Persian Gulf & Middle East Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

plawolf

Lieutenant General
A discussion on the Iranian position on WMDs in Asia Times on line:
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So long as there are no consequences to such blatant lies and misrepresentations of the truth, more and more 'journalists' will lie and cheat to suit their own agendas.

The "Free media" is fast becoming a circus with the predictable race to the bottom when there are no, or toothless regulations in place to keep people honest.

There are pretty damn good reasons every other profession have extremely strict rules of entry and well-enforced monitoring and quality control procedures in place to make sure those entering the profession are at least basically competent enough to do a reasonable job, and to find and kick out anyone who cannot maintain or uphold those standards during the course of their jobs.
 
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So long as there are no consequences to such blatant lies and misrepresentations of the truth, more and more 'journalists' will lie and cheat to suit their own agendas.

The "Free media" is fast becoming a circus with the predictable race to the bottom when there are no, or toothless regulations in place to keep people honest.

There are pretty damn good reasons every other profession have extremely strict rules of entry and well-enforced monitoring and quality control procedures in place to make sure those entering the profession are at least basically competent enough to do a reasonable job, and to find and kick out anyone who cannot maintain or uphold those standards during the course of their jobs.


Very much agree with you here. The quality of Journalism is in downward spiral. Journalist used to be a respected profession where readers rely on them to provide objective reporting and analysis. They need to be objective to earn the respect of their readers. Now the western press are increasingly owned by special interest group and whomever has best financed operations carries their weight. Reaganomics in action. Investigative and Objective reporting is now a dying art.
 

delft

Brigadier
Here is a commentary by David Ignatius from the Washington Post on the situation in and of Saudi Arabia. Ignatius is not the brightest commentator, see his remark about SA buying nuclear weapons from China, but he seems to have influence.
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Is Saudi Arabia on the edge?

By David Ignatius, Monday, August 6, 1:43 AM

By appointing Prince Bandar bin Sultan as its new intelligence chief, Saudi Arabia has installed what looks like a war cabinet at a time of rising tensions with Iran and growing internal dissent from its Shiite minority.

The Saudis have also heightened their alert level in other ways to prepare for possible regional conflict. Some Saudi military and security personnel were mobilized last month — called back from summer leave or told to cancel planned vacations. One explanation of the mobilization making the rounds in Riyadh is that the Saudis expected that Turkey might retaliate against Syria for the shoot-down of one of its fighters in late June.

The installation of a new intelligence chief came as Saudi Arabia was stepping up its support for insurgents in Syria seeking to topple the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. In this covert effort, the Saudis are working with the United States, France, Turkey, Jordan and other nations that want Assad out.

Bandar will succeed Prince Muqrin bin Abdul Aziz, who was barely visible in the West during his years as Saudi intelligence chief. This led to widespread comment that Muqrin had been fired, but he is said to retain the confidence of King Abdullah, who will use him as a special emissary to Pakistan and other Muslim nations where Muqrin’s traditional Saudi demeanor will be useful.

Bandar, the flamboyant former ambassador to Washington, had appeared to be sidelined in the past several years because of poor health and personal issues. His appointment now as intelligence chief probably signals the desire of both King Abdullah and the new Crown Prince Salman to have an experienced covert operator to handle sensitive foreign contacts at a time of sharply rising tensions.

Bandar would be a useful intermediary, for example, if Saudi Arabia sought nuclear weapons or ballistic missile technology from China to defend against such threats from Iran. Bandar was the go-between in a secret 1987 missile deal with China, known as “East Wind.” Bandar has also been active in secret missions with Syria and Lebanon for decades, and the Wall Street Journal reported that he helped arrange a recent visit to Saudi Arabia by Gen. Manaf Tlass, the highest-ranking Syrian defector.

Bandar is especially well-placed to manage intelligence liaison with the United States, given his two decades here as ambassador. Bandar maintained close relations with the CIA during Ronald Reagan’s presidency, and was said to have helped organize secret funding for joint Saudi-American covert actions in the Middle East. During the run-up to the 1991 Gulf War, Bandar was so close to President George H.W. Bush that he became known as “Bandar Bush,” a moniker that continued under President George W. Bush.

