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Take Syria Seriously–And Stay Out

By , May 23, 2013 4:00 pm

syria-intervention-rebels-chemical-weapons-red-line-assadSyria’s civil war has inspired some in Congress and in the media. Stupidity or insanity? Some people don’t learn from past mistakes. Why start another body count in a Middle East conflict with no direct relationship to U.S. security? New York Times reporter Bill Keller says, “Get over Iraq,” like commanding AIDS patients to get over their disease, and “poof,” it will magically happen.

Bush and Cheney lied and used false intelligence designed to justify their lust for war. Iraq had no WMD or links to Al-Qaeda, as the two had claimed, but invading U.S. forces did destroy Iraq’s integrity. In the end, killing Saddam remains their lone accomplishment – unless one lists the deaths of U.S., NATO, and Iraqi soldiers and civilians.

Today, U.S. military intervention in Syria would ensure more dead U.S. troops, more dead Syrians, and future pain for U.S. troops serving as an occupation force. We would ally ourselves with Saudi Arabia, which supports Syria’s opposition because the Saudis want to break the Syria-Iran alliance, their rival for Persian Gulf dominance. The Saudis also fear the “Arab Spring,” and have tried to contain the unrest before it reaches their territory.

In Spring 2011, the Syrian uprising offered the Saudis (Sunnis) an opportunity to strike at Iran’s key Shi’ite-led Arab ally. Saudi Arabia lacks the military capacity to intervene directly, but used its oily treasure to try to buy a replacement for Assad, with a regime friendly to the Saudi royal family.

Aggressive U.S. pundits ignore the Saudi role, but instead challenge Obama to act militarily. Princeton’s Anne-Marie Slaughter warned: if Obama fails to act militarily he “will be remembered as a president who proclaimed a new beginning with the Muslim world but presided over a deadly chapter in the same old story.” Maybe Obama has learned that the U.S. war with Iraq did not make Muslims love the U.S. or improve our security position.

The “Invade Syria” gang has also claimed that Assad’s forces used sarin gas against the rebels and argued that such a diabolical act justifies U.S. intervention. A UN investigating body, however, has claimed it has evidence suggesting the rebels, not Assad, had perhaps used the gas.

Obama’s spin language on Syria referring to the use of chemical weapons (calling it a “red line” and “game changer)” sounds like a moral imperative, but it overlooks key facts: the U.S. military used phosphorous bombs in attacks on Fallujah during the Iraq War, and U.S. Air Force planes dropped tons of Agent Orange on Vietnam. Pro-war advocates seem less concerned with Syria’s well-being and more with the principle of righteous American power displays.

“If the Obama administration continues to dillydally, it will further undermine the credibility of the United States as a super power, a position already shaken by its failing engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan,” fretted George Washington University’s Amitai Etzioni. Since World War II the U.S. has already bombed Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, Grenada, and Panama. What foreign leader would doubt U.S. credibility to act militarily?

After the mire in Afghanistan, why would Obama want to get more young American soldiers killed in Syria, and simultaneously make more enemies in a region where Washington receives routine blame for its interventionist ways and its links with Israel?

Indeed, 9/11 plotters hated U.S. policy, not our freedom, and isolated acts of terrorism from irate Muslims constitute a security threat that is aggravated by regional interventions. When U.S. planes bomb, or U.S. troops fire into villages and cities, we make enemies. Corpses from these assaults have relatives, some of whom swear oaths of vengeance.

We did not reconstruct Iraq or bring it stable democracy; nor did we succeed in Afghanistan, or previously in Vietnam. Indeed, wars rarely turn out the way the invaders envision. Rather, wars lead to inadvertent and unintended consequences. The Chinese now have access to more oil, for example, and Iraq’s government has moved closer to Iran. People from the region, however, learned lessons that correspond more closely to facts than do the reactions of amnesia-stricken Washington war hawks.

Pew recently surveyed 11,771 people from Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Egypt, Israel, the Palestinian Territories, Tunisia, Germany, France, Britain, the United States, and Russia. According to the Christian Science Monitor, “Ninety-five percent of Lebanese said they were concerned that violence would spread west into their country, with 68 percent of them saying they were ‘very concerned’ and 27 percent saying they were ‘somewhat concerned.’ Eighty percent of Jordanians, who live to Syria’s south, and 62 percent of Turks, who are on Syria’s northern flank, expressed worry.”

So why escalate? President Assad has not threatened to attack the U.S. or allied governments, such as Israel; nor can he take an offensive stance while his government fights for survival. Indeed, Israel has twice bombed Syria in the last month, without retaliation.

Washington, however, has decided to aid the Syrian rebels, as it once armed Afghan insurgents in Pakistan. Thus, the U.S. played an inadvertent role in helping the now-despised Taliban emerge victorious in the 1990s.

Syria’s civil war, an internal battle, got upgraded when Saudi Arabia and Qatar paid jihadists to fight against Assad. This influx of foreign warriors fueled the death toll, over 70,000, and helped force more than one million Syrians to become refugees.

