Thursday, October 29, 2015

WHO WON? 2016 REPUBLICAN DEBATE -- DEBATE 3; Islamic invasion pulls trigger: Europe now scrambles for guns -- Many 'now wish they had a 2nd Amendment'

One Citizen Speaking...


WHO WON? 2016 REPUBLICAN DEBATE -- DEBATE 3

Posted: 28 Oct 2015 08:47 PM PDT

Bottom line … 

The debate standouts were Trump, Rubio, and Cruz; although there were no breakout performances. There were a few spirited exchanges, but many of them were directed at the moderators who were unusually biased. Nothing really has changed except the diminishment of Donald Trump’s stature, which I believe was somewhat diminished.

Donald Trump’s behavior towards Dr. Carson might indicate that Trump may be looking to Ben Carson as a Vice President running mate.

This was a spirited debate, made so by the obvious confrontational bias of the moderators.

Before the GOP debate even starts, the GOP is at a significant disadvantage: one, there are so many people on the stage that individuals have an extremely short timeframe to answer important questions about substantive issues – thus reducing a debate to sound-bites; and two, the GOP cedes procedural matters and questioning to progressive socialist democrat members of the media so that questions can be slanted and candidates nullified.

And, if you want proof that one-time presumptive front-runner Jeb Bush is a lightweight, consider he actually was on the debate stage talking about his success in a fantasy football league. Unreal.

We are so screwed.

-- steve  

DEBATE3-HEADER

bhdr

Wednesday, October 28, 2015 –  8 p.m. EDT

CNBC Republican Debate

Aired On:      CNBC
Location:       University of Colorado in Boulder
Sponsors:       CNBC
Moderators:   Carl Quintanilla, Becky Quick, and John Harwood (with a panel of CNBC “experts” like On-Air Editor Rick Santelli, Senior Personal Finance Correspondent Sharon Epperson and Jim Cramer, host of "Mad Money with Jim Cramer."  

Rules:             Candidates with at least 3% polling average appear in primetime.

Notes:             The debate, titled “Your Money, Your Vote: The Presidential Debate on the Economy,” will focus on key economic issues, such as jobs, taxes, the deficit and the health of the U.S. economy.

The undercard (Rick Santorum, Bobby Jindal, George Pataki , Lindsey Graham) will air at 6:00 p.m. EST / 3:00 p.m. PST.

Donald_Trump_March_2015

Donald Trump






(Celebrity, non-politician, businessman)

cyan_rightcyan_down
"I trust people too much, I'm too trusting. And when they let me down, if they let me down, I never forgive." 


"I love the Mexican people, I respect the Mexican leaders, but the leaders are much sharper, smarter and more cunning than our leaders...a politician cannot get them to pay [for a wall]. I can."

Ben_Carson_at_CPAC_2015
Ben Carson

 

(Physician)

 

cyan_rightcyan_right

100px-Marco_Rubio,_Official_Portrait,_112th_Congress
Marco Rubio

 (Senator)

cyan_rightcyan_up
“Some of the Democrats who have the ultimate super PAC -- they're called the mainstream media. Last week, Hillary Clinton went before a committee she admitted she sent e-mails to her family saying hey, this attack in Benghazi was caused by Al Qaeda-like elements. She spent over a week telling the families of those victims and the American people that it was because of a video. The mainstream media is saying it was the greatest week in Hillary Clinton's campaign. It was the week she got exposed as a liar. On Benghazi. But she has her super PAC helping her out - the American mainstream media." 



QUINTANILLA: So when the Sun-Sentinel says Rubio should resign, not rip us off, when they say Floridians sent you to Washington to do a job, when they say you act like you hate your job, do you? 

RUBIO: Let me say, I read that editorial today with a great amusement. It’s actually evidence of the bias that exists in the American media today. 

 

jebJeb Bush

 (Governor) 

cyan_rightcyan_right
"You find me a Democrat that's for cutting spending $10, I'll give them a warm kiss."




QUINTANILLA: Governor Bush, daily fantasy sports has become a phenomenon in this country, will award billions of dollars in prize money this year. But to play you have to assess your odds, put money at risk, wait for an outcome that’s out of your control. Isn’t that the definition of gambling, and should the Federal Government treat it as such? 

BUSH: Well, first of all, I’m 7 and 0 in my fantasy league.

QUINTANILLA: I had a feeling you were going to brag about that. 

BUSH: Gronkowski is still going strong. I have Ryan Tannehill, Marco, as my quarterback, he was 18 for 19 last week. So I’m doing great. But we’re not gambling.

And I think this has become something that needs to be looked at in terms of regulation. Effectively it is day trading without any regulation at all. And when you have insider information, which apparently has been the case, where people use that information and use big data to try to take advantage of it, there has to be some regulation. 

