Russia Begins Operations in Syria: End Game for the US Empire?

A stellar analysis of Lavrovs latest press conference and what it means for the west and the rest of the world!

Western media ignores Putin's message to the World
http://www.sott.net/article/311824-Western-media-ignores-Putins-message-to-the-World

https://youtu.be/Ex9kEezGpfk
 
Russian ambassador: No need for new 'reset' in Russia-U.S. relations
http://rbth.com/international/2016/02/10/russian-ambassador-no-need-for-new-reset-in-russia-us-relations_566479

February 10, 2016 - Russia and the United States do not need a new 'reset', similar to the one they had in their relations in the previous period, Russian Ambassador to the United States Sergei Kislyak has said.

"If you ask me whether there is a need for a new 'reset', I will tell you that we hardly need another one of the kind," he told Interfax in an interview.

The previous 'reset' was not successful because "our American colleagues failed the life test," he said. "A number of mechanisms created in that period were stopped at the U.S. initiative," Kislyak said.

Nevertheless, "in my opinion, it is important both to us and the Americans to cooperate in the field of common challenges on the basis of equality, mutual respect and non-interference. The work on common problems should bring the countries closer together," the Russian ambassador to the U.S. said.

Russia and the United States have certain interests in common, and their relations "are much more substantive than they are pictured by the U.S. press," the high-ranking diplomat said.

"Despite all the negative things that happen in the bilateral context, we are still the countries on which a lot depends in the world, and we have to respond to similar challenges. First of all, terrorism," the head of the diplomatic mission said.

As to whether Russia saw the United States as 'a probable adversary' or an enemy Kislyak said, "To us, the United States is a rather difficult partner."

He disagreed with the opinion that Moscow viewed the United States as an enemy. "It's unlikely that any of us see the United States and the American factor in the context of national security this way. However, the U.S. course leads to tensions," the diplomat said.

He mentioned the enlargement of NATO and the spread of the alliance's military infrastructure towards Russian borders, which "created substantial risks."


Rapid Collapse of the West Means Europe Must Turn to Russia and China
http://russia-insider.com/en/politics/mediterranean-wiseman-predicts-collapse-west-and-eu-lays-hope-russia/ri12750

Italian thinker Giancarlo Valori says turning away from the USA is the only way Europe can insure its social and economic survival.

The author is Professor of the Plekhanov Russian Economic University, an expert on Italy and a former advisor to the President’s Administration and Security Council of the Russian Federation. (She wrote this article especially for RI.)

Industrialist. During his long career he held numerous high positions in prestigious Italian and foreign companies. He currently chairs “La Centrale Finanziaria Generale SpA”, the Laboratory Foundation for Public Administration and the Italian delegation of the Abertis Foundation. He is also the honorary president of Huawei Italy, economic adviser to the Chinese giant HNA Group. This impressive list of his positions in the industrial sector is far from complete.

Catholic mason (catto-massone). - He had got an honorary membersip at the Papal Court as Cameriere segreto di cappa e spada (secret chamberlain of cloak-and-dagger) when he was only 23 years old. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge of Gian Domenico Romagnosi and the Lodge P2 (Propaganda Due) but was expelled from both of them. However, according to Luigi De Magistris, a well-known Italian politician and former magistrate,

"Giancarlo Elia Valori seems to be one of the current leaders of the contemporary Freemasonry." - Notably, Valori published in 2011 the book “Il Risorgimento oltre la storia” (Italian unification beyond history), dedicated to the 150th anniversary of unification of Italy. According to Giordano Brunettin,

“Valori disrupts traditional prudence and concealment, always practiced by historical and nonfiction literature about the Freemasonry, and openly claims the Masonic leading role in the Italian unification movement since its origins, but also in the entire process of modernization...”

Mediator in talks and friend of modern dictators

In 1965, at age of 25, Valori entered RAI, Italy's national public broadcasting company. Being in charge of international relations, he, particularly, specialized on dictators: Kim Il Sung in North Korea, Nicolae Ceausescu in Romania, communist leaders of China. He was in good relations both with Arturo Frondizi Ercoli, democratic president of Argentine, and former dictator Juan Domingo Peron.

Thanks to his network of international contacts, Valori contributed decisively to the liberation of three French hostages kidnapped in 1985 in Iran by Islamic extremists and released in 1988. It is worth mentioning that he had done that in a very original manner. He took advantage of his close friendship with Kim Il Sung, and asked him to convince the religious leaders in Tehran to exert their influence on the kidnappers in order to release the hostages. When, years later his role in the affair came to light, French President François Mitterrand appointed him as the Knight of the Legion of Honor.

Mediterranean middleman

Valori has friendly relations with the Israeli establishment, particularly, with Shimon Peres. He worked in Libya, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, where he participated in the construction of the strategic Karakaya Dam which gives Turkey the tap that controls Syria and Iraq.

Geopolitical thinker

From this brief summary of Valori's work record, we can conclude that his vast and profound knowledge of geopolitical trends of our time have been the result of creative comprehension of his lifelong experience. The main themes of his recent works are oil as the new geopolitics of power, geo-economic collapse of the West, tactics and strategy in the Greater Middle East. Noteworthy, Valori hasn't ever been a Russophile and we'll hardly find an article dedicated to Russia among his numerous publications. He is looking at Russia through the Mediterranean lens and evaluates Russia's changing political role in the region.

Tactics and strategy in the Greater Middle East

In his blog “Osservatorio Globale”, Valori develops 9 theses on the new geopolitics of the region, which serves as a connecting link between the Western world and the reborn Central Asia. the central point is a struggle for Islamic hegemony between Iran, the leader of the Shiites, and Saudi Arabia, Sunni reference, for the domination over the entire Greater Middle East and the southern and eastern Mediterranean. To counter the Islamic threat, Russia, China and India will be forced to draw closer and will work to create the new Silk Road. The US will negotiate a new special relationship with those who win the game of Islam in the Greater Middle East, like the one that Kissinger negotiated with the Saudis at the end of the Yom Kippur War. He concludes that:

“the only credible threat to the new Caliphate, block and "plug" for the Eurasian peninsula, will come from the North West, with the Russian-Caucasian axis, and from the southern seas, with the Chinese-Indian axis, that will serve as maritime and terrestrial containment for the Islamist area”.

Collapse of the West and the EU

Valori points out that: “the geoeconomic collapse of the West is so rapid that any global strategic choice should conform to the need for political and economic survival of our social systems”. The USA have been leaving Europe in the framework of “repositioning Washington's forces between the Greater Middle East and the Russian Federation”.

In his article “The Eurasian Project” Valori states, “We, Europeans, are, in the meantime, in a strategic context that we can not control, command and sometimes not even understand. Europe does not count anymore... We do not know how to defend ourselves, for a long time.”

In this grave geopolitical situation, Valori proposes a new agenda for Europe:

1) Meditate with the Russian Federation, China, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization upon a regional defense system and economic and financial exchange.

2) Rethink the EU strategy for the Mediterranean, which is not only a regional sea where you collect refugees but the great hub of the next century.

3) Revise a treaty with the Russian Federation and China that stabilize Africa and countries in jihad risks.

4) Restructure the NATO, with a strategic thinking that finally goes beyond the old memory of the Cold War.

5) Reconstruct relationship with Beijing that will allow China to exit from its geographical bottleneck in the central Heartland.

6) Maybe, rethink the impossible - a new role of the euro as a global money.


Geopolitics of oil

In the aftermath of lifting sanctions from Iran, Valori reflects on it's consequences in the article:

“The Iran-Syria-Saudi Arabia triangle”. He writes the Saudis game of lowering prices creates “a perfect geopolitical storm: the greater is the fall in prices, or too insignificant compared to the costs (which is the real problem) the greater will be the internal competition among producers”.

