Formerly "Hudson Institute, New York"
In this mailing:
- Khaled Abu Toameh: The "Mother of All Letters"
- Guy Millière: Bequeathers of Absolute Truth Crush Free Speech in Europe
- Raymond Ibrahim: The Fate of Syria
- Peter Huessy: The Pursuit of Zero Nuclear Weapons
- AK Group: Erdogan Calls for Humanitarian Aid Corridors into Syria
The "Mother of All Letters"
Abbas's Latest Gimmick
by Khaled Abu Toameh
March 8, 2012 at 5:00 am
http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2926/abbas-letter
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They are worried that Iran has stolen the limelight. Instead of wasting his time writing letters, Abbas should return to the negotiating table with Israel immediately and unconditionally. Gimmicks and tricks will not help advance the cause or interests of the Palestinian people.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas deserves an award for being the best master of gimmicks in the Middle East.
After his failed statehood bid at the UN Security Council and his unsuccessful attempts to end the power struggle between his Fatah faction and Hamas, the 76-year old Abbas has resorted to his old habit of issuing empty threats.
Abbas's most recent threat, his aides said this week, was to send the "mother of all letters" to the Israeli government regarding the stalled peace process.
Abbas's explosive letter will hold Israel alone responsible for the failure of the peace process, mainly because of its refusal to halt construction in the settlements and accept the pre-1967 lines as the borders of a future Palestinian state, the aides revealed.
They added that the president was busy these days writing the "mother of all letters," which will be sent to the Americans and Europeans before it is delivered to the Israeli government.
By describing the letter as the "mother of all letters," Abbas and his aides are hoping to create drama and suspension over the stalled peace talks with Israel.
The Palestinian leadership is hoping that the sensation surrounding Abbas's letter will shift worldwide attention back to the Israeli-Arab conflict.
They are worried that Iran has stolen the limelight from the Palestinian issue; they are therefore trying to win back the attention of the world.
Abbas and his representatives expressed that concern this week after hearing the speech of US President Barack Obama before AIPAC's annual gathering in Washington.
Noting that the speech had completely ignored the Palestinian issue, Palestinian officials in Ramallah voiced "deep disappointment" with Obama.
On March 7, Abbas convened yet another urgent meeting of PLO and Fatah leaders in Ramallah to discuss the content of this "mother of all letters" which he intends to send to Israel. The meeting, which came less than 48 hours after Obama's speech, reflected the increased concern of the Palestinians over the world's fading attention to their problems.
Nevertheless, no one in Ramallah is expecting Abbas's dramatic letter to contain anything new.
The most extreme scenario would be a threat by Abbas to dismantle the Palestinian Authority and submit his resignation.
It would be hard to find one Palestinian who would be surprised if Abbas's letter included such a threat, particularly in light of the fact that the Palestinian president has talked about stepping down and dissolving the Palestinian Authority on numerous occasions in the past.
Some Palestinians are already referring to the "mother of all letters" as another one of Abbas's "gimmicks". "The Israelis must be preparing the shelters because they are so scared of Abbas's letter," a Palestinian political analyst remarked sarcastically. "Many people have become used to Abbas's gimmicks and empty threats."
Instead of wasting his time on writing the "mother of all letters," Abbas should return to the negotiating table with Israel immediately and unconditionally to ensure a better future for his people. Gimmicks and tricks will not help advance the cause or interests of the Palestinians.
Related Topics: Khaled Abu Toameh
Bequeathers of Absolute Truth Crush Free Speech in Europe
by Guy Millière
March 8, 2012 at 4:45 am
http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2921/europe-free-speech
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Many of the elites seem to think of themselves as The Bequeathers of Absolute Truth -- proud, self-righteous, totalitarian antagonists to any contrarian thought or speech -- and they have seized power in universities, in the media and in nearly all political parties. A ban takes hold, then another and another and another. And nobody notices until it's too late.
"It is Seldom That Any Kind of liberty is lost all at once," wrote David Hume. To warn that the erosion of economic freedom by interventionist measures would lead to the erosion of political and intellectual freedom, Friedrich Hayek placed this quote on the front page of The Road to Serfdom. It perfectly illustrates the threat to the destruction of freedom in Europe after World War II.
Although seven decades have passed, the warning has not been heeded. Economic freedom in Europe has been largely abolished as month after month, regulations emanating from the unelected, self-appointed, technocratic Brussels Commission continue to multiply.
Political freedom has also been confiscated as key decisions between heads of state are made -- behind closed doors -- by the equally unelected, self-appointed, technocratic European Council.
It now looks as if intellectual freedom is about to be eradicated as well.
In almost all European countries, only monolithic thought is allowed to be actually spoken. Many of the elites seem to think of themselves as The Bequeathers of Absolute Truth -- proud, self-righteous, totalitarian antagonists to any contrarian thought or speech -- and they have seized power in universities, in the media and in nearly all political parties.
In Europe, defending free market ideas and Judeo-Christian values has become almost impossible. When European journalists report on the debates between Republican candidates during the primary elections in the United States, what they hear is so strange to them that they need to invent new words. "Conservatism" is not enough; they speak of "ultra conservatism," implying, of course, that anyone "ultra conservative" must be an insane extremist.
Evoking the contributions of Western civilization, or saying that these contributions are worthy, leads immediately to harsh criticism. Silvio Berlusconi, a few weeks after the September 11 attacks on the US, said, "We must be aware of the superiority of our civilization, a system that has guaranteed well-being, respect for human rights." Faced with the unanimous indignation of his peers, he had to declare a few days later that he was withdrawing his remarks.
