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Bernie Sanders Hire Me As Your Copy Editor – OpEd

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Rev·o·lu·tion – revəˈlo͞oSH(ə)n (noun): a forcible overthrow of a government or social order in favor of a new system.

The word on the street (and by “street,” I mean the internet) is that a 72-year-old white male career politician named Bernie Sanders has started a revolution.

Nothing riles me up quite like the sound of revolution, so I immediately clicked over to Bernie’s official website — ready to join a hardcore rebellion. I had been assured by so many smart activists that Sanders was a genuine revolutionary. I came looking for revolt, insurrection, mutiny, and insurgency. What I found instead was a website in desperate need of a copyeditor.

Feel The Bern excerpt #1: “The American people must make a fundamental decision. Do we continue the 40-year decline of our middle class and the growing gap between the very rich and everyone else, or do we fight for a progressive economic agenda that creates jobs, raises wages, protects the environment and provides health care for all? Are we prepared to take on the enormous economic and political power of the billionaire class, or do we continue to slide into economic and political oligarchy? These are the most important questions of our time, and how we answer them will determine the future of our country.”

While this might arouse HuffPo readers, it’s hardly “revolutionary.”

My edit: “The American people must revolt. Do we continue the 40-year decline of our middle class and the growing gap between the very rich and everyone else, or do we defy the Blue Bloc, take the fight to the streets, and take the liberty that is rightfully ours? Are we prepared to incur massive casualties and the sacrifice of almost all our beloved creature comforts? These are the most important questions of our time, and how we answer them will determine the future of all life on our planet.”

Feel The Bern excerpt #2: “The United States must lead the world in tackling climate change, if we are to make certain that this planet is habitable for our children and grandchildren. We must transform our energy system away from polluting fossil fuels, and towards energy efficiency and sustainability. Millions of homes and buildings need to be weatherized, and we need to greatly accelerate technological progress in wind and solar power generation.”

This is fine… if you’re Al Gore. But I’d say #FeelTheBern needs to embrace a much, much darker shade of green.

My edit: “The people of the United States — not its corrupt, so-called ruling class — must lead the world in recognizing that climate change is just one of countless eco-issues to address. It’s not just about making certain that this planet is habitable for our children and grandchildren. We must defend all forms of life and accept that ‘going green’ is a liberal panacea. Do you realize that 93 percent of the large fish in the ocean are already gone or that 78 percent of old-growth forests are already gone? What about the 150 to 200 plant and animal species that go extinct every single day? ‘Sustainability,’ you say? Are you fxxxxxx kidding me?”

Feel The Bern excerpt #3: “The United States must do everything it can to make certain that Iran does not get a nuclear weapon, that a nuclear Iran does not threaten Israel, and to prevent a nuclear arms race in the region.”

Bernie baby, do you wanna incite a rebellion or line up for AIPAC money?

My edit: “Hold on a minute, why is anyone seriously listening to the country that purposely dropped atomic bombs on Japanese civilians, irradiated half the fxxxxx’ planet with subsequent nuclear tests, and is using depleted uranium weapons as we speak? Yeah, there’s a nuclear rogue nation and it’s called the United States of America! Who the fxxx do we think we are trying to pretend that anyone is safe as long as we have enough nukes to kill 20 Earths and have demonstrated the willingness, the eagerness to use ‘em? As for Israel, please don’t even get me started. Elect me and watch the unconditional military aid dwindle.”

Feel The Bern excerpt #4: “It is an outrage that in these early years of the 21st century we are seeing intolerable acts of violence being perpetuated by police, and racist terrorism by white supremacists. A growing number of communities do not trust the police and law enforcement officers have become disconnected from the communities they are sworn to protect. Violence and brutality of any kind, particularly at the hands of the police sworn to protect and serve our communities, is unacceptable and must not be tolerated. We need a societal transformation to make it clear that black lives matter, and racism cannot be accepted in a civilized country.”

I dig the BLM reference but why differentiate between “racist terrorism by white supremacists” and “intolerable acts of violence being perpetuated by police”? Regardless, dude, let’s make it more clear: There’s a huge difference between your “societal transformation” and a revolution. Let your rad flag fly!

My edit: “Violence? You wanna talk to me about fuckin’ violence? Our entire culture is founded on and maintained by violence. Talking about non-violence in 2015 America is like debating wetness as your ride the Titanic to the bottom of the goddamned ocean. What I wanna know is when the fuck are we gonna name the problem? In the United States, 85 percent of murders, 90 percent of violent assaults, 95 percent of domestic and dating violence, 95 percent of child sexual abuse, and 99.8 percent of rapes are committed by men. Elect me and my administration’s top priority will be to recognize and end Male Pattern Violence.”

That’s as far as I got. But before I do any more work, I’m reaching out to all of you to find out who can put me in touch with Bernie’s campaign. I need a job. He needs a copy editor. It’s a match made in revolutionary heaven!

FEEL THE BERN! FEEL THE BERN! FEEL THE BERN! FEEL THE BERN!

*Mickey Z. is the author of 13 books, most recently Occupy these Photos: NYC Activism Through a Radical Lens. Until the laws are changed or the power runs out, you can “like” his Facebook page here and follow his blog here.


Peru To Compensate Victims Of Forced Sterilization

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Peru’s government has ordered the creation of the Registry of Victims of Forced Sterilizations to record violations that occurred between 1995 and 2001.

The Ombudsman’s Office estimates that more than 270,000 women were sterilized against their will between 1995 and 2001, but only 2,091 have filed a complaint with the Public Ministry.

During the government of former President Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000), 346,219 women were sterilized under the Voluntary Surgical Contraception Program. However, it is unknown how many of them were subjected to forced sterilization. The program’s goal was to control the growth rate of the Peruvian population, particularly in indigenous and extremely poor areas.

Although investigations have been opened and closed four times since 1999, the struggle of women who were victims of forced sterilization has now a victory with the approval of the Justice Ministry’s Supreme Decree 006-2015-JUS — in which the Ministry of Women and Vulnerable Populations and the Ministry of Health have also responsibility — released on Nov. 6, which declared of national interest the priority attention to victims of forced sterilization during the Fujimori regime and ordered the creation of a registry of victims. The decree also mentions access to free health services as well as free public defense and mental health care.

Rute Zúñiga, president of the Association of Women Affected by Forced Sterilizations in Cusco, said that the measure “is just the beginning of what we have been asking for and what we deserve. We will pay special attention on the compliance of the decree provisions. As organized women, we demand to be taken into account in the implementation committees.”

The Peruvian representative to the Andean Parliament, Hilaria Supa, who stood by women who were victims of forced sterilization for 18 years, views the decree as “the beginning of an act of justice for thousands of women who were sterilized against their will.”

Four investigations

The denounces of the abuses committed by the Voluntary Surgical Contraception Program were made in 1997, following the first reports of Supa and the women of Anta, in Cusco. In 1998 María Mamérita Mestanza Chávez, who was surgically sterilized without her consent, died from the operation. A year later, Peruvian and international human rights organizations filed a complaint with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) against the Peruvian State because of the Mestanza case.

In 2003 Peru recognized that it had violated Mestanza’s rights to life, personal integrity and equality before the law and reached a settlement with the family of the victim, which included a series of reparations, such as financial compensation to Mestanza’s husband and children and the commitment to carry out “a thorough investigation of the case.”

As part of this commitment, in 2004 the General Attorney’s Office opened an investigation that was closed in 2009 on grounds that they had found no criminal evidence. In 2011, after the IACHR ruled that these acts constituted crimes against humanity and therefore do not have a statute of limitations, the General Attorney’s Office ordered the reopening of the investigation into the Mestanza case. But this time, the case included more than 2,000 women who were sterilized against their will who have been identified thus far. However, the investigation was stalled until 2012 when the First Criminal Prosecutor’s Office of Lima issued an order to reopen the case.

On Jan. 22, 2014, the prosecutor in charge of the investigation stated that there was no evidence suggesting that the practice was a policy ordered by Fujimori and implemented by his Health Ministers Eduardo Yong, Marino Costa and Alejandro Aguinaga. Despite the hundreds of testimonies, the prosecutor found evidence of crimes committed only by six doctors and closed the case, stating that forced sterilizations not constitute a crime against humanity.

The investigation was reopened for the fourth time in May by the Public Ministry, but this time it includes Fujimori, who since 2007 is serving a sentence of 25 years in prison for crimes against humanity and corruption, and former Ministers Yong, Costa Bauer and Aguinaga. The Second Criminal Prosecutor’s Office of Lima, led by attorney Marcelita Gutiérrez, has until January 2016 to submit its results and make the appropriate complaint with the judiciary.

“There is evidence to prosecute Fujimori for this crime against humanity, as well as [to prosecute] the Ministers of Health who carried out the plan of mass sterilization of poor women,” told María Ysabel Cedano, director of Demus-Studies for the Defense of the Rights of Women, to reporters.

South China Sea And Rising Tension In The Waters: China, US And Unintended Crisis – Analysis

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The US is planning further patrols in the South China Sea, following the USS Lassen’s successful freedom of navigation operation. Although China did not take action to confront it, the risk of an unintended crisis escalating from future patrols remains high.

By Zhang Baohui*

On October 27, 2015, USS Lassen, a guided missile destroyer, entered the 12-nautical mile zone of one of the Chinese-controlled features in the Spratly islands, which are currently going through massive land reclamation. China immediately issued strong protests against the US act. However, the Pentagon and the US Navy have stated that the so-called “freedom of navigation patrols” will become routine in the future.

Although China did not take concrete actions this time to confront the US warship, future such operations could gravely destabilise the South China Sea situation, even peace and stability of the whole region. They could touch off an unintended escalation and push the two countries towards military conflicts. The logic is quite obvious.

Dynamics of Escalation

More actions by the US Navy will corner the Chinese leadership and force them to respond to perceived provocations to its national interests and power reputation. After all, the South China Sea constitutes an essential part of China’s geostrategic interests. Moreover, China’s reputation as a great power is at stake when its key interests face a direct and deliberate challenge by another great power.

Further, China may feel the urge to stand firm in order to deter future escalation in US challenges to its interests and reputation. Chinese decision-makers may worry that if China does not respond to this perceived US provocation, Washington may escalate pressures on China in the future.

