Report claims soldiers may be British, possibly SAS – which would break UN resolution over any ‘occupation force’ Armed western men have been filmed on the ground with rebels in central Libya in the first apparent confirmation that Nato has sent military advisers to train anti-government forces. A group of six westerners were clearly visible, according to a report by al-Jazeera from Dafniya, described as the westernmost point of the rebel lines west of the town of Misrata. Five of them were armed and wearing informal sand-coloured clothes, peaked caps, and cotton Arab scarves. The sixth, apparently most senior of the group, was carrying no visible weapon and wore a pink, short-sleeve shirt. He may be an intelligence officer. The group is seen talking to rebels and then quickly leaving on being spotted by the television crew. The footage emerged as South Africa’s president, Jacob Zuma, arrived in Tripoli in an attempt to broker a ceasefire. He described reports that he would ask Gaddafi to step down as “misleading”, and said he would instead focus on humanitarian measures and ways to implement a plan concocted by the African Union, which would see Libya undertake a process of transition to democratic rule but not seek Muammar Gaddafi’s exile. The western men seen by Al Jazeera were present on rebel lines late last week, days before British and French attack helicopters are to join the Nato campaign. They are expected to be active over Libya this week and likely to be deployed on the outskirts of Misrata, from where forces loyal to Gaddafi continue to shell rebel positions to the east. There have been numerous reports in the British press that SAS soldiers are acting as spotters in Libya to help Nato warplanes target pro-Gaddafi forces. In March, six special forces soldiers and two MI6 officers were detained by rebel fighters when they landed on an abortive mission to meet rebel leaders in Benghazi, in an embarrassing episode for the SAS. The group was withdrawn soon afterwards and a new “liaison team” sent in its place. Asked for comment yesterday, a Ministry of Defence spokeswoman said: “We don’t have any forces out there.” The subject is sensitive as the UN security council resolution in March authorising the use of force in Libya specifically excludes “a foreign occupation force of any form on any part of Libyan territory”. Despite more than two months of bombing by Nato jets, rebels have remained unable to advance west of Misrata, or west of Brega, 300 miles to the east. The capital, Tripoli, also remains in the grip of Gaddafi, who has defied all attempts to force him to leave. The Benghazi-based Transitional National Council, which is positioning itself as a democratic alternative to the four decade strongman rule of the four-decade rule of Gaddafi, claimed that eight senior military officers, among them four generals, had defected to its side and would announce their new loyalties at a meeting soon to take place in Rome. There was no immediate confirmation from the Italian government. However, air force pilots have landed in Italy and defected earlier in the rebellion. Undertrained and under-manned rebel forces have been encouraging defections, which they see as a way to whittle down support for Gaddafi in the absence of a ground army sent to assist them In April, William Hague announced that an expanded military liaison team would be dispatched to work with the Transitional National Council. The foreign secretary said the team would help the rebels improve “organisational structures, communications and logistics” but stressed: “Our officers will not be involved in training or arming the opposition’s fighting forces, nor will they be involved in the planning or execution of the NTC’s military operations or in the provision of any other form of operational military advice.” There were unconfirmed reports at the time that Britain was planning to send former SAS members and other experienced soldiers to Libya under the cover of private security companies, paid for by Arab states, to train the anti-government forces. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Africa Al-Jazeera TV news Military Julian Borger guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Al-Qaida leader spent final weeks trying to strengthen links with Afghan and Pakistani insurgent groups in bid to ‘stay relevant’ Osama bin Laden spent much of his last weeks alive planning a new attempt to bring the disparate factions among insurgents and militants fighting in Pakistan and Afghanistan together under the umbrella of al-Qaida. The terrorist leader, who had made repeated efforts to unify militant groups, was even considering risking leaving his safe house in Abbottabad, the northern Pakistani garrison town, to try to build a fresh alliance through face-to-face meetings, sources in Pakistan, Afghanistan and America have told the Guardian. Western intelligence services and Richard Barrett, head of the United Nations al-Qaida and Taliban sanctions committee, told the Guardian the reports that