They're
keeping very quiet about this one!
U.S.
Troops Deployed in Iraq Again
A
unit of U.S. Army Special Operations soldiers was recently deployed
to Iraq and more U.S. soldiers may soon be on their way, according to
a New York Times report on the impact the civil war in neighboring
Syria is having on Iraq's "fragile society and fledgling
democracy."
27
September, 2012
Buried
in the 15th paragraph of the report in Tuesday's Times was the news
that "Iraq and the United States are negotiating an agreement
that could result in the return of small units of American soldiers
to Iraq on training missions" and that a unit of Army Special
Operations soldiers has already been deployed to Iraq to advise on
counterterrorism and help with intelligence.
Nearly
a decade after U.S. and coalition forces invaded Iraq and overthrew
the government of Saddam Hussein and just nine months after
withdrawal of the last of the American combat units, the Shia
government in Iraq is fighting for its survival against Sunni
insurgents in its own country, while struggling to cope with the
"spillover" of the fighting and the influx of refugees from
the war next door in Syria. Meanwhile, the Times reported, the
Baghdad government "leans closer" to the Shia regime in
Iran and is looking to buy arms from Russia, while continuing to rely
on military support from the United States. Aerial attacks by Turkey
on Kurdish enclaves in the mountains of northern Iraq have added to
the woes of a government trying to assert its sovereignty both in the
air and on the ground.
For
article GO
HERE
US
temporarily reduces more staff from Libya embassy
28
Septermber, 2012
The
United States is temporarily withdrawing more staff from its embassy
in Libya's capital for security reasons, but hopes to return them to
Tripoli early next week, the U.S. State Department said on Thursday.
"This
is a temporary further drawdown of staff for security reasons. We
will review our posture again early next week with the goal of
restoring staff as soon as conditions allow," a State Department
official said in New York, where Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
is attending the U.N. General Assembly.
The
senior official declined to say how many staff were being withdrawn
or discuss specifics.
U.S.
Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and three other Americans
were killed during what Washington has called a terrorist attack on
the U.S. consulate in Benghazi on September 11.
Half
of Israelis fear war with Iran would endanger Jewish State's
existence
More
than half of Israelis fear that war with Iran would endanger the
Jewish State's very existence, a new poll has found.
28
September, 2012
It
is a startling finding that will worry Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who has argued that a pre-emptive strike on Iran's nuclear
facilities may be necessary to prevent it from obtaining the atom
bomb.
It
also suggests that few were convinced by Defence Minister Ehud
Barak's surprising assertion last November that Israel would suffer
fewer than 500 casualties were Iran to retaliate to an Israeli
attack.
Undermining
the calls for military action from the government are the sober
warnings from retired defence officials, who fear that a pre-emptive
strike would precipitate a new Middle East war, the consequences of
which would be impossible to predict.
The
Tel Aviv University poll, published in Israel's Haaretz newspaper,
found that a majority of Israelis thought the likelihood of a
conflict with Iran “high” or “medium,” while half either
feared or “greatly” feared for Israel's existence. The newspaper
did not provide a detailed breakdown of the poll's findings.
But
even as Israelis appear to accept the inevitability of a showdown
with Iran, the poll suggested that it would not affect Mr Netanyahu's
ability to form a coalition government if elections were held today.
Mr
Netanyahu has stepped up his rhetoric in Iran in recent weeks, and
tried unsuccessfully to push Washington to set “red lines” over
Iran, a demand dismissed by President Barack Obama in a recent
interview as “noise.”
Mr Netanyahu could find himself out of a job if he oversteps the mark. No one wants to live in an ashtray let alone die in one.
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