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

Monday, April 16, 2018

Syrian Bombing by US and Allies Unwarranted and Condemnable

President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin talk during an Asian economic summit in Danang, Vietnam, last year. (Jorge Silva/Reuters)

 

President Trump seemed distracted in March as his aides briefed him at his Mar-a-Lago resort on the administration’s plan to expel 60 Russian diplomats and suspected spies.

The United States, they explained, would be ousting roughly the same number of Russians as its European allies — part of a coordinated move to punish Moscow for the poisoning of a former Russian spy and his daughter on British soil.

“We’ll match their numbers,” Trump instructed, according to a senior administration official. “We’re not taking the lead. We’re matching.”

The next day, when the expulsions were announced publicly, Trump erupted, officials said. To his shock and dismay, France and Germany were each expelling only four Russian officials — far fewer than the 60 his administration had decided on.

The president, who seemed to believe that other individual countries would largely equal the United States, was furious that his administration was being portrayed in the media as taking by far the toughest stance on Russia.


The Post's Anton Troianovski and Louisa Loveluck explain why the joint United States military strike against Syria on April 13 will likely have little effect. 
His briefers tried to reassure him that the sum total of European expulsions was roughly the same as the U.S. number.

“I don’t care about the total!” the administration official recalled Trump screaming. The official, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

Growing angrier, Trump insisted that his aides had misled him about the magnitude of the expulsions. “There were curse words,” the official said, “a lot of curse words.”

The incident reflects a tension at the core of the Trump administration’s increasingly hard-nosed stance on Russia: The president instinctually opposes many of the punitive measures pushed by his Cabinet that have crippled his ability to forge a close relationship with Russian President Vladi­mir Putin.

The past month, in particular, has marked a major turning point in the administration’s stance, according to senior administration officials. There have been mass expulsions of Russian diplomats, sanctions on oligarchs that have bled billions of dollars from Russia’s already weak economy and, for the first time, a presidential tweet that criticized Putin by name for backing Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad.

On Friday night, the United States, acting with Britain and France, attacked Assad’s chemical weapons facilities as punishment for what they say was his use of agents on civilians. U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said Sunday that the administration plans to announce additional sanctions against Russia soon.


After airstrikes against Syrian chemical weapons facilities on April 13, lawmakers and Trump administration officials weighed in on the attack. 
A White House spokesman stressed that Trump’s Russia policy has been “consistent and tough” from his earliest days in office, and that the president supports the recent moves.

“While we would like to work with Russia, when faced with their malign activities on the international stage, the president will hold them accountable,” Raj Shah said.

Some close to Trump say the recent measures are the product of an ongoing pressure campaign to push the president to take a more skeptical view of the Russian leader.

“If you’re getting briefed by the CIA director on all this stuff, there’s a point where, even if you’re Donald J. Trump, you think, ‘Hmm [Putin’s] a really bad guy,’ ” said former House speaker Newt Gingrich, an informal Trump adviser.

Others note Trump’s ongoing unease with his own policy. Even as his administration has ratcheted up the pressure on Putin’s inner circle, Trump has continued in recent weeks to make overtures to the Russian leader, congratulating him on his election win and, in a move that frustrated his national security team, inviting him to visit the White House.

“I think I could have a very good relationship with Russia and with President Putin,” Trump said at a news conference just days after the largest expulsion of Russians in U.S. history. “And if I did, that would be a great thing. And there’s also a possibility that won’t happen. Who knows?”

Trump came to the White House believing that his personal relationships with other leaders would be central to solving the world’s thorniest foreign policy problems, administration officials said. In Trump’s mind, no leader was more important or powerful than Putin, they said.

A cooperative relationship with the Russian leader could help Trump find solutions to problems that bedeviled his predecessor in places such as Ukraine, Syria and North Korea.

Former president Barack Obama had a tense relationship with Putin. Trump said he could do better but felt stymied by the media, Congress and special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s probe into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.

Any conciliatory move he made toward Putin came under heavy scrutiny. “When will all the haters and fools out there realize that having a good relationship is a good thing,” Trump tweeted in November. “They are always playing politics — bad for our country.”

Privately, he complained to aides that the media’s fixation on the Mueller probe was hobbling his effort to woo Putin. “I can’t put on the charm,” the president often said, according to one of his advisers. “I’m not able to be president because of this witch hunt.”