If they can’t regulate themselves, then the NFL needs to look at just, you know, moving away from them a little bit. And there should be some regulation. I have no clue whether the federal government is the proper place, my instinct is to say, hell no, just about everything about the federal government. 

(CROSSTALK) 

CHRISTIE: Carl, are we really talking about getting government involved in fantasy football?

carly
Carly Fiorina

 (business) 
cyan_rightcyan_right

 

cruz
Ted Cruz

 (Senator)

cyan_upcyan_right

QUINTANILLA: Senator Cruz, Congressional Republicans, Democrats, and the White House are about to strike a compromise that would raise the debt limit, prevent a government shutdown, and calm financial markets that fear of another Washington-created crises on the way. 

Does your opposition to it show that you’re not the kind of problem-solver American voters want? 

CRUZ: You know, let me say something at the outset. The questions that have been asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t trust the media.


QUINTANILLA: Senator Cruz, Congressional Republicans, Democrats, and the White House are about to strike a compromise that would raise the debt limit, prevent a government shutdown, and calm financial markets that fear of another Washington-created crises on the way. 

Does your opposition to it show that you’re not the kind of problem-solver American voters want? 

CRUZ: You know, let me say something at the outset. The questions that have been asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t trust the media. 

[APPLAUSE] 

This is not a cage match. And if you look at the questions: Donald Trump, are you a comic book villain? Ben Carson, can you do math? John Kasich, will you insult two people over here? Marco Rubio, why don’t you resign? Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen? 

How about talking about the substantive issues – 

[APPLAUSE] 

… and, Carl, I’m not finished yet. The contrast with the Democratic debate, where every fawning question from the media was, Which of you is more handsome and why? And let me be clear – 

QUINTANILLA: You have 30 seconds left to answer, should you choose to do so. 

CRUZ: Let me be clear. The men and women on this stage have more ideas, more experience, more common sense than every participant in the Democratic debate. That debate reflected a debate between the Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks. 

And nobody watching at home believes that any of the moderators have any intention of voting in a Republican primary. The questions that are being asked shouldn’t be trying to get people to tear into each other. It should be what are your substantive – 

[CROSSTALK] 

QUINTANILLA: I want the record to reflect, I asked you about the debt limit and got no answer. 

[CROSSTALK] 

HARWOOD: We’re moving on. 

CRUZ: Let me tell you – 

[CROSSTALK] 

CRUZ: Let me tell you — you don’t actually want to hear the answer, John? You don’t want to hear the answer? 

HARWOOD: You used your time on something else. 

CRUZ: You’re not interested in an answer. 

[CROSSTALK] 

Mike_Huckabee
Mike Huckabee

 

(Governor)

cyan_rightcyan_down

"If you saw that blimp that got cut loose from Maryland today, it's a perfect example of government. I mean, what we had was something the government made, basically a bag of gas, that cut loose, destroyed everything in it's path, left thousands of people powerless, but they couldn't get rid of it because we had too much money invested in it, so we had to keep it. That is our government today. We saw it in the blimp." 

"I don't really have any weaknesses that I can think of, but my wife is down in the front and I’m sure if you would like to talk to her later she can give you more than you will ever be able to take care of."

Chris_Christie_April_2015
Chris Christie

 

Governor)

cyan_upcyan_right

"The government has lied to you and they have stolen from you. They told you that your social security is in a trust fund. All that's in that trust fund is a pile of IOUs for money they've spent on something else a long time ago."

100px-Governor_John_KasichJohn Kasich



(Governor)

cyan_upcyan_up

"My great concern is that we are on the verge, perhaps of picking someone who cannot do this job."

100px-Rand_Paul,_official_portrait,_112th_Congress_alternate
Rand Paul

 (Senator)

cyan_downcyan_right

 

About the "People Who Will Not Be President” undercard …

Who cares!! None of these candidates has a chance to even advance to the main stage. Lindsey Graham and George Pataki are statistical non-entities. Bobby Jindal and Rich Santorum are credible candidates, but cannot seem to get traction.

BIOLOGICAL WARFARE: JUST NOT IN THE FORMAT WE ENVISIONED?

Posted: 28 Oct 2015 12:39 AM PDT

For those who are not well-read in socialist political theory, let me introduce you to the Cloward-Piven strategy …

The Cloward–Piven strategy is a political strategy outlined in 1966 by American sociologists and political activists Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven that called for overloading the U.S. public welfare system in order to precipitate a crisis that would lead to a replacement of the welfare system with a national system of "a guaranteed annual income and thus an end to poverty.” 

