The Conflict in Yemen

IBSA

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Re: Yemani Civil War

The Shia Houthis are advancing inside Sunni tribal areas

The KSA are uniting the several Yemeni tribes, without regards to their religion, against them. This is a slap on the face of whom believes in Western media's fallacy that Yemen, as well as Syria and Iraq, is a religious war between Shia e Sunni Muslims.

Just because there are a rivalry between Iran, a Shia majority country, and KSA, a Sunni majority country, some morons states that over any country that both them measures their strenght, the political crisis outcome is due to a Shia-Sunni conflict.

This is the same thing that to say there's running a religious shock between Protestant and Orthodox Christian because of USA-Russia's rivalry and that the Ukrainian crisis is a religious conflict of this kind
 

sorcerer

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Dollar Hegemony and the Iran Nuclear Issue: The Story behind the Story



"International treaties are being held hostage by the west. There has been a lot of interference inside Iran by Washington. The nuclear issue is just an excuse to undermine the Islamic Republic and has very little to do with anything else." - Interview with RT by Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich, 6 April 2015.


This statement is right on the dot. The artificially created nuclear issue – is just an excuse for regime change"¦ perhaps yes. But there is more to it. While the expressed views on what the recent "Lausanne deal" really brought for Iran and the 5+1 participants may differ widely, one must sense that there is another story behind the story.

A little detail, nobody talks about, and maybe most pundits – eAven honest ones – are not aware of. In 2007 Iran was about to launch the Iranian Oil Bourse (IOB) – an international hydrocarbon exchange, akin to a stock exchange, where all countries, hydrocarbon producers or not, could trade this (still) chief energy source in euros, as an alternative to the US dollar.

This, of course would have meant the demise of dollar hegemony – the liberation of the world from the dollar stranglehold. This was inadmissible for Washington. It would have meant the end of the dollar as the world's chief reserve currency, and giving up the instrument of coercing the world into accepting Washington's dictate, the tool that serves to dish out sanctions left and right – no way!

Hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of hydrocarbons are traded on a daily basis; huge amounts of dollars that find no justification in the US economy, but – they allow the FED to print money at will – and every new dollar is a dollar of international debt, filling the reserve coffers of nations around the world, thereby also gradually devaluing the US currency, but barely affecting the US economy.

As long as petrol and gas are traded in dollars – a 'negotiated' imposition on Saudi Arabia by Father Bush, friend of the House of Saud, in the early 70s under the Carter Administration, in return for military protection – and as long as the world needs hydrocarbons to fuel its industries, so long the world will need dollars, insane amounts of dollars. The so-called Quantitative Easing (QE) allowed the US to print hundreds of billions, if not trillions of dollars to finance wars and conflicts around the globe, and to fund the relentless Zionist-Anglo-Saxon lie and propaganda machine. No problem
. It's just debt. Debt – paradoxically carried by the very countries that the empire eventually fights and lies to; countries which hold dollars in their reserves.


Hardly anybody knows that the real US debt, consisting of 'unmet obligations' has risen in the last 7 years from about 48 trillion to close to 130 trillion dollars in 2014 (GAO – General Accounting Office), about seven and a half times the US GDP.
Comparatively speaking, a debt by a multiple higher than that of 'troika' (EU-IMF-ECB) badgered and shattered Greece.

Allowing a country like Iran destroying the US hegemon's power base by taking a sovereign decision to abandon the dollar for oil and gas trading – no way. A pretext had to be invented to surmise the country which according to George W. Bush became a link of the axis of evil. What better than the nuclear threat – with the full support of Israel, of course. Bolstered by worldwide media manipulation, Iran became a nuclear menace not only for Israel and the entire region, but also for the US of A. A threat for the empire, some 15,000 km away, when at that time the most powerful Iranian long-range missile had a range capacity of about 2,000 km.:rofl:

This sounds almost like the latest (bad) Obama joke, accusing Venezuela to be an imminent threat to the United States. It would be laughable, if it wouldn't be so sad, so criminal actually. Because this lie is followed by economic warfare, akin to the one led against Russia – which – eventually backfired punishing the 'sanctioneers' themselves, especially the Europeans.:taunt1: When the real impact of the 'sanctions' became evident, the MSM were simply silent. People easily forget. Without opening their eyes, they remain gullible for the next lie.

The dollar is the ultimate pillar of the empire's world hegemony. Without it, it is doomed. Washington knows it. You don't have to look far to find similar examples to that of Iran. When Saddam Hussein announced in the late 1990's that he would sell Iraq's petrol in euros, as soon as the embargo would end in 2000, a reason had to be found to invade his country. The WMD menace that never existed was sold around the world, including at the UN Security Council, and – bingo – the western media killing machine had created a motive for invading Iraq and to murder Saddam. As if this wasn't enough, he was suddenly linked to 9/11 – and big miracle, Americans bought even this lie.

Muammar Gadhafi was another victim for asserting his country's sovereignty. He announced a new hard currency for Africa, the Gold Dinar, backed by Libyan gold. Libyan and African hydrocarbons could henceforth be traded in an alternative currency to the dollar, the Gold Dinar. Gadhafi also intended to free Africans from the western predatory telephone giants, by introducing a Libya sponsored low-price mobile network throughout Africa. Gadhafi was atrociously murdered by CIA handlers on 20 October 2011. Libya today is a hotbed of civil unrest and murder.

Iran's case is a bit more complicated. Iran has Russia and China backing. Nevertheless, with the propaganda machine painting a nuclear danger to the world, Iran could be brought to her knees, no problem. No matter what logic said and still says, no matter that the 15 US key intelligence agencies assured the then Bush Administration that Iran has no plans of manufacturing a nuclear bomb, that Iran was genuine in using its enriched uranium for power generation and for medical purposes.

No matter that Iran's enrichment process reached a mere 20% purity, enough for medical purposes, but far from the 97% required for a nuclear bomb, Iran had to be oppressed and under a web of lies made a pariah state, a risk for the world. That's what the average American and European today believes. It's a shame. Nobody openly dares talking about the only nuclear threat in the Middle East, Israel. That is another shame.

No matter what the Lausanne deal is today, or next June, after three more months of intense, but useless negotiations, no matter what a UN resolution would say about the deal, about the lifting of sanctions – Washington will always find a pretext to keep the stranglehold on Iran. As Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich said, "International treaties are being held hostage by the west"- there is no international compact or law that prevents the only rogue state in the world, the atrociously criminal US empire from crushing its way to satisfy its abject greed.

Always – that is, as long as empire survives. And yes, the economic survival is only a question of time. Fifteen years ago some 90% of worldwide reserve holdings were kept in US dollars, or dollar denominated securities. In 2010 the ratio shrunk to about 60%; today it is approaching 50%. When it sinks below 50%, governments around the globe may gradually lose confidence in the greenback, seeing it as what it is and has been for the last 100 years, nothing else but a fraudulent Mickey-Mouse currency at the service of a Zionist dominated western financial system, not worth the paper it's printed on; a currency that has been abusing and impoverishing the 'non-aligned' world at will.


Iran knows it, Russia knows it – without direct confrontation, the empire's grip may not hold as long as the Iran deal is planned to last, some 20 to 30 years. Therefore, the large concessions that Iran had to make for 'peace' – to reduce its enrichment process to 3.37% just enough to fuel power plants, and to sell or transfer its stock of 20% enriched medical-grade uranium abroad – these concessions to reach this 'glorious' interim agreement, are unimportant. It is a winner for Iran, as announced by Iran's Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, as well as Russia's Sergei Lavrov. Even if Washington derails the agreement within the next three months, or at any time at will, as is likely, Iran has won a battle of credibility worldwide, as she is ready to adhere to a signed agreement, no matter how far its sets her back.