When the French Interior Minister Claude Gueant recently declared that "not all cultures are of equal value," a socialist deputy publicly expressed outrage, and added that sentences of this kind had "paved the way for the Third Reich;" the French National Assembly has envisioned legal action against him.
Criticizing Islam is even more dangerous. This apparently marks you as an "Islamophobe" and a "racist." Complaints are filed, and courts impose heavy fines, sometimes prison sentences.
The prominent Dutch politician Geert Wilders, who expressed the opinion that Islam was "fascism," was prosecuted in the Netherlands in January 2009 for "inciting hatred against Muslims." Although he was acquitted in June 2011 by a Dutch court, those who sued him brought the case before the European Court of Human Rights. Final judgment has not yet been reached. The plaintiffs said they felt "humiliated and threatened" by Wilders who, unlike them, must live in safe houses, under police protection. The film director Theo van Gogh was murdered for having made a short film, "Obsession," about the treatment of women in Islam. The Dutch Parliamentarian, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who had worked in women's shelters, was threatened with death for having written the script for it; she eventually fled to the United States.
An Austrian woman, Elisabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff, gave a private lecture in Vienna in November 2009, during which she remarked that the prophet Mohammed, who married one of his wives, Aisha, when she was nine, "liked young girls," and one month later found herself charged with "denigrating the teachings of a recognized religion." In February 2011, she was sentenced to a heavy fine, which she paid; she nevertheless lives under constant threat.
Lars Hedegaard, President of the Danish Free Press Society and the International Free Press Society, affirmed in a December 2009 interview, that Islam treated women in a "degrading manner." He was immediately convicted of "inciting hatred" and of "racism." In May 2011, he too was sentenced to a heavy fine.
When two Frenchmen, Pierre Cassen and Pascal Hillout, created a secularist movement, Riposte Laïque, [Secular Reply] in 2007, and published several articles against the Islamization of France and Europe, they were charged with "inciting racial hatred" against Muslims. It should be noted that Cassen is a trade-unionist and belongs to the left, and that Hillout was born a Muslim. Complaints against them were filed by the League against Racism and Antisemitism (LICRA), the Movement against Racism and for Friendship among Peoples (MRAP), and the League of Human Rights (LDH) -- three organizations that used to fight to defend human rights but that now pursue very different goals and act only when Islam appears "threatened." On February 3, 2012, the prosecutor requested a jail sentence of two months for Hillout, a jail sentence of three months for Cassen, and a crippling fine of 150,000 euros ($200,000) for Riposte Laïque. The verdict is to be delivered in a few weeks.
For a book about Islam in 2004 (Who's Afraid of Islam?), that criticizes Islam and defends Israel, I also have been attacked by the MRAP and still receive frequent explicit death threats -- anonymous letters and e-mails, and pictures of slit throats -- and copies of The Invention of the Palestinian People, my latest book, have been destroyed by organized gangs raiding bookshops.
The list of examples could be long; all who dare to criticize Islam, defend Israel, or even speak of "Western civilization" in Europe live in a situation of provisional freedom, and face increasing risks. The situation resembles nothing so much as that of dissidents in the former Soviet Union, who risk harassment, fines and even, as we have seen, incarceration. Newspapers and magazines no longer feel free to publish their writings; large publishing companies refuse their books.
Muslim imams in mosques all over Europe feel free to preach hatred for the West and to call for "War against Christians and Jews," while mainstream politicians and journalists hear nothing, and judges see nothing.
What happened to Europe needs to be a warning to the American people; it needs to be urgently known and explained. The loss of freedom can occur gradually. It can also be brutal. A ban takes hold, then another, and another and another. And nobody pays attention until its too late.
Related Topics: Guy Millière
The Fate of Syria
"Cut Into Pieces and Thrown in the River"
by Raymond Ibrahim
March 8, 2012 at 4:30 am
http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2922/syria-christians-fate
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Should "rebels" get their way and topple the Assad regime, the same brutal pattern experienced by Iraq's Christian minorities will come to Syria, where an anti-Assad Muslim preacher recently urged Muslims to "tear apart, chop up and feed" Christians to the dogs.
What is the alternative to Bashar al-Assad's regime in Syria? Just consider which groups in Syria are especially for or against Assad—and why.
Christian minorities, who, as 10% of the Syrian population, have the most to gain from a secular government and the most to suffer from a state run by Islamic Sharia law, have no choice but to prefer Assad. They are already seeing aspects of the alternative. A recent Barnabas Fund report, "Christians in Syria Targeted in Series of Kidnappings and Killings; 100 Dead," tells how "children were being especially targeted by the kidnappers, who, if they do not receive the ransom demanded, kill the victim." In one instance, kidnappers videotaped a Christian boy as they murdered him in an attempt to frame the government; one man "was cut into pieces and thrown in a river" and another "was found hanged with numerous injuries."
Accordingly, it is understandable that, as an earlier report put it, "Christians have mostly stayed away from the protests in Syria, having been well treated and afforded a considerable amount of religious freedom under President Assad's regime." After all, "Should Assad fall, it is feared that Syria could go the way of Iraq, post-Saddam Hussein. Saddam, like Assad, restrained the influence of militant Islamists, but after his fall they were free to wreak havoc on the Christian community; hundreds of thousands of Christians were consequently forced to flee the violence. Many of them went to Syria."
