Russian warships in position opposite Israel
DEBKAfile Special Report November 23, 2012, 4:58 PM (GMT+02:00)
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The Black Sea Fleet's naval task force, including the missile cruiser Moskva, the destroyer Smetlivy, the large landing ships Novocherkassk andSaratov, the tugboat MB-304 and the large oil tanker Ivan Bubnov, have received an order to remain in a designated area in the eastern Mediterranean ready to evacuate Russian citizens from the Gaza Strip should the Palestinian-Israeli conflict worsen.
This statement was issued Friday, Nov. 23, by a source in the Russian Navy’s Mai Command.
DEBKAfile’s military sources: The Russian statement is in effect a cover story for the naval task force’s real mission, which is to stand by for coming developments in relation to the Syrian conflict.
Moscow used the pretext first offered by Washington last week for the stationing of three US warships led by the USS Iwo Jima amphibious ready group opposite Israeli shores last week, i.e. as a precautionary measure for the evacuation of US citizens in a war emergency.
The Iwo Jima was meanwhile to be found Friday in waters opposite Syria.
and....
http://www.tampabay.com/incoming/libyas-investigation-of-benghazi-consulate-attack-in-limbo/1262870
BENGHAZI, Libya — After more than two months, Libya's investigation into the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi appears in limbo. Key security commanders and witnesses say they were never questioned. No suspects have been named, and gunmen seen participating in the assault walk freely in the eastern Libyan city.
Hanging over the inquiry is a fear of reprisals from extremist militiamen. Farag al-Fazani, a young commander of a Libyan security force commissioned to protect the U.S. post at the time of the Sept. 11 attack, says he sees militants he recognizes from that chaotic night.
They recognize him too.
"I get death threats by phone (saying) you are an infidel and spilling your blood is permitted," said al-Fazani. "No one can protect me. I see them and they know me."
The dangers in the city are clear. On Wednesday, the head of one of the city's security agencies, National Security chief Farag el-Dersi, was shot to death by three attackers as he headed home from work. It is the latest in a string of killings of officials with no word on who is behind them, though there is no indication they are connected to the investigation.
U.S. and Libyan leaders have sworn to hunt down those who carried out the Sept. 11 assault, in which gunmen blasted their way into the consulate compound after nightfall and killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens. Most officials and witnesses have blamed fighters from Ansar al-Shariah, an Islamic extremist militia in the city. But much remains unexplained — including what was the attack's motive, why did Libyan security pull back from the consulate and even what time the attack started, much less the bigger questions of whether outside terror groups like al-Qaida had a hand.
The FBI, which sent a team to Tripoli immediately after the attack to work with Libyan investigators, has said nothing about its findings so far. At FBI headquarters in Washington, spokesman Michael Kortan on Wednesday declined to comment on the Libyan's conduct of the inquiry.
At the United Nations in New York, U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice told reporters, "You know the FBI and the State Department's Accountability Review Board are conducting investigations as we speak. And they will look into all aspects of this heinous terrorist attack, to provide what will become the definitive accounting of what occurred.
"None of us will rest, none of us will be satisfied until we have the answers, and the terrorists responsible for this attack are brought to justice," she said.
From Libya, there has been little sign of an investigation.
Numerous senior security officials in the city approached by the Associated Press knew nothing about the inquiry, and none said they had been questioned by investigators. The commander of Joint Operation Room who oversaw the security forces' reaction during the attack said he sent a report to the ruling General National Congress but received no feedback and had not been contacted by investigators.
"We were surprised that we were not summoned. . . . Very strange," said the commander, Abdel-Salam al-Barghathi. "I don't see anything on the ground" by way of investigation.
Several witnesses reported seeing an Islamic militant commander, Ahmed Abu Khattala, help direct the attack. Abu Khattala denies involvement but says he was at the scene to help rescue men trapped in the consulate. He has not been questioned by investigators, whether as a witness or a suspect.
"No one from Ansar al-Shariah has been summoned, or even told they are wanted," Abu Khattala told the Associated Press. Abu Khattala is a frequent visitor of Benghazi's el-Fadheel hotel, which is owned by Adel Galgoul, the owner of a safe house to which staffers from the consulate were evacuated during the attack, only to be hit by mortars that led to two of the American deaths.
Al-Fazani, the protection force commander, said Ansar al-Shariah carried out the consulate attack, led by Abu Khattala. "They divided themselves into two groups, one stormed the place and the second gave protection and supply," he said.
Al-Fazani said he was told to go to Tripoli to speak to U.S. investigators, but he was too afraid to do so. "I don't want to get into this. Security and things here are still tense," he said.
The investigation commission created by the National Congress to work with the FBI is largely based out of Tripoli, 400 miles from Benghazi.
It has faced personnel problems. Initially it was led by a judge in Benghazi, but he stepped down after only two weeks, according to the head of the Benghazi Cassation court, Fatma al-Baraghathi, who appointed him.
He was replaced by a judge in Tripoli, but al-Baraghathi said it was not clear if he had started work. The commission also includes the Interior Ministry's Criminal Investigation Division and Libyan intelligence.
The judge who stepped down refused to give details.
"I no longer have anything to do with this case, and I have nothing to say about it," said Salem Abdel-Atti.
