation in this respect from the Syrian authorities, or the requested support from French academic institutions inside Syria. The latter, according to Balanche, even worked against him, because the French institutions concerned were afraid that supporting Balanche’s work could negatively affect their own positions vis-à-vis the Syrian authorities.

One could say that Balanche had a somewhat rough academic landing in Syria because of these sensitive circumstances, but he persevered and finally managed to achieve his aim through intensive and painstaking fieldwork. Balanche succeeded in penetrating deeply into Syrian society, at first mainly in Alawi circles. By becoming very close with their community he noticed how all kinds of doors within Alawi society were opened, providing him with an intimate look into its inner workings. Being close to one community had, however, as a side effect that his contacts with other communities, such as parts of Sunni society, were made more difficult, if not blocked altogether. Later on, Balanche made up for this by widening his Syrian social circuits outside the Alawi community, and entering into Sunni circles. When entering the “Sunni world” it appeared as if he stepped into “another Syria”. Through informal channels Balanche was able to obtain a lot of essential information and insights. Having obtained a working knowledge of Syrian colloquial Arabic, Balanche had the necessary tools to get to the bottom of what was happening. Without this immersion into several different communities, he would not have come half as close to achieving the same high academic level. His fieldwork, not always appreciated by others, has turned out to be indispensible.

Whereas Volume 1 La facteur communautaire dans l’analyse des espaces syriens et libanais (140 pp.) constitutes the central part of Balanche’s studies discussed here, Volume 2 Parcours personnel (or large Curriculum Vitae) (139 pp.) should not be considered as less important, as it provides many highly valuable and detailed insights into the inner workings of Syrian society and into the many obstacles with which one may be confronted when doing field work there. Volumes 3 (536 pp.) and 4 (550 pp.) are an enormously rich and impressive collection of Balanche’s numerous earlier publications, which he refers to wherever necessary, in the two first volumes. Next to these four volumes one should also consult Balanche’s splendid Atlas du Proche-Orient arabe (Paris: Sorbonne, 2012, 135 pp.), and take note of his earlier book La région alaouite et le pouvoir syrien (Paris: Karthala, 2006, 315 pp.), which provides many highly interesting details not included in Volumes 1 and 2. (All these works together comprise some 1800 pages).

Although I do agree with many, if not most of the points Balanche makes in his analysis of communitarianism, I think it is necessary to pose some questions and add some marginalia where parts of his conclusions and predictions for the future are concerned. Before I come to that, however, I want to note that certain predictions or observations made by Balanche in the past have turned out to be fully correct. The present-day bloody conflict in Syria is often judged on the basis of wishful thinking, by the general public, as well as among politicians and academics, and realism is not always appreciated if it does not fit into the wishful thought of those concerned. After the start of the Syrian Revolution in March 2011, many observers and politicians expected the regime of Bashar al-Asad to fall quickly. They were, apparently, not aware of the inner strength and coherence of the regime, as they were not burdened by any deep knowledge of it. Had they read Balanche’s works, they might have known better. When Balanche during an interview in France in 2011 commented on the situation in Syria by saying that the regime was not “ripe” to fall and that the country was going straight into the direction of a civil war, he was categorized as a “defender of the Asad regime”. When in mid-2012 he continued to declare that the regime should not be expected to fall soon, his interview was published under the title of “L’interview qui fâche” [The interview which makes you angry] (Volume 2, p. 78). His “realism” was clearly not appreciated. In an interview with L’Hebdo Magazine of 15 November 2013, Balanche predicted that the al-Asad regime is not going to fall. And during a symposium on 4 November 2013 Balanche said that he expected Bashar al-Asad to win the war, leaving open the question, however, “who will win the peace.”

Since the Asad regime relies so heavily on people from its own Alawi community, its strength can be attributed, to a great extent, to the issue of communitarianism. As described by Balanche, however, the importance of communitarianism has been ignored or even denied in various academic circles because of prevailing ideological or idealistic motivations, on the basis of which, for instance, class, rural-urban and economic factors are considered much more important than communitarian ones. This phenomenon of denial has, according to Balanche, been stronger in France than in the Anglo-Saxon academic world, although it may have changed more recently.

