"Moderate"
Syrian Rebels Sign Non-Aggression Pact With ISIS; Iraq Defies US
13
September, 2014
First
it was the 'broad coalition' that appeared a little narrower than
President Obama explained to the world last week. Today, 2 more
crucial aspects of the 'strategy' appear to be faltering. Despite the
promise of $500 million to train "moderate" Syrian
terrorist/rebels to fight ISIS, GlobalPost reports Syrian rebels and
jihadists from the Islamic State have agreed a non-aggression pact
for the first time. Under the
deal, "the two parties will respect a truce until a final
solution is found and they promise not to attack each other because
they consider the principal enemy to be the Nussayri regime."
Not exactly what Obama and Kerry had in mind. But it is John Kerry's
trip to Iraq that appears to have had blowback already as Reuters
reports the newly installed US-friendly PM al-Adadi ordered
his air force to halt strikes on civilian areas, "even in those
towns controlled by ISIS,"
just a day after Kerry's visit (which left Turkey explaining how it
would not support US airstrikes either). So far, so good?!
So,
to sum up...
First,
Germany
and UK (and Australia) - the USA' broad coalition of allies to strike
ISIS - will not support airstrikes on ISIS
in Syria.
Germany
and the U.K. on Thursday ruled out carrying out air strikes on
Islamic State militants in Syria, a
day after President Barack Obama authorized the start of U.S. air
strikes there.
"We
haven't been asked, nor will we do it," German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier told reporters
when asked about German participation in air strikes against the
Islamic State, known as ISIL or ISIS, in light of Mr. Obama's speech.
"We
need to be honest with ourselves in the current situation, we don't
yet have a final, blanket strategy which guarantees that we'll be
successful against ISIS and similar groups,"
the German minister said in Berlin.
His
U.K. counterpart Philip Hammond explicitly ruled out air strikes in
Syria,
after the U.K. parliament struck down such a move last year.
*
* *
Second,
Turkey
- the USA's closest ally in NATO among the Middle East - denies them
its airbases for use as launch sites of airstrikes and will not
support airstrikes in Syria
(after John Kerry visits)
US
Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Ankara Friday for talks
aimed at building a coalition against Islamic State jihadists,
a visit that comes after Turkey said it would not allow its air bases
to be used for strikes on the extremists.
The
top US diplomat,
touring the Middle East to establish a coalition of more than 40
countries,
is to meet with Turkey's leaders including President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan for talks on measures to defeat the militants in Iraq and
Syria.
Turkey,
a NATO member and Washington's key ally in the region,
is reluctant to take part in combat operations against Islamic State
militants, or allow a US-led coalition to attack jihadists from its
territory.
On
the eve of the visit, a Turkish official told AFP: "Our
hands and arms are tied because of the hostages."
The
official added that Turkey
will "not be involved in any armed operation but will entirely
concentrate on humanitarian operations."
IS
militants hold 49 Turks hostage, including diplomats and children,
abducted from the Turkish consulate in Mosul in Iraq in June.
Turkey
is the only Muslim country in a coalition of 10 countries who agreed
to fight ISIS at the NATO summit in Newport.
Turkey
can open Incirlik Air Base in the south for logistical and
humanitarian operations
in any U.S.-led operation, according to the official who stressed
that the base would not be used for lethal air strikes.
“Turkey
will not take part in any combat mission, nor supply weapons,”
he said.
*
* *
As
Reuters reports,
Iraq's
Shi'ite Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said on Saturday that he had
ordered his air force to halt strikes on civilian areas.
"I
have ordered the Iraqi Air Force to halt shelling of civilian areas
even in those towns controlled by ISIS," Abadi
said on his official Twitter account, using the former name for
militant group Islamic State.
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry has been touring the Middle East to
coordinate a response to Islamic State's growing power in eastern
Syria and western Iraq.
Abadi
said his order to protect civilians had been issued on Thursday, a
day after he held talks with Kerry in Baghdad.