“If the Saudis maintain the low price to expand their market share, at the extent of profitability, it is highly probable that they want the direct confrontation with the Iranians. According to analysts of many Western merchant banks, the scenario of a full-scale war between Iran and Saudi Arabia could lead to an immediate peak of 300 US dollars/barrel, before stabilizing around 100 dollars, or the Saudi production profitability thresholds. The Iranians, have a higher profitability point than Riyadh. And so we can assess the duration and the winner of the clash.”

“It's 'a struggle for the hegemony based on oil, through which will be controlled the world and the Western economies, and nothing is forbidden unless careful Russian mediation and the policy of equilibrium between the Chinese parties will provide, that the worst would not happen”.

In his book “Il Futuro è già qui” (The future is already here) Valori outlines a number of scenarios in which participate two sets of actors, supporting actors on the one hand, and decision-makers on the other. In the interview with Marcello Lopez , he explains that decision-makers comprise multinational companies, major research centers which are universally recognized, certain mass-media, some ecological pressure groups, foundations of large industrial groups or consulting firms in the oil sector, and also opinion leaders of young masses of people, and "icons" of pop culture.

Following Valori's own logic, we can, certainly, define him as a decision-maker of a new type who always acted behind the curtains. Formerly, as a mediator in the talks and recently as an opinion maker. It's clear that his articles in the Russia Insider is a message to Russia and pro-Russian forces from the circles which Giancarlo Elia Valori has been representing during his long political and aconomic activity – industrial sector, academic science and Catholic masonry.

I can sum his appeal in one short phrase: The twilight West is looking with hope to Russia and is ready to cooperate in order to stabilize the Greater Middle East. It's an interesting coincidence that after meeting Vladimir Putin, Henry A. Kissinger has published a vast article on the US-Russian relations with a message “Russia should be perceived as an essential element of any new global equilibrium”.



Kissinger’s Vision for U.S.-Russia Relations (Long 2 page article)
http://nationalinterest.org/feature/kissingers-vision-us-russia-relations-15111

Russia should be perceived as an essential element of any new global equilibrium.

Henry A. Kissinger - February 4, 2016


Moscow ready for dialogue with Washington on INF Treaty
http://rbth.com/news/2016/02/10/moscow-ready-for-dialogue-with-washington-on-inf-treaty_566603

Moscow sees no progress in its dialogue with Washington on the Soviet-U.S. Treaty on the Elimination of Their Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles (INF Treaty), a high-ranking Russian Foreign Ministry official has said.

"We would like to see progress, but unfortunately, there is none today," Russian Foreign Ministry Nonproliferation and Arms Reduction Department Director Mikhail Ulyanov said at a press conference in Moscow on Feb. 10.

Moscow is ready for a dialogue with Washington on the elimination of the existing disagreements, and the U.S. should take Russia's concerns more seriously, he said.

"They are well known. These are weapons used in the development of a global missile defense system, whose parameters, as we see it, match the criteria banned by the treaty," Ulyanov said.
 
angelburst29 said:
Thank You for the compliment, Happyliza, very much appreciated.

You're ahead of me - in that - I never got into "Facebook". It's a very important avenue, for the work we share here and multiplies all our efforts - to a wider audience. One thing I have noticed in the past month or so, when searching the net for specific information or trying to validate a reference source, I'm beginning to see (more and more) listings and articles from SOTT in the listings. In one instance, around Christmas, I was searching the net to verify something and was going through some of the links provided, when I clicked on a link and found myself on a SOTT FOCUS article. It's moments like that - which are the most rewarding!

That is really encouraging to hear! Especially as you are searching on a daily basis. I only use Facebook purely for our work/activism and have slowly built up some good followers worldwide. 3600 so far. I have to vet each friend request too (as I get so many daily) but I try to ascertain those who are most likely to share and take seriously that which we post. Particularly as there is a ‘friend’ limit of 5000 on FB.
Luckily I get occasional posts of encouragement, recently even from some followers here in North Cyprus, which was a surprise. So it make us for the doom and gloom we have to read through daily. And so does knowing that Sott articles are going up the ratings!!! So although the C;s said this already, we now have concrete proof! Same with the use of the word ‘psychopath’ – though whatever word they could possibly use nowadays for the horrors that are witnessed daily, beats me.

In order to ensure we can build on this it is important for peeps here to realize that even if they themselves don’t have a significant number of followers on FB (or other social media sites) to post to, then they can still be making a huge contribution by ‘liking’ all the posts that other members are able to share. Plus, generally, on many sites of my own ‘followers’ there are plenty of extra articles that are important to read too.
I do sympathize though on the fact that as most of the time is spent sharing on social media that it does limit the time available to read up and comment on the important forum threads. So again, balance is the key.
Thanks also to StormRidr and others too as I know we have a huge commitment from nearly everyone here, for obvious reasons. :) :) :)

Edit- gremlins in initial post!
 
The U.S. Air Force is short hundreds of fighter jets. To make up the gap, the Pentagon has come up with a wild concept: stuff hundreds of missiles into Cold War-era heavy bombers.

Pentagon Wants a Plane Packed With Hundreds of Missiles to Beat Putin’s Air Force
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/02/10/pentagon-wants-a-plane-packed-with-hundreds-of-missiles-to-beat-putin-s-air-force.html

The next time America’s high-tech jet fighters fly into battle against a major foe, they might have some serious backup—heavy bombers, newly modified to haul potentially hundreds of missiles and fire them at the fighters’ command.

The upgraded bombers have picked up a cool new name: “arsenal planes.”

That’s right, the next global air war could involve the U.S. military newest, smallest warplanes—its “fifth-generation” stealth fighters — working in teams with the military’s Cold War-era heavy bombers, its oldest and largest warplanes.

It’s an unprecedented and seemingly unlikely combination born of budgetary and strategic desperation. But for all its counter-intuitiveness, the fighter-bomber pairing—which could bring to bear overwhelming firepower—might be just the thing that the U.S. Air Force needs to stay ahead of the rapidly-modernizing Russian and Chinese air arms.

You see, the Pentagon is short hundreds of fighter planes. And in the most likely air-war scenarios over Eastern Europe or the Western Pacific, Russian or Chinese fighters would outnumber American planes, placing the U.S. pilots with their lightly-armed aircraft at a major disadvantage.

Enter the arsenal planes. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter revealed the bomber-fighter teaming concept in a Feb. 2 speech in Washington, D.C. previewing the Pentagon’s budget proposal for 2017. The arsenal-plane concept, Carter said, “takes one of our oldest aircraft platform and turns it into a flying launch pad for all sorts of different conventional payloads.”

“In practice,” Carter continued, “the arsenal plane will function as a very large airborne magazine, networked to fifth generation aircraft that act as forward sensor and targeting nodes, essentially combining different systems already in our inventory to create whole new capabilities.”

Carter left vague the identity of the arsenal-plane “platform,” but a Pentagon official confirmed to Aviation Week, a trade magazine, that it could be the eight-engine B-52 bomber, built in the 1960s, or the 1980s-vintage, swing-wing B-1 bomber—or both.

In the arsenal plane concept, fast stealth fighters including twin-engine F-22s and smaller, single-engine F-35s would fly into battle in their hardest-to-detect configuration, keeping their weapons tucked inside internal weapons bays in order to minimize reflectivity on radar. When they spot a target, they would dial up a munition from a much-slower bomber flying a safe distance from the aerial front line.

There’s a logic to this proposed teamwork.
Loading weapons strictly internally limits how many the fighter can carry. The F-22’s standard loadout is four air-to-air missiles and two 1,000-pound bombs. The F-35 can haul just two air-to-air missiles and two 2,000-pound bombs internally. By contrast, many Russian and Chinese fighters, while not stealthy, routinely carry 10 or more missiles and bombs under their fuselages and wings.

And owing to the Pentagon’s budget-driven decision to end F-22 production in 2012 after Lockheed Martin had built just 195 copies—half what the Air Force said it needed—plus repeated delays and cost overruns on Lockheed’s F-35 development, the Pentagon doesn’t have nearly the number of dogfighters it originally counted on.

