Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Paskralingem major irritant to SLFP Sirisena Group

Paskralingem major irritant to SLFP Sirisena Group
Jan 04, 2017
Many SLFP Ministers and MPs supporting President’s group are contemplating whether they should join the Joint Opposition.
The reason they say the UNP is running the government and the SLFP has no say what so ever.
The ECONOMIC  COMMITTEE headed by the Prime Minister runs the country. The Cabinet has become a post box to rubber stamp the Prime Minister’s decisions. They say they cannot go to their electorates because they have not helped their people.
 A person who is causing a lot of concern is Paskaralingam, the man who was guilty of gross abuse of power by a presidential Commission. . The man ran away to London during the SLFP days. He has now remerged to become key official for the Prime Minister. He makes sure that SLFP, request are delayed as much as possible.
To get anything done through him they say, he needs to be canvassed. Recently he undertook a trip oversees with a notorious businessman. They alleged it was a pay off for a road project. The man sells the Prime Minister’s name at every turn.  
Some SLFP MPs want the Prime Minister replaced to purely get rid of people like Paskaralingem from the government. The Prime Minister is getting unpopular because of people like Paskaralingem.

Sri Lanka: President Brother Dudly kicked the asses of poor by playing rice monopoly


Jan 4, 2017

( January 4, 2017, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Rural Economic Affairs Minister P. Harrison yesterday challenged President’s brother Dudley Sirisena, who is the Araliya Rice proprietor to prove allegations that he had received kickbacks from some millers to release paddy stocks in the state-owned Paddy Marketing Board (PMB) storage facilities and was responsible for severe shortage of rice in the market.

Addressing the media at his ministry, Anuradhapura District MP said that if the allegations were proved, he would quit his parliamentary seat.

Sirisena recently claimed that had paddy stocks in the state-owned godowns been released properly to rice mill owners, the country wouldn’t have faced the present rice shortage. Sirisena alleged that paddy stocks had been released to middlemen. He blamed Minister Harrison for selling a kilo of paddy at Rs. 43.65 a kilo to middlemen who re-sold it at Rs. 55 a kilo to millers thereby making a huge profit.

Minister Harrison said that he hadn’t taken money from millers or middlemen or sought profits at the expense of the people.

The UNPer said that Dudley Sirisena had received the lion’s share of paddy stocks held by the government on the basis of the highest price quoted by his enterprise. The Minister said that Sirisena had obtained 17,000 MT of paddy.

Namal’s revelation confirmed – rice mixed with poison seized


 by

A stock of rice imported to CWE during Mahinda Rajapaksa regime, declared unsuitable for human consumption and sold as animal food but was later chemically treated and sold as ‘imported rice’, was taken into custody by Consumer Affairs Authority yesterday (3rd).

On 31st December night Small and Medium Scale Mill Owners Association and All Ceylon farmers’ Federation held a press conference and warned people that a stock of rice mixed with poison and dangerous for human consumption had been released to the market and to be careful when buying rice.
The National Organizer of Farmers’ Federation Namal Karunarathna revealed that the contaminated rice was sold and also displayed rice that had been mixed with poison at the press conference.

The stock of rice taken into custody yesterday had 15,000 kilos in 1150 sacks. The contaminated rice had been taken into custody from wholesale shops in Pettah, Colombo.

Speaking to the media the National Organizer of All Ceylon farmers’ Federation Namal Karunarathna said his revelation has benefited the consumers of the country and his organization together with rice mill owners, farmers and consumers will continue to fight against the rice mafia in the country.

Related news: Rice unsuitable for human consumption in the market

namal2
namal3

16 BANK ACCOUNTS OF UDAYANGA WEERATUNGA SUSPENDED

January 4, 2017
Court today ordered the suspension of 16 bank accounts of Former Sri Lankan Ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga.
The Accounts are said to contain a total of 1.5 Million US Dollars.
The order was issued by Colombo Fort Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne this afternoon.
The order was issued after officials of the Police Financial Crimes Investigation Division informed Court of details of the content in the Bank Accounts through a motion.
Charges were levelled against the Former Ambassador over financial fraud alleged to have taken place during the controversial procurement of MiG-27 aircraft for the Sri Lanka Air Force.
The Fort Magistrate’s Court on the 20th of October issued an arrest warrant for Udayanga Weeratunga over the case.