Fifteen years ago (1998) Balanche already hinted that, if the Alawi-dominated Ba’th regime fell, the Alawi region might break away or separate from Syria proper (Volume 2, p. 33). In his Thèse de Doctorat, L’intégration de la region côtière dans l’espace syrien: une intégration nationale ambigüe [The integration of the coastal region in Syrian space: an ambiguous national integration] (Tours, 2000, 800 pp.), Balanche has argued that the potential for a separation of the Alawi region from Syria is well-founded, a view he repeated in his book (2006), as well as in the volumes which are being considered in this evaluation. Balanche even sees evidence of such a potential development in both the transport infrastructure and the presence of certain military bases in the Alawi region. He interprets these as having strategic importance for the defense of the Alawi territories within the Syrian internal context (Volume 1, p. 79).

Balanche compares the case of Syria with that of post-Tito Yugoslavia, which fell apart into several states. One should be careful, however, in making such a comparison. In the first place, the population of Yugoslavia was made up of various ethnic groups with different languages. The Syrian population is much more homogeneous in the ethnic context, and the Alawis should, in principle, be considered as Arabs, like the majority of the Syrian population. Moreover, the Alawis would in general not at all want to separate from Syria. The only reason why they would wish to establish their own state, or autonomous region, is that the Alawis might feel threatened by the Sunni majority to such an extent, that they would, purely for security reasons, want to escape from radical Sunni anti-Alawi revanchism, which could explode after an eventual toppling of the regime of Bashar al-Asad. In such a scenario the Alawi population from Damascus and other cities might wish to flee to their original homeland, or that of their ancestors. But the Alawi community fleeing from Damascus sounds simpler than it is, because many Alawis have lived there (and in other Syrian cities) for several generations, including Bashar al-Asad himself, who, from that perspective, should be considered a Damascene (although it is clear that the local Sunni population considers him as an Alawi originating from the Alawi mountains). I could not really imagine the Alawi community being prepared to leave Damascus and its Alawi neighborhoods before losing their very last defensive lines and witnessing a major part of the city turned into ruins. This may be due, however, to my lack of imagination to see greater part of Damascus changed into rubble (as already happened in Aleppo).

One should, moreover, not underestimate the durability of colonial boundaries, however much these may have been rejected in the past. Additionally, if Alawi-dominated rule were to be replaced by Sunni-dominated rule, the successor regime in Damascus would, in my view, certainly try to regain control over the whole area of Syria, including the Alawi coastal region. When dealing with international boundaries, every inch of territory acquires an almost holy importance, because national sovereignty is at stake. Loss of even an inch of territory can lead to further claims, political instability, tensions in international relations, and sometimes to further wars.

Balanche notes that territorial partition may not bring peace at first, but that, in the long term, the bringing into practice of former US President Wilson’s principle of “national self-determination” to the ethnic-confessional communities of the Middle East could bring stability and democracy. Some areas are, according to Balanche, already going through a phase of federalism (like in Lebanon), or semi-independence (like in Iraqi Kurdistan) (Volume 1, p. 126).

Where Syria is concerned, one should, however, not underestimate the force of Arabism and Arab identity. Balanche has correctly noted that Arab nationalism has not at all been a success, and that primordial loyalties have turned out to be stronger. He even cynically comments that “Les indices de la supercherie baathiste étaient pourtant clairs depuis des décennies pour celui qui connaissait réellement la société syrienne.” [The indications of Ba'thist deception were clear for decades to those who really knew Syrian society] (Volume 1, p. 145). Regardless, that does not mean that the Syrian Alawis, after generations of Arab nationalist indoctrination, would not also feel they have a Syrian Arab identity, irrespective of the extremely negative Sunni anti-Alawi feelings which have increased during the many years of Alawi-dominated Ba’th rule and repression. In the past, many Alawis themselves already rejected the Alawi state that was created during the French Mandate.
The Ba’th regime in Syria has achieved exactly the dramatic opposite of the ideals it originally wanted to achieve. Half a century ago, it still declared that it wanted to abolish sectarianism and communitarianism, but by making communal loyalties the central key to their power, the Ba’thist rulers became prisoners of their own system and achieved the anti-thesis of their Ba’thist Arab nationalist ideology and ideals. They have thereby even endangered the very existence of Syria, with sectarianism stronger than ever before, as is demonstrated through the ongoing civil war.