Cloward and Piven were both professors at the Columbia University School of Social Work. The strategy was formulated in a May 1966 article in the liberal magazine The Nation titled "The Weight of the Poor: A Strategy to End Poverty.” <Source>

It was quickly recognized by the progressives that the same strategy could quickly overwhelm our social safety nets and institutions, thus bringing about scarcity, the need for rationing, and the imposition of authoritarian rule by enlightened elites to manage the situation. Thus, a revolution leading to socialism/communism and centrally-planned economic and social public policies without the necessity of a civil war.

And, what better way to overload the system than to import poverty, illiteracy, crime, and the most compelling weapon of all – disease which could expand virally and exponentially to collapse even the most resilient of contingency plans. Hence, we see millions of illegal aliens crossing American borders and impacting the financial, legal, criminal, and medical systems meant for American citizens.

A biological attack does not require trained soldiers and specialized weapons …   

bioh

What is happening in Europe may soon be happening in the United States under the illegal and unconstitutional immigration policies of the Obama Administration …   

Britain next? Doctor's outrage at 'refugees pushing German hospitals to breaking point'  -- A DOCTOR working in German hospitals has revealed the horrifying chaos which could face the NHS if thousands of migrants from the Middle East manage to reach Britain. 

A female doctor has claimed German hospitals are struggling to deal with the number of refugees. The female anesthetist said the German health service has been completely overwhelmed by the influx of Muslim asylum-seekers who are REFUSING to be treated by female medics.

In a furious outburst the experienced doctor said hospitals simply cannot cope because so many of the migrants require treatments for diseases long since eradicated in Europe. She also claimed huge numbers of the asylum-seekers have Victorian diseases including TB, which they risk passing on to locals. "Many migrants have AIDS, syphilis, open TB and many exotic diseases that we, in Europe, do not know how to treat them.

She also shockingly claimed migrant parents are abandoning their children at pharmacies across the country after being told that they have to pay a prescription charge for lifesaving drugs.  Meanwhile, German authorities have been forced to post police at hospitals around the country after others got involved in angry clashes with medics over cultural differences. "Since last weekend, migrants going to the hospitals must be accompanied by police with K-9 units.

The doctor, who wished to remain anonymous, wrote to the press back home in the Czech Republic to express her shock at the "unsustainable" situation which she says is now affecting the medical care received by taxpaying Germans. She said: "Clinics cannot handle emergencies, so they are starting to send everything to the hospitals. 

Source: Doctor claims refugees have pushed German hospitals to breaking point | World | News | Daily Express

Who said it couldn’t happen here?

Obama Won’t Say Where Illegal Immigrant Children Are Going

he Obama Administration remains tight-lipped about the location of illegal immigrant children it has moved around the country. Last week, the Department of Defense released information about three locations being used to house the children coming across the border. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has begun using Naval Base Ventura County, Calif., Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, and Fort Sill, Oklahoma, to house the “unaccompanied alien children,” according to the Department of Defense.

But across agency lines, officials have ignored questions from the press. Federal officials have instructed caseworkers, who identify and verify the sponsors of the illegal immigrant children, not to speak to the media under any circumstance. A caseworker spoke to KSAT in San Antonio anonymously and said caseworkers are told speaking to the media is a federal offense. As a result, the Obama Administration has yet to explain where the illegal immigrant children are being held and where they have been reunited with their families. <Source>

Many local officials have been given little or no notice about children suddenly being placed into local school systems where sickness surges among easily susceptible children and then into the adult population.

Inviting combatants into your local area …

The weapons of a revolutionary war do not always involve the military and sophisticated weapons of war. In fact, many in Europe are wishing for a Second Amendment and arming themselves to protect themselves against a culture that riots at the drop of a hat. 

Islamic invasion pulls trigger: Europe now scrambles for guns -- Many 'now wish they had a 2nd Amendment'

Austrians are arming themselves at record rates in an effort to defend their households against feared attacks from Muslim invaders.

Tens of thousands of Muslim “refugees” have poured into Austria from Hungary and Slovenia in recent months on their way to Germany and Sweden, two wealthy European countries that have laid out the welcome mat for migrants. More than a million will end up in Germany alone by the end of this year, according to estimates from the German government.

Obtaining a working firearm and ammunition in Germany, Britain, Denmark and the Netherlands is practically impossible for the average citizen. Germany, for instance, requires a psychological evaluation, the purchase of liability insurance and verifiable compliance with strict firearms storage and safety rules. And self-defense is not even a valid reason to purchase a gun in these countries. <Source>

Bottom line …

President Obama and his cadre of progressive socialist democrats are radically transforming our nation. The door to reversing this change is quickly closing. It is up to the decent citizens to stand up and say “enough.” Enough to anti-American politicians. Enough to crippling our infrastructure with socialist constructs – especially destroying or dumbing down our educational system. 