The above strategic imperatives could result in Chinese decisions and measures to resist further US naval intrusions into the 12-nautical-mile zones around its claimed islands in the Spratly chain. Indeed, on 2 November 2015, Vice Admiral Yi Xiaoguang, PLA’s Deputy Chief of Staff, stated that China “will use all means necessary to defend its sovereignty” if the US takes similar actions.

The next day, General Fang Changlong, vice president of the Central Military Commission of the Chinese Communist Party, told Admiral Harry Harris Jr. commander of the United States Pacific Command, that any future actions by the US Navy could trigger accidental escalations that harm the interests of both countries.

Chinese military’s response

Indeed, the Chinese are also escalating their actions. The PLA revealed that its air force conducted war games on 30 October in the South China Sea. Specifically, the photos released by the PLA suggest the war games involved Chinese J-11b jet fighters taking off from Woody Island, which has the closest airport to support military operations in the Spratlys chain of islands. Then, the PLA Air Force announced that it conducted a joint war game on 2 November that included a H-6k bomber launching cruise missiles in the South China Sea.

Finally, on 3 November, the PLA released rare photos of the JL-2 sea-based strategic missile, which is borne by China’s Type 094 nuclear submarines, lifting out from the sea. Chinese media analyses all suggest that the unexpected release of the photos is meant to deter the US.

Therefore, it is obvious that China has stepped up deterrence against a potential repeat of similar US operations in the South China Sea. Various Chinese rhetoric and measures suggest that China could resort to more concrete and forceful measures to confront the US navy. If so, a face-off between the two navies becomes inevitable. Even worse, the face-off may trigger an escalation toward military conflicts.

However, the US military appears oblivious to this scenario. A logical answer lies in the current conventional military imbalance between the two countries. The vast US conventional military superiority in theory discourages China from responding forcefully to the projected scenario. It is highly likely that US decision-makers assume China would adopt of policy of inaction when facing intruding American naval vessels.

Flawed US perception

This US expectation is flawed, as China is a major nuclear power. When cornered, nuclear-armed states can threaten asymmetric escalation to deter an adversary from harming its key interests. The 3 September military parade in Beijing revealed that China’s new generation of tactical missiles, such as the DF-26, can be nuclear-armed. Recent information also indicates that China’s air-launched long-range cruise missiles can also carry tactical nuclear warheads. Indeed, the latest photos of the JL-2 sea-based nuclear missile lifting out of the sea could be a veiled nuclear signaling by China to deter the US.

The challenge for the US is that while the South China Sea concerns China’s strategic interests, few would think that these Spratly islands constitute US core interests. The asymmetry in stakes would certainly give China an advantage in “the balance of resolve” over the US.

If so, when a crisis situation escalates and starts to involve potential nuclear scenarios, the US faces the stark choice of either backing down first or facing the prospect of fighting a nuclear-armed China. Neither option is attractive and both exact high costs, either in reputation or human lives, for the US.

Therefore, it would be imprudent for the US to challenge China. By underestimating Beijing’s resolve to defend its interests, reputation and deterrence credibility, this plan could touch off a spiral of escalation that would in the end harm US interests.

Need for greater consideration

What is vital for peace and stability in the South China Sea is that all concerned parties should base their strategies and policies on worst-case scenarios. Both China and the US need to consider how their actions may lead to unintended consequences, especially unintended escalation toward military conflict.

Prudence is very much needed at this stage of Sino-US relations, when mutual mistrust has reached an all-time high. Imprudent actions by one or both parties may well turn mistrust into bloody military conflicts. Nobody, especially countries in the region, wants this scenario. If the US claims to be the defender of world peace and regional stability, it must do everything to avoid this scenario through unintended escalations.

*Zhang Baohui is Professor of Political Science and Director of Centre for Asian Pacific Studies at Lingnan University in Hong Kong. He is the author of China’s Assertive Nuclear Posture: State Security in an Anarchic International Order (Routledge 2015). He contributed this to RSIS Commentary for the series on the South China Sea disputes.

Saudi Arabia FM Says Paris Attacks Violation Of All Religions

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By Rashid Hassan

United against the evil scourge of terrorism, the Kingdom on Saturday strongly denounced the heinous Paris attacks describing them as a violation of all religions.

Saudi Arabia’s Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman sent a message of condolence to President Francois Hollande.

A Foreign Ministry spokesman expressed sincere condolences on behalf of the Saudi government and people to the bereaved families, the French government and people, wishing quick recovery to those injured in the attacks.

Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir described the Paris attacks as a violation of all religions and a brutal assault that underlines the need to further up the ante against terrorism by intensifying efforts to put the evil practice in check forever.

“I express our deep condolences to the government and the people of France for the heinous terrorist attacks which are in violation and contravention of all ethics, morals and religions,” Al-Jubeir told reporters in Vienna as he arrived there for talks on ending the Syrian civil war.

The ministry spokesman pointed out that Saudi Arabia always underscored the importance of collective international efforts to combat the scourge of terrorism in all its forms and the need to root out this dangerous plague which targets global security and stability.
The Council of Senior Scholars denounced the heinous crime saying, “terrorism is contrary to the teachings of Islam and to the values of mercy it brought to the whole world.”

These terrorist attacks are strictly prohibited in Islam, it added.

Saudi Arabia has joined international efforts headed by the US to combat Daesh terrorists in Iraq and Syria, and has also worked with Washington in its battle against Al-Qaeda.

The Kingdom has itself been hit by a spate of deadly shooting and bomb attacks, many of them blamed on Daesh.

China Discovers Undersea Gold Deposit Estimated At $16.4 Billion

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A huge deposit holding at least 470 tons of gold has been discovered beneath the seabed of the East China Sea.

The largest deposit is located two kilometers below sea level in an area with estimated reserves of at least 1,500 tons of gold. It was discovered in the Laizhou city which has the largest gold reserves in China. More than 2,000 tons of gold has been found there recently.

“It’s very difficult to locate and set up the drilling platforms at sea,” said Ding Zhengjiang, the deputy director of the Shandong Provincial No. 3 Institute.

The project’s manager Zhang Junjin added that “drilling holes into underground rocks that are more than 1,000 meters deep is a big challenge while in China gold mine prospecting is normally conducted within 800 meters underground. The discovery of a gold deposit lying 2000 meters undersea provides the need for new drilling technology for future gold mining,” Zhang said.

Earlier this year Beijing proposed deep seabed mining cooperation in Indian Ocean. China said India was an ideal partner in terms of the development of deep seabed mining. Both countries are the world’s largest gold consumers.

In July China revealed a nearly 60 percent increase in gold reserves in the past six years, becoming the fifth largest holder of gold in the world.

The marine prospecting took three years, and involved over 120 kilometers of drilling, with 67 sea drilling platforms and about 1,000 drillers and geologists.

Spain: Fernando Del Paso, Winner Of 2015 Cervantes Prize

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Fernando del Paso has been awarded the 2015 Miguel de Cervantes Prize for Literature in Spanish. The jury’s decision was announced by Íñigo Méndez de Vigo, the Minister for Education, Culture and Sport during an event held at the headquarters of the Secretariat of State for Culture.

According to the minutes of the meeting, the jury awarded the prize “for his contribution to the development of the novel, combining tradition and modernity, as Cervantes did in his time. His novels take risks and recreate key episodes in the history of Mexico in a way that highlights their foundational character.”

The jury was composed of Inés Fernández-Ordóñez (chair), proposed by the Spanish Royal Academy; Juan Gelpi, representing the Puerto-Rican Academy of the Spanish Language; Pedro Manuel Cátedra, representing the Conference of Rectors of Spanish Universities (CRUE); Verónica Ormachea, representing the Union of Latin American Universities (UDUAL); Beatriz Hernanz, representing the Director of the Instituto Cervantes; Enrique Krauze, representing the Minister for Education, Culture and Sport; Oti Rodríguez Marchante, representing the Federation of Associations of Spanish Journalists (FAPE); Carmen Martina Intriago, representing the Latin American Federation of Journalists (FELAP); and Pierre Civil, representing the International Association of Hispanists.

José Pascual Marco, director general for Cultural and Book Policy and Industries, acted as secretary (with voice but no vote); and Mónica Fernández, deputy director general for Book Promotion, Reading and Spanish Literature, was records clerk (also with voice but no vote).

Biographical data

Fernando de Paso Morante (Mexico, 1935) has written non-fiction, children’s literature, fiction, poetry, theatre, etc. He studied biology and economics in the National University of Mexico, but abandoned his studies to dedicate himself to other activities. He received a grant from the Mexican Centre for Writers to complete his novel José Trigo, as well as from the Ford Foundation and the Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

He has lived outside Mexico for many years. From 1971 to 1985 he worked as producer of radio programmes, writer and announcer for the BBC in London and in Radio France Internationale in Paris. In 1986 he won the Spanish National Radio Prize for the best programme in Spanish for “Carta a Juan Rulfo” (Letter to Juan Rulfo). He was Cultural Attaché at the Embassy and Mexican Consul General in Paris. In 1992 he was appointed director of the Octavio Paz Ibero-American Library at the University of Guadalajara. Since 1996 he has been member of the Colegio Nacional (National Academy).

As a graphic artist and painter, his work has been exhibited in London, Paris, Madrid and a number of cities in the United States and Mexico.

His literary work has received numerous awards, including the Xavier Villarrutia Prize (1966) for José Trigo; the International Rómulo Gallegos Novel Prize (1982) for Palinuro de México; the Casa de las Américas prize in 1985 (Cuba); the Prix Médicis award for foreign novels (France) in 1986; the Mazatlán Literature award (1987) for Noticias del Imperio; the National Science and Arts, Linguistics and Literature award (Government of Mexico) in 1991; the FIL Latin American Literature and Caribbean Literature Award (2007); and the José Emilio Pacheco National Award for Excellence in Literature (International Yucatan Reading Fair) in 2015.

Works

Non-fiction: El coloquio de invierno (with Carlos Fuentes and Gabriel García Márquez), 1992; Yo soy hombre de letras: acceptance speech. Response by Miguel León-Portilla, 1996; Viaje alrededor del Quijote, 2004; Bajo la sombra de la historia: essays on Islam and Judaism, 2011.

Children’s literature: De la A a la Z por un poeta (with illustrations by Ignacio Junquera), 1988.

Fiction: José Trigo, 1966; Palinuro de México, 1980; Noticias del imperio, 1987; Linda 67. Historia de un crimen, 1995; Cuentos dispersos, 1999.