“Mey thambiya monawada yako mehe karanne ?”

“Mey thambiya monawada yako mehe karanne ?”

Jan 04, 2017

This incident took place when Mahinda Rajapaksa was the president. Those days, he used to visit countries that were not known much by the public. He received invitations from countries such as Belarus, Swaziland and Uganda. Mahinda had been eagerly waiting to see from which country he would receive the next invitation.

Soon after receiving the invitation, he used to get all his stooges and visit those countries in the style of the southerners visiting the homes of their relatives. In the meantime, there used to be a group that would find out ahead which country Mahinda would go to next, get a booking in the same flight or a previous flight and book hotels at their own expense and try to show that they were accompanying the country’s president.
 
What they used to do was to go ahead of Mahinda, make an appearance at the airport or the hotel lobby when he arrives and show their faces to him. A well known Muslim businessman who suffered from this illness once got to know that Mahinda was to go to Uganda. He spent out of his own pocket and went there ahead of Mahinda. He waited for hours at Entebbe airport, which is even less busy than Katunayake. Therefore, he got the opportunity to meet Mahinda face to face. Going in front of him and making a very low bow, he greeted him, ‘Good afternoon, Your Excellency!’ Mahinda turned to him and was taken by much surprise. He was so surprised that he uttered for even all his bodyguards to hear, “Ammata hudu, mey thambiya monawada yako mehe karanne? (What this Muslim man is doing here?)”. He kept looking at him for around a minute. His MSD men told him, “Sir, he is our man.”  He said, “That is correct, Yakko. But, what is he doing here? I can understand if it was London or New York. But, this is Uganda.”

Israel’s global standing continues to sink, top strategists say

Israeli soldiers, like these ones detaining a Palestinian during a raid in Hebron, on 20 September 2016, would retain “complete freedom of action” throughout the occupied West Bank, in revived plan for “unilateral separation.”Wisam HashlamounAPA images


Ali Abunimah-4 January 2017

Israel’s global standing is continuing to deteriorate, a new report from some of the country’s top strategists concludes.

“Israel’s image in Western countries continues to decline, a trend that enhances the ability of hostile groups to engage in actions aimed at depriving Israel of moral and political legitimacy and launch boycotts,” the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) at Tel Aviv University states in its 2016-2017 Strategic Survey for Israel.

Netanyahu backs calls for convicted Israeli soldier to be pardoned

Israeli PM says manslaughter verdict handed to Sgt Elor Azaria for killing a Palestinian attacker is ‘painful for all of us’

 in Jerusalem-Wednesday 4 January 2017

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has joined calls for an Israeli soldier to be pardoned after being convicted of manslaughter for shooting dead a severely wounded Palestinian attacker in the West Bank city of Hebron last year.

As soon as the verdict was handed down on Wednesday at the end of one of the country’s most polarising court cases in recent memory, there were calls from Israeli ministers demanding that Sgt Elor Azaria, an army medic who was 19 at the time of the shooting, be granted an immediate pardon by the Israeli president, Reuven Rivlin, as others accused the Israeli military of abandoning the soldier.

In a short statement, Netanyahu said: “This is a difficult and painful day for all of us – and first and foremost for Elor and his family, for IDF soldiers, for many soldiers and for the parents of our soldiers, and me among them.

“We have one army, which is the basis of our existence. The soldiers of the IDF are our sons and daughters, and they need to remain above dispute.”

The three-judge military court sitting in Tel Aviv said Azaria had acted outside the military’s rules of engagement when he killed Abdel Fattah al-Sharif by shooting him in the head as he lay on the ground, shortly after Sharif and another Palestinian had stabbed and wounded a soldier at an Israeli military checkpoint.

Reading for more than two hours from the verdict, the chief judge, Col Maya Heller, said Azaria shot Sharif out of revenge. The court ruled that accounts of the incident that he had given were “unreliable and problematic” and his defence contradictory and flawed.

“We found there was no room to accept his arguments,” she said. “His motive for shooting was that he felt the terrorist deserved to die.”

