Thursday

Obama Ordered U.S. Military Strike on Yemen Terrorists

Thank you Soldier



Yemen 101

Obama Ordered U.S. Military Strike on Yemen Terrorists

On orders from President Barack Obama, the U.S. military launched cruise missiles early Thursday against two suspected al-Qaeda sites in Yemen, administration officials told ABC News in a report broadcast on ABC World News with Charles Gibson.

One of the targeted sites was a suspected al Qaeda training camp north of the capitol, Sanaa, and the second target was a location where officials said "an imminent attack against a U.S. asset was being planned."

The Yemen attacks by the U.S. military represent a major escalation of the Obama administration's campaign against al Qaeda.

In his speech about added troops for Afghanistan earlier this month, President Obama made a brief reference to Yemen, saying, "Where al Qaeda and its allies attempt to establish a foothold -- whether in Somalia or Yemen or elsewhere -- they must be confronted by growing pressure and strong partnerships."

Until tonight, American officials had hedged about any U.S. role in the strikes against Yemen and news reports from Yemen attributed the attacks to the Yemen Air Force.

President Obama placed a call after the strikes to "congratulate" the President of Yemen, Ali Abdallah Salih, on his efforts against al Qaeda, according to White House officials.






Yemen is now front and center in the war on al Qaeda. Mohammed Jamjoom explains the crises facing the country.






Al Qaeda In Yemen Makes Rare Public Appearance: "War Is Against US And Not Yemeni Army"

Men claiming to be leaders of al Qaeda have made a rare public appearance in Yemen, telling an anti-government rally the fight is against the US, not the country's army. The statement was made at an al Qaeda training camp in southern Yemen - the same one that was attacked by the Americans leaving more than 30 dead.

 



Wednesday

Yemen's problems will not stay in Yemen

Thank you Soldier

Yemen's problems will not stay in Yemen

By Christopher Boucek, Special to CNN
December 30, 2009


Editor's note: Christopher Boucek is an associate in the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 

(CNN) -- In recent days, international attention has refocused on the rapidly deteriorating security situation in Yemen. The claim of responsibility for the attack on Northwest flight 253 on December 25 by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has underscored the fact that Yemen's problems will not stay in Yemen.
In the absence of immediate and sustained attention by the international community, Yemen may be overwhelmed by a unique convergence of crises. While some observers feared this would come in several years, it is increasingly apparent that failure may come sooner than previously expected.
Yemen has frequently been described as a failing state -- and with good reason.


Why has al Qaeda moved into Yemen? The Washington Post's Sudarsan Raghavan talked to CNN's Kiran Chetry.


Civil war, terrorism, a deepening secessionist movement and economic and demographic trends threaten to overpower the Yemeni government, provide a breeding ground for terrorists and destabilize the region. Yemen has often teetered on the brink of collapse, but it has never faced so many interconnected challenges at one time.
At the heart of the country's problems is a looming economic crisis. Oil is the source of nearly 80 percent of government revenue, and it is quickly running out. There are few viable options for a sustainable post-oil economy, and Yemen is already the poorest country in the Arab world with an unemployment rate conservatively estimated at 35 percent.