*
* *
Finally,
The
USA's proxy boots-on-the-ground - Syria's "moderate" rebels
- have signed a non-aggression truce with ISIS.
Syrian
rebels and jihadists from the Islamic State have agreed a
non-aggression pact for the first time
in a suburb of the capital Damascus, a monitoring group said on
Friday.
The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the ceasefire deal was
agreed between IS and moderate and Islamist rebels in Hajar al-Aswad,
south of the capital.
Under
the deal, "the two
parties will respect a truce until a final solution is found and they
promise not to attack each other
because they consider the principal enemy to be the Nussayri regime."
But
apart from that, everything is going great...
*
* *
We're
gonna need a new strategy.
Obama’s ISIS War Is Not Only Illegal, It Makes George W. Bush Look Like A Constitutional Scholar
13
September, 2014
Submitted
by Mike
Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,
Rudderless
and without a compass, the American ship of state continues to drift,
guns blazing.
-
Andrew J. Bacevich, the Boston University political science professor
and former Army colonel who lost his son in the Iraq war in
2007, in a recent
Reuters article.
I
have spent the past several days outlining my deep concerns about the
“ISIS crisis” and Obama’s willingness to employ extreme
propaganda in order to once again embark on another poorly thought
out military campaign here
and here.
What I have also come to realize is that his latest war plan is
brazenly illegal and unconstitutional.
While
critics have been questioning the legality of U.S. military
campaigns consistently since the end of World War II, one trend
has become increasingly clear. With each new President and each new
war, we have witnessed those who hold the office act more and
more like dictators, and less and less like constitutional
executives.
One
very important, and up until recently, overlooked point about Obama’s
latest “war on ISIS” is that this is not at all just more of the
same. This crosses yet another very important line of shadiness, and
if we as as American public allow him to do so, we will suffer grave
long-term consequences to our economic future as well as our
liberties. This is very serious stuff.
No
one has outlined this point better than Bruce Ackerman, a professor
of law and political science at Yale, in yesterday’s New York Times
op-ed: Obama’s
Betrayal of the Constitution.
He writes:
BERLIN
— PRESIDENT OBAMA’s declaration
of war against
the terrorist group known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria
marks a decisive break in the American constitutional tradition.
Nothing attempted by his predecessor, George W. Bush, remotely
compares in imperial hubris.
Mr.
Bush gained explicit congressional consent for his invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq. In contrast, the Obama administration has not
even published a legal opinion attempting to justify the president’s
assertion of unilateral war-making authority. This is because no
serious opinion can be written.
This
became clear when White House officials briefed reporters before Mr.
Obama’s speech to the nation on Wednesday evening. They said a war
against ISIS was justified by Congress’s authorization of force
against Al Qaeda after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, and that no
new approval was needed.
But
the 2001 authorization
for the use of military force does
not apply here. That resolution — scaled back from what Mr. Bush
initially wanted — extended only to nations and organizations that
“planned, authorized, committed or aided” the 9/11 attacks.
Not
only was ISIS created long after 2001, but Al Qaeda
publicly disavowed it
earlier this year. It is Al Qaeda’s competitor, not its affiliate.
Mr.
Obama may rightly be frustrated by gridlock in Washington, but his
assault on the rule of law is a devastating setback for our
constitutional order. His refusal even to ask the Justice Department
to provide a formal legal pretext for the war on ISIS is astonishing.
Senators
and representatives aren’t eager to step up to the plate in October
when, however they decide, their votes will alienate some
constituents in November’s midterm elections. They would prefer to
let the president plunge ahead and blame him later if things go
wrong. But this is precisely why the War Powers Resolution sets up
its 60-day deadline: It
rightly insists that unless Congress is willing to stand up and be
counted, the war is not worth fighting in the name of the American
people.
But
for now the president seems grimly determined to practice what Mr.
Bush’s lawyers only preached. He is acting on the proposition that
the president, in his capacity as commander in chief, has unilateral
authority to declare war.