Azaria sitting with his parents and his girlfriend Orel (left) as he awaited the verdict at the military court in Tel Aviv on Wednesday. Photograph: Heidi Levine/AFP/Getty Images

The other Palestinian involved in the knife attack was shot and died immediately, but Sharif was still alive, badly injured and posing no threat when Azaria shot him, the judges ruled.
As the verdict was read out, Azaria’s mother shouted at the panel of judges: “You should be ashamed of yourselves.” Other members of Azaria’s family clapped as the decision was delivered, shouting: “Our hero!”

Outside the court there were clashes between Azaria’s supporters – some notorious fans of Beitar football club, which is known for its anti-Arab followers – and the police. Some supporters chanted death threats against the Israeli army chief, Gadi Eisenkot, insinuating he would face the same fate as Yitzhak Rabin, the former prime minister killed 20 years ago by an ultranationalist Israeli.

Sharif’s father welcomed the verdict. “For me, a just verdict will be one that is similar to the verdicts our sons [in Israeli prisons] get … [a] life sentence,” Yusri al-Sharif said. “But Israel is trying its own son, so there is a possibility it will be lenient.”

Initially prosecutors had called for Azaria to be charged with murder but instead settled on a lesser charge of manslaughter, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years. Sentencing is expected in about a month.

The end of the trial has coincided with one of the most febrile periods in recent Israeli politics, with the two-state solution on its last legs and the US president-elect, Donald Trump, threatening to move the US embassy to Jerusalem.

A resurgent and pro-settler far right, emboldened by Trump’s imminent inauguration, has been pushing Netanyahu’s rightwing government on issues from the Azaria case, Jewish settlement expansion and calls to annex large parts of the occupied Palestinian territories.

Among the earliest calling for a pardon was the leader of the far-right Jewish Home party, Naftali Bennett. Describing the trial as politically “contaminated from the beginning”, Bennett said: “Today a soldier who killed a terrorist who deserved to die, who tried to slaughter [another] soldier, was placed in shackles and convicted as a criminal.”

Israel’s culture minister, Miri Regev – a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party – said she would also work to win a pardon. “That’s not how you act toward a soldier [who belongs] to all of us,” she said.

However, the defence minister, Avigdor Lieberman – who has previously supported Azaria – said he “didn’t like the verdict” but Israelis should respect it.

Commenting on the demands for a pardon, Rivlin’s office said such requests could only be “submitted by the applicant themselves, or by one with power of attorney, or an immediate relative, following a conclusive judicial ruling” – in other words at the end of all appeals.

The shooting on 24 March last year, captured on video by a Palestinian human rights activist, prompted international condemnationIn the footage, the wounded Sharif is surrounded by soldiers, medics and settlers. Azaria then appears and unslings a weapon before shooting Sharif in the head.

The discussion at the heart of the case was whether Azaria was justified in killing Sharif. 

Heller rejected the defence’s two central but contradictory claims, the first suggesting that Sharif was already dead at the time of the shooting, and the second that Azaria felt threatened, telling the court: “You can’t have it both ways.”

Prosecutors had argued Azaria’s motive was expressed in comments witnesses said he had made: that Sharif “deserved to die” for wounding a comrade. The court accepted this account, noting that the words carried “serious significance” in its ruling.

Azaria’s defence team said it would appeal against the verdict, and a family spokesman said the court had ignored evidence indicating the soldier was innocent. “It was like the court was detached from the fact that this was the area of an attack,” said Sharon Gal. “I felt that the court picked up the knife from the ground and stabbed it in the back of all the soldiers.”

Lt Col Nadav Weissman, a military prosecutor, said the verdict was “important, clear, decisive and speaks for itself”. He added: “This is not a happy day for us. We would have preferred that this didn’t happen. But the deed was done, and the offence was severe.”

The rare case of an active serviceman being charged had been seen as a test of Israeli military justice.
It also exposed deep divisions in Israeli society, not only between left and right, but between the Israeli military’s most senior officers – who pushed for the prosecution – and nationalist political figures, who have campaigned for Azaria’s acquittal.

On Tuesday, however, the Israeli military’s chief of staff pushed back at the most recent campaign slogan of Azaria’s supporters, which claims the soldier was “the child of us all”.