As the months passed, the president’s options for improving relations with Russia narrowed. In late July, Congress overwhelmingly approved new sanctions on Moscow that were widely seen as a rebuke of Trump’s efforts to reach out to Putin. It took aides four days to persuade Trump to sign the bill, which had cleared with a veto-proof majority.

Trump advisers were reluctant to even raise the topic of Russian interference in the election, which Trump equated with Democrats’ efforts to undermine his victory. “It’s just kind of its own beast,” a senior national security official said. “It’s been a constant from Day One.”

Gingrich and other Trump advisers said CIA Director Mike Pompeo, the secretary of state nominee, was one of the few advisers who could address Russia without raising the president’s ire.

In January, Pompeo told the BBC that he had “every expectation” that Russia would make an effort to disrupt the 2018 midterm elections. Privately, he pushed Trump to take a tough line on Moscow.
One area where aides worked to change Trump’s mind was on a proposal to sell antitank missiles to Ukraine. Obama had opposed the move for fear of angering Moscow and provoking a Russian escalation.

Trump initially was also hesitant to support the move, which had the backing of the Pentagon and State Department. “He would say, ‘Why is this our problem? Why not let the Europeans deal with Ukraine?” a U.S. official said.

Aides described a lobbying effort by Pompeo, Haley and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in support of the lethal aid. “I just want peace,” Trump would say when pressed on Ukraine.

His aides countered that the weapons would help achieve peace by deterring further Russian aggression.

To bring the president around, U.S. officials argued that the $47 million military aid package could be a boon to U.S. taxpayers if cash-strapped Kiev stabilized and someday became a reliable buyer of American military hardware.

To the surprise of even his closest advisers, the president agreed late last year to the weapons transfer on the condition that the move be kept quiet and made without a formal news release.

Aides tried to warn him that there was almost no way to stop the news from leaking.

When it broke, Russia hawks in Congress praised the president. “Another significant step in the right direction,” said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), a frequent Trump critic. But Trump was still furious, an administration official said.

“For some reason, when it comes to Russia, he doesn’t hear the praise,” a senior administration official said. “Politically speaking, the best thing for him to do is to be tough. . . . On that one issue, he cannot hear the praise.”

The poisoning in Britain in early March of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, with a nerve agent upped the tension between Trump and his advisers.

Initially, the president was hesitant to believe the intelligence that Russia was behind the attack — a fact that some aides attributed to his contrarian personality and tendency to look for deeper conspiracies. To persuade him, his advisers warned that he would get hammered in the press if he was out of step with U.S. allies, officials said.

“There was a sense that we couldn’t be the only ones not to concede to reality,” the Trump adviser said.

The next task was convincing Trump that he should punish Putin in coordination with the Europeans. “Why are you asking me to do this?” Trump asked in a call with British Prime Minister Theresa May, according to a senior White House official. “What’s Germany going to do? What about France?”
He was insistent that the poisoning in the English city of Salisbury was largely a European problem and that the allies should take the lead in moving against Russia.

Trump told aides in an Oval Office session on March 23 that he was confident French President Emmanuel Macron would deliver on promises to expel Russian officials but that he was worried about German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country depends on Russian oil and gas.
The next day, at his Mar-a-Lago resort, Trump’s aides gave him the final memo with the precise number of American expulsions.

The president signed the order on the plane back to Washington.

Trump was furious as news reports described the expulsions as the largest purge in U.S. history and noted the wide gap between the United States and its allies. “If you had told me France and Germany were only doing [four], that’s what we would have done,” one official recalled him saying.

Some officials said it was a simple misunderstanding. Others blamed the president’s strained relationship with his top aides, including H.R. McMaster, his former national security adviser.

“Anytime McMaster came in with a recommendation, he always thought it was too much,” the Trump adviser said. “They were just oil and water on everything. So his natural impulse was, if this was your recommendation, it must be too far.”

In the days since the expulsions, Trump has continued to take tough new actions to punish Russia. Early this month, the administration sanctioned 17 senior Russian officials and seven oligarchs and their companies, prompting Russia’s Foreign Ministry to threaten a “harsh response.”

The sanctions were followed by an alleged chemical attack that killed dozens of Syrians in the rebel-held town of Douma, east of Syria’s capital. “President Putin, Russia and Iran are responsible for backing Animal Assad,” Trump tweeted in his first by-name criticism of the Russian leader. “Big price to pay.”