Yemen's pending economic collapse has been greatly accelerated by the civil war in Saada. Government forces have been unable to decisively put down the rebels in the north of the country, and there is no military solution to the conflict. The toll in Saada has been severe, with extensive damage to infrastructure and an estimated 175,000 internally displaced people.
The conflict's strain on the Yemeni army has led to questions about the military's ability to simultaneously engage in other operations, including counterterrorism.
The government is spending foreign currency reserves at an alarming rate, recently estimated at more than $200 million per month. Spending on the war will create a major budget deficit next year. Every dollar spent on the civil war is a dollar not spent on addressing the underlying causes of instability in Yemen.
Yemen also is facing a growing secessionist movement in the south of the country. When the war in Saada subsides, it is feared that the secessionist movement will again flare up. The government does not control the entire territory of Yemen, and the emergence of additional areas outside of the capital of Sanaa's control will create more under-governed spaces that can be exploited by terrorist movements.
For the past year, there have been growing indications that al Qaeda is regrouping in Yemen and preparing to strike Western and other targets. Recent counterterrorism measures in Saudi Arabia have forced extremists to seek refuge elsewhere, and analysts have observed a steady flow of extremists relocating to Yemen's under-governed areas.
In spring 2008, al Qaeda operatives in Saudi Arabia were encouraged by local Saudi al Qaeda commanders to escape to Yemen, and by January 2009, the Saudi and Yemeni al Qaeda affiliates merged.
A video announcing the establishment of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula featured two Saudis previously released from the U.S. military detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -- both assumed leadership positions in the newly formed organization. Mohammed al-Awfi subsequently surrendered to Saudi authorities and Said al-Shihri reportedly escaped a recent counterterrorism strike that preceded the Northwest bombing.
The emergence of the regional al Qaeda group marks a major deterioration of security in Yemen. As recent events have highlighted, Yemen is becoming a base for al Qaeda to mount operations not only inside the country but also across the Arabian Peninsula and internationally.
In August 2009, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula nearly assassinated Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the Saudi counterterrorism chief, in an attack that was eerily similar to the Christmas Day Northwest bomb attack. Following the attack on Prince Mohammed, it boasted of its new bomb technology and threatened to use its new 'undetectable substance' again.
And in mid-October, several Saudis were killed trying to cross into Saudi Arabia, including the brother of deputy commander Said al-Shihri. According to local press reports, the two were attempting to smuggle several suicide vests into Saudi Arabia.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula was allegedly bolstered by the relocation of al Qaeda operatives from Pakistan and Afghanistan this summer. Media reports quoted intelligence sources saying that fighters fleeing from South Asia were seeking safe havens in Yemen and Somalia.
Any single event -- or more likely a confluence of worst-case events beyond the ability of the Yemeni government to control -- could lead to a further erosion of central government authority in Yemen and destabilization of the region.
As the central government's authority and legitimacy continue to deteriorate, there will be more opportunities for extremists directed or inspired by al Qaeda to regroup, organize, train and launch operations against U.S. and allied targets throughout the Gulf region and globally.
Military operations to kill or capture al Qaeda operatives will likely increase in 2010. These actions carry risks. Publicly acknowledged American involvement in counterterrorism operations in Yemen would be deeply unpopular in the country, likely undermine the legitimacy of the Yemeni government and feed into the grievances that help fuel al Qaeda militancy.
Development assistance is one of the most effective tools available to address the interconnected long-term challenges facing Yemen. But, U.S. aid is disproportionately small considering the magnitude of the problems facing the country and Yemen's strategic importance to the United States.
In addition to the reported $70 million of military and security assistance, the United States recently announced $121 million in development aid over the next three years, a significant increase from previous years and a vital step in the right direction.
Still, the amount pales in comparison to the $1.5 billion allotted to Pakistan in the next year alone. This disparity persists even as U.S. officials increasingly cite Yemen as a terrorism and security priority second only to Afghanistan and Pakistan.
No perfect solutions exist for Yemen's problems today, and none of its many pressing challenges can be fully averted. However, steps can be taken to lessen their impact. The United States has a stake in helping Yemen deal with its problems, and the cost of inaction would be too great.
Failure to act now would lead to fewer and even worse options in the future. As one administration official recently said to me, "We've seen this movie before, and we know how it ends."
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Christopher Boucek.



UK hostage Peter Moore released alive in Iraq

Thank you Soldier


UK hostage Peter Moore released alive in Iraq
Wednesday, 30 December 2009
From BBC News

British hostage Peter Moore has been released alive from captivity in Iraq, Foreign Secretary David Miliband said.


He said Mr Moore, an IT consultant from Lincoln who was seized in Baghdad in May 2007, was in good health and "absolutely delighted at his release".
Mr Miliband said the Moore family felt deep relief after two-and-a-half years of "misery, fear and uncertainty".
Three bodyguards seized at the same time were later shot dead and a fifth man was also taken hostage.
The Foreign Secretary said he believed Alan McMenemy, a security guard from Glasgow, had also been killed and called for the release of his body.
Mr Miliband said Mr Moore, who had been released on Wednesday morning, was in the British Embassy in Baghdad and would be reunited with his family as soon as possible.
The Foreign Secretary said he had a "very moving" conversation with Mr Moore, who was "to put it mildly absolutely delighted" and now undergoing medical checks.
Mr Miliband said: "The joy and relief that will be felt by Peter's family will be mirrored by the continuing anguish of the family of Alan McMenemy, the last of the five men taken hostage.
"We have believed for some time that he has been killed and his family have been told our view of his likely fate."
Mr Moore had been working for US management consultancy Bearingpoint in Iraq. The other men were security contractors employed to guard him.