In fact, the rotten palaces of empire are crumbling as these lines are going to print. Two new international Asian based development and investment banks have been created within the last two years. The BRICS Development Bank was signed into existence in Brazil in July 2014 by the leaders of the 5 BRICS countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. Earlier this year sponsored by China and 20 other countries, the Asian Investment and Infrastructure Bank – AIIB, located in Shanghai, was created. Iran is a founding member of the AIIB.

Ecuador's Foreign Minister has also just announced that the Venezuela sponsored Banco del Sur – development bank for the Latin American hemisphere – will become operational in the course of 2015. These three banks are direct challenges to the Washington dominated IMF, World Bank and IDB (Inter-American Development Bank). Guess which ones are the most notorious 'allies' of Washington and which against the will of the White House, are joining AIIB's forty-some membership? – They include the epitome of neoliberal Europeans – UK, France, Germany, Italy and Switzerland.

Washington's seemingly blind and preposterous arrogance drives the closest allies into the 'adversary's camp. The FED (Federal Reserve Bank) announced on 2 April 2015 that it fined the German Commerzbank with 1.7 billion US dollars for dealing with Cuba, Sudan and Iran :rofl: – Washington sanctioned countries.

This can only happen as long as all international banking transactions have to be channeled through US banks and controlled by the Rothschild dominated BIS – Bank for International Settlement. Russia, China and other SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organization) aligned countries have already broken away from the dollar system for international contracts and money transfers, including hydrocarbon trading. They are about to launch an alternative to the western ruled privately owned SWIFT transfer systems. The new system could be joined by any country wanting to break loose from the predatory dollar claws.

When even the staunchest stooges of empire seek alliances in the East, the writing is on the wall, that the economic winds are shifting, that a tectonic sea-change is in the offing and that the Iran nuclear deal, one way or another, doesn't really matter in the foreseeable future.

Peter Koenig is an economist and geopolitical analyst. He is also a former World Bank staff and worked extensively around the world in the fields of environment and water resources. He writes regularly for Global Research, ICH, RT, Sputnik News, the Voice of Russia / Ria Novosti, TeleSur, The Vineyard of The Saker Blog, and other internet sites. He is the author of Implosion – An Economic Thriller about War, Environmental Destruction and Corporate Greed – fiction based on facts and on 30 years of World Bank experience around the globe.

Dollar Hegemony and the Iran Nuclear Issue: The Story behind the Story | Global Research - Centre for Research on Globalization
 

sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

Pakistani Troops were Already in Saudi Arabia: Mushahidullah Khan


"Our troops are already present in Tabuk and some other cities of Saudi Arabia," he said at a press conference at the PML-N secretariat. Pakistani newspaper Dawn reported on saturday.

He said Pakistan would not send its army to Yemen and its troops would protect the territorial limits of Saudi Arabia and holy places which "is our religious responsibility".

He said Defence Minister Khawaja Asif had also said that a number of Pakistan Army personnel were in Saudi Arabia.

Replying to a question, Senator Khan said: "Being a large Muslim country and a nuclear state Pakistan has to intervene in this sensitive matter, otherwise the Muslim world will blame Pakistan for acting as a silent spectator.

"We have fought two Americans wars but this time it is the issue of our time-tested friend and holy places."

He said Pakistan was nowhere near Saudi Arabia in terms of military strength but even then it had been asked to provide aircraft, warships and troops. "Saudi Arabia's defence spending for the current fiscal year is said to be of over $82 billion and last year it was $62bn."

He said Saudi Arabia had adequate resources for its own defence.

Replying to a question about Iran's alleged role in the civil war in Yemen, he said: "Pakistan wants to maintain relations with all neighbours and friends on the basis of equality."

He said every state had its own interest and the role of the United States in the situation was still uncertain.

Read more: Pakistani Troops were Already in Saudi Arabia: Mushahidullah Khan / Sputnik India English - News, Opinion, Radio
 

sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

duplicate post..self delete
 
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sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

Beyond The Nuclear Deal: A Civil War In The Middle East?


There are 40,000,000 men under arms in the world today, and our statesmen and diplomats have the temerity to say that war is not in the making. Hell's bells! Are these 40,000,000 men being trained to be dancers?""•Smedley Butler (Major General, an outspoken critic of U.S. military adventurism and, at the time of his death in 1940 the most decorated Marine in U.S. history). The world military manpower has increased substantially in 75 years.

The two US political parties hiding under the garbs of "democracy" are both right wingers (conservatives, liberals, neocons, fascists, capitalists etc.) pursuing the same geopolitical agenda in the Middle East. On one hand the GOP (Republicans) are pursuing a belligerent agenda while the Democrats are pursuing a diplomatic agenda. The goal for both parties is exactly the same, that being global hegemony and survival as an empire. They share the ideology with their right wing partners in Britain, France, Germany (EU3), Canada and Israel and all are beating on the war drums while at the same time working hypocritically for peace.

N. America and Europe remain unchallenged externally through NATO military alliance and economically by liberal capitalism (PITFALLS OF LIBERAL CAPITALISM) Russia and China rank number 2 and 3, respectively, as military powers after the US while China is on an equal footing with the US as an economic power. Russia has been militarily contained in Ukraine and perceptibly weakened by western sanctions. Both are perceived as Eurasian threats towards achieving global hegemony. The west does not have the stomach to engineer a conflict in Eurasia so the killing fields will be in the Middle East. The methods by the right wingers are different but the result has always been identical whether in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Gaza, Libya or Syria. Now they intend to pit Iran and it's so called Shia allies with Sino-Russian support and Saudi Arabia with its Sunni allies supported by the NATO alliance through a disastrous conflict in the Middle East-a Muslim civil war in the region.

Learning from the pages of history, the Battle of Jamal (camel) took place at Basra, Iraq in November 656 AD. Aisha, a wife of Prophet Mohammed and daughter of the first Muslim caliph Abu Bakr, heard about the killing of Uthman, the third Caliph. Angered by his unavenged death, and the naming of Ali as the fourth caliph she took up arms against those supporting Ali. She gained support of the big city of Basra and, for the first time, Muslims took up arms against each other. This battle is now known as the first Muslim civil war.

The battle was politically (tribal) motivated regarding the issue of caliphate succession after Uthman's assassination. Some miscreants used Aisha to gain power but lost out. This battle had nothing to do with Shias and Sunnis as neither existed then but one entirely of pre-Islamic practices of tribal avenging. After the battle, Aisha's brother Muhammad, who was Ali's commander and his adopted son, approached his sister for reconciliation. It was accepted. These pre-Islamic tribal practices of vengeance continue on even in these modern times in the Gulf monarchies of Arabia.



The signs of another great Muslim civil war are becoming visible on the region's horizons. Though perceptibly it is about the Shia-Sunni conflicts, the fact is that the sectarian issues are being exploited together with the geopolitics of the region. The Gulf monarchies and Israel feared that the Iranians were acquiring a nuclear bomb to threaten them. Will both be pacified by the N-deal and convinced that Iran is no longer a regional nuclear threat to Israel as a state and to the Gulf monarchies as religious extremists? Thus far it does not seem so.

It may seem, in all aspects, that the P5+1 N-deal with Iran is with the objective of achieving peace in the region. It is an illusion. Iran understands that but it has accepted the deal to maneuver out of the sanctions and what have USA and EU3 powers gained by the easing of the sanctions? US, Israel and EU3 are also no fools hiding behind the illusion of peace when the agenda is war-one not of their making but that of the "bloodthirsty Muslims". Both aspects will be examined without delving into details in the following paragraphs.

Iran achieved the 20% enrichment of uranium as a bargaining chip – not that it ever wanted a bomb. Once it had achieved that leverage Iranian President Rouhani made peaceful overtures towards negotiations so that sanctions against it would be lifted and accrue economic benefits from the lifting of sanctions on banking and financial sectors and export of oil and gas imposed under UNSC. In exchange Iran surrendered various facets of its N-program.