Bin Laden was planning a “grand coalition” were credible. “Bin Laden found it pretty difficult to be marginalised and was making a huge effort to stay relevant. There was some indication that he was looking at re-energising links with [other local militant groups] to give himself a central role,” Barrett said. Mediating alliances and focusing the efforts of disparate groups has been a favoured strategy of Bin Laden since the late 1980s. Many experts say that, with the growing sophistication of local groups such as the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban, the role of international militants in the region has diminished. “In recent years, al-Qaida has become increasingly marginal in the region, particularly in Afghanistan,” said Thomas Ruttig, a Kabul-based analyst. “The Taliban have people who have been fighting for 30 years and who have little to learn from outsiders.” Western intelligence officials in Kabul told the Guardian they believe there are probably no more than 100 extremists affiliated with al-Qaida fighting in Afghanistan and that relations with the other insurgent groups there and in Pakistan are “variable and dynamic”. “Most of the guys fighting in this region have a very local focus. That leads to friction with the internationals,” one said last week. Bin Laden had known key insurgent figures such as the cleric Jalaluddin Haqqani or the Islamist former prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, for decades. American investigators hope the trove of data seized in the raid on the Abbottabad compound this month, in which Bin Laden and his 22-year-old son, Khaled, were killed, will cast light on the relations of al-Qaida and other militant groups in the region and beyond. Special forces seized dozens of computers, 10 hard drives and more than 100 storage devices, such as disks, DVDs and flash drives, from the safe house. The data includes emails sent as recently as last month by a courier on behalf of the al-Qaida leader. The sheer size of the haul – described by one official recently as a mother lode of intelligence – has slowed the flow of information, however. “My understanding is that we are talking about something the size of a small college arts faculty library,” said Bruce Riedel, a former senior CIA analyst and expert in south Asian Islamist militancy. “There is a huge amount that needs processing.” Almost all the data is in Arabic, and needs to be translated into English. A further problem, US officials have said, is that it is unclear whether many of the messages, instructions and notes written by Bin Laden were ever sent or ever reached their intended destination. “They could have been just jottings. He probably got bored, like anyone else,” Riedel said. Intelligence gathering American former intelligence officials told the Guardian the immediate priority of the dedicated teams set up to work through the data would be to search for any operational information that could avert terrorist plots, rather than to focus on more strategic issues. So far, the investigators have found evidence confirming only that certain broad types of target – such as trains and planes – were still of interest to Bin Laden. According to officials and an American law enforcement bulletin two weeks ago, Bin Laden was also interested in hijacking and blowing up oil and gas tankers. Among the material seized in the compound, where Bin Laden may have been based for at least five years, are his notes on how many Americans he believed an attack needed to kill to force a change in Washington’s Middle East policies and on who were the best senior political officials to target in the US. There are also indications that Bin Laden was contemplating trying to negotiate some kind of pact with the Pakistani government. Investigators are also looking for details of the financing of al-Qaida. Much of the money for the terror group came from personal contacts of Bin Laden’s and what is believed to be a relatively small number of donors in the Middle East. One official with knowledge of the operation said last week it was hoped that the cache would identify these. Of particular interest would be any communications with al-Qaida’s Sheikh Sa’id al-Masri, believed to be the group’s chief financial officer until he was killed last year, the official said. The key thing the investigators will be seeking to assess is the nature of Bin Laden’s role in recent years within the al-Qaida organisation. Since his death, US officials have described the 54-year-old Saudi-born militant leader as “central” to the group and “a micro-manager” linked to “every plot” in America and Europe. However, some doubt Bin Laden could have been closely involved in day-to-day management, given that the compound where he lived was without internet access or telephones. Communicating may have involved a laborious process of writing messages offline, saving them to a USB key and then having a courier take them to a distant internet cafe or other terminal to be sent. The two men who lived with Bin