British hostage released in Iraq
The bodies of Jason Swindlehurst, from Skelmersdale, Lancashire, and Jason Creswell, of Glasgow, were returned to the UK in June 2009, followed by that of Alec MacLachlan, of Llanelli, Carmarthenshire, in September.
The group was captured at the Iraqi Ministry of Finance by about 40 men disguised as Iraqi policemen.
They were understood to belong to an obscure militia known as Islamic Shia Resistance, which demanded the release of up to nine of their associates held in US military custody since early 2007.

'I'm breaking down'

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said: "I am hugely relieved by the wonderful news that Peter has been freed.
"At this moment of celebration, we also remember the families of British hostages who have been killed in Iraq and elsewhere.

"And we pledge to continue to do everything we can to bring British hostages back to their loved ones, including the remaining hostage of the group in Iraq, Alan McMenemy. I demand that the hostage takers return him to us."
Mr Moore's father Graeme, 60, from Wigston, Leicestershire, said he was "over the moon" at the news.
He said: "We are so relieved and we just want to get him home, back now to his family and friends.
"I'm breaking down, I'm just so overjoyed for the lad. It's been such a long haul. I know that there have been one or two people working in the background to get Peter released.
"Peter is a very resilient lad and he always has been because of his background."


Saturday

Marines move in to stop Taliban from Pakistan

Afghanistan war: Marines move in to stop Taliban from Pakistan

By Ben Arnoldy Staff writer / December 23, 2009 
CS Monitor.com

As part of Obama's Afghanistan war surge, some 9,000 marines are moving into small Afghan towns near the border to stop Taliban soldiers and supplies coming from Pakistan. The view from this new front.

Khan Neshin, Afghanistan
For Taliban fighters infiltrating Helmand Province from Pakistan, one ratline proved simple. They crossed open desert of pebble, sage, and moon dust toward a lonely mountain ridge, and entered Khan Neshin, a gateway to both the Helmand River Valley and one of the bloodiest corners of the Afghanistan war.
In July, though, US Marines seized towns along the Helmand River in a bid to shut down a central problem of the war: the cross-border flow of fresh fighters. But their march stopped at Khan Neshin, 70 miles short of the

Pakistan border, slowing but not shutting down Taliban traffic. Now, some 9,000 of the new troops surging into the country are heading to Helmand to expand security and finish the march south. The scope of the time and manpower dedicated to the effort underscores just how difficult it is to secure the 1,600-mile frontier between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
“We have to get down to the border. We have to establish a legal border crossing point, so that if you try to bypass it, it becomes an illegal activity,” says Lt. Col. Michael Martin, the commanding officer in charge of 4th Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion in the Khan Neshin area. “You start to squeeze off the insurgency’s ability to resupply itself.”
But it’s not as simple as dropping troops into new border outposts. Such posts have been tried before, only to have Pashtun towns deep inside Afghanistan begin to fall to the Taliban, cutting off the remote coalition outposts from behind.
This time, the goal is to secure and win over populations all the way from the capital of Helmand, Lashkar Gah, to the isolated southern border, explains Martin. Khan Neshin will become a safe place to refuel and reconnoiter before the final leg to the checkpoint being built 10 miles north of Baram Shah, a Taliban drugs and arms border bazaar.
“So it’s just one of these things that has to happen incrementally – it’s not something where we can just wish it, snap our fingers, and there you go, you’ve got a border-crossing site,” says Martin.

US Marines in 'flyover country'

That’s the logic that has brought some 800 marines and a cadre of civilians to protect and build up this feudal district of some 17,000 people. The town is little more than a crumbling, centuries-old mud castle – now the marines’ headquarters – and an adjacent bazaar. Families live in mud compounds spread several football fields apart as they coax crops from a sage-strewn wasteland with the help of crude irrigation ditches. Forget cars; here, motorcycles and tractors are scarce.
Even the Taliban treated this place as flyover country. “When the Taliban were here, they never disturbed the local people,” says local elder Fathie Mohammad. Often, they barely seemed to have time to sit down to eat with locals. “They just were moving and walking around.”
T