Due to the sanctions Iran's crude oil exports had fallen from 2.2 million barrels per day (MMBOPD) in 2011 to 700,000 MMBOPD by 2013-14 costing Iran $50-55 billion/year (It is anticipated that additional 300,000 BOPD will come on the market in early 2016). The Iranian currency also fell against the US dollar by 60% causing inflation to rise by 35-40%. By early 2013 Iran's economy was seriously being pinched by the economic sanctions. Iran's ulterior motive was its right under the NPT to acquire nuclear technology for scientific research and fuel and it has managed to achieve the desired results by being able to operating about 5,060 centrifuges to produce 3.67% LEU (low enriched uranium) while at the same time stabilizing its economy. All along Iran was supported by China and Russia, its principal arms suppliers.

As Michael Rubin, an Iran analyst and critic of the administration at the American Enterprise Institute (supported by the neo-cons under Bush dynasty) correctly stated: "The Iranians used to brag that they play chess and we play checkers. It turns out that they play chess, while we play solitaire." Not quite.

The US has portrayed itself as a global peace broker by the deal with Iran but on the other side it continues to support the Gulf monarchies and the 10 member Sunni coalition to adopt belligerence in Syria and Yemen. Large corporations operate the cogs of the American economy and thrive during periods of recessions and wars. Both right wing parties are just puppets of the big corporations. The US recognized that without the lifting of sanctions under the N-deal, Iran would've been unable to fund and sustain its position as the regional power and support Iraq, Syria and Lebanon making up the Shia crescent. The US also needed to get an inside view of Iran's military capability and most likely it will manage it even though Iran took off the table the issue of PMD (possible military dimensions). If it'd not have done so, the same WMD issue with Iraq would've been imposed on the country. If Iran, by some scheme of the west, is to get involved in the Muslim civil war, it would need the monetary clout. The US and EU3 have ensured this by lifting the sanctions in phases.

Since the Western powers were kicked out of Indo-China, they along with Israel have managed to create wars, civil wars and wars of terrorism in Muslim countries over the past four decades – in Algeria, Egypt, Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Mali, Libya, Yemen and Iran. These wars have killed at least 15 million Muslims in those four decades. In sharp contrast, Southeast Asia has seen peace and economic prosperity. If Muslims desire peace and economic prosperity, they'll have to adopt the SE Asian model. In a civil war, it will be Muslims eating the flesh and drinking the blood of each other. Some sense should prevail among Muslims by not falling into the western trap. Will it? Time will tell if the western powers will be able to impose their civil war agenda in the Middle East or will Muslims get their sanity to defeat the western agenda and opt for peace?

Gulam Asgar Mitha is a retired Techinal Safety Engineer. He has worked with several N. American and International oil and gas companies. He has worked in Libya, Qatar, Pakistan, France, Yemen and UAE. Currently Gulam lives in Calgary, Canada and enjoys reading and keeping in tune with current global political issues.

Beyond The Nuclear Deal: A Civil War In The Middle East?�|�Oriental Review
 

GokuInd

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Re: Yemani Civil War

The Shia Houthis are advancing inside Sunni tribal areas

The KSA are uniting the several Yemeni tribes, without regards to their religion, against them. This is a slap on the face of whom believes in Western media's fallacy that Yemen, as well as Syria and Iraq, is a religious war between Shia e Sunni Muslims.

Just because there are a rivalry between Iran, a Shia majority country, and KSA, a Sunni majority country, some morons states that over any country that both them measures their strenght, the political crisis outcome is due to a Shia-Sunni conflict.
1) Care to tell the source of your claim? Let me give you a small word of advice: bribery and corruption have always worked wonders in tribalistic societies.
What else you think is the KSA doing in Yemen but stopping the advance of a SHIA tribe? Besides, have you found any incriminating evidence against the "Bad" Houthis or do you even equate them with Daesh or Al-Nusra-Front?
2) There is a religious war going on between the two denominations awfully well. Intra-religious conflicts between Sunnis and Shiites have simply extended from Syria to Iraq now to Yemen and flared up from time to time in Lebanon as well. Power poliitics between KSA & Iran and their camps. Simple.
 

sorcerer

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The Limitations of the Iran Deal

Eighteen months, hundreds of thousands of travel miles, and countless cups of hotel coffee later, the world's top powers strode up to the stage with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif on April 2 and declared "mission accomplished" – at least for the next three months. The central tenets of the negotiations – preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapons capability, minimizing the risk of a nuclear breakout, and establishing a strict inspection regime over all of Tehran's nuclear facilities – were a justifiable source of pride for all of the negotiators in the room. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, and the European Union's top foreign policy official, Frederica Mogherini, managed to produce one of the most thorough and strict arms control agreements in the history of nuclear proliferation. This is nothing short of historic.

The political framework of the nuclear agreement, released by the White House and the U.S. State Department immediately after the joint press statement was issued, is well known and has already been analyzed by supporters, opponents, and skeptics of the negotiations. But, when taking an impartial, facts-based approach towards the agreement and judging the text on its merits, it's difficult to see how the P5+1 didn't come out on top.

Tehran's centrifuge stockpile, 20,000 strong before the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was agreed to, will be slashed by two-thirds; Tehran will not be allowed to exceed a strict cap on the amount of low enriched uranium it produces for 15 years; not a single enrichment machine in Fordow will be permitted to churn out uranium for 15 years; the plutonium Arak facility will be reconfigured to be less of a proliferation threat; IAEA inspectors will be roaming Tehran's nuclear facilities and verifying that the terms are being met; Iran will be a permanent member of the Additional Protocol; and the IAEA will have the power to launch investigations at any time if it suspects that something nefarious is taking place. In exchange, Iran gets a phased lifting of all financial, banking, shipping, automotive, and oil sanctions from the United States, European Union, and United Nations once the IAEA certifies that Tehran "has taken all of its key nuclear-related steps."

Still, it's also important to recognize a reality that some optimists might wish to overlook: As strict and detailed as the agreement on Iran's nuclear program is, this is not – nor should it be seen as – a magic bullet that will end tensions between Iran and the West. Relations will remain tense and adversarial on a number of regional security issues. The Obama administration may be silently hoping that a deal on Tehran's nuclear program will lead to something bigger and brighter, like the ascendancy of moderates within the Iranian political system or the beginning of a U.S.-Iran rapprochement that strategically balances a turbulent part of the world. This is unlikely. A first-step comprehensive agreement on the nuclear file is a big win for both sides and has the potential to slow the proliferation of domestic nuclear programs among a number of Sunni Arab countries, but Iran and the West remain diametrically opposed on a number of crucial issues.

In Syria, Lebanon, and in a more muddled Iraq, the United States and its European partners are pursuing policies that are directly contradictory to what the Iranian government is trying to accomplish. The most obvious difference is on the issue of terrorism. For the West, Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon are violent, destructive anti-Semitic terrorist organizations seeking to destabilize the legitimate governments in both areas and consolidate their own power at the expense of Arab democracy and non-sectarian, nationalist political parties. Those same organizations, however, are critical partners for Tehran that provide Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force with an essential beachhead in an Arab world largely hostile to a major Shia power. A deal on centrifuges and uranium enrichment will has implications for Iran's patronage for either Hamas or Hezbollah in the near or medium term, particularly given the fact that both groups remain sympathetic to Iran's goal of becoming the region's foremost political power.

The situation in Syria is another case in point. Bashar al-Assad and his regime, responsible for the deaths of an estimated 220,000 Syrians over four years of civil war through the use of indiscriminate aerial bombardment, starvation, and chemical weapons, are a proxy force that the Iranians have been more than willing to support. Indeed, the Syrian National Coalition estimates that Iran has given Assad's regime tens of billions of dollars to ensure that the Syrian army and pro-government forces possess the weapons, fuel and resources needed to sustain a war effort against an insurgency that the West has supported with covert assistance, humanitarian aid, and non-lethal military gear. The Assad regime, first under Hafez and then under son Bashar, has been the only Arab ally that Tehran has been able to court over the past forty years, and its support over the last four years of the war is an illustration that the objectives of Tehran, Washington, Paris and London are simply irreconcilable at the moment.