Poetry: Sonetos del amor y de lo diario, 1958; Paleta de diez colores (with illustrations by Vicente Rojo), 1992; PoeMar, 2004.

Theatre: Palinuro en la escalera, 1992; La loca de Miramar, 1998; La muerte se va a Granada: poema dramático en dos actos y un gran final, 1998.

Other genres: Visiones de un escritor, 1990; Douceur et passion de la cuisine mexicaine, 1991; Memoria y olvido, vida de Juan José Arreola (1920-1947) contada a Fernando del Paso, 1994; Trece Técnicas Mixtas, 1996; 2000 caras de cara al 2000, 2000; Castillos en el aire. Fragmentos y anticipaciones. Homenaje a Mauritz Cornelis Escher, 2002; El mito de dos volcanes: Popocatépetl, Iztaccíhuatl, 2005.

History of the Award

The award, with a monetary value of 125,000 euros, is an annual public testimony of admiration to the figure of a writer has helped to enrich the literary Hispanic legacy through his or her work.

The Cervantes Prize may be awarded to any author whose literary work is written totally or mostly in Spanish. Nominations for the award can be presented by the Academies of the Spanish Language; the winners from previous years; institutions that by their nature, purpose or content are linked to literature in Spanish; and members of the Jury.

The list of winners is a clear reflection of what the award means for culture in the Spanish language:

1976 Jorge Guillén

1977 Alejo Carpentier

1978 Dámaso Alonso

1979 Jorge Luis Borges y Gerardo Diego

1980 Juan Carlos Onetti

1981 Octavio Paz

1982 Luis Rosales

1983 Rafael Alberti

1984 Ernesto Sábato

1985 Gonzalo Torrente Ballester

1986 Antonio Buero Vallejo

1987 Carlos Fuentes

1988 Maria Zambrano

1989 Augusto Roa Bastos

1990 Adolfo Bioy Casares

1991 Francisco Ayala

1992 Dulce María Loynaz

1993 Miguel Delibes

1994 Mario Vargas Llosa

1995 Camilo José Cela

1996 José García Nieto

1997 Guillermo Cabrera Infante

1998 José Hierro

1999 Jorge Edwards

2000 Francisco Umbral

2001 Álvaro Mutis

2002 José Jiménez Lozano

2003 Gonzalo Rojas

2004 Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio

2005 Sergio Pitol

2006 Antonio Gamoneda

2007 Juan Gelman

2008 Juan Marsé

2009 José Emilio Pacheco

2010 Ana María Matute

2011 Nicanor Parra

2012 José Manuel Caballero Bonald

2013 Elena Poniatowska

2014 Juan Goytisolo Gay​​

Islamic State Claims Paris Attacks That Killed 129

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(RFE/RL) — French officials say 129 people were killed in Paris terrorist attacks claimed by the Islamic State (IS) extremist group.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said 352 people were injured in November 13 shootings and explosions in multiple locations in the French capital.

He added that 99 of the injured are in critical condition.

Molins also said seven “terrorists” – all wearing identical explosives belts – were killed in the attacks.

He added that three coordinated teams of gunmen struck at six different sites across Paris.

Molins said the type of explosives used by the attackers – who were wearing suicide vests – was triacetone triperoxide (TATP). TATP is a type of explosive that can be made with easily available chemicals and is difficult to detect.

The IS extremist group said in an official statement posted online November 14 that “eight brothers wearing explosive belts and carrying assault rifles” carried out the attacks.

It said the attacks were a response to insults to Islam’s prophet and air strikes in “Islamic State territory.”

The statement comes shortly after French President Francois Hollande said in a televised address that the attacks were committed by Islamic State extremists.

Calling the attacks an “act of war,” Hollande said the attacks were planned and organized from abroad with help from inside France.

The attacks are the worst terrorist attack in France’s history and the worst witnessed in Europe since the 2004 Madrid railway bombings, which claimed 191 lives.

None of the attackers has yet been publicly identified.

The Paris prosecutor said one of the attackers was born in France.

Molins also said a French national was among three people linked to the Paris attacks arrested at the Belgian border in the morning on November 14.

He said a different suicide attacker identified by a Syrian passport found near his body at the national stadium was not known to French intelligence services.

Greek officials say two men who French police are seeking to trace in connection with the attacks registered as refugees in Greece earlier this year.

“The holder of the passport passed through the island of Leros on October 3, 2015, where he was identified according to EU rules,” said Greece’s deputy minister in charge of police, Nikos Toscas.

A Greek police source was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying the second man had also registered in Greece, with TV station Mega adding this was also on Leros in August.

Over 800,000 people have crossed the Mediterranean to Europe this year, with over 3,400 dying in the process.

In Belgium, authorities said on November 14 they have made several arrests linked to the attacks in Paris.

Justice Minister Koen Geens said the arrests came after a car with Belgian license plates was seen close to the Bataclan theater late on November 13.

He said it was a rental vehicle and police organized several raids in the St. Jans Molenbeek neighborhood in Brussels on November 14.

The LA Times has quoted U.S. law enforcement officials with knowledge of the French investigation, as saying that the attack was seemingly planned in Belgium.

The newspaper wrote that the Paris attacks “apparently began with a small extremist cell in Brussels, where French authorities believe the attacks were planned and the operation financed.”

German officials say a man arrested in Germany’s southern state of Bavaria in early November after guns and explosives were found in his car may be linked to the Paris attacks.

“There are reasonable grounds for presuming that it might be related to the matter,” Bavaria’s state premier, Horst Seehofer, said on November 14.

At the scene of the worst carnage, the gunmen entered the Bataclan concert hall as it was hosting an American rock band and held dozens of the some 1,500 concertgoers there hostage as they went on a shooting spree.

Paris city officials told media that at least 89 people were killed in the concert hall.

Eyewitnesses present in the hall during the attacks said the gunmen, some shouting “God is greatest” in Arabic, systematically shot dead hostages as the music fans tried to hide.

Some victims were killed when the militants set off their suicide vests as the hall was stormed by elite French forces, who managed to shoot and kill one of the attackers before he set off his suicide bomb belt.

There was also an apparent double suicide bombing north of the center of the city near the Stade de France national stadium, where Germany and France were playing a friendly soccer match.

Hollande, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier were evacuated from the soccer match.

There were also attacks on three restaurants, including one where gunmen opened fire on patrons sitting at an outdoor terrace.

Hollande has vowed to be ruthless with any attackers and accomplices who remained alive.

Calling the attacks an “abomination” and “barbarism,” he vowed: “We will lead the fight. We will be merciless.”

Hollande declared a state of emergency and said he had closed the country’s borders. Some 1,500 French soldiers were deployed in Paris.

France is to observe three days of official mourning.

Meanwhile, people have been gathering around the world to mourn for the victims of attacks, holding candlelit vigils, singing the French national anthem, and leaving flowers and messages at French embassies across the globe.

National landmarks were lit up in the French Tricolore, including in Australia, China, the United States, and across many European cities.

​International Condemnation

World leaders are condemning the attacks.

U.S. President Barack Obama called the November 13 attacks “an attack on all of humanity and the universal values we share.”

British Prime Minister David Cameron vowed that “we will do whatever we can to help.”

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said the attacks were a call to unite against extremism.

“The Paris tragedy requires of us all to unite in the fight against extremism, to bring a strong answer to terrorists’ actions,” Medvedev said in a statement published on the government’s website.

Chinese President Xi Jinping condemned “in the strongest ways this barbarous act.”

Iranian President Hassan Rohani branded the attacks “crimes against humanity” as Tehran announced he would postpone a scheduled trip to Paris this weekend because of them.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who announced the cancellation to Iranian news media, did not say when the trip would be rescheduled.

Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah tweeted that “these brutal, barbaric & coward attacks show that terrorists have no religion…. Global efforts must eliminate terrorism.”

And the head of Sunni Islam’s leading seat of learning, Cairo’s Al-Azhar, condemned the attacks as “hateful.”

“We denounce this hateful incident,” Ahmad al-Tayyeb told a conference in comments broadcast by Egyptian state television.

‘The French 911’: Three Lessons For Future In Eurasia – OpEd

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Less than 24 hours have elapsed from the horrific terrorist attacks in Paris, and many questions about it remain unanswered, but commentators in many countries, including the post-Soviet states, are already calling it “the French 911,” thus drawing parallels with the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

This analogy with the September 11 attacks suggests three important lessons that event has offered. First, there will be a diversion of attention from current conflicts to the one between civilization and barbarism, with widespread agreement that security issues must trump all others until that battle is somehow over.

Second, as a result, there will be created both within countries and among countries new classes of winners and losers, with unexpected alliances being formed and policies changed, all of which will appear to mark a permanent sea change in the domestic politics and world order that existed before yesterday.

And third, both of these changes will attenuate with time, some very quickly and others more slowly, with old divisions again both within and among these countries and the world re-emerging sometimes in heightened form precisely because these divisions will have been submerged and ignored for a time.

Below is a list of the some of the most obvious specific lessons each of these three more general ones provide for Eurasia:

New Priorities and New Alliances

  1. Vladimir Putin will certainly take the lead in insisting that the world must focus all its energies on fighting terrorism and thus overcome divisions on “lesser” issues like the Russian invasion of Ukraine and use of force more generally. Indeed, the Kremlin leader will insist in the coming days that his approach based on the use of force is more promising than any other.
  1. Authoritarian regimes, including Putin’s, will argue that the terrorist threat is so great that they are justified in taking “unprecedented” measures to combat it and that other countries should accept that instead of criticizing them for violations of human rights and other thuggish behavior.
  1. These two things in turn will divide current alliances in Eurasia and the West, leading to the formation of new alliances based predicated on “a new war on terror.” These alliances will cut across existing ones, weakening some of them to the benefit of some but not to that of all.

New Winners and New Losers

  1. Ukraine will obviously be the big loser in the short term because this terrorist attack and “a new war on terrorism” that is likely to follow will ensure that there will be less attention devoted to Russian aggression there and Ukraine’s problems and less willingness to oppose the new “ally” in this war, the Russian Federation.
  1. When there is a terrorist attack, many will rally to the banner of those who insist that the only way to combat it is to use massive force. Putin’s use of force at home and abroad and that of other authoritarian regimes in Eurasia and elsewhere will thus gain them support.
  1. Because many are blaming France’s traditional policy of tolerance and the influx of Muslim migrants as having created the conditions for this terrorist outrage, there will be a further swing in public opinion against migration and for a tighter and more nativist approach in many countries. That will lead to increased border controls, more xenophobia, and fewer jobs for those coming in. In the case of the post-Soviet space, that will leave those countries which rely on transfer payments from their gastarbeiters in Russia – Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan in particular – in a far worse position.