he Taliban first came five years ago, say the marines, returning from havens in Pakistan after noticing that neither the coalition nor the government kept any presence here. They used it as a staging point – much as the marines hope to do – to reach more critical population centers.
They also took a cut of the opium poppy crop – the world’s largest – says Mr. Mohammad, angering farmers. But the Taliban’s cross-border movements helped farmers get poppy to market – something that may put farmers on a collision course with the marines (who don’t touch the crops) if they establish a border crossing.
The area has also taken an economic hit from the loss of drug trading in the sleepy bazaar, which still uses Pakistani rupees. “Before, [business] was better. Now people are afraid to come, so it’s slower than before,” says Allah Daad, a mechanic with a shop in the bazaar.
The Taliban no longer stop in Khan Neshin, says Mohammad, who, like Mr. Daad, spoke through a military interpreter. But the marines are still tracking locals whom they believe put up Taliban travelers. “There are supplies a couple times a week going further north or people going down to Pakistan,” says Maj. Jeremy Hoffman, an information operations officer from Aurora, Colo., who notes Taliban movements are slower in the winter. “Us having more troops would make it more difficult to move personnel and resources across the border.”

A place to watch for Taliban

Since the area is largely desert, essentially creating an open road, circumventing the coalition may be a hassle, but not too great a one. On the other hand, the terrain lets the marines see easily, aided by long-range camera towers inside the bases.
“In modern warfare, surveillance is incredibly important,” says Lt. Col. Christopher Langton (ret.), a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London. “There is the possibility of interdicting movement of militants across the border into Kandahar and Helmand.”
Yet the partial closing of this one door from Pakistan required a 10,000-strong task force of marines, with 9,000 more to help finish the job. And critics say the intense focus on the south has come at the expense of provinces closer to Kabul, including Logar and Wardak.
The troop numbers committed to Helmand also call into question if the military really has the manpower to secure other border regions – and if not, what would stop the Taliban from using those. Getting coalition troops along the full border is “impossible” because of expense, says Haroun Mir, an Afghan analyst.
The marines here are training Afghan security forces to take over more secure areas, thus allowing marines to address other areas. That effort here has only begun, with some 100 police being trained around Khan Neshin. It could be years before they are ready to relieve the US forces.
Others advocate boosting a political approach to the border problem: Lean more on Pakistan to move militarily against Taliban centers on its soil. So far, despite US pressure, Pakistan’s military have only gone after insurgents who have attacked them, leaving Afghan-focused insurgent leaders untouched.

CNN Broadcasts Photo of Terrorist in Custody on Northwest Flight

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM

Dec 26,2009

CNN Broadcasts Photo of Terrorist in Custody on Northwest Flight






A Northwest Airlines passenger from Nigeria, who said he was acting on al-Qaida's instructions, set off an explosive device Friday in a failed terrorist attack on the plane as it was landing in Detroit, federal officials said.



























 Examiner.com

A Nigerian National with terrorist ties to Al Qaeda lit an explosive device that was strapped to his leg on Northwest Airlines flight 253 enroute to Detroit from Amsterdam December 25, 2009.

According to passengers on the flight, a loud, single pop was heard as the plane neared Detroit around noon and the unknown device produced smoke and flames, which lit the suspect's leg on fire. All 278 passengers and crew arrived safely at Detroit and the suspect is in custody.

The flight originated in Nigeria, where the 22-year old suspect boarded, and made a stop in Amsterdam before continuing to its Detroit destination. He was identified as Abdul Mudallad by New York Congressman Peter King. While his name came up in a database of Al Qaeda connections in Nigeria, he was not on the No-Fly list.
President Obama, while on vacation in Hawaii, is monitoring the activities and has ordered heightened security throughout the nation's airports.
The incident is sparking debate as to how a person with known terrorist ties is able to board a plane with an incendiary device on his person.