Syria’s struggle also confronts Washington again with the drama of the Arab Spring: pro-U.S. dictatorships in Arab countries vie with an amalgam of democrats, socialists, and religious authoritarians, a setting ripe for more conflicts.

Assad’s ouster could actually lead to worsening conditions. Some rebels have already proclaimed Sharia law in areas they control and have slaughtered Christians, Alawites, and other minority Assad supporters.

U.S. military intervention could also hinder humanitarian relief operations and simultaneously embroil the United States in uncertain military commitments. Unilateral military action could strain key international relations, since no world or regional consensus supports armed intervention. And intervention could bring the United States into a broader regional conflict. Obama should not commit what the Pentagon estimates as the 75,000 troops needed to secure Syria’s chemical weapons stockpiles, which do not threaten U.S. interests.

Stay out of Syria.

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Improvised Explosive Devices Are Here to Stay

By , May 19, 2013 9:21 am

A decade of combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan has confirmed that improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, are the weapon of choice for threat networks around the globe. While there are obvious differences between these two conflicts, there are also common threads and lessons to be learned.

As Iraq fades from view and the United States focuses increasingly on post-2014 Afghanistan, I fear that some will view the threat from these networks and IEDs as aberrations, unique to the Middle East or South Asia and to these two operations. Unfortunately, trends and evidence show that threat networks using IEDs are here to stay.

IEDs are makeshift weapons incorporating destructive and lethal chemicals, military or commercially available explosives, or homemade explosives. The supplies used to assemble IEDs are cheap and readily available at hardware stores. While the networks that employ IEDs seek instability, others have used this indiscriminate weapon outside of battle-torn regions, as was underscored in last month’s attack in Boston.

More than 60 percent of U.S. combat casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan — 3,200 killed and 33,100 wounded since 2001 — stem from IEDs. We and our allies face an agile, adaptive and resilient enemy whose ease of access to IED materials and unfettered ability to collaborate and coordinate by social media and elsewhere on the Internet make this weapon an enduring challenge for our military forces and our domestic security partners.

Analysis of how unique tactics, tools and financing are connected among different splinters of the threat network has produced empirical evidence that as these networks migrate, their weapon of choice follows. The IED is being used in Syria, Mali, Algeria, Somalia and every other global hot spot, and no change is likely in the near future. For example, the terror group Hezb-e-Islami used female suicide bombers, a method originated by the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka, during a September attack in Afghanistan. This is the same group that claimed responsibility for the suicide car bombing of a NATO convoy in Kabul on Thursday.

Around the world, there have been more than 700 IED explosions each month outside of Iraq and Afghanistan — for a total of more than 17,000 explosions in 123 countries since January 2011. These statistics clearly indicate that IEDs will remain a threat for the foreseeable future.

Because of this, we must capture the lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan and, despite budgetary and other pressures, institutionalize them in our security framework. Some to consider include:

●Threat networks learn and adapt. They are more agile and flatter than our government, and they operate seamlessly. They use the Internet to communicate, raise funds and share intelligence. We must become equally adaptable, agile and flexible.

●The enemy is a master of off-the-shelf and dual-use components. They use ordinary containers, commercial fertilizer, wire, discarded batteries and scraps of wood to construct weapons. We, along with our allies, must figure out how to make it more difficult to use these commonplace supplies for illicit activities.

●We must resist the inertia to return to our pre-2003 processes; instead, we must develop a rapid and responsive acquisition process. As one commander told me, “We are in an arms race, but instead of years, the enemy innovates in days, weeks or months.”

● We must see this as more than a military problem. Drones cannot be used to strike our way out and armor is not enough to combat the IED threat. Success against a bureaucratically unencumbered enemy requires a seamless, holistic approach that integrates all partners — military, federal, state, local, private-sector and multinational allies.

●Money is the lifeblood of these networks, so we must attack threat networks where it hurts most: their bank accounts. Our current approach is disjointed, with too many organizations doing too little. Identifying the junctions between money, geography, IED materials, social networks, legitimate entities and government is difficult — but when we do succeed, the United States can disrupt global threat networks that use IEDs.

●Training is invaluable. Our best counter to IEDs is a well-trained soldier. We can provide the best and most innovative counter-IED capabilities to our war-fighters, law enforcement and first responders, but without the relevant training, the full capacity of equipment and tactics will never be achieved.

●We must identify and continue to invest in capabilities to counter the evolving threat from IEDs. During my tenure focused on this threat, commanders in the field have acknowledged two tactical “game changers”: constant surveillance from advances in manned and unmanned aircraft, and the application of law-enforcement forensic and biometric techniques on the battlefield. These capabilities remove violent extremists’ greatest defense — anonymity — and make them vulnerable to attribution and enable action. We must develop the next game-changing advances.

●Threat networks do not differentiate between overseas military operations and the homeland. We cannot allow self-inflicted statutory, regulatory and bureaucratic challenges to impede our response to an unencumbered, agile enemy intent on bringing the fight to our domestic soil.