Folks, we are so screwed. And, those with their hands out do not even recognize the danger posed by the government using our money, much of it borrowed, to temporarily buy votes. And, when that fails, there are always storm troopers, fire hoses, and vicious dogs. All to protect a lying, corrupt, and evil political system that we apparently welcomed with, if not open arms, the type of apathy that allows evildoers to flourish.

-- steve

Baja California Sur Governor seeks help of USA State Dept to combat crime...

Borderland Beat

Link to Borderland Beat

Baja California Sur Governor seeks help of USA State Dept to combat crime

Posted: 29 Oct 2015 06:01 AM PDT

Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a BCS Noticias article

[ Subject Matter: USA State Dept, BCS State Government
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required]


Reporter: Ivan Gaxiola
La Paz, BCS. The Governor of Baja California Sur, Carlos Mendoza Davis, reported that he has sought the help of the State Dept of the United States to combat crime in the peninsular, he also said that the collaboration could include " equipment and infrastructure, until we have the capacity and the learning".

"We have made an invitation, and I hope it will materialize in the next few days, in order for the people of the State Dept, set up in Mexico, they can come here and get to know us, carry out a revision and diagnostic, and supervise and see where, we can inside of the points of the Merida Initiative, well, to synergize in order to be able to receive and give support and security in Baja California Sur ", said the Governor.




Mendoza Davis considered that the American intervention does not violate State or National Sovereignty, and also said that he does not know exactly when the work will be carried out with the United States nor in precise terms what that will be.

They will say when they arrive, it is at our invitation, and because I hope that they may soon be here. I have no issue with them coming, for it is they who will have to tell us where there are areas of opportunity where they can help us, but yes it includes equipment and infrastructure, and training and learning topics.

Finally to accept that the level of crime, which had increased in the previous year, but has reduced this year to date, the Governor said that this was not a victory but a first effort.

"We don't count this as a victory, this is not a fight of fifteen days, this is medium to long term in order to strengthen our institutions, our police, our preventative, ministerial police, the municipal police forces and coordination with the Federal Government", he concluded.

Original article in Spanish at BCS Noticias

Family buries first Russian soldier dead in Syria, doubts suicide...

TERROR WARS
Family buries first Russian soldier dead in Syria, doubts suicide
Grechanaya Balka, Russia (AFP) Oct 28, 2015 - The first Russian serviceman confirmed dead in Syria was laid to rest in his native village on Wednesday as his family and friends disputed the official explanation that he committed suicide. Authorities said 19-year-old soldier Vadim Kostenko hanged himself at Russia's airbase in the Syrian province of Latakia due to relationship trouble, but his loved ones said they would never believe he ... more

Russia buzzes US carrier; China steamed over Lassen passage; How to improve Pacific intelligence; Blimp goes rogue!; and a bit more...

The D Brief
October 29, 2015   
 
 
 

Antagonism at sea, U.S.-Russia edition. Earlier this week, Russian aircraft ignored repeated U.S. warnings and flew within one nautical mile of the USS Ronald Reagan just east of the Korean peninsula, Stars and Stripes reports this morning.  

"In the latest in a series of incidents involving Russian aircraft, two Tupolev Tu-142 Bear aircraft flew as low as 500 feet Tuesday morning near the Reagan, which has been conducting scheduled maneuvers with South Korean navy ships. Four F/A-18 Super Hornets took off from the Reagan's flight deck in response to the Russian advance, 7th Fleet spokeswoman Lt. Lauren Cole said Thursday." That story, here.

In Europe, NATO wants to add troops to its eastern flanks—and might sooner than later if Germany weren't opposed, WSJ's Julian Barnes reports from Brussels. "Under one plan, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization would have a battalion in Poland and each of the three Baltic states—roughly 800 to 1,000 soldiers in each unit. A more modest version would have a single NATO battalion in the area… NATO officials say Berlin is unlikely to back the biggest deployment, but could support the more modest increase…telling the allies in private discussions that they don't want to treat Moscow as a permanent enemy or lock it out of Europe, despite the frictions over Ukraine and other provocations." More here.

Brought to you by Adobe

Cyber: The Next Battlefield

How are hackers breaching our security and how do we stop them? Join us on November 5th at 2:00 PM to learn about the new tools and policies, such as persistent encryption, kill chain, and zero-trust.