The relatively modest airstrikes that Trump ordered Friday were designed to deter Assad without provoking a broader military conflict with Russia.

Some European diplomats in Washington question whether the tough moves have Trump’s full support. “This wouldn’t be the policy unless Trump supports it. . . . Yes?” asked one ambassador.
Russia analysts seem just as mystified. “This is a man who if he had his druthers would be pursuing a much more open and friendly policy with Russia,” said Angela Stent, a former White House official and professor at Georgetown University. “The United States essentially has three Russia policies: the president’s, the executive branch’s and Congress’s.”

Less than a month after Trump shocked his foreign policy advisers by inviting Putin to the White House, the prospects for a visit anytime soon seem remote. No date has been set, White House officials said.

“We’re not rushing to do this meeting,” a senior administration official said. “Our team wasn’t thrilled about the idea.”

Julie Tate contributed to this report.

Security Brief: Syria’s War Machine Up and Running; Chemical Weapons Revelations

The United States has no intention of using its firepower to halt the mass killing of civilians through conventional means, degrade Syria’s military forces, or to challenge Russia and Iran’s military positions is Syria.

A British military Typhoon aircraft lands at the Sovereign Base Area (SBA) of Akrotiri following U.S., British and French strikes on Syria on April 14, 2018. IAKOVOS HATZISTAVROU/AFP/Getty Images
A British military Typhoon aircraft lands at the Sovereign Base Area (SBA) of Akrotiri following U.S., British and French strikes on Syria on April 14, 2018. IAKOVOS HATZISTAVROU/AFP/Getty Images 
BY -
 
No automatic alt text available.By Elias Groll, with Robbie Gramer, Dan De Luce, and Rhys Dubin

Another day in Syria. Just two days after the United States, France, and Britain struck three sites associated with Syria’s chemical weapons program, Bashar al-Assad’s war machine was up and running again, with forces loyal to the president carrying out at least 28 strikes around Homs and Hama, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The limited strikes, in retaliation for a poison gas attack on the Syrian enclave on Douma, reflect a cold calculus: the United States has no intention of using its firepower to halt the mass killing of civilians through conventional means, degrade Syria’s military forces, or to challenge Russia and Iran’s military positions is Syria.

American military officials said the missile volley had struck the heart of the Syrian chemical weapons complex, but noted that Syria retains the ability to deliver chemical weapons. Serious questions remain about the extent of the damage inflicted on Syria’s chemical weapons program. According to a “senior official in a regional alliance that backs Damascus” quoted by Reutersthe sites that were targeted had been evacuated days ago thanks to a warning from Russia.”

Capt. Adulsalam Abdulrazek, a former officer in Syria’s chemical program, told the Associated Press that the strikes likely hit “parts of, but not the heart” of Assad’s poison gas infrastructure. Abdulrazek told the AP he doubts the strike will curb Assad’s ability to use chemical weapons or produce them in the future.

Russia reacted harshly to the strike on Syria’s chemical weapons compounds, with Russian President Vladimir Putin warning that another strike would lead to “chaos” in international relations. Russian military officials disputed the American account of the strike and claimed that Syrian air defenses had shot down 71 American missiles and that the strikes targeted a number of airfields, including the international airport in Damascus.

American military officials flatly denied both claims and released satellite and drone imagery of sites struck Friday night, in an effort to combat what Defense Secretary Jim Mattis described as the coming disinformation campaign.

For his part, Assad tried to put his best spin on the attacks. He tweeted a video of him striding into work briefcase in hand the day following the attacks. A Russian lawmaker who met with Assad on Sunday reported the Syrian leader remains in a “good mood.”

In Syria for the long-run? The American-led strikes came on the heels of statements by President Donald Trump that he hoped to quickly withdraw American forces from Syria, and over the weekend French President Emmanuel Macron said he convinced Trump to maintain U.S. troops there. “Ten days ago, President Trump was saying the United States of America had a duty to disengage from Syria,” Macron said in an interview Sunday. “I assure you, we have convinced him that it is necessary to stay for the long-term.”

CW revelations. France and the United States released detailed intelligence assessments to back up their claim that the Assad regime was responsible for the April 7 chemical weapons attack and provided new details about Syrian chemical weapons use. Notably, both countries believe Syria used sarin in a November 2017 attack on the Syrian city of Harasta.“We are convinced that there have been other instances of both sarin and chlorine use in [the Damascus] area that we have not verified,” the American assessment notes.  