Balanche has concluded in this respect that national integration in Syria constituted a danger for the power position of the regime, and has appropriately questioned whether durable territorial integration is possible without social integration (Volume 2, p. 35). Personally, I would have liked Balanche to give some additional insights into the opposition within the Alawi community against the Alawi dominated Ba’th regime. After all, many Alawi villages have their political prisoners, and the Syrian Ba’thist dictatorship applies to all Syrians. Balanche makes clear that the Alawis in general have taken the side of the regime, not out of positive conviction, but rather out of fear for the future, and what would happen if the regime of Bashar al-Asad were to fall. When reading Volume 1, I wondered whether one could really say, as Balanche does, that Hafiz al-Asad “a fait un monolithe d’une communauté alaouite divisée en multiples clans” [Hafiz al-Asad has made a monolith of the Alawite community that used to be divided into multiple clans] (Volume 1, p. 114), except in the sense that they seem to be united in their common fear for radical Sunni revanchism. A more detailed explanation can be found, however, outside Volume 1 and 2, in his book (2006, pp. 159-172).

Balanche presents a possible future break-up of Syria as an almost inevitable development (Volume 1, 146) when he concludes that: “Un divorce à l’amiable est alors préférable à une guerre civile communautaire qui aboutira au meme résultat. Cela implique que les acteurs locaux et internationaux soient rationnels et raisonnables en privilégiant un scénario tchécoslovaque plutôt de yougoslave.” [An amicable divorce is preferable to a communitarian civil war that leads to the same result. This would imply that local and international actors would be rational and reasonable by favoring a Czechoslovakian scenario rather a Yugoslav one]. I am afraid that the civil war has already progressed much too far to make a scenario similar to that of Czechoslovakia possible, and doubt whether this would ever have been a realistic option in the first place. After all, the Czechoslovakia case does not fit into the Syrian model since, like in former Yugoslavia, substantial different ethnic-linguistic groups were involved. Syria is much more homogeneous in this respect.

Balanche convincingly explains why the often-suggested existence of a Shi’i alliance or “Shi’i crescent” (consisting of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon) is a wrong (albeit increasingly popular) concept, as alliances are strategic and not ideological or religious (Volume 1, pp. 107, 124). Moreover, the areas inhabited by Shi’is do not constitute an uninterrupted geographical area.

Balanche uses the term “Syrian Arab nation” throughout his work. According to the ruling Ba’th Party’s ideology there is, however, only an “Arab nation”, of which the Syrian Arabs are one part. They don’t say: “We are all Syrian Arabs”, but rather “We are all Arabs”. Only at a later stage of Ba’thist rule did the “Syrian identity” become a more accepted concept, even though it contradicts the Ba’thist ideology. Stressing the wider pan-Arab identity at the cost of the more restricted Syrian Arab identity did, in practice, not positively contribute to “nation building” in Syria, but rather achieved the opposite: a strengthening of communitarianism for lack of tangible results in the field of pan-Arabism and because of the discouragement, earlier on, of the Syrian identity.

Balanche describes Jordan as a “paradox” in the region. Jordan does not suffer from fragmentation on the basis of communitarianism like Syria and Lebanon, as it has a quasi ethnic-confessional population with a 95% Sunni Arab majority (Volume 1, p. 125). Elsewhere in his study, Balanche interestingly defines the Palestinians as a “quasi-ethnic group” (Volume 1, p. 26), which has developed as a result of their political circumstances. He does not, however, hint at the potential consequences of the large Palestinian presence in Jordan for its supposed homogeneity. Balanche concludes that Jordan is paradoxically one of the most stable Middle Eastern countries because of its ethnic homogeneity, being, however, at the same time, the most artificial state in the region.

I want to end by pointing out some minor details.

Balanche notices that the isolated villages of the Alawi sect of the Murshidiyin in the remote Alawi Mountains were only given accessible asphalted roads in the early 1990s once they had clearly entered into the clientele of the Asad clan (Volume 1, p. 81). This is correct, except for the fact that the Murshidiyin had already shown their allegiance to the Asads much earlier on, as can be concluded from the fact that already in the first part of the 1980s the Murshidiyin constituted the backbone of Rif’at al-Asad’s elite troops, the Defence Platoons (Saraya al-Difa’). When in 1984 Rif’at intended to take over power by force from his brother President Hafiz al-Asad, the Murshidiyin turned out to be completely unreliable towards Rif’at, as they all choose the side of the president, as a result of which Rif’at’s revolt became toothless and failed completely.