Finally, there is the deep and personal dispute between Iran and the West on Israel. Ayatollah Khamenei, the generals of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, and the Iranian clerical establishment are – and will remain – implacably hostile to anything that the Israelis do in the region, regardless of whether or not a final nuclear deal is struck by June 30. During the closing days of the nuclear talks, the top commander of the Basij militia, Mohammad Reza Naqdi, loudly proclaimed that annihilating Israel was "nonnegotiable" for the Iranian regime. With so much national investment devoted to pressuring Israel along its borders through the subsidizing of Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and Hezbollah, Iranian policy towards Israel is guaranteed to remain a lasting and significant problem to the west.

Ultimately, Khamenei is the ultimate arbiter of all things foreign policy and national security, meaning that any hope of a broader improvement in the relationship between Iran and the West needs to go through him before it's considered a real option. Granted, Khamenei exhibited a degree of realism and pragmatism during the nuclear negotiations that was welcome to negotiators on all sides of the discussion, most critically his willingness to defend the Iranian negotiating team from critics and ensuring that hardliners in the Majlis didn't get too boisterous in their opposition. But Khamenei didn't do any of this as a favor to the United States or its partners in Europe – he did so because he fully understood that the economic sanctions that were levied against Tehran's crude oil exports were such an albatross around the neck of the Iranian economy that it was depriving the government of critical resources from its budget.

For the sake of making the Middle East a safer and more predictable place, the agreement – particularly if it's completed by the final June 30 deadline – will be valuable progress towards the goal of regional non-proliferation and a historic milestone in relations between Iran, the United States, and European powers. Yet acknowledging the good of what the JCPOA can do for regional stability doesn't mean that the other problems dividing Iran and the West will be magically resolved over the coming months or even years. Unfortunately, the adversarial relationship that has defined interactions among Iranian officials and those in Washington and European capitals will persist long into the foreseeable future.

Daniel R. DePetris is a Middle East analyst at Wikistrat, Inc., a geopolitical consulting firm specializing in foreign policy and national security trends for clients worldwide. He is also a contributor to the Atlantic Council, a leading national security think tank located in Washington, D.C.


The Limitations of the Iran Deal | The Diplomat
 

sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

Putin Lifts Ban on Delivery of S-300 Missile Systems to Iran
The Russian president has repealed the ban prohibiting the delivery of S-300 missile air defense systems to Iran.

The Russian president has repealed the ban prohibiting the delivery of S-300 missile air defense systems to Iran, according to the Kremlin's press service. The ban was introduced by former President Dmitry Medvedev in 2010.

"[The presidential] decree lifts the ban on transit through Russian territory, including airlift, and the export from the Russian Federation to the Islamic Republic of Iran, and also the transfer to the Islamic Republic of Iran outside the territory of the Russian Federation, both by sea and by air, of air defense missile systems S-300," says the information note accompanying the document, RIA Novosti reported.

The decree enters into force upon the president's signature.

The contract for supplying S-300 missile systems to Iran was signed in 2007 and implied the delivery of five S-300 squadrons worth $800 million. But in 2010 the contract was put on hold due to the UN imposing sanctions on Iran.

Tehran answered with filing a nearly $4 billion lawsuit against Russia's Rosoboronexport arms dealer company to a Geneva arbitration tribunal.

Read more: Putin Lifts Ban on Delivery of S-300 Missile Systems to Iran / Sputnik India English - News, Opinion, Radio

:popcorn:

Interesting.......
 

sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

The S-300 (NATO reporting name SA-10 Grumble) is a series of initially Soviet and later Russian long range surface-to-air missile systems produced by NPO Almaz, based on the initial S-300P version. The S-300 system was developed to defend against aircraft and cruise missiles for the Soviet Air Defence Forces. Subsequent variations were developed to intercept ballistic missiles.

S-300 (missile) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

Saudi Arabia's Other War
by ERIC DRAITSER

The Saudi war on Yemen has understandably come to dominate the headlines since it began in late March 2015. The international scope of the conflict – nominally including the participation of nearly a dozen Gulf countries – coupled with the obvious political and geopolitical implications, all but assured that nearly all mention of Saudi Arabia in the news would be in the context of this war. However, there is another war being waged by Saudi Arabia, this one entirely within its own borders.

While Riyadh viciously, and illegally, bombs the people of Yemen, it also continues to wage a brutal war of repression against its own Shia population. A significant minority inside Saudi Arabia, the Shia community has been repeatedly victimized by the heavy-handed, often murderous, tactics of Saudi security forces in a desperate attempt by the House of Saud to maintain its iron grip on power. Rather than being challenged to democratize and respect the rights of a minority, the Saudi government has chosen violence, intimidation, and imprisonment to silence the growing chorus of opposition.

Were it only the Shia minority being targeted however, this overt repression might be crudely caricatured as sectarian conflict within the context of "Iranian influence" on Saudi domestic politics; Iran being the bogeyman trotted out by Riyadh to justify nearly all of its criminal and immoral actions, from financing terror groups waging war on Syria to the bombardment of the people of Yemen. However, the Saudi government is also targeting bloggers, journalists, and activists who, despite their small numbers in the oppressive kingdom, have become prominent defenders of human rights, symbolizing an attempt, fruitless though it may be, to democratize and bring some semblance of social justice to the entirely undemocratic monarchy.

At War Against Its Own People

It is a well understood fact, almost universally recognized, that Saudi Arabia is one of the principal instigators of sectarianism throughout the Muslim world. Using a "divide and conquer" strategy that has worked with insidious perfection in Iraq, Syria, Yemen and elsewhere
, Saudi Arabia has managed to flex its geopolitical muscles and project its power without much threat to its own internal stability. However, there is increasingly a Shia movement within Saudi Arabia – we should not call it "sectarian" as it is about equality under the law – demanding its rights and legal protections that are undeniably incompatible with the absolutist, monarchical system that Saudi Arabia has erected.

Recent days have seen violent raids and clashes between Saudi security forces and residents throughout the overwhelmingly Shia Qatif province of Eastern Saudi Arabia, the most violent of which having taken place in the town of Awamiyah
. In response to protests against Riyadh's war on Yemen, the regime's security forces unleashed a brutal crackdown that perhaps most accurately could be called violent suppression. As one activist and resident of Awamiyah told the Middle East Eye, "From 4pm until 9pm the gunfire didn't stop"¦ Security forces shot randomly at people's homes, and closed all but one of the roads leading in and out of the village"¦ It is like a war here – we are under siege." A number of videos uploaded to YouTube seem to confirm the accounts of activists, though all eyewitness accounts remain anonymous for fear of government retribution.

Such actions as those described by activists in Awamiyah, and throughout Qatif, are nothing new. Over the last few years, the province has repeatedly seen upsurges of protests against the draconian policies of the government in Riyadh. Beginning in 2011, in concert with protests in Bahrain, Qatif became a hotbed of activism with increasingly significant demonstrations shaking the social foundations of the region, and rattling nerves in Riyadh which, with some justification, interpreted the growing democracy movement as a threat to its totalitarian control over the country. Responding to the "threat," the Saudi government repeatedly unleashed its security forces to violently suppress the demonstrations, resulting in a number of deaths; the total remains unknown to this day as Saudi Arabia tightly controls the flow of such sensitive information.

Of course, these actions by the Saudi regime cannot be seen in a vacuum. Rather, they must be understood within the larger context of the events of the 2011 uprising, and ongoing resistance movement, in neighboring Bahrain. Long a vassal state of Saudi Arabia, the majority Shia Bahrain has been ruled by the al-Khalifa family, a Sunni dynasty that for years has lorded over the country in the interests of their patrons and protectors in Saudi Arabia. When in 2011, much of the country erupted in protests against the totalitarian Khalifa regime, it was Saudi Arabia which militarily intervened on behalf of their proxies.