Speaking at a conference in Herziliya, Gen Gadi Eisenkot warned that the attempt to portray Azaria as immature and confused “undermines the most fundamental values that we look for in our soldiers”.

Among the pages of commentary in the Israeli media and on social media during the trial, perhaps most bizarre was the decision by Makor Rishon’s Profile magazine to declare Azaria one of its men of the year for “sparking the stormiest argument in Israeli society”, complete with a cover picture of the accused soldier posing with a gun.

The video of the killing was filmed by a Palestinian volunteer for the Israeli rights group B’Tselem, which accused the security forces of “routine whitewashing” in a statement after the verdict.

“The fact that one soldier was convicted today does not exonerate the Israeli military law-enforcement system from its routine whitewashing of cases in which security forces kill or injure Palestinians with no accountability,” B’Tselem said.

“The exception of a much-publicised trial, marked by a rare instance of video documentation, is not enough to change this norm.”

Child deaths in West Bank hit 10-year high in 2016: Report


Defence for Children International have accused Israeli security forces of employing a 'shoot-to-kill' policy in the West Bank
Palestinian protestors stand facing the Israeli settlement of Qadumim (Kedumim) during clashes with Israeli security forces (AFP)

Wednesday 4 January 2017
A report says that 2016 was the deadliest year in the past decade for Palestinian children in the West Bank, with 32 killed by Israeli security services.
Defence for Children International, an NGO focusing on children's rights, warned that Israeli police and soldiers were not being held accountable for lethal attacks on youths in the West Bank, and criticised the use of firearms against demonstrations and stone-throwers.
Out of the 32 killed, 19 were between the ages of 16 and 17, while 13 were between 13- and 15-years old. This compares with 30 killed in 2015.
Eighty three children were also injured in 2016.
“Israeli forces have increasingly used excessive force to squash demonstrations since 2014,” said Ayed Abu Eqtaish, accountability programme director at the DCIP.
“Intentional lethal force now appears to be routinely used by Israeli forces, even in unjustified situations, with no accountability, putting more and more children at risk.” Speaking to Al-Jazeera, he accused Israeli forces of employing a "shoot-to-kill policy."
Faris al-Bayed, 15, died 23 December after being shot with a rubber-coated metal bullet by Israeli forces and more than two months in a coma. (Photo: al-Bayed family)
The report cited the death of 15-year old Faris Atta al-Bayed, who was shot by a rubber-coated bullet during clashes at the entrance to the Jalazoun refugee camp, north of Ramallah on 15 October.
Doctors at the Palestine Medical Complex in Ramallah said that the bullet had pierced the front of the teen's head and lodged in his brain. Despite removing the bullet, he died after 69 days in a coma.
“I looked at Faris and saw him moving his head so fast ... and falling to the ground, with his face covered in blood,” a witness to the shooting told DCIP. “I realised he had been shot in the head.”
“I looked at Faris and saw him moving his head so fast ... and falling to the ground, with his face covered in blood”
Unrest in the West Bank has been on the rise since the start of demonstrations against perceived moves by Israeli activists to change the status quo on the Haram al-Sharif, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
A wave of Palestinian knife, gun and car-ramming attacks erupted in October 2015: while the violence has largely subsided, attacks still happen sporadically.
Since October 2015, Israeli soldiers have killed at least 244 Palestinians, including unarmed demonstrators.
Ahmad Zeidani, 17, was shot dead by Israeli forces on 18 December. (Photo: Zeidani family)
The killing of 21-year old Fatal al-Sharif in March last year - apparently while lying on the floor bleeding in the West Bank city of Hebron - provoked a storm of controversy in Israel about the willingness of Israeli soldiers to use lethal force. On Wednesday, Israeli soldiers Elon Azaria was convicted of manslaughter for the shooting, with judges concluding that Azaria had killed Sharif "without reason"
Thirty-six Israelis have also been killed in stabbing and shooting attacks by Palestinians.
Israeli security forces have been accused of excessive force, though authorities say officers act appropriately to protect themselves and civilians.