Carter’s arsenal plane is a band-aid on this wound. But as far as band-aids go, it could be a pretty effective one. Since the F-22s and F-35s would fly ahead, evading detection while spotting targets, the B-52s and B-1s wouldn’t need to be stealthy. All they would need to do is carry lots of weapons ... and launch them when the fighter pilots say so.

That scheme plays to the bombers’ strengths. A B-52 or B-1—the Air Force possesses more than 130 of the bombers—can carry no less than 35 tons of munitions, nearly 10 times the F-22 and F-35’s internal payloads.

But there’s a problem. The Pentagon’s Strategic Capabilities Office, which Carter established while serving as deputy defense secretary in 2012 and which is developing the arsenal-plane concept, hasn’t said exactly how the fighters and bombers would combine their efforts.

Generally speaking, a warplane detects a target with its sensors and a router-like digital “bus” inside the plane codes the target’s location in the computer “brain” of the plane’s own munition. The pilot launches the weapon and it streaks toward the target it just memorized. The process requires a hard-wired connection.

But the arsenal plane wouldn’t have any such connection. Its communication with the stealth fighters would be strictly remote—a subtle, coded radio signal that the military calls a “datalink.” “The technology that is needed for one aircraft to feed another aircraft the type of information required for an accurate firing solution is difficult,” Brian Laslie, an Air Force historian and author of The Air Force Way of War, told The Daily Beast via email.

However, Dave Deptula—a retired Air Force general who oversaw bomber operations during the 2001 U.S. invasion of Afghanistan—praised the arsenal-plane idea in an email to The Daily Beast. “What we previously labeled as ‘bombers’ can play dramatically broader roles than they ever did in the past,” Deptula wrote. “To capture this potential, however, requires innovative thought, and shedding anachronistic concepts that aircraft can only perform singular functions and missions.”

And Deptula insisted the technical hurdles are surmountable. “Today we can incorporate sensors, processing capacity and avionics in a single aircraft at an affordable cost to an unprecedented degree.”

Laslie urged caution. “This is a little unusual and something (almost) entirely new,” he wrote about the arsenal plane. But with too few fighters carrying too few weapons—and rapidly-arming foes—the Pentagon seems willing to risk something unusual and new. Slow, decidedly non-stealthy heavy bombers backing up speedy stealthy fighters a fraction their size.


Intelligence officials: ISIL determined to strike U.S. this year
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/02/09/islamic-state-world-threats-senate-testimony/80079254/#

WASHINGTON — The Islamic State militant group will "almost certainly" remain a threat to the U.S. homeland and seek to launch or inspire attacks on American soil in 2016, [/b] a top U.S. intelligence official warned Tuesday.

Attacks in the United States by the group, also known as ISIL, "will probably continue to involve those who draw inspiration from the group's highly sophisticated media without direct guidance from ISIL leadership," James Clapper, director of national intelligence, testified in a rare public hearing on Capitol Hill about intelligence threats facing the nation.

Testifying with Clapper were the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Marine Lt. Gen. Vincent Stewart; CIA Director John Brennan; FBI Director James Comey; and Navy Adm. Michael Rogers, who heads the National Security Agency.

Clapper called the Islamic State the "pre-eminent terrorist threat." It can "direct and inspire attacks against a wide range of targets around the world." [/b] In a world where violent extremists are active in 40 countries, "ISIL is using the collapse of government authority to expand," he said.

Stewart said the Islamic State will probably conduct additional attacks in Europe and then attempt the same in the U.S. He said U.S. intelligence agencies believe ISIL leaders will be "increasingly involved in directing attacks rather than just encouraging lone attackers," according to the Associated Press.

The leaders also listed other threats facing the nation.

Al-Qaeda, which spawned the Islamic State, remains an enemy. The United States will face disparate threats from conflicts spurred by fights over scarce resources caused by climate change and global warming, and drug traffickers selling lethal heroin produced largely in China.

In addition, the nation's cyber infrastructure remains vulnerable to attack by terrorists such as ISIL, as well as by states such as Russia, China, Iran and North Korea, Clapper said.

[...] In general, the United States is facing a more violent world with a greater variety of threats than it has in 50 years, Clapper said.



‘We don’t have the gear': How the Pentagon is struggling with electronic warfare
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/checkpoint/wp/2016/02/09/we-dont-have-the-gear-how-the-pentagon-is-struggling-with-electronic-warfare/

In the future, many of the most effective weapons used against the U.S. military are likely to be unseen: electromagnetic waves that disrupt radios or jam global positioning systems, paralyzing units.

This realm of fighting is called electronic warfare, and since the 9/11 attacks it’s been relegated to a lower priority than fighting insurgent groups with precision guided munitions and drones. Now, defense officials say they’re worried that the U.S. military’s ability to counter and wage electronic warfare has atrophied and is lagging behind countries such as Russia and China.

“We don’t have the gear,” Col. Jeffrey Church, the head of the Army’s electronic warfare division, said in a recent interview. “We’re working on getting it, [but] we’re talking years down the road, when our adversaries are doing this right now.”

One place where the United States’ adversaries have displayed their proficiency in electronic warfare is in eastern Ukraine, where the Pentagon has watched Russian forces with a wary eye, gleaning what they can from the country’s reinvigorated military.

“The Russians have worked hard in recent years” in electronic warfare, Gen. Ben Hodges, the commanding general for the Army’s forces in Europe, said during a recent interview. “What they’ve done in east Ukraine and in Crimea has allowed us to study the challenge.”

One Ukrainian special-forces colonel fighting outside of the war-torn city of Donetsk said his men were targeted by an artillery strike after Russian-backed forces located his troops solely by his radio transmissions. The colonel, who for security reasons would identify himself only by his first name, Andrei, said in a recent interview that the radio they had was an American-brand Harris radio. The radio was capable of encrypted communication, but since its output was so much more powerful than the smaller handheld radios the regular Ukrainian troops often carry, the Russian-backed separatists were able to locate the American radio and attack its broadcast site with artillery.

The U.S. Army has a potential tool that would counter the Russians’ techniques, according to Church. Called the Integrated Electronic Warfare system, the three-piece program is meant to be a sort of one-stop shop for the Army’s electronic warfare division. The system is essentially a collection of software, sensors and devices that can be mounted to ground vehicles and drones and carried in troops’ rucksacks and will be able to jam, detect and identify enemy interference. The catch? It isn’t completely funded and has no set year when it will be ready, though one component of the system is slotted to be fielded by the end of 2016, with another due in 2023.

“We’ve been talking about this since 2005,” Church said, referring to one component of the Integrated Electronic Warfare system that was supposed to be ready in 2009 but won’t be in the field until later this year. “There’s these guys that have been looking at really neat pictures of really neat capabilities for years and we still don’t have it.”

[...] Church says the Pentagon brass has acknowledged to him that ideally there would be 3,200 electronic-warfare soldiers spread throughout the Army. Instead, he has 800.

“The joke in the field is that EW [electronic warfare] stands for extra workers,” Church said. “Because they have no gear, we have hardly any equipment to do our job.”

In the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps, conventional electronic warfare has been mostly relegated to certain aircraft with the purpose of jamming and defeating enemy air defenses and radar along with gathering signals intelligence. The Navy has the EA-18G Growler, while the Marines last year retired their aging EA-6B Prowler, a jet specifically designed for electronic warfare. With the Prowler gone, the Marines, in the past two years, have been using a system of pods that can be mounted to various aircraft and will soon be able to be attached to ground vehicles and carried by individual Marines — the same capability the Army is seeking.

Two days later, Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) introduced a bill that would allow the Pentagon to fund electronic warfare programs more quickly, in hopes of keeping pace with advancing technology and the United States’ adversaries.


Pentagon seeks funding for Libya, Africa military operations
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/02/09/pentagon-seeks-funding-for-libya-africa-military-operations.html

The Pentagon is seeking $200 million in the 2017 budget for counterterrorism operations in Libya and other portions of North and West Africa, as the Islamic State threat in that region continues to grow.