Bandar continued to play a behind-the scenes role even after he left Washington in 2005. He was said, for example, to support Vice President Dick Cheney’s confrontational policy against Iran, to the consternation of Prince Turki al-Faisal, his successor as ambassador, who was working with less hawkish members of the Bush administration.

Interestingly, Bandar has been a special target for Iranian media attacks in recent days. Iran’s Press TV on Aug. 2 described him as “the linchpin in the ‘dastardly subterfuges’ of the CIA and Mossad against Syria.” Press TV also carried an uncorroborated report early last week claiming that Bandar had been assassinated; the rumor was rebutted Friday by a source who said that Bandar had been in telephone contact with non-Saudis.

At home, the Saudis have been struggling to contain Shiite protests in Al-Qatif, in the kingdom’s oil-rich eastern province. Those protests, which the Saudis believe are Iran-inspired, led to two deaths in early July, according to a July 9 BBC report. The demonstrations continued last week and there were reports of more casualties.

The Saudis haven’t been able to stop the insurgency in Al-Qatif; indeed, it appears to be worsening. The protesters may hope to provoke the Saudis into a bloody crackdown, which would leave scores dead and encourage much wider demonstrations and international outcry. So far, the Saudis have avoided such an escalation through relatively restrained tactics. Saudi reformers argue that the best way to quell Shiite protests is to give them the full economic and political rights of citizenship.

Iran’s Press TV on July 27 featured an interview with an analyst headlined: “Collapse of al-Saud regime becomes more realistic than before.” The information may have been Tehran’s propaganda, but it helps explain why the Saudi monarchy is going to battle stations.

[email protected]
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
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In what is becoming an increasingly common event, a gunfight erupted between two local Taliban groups in northern Balkh province, leaving three "key insurgent commanders" dead and 10 other militants wounded, according to local Afghan police officials who spoke with Pajhwok Afghan News. The clash erupted following a disagreement between Taliban militants belonging to the Mullah Naqibullah Mahaz (or Mullah Naqibullah Front) and those associated with the Mullah Toofan Mahaz in the Gala Joy area of Chahar Bolak district on Saturday night.
At least three Taliban commanders from the Naqibullah Mahaz -- Mullah Baqi, Mullah Hassan, and Mullah Safari -- were among eight Taliban fighters killed; 10 other militants were wounded in the firefight. Taliban commander Mullah Toofan and nine of his fighters allegedly surrendered to the Afghan government shortly after the incident.
The prospect of negotiating with the Afghan government -- specifically the reconciliation and reintegration of militants -- has led to reoccurring rifts within the ranks of the Taliban. The clash in Balkh was likely connected to the July 11 reconciliation of 18 Taliban fighters loyal to Mullah Naqibullah in the Chahar Bolak district, a political move seen by hardened anti-government fighters as tantamount to treason. Afghan government officials have announced the reconciliation of 200 insurgents in Balkh since the formation of the High Peace Council.
Previous infighting among Taliban factions has been documented this year in Herat, Parwan, Zabul, and Ghazni provinces, as well as in Quetta, Pakistan. The most serious reports of Taliban infighting came in early May when Taliban detractors and Afghan intelligence officials reported that senior Taliban leadership, including the deputy military council chairman for the Quetta Shura, had been detained, tortured, and possibly executed for participating in "non-sanctioned" negotiations with the Afghan government. Additional infighting has killed several Taliban officials, including shadow district governors, in Parwan and Herat provinces.
For more information on recent Taliban infighting, see the following Long War Journal and Threat Matrix articles:

Read more:
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delft

Brigadier
From Marine Forum Daily News, today:
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07 August

IRAN (related)

After being hit by European and US sanctions, Iran's oil sales are stabilizing as the country entices buyers with attractive prices and a form of barter.
South Korea has signalled it was likely to resume crude purchases from Iran, possibly as early as September.
As always with Marine Forum, no sources.
 

i.e.