The Attenuation of Each over Time

  1. Each of these developments will look like a permanent change to many, but history suggests that all the problems that these countries have now have somehow been submerged in a common struggle will more or less quickly reemerge. The Ukrainian crisis will not disappear but rather reemerge with new force but in possibly new forms as Moscow, Kyiv and the West jockey for positions.
  1. The reliance on force alone, always the first choice of officials and populations in response to such attacks, will quickly backfire. Countries without democratic forms of governance will face more radical challenges at home. Indeed, their very reliance on force will make them into seedbeds of radicalism. Ultimately, an ideological challenge is defeated only by another more attractive ideology. And it is going to be hard to find and even harder to maintain common ground between authoritarian regimes and democratic ones, however much short-term perspective and “realist” arguments suggest otherwise.
  1. Moreover and most disturbing, this “French 911” is unlikely to be the last in the current age of terrorism; and future terrorist incidents including quite possibly in Eurasia are likely to lead to further rearrangements of the international system.

No More War On Terror, Please: Europe Urgently Needs Denazification – OpEd

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There is a claim constantly circulating the EU: ‘multiculturalism is dead in Europe’. Dead or maybe d(r)ead?… That much comes from a cluster of European nation-states that love to romanticize – in a grand metanarrative of dogmatic universalism – their appearance as of the coherent Union, as if they themselves lived a long, cordial and credible history of multiculturalism. Hence, this claim and its resonating debate is of course false. It is also cynical because it is purposely deceiving. No wonder, as the conglomerate of nation-states/EU has silently handed over one of its most important debates – that of European anti-fascistic identity, or otherness – to the wing-parties. This was repeatedly followed by the selective and contra-productive foreign policy actions of the Union.

Paris shootings, terrible beyond comprehension, will reload and overheat those debates. However, these debates are ill conceived, resting from the start on completely wrong and misleading premises. Terrorism, terror, terrorism!! – But, terror is a tactics, not an ideology. How can one conduct and win war on tactics? – it is an oxymoron. (In that case, only to win are larger budgets for the homeland security apparatus on expenses of our freedoms and liberties, like so many times before.) The January assassins in the Parisian Satirical Magazine (and subsequent hostage crises) as well as these of bloody Friday of November are Islamofascists. The fact that these individuals are (again) allegedly of Arab-Muslim origins and seemingly clero-indoctrinated does not make them less fascists, less European, nor does it abolish Europe from the main responsibility in this case. How do we define that challenge will answer us whether we live the real democracy or are blinded by the formal one.

Fascism and its evil twin, Nazism are 100% European ideologies. Neo-Nazism also originates from and lately unchecked blossoms, primarily in Europe. Some would say of today; an über-economy in the center of continent, surrounded from all sides by the recuperating neo-fascism.
(How else to explain that the post-WWII come-and-help-our-recovery slogan Gastarbeiter willkommen became an Auslander Raus roar in a matter of only two decades. Suddenly, our national purifiers extensively shout ‘stop überfremdung of EU, we need de-ciganization’ of our societies, as if it historically does not always end up in one and only possible way– self-barbarization. In response, the socially marginalized and ghettoized ‘foreigners’ are calling for the creation of gastarbeiterpartie. Indeed, the first political parties of foreigners are already created in Austria, with similar calls in Germany, France and the Netherlands. Their natural coalition partner would never be any of the main political parties. We should know by now, how the diverting of the mounting socio-economic discontent and generational disfranchising through ethno engineering will end up, don’t we?)

The Old continent tried to amortize its deepening economic and demographic contraction by a constant interference on its peripheries, especially meddling on the Balkans, Black Sea/Cau-casus and MENA (Middle East–North Africa). What is now an epilogue? A severe democratic recession. Whom to blame for this structural, lasting civilizational retreat that Europe suffers? Is it accurate or only convenient to accuse a bunch of useful idiots for returning home with the combative behavior, equipped with the European guns and homegrown anger of the misused?

* * * * *

My voice was just one of the many that included notables like Umberto Eco, Bono Vox and Kishore Mahbubani –foster moderation and dialogue, encourage forces of toleration, wisdom and understanding, stop supporting and promoting ethno-fascism in the former Yugoslavia and Ukraine. These advices were and are still ridiculed and silenced, or in the best case, ignored. Conversely, what the EU constantly nurtured and cherished with its councils, boots and humanitarian aid starting from Bosnia 25 years ago, Middle East, until the present day Ukraine was less of a constructive strategic engagement and lasting-compromise, but more of a history-rewriting, cult of death, destruction, partition, exclusion and fascism.1

(Some of the most notorious regimes on this planet are extensively advertised and glorified all throughout the EU– including its biggest sports events and the most popular sports. No matter, that one of these hereditary theocracies considers as a serious criminal offence– brutally coercing like European Nazis did in 1930s – if the prescribed state religion is not obeyed as the only existing one). On the other side, European temple of multiculturalism – Sarajevo, was barbarically sieged and bombed for 1,000 days – all that just a one-hour flight from Brussels. Still, 20 years after falling a victim of unthinkable genocide, Bosnia remains the only UN member state in the world that does not exercise its sovereignty. It is administratively occupied by the opaque and retrograde international bureaucracy – predominantly overpaid European apparatchiks that institutionalized segregation in this, victimized then criminalized, country.

Illuminating cradles of multiculturalism – some of the brightest verticals of entire human civilization such as Jerusalem, Bagdad and Damascus still suffer unbearable horrors of externally induced, rather ahistorical destruction, hatred and perpetuated purges. With such a dismal ‘export’ record, universal claim of the European political system or even its historic perspective does not hold water anymore.

Europe still defies the obvious. There is no lasting peace at home if the neighborhood remains restless. Ask Americans living at the Mexican border, or Turks next to Syria. The horrific Paris massacre (and related shootouts that did not fade away even days after the initial assault last time in January, as it might be unfortunately the case this time, too) is yet another a painful reminder of how much the EU has already isolated itself. For unreasonably long, Europe promoted in the Middle East and Africa everything but the stability and prosperity of its own post-WWII socio-economic model. No wonder that today, instead of blossoming neighborhood, the EU is encircled by the ring of politico-military instability and socio-economic despair – from Ukraine, Balkans to MENA, and countless refuges pouring from there. (How many times is history to repeat itself? – The colonial overstretch/economic chauvinism, yesterday abroad – means a moral overkill, today at home. In this context, one should understand also the recently released Oxfam study ‘Wealth: Having it All and Wanting More’, /January, 2015/. It documents into a detail, all the enormous wealth accumulation on the side of 1%, as well as the further acceleration of wealth gap. Rather mistakenly, many would consider 99% as a principal victim, although 99% themselves are primarily, sustained and for years, responsible for this cleavage by ignoring and silencing it.)

As the saying goes, when there is no opportunity, give at least a lame hope. That is what Europe keenly helped with in the Middle East: The very type of Islam Europe supported in the Middle East yesterday, is the version of Islam (or better to say, fascism), we are getting today in the Christian Europe as well as in the Christian neighborhoods of Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.

Thus, in response to the Balkans, MENA and Ukraine crises, the EU repeatedly failed to keep up a broad, single-voiced consolidated agenda and all-participatory basis with its strategic neighborhood. The EU missed it all – although having institutions, WWII-memory, interest and credibility to prevent mistakes – as it did wrong before at home; by silently handing over one of its most important questions, that of European identity, anti-fascism and otherness, to escapist anti-politics (politics in retreat) dressed up in the Western European wing-parties. (It leads the so-called western democracies into the deadlock of perpetuated cycles of voters’ frustrations: elect and regret, vote against and regret, re-elect and regret again… A path of an ongoing trivialization of our socio-political contents or formalization of substantive democracy.)

Eventually, the ‘last world’s cosmopolitan’ – as the EU is often self-portrayed – compromised its own perspectives and discredited its own transformative power’s principle. The 2012 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, EU did so by undermining its own institutional framework: the Nurnberg principles and firm antifascist legacy (UN and CoE), Barcelona Process as the specialized segment of from-Morocco-to-Russia European Neighborhood Policy (EU) and the Euro-Med partnership (OSCE).

The only direct involvement of the continent was ranging between a selective diplomatic de-legitimization, satanization in media, false-flag or proxy assaults, and punitive military engagements via the Atlantic-Central Europe-led coalition of the willing (the Balkans, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Ukraine).2 This naturally results in a massive influx of refugees, a consequence to which Europeans usually respond by criminalizing migrations and penalising the immigrants’ way of life. Confrontational nostalgia prevailed again over both that is essential for any viable future: dialog (instruments) and consensus (institutions).

The consequences are rather striking and worth of stating once more: The sort of Islam that the EU supported (and the means deployed to do so) in the Middle East yesterday, is the sort of Islam (and the means it uses) that Europe gets today. Small wonder, that Islam in Turkey3 (or in Kirgizstan and in Indonesia) is broad, liberal and tolerant while the one in Atlantic-Central Europe is a brutally dismissive, narrow and vindictively assertive.
Our urgent task – if we are any serious about Europe– is denazification. Not a one-time event, but a lasting process. Let’s start from Bosnia, Ukraine and Paris at once.

Post scriptum:

Back in November 2011, reflecting on the tragic events from Norway, I wrote for the Oslo’s Nordic Page the following: “No doubt, just as the cyber-autistic McFB way of life is the same in any European and Middle Eastern city, so are the radical, wing politics! Have you spotted any critical difference between the rhetoric of Norwegian serial killer Breivik and the Al Qaida Wahhabi ‘Islamists’? ‘Just like Jihadi warriors are the plum tree of Ummah, we will be the plum tree for Europe and for Christianity’– many news agencies reported these as words allegedly written by the Christian Jihadist Anders Behring.4 The European (rightwing) parties opposing e.g. Muslim immigration are nothing but the mirror image of the MENA’s Islamist parties. In both cases, there are: (i) Socio-political outsiders (without much of any coherence, integrity and autonomy) that are denouncing the main, status quo, parties as a ‘corrupt establishment’; (ii) Extensively exploiting domestic economic shortcomings (e.g. unemployment, social inequalities, etc.), but they themselves do nothing essential to reverse the trend; (iii) Making ethnic and religious appeals (preaching the return to tradition), attacking foreign influences in their societies and otherwise ‘culturally purifying’ population; (iv) Generally doing better in local rather than in national elections (the ‘Rightists’ win on the national elections only when no other effective alternative exists to challenge the governing party/coalition block); (v) More emotionally charged populist movements than serious political parties of the solid socio-economic and socio-political program (per definition, these parties have very poor governing score).”