In
taking this step, Mr. Obama is not only betraying the electoral
majorities who twice voted him into office on his promise to end
Bush-era abuses of executive authority. He is also betraying the
Constitution he swore to uphold.
Think
about this for a second. Barack Obama is using the 2001 Authorization
for Use of Military Force (AUMF), which allowed for military action
against “nations and
organizations that planned, authorized, committed or aided the 9/11
attacks.”
ISIS wasn’t even a twinkle in Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s eye
back in September 2001. Even more stunning, ISIS and al-Qaeda more
closely resemble enemies than allies. Yet this doesn’t seem to
affect Nobel Peace Prize winning Barry Obama’s war
planning. You can’t get much more insane and Orwellian than that.
Who
cares right? This won’t ever affect you. So what if some bombs fall
on innocent Arab civilians? Wrong.
One
of the most terrifying aspects of this whole war push if Obama is
able to pull it off, is that the reasoning (or lack thereof) could
ultimately be applied to the detention of U.S. citizens
indefinitely without a trial.
Yes,
what I am referring to is the National Defense Authorization Act, or
NDAA, which allows for the indefinite detention of American citizens
without a trial. I covered this frequently several years ago when
Chris Hedges and others were suing the Obama Administration regarding
the constitutionality of this law. In fact, one of my most popular
posts ever was, NDAA:
The Most Important Lawsuit in American History that No One is Talking
About.
One
of the ways in which the U.S. government has defended the NDAA is by
saying it can only be used against “a
person who was a part of or substantially supported al-Qaeda, the
Taliban, or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against
the United States or its coalition partners.”
Section
1021 of the NDAA governs, as its title says, “Authority of the
Armed Forces to Detain Covered Persons Pursuant to the AUMF.” The
first provision — section (a) — explicitly “affirms that the
authority of the President” under the AUMF ”includes the
authority for the Armed Forces of the United States to
detain covered persons.” The next section, (b), defines
“covered persons” — i.e., those who can be detained by the
U.S. military — as “a person who was a part of or substantially
supported al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or associated forces that are
engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition
partners.”
Notice
that the above says “pursuant to the AUMF,” which is the exact
law the Obama Administration is using to justify his latest
war. If he is able to start a war with ISIS based on the AUMF,
despite the fact that ISIS and al-Qaeda are not allies at all, he or
a future President could similarly use the AUMF and the
NDAA to imprison anyone, anywhere for an indefinite amount of time
based on the same absurd non-claim.
Let
this all sink in for a second. Do you still support these ISIS
strikes?
"NATO
and the United States should change their policy because the time
when they dictate their conditions to the world has passed,"
Ahmadinejad said in a speech in Dushanbe, capital of the Central
Asian republic of Tajikistan
ISIS
Beheads British Aid Worker In "Message To Allies Of America"
13
September, 2014
Rather
disturbingly, ISIS had just announced the execution of another
captive:
*ISLAMIC
STATE RELEASES VIDEO SHOWING BEHEADING OF DAVID HAINES
As
Bloomberg reports,
Video
is similar to ones in which James Foley, Steve Sotloff were killed,
SITE says.
Jihadist
monitoring website comments on today’s beheading in statement on
its website
British
captive David Haines, who SITE says is beheaded in video, addresses
U.K. PM Cameron in video
Video
purportedly shows David Haines saying he holds David Cameron
"entirely responsible" for his "execution" before
being murdered
“You
entered voluntarily into a coalition with the United States against
the Islamic State, just as your predecessor Tony Blair did, following
a trend amongst our British prime minister who can’t find the
courage to say no to the Americans,” SITE
quotes Haines as saying
SITE
says executioner appears to be same as in previous videos.
“IS
Beheads Briton David Haines,
Threatens to Execute Another Briton, Alan Henning,” SITE
Intel Group says on Twitter.