Laden, his three wives and up to 15 children and grandchildren put batteries in their mobile phones only when they were at least 60 miles from Abbottabad, for security reasons, according to one report. This will have limited Bin Laden’s ability to run the group, officials told the Guardian. The data retrieved has already shown that Bin Laden was in touch with a small number of senior al-Qaida figures, including Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Egyptian veteran militant who is now expected to succeed as the head of the group. In a statement released in February this year, Zawahiri told followers to avoid “civilian casualties” in their attacks, saying he had been asked to issue the directive by Bin Laden himself. According to news reports, Bin Laden’s notebooks show his displeasure at a suggestion in the Islamist extremist internet magazine Inspire, published from the Yemen by an al-Qaida affiliate, that a farm tractor be converted into a “killing machine” by attaching blades to its wheels. This was not “representative of al-Qaida”, he complained. There is also evidence that Bin Laden had the final say in leadership appointments, pointing out the defects of potential candidates to close senior associates such as Zawahiri. But some officials seeking to divine the future direction of Islamist militancy point to the conclusions of Moroccan investigations into the bombing of a Marrakech cafe days before the al-Qaida leader died. A government statement said: “The individuals were absorbed by jihadist ideology, and had allegiance to al-Qaida and had already made several attempts to join some of the hotbeds of tension, especially Chechnya and Iraq, before deciding to carry out terror in the homeland.” There was no evidence of a direct connection with the al-Qaida leadership, the investigators said. “The suspects learned on the internet how to make the two remote-detonated explosive devices,” the statement said. Shortly after the death of Bin Laden, al-Qaida’s online al-Fajr Media Centre issued a statement telling every “mujahid Muslim, if there is an opportunity, do not waste it”. “Do not consult anyone about killing Americans or destroying their economy,” the statement continued. “We also incite you to carry out acts of individual terrorism with significant results, which only require basic preparation.” Osama bin Laden al-Qaida Afghanistan Pakistan Global terrorism Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media This week’s edition of the Stossel show on Fox Business News hosted a mock debate on budgets that cut the deficit for the almost the entire hour. Five sets of budgets put out by five different think tanks were the focus. Two supposed liberals (from the Roosevelt Institute and from Demos ), two conservatives (from American Enterprise Institute and the Heritage Foundation), and one bi-partisan (from BiPartisan Policy Center ) (the Center for American Progress would not participate with their new budget because of bias on the show). The Stossel show also included a panel of Bob Beckel, David Asman and “neutral” Fox Business reporter Sandra Smith . They were asked to question each think tank and then vote for one of them, but the audience would have the deciding vote. Bob Beckel is a longtime “liberal’” on Fox News who believes in the flat tax , and first he apologized to Hillary Doe for putting up with the crowd and then said he was the only liberal on Fox, so he’s used to it. After Stossel told him there were others on the network, he said this: Beckel: I want to congratulate you for putting up with this (audience booing), and with all due respect… being the only liberal at Fox, I can get a pretty thick skin. Stossel: Well, you’re not the only liberal at Fox! Beckel: There’s damn few of us, we all of us can caucus in a phone booth, let me put it that way to you. … Alan Colmes is a featured liberal on FNC, but Beckel is right on the overall truth of his claim that the amount of real liberals on Fox can barely fill a phone booth. I wonder how Roger Ailes will take that bit of honesty since it bucks his “fair and balanced” slogan? Hillary Doe of the Roosevelt Institute was a good sport after she was repeatedly booed by the audience for proposing taxes on banks and was against the ‘too big to fail’ mentality. She also said that if their health-care pools didn’t rein in costs after ten years, they would force in a public option — which was also booed heavily by the audience. Can you guess which think tank won the debate? The Heritage Foundation. I know, what a shocker. Asman has ties to the Heritage Foundation and he voted for the BiPartisan Center budget. Sarah Smith, who’s supposed to be an impartial news reporter, voted for the Heritage Foundation because it’s the only plan that balances the budget in ten years. See, she’s non-partisan because details don’t matter. She’s a reporter? Here’s Demos and the BiPartisan Center debate section of Stossel: John Stossel gives the last word on the budget debate and of course he just wants to cut government spending almost entirely because there are too many pages in a budget plan.
