Gazans continue festivities for victory

People of the Gaza Strip continue festivities for victory against the Israeli regime after seven weeks of aggression on Palestinians, Press TV reports.

On Friday, the Palestinian resistance group Islamic Jihad staged a parade and rally in Gaza City to mark the victory following 50 days of fighting.

The demonstrators praised armed resistance against the recent Israeli onslaught.  

“Israel was broken during this war and the resistance fighters you see standing around here are determined to fight with the Zionist enemy until the complete liberation of Palestine,” said Dawud Shehab, a senior Islamic Jihad official, at the demonstration.

“We kept fighting until the last minute before the start of the truce and we will continue to train and equip our forces until the next battle with the enemy,” added Shehab.

The Egyptian-brokered truce, which took effect after Cairo negotiations on Tuesday, stipulates the ease of Israel’s seven-year-old blockade as well as the provision of a guarantee that Palestinian demands will be met.

Israeli warplanes and tanks started pounding the blockaded enclave in early July, inflicting heavy losses on the Palestinian land.

Nearly 2,140 Palestinians, mostly civilians, including women and children, were killed in 50 days of the Israeli onslaught on Gaza. Around 11,000 others were injured.

Tel Aviv says 69 Israelis were killed in the conflict, but Hamas puts the number at much higher.

NT/MHB/MAM

S Korea ferry captain blames company

The captain of a South Korean sunken ferry has blamed the ship’s operator for one of the worst maritime disasters in the country’s history.

Testifying at a court on Friday, Lee Joon-seok said it was a standard, customary decision made by the management to overload the ferry and ignore safety checks.

Kim Han-sik, the head of the ship’s operator Chonghaejin Marine Company, together with 11 other officials from the company and related firms appeared in the court to be tried on a number of charges, including criminal negligence and corruption.

“It was an open secret and everyone at Chonghaejin knew very well that the ferry had dangerously been tampered with its ability to rebalance itself”, the captain told the court in the southern city of Gwangju, adding, “We just followed an old practice.”

The captain, along with 14 other crew members, is accused of leaving the sinking ship with passengers on board.

The 6,825-ton ferry was reportedly carrying an estimated 3,608 tons of cargo — more than three times what an inspector said it could safely carry. It sank en route to the resort Island of Jeju on April 15, killing 294 passengers, mostly students. Ten others still remain missing.

The Korean government faced widespread disapproval for its handling of the disaster and the rescue effort. Critics said valuable time was wasted during the first emergency call from a passenger to the coast guard office.

MSM/MHB/MAM

US cop resigns over threatening people

The US policeman who threatened to kill protesters during demonstrations in Missouri has stepped down from the St. Ann police department.

Lt. Ray Albers, a 20-year veteran, has been relieved of duty after he pointed his semiautomatic weapon at peaceful protesters and reporters earlier this month.

A video that recorded the encounter showed the officer cursing and pointing his rifle in the direction of the camera, telling protesters, “I will [expletive] kill you.”

Protesters can be heard urging the officer to lower his weapon.

One police sergeant can be seen lowering the officer’s weapon and escorting him away from the area.

“I’m not condoning [Albers’] behavior whatsoever,” Chief Aaron Jiminez said on Thursday. “It’s very hard because he is a good friend, he was a good boss.”

“There’s going to be those who didn’t like him who are high-fiving now. Altogether it’s going to be a black eye on the city of St. Ann because he represented our department.”

The incident of the police threatening to kill people comes at a time when protesters demanded charges against Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson for the August 9 fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed African-American teen.

AGB/AGB

Shooting left 1 woman dead in Florida

A woman has been fatally shot in the US state of Florida, and police have arrested the suspect in what to appear to be a botched drug-related robbery.

Tahnika Michelle Duppins, 32, was found shot and injured in a home in Cocoa, Brevard County, on Friday, authorities said. She was taken to the hospital where she was pronounced dead later.

“We actually had our SWAT team out serving a search warrant around the corner. Police responded. A female was transported. (She) has recently been pronounced dead,” said Cocoa Police spokeswoman Barbara Matthews.

