Archive for September 2014

We Don’t Need Another Dumb War

September 13, 2014

We Don’t Need Another Dumb War
BY ROSA BROOKS SEPTEMBER 11, 2014

(“Combating IS is just important enough that we need to demonstrate that we’re “doing something” — but not quite important enough for us to bother to do it right.”…as quoted from article. – LS)

But if President Obama follows through on his plan to degrade and destroy the Islamic State, that’s exactly what we’re going to get.

Back when he was just a U.S. Senator, Barack Obama used to say that he didn’t oppose all wars, just “dumb wars.” I assumed that by “dumb wars,” he meant wars to address phantom or exaggerated threats (see: Iraq, 2003), or wars launched to achieve domestic political objectives (see also: Iraq, 2003), or wars begun without sufficient attention to alternatives, capabilities or strategic consequences (see yet again: Iraq, 2003).

Apparently, I was wrong: all Obama really meant was that he opposed long, expensive, politically unpopular wars involving lots of American ground forces and lots of American casualties. He’s fine with other kinds of dumb wars (though he prefers to avoid the W-word, and instead uses phrases like “military action” and “targeted strikes.”)

But call it what you will: I have a sinking feeling that what the United States is about to do in Syria may turn out to be another dumb war.

How is it dumb? Let me count the ways. First: the Islamic State (IS) is an undeniably nasty group, but even the president admits that IS poses no immediate threat to the United States. Second, other actors may be better suited than the United States to combatting the regional threat IS poses. Third, U.S. military strikes against IS in Syria risk inspiring more new violent extremists than they kill, undermining long-term U.S. security interests. Fourth, our current fixation on IS also carries opportunity costs. Fifth, Obama’s willingness to embrace and expand George W. Bush’s doctrine of unilateral preventive self-defense is one more nail in the coffin of the fragile post-World War II collective security system.

Dumb, Part I: Threat Inflation

According to the latest Washington Post poll, 59 percent of Americans think that IS poses a “very serious threat to the vital interests of the United States.” They didn’t think this a few weeks ago, but televised beheadings have a way of capturing public attention.

Nonetheless, two tragic and gruesome beheadings do not an existential threat create. If beheadings were a sufficient causus belli, we should consider air strikes against violent Mexican drug cartels, several of which appear to specialize in decapitations.And unlike IS, the cartels — which have killed tens of thousands of people in the last few years — already have a major presence inside the United States­­.)

IS is plenty brutal, but most experts say it is neither as well-organized nor as sophisticated as al Qaeda was before 9/11. Most estimates suggest it has no more than 20,000 fighters, many of them inexperienced; Obama admits that there is no evidence that it has cells in the United States or has the ability to stage attacks inside the United States.

Though some Americans have reportedly joined IS fighters in Syria, the number is apparently quite small. Hypothetically, it’s always possible that a few of those Americans will eventually return to the U.S. and try to plan attacks here, but as the Boston Marathon bombing made clear, alienated young men bent on killing people in the U.S. don’t need to go off and train in foreign lands. Why bother, when they can find al Qaeda bomb-making recipes right there on the internet?

In any case, when it comes to homegrown violent extremism, jihadist sympathizers have nothing on old-fashioned right-wing crazies: according to data compiled by the New America Foundation, homegrown jihadists have killed only 21 people (13 of whom were victims of the Fort Hood massacre) in the 13 years since 9/11, while right-wing extremists accounted for 37 victims.

(Not sure what she’s referring to here.  The author is a bit of a leftist and I take exception to her insinuating  conservatives had anything to do with this behavior. – LS)

IS is a direct threat to the regime of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, but since Assad’s forces have so far killed scores of thousands more people than IS, it’s hard to feel too sorry for him. IS is also a threat to rival Islamist rebel groups inside Syria, including groups directly tied to al Qaeda. Why not let them all slug it out, on the theory that the brutality of all concerned will ultimately do more to discredit jihadist violence than anything the United States could possible say or do?

Granted, letting them all slug it out is surely a threat to Syria’s beleaguered civilian population — but since the White House has been willing to watch Syria’s civilians suffer for three years now, we can probably conclude that protecting Syrian civilians has never been considered a vital U.S. interest.