In short, should "rebels" get their way and topple the Assad regime, the same brutal pattern experienced by Iraq's Christian minorities—who have been likened to, and killed off like, dogs, to a point nearing extinction—will come to Syria, where an anti-Assad Muslim preacher recently urged Muslims to "tear apart, chop up and feed" Christians who support Assad "to the dogs." From last week alone, some 70 additional Christian homes were invaded and pillaged, and "for the first time in the history of the conflict in Syria, an armed attack has been made on a Catholic monastery," partially in search of money.
And who are these "rebels" who see and treat Christians as sub-humans to be exploited and plundered to fund the "opposition" against Assad? Unfortunately, many of them are Islamists, internal and external, and their "opposition" is really a jihad [holy war]; moreover, they are acting out anti-Christian fatwas that justify the kidnapping, ransoming, and plundering of "infidel" Christians.
As in Libya, al-Qaeda is operating among the Syrian opposition; Ayman al-Zawahiri himself "urges the Syrian people to continue their revolution until the downfall of the Assad regime, and stresses that toppling this regime is a necessary step on the way to liberating Jerusalem." Both the influential Yusif al-Qaradawi and Hamas -- the latter supported by Assad's ally, Iran— back the "rebels." This overview should place the "opposition" -- who they are, what they want — in a clearer context.
Meanwhile, U.S. President Obama, who was remarkably reticent when Iranians seeking Western-style freedom tried to revolt against the oppressive Islamist regime of Iran, made it a point during his recent State of the Union Address to single out Assad by name as needing to go (not that the Republican presidential candidates seem to know any better; see Andrew McCarthy's recent article where, drawing on America's other misadventures in Islamic nations, he shows how the U.S. has little to gain and possibly much to lose by supporting the anti-Assad opposition).
The lesson here is clear: while it is true that not all of Assad's opposition is Islamist—there are anti-Assad Muslims who do not want a state that will be run by Islamic Sharia law —the Islamists are quite confident that the overthrow of Assad will equate with their empowerment. And why shouldn't they be? Wherever Arab tyrants have been overthrow—Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Yemen, and so on —it is Islamists who are filling the power-vacuums. Just ask Syria's Christian minorities, who prefer the dictator Assad to remain in power—who prefer the devil they know to the ancient demon their forefathers knew.
Raymond Ibrahim is an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum and a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
Related Topics: Raymond Ibrahim
The Pursuit of Zero Nuclear Weapons
How Much Is Enough?
by Peter Huessy
March 8, 2012 at 4:00 am
http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2911/zero-nuclear-weapons
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We are now the ONLY nuclear-armed state not modernizing our nuclear fleet or platforms.
Should the United States reduce its nuclear warheads to 300 as is being proposed by advocates of Global Zero (the campaign to eliminate all nuclear weapons worldwide)? Advocates of that number contend it would be sufficient to drop three bombs on each of fifty Russian and Chinese cities. Sounds reasonable, write the St. Louis Post Dispatch, the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times.
No. Not to us. It is, in fact, a terrible and dangerous idea. Such a reduction in the US stockpile would not only encourage the spread of nuclear weapons, but also make every crisis a possible nuclear Armageddon and even eventually cripple the US ability to maintain a credible, effective, stable and secure nuclear deterrent. In short, lowering our nuclear deterrent is no casual endeavor.
How much is enough has been a long-standing question facing US military planners. The development in the late 1960s of the ability to put many warheads on one missile increased our deployed arsenal from a few thousand warheads to over 12,000 weapons. This deterrent was to be deployed from three legs -- missiles from sea, land and air, known as a "Triad," that has kept the peace for more than half a century.
The decision to limit our nuclear forces started with the Nixon-era Strategic Arms Limitation Talks [SALT] nuclear weapons treaty with the former Soviet Union. Although the SALT treaty put a partial cap on the number of missiles each side could build, it did allow the enormous expansion of warheads on each of those missiles.
President Reagan, however, and then President George H. W. Bush, reversed this policy dramatically. One initiated, then the other continued, discussions with the USSR to reduce the number of nuclear weapons. Prior to Reagan, the Soviet Union was building a vastly increasing nuclear arsenal. There was also a serious imbalance, referred to as the "window of vulnerability": Moscow appeared to be seeking a first-strike, pre-emptive capability to destroy quickly -- using their nuclear weapons in a sudden, massive strike -- most US nuclear weapons before they could ever be used in retaliation.
Cuts in the START treaties were eventually agreed to between Washington and Moscow; they involved reducing American- and Russian-deployed, "out-in-the-field" weapons to 6000 under START I -- a 50% reduction from the 12,000 weapons Reagan inherited. Then, under the George W. Bush administration, a decade after the end of the Cold War, the Moscow Treaty, again between the US and Russia, reduced deployed nuclear warheads even further to 2,100 -- a dramatic 65% cut. The Obama administration secured passage of yet another agreement with Russia, called "New START," which was agreed to by the US Senate in December 2010, and which further reduced our planned deployed nuclear arsenal to 1,550 warheads -- an additional cut of almost 30% -- to be achieved no later than 2017.