Read: Israeli army accused of West Bank 'shoot to cripple' campaign

Most of the attacks were by lone-wolf assailants, many of them young people, including teenagers. Israel's military has said it believes a significant number of them were essentially on suicide missions.
Human Rights Watch said on Monday that they had documented more than 150 cases since October 2015 in which Israeli forces had fatally shot Palestinian children and adults. They added that "video footage and/or witness accounts raise serious questions about the necessity of the use of lethal force".
They also warned that some Israeli officials had been "encouraging" soldiers and police to kill Palestinians even when they were no longer a threat.
They called on the government to "issue strong public and private admonitions to intentionally use lethal force only when strictly necessary to protect life."
"Video footage and/or witness accounts raise serious questions about the necessity of the use of lethal force"
Last year, Middle East Eye reported on an alleged policy of "shoot-to-cripple" being used by Israeli soldiers against youths in the West Bank.
According to a report by the BADIL Resource Centre, during raids on the Dheisha refugee camp in 2016, 18 youth aged between 14 and 27 were shot in their legs.
Palestinians taking part in demonstrations reported that the leader of the Israeli raids - a man nicknamed "Captain Nidal" - had told them he would "cripple half of you and let the other half push your wheelchairs”.

Bangladesh: Killing lawmakers maybe another chapter of the terrorism


Liton was so popular and powerful in his area that he was successful to postpone the rally of GolamAzam in the1991 to ‘96 regime of Khaleda Zia. So, with all his good sides and bad sides, Liton was very much anti-Jammat; that is why, he was always a target of Jammat.


by Swadesh Roy-Jan 3, 2017

( January 3, 2017, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) A lawmaker (member of the parliament) of ruling party at Gibandha, a northern district of Bangladesh was killed on 31st night being gunshot. The lawmaker, named Manjurul Alam Liton, was at home when three persons came by a scouter, and without giving a chance, they hit him. After taking the injured in a nearby hospital, doctor declared him dead. Liton was not only the leader of the ruling party ‘Awami league’, but also, he was a leader of a social pressure group, called, ‘Ekhatorer Ghatok Dalal Nirmul committee’( the wipe out committee of killer and collaborator in 1971). This social group has been fighting against the killer and the collaborator of 1971 since 1991.

In Bangladesh, the main killer group and collaborator of Pakistan army in 1971 was Jamata-E- Islami of Bangladesh (Jammat). They were the main group in the then time that helped commit the biggest genocide of twentieth century in the world. Three million people were killed and half million women were raped. During this period, their main leader was Golam Ajam; who died in jail in 2014; when he was awarded jail until death for being a war criminal by the Supreme Court of Bangladesh. Unfortunately, these war criminals were once so powerful in Bangladesh, even two of them were the Cabinet Ministers in Bangladesh from 2001 to 2006, in the cabinet of Khaleda Zia, the leader of the Bangladesh nationalist party.

However, Liton was so popular and powerful in his area that he was successful to postpone the rally of GolamAzam in the1991 to ‘96 regime of Khaleda Zia. So, with all his good sides and bad sides, Liton was very much anti-Jammat; that is why, he was always a target of Jammat.

On 2ndJanuary , Monday, in the regular cabinet meeting, the Prime Minister of Bangladesh indirectly said that, Jammat has killed Liton. After the cabinet meeting I talked with some Cabinet Ministers and they confirmed that the Prime Minister indirectly said,Jammat is the killer of Liton. On 1st January, the special branch of Bangladesh gave a primary report; in that report they indicated that jammat will be the beneficiary after the death of liton. Basically, the terrorists of Jammat are more powerful in the area of Liton. In 2013, in this area, they killed four members of police force and they torched a lot of Hindu families’ house.

However, the lawmaker killing is not the new phenomenon in Bangladesh. When Bangladesh was a new born country, then at least four lawmakers were killed; but then it was counted that, huge number of arms were in the hand of many miscreants’ groups. So then it was not counted, it was the work of the anti-liberation forces of Bangladesh. However, Bangladesh underwent a dark age within very short of its independence. The father of the nation was killed brutally and the constitution was changed to wipe out the aspiration of independence. Afterwards, for a long time the country was ruled by the military government and the party which was created by the military. In spite of that, a movement was always in Bangladesh to restore the democracy. Its history is long. But the misfortune of Bangladesh is that, political party created by the military rulers is one of the biggest parties in Bangladesh; so, they always give shelter to the collaborator of 1971. Under their shade, the collaborator group like Jammat has made an Islamic terrorist group in Bangladesh. They became more powerful after 2001. So from2001 to 2006,two law makers of Awami league were killed. In the past seven years, the terrorist of Jammat has killed many politicians, intellectuals, and the common people in the name of many terrorist groups. Now the new phenomenon, they have changed the way of their target killing. So killing of Liton may be another chapter of the terrorists of Bangladesh.