The Murshidiyin, therefore, could already be considered loyal to President Hafiz al-Asad from 1984 onwards, and from that perspective might have been given their asphalted roads much earlier. On the other hand, it may have taken some years before the president really trusted the Murshidiyin, because they had switched sides so easily.

In conclusion I wish to stress that Fabrice Balanche has produced excellent and impressive academic work. On that basis he strongly deserves to be supported for his Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches.

Nikolaos van Dam
Former Ambassador of the Netherlands to Iraq, Egypt, Turkey, Germany and Indonesia (1988-2010). Also served as a diplomat in Lebanon, Jordan, Palestinian occupied territories and Libya. Author of The Struggle for Power in Syria. Politics and Society under Asad and the Ba’th Party, 4th edition, London: I.B. Tauris 2011 (5th printing 2013). www.nikolaosvandam.com

The article The Work Of Fabrice Balanche On Alawites And Syrian Communitarianism: Review appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Mandela Family Speaks: ‘Thank You’

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The family of the late President Nelson Mandela say they are humbled by the support they have received from President Jacob Zuma, the medical team that attended to Madiba and messages from all people in South Africa and abroad.

Briefing the media at the SABC studios in Auckland Park on Saturday, retired Lieutenant General Temba Templeton Matanzima also expressed their thanks to the medical team that attended to him “around the clock”.

In their first statement ever since Mandela died on Thursday, the family also said the past two days have not been easy as they still grapple to come to terms with his passing.

“Special thanks to President Jacob Zuma and the government of South Africa, the dedicated medical team that attended to him around the clock, religious communities of the different faiths of our country and beyond that offered prayers and counselling to the family.

“.. As a family, we are humbled by the messages of condolences and support that we continue to receive from governments and people of the world. Clearly, this once more underlines the simple truth that Madiba was not just a citizen of South Africa and the broader African continent, but a global citizen.

“We are, however, comforted by the knowledge that our pain and sorrow is shared by millions around the world,” he said.

Accompanied by Mandela’s grandson, Ndaba, Matanzima said they will mostly remember Mandela for his values and sacrifice and his sacrifices, having lived his life to ensure a better life for all South Africans.

“Yes, Tata is gone, the pillar of the family is gone, just as he was away during that 27 painful years of imprisonment, but in our hearts and souls he will always be with us. His spirit endures. As a family, we commit ourselves to uphold and be guided by the values he lived for and was prepared to die for,” General Matanzima said.

After the statement, Ndaba said while mourning the death of South Africa’s hero, the family learnt about the passing of another South African hero, former boxing champion Baby Jake Matlala, who passed away earlier on Saturday

President Jacob Zuma has also extended condolences to the family of Matlala who passed on today after an illness.

“We have learned with sadness the news of the passing of this outstanding sportsman, known for his professionalism and dedication to boxing. We extend our deepest condolences to his family during this difficult time,’’ said President Zuma.

The article Mandela Family Speaks: ‘Thank You’ appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Saakashvili Addresses Protesters In Kiev

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(Civil.Ge) — Georgia’s former president Mikheil Saakashvili addressed pro-Europe protesters in Kiev on Saturday.

“Ukrainian triumph will put an end to the era of [Russian President] Vladimir Putin and it will start here, on this very square,” he said.

Saakashvili, who graduated from the Taras Shevchenko National University in Kiev in 1992 after serving with the Soviet border troops in Ukraine, addressed the rally in Ukrainian reading out from notes.

After arriving in Kiev on Friday, Saakashvili, who has not been in Georgia since early November, met one of the Ukrainian opposition leaders, Vitaly Klitschko, whose UDAR party is a partner of the United National Movement (UNM), which is chaired by Saakashvili. Klitschko visited Tbilisi and attended UNM congress in December, 2012.

“I am Georgian, I am Ukrainian, therefore I am European,” he said.

Earlier on Saturday he told Tbilisi-based Rustavi 2 TV in Kiev that developments in Ukraine are of vital importance for Georgia. “Georgia’s fate is also being decided here. We can’t remain passive observers,” he said.