Despite being the leading edge of what would come to be known as the "Arab Spring," the uprising in Bahrain was largely forgotten amid the far more catastrophic events in Libya and Syria. Naturally, it should be noted that Saudi Arabia played a central in sponsoring both of those conflicts, as protests were transmogrified into terrorist wars backed by Saudi money and jihadi networks. In the midst of the regional instability, Saudi intervention in Bahrain became, conveniently enough for Riyadh, "lost in the shuffle." So, while the world hemmed and hawed about "dictators" in Libya and Syria, and marshaled political, diplomatic, and military forces to bring regime change to both, the dictatorship in Saudi Arabia continued to prop up its proxies in Bahrain, while suppressing the uprisings at home.

But while many would claim that Saudi actions are dictated not by authoritarianism but a continuing geopolitical struggle with Shia Iran, such arguments seem frivolous when considering the repression of freedom of speech within Saudi Arabia.

It is not sectarianism and "Iranian meddling" that has caused the Saudi regime to convict Raif Badawi, a liberal blogger and independent journalist, for the crime of "insulting Islam" for daring to question the draconian laws enforced by the reactionary monarchy and its police state apparatus. Not only was Badawi sentenced to ten years in prison and 1000 lashes, he was also originally tried on the absurd charge of "apostasy" which could have carried a death sentence. Indeed, though these charges were thrown out, reports have emerged in recent months that the apostasy charge may be brought back in a second trial; the punishment for a conviction would be beheading. So, physical abuse, long-term imprisonment, and a possible death sentence for a blogger who had the temerity to voice his opinion about political and social issues. And this country has the gall to intervene in Yemen on behalf of "democracy"?

Speaking of death sentences handed down by Saudi authorities for publicly airing one's beliefs, the case of Shia cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr also highlights the deeply unjust policies of the regime. A vocal supporter of the Qatif protests, Nimr was convicted of the crime of "disobeying" the Saudi government by seeking "foreign meddling" in the country. An obvious reference to the ever-present bogeyman of Iran, the spurious charges have been widely interpreted as an attempt to silence a major critic of the regime, one who has the support of the significant Shia minority. Saudi courts have sentenced Nimr to death for the "crime" of supporting the protests seeking democratization and a respect for minority rights. That decision was appealed, and last month a Saudi court upheld the death sentence.

While the House of Saud might peddle its propaganda of Iranian meddling with regard to Sheikh Nimr with some success, what of Badawi? Is he also an "agent" working on behalf of Iran? What of the estimated 12,000-30,000 political prisoners held in Saudi jails under very dubious pretexts?

Rights? What Rights?

The Saudi regime attempts to frame all of its blatant human rights abuses in the context of legitimate law enforcement. But this is a poorly conceived illusion, and cruel insult to the very concept of human rights. While the Saudis attempt to lecture countries like Syria about "human rights" and treatment of the people, Saudi Arabia remains perhaps the world leader in systematic and institutional oppression of its own citizens.

The infamous repression of women in Saudi Arabia has earned the country international scorn, but the regime scoffs at such conclusions. As the Washington Post wrote in 2013:

Saudi Arabia's restrictions on women go far, far beyond just driving, though. It's part of a larger system of customs and laws that make women heavily reliant on men for their basic, day-to-day survival"¦ each Saudi woman has a "male guardian," typically their father or brother or husband, who has the same sort of legal power over her that a parent has over a child. She needs his formal permission to travel, work, go to school or get medical treatment. She's also dependent on him for everything: money, housing, and, because the driving ban means she needs a driver to go anywhere, even the ability to go to the store or visit a friend"¦ The restrictions go beyond the law: women are often taught from an early age to approach the world outside their male guardian's home with fear and shame"¦[they are] warned against the "dangers that threaten the Muslim woman," such as listening to music, going to a mixed-gender mall or answering the telephone.

It takes an unfathomable degree of hypocrisy to oppress women in this way, and then lecture Syria – a secular socialist country where women's rights and freedoms are guaranteed, and where women have every educational and professional opportunity they might have in the West – about its treatment of its citizens. It is staggering the gall required of an unelected feudal monarchy to chastise the Yemeni rebels, and make a case for "legitimacy" in government.

Naturally, Saudi Arabia gets away with such egregious hypocrisy not because it isn't obvious to the world, it most certainly is. Instead, the House of Saud is able to carry on its repression because of its powerful patron in Washington. Because the regime has for decades furthered the geopolitical agenda of the United States, it has managed to continue its brutal repression facing only minimal outcry. Though there is scrutiny from international human rights organizations, the government is not sanctioned; it is not isolated by the much touted "international community." Instead it continues on with its oppressive policies and aggression against its neighbors.

Saudi bombs are falling on Yemen as you read this. Saudi-sponsored ISIS terrorists are waging war on Syria and Iraq as you read this. Saudi-sponsored terror groups all over the Middle East and Africa continue to destabilize whole corners of the globe. Activists in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia itself are being brutally oppressed by the Saudi regime and its proxies.

And yet, the House of Saud remains a US ally, while Assad or the Houthis or Iran or Hezbollah (take your pick) are the great villain? It is plainly obvious that right and wrong, good and evil, are mere designations of political expediency for Saudi Arabia and, taken more broadly, the US and the imperial system it leads.

Eric Draitser is the founder of StopImperialism.org. He is an independent geopolitical analyst based in New York City. You can reach him at [email protected].
Saudi Arabia's Other War » CounterPunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names
 

sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

Saudi Arabia's Other War
by ERIC DRAITSER

The Saudi war on Yemen has understandably come to dominate the headlines since it began in late March 2015. The international scope of the conflict – nominally including the participation of nearly a dozen Gulf countries – coupled with the obvious political and geopolitical implications, all but assured that nearly all mention of Saudi Arabia in the news would be in the context of this war. However, there is another war being waged by Saudi Arabia, this one entirely within its own borders.

While Riyadh viciously, and illegally, bombs the people of Yemen, it also continues to wage a brutal war of repression against its own Shia population. A significant minority inside Saudi Arabia, the Shia community has been repeatedly victimized by the heavy-handed, often murderous, tactics of Saudi security forces in a desperate attempt by the House of Saud to maintain its iron grip on power. Rather than being challenged to democratize and respect the rights of a minority, the Saudi government has chosen violence, intimidation, and imprisonment to silence the growing chorus of opposition.

Were it only the Shia minority being targeted however, this overt repression might be crudely caricatured as sectarian conflict within the context of "Iranian influence" on Saudi domestic politics; Iran being the bogeyman trotted out by Riyadh to justify nearly all of its criminal and immoral actions, from financing terror groups waging war on Syria to the bombardment of the people of Yemen. However, the Saudi government is also targeting bloggers, journalists, and activists who, despite their small numbers in the oppressive kingdom, have become prominent defenders of human rights, symbolizing an attempt, fruitless though it may be, to democratize and bring some semblance of social justice to the entirely undemocratic monarchy.

At War Against Its Own People

It is a well understood fact, almost universally recognized, that Saudi Arabia is one of the principal instigators of sectarianism throughout the Muslim world. Using a "divide and conquer" strategy that has worked with insidious perfection in Iraq, Syria, Yemen and elsewhere
, Saudi Arabia has managed to flex its geopolitical muscles and project its power without much threat to its own internal stability. However, there is increasingly a Shia movement within Saudi Arabia – we should not call it "sectarian" as it is about equality under the law – demanding its rights and legal protections that are undeniably incompatible with the absolutist, monarchical system that Saudi Arabia has erected.

Recent days have seen violent raids and clashes between Saudi security forces and residents throughout the overwhelmingly Shia Qatif province of Eastern Saudi Arabia, the most violent of which having taken place in the town of Awamiyah
. In response to protests against Riyadh's war on Yemen, the regime's security forces unleashed a brutal crackdown that perhaps most accurately could be called violent suppression. As one activist and resident of Awamiyah told the Middle East Eye, "From 4pm until 9pm the gunfire didn't stop"¦ Security forces shot randomly at people's homes, and closed all but one of the roads leading in and out of the village"¦ It is like a war here – we are under siege." A number of videos uploaded to YouTube seem to confirm the accounts of activists, though all eyewitness accounts remain anonymous for fear of government retribution.