The new funding provides the first concrete indication of what the U.S. military may do to battle the threat, including expanded drone and surveillance flights, strikes and other operations. And it is the first time that the Pentagon has included a separate increase for operations against the Islamic State in Africa.

There were no details on how the money would be spent. The $200 million is an overall increase the department's war funding, including the ongoing effort in Afghanistan, and the airstrikes and training in Iraq and Syria against the Islamic State. The war funding request is $58.8 billion for 2017, compared to $58.6 billion this year.

The $200 million is likely to cover increased drone operations over Africa, as the military struggles to provide real-time intelligence through 24-hour unmanned aircraft patrols in the coming years. And that budget increase will build on discussions U.S. officials are having now on plans to beef up counterterrorism operations in Libya in the coming weeks and months.

U.S. officials are increasingly worried that Libya could become the next Syria, where the Islamic State flourished amid civil war and spread into Iraq. Both Syria and Libya have vast under-governed areas where militants can set up headquarters, training camps or storage depots.


Army Soldier rescued after parachute caught in power lines
http://www.news-journalonline.com/article/20160208/NEWS/160209583/101040?Title=Army-soldier-gets-tangled-in-power-lines-during-DeLand-parachute-jump&tc=ar

A U.S. Army soldier described by his superiors as a very experienced parachutist was blown off course and got tangled into some power lines Monday near the DeLand Municipal Airport, military officials said.

Carlos Esparza, 33, stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, was rescued shortly after the 9:03 a.m. incident at Yorketown Street and Ranger Avenue, according to an incident report.

Esparza, who is "very experienced at free fall and high altitude jumps," was stuck on a power line pole a quarter of a mile from the drop zone at the airport, said Sgt. Maj. Tom Clementson of the Fort Bragg Public Affairs Office.

Emergency workers responding to the scene reported that Esparza was dangling about 20 feet off the ground, according to radio communications.

Duke Energy workers were called to the scene to cut the power so DeLand firefighters could use their ladder truck to rescue the parachutist, said DeLand Fire Department Deputy Chief Ron Snowberger.

"We had an individual sky diving this morning and got caught in power lines," Snowberger said. "He wasn't injured."

The report states Esparza was on a training exercise following behind his squad when he drifted into a power pole at 1330 Yorktown St.

He was tangled in the parachute cords and hung from the wires on top of the pole. He was freed from the power pole by firefighters and a Duke Energy employee, the report states.

Clementson said Esparza and 19 others from a unit attached to the 18th Airborne Corps were on a "contracted training" in DeLand.

The unit was conducting its parachute training outside of Fort Bragg because other training activities at the military base that involve live fire, artillery fire or other aerial training did not permit the jumps, Clementson said.

"Whenever this situation occurs, they contract with another airfield or municipality to use their air space or targeted area for jumps," Clementson said. "So, it's not uncommon for our units to be training outside of Fort Bragg."
 
Russia's Back: How Moscow Returned to the Global Stage

http://sputniknews.com/politics/20160210/1034545979/russia-international-diplomacy-turnaround.html

On February 10, Russia's diplomats celebrated their professional holiday, Diplomat's Day. This year, they had much to celebrate. Effectively, the past three years have seen Russia return to the world stage as a major power.

Established by presidential decree in 2002, Diplomat's Day commemorates the founding of the Russian Diplomatic Service in 1549. Today, the Foreign Ministry is undoubtedly one of the most respected state institutions inside Russia, with its head, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, considered one of the most respected officials in Russia.

Taking a step back to analyze the important successes of Russian diplomacy over the past three years, RT Russian explained that over the past three years, Russian diplomats managed to prevent a Western invasion of Syria, to find compromise over the conflict in Ukraine, and to help solve the once seemingly intractable Iranian nuclear issue. "All this," RT noted, "has allowed Moscow to return the forefront of the political big-leagues."

Syrian Crisis

The first major, widely-recognized success for Russian diplomacy in recent memory was the issue of Syria's chemical disarmament. In the fall of 2013, as the West prepared for another invasion and occupation of a Middle Eastern country, "and Bashar Assad's opponents were counting the minutes before his resignation, the total mismatch in US and Russian interests in Syria threatened the world with a new global crisis."

"Experts," RT Russian recalled, "spoke about Syria as a new Cuban missile crisis."

"The main argument brought forward by the Americans at the time was the chemical attack which had cost the lives of hundreds of people in a suburb of Damascus. An incomplete and drawn out investigation lasted for more than a year, but could confirm only that sarin was used. The culprit has not been named."

"All the while," Western media "conducted its own 'investigation'…convincing themselves and their readers that Bashar al-Assad was a criminal who deliberately killed hundreds of Syrian civilians. The question about why the president would use chemical weapons literally right next to his own army, knowing that civilians would die, at the moment when a turning point in the conflict was taking place was not one which bothered most Western journalists very much. The sentence was handed down, and was not subject to revision."

On September 11, 2013, the United States postponed the planned attack on Syria, with Congress taking a break to discuss a timely Russian initiative for peacefully transferring the Syrian chemical weapons under international control. "Commenting on his decision in a special televised address to the nation, President Barack Obama acknowledged that the talks with Vladimir Putin on the issue had been a major influence in his decision."

For its part, Damascus "immediately opened its caches to UN inspectors, declared their readiness to join the global ban on the use of chemical weapons, and one after another, the containers with toxic substances began to leave Syria. This episode gave the first hopes for a peaceful resolution to the Syrian conflict, and showed that Bashar Assad can and should be negotiated with."

Newfound Reserves of Strength in the UN

"By 2014, the UN was even more firmly entrenched as an organ to 'find the guilty party', rather than an organization aimed at compromise and the ability to resolve the world's major crises." A place was prepared for Russia as the 'main violator of world peace."

However, "Russian diplomats, initially reacting with restraint, gradually passed on the offensive. The chief representative of the Russian side in the diplomatic battles in the UN was Vitaly Churkin. The diplomat became the only one among the UN members' major powers to make speeches going against the flow of the one-sided rhetoric of the West. The naiveté of Russia's Western partners as far as the events in Ukraine were concerned bordered on the absurd."

Consistent in their defense of Russia's interests in Ukraine, Russian diplomats were not afraid to use Moscow's right of veto, first in the vote on the possibility of a US-led invasion of Syria, and then to block a resolution on the creation of an international tribunal show trial over the crash of MH17 in Ukraine, "causing strong criticism in the West," and in Ukraine, with President Petro Poroshenko suggesting that Russia, despite being the legal successor of the Soviet Union, should be deprived of its right to the veto.

The Minsk Agreements

In September 2015, Russia initiated the signing of the Minsk Protocol on peace in southeastern Ukraine. "As in the case of the Syrian disarmament, Moscow was responsible for proposing the format which, in spite of the perceived conflict of interest, was deemed acceptable by both Kiev and the Donbass republics, which had broken off from Ukraine following the Maidan coup d'état."

"After lengthen negotiations and a series of international meetings, on February 12, 2015, a second version of the agreements was signed, aimed at resolving the crisis in southeastern Ukraine." Attended by the so-called 'Normandy Format' group of countries (Ukraine, Russia, Germany and France), as well as representatives of the OSCE and the Donbass republics, "the final revision of the Minsk agreements involves a complete ceasefire, the withdrawal of heavy weapons, the beginning of talks on amnesty for a number of persons…the holding of elections, and other important provisions. Through 2015, both sides repeatedly accused one another of violating the agreements, but ultimately, in general, the ceasefire has continued to this day."

Iranian Nuclear Program

In the summer of 2015, with Russia's active participation, world powers came together to resolve what had previously been considered the "intractable issue" of Iran. "Tehran's alleged nuclear program was considered to be one of the most serious" regional and global problems, escalating tensions in international relations.