*ISLAMIC
STATE THREATENS TO EXECUTE BRITISH HOSTAGE HENNING:SITE
*SITE
SAYS BEHEADING VIDEO ENTITLED `A MSG TO ALLIES OF AMERICA'
*SITE
SAYS VIDEO SIMILAR TO BEHEADINGS OF FOLEY, SOTLOFF
*SITE
COMMENTS ON TODAY'S BEHEADING IN STATEMENT ON ITS WEBSITE
*HAINES
ADDRESSES U.K.'S CAMERON IN VIDEO, SITE SAYS
*SITE
SAYS EXECUTIONER APPEARS TO BE SAME AS IN PREVIOUS VIDEOS
*
* *
*
* *
In
London, the Foreign Office has said it is aware of the video and
“working urgently to verify” its content.
Haines,
who was 44, was kidnapped last year. He had been in Syria for just
three days when he was kidnapped and handed over to Isis militants.
The
aid worker was taken while working for Acted in Syria in March 2013.
*
* *
The
44-year-old Haines has a teenage daughter in Scotland from a previous
marriage and a four-year-old daughter in Croatia from his present
marriage.
Educated
at Perth Academy secondary school, he has worked for aid agencies in
some of the world's worst trouble spots.
He
was in Libya during its civil war in 2011, working as head of mission
for Handicap International, which helps disabled people in poverty
and conflict zones around the world.
*
* *
British
PM Cameron responds:
*DAVID
HAINES MURDER ’ACT OF PURE EVIL’: CAMERON ON TWITTER
*’WE
WILL DO EVERYTHING TO HUNT DOWN THESE MURDERERS’: CAMERON
*U.K.'S
CAMERON SAYS ACT WAS `DESPICABLE AND APPALLING MURDER'
*CAMERON
SAYS CABINET MEETING ON MATTER TO BE HELD SUNDAY
Australia
to deploy military
to help fight Islamic State:
Tony Abbott
14
September, 2014
TONY
Abbott has committed RAAF combat aircraft and army special forces
advisers to join the fight in Iraq against the Islamic State
terrorist group, in an operation that could last for “many months”.
Eleven
years after the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the Prime Minister announced
today that within days, the RAAF would send to the United Arab
Emirates up to eight Royal Australian Air Force F/A18 Super Hornet or
“classic” Hornet combat aircraft, an E-7A Wedgetail Airborne
Early Warning and Control aircraft; and a KC-30A multi-role tanker
and transport aircraft.
With
them will go about 600 Australian Defence Force personnel — 400
from the RAAF and 200 from the Army.
Mr
Abbott and Australian Defence Force chief Mark Binskin said the ADF
would also immediately send a Special Operations Task Group as
military advisers to help Iraqi and other security forces fighting
Islamic State terrorists, also known as ISIL.
He
said the deployment did not mean Australia was at war and stressed
the operation so far was “preparation and deployment”, with a
decision yet to be made to send forces into action.
“But
obviously that’s something we have in contemplation,” he said.
Mr
Abbott warned the operation, which has Labor support, could be highly
hazardous.
“I
have to warn the Australian people that should this preparation and
deployment extend into combat operations, this could go on for quite
some time — months rather than weeks, perhaps many, many months
indeed,’” Mr Abbott said.
The
move comes days after US President Barack Obama ordered a
“relentless” war against Islamic State, including air strikes in
Syria and expanded operations in Iraq to “destroy” the jihadists.
Mr
Abbott said Mr Obama had told him the US was “prepared for quite a
lengthy American contribution to this particular mission”.
He
added: “There are obviously further decisions to be taken before
Australian forces will be committed to combat operations in Iraq,”
he said in Darwin.
“Nevertheless
Australia is prepared to engage in international operations to
disrupt and degrade ISIL because of the threat that this murderous
death cult poses not just to the people of Iraq, not just to the
people of the Middle East, but to the whole world including to
Australia.”
The
Prime Minister said the Islamic State’s beheading of British aid
worker David Haines “should make all of us more resolved than ever
to do whatever we reasonably can to disrupt, degrade and if possible
destroy this movement”.
