'Russian generals killed' by massive car bomb at Latakia military base
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PROXY FIGHT02.05.16 12:13 AM ET -
Are U.S. Missiles Taking Out Russian Military Officials?
Syrian militant groups have claimed responsibility for a car bomb that killed several Russian military personal in the town of Latakia, according to reports. Ahrar al-Sham and Bayan groups claimed they planted a car bomb at base the eastern city after on 21 February.
According to Ahrar al-Sham, the announcement of the attack was delayed until three days later to ensure those responsible returned safely to opposition territories, reported the Jerusalem Post.
A statement from the group added: "After weeks of hard intelligence work we were able to determine the location and time of the meeting and planted the car in the location. After the explosion several ambulances and Russian choppers rushed to the location and they were seen evacuating deaths and wounded Russians to Latakia and Jableh hospitals."
IBTimes UK has been unable to verify the claims. The alleged attack took place before US and Russia have announced plans for a ceasefire in Syria that would begin from 27 February.
The ceasefire will not include targeting against Islamic State (Isis) or the Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front.
Dozens of Russian generals at a military base near the eastern Syrian city of Latakia were killed Sunday afternoon in a deadly car bomb attack committed by two opposition factions, Ahrar al-Sham and Bayan movement, Syrian opposition groups reported on Wednesday.
According to the media office of Ahrar al-Sham, the two factions, in coordination with local jihadists who were located at the Russian military base, decided to bomb the car after they observed a gathering of senior Russian generals at the military base.
Ahrar al-Sham claims that dozens of Russian generals were killed and injured in the explosion. According to the movement, the announcement of the terror attack was delayed until Wednesday to ensure that the jihadists who committed the attack returned safely to opposition territories.
The military base that was hit by the car bomb is considered one of the most important military centers of the Russian forces on the Syrian coast, located some 15 kilometers from Latakia.
The belated announcement of the car bombing came shortly before the Syrian truce was scheduled to start on Saturday. Russia and the US have already announced that the ceasefire will not apply to ISIS and al-Nusra Front, but in light of this terror attack, Russia might demand the exclusion of Ahrar al-Sham as well.
According to the media office of Ahrar al-Sham, the two factions, in coordination with local jihadists who were located at the Russian military base, decided to bomb the car after they observed a gathering of senior Russian generals at the military base.
Ahrar al-Sham claims that dozens of Russian generals were killed and injured in the explosion. According to the movement, the announcement of the terror attack was delayed until Wednesday to ensure that the jihadists who committed the attack returned safely to opposition territories.
The military base that was hit by the car bomb is considered one of the most important military centers of the Russian forces on the Syrian coast, located some 15 kilometers from Latakia.
The belated announcement of the car bombing came shortly before the Syrian truce was scheduled to start on Saturday. Russia and the US have already announced that the ceasefire will not apply to ISIS and al-Nusra Front, but in light of this terror attack, Russia might demand the exclusion of Ahrar al-Sham as well.
Opposition calls out coalition politicians who spoke in favor of gay rights but voted against them.
The military base that was hit by the car bomb is considered one of the most important military centers of the Russian forces on the Syrian coast, located some 15 kilometers from Latakia.
February 24, 2016, 7:16 PM (IDT)
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu phoned President Vladimir Putin Wednesday Feb. 24, to find out how the partial Syrian ceasefire due to go into effect Saturday Feb. 27 will affect Israel’s northern border security. He asked for guarantees that Syrian, Iranian and Hizballah forces would not be permitted to take advantage of the lull to advance towards Israel’s Golan border with hostile intent.debkafile: Putin made an effort to allay the prime minister’s fears, without success.
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Gentleman Spymaster by fredslibrary
Title: Gentleman Spymaster
Author: Geoffrey Elliott
Elliott, Geoffrey (2011). Gentleman Spymaster: How Lt. Col. Tommy “Tar” Robertson Double-Crossed The Nazis. London: Methuen
OCLC: 741550570
D810 .S8 R576 2011
Subjects |
Date Posted: February 24, 2016
Reviewed by Hayden Peake.[1]
“Agent” is one of the two most misused terms in media coverage of intelligence — “double agent” is the other.
A recent example appeared in an article by Washington Post correspondent Ian Shapira subtitled “Ex-agents claim credit:”[2] In that case, the article discussed former intelligence officers who had recruited and handled agents and wrote memoirs about the experience. Such memoirs have become a staple in recent intelligence literature. But it was not always thus, and Geoffrey Elliott’s work is about a World War II MI5 officer who declined to write about his career.
Thomas Argyll “Tar” Robertson was born in Sumatra, educated at Sandhurst, and, shortly after leaving the Army, was recruited into MI5 by its director general, Vernon Kell. He had a natural ability for counterintelligence work, and in WWII was the original architect of the Double-Cross system that controlled all the German agents sent to spy in Britain. Elliott describes Robertson’s early days in MI5, the agent-handling techniques he developed, how he came to recommend the use of double agents for deception, and the difficulties he overcame in supervising the Double-Cross system that deceived Hitler and his generals before D-Day. To add perspective, Elliott also provides background on the principal agents and the efforts Robertson made—in some cases dealing with them himself-to maintain their cooperation. A good example is the temperamental Russian emigre Nataliya “Lily” Sergueiew (TREASURE), whose affection for her dog nearly exposed the entire double agent operation. At times, agents’ reliability became suspect, and Robertson was forced to terminate their service or, as in the case of SNOW, have them operate from prison.