Senior Member
@ bladerunner
The Bahraini royal family is responsible for a few hundred deaths on a population of a few hundred thousand in a few weeks a year ago in order to stay in power. Saddam killed some 400 000 in thirty years for the same purpose. This means a comparable kill rate over a much shorter time.
Iraq lost 500 000 in the war against Iran, when Saddam was the champion of the civilized world against the godless Iranians. That was another purpose.

It might well be that El Baradei decided to write the book for the purpose you suggest, but have you reason to doubt his veracity? It accords very well with the impression I got at the time and with what I have read on this subject since in other sources.

Your survey of the Iraqi casualties over the last forty years seems to me to be entirely reasonable. Thanks.

I just want to add a bit on Iraq situation..
what did Iraq in was the sanctions enacted after gulfwar I.
image most of your civilian infrastructure (electric plants, sewage treatment plants, medicine factories) cripple by either bombing or sanctions. Imagine your people has to suffer in 40 deg C heat and drink untreated water from rivers.
this is where most death and destruction comes from. a slow and painful curl of the population especially the vulnerable children.

don't take my word for it:

UNICEF:
"In May 2000 a United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) survey noted that almost half the children under 5 years suffered from diarrhoea, in a country where the population is marked by its youth, with 45% being under 14 years of age in 2000. Power shortages, lack of spare parts and insufficient technical know-how lead to the breakdown of many modern facilities.[26]"

and The guy who ran the UN Humanitarian effort in Iraq for much of the snactions post 91':

"Denis Halliday was appointed United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator in Baghdad, Iraq as of 1 September 1997, at the Assistant Secretary-General level. In October 1998 he resigned after a 34 year career with the UN in order to have the freedom to criticise the sanctions regime, saying "I don't want to administer a programme that satisfies the definition of genocide"[34] However, Sophie Boukhari a UNESCO Courier journalist, reports that "some legal experts are skeptical about or even against using such terminology" and quotes Mario Bettati: "People who talk like that don’t know anything about law. The embargo has certainly affected the Iraqi people badly, but that’s not at all a crime against humanity or genocide."[35]
...

I dpn't know.
when you deny their civilian infrastructure a chance to rebuild and alot of their kids die from treatable and preventable disease like cholera and diahreaha... is this not genocide?


...

It is pretty clear to me that post '91 the UN sanctions has been driven by some into the wrong path of Punishment and revenge not prevention as the stated goal. a secular literate 2nd world country has been grinded into abject poverty and violent sectarianism.
Is it fitting as a punishment? is the human cost worth the blood lust of revenge for the kuwait invasion?
 
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asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
its reported in this months AFM (just a small article) that Venezuela in 2006 transfered one of its F16s in knock down condition to Iran to quote "help calibrate Irans airdefences"

the F16 was in 2 x C130 Cargos and stoped over in over 6 countrys with the last one stop in Algeria, it took a very complicated route

dont know if its true though
 

delft

Brigadier
I just want to add a bit on Iraq situation..
what did Iraq in was the sanctions enacted after gulfwar I.
image most of your civilian infrastructure (electric plants, sewage treatment plants, medicine factories) cripple by either bombing or sanctions. Imagine your people has to suffer in 40 deg C heat and drink untreated water from rivers.
this is where most death and destruction comes from. a slow and painful curl of the population especially the vulnerable children.

don't take my word for it:

UNICEF:
"In May 2000 a United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) survey noted that almost half the children under 5 years suffered from diarrhoea, in a country where the population is marked by its youth, with 45% being under 14 years of age in 2000. Power shortages, lack of spare parts and insufficient technical know-how lead to the breakdown of many modern facilities.[26]"

and The guy who ran the UN Humanitarian effort in Iraq for much of the snactions post 91':

"Denis Halliday was appointed United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator in Baghdad, Iraq as of 1 September 1997, at the Assistant Secretary-General level. In October 1998 he resigned after a 34 year career with the UN in order to have the freedom to criticise the sanctions regime, saying "I don't want to administer a programme that satisfies the definition of genocide"[34] However, Sophie Boukhari a UNESCO Courier journalist, reports that "some legal experts are skeptical about or even against using such terminology" and quotes Mario Bettati: "People who talk like that don’t know anything about law. The embargo has certainly affected the Iraqi people badly, but that’s not at all a crime against humanity or genocide."[35]
...

