Iraqi Dinar News

Trade Iraqi Dinar

Posts tagged: Destabilize

Taliban US working together to destabilize Afghanistan: Hamid Karzai. Oh, no Sherlock ..really? ha ha ha

By , March 12, 2013 11:21 pm

Taliban US working together to destabilize Afghanistan: Hamid Karzai. Oh, no Sherlock ..really? ha ha ha
By: Bulov on: 13.03.2013 [05:36 ] (26 reads)

Taliban US working together to destabilize Afghanistan: Hamid Karzai. Oh, no Sherlock ..really? ha ha ha

http://www.presstv.com/detail/2013/03/11/293024/us-in-cahoots-with-taliban-karzai/

Afghan President Hamid Karzai

Mon Mar 11, 2013 1:26PM

Afghan President Hamid Karzai says US officials and the Taliban are jointly seeking to destabilize Afghanistan to justify the presence of foreign forces in the country.

On Sunday, Karzai also added that talks are under way on a daily basis “between Taliban, American and foreigners in Europe and in the (Persian) Gulf states.”

Referring to two Taliban bombings in Kabul and Khost which killed 17 people on Saturday, Karzai said that “Those bombs … were not a show of force to America. They were in service of America. It was in the service of the 2014 slogan to warn us if they (Americans) are not here then Taliban will come.”
The attacks show “that Taliban want longer presence of foreigners — not their departure from Afghanistan,” Karzai said.

The United States currently has 66,000 troops in Afghanistan, down from about 100,000 in 2010. The US has announced plans to decrease its troop level to about 32,000 by early 2014.

According to the website icasualties.org, 3,259 foreign soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since the US-led war began in 2001.

MAM/MA
75 13

93
Related Stories:
• ‘News conf. by Karzai, Hagel cancelled’
• US, Afghanistan to discuss ‘immunity’
• Afghan president in US for security talks
• Kabul frees Afghans held by US forces
• Kabul frees 80 Afghan prisoners
• ‘Haqqani leader killed in Afghanistan’

www.iraq-war.ru (en) RSS feed for articles and news

NATO Using Al Qaeda to Destabilize Syria

By , May 23, 2012 1:07 pm

NATO Using Al Qaeda to Destabilize Syria
By: Bulov on: 23.05.2012 [15:51 ] (57 reads)

NATO Using Al Qaeda to Destabilize Syria
Infowars.com
Tuesday, May 22, 2012

http://www.infowars.com/nato-using-al-qaeda-to-destabilize-syria/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=XA3xSnBEh54

Infowars’ Paul Joseph Watson is joined by Syrian Girl, an outspoken activist against NATO’s campaign to use Al-Qaeda terrorists as a means of destabilizing the Assad regime. In this interview, Syrian Girl reveals the true intentions behind NATO’s agenda in Syria as well as discussing other topics such as the charge that she is a pro-Assad mouthpiece, women in the truth movement, the Arab Spring and more.

Similar/Related Articles

1. Syrian Girl: NATO’s Secret Agenda In Syria
2. The Plan to Destabilize Syria
3. “Friends of Syria” meet in Tunisia – to destabilize Syria
4. Free Syria Army Now Led by NATO-Libya Al Qaeda Commander
5. Assad predicts disaster if West meddles in Syria
6. CIA-NATO Front Group Drafts “Humanitarian Aid” for Syria
7. NATO Invasion Of Syria Set For This Month?
8. Moscow, Tehran to Provide Military Aid to Curb US-NATO Armed Insurrection in Syria
9. Former CIA Officer: ‘NATO’s War in Syria Not in US Interest’
10. Arab countries sending mercenaries into Syria
11. Syria given 24 hours to sign Arab League deal or face sanctions
12. BREAKING: Russia, China veto U.N. resolution telling Syria’s Assad to quit

www.iraq-war.ru (en) RSS feed for articles and news

After Libya, NATO Intervention Threatens To Destabilize the Entire Region

By , March 22, 2012 11:33 pm

After Libya, NATO Intervention Threatens To Destabilize the Entire Region
By: John Cherian on: 22.03.2012 [18:19 ] (113 reads)

SLIPPING INTO CHAOS: After Libya, NATO Intervention Threatens To Destabilize the Entire Region

by John Cherian

Global Research, March 21, 2012
Frontline

One year after the NATO intervention, Libya faces disintegration as the oil-rich eastern region seeks semi-autonomy.

