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War Whore

Trump's new missile defense plan is Eisenhower's nightmare on steroids

Slim Pickens as Major T.J. Kong riding the bomb
© Screenshot/You Tube/Courtesy of Columbia Pictures.
Slim Pickens as Major T.J. Kong riding the bomb in “Dr. Stangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb” (1964).
Trump's new missile defense plan will be a bonanza for political patronage in Washington, and a huge fail for peace.

President Donald Trump's plan to escalate efforts in Ballistic Missile Defense (BDM), including the introduction of space-based weapons, should not be viewed in isolation.

It comes on top of the Defense Department's plan to execute an across-the-board modernization of all our nuclear strike forces. It comes on top of the expansion of NATO under three presidents, despite earlier promises (here and here) to the contrary. It comes on top of the unilateral decision by President George W. Bush to withdraw from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in June 2002, on top of Trump's threat to withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, and on top of Trump's publication of a more aggressive Nuclear Posture Review. To argue that such a massive effort is directed at deterring Iran or North Korea is ludicrous. Russia and China know who these programs and policies are aimed at.

Comment: The wheels are so far into motion, and insight into its own behavior is so lacking in Washington, that Russia and China have come right out to say they are preparing for war:


Eye 1

Israel launches new barrage of airstrikes against 'Iranian' targets in Syria, warns against retaliation - UPDATES

Syria israel strike
© Global Look Press/ ZUMA Press
Syria's air defenses repel an Israeli missile attack over Damascus on Jan.21, 2019.
Syrian air-defense systems have repelled an attack in the skies over Damascus, state news agency SANA has reported. The Israeli Army said it was attacking "Iranian Quds" forces and warned the Syrian military not to retaliate.

A military source cited by SANA said that Syrian air-defenses intercepted most of the Israeli missiles before they hit targets. The source added that Israel launched guided missiles from ground and air in several rounds.

In a brief statement on Twitter, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) warned the Syrian Army "against attempting to harm Israeli forces or territory."

Witnesses on the ground reported hearing explosions above Damascus throughout the city. Images posted on social media show bright flashes in the sky as missiles were apparently destroyed mid-flight.

Comment: Sputnik reports:
[...]


"The Israeli enemy struck a massive air and ground attack with several 'waves' of guided missiles. Our air defense systems immediately began to repel the attack of enemy missiles. A significant part of the missiles destroyed before they reached the targets", the source said.

State broadcaster Ikhbariya reported that air defense forces had shot down "tens" of Israeli targets. The broadcaster noted that various types of weapons had been used in the attack and that the missiles had been launched from the airspace of Lebanon, as well as from the northern part of the Israeli region of Galilee and from the area of Lake Tiberias.

[...]

Later in the day, the Israeli Air Forces struck, in response to an a attempt of an alleged missile attack on Golan Heights, several air defense targets in Syria, including alleged Iran's Syria-based arms depots, reconnaissance facility and a training camp, the IDF claimed in a twitter statement on Monday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's press office said on Sunday that "our permanent policy is to oppose Iran's attempts to gain a foothold in Syria and to hurt those who is trying to hurt us".


That's quite a telling statement: Netanyahu wants to actively hurt those who (in his paranoia addled mind) are trying (how he defines that isn't so clear) to hurt them.


Earlier in January, Netanyahu vowed to continue confronting military activities in Syria allegedly conducted by Iran.

"Our position is clear. We will continue to act against the Iranian military entrenchment in Syria, including at present, and we will act against any element that undermines, or attempts to undermine, the security of Israel", Netanyahu said.

The Israeli military estimated the number of air strikes over the past two years at 200. Tel Aviv, Tehran's long-time regional opponent, has repeatedly expressed security concerns over an alleged Iranian military presence next to its borders in Syria.

Israel has officially taken a neutral stance on the seven-year Syrian civil war, however, and Tel Aviv claims the IDF has been conducting air raids in Syria allegedly against the Lebanese paramilitary group Hezbollah and also to counter what it claims is alleged Iran's military presence in the neighboring country.

Hezbollah has been reportedly supporting the Syrian government in the civil war since 2012. Hezbollah has repeatedly claimed that its troops came to Syria after receiving an invitation from Damascus and were ready to leave the country as soon as the government asks.

Tel Aviv has a bellicose relationship with Damascus' Lebanese ally Hezbollah and Iran, and repeatedly strikes its alleged targets in the conflict-torn country. According to Tel Aviv, Iran allegedly seeks to turn Syria into a military foothold and Israeli activities in Syria are aimed to curb Tehran's aspirations. Tehran has repeatedly stressed that only its military advisers operate in Syria.
And RFE/RL reports on a blast that struck a Damascus security facility curiously around the same time, although in this instance the claims are that it was a terrorist on the ground and their affiliation is not yet clear:
A bomb blast has hit Damascus on January 20, in a rare attack in the Syrian capital.