IS is also a threat to Iraq’s increasingly nominal central government, but here again, this doesn’t necessarily make it a threat to a core U.S. interest. While the group has ample capacity to cause mayhem — and its rapid advance into Iraq revealed the hollowness of portions of the Iraqi Army — there is little reason to believe it has the ability to hold and control the territory it has seized. As American troops learned many times over the last 13 years, it’s one thing to seize territory; holding and building is another thing altogether. Iraq’s remaining armed forces greatly outnumber IS’s small band of fighters; with intelligence, planning and logistics assistance from U.S. military advisors, they stands a decent chance of turning the tide against IS without the aid of additional U.S. strikes in Syria.

At the risk of being heretical, it’s not clear that vital U.S. interests are threatened even if IS does succeed in holding the territory it has gained inside Iraq. If Iraq ends up in a state of de facto sectarian and ethnic partion — which Vice President Joe Biden once advocated as the only route to enduring stability — it’s not the worst outcome. It’s not a good outcome — but as Otto von Bismarck, Germany’s first chancellor, famously said, “politics is the art of the possible, the attainable — the art of the next best.”

IS was able to roll through parts of Iraq in large part because Sunni tribes, alienated by former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s divisive policies, were willing to form an alliance of convenience with the new fighters in town. Many analysts say those Sunni tribes won’t hesitate to dispense with IS once the group ceases to be so convenient. Arguably, a partitioned Iraq would be more stable than a non-partitioned Iraq — and past events demonstrate that Iraq’s Sunni tribes are capable of working pragmatically with the United States when it’s in their interest to do so.

Dumb, Part II: Believing This Problem Requires an American Solution

Assad, the Al Nusra Front, and the Iraqi government aren’t the only actors dismayed by IS’s advances. Our Iranian adversaries — who provide substantial backing to the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government, as well as to private Shiite militias, and who have also been supporting the Assad regime in Syria — are appalled by IS’s progress. while, our frenemies the Saudis, who even more fond of beheadings than IS, nonetheless recognize IS as a profoundly destabilizing force. Ditto for the Jordanians, the Kurds, and the Turks.

Obama says the United States will “lead” a coalition against IS, but the United States should instead step back and let other regional actors assume the lead. They have a strong incentive to combat IS (an incentive we undermine when we offer to do the job for them), and the common threat of IS may even help lead to slightly less chilly relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia (though I won’t hold my breath).

Other Middle East powers also have greater ability than we do to understand local dynamics, not least of which because many share a common language with IS or with other actors in the mix. The Kurds and the Jordanians may need some U.S. help to protect their own territory, and other states may need intelligence or other forms of logistical assistance. But we can provide such support to any of our allies and partners without putting ourselves front and center in the effort to combat IS.

Dumb, Part III: Believing that Stand-Off Strikes Will Eliminate the Threat

Air strikes are an excellent way to turn live people into dead people, and the United States has an impressive ability to carry them out with minimal damage to unintended targets. But air strikes are a very poor way to hold territory, and an even worse way to establish stable and legitimate governance structures. Without capable partners on the ground in Syria, it’s not clear that U.S. airstrikes against IS will achieve the objectives we want to achieve — though anything that hurts IS will surely gladden the twisted little hearts of Assad and leaders of rival extremist groups.

It would be really nice, just about now, to have some well-armed, well-led, realio-trulio moderate Syrian rebels with whom we could coordinate — but I think we missed that boat a long time ago. Today, rebels who are both moderate and good at fighting are about as common in Syria as pink fluffy unicorns.

Stand-off air strikes also have an unfortunate tendency to make people mad. Drones, in particular, have become a divisive symbol of American power — of our fearsome ability to kill without assuming any immediate risk to ourselves. Stand-off strikes may succeed in degrading IS’s near-term ability to be an effective fighting force, but there’s a real, if non-quantifiable, risk that U.S. strikes will ultimately inspire even more disaffected young men to join violent jihadist groups.