Libya seems to be on the verge of disintegration one year after the military intervention by the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). In the first week of March, leaders from its oil-rich eastern region, which includes Benghazi, the focal point of the Western-backed rebellion that ousted Muammar Qaddafi, announced their intention to seek “semi-autonomy” from the central government. The meeting in Benghazi, where the decision was taken, was attended by major political leaders, military commanders and tribal leaders from the region. The new “semi-autonomous” region, Cyrenaica, will extend from the central coastal city of Sirte, Qaddafi’s hometown, to the country’s border with Egypt. According to energy experts, the area holds around two-thirds of the country’s oil reserves.

Observers of the Libyan scene predict that the move is aimed at partitioning the country. At the Benghazi meeting, there was an open call for the re-adoption of the 1951 Constitution, which recognised Tripoli as the administrative capital and Benghazi as the financial capital of the country.

Under King Idris, the pro-Western puppet ruler at the time, Libya was divided into three provinces, Cyrenaica in the east, Tripolitana in the west and Fezzan in the south. Benghazi, where the King resided, was the centre of decision making. The United States had military bases nearby while big Western oil companies monopolised the country’s oil resources. After Qaddafi came to power, he nationalised the oil industry and forced the U.S. to vacate its bases.

Sheikh Ahmad Zubeir al-Sanussi, who has emerged as the leader of the Benghazi group, is a grand-nephew of King Idris. The Benghazi meeting rejected the decision of the Libyan Transitional National Council (NTC) to allocate 60 seats to the eastern region in the 200-member Assembly. The leaders are demanding around 100 seats for the region. Elections for a new government are scheduled to be held in June. But with a powerful Western-backed power bloc emerging in the east and general lawlessness prevailing in most parts of the country, it would be an uphill task for the interim government in Tripoli to supervise a peaceful transfer of power to an elected Assembly.

Over 100 militias, flush with lethal arms, are bunkered down in the major towns of the country. They are unwilling to integrate into the national army or give up their arms. In the capital, Tripoli, the main airport and major government buildings are still under the control of opposing militias. Frequent clashes have erupted in the capital and other parts of the country as each militia has been trying to expand its turf. The seven-month- long war inflicted by the NATO forces not only claimed thousands of lives but also destroyed the country’s infrastructure.

Mustafa Abdul Jalil, the NTC Chairman, has described the Benghazi declaration as “the beginning of a conspiracy against Libyans” which could lead to the eventual disintegration of the country. He blamed “some Arab nations” for encouraging the secessionist moves. Qatar, which was among the early backers and sponsors of the counter-revolution against Qaddafi, is said to figure prominently on the list of the Arab countries behind the conspiracy. Senior officials in Tripoli have been critical of the interference of the tiny but rich Gulf emirate in the internal affairs of the country following the ouster of Qaddafi. Abdel Rahman Shalgham, Libya’s Ambassador to the United Nations, had famously asked, late last year, “Who is Qatar?” He was angered by Qatar’s continued interference in the internal affairs of Libya and its backing of Islamist militias and politicians.

In statements issued earlier in the year, Mustafa Jalil had said that Libya had descended into a state of “civil war”. Sirte, which was reduced to rubble by NATO bombing, is occupied by fighters from Misrata. Tens of thousands of Qaddafi supporters continue to languish in jail. International agencies have provided graphic accounts of the torture they endured at the hands of their captors. Many citizens, including a former Libyan Ambassador to France, Omar Brebesh, died following brutal torture in prison. The town of Tawergha near Misrata has been depopulated forcibly because its residents supported Qaddafi. Amnesty International, in a report on Libya released in February, has documented details about the widespread abuse of human rights in the country. A spokesman for the organisation said that militias in the country “are largely out of control of the government”.

Navi Pillay, the chief of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), asked the Libyan authorities to take control of the prisons. “There is torture, extrajudicial killings, rape of both men and women,” she said in late January.

The NATO-backed government in Tripoli has said that it will guarantee the primacy of Sharia law in the country. Under Qaddafi, women enjoyed considerable freedom. Polygamy was banned. A man needed his wife’s legal consent to get a divorce. Qaddafi had encouraged women to join the workforce. The interim government has announced that it will relax the strict rules against polygamy.

The majority of the anti-Qaddafi militia leaders, despite being backed by the West, are avowed Islamists. Libyan militia leaders are now coordinating with the Free Syrian Army fighting against the government in Damascus. The Russian Ambassador to the U.N., Vitaly Churkov, has accused the Libyan government of training Syrian rebels in Libyan camps and then sending them back to Syria.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has given instances of migrant workers from sub-Saharan Africa being targeted for detention and summary executions by the militias. Baso Sanggu, the President of the U.N. Security Council and South Africa’s Ambassador to the U.N., said that NATO had to be investigated for human rights abuses. NATO air raids resulted in the death of thousands of innocent civilians. The destruction of Sirte is mainly the handiwork of NATO forces. A new U.N. report has concluded that NATO has not sufficiently investigated the air raids it conducted over Libya. The U.N. had mandated a “no-fly zone” over Libya with the overt aim of protecting civilians. NATO drones and Special Forces had played a key role in facilitating the capture of Qaddafi. He was later tortured and shot by his captors. The report also said that the militias were continuing with their “war crimes”.