Friday

Taliban release video of captured U.S. soldier

Taliban release video of captured U.S. soldier

 By Amir Shah - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Dec 25, 2009 12:37:48 EST

KABUL — The Taliban released a video Friday showing a U.S. soldier who was captured more than five months ago in eastern Afghanistan.
Pfc. Bowe Bergdahl is the only known American serviceman in captivity. The U.S. airborne infantryman was taken by the Afghan Taliban in Paktika province on June 30.
“This is a horrible act which exploits a young soldier, who was clearly compelled to read a prepared statement,” said a statement from U.S. Navy Rear Admiral Gregory Smith, spokesman for the NATO-led international force in Afghanistan that confirmed the man in the video is Bergdahl. “To release this video on Christmas Day is an affront to the deeply concerned family and friends of Bowe Bergdahl, demonstrating contempt for religious traditions and the teachings of Islam.”
Bergdahl is shown seated, facing the camera, wearing sunglasses and what appears to be a U.S. military helmet and uniform. On one side of the image, it says: “An American soldier imprisoned by the Mujahideen of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.”
The man identifies himself as Bergdahl, born in Sun Valley, Idaho, and gives his rank, birth date, blood type, his unit and mother’s maiden name before beginning a lengthy verbal attack on the U.S. conduct of the war in Afghanistan and its relations with Muslims. He seems healthy and doesn’t appear to have been abused.
The video, which has an English-language narration in parts, also shows images of prisoners in U.S. custody being abused. The speaker says he did not suffer such ill treatment.
A statement read by a Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, appears at the end of the video and renews demands for a “limited number of prisoners” to be exchanged for Bergdahl. The statement says that more American troops could be captured.
The Geneva Conventions, which regulate the conduct of war between regular armies, bar the use of detainees for propaganda purposes and prohibit signatories from putting captured military personnel on display. As an insurgent organization, the Taliban are not party to the treaty.
Statements from captives are typically viewed as being made under duress. The insurgents also released a video of Bergdahl a few weeks after he was captured. In the July 19 video, Bergdahl appeared downcast and frightened.
Bergdahl, who was serving with a unit based in Fort Richardson, Alaska, was 23 when he vanished just five months after arriving in Afghanistan. He was serving at a base in Paktika province near the border with Pakistan in an area known to be a Taliban stronghold. On Friday, NATO said a joint Afghan-international force killed several militants in Paktika while searching for a commander of the Jalaluddin Haqqani militant network that is linked to al-Qaida.
U.S. military officials have searched for Bergdahl, but it is not publicly known whether he is even being held in Afghanistan or neighboring Pakistan.
Lt. Col. Tim Marsano, an Idaho National Guard spokesman who has been serving as a liaison between the family and media, said late Thursday night that the family had not seen the video since word of its possible release surfaced earlier this month. He spoke with Bob and Jani Bergdahl, Bowe Bergdahl’s parents, earlier this week and described their mood as “anxiously awaiting” any new information about their son.
“They’re very hopeful that the message will be a positive one, as far as their son’s health and welfare,” Marsano said.
Marsano said the family still wasn’t speaking publicly about Bergdahl’s capture.

The family of an American solider captured in eastern Afghanistan is pleading for the release their son, and urging him to "stay strong."






 

Thursday

Twin Bombings Kill 10 South of Baghdad

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM




Twin Bombings Kill 10 South of Baghdad 



Published: December 24, 2009

BAGHDAD — Two bombs exploded within minutes of each other near a bus station south of Baghdad on Thursday, killing 10 people and wounding 110 others, according to the Iraqi authorities, adding to the rise in violence around the nation this month.

The bombings occurred in Hilla, the capital of Babil Province, about 65 miles from Baghdad. The first bomb had been attached to a minibus near the entrance of Hilla’s main bus terminal and exploded about 2 p.m., said Fadhil Radad al-Sultani, the chief of the provincial police.
As officers rushed to the scene, a car bomb was detonated just outside the bus station, the police said. The bus terminal is in one of the busiest sections of Hilla, near a public market and government offices.
About the same time as the explosions, Neima al-Bakri, a member of the Babil provincial council, was fatally shot by a police officer in Hilla at a checkpoint about a mile from the bus station, the police said.