Since taking office, President Obama has relied increasingly on drone strikes to counter terrorist threats. A couple thousand dead bad guys later, the global terrorist threat has merely metamorphosed, and in many ways it appears to be as bad as ever.

Why do we think a counter­terrorism approach that had achieved no strategic success so far will suddenly start working in Syria?

IS is far from invincible, but if we were truly serious about degrading or destroying IS in Syria, we’d need to cross John Kerry’s latest red-line and put some American boots on the ground. Not 100,000 boots — a fairly small number of American special operators working with the few remaining local unicorns might even do the trick — but boots nonetheless. That would be risky, of course; some of those Americans might get killed. But if IS is truly a threat to core U.S. interests, it’s a risk we should be willing to take.

The administration’s unwillingness to put U.S. troops on the ground in Syria sends an all-too clear message both to Americans and to the rest of the world: Actually, destroying IS isn’t that important to us. Combatting IS is just important enough that we need to demonstrate that we’re “doing something” — but not quite important enough for us to bother to do it right.

Dumb, Part IV: Chasing the Soccer Ball

The U.S. security establishment loves to chase en masse after thethreat du jour. (Yes! I speak French, the language of diplomacy.) Once, the threat was al Qaeda and the Taliban; today, it’s IS.

But as we pour money and energy into combating IS, we risk overlooking other threats and opportunities. Is IS truly more dangerous to the United States than violent Mexican drug cartels, or the pro-Russian Ukrainian rebels who brought down a passenger jet with an anti-aircraft missile in July, or the long-term effects of climate change? Shouldn’t we spare a few brain cells (and a few bucks) for all that other stuff?

Dumb, Part V: Setting Bad Legal Precedents

Last but not least, the president’s decision to authorize air strikes in Syria risks cementing a dangerous legal precedent — and I’m not even talking about his decision to bypass Congress. Since World War II, the U.N. Charter’s rules on the use of force have helped substantially reduce interstate conflict, but Obama’s speech last night just tossed those international law rules out the window.

The basic idea of the U.N. Charter system is that unless they have Security Council authorization, states can’t use force inside other sovereign states without their consent. The only exception is the use of force in self-defense. Traditionally, self-defense has been understood narrowly: it permits force to be used to prevent an imminent attack, but not against actors who don’t pose any immediate threat.

(We could argue this point, but I think Israel already knows the answer to this one. – LS)

Unless we plan to ask Assad for his blessing first, it’s not clear that the United States has any basis under international law to use force against IS inside Syria’s borders Obama acknowledges that the United States has detected no “specific plotting against our homeland.” Instead, he falls back on speculative hypotheticals: “If left unchecked, these terrorists could pose a growing threat beyond that region, including to the United States,” and Westerners who join IS “could tryto return to their home countries and carry out deadly attacks.”

The Bush Administration invoked the idea of preventive self-defense to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq: “If we wait for threats to fully materialize, we will have waited too long.” But in his 2007 book, The Audacity of Hope, Senator Barack Obama rightly rejected this approach. The United States has “the right to take unilateral military action to eliminate an imminent threat to our security,” he wrote, but only “so long as an imminent threat is understood to be a nation, group, or individual that is actively preparing to strike U.S. targets.” This would seem to rule out military action against a group that has no specific plan to strike the United States but merely “could” pose a “growing” threat sometime in the unspecified future.

America’s words and actions are precedent setting. If we flout international law restrictions on the use of force, we’d better be prepared for the precedents we’re setting to come back and bite us.

Stop laughing, Vladimir Putin. It’s not very polite.

Dumb, Part the Last: Forgetting the most important question

Tell me how this ends?

I don’t envy President Obama. The challenges posed by the rise of IS are complex and difficult, and the politics are extraordinarily tangled. But it all reminds me of a famous line from Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who served on the Supreme Court a century ago: “Hard cases make bad law.”

In foreign policy, hard cases make dumb wars.