Deputy Interior Minister Omar al-Khadrawi insisted the investigation was "going well" but could not say when it would be completed.
Speaking two weeks ago, ministry spokesman Ezz Eddin al-Fazani said the results would be released soon.
He and other Interior Ministry officials say they don't even know how many people have been detained. Early on, top officials said they made anywhere from 6 to 40 arrests, but no one can say if anyone is still held. In any case, all of those detained were post-attack looters, not gunmen who stormed the compound, former Prime Minister Mustafa Abu-Shagour told the Associated Press.
The confusion reflects the broader disarray of Libya's state security. To keep a degree of peace, authorities rely on the numerous militias made up of tens of thousands of young Libyans who took up arms against Gadhafi. It is often difficult to draw clear lines between those providing security and those causing instability. Many militias are under the Interior Ministry's Supreme Security Committee, giving them a veneer of state authority to handle security tasks police would normally perform, but they remain virtually independent, loyal to their own commanders and agendas.
Security officials are fearful of confronting the militias, which are far better armed than security forces. Ansar al-Shariah and its mother group, the Rafallah Sahati brigade, are among the strongest militias in Benghazi.
Fawzi Wanis, head of the Supreme Security Committee, is convinced militiamen within the committee fed information to the consulate attackers. But "I don't have the capability to carry out an internal investigation."
Details of the attack remain muddled. The Obama administration says it was a planned terror attack by militants, after initial confusion over whether there was also a protest against an anti-Islam film. Libyan security guards at the consulate and most witnesses say there were no peaceful protests outside the mission, but there were onlookers attending a wedding at a hall named Venice outside the mission's main gate.
Libyan security officials continue to give contradictory statements. Al-Barghathi, the head of the command center, told the Associated Press that there were protesters and he withdrew troops from in front of the consulate because he did not want to cause casualties among civilians. But in the report he submitted to the National Council — shown to the Associated Press — he makes no mention of protests.
Even the time the attack began is unclear. A U.S. time line says it started at 9:40 p.m., but most witnesses say the first firing began an hour earlier. Another question is why Stevens did not have stronger security and why Libyan security reinforcements did not arrive until 11 p.m., even though military and security bases are nearby.
The void of information has only fueled conspiracy theories among Benghazi's residents. Al-Barghathi, for example, is convinced the United States wanted Stevens to be killed.
"They brought him here to get rid of him. We have information that he was about to convert to Islam," said al-Barghathi. "Why else would he not have enough security?"
and.......
http://news.antiwar.com/2012/11/23/syrian-kurds-talk-alliance-in-fighting-invading-rebels/
Syrian Kurds Talk Alliance in Fighting Invading Rebels
PKK-Linked Rebels May Add More Kurdish Allies in Ongoing Battle for Syria's East
by Jason Ditz, November 23, 2012
The Kurdish Democratic Union (PYD), a PKK-linked opposition party in Syria, has been fighting with the rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) for awhile, and now seems to be locking horns with the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front as well, as rebels look to expand in Syria’s east.
Syria’s east is also Kurdistan’s west, however, and the PYD is reportedly in talks with long-standing rivals the Kurdish Azadi Party about the potential of uniting against the common threat of rebel incursion.
For Syrian rebel factions, the effort to take over the oil-rich east is about cementing their hold on one of the largest contiguous areas they have in a deeply contested nation, and a particularly oil-rich region, which the regime relies on for revenue.
They assumed it would be easy with the Syrian military having very little presence, and far from their major supply lines. Yet while they are expanding, this Kurdish alliance may be a more dangerous enemy in this specific region, and insurgent factions could find themselves trying to deal with their own insurgents in captured territory.
and Kurds cause dust up between Iraq and turkey PMs......
http://news.antiwar.com/2012/11/23/turkey-iraq-pms-trade-barbs-over-their-respective-kurdish-problems/
Turkey, Iraq PMs Trade Barbs Over Their Respective Kurdish Problems
Both Advise Other to Mind Their Own Business
by Jason Ditz, November 23, 2012
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan and his Iraqi counterpart Nouri al-Maliki are at odds. That’s nothing new, but both are trading unusually angry barbs with one another over their respective Kurd problems.
It began with Erdoganexpressing concern about the looming battle between the Iraqi military and the Peshmearga, fearing it could threaten their existing oil deals with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), deals which the Maliki government has condemned as illegal.
Maliki fired back that Erdogan should be focusing on Turkey’s own war with the PKK, which he termed a “civil war,” while predicting that Erdogan would eventually be forced from office.
Turkish Foreign Ministry statements followed mocking Maliki, claiming he has “lost touch with reality” and “confused the state of affairs in Iraq with that of Turkey.” In the end both governments have big problems with their respective Kurdish minorities, and far from bringing them together, it seems to be driving them more apart.
additional war watch news of note.....
- Iran Complains to UN About Illegal US Overflights - November 23rd, 2012
- Syrian Rebels Claim Control of Northeast 'Supply Route' to Iraq - November 23rd, 2012
- Netanyahu Struggles to Sell 'Victory' in Gaza War - November 23rd, 2012
- Jordan Spurns Iran's Offer of 30 Years of Free Oil for Tourism Access - November 23rd, 2012
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