The article Saakashvili Addresses Protesters In Kiev appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Analysts: Neutralising Syrian Chemical Weapons At Sea Would Be ‘Safe And Secure’

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By Alakbar Raufoglu

As international allies prepare to dispose of Syria’s most dangerous chemical weapons, which must be removed from the country by the end of December, officials and analysts in neighbouring Turkey agree that operating the disposal machines at sea should be safe to the environment, analysts told SETimes.

“The destruction [of Syria's chemical weapons] process is organised by the joint efforts of the UN and Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons [OPCW], meaning it has international legitimacy,” Bezen Coskun, international security analyst from the Gaziantep-based Zirve University, said.

The OPCW’s plan calls for the most dangerous weapons to be broken down on a US ship in the Mediterranean Sea. While at least 35 companies have expressed interest in bidding on contracts to dispose about 800 tonnes of the weapons, about 500 tonnes are too dangerous to transport to another country and would be disposed of on the US ship. The operation would involve neutralising the poison gas arsenal, collecting several hundred tonnes of the resulting hazardous waste and disposing it safely.

The threat of chemical weapons has loomed over both Syria and Turkey as the two-year civil war in Syria continues. Turkey’s military is closely monitoring the border to protect its citizens from the fighting, and more than 600,000 Syrians have fled into Turkey since the fighting began.

Syrians have already begun destroying their chemical weapons arsenal, which included missile warheads, aerial bombs as well as mixing and filling equipment, according to an international team tasked with overseeing the effort.

The UN official in charge of co-ordinating the process provided new details about the plan on Wednesday (December 4th), saying that once started, the process of neutralising 500 tonnes of the chemical components used to make mustard gas and sarin gas could be completed within 45 to 90 days, while an additional 800 metric tonnes of less dangerous chemical precursors will be destroyed by one of 35 companies that have bid for the contract.

If all goes according to plan, the most dangerous materials will be sent overland to the country’s biggest Mediterranean port of Latakia, about 225 kilometres north of Damascus, where ships would take them to a foreign port and transfer to a specially equipped naval vessel offered by the US.

Though this process has never been carried out at sea, Coskun said the process should be a “very low-risk operation,” to the environment, and that hydrolysis is a proven technology.

“As the chemical agents are planned to be destroyed by using hydrolysis, which is a chemical process in which a certain molecule is split into two parts by the addition of a molecule of water, the process will do no harm environmentally,” she told SETimes.

US officials on Thursday said that, “absolutely nothing will be dumped at sea,” calling the process “a relatively low-risk operation.”

Serdar Erdurmaz, a retired Turkish Army colonel currently with the Ankara-based Turkish Centre for Strategic Analysis, said it is also important to know the location of the designated ships.

“It is wise to contemplate that all ships must be located to the nearest point to all chemical arsenal in Syria,” he told SETimes.

The plan could restore momentum to the international effort to rid Syria of all its chemical weapons, as many countries have been reluctant to volunteer to dispose of the chemicals, with a fair of being used in attacks inside the country or as terrorist weapons outside the country.

Coskun said the removal of chemical agents from Syria “is a relief for Turkey.”

The open border policy and the open hostility between Ankara and the regime of Syrian President Bashir al-Assad had raised Ankara’s concerns over the possibility of chemical attack.

“As Ankara had concerns about the chemical attacks from Syria, during the last couple of months Ankara sent letters explaining the ways to protect from the harms of a chemical attack to public offices and schools in Southeastern Anatolia,” Coskun said.

The article Analysts: Neutralising Syrian Chemical Weapons At Sea Would Be ‘Safe And Secure’ appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Yemen: Attack On Defence Ministry Complex, Hospital Draws Wide Condemnation

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By Faisal Darem

Condemnation is pouring in over the Thursday (December 5th) suicide bombing at the Yemeni Defence Ministry complex in Sanaa, which killed at least 52 people and wounded 167 others, according to the official toll.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula on Friday claimed responsibility for the attack, which hit near the military hospital at the complex, al-Ordhi.

Doctors, nurses, patients and civilian and military visitors are among the dead.

Following the blast, a car carrying gunmen entered the complex and exchanged fire with ministry guards. Most of the gunmen were dealt with and killed within the perimeter of the hospital, the Defence Ministry said.

The perpetrators took advantage of on-going construction work to carry out the attack, it said.

