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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
Syrie: Obama prêt à intervenir en dépit du retrait britannique (journal)

WASHINGTON, 30 août - RIA Novosti

 

Le président américain Barack Obama est prêt à autoriser une frappe "limitée" contre la Syrie en dépit du refus de Londres de participer à l'intervention, rapporte vendredi le Washington Post citant des sources au sein de la Maison Blanche.

 

"En dépit des déclarations d'Obama qui affirme ne pas avoir pris de décision définitive, tout porte à croire que la frappe pourrait avoir lieu dès que les inspecteurs de l'Onu auront quitté la Syrie", indique le quotidien.

 

Toujours selon le journal, le départ des experts onusiens chargés d'enquêter sur les cas présumés d'emploi d'armes chimiques en Syrie est prévu samedi 31 août.

 

Dans la nuit de jeudi, le parlement britannique a rejeté à vendredi l'idée d'une intervention militaire contre la Syrie. Par la suite, le ministre britannique de la Défense Philip Hammond a estimé qu'une frappe contre le régime de Damas aurait lieu en dépit du retrait de Londres.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
source BBC

source BBC

30 août 2013 à 07:00 Paul Khalifeh correspondant à Beyrouth - RFI

 

Alors que le Parlement britannique refuse une action militaire contre Damas et que l'hypothèse d'une action unilatérale des Etats-Unis se voit renforcée, le régime syrien, lui, s'organise. Il procèderait à un redéploiement de ses troupes partout pour parer à toutes les éventualités.

 

Suite de l’article

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
Syria: Britain sets out intelligence case for military action

29 Aug 2013 By David Barrett, Home Affairs Correspondent - telegraph.co.uk

 

Britain’s case for military intervention in Syria is based on a “limited but growing body of intelligence”, which suggests it is “highly likely” the Syrian regime was responsible for last week’s devastating chemical weapons attack, the government has said. But Mr Cameron, in last night’s debate, admitted the intelligence did not provide a definitive case against Assad.

 

An intelligence dossier released by the Prime Minister shows the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) - which oversees Britain's spy network - said that the chemical attack, which killed at least 350 civilians, was “probably” delegated by Bashar al-Assad to one of his commanders, rather than overseen by the Syrian President himself.

However the JIC guidance, which forms the basis for David Cameron’s case to attack Syria, says that it cannot establish the motive behind the attack.

In his letter to the Prime Minister, the JIC chairman Jon Day concluded that there are “no plausible alternative scenarios” other than the attack being an act of the Syrian regime.

The letter was released on the same day that American sources admitted there was “no smoking gun” proving President Assad personally ordered his forces to use chemical weapons.

The weight given to the JIC documents was questioned by some MPs. Ben Bradshaw, a former Labour Cabinet minister, said: “‘Intelligence’ published by JIC today is not intelligence but assertion. The Government’s going to have to do much better than that”

David Davis, former shadow home secretary, said: “We must consider, being where we’ve been before in this House, that our intelligence as it stands might just be wrong because it was before and we have got to be very, very hard in testing it.”

But Mr Cameron, in last night’s debate, admitted the intelligence did not provide an definitive case against Assad.

He said: “Of course intelligence is part of this picture, but let’s not pretend there is one smoking piece of intelligence that can solve whole problem. In the end there is no 100 per cent certainty about who is responsible. You have to make a judgment.”

Mr Day’s letter to Mr Cameron, dated yesterday, dispensed with the traditional formal salutations and farewells of letter-writing, and bears the reference “Jp 115”.

It is likely to become one of the most scrutinised government documents since the Labour government’s now notorious Iraq dossier published in 2003.

The two-page letter was accompanied by a short summary of the intelligence case which runs to just 313 words, in six short paragraphs.

Critically, this document said the JIC believes permission to authorise chemical weapons had “probably been delegated” by President Bashar al-Assad to senior regime commanders.

The summary is also dated as the “JIC’s assessment of August 27 on reported chemical weapons use in Damascus” - and it is not known why later intelligence, if it exists, was not included in the document.

Amid claims by the Syrian regime and others that the chemical attack was faked or staged by the Syrian rebels, Mr Day said in his letter: “There is no credible intelligence or other evidence to substantiate the claims or the possession of CW [chemical weapons] by the opposition.

“The JIC has therefore concluded that there are no plausible alternative scenarios to regime responsibility.”

He went on: “We also have a limited but growing body of intelligence which supports the judgement that the regime was responsible for the attacks and that they were conducted to help clear the Opposition from strategic parts of Damascus.

“Against that background, the JIC concluded that it is highly likely that the regime was responsible for the CW attacks on 21 August.

“The JIC had high confidence in all of its assessments except in relation to the regime’s precise motivation for carrying out an attack of this scale at this time - though intelligence may increase our confidence in the future.”

He also pointed out the JIC assessed President Bashar al-Assar’s regime had used chemical weapons on 14 previous occasions since last year.

The intelligence summary said: “Permission to authorise CW has probably been delegated by President Asad to senior regime commanders, such as [redacted], but any deliberate change in the scale and nature of use would require his authorisation.”

United States intelligence sources yesterday indicated that its agencies intercepted communications discussing the chemical attack between officials in Syria’s central command and in the field.

But it is understood these do not clearly implicate President Assad or his entourage in ordering the use of chemicals.

The Americans admitted there was “no smoking gun” proving President Assad personally ordered his forces to use chemical weapons. But it expressed high confidence that Syrian government forces carried out the attack and that Assad’s government therefore bears responsibility.

“This was not a rogue operation,” one US official said.

Evidence that forces loyal to Assad were responsible goes beyond the circumstantial to include electronic intercepts and some tentative scientific samples from the neighborhood which was attacked, US officials said.

John Kerry, the US Secretary of State, and Chuck Hagel, the US Defence Secretary, are due to brief senior members of Congress on the situation on Thursday.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
Chuck Hagel secrétaire américain à la Défense (Photo Glenn Fawcett DoD)

Chuck Hagel secrétaire américain à la Défense (Photo Glenn Fawcett DoD)

WASHINGTON, 30 août - RIA Novosti

 

Washington cherche toujours à créer une "coalition internationale" pour lancer une opération militaire en Syrie malgré le rejet d'une intervention par le parlement britannique, a déclaré vendredi le chef du Pentagone Chuck Hagel, cité par les médias occidentaux.

 

"Notre approche est de continuer pour trouver une coalition internationale qui agira de concert", a déclaré le secrétaire américain à la Défense lors d'une conférence de presse à Manille.