Register Now

 

Beijing is officially steamed that the U.S. Navy sailed so close to two artificial islands in the South China Sea earlier this week. And China's military this morning vowed to use "all necessary measures according to the need" to deter a future passage like the one the destroyer Lassen made on Tuesday past the Subi and Mischief reefs. So far, AP reports, the response fits a "pattern in similar such incidents in recent years," noting the defense ministry "offered no details on how Beijing might respond differently in the future."

But "there is little doubt that China is thinking big about how these islands could limit America's military options, about how control over these waters could give it leverage over key trade routes and about how making the United States look hapless could strengthen its diplomatic clout in the region," the New York Times writes.

The two nations' naval chiefs hurriedly set up a chat by video teleconference schedule for today, Defense News reports.

The Pentagon wanted to send a ship past the fake islands roughly five months ago, but were delayed by "repeated stalling" from the White House and State Department, an anonymous U.S. defense official told Reuters. The official said the administration wanted to a) to ensure the move wasn't seen as a direct response to high-profile hacks like the OPM breach in the spring and b)

to ensure "every possible measure was being taken to minimize the risk of a U.S.-China military confrontation at sea."

The consequence: "The months leading up to the patrol allowed Beijing to harden its stance and, according to some U.S. officials and security experts, blew the operation out of proportion," Reuters reports. "Washington's caution also caused disquiet among some military officials in Japan and the Philippines, both U.S. security allies, feeding concerns that China's ambitions in the South China Sea would go unchecked."

 

But there is a right way to enforce freedom of navigation in the South China Sea: "Send U.S. naval vessels through traditional sea lanes, but [without] bragging, taunting, or making a big rhetorical deal of it," The Atlantic's James Fallows writes, with input from Judah Grunstein of World Politics Review. "The patrols must be clearly seen as reinforcing the maritime norm involved, without bias or prejudice to who is claiming the features. Otherwise they can be portrayed as the U.S. provoking China, which is in neither side's interest. This is not as easy as it sounds." More here.

And there are a few key lessons from Washington's global counterterrorism fight that inform best tactics for confronting China, says Rear Adm. Paul Becker, former intelligence director for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in this conversation with Defense One's Deputy Editor Bradley Peniston.

Becker: "One, in order to achieve success, we need to understand and fight an adversary's strategy, not just their forces. Two, we need to provide a detailed context to a complex battlespace. And three, we need to build an intelligence-sharing network that's fully integrated — within our U.S. intel community, but also incorporating our allies and partners." The one-star elaborates at length, here.

And before we leave China, Beijing shares one thing with its southern neighbors in Pyongyang: "China and North Korea are ill equipped to defend themselves against cyberthreats despite what the Pentagon deems their strong offensive capabilities in cybercrime," according to a report released Monday night from the Australian Security Policy Institute, which provides independent security advice to Australia's government and military. More from the Wall Street Journal, here.

 
 
 
 
 
D  From Defense One

Blimp goes rogue! The military's runaway surveillance blimp was everyone's favorite story yesterday, with even Edward Snowden weighing in from exile on the Raytheon JLENS that snapped its tether at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Maryland, and drifted for hours and more than 100 miles. The military scrambled two F-16 fighter jets to keep an eye on the 3.5-ton aerostat (not technically a blimp), but could not prevent it from dragging its cables on the ground for 20 miles, damaging ground wires and cutting power along the way. The helium-buoyed craft, which cost more than $100 million to build and was developed as part of a multibillion-dollar program, eventually came to rest in Moreland Township, Pennsylvania. Technology Editor Patrick Tucker followed the story of the blimp (as did the Washington PostAP, and lots of others).

The student has become the master.​  At the third presidential face-off Wednesday night, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush tried to take out Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, his former protégé, and backfired. In Boulder, Colo., Bush hit Rubio for being an absentee senator: "I mean, literally, the Senate—what is it, like a French work week? You get, like, three days where you have to show up?" Bush said. "You can campaign, or just resign and let someone else take the job." But the Bush campaign has been hitting this same note for a week, and Rubio was ready: "Someone has convinced you that attacking me is going to help," he responded. "I'm not running against anyone on this stage. I'm running for president because there is no way we can elect Hillary Clinton to continue the policies of Barack Obama." Read more debate coverage from Politics Reporter Molly O'Toole, here.

ICYMI: the Senate passed the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act, or CISA, 74-21. Senators will now meet with House colleagues to craft a common version of the cyber-information-sharing legislation. "Opposition to the bill, which would provide incentives to private businesses to share information about online threats with each other and with the federal government, was led by the Senate's privacy hawks...and backed by civil liberties groups and tech companies who were unhappy with the bill's privacy protections." That from National Journalhere.