Such actions as those described by activists in Awamiyah, and throughout Qatif, are nothing new. Over the last few years, the province has repeatedly seen upsurges of protests against the draconian policies of the government in Riyadh. Beginning in 2011, in concert with protests in Bahrain, Qatif became a hotbed of activism with increasingly significant demonstrations shaking the social foundations of the region, and rattling nerves in Riyadh which, with some justification, interpreted the growing democracy movement as a threat to its totalitarian control over the country. Responding to the "threat," the Saudi government repeatedly unleashed its security forces to violently suppress the demonstrations, resulting in a number of deaths; the total remains unknown to this day as Saudi Arabia tightly controls the flow of such sensitive information.

Of course, these actions by the Saudi regime cannot be seen in a vacuum. Rather, they must be understood within the larger context of the events of the 2011 uprising, and ongoing resistance movement, in neighboring Bahrain. Long a vassal state of Saudi Arabia, the majority Shia Bahrain has been ruled by the al-Khalifa family, a Sunni dynasty that for years has lorded over the country in the interests of their patrons and protectors in Saudi Arabia. When in 2011, much of the country erupted in protests against the totalitarian Khalifa regime, it was Saudi Arabia which militarily intervened on behalf of their proxies.

Despite being the leading edge of what would come to be known as the "Arab Spring," the uprising in Bahrain was largely forgotten amid the far more catastrophic events in Libya and Syria. Naturally, it should be noted that Saudi Arabia played a central in sponsoring both of those conflicts, as protests were transmogrified into terrorist wars backed by Saudi money and jihadi networks. In the midst of the regional instability, Saudi intervention in Bahrain became, conveniently enough for Riyadh, "lost in the shuffle." So, while the world hemmed and hawed about "dictators" in Libya and Syria, and marshaled political, diplomatic, and military forces to bring regime change to both, the dictatorship in Saudi Arabia continued to prop up its proxies in Bahrain, while suppressing the uprisings at home.

But while many would claim that Saudi actions are dictated not by authoritarianism but a continuing geopolitical struggle with Shia Iran, such arguments seem frivolous when considering the repression of freedom of speech within Saudi Arabia.

It is not sectarianism and "Iranian meddling" that has caused the Saudi regime to convict Raif Badawi, a liberal blogger and independent journalist, for the crime of "insulting Islam" for daring to question the draconian laws enforced by the reactionary monarchy and its police state apparatus. Not only was Badawi sentenced to ten years in prison and 1000 lashes, he was also originally tried on the absurd charge of "apostasy" which could have carried a death sentence. Indeed, though these charges were thrown out, reports have emerged in recent months that the apostasy charge may be brought back in a second trial; the punishment for a conviction would be beheading. So, physical abuse, long-term imprisonment, and a possible death sentence for a blogger who had the temerity to voice his opinion about political and social issues. And this country has the gall to intervene in Yemen on behalf of "democracy"?

Speaking of death sentences handed down by Saudi authorities for publicly airing one's beliefs, the case of Shia cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr also highlights the deeply unjust policies of the regime. A vocal supporter of the Qatif protests, Nimr was convicted of the crime of "disobeying" the Saudi government by seeking "foreign meddling" in the country. An obvious reference to the ever-present bogeyman of Iran, the spurious charges have been widely interpreted as an attempt to silence a major critic of the regime, one who has the support of the significant Shia minority. Saudi courts have sentenced Nimr to death for the "crime" of supporting the protests seeking democratization and a respect for minority rights. That decision was appealed, and last month a Saudi court upheld the death sentence.

While the House of Saud might peddle its propaganda of Iranian meddling with regard to Sheikh Nimr with some success, what of Badawi? Is he also an "agent" working on behalf of Iran? What of the estimated 12,000-30,000 political prisoners held in Saudi jails under very dubious pretexts?

Rights? What Rights?

The Saudi regime attempts to frame all of its blatant human rights abuses in the context of legitimate law enforcement. But this is a poorly conceived illusion, and cruel insult to the very concept of human rights. While the Saudis attempt to lecture countries like Syria about "human rights" and treatment of the people, Saudi Arabia remains perhaps the world leader in systematic and institutional oppression of its own citizens.

The infamous repression of women in Saudi Arabia has earned the country international scorn, but the regime scoffs at such conclusions. As the Washington Post wrote in 2013:

Saudi Arabia's restrictions on women go far, far beyond just driving, though. It's part of a larger system of customs and laws that make women heavily reliant on men for their basic, day-to-day survival"¦ each Saudi woman has a "male guardian," typically their father or brother or husband, who has the same sort of legal power over her that a parent has over a child. She needs his formal permission to travel, work, go to school or get medical treatment. She's also dependent on him for everything: money, housing, and, because the driving ban means she needs a driver to go anywhere, even the ability to go to the store or visit a friend"¦ The restrictions go beyond the law: women are often taught from an early age to approach the world outside their male guardian's home with fear and shame"¦[they are] warned against the "dangers that threaten the Muslim woman," such as listening to music, going to a mixed-gender mall or answering the telephone.

It takes an unfathomable degree of hypocrisy to oppress women in this way, and then lecture Syria – a secular socialist country where women's rights and freedoms are guaranteed, and where women have every educational and professional opportunity they might have in the West – about its treatment of its citizens. It is staggering the gall required of an unelected feudal monarchy to chastise the Yemeni rebels, and make a case for "legitimacy" in government.

Naturally, Saudi Arabia gets away with such egregious hypocrisy not because it isn't obvious to the world, it most certainly is. Instead, the House of Saud is able to carry on its repression because of its powerful patron in Washington. Because the regime has for decades furthered the geopolitical agenda of the United States, it has managed to continue its brutal repression facing only minimal outcry. Though there is scrutiny from international human rights organizations, the government is not sanctioned; it is not isolated by the much touted "international community." Instead it continues on with its oppressive policies and aggression against its neighbors.

Saudi bombs are falling on Yemen as you read this. Saudi-sponsored ISIS terrorists are waging war on Syria and Iraq as you read this. Saudi-sponsored terror groups all over the Middle East and Africa continue to destabilize whole corners of the globe. Activists in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia itself are being brutally oppressed by the Saudi regime and its proxies.

And yet, the House of Saud remains a US ally, while Assad or the Houthis or Iran or Hezbollah (take your pick) are the great villain? It is plainly obvious that right and wrong, good and evil, are mere designations of political expediency for Saudi Arabia and, taken more broadly, the US and the imperial system it leads.

Eric Draitser is the founder of StopImperialism.org. He is an independent geopolitical analyst based in New York City. You can reach him at [email protected].
Saudi Arabia's Other War » CounterPunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names
 

sorcerer

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Re: Yemen Shia-Sunni Clashes

The War on Yemen: Where Oil and Geopolitics Mix

Everything about the war on Yemen is a smokescreen. Concealed behind the smoke is a tale of geopolitics and petro-politics that aims to control the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait and the Gulf of Aden.

The House of Saud and a military coalition that consists mostly of anachronistic monarchies are claiming to bomb Yemen as a means of saving the Yemenite people and their transition to democracy. The irony should not be lost on observers that recognize that the Saudi-led coalition — consisting of the Kingdom of Morocco, UAE, Kuwait, Kingdom of Bahrain, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Qatar, Pakistan, Egypt, Sudan, and Saudi Arabia itself — is comprised of an unhealthy mixture of backward family dictatorships and corrupt governments that essentially are the antithesis of democracy.