Mr
Abbott said the situation in Iraq was as much a matter of domestic
security as it was of international security.
He
said the conflict had “reached out” to Australia, with at least
60 Australians fighting with ISIL and other terrorist groups and
another 100 or so supporting these extremists.
“It
is right for Australia to do what it prudently and proportionately
can to support international efforts to prevent the spread of ISIL,
roll back its gains and alleviate suffering in Iraq.”
.
The
decision to take on a more active role in Iraq follows a formal
request for help from the government of new Iraqi prime minister
Haider al-Abadi and from the United States.
“In
recent days, I have discussed the situation with President Barack
Obama, with Iraq’s new Prime Minister al-Abadi and with Crown
Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zaiyed of the United Arab Emirates,” Mr
Abbott said.
“These
leaders share the government’s grave concern about the situation in
Iraq and support Australian participation in an international
coalition to disrupt and degrade ISIL’s ruthless advance.”.
Air
Chief Marshal Binskin said he could not go into more details about
the deployment to avoid providing information to enemy forces.
But
he said disrupting IS would take a “comprehensive and sustained
effort”.
“If
we do nothing, the risk of allowing the shocking acts of ISIL to
further destabilise the Middle East, and spread beyond the Middle
East region, potentially back to Australia is a greater risk,” he
said.
Australia
will also place ADF specialists in the United States headquarters to
ensure close coordination with alliance partners and to support
planning and logistics.
“We
are not deploying combat troops but contributing to international
efforts to prevent the humanitarian crisis from deepening,” Mr
Abbott said.
He
said the national security committee of cabinet and the full cabinet
had considered the decision, to send troops.
Mr
Abbott said he would attend the United Nations Security Council on
September 24 to further discuss the international effort.
Labor
gave the deployment bipartisan support, with Bill Shorten describing
Islamic State as a “barbaric organisation”.
“We
don’t do so lightly,” the Opposition Leader said in a statement.
“(But) Australia has a role to play in eradicating this evil and we
are reassured that our support is being provided at the request of,
and in full co-ordination with, the Iraqi Government.”
But
the Greens said the plan was ultimately an act of war.
“Make
no mistake. Today, Tony Abbott has committed Australia to blindly
following the United States into another war in Iraq,” Greens
leader Christine Milne said in Hobart.
“This
is an open-ended mission, there is no timeframe for how long troops
would be there or even a notion of what success would look like.”
Australian
military instructors, who gained considerable experience in
Afghanistan, will return to Iraq to help build up training,
logistical support and other areas vital to the Kurdish and other
forces fighting the jihadists.
While
Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, backed by air strikes by the US and its
allies, have shown the courage to face the jihadist advance, they
lack the effective logistical “tail” needed to keep the supply of
ammunition, food and medical supplies flowing to their front line
troops.
The
Wedgetails can oversee a complex battle by directing fighter
aircraft, tankers and manned and unmanned intelligence-gathering
aircraft while flying over hostile territory.
Australia
has already provided airlift assistance to Iraq, including the
movement of arms and munitions and two humanitarian aid drops to
stranded people in northern Iraq.
The
RAAF’s giant C-17 Globemaster and C130 Hercules transport aircraft
are based at al-Minhad Air Base south of Dubai in the United Arab
Emirates.
The
aircraft can parachute supplies to trapped communities or land to
unload cargoes at a safe and suitable airfield.
The
RAAF fighter-bombers are expected to be a squadron of the RAAF’s
Hornet or Super Hornet fighter-bombers. They would be escorted to the
Middle East by a flying tanker, possibly one of the RAAF’s KC-30s.
The
Super Hornets will come from RAAF Base Amberley and the Wedgetail and
tanker from RAAF Base Williamtown.
Australia
withdrew most of its troops from Iraq in mid-2008. Two officers were
kept on there as advisers to the United Nations and they were brought
home in August 2011.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.