‘Moderate’ Syrian Revolutionaries Front continues to support al Qaeda

September 13, 2014

‘Moderate’ Syrian Revolutionaries Front continues to support al Qaeda, Long War Journal, Lisa Lundquist, September 12, 2014

The cooperation between Maarouf’s Syrian Revolutionaries Front and powerful Islamist jihadist groups such as Al Nusrah and the Islamic Front is ongoing. In recent weeks, the Syrian Revolutionaries Front fought alongside Al Nusrah and the Islamic Front in the takeover of the Quneitra crossing into the Israel-occupied Golan Heights.

******************

An article in yesterday’s New York Times titled “US Pins Hope on Syrian Rebels with Loyalties All Over the Map” highlights the fact that President Obama’s recently declared strategy against the Islamic State depends on empowering Syrian rebels to take control once the Islamic State is driven out. This plan leaves the US “dependent on a diverse group riven by infighting, with no shared leadership and with hard-line Islamists as its most effective fighters,” the article observes, and proceeds to elaborate on the difficulties of working with the various groups and even knowing what their allegiances are.

The article concludes with a brief focus on one likely prospect:

Some rebels appear ready to join the fight against ISIS [Islamic State]. A video posted online this week showed Jamal Maarouf, a rebel commander in northern Syria, addressing a gathering of hundreds of fighters. “God willing, we will fight two states: the state of Bashar al-Assad, the unjust tyrant, and the state of Baghdadi, the aggressor tyrant,” he said, referring to the head of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

The only problem with this example of a possible US ally in the fight in Syria is that Maarouf has already stated that he has no problem with al Qaeda’s Syrian branch, the Al Nusrah Front, and has admitted to sharing weapons with it. And this example of cooperation between “moderate” and radical Islamist groups is not an isolated one; seeThreat Matrix report, Desperately seeking moderate Syrian rebels.

As we pointed out here at Threat Matrix back in April, Maarouf told an interviewer from The Independent:

“It’s clear that I’m not fighting against al-Qa’ida. This is a problem outside of Syria’s border, so it’s not our problem. I don’t have a problem with anyone who fights against the regime inside Syria.” Maarouf admits to fighting alongside Jabhat al-Nusra – one example being the offensive against Isis, whose brutal tactics were deemed too violent even for al-Qa’ida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.While Maarouf maintains that their military supplies are too few to share, he cites the battle of Yabroud, against the regime, as an example of how his group shared weapons with Jabhat al-Nusra.

“If the people who support us tell us to send weapons to another group, we send them. They asked us a month ago to send weapons to Yabroud so we sent a lot of weapons there. When they asked us to do this, we do it.”

The cooperation between Maarouf’s Syrian Revolutionaries Front and powerful Islamist jihadist groups such as Al Nusrah and the Islamic Front is ongoing. In recent weeks, the Syrian Revolutionaries Front fought alongside Al Nusrah and the Islamic Front in the takeover of the Quneitra crossing into the Israel-occupied Golan Heights. During the takeover, 45 Fijian UN peacekeepers were abducted by Al Nusrah. A video posted by the Syrian Revolutionaries Front shows its fighters manning the crossing, according to The Line of Steel:

Walid Shoebat on the Islamic State Threat

September 12, 2014

Obama Will Sell Out Americans To Antichrist

By Walid Shoebat

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We wrote our prediction on Obama’s plan before his miserable speech and we were dead on target. Our predictions were not accurate because we were smart, but because we look at the biblical map and not whatever wishful thinkers and evil men want you to believe, while they sell out on America and do the bidding for Antichrist. In life, every individual has but two choices; stick to God or to cling to the god of this world. Many view the prophetic word as a time-clock, not realizing that the spirit of Antichrist is already upon us, yet they, like the lazy servant, are simply using their bibles as a compass, not to see what they can do for God’s cause, but to see what they can do for themselves asking always: “when do we pack up” and “the Rapture is right around the corner” and “Its strictly coming to save us since we have faith and we need to do nothing”. Such is the lazy servant.

We outlined “Obama’s Plan To Kill ISIS” in one simple title: “Aid Moderates” Who Want To “Kill Bashar” Who Is Already Trying To “Kill ISIS” And Lets Hope That Bashar’s “Moderate” Killers In The End “Kills ISIS”.