And then there was the case of Yugoslav volunteer Dusko Popov (TRIYCLE), who came into contact with a not too friendly FBI. Not all of Robertson’s problems had to do with agents, and Elliott tells how he interacted with MI6 and the various deception committees in Britain as well.
MI5 had a unique advantage in managing the systeM—namely, the ability to monitor German reaction to agent reports by reading their cable traffic at Bletchley Park, where the codebreakers performed their magic.
Elliott explains how Robertson used this capability to deceive.
After the war, Robertson, just 39, resigned from the service and became a gentleman farmer. His only concession to discussing his wartime service was made when he cooperated with author Nigel West in writing a history of MI5. Gentleman Spymaster provides unusual insights to both double agent operations and the life of one of the best at the task.
[1] Hayden Peake is a frequent reviewer of books on intelligence and this review appeared in The Intelligencer: Journal of U. S. Intelligence Studies (19, 1, Winter/Spring, 2013, pp. 115-116). Hayden Peake is the Curator of the CIA’s Historical Intelligence Collection. He has served in the Directorate of Science and Technology and the Di recto rate of Operations. Most of these reviews appeared in recent unclassified editions of CIA’s Studies in Intelligence. These and many other reviews and articles may be found on line at http://www.cia.gov.
[2] Shapira, Ian, “CIA memoirs offer revelations and settle scores among spies,” The Washington Post (June 2012).
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Today's Headlines and Commentaryby Alex R. McQuade, Cody M. Poplin
President Obama announced earlier today that he had submitted his plan to close the Guantanamo Bay Detention Facility to Congress. In his statement announcing the plan, President Obama statedthat “This is about closing a chapter in our history. It reflects the lessons that we have learned since 9/11, lessons that need to guide our nation going forward.”
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Still, key questions remain. Even if the detention facility is indeed closed for good, where will the United States send future militants captured on the battlefield? Who will hold them? And, where will they be tried? If the United States is to continue counterterrorism operations abroad, it would have to consider what exactly to do with possible detainees. The Associated Press has more.
In other GTMO news, the Miami Herald tells us that attorneys for news organizations and the alleged 9/11 plotters have asked the trial judge to make the full transcript of an initially-open hearing on "an unpopular order" involving female bodyguards available to the public. The hearing was retroactively censored by security officials. Chief war court prosecutor, Army Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, has urged the trial judge, Col. James. L. Pohl, to continue the detention center’s secrecy on the testimony. The unpopular order refers to a decision by Judge Pohl to bar female guards from transferring Guantanamo detainees around the camp.
Attorney David Nevin, a defense lawyer for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, has requested that Judge Pohl allow testimony by a witness who will say that Mohammed and other alleged 9/11 conspirators “were subjected to handling by female guards that caused psychological trauma and violated their Muslim belief.” Medill News Service reports that a request was made for Dr. Pablo Stewart to testify about the health consequences of the defendants’ “sexualized torture and naked touching by women.”
The dispute between Apple and the FBI continues to play out on public display, with Apple once again on Monday calling on the government to withdraw its demand that the tech company write code to circumvent security measures on a San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone. Following FBI Director James Comey’s public appeal on Lawfare, Apple released an FAQ of sorts, providing their answers “about Apple and Security.”
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg came out yesterday in support for Apple, saying that he was “sympathetic with Apple” and that requiring back doors into encryption is likely to be ineffective. This morning Financial Times reports that Microsoft founder Bill Gates had broken ranks with the tech community, saying they should cooperate with law enforcement in terrorism investigations. However, by this afternoon, Mr. Gates had challenged that headline, saying that the courts would decide in this case who was right.
The FBI has said that this case is a “narrow” attempt to gather data on one phone. Yet the Wall Street Journal reports that the U.S. Department of Justice is pursuing court orders to make Apple help investigators unlock no fewer than 12 other iPhones around the country. According to a newly unsealed court document, the FBI has attempted to use the All Writs Act to compel Apple to provide software to bypass passcode security features in Illinois, New York, California, Ohio, and Massachusetts. Since not every phone is running the same version of iOS, it is not clear that Apple would need to write a software program in each of those cases or whether they may be accessible by some other technical means. Over at the Intercept, Jenna McLaughlin provides a roundup of law enforcement officials around the United States, with one police office in Eau Claire, Wisconsin saying the San Bernardino case is “going to have significant ramifications on us locally.”