Just as important to note, the Saudi-led war on Yemen is a criminal act. The military attack on Yemen was not authorized by the UN Security Council. Nor can the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia justify its bombing campaign under Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, because Yemen and Ansarullah (the Houthi movement) pose no threat of war to Riyadh and never had any intentions of igniting a war in the Arabian Peninsula. This is why the Kingdom's war on Yemen is categorically a violation of the Charter of the UN and international law.

The Houthis never wanted to aggravate Saudi Arabia let alone start a war against the Kingdom. Days before the Saudi-led war on Yemen, the Houthis had stealthily sent a delegation to Riyadh to establish an understanding with the Saudis and to calm them down.

Instead of opposing the illegal war on Yemen, Washington and its allies, including Britain, have thrown their political support behind the bombing of Yemen by the malfeasant Royal Saudi Air Force, which has committed war crime by intentionally bombing civilian infrastructure, including refugee camps and children's schools.

It is no coincidence that most of the victims in Yemen are civilians. This is part of a Saudi strategy of establishing rapid military dominance, which is colloquially called "shock and awe." Ring any bells? This is a strategy taken right out of Uncle Sam's playbook that intends to demoralize resistance and scare the opponent into surrendering.

Pentagon's not-so-hidden bloody hands

Not eager to reveal their roles in another illegal war on another sovereign country, the US and undoubtedly several of its NATO allies have decided to keep low profiles in the attack on Yemen. This is why Washington has opted to publicly present itself as only providing logistical and intelligence support to the Saudis for the war on Yemen.

The war on Yemen, however, would not be possible without the US. Not only have countries like the US and Britain provided military hardware to Saudi Arabia, but they are providing it with bombs for the attack, refueling its warplanes, providing intelligence, and giving the Kingdom logistical support.

Does this sound like non-involvement? Can the US really be considered a non-combatant in the war?

History — and very recent history at that too — is repeating itself in Yemen.

Observers should recall how Washington deceptively claimed that it did not want to go to war with the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya in 2011. The US publicly let the British and French take the lead in the NATO war on Tripoli while the Pentagon was actually the main force behind the war. US President Barack Obama called this a strategy of "leading from behind."

The US strategy in Yemen is not too different from that of the NATO war on Libya. It is another case of cloak and dagger where the US does not want to be seen pulling the strings behind the aggression and violation of international law.

The Saudis would never have dared attack Yemen without Washington's green light or help. The Pentagon is even selecting the bombing targets in Yemen for the Kingdom. "American military planners are using live intelligence feeds from surveillance flights over Yemen to help Saudi Arabia decide what and where to bomb," the Wall Street Journal casually reported when the war began. National Security Council Spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan, even stated that the US had established "a joint planning cell with Saudi Arabia to coordinate" the attack on Yemen.

This is why it should not come as a surprise that Saudi Arabia used Washington as the platform to announce the launching of its war on Yemen. The Associated Press even noticed the weird podium that the Kingdom had selected. "In an unusual tableau, Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the United States announced the rare military operation by his country at a Washington news conference about a half-hour after the bombing began," the Associated Press reported on March 25.


Double standards: Remember EuroMaidan in Ukraine?

One ugly double-standard after another ugly double-standard sticks out. While the House of Saud argued that it has intervened militarily in Yemen to restore Abd-Rabbuh Maná¹£our Al-Hadi, who Riyadh claims is the legitimate president of Yemen, it has pushed for a war on Syria and worked with the US to topple Bashar Assad's government.

Washington's reaction is even more lopsided. When EuroMaidan was underway in Kiev and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich was forced to flee in 2014, the US and its allies claimed that Yanukovich had lost all legitimacy because he fled Ukraine. Even as recently as February 2015, US officials have maintained this argument. "Well, let's all refresh ourselves on the facts here. President — former President Yanukovich abdicated his responsibilities by fleeing Kiev during a political crisis," the US Department of State's spokesperson, Jennifer Psaki, told reporters during a press briefing.

Well Mr. Al-Hadi also fled his country. Nevertheless, the same measuring stick that was used in Ukraine is not applied to assess Al-Hadi's legitimacy. Unlike its position on Ukraine, Washington claims that Al-Hadi is still the legitimate leader of Yemen.

The US is even willing to put aside its differences and work with Sudan, which the US Department of State claims is a state sponsor of terrorism, to bomb Yemen into accepting Al-Hadi back.

The basis for all of these contradictory positions is really a marker of US interests and Machiavellianism. It has nothing to do with legitimacy, democracy, or human rights.

Al-Hadi's (il)legitimacy

While there some parallels between the two, there are key differences between Ukraine and Yemen. These key differences set Yanukovich and Al-Hadi apart and are what made Yanukovich legitimate and Al-Hadi illegitimate.

Firstly, unlike President Yanukovich, Al-Hadi resigned from office. For arguments sake, however, we will not dwell on this. There are much more important points for evaluating Al-Hadi's legitimacy.

Unlike Yanukovich, Al-Hadi's term had actually expired. While President Yanukovich was elected into office by the Ukrainian people for his term, President Al-Hadi's term was extended through an administrative process. To quote Reuters: "Yemen's political factions extended the president's term by a year" on January 21, 2014. Al-Hadi was only kept in office to execute reforms, and this is the criterion for his legitimacy.

Under the above context, it has to be remembered that Al-Hadi was selected as a transitional figure. He became the president of Yemen to usher democracy and his term was extended in 2014 for this purpose. Instead, Al-Hadi dragged his feet on the democratic reforms — the fundamental basis for his legitimacy — that he was supposed to institute in Yemen. He was not fulfilling his mandate to share power and to enfranchise Yemen's different political factions.

President Al-Hadi actually tried to concentrate power into his own hands while working to weaken Yemen's other factions, including the Houthis, through gerrymandering by redrawing Yemen's administrative regions.


Petro-politics & Bab-el-Mandeb Strait: Another war for control of oil?

The geopolitical significance of Yemen has weighed heavily in the equation. This war is as much about oil as it is about Saudi suzerainty and the House of Saud's objectives to make Yemen a vassal state. Alongside Djibouti, Yemen forms part of an important maritime chokepoint, called the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait (also known as the Gateway of Tears/Anguish), which connects the Indian Ocean's Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea.

It is no exaggerations to call the Mandeb Strait one of the world's arteries. As a maritime chokepoint, the strait is just as important as Egypt's Suez Canal — which connects the Mediterranean to the Red Sea — and the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf, because Bab-el-Mandeb overlooks one of the most strategic and important global corridors for the transportation of energy and international commerce.

Preventing US and Saudi rivals from gaining a strategic foothold over the Mandeb Strait and the Gulf of Aden is a major objective of the war on Yemen.
The US and the House of Saud see control over the Mandeb Strait and the Gulf of Aden as strategically important in the scenario of a conflict with Iran where Tehran closes the Strait of Hormuz to oil shipments and international shipping. As the New York Times points out, "Nearly all Saudi commerce is via sea, and direct access to the Arabian Sea would diminish dependence on the Persian Gulf — and fears of Iran's ability to cut off the Strait of Hormuz."Plan B in such a scenario for the Kingdom includes using Aden and other Yemeni ports.

Support for the balkanization of Yemen chimes with this and ideas about dividing Yemen have been floating around since the Arab Spring. In 2013, the New York Times had this to propose about a Saudi takeover and annexation of southern Yemen: "Arabs are abuzz about part of South Yemen's eventually merging with Saudi Arabia. Most southerners are Sunni, as is most of Saudi Arabia; many have family in the kingdom. The poorest Arabs, Yemenis could benefit from Saudi riches. In turn, Saudis would gain access to the Arabian Sea for trade, diminishing dependence on the Persian Gulf and fear of Iran's virtual control over the Strait of Hormuz."

Houthi control over Yemen, however, complicates and obscures US and Saudi plans.