Yemeni President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi visited the site of the attack and ordered an investigation into the incident.

‘No religion, law or circumstance gives anyone the right to carry out this attack’

The government must hunt down the “planners, financiers and abettors of this criminal attack so they may receive their just punishment, and announce the results to the public”, said parliament head Yahya al-Rai.

“This is a terrorist act and a crime against law and order aimed at disrupting public peace and undermining security and stability,” al-Rai said.

All Yemenis must fight, confront and help uncover such attacks before they occur, he added.

“This brutal and cowardly terrorist act against a medical facility and a government and national institution shows that whoever carried it out or is behind it is devoid of all human, moral or religious values, and reflects the destructive dark hatred their sick evil souls hold for all of humanity,” the government said in a statement.

“We, along with all Ministry of Interior personnel and all members of society condemn this heinous crime,” said Brig. Gen. Mohammed al-Kaedi, director general of public relations and moral guidance at the ministry.

“It is a serious criminal act carried out by a group that is devoid of religion, values, morals and norms, and whose sole passion is bloodshed and the taking of life, [perpetrated] against patients, nurses and doctors for no fault of their own,” he told Al-Shorfa.

Yemeni Minister of Youth and Sports Muammar al-Eryani told Al-Shorfa his ministry and the youth sector, including all its unions and clubs, condemn the attack, which he sees as “a cowardly act that is contrary to all religious and humanitarian values and principles”.

The youth sector stands by Yemen and is working to deny such criminals the opportunity to undermine Yemen’s security and stability, he said.

“It is a sad [incident] that debilitates souls, makes tears flow and causes hearts to bleed,” said Sheikh Hassan al-Sheikh, a member of the Yemen Scholars Association and deputy minister of endowments. “No religion, law or circumstance gives anyone the right to carry out this attack.”

“Islam honoured man regardless of his colour, religion, sex or race, held him in high regard and forbade defamation and slander against him. Islam is innocent of what happened, for the taking of life and killing souls are among the greatest sins in Islam,” al-Sheikh said.

“Who permitted them to do what they did? […] This proves they have no faith and no religion [for no religion] permits them to do what they did,” he said.

Al-Sheikh called on scholars, murshids and the media to fulfil their duty in raising public awareness about the dangers of such practices.

Politicians urge unity

“The terrorist attack is a heinous crime that violates all tolerant Islamic values and principles and customs of Yemeni society, which rejects violence, extremism and terrorism,” the General People’s Congress and the National Alliance Parties (NAP) said in a statement.

Deputy Information Minister and NAP spokesman Abdo al-Janadi called on all those involved with political and partisan activism and civil society organisations to denounce such violence.

“Yemen continues its war against terrorism and al-Qaeda, which is carrying out various forms of assassination attacks against military and security personnel, sometimes using motorcycles and other times car bombs,” al-Janadi said.

The attack on the hospital “necessitates concerted efforts by all national forces to confront this tide that targets Yemen,” Joint Meeting Parties president Hassan Zaid told Al-Shorfa.

Zaid called on political, military and security leaders to heighten the vigilance of the security forces,” because they are targeted, and targeting them is targeting Yemen”.

He urged all sectors, institutions and organisations to condemn the attack by taking practical actions that “besiege takfiri thought”.

The Secretariat General of Yemen’s National Dialogue Conference (NDC) also condemned the assault, describing it as a “brutal terrorist attack carried out by a group [of people who are] devoid of humanity, who hate life and have given up on the future, against a health facility with a sacred humanitarian mission”.

“They spilled blood and scattered [human] remains in cold blood, brutality and destructive dark hatred,” it said in a statement.

NDC standards and discipline committee member Judge Abdul Jalil Noman and his wife were among those killed in the attack.

On Thursday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on all parties in Yemen to co-operate fully with the investigation of the attack, said his spokesman Martin Nesirky.

Ban “strongly believes that the only path to a stable, prosperous and democratic Yemen is through the on-going peaceful and all-inclusive National Dialogue Conference”, Nesirky said.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague also denounced the attack and affirmed the support of the United Kingdom for Yemen’s political transition process and its war against terrorism.

The article Yemen: Attack On Defence Ministry Complex, Hospital Draws Wide Condemnation appeared first on Eurasia Review.

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