Welcome to this Monday-morning edition of Security Brief. Send your tips, questions, and comments to elias.groll@foreignpolicy.com.

Mission accomplished? President Donald Trump faced a barrage of criticism after he took to Twitter to proclaim “Mission Accomplished!” to describe the strike on Syria’s chemical weapons program. By Sunday, Trump was apoplectic over the criticism. “The Syrian raid was so perfectly carried out, with such precision, that the only way the Fake News Media could demean was by my use of the term ‘Mission Accomplished,’” he tweeted on Sunday. “I knew they would seize on this but felt it is such a great Military term, it should be brought back. Use often!”

Bolton v. Mattis. The poison gas attack and the U.S. retaliatory strike provided a first test for newly-appointed national security advisor John Bolton and his influence in the White House. Bolton reportedly disagreed with Defense Secretary James Mattis over how to respond, with the Pentagon chief and top U.S. military officer Gen. Joseph Dunford adopting a more cautious stance. Bolton, meanwhile, is starting to clear out staff named by his predecessors, with deputy national security Nadia Schadlow and NSC chief spokesman Michael Anton resigning last week. Bolton also was reportedly behind the departure of White House homeland security adviser Tom Bossert, who announced he was stepping down last week.

Congressional opposition. While congressional Republicans mostly praised the strikes against Syria, a coterie of powerful Democrats criticized the decision to do so without congressional authorization, Defense News reports. In a letter, Sens. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee; Dick Durbin, the Senate minority whip, and Bob Menendez, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, demanded President Trump provide a legal justification for the strike.

‘Curse words, a lot of curse words.’ President Donald Trump was furious to learn that he had ordered the United States to expel far more Russian spies and diplomats than his European allies, the Washington Post reports. Trump felt deceived by his advisers and unleashed an expletive-filled tirade on his underlings. The Post casts the incident as reflective of “a tension at the core of the Trump administration’s increasingly hard-nosed stance on Russia: The president instinctually opposes many of the punitive measures pushed by his Cabinet that have crippled his ability to forge a close relationship with Russian President Vladi­mir Putin.”

More Russia sanctions. The Trump administration is set to unveil additional sanctions on Russia on Monday as part of its response to the April 7 chemical weapons attack, U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said on Sunday. “They will go directly to any sort of companies that were dealing with equipment related to Assad and chemical weapons use,” Haley said.

Hybrid war. An intriguing report from the Times of London claims that Moscow may retaliate against the British government by releasing compromising material. “Theresa May has received intelligence risk assessments since the nerve-agent attack in Salisbury that the Putin regime could hit back with “kompromat” (compromising material) on members of her cabinet,” the paper reports.

Sales pitch. Friday’s strike on Syria’s chemical weapons program saw the combat debut of two key American weapons systems. A Virginia-class submarine fired Tomahawk cruise missiles , and American jets fired the JASSM-ER, a stealthy long-range air-fired cruise missile. The launch of the JASSM-ER is likely being closely watched in Tokyo, where military officials are considering purchasing the missile to give the country’s military a long-range strike capability against North Korean targets, Japan Times reports.

Cautionary measures. U.S. special operations forces stationed in eastern Syria increased security at their outposts in anticipation of a potential military response to this weekend’s airstrikes, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Joseph Dunford, said Friday. The United States has over 2,000 troops stationed throughout eastern Syria. On several occasions, these units have come under attack from Syrian government forces — including at the end of February, when U.S. troops killed more than 100 government-aligned forces, including Russian mercenaries, in a firefight near Deir-Ezzour.

Will Pompeo get the job? After a heated confirmation hearing, CIA Director Mike Pompeo is facing a tight confirmation vote in coming weeks to become President Trump’s new diplomat in chief. He’s expected to eke out a win on the Senate floor, where a vote is expected by the end of the week of April 23, congressional sources tell FP. Pompeo could eke by on an even slimmer margin than his predecessor, Rex Tillerson, who faced the most opposition of any secretary of state in the past 50 years with a 56 to 43 vote in the Senate.

Trump golfs with Abe. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will meet with President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort this week to see if he can save his once seemingly close relationship with the U.S. president, FP’s Emily Tamkin and Dan De Luce report. Japan was caught off-guard by Trump’s plans for talks with North Korea and his Twitter attacks on Japan and trade. Maybe a weekend of golf is just what the doctor ordered.