Made your reservation yet? The Defense One Summit 2015: The Age of Everything is next Monday, Nov. 2. Top national security leaders from military, government, and politics will gather to discuss how they are confronting today's threats: from terrorism to cyberattacks, Russia, Iran, and in space, at sea, even in Chattanooga. Director of National Intelligence James Clapper will appear in a live keynote interview. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley will talk about setting his service's priorities to face ground threats. Join us! Register here.

Welcome to the Thursday edition of The D Brief, from Ben WatsonBradley Peniston and Molly O'Toole. Tell your friends to subscribe here: http://get.defenseone.com/d-brief/. Want to see something different? Got news? Let us know: the-d-brief@defenseone.com.

 
 
 

Kerry frames Vienna talks on Syria's future as a moment of truth for Russia. "Is Russia there just to shore up Assad or is Russia there to actually help bring about a solution? We'll know. We'll put that to the test," Kerry said Wednesday in remarks at the Carnegie International Endowment for Peace. He offered this tough talk for Moscow's strategy, which he said could "perhaps even strengthen the illusion on Assad's part that he can just indefinitely maintain his hold on power...And if that's what he thinks, I got news: there's no way that a number of the other countries involved in this coalition are going to let up or stop. It won't happen."

Still, he outlined shared areas of interest with the Russians and called the talks, which will now feature Iran, the most promising opportunity. "While finding a way forward on Syria will not be easy—it's not going to be automatic—it is the most promising opportunity for a political opening ... the best opportunity we have is to try to come to the table and recognize there has to be the political solution that everybody has talked about."

But earlier in the day, Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Bob Corker had found some daylight between Kerry's closed-door testimony this week and that of retired Marine Corps Gen. John Allen, outgoing Special Presidential Envoy for the Global Coalition to Counter ISIL, on Russia's intentions and kinetic options.

"I expect that as time goes on, as we continue to build our military options on the ground in Syria, we may well find that we'll have other European partners join us in that process," Allen said, hinting that allies are considering expanded action along with the U.S. "There may be opportunities in the south as well as in the north where our coalition partners—our European coalition partners could, in fact, play an important role and—and I'm thinking special operations, but I won't become more specific than that."

But Allen was decidedly more pessimistic on Russia's role as mediator: "Russia is going to suffer from this incursion in ways they can't even begin to imagine," he said. "We're going to have to deal with Daesh, but when the Russians stop killing the moderate Syrian opposition, which is both their hope for the future as well as our hope for the future, then perhaps we can get to where we need to be. But they're going to have to feel some pain on this and I think they're going to relatively soon."

Emptying Gitmo continues. Early this morning, the Pentagon transferred Ahmed Ould Abdel Aziz from Guantanamo to be repatriated by Mauritania. The move follows a few recent transfers, whittling away at the population amid Obama's first veto of the annual defense authorization bill, in part due to restrictions intended to freeze out such transfers. The House has set an override vote on Nov. 5 but doesn't have the votes. Today, 113 remain at Guantanamo. Read the latest on the Pentagon's effort to find a home for detainees stateside, or take a deep dive into the long-delayed effort to close the prison from our Molly O'Toole, here.

U.S.-Israel defense relationship picks back up. What is the U.S. prepared to offer Israel to shore up its long-time ally whose support has been wavering since the forging of the Iran nuclear deal? "The 'entire spectrum' of strategic cooperation…from cyber defense and high-end attack capabilities down to a joint program aimed at combating terror tunnels," Defense News reports from Defense Secretary Ash Carter meeting yesterday with Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon.

"This is one of the most trusted relationships we have in the world," said Carter, "and so when we discover something that is critical to both of us, we share it, and we do that from electronic warfare to cyber to all kinds of … tremendous intelligence sharing." Carter also pledged more U.S. funding for Israel's anti-missile systems Iron Dome, David's Sling and Arrow. More here.

Lastly today: Our Thursday #LongRead comes from NYT's Charlie Savage, who reports on four U.S. attorneys who helped set the legal stage for the 2011 raid on Osama bin Laden, making it "all but inevitable that Navy SEALs would kill the fugitive Qaeda leader, not capture him."

The legal parties involved: Stephen W. Preston, the C.I.A.'s general counsel; Mary B. DeRosa, the National Security Council's legal adviser; Jeh C. Johnson, the Pentagon general counsel; and then-Rear Adm. James W. Crawford III, the Joint Chiefs of Staff legal adviser.

"Just days before the raid, the lawyers drafted five secret memos so that if pressed later, they could prove they were not inventing after-the-fact reasons for having blessed it," Savage writes. "The lawyers decided that a unilateral military incursion would be lawful because of a disputed exception to sovereignty for situations in which a government is "unwilling or unable" to suppress a threat to others emanating from its soil...There was also a trump card. While the lawyers believed that Mr. Obama was bound to obey domestic law, they also believed he could decide to violate international law when authorizing a 'covert' action." Read the report in full, here.


Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Time to Greenlight a Vet!

WHAT IS GREENLIGHT A VET?

America’s veterans are some of our nation’s bravest, hardest-working men and women. However, it’s hard to show them the appreciation they deserve when, back home and out of uniform, they’re more camouflaged than ever. Greenlight A Vet is a campaign to establish visible national support for our veterans by changing one light to green.


Sunday, October 25, 2015

Iguala & Tlatlaya Cases: U.S.blocking Merida funds to Mexico due to human rights abuses ...

Borderland Beat

Link to Borderland Beat

Iguala & Tlatlaya Cases: U.S.blocking Merida funds to Mexico due to human rights abuses 

Posted: 25 Oct 2015 05:50 AM PDT

By Lucio R for Borderland Beat
From Tlatlaya extrajudicial killings of 22

The colossal mess and failure of Mérida 

Reforma is reporting the United States has again blocked a portion of funds due to be given to Mexico through the Merida Initiative.  The initiative was established to support Mexico in funds and equipment, in its fight against drugs.

The U.S. with withhold 15% of the total annual budget allocated, until the State Department issues a certification that Mexico has met the human rights standards.

The U.S. decided on this action in part based on the Iguala case of the killing and kidnapping of 49 persons on September 26-27, 2014.  43 of the 49, mostly normalistas, are missing and presumed dead,  ( the majority of people in Mexico are discounting the official explanation by the Enrique Peña Nieto administration). 

Other cases are of extrajudicial killings such as the 22 in Tlatlaya. And 16 in Apatzingán, Michoacán where police were heard saying “mow them down like dogs” when killing or injuring the unarmed citizens including children. Some photos reveal a few of the citizens, with the only weapon they had in their vehicles, sticks.  Citizens reported federal police of planting the few weapons shown in photos. 

The US government significantly strengthened its partnership with Mexico in combating organized crime in 2007 when it announced the Merida Initiative, a multi-year US security assistance package for Mexico.  Aside from funds, the U.S. has provided equipment and training.

Since the 2008 onset, the United States congress highlighted the importance of tying in assurances that Mexico respect human rights from the outset, US Congress recognized the importance of ensuring that the Mexican government respect human rights in its public security efforts, thereby mandated that 15% of funding be withheld of Merida funds until the State Department issued a report to the US Congress which showed that Mexico had demonstrated it was meeting four human rights requirements.  
    Apatzingán, Michoacán, directly above and above left

In the years since the initiative began, Mexico has been chastised by the U.S. for human rights violations.  Critics have said it has not been effective or that punitively at 15% funding freeze  is not harsh enough. (What it calculates to this year is meager 5 million USD)

The U.S. threatened to withhold money unless cases of violations by military elements, and Federal Police, are prosecuted in public court, instead of military court.

In 2010 U.S. congress set forth these following requirements to be met by Mexico. Astonishingly, in the same year it was determined by the State Department in a report to congress, that that Mexico was meeting the Merida Initiative's human rights requirements,and it stated its intention to obligate roughly $36 million in security assistance that had been withheld from the 2009 supplemental and the 2010 omnibus budgets.   

However, research conducted by organizations, including Mexico's National Human Rights
Futbol player, age 15 killed in Iguala attack
Commission, and the State Department's own reports, demonstrates conclusively that Mexico has failed to meet the four human rights requirements set out by law. 

In consideration of these facts congress should not have been releasing funds.  In doing so and liberating previous fund withholding's, the Obama administration sent a message to Mexico, that the United States will not react punitively to grave human rights violations.  In effect, establishing the United States, tolerates human rights violations that include torture, rape, murder and disappearance. 

Four requirements:

1) Requirement: Ensuring that civilian prosecutors and judicial authorities are investigating and prosecuting members of the federal police and military forces who have been credibly alleged to have violated human rights.

In a report to congress it states that Mexico's military justice system continues to "systematically claim" jurisdiction over the investigation of these cases. The reports also states; "information on military prosecutions is difficult to obtain," the "limited information on military prosecutions and complaints filed suggest that actual prosecutions are rare." 

According to the Mexican military's own reports, military courts have only sentenced one soldier for a human rights violation committed since 2007. 

Up to 2015, not a single soldier has been prosecuted in civilian courts since the Merida Initiative came into effect in July 2008. In this sense, the State Department's assertion in its September 2010 report that civilian prosecutors are investigating and prosecuting members of the military accused of human rights violations is inaccurate.  To date, no bill has been introduced in the Mexican Congress to amend this practice.  