“We do believe from information we’re getting from witnesses and people in the area that this is not a random crime,” Matthews said.

Matthews also said there is a possibility that more than one person was involved in the shooting as a person of interest told police that two men had entered the home.

“We have some information of some people seen leaving the area. We’re checking all over the area for people in different vehicles. We’re following up on every bit of info we’re getting,” she stated.

Dennis Avile II, 33, was considered a person of interest earlier in the investigation and his handgun was seized as evidence.

Avile II was charged late on Friday with second-degree murder, giving false information to police, possessing a firearm by a convicted felon as well as charges pertaining to the destruction of evidence.

According to neighbors, there was a similar home invasion and a shooting in the neighborhood last week and that they are tired of violence in the area.

“Somebody need to do something about this crime, and people in this neighborhood need to stop being scared,” neighbor Hope Jenkins said. “They need to stand up. If they want to come kill me, they can kill me. Me and God got an understanding.”

“That’s a good girl,” said Jenkins. “(She) take her child to school. Now she dead. What is her child supposed to do now? I feel like it could have been me. The woman didn’t have nothing. It’s just stupid.”

The shooting caused the authorities to lock down two schools, McNair Middle School, Golfview Elementary School and Emma Jewell Charter School just after 8 a.m. Friday.

AT/GJH

 

Obama under fire for ‘no ISIL strategy’

President Barack Obama is facing intense criticism for admitting the United States does not have a strategy to address the ISIL terrorist organization after a week of bluster about eliminating that “cancer.”

The US president said Thursday that he was not planning to significantly expand the military action against ISIL anytime soon. American military planes have carried out over 100 airstrikes against the terror network in Iraq since August 8.

“I don’t want to put the cart before the horse. We don’t have a strategy yet,” Obama said in a briefing with reporters at the White House.

“My priority at this point is to make sure that the gains that ISIL made in Iraq are rolled back and that Iraq has the opportunity to govern itself effectively and secure itself,” he stated.

Obama’s remarks came after days of heated debate within his national security team about whether to strike ISIL in Syria. Earlier this week, Obama authorized military surveillance flights over Syria, a move that was seen as a prelude to subsequent airstrikes.

Republican critics were quick to bounce Thursday, criticizing the president for his self-admitted lack of strategy while ISIL is growing in strength in both Iraq and Syria.  

Sen. John McCain, one of Obama’s fiercest foreign policy critics, tweeted Thursday that ISIL was the largest and richest terrorist group in history.

At an event in California Thursday night, Rep. Paul Ryan, (R-Wis.) also responded to Obama’s comment, saying the US needed a “strategy to finish them off.”

“Not to contain them … but to fundamentally finish them off. And I don’t think the president sees this moment for what it is,” he added.

Rep. Louie Gohmert, (R-Texas) said on Fox News that the Obama administration’s strategy to address the ISIL terror network was inadequate.

“He did say we don’t have a strategy, but he followed that up by saying the strategy is to nip it in the bud. Well, unfortunately, it’s not in a bud, it’s full-blossom,” Gohmert said.

Calls for striking ISIL grew more intense following last week’s brutal beheading of American journalist James Foley by the militant group in Syria which was posted in a video online.

Obama said Thursday that military leaders were presenting him with a “range of options” for addressing the terrorist group that, according to some intelligence officials, poses the greatest threat to the US homeland since al-Qaeda before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

HRJ/HRJ
 

US imposes more sanctions on Iran

The United States has imposed new sanctions on more than 25 Iranian individuals and companies.

The Treasury Department said on Friday that the sanctions’ targets include shipping firms, oil companies, airlines and six Iranian banks.

The Treasury Department also blatantly accused the Iranian businesses and individuals of ‘supporting terrorism’ and trying to evade previous sanctions.

Despite the additional measures, the White House National Security Council (NSC) on Friday reaffirmed Washington’s commitment to working with the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the United States, France, Britain, Russia and China – plus Germany in seeking a comprehensive deal with Tehran over its nuclear energy program.