Re-read slowly the previous statement and stop being slow to learn. Instead learn how the devil manipulates. In other words, whatever Obama does, it would be twisted, he will somehow find a way to aid and abet the so-called “moderate” Islamist cause who will in the long run kill Bashar Al-Assad who protects Christians in favor of the Islamist Jihadist FSA whom in Obama’s claim will eventually kill ISIS. The spirit of Antichrist intends not to save, but to kill and destroy.

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We predicted “You will never hear anything in tonight’s talk about training and arming the Christians in Syria and Iraq.”

And there was no talk of aiding Assyrians, Chaldeans, Maronites or other Christians in the region that is afflicted by ISIS, instead, all the aid (they plan $500,000,000 of your tax dollars) will go to other Muslim Jihadis in hope to pit them against ISIS.

And the news confirmed what we said: “The President has already asked Congress for the authority to arm and train moderate Syrian rebels to fight ISIS, administration and congressional sources told CNN. Obama is seeking the authority under Title 10 of U.S. Code, which deals with military powers. His request was sent soon after he met with Congressional leadership Tuesday night.”

“Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called on Congress to support the request.”

“It is clear to me that we need to train and equip Syrian rebels and other groups in the Middle East that need some help,” Reid said Wednesday.

But the problem is even worse when it comes to Turkey’s promises to help the U.S. combat ISIS. Turkey is the only Muslim country in a coalition of 10 countries who agreed to fight ISIS at the NATO summit in Newport. But we predicted the opposite:

“In Obama’s speech tonight, he will tiptoe around the fact that NATO ally Turkey is the gateway for ISIS would-be jihadists who are eager to join the fight in Syria and Iraq. He will not address Turkey’s government and the feeble job of stopping terrorists from entering Turkish borders. He will not address Turkey and why it will not allow the US to use its airbases at Batman and Incirlik.”

And today we read the news:

“Turkey, a crucial U.S. ally in the Middle East that borders Syria, said it won’t allow the U.S.-led coalition to launch strikes in Syria from its air bases. It also won’t participate in any combat operations. “Turkey will not be involved in any armed operation but will entirely concentrate on humanitarian operations,” an unnamed Turkish government official told Agence France-Press.”

We had stated correctly: “Turkey needs the ISIS to dismantle nationalistic governments then to later consume them to create its Sunni Axis and its Ottoman dream.”

And Obama’s policies are on the same lines as Erdogan’s.

Turkey’s brilliant plan is that it needs the ISIS to dismantle the Levant while using wealthy Arabs who support ISIS to aid the Caliphate cause while using the very ISIS to even turn on the Arabs themselves. Turkey then will execute a double-whammy plan using its non-Wahhabist Sufi version of Islam that is neutral towards Shiite Iran, to unite both Sunni and Shiite forces to finally bring about peace amongst Muslims in the region and by that become the champion of Islam.

Liberal Atheist Comedian RIPS Those Who Say ISIS Not Islamic And Ends Up Defending Christians More Than Christians Do

September 12, 2014

Liberal Atheist Comedian RIPS Those Who Say ISIS Not Islamic And Ends Up Defending Christians More Than Christians Do

Don’t look now but far left-wing liberal comedian Bill Maher, who has gone to great lengths to support Barack Obama may have just slapped down the president’s core message in the latter’s recent speech about ISIS. That message was that ISIS does not represent Islam. Maher blew that notion up and just kept going.

Maher is a vile left-wing atheist but he is also extremely critical of Islam. In fact, he insists that Islam is much worse than Christianity, which is where he really wanders off the liberal plantation; that’s something you just don’t do.

There are several things to watch in the video below of his exchange with Charlie Rose on the subject. Rose quickly finds himself confronted with the conundrum of having to acquiesce to a fellow liberal who attacks a paradigm liberals are supposed to be in solidarity with – one that says Islam is a religion of peace. Right out of the gate, Maher essentially challenges Rose to admit he’s religious. Rose’s reaction tells you all you need to know.

It’s worth noting that while Maher insists that “all religions are bad”, he does something that most Christians won’t do. He says the problem is not with ‘radical Islam’ but with Islam itself. Rose just can’t process that coming from a far left liberal. Maher shockingly contrasts Islam with Christianity and ultimately ends up actually defending Christians more than many Christians do. In particular, compare what Maher says below with what Catholic Cardinal Theodore McCarrick did (see this post).