So, the reasoning goes by some, why not simply cut even further? After all, how many of these awful weapons do we need? We went from 12,000 to 1,550 warheads, so why not simply keep on going? What is "enough" should be the number needed to guarantee nuclear weapons are never used against the United States. Period. One NATO expert suggests the US should keep a nuclear force equal to all the nuclear weapons our adversaries have plus one. The biggest factor, however, involves nuclear stability. Let me explain.
Let us assume we are now going to reduce our arsenal to 300 warheads. How should we deploy what we have? Under the 2010 New START Treaty between the US and Russia, we are allowed to have up to 420 Minuteman Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM), each with one warhead, spread out in 450 underground silos, in 5 states. We are allowed to have 12 submarines, each with 24 missiles but which will be reduced to 20 to comply with the treaty -- each missile with probably four warheads.
We have B2 and B52 bombers; up to 60 can be nuclear-armed. These are able to carry gravity bombs and air-launched cruise missiles anywhere, up to 12-18 per plane. Under New START, no matter how many weapons they carry, each bomber counts as "one warhead" toward the treaty limits.
Although bombers count as only one warhead under New START, submarines and ICBM warheads count as the number actually deployed. So under New START, we will have 420 ICBM warheads on 420 missiles, and roughly 80 warheads per 12 submarines -- each with 20 missiles -- plus 60 bombers, which count as 60 warheads. This gets you roughly to somewhat fewer than the New START allowed: 1,550 strategic deployed nuclear warheads.
These are ready for use should the President so order. But we also have stored weapons (spares), in case something goes wrong with one of the various warhead types (we find out they might not work). We also have short-range tactical, battlefield nuclear warheads, largely in Europe. These categories both come to roughly 3,500 warheads. They are not included in the New START ceiling of 1,550.
How then would one logically reduce the arsenal to 300 warheads? (To be fair, there are reports from the media that warhead levels of 600-700, 1000-1,100, and the status quo are also being examined.)
Let's do the math:
Where and how would you base 300 warheads? Let us say we keep 100 in reserve, 50 as tactical weapons and 150 as deployed strategic warheads. Given such a very low level of deployed weapons, it would be prohibitively expensive, on a cost-per-unit basis, to keep all the legs of our Triad. If they all were deployed on submarines, each with 20 missiles and two warheads, that comes to four submarines. If all were deployed on land, that comes to 150 missiles in silos. But what if there were a technical problem with one or another of the forces, and we found out it did not work? That would be an unacceptably big oops. But let us assume, as one possible scenario, that we took this risk and deployed all 150 warheads on submarines.
First, at any one time, only a portion of the submarines are at sea, where they must be, to cover the targets necessary for deterrence. Second, we have to keep some warheads in reserve for insurance; and third, what if you have to build back up? The Minuteman III missile can add two warheads for a total of three-per-missile, but it takes time -- many months -- to add more warheads. The submarine-based missile can hold up to eight warheads, and they can be uploaded or added over time as well. Under any reductions, these options would be seriously curtailed.
Here we get to the nub of the problem. Most comments about the new reductions concentrate solely on the number of warheads. But a key part of the nuclear posture of the US is not discussed: When we went from 2,200 to 1,550 warheads under the Moscow Treaty, we kept roughly the same number of platforms — silos, submarines, and bombers.
When we reduced for START the number of warheads from 6,000 to 2,200, we eliminated only 50 ICBM silos and two submarines, keeping 14 submarines;, nearly 100 bombers on three bomber bases and 500 Minuteman III missile silos. In short, under both START and Moscow, we kept enough ICBMs (420-500) and bombers (60-100) so our submarines (14) could survive, and we kept enough submarines and bombers so our ICBMs could survive.
This resulted in our "platforms" -- from which missiles could be launched -- remaining close to 500 targets which an adversary would have to face in a crisis. These are the military targets an adversary would have to strike to be able to wipe out our ability to respond with nuclear firepower. We therefore kept them above 450 even during day-to-day peacetime, and even as we reduced warheads from 6,000 to 1550.
In any crisis, a critical concern is that the other guy will get you before you get him. These nuclear armed missiles can reach their targets in 30 minutes or less. But for an adversary to get us first, he would have to use two nuclear warheads for every one of our ICBM silos in order to be relatively confident that he had destroyed the silos. But to eliminate our retaliatory capability, he would also have to target not only hundreds of hardened and geographically dispersed silos, but simultaneously our submarines at sea, and our three bomber bases and two submarine ports, as well.
As our satellites can see rockets launched from both sea and land, the thirty-minute flight time of such missiles -- if our platforms are sufficiently dispersed -- precludes a sneak, or sudden attack, such as a nuclear Pearl Harbor. Should an attacker come at us with close to a thousand warheads, the number necessary to be confident to take out all our nuclear forces as they sit on their bases, an imminent attack would be obvious. Were the Russians, for example, to launch that many missiles simultaneously at us, they would have to put their own forces on alert, put submarines, now usually in port, to sea, and flush, or get ready,their mobile ICBMs, all of which we would be able to see from our satellites.
This "warning" which could take a matter of days would allow us to respond prudently, putting our forces on higher alert if need be, thereby making any such pre-emptive strike by adversaries out of the question. They would then have two choices: use everything -- all or most of their nuclear weapons -- in a single strike and end up with nothing but burnt rubble for a country as we struck back, or else leave their nuclear guns in their nuclear holsters. In the words of one of the top American nuclear gurus, the late Paul Nitze, we want the Russian planners to say, after looking at all the computer simulations and data, "Not today, comrade."