Drama in Pence world. Nikki Haley deputy Jon Lerner was all set to come on board as Vice President Mike Pence’s national security adviser — until President Trump learned of his appointment. Late Sunday, Lerner withdrew from the position.

“Morally Unfit”. On the domestic front, former FBI director James Comey gave his first televised interview since he was fired and served up an extraordinary public condemnation of the president. Comey, whose interview aired on ABC Sunday night ahead of the release of his book, compared to the president to a mafia boss, warned that Trump was possibly vulnerable to blackmail by Russia, and called Trump “morally unfit” for office.

Remember that Iranian drone? The Iranian drone shot down by Israeli forces in early February was armed, the Israeli Defense Forces said on Friday. “The interception of the Iranian unmanned aircraft by an attack helicopter prevented an Iranian intent to carry out an attack in the territory of the State of Israel,” the army said in a statement. An armed drone violating Israeli airspace — and launched by Iranian forces operating in Syria — represents a notable escalation in what is already a volatile stand-off in the region. The violation of Israeli airspace prompted an Israeli attack on Iranian military installations inside Syria.

How Marie Colvin was assassinated. A new lawsuit filed in U.S. federal court provides new details about the death of journalist Marie Colvin, who was killed in Syria in 2012 in a rocket attack alongside another journalist. “Witness accounts, internal regime documents, and testimony from senior defectors” describe an effort by the Assad regime to assassinate Colvin and other journalists — and jubilation when she was successfully killed, the Intercept reports.

Aviation crisis.  Defense Secretary Jim Mattis addressed the rising rate of deaths in military aviation last week, telling lawmakers that “we cannot repair our way out of the situation we are in.”
Cyber turf war. As the United States grows its hacker army, a bureaucratic battle has emerged over who will take the lead role in cyberspace, CyberScoop reports. “A quiet but constant tug of war is raging between the intelligence community and the military over the future of government-backed hacking operations,” the outlet reports. If the U.S. is going to strike back at foreign targets in cyberspace, when should the soldiers or the spies lead the charge?”

Facebook’s ‘arms race.’ Mark Zuckerberg attempted to bat away congressional scrutiny over his company’s handling of Russia’s use of Facebook to meddle in the 2016 election by arguing that his company is in an “arms race” with Russia. After that less than subtle plea for sympathy, Zuckerberg argued artificial intelligence tools would eventually solve problems of disinformation and propaganda on his platform — and then promptly conceded the technology is five to ten years from maturity.
Pence goes to space. Vice President Mike Pence travels to Colorado Springs today where he will deliver a speech on space policy, Space News reports. Details remain sparse but the Trump administration has broadly pursued an agenda of regulatory reform to improve the pace and lower the cost of space launch.  

A milestone. Marine Corps Col. Lorna M. Mahlock is about to make history. If confirmed, Mahlock will be the first black woman general in the history of the Marine Corps, ABC reports. Mahlock is the current deputy director of operations, plans, policies and operations directorate.

Spotted: X-37B. It managed to stay hidden for 218 days, but amateur satellite observers have finally spotted the secretive X-37B space plane, Space Flight 101 reports 

Submarine tech to Taiwan. The State Department approved the sale of submarine technology to Taiwan, providing a potentially powerful boost to the country’s domestic efforts to develop their underwater weapons, Defense News reports.

New PACOM commander. Adm. Phil Davidson, the head of U.S. Fleet Forces Command, has been tapped as the next top military officer in the Pacific, USNI reports. Davidson will succeed Adm. Harry Harris, who has been nominated to serve as the next U.S. ambassador to Australia.

Not quite how that’s supposed to work. An F-22 Raptor ended up on its belly on the tarmac of Naval Air Station Fallon, the Drive reports. “the jet may have retracted its gear too early during takeoff, with the aircraft slamming back down on the runway at relatively high speed and skidding its way to a stop,” the outlet reports. 

Cruiser replacement. Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson is laying out an aggressive timeline for the Navy’s next major ship purchase, a new cruises. In an interview with Defense News, the naval chief said an electrical system that can power next-generation weapons such as railguns and lasers will be a major priority.