Mr. Sultani, the police chief, said that the shooting resulted from a “misunderstanding” and that an investigation was being conducted.
Mushtak Talib, who said he witnessed the shooting, said Mr. Bakri had stopped his car and gotten out to present his identification to the police officer at the checkpoint before returning to his vehicle.
“He went back inside the car, and then the policeman shot him,” Mr. Talib said.
Mr. Talib said Mr. Bakri’s family was inside the car at the time. His account could not be immediately verified.
Violence in Iraq has increased after a relatively peaceful November, a month in which the fewest people were killed since the United States-led invasion in 2003.
In the Sadr City section of Baghdad on Thursday, a bomb placed in a plastic bag near a funeral tent killed 7 people and wounded 20, the police said.
“I was standing there and then ‘boom,’ an explosion,” said Ali Mhawi, 32. “I went inside the tent and there were people yelling and shouting. People had lost their eyes and heads and legs. There was blood all over the chairs. It was terrible.”
And in Zafarania, a neighborhood in eastern Baghdad, a bomb aimed at Shiite pilgrims killed 3 people and wounded 20 others. The pilgrims were walking to a shrine in the city of Karbala for the Day of Ashura on Sunday, a religious observance commemorating the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad.
Iraq also announced Thursday that three senior officials in the Trade Ministry had been given sentences of up to two years in prison for taking kickbacks and other crimes while overseeing the food import program.
The officials included the ministry’s former spokesman and the head of its department for importing sugar, tea and other staples, according to the Web site of Iraq’s Commission of Integrity, which is in charge of investigating corruption.
In May, Abdul Falah al-Sudani resigned as trade minister over allegations of corruption in the ministry. As he tried to leave Iraq, the government ordered that his plane return to Baghdad, and he was arrested. He was later released on bail.

Saturday

In Love And War/ MUST SEE Husbands and wives can now serve together in the Army.



In Love And War
From the Wall Street Jouneral 
By MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS 
Kandahar, Afghanistan

Maybe the couple that fights together stays together.


The 293rd Military Police Company is a rarity in American love and American war. Among the 150 soldiers deployed to this restive Afghan city are three married couples.The couples' first few months in the combat zone have revealed the tensions of married warfare: The shared experience of purpose, fear and trauma brings each couple closer together, while the constant worry makes them wish they were apart. Like their civilian counterparts, they struggle to balance life and work, trying to fit in a few moments of comfort and affection among a grueling schedule of patrols, ambushes and convoys.
There are the Glynns, Sheree and Rob, corporals on their second combat tour. He survived a scrape with death, and she glimpsed widowhood. They've been drawn together by danger and loss.
There's Thomas and Bergan Flannigan, young lieutenants who believe that their roles as commanders require them to maintain a façade of marital indifference. They feel watched from above and below.


 And there's Seth and Jessica Bivens, 19-year-old privates first class, new to the Army and each other. Freshly in love, they chafe at the limits that the war imposes on their relationship, and their superiors feel obliged to remind them that marriage comes second to mission.
Not long ago commanders would have balked at putting spouses this close together. First Sgt. Danny Knell, the company's top enlisted man, says that in 21 years of Army service, he has never before seen three couples in one company.
But the military is increasingly worried about the stress that repeated combat deployments have created in military marriages. The Pentagon said last month that 3.6% of married active-duty military men and women went through divorce in the year ended Sept. 30, compared to 2.6% a year prior to the Sept. 11 attacks.
So commanders are trying to be more flexible with service couples. In October, the Army adopted new rules making it easier for couples to deploy simultaneously. Army regulations leave it to local commanders to decide whether to put married couples together. Today, the Pentagon counts 284 couples deployed overseas together.Read Full Story


Friday

Intelligence officials say a suspected U.S. drone missile strike has killed three militants in Pakistan's lawless tribal area near the Afghan border.

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM


US drone strike kills three in N Waziristan
Tue, 08 Dec 2009 05:55:27 GMT
Press TV

Missiles fired from a US drone have killed three people and left three others wounded in a village in the lawless tribal district in Pakistan's northwest.
Security and intelligence officials said the early morning attack hit Aspalga village, some 12 kilometers (seven miles) southeast of Miranshah in North Waziristan tribal district.
"A car was hit by two missiles, killing three people and injuring three others," security officials in the area said on Tuesday.
The US has been carrying out regular drone attacks in the mountainous tribal belt in Pakistan, where they insist most wanted al-Qaeda leaders are hidden.Read full story


__________________________________________________________________________________


Another Pakistan drone strike 'kills three militants' 

updated at 12:53 GMT, Friday, 18 December 2009
BBC News
Three suspected militants have been killed in the third US drone strike on Pakistan's tribal district of North Waziristan in two days, officials say.
At least 12 suspected Taliban members were killed on Thursday in two attacks which correspondents say were among the most deadly of recent air strikes.Read Fill Story







Wednesday

Al Qaeda in Iraq 'shifting its tactics

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM

Al Qaeda in Iraq 'shifting its tactics

By Tom Evans, CNN
December 15, 2009 9:16 p.m. EST





(CNN) -- The former U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker, blames al Qaeda for Tuesday's coordinated bomb attacks in Iraq, saying al Qaeda is now targeting the Iraqi government.