The critical nature is "crisis stability": it cannot be forgotten in planning our nuclear deterrent forces. You have to deploy what are termed "survivable forces," sufficient to withstand even the first use of nuclear weapons, and to be able to retaliate to take out everything else the adversaries have left, especially their ability to wage war, to deny them a sanctuary from which to fire missiles at us. Blowing up their cities does not stop their ability either to wage war or launch more nuclear armed rockets at America and its allies.
It is also crucial to have significant barriers to the early or prompt use of nuclear weapons in a crisis. This barrier, more than any single factor, is the deployment of US forces in different modes – land, sea, air – sufficiently spread out to offer extremely unattractive targets. Put your eggs in a great many baskets and make sure the baskets are spread out as widely as possible. The "stability" guaranteed by such planning will help keep the peace.
But not so with very low numbers. Most importantly of all, the inability to maintain deterrence is the single greatest weakness of forces with very low numbers. The proponents of low-numbers apparently consider only the warheads needed to blow up the adversaries' cities. Some experts such as Sidney Drell, formerly of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, assume that if we can destroy a dozen or so cities of our adversaries, that would be enough to deter any sane person.
Sanity, however, is not necessarily going to prevail, or leaders would never start the wars they end up losing -- such as Japan and Germany in WW II, and North Korea in 1950. If deterrence fails, as it often does, our nuclear deterrent must be able to prevent the use of nuclear weapons against the United States even if war has broken out only where conventional, or non-nuclear weapons, are being used.
Should we be even considering future reductions? A number of senior Russians have said they will accept no fewer than 1,000 deployed strategic weapons on their side. But they have refused to include tactical and stockpiled weapons in that total. Russia may have 5,000 tactical weapons and a stockpile of 2,000-3,000 additional bombs, but those numbers are not exactly transparent, to say the least. On top of such non-information, Russian officials also say they may have to build up their nuclear forces because of new threats: Mr. Putin is already calling for the building 400 new nuclear-capable ballistic missiles.
As for China, we have evidence that they are building new mobile nuclear-tipped missiles, as well as a submarine from which to launch nuclear weapons. Richard Fischer, Vice President of the International Assessment and Strategy Center, projects that China is working toward a deployed strategic nuclear arsenal of upward of 600 weapons as part of what Jane's Intelligence states will be a doubling of China's defense budget by 2015.
As senior US military officials acknowledge, we are now the ONLY nuclear-armed state not modernizing our nuclear fleet or platforms. Our new submarine replacement program has been delayed by two years; our new bomber -- whose cruise missile replacement has also been delayed two years -- will not initially be nuclear, and we are in only a planning-and-studying mode to replace the Minuteman but have not yet decided what future land-based strategic deterrent we shall build. On a positive note however, these modernization elements have been preserved in the five-year defense strategy presented to Congress, despite some very significant budget cuts elsewhere.
Even more important, would 150 warheads -- our current notional deterrent -- be sufficient to extend our nuclear deterrent over our 31 allies -- including NATO, Japan, the Republic of Korea and Taiwan that we now protect -- or for their own national security, would they feel obligated to scramble to deploy their own nuclear deterrent? Would going to 300 total warheads encourage others bad actors -- current and potential future adversaries collectively to go to 3,000 warheads?
The reason our allies — Germany, South Korea, Japan — do not have nuclear programs is that they believe our deterrent extends to them. But if they see us backing away or diminishing our deterrent, however, they may move toward their own nuclear deterrent. Thus a strong US nuclear deterrent is a great tool for non- proliferation. Counter-intuitive, perhaps, but true. Going too low could expand proliferation and also allow other nations – such as China, North Korea and Iran -- to build up to match or exceed us. And of course, countries such as North Korea and Iran, for example, are not exactly known for being either open or forthright about their plans.
Next, as mentioned earlier, a reasonable assumption is that the total of 300 warheads may mean as few as 150 deployed warheads. Let us assume they are all deployed on submarines. Our entire deterrent would rest with as few as 3-4 submarines. Generally, they rotate, with some at sea and some in port. Submarines in port, known as "boomers," can be targeted with, for example, conventional, non-nuclear cruise missiles. One former military commander of our nuclear forces wrote: "In port...a ballistic missile submarine is potentially one of the most destabilizing weapons since it is an extremely lucrative target." What he meant was that an adversary need only use a handful of weapons to take out 80 or more nuclear weapons, each of which is carried on a single US strategic nuclear submarine.
I was told by former Senator John Warner that when he was Secretary of the Navy during the Nixon administration, the above scenario was the one thing that kept him up at night. It was why Reagan and Bush in START eventually proposed that all land-based missiles with multiple warheads be banned — if everyone had single-warhead missiles and a lot of them, trying to be the first to disarm and disarm the other guy could not be done--you do not have enough attacking warheads to take out all of an adversary's weapons -- even on paper. If I had 420 Minuteman silos, for example, and the other guy had 420 silos, each containing one missile with one warhead, I cannot take out all of their silos with an attack — I need at least two warheads per target to be sure of destroying it. Submarines can be destroyed under water with conventional torpedoes, and bomber bases can be eliminated with a few weapons. So a good rule of thumb, if you are reducing warheads, is to keep a lot of platforms.
Years ago, such low numbers as 300 total warheads were considered a far-fetched, even dangerous, idea. President Carter reportedly once announced to an National Security Council meeting if it wouldn't make a lot of sense to put all our nuclear warheads on two submarines and get rid of the rest. It would, said Carter, save a lot of money. His senior advisers stopped the meeting, called on everyone to leave the Situation Room, and said, "Mr. President, do not ever propose such a foolish notion again."