"Sergei Lavrov actively participated in the negotiation process between Iran and the group of six international mediators (the USA, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany). AS a result of a real diplomatic marathon in Geneva, a balance of interests was found, providing for Iran's right to the peaceful development of nuclear energy, including uranium enrichment, while at the same time retaining the nuclear nonproliferation regime."

"As a result, on January 16, 2016, the United States and the European Union officially lifted the sanctions against Iran imposed because of its nuclear program. The decision was made after the IAEA confirmed that Iran had fulfilled all of the requirements for the implementation of the conditions for the nuclear deal."

"As a result, on January 16, 2016, the United States and the European Union officially lifted the sanctions against Iran imposed because of its nuclear program. The decision was made after the IAEA confirmed that Iran had fulfilled all of the requirements for the implementation of the conditions for the nuclear deal."

2015: Putin's General Assembly Appearance

"A series of high-profile diplomatic successes strengthened Vladimir Putin's position as the major political figure of his time," RT unabashedly notes. "His speech at the UN General Assembly in 2015 was awaited by all of the world's leaders."

"The Russian leader almost managed to stay within the allotted 15 minutes of time. During this time he managed to touch on all the main points on the international agenda. Later, his speech was deservedly named to have been the most outstanding for the entire session. Among the other speeches was Barack Obama, who in 40 minutes could not say anything concrete, as well as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who amazed participants with his dramatic [43 second] theatrical pause."

"Two days later, the Russian and American leaders met in person. Immediately after his conversation with the president, on September 30, the Russian Senate gave the president authorization to use force in Syria. Syrian President Bashar Assad had asked for the assistance of the Russian Aerospace Defense Forces to assist with resolving the situation in Syria. Putin accepted the request, and on the same day, the Defense Ministry reported the first successful bombing against terrorist positions in the country."


INTERNATIONAL MILITARY REVIEW – SYRIA & IRAQ, FEB. 10, 2016

http://southfront.org/international-military-review-syria-iraq-feb-10-2016/

The Syrian Arab Army (SAA) and local militias liberated the town of Bashoura in the Northern part of Latakia province on Feb.8. The SAA also purged terrorists from the town of al-Hour town and deployed the force in the suburbs of al-Raqaqieh. The militant groups reportedly pulled their units back from the positions near the villages of Dahret al-Baiday al-Mahrouq and Ard al-Kataf.
A major convoy of Jeish al-Fatah terrorist group, loaded with weapons and ammunition was destroyed by the Russian Aerospace Defense Forces on the road linking the Eastern part of Idlib and the Western part of Aleppo. A number of militants, guarding the convoy, also were killed or wounded in the air raid.

On Feb.9, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), predominantly Kurdish YPG units, has reportedly seized the Mennagh Military Airport in northern Aleppo. On account of this, the militants of Harakat Ahrar Al-Sham, the Free Syrian Army (FSA), and Jabhat Al-Shamiyah were force to withdraw in direction of ‘Azaz.

We remember, Russian warplanes conducted air raids in the area of the airport on Feb.9 while the U.S. ignored this area to avoid additional jitters in the relations with the Erdogan’s regime.
The Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) announced on Feb. 9 that it purged ISIS from Ramadi’s eastern suburbs and secured the road between Baghdad and Ramadi. However, this area still remains vulnerable to attacks and will need to be cleared of IEDs.

Peshmerga and Suni tribals have conducted several military operations west of Makhmur. The U.S.-trained 1st Battalion of the 91st Brigade of the 16th Iraqi Army Division participated in them.
ISF and local militias continue to clash with ISIS between Samarra and Lake Thar Thar despite previous claims over the control of the areas west of Samarra. ISIS has launched an operation to push the ISF and its allies in Khat al-Layn and the Jazeera desert.
 
Author F. William Engdahl in this article, gives the history of the Petrodollar - coined by Henry Kissinger and the monopoly created with the huge rise of OPEC oil prices, in backing the American dollar. Saudi King Faisal, during the Yom Kippur War had threatened to declare an OPEC oil embargo against Europe and the US for supplying Israel with arms before the war. Germany wanted to stay neutral in the Middle East conflict. Washington sent a strong letter to Germany's Chancellor Brandt (via Henry Kissinger's request) that it wouldn't be in Germany's interest - to go "neutral".

The US-Saudi oil-for-dollars agreement was ignored by Saddam Hussein who, in the UN oil-for-food deals, sold Iraqi oil for Euros. The Iraqi “petroeuro” practice ended abruptly with the March 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Now, with U.S. sanctions lifted, Iran made a statement on Feb. 5 - that Iran will only except Euro payment - for new and outstanding oil sales - two days after Henry Kissinger met with President Putin. It will be interesting to watch developments - unfold?


Washington Again Underestimated the Iranian Mind F. William Engdahl
http://journal-neo.org/2016/02/10/washington-again-underestimated-the-iranian-mind/

Feb. 10, 2016 - In summer of 2015 the United States agreed to a lifting of sanctions on Iran, on certain conditions, allegedly tied to Iranian guarantees to IAEA international monitoring of its nuclear reactor program.

The most brutal of sanctions were devised by the US Treasury’s aggressive Office of Financial Terrorism in January 2012. They were then imposed by the European Union under immense Washington pressure. Among other measures they imposed unprecedented worldwide cessation of all Iranian banks’ access to the SWIFT interbank payments system for sales of its oil or trade on world markets.

SWIFT, Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, clears most world interbank financial transactions. It is based in Belgium and owned by private banks, not by the EU. It was SWIFT’s first expulsion of any institution in its 39 year history. The SWIFT expulsion was designed by David Cohen, US Undersecretary of Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, together with Mark Dubowitz, a sanctions specialist in Washington. It was the financial equivalent of Washington deciding to use a thermonuclear weapon.

As well, the EU agreed to an oil embargo on Iran and to freezing the assets of Iran’s central bank abroad. The Iranian currency rapidly collapsed some 80% to the dollar. Iranian inflation, especially for vital wheat imports, exploded and oil exports to major customers including the EU, China, Japan, South Korea and India were cut in half.

Ingratitude? - On January 16, 2016 on the report from the Vienna IAEA that Iran was complying with the nuclear enrichment and other parts of the agreement of July 2015, SWIFT announced it was readmitting all Iranian banks, including the National Bank, into the payments system. The EU stated that European companies, including oil companies, were no longer prohibited from doing business with Iran. The Obama Administration, however, was not so generous.

The US Treasury stated that “the US embargo will generally remain in place, even after Implementation Day, because of concerns outside of Iran’s nuclear program.” The White House issued a statement that, “US statutory sanctions focused on Iran’s support for terrorism, human rights abuses, and missile activities will remain in effect and continue to be enforced.”

Now Teheran has reacted to years of US-driven economic warfare. Rather than embrace the nation that waged a constant war against her since 1979, like Vietnam has done with its embrace of US free market economics, Iran’s leadership has responded with a clear decision to ride a tightrope between giving the US an excuse to re-impose the SWIFT and other sanctions, and to follow her own national interests.

Those interests include a major step to de-dollarize. No doubt some hard-liners in Washington and their allies in Saudi Arabia and Tel Aviv will call it ingratitude. I call it autonomy, pursuing Iran’s sovereign national interest.

Oil only for Euros Now, in gratitude for 37 years of USA economic sanctions being lifted, on February 5, according to a report in Iranian state-owned PressTV, an official of the National Iranian Oil Company has announced that Iran will accept payment only in Euros, not dollars, for its oil. The official added that that rule applied to newly signed deals with France’s energy giant Total, Spain’s refiner Cepsa and Russia’s Lukoil.

The NIOC official declared, “In our invoices we mention a clause that buyers of our oil will have to pay in euros, considering the exchange rate versus the dollar around the time of delivery.” In addition NIOC clarified, India and other large buyers of Iranian oil at the time of the SWIFT freeze must also pay the debt, billions of Euros worth, in Euros, not dollars. The official of NIOC clarified that the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) had instituted the policy to carry out foreign trade in euros while the country was still under sanctions.