LCS hits another snag. The Navy’s troubled Littoral Combat Ship is facing yet another set-back: The Navy may not deploy any of this ships in 2018, despite previous plans to do so, USNI reports.
F-35 delivery pause. Pentagon officials are putting their best spin on a contract dispute with Lockheed Martin that has resulted in a pause of F-35 deliveries. Ellen Lord, the Pentagon’s chief weapons buyer says the dispute over who will pay for maintenance costs is indicative of how the Defense Department is holding Lockheed Martin morely closely accountable to its contract, Defense News reports.
 Syrian forces walk in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus. Photograph: Louai Beshara/AFP/Getty Images


Russia and the Syrian regime have been accused by western diplomats of denying chemical weapons inspectors access to sites in the town of Douma, where an attack killed dozens and prompted US-led missile strikes over the weekend.

Russia and Syria had cited “pending security issues” before inspectors could deploy to the town outside Damascus, said Ahmet Üzümcü, the director-general of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, at a meeting of the OPCW’s executive council.

Syrian authorities were offering 22 people to interview as witnesses instead, he said, adding that he hoped “all necessary arrangements will be made … to allow the team to deploy to Douma as soon as possible”.

Speaking in parliament on Monday, Theresa May accused Syria and Russia of blocking access and attempting to cover up the attack. “The Syrian regime has reportedly been attempting to conceal the evidence by searching evacuees from Douma to ensure samples are not being smuggled from this area, and a wider operation to conceal the facts of the attack is under way, supported by the Russians,” the prime minister said.

The UK’s OPCW delegation tweeted: “Russia & Syria have not yet allowed access to Douma. Unfettered access essential. Russia & Syria must cooperate.”

The Russian deputy envoy at the UN, Dmitry Polyanskiy, said the obstacles were caused by the western bombing. “If you go to a site which was just bombed I imagine you might have certain logistic problems,” he said.

Earlier, Russia’s deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, said the inspectors could not access the site because they did not have the appropriate United Nations permission. In response the UN said it had provided the necessary clearances for a fact-finding mission.

Russian military officials were at the site of the Douma attack days before the OPCW reached Damascus. “It is our concern that they may have tampered with it,” Kenneth Ward, the US ambassador to the OPCW, told the council meeting.

In an interview with the BBC the Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, said he could “guarantee that Russia has not tampered with the site” and reiterated the Russian line that any attack on Douma was “staged”.

The US launched military strikes, alongside UK and French forces, in the early hours of Saturday morning local time aimed at reducing the Syrian regime’s chemical weapons facilities.


 What you need to know about the Syria strikes – video report

Over the weekend the OPCW sent inspectors on a fact-finding visit to Douma to search for evidence and interview witnesses. Their arrival coincided with a Syrian military announcement that it had “purified” the region of eastern Ghouta, of which Douma is a part, after a two-month campaign that has killed nearly 2,000 civilians, following years of siege.

Western countries are making a push both at the OPCW in The Hague and the UN in the New York to secure wider diplomatic support for a clampdown on the use of chemical weapons in the Syria. The suspicion is that the Syrian government previously misled inspectors when it declared its entire chemical weapons stockpile had been disclosed and destroyed.

The UN security council’s 15 members will meet on Monday to discuss a call for a wider push to eliminate the covert Syrian government stockpiles.

The White House said there had been no decision on imposing sanctions on Russian entities suspected to have given support and equipment to the Syrian chemical weapons programme, contradicting remarks on Sunday by the US envoy to the UN, Nikki Haley. Haley had said in a television interview that sanctions would be “coming down” on Monday. But the White House spokeswoman, Sarah Sanders, said: “We are considering additional sanctions on Russia and a decision will be made in the near future.”

EU foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg threatened new sanctions against Syria, but offered little support among member states for fresh US measures against Russia. A joint statement from the 28 also fell short of wholehearted support for the US-led strikes.

Syria joined the OPCW in 2013 after a sarin gas attack that killed hundreds of people in Ghouta. The move was part of a joint Russian-US deal that averted military action threatened by the then US president, Barack Obama.

The OPCW needs a two-thirds majority to take decisions, and faces the threat of being fatally weakened as Russia and the west fight over the OPCW’s mandate to ascribe responsibility for attacks.

A Russian veto at the UN last November means the OPCW is empowered only to state if chemical weapons have been used, and not to attribute responsibility.

Russia is also challenging an OPCW finding that a nerve agent was found in an attack in Salisbury on the Russian double agent Sergei Skripal.