The bombings -- the latest in a series of attacks in Iraq -- killed eight people.

Calling al Qaeda in Iraq a "very deadly adversary," Crocker said in an interview with CNN's Christiane Amanpour that al Qaeda was working "to shake popular confidence in the (Iraqi) government, particularly as we move toward elections."

In Tuesday's attacks, insurgents exploded three car bombs close to heavily guarded sites in the Baghdad city center near the fortified "Green Zone" that houses Iraqi government buildings and the U.S. embassy. Four people were killed and 14 others were injured. In the volatile northern city of Mosul, four people were killed in three bombings.
"It's pretty clear to me that the architect is al Qaeda in Iraq," Crocker told Amanpour.

The bombings in Baghdad came a week after a string of attacks that killed nearly 130 people in the Iraqi capital and wounded 400 others. They were the worst in the city since October when car bombs killed and wounded hundreds. Overall though, the number of Iraqi civilians killed in the war has fallen to the lowest levels since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

Crocker -- who is now dean of the George Bush School of Government at Texas A&M University -- said al Qaeda in Iraq is shifting its tactics. He said al Qaeda previously launched bombings targeting the civilian population in an effort to restart sectarian violence, but it didn't work.

"Iraqis simply refused to be provoked into that kind of widespread carnage that we saw in '06 and '07," he said. "So al Qaeda shifted to take on the (Iraqi) state, and I don't think that's going to work either."

Crocker said the upcoming Iraqi elections, scheduled for early March, are going to be very important for the country's development. But he warned there will be new security challenges, echoing concerns expressed by the U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. Raymond Odierno.

The United States has stopped patrolling Iraqi urban areas, under an agreement with the Baghdad government that was implemented in June. The U.S. will withdraw all its combat troops from Iraq by the end of August next year, leaving a residual force of up to 50,000 troops. There are about 115,000 American forces in Iraq now, while Iraq has nearly 700,000 troops and police in its security forces.

The U.S. Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, Stuart Bowen, said the United States has spent a huge sum of money on building up Iraq's army and police.

"Eighteen billion dollars in the Iraq security forces fund and another $7 billion in other resources into the Iraqi army and police have built a pretty credible force that should be able to keep the peace across the country, notwithstanding these notable attacks," Bowen told Amanpour.

Bowen also highlighted what he described as the enormous economic success that Iraq realized over the weekend, when it awarded seven new contracts to develop its oil fields. Those oil fields have the potential to double Iraq's oil production to 5 million barrels a day within a few years.

"There is an economic engine waiting to be unleashed. It's in the ground in Iraq. That oil has to be gotten out and exported," Bowen said. "If the Iraqis can do that while fighting corruption and keeping this insurgency down, then prosperity lies ahead."

But a leading Iraqi advocate for women and children's rights, Basma Al-Khateeb, had a less rosy outlook for Iraq. She said security in Iraq remained "quite fragile."

Asked whether she is worried about the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq, she said, "The occupation and the American forces' role is not really one of the issues that are making trouble here. We have more complex and complicated issues that we need to solve."

Al-Khateeb said the chaos in Iraq has made many Iraqis lose faith in democracy. But she added that Iraqis themselves will eventually solve their problems, even if the elections do not lead to any change, pointing to the possibility of a new era in politics in the future.

"We want elections to pass through, but also we expect more political powers and movements to rise from the new generation in Iraq," she said.





Tuesday

The Soldiers take a musical break from the day job

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM




The Soldiers take a musical break from the day job

Three servicemen who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan release their debut album, Coming Home