I dpn't know.
when you deny their civilian infrastructure a chance to rebuild and alot of their kids die from treatable and preventable disease like cholera and diahreaha... is this not genocide?


...

It is pretty clear to me that post '91 the UN sanctions has been driven by some into the wrong path of Punishment and revenge not prevention as the stated goal. a secular literate 2nd world country has been grinded into abject poverty and violent sectarianism.
Is it fitting as a punishment? is the human cost worth the blood lust of revenge for the kuwait invasion?
And after acting like that for a dozen years the US were surprised not to be hailed as liberators when they started their invasion of Iraq in 2003.
 

delft

Brigadier
Collision by AB destroyer USS Porter DDG-78 with a Japanese tanker in the Strait of Hormuz:
From
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The guided missile destroyer collided with a Japanese-owned oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz on the early morning of 8/12/2012. No one was injured in the collision that occurred about 1 a.m. local time when the USS Porter collided with the Panamanian-flagged bulk oil tanker M/V Otowasan. The USS Porter, in the Persian Gulf on a scheduled deployment, is assigned to the U.S. 5th Fleet. It is conducting maritime security operations.
I originally found this on a site from a Dutch broadcaster. What happened?
 

delft

Brigadier
Re: Egypt

Broadcasters say the Egyptian President has fired the Commander-in--Chief of his armed forces and minister of defense field marshal Tantawi.
This from the BBC:
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12 August 2012 Last updated at 17:12 GMT
Egypt leader Mursi orders army chief Tantawi to resign

Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi has ordered the retirement of the powerful head of the country's armed forces, Field Marshal Mohamad Hussein Tantawi, a presidential spokesman has said.


He also said a constitutional declaration aimed at curbing presidential powers had been cancelled.

Mr Mursi, who was elected in June, is a member of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Relations between Islamists and the military have been increasingly tense since the fall of President Mubarak.

"Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi has been transferred into retirement from today," presidential spokesman Yasser Ali said in a statement.

He added that a career army officer, Gen Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, would replace Field Marshal Tantawi as both armed forces chief and defence minister.

Field Marshal Tantawi, 76, has not yet indicated whether he accepts the moves.

Chief of staff Sami Annan is also retiring, the spokesman announced.

Islamist raid

BBC Middle East correspondent Kevin Connolly says the dismissal of senior military officers will be seen by Egyptians as a decisive move in a struggle for real power between the country's newly elected politicians and the generals who have exercised power for many years.

As head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (Scaf), Field Marshal Tantawi became Egypt's interim ruler after President Hosni Mubarak was ousted following mass protests in February last year.

Under the interim constitutional declaration issued by Scaf before Mr Mursi was sworn in, the president could not rule on matters related to the military - including appointing its leaders.

Scaf also dissolved parliament, which is dominated by the president's Islamist allies.

Tensions between the Egyptian presidency and the military have been exacerbated since Islamist militants in the Sinai peninsula killed 16 border guards in a raid last week.

Our correspondent says Mr Mursi appears to be seizing on that failure - which shocked many Egyptians.

The presidential spokesman said Gen Annan and Field Marshal Tantawi had been appointed as presidential advisers and were given Egypt's highest state honour, the Grand Collar of the Nile.

The failure of the Egyptian military to keep control of the Sinai, a direct result of the agreement with Israel to keep its presence there strictly limited, gives a chance to the President to reduce the power of the military and put himself in command of the country. His has played this very carefully. He might well be able to open the border with Gaza for all economic traffic in a few months time. This will also reduce the prestige of Saudi Arabia and the US in the Middle East and so reduce the chances of the Syrian terrorists, but it might also induce foreign powers to intervene directly in that country if they are afraid of the fall out from these Egyptian developments.
 
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