Yes, God does work in mysterious ways.

If you watch for no other reason, do so just to see Rose’s face display the extreme levels of cognitive dissonance going on behind his forehead. Liberals have a script they must follow. Everything must fit in a box just so and when a fellow liberal like Maher blows that up and actually shows more courage than the Christian right on a particular issue, Rose just can’t compute and visibly short circuits:

Syria’s Nusra Front releases U.N. peacekeepers – Sept 12, 2014

September 12, 2014

Off Topic: John Hagee ‘Prevent Obama from sacrificing Israel for Palestine

September 12, 2014

Germany to train Kurdish fighters against Islamic State

September 12, 2014

Germany to train Kurdish fighters against Islamic State

Kerry seeks Turkey’s support for anti-IS coalition; France ‘ready to step up military assistance’ for Iraq

Germany plans to send 40 military instructors to Iraq, to train Kurdish fighters known as Peshmerga, engaged in a lengthy battle against the jihadist insurgent group Islamic State, Associated Press reported citing German military news website Augen Geradeaus.

Small groups of soldiers will accompany weapon shipments sent to the Kurdish troops in Iraq that will start being sent to Iraq later in September. It was announced late August that Germany will provide the Peshmerga with anti-tank rocket launchers, armored vehicles and small arms such as assault rifles and hand grenades.

Meanwhile, 30 Kurdish fighters will undergo training in southern Germany, training on “more complex weapons systems”.

However, the German government has ruled out taking part in US-led airstrikes against IS who, the US Central Intelligence Agency estimates, now has about about 20,000 to 31,500 fighters on the ground in Iraq and Syria.

The decision not to participate in direct military action against the jihadist movement was announced both by an aide to German head of state, Chancellor Angela Merkel, and the German foreign minister.

Ali al-Saadi  (Pool/AFP)

Meanwhile, while on a visit to Iraqi capital Baghdad, French President Francois Hollande said that France is ready to step up military assistance for Iraq.

It was the highest-profile visit to Iraq since militants led by the Islamic State (IS) overran large parts of the country in June and sparked international concern over an expanding jihadist threat.

Hollande touched down hours after Washington secured the support of 10 Arab states to help stamp out IS.

France, which hosts an international conference on Iraq on Monday, said it is prepared to take part in air strikes against the militants in Iraq “if necessary”.

“I came here to Baghdad to state France’s availability in providing even more military assistance to Iraq,” Hollande said at a joint news conference with Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, whose cabinet was approved by parliament this week with key security posts unfilled.

Hollande said after meeting President Fuad Masum that “it is an honor to be the first head of state here since this government was formed,” and assured him “of France’s support and solidarity”.

Kerry attempts to gain Turkey’s support against IS

Brendan Smialowski (POOL/AFP)

As the United States is still making effort to construct a wide coalition against Islamic State, US Secretary of State Kerry was in Ankara on Friday after Turkey refused to allow its air bases to be used in the campaign or to participate in combat.

The top US diplomat, touring the Middle East to establish a coalition of more than 40 countries, is to meet with Turkey’s leaders including President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for talks on measures to defeat the militants in Iraq and Syria.

Turkey, a NATO member and Washington’s key ally in the region, is reluctant to take part in combat operations against Islamic State militants, or allow a US-led coalition to attack jihadists from its territory.

On the eve of the visit, a Turkish official told AFP: “Our hands and arms are tied because of the hostages.”

The official added that Turkey will “not be involved in any armed operation but will entirely concentrate on humanitarian operations.”

IS militants hold 49 Turks hostage, including diplomats and children, abducted from the Turkish consulate in Mosul in Iraq in June.

Germany bans pro-IS activities

Maurizio Gambarini (AFP)

In another move against the increasingly discussed threat posed by Islamic State, Germany also said Friday it had prohibited activities in support of the Islamic State, warning the “terrorist” group operating in Iraq and Syria also posed a threat to Europe.