How many more have to die before we accept and acknowledge the inevitable – Denazification process is urgently needed in Europe!

Notes:
1. Lasting conflicts in the multireligious and multinational countries nobody can win. Therefore, the severity and length of atrocities as well as the magnitude of suffering of civilians in the former Yugoslavia, Iraq, Libya, Syria and Ukraine are meaningless from the military or any logical point of you, unless the very objective is something else. What if war is used as an instrument of mass torture, not for a geostrategic advancement but for a social reengineering, e.g. Nazification? The conduct is as follows: (i) destabilized central authority; (ii) systematic and prolonged sectarian violence to the point of ‘we cannot forgive, we cannot live together anymore’; (iii) partition, hysteria, further atomization; (iv) ethno-fascism; (v) permanently dysfunctional government, easily controllable on remote control.
2. It is worth to recall my warnings against destruction of the most successful African state, one of the very few MENA countries that generously offered a universal health, universal schooling and universal housing to its citizens and permanent residents. This is my voice from autumn 2011: “To conclude with the Huntingtonian Clash of Civilizations wisdom: When the predominantly Christian air-force is bombing a predominantly Muslim country for 4 consecutive months and keeps doing so all throughout the ‘Muslim Christmas’ – the holy fasting month of Ramadan and Eid-ul-Fitr – it surely will not help to maintain secularism and introduce democratization locally, nor will it assist the war against Islamist radicals regionally… The nomadic tribes that got its first nationhood in 1951, and were effectively united only under Gaddafi, have finally managed to overthrow the only indigenous governing structure they have ever experienced. It has been done after nearly six months of armed struggle and with the help of over 7,000 NATO air-raids deployed against their own country and the properties built for generations. Deliberately or not, the current momentum of Libya– with the infrastructure devastated, police force dismantled, properties plundered, and the streets full of civilians (of minor and older ages, but some with the previous criminal prison dossiers, sporadic racist killers or looters) of many nationalities, armed with long guns (including the air-defence mobile rockets) without any visible command – does not create a context for any political debate or any promising future. With its social cohesion brutally fractured, and society deeply traumatized, Libya may sink into the limbo and a lasting, bloody interregnum.” (Bajrektarevic, A. (2011), Libya – The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Africa, Addleton
3. While the cacophony of European contradictions works more on a self-elimination of the EU from the region, Turkey tries to reinsert itself. The so-called neo-Ottomanism of the current (Anatolian, eastern rural power-base) government steers the country right into the centre of grand bargaining for both Russia and for the US. To this emerging triangular constellation, President Erdoğan and its PM Davatoglu wishes to appoint its own rhythm. Past the ‘Arab Spring’, neither will Russia effectively sustain its presence in the Middle East on a strict pan-Arabic secular, republican and anti-Islamic idea, nor will the US manage to politically and morally justify its backing off of the absolutistic monarchies energized by the backward, dismissive and oppressive Wahhabism. Ankara tries to sublimate both effectively: enough of a secular republican modernity and enough of a traditional, tolerant and emancipating Islam, and to broadcast it as an attractive future model across the Middle East. Simply, Bosporus wakes itself up as an empiric proof that the Islam and modernity goes together. In fact, it is the last European nation that still has both demographic and economic growth. Moreover, Ataturk’s Republic is by large and by far the world’s most successful Muslim state: It was never resting its development on oil or other primary-commodity exports, but on a vibrant socio-economic sector and solid democratic institutions. This is heavily contesting, not only for Russia, but primarily for the insecure regime of the House of Saud (and other GCC autocracies), which rules by the direct royal decree over a country of recent past, oil-export dependent and fizzing presence and improbable future. No wonder that on the ideological battlefield, the two belligerent parties will be dominating the Middle East, which is currently in self-questioning, struggling past yet another round of hardships. The outcome will be significantly beyond the Arab world, and will reverberate all across the Sunni Muslim world. Ankara is attempting to justify that the Saudi-promoted Islam is actually a toxic, separatist/sectarian Wahhabistic ideology that self-constrains Muslims, and keeps them on a wrong side of history by hindering their socio-economic and political development. It does so, Turkey claims, by holding Muslims on a permanent collision course with the rest of the world, while Turkey-promoted Islam is not a weaponized ideology, but a Modus Vivendi, which permits progress and is acceptable for all (including the non-Muslims), with the centuries-long history of success.
4. Tim Lister Europe’s resurgent far right focuses on immigration, multiculturalism, CNN (July 24, 2011).

Who Would Dr. Ben Kill? – OpEd

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GOP Presidential candidate and retired neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson is unafraid to wear his Christian values on his sleeve. Indeed he has rocketed to frontrunner status on the strength of his popularity with Evangelical Christians in the US. But thanks to Lew Rockwell for pointing out the shocking anti-Christian core of Ben Carson’s “Christianity.” Carson rips to shreds a central component of the ancient Christian “Just War” theory: the idea of distinction once war has begun (Jus in bello).

According to centuries of thinking on the Christian conduct of war, the warring parties must make a distinction between legitimate military targets and non-combatants caught up in the conflict through no fault of their own. Christians are not to support the wholesale slaughter of civilian non-combatants regardless of their religious beliefs, skin color, customs, or nationality.

Dr. Carson, who is strongly opposed to killing American babies inside the womb, just as strongly supports killing the same innocent babies once they are out of the womb — as long as they are foreigners.

Dr. Carson believes that it is intolerable “political correctness” that “dictates we cannot kill innocent women and children” who get in the way of “destroying the enemy.”

The US should have completely annihilated the Iraqi city of Fallujah, Carson asserts, because “if the terrorists were foolish enough to choose to remain and to keep people from leaving, any ensuing deaths would clearly be their responsibility.” This despite the fact that the US had no legal or moral right to attack Iraq in the first place — a point that is no doubt lost on Carson.

This is the moral compass of the presidential candidate championed by millions of American Christians? God help us.

This article was published by the RonPaul Institute.

Poland To Refuse To Relocate Migrants After Paris Attacks

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(EurActiv) — Poland cannot accept migrants under European Union (EU) quotas after the attacks in Paris, Poland’s European affairs minister designate Konrad Szymański said today (14 November), in a sign that Friday’s assault may seriously undermine EU refugee policy.

In a commentary published in the right-leaning news portal wPolityce.pl, Szymański said his incoming government did not agree with Poland’s commitment to accept its share of an EU-wide relocation of immigrants, and now, “in the face of the tragic acts in Paris, we do not see the political possibilities to implement (this).”

“The (EU Council) decision is valid for all EU countries, but its implementation is very hard to imagine today,” Szymański said in a separate interview for RMF FM radio. “We have to wait for the EU Court of Justice, for Brussel’s reaction.”

Szymański will take up his position on Monday as part of a government formed by last month’s election winner, the conservative and eurosceptic Law and Justice (PiS) party.

In September, Poland broke ranks with its ex-communist partners from the ‘Visegrad group’ – Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia – by backing a European Union plan to share out 120,000 refugees across the 28-nation bloc.

Under the plan, agreed by the outgoing centre-right, pro-EU government, Poland was to take in 4,500 refugees, adding to some 2,000 it has already accepted.

The migrant crisis was a key issue in the election campaign, with PiS strongly critical of the government’s decision.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attacks in Paris in which at least 127 people were killed. French President Francois Hollande deemed the attacks an act of war.

Poland’s incoming Prime Minister Beata Szydlo lit a candle at the French Institute in the southern city of Cracow. At a briefing she refused to comment on the migrant issue, adding that she and her government will do everything “for the Polish nation to feel safe.”

‘France Has Never Seemed So Close’, Says Swiss President Sommaruga

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By Thomas Stephens

Shocked and angry, Swiss President Simonetta Sommaruga has expressed her condolences and support for France after Islamic State terrorists killed at least 127 people in Paris on Friday night.

“Such attacks are attacks on the fundamental values of our society,” she said on Saturday. “What is needed now is solidarity with those who have lost friends and family and cooperation with the French authorities. In such moments people have to stand together.”

Four gunmen systematically slaughtered at least 87 young people at a rock concert at the Bataclan concert hall, according to a Paris city hall official. Anti-terrorist commandos eventually launched an assault on the building. The gunmen detonated explosive belts and dozens of shocked survivors were rescued, while bodies were still being removed on Saturday morning.

Some 40 more people were killed in five other attacks in the Paris region, the official said, including an apparent double suicide bombing outside the Stade de France national stadium, where Hollande and the German foreign minister were watching a friendly football international. Some 200 people were injured.

There are no indications that any Swiss are among the victims, according to the foreign ministry. Almost 200,000 Swiss live in France, the largest community of Swiss abroad.

The government said on Saturday that the Swiss security forces were on higher alert and that the Federal Office of Police (Fedpol), the National Intelligence Agency and the Swiss Customs Administration were working closely with the French authorities to determine whether there was a Swiss connection to the attacks.

‘Carnage’

French newspapers spoke of “carnage” and “horror” at the country’s deadliest peacetime attacks. Le Figaro’s headline said: “The war in the heart of Paris” on a black background with a picture of people being evacuated on stretchers.

In Switzerland, Le Temps in Geneva noted in an editorial that the attacks had changed in form and nature since January, when 18 people were killed in attacks on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper and a kosher supermarket in Paris.

“The bloody terrorists went for the man on the street, making no distinction between people, in order to sow real carnage at the heart of the French capital,” the paper wrote on its website on Saturday morning.

“The images broadcast on television since last night show scenes of war three hours by train from Switzerland. We know the streets, we’re worried about friends and family either living in Paris or just visiting for a few days. France has never seemed so close. Our fellow humans, our brothers and sisters have fallen under bullets.”

The paper said the terrorists “want to destroy not only such fragile humans but also our way of living together. They are sowing chaos to destroy democracy”.

Le Temps concluded: “Now is the time for unity among everyone who believes in democracy, among everyone of good will around the world and in a position of political power. In these terrible hours for France, when the state of emergency has been decreed, when the army has been mobilised in the capital, we are all French.”