Global threat networks are not going to cease operations or stop developing IEDs after coalition forces leave Afghanistan. Their weapon of choice has proven too effective, cheap and easy to make. The U.S. military must capture and institutionalize the hard-earned knowledge and expertise from 10 years of conflict, and share this with our domestic security partners. That is the only way to stay ahead of evolving threats and imaginative bombmakers.

Read more from Opinions: David Ignatius: The limits of intelligence collection Dan Berschinski: Extending leadership on disability issues Reuel Marc Gerecht: The CIA’s interrogation program deserves a public airing George F. Will: A case for targeted killings David Barno and Matthew Irvine: How to fight in Afghanistan with fewer U.S. troops.

By Michael D. Barbero
Washington Post

Army Lt. Gen. Michael D. Barbero directs the Defense Department’s Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization.

Assyrian International News Agency

Despite Horrific Repression, the U.S. Should Stay Out of Syria

By , May 15, 2013 2:11 pm

stephen-zunes-syria-interventionThe worsening violence and repression in Syria has left policymakers scrambling to think of ways the United States could help end the bloodshed and support those seeking to dislodge the Assad regime. The desperate desire to “do something” has led to increasing calls for the United States to provide military aid to armed insurgents or even engage in direct military intervention, especially in light of the possible use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime.

The question on the mind of almost everyone who has followed the horror as it has unfolded over the past two years is, “What we can do?”

The short answer, unfortunately, is not much.

This is hard for many Americans to accept. We have a cultural propensity to believe that if the United States puts in enough money, creativity, willpower, or firepower into a problem that we can make things right. However, despite the desires of both the right-wing nationalists and liberal hawks, this isn’t always the case.

Both the right and the far left seem to embrace the idea that United States—either for good or for ill—has the power to determine the outcome of virtually every conflict in the world. However, there are limits to power. The tens of billions of dollars’ worth of arms sent to the Shah and to Mubarak were not enough to keep these dictators in power against the will of their own people. Overwhelming U.S. military force could not prevent a Communist victory in Vietnam or create a peaceful, democratic, pro-American Iraq.

The Baath Party has ruled Syria for most of the past 50 years, from even before the 30-year reign of Bashar al-Assad’s father. Military officers and party apparatchiks have developed their own power base. Dictatorships that rest primarily on the power of just one man – like Libya’s Gaddafi, Egypt’s Mubarak, and Tunisia’s Ben Ali – are generally more vulnerable in the face of popular revolt than are oligarchical systems where a broader network of elite interests has a stake in the system. Just as the oligarchy that ruled El Salvador in the 1980s proved to be far more resistant to overthrow by a popular armed revolution than the singular rule of Anastasia Somoza in neighboring Nicaragua, it is not surprising that Syria’s entrenched ruling group has been more resilient than the personalist dictatorships toppled in the wave of largely nonviolent insurrections in neighboring Arab countries.

A large minority of Syrians—consisting of Alawites, Christians, and members of other minority communities; Baath Party loyalists and government employees; the professional armed forces and security services; and the (largely Sunni) crony capitalist class that the government has nurtured—still cling to the Assad regime. There are certainly dissidents within all of these sectors, but altogether regime supporters number as much as one-third of the population.  

What this means is that even large-scale direct foreign intervention will not lead to a quick collapse of the regime.

The Nature of the Opposition

The initial popular uprising against the Assad regime, which began in March of 2011, was overwhelmingly nonviolent, broad-based, and non-sectarian. Since turning to primarily armed resistance by early the next year, however, an increasing percentage of the armed opposition appears to consist of hardline Salafi Islamists, including some who are affiliated with al-Qaeda. Even the so-called “moderate” Free Syrian Army consists of literally hundreds of separate armed militias, some of which are just as extreme, and operate without a central command. A shoulder-fired missile that could defend a village from a Syrian helicopter gunship could also take down a civilian airliner.

Proponents of arming the rebels claim the United States could somehow differentiate between “moderate” and “extremist” elements of the opposition, but it is hard to imagine how this could be done in practice. It’s important to remember that most of the U.S. arms sent to Afghan rebels in the 1980s ended up in the hands of Hizb-i-Islami, the most hardline of the half dozen or so mujahedeen groups fighting the Soviets and the Soviet-backed Afghan regime. After the Soviets withdrew and Afghanistan’s Communist government was overthrown, Hizb-i-Islami forces killed thousands of Afghan civilians and are now allied with the Taliban fighting American forces. As with the fall of the Communist regime in Afghanistan, there is no guarantee that Assad’s overthrow would actually bring peace. And as Iraq showed us, opposition to an oppressive Baathist regime does not mean support for the United States, nor does military intervention guarantee a peaceful and democratic post-Baathist government.

Syria is very different from Libya, where NATO air power supported an armed rebellion that toppled the Gaddafi regime in a bloody civil war. The Syrian population is more than three times the size of Libya’s, and the terrain far more challenging. The liberated zones controlled by the rebels are tiny and non-contiguous, and the Syrian armed forces—and their anti-aircraft capabilities—are far superior. Another critical difference is that by the time the Libyan uprising began in 2011, Gaddafi had virtually no popular support, although it still took six months of heavy NATO bombardments and fierce fighting by foreign-armed rebel forces to dislodge him.