“Just as we announced these measures and continue to enforce pre-existing sanctions on Iran, the United States remains committed to working with our P5+1 partners toward a long-term, comprehensive solution that provides confidence that Iran’s nuclear program is exclusively peaceful,” said Caitlin Hayden, the NSC spokeswoman.

The new sanctions come as Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany are in talks to reach a final agreement aimed at resolving the standoff over Tehran’s civilian nuclear work.

The two sides signed a historic interim deal in Geneva last November. The agreement entered into force on January 20 and expired six months later. In July, Tehran and the six states agreed to extend their discussions until November 24 in a bid to work out a final accord.

Iran has previously slammed similar sanctions stating that the measures are contrary to the spirit of ongoing negotiations.

Tehran calls anti-Iran sanctions illegal and wants them to be lifted as part of a final nuclear agreement.

SF/HSN/SS

America’s return to Iraq

In an interview with Thomas Friedman of the New York Times on August 8, President Obama stressed that the US was only fighting the Islamic State (IS, or ISIS) in Iraq as a partner, not as Iraq’s or the Kurds’ air force. Obama claims his officials are reminding everyone, “We will be your partners, but we are not going to do it for you. We’re not sending a bunch of US troops back on the ground to keep a lid on things.” Now, less than three weeks later, the strategic picture has changed, and emphases on “partnerships” have faded while the US military complex advances largely on its own.

US air strikes temporarily stalled the IS advance, but its expanding territorial control (now roughly equal in area size to Jordan) and the beheading of an American reporter led Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel to declare IS a threat “beyond anything we’ve seen.”  Washington has increased the number of US advisers sent to Iraq, and there is even talk of carrying out air strikes in Syria. Drones are already flying overhead.

We have witnessed this sudden turnaround many times before, haven’t we?  The pattern is all too familiar.  First, the President and other top US leaders soft-pedal talk about a modest direct role in a conflict: no boots on the ground, just a few air strikes to create better odds for our side.  Then the characterization of the threat changes, from local to regional and even global, exemplified Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby’s warning on August 26, of the “global aspirations” of ISIS.

What was once called a terrorist group is now an insurgency with grand ambitions that may carry to our doorstep.  This change in scope is followed by dropped talk of partnership and political reform in our ally’s capital.  Now the threat takes on highest priority.  Congress follows the administration’s lead by abandoning its responsibility to authorize war or otherwise challenge the commander-in-chief.

Once the stakes have risen in the minds of decision makers, the US role becomes paramount.  After all, if not us, who?  The US thus becomes the victim of its unilateralist impulse.  When presidents of both parties have decided to intervene abroad—in Korea, Vietnam, the Dominican Republic, Lebanon, Grenada, Panama and Iraq, for example—they always acted in the name of national security and were quite prepared to go to war without allies.  When they accepted offers of help, it was only on the condition of total US control of war making.  War “by committee” was unacceptable, as Donald Rumsfeld famously said in relation to the first Gulf War.  What the US wants are “coalitions of the willing”—governments willing, that is, to follow US orders.

Now the US is facing the IS largely on its own. The “we” in Obama’s interview with Friedman includes no one else but us—unless, that is, you include Syria, whose dictator has already thrown down the welcome mat at the prospect of the US becoming involved in its civil war and bombing IS soldiers.

Where are US allies in this supposedly monumental battle—not just the Europeans in NATO but the Japanese, the Koreans, and the Australians?  If the IS is an “imminent” threat to “international security,” as Chuck Hagel has suggested, why haven’t others clamored to join the battle? Why hasn’t the US brought this global threat to the United Nations?

The US is again playing sheriff without a posse and the consequences are predictable and dire. US bombs will kill a certain number of IS fighters, but how many more recruits will IS gain as a result?  How much more likely will an attack on a target in the US become as Washington makes the war on IS its own?  How much less likely will a political settlement of Iraq’s internal struggle be?