 

Dans la nuit de jeudi à vendredi, le parlement britannique a rejeté l'idée d'une intervention militaire contre la Syrie. Jeudi, le premier ministre canadien Stephen Harper a déclaré que son pays ne participerait pas à une opération militaire en Syrie.

 

Toutefois, le président américain Barack Obama serait prêt à autoriser une frappe "limitée" contre la Syrie, selon les médias américains citant des sources au sein de la Maison Blanche.

 

Cette frappe pourrait avoir lieu une fois que les inspecteurs de l'Onu, chargés d'enquêter sur le recours à l'arme chimique en Syrie, auront quitté le pays.

 

Leur départ est prévu pour samedi 31 août.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
Damas redéploye ses missiles Scud

MOSCOU, 30 août - RIA Novosti

 

Le commandement de l'armée syrienne a redéployé ses missiles tactiques Scud sur fond de menace croissante d'une intervention étrangère dans le pays, rapportent vendredi les agences occidentales citant des sources diplomatiques au Proche-Orient.

 

Selon les médias, plusieurs missiles Scud et des dizaines de rampes de lancement ont été transférés depuis une base militaire située à proximité de Damas dans des régions intérieures de la Syrie. Ces manœuvres seraient destinées à protéger les forces balistiques syriennes contre une éventuelle frappe visant les sites militaires du pays.

 

En décembre 2011, le secrétaire général de l'Otan Anders Fogh Rasmussen a annoncé que les forces fidèles au gouvernement de Damas utilisaient des missiles tactiques Scud contre l'opposition armée.

 

Le terme Scud désigne une série de missiles balistiques à courte portée développés dans les années 1950 par l'Union soviétique. Pour sa part, le ministre syrien des Affaires étrangères nie toute utilisation de missiles Scud par les troupes gouvernementales.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
photo Susan Walsh

photo Susan Walsh

30/08/2013 LeFigaro.fr

 

Le président est pris entre le désir d'envoyer un message d'avertissement sans ambiguïté à Assad et la peur de glisser dans un conflit élargi financièrement trop coûteux.

 

Comme il paraît loin ces derniers jours, «le pivot vers l'Asie» revendiqué par l'administration Obama, avec le compte à rebours qui s'est soudain enclenché pour d'éventuelles frappes américaines limitées contre les installations aériennes du régime d'Assad. Il est fascinant d'observer comment l'Amérique, échaudée et épuisée par dix ans de guerre en Irak et en Afghanistan - et qui annonçait très sérieusement il y a un an son désengagement du Moyen-Orient, se prépare à nouveau à s'engager dans une nouvelle opération militaire dans la région, malgré toutes ses préventions et ses promesses de ne plus s'y laisser prendre. Cette volte-face prouve qu'il n'est pas si facile, pour la superpuissance Amérique, d'échapper à ses responsabilités de gendarme du monde.

 

Suite de l'article

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
source economist.com

source economist.com

Aug. 29, 2013 By SUSAN DAVIS – Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — President Obama prepared Thursday for the possibility of launching a US military action against Syria within days, even as Britain opted out in a vote by Parliament.

 

Advisers said the president would be willing to retaliate against Syria alone.

 

“The president of the United States is elected with the duty to protect the national security interests in the United States of America,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.

 

Caitlin Hayden, National Security Council spokeswoman, said the United States would continue to consult with Britain but Obama would make decisions based on “the best interests of the United States.”

 

“As we’ve said, President Obama’s decision making will be guided by what is in the best interests of the United States,” Hayden said. “He believes that there are core interests at stake for the United States. He believes that there are core interests at stake for the United States and that countries who violate international norms regarding chemical weapons need to be held accountable.”

 

U.S. Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said after a White House teleconference with some Congress members Thursday, “The main thing was that they have no doubt that (Syrian President Bashar) Assad’s forces used chemical weapons.”

 

He said administration officials did not provide new evidence but revealed the government has intercepted “some discussions and some indications from a high-level official” in Syria regarding use of gas.

 

US Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he would support “surgical, proportional military strikes” given the evidence of continued use of chemical warfare.

 

“Whatever limited action is taken should not further commit the US in Syria beyond the current strategy to strengthen the vetted, moderate opposition,” he said. “While the administration has engaged in congressional consultation, they should continue to be forthcoming with information and would be far better off if they seek authorization based upon our national interests, which would provide the kind of public debate and legitimacy that can only come from Congress.”

 

A White House statement released after the 90-minute teleconference said the call included, among others, National Security Adviser Susan Rice, Secretary of State John Kerry, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and 26 lawmakers — the chairs and ranking members of national security committees within Congress.

 

“The views of Congress are important to the President’s decision-making process, and we will continue to engage with Members as the President reaches a decision on the appropriate US response to the Syrian government’s violation of international norms against the use of chemical weapons,” the White House statement read.

 

Earlier, the White House stepped up efforts to consult with Congress in advance of any US military intervention in Syria, including private communications between President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and a conference call for congressional leaders with senior administration officials.

 

“That conference call is just the latest in a series of robust congressional consultations that everybody from the president on down in the administration have been engaged in over the last few days,” Earnest said of the Thursday evening briefing.

 

Officials including National Security Adviser Susan Rice, Secretary of State John Kerry, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper briefed leaders and committee chairman with jurisdiction on foreign policy and the U.S. military.

 

More than one quarter of the 435-member House has signed a letter authored by Rep. Scott Rigell, R-Va., calling on the president to seek a formal vote for congressional authorization for action in Syria. Boehner has stopped short of calling for a vote, but has publicly chided the president for not making a strong enough case to either Congress or the public.

 

Following a private call with the president on Thursday, Brendan Buck, a spokesman for Boehner said “it is clear that further dialogue and consultation with Congress, as well as communication with the American public, will be needed.”

 

The White House is unlikely to seek formal congressional approval, but Earnest said the White House is making an effort to consult closely with Congress.

 

Davis writes for USA Today. Contributing: Aamer Madhani in Washington, Melanie Eversley in New York, Associated Press

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:30
British 'no' hits US plans for coalition against Syria

Aug 30, 2013 ASDNews (AFP)

 

British lawmakers have rejected their government's call for military strikes against the Syrian regime, leaving the US to look elsewhere for international partners while reserving the right to act alone against Damascus.

 

The British House of Commons voted Thursday to defy Prime Minister David Cameron's bid to win support for military intervention over the Syrian regime's suspected use of chemical weapons against its own people.