It is also important to remember that, despite the ouster of Gaddafi and a relatively fair and free vote that elected moderates to lead the new government, Libya has not actually turned out that well. In addition to the summary execution of Gaddafi and many hundreds of his supporters, over 200,000 people in that country of barely 6 million have joined armed militias not controlled by the government, which have been creating havoc throughout the country. Some of these include al-Qaeda-aligned groups, like the one responsible for the deaths of four U.S. officials, including the ambassador, last August. Furthermore, weapons from Libya have proliferated throughout North Africa, playing an important role in the uprising by Tuareg nationalists and Islamist extremists in Mali and the resulting conflict.

Another tragic consequence of the NATO intervention in Libya is that Syrian opposition members may have decided to abandon their impressive nonviolent struggle in the hope that it would prompt Western military intervention.

Problems with “Humanitarian Intervention”

Indeed, as with Libya, there are often serious unintended consequences from foreign intervention. Empirical studies have repeatedly demonstrated that international military interventions in cases of severe repression actually exacerbate violence in the short term and can only reduce violence in the longer term if the intervention is impartial or neutral. For example, the wholesale ethnic cleansing in Kosovo by Serbian forces in 1999 began only after NATO’s decision to launch air strikes. Other studies demonstrate that foreign military interventions actually increase the duration of civil wars, making the conflicts longer and bloodier, and the regional consequences more serious, than if there were no intervention. Military intervention in Syria would likely trigger a “gloves off” mentality that could dramatically escalate the violence on both sides, since the regime would find that it no longer had anything to lose and the opposition would feel no need to negotiate or compromise.

Foreign intervention tends to exacerbate nationalist resistance. The 1999 NATO intervention in Yugoslavia, rather than force Milosevic from power, initially strengthened the regime as people rallied around the flag in the face of more than 11 weeks of bombing by foreign forces. The leaders of Otpor, the youthful pro-democracy movement that would eventually lead the struggle that toppled the regime nonviolently, strongly opposed the bombing and recognized that it set back their cause.

This nationalist reaction is exacerbated by the understandable tendency to question the motivations – sometimes justifiably and sometimes not – of those who advocate the so-called “responsibility to protect.” Indeed, most foreign interventions by the United States which were viewed by most of the international community as acts of imperialism – Vietnam, Iraq, the Dominican Republic, Grenada, and Panama, among others – were rationalized on humanitarian grounds.

Even when imperialism does not appear to be the primary motivation, there is the problem of perceived double standards. For example, President Clinton justified the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia because “we cannot allow this kind of repression to happen on NATO’s doorstep” when very comparable repression was at that time going on within NATO itself, namely in the Kurdish region of Turkey, using primarily U.S.-supplied weaponry. Similarly, while U.S. officials have cited calls by Amnesty International and other human rights groups in calling on Russia to stop sending helicopter gunships to Syria, the United States has ignored similar calls by Amnesty International and others to stop sending helicopter gunships to Colombia, Turkey, and Israel, which—like the Syrian regime—have also used these weapons to attack civilians.

Some have called for unilateral military intervention in Syria, arguing that the Russian and Chinese vetoes of UN Security Council resolutions have paralyzed the United Nations from exercising its responsibilities, despite the illegality of such intervention without UN authorization. However, the Syrian regime could also observe that since joining the United Nations 42 years ago, China has used its veto power only eight times and, during that same period, Russia (and previously the Soviet Union) has used its veto power only 18 times. By contrast, the United States has used its veto power 83 times, mostly to protect allies like Israel from accountability for violations of international humanitarian law.

It’s rather revealing that the leading intellectual architect of the so-called “responsibility to protect” is none other than Gareth Evans, a former Australian foreign minister who for more than a decade served as head of the International Crisis Group. He was an outspoken supporter of military intervention in Libya following the killing of between 200and 300 civilians by Gaddafi’s forces. However, as Australian foreign minister, he was also an outspoken supporter of Indonesia’s brutal occupation of East Timor, which took the lives of more than 200,000 East Timorese. Indeed, he headed the only foreign ministry in the world that recognized Indonesia’s illegal annexation of the former Portuguese colony. (When I had the temerity to bring this to his attention at an academic conference in Melbourne last year, he started screaming at me, tore off my badge, and threatened to punch me in the face. Apparently, he felt a responsibility to protect his reputation.)

Meanwhile, the U.S. government remains, by far, the world’s primary military, economic, and diplomatic supporter of the world’s remaining authoritarian regimes and occupying armies, openly defending allies engaged in military operations that, like those of the Syrian regime, have resulted in the widespread killing of civilians. For example, during the three-week Israeli military campaign in the Gaza Strip in early 2009, both the U.S. Congress and the Bush administration—using the same kind of language as apologists for the Syrian regime—insisted that the Israeli attacks on civilian neighborhoods were “legitimate self-defense” against “terrorists” placed responsibility for the civilian deaths solely on armed Islamists, and dismissed reports by the UN Human Rights Council, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and other reputable groups documenting the atrocities as “biased.”