A war monitor reported a "huge explosion" near a military intelligence office in the south of the city that left a number of people dead and wounded.

The blast was followed by shooting, said the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights

The state news agency SANA reported that the "bomb blast" hit southern Damascus "without leaving any victims," and said a "terrorist" was arrested.

The explosion came as a bomb in the northern Syrian city of Afrin killed three people and wounded nine others, according to the Observatory, on the first anniversary of the start of a military operation by Turkey and allied rebels in the Kurdish-majority region.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blasts in Damascus and Afrin.

Meanwhile, Israel said it intercepted a rocket fired from Syria's Israeli-occupied Golan Heights after Damascus accused the Jewish state of carrying out air raids on the south of the country.


Israel claims to have intercepted one rocket - and there's no reason to believe these claims - meanwhile it sent "waves" of rockets to Syria in the dead of night.


Syrian air defenses destroyed seven projectiles after four Israeli F-16 military planes "fired rockets into Syrian territory," according to the Russian military.

Israel's military declined comment on the air strike.

Russia and Iran have given Syrian President Bashar al-Assad crucial military and diplomatic support throughout the nearly eight-year war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced millions.

Israel has pledged to stop Iran from entrenching itself militarily in Syria, carrying out hundreds of air strikes there against Iranian targets and those of Lebanon's Shi'ite militant group Hizballah.
Update (Jan 21): The Israeli military released their footage of the strikes:

The Russian Ministry of Defense announced that the attacks killed four Syrian soldiers and partially damaged the infrastructure of the Damascus international airport". They also revealed that Syrian Air Defenses destroyed over 30 Israeli cruise missiles and guided bombs. The Syrian Foreign Ministry made the clear point regarding the attacks: that Israel operates under a double standard because of its relationship with the US:
Such attacks are possible only thanks to the unlimited support provided by the US administration, the immunity from investigations extended to Israel by a number of countries in the UN Security Council, as well as the complete silence regime that these countries have imposed in the UN Security Council to prevent this body from fulfilling its role in repelling these criminal attacks



Snakes in Suits

Theresa May to reveal her 'Plan B' for Brexit

theresa may
© Jack Taylor | Getty Images News | Getty Images
U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May is due to lay out a 'Plan B' for Brexit to lawmakers on Monday as she looks to secure a fresh withdrawal agreement before the March 29 deadline to leave the European Union (EU).

As widely expected, May's initial Brexit deal, or 'Withdrawal Agreement,' was rejected by a majority of the U.K. Parliament last week, giving the prime minister three working days to come up with an alternative plan.

May has since held cross-party talks although opposition parties have called on her to both rule out a 'no-deal' Brexit (where Britain leaves the EU abruptly with no ongoing relationship in place) or to hold a second referendum. A second vote is the preferred option of several larger opposition parties, including the Liberal Democrats and Scottish National Party (SNP), both of whom oppose Brexit.

May is now focused on persuading Brexiteers within her Conservative party and the pro-Brexit Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) in Northern Ireland to back her deal by resolving Irish "backstop" concerns, according to the BBC on Monday, citing anonymous sources within the Cabinet, top-level ministers.

The BBC added that May held a conference call with the Cabinet, her closest ministers, on Sunday and said "it's understood she wants to show the EU that MPs could back a deal without a backstop, in the hope of encouraging Brussels to soften its position."

Comment: The UK's International Trade Secretary Liam Fox has warned that the failure to deliver Brexit would lead to a "political tsunami" among the UK electorate. Fox warned:
"Failure to deliver Brexit would produce a yawning gap between Parliament and the people, a schism in our political system with unknowable consequences."
"Parliament has not got the right to hijack the Brexit process because Parliament said to the people of this country we make a contract with you, you will make the decision and we will honour it"
May has since revealed her Plan B to parliament:
May says there were six issues that came up when she conducted cross-party discussions on the best way forward for Brexit negotiations.

The first concerned the issue of a no-deal Brexit. She insists the best way to avoid such a scenario is by approving a deal.

The second issue, May says, was on a second referendum pushed by certain opposition leaders. She claims a 'people's vote' would be voted down by MPs in the house of commons.

The PM insisted that there could be some progress on the other four issues. On the Irish backstop, May ruled out reopening the Good Friday agreement. She told parliament that she needed to find out what MPs wanted changed on the backstop.

May revealed that her government has decided that the £65 fee for EU nationals applying for settled status in the UK is to be abolished.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn responded to the PM's statement by saying that her attempted cross-party talks were a "sham" - adding that May was in denial about the severity of the defeat of her Brexit deal in parliament last week.