Requirement: Ensuring that civilian prosecutors and judicial authorities are investigating and prosecuting members of the federal police and military forces who have been credibly alleged to have violated human rights.

Requirement: Enforcing the prohibition on the use of testimony obtained through torture.  

Mexico claims to have addressed this practice of abuse, however the systematic practice of torture to obtain confessions have continued unabated.  This is a critical issue most effecting Mexico’s system of justice, as most often confessions are the sole or primary evidence in criminal conviction.

Amid the tactics documented in force confession abuses, are the use of electric shocks, beatings, water boarding and suffocation with plastic bags. Meanwhile, the practice of “arraigo” in  which a suspect may be detained for up to 80 days before being charged, in itself creates an environment that, facilitates torture.  

Requirement: Improve the transparency and accountability of federal police forces and work with state and municipal authorities to improve the transparency and accountability of state and municipal police forces. 

Mexico has agreed to changes that would create effective accountability and transparency, it does not provide clear guidelines for human rights complaints nor does it provide mechanisms that ensures transparency in the investigation, court hearings and disciplinary actions

Requirement: Conduct regular consultations with Mexican human rights organizations and civil society on recommendations for the implementation of the Merida Initiative. 

Mexico has for all intents and purpose have kept meetings private to only a few select groups of representatives by making it impossible to improbable all groups can attend.  By holding the meetings in D.F. with only a few days’ notice, rarely opened to the public, and exclusion of all groups having the right to set the agenda for the meetings, set only by the government.  As a result few groups are left participating in the consultations.
Iguala, Guerrero scene of first of two attacks in September, 2014 a massacre of 49 people
Obama administration adjustments and goals

The Barrack Obama administration has made wide changes in the implementation of the treaty, by shifting funds pegged for security, to social programs targeted at facilitating Mexico's  economic and justice system.

The administration implemented four goals:
1) The disruption of  organized criminal groups2) Establishing the rule of law and respect for human rights reforms3) 21st century border structure with the utilization of equipment, technology, and training”4) The creation of strong, stable communities (ex. Micro loans, workshops, education)
In the face of these changes, the deterioration of the situation in Mexico has proved the initiative of being a colossal failure, and yet it has continued. All the good intentions will fall flat without stringent safeguards, if the beneficiary is immersed in a bed of criminal collusion and corruption.

The 2014 Iguala nightmare set the stage for a global spotlight to shine of the chaotic state of culpability, organized crime collusion, corruption, and human rights abuses, threaded through all layers of municipal, state and federal governments.

Dr. John Ackerman, an author as well as a professor at the Institute of Legal Research of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and vice president of the International Association of Administrative Law puts it this way in speaking about the Merida Initiative;
“Through two United States presidents, and 3 billion dollars later, Mexico is more unsafe, chaotic and authoritarian than ever”.
American Julio Mondragon, a student teacher living in Mexico, 
face was flayed in the Iguala attack against "normalitas" and others
In a September 2015 report from Small Wars Journal (authored by Michael Hoopes) this was the conclusion:

Conclusions

Despite the official policy goals expressed by the U.S. and Mexican governments, U.S. support of Mexican security forces through training and cash transfers, has remained at high levels. 

Moreover, while U.S. net assistance to Mexican security forces has declined from its historically high levels of the George W. Bush administration, data show that said decline has not coincided with an increase in U.S. funds devoted to non-security initiatives that seek to remedy Mexico's crime problem, despite public promises by the Obama administration.

While this report does not explore arguments in favor of the United States supporting Mexican security institutions through training and equipment transfers/sale, Mexico's human rights catastrophes of 2014 support the critics who say that U.S. funds continue to support a state security apparatus rife with corruption. Thus, an analysis of both the nature of the U.S. foreign aid budget to Mexico and the events of 2014 clearly show that the institution-building efforts enshrined in the Mérida Initiative elude achievement.

The U.S. government, specifically the agencies who administer Mérida Initiative and Department of Defense funds to Mexico, by all accounts lacks a program that methodically and specifically assesses the outcomes of their financing and training experts. The 2010 recommendation of the U.S. Government

Accountability Office that the Secretary of State “incorporate into the strategy for the Mérida Initiative outcome performance measures that indicate progress toward strategic goals” remains largely unfulfilled, and the more complete implementation of the recommendation would be the crucial step in allowing the U.S. government to properly assess the impacts of the military assistance that those inside and outside the U.S. government continue to deem negative.

In writing this post a portion of info or material was used from;  Gov Track, SMJ, Reforma and Human Rights Watch, BB archive

Featured Post

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG — Joseph Moran (@JMM7156) May 2, 2023 from Twitter https://twitter....