Until the United States is willing to take a principled stand against all war crimes, regardless of the relationship of the perpetrator with the United States, the Obama administration will have a hard time convincing Syrians and others that its intentions in supporting the armed opposition are actually humanitarian.

Provoking Assad’s Nationalist Card

Indeed, the intentions of Western governments, particularly the United States, are highly suspect in the eyes of many Syrians, even among those opposed to Assad’s dictatorship. U.S. military intervention would simply play into the hands of the regime in Damascus, which has decades of experience manipulating the Syrian people’s strong sense of nationalism to its benefit. The regime can point out that the United States is the world’s primary military supplier to the region’s remaining dictatorships and disingenuously used the “promotion of democracy” and fabricated claims of “weapons of mass destruction” to justify its illegal and disastrous invasion of its neighbor Iraq which, like Syria, happens to oppose Washington’s designs on the region.

The United States has also been the primary military, financial, and diplomatic supporter of the government of Israel, which has occupied much of Syria’s southwestern Golan province since it seized the territory in a military assault in the closing hours of the 1967 war, ethnically cleansing most of its residents. Indeed, in 2007, the United States successfully blocked progress towards Israel-Syria peace out of concern that the return of the Golan Heights could bolster Assad’s standing at home.

Well prior to the popular uprising against the regime, the United States had been seeking the downfall of the Syrian government, with the Bush administration actively considering options for toppling the regime. The United States imposed major unilateral sanctions on the country in 2003. In addition to repeated U.S. attacks against Syrian positions in Lebanon in 1983-84, the United States bombed Syria itself as recently as 2008, killing eight civilians. Syrians know this history and, among the large numbers who support neither the regime nor the armed opposition, further U.S. involvement is more likely to move them closer to the regime.

Indeed, Western intervention could unwittingly trigger the mobilization of hundreds of thousands of Syrians to resist foreign invaders. Hundreds of Syrians have quit the Baath party and government positions in protest of the killings of nonviolent protesters, but few defections could be expected if Americans and Europeans attacked their country.

Opposing U.S. support for the armed resistance in Syria has nothing to do with indifference, isolationism, or pacifism. Nor is it indicative of being any less horrified at the suffering of the Syrian people or any less desirous of the overthrow of Assad’s brutal regime. With so much at stake, however, it is critical not to allow the understandably strong emotional reaction to the ongoing carnage lead to policies that could end up making things even worse.

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France will stay in Mali as long as necessary, Hollande says

By , February 3, 2013 5:13 am

France will stay in Mali as long as necessary, Hollande says
By: Press TV on: 03.02.2013 [07:11 ] (56 reads)

France will stay in Mali as long as necessary, Hollande says

French President Francois Hollande (C) arrives in the Malian town of Timbuktu on February 2, 2013.

Sun Feb 3, 2013 4:39AM GMT

President Francois Hollande says France would continue its combat mission in Mali and French troops will stay in the country as long as necessary.

“We’ll stay as long as we need to, but there’s no question of us getting entrenched here, this is a short operation. We’ll stay by your side as you address rebuilding in your nation,” the French president told thousands of Malians in the capital, Bamako, on Saturday.

Hollande also praised the work done by French troops in Mali and pledged more support for the African country.

“France will stay with you as long as it takes, until the time for Africans themselves to replace us. Until then we will be beside you to the end, as far as north Mali.”

Also on Saturday, Hollande, accompanied by Mali’s interim President Dioncounda Traore, traveled to the northern city of Timbuktu, which was recaptured by French and Malian troops on January 26.

“It (the war) is not over yet, it’s going to take several weeks, but our goal is to pass the baton,” he said.

Hollande arrived in Mali on Saturday for a one-day visit nearly four weeks after France launched the war on Mali under the pretext of halting the advance of anti-government fighters in the country.

Analysts believe that behind the military campaign are Mali’s untapped resources, including oil, gold and the uranium in the region.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/02/03/286998/france-will-stay-in-mali-hollande/

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France will stay in Mali as long as necessary, Hollande says

By , February 3, 2013 2:29 am

France will stay in Mali as long as necessary, Hollande says
By: Press TV on: 03.02.2013 [07:11 ] (37 reads)

France will stay in Mali as long as necessary, Hollande says

French President Francois Hollande (C) arrives in the Malian town of Timbuktu on February 2, 2013.

Sun Feb 3, 2013 4:39AM GMT

President Francois Hollande says France would continue its combat mission in Mali and French troops will stay in the country as long as necessary.

“We’ll stay as long as we need to, but there’s no question of us getting entrenched here, this is a short operation. We’ll stay by your side as you address rebuilding in your nation,” the French president told thousands of Malians in the capital, Bamako, on Saturday.