Why is this such a big deal, you might be asking? In and of itself it isn’t. But combined with similar moves among other nations of Eurasia, particularly Russia and China to conduct their bilateral energy trade in national currencies–ruble and renminbi–as well as Russia’s recent decision to start trading Russian crude oil futures on the St Petersburg Mercantile Exchange in rubles, not dollars, and to create a new Urals ruble oil benchmark to replace the US-dollar Brent futures at the London ICE exchange, the Iranian move begins to cause serious damage to what Henry Kissinger back in the days of the first 1973-74 oil price shock, dubbed “petrodollars.”

What are petrodollars, anyway? As I document at some length in my book, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics, (German “Mit der Ölwaffe zur Weltmacht”) the idea of “petrodollars” first arose out of the 1973 oil price shock.

That year an obscure and rather influential Atlanticist network of bankers, oil multinationals, US and European government officials–some 84 hand-picked players–met in an ultra-closed-door two day session at the Saltsjoebaden Grand Hotel, owned by the wealthy Swedish Wallenberg family. There, the May 1973 Bilderberg Meeting discussed the world of oil.

The top Anglo-American bankers and oil barons, including David Rockefeller of Chase Manhattan Bank; Baron Edmond de Rothschild of France; Robert O. Anderson of ARCO oil company; Lord Greenhill, chairman of British Petroleum; René Granier de Lilliac chairman of the French Compagnie Française des Pétroles, today TOTAL; Sir Eric Roll of S.G. Warburg, creator of Eurobonds; George Ball of Lehman Brothers. German industrialist and close Rockefeller friend, Otto Wolff von Amerongen and Birgit Breuel, later head of the German Treuhand, where she asset stripped former East Germany, were also present. So too was Italian industrialist and close Rockefeller business associate, Gianni Agnelli of FIAT.

The Swedish closed-door meeting, from which no press coverage was allowed, discussed a coming 400% rise in the price of OPEC oil. Rather than discuss how such a shock to world economic growth might be avoided through careful diplomacy with Saudi Arabia, Iran and other Arab OPEC oil states, the meeting focused on discussing what they would do with the money! They discussed how to “recycle” the anticipated fourfold increase in the price of the world’s most important commodity, petroleum.

The official confidential minutes of the Bilderberg Saltsjöbaden meeting, which I’ve read, discussed the danger that in the wake of a huge rise of OPEC oil prices, “inadequate control of the financial resources of the oil producing countries could completely disorganize and undermine the world monetary system.” The minutes go on to speak of “huge increases of imports from the Middle East. The cost of these imports would rise tremendously.” Figures given later in the Saltsjöbaden discussion by US oil consultant and presenter, Walter Levy, show a projected price rise for OPEC oil of some 400 per cent.

This was the true origin of what Kissinger later would call the problem of “recycling the petrodollars,” the huge increase of dollars from oil sales. US and UK policy–Wall Street and the City of London policy to be more precise–was to make certain that OPEC oil countries would invest their newfound oil riches mainly with Anglo-American banks.

Yom Kippur War The October 1973 Yom Kippur War between Israel and a coalition of Arab states led by Egypt and Syria, predictably, led Saudi King Faisal to make good on his threat to declare an OPEC oil embargo against Europe and the US for supplying Israel with arms before the war. Kissinger and Wall Street counted on that.

At the outbreak of the war, in mid-October 1973, the German government of Chancellor Willy Brandt told the US ambassador to Bonn that Germany was neutral in the Middle East conflict, and therefore would not permit the United States to resupply Israel from German military bases. Nixon, on October 30, 1973, sent Chancellor Brandt a sharply worded protest note, most probably drafted by Kissinger:

“We recognize that the Europeans are more dependent upon Arab oil than we, but we disagree that your vulnerability is decreased by disassociating yourselves from us on a matter of this importance…You note that this crisis was not a case of common responsibility for the Alliance, and that military supplies for Israel were for purposes which are not part of Alliance responsibility. I do not believe we can draw such a fine line…”

Washington would not permit Germany to declare its neutrality in the Middle East conflict. But, significantly, Britain was allowed to clearly state its neutrality, thus avoiding the impact of the Arab oil embargo. That was the Anglo-American oil world.

In a fascinating personal discussion in London in September 2000 with Sheikh Zaki Yamani, Faisal’s trusted Oil Minister, Yamani told me about a mission to Teheran in late 1973. It was prior to a major December OPEC meeting. Yamani related that King Faisal had sent him to Teheran to ask Shah Reza Pahlavi why Iran was insisting on a major permanent OPEC price increase that would amount to a 400% rise from prewar levels. Yamani related to me that the Shah told him, “My dear minister, if your king wants the answer to that question, tell him he should go to Washington and ask Henry Kissinger.”

In June 8, 1974, US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger signed an agreement establishing a US–Saudi Arabian Joint Commission on Economic Cooperation, whose official mandate included “cooperation in the field of finance.” In December 1974, in strict secrecy the US Treasury Assistant Secretary, Jack F. Bennett, later to become a director of EXXON, signed an agreement in Riyadh with the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA, the Saudi central bank). The mission of SAMA was “to establish a new relationship through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with the US Treasury borrowing operation. Under this arrangement, SAMA will purchase new US Treasury securities with maturities of at least one year,” explained Bennett in a February, 1975 memo to Secretary of State Kissinger.

The Washington government was now free to run almost unlimited deficits, knowing that Saudi petrodollars would buy US debt. Washington promised the Saudis major US arms sales in return, winning on both ends.

No less astonishing than these US–Saudi “arrangements” was the exclusive policy decision by the OPEC oil states in 1975, led by Saudi Arabia, to accept only US dollars for their oil—not German marks, despite their clear value, not Japanese yen, French francs or even Swiss francs, but only American dollars.

This is the actual origin of what were called petrodollars. Petroleum, following the 1975 US-Riyadh agreement, was to be sold by OPEC oil producers in US dollars only. The result was a dramatic revival of a sinking US dollar, a windfall profit for the Rockefeller and UK oil majors, then known as the Seven Sisters, a boom for the Wall Street and City of London Eurodollar banks that “recycled” those petrodollars, and the worst world and USA economic recession since the 1930’s. For the bankers of London and Wall Street the economy was a mere externality.

That US-Saudi oil-for-dollars agreement, which holds to this day, was ignored by Saddam Hussein who, in the UN oil-for-food deals, sold Iraqi oil for Euros deposited with the French BNP Paribas bank. The Iraqi “petroeuro” practice ended abruptly with the March 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Since that time, no OPEC oil country has sold their oil in any other currency. Now, Iran breaks ranks, yet another blow to the hegemony of the US Dollar System and the role of the dollar as dominant world reserve currency. After all there is no international law that countries must buy and sell oil only for dollars, is there?

The end of what has become a tyranny of that Dollar System is moving nearer with Iran’s decision to sell oil only for euros now. It’s a truly fascinating world.


Exclusive: Iran wants euro payment for new and outstanding oil sales
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-oil-iran-exclusive-idUSKCN0VE21S
 
Video: A Free Syrian Army Commander Says Russia Bombing Will Give Assad Victory
19:32, UK, Monday 08 February 2016
_http://news.sky.com/video/1638222/aleppo-may-fall-to-assad-in-days

cegrab-20160208-191937-799-1-992x558.jpg

A Free Syrian Army commander has told Sky News that - unless Russia stops its indiscriminate bombing of Aleppo - the city will fall to President Assad's troops within days. In an exclusive interview, he predicted a "massacre" in Aleppo that would send a surge of refugees heading towards Turkey. Sky's Stuart Ramsay reports.

NATO’s buildup in Eastern Europe, reckless policy: Commentator (Video)
Press TV
Thu Feb 11, 2016 6:37AM
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2016/02/11/449689/Russia-NATO-US-military-presence-Putin-Syria-Ukraine#
Press TV has conducted an interview with Mark Dankof, a broadcaster and commentator in San Antonio, Texas, and Peter Sinnott, an independent scholar in New York, to discuss NATO’s plan to boost the alliance’s presence in Eastern Europe.
1077ce68-8e4f-4452-bee1-e1420123c3ab.jpg

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg :pinocchio:

Dankof says the policies of the United States and NATO to increase their military presence in Eastern Europe are absolutely “reckless,” adding that they have basically driven Russia into a very “understandable defensive posture.”

