Syria conflict: FSA rebels reject Russia military help - BBC News
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BBC News |
Syria conflict: FSA rebels reject Russia military help
BBC News Western-backed rebels of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) have rejected an offer of military support from Russia. An FSA spokesman told the BBC that Moscow could not be trusted and that its help was not needed. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Saturday ... Russia Ready to Cooperate With US Over Syria, Says LavrovWall Street Journal 'Russia after terror groups in Syria, only hitting confirmed targets' – MoD to RTRT New Russian military might on full display in SyriaWashington Post The Guardian -Business Insider all 1,296 news articles » |
Reuters |
US, Saudi Arabia to bolster support for moderate Syrian opposition
Reuters RIYADH The United States and Saudi Arabia agreed to increase support to Syria's moderate opposition while seeking a political resolution of the four-year conflict, the U.S. State Department said after Secretary of State John Kerry met King Salman on ... US, Saudi Arabia to Increase Support for Syrians Fighting Islamic StateWall Street Journal Kerry talks Syria with Saudi kingThe Boston Globe Envoys discuss Syria transitionPhilly.com Minneapolis Star Tribune-Arab News- US Department of State (press release) all 201 news articles » |
Statesville Record & Landmark |
Suspect Killed in Georgia Shooting That Wounded 2 Deputies
ABC News Authorities say a suspect was killed in a shooting that also wounded two deputies in north Georgia. It began Saturday around 9 p.m. when deputies responded to a domestic dispute in Pickens County. Pickens County Sheriff's Lt. Kris Stancil told Atlanta ... Two deputies shot, suspect dead north of AtlantaWTSP 10 News Two deputies shot, suspect dead in Pickens CountyWXIA-TV 2 deputies shot, suspect killed in Georgia shootoutUSA TODAY WTVM-Fetchyournews.com all 9 news articles » |
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A statue memorializing Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin in the Ukraine has been transformed into a monument to Darth Vader.
The new statue, first reported by the news site Dumskaya, was unveiled Friday in the city of Odessa. It comes in the wake of a law requiring “decommunization” in Ukraine. Instead of destroying the statue it its entirety, artist Aleksander Milov was selected to modify it. Much of the statue remained the same as Milov replaced Lenin’s head with a helmet and turned his coast into a cape. The statue is also now a wi-fi hotspot.
The new statue comes as Star Wars fans prepare for the first new film in the franchise in a decade.Star Wars: The Force Awakens hits theaters this December.
Statue of Lenin converted into Darth Vader in Ukraine as a part of a process which outlaws Communist symbols. pic.twitter.com/bwSjVEm4jj— Powerful Pictures (@Powerful_Pics) October 23, 2015
[Dumskaya]
Kurdish authorities have released a dramatic video of a hostage rescue against the Islamic state in Iraq on Friday. The raid was carried out in conjunction with US special forces on a compound in northern Iraq, aimed at freeing peshmerga fighters, following intelligence that Kurdish fighters were being imprisoned there by the militant group
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Western-backed Syrian rebels reject an offer of military support from Russia saying Moscow, a key ally of Syria's government, cannot be trusted.
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Russian Presence Near Undersea Cables Concerns U.S.by DAVID E. SANGER and ERIC SCHMITT
The ultimate hack could involve severing the cables at their most remote locations and halt the communications on which the West has grown dependent.
Dispatch Times |
Do you think the Benghazi panel is politically motivated?
Dispatch Times During the hearing, FBI director James B. Comey said the ongoing investigations are “one [he's] following very closely and get briefed on regularly”. But said he did not know whether the embattled panel gained credibility. “She was glowing”, said ... Christie: I'd Press Hillary on Why Security In Benghazi 'Was Not ImportantHuewire News all 1,625 news articles » |
Cyber-crime needs to be tackled urgently
Telegraph.co.uk Astonishingly, one recent survey found that nine out of every 10 big British companies have suffered a cyber attack. That this is not more widely known is probably because too many people accept such fraud as a fact of modern life. In 2013 the Home ... |
Fx Report Daily |
USA draws a line on protecting CIA-backed rebels in Syria
Dispatch Times The Russian military intervention to prop up Syria's government has brought new scrutiny of theCIA's secret support to Syrian rebels fighting Bashar Assad. The head of Al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate has called on jihadists in the Caucasus to attack ... United States draws a line on protecting CIA-backed rebels in SyriaFx Report Daily Report: Russian airstrikes hit 9 hospitals in Syria in the last monthAmerican Thinker (blog) all 1,277 news articles » |
In-Cyprus (press release) (subscription) (blog) |
China is power hungry
In-Cyprus (press release) (subscription) (blog) China is the world's most populous country and has a rapidly growing economy, now second to the US, which has been driving the country's energy demand. China became the largest global energy consumer in 2011. This rapidly increasing energy demand, ... and more » |
TakePart |
China Economist: 'Value' Of Females 'Going Up,' Men Will Have To Share Wives
Forbes The “value” of females in China, says Professor Xie Zuoshi of Zhejiang University, is “going up.” The reason? There are too many men in the country. By 2020, he forecasts, the number of excess males could reach 40 million. His demographic projection ... An Academic's Answer to China's Bachelor Crisis: Wife SharingTakePart all 6 news articles » |
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Power Line (blog) |
Comey, complete and unexpurgated
Power Line (blog) Here are two of Comey's comments I have extracted from the Times sludge for consumption as bite-size edibles. The Schmidt/Apuzzo article opens: “The F.B.I. director, James B. Comey, said on Friday that the additional scrutiny and criticism of police ... |
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It seems that military experts are not sure what to call Russia’s military: a lethal threat to the U.S. or a “paper tiger.”