They may lack Cheryl's smile, Robbie's wit or Alexandra's dance moves, but they do have a unique selling point: each member of the band has risked their life for their country. The Soldiers, three servicemen who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, today released their debut album, Coming Home.
The trio – Sergeant Major Gary Chilton, Sergeant Richie Maddocks and Lieutenant Corporal Ryan Idzi – recorded the album during a break in their duties but describe being in the army as their "day job". It features a range of covers including He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother, by The Hollies, and Eric Clapton's Tears in Heaven.
The title track, which features the line "All the wounded and the brave/the ones God couldn't save/We salute your courage", is a tribute to fallen colleagues and a celebration of those who have made it back. Chilton, who has been a military musician since joining the army as a 16-year-old, told the Guardian the song did not contain any political message. "We are there to serve the government, which is elected by the people of this country. The lads in Afghanistan are doing a fantastic job."
Many people had found the single a huge comfort, he added. "It is a tough time for the army at the moment, and for the lads out there, to see three of their own in the charts is a great thing."
They have already gathered a substantial following, with almost 27,000 fans following them on their Facebook page. The youngest member of the band, 24-year-old Idzi, may already be known to fans of The X Factor: he sang Lean on Me in his audition in 2007 and was told by the perennially frisky Dannii Minogue that he was "gorgeous".

dzi, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan as part of the 20th Armoured Brigade, said at the time he would not leave the army even if he won the competition. "Singing has always been my hobby and the army has always been my job. Of course I want to have a number one single and album, but if I can do both then I will," he said. He made it to the Boot Camp stage of the show before suffering a bout of stage fright and leaving the competition.

Chilton, a Gulf war veteran who was awarded the Gulf medal, joined the Royal Armoured Corps in 1984 straight from school and throughout his army career has sung around the world. Maddocks, from Oldham, Manchester, who was also awarded the Gulf medal, joined the army as a 16-year-old and has served in Europe, Canada, Cyprus, Finland and the Falklands.

The album's producer, Nick Patrick, who has worked with Russell Watson, said the men had a "great time" in the recording studio. He said: "Having worked with some of the UK's biggest classical recording artists, Gary, Ritchie and Ryan's voices are some of the most genuine and heartfelt voices I've heard in a long time."

Coming Home, the single, was released as a digital download on 5 October with all proceeds going to the Army Benevolent Fund, which will also get a share of the profits from the album, along with Help For Heroes and other groups that support soldiers.

Could the single be this year's Christmas number one? The Soldiers and their fellow servicemen and women have high hopes. "It's a fickle trade but it would be fantastic," said Chilton. "And who knows? If Mr Blobby can do it, so can we."


Mullen: U.S. focused on entire al Qaeda network

December 15, 2009 1:58 a.m. EST

Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- The United States is focused on eliminating not just Osama bin Laden, but the entire al Qaeda network and its extremist allies, the Pentagon's top military officer said Monday.
Adm. Mike Mullen was in the Afghan capital where he held a news conference to discuss U.S. plans and the upcoming surge of 30,000 more troops. He reiterated the United States' commitment to ensuring long-term stability for Afghans.
He said he was concerned about a resurgence of militants in the country.
"The most important goal in this strategy is the elimination of the safe heavens for al Qaeda and its extremist allies," the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said. "And to ensure that Afghanistan does not provide a safe haven for his people."
He added that part of the goal will include "to capture and kill" terror mastermind bin Laden.
"But it's not just bin Laden ... quite frankly," he said. "It's the entire network that must be defeated. We are very focused on that in terms of the outcome."
Mullen said the additional troops deployed to Afghanistan will remain in the country exclusively, and there are no plans to send any to neighboring Pakistan.
The U.S. commitment to Pakistan remains in training their forces and helping with equipment, he said.
Mullen hailed pledges by NATO members to send 7,000 more troops to Afghanistan to battle Taliban and al Qaeda extremists, and train Afghan forces. The troops will augment the 30,000 additional American troops that President Barack Obama recently announced he was sending to Afghanistan as part of a new initiative to stabilize the country.
"We cannot accomplish our mission alone," Mullen said.






Bookmark and Share

Capt. Luis Montalvan was joined by supporters to protest

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM


TOTAL OUTRAGE

Capt. Luis Montalvan was joined by supporters to protest his
mistreatment by McDonald's employees when he went there to eat with his
service dog, Tuesday.




Protest of McDonalds over Violation of Disability Rights from Marcia Rock on Vimeo.

Training the Afghans

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM

Training the Afghans
The Hashish Army. Is a total challenge




________________________________________________________________

CNN/ITN news footage from Afghanistan

Screenshot - 9_9_2009 , 4_22_06 PM


CNN/ITN news footage from Afghanistan
showing a Royal Marines patrol coming into contact with Taliban forces. In the ensuing gun battle, the Marines can be seen employing their full range of personal weapons - SA80a2 assault rifles, minimis, GPMGs, light mortars and 40mm grenades, fired from SA80a2 UGLs.