Hollande also praised the work done by French troops in Mali and pledged more support for the African country.

“France will stay with you as long as it takes, until the time for Africans themselves to replace us. Until then we will be beside you to the end, as far as north Mali.”

Also on Saturday, Hollande, accompanied by Mali’s interim President Dioncounda Traore, traveled to the northern city of Timbuktu, which was recaptured by French and Malian troops on January 26.

“It (the war) is not over yet, it’s going to take several weeks, but our goal is to pass the baton,” he said.

Hollande arrived in Mali on Saturday for a one-day visit nearly four weeks after France launched the war on Mali under the pretext of halting the advance of anti-government fighters in the country.

Analysts believe that behind the military campaign are Mali’s untapped resources, including oil, gold and the uranium in the region.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/02/03/286998/france-will-stay-in-mali-hollande/

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Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!

By , January 23, 2013 7:59 am

Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!
By: Bulov on: 23.01.2013 [01:50 ] (165 reads)

Duke Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!
http://www.davidduke.com/?p=38133
Administrator Jan 22, 2013 |

Jewish Supremacists the world over have been notorious for their support and agitation in favor of mass immigration into European nations—while simultaneously maintain a strict Jews-only immigration policy for Israel.

If this hypocrisy was not enough, the destructive nature of their policies in Europe and America has been demonstrated with the fact that Jews themselves are now starting to flee the product of their own creation.

In an article published in the Times of Israel, news has come of the Jewish school closure which “reflects Jews’ flight from European cities.”

The article says that an “increasingly dangerous neighbourhood” has “forced tough decisions at a Brussels institution founded as a symbol of survival after the Holocaust.

“Established in 1947 as a testament to Belgian Jewry’s post-Holocaust revival, the Athenee Maimonides Bruxelles school once accommodated 600 students in its spacious building in downtown Brussels, but now has only 150. Enrollment entered a free fall 10 years ago, as Jews left the area for the suburbs and were replaced by immigrants, many of them Muslims, who made Jewish parents believe the area was unsafe,” reads the article.

With fewer students, the school went massively into debt; Maimonides now owes various government bodies a total of $ 8 million.

This year, Maimonides’ staff has stepped up efforts to find an alternative locale in the suburbs. If the bid fails, the school may shut down later this year, “a development that would complete the silent exodus of Jews from central Brussels.”

“The area has an immigrant population that doesn’t have a very favorable attitude to Jews,” said Agnes Bensimon, an employee of the Israeli Embassy in Brussels and a former member of the Maimonides parents association.

“The story of Maimonides is the story of Brussels’ Jewish community and its growing unease in the city,” said Joel Rubinfeld, a Maimonides alumnus and co-chairman of the Brussels-based European Jewish Parliament.

It’s not only Brussels. Across Europe, Jews have quietly abandoned long-inhabited neighborhoods in central urban areas for remote suburbs.

In a number of cities, neighborhoods once teeming with Jewish life have become no-go zones for Jews — especially if they wear a yarmulke.

The Jewish population of 80,000 in Marseille, France, has almost completely cleared out of the heavily Muslim city center it inhabited until the 1980s.

Similar migrations have taken place in another French city, Lyon, as well as in Amsterdam and even Antwerp — home to one of the last European Jewish communities to live and work almost exclusively in an urban center.

“It’s not happening everywhere, but is happening in France, Belgium and Holland,” said Dina Porat, head of Tel Aviv University’s Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry.

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

Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!

By , January 23, 2013 5:19 am

Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!
By: Bulov on: 23.01.2013 [01:50 ] (118 reads)

Duke Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!
http://www.davidduke.com/?p=38133
Administrator Jan 22, 2013 |

Jewish Supremacists the world over have been notorious for their support and agitation in favor of mass immigration into European nations—while simultaneously maintain a strict Jews-only immigration policy for Israel.

If this hypocrisy was not enough, the destructive nature of their policies in Europe and America has been demonstrated with the fact that Jews themselves are now starting to flee the product of their own creation.

In an article published in the Times of Israel, news has come of the Jewish school closure which “reflects Jews’ flight from European cities.”

The article says that an “increasingly dangerous neighbourhood” has “forced tough decisions at a Brussels institution founded as a symbol of survival after the Holocaust.

“Established in 1947 as a testament to Belgian Jewry’s post-Holocaust revival, the Athenee Maimonides Bruxelles school once accommodated 600 students in its spacious building in downtown Brussels, but now has only 150. Enrollment entered a free fall 10 years ago, as Jews left the area for the suburbs and were replaced by immigrants, many of them Muslims, who made Jewish parents believe the area was unsafe,” reads the article.

With fewer students, the school went massively into debt; Maimonides now owes various government bodies a total of $ 8 million.

This year, Maimonides’ staff has stepped up efforts to find an alternative locale in the suburbs. If the bid fails, the school may shut down later this year, “a development that would complete the silent exodus of Jews from central Brussels.”

“The area has an immigrant population that doesn’t have a very favorable attitude to Jews,” said Agnes Bensimon, an employee of the Israeli Embassy in Brussels and a former member of the Maimonides parents association.