Continue reading …• Follow all the latest updates on our live blog • Suspended vice-president threatens to tear Fifa apart Fifa has been rocked further as Sepp Blatter and Jérôme Valcke, its two most senior figures, were accused of a “politically motivated” subversion of the presidential election process by one of the men suspended in the ethics committee inquiry. Jack Warner was the vice-president who had spent almost 30 years on Fifa’s executive committee until his provisional suspension on Sunday. Now he threatens to tear Fifa apart from within, challenging his suspension through the courts. As a first step he has opened a front on Valcke, who is Fifa’s top mandarin as its general secretary. Warner has disclosed an incendiary email in which Valcke discussed the presidential election campaign of the Qatari Fifa executive-committee member Mohamed bin Hammam, who was suspended on Sunday. In the message Valcke appears to accuse Qatar of “buying” the World Cup. “‘For MBH, I never understood why he was running,’” Valcke’s email states. “‘If really he thought he had a chance or just being an extreme way to express how much he does not like anymore JSB [Blatter]. Or he thought you can buy Fifa as they [Qatar] bought the WC.” Valcke has confirmed the email but said it has been quoted selectively. “It was a private email and we will discuss it,” Valcke said on Monday. “He sent me an email asking if I want that [Bin Hammam to run], he said I should ask Bin Hammam to pull out.” Qatar 2022 said it is considering its next steps. Valcke’s comments to Warner about Bin Hammam cast doubt on his own impartiality in the election process. According to Warner’s statement Valcke, who is known to believe that he would be dismissed from Fifa were Bin Hammam to have won Wednesday’s election, added in the email: “I have a bet since day one, he will withdraw but on June 1st after his 10 min speech. “He will get some votes. Less than 60 today after CAF support. It will be the ‘coup de grace’ if you would officially send a message as the Concacaf president by saying Concacaf supports unanimously. So I am not giving you an advice but just my feeling about what I think is the situation.” Warner, the then Concacaf president, refused to offer that support. He claims what followed was evidence of the political “bias” of Fifa’s administration in favour of the incumbent president, since it was Valcke who set the ball rolling on the inquiry that has led to the suspensions of Bin Hammam and Warner. “The complaints made in this matter are politically motivated against Mr Bin Hammam and me and are designed, among other things, to cause serious prejudice and damage to both Mr Bin Hammam and myself at one of the most critical times for the Fifa,” Warner said. Warner’s statement was prepared under legal advice and his case against Fifa will seek to discredit the principal accuser in the ethics committee inquiry. Concacaf’s general secretary, Chuck Blazer, ordered the Collins & Collins report into Warner and Bin Hammam’s conduct, which formed the basis of the ethics committee decision on Sunday. “It is informative for one to look at Mr Blazer’s credibility by referring to the report of the New York district court judge in the matter between Master Card and Visa in the Fifa matter of 7 December 2006,” wrote Warner, before citing the court decision. “Mr Blazer’s testimony was generally without credibility based on his attitude and demeanor on his evasive answers on cross-examination … Thus, for that reason and based on his evasive answers and his attitude and demeanor, Mr Blazer’s testimony as the 14 March 2006 Marketing & TV AG Board meeting is rejected as fabricated.” The final strand of Warner’s attack on the events that led to his suspension on Sunday is against Blatter. Warner accuses Blatter of apportioning Fifa funds for his own political ends in the final weeks before Wednesday’s election. “I also indicated that at the Miami Concacaf congress on 3 May Mr Blatter made a gift of $1m to Concacaf to spend as it deems fit,” Warner said. “This annoyed [Uefa's] president Michel Platini who was present and he approached Valcke complaining that Mr Blatter had no permission from the finance committee to make this gift to which Jérôme [sic] replied that he will find the money for Mr Blatter.” The president of a Concacaf federation, in Zurich for a special caucus of the Caribbean, Central and North American confederation, has confirmed that this award had been made. It was in favour of two Goal projects of the confederation’s choosing. Fifa Football politics Sepp Blatter Jack Warner Mohamed bin Hammam Matt Scott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Less than a month before Korea, years before Vietnam and decades before Iraq, Memorial Day was about remembering those who served and died during the Wars previous, back to the Civil War. The Second World War had only ended less than five years before, the task of rebuilding was still going on. The upheavals and changes were new with words like “Right Of Self-Determination” and “Cold War” recent additions to the lexicon. Just sixty years ago today. Everything was in a state of change, nobody really knew where any of it was headed. The only thing certain were fields of white crosses, evidence that sacrifice was the constant – no matter how much things changed, or how much they remained the same.