Attention

Sochi Gold Stands: IOC knew Russian athletes were clean, but concealed evidence of their innocence

Olympic emblem
© Reuters/Denis Baibouse
Staff of the IOC dismantle backdrop to news conference after the Olympic Summit on doping in Lausanne, Switzerland, June 21, 2016.
Russian athletes, falsely accused of a doping scheme at Sochi 2014, could've avoided career-ruining bans if the International Olympic Committee (IOC) didn't conceal facts of their innocence, an athlete's lawyer told RT.

Russian sport has won a crucial legal battle on Saturday. Swiss Supreme Court has turned down the IOC's appeal against the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) ruling from February 1, 2017 to acquit 28 Team Russia members of doping use accusations during the 2014 Winter Games in Russia. The Olympic officials accepted the decision with "disappointment," but announced that they'll stop further persecution of the athletes.

The athletes' good names might be restored now, but they had all been handed lengthy disqualifications and missed out on the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang last year.

The harsh measures were introduced after an Olympic disciplinary panel accused the Russians of being part of a state-run doping program, based on claims by former Moscow anti-doping laboratory director Grigory Rodchenkov, who fled to the US in 2015 and is wanted at home on several charges.

German legal firm Wieschemann Lawyers said in a statement on Saturday that "there is no factual evidence for the allegations made by Dr. Rodchenkov regarding the events in Sochi." It also insisted that the International Olympic committee "seriously violated the procedural rights of the athletes and even withheld exculpatory evidence from the defense and the court."


Comment: Justice done? Admitting the wrong doesn't begin to make up for destroying athlete reputations, tarnishing their sports programs, maligning the country they represent or eroding trust for international sports. Dr. Rodchenkov, WADA and the IOC were all party to this despicable episode in the history of the Olympics - an arrow to the heart of sportsmanship and athletic honor.
See also:


Bizarro Earth

German arms manufacturer to sue for government's halt of weapons deliveries to Saudi Arabia

transport planes tarmac
© Reuters/Axel Heimken
Berlin might face a lawsuit from one of Germany's largest defense contractors, Rheinmetall, over its decision to halt all arms deals with Riyadh in the wake of the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Der Spiegel reports.

Rheinmetall AG might file a claim for compensation against the federal government worth millions of euro, the company said in a letter to the Ministry of Economics, the German weekly says. The defense industry giant considers itself eligible for restitution as Berlin suspended exports, which were already approved by the German security council, "for political reasons."

The company also fears that its own shareholders could file lawsuits against it if the management fails to demand compensation for the losses stemming from the halt of arms exports to Saudi Arabia. The exact amount of compensation has not been revealed, though.

Back in October, Chancellor Angela Merkel announced her country would stop supplying weapons to Riyadh "under current circumstances" - referring to the investigation into the killing of Jamal Khashoggi. The self-exiled fierce critic of Riyadh's policies was murdered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

Comment: Approximately $129B in just this current total of arms purchases could feed a bucketload of starving people...instead of making a few guys exceedingly rich.


Snowflake Cold

The Pentagon warns Congress climate change is 'national security' risk to military bases

US military bases
© US Dept. of Defense
The Defense Department issued a report to Congress Thursday finding that climate change is a "national security" issue that could leave military bases vulnerable to coastal flooding and wildfires fueled by drought.

"The effects of a changing climate are a national security issue with potential impacts to Department of Defense missions, operational plans, and installations," the 22-page report said.

Congress mandated the report in the fiscal year 2018 National Defense Authorization Act, asking DOD to report on "vulnerabilities to military installations and combatant commander requirements resulting from climate change over the next 20 years."

The NDAA also required the Pentagon to report on the top 10 at-risk bases and what should be done to protect them. But the new DOD report to Congress does not provide a list.

Rather, it reviewed 79 "mission-essential" military installations in the U.S. that could face climate change-related risks within the next 20 years.

Comment: See also:
Military contractors see extreme weather civil unrest as good for business


Bomb

US Afghan policy blown to hell: Taliban hits army base with massive car bomb - At least 100 soldiers killed

Afghan soldiers
© The National
Afghan soldiers on guard as ambulances arrive.
A Taliban attack in central Afghanistan on Monday killed scores of security personnel, officials said, with some estimates putting the death toll at more than 100, amid government silence about one of the most deadly insurgent attacks in months.

Attackers rammed a captured military Humvee packed with explosives into a training center of the National Directorate for Security in Maidan Wardak province, west of the capital, Kabul. At least two gunmen followed up, spraying the compound with gunfire before they were shot down.