According to Dave Majumdar of The National Interest, Russia’s military faces two deep structural problems that would bring deadly consequences to Russia in case of a military confrontation against another large force, such as the U.S.
In particular, Russia experiences severe difficulties with its unprofessional and undertrained manpower and outdated military hardware.
As for its manpower difficulties, Russia’s problem lies in conscription. More than half of Russia’s military personnel, except the Strategic Missile Forces, airborne forces, and naval infantry, still fill their ranks with undertrained and unprofessional young conscripts, who would love to do something else than hold weapons in their hands.
“Only about a quarter of Russian ground forces are fully staffed, well-trained professional troops,” the author of the article notes. “Those professional soldiers — who are not quite trained to Western standards — are part of a corps of rapid reaction forces.”
As for the rest of Russia’s military, they still get packed with the help of the draft, which obliges conscripts to serve only one year in Russian forces before being ‘freed’ from the military.
Even though such drafts prove themselves useful to quickly muster up an impressively large army, these conscripts fail to form a formidable fighting force that would be capable of countering professional forces. It also proves itself counterproductive when soldiers constantly rotate, because it does not allow Russia to maintain a stable military force.
Deadly consequences for Russia in larger wars
As for the second difficulty of the Russian military – the outdated hardware – even though Russia has made major attempts to modernize its military equipment, it still fails to meet the technological level of U.S. or NATO armed forces. With the collapse of the USSR, Russia lost large amounts of its military equipment as well as its industrial and technological base.
“The country fell behind in many crucial technological areas, particularly during the 1990s,” Majumdar noted. “For example, the Russians are well behind on key technologies for building precision weapons, targeting pods and active electronically scanned array radars — which are just a few examples.”
As for the shipbuilding industry, Russia is no longer capable of building large warships the size of a carrier, which is why the Kremlin uses outdated naval hardware, according to Majumdar.
Although Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed to fully modernize the Russian military by 2020, it does not seem like an achievable task given the economic decline of Russia. Russia’s economy difficulties due to Western sanctions forced Moscow to significantly cut back on some of its ambitious defense projects, including the development of the new fifth-generation bomber, the PAK DA.
Even though Russia is able to successfully carry out small military operations on the territories it is familiar with, such as Crimea and Georgia, a bigger war against a large rival military would be a great challenge to the Russian military that could bring deadly consequences for the Kremlin and its leadership.
Russia’s military poses a lethal threat to the U.S.
However, at the same time, the Russian military poses a lethal threat to the U.S., according to Robert Caskey, an author of the American Thinker.
Caskey claims that Russia’s Syrian campaign turned into an exhibition of cutting-edge and formidable military hardware, reminding the U.S. of the damage Moscow could do to the U.S. and its allies.
U.S. President Barack “Obama’s reckless abandonment of U.S. commitments overseas, meanwhile, has left America’s armed forces flat-footed as they try to deal with military advancements abroad,” the author noted.
By using a few small corvettes deployed in the Caspian Sea, Russia managed to carry out the launch of brand new Kalibr NK cruise missiles at targets located nearly 1,000 miles away.
These missiles, which provide Moscow with the kind of strike capabilities even the U.S. does not have, were first tested in 2012. But Caskey wonders “why would the Russians launch cruise missiles from so far away when they already have a fleet off of Syria’s shores?”
Answering his own question, the author argues that it was to show Obama as well as Russia’s potential arms buyers what the Russians are capable of.
The brand new missiles are capable of shifting the balance of power in naval forces, since they can transform even the most outdated Soviet warships, which Majumdar claimed make the Russian military vulnerable, into a “lethal threat” against U.S. carrier groups, according to Caskey.
Obama administration has ruined U.S. military
“While Moscow and Beijing arm themselves for the conflicts to come, modernizing weapons and using their newfound strength to menace America’s allies, the Democrats have opted to go after the U.S. military with a vengeance,” the author noted.
He added that through sequestration, the Democrats reduced military spending, leaving American militaries without the tools and support required to function properly. After Obama became the President, the U.S. has slashed the military budget, reduced the number of troops and made both allies and enemies question whether the U.S. is still capable to defend its own interests and the interests of its allies.
Meanwhile, Vladimir Putin threw the entire Russia into developing ground forces, naval and air forces in order to be equal to the West in terms of its firepower. But the Obama administration still refuses to take the military needs of the U.S. seriously, the author noted and reminded of Obama’s jokes about “horses and bayonets.”
So, we have two completely different points of view, one saying that the Russian military is nothing but a paper tiger, while the other one claims that Russian forces present deadly threat to the U.S. Who got it right?
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