 

Speaking in Manila Friday, US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel insisted Washington is still seeking an "international coalition" to take action against the Syrian regime.

 

"Our approach is to continue to find an international coalition that will act together," Hagel told a news conference.

 

Hagel said Washington respected the British parliament's stance rejecting participation in any punitive strikes against Syria's regime.

 

"We are continuing to consult with the British as with all of our allies. That consultation includes ways forward together on a response to this chemical weapons attack in Syria," he added.

 

The British parliament's decision also came after the failure of an improbable eleventh-hour effort by British diplomats to win UN backing for action against Bashar al-Assad's regime at a meeting of the permanent members of the Security Council.

 

"It is clear to me that the British parliament, reflecting the views of the British people, does not want to see British military action. I get that and the government will act accordingly," Cameron said.

 

His government was defeated by just 13 votes in the House of Commons in its bid for a "strong humanitarian response" to the alleged use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime.

 

That, combined with deadlock at the United Nations, appeared to effectively sound the death knell for the idea of a broad-based Western military coalition, although other American allies might still participate.

 

Caitlin Hayden, a National Security Council spokeswoman said that President Barack Obama's decision-making "will be guided by what is in the best interests of the United States.

 

"He believes that there are core interests at stake for the United States and that countries who violate international norms regarding chemical weapons need to be held accountable."

 

Earlier, envoys from the permanent five members of the UN Security Council -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States -- had met at UN headquarters in New York.

 

The 45-minute meeting was the second since Britain proposed a draft resolution to permit "all necessary measures" to protect Syrian civilians after a suspected chemical weapons attack last week.

 

But none of the envoys commented as they left.

 

Earlier in the week reports had suggested that a Western strike was imminent, but questions have been raised about the quality of the intelligence linking Assad to the attack.

 

The White House reached out to US lawmakers, with the president's top aides briefing congressional leaders in a 90 minute conference call.

 

Some members of Congress voiced support for limited, surgical strikes, while urging the administration to continue consulting closely with the Congress.

 

Nancy Pelosi, the minority leader in the House, said she agreed with House Speaker John Boehner that "there needs to be more consultation with all members of Congress and additional transparency into the decision making process and timing, and that the case needs to be made to the American people.

 

"It is clear that the American people are weary of war. However, Assad gassing his own people is an issue of our national security, regional stability and global security. We must be clear that the United States rejects the use of chemical weapons by Assad or any other regime," she said.

 

US warships armed with scores of cruise missiles are converging on the eastern Mediterranean, and US military officials have said they are ready to launch a powerful barrage against regime targets in Syria.

 

Assad's ally Russia has blocked all attempts to toughen international sanctions against Damascus or authorise outside force to punish or unseat the regime.

 

Syria, meanwhile, is in the 29th month of a vicious civil war in which more than 100,000 people are credibly reported to have died.

 

As the stand-off continues, a team of UN inspectors are investigating reports that last week's gas attack outside Damascus killed more than 350 people, including women and children.

 

A UN spokesman said Thursday that the team had collected "considerable" evidence and will brief UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon soon after they leave Syria on Saturday.

 

"Starting tomorrow he will try to reach out to member states and take discussions forward on the question of what is happening in Syria," the spokesman said.

 

Ban has appealed for the inspectors to be allowed to complete their work before the major powers decide any follow-up action.

 

Assad remained defiant in the face of the Western threats.

 

"Syria will defend itself in the face of any aggression," state television cited him as telling a visiting delegation of Yemeni politicians.

 

He vowed that any attack would result in "victory" for the Syrian people.

 

His regime has denied using chemical weapons and blamed "terrorist" rebels.

 

The mood among Damascus residents was fearful, while security forces prepared for possible air attacks by pulling back soldiers from potential targets and introducing tougher controls at roadblocks and hospitals.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:20
Marines to receive TCS satellite services

ANNAPOLIS, Md., Aug. 29 (UPI)

 

A $58.3 million contract has been given by DISA to TeleCommunication Systems Inc. (TCS) to supply managed satellite services to the U.S. Marine Corps.

 

The award from the U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency has a one-year performance period and four one-year options. Funding for the base period is $12.8 million.

 

The contract was issued under the joint DISA/GSA Future Commercial Satcom Acquisition program. TeleCommunication Systems is one of eight prime contract awardees under the Custom SATCOM Solutions contract vehicle, which was awarded in August 2012.

 

Under the award, TeleCommunication Systems will provide Ku satellite bandwidth, terrestrial support and 24-hour support services for the Marines' Tactical Satellite Communications Network.

 

"Through our experience with wireless point-to-point links and commercialization projects, the Marine Corps has come to trust TCS TotalCom solutions. Now, we will provide further highly reliable communication technology to deployed forces.

 

"TCS has established a proven track record for more than 25 years as a trusted provider of communication technology solutions for the government's toughest technical challenges, under conditions that demand the highest level of reliability, availability and security. To ensure mission continuity, TCS TotalCom offers deployable, highly secure communication solutions and complete end-to-end managed services for converged (IP-based) voice, video and data solutions to organizations requiring seamless and secure connectivity between fixed sites and remote operations," it said.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:20
Raid that killed bin Laden guided by fleet of satellites, top-secret budget shows

08/29/2013 By Craig Whitlock and Barton Gellman, The Washington Post

 

WASHINGTON — The U.S. commando raid that killed Osama bin Laden was guided from space by a fleet of satellites, which aimed dozens of separate receivers over Pakistan to collect a torrent of electronic and signals intelligence as the mission unfolded, according to a top-secret U.S. intelligence document.

 

The National Security Agency was also able to penetrate guarded communications among al-Qaida operatives by tracking calls from mobile phones identified by specific calling patterns, the document shows. Analysts from the Central Intelligence Agency pinpointed the geographic location of one of the phones and tied it to the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, where an accumulation of other evidence suggested bin Laden was hiding.

 

The new disclosures about the hunt for bin Laden are contained in classified documents that detail this year's "black budget" for U.S. intelligence agencies, including the NSA and CIA. The documents, provided to The Washington Post by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, make only brief references to the bin Laden operation. But the mission is portrayed as a singular example of counter-terrorism cooperation among the U.S. government's numerous intelligence agencies.

 

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:20
US Carrier Theodore Roosevelt Returns To Service

Aug. 29, 2013 - By CHRISTOPHER P. CAVAS  - Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — Four years to the day from when it was pushed across Hampton Roads, Va., to begin the biggest overhaul of its life, the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt returned to Norfolk Naval Base — reconditioned, refueled and overall much spiffier than before.