A joint United Nations-OPCW mission concluded the Syrian air force was responsible for a sarin attack that killed nearly 100 people a year ago in the town of Khan Sheikhoun. The finding led Russia to object to the way in which the joint mission reached its conclusions, and to demand changes in its methodology before its mandate could be renewed.

The British envoy to the OPCW, Peter Wilson, told the executive meeting: “The time has come for all members of this executive council to take a stand. Too many duck the responsibility that comes with being a member of this council. Failure to act to hold perpetrators to account will only risk further barbaric use of chemical weapons, in Syria and beyond.”

Conditions worsening for Rohingya in Cox's Bazar ahead of rains

A Rohingya refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, September 19, 2017. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton/Files

APRIL 16, 2018

GENEVA (Reuters) - Conditions in crowded camps in Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh have deteriorated for nearly 700,000 Rohingya as aid workers race to strengthen shelters ahead of monsoon season, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.

Steve McAndrew, head of its emergency operations in the coastal area, said its clinics were scaling up to combat possible outbreaks of cholera and other water-borne diseases feared with the rains that could arrive this month.

Desperation has grown among the Muslim Rohingya, who fled a military crackdown last August in Myanmar’s Rakhine state and many see scant chance of returning, he said in an interview on Monday.

“It’s hot, it’s hard to find water and food, and the conditions are getting worse. And they are going to continue to get worse as the rainy season comes and then we have a monsoon season and cyclone season,” McAndrew told Reuters at Federation headquarters in Geneva.

“The situation is getting worse, and it’s open-ended and there is no end in sight,” he said.
 
The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said last week conditions in Myanmar were not ready for a safe return of the Rohingya.

Rohingya are fleeing a “horrendous” situation, McAndrew said, while declining to apportion blame.

“People are losing their families, their villages are being destroyed. A lot of the people are saying they don’t even want to know what’s going on back home anymore. They seem to have just decided they will not go home.”

His agency is reinforcing the flimsy bamboo and plastic structures in which the Rohingya live in Cox’s Bazar so they can withstand the rains, and a new site is being prepared for those most at risk, McAndrew said.

“We believe we can move around 25,000 families about the first of May...We have satellite maps of the potential flood zones and the gullies where we know they are going to get flooded out.

“We’re drilling wells, we’re putting in latrines, we’re working with the U.N. and other agencies preparing this site around the clock,” he said.

McAndrew, who headed the Federation’s operation in Haiti when cholera erupted there in late 2010, said of Cox’s Bazar: “We’re highly concerned about outbreaks in the upcoming rainy season, especially cholera and other water-borne diseases.”

The agency was pre-positioning medical supplies and preparing its clinics to treat cholera, which thrives in unsanitary conditions.



A Rohingya refugee man with child walks on a bamboo bridge to cross a water stream in Balukhali refugee camp, in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, March 21, 2018. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain

The Federation’s appeal of 33.5 million Swiss francs ($34.92 million) is only 55 percent funded, McAndrew said. “It’s just not enough in front of the scale of the needs.”

($1 = 0.9592 Swiss francs)
Rohingya left homeless after fire destroys Delhi refugee camp


 
MORE than 230 Rohingya refugees have been left homeless after a massive fire destroyed their camp in Delhi, India. While no casualties have been reported, the residents reportedly left behind all their belongings including identity cards and documents needed for repatriation.

According to Times of India, the fire broke out at about 3 am on Sunday due to a short circuit, and raged for three hours before being extinguished by fire services. The fire quickly spread across the 47 homes destroying everything in the makeshift camp in which shelters are predominantly made from plastic sheets and asbestos.
One resident told of how quickly the temporary shelters burned, giving people only enough time to wake their family members.

camp in Delhi reduced to ashes last night. No injuries but they left with nothing.
“People from the adjoining areas came and tried to douse the fire with buckets of water but the tents quickly caught fire and were destroyed,” Syed Hussain, who has been living in the camp since 2012, recalled.

The refugees told news agencies that they have lost all belongings including the little money they had as they have no bank accounts. All occupants have since been moved to a temporary shelter, police said.

Rohingya camps have gained attention in recent weeks after the Supreme Court asked the government to produce a report into the living conditions in two camps in Delhi and Haryana after it was found that basic facilities such as drinking water and sanitation were not available. The now destroyed Kalindi Kunj in Delhi was one of the camps to be reviewed.
A lawyer acting on behalf of the refugees said they were subjected to discrimination when it comes to the provision of such amenities.