Another report, by the West Asian Human Rights Groups, which included the Arab Organisation of Human Rights, the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights and the International Legal Assistance Consortium, released in January, concluded that there was strong evidence to implicate NATO in war crimes in Libya. “NATO participated in what could be classified as offensive actions undertaken by the opposition forces, including, for example, attacks on towns and cities held by Qaddafi forces. Equally, the choice of certain targets, such as regional food warehouses, raises prima facie questions regarding the role of such attacks with respect to the protection of civilians,” the report stated.

The mission found the strongest evidence of NATO war crimes in the city of Sirte. The U.S. had spent around $ 2 billion for its “special operations” which finally led to the grisly assassination of Qaddafi. France and Britain were the other notable NATO countries that played a key role in guaranteeing regime change in Libya. Qatar and Saudi Arabia opened up their purse strings and launched a propaganda blitz through the auspices of Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya respectively, demonising Qaddafi and whitewashing the sins of the Libyan militias and their patrons.

There are reports in the Arab media that Qaddafi loyalists have started regrouping under the banner of the “Green Resistance” movement. Al Ahram, the Egyptian newspaper, reported that Green Resistance fighters had recently stormed the prison in Misrata and killed 145 guards. There are claims that hundreds of fighters owing allegiance to the new government have been killed by the resistance since the beginning of the year.

The Tuareg ethnic group, which stood by Qaddafi until the very end, while siding with the resistance, has also linked up with its kinsmen in neighbouring Mali and Niger. The Tuaregs, known for their distinct style of dressing and nomadic lifestyle, have been demanding a separate state. Well-armed Tuareg groups have, in recent months, attacked towns in Niger and Mali. Sophisticated arms in the Libyan armoury have trickled down not only to militant Islamist groups but also to groups fighting to overthrow governments in the Sahel region bordering Libya. NATO’s military intervention in Libya now threatens to destabilise the whole region and beyond.

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=29893

iraqwar.mirror-world.ru (en) RSS feed for articles and news

Advisor: Iran invasion would destabilize whole region

By , March 10, 2012 9:30 am

Advisor: Iran invasion would destabilize whole region
By: trend on: 10.03.2012 [09:41 ] (98 reads)

Advisor: Iran invasion would destabilize whole region
10 March 2012, 13:11 (GMT+04:00)

Azerbaijan, Baku, March 10 / Trend S.Isayev, R. Hafizoglu/

Turkey does not support invasion of any kind into Iran by any outside forces, Turkish President’s advisor on Middle East, Ershad Hurmuzlu told Trend.

Ormuzlu was answering the question about a possible attack on Iran by Israel or the U.S.

“Turkey will not support such a move, it would destabilize the whole region,” Hurmuzlu noted.

Earlier, Tehran’s ambassador to Lebanon Ghazanfar Roknabadi said that Iran has prepared itself, and in case of an attack, will launch about 11,000 missiles at Israel and U.S. bases in the region if they do a strike on country’s nuclear facilities.

http://en.trend.az/regions/iran/2001938.html

www.iraq-war.ru (en) RSS feed for articles and news

U.S. Said to Be Working to Destabilize Iraq Before Withdrawal

By , October 6, 2011 7:47 am

An Iraqi Shiite group says it expects a surge in violence in the months before the U.S. withdrawal scheduled for the end of the year. View full post on Iraq Updates – Latest News

Mubarak Vows Terrorists Won’t Destabilize Country After Church Bombing

By , January 3, 2011 2:39 am

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has vowed not to allow terrorists to destabilize his country or divide Christians and Muslims. View full post on Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Attacks Aim to Destabilize Security, Hamper Negotiations – Politicians

By , November 7, 2010 6:01 am

A number of Iraqi politicians agreed that the recent bombing attacks in Baghdad last Tuesday aimed to destabilize security in the country and to hamper the ongoing negotiations between political blocs to end the current deadlock. View full post on Iraq Updates – Latest News

US Accuses Syria Of Attempting To Destabilize Lebanon

By , October 28, 2010 8:44 am

The United States has accused Syria of attempting to undermine the stability of Lebanon and the region as a whole, a day after Syrian President Bashar al-Assad alleged that the U. View full post on Assyrian International News Agency