As the US, the Lone Ranger, focuses its attention and resources on the threat du jour, political change and the development of civil society in Iraq and Syria will remain on hold.  Yet those transformations are the keys to demobilizing the IS and neutralizing its grandiose ambitions. Trying to level the playing field unilaterally with bombs and advisers is a sucker’s game and will only make things worse.

AGB/AGB

Russia ready to repel threats: Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin says Moscow’s armed forces are always ready to repel any threat against the country.

“We should always be ready to repel any aggression towards Russia,” Putin said on Friday.

Putin went on to say that “Russia’s partners… should understand it’s best not to mess with us.”

Western powers and the Kiev government accuse Moscow of having a hand in the crisis in eastern Ukraine, which erupted when Kiev launched military operations in April to silence pro-Russia protests, but the Kremlin denies the accusation.

Referring to allegations of the presence of Russian troops in Ukraine, he said that “Russia is far from being involved in any large-scale conflicts,” and that the United States and the European Union were responsible for the “unconstitutional” removal of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych and replacing him with a “pro-European government.”

“Small villages and large cities surrounded by the Ukrainian army which is directly hitting residential areas with the aim of destroying the infrastructure,” he added.

Violence intensified in May after the two flashpoint regions of Donetsk and Luhansk held local referendums, in which their residents voted overwhelmingly in favor of independence from Ukraine.

SRK/MHB/MAM

Security Council threatens Houthis

The United Nations Security Council says the Yemeni Houthi movement must end protests against the government.

On Friday, the 15-member world body accused the Houthis of attempts “to obstruct the political transition.”

“The Houthis and others continue to stoke the conflict in the north in an attempt to obstruct the political transition,” said the Security Council.

The members also demanded that the Houthis pull out their fighters from the al-Jawf region “and remove the camps and dismantle the checkpoints they have erected in and around Sana’a.”

“The Security Council calls on the Houthis to withdraw their forces from Amran.”

The world body has threatened to impose sanctions on anyone who endangers the stability of the Arab country.

Hundreds of thousands of the demonstrators have taken to the streets of the capital Sana’a, calling on the government to resign.

Yemen’s northwestern city of Amran, about 72 kilometers (45 miles) north of Sana’a, has also been under the Houthis’ control since early July.

Yemen’s Shia Houthi movement draws its name from the tribe of its founding leader Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi.

The Houthi movement played a key role in the popular revolution that forced former dictator Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down.

Saleh, who ruled Yemen for 33 years, stepped down in February 2012 under a US-backed power transfer deal in return for immunity, after a year of mass street demonstrations demanding his ouster.

NT/MHB/MAM

Libya militias claim to down plane

Libyan militias claim that they have shot down a plane belonging to forces of retired General Khalifa Haftar.

The militias said on Friday that they had fired a missile at the plane and downed it in the city of al-Bayda.

However, Haftar’s spokesman Mohamed Hegazi rejected the claim, saying that the crash was caused by a “technical fault.”

“The plane was on a military mission when it crashed due to a technical malfunction. The pilot, identified as Ibrahim al-Manfi, was killed in the crash.”

Haftar launched a military offensive in the country’s east on May 16, vowing to crush the militants and “establish stability in Libya.”

Libyan authorities have denounced Haftar’s attack as a “coup” bid.

The inter-militia battles are part of the chaotic situation posing security concerns all over the North African country.

A top Libyan official warned the United Nations Security Council on Wednesday that the country could descend into a “full-scale civil war” if militias are not disarmed.

The situation in Libya “since the 13th of July, has become even more complicated and the situation might unravel into a full-blown civil war if we’re not very careful and wise in our actions,”  the country’s UN Ambassador Ibrahim Dabbashi told the world body.

His mid-July reference was to heavy fighting that broke out between rival militias vying for the control of Libya’s main airport in the capital Tripoli.

Nearly three years after the fall of former dictator Muammar Gaddafi, Libya is still grappling with rising insecurity as the country has been witnessing numerous clashes between government forces and rival militant groups that refuse to lay down arms despite efforts by the central government to impose law and order.

MSM/MHB/MAM