“The story of Maimonides is the story of Brussels’ Jewish community and its growing unease in the city,” said Joel Rubinfeld, a Maimonides alumnus and co-chairman of the Brussels-based European Jewish Parliament.

It’s not only Brussels. Across Europe, Jews have quietly abandoned long-inhabited neighborhoods in central urban areas for remote suburbs.

In a number of cities, neighborhoods once teeming with Jewish life have become no-go zones for Jews — especially if they wear a yarmulke.

The Jewish population of 80,000 in Marseille, France, has almost completely cleared out of the heavily Muslim city center it inhabited until the 1980s.

Similar migrations have taken place in another French city, Lyon, as well as in Amsterdam and even Antwerp — home to one of the last European Jewish communities to live and work almost exclusively in an urban center.

“It’s not happening everywhere, but is happening in France, Belgium and Holland,” said Dina Porat, head of Tel Aviv University’s Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry.

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Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!

By , January 23, 2013 2:33 am

Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!
By: Bulov on: 23.01.2013 [01:50 ] (67 reads)

Duke Jews Cause Mass Immigration—and Now Flee their Own Creation! Oh noooo stay please stay! Enjoy multikulti!
http://www.davidduke.com/?p=38133
Administrator Jan 22, 2013 |

Jewish Supremacists the world over have been notorious for their support and agitation in favor of mass immigration into European nations—while simultaneously maintain a strict Jews-only immigration policy for Israel.

If this hypocrisy was not enough, the destructive nature of their policies in Europe and America has been demonstrated with the fact that Jews themselves are now starting to flee the product of their own creation.

In an article published in the Times of Israel, news has come of the Jewish school closure which “reflects Jews’ flight from European cities.”

The article says that an “increasingly dangerous neighbourhood” has “forced tough decisions at a Brussels institution founded as a symbol of survival after the Holocaust.

“Established in 1947 as a testament to Belgian Jewry’s post-Holocaust revival, the Athenee Maimonides Bruxelles school once accommodated 600 students in its spacious building in downtown Brussels, but now has only 150. Enrollment entered a free fall 10 years ago, as Jews left the area for the suburbs and were replaced by immigrants, many of them Muslims, who made Jewish parents believe the area was unsafe,” reads the article.

With fewer students, the school went massively into debt; Maimonides now owes various government bodies a total of $ 8 million.

This year, Maimonides’ staff has stepped up efforts to find an alternative locale in the suburbs. If the bid fails, the school may shut down later this year, “a development that would complete the silent exodus of Jews from central Brussels.”

“The area has an immigrant population that doesn’t have a very favorable attitude to Jews,” said Agnes Bensimon, an employee of the Israeli Embassy in Brussels and a former member of the Maimonides parents association.

“The story of Maimonides is the story of Brussels’ Jewish community and its growing unease in the city,” said Joel Rubinfeld, a Maimonides alumnus and co-chairman of the Brussels-based European Jewish Parliament.

It’s not only Brussels. Across Europe, Jews have quietly abandoned long-inhabited neighborhoods in central urban areas for remote suburbs.

In a number of cities, neighborhoods once teeming with Jewish life have become no-go zones for Jews — especially if they wear a yarmulke.

The Jewish population of 80,000 in Marseille, France, has almost completely cleared out of the heavily Muslim city center it inhabited until the 1980s.

Similar migrations have taken place in another French city, Lyon, as well as in Amsterdam and even Antwerp — home to one of the last European Jewish communities to live and work almost exclusively in an urban center.

“It’s not happening everywhere, but is happening in France, Belgium and Holland,” said Dina Porat, head of Tel Aviv University’s Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry.

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USA is All out of ammo: US cops can’t stay stocked up as gun and bullet sales putting a substantial amount of weaponry in civilian hands! Russia to the rescue, please! We need your Tula and Wolf ammo now!

By , January 10, 2013 9:47 am

USA is All out of ammo: US cops can’t stay stocked up as gun and bullet sales putting a substantial amount of weaponry in civilian hands! Russia to the rescue, please! We need your Tula and Wolf ammo now!
By: Bulov on: 10.01.2013 [08:41 ] (117 reads)

USA is All out of ammo: US cops can’t stay stocked up as gun and bullet sales putting a substantial amount of weaponry in civilian hands! Russia to the rescue, please! We need your Tula and Wolf ammo now!

http://rt.com/usa/news/gun-sales-ammunition-police-662/

Published: 09 January, 2013, 23:57
TAGS:
Retail, Arms, USA

AFP Photo / Spencer Platt

A spike in gun and ammunition sales has caused a nationwide shortage that has delayed police training exercises and is putting a substantial amount of weaponry in civilian hands.

Police in Atlanta, Georgia have been forced to delay training exercises due to a shortage of ammunition. The police department has put orders for more bullets on back-order, while officers are being deprived of the training that makes them capable of handling weapons.