We currently have 14 submarines capable of carrying nuclear weapons. Two are due to be retired soon, and the remaining 12 are scheduled to be replaced over the next 20-30 years. If the US were to lower its deterrent to 300 warheads, the number of submarines carrying them might be reduced to as few as four: two at sea, one in transit, and one in port. On these platforms would rest our entire nuclear deterrent.
Just think of that famous political advertisement, the red phone on the desk, ringing at 3am in the President's office. "Mr. President?" "Yes?" "This is the Chief of Naval Operations. One of our "boomers," a nuclear armed submarine, has not come home." "What do you mean, not come home?"says the President. "It appears," says the CNO, "that our adversaries tracked one successfully." "Who?" says the President asks. "We do not know, Mr. President," the CNO admits.
Game, set, match.
Related Topics: Peter Huessy
Erdogan Calls for Humanitarian Aid Corridors into Syria
And more from the Turkish Press
by AK Group
March 8, 2012 at 3:00 am
http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2925/humanitarian-aid-corridors-into-syria
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Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan denounced the Syrian government's brutal crackdown on anti-regime protests, describing them as "inhumane savagery," and called for the immediate establishment of humanitarian aid corridors in Syria to help civilians.
Erdoğan, addressing his Justice and Development Party, or AKP, in Parliament, also asserted that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad will be held accountable for what he has done, unlike his late father Hafez al-Assad, who ordered massacres in Sunni cities during his rule.
"His father was not held accountable for his actions in this world. But his son will answer for the massacre," Erdoğan said. "The bloodshed in Syrian cities will not be left unaccounted for." Erdoğan, once a close ally of Assad, also said the Syrian regime should start implementing an Arab League plan, proposed in January. The plan calls on Assad to hand over power to a deputy and envisages the creation of a unity government as a prelude to early parliamentary and presidential elections in a plan compared to what happened in Yemen, where President Ali Abdullah Saleh agreed to hand over power after protests.
"Humanitarian aid corridors should be established immediately. The international community should impose pressure on the Syrian government so that aid can be delivered to the people of Syria, especially in Homs. The Arab League plan should be implemented without any more delay and further loss of lives," Erdoğan said.
The "Friends of Syria," a group of about 70 nations that gathered in Tunisia last month to discuss the situation in Syria, urged the Syrian authorities to allow "free and unimpeded access by the UN and humanitarian agencies" in areas worst hit by the conflict.
There has been talk of creating humanitarian aid corridors to help the Syrian population via alternative routes, including one running from the Turkish-Syrian border. But there are concerns that Syria will not allow the establishment of such corridors, making a sort of military intervention necessary.
Facing intense international pressure to grant access for aid, Syria allowed the International Committee of the Red Cross to enter some neighborhoods of the battered city of Homs, but the aid group said on Monday that it could not get clearance from authorities to enter the hardest-hit district of Baba Amr.
Also on Monday, UN humanitarian affairs Chief Valerie Amos said the Syrian government had agreed to allow her to visit the country later this week after previously refusing to let her into the country at the expense of sharp international criticism.
Erdoğan also criticized the lack of international action against Syria, a criticism that appeared to be directed at Russia and China, which vetoed a UN Security Council resolution calling on Assad to leave power.
"I am calling on the countries that remain silent on massacres in Syria and the international organizations that are unable to produce a solution. A single drop of an innocent child's blood is above every strategy," he said.
http://www.todayszaman.com/news-273433-.html
Annan To Offer Assad 'Honorable Exit' Way
Veteran diplomat Kofi Annan, the United Nations' Arab League envoy for Syria, will offer "a last chance" to President Bashar al-Assad when he visits Damascus on Saturday, a Turkish diplomatic source said Tuesday.
The offer will give al-Assad the chance to "honorably exit the scene," the source told the Daily News. Annan will go to Damascus on the same day Russia joins an Arab League foreign ministers meeting in Cairo.
The statement suggests that Saturday could be the last date to find a diplomatic solution.
Turkey also called for the establishment of a humanitarian corridor while the United States urged diplomacy to end Syria's violence.
Syria should immediately allow the opening of humanitarian aid corridors and the international community should place stronger pressure on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said Tuesday.
"The international arena should put pressure on the Syrian administration to distribute humanitarian aid to the Syrian people, particularly people in Homs," Erdoğan said, speaking to his deputies in Parliament. "The Arab League's plan should be implemented without losing more time or lives."
The prime minister "saluted" the Syrian opposition and warned al-Assad that he would pay for the current violence and his father's massacres in Hama.
"The world did not ask for an explanation from Bashar al-Assad's father, but it will ask for an explanation from Bashar al-Assad. This time, bloodshed in Syrian cities will not remain unanswered," he said.
Recalling that the Syrian administration was once more targeting its own people in front of the entire world's eyes, the prime minister accused the UN of being inefficient on the Syrian bloodshed. He also criticized those countries that remained silent on the situation, implying a rebuke to Russia and China for vetoing a UN Security Council resolution against the al-Assad regime.
"Unfortunately, the international community – particularly at the UN – is just watching what is going on in Syria," Erdoğan said.
Resolutions that were not adopted at the UN, and the hesitant approach of some countries, were strengthening the hand of the Syrian administration, even inciting it to stage more massacres, he said.