"We have information that 126 people have been killed in the explosion inside the military training center, eight special commandoes are among the dead," said a senior official in the defense ministry in Kabul, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Local officials also said that scores of troops and NDS personnel were killed in the attack but there was no official confirmation of the casualty toll, with officials ordered not to talk to media for fear of damaging morale. "I have been told not to make the death toll figures public. It is frustrating to hide the facts," said a senior interior ministry official in Kabul.

Comment: How many US taxpayer dollars had been spent building and maintaining that base? And training, arming, and housing those Afghan army soldiers? And how much went into bribes? And kickbacks for defense contractors?

$50 million altogether?

Kaboom - All gone in the blink of a makeshift car-bomb.

Putting up this much resistance for this long, the Taliban can only have done so with the supported of a majority of the population.

After 18 years of this - and with the Taliban now in control (again) of two thirds of the country - it's perhaps time for the US to go home and redirect resources elsewhere?


X

Venezuela's supreme court: All acts of opposition-led National Assembly are illegal

Venezuela Natl Assembly
© Reuters
Opposition leader Juan Guaidó speaks at the Venezuelan National Assembly.
Venezuela's Supreme Court has declared all acts of the country's National Assembly null and void, days after the opposition-held assembly declared President Nicolas Maduro's election illegitimate.

The National Assembly is a 167-seat legislature, currently headed by Juan Guaidó of the Popular Will party - a fierce opponent of Maduro, who had been taking part in protests against him and has called for the country's military to depose the president.

Maduro already declared the National Assembly illegitimate in 2017, and created a new legislature - the Constituent National Assembly - to replace it, where all seats are currently held by pro-Maduro parties. As Maduro lacks the Constitutional power to outright dissolve the National Assembly, both houses have functioned alongside each other since 2017, with the CNA given power to overrule legislation passed by the National Assembly.

Maduro was sworn in last week after winning re-election last May. The opposition-led assembly and a coalition of neighboring countries declared Maduro's election illegitimate.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called Maduro's election "illegitimate" and a "sham," and vowed to keep up diplomatic pressure on the Venezuelan government.


Comment: See also:


Arrow Down

Corbyn refrains from conceding to calls for second EU referendum

Corbyn
© The Telegraph
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn
Jeremy Corbyn is likely to refrain from making fresh moves towards backing a second referendum until after the government's Brexit plan B is voted on later this month, as he seeks to balance pressure from rival wings of his party.

Labour strategists believe there is a firm majority both in the shadow cabinet and in parliament against an immediate shift towards full-throated support for a referendum, the Guardian understands.

They are also keen for the focus in the coming days to remain on Theresa May's efforts to rework the Irish backstop, after her Brexit deal was defeated by a historic margin of 230 votes last week.

Labour wants to prioritise pursuing its own version of Brexit - with a customs union, a close relationship to the single market, and stronger protections for workers' rights and environmental standards.

The prime minister is due to table a motion on Monday setting out the next steps in the Brexit process, which is set to be voted on by MPs on 29 January.

Attention

Italian PM: EU should sanction France for its 'continued colonization' of Africa

African Migrants
© REUTERS/Jon Nazca
Migrants, intercepted off the coast in the Mediterranean Sea, wait to disembark from a rescue boat at the port of Malaga, southern Spain, January 6, 2019.
The Italian deputy prime minister has blamed France for the European migrant crisis, accusing it of impoverishing African nations with "colonialist" policies. He promised to take the issue to the EU and other international bodies.

Luigi Di Maio, leader of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement and Italy's Deputy PM, launched a scathing attack on France, which he argued is to blame for the inherent causes of the ongoing migrant crisis at EU borders.

Di Maio was speaking at a rally on Sunday, when he touched on recent mass migrant drownings in the Mediterranean. It is believed that up to 170 migrants who left Libya and Morocco on ramshackle dinghies may have drowned in the sea last week. Three migrants were saved by the Italian Navy on Friday off the cost of Lampedusa. The survivors said they were a part of a group of 120 people that sailed from Libya on Thursday. Their boat started to sink after they were at sea for about 10 hours. The victims, according to migrant organizations, include a two-month-old child and at least 10 women. Separately, another boat carrying 53 migrants capsized in the western Mediterranean, according to sole survivor of the incident.

The tragedies have reignited the debate on the hardline migration policy championed by Italy's right-wing government.

Comment: More from RT:
Eyebrow-raising remarks from Italy's deputy prime minister, in which he blamed France for the migrant crisis, have reportedly earned the country's ambassador to France a summons to explain the comments.

The remarks have not been well received in France with AFP citing a government source that the ambassador was summoned on Monday to explain the "unacceptable and groundless" comments.

The row is just the latest incident in the public spat between the two governments, who have a notably frosty relationship.