Tuesday, 17 November 2015

U.S. to boost intelligence sharing with France after attacks

By Lisa Lambert
The Eiffel Tower is lit with the colours of the French tricolour
The United States will make it easier to share planning information and intelligence with France after the Paris attacks, the Pentagon said on Monday.
"In the wake of the recent attack on France, we stand strong and firm with our oldest ally, which is why the U.S. and France have decided to bolster our intelligence sharing," Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook said in a statement.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Ash Carter and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper have issued new instructions to U.S. military personnel to allow greater intelligence sharing, the Pentagon said.
The militant group Islamic State has claimed responsibility for Friday's attacks in Paris that killed 129 people.
France is a member of the U.S.-led coalition waging air strikes in Syria and Iraq against Islamic State, sometimes known as ISIL.
Earlier on Monday, President Barack Obama told a G20 summit in Turkey that: "France is already a strong counterterrorism partner, and today we're announcing a new agreement."


"We're streamlining the process by which we share intelligence and operational military information with France. This will allow our personnel to pass threat information, including on ISIL, to our French partners even more quickly and more often, because we need to be doing everything we can to protect against more attacks and protect our citizens," he added.
From:
Lambert, Lisa. "U.S. to Boost Intelligence Sharing with France after Attacks."Reuters.com. Thomson Reuters, 16 Nov. 2015. Web. 17 Nov. 2015.
Response:
An attack on one is an attack on all.
It seems that the tragedy in France is bound to become the new face of modern terrorism. A second wake-up call after the bombing of the Russian plane, violently reminding the rest of the West that ISIL's reach continues to grow.
Hollande, fighting widespread disapproval at home, is already spearheading efforts for a new chapter in Russo-American relations, one in which the two superpowers (theoretically) unite to counter the common threat of terrorism. Depending on how he decides to pursue such an action, the coming months and years may alter the traditional alignments in Western Europe, especially considering Cameron's recent warming to Putin.
In any case, when the grieving dies down, a very changed Republic is going to emergeone struggling against revived feelings of xenophobia and one where civil liberties may be at greater risk than before. One hardened to terrorism (though in no way was it a stranger before).
That, however, remains to be seenin the brief substance of this article the writer sticks solely to facts and quotes.

Monday, 9 November 2015

Exclusive: Investigators '90 percent sure' bomb downed Russian plane

By Ahmed Mohamed Hassan and Michael Georgy
A military investigator from Russia stands near the debris of a Russian airliner at its crash site at the Hassana area in Arish city, north Egypt, November 1, 2015.

Investigators of the Russian plane crash in Egypt are "90 percent sure" the noise heard in the final second of a cockpit recording was an explosion caused by a bomb, a member of the investigation team told Reuters on Sunday.
The Airbus (AIR.PA) A321 crashed 23 minutes after taking off from the Sharm al-Sheikh tourist resort eight days ago, killing all 224 passengers and crew. Islamic State militants fighting Egyptian security forces in Sinai said they brought it down.
"The indications and analysis so far of the sound on the black box indicate it was a bomb," said the Egyptian investigation team member, who asked not to be named due to sensitivities. "We are 90 percent sure it was a bomb."
His comments reflect a much greater degree of certainty about the cause of the crash than the investigation committee has so far declared in public.
Lead investigator Ayman al-Muqaddam announced on Saturday that the plane appeared to have broken up in mid-air while it was being flown on auto-pilot, and that a noise had been heard in the last second of the cockpit recording. But he said it was too soon to draw conclusions about why the plane crashed.
Confirmation that militants brought down the airliner could have a devastating impact on Egypt's lucrative tourist industry, which has suffered from years of political turmoil and was hit last week when Russia, Turkey and several European countries suspended flights to Sharm al-Sheikh and other destinations.
It could also mark a new strategy by the hardline Islamic State group which holds large parts of Syria and Iraq.
Asked to explain the remaining 10 percent margin of doubt, the investigator declined to elaborate, but Muqaddam cited other possibilities on Saturday including a fuel explosion, metal fatigue in the plane or lithium batteries overheating.
He said debris was scattered over a 13-km (8-mile) area "which is consistent with an in-flight break-up".
"GAME CHANGER"
"What happened in Sharm al-Sheikh last week, and to a lesser extent with the ... (Germanwings) aircraft, are game changers for our industry," Emirates Airlines President Tim Clark said, referring to the crash of a Germanwings airliner in the French Alps in March, believed crashed deliberately by its co-pilot.
"They have to be addressed at industry level because no doubt the countries -- U.S., Europe -- I would think will make some fairly stringent, draconian demands on the way aviation works with security," he said at the Dubai Airshow.
Clark said he had ordered a security review but was not suspending any flights as a result of the disaster. Emirates does not operate regular flights to Sharm al-Sheikh.
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond also said the incident could lead to changes in flight security.
"If this turns out to be a device planted by an ISIL operative or by somebody inspired by ISIL, then clearly we will have to look again at the level of security we expect to see in airports in areas where ISIL is active," Hammond told the BBC.
Islamic State, which wants to establish a caliphate in the Middle East, is also called ISIS or ISIL.
Islamic State militants fighting security forces in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula have said they brought down the aircraft as revenge for Russian air strikes against Islamist fighters in Syria. They said they would eventually tell the world how they carried out the attack.
If the group was responsible, it would have carried out one of the highest profile killings since al Qaeda flew passenger planes into New York's World Trade Center in September 2001.
Russia has returned 11,000 of its tourists from Egypt in the last 24 hours, RIA news agency said on Sunday, a fraction of the 80,000 Russians who were stranded by the Kremlin's decision on Friday to halt all flights to Egypt.
In St Petersburg, where the flight was headed on Oct. 31, the bell of St Isaac's Cathedral rang 224 times and a service was held in memory of the victims.
Russia has sent specialists to conduct a safety audit of Egypt's airports and to provide recommendations on additional measures, Arkady Dvorkovich, deputy prime minister, was quoted as saying by Russian agencies.
Dvorkovich, the head of a government group created on Friday to deal with suspended flights to Egypt, added a second group was going to Egypt on Sunday and a third would be sent later.
Britain, which has 3,000 nationals waiting to return home, has sent a team of 70 people, including 10 aviation specialists working at Sharm al-Sheikh airport to make sure security measures are being followed.