Swadesh Roy, Executive Editor, the Daily Janakantha, Dhaka, Bangladesh

SitRep: BREAKING: Trump Says He Believes Assange; Rips U.S. Intel Community; Mattis to Capitol Hill, Voices Support for F-35

SitRep: BREAKING: Trump Says He Believes Assange; Rips U.S. Intel Community; Mattis to Capitol Hill, Voices Support for F-35

No automatic alt text available.BY PAUL MCLEARYADAM RAWNSLEY-JANUARY 4, 2017

Here we go. President-elect Donald Trump apparently tuned in to FOX NewsTuesday night for Sean Hannity’s sit down with Wikileaks chief Julian Assange, who appears to be emerging as a surprising ally of some conservatives in Washington.

Trump tweeted Wednesday morning that Assange backs up his own suspicions over the U.S. government and a variety of independent cybersecurity firms’ assessment that Russia was behind the hacks on the Democratic National Congress, writing, “Julian Assange said ‘a 14 year old could have hacked Podesta’ – why was DNC so careless? Also said Russians did not give him the info!”

More tweets, more doubts. The tweet comes after Trump’s missive late Tuesday that the intel briefing he was scheduled to receive on the hacks had been moved to later this week: “The “Intelligence” briefing on so-called “Russian hacking” was delayed until Friday, perhaps more time needed to build a case. Very strange!”

But senior administration officials tell the New York Times that no meeting had been scheduled for Tuesday. Trump had previously said he might reveal “things that other people don’t know” about the hacking, but has provided no evidence to back up his doubts about the intel community’s conclusions.

His latest 140-character assaults on U.S. government agencies comes as F.B.I. director, James Comey, and director of national intelligence, James Clapper were preparing to travel to New York on Friday to brief him about their findings. “The decision by Mr. Comey and Mr. Clapper to brief Mr. Trump in person appears to be an effort to show him how seriously they take their conclusions that the Russian government was behind the hacking of Democratic officials before the election,” the Times notes.

Not helping. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) fanned the flames of the budding war between the President-elect and the intelligence community, telling MSNBC Tuesday night that Trump is being “really dumb” for picking a fight with the intel pros, warning they “have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.”

To the Hill. Trump’s pick to become the next defense secretary, retired Marine General James Mattis, is making the rounds on Capitol Hill this week, and had some interesting things to say to Sen. Richard Blumenthal, the Democrat from Connecticut on Tuesday.

Blumenthal hinted that Mattis might not share the same views as Trump when it comes to the F-35 program, and the lawmaker said he was “encouraged by his clear commitment” to the “important role of the F-35 program in sustaining and enhancing it.” Trump has tweeted about the program, demanding that Lockheed Martin bring the costs down while asking Boeing “to price-out a comparable F-18 Super Hornet,” an older jet that would be hugely expensive to bring up to speed with the F-35.

The two also talked about cyber attacks, “particularly by the Russians,” Blumenthal said, but wouldn’t provide any details. The senator did say that he believes Mattis “could provide a sense of balance and stability” in the Trump administration.

More meets. Mattis also sat down with Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, and has planned visits with two other panel members Wednesday and Thursday: Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.). The New York senator is the only Democrat who has come out against Mattis, saying in a statement that she will not vote for an exception to the rule of civilian control of the military, as it is “a fundamental principle of American democracy.” The Senate would have to change existing law to allow Mattis to serve, since he has not been out of the military for the required seven years.

So long. On Wednesday morning, President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden will sit down with the Pentagon’s global Combatant Commanders and Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Cabinet Room for the final time of their administration, followed by a trip out to Joint Base Myers-Henderson Hall, where they’ll to participate in the Armed Forces Full Honor Review Farewell Ceremony.