“The French capital turned into a battlefield on Friday evening,” wrote the Neue Zürcher Zeitung online.

“All signs point to a meticulously planned attack. During the attack on the Bataclan one of the men is said to have shouted ‘Allah is great’. A witness added that the attackers justified their action with France’s military involvement in Syria. The man reportedly said: ‘This is Hollande’s fault. This is your president’s fault. He shouldn’t have intervened in Syria’. The attacks are being celebrated by supporters of the terrorist group IS.”

Swiss measures

Sommaruga told Swiss public radio, SRF, that Paris was in shock but Switzerland was too, adding she felt not only immense sadness but also immense anger.

She pointed out that there was no such thing as 100% security. “That will now be a challenge for us: security is a precious asset – perhaps even the most precious asset. Without security things get difficult,” she said.

Sommaruga underlined that Switzerland had not been doing nothing but she admitted that “now we will certainly have to re-analyse the situation and see whether additional measures are necessary.” She said that in this respect cooperation with Interpol, Europol and the intelligence services were central.

Fedpol director Nicoletta della Valle said border checks on the border with France had been tightened in some places, although systematic checks were currently not necessary.

Stefan Blättler, president of the conference of police chiefs, said there would be an increased presence of police at airports, train stations, in trains and around diplomatic buildings in Bern, Geneva and Zurich.

Islamic State claim responsibility

On Saturday Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attacks, which it said in a statement were designed to show France would remain a top target for the jihadist group as long as the country continued its current policies.

The coordinated assault came as France, a founder member of the US-led coalition waging air strikes against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, was on high alert for terrorist attacks ahead of a global climate conference due to open later this month.

Paris is expected to host 80 heads of state, including US President Barack Obama, in two weeks. In June, France is to scheduled to host the European football championships – with the Stade de France a major venue.

Also, Paris-based UNESCO is expecting world leaders on Monday for a forum about overcoming extremism. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani pulled out because of Friday’s attacks. Hollande cancelled a planned trip to this weekend’s G-20 summit in Turkey.

“Faced with war, the country must take appropriate action,” he said, without saying what that meant. Hollande said he would address parliament on Monday in an extraordinary meeting and the country would observe three days of official mourning.

Foreign reaction

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned “the despicable terrorist attacks” in Paris. The UN Security Council also condemned “the barbaric and cowardly terrorist attacks” and underlined the need to bring the perpetrators of “these terrorist acts to justice”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she was “deeply shaken by the news and pictures that are reaching us from Paris”.

In a telegram to President Hollande, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the attacks were “the latest testimonial to the barbaric essence of terrorism which throws down a challenge to human civilisation”.

“It’s obvious that an effective fight against this evil demands a real unity of the forces of the international community. I would like to confirm the readiness of Russia for the closest cooperation with our French partners in investigating the crime that took place in Paris,” he wrote.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said China was “deeply shocked” by the attacks and pledged solidarity with France in combating terrorism. “Terrorism is a common challenge facing humanity. China resolutely supports France in maintaining its national security and stability and in attacking terrorism,” Hong said.

President Obama called the attacks on Paris an “outrageous attempt to terrorise innocent civilians” and vowed to do whatever it takes to help bring the perpetrators to justice.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, Obama called the attacks a “heartbreaking situation” and an “attack on all of humanity”.

Paris Attacks: Passport Found By Gunman’s Body Belonged To Syrian Who Passed Through Greek Island

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The owner of a Syrian passport found near the body of one of the Paris gunmen had passed through the Greek island of Leros last month, the Greek deputy police minister has said.

Nikos Toscas said he did not know if the passport had been check by countries the holder may have passed on his way to France.

A Greek police source said French authorities had asked other countries in Europe to check on the passport.

Original article

Modi’s UK Visit A Success – OpEd

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Narendra Modi has done it again. He was able to rally thousands of supporters in his latest trip outside India. This time it was in the UK.

Modi is the third in a string of controversial state leaders hosted by Britain in the past two months, following Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit last month and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s stay in September.

Modi is the first Indian prime minister to visit the UK since 2006, and his visit has polarized opinion among British politicians and the Indian diaspora.

In 2002, an alleged arson attack on a train in Gujarat province, where Modi was chief minister, killed some Hindu pilgrims and sparked anti-Muslim pogroms. Estimates vary, but over the following few months, nearly 2,000 Muslims were killed by Hindus. Women were raped, mosques destroyed and bodies dumped into mass graves.

Modi was accused of not only turning a blind eye to the killings but also of being implicitly involved in this genocidal attacks against minority Muslims in his state. The UK, US and EU swiftly cut off diplomatic relations with him.

A decade later, India’s Supreme Court cleared Modi of complicity in the killings – a ruling challenged by some Indian Muslims – but criticized him for showing a lack of remorse for the tragedy. Soon after the court ruling, the ban on Modi visiting the UK was lifted in 2012.

Modi is now the prime minister of India, the largest illiberal democracy in the world. He has made clever use of social media to promote his rise in popularity, both at home and abroad. He was the first Indian politician to open a Twitter account and now has nearly 16 million followers, making him the second most followed politician after US President Barack Obama.

Modi is very popular amongst many diaspora Indians living outside India, who have increasingly become backers of the Hindutvadi fascist ideology, advocated by the BJP, Modi’s party. These fascist sympathizers want India to be a state for Hindus only, and not any other minorities.

Already measures are taking place all across India to marginalize Muslim minorities economically, socially and politically. Christian churches and Muslim mosques are routinely attacked and false cases are filed to take possession of such places of worship unless they could be razed to the ground Babri-masjid style.

The slaughter of cows has been banned in many Indian states, and even the traders in this business have faced coordinated attacks from Hindutvadi fascists inside India. Haryana, which made sale of beef a non-bailable offence a few days after Maharashtra in March this year, is the 13th such state.  In March 2015, Maharashtra government extended its ban on cow slaughter to bullocks. As bulls are the main source for hides, this has caused a severe shortage in the leather market. Ninety-eight tanneries closed in Kanpur alone. In Maharashtra, the leather business is said to have gone down by nearly 90% after the state extended the ban on cow slaughter to bullocks in March this year.  Businessmen running tanneries say that Gujarat and Maharashtra, both important coastal states, are not even letting containers of imported hides and other raw, semi-processed leather material pass through easily. This has resulted in huge cost overruns.

A total of 3,000 tanneries are estimated to be running in Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Punjab, besides Kanpur, which is the leather hub of India. Together, they export roughly Rs 10,000 crore worth of processed leather from India. This market was estimated to double by 2020.

In its effort to protect cows, the BJP has potentially delivered a death knell to India’s leather industry.

Lately, there are much talk about stopping the leather and tannery industry all across India, which is mostly run by many Muslims. Already, as many as 1.5 lakh people have lost their jobs in this period. All these measures are taking place to economically ruin Indian Muslims, creating an environment in which they would be forced to leave their homeland for an uncertain future.

It goes without saying that Modi remains a highly controversial political figure in our time. In July, 39 British MPs signed an Early Day Motion calling on Prime Minister David Cameron to raise human rights concerns with Modi during his visit. Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn is a supporter of the motion. It calls for the release of Indian political prisoners, several of whom are on hunger strike, draws attention to human rights abuses in Kashmir, and criticizes the Indian government’s ban on the BBC documentary “India’s Daughter,” which covers the gang rape and murder of a young woman in Delhi.

Modi also faces condemnation for stopping Greenpeace activist Priya Pillai from coming to Britain as she was about to board her plane. Pillai was on her way to brief MPs on her work.

In 2013, Corbyn called on the-then coalition government to reinstate a ban on Modi entering the UK. However, the leader of the opposition recently announced his plans to meet with the Indian leader privately on Saturday to discuss human rights.

Over 200 prominent authors including Rushdie had asked Prime Minister Cameron in a letter to raise the issue of “rising climate of fear” and “growing intolerance” in India with Modi. Booker Prize winner Rushdie, recent Booker prize shortlisted British-Indian author Neel Mukherjee and other well-known names like Ian McEwan and Hari Kunzru were among the signatories of the open letter to Cameron.

Modi’s visit to UK was organized by Europe India Forum in partnership with 450 organizations, many of which are owned and/or run by rich Hindutvadis.

On Friday afternoon, Modi addressed some 60,000 people – almost all British Indians – at a grand reception entitled: “Two Great Nations. One Glorious Future” in Wembley Arena. As it has happened before with Modi’s visit in New York City, and thanks to the rich supporters of the BJP within the diaspora community, there were unmistakable signs of the ‘Modi-mania’ with a huge display of fireworks, which coincided with the Hindu cultural event Diwali.

Not all British Indians were happy with Modi’s visit though.

On November 8, Awaaz Network activists projected a picture of the Indian prime minister alongside a swastika onto the Houses of Parliament, angering Modi supporters around the world. The Awaaz Network is an alliance of organizations involved in the #ModiNotWelcome campaign. It includes the groups Sikh Federation UK, Caste Watch UK, Southall Black Sisters, Indian Muslim Federation and Voice of Dalit International.

More than 800 protesters, community members and women’s rights groups gathered outside 10 Downing Street and opposite the Houses of Parliament on Thursday. As reported by Al Jazeera, the chants of “Free Palestine” could be heard among others, such as “Modi is a terrorist.” “We are at this demonstration today to protest against Modi and the Indian government for their illegal occupation of Kashmir and the massacre of our people,” said Najib Afsar, the chief coordinator for Jammu Kashmir Liberation Council.

Sikh protester Mindy Kawr said, “Modi’s government is treating us like second-class citizens. They’re not recognizing the Sikhs; they say there’s no such thing as Sikhs.” She said, “We want justice and we want people to know that what happened was genocide.”

Nepali protesters Santosh Kharel and Rakash Sapkota were there to protest against what they see as a blockade of Nepal by the Indian government. “Nepalis have suffered from an earthquake recently and now they are suffering more with Modi’s blockades,” explained Kharel. “We are here to protest against him and his and his government’s attitudes towards us.”

By any measure, Modi’s trip was a successful one. Prince William and Kate’s Kensington Palace office said on Friday that the royal couple would make their first visit to India in spring 2016.

Cameron and Modi announced more than 20 business deals worth $13.7bn between the two countries following their meeting on Thursday, including a two billion pound ($3bn) British investment in solar power in India, and more than one billion ($1.5bn) worth of London-issued bonds to finance the expansion of India’s rail network and other projects.