Mandeb Strait and control of strategic chokepoints

As Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah has rightly pointed out, the Houthis and the Yemeni military are capable of closing the Mandeb Strait. One of the reasons that Saudi Ambassador to Washington Adel Al-Jubeir stressed that the Houthis should not have control over ballistic missiles, heavy military hardware, and Yemeni bases is because the US and Saudi Arabia want to neutralize the potential of Yemen to close the Mandeb Strait, especially if Yemen should coordinate with Tehran as an Iranian ally in the future. In this regard, the Saudis have attacked Yemen's missile depots. The aim of the air strikes include not only preventing Yemen's missile arsenal from being used to retaliate against any exertions of Saudi force, but to also prevent them from being on hand to a Yemeni government aligned to Tehran or other US rivals.

Moreover, it has to be remembered that control over Yemen is not only important for mitigating the effects from a scenario where the Strait of Hormuz are closed by Tehran. Control over Mandeb Strait is also important for tightening the noose around the Iranians and in the scenario of a war with Iran. The same can be argued about a US strategy in the Indian Ocean against the Chinese.

Back in 2011, when Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin was serving in Brussels as Moscow's envoy to NATO, he noted that Washington was not only planning on taking over Syria as a beachhead for a war with Iran, but that the US and its allies would later try to control Yemen as the next step in preparing the grounds for an attack on Iran. At the time, RIA Novosti (now renamed Sputnik) reported that "Rogozin agreed with the opinion expressed by some experts that Syria and later Yemen could be NATO's last steps on the way to launch an attack on Iran."

Why did Netanyahu warn US Congress about Yemen?

Reports that Israel is a not-so-secret member of the Saudi-led coalition that is bombing Yemen need to be read, understood, analyzed in the above context about the Mandeb Strait too. Netanyahu's unspoken concern is that Yemen could cut off Israel's access to the Indian Ocean and, more specifically, its ability to easily deploy its Dolphin class submarines to the Iranian coast in the Persian Gulf.

Who is threatening who? According to the Sunday Times and Israeli sources, three nuclear-armed Israeli submarines are deployed near Iran's shores at all times waiting on standby for orders from Tel Aviv to bomb Iran. In part, this is why Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was ringing the alarm bells about Yemen and the Mandeb Strait in the Washington Beltway when he went to speak on Capitol Hill on March 4.

Israel is concerned about Yemen because an independent Yemeni government could inhibit Israel's nuclear-armed submarines from easily deploying from the Red Sea to the Persian Gulf to menace Iran with the threat of an attack.

Iran and the Houthis

Just like the case with Ukraine, all the problems in Yemen are also being blamed on a nearby country. While Russia has been blamed as the scapegoat for the plethora of problems in Ukraine, Iran has been blamed for the Saudi war on Yemen.

The Saudis are falsely depicting the Houthis as Iranian proxies or allies, because the movement is composed of Zaidi (Fiver) Shiites. The Houthis, however, are independent from Tehran and have agency as political actors; they are not Iranian proxies whatsoever. A common faith has not brought the Houthis and the Iranians, who are predominately Jaffari (Twelver) Shiites, together. Politics is what has brought the two together.

The sectarian language that falsely depicts Yemen as a battleground between Shia Muslims and Sunni Muslims is ill informed or intended to mislead people by design about the actual politics and history of Yemen. This type of sectarian language was never used when the House of Saud supported King Mohammed Al-Badr's Zaidi imamate against the republicans or Ali Abdullah Saleh, who himself is a Zaidi Shiite, against the Houthis.

Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah is very accurate when he points out that different regional players are turning to Tehran for help, because either Saudi Arabia will not help them or is pushing them in the direction of Iran through its foolish policies. This has been precisely the case for the Houthis. If it was not for the flawed policies of the US and Saudi Arabia, the Houthis would never have turned to Iran in the first place.

The Houthis also sent delegations to Moscow and Beijing to overcome US and Saudi efforts to isolate and weaken them internationally
.
Will Yemen become Saudi Arabia's Vietnam?

Historically, foreign intervention in Yemen has largely proven to be a disaster. Yemeni terrain is rugged and the elevated interior topography is perfect for guerilla warfare. Gamal Abdel Nasser's Egypt lost many soldiers in North Yemen during its civil war, which was a major liability for Cairo.

When Ibn Saud was conquering Arabia, he was stopped in Yemen by King Yahya.

In more recent history or times, when Saudi Arabia invaded Yemen to fight the Houthis in 2009 and 2010, it was effectively defeated again in Yemen. The Houthis even ended up capturing towns inside Saudi Arabia.

Ground operations will not be a walk in the park for Saudi Arabia. Any invasion and occupation of Yemen will prove to be a disaster for the Kingdom. There are also complex tribal links between southern Saudi Arabia and Yemen. In the chaos a Pandora's Box could be ignited that would result in rebellions inside the Kingdom itself.

The House of Saud seems to be cognizant of the dangers. This may be why it is pushing Pakistan and Egypt to send their troops.

Someone should tell the House of Saud that according to the Chinese general Sun Tzu, "The best war is the one that never has to be fought."

This article was originally published by RT on April 9, 2015.
The War on Yemen: Where Oil and Geopolitics Mix | Global Research - Centre for Research on Globalization
 

ShahryarHedayatiSHBA

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Russia's President Vladimir Putin called for an "immediate
ceasefire" in Yemen in phone conversations with Iran's President Hassan Rouhani,



news.yahoo.com/russias-putin-iran-immediate-ceasefire-needed-yemen-163620870.html
 

ShahryarHedayatiSHBA

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China says deeply concerned about Yemen situation

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's foreign ministry said on Thursday it was deeply concerned about the worsening situation in Yemen, after Saudi Arabia announced it had launched military operations in that country with Gulf region allies.

Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said that China urges all parties to act in accordance with United Nations Security Council resolutions on Yemen, and to resolve the dispute through dialogue.


Hua told a news conference that China hopes all parties involved will "quickly resolve the dispute through political dialogue, solve the current crisis and restore domestic stability and normality to Yemen at an early date."

She said that all Chinese people and institutions in Yemen were safe, adding that the foreign ministry and the Chinese embassy in Yemen had warned its citizens not to visit Yemen.

Yemen exports about 1.4-1.5 million barrels of Masila crude each month, mainly to China, but a Chinese trade source said that volume was relatively small and could easily be replaced with West African crude.

China's crude imports from Yemen in the first two months this year were 4.5 mln bbls, up 315 percent from the same period a year ago.
China has traditionally kept a low profile in Middle East diplomacy despite its reliance on oil imports from the region, although it is keen to demonstrate its role as a force in international politics.

news.yahoo.com/china-says-deeply-concerned-yemen-situation-072030872.html
 

ShahryarHedayatiSHBA

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Egyptian Warships en Route to Gulf of Aden to Support Offensive in Yemen
Read more:
sputniknews.com/middleeast/20150326/1020037435.html#ixzz3VUuEEx20

Turkey Supports Saudi-Led Attack on Houthis in Yemen
Read more:
sputniknews.com/middleeast/20150326/1020039088.html#ixzz3VUuK9KpS

Sudan Confirms Participation in Saudi-Led Operation Against Houthis
Read more:
sputniknews.com/middleeast/20150326/1020036584.html#ixzz3VUuMv5Il
 

ShahryarHedayatiSHBA

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Messages
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6 children dead in Yemen as Saudi-led coalition airstrike hits school


rt.com/news/247701-yemen-school-children-dead/







Yemen: Saudi airstrike hit school


.cnn.com/2015/04/07/middleeast/yemen-crisis-houthis-saudi-arabia/







Saudi Arabia accused of killing 40 including children in air strike on Yemen refugee camp



independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/saudi-arabia-accused-of-killing-40-including-children-in-air-strike-on-yemen-refugee-camp-10145294.html








Dozens killed in airstrike at refugee camp in Yemen


.washingtonpost.com/world/saudi-led-airstrikes-shake-sanaa-for-fifth-day-as-rebels-push-towards-aden/2015/03/30/0f3b3b76-d6bf-11e4-8103-fa84725dbf9d_story.html
 

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