 

The ship returned to base Thursday following four days of sea trials to validate the work and redelivery to the Navy.

 

The $2.622 billion refueling and complex overhaul (RCOH), carried out about midway through the ship’s planned 50-year active lifespan, is the most comprehensive shipyard period an aircraft carrier will undergo. All of the ship’s major systems are replaced, upgraded or renewed, and both nuclear reactors are refueled. The upgrades give the ships another 23 years or more of active service.

 

Roosevelt is the fourth carrier to undergo the full RCOH process, each at Newport News Shipbuilding in Newport News, Va. — where all today’s US aircraft carriers are built.

 

“The ship performed wonderfully. All the systems were operating well,” Chris Miner, the shipyard’s vice president of in-service aircraft carrier programs, said via satellite phone Thursday as Roosevelt headed back to Norfolk.

 

“The improved capabilities of the ship were shown to be operating properly,” he said. “At the end of the day, TR is [now] as capable as any carrier in the fleet.”

 

Unlike the previous three RCOHs, Roosevelt won’t be headed back to Newport News for another short shipyard period for work added on since the original work package was agreed to, or discovered during the overhaul.

 

“We moved a significant amount of work into the RCOH,” Miner explained, eliminating the need for a follow-on shipyard visit.

 

Completion of the RCOH was originally scheduled for February 2013, but was extended twice due to emergent work and additional modifications. The additional work, according to Naval Sea Systems Command, added about $153 million to the ship’s overall cost.

 

At peak, Newport News assigned about 4,000 employees to work on Roosevelt, Miner said. Those workers now have been transferred to other projects in the shipyard, including three other aircraft carriers:

 

■ The Abraham Lincoln arrived in late March to begin its RCOH, scheduled to be completed in late 2016.

 

■ The Gerald R. Ford, first of a new class of carriers, is under construction and scheduled to be launched this fall.

 

■ The Enterprise, the world’s first nuclear carrier, was towed to the shipyard in mid-June to undergo inactivation. When the work is complete, the ship will be towed around South America to Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, Wash., for final dismantling.

 

Three carriers already have completed the RCOH process: Nimitz in June 2001; Dwight D. Eisenhower in March 2005; and Carl Vinson in July 2009.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:20
Report: US Spying Is Costly But Often Ineffective

Aug. 29, 2013 - By TOM VANDEN BROOK  - Defense News

 

WASHINGTON — The US government will spend $52 billion on intelligence programs this year but often fails to provide the president with information needed to protect national security, according to a report in the Washington Post.

 

The Post’s story is based on the intelligence community’s secret budget, which it obtained from Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency contractor who has leaked information on the nation’s most secretive spy agencies and their programs.

 

The paper withheld detail from the 178-page budget at the request of the government, which said it could expose key sources. Overall spending on intelligence budgets has been made public for years, but the details of the spending plan have been a closely held secret.

 

The budget discloses “blind spots” for the spy agencies that include some of the top national security concerns, including the security of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons components, the capability of China’s warplanes and the Hezbollah movement in Lebanon.

 

Among the budget highlights of the budget, per the Post:

 

■ The CIA and NSA have launched offensive cyber operations to hack into foreign computer networks systems to steal secrets and commit sabotage. USA Today has reported on the military’s efforts to develop offensive cyber abilities, including the capability to knock off an adversary’s computer networks.

 

■ The CIA is the intelligence community’s top dog, spending $14 billion, half again as much as the NSA, the top eavesdropping agency.

 

■ The NSA planned to investigate 4,000 “insider threats” in which one of the agency’s own, like Snowden, divulged secrets.

 

Vanden Brook is a reporter for USA Today.

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30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 06:50
Cameron Loses War Vote In Parliament

Aug. 29, 2013 - By OREN DORELL and KIM HJELMGAARD – Defense News

 

LONDON — The British Parliament on Thursday narrowly voted against military action int Syria, possibly forcing the United States to go it alone to strike Syria over a recent chemical attack that killed hundreds of people.

 

Prime Minister David Cameron said it was clear the Parliament does not want action and “I will act accordingly,” according to the BBC.

 

The government motion requesting backing for a strike was defeated 285 to 272.

 

The votes came on a day that the Obama administration postponed disclosure of the intelligence that led it to conclude the regime of Bashar Assad was to blame for the Aug. 21 chemical attack that killed hundreds of people in a region north of Damascus. The British government released its intelligence findings Thursday.

 

The document released by Downing Street that sets out the government’s legal position says, “military intervention to strike specific targets” would be “legally justifiable.” Cameron, a Conservative Party member, had said earlier he could act without Parliament approval.

 

Meanwhile, a meeting of the U.N. Security Council’s permanent members ended quickly Thursday with no sign of progress on an agreement over Syria’s crisis. The meeting Thursday afternoon started breaking up after less than an hour, with the ambassadors of China, France, Britain, Russia and the United States walking out.

 

It was the second time in two days that the five Security Council powers came out of a meeting on Syria with no progress.

 

The wrangling comes as Russia insisted no action could take place without U.N. approval, and it dispatched two warships to the Mediterranean where at least three U.S. warships have been positioned for days in case of an order to attack. Iran also announced it would coordinate its efforts with Russia to stop any attack.

 

Britain’s government said earlier that the legal conditions have been clearly met for taking action against Syria for allegedly launching a chemical attack against its people.

 

Defense Secretary Philip Hammond had said that the leader of the Labor party was giving “succour” to Assad.

 

“Anything that stops us from giving a clear united view of the British Parliament tonight will give some succour to the regime,” he told Channel 4 News.

 

The opposition Labor Party had said it wants to see “compelling evidence” of the Syrian regime’s guilt before siding with Cameron’s governing coalition in a parliamentary vote. Labor Party leader Ed Miliband said he was “determined we learn the lessons of the past, including (on) Iraq,” where much ballyhooed evidence of weapons of mass destruction was subsequently deemed to be false.

 

The potential roadblock to war comes as Britain’s Joint Intelligence Committee concluded that it is “highly likely” that Assad’s regime was responsible for the alleged chemical attack. A document released by the JLC forms the British government’s first published evidence indicating culpability for the attack.

 

The independent Doctors Without Borders group says at least 355 people died in the attack. Syria’s regime has denied using chemical weapons.