"I am addressing the entire world, and the countries that remain silent and indifferent and ignore or tolerate the massacre in Syria. I am also addressing international organizations, which cannot produce solutions to this crisis and which encourage its continuation," the prime minister said.
Turkey would continue to keep the massacre in Syria on the world's agenda, which will be helped by the fact that Istanbul is hosting a conference on the Syrian crisis in March, Erdoğan said.
Main opposition Republican People's Party, or CHP, leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu criticized the government's policy on Syria while speaking to CHP deputies. Suggesting that the turmoil in Syria was fast becoming a civil war, Kılıçdaroğlu said the situation was more complex than a simple government-opposition conflict.
"The AKP did not exercise prudence to prevent the turmoil in Syria. They expected a similar international intervention in Syria as happened in Libya. But the Western powers ignored military intervention in Syria," he said.
"The prime minister said 'push has come to shove' before," Kılıçdaroğlu said. "Now blood is being shed in Syria, and he is watching. Erdoğan is also responsible for this bloodshed […] He should take a lead to secure peace in Syria. Turkey, Russia and Iran should come together to secure peace in Syria. If Erdoğan can succeed in this, he would hold an important role in the region."
Turkish Airlines Connects Somalia to World With Regular Flights
Turkish Airlines started flights to Mogadishu this week, the first major international carrier to run a regular service to the Somali capital in more than two decades.
Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdağ flew into Mogadishu to launch the twice-weekly Turkish Airlines service to İstanbul via Sudan's capital Khartoum.
"Somalia was cut off but we have now connected it to the world," he told reporters at Mogadishu's airport on Tuesday. "We have repaired the airport and now international flights can use it. We have discussed with the president and Turkey will also do local flights inside Somalia."
Somalia has largely been a security vacuum since a dictator was ousted in 1991. Stability is gradually returning to the capital after rebels were forced out by African Union and government troops last year.
Until now, flights into Mogadishu have been operated by small east African operators linking the Horn of Africa nation to neighboring countries. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan visited Somalia last August, the first non-African government leader to do so in nearly 20 years.
The Turks have since opened an embassy, improved the international airport, offered Somalis university places in Turkey and made plans to build a new hospital.
Erdoğan's visit reflected Turkey's efforts to boost its profile in Africa, as it has done in the Middle East in recent years, and to promote itself as a model Muslim democracy.
Turkey is behind other emerging countries such as China, Brazil and India in the race for new markets in Africa. But under Erdoğan's Justice and Development Party, or AKP, government, Turkey has boosted trade with the continent and opened several new embassies, particularly in Muslim Africa.
Turkish Prime Minister Meets Media Mogul Murdoch
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan met with News Corporation Chairman Rupert Murdoch on Tuesday afternoon in Ankara.
The Australian-American media mogul's meeting with Erdoğan followed last month's media reports that his News Corporation was planning to buy Turkish Çalık Holding's Sabah daily and ATV station.
A Turkish official close to the prime minister told The Associated Press that Murdoch has expressed an interest in expanding investments in Turkey and regarded the Turkish media as an "important sector" for investments.
The Turkish official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with government rules, would not say if Murdoch expressed interest in acquiring Turkey's ATV television and Sabah newspaper.
Murdoch, in 2007, shared with the Turkish government that he "seriously contemplated the acquisition of Sabah and ATV" when they were put up for sale by the state's Savings Deposit Insurance Fund, or TMSF. Following confiscation by the TMSF of Turkish business tycoon Turgay Ciner's Merkez Media Group in 2007, the Çalık Group acquired Sabah and ATV along with other smaller entities for $1.25 billion in 2008. The News Corporation's Wall Street Journal said in late January that the U.S. media giant Time Warner Inc. and private equity firm TPG Capital are also interested in Sabah and ATV.
Murdoch's reputation as a media tycoon was smeared by a scandal last year that forced the British government to make a statement regarding its links to the mogul's media empire. Following the discovery of systemic phone hacking made by Murdoch's News International, police arrested dozens of reporters, as well as a number of executives working for him.
http://haber.gazetevatan.com/Haber/435166/1/Gundem
Fighting Erupts in Turkish Parliament
Brawls erupted in Parliament's Education Commission Tuesday during a debate on the controversial education bill after lawmakers from the Justice and Development Party, or AKP, proposed and passed a motion to limit speeches to five minutes.
The commission chairman had ordered a break to defuse the tensions just before 7 p.m. The motion curbing the normally unlimited speaking time was drawn up after a lawmaker of the main opposition Republican People's Party, or CHP, spoke for more than two hours following a record 12-hour speech by a fellow CHP deputy during the previous session.
The CHP has vowed to use all procedural means to protract the proceedings and block the bill.
http://haber.gazetevatan.com/burada-kan-cikar/435224/9/Siyaset
Sivas Massacre Case Should Go On, Victims, Suspects Say
An Ankara court is expected to close the 1993 Sivas massacre case due to a statute of limitations on March 13, but neither the defendants nor the prosecution want the trial to be dropped.
Speaking on behalf of the families of the 33 victims who were burned to death in a fire set by an Islamist mob during an Alevi cultural festival in the eastern province of Sivas, lawyer Şenal Sarıhan said even though the court is to drop the case due to the statute of limitations, they will continue to pursue their rights.
Muhammet Emin Özkan, a lawyer for suspect Muhsin Erbaş, also argued the case should not be dropped, for different reasons.