He also stresses that NATO is pursuing a policy of “encirclement” of Russia which is absolutely “needless.”

“This is aggressive, it is reckless and it is moving the United States and NATO away from the old policy of deterrence and the old policy of peace through strength. This [NATO] is in fact an entity that is increasingly being used to facilitate aggression and regime change and the economic exploitation of governments and countries it does not like,” he states.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Dankof argues that tensions over Syria and Ukraine could boil over into a military confrontation between NATO and Russia.

“NATO encirclement of Russia, economic sanctions and so forth, this is clearly a reckless policy that just in Syria alone and Ukraine could well lead to a tragedy that could escalate into a global war,” he says.

Sinnott, for his part, believes that NATO’s buildup in Eastern Europe is mainly a “response” to Russian activity in the airspace of Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. He also argues that the military buildup will help lower tensions because “cooler heads will prevail” when there is a stronger NATO presence.

NATO defense ministers approve the increase presence in Eastern Europe (Video of the :cuckoo: 's)
Thu Feb 11, 2016 12:58AM
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2016/02/11/449661/NATO-defense-ministers-approve-new-force-Eastern-Europe
Here is a round-up of global news developments:
2a9a3841-27bc-4bb4-9c2f-9bf99dbebd54.jpg

1- NATO defense ministers have approved a plan to extend the alliance’s presence in Eastern Europe. The military coalition says the defense lines of some of the member states need to be strengthened. Russia says the build-up is a destabilizing factor in the region.

2- Russia has warned about Turkey’s intention to create a so-called Daesh-free zone in northern Syria. Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov says such a move will be in breach of international law and will cause substantial and qualitative tensions in the region.

3- Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani has warned that terrorism and extremism can spread across the globe unless they are completely defeated. Rouhani said terrorism could not be defeated by slogans and that all countries must intensify their efforts in fighting extremism.

4- More than 60 people have been killed and nearly 80 injured in an attack in northeastern Nigeria. Officials say two female bombers detonated their explosives in a refugee camp in the northeast of Borno State’s capital, Maiduguri. They blame Boko Haram terrorists for the bombings.

5- Efforts to form a unity government in Libya have failed over the key post of the Defense Ministry. The post was given to a prominent military figure close to Libya’s internationally-recognized administration. But the nomination was rejected by a UN-backed council tasked with forming the unity government.

6- Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir says Riyadh is willing to commit its special forces to Syria should quote-the international coalition decide to deploy ground troops there. Jubeir claimed the mission would be to fight Daesh. Earlier, another Saudi official said the soldiers will also fight the Syrian government forces.

7- Nearly a dozen people, including eight members of a family, have been killed in the latest Saudi airstrikes on the Yemeni capital Sana’a. Three civilians were also killed in separate Saudi attack in Sa’ada province. More than 83-hundred Yemenis have been killed since Saudi Arabia launched its war on Yemen in late March.

8- French lawmakers have voted in favor of a controversial package of measures to change the constitution. The amendment was requested by the Socialist government of François Hollande after the November terror attacks in Paris. The law would allow the stripping of convicted terrorists of their French nationality.
 
angelburst29 said:
Author F. William Engdahl in this article, gives the history of the Petrodollar - coined by Henry Kissinger and the monopoly created with the huge rise of OPEC oil prices, in backing the American dollar. Saudi King Faisal, during the Yom Kippur War had threatened to declare an OPEC oil embargo against Europe and the US for supplying Israel with arms before the war. Germany wanted to stay neutral in the Middle East conflict. Washington sent a strong letter to Germany's Chancellor Brandt (via Henry Kissinger's request) that it wouldn't be in Germany's interest - to go "neutral".

The US-Saudi oil-for-dollars agreement was ignored by Saddam Hussein who, in the UN oil-for-food deals, sold Iraqi oil for Euros. The Iraqi “petroeuro” practice ended abruptly with the March 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Now, with U.S. sanctions lifted, Iran made a statement on Feb. 5 - that Iran will only except Euro payment - for new and outstanding oil sales - two days after Henry Kissinger met with President Putin. It will be interesting to watch developments - unfold?


Washington Again Underestimated the Iranian Mind F. William Engdahl
http://journal-neo.org/2016/02/10/washington-again-underestimated-the-iranian-mind/


It's a great honor to learn with you angelburst29,thanks for sharing! :)
 
angelburst29 said:
That US-Saudi oil-for-dollars agreement, which holds to this day, was ignored by Saddam Hussein who, in the UN oil-for-food deals, sold Iraqi oil for Euros deposited with the French BNP Paribas bank. The Iraqi “petroeuro” practice ended abruptly with the March 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Since that time, no OPEC oil country has sold their oil in any other currency. Now, Iran breaks ranks, yet another blow to the hegemony of the US Dollar System and the role of the dollar as dominant world reserve currency. After all there is no international law that countries must buy and sell oil only for dollars, is there?

Wow, thank you angelburst29 for this information - this gives a whole new perspective as to why some European countries (including Germany and France) were against the Iraq war in 2003. I always suspected it hadn't anything to do with morals or compassion for the Iraqi people, but I never saw this connection. Thank you.
 
Russia won't change strategy in Syria in accordance with Pentagon’s recommendations

http://tass.ru/en/politics/855917

The recommended change of strategy was aimed at helping the United States attain political transition of power in Syria

MOSCOW, February 11. /TASS/. Russian Defense Ministry does not intend to change the strategy of its military operation in Syria in accordance with Pentagon’s recommendations, the ministry’s official spokesman Igor Konashenkov told reporters on Thursday.

"We have lately heard advice from the Pentagon on the necessity to change our strategy in Syria to ‘help’ the United States attain political transition of power there. We will remind especially for such advisors that the aim of our operation in Syria is to destroy terrorism - direct and clear threat to security of our country and the world," Konashenkov said.

He noted that all political issues should be resolved only by Syrians themselves with international mediation, "not in tranches but at the negotiations table." "We never had and never will have any other ‘strategies’," the spokesman noted.

"We have clearly seen over the last five years the results of Washington’s strategies of ‘political transitions’ in the Middle East near Russian borders. Instead of ‘triumph of democracy’, there is devastation, blood, refugees everywhere. Is this why foreign strategists are now talking about the necessity of launching ground operations in Syria and Libya? Maybe these advisors should better stop making the same mistakes over again?" Konashenkov said.

Russia's military operation in Syria

Russia’s Aerospace Force started delivering strikes in Syria at facilities of the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra terrorist groups (both banned in Russia) on September 30, 2015. The air group initially comprised over 50 aircraft and helicopters, including Sukhoi Su-24M, Su-25SM and state-of-the-art Su-34 aircraft. They were redeployed to the Khmeimim airbase in the province of Latakia. On October 7, Moscow also involved the Russian Navy in the military operation. Four missile ships of the Caspian Flotilla fired 26 Kalibr cruise missiles (NATO codename Sizzler) at militants’ facilities in Syria.

Since 2014, the US-led coalition has also been delivering air strikes against militants in Syria and Iraq.

In mid-November, after an alleged terrorist attack on Russian passenger jet that fell in Egypt killing 224 people on board, Moscow increased the number of aircraft taking part in the operation in Syria by several dozen and involved strategic bombers in the strikes as well. Targets of the Russian aircraft include terrorists’ gasoline tankers and oil refineries. Russia’s aircraft have made thousands of sorties since the start of the operation in Syria, with over a hundred of them performed by long-range aircraft.