In our time with a lack of focus on human rights in international relations, I am not surprised with such genuflections with an accused mass murderer.

The Paris Attack: An Obnoxious Picture Of Violent Extremists – OpEd

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“It is about time to take cognizance of the extremist ideology that the ISIS and its entire jihadist ilk adhere to,” said, founder-president, Syed Muhammad Ashraf Kichuachwi

An apex body of Sufi-oriented Muslims in India, All India Ulama and Mashaikh Board (AIUMB) condemned the recent brutal attacks in Paris. AIUMB founder-president, Syed Muhammad Ashraf Kichuachwi said, “The recent Paris attack showed an obnoxious picture of the violent extremists wantonly killing and terrorizing innocent civilians. It was not only an attack on peace and harmony prevailing in France but a reminder to call a spade a spade. The brutality in Paris is a clear indication of rapidly rising threat of Daesh. It is a direct result of ISIS jihadists returning from Syria with mindless violence motivated by a dangerous ideology of intolerance and wanton killing”. “It is about time to take cognizance of the extremist ideology that the ISIS and its entire jihadist ilk adhere to,” he said.

Syed Muhammad Ashraf Kichuachwi further said that “the Paris attack is not just an aggression against the people of France, but this is an infringement against the universal values of Islam. It was Islam which set example centuries ago by sheltering the Spanish Jews when Spain threw them out. It was Islam which taught Muslims to be the most compassionate towards the strangers and the guests, both Muslims and non-Muslims alike. But the ISIS aims at completely run down the history of Islam which is replete with these universal and egalitarian values.”

All India Ulama and Mashaikh Board founder-president continued: “With a unanimous opinion endorsed by the mainstream Islamic scholars and thinkers, it is patently clear now that ISIS is a bunch of radical hyenas with an inhuman, brazenly anti-Islamic hardcore ideology. They are a murderous cult with no place in modern society. It’s about time to completely run down the hate-driven understandings of Islam as pioneered by the ISIS today, before it kills more innocent lives.”

On this occasion, he said, we must not forget that that violent Wahabism/Salafism, the theological school that ISIS belongs to, is a rising threat to global peace and social affinity. “What else will it take to wake up the world and realise that the Daeshi ideology is at war with humanity including Muslims, not just the non-Muslim world? The world at large should declare war against the root-cause of the ISIS. That is something that only will help war on terror. We have no time to lose now”, said Syed Muhammad Ashraf Kichuachwi.

He concluded saying that “the mainstream peace-loving Muslims the world over stand with the people of Paris. AIUMB appeals to the Sufi-oriented Muslims in the entire world to have the courage of conviction to stand united against the Daeshi terrorism and show solidarity and firm faith in peace”.

In this context, it would be educative to quote the Report of Congressional Research Service of USA titled, “ Islamic Traditions of Wahhabism and Salafiya”. It has stated that “since its emergence, Wahhabism’s puritanical and iconoclastic philosophies have resulted in conflict with other Muslim groups”. Similarly the Report of Director General of External Policy of European Union states that “clearly, the risks posed by Salafist/Wahhabi terrorism go far beyond the geographical scope of the Muslim world”. The Paris attack reminds us of the threats as pointed out in several reports like this.

*Ghulam Rasool Dehlvi, English-Arabic-Urdu Writer, Columnist, Translator, Speaker & Trainer and Doctoral Research Scholar, Centre for Culture, Media & Governance (JMI University); NET Holder in Arab Culture and Islamic Studies; M.A in Comparative Religions & Civilisations; M.A in Islamic Studies; and Alim and Fazil (Classical Islamic Scholar).


Morocco Stands With France, Royal Messages To French President And French PM – OpEd

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Simultaneous attacks on multiple targets by gunmen and suicide bombers working in unison: a nightmare scenario that France’s anti-terror agencies had dreaded for months came true in Paris on Friday night. French President Francois Hollande said on Saturday the deadly attacks in Paris that killed 127 people were “an act of war” organized from abroad by Islamic State with internal help. In an attack that is being touted as the deadliest of its kind that Paris has faced since World War II which has left the nation reeling from grief, Hollande in a strong message earlier, swore to the country that he intends to take revenge on those who committed the ‘barbaric’ act

On this sad occasion King mohammed VI offers condolences to French President following terrorist attacks in Paris. The Sovereign expresses deep emotion and sadness over the odious terrorist attacks in several neighborhoods of Paris. In these painful events “I offer my most saddened condolences to you, to the innocent victims’ families and to the entire French people as well as my earnest wishes of prompt recovery to the wounded”

“I would like to condemn in the strongest terms on behalf of the Moroccan people and in my own name these vile terrorist acts and express our full solidarity and support in this ordeal », the Royal message reads.

HM King Mohammed VI sent another message to French prime minister Manuel Valls, following the series of terror attacks against several neighborhoods in Paris. In this royal message, King Mohammed VI expressed on behalf of the Moroccan people his heartfelt sympathy to all families of the victim.

Morocco has disrupted a number terrorist recruitment efforts in the kingdom. In the past, Moroccan security services have broken up organisations recruiting fighters for Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.

Since 2003, Morocco has been adopting a pre-emptive strike policy against the terrorist groups. Morocco doesn’t want to be involved in supplying any region with terrorist fighters because it is itself a victim of that. Morocco’s counter-terrorism policy, which involved legal, social and religious reforms, has worked, in general.

Morocco has set up a model for other neighboring nations to fight terrorism and extremist ideologies. So far it has been successful but certainly a regional effective cooperation will put an end to this threat that does not menace only countries in north Africa and Sub Saharan Africa but Europe and even the United States.

France: Suspected Accomplices Arrested In Paris Terror Attacks – Reports

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French authorities have detained several suspects allegedly linked to a cell that carried out the terrorist attacks in Paris. Meanwhile sources close to the investigation revealed that at least two of the assailants “very likely” entered Europe as refugees via Greece.

According to the French television channel iTele, at least one person linked to those involved in the Paris attacks has been arrested.

Meanwhile, AFP reports that the father and brother of a 29-year-old Frenchman identified as one of the suicide bombers at the Bataclan, have been taken into custody.

Police have been searching the house of the attacker’s father in the small town of Romilly-sur-Seine, around 130 km from Paris. They have also been checking the residence of the assailant’s brother, in the near-by town of Bondoufle, source told AFP.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins earlier announced that the authorities have already identified several terrorists who took part in Friday’s attacks.

“We have to find who these people are, who their accomplices are, who ordered this, where they come from, how they were financed,” Molins told journalists.

At this point of the investigation “a terror suspect” has been “formally identified,” the prosecutor said. “It is of an individual born November 21, 1985 in [town] Courcouronnes, in Essonne, [and the person is known to the French authorities] for ordinary crimes.”

One of the suicide bombers identified by the French authorities allegedly traveled to Turkey back in 2013, and “very likely” visited Syria as well, according to BFMTV.

Meanwhile, German authorities are investigating a man who was earlier arrested in Bavaria for possibly being connected to the Paris massacre.

“There is a connection to France but it’s not certain that there is a link to this attack,” said Thomas de Maiziere, Germany’s interior minister, as cited by AP. According to the Bavarian governor Horst Seehofer “there are reasonable grounds to assume that there may be a link to the matter.”

Attackers ‘very likely’ entered EU via Greece

The investigation believes that “three co-ordinated teams” were responsible for the attacks, Molins added.

According to the Greek authorities and a source in the government, at least two of those who took part in Friday’s terror assaults in Paris are “very likely” to have entered the European Union via Greece.

French police said they found a Syrian passport “near the body of one of the attackers” during the investigation into the assaults. On Saturday, Greece’s deputy minister in charge of police, Nikos Toscas, confirmed that the holder of the passport might have entered Europe via Greece back in October.

“The holder of the passport passed through the island of Leros on October 3, 2015, where he was identified according to EU rules,” said Toscas. The official however couldn’t provide any additional information as to whether the gunman’s passport had been checked en-route to France.

However, the Syrian passport found at the site of the attack might be fake, a US intelligence official told CBS News, pointing out that it did not contain the correct numbers for a legitimate Syrian document and the picture did not match the name.

Later on Saturday, government sources in Athens confirmed to Reuters that a second identified attacker seemed to have travelled to Europe via Greece as well.

“It is very likely that a second suspect also passed through Greece. The investigation is continuing,” one of the sources told Reuters. According to reports from the Greek television station Mega, the second attacker also passed via Leros island in August.

Security officials in European states have long voiced concerns that extremists might use the unprecedented refugee flow to sneak into the EU undetected.

“It is clear now that together with the victims of Islamo-fascism in the Middle East that come as refugees, extreme elements are crossing to Europe,” Greek Defence Minister Panos Kammenos said, as cited by AFP.

South-East Europe On Edge Of Civilization: Why We Should Not Ask US For Help – Essay

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The first reason, above all, is because the International community, including the USA and EU, has made this paralyzed state possible.

But, to be more precise this article will be more focused on the essay published by the distinguished author Rodolfo Toe from Balkan insight, which focused on a few issues (I do accept that those are among the major ones, but…) within the problems related to current Bosnia and Herzegovina society.

But, as I have said, We cannot solve the problem by solving the consequences. The causes should be solved about which I have been writing within Eurasia Review for almost the last two years.

So, let us focus on the following, as the main causes:

  • Nobody can be elected if he/she is not part of the constitutive people (Serb, Muslim-Bosniak, Croat) of Bosnia and Herzegovina; Remember the story of Sejdić/Finci
  • In Bosnia and Herzegovina, a country with a population of 3,791,662, you have one state (Bosnia and Herzegovina) with a Presidency (three members – guess who?), Council of Ministries and a Chairman of that; Parliament and House of Peoples, two entities (Federation of BiH and Republic of Srpska) with their Parliaments, President of each entity and Prime-Minister for each, and Ministries within each entity (16 ministries for FBiH and 16 for Republika Srpska). Also, there is one District – Brčko District with its own Government. And here dose not finish everything: Within Federation BiH there are ten cantons with their own Governments and 143 municipalities (79 in Federation BiH and 64 in republic of Srpska).

So, please count and you will see that each one of us, the citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina, until the end of his life might be at least be a Minister or Member of municipal council. Who then will do the all work?