"The actual ones who burnt the hotel down and killed 37 people [33 intellectuals, two hotel staff and two protesters] should be discovered," Özkan told the Hürriyet Daily News Tuesday by phone. A lawyer for the victims said the charges had been an attempt to destroy constitutional order at the time, but now they say it was a crime against humanity.
The victims were killed on July 2, 1993, when the Madımak Hotel in Sivas was torched. In 2008, after 15 years had passed, an Ankara prosecutor demanded the case be dropped since it had been filed on the charges of attempting to destroy constitutional order, which has a 15-year statute of limitations. Although 79 people have been sentenced to jail so far, six suspects in the case are still missing.
"If the case ends on March 13, we will appeal to a higher court, and if we cannot get a result again, this case will go to the ECHR [European Court of Human Rights] in the end," Sarıhan told the Daily News. Sarıhan also argued the court should recognize the case as a crime against humanity, so it would not have a certain time limit.
Systematic Discrimination
Meanwhile, Turkey's Alevi Bektaşi Federation Chairman Selahattin Özel condemned the government for "backing the fugitives in the case by doing nothing to have them arrested" and said the government had a policy of systematic discrimination against Alevis.
"One of the suspects in the case, Cafer Erçakmak, was wanted worldwide by Interpol. But he died on July 10, 2011, in Sivas, where he had been living openly. They could have found him easily; they did not want to. The end of the Sivas massacre case will be proof of discrimination against Alevis," Özel told the Daily News.
Erçakmak had called on the crowd who burned the Madımak Hotel to lynch Aziz Nesin, a famous author who narrowly escaped.
Minister of Customs and Trade Hayati Yazıcı also said on March 4 that he hoped the court would not decide for a statute of limitations and the criminals would be punished. Yazıcı had served as a lawyer to one of the defendants.
http://haber.gazetevatan.com/sivas-davasinda-2-sanik-kurtuldu-5ine-de-az-kaldi/435266/1/Gundem
Child Inmates Moved Amid Call for Debate Following Allegations of Sexual Abuse
Authorities began transferring minors from Adana's Pozantı juvenile prison to Ankara Tuesday following allegations of sexual abuse at the facility, while Turkey's main Kurdish party called for a public debate as to why the children were initially incarcerated.
Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin said the transfer of 199 minors from the Pozantı jail in Adana to the Ankara Sincan prison began Tuesday morning. Inspectors will complete their investigation over the allegations by the weekend, after which their findings will be shared with the press in detail, Ergin said.
Ergin said Turkey was building facilities to house delinquent kids and the Sincan prison was currently the most appropriate place to house them.
"No one ever promised a paradise. We are trying to do our best given Turkey's capabilities and the physical capacities at hand," he said.
The ministry has come under fire for ignoring warnings about mistreatment at the prison. Ergin told reporters that a deputy had claimed in 2010 that children were being beaten there, but that a subsequent enquiry failed to substantiate the allegations.
The co-chair of the Peace and Democracy Party, or BDP, Gültan Kışanak, decried the incident as one of the many ramifications of the Kurdish conflict and demanded the immediate release of the children.
"We must first ask why these children are in prison. For the past 30 years, there has been a state that is trying to solve the Kurdish issue through violence, burning villages and forcing millions to migrate. These children are not in prison for throwing stones. They are the children of the people who have been subject to violence from the state for the past 30 years," she said.
"The children must be returned to their families immediately. They have been through enough pain and trauma. Rebellion is not something to be ashamed of. People revolt if they have a sense of justice," she said.
Nationalist Movement Party, or MHP, leader Devlet Bahçeli blamed the scandal on the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, and said it "would be engraved on the AKP's brow as an unacceptable moral disaster."
http://haber.gazetevatan.com/utanc-yuvasindan-sincana/435207/1/Gundem
Turkey, Netherlands Seek Improved Ties on 400th Anniversary of Relations
Turkey and the Netherlands are seeking to improve their ties on the 400th anniversary of the start of diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu traveled to the Netherlands on Tuesday to meet with his Dutch counterpart and to attend a conference in Rotterdam. Turkish President Abdullah Gül's visit will follow next month to mark the anniversary of the beginning of diplomatic relations in the hope of further advancing ties between the two countries.
Speaking at a joint news conference with his Dutch counterpart, Uri Rosenthal, Davutoğlu said events marking the anniversary of diplomatic relations between Turkey and the Netherlands will positively contribute to ties between the two countries, which have been strained at times due to discrimination against the large Turkish community in the EU nation.
Before speaking to reporters, Davutoğlu attended the fifth gathering of the Turkey-Netherlands Wittenburg Conference. He also had talks with Rosenthal, where both officials discussed bilateral relations along with regional developments in the Middle East.
The Turkish foreign minister told reporters that nearly 400,000 Turks living in the Netherlands are playing a positive role in improving relations between the two countries and that the Turkish community in the country is well-integrated.
Davutoğlu also discussed the latest developments in the Middle East with Rosenthal, particularly Syria, and added that Turkey hosts more than 11,000 Syrian refugees fleeing from violence in neighboring Syria.
Rosenthal said she discussed developments in Iran, Syria and the Middle East with Davutoğlu and praised Turkey's steps with respect to Syria as "positive." She also spoke positively regarding Turkey's economic growth and said commercial ties between the two countries are continuing to develop.
Related Topics: AK Group
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