Eight flights were expected to take British tourists back home on Sunday.
From:
Hassan, Ahmed Mohamed, and Michael Georgy. "Exclusive: Investigators '90 Percent Sure' Bomb Downed Russian Plane." Reuters. Thomson Reuters, 09 Nov. 2015. Web. 09 Nov. 2015.
Response
The reach and depth of ISIL continues to surprise.
If indeed the tragedy of the Russian flight is due to Islamic militants, it would represent a departure from ISIL's usual modus operandi and more importantly, a radical change in the future of the Middle East conflict.
In a sense, an attack may come as a blessing to President Putin and his administration--a chance to regain popularity at home as well as to silence the international criticism of Russian involvement in Syria in one fell stroke (which, clad in black, he's sure to take full advantage of).
The authors seem more sympathetic to Egypt's situation than I would be, lamenting the loss to their industry. In my estimation, the tragedy comes across as a lack of proper security measures but for that I'll have to see definitive conclusions regarding the attack.

Monday, 2 November 2015

U.S. Navy Plans Two or More Patrols in South China Sea per Quarter

By Andrea Shalal and Idrees Ali
The U.S. Navy plans to conduct patrols within 12 nautical miles of artificial islands in the South China Sea about twice a quarter to remind China and other countries about U.S. rights under international law, a U.S. defense official said on Monday.
"We're going to come down to about twice a quarter or a little more than that," said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about Navy operational plans.
"That's the right amount to make it regular but not a constant poke in the eye. It meets the intent to regularly exercise our rights under international law and remind the Chinese and others about our view," the official said.
U.S. Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes on Monday said there would be more demonstrations of the U.S. military's commitment to the right to freely navigate in the region.
"That's our interest there ... It's to demonstrate that we will uphold the principle of freedom of navigation," Rhodes told an event hosted by the Defense One media outlet.
Rhodes' comments came a week after a U.S. guided-missile destroyer sailed close to one of Beijing's man-made islands in the South China Sea last week.
China's naval commander last week told his U.S. counterpart that a minor incident could spark war in the South China Sea if the United States did not stop its "provocative acts" in the disputed waterway.
The USS Lassen's patrol was the most significant U.S. challenge yet to the 12-nautical-mile territorial limit China claims around artificial islands it has built in the Spratly Islands archipelago.
China claims most of the South China Sea, through which more than $5 trillion of world trade transits every year. Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Taiwan all have rival claims.
Rhodes said the goal in the dispute was to come to a diplomatic framework to resolve these issues.
U.S. Vice Admiral John Aquilino, deputy chief of naval operations for operations, plans and strategies, declined to comment about when the next patrols would take place.
"We do operations like that all the time around the world. That will continue for us," he told Reuters after his remarks at the same conference. "We'll just keep going."
Defense Secretary Ash Carter may visit a U.S. Navy ship during his upcoming visit to Asia, but is not expected to be on board during any Navy freedom of navigation operations, the U.S. defense official said.
From:
Shalal, Andrea, and Idrees Ali. "U.S. Navy Plans Two or More Patrols in South China Sea per Quarter." Reuters.com. Thomson Reuters, 2 Nov. 2015. Web. 2 Nov. 2015.
Response
The article details the United States’ recent decision to run military patrols near China’s artificial islands in the South China Sea, islands that have been an extremely contentious issue in the past (many claim that, much like the West Bank Barrier, they represent an illegal effort to establish maritime borders in the region). 

There’s slight bias against China in the reporting, with certain references questioning the validity of China’s claims to a clearly international zone (and reasonably so). Indeed, the author portrays China’s past response as disproportionate, the East Asian juggernaut flexing its economic and military muscle to limit the American presence in the area.
Regardless, the new decision from the White House will likely prove to be a wrench in the gears in East Asian relations, a risky (but necessary) move on the part of the Americans to force the escalating regional tensions into a denouement—a game of chicken played on a massive scale.