The report into the conditions in the camps is expected to be reviewed on May 9.
Delhi: Rohingya refugees, living in a slum near Kalindi Kunj Metro Station, shifted to the nearby ground after the slum caught fire last morning, say 'Everything we had was gutted in the fire. We're being provided food & clothes by locals, a lot of help was provided by police'.
 
A report from The Indian Express found almost unliveable conditions when they visited four settlements housing Rohingya. There was no access to drinking water, education, healthcare or sanitation, they found. Women are also denied reproductive rights and children are suffering from malnutrition and diarrhoea.

There are an estimated 40,000 Rohingya refugees living in India, many of whom have been there for more than a decade. Fleeing violence in Rakhine State of Burma, many are now living in Jammu, Hyderabad, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Delhi and Rajasthan.
  • Asifa Bano was abducted while grazing family's ponies in the Himalayan foothills
  • The eight-year-old's raped and mutilated body was found in woods a week later
  • Police say she was drugged and raped for three days before being murdered
  • One attacker asked another to delay the murder so he could rape her a final time
  • Eight men accused of involvement pleaded not guilty in first court appearance
By JULIAN ROBINSON FOR MAILONLINE-16 April 2018

MailOnline US - news, sport, celebrity, science and health storiesA man who gang-raped of an eight-year-old Muslim girl for three days at an Indian temple stopped her killer as he beat her to death with a rock so he could have sex with the child one last time, police have revealed.

A man who gang-raped of an eight-year-old Muslim girl for three days at an Indian temple stopped her killer as he beat her to death with a rock so he could have sex with the child one last time, police have revealed.  

Asifa Bano's mutilated body was found a week after she was kidnapped by a gang trying to drive away the Muslim nomadic herders to which she belonged in India's Jammu and Kashmir. 

As a trial began today of eight men accused of involvement, police released shocking new details of the attack and how she was sedated and kept without food in a small village.

Police say she was held in the temple for three days while three men gang-raped her repeatedly before she was strangled and hit twice with a heavy rock. One of the men involved ordered another attacker to delay her murder so he could rape her one last time, police say.
A lawyer has been threatened with rape and death for fighting for justice for Asifa Bano - an eight-year-old Muslim girl who was raped and murdered in India 
 A lawyer has been threatened with rape and death for fighting for justice for Asifa Bano - an eight-year-old Muslim girl who was raped and murdered in India

Eight men have gone on trial over the murder. They include Sanji Ram (pictured arriving at court today), a retired revenue official, who, according to Indian media, is accused of being the main conspirator, inciting his nephew to abduct the child. He was also said to be in-charge of the temple where the gang-rape and murder took place
Eight men have gone on trial over the murder. They include Sanji Ram (pictured arriving at court today), a retired revenue official, who, according to Indian media, is accused of being the main conspirator, inciting his nephew to abduct the child. He was also said to be in-charge of the temple where the gang-rape and murder took place

One of the men on trial is Deepak Khajuria (pictured outside court today), a special police officer
One of the men on trial is Deepak Khajuria (pictured outside court today), a special police officer

 One of the men accused of involvement in the case is escorted by police at the District and Sessions court in Kathua today
One of the men accused of involvement in the case is escorted by police at the District and Sessions court in Kathua today

Eight men, including four police and a Hindu temple custodian, have been arrested over the attack and appeared in court on Monday for the first hearing in a case that has sparked nationwide outrage. 

Ankur Sharma, a lawyer for the accused, said the men had pleaded not guilty and were willing to take a lie-detector test. The court adjourned the case for procedural reasons, he added.  

The temple's custodian, retired public servant Sanji Ram, is accused of conspiring with four police officers, a friend, his son and a juvenile nephew to kill the girl and destroy crucial evidence.

Darkest Days of India’s Democracy

Darkest Hour In Post Independence India-Fifty Retired IAS, IPS, IFS Officers Writes To PM Modi

( April 16, 2018, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) Fifty retired civil servants have written to Prime Minister Modi expressing shame, rage and anguish over the situation in India. Some excerpts:
“the unspeakable horror of the Kathua and the Unnao incidents shows that the Government has failed in performing the most basic of the responsibilities given to it by the people.“