Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Battles in Syrian city of Aleppo as military counterattack looms


BEIRUT -- Syrian authorities were sending reinforcements to strife-torn Aleppo, opposition activists said Wednesday, as outgunned rebels in the northern city tried to deliver a potentially decisive blow to the government of President Bashar Assad.
Street battles were ongoing in several neighborhoods, including districts close to the gates of the old city, with government forces shelling rebel-occupied quarters with artillery and helicopter gunships, the activists said. Many residents had fled or remained indoors in the city of 2 million, they said.
Parts of Aleppo are "a ghost city," said one opposition activist in Aleppo reached via Skype. "The people are scared of going out in the streets," noted the activist, who said he had visited Salahuddin, said to be under the control of rebels.
"There are destroyed buildings there and injuries and deaths," said the activist, who asked not to be named for security reasons.
In the video below, uploaded by opposition activists, rebels have torched what appears to be a police station. Thick black smoke is seen billowing from a building.


Rebels apparently got their hands on various types of arms, ammunition and even gas masks from a military supply barracks in this video:



Residents reportedly have shuttered shops, and gasoline and bread are in short supply. But neighborhoods away from the fighting in the sprawling city still retain some semblance of normalcy, though many people have left.
Video by a BBC crew in Aleppo shows rebels setting up sniper positions in battered buildings, firing on helicopters with a machine gun mounted on a captured tank, and rounding up men, presumably suspected regime collaborators.
The Syrian government said its forces in Aleppo had killed scores of "terrorists," the official term for the armed opposition. The state news service accused insurgents of assaulting citizens and attacking property in the al-Sakhour neighborhood, which also was reportedly under rebel control.
There was no definitive word on casualties. Rebel medics were treating wounded in makeshift clinics, which have sprung up in battle zones across Syria during the uprising.
Insurgents called the attack on Aleppo an all-out offensive that has galvanized dozens of rebel brigades from throughout northern Syria. The fighters are seeking to wrest control of the city and use it as a base to expand their power in the north, where they already have effective control of large swaths of territory.
"Aleppo now is the center of the revolution," said another opposition activist reached on the outskirts of the city. "The liberation of Aleppo means the fall of the regime."
Losing Aleppo would be a major blow to the Assad government, and there was widespread expectation of a concerted government counterattack with fresh reinforcements from northern garrisons.
On Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton predicted that rebel territorial gains could result in an insurgent "safe haven" inside Syria, presumably in the northern regions. She urged the opposition to start thinking about how to govern.
Neighboring Turkey, fearing a spillover in violence, said Wednesday that it had closed its borders with Syria, at least to commercial traffic.
The once-bustling truck traffic and movement of goods between the two nations has largely ceased because of the raging conflict. Syrian rebels have seized several border posts.
Turkey, once a close ally of Assad, has sided openly with the rebels trying to overthrow him and has provided a refuge for the opposition just across the border.


Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2012/07/syria-battles-aleppo-military-counter-attack-looms.html

Botswana: Defence Force, U.S. to Conduct Joint Military Exercise


Gaborone — The Botswana Defence Force and the U.S. Embassy announced that Botswana will host a joint military exercise known as Southern Accord 12, August 1-17, 2012.
The exercise will involve approximately 700 BDF members and 700 American military personnel, and will take place on and around the Thebephatshwa Air Base. Joint exercise activities conducted during Southern Accord 12 will enhance the capabilities of military personnel for both countries in a variety of areas, including humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, anti-poaching, peacekeeping, and convoy operations, as well as aero-medical evacuation.
The United States has in the past two years conducted similar joint military exercises with African countries such as South Africa, Mozambique, Tunisia, Uganda, Mali and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
In partnership with the Botswana Defence Force, U.S. Air Forces Africa will take part in MEDLITE 12.
U.S. Air Forces Africa, headquartered at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, is the Air Force component to the United States Africa Command, the U.S. regional command that oversees and coordinates U.S. military activities in Africa.
MEDLITE 12 is the latest in a series of exercises involving U.S. military forces and partner militaries in Africa with the aim to establish and develop military interoperability, regional relationships, synchronization of effort and capacity-building. The exercise will improve the readiness of both countries' medical personnel and will consist of classroom instruction, a mass casualty and aero-medical evacuation exercise.
Additionally, BDF and U.S. personnel will conduct outreach programs in several rural communities, including Malwelwe, Mantshwabisi, Sernane and Mowane. These outreach activities will include dental and medical examinations, veterinary assistance as well as other medical procedures.