For sure, not those 58% who are the current unemployed young people and up to 44% of unemployed in general in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The letter from my distinguished colleagues from SEESOX (South East European Studies at Oxford) published on 14.11.2015. in Eurasia Review is good to be realized within an already properly shaped up country heading towards democracy. But here? Nothing before we unpack the Dayton Accord and pack it again, using consensuality of the citizens and not of the nations. I respect that letter and agree with it, but…

If we continue to ask the leaders of the nations how to do it we will never do it.

If we decide to establish the state which will serve the citizens and not the nations, we will have that above mentioned as democratic state.

How we will do that?

Simple as it is:

  1.  Start with Lustration through the listening the sound of the future and not of the past.
  2. Continue with Education through the listening the sound of the future and not of the past.
  3. Finish with the establishment of the society in which will worth to exist on the bases of your work and knowledge and not on the basis of membership of the party (does not matter left and/or right in BiH) and ignorance.

The essay of distinguish colleague Rodolfo Toe is good for a presentation of thoughts and good for small push, but will it help us, over here in Bosnia and Herzegovina? I have doubts. Why? Let me ask just one question: Were the all changes that has been made in Bosnia and Herzegovina since the Dayton Peace Accord back in 1995 accepted willingly by politicians? The answer is again, simple – No, and it was imposed by the International community.

Is there a solution? Again, unpack and re-pack the Dayton Accord, because even the war was better back in 1992-1995. Back then we at least all knew against who we were fighting. Today, we don’t. Sorry, we do, but we cannot. Why? The answer to this is knows by the International community, together with our nationalistic leaders.

US Airstrike Targets Senior Islamic State Leader In Libya

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The U.S. military conducted an airstrike in Libya on Friday against an Iraqi national who was a longtime al-Qaida operative and the senior Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant leader in Libya, Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook said today.

In a statement, Cook said the strike targeted Abu Nabil, also known as Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi. Reporting suggests Nabil may have been the spokesman in ISIL’s February Coptic Christian execution video, the press secretary added.

“Nabil’s death will degrade ISIL’s ability to meet the group’s objectives in Libya,” he said, “including recruiting new ISIL members, establishing bases in Libya, and planning external attacks on the United States.”

While this was not the first U.S. strike against terrorists in Libya, this is the first U.S. strike against an ISIL leader in Libya, and it demonstrates that the United States will go after ISIL leaders wherever they operate, Cook said.
The press secretary added that this operation was authorized and initiated before the terrorist attack in Paris took place.

US And Russia: Adding Fuel To The Fire In The Middle East – Analysis

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By Shazad Ali

The West has a self-deceiving notion that it will deftly overcome the self-styled Islamic State by relentlessly bombing Syria and Iraq. What it doesn’t realize is that it is this display of military might that is helping the brutal terrorist outfit flourish.

The United States has always created Frankenstein’s monsters wittingly or unwittingly for itself. Be it Al Qaeda, the Taliban, or Islamic State, all are the creations of the United States. US President Barack Obama himself has conceded that the invasion of Iraq created ISIS. And now the country is paying a heavy price.

Not only this, the West also armed fighters in Libya to fight against Col Muammar Gaddafi, who, after the death of the dictator, got hold of the former army’s weapons and gained strength, destabilising the region. It made Libya a fertile breeding ground for transnational militants. The same thing happened in Syria. The West armed and backed the Islamic State to fight against the Bashar al-Assad regime only to realize later that it is the bigger evil than Assad. Consequently, the US bombed ISIS in Syria, which gave Assad room to fight opposition forces.

The Islamic State strategy is simple: cash in on Muslim grievances. The more brutalities and interventions there are by the West in Muslim countries, the better it is for ISIS. To make matters worse, the US-backed Nouri al-Maliki’s Shia regime deepened the Shia-Sunni schism in Iraq. The subsequent creation of the anti-Shia ISIS was a foregone conclusion. The atrocities by Shia militias – allied with the Maliki government – against Sunnis resulted in the latter’s joining the ISIS ranks to fight against the Shia regime.

It seems the Obama administration has not learned from its predecessor’s follies. It is, in fact, US support of authoritarian governments of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt which breeds terrorism. Terrorist outfits like ISIS exploit such scenarios and convince the Muslim populations of such countries to fight against the US in the name of Islam.

The military offensives by the U.S. in Syria and Iraq add fuel to fire. Such an environment gives ISIS an opportunity to grow and receive a regular supply of fighters from all over the world. Washington’s counter-ISIS strategy seems to be nothing but flawed. To add to a series of foreign policy blunders, Washington, in a major policy shift, has decided to send boots on ground in Syria. Dozens of US Special Forces troops, according to the White House, would be there to ‘train, advise, and assist.’

This is despite the fact that US ‘war on terror’ has not achieved peace. Instead, it has increased terrorism which is evident from the Global Terrorism Index prepared by the Institute for Economics and Peace.

According to the index, only 1,500 terrorist incidents occurred in 2000, while the number of such incidents rose to 10,000 by 2013. It means terrorism has increased fivefold since 2000. However, the U.S. is exacerbating the situation by launching military offensives in Iraq and Syria, which are not only open-ended, but also ill-defined.

False Beliefs

Having struck the nuclear deal with Iran, the United States might have scored a diplomatic victory. But the downside of this is that it will be seen as yet another step to isolate the Sunnis in the Middle East. The U.S. might annihilate ISIS with Iran as its ally, but it will surely destabilize Iraq, creating a wider Shia-Sunni divide.

The US military campaign against ISIS is beyond comprehension considering the views of former counter-terrorism adviser at the State Department Daniel Benjamin. The ex-adviser believes IS’s threat to the US is nothing but a farce.

While US Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson says there is no threat to the U.S. from Islamic State, Deputy Director of the US National Counter-terrorism Centre, Nicholas Rasmussen, told Congress ISIS poses a threat to US interests, but only in Iraq. In fact, it is right-wing extremists who have killed more people in the U.S. than Al Qaeda-inspired Muslims since 9/11.

US intelligence officials believe that ISIS has neither the will nor does it have the capability to launch an attack against the U.S. Unlike Al Qaeda, the vicious group does not have plans to strike the ‘far enemy.’ It, however, will most likely perpetrate terrorist acts in the U.S. only once it is convinced that it is the U.S. which has snatched its statehood. Home-grown terrorists may seek inspiration from Islamic State. But then lone wolves can be just as lethal even if ISIS is defeated. It is the US foreign policies and marginalization of Muslims in the West that transform them into terrorists, and that needs to be the focus.

There is also a big question mark over the legality of US military actions in the Middle East. International law permits a country to launch attacks only if it is approved by the UN Security Council, for self-defense, or if assistance is requested by the other country’s government.

US military intervention in Iraq may be legitimate as Baghdad had requested it, but in Syria, this is not the case. Neither the Assad regime requested for the US military strikes nor were such actions authorized by the UN. That the U.S. is trying to ‘degrade and defeat’ ISIS in Syria as a pre-emptive measure in self-defense is an unconvincing argument. The extremist outfit hardly poses any direct security threat to the U.S.

Russia’s Entry

Russia’s entry into the Syrian theater has increased complexities. Despite Russia’s claim that it had been bombing ISIS, it is believed that Moscow has been mostly targeting anti-Assad forces. This has obviously been done because Vladimir Putin doesn’t want to lose a major ally in the Middle East. But this is giving ISIS space and relief in Syria despite Russia’s fear of the group.

Unlike the U.S., which is bombing Syria without legal cover, Russia’s military campaign in Syria is not illegitimate because Damascus has requested it, or, at least it doesn’t have objections over it. This, however, doesn’t suggest that Russia’s entry into the Syrian war will not have negative repercussions.

Even if it is really ISIS that Russia is after, are there are any guarantees that it would be able to defeat an ideology militarily and would not get stuck into a morass? Then there is also the spectre of home-grown terrorism. Russia’s Sunni Muslim community, which has not reacted yet on Russia’s intervention in Syria, might turn violent if it is convinced that Moscow is involved in an anti-Sunni campaign.

Revisiting Foreign Policy

Washington must wrap up its flopped ‘war on terror,’ which has produced more terrorism than peace, and fostered anti-American sentiment. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have already cost the US a whopping $4-6 trillion. It must pull out its military forces from the Middle East, stop using proxies and supporting totalitarian Arab regimes.

While forging ties with progressive players in Iraq and Syria might be beneficial to the U.S. and the Middle East, Washington also has the moral obligation to pay reparations for invading and occupying Iraq on flimsy grounds which later proved wrong.

Military action alone cannot eliminate Islamic State. Instead, it will give a huge boost to the ISIS campaign. The US must find a diplomatic solution and a negotiated settlement to the Syrian crisis. If force has to be used against ISIS, it should be from the regional powers, not Iran-backed Shia militias as done by Maliki. The U.S., instead of further aggravating the situation by sending ground troops to Syria and trying to impose its puppet, should let the Syrians decide who will rule the country.

Disenfranchised Iraqi Sunnis must be convinced they have a better future under the present Haider al-Abadi government, and not ISIS. The onus is on Baghdad to gain Sunnis’ trust which will help the Iraqi government fight ISIS.

On one hand, the United Kingdom’s role in war against ISIS is small as compared with the U.S. But its contribution to the US fight is still larger than any other US ally. The attack on British tourists in Tunisia had some messages and agenda.

ISIS wants the UK to be sucked into the quagmire by provoking the Cameron government to commit ground forces to fight ISIS. Moreover, ISIS might take advantage of xenophobia and Islamophobia that may rise in the UK, which already has radical far-right extremist organizations such as the English Defence League. This may lead to further marginalisation and alienation of the UK’s Muslims who will be lured by ISIS to become fighters. There is a huge possibility of this happening in the UK as about 700 British youth are believed to have joined Islamic State’s fight in the Middle East.

Being the partner in Washington’s folly of the Iraq invasion, the UK should also share the burden of reparations, especially after Tony Blair’s face-saving apology and confession of faulty intelligence before the invasion and that it gave rise to Islamic State. But Blair’s was a half-hearted apology ahead of the John Chilcot report, for he refused to concede that invading Iraq and removing Saddam Hussein was a blunder.

The United States and its Western allies have a vital role to play in the Middle East, especially in Iraq and Syria. It is time they played their role prudently to end the political and sectarian turmoil in the Middle East, which are by-products of Western military and political interventions in the region.

This article was published by Geopolitical Monitor.com</em>

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