On November 24, a Turkish F-16 fighter brought down a Russian Sukhoi Su-24M bomber involved in Moscow’s military operation against the Islamic State (a terrorist group outlawed in Russia). Ankara claimed the warplane violated the Turkey’s airspace. The Russian Defense Ministry said the warplane was flying over Syrian territory without violating Turkey’s airspace. The Russian president referred to the attack as a “stab in Russia’s back” and promised that the move would cause response action from Russia. Moscow deployed new S-400 air defense systems in Syria in order to protect the warplanes involved in the military operation and started arming the fighters intended to provide air support to bombers and attack aircraft in Syria with air-to-air missiles.

Iranian Defense Minister to Arrive in Moscow to Discuss S-300 Deliveries

http://sputniknews.com/business/20160211/1034564697/iran-russia-s-300-deliveries.html

According to a source in the Iranian Defense Ministry, Defense Minister Hossein Dehgan will arrive in Moscow on February 16 to discuss the delivery of the S-300 air defense system to the country.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Iranian Defense Minister Hossein Dehgan will arrive in Moscow on February 16 to discuss the delivery of the S-300 air defense system to the country as well as the delivery of Su-30 Flanker multirole jet fighters, a source in the Iranian Defense Ministry told Sputnik on Thursday.

“Minister Dehgan is taking a number of the Defense Ministry’s representatives to the Russian capital to meet with their Russian colleagues and other highly-ranked officials,” the source said.

During the upcoming meeting, the minister plans to discuss Iran’s need for the Su-30 and to hopefully sign a contract on its delivery.

“The last stages will be discussed of delivering Iran the S-300 complex, the first part of which should arrive before the end of next month, and the second by the end of June. Minister Dehgan will also discuss the delivery of Su-30 airplanes because the Defense Ministry believes the Iranian Air Force needs this type of plane. We’ve moved far in these discussions of purchases and I think that during the upcoming visit a contract will be signed,” the source said.
 
sToRmR1dR said:
angelburst29 said:
It will be interesting to watch developments - unfold?

Washington Again Underestimated the Iranian Mind F. William Engdahl
http://journal-neo.org/2016/02/10/washington-again-underestimated-the-iranian-mind/


It's a great honor to learn with you angelburst29, thanks for sharing! :)

Thanks StormRidr! I think, the "honor" rests in the acknowledgement - that we have been given "a platform" to freely interact with, in terms of collecting and documenting vital information. Bit's and pieces of a puzzle begin to emerge, as we interact on any given topic. The information provided in links, articles, commentaries, videos and Forum Member feedback increases our awareness of developments around us - that directly or indirectly - affect each one of us, in one way or another.

Each Post, carries with it, a piece of information. It's up to us, to verify - if it's fact or fiction. Additional documentation helps in creating a larger information base, from which Forum Members can add commentary or expressed opinions in forming a wider picture. Sharing and interaction is part of the process of separating the "Wheat from the Chaff" and helps us get to the truth. Then we can begin the process of putting the pieces together.

It's amazing, the amount of information that's now surfacing on the Internet, in terms of Political and National interest, much of which was hidden to public view. It's like - the veil is lifting? It gives us opportunity, to use our eyes and ears, to find the "gems".
 
angelburst29 said:
It's amazing, the amount of information that's now surfacing on the Internet, in terms of Political and National interest, much of which was hidden to public view. It's like - the veil is lifting? It gives us opportunity, to use our eyes and ears, to find the "gems".

Yeah, and thanks for that stimulating imagery. :) If I may add to that, I like the idea that there are people yet to come who will discover this treasure house of info and see all these glittering gems lighting the path out of the tunnel with understanding of what's been going on this whole time. I see such people just staring in awe and wonder, experiencing real awareness of the kind that there's few words for.
 
luc said:
angelburst29 said:
That US-Saudi oil-for-dollars agreement, which holds to this day, was ignored by Saddam Hussein who, in the UN oil-for-food deals, sold Iraqi oil for Euros deposited with the French BNP Paribas bank. The Iraqi “petroeuro” practice ended abruptly with the March 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Since that time, no OPEC oil country has sold their oil in any other currency. Now, Iran breaks ranks, yet another blow to the hegemony of the US Dollar System and the role of the dollar as dominant world reserve currency. After all there is no international law that countries must buy and sell oil only for dollars, is there?

Wow, thank you angelburst29 for this information - this gives a whole new perspective as to why some European countries (including Germany and France) were against the Iraq war in 2003. I always suspected it hadn't anything to do with morals or compassion for the Iraqi people, but I never saw this connection. Thank you.

I agree with you, Luc - the information does give a different perspective, then what was allowed and presented to the Public. Notice how F. William Engdahl details "how" arrangements were made, by a select few, to form "an Oil Monopoly" to enrich themselves, raising the price 400%, then giving the profits a fancy name "petrodollars" to legalize their scheme. On a wider scale, it gave the U.S. a blank check to spend "without accountability" while filling their own pockets and creating an enormous "debt" - now to be picked up by the taxpayers! Engdahl properly describes this process as economic warfare. Problem is - this describes only one monopoly (oil) while many more have been fostered upon us - yet Washington blames public expenditures for high deflect spending? (Blame the victim.)

It's also interesting to learn, how other's, not wanting to be part of the scheme (to the detriment of their own public welfare and economies) are forced into line or pay a heavy price. Information, like this, gives us a better idea, as to why, there's nothing left of our paycheck - after we pay "living" expenses? They're playing High Stakes Casino and we're being used to feed the slot machine. Time - to re-think our situation and make individual choices in changing direction......
 
KURDISH FEMALE FIGHTERS COMMANDEER TANKS IN BATTLE TO CAPTURE ALEPPO AIR BASE

http://europe.newsweek.com/kurdish-female-fighters-commandeer-tanks-battle-capture-aleppo-air-base-425432?rm=eu

Footage emerged on Thursday of female Kurdish fighters commandeering tanks, sniper rifles and machine-gun mounted trucks in the successful offensive to capture the Mannagh air base from Islamist rebels in Syria’s Aleppo province.

The video, released by the Kurdish AHNA news agency, begins with female voices before cutting to a tank with three female Kurdish fighters sitting atop the vehicle and another in a front seat.

It is unclear if a female fighter is driving the vehicle but it demonstrates the willingness of the Kurdish female fighters to be at the heart of the People’s Protection Units’ (YPG) battle for territory in northern Syria. A second shot of the tank, towards the end of the video, shows a tank firing into the distance with female voices shouting afterwards.

The footage then shows female fighters manning heavy weaponry, firing between sandbag protected walls, and machine-gun mounted trucks. It also shows what appears to be a female with long hair firing a sniper rifle through a hole that appears to have been created by a projectile.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) told AFP news agency that the Kurds captured the air base and the nearby village of Mannagh from anti-regime rebels late Wednesday. The U.K.-based monitoring group revealed that the Russian air force, allied to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, supported the offensive with air strikes.

"With the defeat at Mannagh, Islamist fighters lost the only military airport they held in Aleppo province," SOHR founder Rami Abdel Rahman said.

The air base is located between two key roads that lead from Aleppo city to Azaz north of the city, giving them a strategic advantage to tackle jihadis further east, he added. The Assad regime lost control of the base in August 2013.

YPG forces have been battling Islamist rebels in Syria as well as the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) in eastern Syrian provinces of Raqqa and Hasakah. Arab rebels claim that Kurdish fighters are cleansing towns they capture of Arabs to claim more territory for an enclave they wish to build for themselves in northern Syria. The YPG denies this accusation.


Syrian Christian Girls Train to Defend Their Homes from US-Backed 'Moderate' Rebels (Video)

http://russia-insider.com/en/military/christian-syrian-women-become-soldiers/ri12784

ISIS fighters believe getting killed by a woman will send them to hell. These ladies are ready to help them out

Originally appeared at Anna News. Translated by Julia Rakhmetova and Rhod Mackenzie
Here you can see the difference between secular Syria and its Islamist enemies. ISIS uses women as jihadi wives or suicide bombers, while these Christian Arab girls defend their country with brave faces - learning to become snipers.
 
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