Good morning and as always, if you have any thoughts, announcements, tips, or national  security-related events to share, please pass them along to SitRep HQ. Best way is to send them to: paul.mcleary@foreignpolicy.com or on Twitter: @paulmcleary or @arawnsley
POTUS and PEOTUS

Is President Barack Obama more comfortable with the idea of President-elect Donald Trump getting the nuclear codes? Not so much. Both Obama and Hillary Clinton made Trump’s erratic temperament an issue during the presidential campaign, declaring him unfit to bear the responsibility inherent in receiving launch codes for U.S. nuclear weapons. But Politiconotes that when asked if his opinion on a nuclear-capable Trump has changed, White House spokesman Josh Earnest punted before admitting that his “assessment would be that his opinions have not changed.”
Pacific

The USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier is headed to the western PacificNavy Times reports. 3rd Fleet’s Vice Adm. Nora Tyson will command the carrier strike group accompanying the Vinson, but the group plans to stray past the international dateline that has marked the fleet’s traditional area of responsibility and venture into 7th Fleet’s territory. The Obama administration has received some criticism for leaving the Persian Gulf without a carrier group at the moment but the Vinson has no plans to sail that far to fill the gap.

Water war

The Assad regime and rebels are fighting for control of a vital spring used to supply the capital with most of its water, according to the AP. Until recently, the two sides had agreed to leave the Ain al-Fijeh spring out of the conflict and let its water flow to the capital. But all that changed recently and both sides accuse each other of sabotaging the deal. Rebels say Russian warplanes bombed the water processing plant that supplies the capital, offering imagery of its collapsed roof as proof. The Assad regime, however, denies any strikes on the facility and accuses rebels of dumping gasoline into the water supply.
Turkey

American warplanes are providing air support to Turkish forces ranged off against the Islamic State near the Syrian town of al-Bab, Reuters reports. American officials have been leery of providing air support for Turkey’s operation near al-Bab, seeing it as an attempt to blunt the advance of Kurdish YPG forces who are also fighting the jihadist group. After the Turks requested U.S. air support in late December, Russian warplanes carried out airstrikes in support of Turkish forces near the town. Defense Department spokesman Peter Cook called the U.S. airstrikes a “visible show of force,” but said no bombs were dropped.

Israel

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu got an unwelcome visit from police this week investigating allegations that he illegally received gifts from wealthy businessmen. The New York Times notes that some Israeli political observers see a chance that Israel’s attorney general could issue an indictment, which would force the second longest serving Israeli leader to resign. Other recent Israeli prime ministers have faced ethics investigations, however, and come away unscathed, including Ariel Sharon and Ehud Barak.

Drones

The Islamic State’s explosive-laden drones have captured the attention of the media but that’s not the only thing for which the group is using homebrew unmanned aircraft. Iraqi officials tell Al Jazeera reports that the Islamic State has also been using small drones to help guide their car bombs towards Iraqi military targets and locate the positions of enemy troops closing in on them in Mosul. The group has been using hobby drones equipped with small explosives to target enemy troops and two Peshmerga fighters died last year disassembling a downed Islamic State drone equipped with an explosive device.

Think Tanked

The Atlantic Council has published a new report on using cyber capabilities in deterrence. In “Cyber and Deterrence: The Military-Civil Nexus in High-End Conflict,” authors Franklin Kramer, Robert Butlet, and Catherine Lotrionte spell out what the various components of the U.S. government with responsibility for cybersecurity should do in the event of a major conflict with a highly capable adversary.
And finally…

BattleMechs, getting closer every day.

Photo Credit: Carl Court/Getty Images
Trump alleges delay in his briefing on ‘so-called’ Russian hacking; U.S. official says there wasn’t one

Arriving at an annual New Year's Eve celebration at his Mar-a-lago, Fla., estate, President-elect Donald Trump left open the possibility of a meeting with Taiwan's president if she visits the United States after he is sworn in on Jan. 20. Trump also pushed back on intelligence claims about Russian hacking. (Reuters)


  
President-elect Donald Trump took to Twitter on Tuesday night to say that a planned intelligence briefing for him on “so-called ‘Russian-hacking’” had been delayed until Friday, a development he called ‘very strange!” -- but one that a U.S. official said wasn't a delay at all.
The tweet was the latest sign of Trump’s skepticism about a case pressed by the Obama administration, based on the work of U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement agencies, that Russia tried to influence the U.S. presidential election by hacking several Democratic email accounts, among other actions. Several leading Republicans have also endorsed that view.