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said the immediate ban included the recruitment of jihadist fighters, the public display of Islamic State (IS) symbols and signs and social media propaganda.

“Germany is a well-fortified democracy, there’s no place here for a terrorist organisation which opposes the constitutional order as well as the notion of international understanding,” he said in a statement.

“Today’s ban is directed solely against terrorists who abuse religion for their criminal goals.”

The move, which had been called for by lawmakers from different parties, covers all participation in the group on German soil, including via social media, to support or promote the group at demonstrations or by trying to gather fighters or funding.

IS is also active in Germany in terms of “propaganda and agitating” on the Internet and “specifically courts supporters in the German language”, the minister said.

De Maiziere also reiterated concern over an estimated 400 German nationals who have travelled to Iraq and Syria to fight on the side of the jihadists.

“We must prevent radical Islamists bringing their jihad to our cities,” he said.

Chancellor Angela Merkel defended the move to break with a post-war policy of refusing to send weapons into conflict zones by saying Europe’s own security was at stake.

“The enormous suffering of many people cries to the heavens and our own security interests are threatened,” Merkel said in a September 1 speech.

(with AFP)

Does the Obama administration really know what’s going on Fox News Video

September 12, 2014

Grave setbacks for Obama’s strategy: Turkey backs out of US-led war on IS. Germany, UK say no to air campaign

September 12, 2014

Grave setbacks for Obama’s strategy: Turkey backs out of US-led war on IS. Germany, UK say no to air campaign, DEBKAfile, September 11, 2014

Erdogan-No_to_US_war_ISIS_11.9.14Erdogan’s second no to the United States

The Turkish government inflicted a stunning blow to President Barack Obama’s strategy for a broad US-led coalition for tackling and defeating the Islamic State, Thursday, Sept. 11 – just hours after the plan was unveiled in Washington. One of the 11 Sunni Muslim nations invited to Jeddah by US Secretary John Kerry Thursday to join the coalition’s establishment, Turkey announced instead that it wants no part in the US strategy for destroying IS.

In his speech Wednesday night, President Obama specifically named Turkey as one of the “friends and allies” who would contribute troops to the mission.

However, an official in Ankara, who chose to remain anonymous, stated later: “Turkey will refuse to allow a US-led coalition to attack jhadists in neighboring Iraq and Syria from its air bases, nor will it take part in combat operations against militants.” The statement continued: “Turkey will not be involved in any armed operation but will concentrate entirely on humanitarian operations.”

DEBKAfile’s military and intelligence sources report that Turkey has knocked out one of the main props from under the Obama plan, which was its reliance on regional forces for combating the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, while the United States provided air strikes and cover.

As prime minister of Turkey eleven years ago, President Tayyip Erdogan confronted former US President George W. Bush with the same letdown when, on the eve of the US 2003 invasion of Iraq, he withheld Turkish bases for the deployment of 60,000 US troops to open a northern front against Saddam Hussein.

This act provoked a long crisis in relations between Washington and Ankara.

US sources report that, straight after the Jeddah meeting, Secretary Kerry will travel to Ankara on Friday, Sept. 12, to confront Turkish leaders.

But meanwhile, Germany and Britain have said they would not take part in the US air campaign in Iraq and Syria.

DEBKAfile reported earlier: In his speech to the American people, Wednesday, Sept. 10, President Barack Obama unveiled a four-point strategy “to roll back, degrade and ultimately destroy” ISIS, at the head of “a broad coalition of friends and allies.” The US would lead off with systematic air strikes against IS targets, while local forces would perform the fighting on the ground. “No US combat troops would be involved,” he pledged.

He described the effort as a “comprehensive and sustained counter-terror mission,” to hunt terrorists down wherever they are. “We will not hesitate to take action against IS in Syria as well as Iraq,” said Obama. “There will be no safe haven for anyone threatening America.” He therefore called on Congress to approve additional resources for training and equipping Syrian opposition forces to take part in the war on IS.

Another 475 US military personnel had been assigned to Iraq, he said, but not in combat missions. They would provide training, intelligence and equipment and judge how best to support the Iraqi military. “America can make a difference,: he stressed, “but Iraqis must do the job of fighting IS themselves.”