 

Meanwhile, Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin by telephone and was quoted by Iranian state TV as saying that “military action will bring great costs for the region” and “it is necessary to apply all efforts to prevent it.”

 

According to state TV, Rouhani said both Iran and Russia would work in “extensive cooperation” to prevent any military action against Syria. The Iranian president also called such military action an “open violation” of international laws.

 

Britain can go to war without the express consent or backing of Parliament but in the wake of the Iraq War in 2003 there have been calls for the government to always seek the approval of Parliament.

 

On Wednesday, Cameron reversed an earlier to decision to hold a single formal parliamentary vote that would specifically seek authorization for British action. He bowed to opposition demands that a second vote by Parliament be required, but only after U.N. investigators conclude their findings. That is supposed to happen Saturday, according to the U.N.

 

Meanwhile, the Syrian government had sent a letter to the British government asking for talks.

 

“We implore you to communicate through civilized dialogue rather than a monologue of blood and fire,” the letter said, according to the BBC, which obtained a copy. The open letter was sent by the Syrian parliament speaker who also invited British MPs to send a delegation to the Mideast nation.

 

President Obama said Wednesday he has concluded the Syrian regime is behind the attack.

 

A yet-to-be-released report by the Office of the Director for National Intelligence outlining evidence against Syria includes a few key caveats — including acknowledging that the U.S. intelligence community no longer has the certainty it did six months ago of where the regime’s chemical weapons are stored, nor does it have proof Assad ordered chemical weapons use, according to two intelligence officials and two more U.S. officials, the Associated Press reported Thursday.

 

The officials, who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the intelligence report publicly, said intelligence linking Assad or his inner circle to the alleged chemical weapons attack is no “slam dunk.”

 

Dorell and Hjelmgaard write for USA Today.

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 23:14
Le Parlement britannique rejette toute action militaire en Syrie

29.08.2013 à 23h57 Le Monde.fr (AFP)

 

Les députés britanniques ont voté jeudi 29 août contre la motion gouvernementale présentée  par le premier ministre, David Cameron, qui défendait le principe d'une intervention militaire en Syrie en réponse aux lourds soupçons d'usage d'armes chimiques par Damas.

 

"Il est clair que le Parlement britannique ne veut pas d'intervention militaire britannique. Je prends note et le gouvernement agira en conséquence", a réagi David Cameron après ce vote, ajoutant qu'il était "attaché au respect de la volonté de la Chambre des Communes".

 

La motion, présentée en début d'après-midi à la Chambre des communes par David Cameron et soumise au vote dans la soirée, condamnait l'usage d'armes chimiques "par le régime de Bachar Al-Assad", et réclamait une intervention de la communauté internationale, "impliquant si nécessaire une action militaire légale et proportionnée". Lors de son allocution, David Cameron avait cependant reconnu qu'"il n'y a pas 100 % de certitude" sur la responsabilité de l'attaque présumée à l'arme chimique en Syrie, tout en redisant sa conviction qu'elle avait été menée par le régime syrien.

 

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 23:04
China's Silk Road Strategy and String of Pearls 2011 source Washington Institute

China's Silk Road Strategy and String of Pearls 2011 source Washington Institute

29.08.2013 à 21h01 Par Mathilde Damgé - Le Monde.fr
 

Le début d'un conflit international se précise en Syrie. En dépit d'une réduction drastique des budgets de la défense (édition abonnés), les militaires français se préparent à ce qui serait leur cinquième grosse opération depuis 2001. Outre la volonté de venir en aide aux innocents aux prises avec un conflit meurtrier, quels pourraient être les intérêts économiques de la France ?

Investissement étranger numéro un dans le pays : le pétrole. "Principal récipiendaire des investissements directs étrangers, le secteur des hydrocarbures constitue un enjeu stratégique pour l'économie syrienne", détaille Bercy dans sa dernière publication économique sur le pays, qui date de juillet 2011. Le Trésor rappelle aussi qu'au milieu des années 1990, la production syrienne avait dépassé 600 000 barils par jour (elle est tombée à quelques dizaines de milliers de barils dans les derniers mois).

Implanté via un consortium avec l'entreprise publique Syrian Petroleum Company, Total a fini par se résoudre à cesser toute activité et rapatrier son personnel en décembre 2011, après l'annonce de sanctions européennes à l'encontre du régime de Bachar Al-Assad, qui interdisent d'exporter vers la Syrie des équipements à destination de l'industrie gazière et pétrolière ou des logiciels permettant la surveillance des communications Internet et téléphoniques.

 

POINT NODAL POUR LE GAZ ET LE PÉTROLE

 

La major française, présente dans le pays depuis 1988, avait réussi à obtenir les permis d'exploitation Deir Ez Zor (pétrolier) et Tabiyeh Gas (gazier), cumulant près de 40 000 équivalents barils par jour en 2010. Cette année-là, la seule production pétrolière de Total tournait autour de 14 000 barils de pétrole brut extraits par jour du sol syrien, soit seulement 1 % de l'ensemble de sa production.

Reste qu'une entreprise ne vient pas s'installer dans un pays si elle n'y trouve pas un intérêt. Intérêt lié non seulement aux réserves de barils – évaluées à 2,5 milliards –, mais aussi à la place du pays sur la carte du Moyen-Orient et à l'idée, déjà plusieurs fois caressée, de faire de la Syrie un "hub", un point nodal pour le gaz et le pétrole au Moyen-Orient.

"La Syrie entend jouer la carte d'un pays transitaire (...) pour compenser les pertes dues à la baisse de la production. Offrir un débouché sur la Méditerranée au pétrole irakien, saoudien et autres pays du Golfe, rapprochant ainsi ces zones de production majeures de leurs marchés", permettrait à la Syrie de "devenir un centre de répartition de ces ressources vers les pays de la région (Turquie, Jordanie, Liban, Chypre)", note le Trésor.

A contrario, la simple perspective de voir, par contagion, se boucher une des voies principales d'acheminement de l'or noir, notamment vers l'Europe, a suffi à propulser le baril vers des prix qui n'avaient plus été vus depuis deux ans.

 

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 22:55
Le Premier ministre Stephen Harper (Photo: 45eNord.ca)

Le Premier ministre Stephen Harper (Photo: 45eNord.ca)

29/08/2013 par Nicolas Laffont – 45eNord.ca

 

Le Premier ministre canadien Stephen Harper a dit lors d’une conférence de presse ce jeudi midi qu’Ottawa n’a pas l’intention participer à une mission militaire en Syrie pour l’instant.