The "Intelligence" briefing on so-called "Russian hacking" was delayed until Friday, perhaps more time needed to build a case. Very strange!
Trump returned to the topic on Wednesday morning, sending out a new tweet referencing an interview of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange by Sean Hannity of Fox News. In the interview, Assange said a 14-year-old could have hacked the email account of John Podesta, the chairman of Hillary Clinton's campaign. WikiLeaks published the contents of Podesta's emails without identifying the source of the hacking.

Julian Assange said "a 14 year old could have hacked Podesta" - why was DNC so careless? Also said Russians did not give him the info!

Speaking outside a party at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida last week, Trump sounded dismissive of Russia's alleged role in the hacking, saying it was “time for the country to move on to bigger and better things.” But he indicated that he was willing to listen to a briefing on the issue this week.
Those remarks on Thursday came just hours after President Obama announced retaliation against Russia that included the removal of 35 Russian government officials and other sanctions against state agencies and individuals allegedly tied to hacking.
In a conference call with reporters on Tuesday, transition spokesman Sean Spicer said Trump's briefing would be “later this week” but did not specify a date.
In his tweet on Tuesday night, Trump speculated that the reason for a delay of his briefing until Friday was “perhaps more time to build a case.”
“Very strange!” the president-elect said in the tweet.
A U.S. official disputed that there had been any delay in delivering the briefing that Trump requested on Russia, saying that high-level U.S. intelligence officials are scheduled to meet with the president-elect in New York on Friday.
The official said that Trump did receive a regular intelligence briefing on Tuesday, and raised the possibility of confusion on the part of his transition team or schedulers.
“It's possible that his team has some scheduling disconnect” and that “whatever he received today didn't meet his expectations,” the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence matters. But, the official said, the fuller briefing on Russia's alleged election hacking was never scheduled to occur Tuesday, and that plans for a fuller Friday briefing have been in place for several days.
The officials expected to take part in that session include Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper, Jr., CIA Director John Brennan, FBI Director James B. Comey and the head of the National Security Agency, Adm. Mike Rogers.
U.S. intelligence agencies in recent days completed a draft of the comprehensive review of Russian hacking that Obama had ordered after the election. U.S. officials said the document would first need to be briefed to Obama before it is shared with Trump.
The full report could be delivered to Obama as early as Thursday, allowing for the document and its principal findings to be shared with Trump shortly thereafter. U.S. spy agencies are also preparing a declassified version, stripped of the most sensitive intelligence information, that could be shared with the public.
In December, during a closed door briefing with senators, the CIA shared a secret assessment. The agency concluded it was now “quite clear“ that Russia’s goal was to help Donald Trump win the White House. (Jason Aldag/The Washington Post)
That version could be ready as early as next week, but the U.S. official cautioned that the timetable on all of these events is subject to change because of the complexity of coordinating the meetings of multiple spy agencies and their top officials with the White House and Trump's transition team.
Leading Democrats were quick to criticize Trump on Tuesday night.
When Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) was shown a copy of Trump's tweet during a television interview, he said Trump was “being really dumb.”
“Let me tell you, you take on the intelligence community, they have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you,” Schumer said on MSNBC's “The Rachel Maddow Show.” “So even for a practical, supposedly hard-nosed businessman, he’s being really dumb to do this. … From what I am told, they are very upset with how he has treated them and talked about them.”

In light of 2016 election losses, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) encouraged Senate Democrats to "look forward" during a speech on the Senate floor at the outset of the 115th Congress, Jan. 3, 2017. (Reuters)
Meanwhile, Sen. Mark R. Warner (Va.), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, took to Twitter, saying he wished Trump showed “more . . . respect for our intelligence professionals.”

Really wish we saw more PEOTUS respect for our intelligence professionals. (1/2) https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/816452807024840704 
Proves the need for Congress to give the American people a timely bipartisan probe. (2/2)

And on Wednesday morning, Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) said she found the “disrespect” Trump had showed the intelligence community to be “stunning.”