“When you can’t get ammunition, it is very concerning,” Sandy Springs Police Chief Terry Sult tells WSBTV. “It affects our ability to be prepared. It affects the potential safety of the officers, because they’re not as proficient as they should be.”

The Sandy Springs Police Department is facing a shortage of tens of thousands of bullets and is scrambling to restock. The neighboring counties are facing an equally dire situation, with both practice ammunition and duty ammunition in short supply. Douglas County Chief Deputy Stan Copeland predicts it could be 6-8 months before the back-orders come in.

“We’re going to get very concerned at the six-month level if that’s all we have in stock, because then we have to start planning and rationing,” Sult says.

Local ammunition suppliers are attributing the shortage to the spike in gun and ammunition purchases by civilians after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting sparked debate on tighter gun control regulations.

FBI background checks for weapons hit a record 2.8 million in December, with most of those occurring after the Dec. 14 massacre. Last month also saw a drastic increase in gun sales, with every US state seeing a rise from the previous month. Ammunition sales were equally steep, with Brownells, the largest supplier of firearm accessories in the world, reporting that it has blown through several years’ worth of ammunition in just a matter of hours. The company apologized for its inability to meet consumer demands.

“There’s been a whole lot of hysteria raised by the National Rifle Association about the need to stockpile guns because Obama’s going to take your guns away,” Caroline Brewer, a spokeswoman for the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, tells ABC News. “It may mean more gun owners are buying more guns.”

Factories are now struggling to produce enough ammunition to keep up with demand, prompting police departments to share with neighboring counties in order to keep running. The federal government may have experienced a similar shortage if it didn’t prepare ahead of time: the Department of Homeland Security recently ordered 200,000 rounds of bullets at the cost of $ 45,000 dollars. The ammo will be delivered to a training site in South California.

The agency said there was already a shortage of bullets back in August, which made the threat of “substantial safety issues for the government” a very real one, should law enforcement officials not be adequately armed. The spikes in gun control, which came in waves after Obama’s reelection and the Sandy Hook massacre, drastically worsened the shortage.

Rather than purchasing ammo from their usual factory suppliers, police are now being forced to search local shops for the supplies they so desperately need.
“We’re having law enforcement agencies that are coming in and buying ammunition off the shelf, because, you know, they need it,” says Jay Wallace, owner of the Georgia-based Smyrna Police Distributors.

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USA Pictorial: Stop Guns Grabbers Now. Kill the bastards if you have to, stay free.

By , December 24, 2012 4:10 am

USA Pictorial: Stop Guns Grabbers Now. Kill the bastards if you have to, stay free.
By: Bulov on: 23.12.2012 [06:12 ] (41 reads)

USA Pictorial: Stop Guns Grabbers Now. Kill the bastards if you have to, stay free.

The ownership of Guns in Citizen’s Hands is enormous beyond point of return. They are never leaving their hands! Like your Jobs, they are not coming back!

http://whatreallyhappened.com/node/207807

Switzerland 1 in 2 citizens carry full auto assault rifles , the lowest crime in the world
http://whatreallyhappened.com/IMAGES/1in2citizensarmed.jpg

Average number of people shot in mass shooting when stop by the Police =18. Average number of people shot when Stop by the armed Citizen=2
http://whatreallyhappened.com/IMAGES/gunlaws.jpg

Only if Their Kids’ Teacher had been Armed That Day” Picture, Israeli School Teacher..
http://whatreallyhappened.com/node/207660
http://whatreallyhappened.com/IMAGES/israeliteacher.jpg
http://michigancplblog.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/israeli-teacher.jpg

Connecticut’s Strict Gun Control Laws Did Not Stop the School Shootings in Newtown
Connecticut is one of the states that have the most strict gun control laws preventing the law abiding from being armed to respond to situations like what happened in Newtown. Also the federal” Gun Free School Zones” is a joke that only restrict the law abiding, not the criminal or the deranged. It didn’t stop the gunman killing 22 students in Sandy Hooker Elementary School.

CALL TO ACTION: The only way Americans are going to halt this latest gun-grabber attack on the Bill of Rights is to force the issue of SSRI-caused violence into the public eye. You, yes YOU need to forward all these articles about SSRIs and violence, and the fact that the Connecticut shooter was on these medications, to all your local media, all your family and friends, every public forum you can find, and especially to flood the offices of members of Congress (who already had hearings into this very problem). Right now that fancy software the government bought to fake thousands of online identities is cranked up into rock-and-roll, full-tilt, afterburner overdrive. Unless We The People match them post for post, fact for myth, the gun-grabbers will win through attrition. The first side to quit loses. PLEASE SPREAD ALL THESE STORIES ABOUT SSRI-VIOLENCE, and demand to know if the Dark Knight Shooter and the shooter at the shopping mall in Portkand were also on these drugs.

…………………..
I Bet the Parents Would Give ANYTHING if Their Kids’ Teacher had been Armed That Day” Picture, Israeli School Teacher..

Posted on Dec 15, 2012 at 08:04
Tags:
• RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS

http://michigancplblog.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/israeli-teacher.jpg

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