 

Alors qu’il était accompagné des ministres de la Justice, Peter MacKay, et des Anciens combattants, Julian Fantino, pour faire une annonce afin de renforcer les lois contre l’exploitation des enfants, M. Harper a déclaré que le gouvernement soutenait ses alliés qui envisagent des frappes militaires en représailles à l’utilisation présumée du gouvernement syrien d’armes chimiques la semaine dernière.

 

Il a dit que ne pas répondre serait «un précédent extrêmement dangereux [...] Cela dit, à l’heure actuelle, le gouvernement du Canada n’a pas l’intention, nous n’avons pas l’intention par nous-mêmes pour avoir une mission militaire canadienne», a-t-il dit.

 

Un peu plus tôt, le Premier ministre britannique David Cameron a reconnu à la Chambre des communes qu’il n’était pas sûr à 100% que le régime de Bachar al-Assad est responsable de l’attaque près de Damas, le 21 août dernier.

 

Il s’est dit malgré tout suffisamment convaincu de la responsabilité de Damas pour proposer l’adoption d’une motion autorisant son gouvernement à intervenir contre le régime du président Bachar Al-Assad.

 

Peu convaincus du bien-fondé d’une telle action, les députés de l’opposition s’opposent au déclenchement de frappes immédiates contre Damas.

 

La veille, le ministre canadien des Affaires étrangères, John Baird, disait que s’il est clair que Bachar al-Assad «a choisi une voie dangereuse et la suite sera en conséquence», il était pour le moment exclu de rappeler le Parlement pour discuter de la situation.

 

Il a en revanche indiqué que «la position du président Obama, de la France et du Royaume-Uni est la même que celle du Canada. Nous partageons les mêmes buts d’envoyer un message clair. Ces actions sont inacceptables et on ne veut pas voir une autre utilisation de ces armes chimiques».

 

«Nous n’avons pas pris la décision de faire partie [d'une coalition]ou ne savons pas si nous avons la capacité de faire partie de toute intervention militaire, qui, de toute façon sera limitée dans son orientation», avait alors déclaré M. Baird.

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 22:32
Syrie: la diplomatie occidentale au pied du mur

29 août 2013 à 19:04 Par Juliette Gheerbrant - RFI

 

Sans surprise, la nouvelle réunion du Conseil de sécurité de l’ONU, convoquée mercredi par les britanniques, n’a produit aucun résultat. Les cinq membres permanents du Conseil de sécurité ont prévu de se réunir une nouvelle fois, ce jeudi 29 août à 18 h 00 TU. La perspective d’une frappe de Damas ne laisse guère de doutes, mais les États-Unis et leurs alliés poursuivent les efforts diplomatiques. A défaut de mandat légal du Conseil, il s’agit de donner à l’intervention militaire la plus large légitimité morale possible.

 

Le texte présenté par les Britanniques s’appuyait sur le chapitre VII de la Charte de l'ONU, selon lequel une opération militaire peut se justifier par la nécessité de protéger les civils contre les armes chimiques.

 

Fidèles dans leur soutien à Damas, Russes et Chinois ont quitté la salle avant même la fin de la réunion. Mais il semble désormais urgent d’attendre avant d’agir : les britanniques ont déclaré que rien ne serait entrepris sur un plan militaire avant la publication des résultats de l’enquête des inspecteurs onusiens qui sont actuellement sur le terrain. Selon Ban Ki-moon, ces derniers ont besoin d’encore quatre jours pour mener leur travail à bien.

 

Ces dernières heures les réactions se sont multipliées dans le monde, et de nombreux États ont fait part de leurs réserves ou de leur opposition à l’usage de la force. Mais les positions évoluent de jour en jour. C’est le cas en Italie, pays qui abrite d’importantes bases militaires américaines. La ministre des affaires étrangères, Emma Bonino, avait exprimé mercredi 28 août une position très en retrait. Le lendemain, le président du Conseil, Enrico Letta, a déclaré suite à un entretien avec son homologue britannique David Cameron que les deux pays étaient « tombés d'accord » sur le fait que « le recours massif aux armes chimiques (...) constitue un crime inacceptable qui ne peut être toléré par la communauté internationale ».

 

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 22:30
Syrie: l'allié italien ne sera pas au rendez-vous

29/08/2013 à 17:59 Par Julie Connan – LeFigaro.fr

 

Rome estime qu'il n'est pas «sage» d'intervenir en cas d'absence de feu vert du Conseil de sécurité de l'ONU. Toutefois, l'Italie, très présente au Liban, pourrait revoir sa position en fonction de l'évolution de la situation.

 

Après avoir été prompt à suivre George W. Bush en Irak en 2003, l'Italie ne participera pas à l'opération internationale qui se prépare contre le régime de Bachar el-Assad en Syrie. Le gouvernement se déclare certes en «harmonie avec ses alliés», mais sa ministre des Affaires étrangères, Emma Bonino, a estimé mercredi sur CNN qu'il ne serait pas «sage» d'intervenir sans le feu vert - peu probable - du Conseil de sécurité de l'ONU. «Franchement, je ne sais pas ce qu'ils - la coalition - veulent vraiment faire. Punir Assad? Mettre fin au conflit? Ce n'est pas du tout clair pour moi», a renchéri la chef de la diplomatie. «Il n'y a aucune chance que l'Italie prenne une part active à une quelconque nouvelle action militaire», a tout bonnement tranché mercredi son collègue à la Défense, Mario Mauro, dans une interview à Avvenire.

Le refus italien d'ouvrir un nouveau front s'explique en partie par les réticences de l'opinion publique, qui redoute une action potentiellement inefficace et coûteuse, en pleine polémique sur les dépenses de défense. D'ailleurs, les Italiens sont déjà «engagés et même sur-engagés» militairement dans d'autres régions du monde, dont l'Afghanistan, a insisté Emma Bonino, comme pour se justifier.

 

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 20:45
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013

29/08/2013 Sources : EMA

 

Point sur les opérations de la force Serval depuis le jeudi 22 août 18h00 jusqu’au jeudi 29 août, 18h00.

 

Au cours de ces derniers jours, les opérations aériennes se sont poursuivies avec près de 80 sorties, dont la moitié consacrées aux opérations de reconnaissance ou d’appui au sol.  Une dizaine de sorties ont été dédiées aux missions de ravitaillement, une trentaine d’autres consacrées à des missions de transport et quelques missions de renseignement.

 

Au sol, la force Serval poursuit les opérations autour de la boucle du Niger, et dans le Nord du pays.