Source:http://allafrica.com/stories/201207250775.html

Monday, July 23, 2012

Canadians get key posts in RimPac


Canadian military leaders are taking up key command positions at the world's biggest maritime exercise for the first time in 40 years.
The six-week-long Rim of the Pacific, or RIMPAC, exercise has been taking place every two years since 1974. Twenty-two countries are now engaged around the Hawaiian Islands in all sorts of military simulations, from amphibious landings to diving operations and vessel boardings at sea, as well as some live-fire exercises.
Normally, the U.S. military occupies the top posts in the exercise. But this year, Canadians are in some key commands, the first time non-Americans have been given the opportunity.
Rear Admiral Ron Lloyd of the Canadian navy is the deputy commander of the combined task force — basically, the RIMPAC exercise writ large. Brig.-Gen. Michael Hood is the commander of the air component, and Commodore Peter Ellis is heading up the amphibious task group led by the USS Essex.
"I think it really is a recognition of Canada's ability. We have performed in a leadership role in Afghanistan, in Libya, in Haiti," Defence Minister Peter MacKay said in an interview.
More than 1,400 Canadian sailors, air personnel and soldiers are taking part in the exercise alongside forces from such countries as Russia, Australia and Japan. Canadian ships, a diving unit, several aircraft and an infantry company are participating.
MacKay was headed to the area Sunday, where he will board HMCS Algonquin.
"They love this type of training exercise just as they love deploying," MacKay said of the Canadian Forces.
"This is what they train for. This is a chance to test themselves vis-a-vis others, and in very real-time scenarios. This is as close as it gets to the real thing."
MacKay said the exercise benefits Canada because of the ties it reinforces in the Pacific Rim area. Canada is hoping to take part in the Trans Pacific Partnership, a proposed free-trade zone incorporating countries on either side of the Pacific.
"Much of the world's trade now is being done on the water, and it's being done in the Asia-Pacific region," MacKay said.
"There are concerns about issues such as piracy. The movement of commercial traffic is something Canada has to be concerned about, and strengthening and deepening our ties in the region naturally follows."
The Trans Pacific Partnership is strongly opposed by some economists and critics who say it will further erode Canada's manufacturing industries by opening up channels to send the country's raw materials abroad in exchange for value-added goods produced in other countries.



leading Seamen Barry MacLeod, foreground, and Ryan Burrell of a Canadian navy diving unit head to the surface after taking a sonar reading and GPS co-ordinate of an underwater mine during the 2010 edition of the RIMPAC military exercise in Hawaii. 



The HMCS Algonquin, left, is moored alongside the Australian ship Darwin at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam in Hawaii on Friday for the 2012 RIMPAC military exercise


Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2012/07/15/rimpac-exercise-canadians.html



This week in photo


A Free Syrian Army soldier steps on portraits of President Bashar al-Assad at the Bab Al-Salam border crossing to Turkey July 22, 2012. Touching the soles of his shoes to the likeness of the president is an insult in the Arab world.



Panama's Special Force Border Police officer reacts as a helicopter takes off during a patrol in the area of Bonga, some 12 miles from the Panama-Colombia border in the region of Kuna Yala July 20, 2012.







Paramilitary soldiers lift logs during a physical training in mud in Chuzhou, Anhui province, July 18, 2012.






A Belgian Air Force C-130 cargo plane flies over Belgium July 19, 2012, during a rehearsal for the country's National Day traditional military parade. Belgium will celebrate its 182nd anniversary of independence on National Day on July 21, 2012.




Nasa Indians drag a soldier during an attack on half a dozen soldiers guarding a communications tower on the outskirts of Toribio, southern Colombia, Tuesday, July 17, 2012.




Read more: http://battleland.blogs.time.com/2012/07/23/military-photos-a-week-inside-the-armed-forces-july-14-22/#addition-colombia-indians


Sunday, July 22, 2012

4 killed after military helicopter crashes in Turkey


 A Turkish paramilitary helicopter crashed Sunday in a southeastern region where troops are fighting Kurdish rebels, killing four security personnel on board, officials said. Eight others were injured.
The S-70 Sikorsky helicopter, belonging to Turkey's paramilitary police force, crashed while landing near an outpost in Hakkari province, close to the border with Iraq, the military said in a statement posted on its website. It was carrying four crew members and 11 security personnel.
The military said the helicopter experienced a loss of power and crashed. But Firat News, an agency that is close to the rebels, claimed the helicopter was downed by rebel fire.
Kurdish rebels have used northern Iraq as a springboard for attacks on Turkish targets in their decades-long fight for autonomy in Turkey's Kurdish-dominated southeast. The conflict has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people since 1984.