Continue reading …Medical workers say at least 20 dead as Republican Guards use tanks and bulldozers to clear activists in city of Taiz Hundreds of soldiers loyal to Yemen’s embattled president have stormed a protest camp in a southern city and fired on the crowds indiscriminately, killing at least 20 people, according to medical officials and witnesses. The city of Taiz has been a hotbed of anti-government protests since crowds began calling for President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s ouster in early February. The heavy crackdown there signalled Saleh was still intent on preserving his 33-year rule despite the upheaval, intense international pressure to step aside and defections by key allies and some army units. Security forces first tried to clear the square in Taiz on Monday with water cannon, tear gas and sound bombs, sending thousands rushing for shelter. Forces from the Republican Guard, which is commanded by one of Saleh’s sons, then moved in before dawn with tanks and bulldozers, said Sadek al-Shugaa, the head of a field hospital at the protest camp. Republican Guard soldiers along with security forces and armed men in civilian clothes attacked the protesters. Some set fire to dozens of tents used by the demonstrators, and bulldozers ran over hundreds of other tents without checking whether any protesters were still inside, two witnesses said. One of them, Mohammed al-Zarafi, said he saw tents being set on fire while injured protesters were still inside. The other witness, protester Boushra al-Maqtali, called the attack “a real massacre”. “The square and the (field) hospital are in ruins,” she said. “The tanks took the place of hundreds of tents that were set up there. The artillery units are occupying the whole space to make it impossible for the youth to return to the square,” she said. Troops also attacked the Majeedi hotel overlooking the square, where journalists were detained, Shugaa said. Then snipers took over the top of the building to shoot at protesters. Amateur video aired by al-Jazeera TV showed masked men with rifles shooting from rooftops at the protesters in the street. Shugaa said “most of the injuries are critical in the head, chest and neck”. He said several dozen of the injured were dragged away by security forces and vanished. Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Protest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fears of gang targeting tourists after Ian Haggath was beaten up in Albufeira two weeks ago and died last Wednesday A British man has died in hospital after being attacked two weeks ago near his hotel in Portugal. Ian Haggath, 50, from Dunston near Gateshead, was beaten up in Albufeira. He died from his injuries last Wednesday. A Foreign Office spokeswoman said: “I can confirm the death of a British national in Faro on May 25. We are in touch with the family and we are providing consular assistance.” According to reports Haggath suffered serious head injuries after being attacked by four people. There is speculation that the same gang is responsible for attacking two other tourists this year. According to the Daily Mirror, David Hoban, 44, from Dublin was stabbed in the same area of Albufeira in April but survived. A few days before Darren Lackie, 22, a soldier from Fife, was found in the street with a head injury and died. Portugal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fears of gang targeting tourists after Ian Haggath was beaten up in Albufeira two weeks ago and died last Wednesday A British man has died in hospital after being attacked two weeks ago near his hotel in Portugal. Ian Haggath, 50, from Dunston near Gateshead, was beaten up in Albufeira. He died from his injuries last Wednesday. A Foreign Office spokeswoman said: “I can confirm the death of a British national in Faro on May 25. We are in touch with the family and we are providing consular assistance.” According to reports Haggath suffered serious head injuries after being attacked by four people. There is speculation that the same gang is responsible for attacking two other tourists this year. According to the Daily Mirror, David Hoban, 44, from Dublin was stabbed in the same area of Albufeira in April but survived. A few days before Darren Lackie, 22, a soldier from Fife, was found in the street with a head injury and died. Portugal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rolling Thunder 2011 Washington DC Rolling thunder Petrina and Sarah Palin at Rolling Thunder smirkitty says: Palin grandstanding at Rolling Thunder , what a media whore
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