In the Guardian, Alex Hern explains that the war between the FBI and Apple isn’t really even about encryption. In this instance, the FBI is not asking Apple to build a back door into the encryption protocol, but to instead to “turn off the anti-brute force features” and would leave the “security of other devices unaffected.” And in another surprise, the Guardian editorial board has backed the FBI, saying that “Apple’s stand against the American government takes an important principle a step too far.” And according to Pew, more than half of Americans agree.
The United States and Russia announced yesterday that they have agreed on the parameters of a partial truce in Syria. The Times writes that, as part of the agreement, the United States is in charge of bringing the multiple opposition groups in line while the Russians will take the lead on placing pressure on the government. However, the “cessation of hostilities” does not apply to the two lethal extremist groups, the Islamic State and al Nusra Front. Still, the United Nations’ Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria has warned that the same powers that are pushing for a peaceful solution in Syria are the same nations that are continuing “to feed the military escalation.”
Adding to the questions on whether the cease-fire plan will even be effective, Foreign Policy writes that the newly penned agreement could fall prey to a familiar problem: The question is who’s a terrorist in Syria, and who’s not. Read the rest from Foreign Policy here.
During an interview, Syrian President Bashar Assad stated that he wanted to be “the one” that saves his country. According to NPR, Assad said that the Syrian government was willing to support a truce. However, President Assad included a list of conditions, among them being Syria’s right to attack factions that he calls terrorists.
Speaking of terrorists, the Islamic State continues to suffer a series of financial woes. Reuters reportsthat the pseudo-state is now manipulating the currency rate between U.S. dollars and Iraqi dinars in order to squeeze money out of local people. The move comes after the United States increased its campaign against Islamic State financial targets, which has already destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars.
The Islamic State has lost forces in Afghanistan after assaults by Afghan forces aided by U.S. airstrikes. Reuters writes that more than 30 militants were killed in the most recent fighting in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province. The Afghan forces’ recent push into areas controlled by the Islamic State are a part of a months-long effort to dislodge the militant fighters from the area.
A suicide bomber riding a motorcycle killed 14 people and wounded another 11 at a clinic in a town north of Kabul. The Taliban claimed credit for the attack, which targeted a local police commander, making it the latest attack on police forces in recent months. The attack occurred just a day before officials from Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United States, and China met to discuss peace between the Taliban and Afghan government.
During those peace talks, officials from Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United States, and China decided that direct talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government will occur next week. The talks will be the first of its kind since the peace process was reinstated last month.
The Pentagon’s Inspector General is launching a full investigation into how U.S. troops and commanders in Afghanistan handled and responded to allegations that Afghan military and police leaders sexually abused children. According to the Military Times, the Inspector General’s research project into the allegations began in October and has revealed “sufficient information to warrant conducting a full assessment.”
Sailing over to the South China Sea, the Washington Post reports that satellite images indicate that China might be building a powerful radar system on one of the disputed islands. Gregory Poling, head of the Asian Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, contends that “if it is an HF radar, then it would enormously boost China’s capacity to monitor ships and aircraft in the South China Sea.”
Adding to the mounting tensions in the South China Sea, the Chinese Foreign Ministry on Monday signaled that China’s South China Sea military deployments are no different than U.S. deployments in Hawaii. The combative statements from China’s foreign ministry come just days before the Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi, is set to visit the United States. Reuters reports that, when asked whether China’s operations in the South China Sea would come up during Wang’s meeting with Secretary of State John Kerry, a foreign ministry spokeswoman stated that the United States should not use the issue of military facilities on the islands as a “pretext to make a fuss.”
A new report issued by the Center for a New American Security suggests that the Navy’s aircraft carrier operations are now at an inflection point. The Washington Post writes that the report, “Red Alert: The Growing Threat to U.S. Aircraft Carriers,” “focuses on China’s burgeoning military posture in the Pacific and on a term that is starting to appear with increasing urgency in defense circle: anti-access/area denial. The Post has more here.
A new report issued by the Stimson Center has concluded that President Obama and his administration have made “virtually no progress” towards increased transparency and accountability in the U.S.'s targeted killing program. NPR writes that the report said that the Administration has failed to release fundamental information about the drone program, let alone significantly overhaul it.
The Washington Post tells us that Russia has filed a request to fly a spy plane carrying advanced digital cameras over the United States as part of the Open Skies treaty. The Post has more here.
Parting Shot: Did you apply to be an astronaut during NASA’s open application call? Unfortunately, you may not stand a chance. The Washington Post reveals that NASA received more than 18,300 applications… to fill just 14 slots. Good luck applicants!
ICYMI: Yesterday, on Lawfare
Samm Sacks explored what Beijing actually asks of technology companies, given the recent battle between the FBI and Apple.
Mai El-Sadany examined Egypt’s recent crackdown on artistic expression.
David Ryan covered the 2/18 session of the 9/11 military commissions case.
Michael O’Hanlon detailed three steps on what to do when containment does not work in Syria.
Email the Roundup Team noteworthy law and security-related articles to include, and follow us onTwitter and Facebook for additional commentary on these issues. Sign up to receive Lawfare in your inbox. Visit our Events Calendar to learn about upcoming national security events, and check out relevant job openings on our Job Board.
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