Link to news :http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/07/22/4-killed-after-military-helicopter-crashes-in-turkey/



RIMPAC’s impact on military ties, bio fuel


The largest-ever Rim of the Pacific exercise will conclude Aug. 7 after bringing together 21 countries, 25,000 troops, 40 ships, six submarines and 200 aircraft for a 42-day training evolution.
While a lot of publicity has surrounded the Navy’s “Great Green Fleet” of biofuel-filled ships, there are other reasons to keep close watch of what’s going on in the waters around Hawaii.
This year’s larger military turnout could be credited to China’s growing economic influence and expanding blue-water navy. China’s pushiness into regional issues is unsettling some governments.
“This leads to greater demand for U.S. involvement and leadership to offset possible Chinese domination,” said Denny Roy, senior fellow with the East-West Center in Honolulu. “Almost everyone in the region wants an insurance policy against the possibility of overbearing Chinese behavior.”
But China wasn’t invited. It cut military ties with the U.S. in 2010 because of America’s arms sales to Taiwan, and the relationship got even cooler because of China’s dealings with Iran. In the buildup to RIMPAC, China’s state-run media grumbled that India got invited and they didn’t.
Chinese and U.S. forces have plans to partner down the road, however. In late June, Adm. Samuel Locklear, head of U.S. Pacific Command, met his Chinese counterpart and addressed a top military academy in China with hopes of rebuilding military-to-military ties. China and the U.S. in May agreed to jointly perform humanitarian assistance/disaster relief and counterpiracy exercises, according to the Congressional Research Service.
Relationships don’t have to be golden for countries to participate in RIMPAC, a neutral ground for nations that don’t typically interact or train together.
Russia, for example, sent warships to RIMPAC this year for the first time. So did Mexico, whose navy focuses largely on coastal patrol. Mexico’s leaders want greater U.S. cooperation and military interactions. The country’s play in RIMPAC, which included training with Marines, could signal the start of more joint maritime exercises.
The 2012 exercise sees a return of four countries — Colombia, France, Malaysia and Thailand — that first participated in the biennial event in 2010. India, Norway and the Philippines each sent command staffs to observe and work with the overall combined task force, but India shelved original plans to send a ship for what the task force commander, Vice Adm. Gerald Beaman, told reporters was another commitment.
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus’ biofuel initiative at RIMPAC has been impossible to ignore.
Despite congressional criticism over the high price of biofuel, Mabus still believes it’ll ultimately be cheaper and safer for the environment than petroleum-based fuels. The aircraft carrier Nimitz took on 180,000 gallons of a biofuel blend for aircraft; the algae-, fat- and plant-based biofuel also powered the cruiser Princeton and destroyer Chafee during RIMPAC.
It looks like the U.S. won’t go at it alone: Australia has agreed to work with the U.S. to develop biofuel for military use, and a larger demonstration is planned in 2016, The Australian newspaper reported.


Friday, July 20, 2012

New World Armed Forces Photo


J-20
Photo taken on July 18, 2012, shows a Colombian soldierin Colombia's southwestern Cauca province. Colombia's indigenous Nasa community Tuesday lashed out at a Colombian Army outpost in southwestern Cauca province, as the military refused to leave their land as requested, an army general said. 



Photo taken on July 18, 2012, shows a Colombian soldier pitching a tear gas grenade in clashes with Colombian aboriginals in Colombia's southwestern Cauca province. Colombia's indigenous Nasa community Tuesday lashed out at a Colombian Army outpost in southwestern Cauca province, as the military refused to leave their land as requested, an army general said


Syrian soldiers lift up guns as they salute Syrian President Bashar Assad at the Midan neighborhood in Damascus, Syria, on July 20, 2012. The Information Ministry organized a tour for journalists to the area following an official confirmation that the Syrian army has regained full control on the neighborhood that has witnessed fierce clashes between Syrian forces and armed groups over the past four days. According to media reports, the Syrian cleansed it from all "terrorist mercenaries and restored peace and stability to the area."


Smashed cars are seen at the Midan neighborhood in Damascus, Syria, on July 20, 2012


Palestinian Muslims walk by Israeli soldiers to cross the Qalandia checkpoint, located near West Bank City of Ramallah, to go to pray at Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem for the 1st Friday of the Holy month of Ramadan on July 20, 2012.



Palestinian Muslims walk by Israeli soldiers to cross the Qalandia checkpoint, located near West Bank City of Ramallah, to go to pray at Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem for the 1st Friday of the Holy month of Ramadan on July 20, 2012.