 

Du 13 au 25 août 2013, le groupement tactique interarmes Désert de la brigade Serval a mené l’opération Anaconda, entre les villes de Djebok et d’Almoustarat. Un sous-groupement a opéré un contrôle de l’ensemble de la zone afin d’empêcher la ré-implantation de mouvements terroristes. Plusieurs armes automatiques de type Kalachnikov, un pistolet, des munitions, des grenades à main, ainsi que des explosifs et leurs détonateurs ont été récupérés par les sapeurs du détachement du génie d’aide au déploiement (DGAD) lors des fouilles effectuées dans ces zones.

 

Le 27 août 2013 à Gao, des éléments du génie de la force Serval ont participé à la réhabilitation d’un ancien centre du ministère de l’agriculture malien. Ce détachement, composé de 5 sapeurs du DGAD, est intervenu à l’aide d’engins spécialisés : 2 camions bennes, un tractopelle et du matériel de débroussaillage. Sa mission consistait a effectuer des travaux d’aménagement dans le cadre du déploiement de la MINUSMA.

 

Enfin, lors d'une cérémonie le 29 août, la "Commission dialogue et réconciliation" a souhaité témoigner de sa reconnaissance à la force Serval pour sa contribution au retour de la paix au Mali. A cette occasion et en présence du général Kolodziej, commandant la brigade Serval, le général Dembelé, chef d’état-major général des armées maliennes, a souligné une fois de plus l’importance de l’aide apportée par la France et le Tchad à son pays. Il a souhaité partager cet hommage avec les pays de la CDEAO contributeurs de la MINUSMA.

 

Environ 3200 militaires français sont actuellement présents sur le sol malien et poursuivent leurs missions de sécurisation visant à affaiblir durablement les groupes terroristes ainsi qu’à appuyer le transfert de la zone aux contingents relevant de la MINUSMA.

Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
Serval : point de situation du jeudi 29 août 2013
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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 18:50
Bâtiment de projection Peresvet

Bâtiment de projection Peresvet

MOSCOU, 29 août - RIA Novosti

 

La composition de l'escadre russe en Méditerranée sera rénovée début septembre, a annoncé jeudi le ministère de la Défense dans un communiqué.

 

"La présence des forces navales russes dans les régions de la Méditerranée ayant une grande importance stratégique est actuellement assurée par le patrouilleur Neoustrachimy et les grands navires de débarquement Chabaline, Admiral Nevelski et Peresvet", lit-on dans le communiqué.

 

Ces bâtiments de guerre seront remplacés par le grand navire de lutte anti-sous-marine Admiral Panteleïev (qui accueillera l'état-major de l'escadre méditerranéenne), ainsi que par les grands navires de débarquement Minsk et Novotcherkassk.

 

La relève aura lieu du 1er au 7 septembre. Les navires relayés mettront le cap sur Novorossiisk pour subir des réparations de routine, renouveler leurs stocks de vivres et de munitions et offrir du repos à leurs équipages, indique le ministère de la Défense.

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 17:35
China to build more aircraft carriers

August 29, 2013, zeenews.india.com

 

Beijing: China on Thursday said it will build more aircraft carriers apart from the 'Liaoning' to boost its defence and military capabilities.

 

"There will surely be more addition to Chinese military's first aircraft carrier Liaoning, launched last year," said China's Defence Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun.

 

China will comprehensively consider the development of aircraft carriers in accordance with the needs of national defence and military building, he added.

 

Currently, China operates one aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, which is based on an unfinished Russian-made carrier. It was delivered to the Chinese Navy on September 25 last year. The carrier's original design allows it to carry about 30 fixed-wing aircraft.

 

China has also developed carrier-borne aircraft called J-15, which will be the main strike aircraft for its carrier fleet. The Liaoning has conducted successful take-off and landing tests of its carrier-borne J-15 fighters.

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 17:35
China and Pakistan to hold joint Air Force exercises

August 29, 2013 indian.ruvr.ru

 

China and Pakistan will hold joint defence aviation exercises in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (northwest China) during the period of 2nd to 22nd of September this year, said spokesman of the Chinese Defense Ministry Yang Yujun on Thursday.

 

According Mr Yang, the exercise codenamed “Shaheen-2” will be held in the Hotan county. The previous exercises were held in 2011.

 

Yang Yujun also said that China and India have planned to carry out anti-terrorism exercises this year in the city of Chengdu in southwest China's Sichuan Province.

 

According to Mr Yang, the joint military exercises are aimed at enhancing trust between the countries and developing further cooperation with a view to maintain peace and stability in the region.

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 17:30
New Middle East Clients Lining Up To Buy CH-47 Chinooks

In June, Boeing began delivery of 13 new CH-147F model Chinooks to Canada. Here, the first helicopter off the line demonstrates its capabilities Aug. 28. (Boeing)

 

Aug. 29, 2013 - By PAUL McLEARY – Defense News

 

MIDDLETOWN, DEL. — Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar head the list of countries looking to begin flying variants of the CH-47 Chinook helicopter in coming years, Boeing officials said here Wednesday. .

 

If deals being negotiated between Boeing, the US government, and these three countries eventually come to fruition, projections are that at least 54 Chinooks would be shipped overseas, making up a good portion of the 168 Chinooks that foreign clients around the globe are considering buying in coming years.

 

Pentagon officials and defense industry brahmins have been talking for the better part of two years about how they’re planning to rely on foreign sales to make up for the reductions they’re seeing in the US defense market, but a chart shown to reporters Wednesday really drove that point home.

 

On top of the 830 Chinook H-47 variants that are currently flying around the world, the chart showed, Boeing executives are working with foreign clients and the US government to sell another 168 to new and existing clients if all goes as planned.

 

In addition to the six CH-47D models and 16 CH-47F models that Libyan officials are working on buying, Saudi Arabia has expressed interest in fielding one of the world’s largest CH-47F fleets, with at least 24 helicopters being considered for the oil-rich kingdom.

 

Mark Ballew, director of business development for Boeing’s Chinook program, said the company is preparing to do a flight demonstration in Saudi Arabia, and that Qatar is interested in buying eight of the “F” models similar to what the company produced for Canada, which feature larger external fuel tanks and an upgraded electrical system.

 

Morocco, which has already purchased three “D” models, also is talking about buying three more, and Egypt, which currently flies 18 “D”s, has enquired about buying six more from the US Army as it retires them in the switch to the upgraded “F” aircraft.