According to US sources, the Obama administration has earmarked the small sum of $25 million dollars for training the Iraqi and Kurdish armies.

In the past six weeks, the US has conducted 154 air strikes against IS – a relatively low number which DEBKAfile’s military sources note is far below the fire power needed to “degrade” the Islamists.

Moreover, Washington has scarcely delivered on its promises for three years to arm the Syrian opposition adequately to contest Bashar Assad and his Iranian, Russian and Hizballah-backed war machine.

Now, it will take months if not years to bring the pro-Western Syrian rebel militias up to scratch for their new mission of fighting IS.

As for the broad coalition of friends and allies, US Secretary of State John Kerry stated in Baghdad Wednesday that it would consist of 40 nations. So far only 10-15 governments have signed up. At the same time, President Obama appeared to be firm and determined in his resolve the eradicate the terrorist scourge that calls itself the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, but he made no bones about a mission that would start slowly and stretch out over a long period.

War Coming: Nothing The Peace-At-Any-Costers Can Do About It

September 12, 2014

War Coming: Nothing The Peace-At-Any-Costers Can Do About It, IsraellicoolRyan Bellerose, September 11, 2014

isis-marching-AP-300x224

ISIS is a Muslim group. Their foundation is pretty much a strict interpretation of Sunni Islam. To claim that it is not Islamic is to ignore several important things, but the key fact is it doesn’t matter what WE think or what western Muslims think, it only matters what the asshats in ISIS think.

And what they think is they are on a holy mission to create an Islamic Caliphate. I am getting tired of reading all these western orientalists who post that “these people do not follow Islam” as though they have all studied Islam and as though Islam is a monolith.

I also grow tired of the apologists who try to marginalise the problem or claim that anyone who speaks up about this issue is a racist, bigot or Islamophobe. ISIS is NOT the same as Westboro. Westboro are asshats no doubt but they do not behead people and aren’t large enough in numbers to cause any real issue. The mainstream of Christianity doesn’t support them. ISIS, on the other hand, has the support of a LOT of Muslims, and even the ones who do not support it, are rarely vocal about that unless they are in the west.

Hamas is only fighting the expansion of ISIS because the Hamas leadership does not want to lose the cash cow they have. In fact the Hamas charter demands pretty much the same as ISIS: an islamic caliphate where everyone else is a dhimmi (not even a citizen let alone a second class citizen).

Let me be clear, if you belong to any of the following groups, you shouldn’t be supporting ISIS:

Women, Homosexuals, Christians, Jews, Natives, Muslims who are not fanatical, Atheists, Europeans, Asians, North Americans, people who believe in Humans rights……. perhaps now you get the picture. If you are not Muslim, and more specifically a specific sort of muslim, then you should not remain silent. Pretty much the only people who should support ISIS, out of self interest, are Sunni Muslims, mostly of the more legalist end of the spectrum because moderate Sunnis probably don’t want to party like its 999.

There is a war coming, and there is not a damn thing the peace-at-any-costers can do about it. This war will not always be fought openly, even now, its being fought on campuses, in the media and in other arenas of public perception. It really is going to be all the people who believe in human rights and freedom against a totalitarian ideology that believes in its supremacy and refuses to acknowledge equality.

WE do not have a choice over whether to fight, if we do not fight we will be allowing our freedoms to be taken from us. If you think I am being an “Islamophobe” I urge you to spend some time and research Islam and its core beliefs. Look at what ISIS is doing because, my friends, actions speak louder than words. Sex slavery, torture, beheadings, crucifixion: these aren’t just things from the dark ages, these are happening right now to Christians, Yazidis and Kurds.

Now that’s the bad news, the good news is we’re not alone in this fight, there are Muslims who speak up against ISIS and extremism, and they are fighting to change Islam into a more moderate religion. It is imperative that we support those people, we do not allow ourselves to become jaded and prejudiced against all Muslims, because I will be honest with you, our best chance to defeat the radicals is to work with those who want change. So take some time, educate yourself about these things because whether you like it or not we are in this fight: its just that some of us don’t know it yet.