 

Boeing is also involved in the competition for India’s heavy lift requirement, which would mean 15 more “F” aircraft if it wins.

 

The deals with these countries are still very early on in the negotiation stage, Ballew and other executives stressed, adding that contracts for the birds aren’t expected soon.

 

Any deals several years down the road would be welcome news for Boeing, however, as the company’s $4 billion, five-year deal with the US Army for 214 more CH-47 “F” models will end in 2019.

 

That agreement would add to the 241 CH-47F helicopters that the Army already has in its fleet, eventually bringing the service close to its goal of 464 “F” models.

 

The foreign deals — especially with countries in the Middle East — aren’t just helicopter contracts, however. Countries in the region have generally neglected establishing their own maintenance and logistics programs, which would mean years of repair work for the contractor.

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 17:30
F-22 May Get Its First Combat Mission in Syria

August 29, 2013 by Brendan McGarry - defensetech.org

 

The U.S. Defense Department spent about $67 billion acquiring a fleet of almost 200 F-22 fighter jets, none of which has yet flown in combat.

 

That may change with a U.S.-led intervention in Syria, where the stealthy, highly maneuverable plane known as the Raptor may be used to penetrate and attack the country’s air defenses, among other targets.

 

“Syria is not Libya,” Mark Gunzinger, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a research organization in Washington, D.C., said in a telephone interview with Military​.com. “Their air defense systems are more formidable. Using F-22s to help suppress those threats and support penetrating capability may be a good idea.”

 

The White House is preparing to launch a military strike in the war-torn country after the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad allegedly used chemical weapons against civilians. The Aug. 21 attack around Damascus reportedly killed a few hundred people and may be the deadliest since Saddam Hussein’s forces killed thousands of Kurds with Sarin gas in 1988.

 

While President Barack Obama said he hasn’t made a decision on whether to conduct a strike, he said there must be consequences for governments that violate international norms against the use of chemical weapons.

 

“It’s important that if, in fact, we make a choice to have repercussions for the use of chemical weapons, then the Assad regime will have received a pretty strong signal that, in fact, it better not do it again,” he said in an interview yesterday on PBS’s “NewsHour” show.

 

When pressed on what a limited air campaign will achieve, Obama acknowledged that it won’t “solve all the problems inside Syria. It doesn’t obviously end the death of innocent civilians inside of Syria. We hope, ultimately, that a political transition can take place.”

 

More than 100,000 people have died in the two-year-old uprising against forces loyal to Assad, according to a June estimate from the U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks the death toll through a network of activists in the country.

 

 

Details on what an operation might look like remain murky, though at the very least would probably involve launching a series of Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles, or TLAMs, from ships against such targets as command and control facilities, air defenses and aircraft, Gunzinger said.

 

The U.S. and Britain amassed a naval armada in the Mediterranean within striking distance of Syria. Four Norfolk, Va.-based destroyers — the USS Ramage, USS Mahan, USS Barry and USS Gravely — are already in position, ready to launch the Tomahawk cruise missiles.

 

At about $1.5 million apiece, the GPS-guided missiles are more expensive than conventional bombs. But they can be launched from a safe distance — at least several hundred miles — and are ideal for hitting so-called “light” targets in fixed locations above ground such as planes, runways, fuel depots, weapon storage areas and Russian-made SA-2 and SA-5 anti-aircraft batteries.

 

The mission may also involve dropping GPS– and laser-guided bombs from such aircraft as F-15 and F-22 fighter jets and B-2 and B-52 bombers, though the U.S. probably won’t target chemical weapons or stockpiles or other so-called “hard” targets, at least initially, because they’re more difficult to track, pose a threat to civilians and may be buried deep underground.

 

The F-22 for its air-to-ground mission can carry two 1,000-pound Joint Direct Attack Munitions, or JDAMs; two AIM-120C Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile, or AMRAAMs; and two AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles, according to an Air Force fact sheet.

 

Operational F-22s are assigned to Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Va.; Joint Base

Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska; Holloman Air Force Base, N.M.; and Joint Base

Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, according to a July report from the Congressional Research Service.

 

The F-22 fleet was grounded for several months in 2011 and aircraft were again restricted from flying in 2012 after pilots complained of oxygen-deprivation symptoms, including dizziness, disorientation and coughs. The Air Force, which initially struggled to identify the cause of the problem, concluded that a lack of oxygen — not the quality of it — was causing the symptoms, due primarily to a faulty valve on the pilots’ life-support vest.

 

The Air Force earlier this year lifted flying restrictions on many F-22 fighter jets after upgrading their oxygen system and life-support equipment,

The service fielded new vest pieces in January and expects to finish installing automatic back-up oxygen systems on the rest of aircraft in the fleet by July 2014.

 

The aircraft is made by Lockheed Martin Corp., based in Bethesda, Maryland, and its oxygen system is made by Honeywell International Inc., based in Morristown, New Jersey.

 

Some questioned the Pentagon’s decision to not fly the F-22 in the 2011 allied attack on Libya that toppled former strongman Muammar Gaddafi. Whether to use the aircraft in Syria will be driven by operational requirements, not politics, according to Gunzinger, the analyst.

 

“The decision will be based on military need,” he said, “not on bureaucratic politics.”

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29 août 2013 4 29 /08 /août /2013 16:55
Le vice-amiral d’escadre Philippe Coindreau à la tête de la force d’action navale

29 août 2013. Portail des Sous-Marins

 

Le lundi 2 septembre 2013, le vice-amiral d’escadre Philippe Coindreau prendra le commandement de la force d’action navale (FAN). Il succèdera au vice-amiral d’escadre Xavier Magne, commandant de la FAN depuis le 8 septembre 2011.

 

La cérémonie militaire se déroulera à bord du porte-avions Charles de Gaulle en présence de personnalités civiles et militaires.

 

La force d’action navale :

- Regroupe tous les bâtiments de surface de la marine Nationale, soit près de 100 unités ;

- Compte 10 500 personnes ;

- A sa tête, l’amiral commandant la force d’action navale (ALFAN) est responsable de la préparation opérationnelle et de la gestion du personnel des forces de surface ;

- ALFAN met les forces à la disposition du commandement opérationnel, qui les déploie dans le cadre de missions couvrant l’ensemble des fonctions stratégiques : connaissance et anticipation, prévention, dissuasion, protection et projection ;

- L’état-major de la force d’action navale est basé à Toulon, avec une antenne à Brest et une à Cherbourg.

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