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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/11/2015 10:12:34 AM

Iraq Urges UN Security Council to Take
Stance
onTurkish Incursion


SPUTNIK 14:52 10.12.2015

The Iraqi Foreign Ministry also requested that the Arab League hold an emergency foreign ministers' meeting to formulate an Arab stance on the matter of the presence of Turkish military forces in Iraq, according to Iraq's Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmad Jamal.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — The Iraqi Foreign Ministry has urged the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) members to develop a single international stance on the presence of Turkish military forces in Iraq, Iraq's Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmad Jamal said Thursday.

"The foreign ministry addressed the international community. The ministry approached the five permanent UNSC members, as well as certain other friendly states to scrutinize and adopt an international position on the violation of Iraq's sovereignty by Turkey," Jamal told Al Sumaria TV channel.

Iraq's plea comes after the UNSC convened on Wednesday for a closed-door meeting on the issue at Russia's request. The ministry has also requested that the Arab League hold an emergency foreign ministers' meeting to formulate an Arab stance on the matter, according to Jamal.

On December 4, Turkey deployed about 150 troops and 25 tanks to a base in the Iraqi Nineveh province, without Baghdad’s approval.

According to Ankara, the aim of the deployment was to provide security to Turkish soldiers deployed earlier at the base to train Kurdish militia who are fighting Islamic State (ISIL), also known as Daesh in Arabic, a group outlawed in a number of countries worldwide, including Russia.

Iraq has rejected the claims, stressing that the Turkish forces had not been requested.



Read more: http://sputniknews.com/politics/20151210/1031525991/iraq-turkey-unsc.html#ixzz3u0PeUoOD


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/11/2015 10:24:17 AM

Turkey urges citizens to leave Iraq, excluding Iraqi Kurdistan: foreign ministry

AFP

A member of the Iraqi security forces carries a rocket-propelled grenade in a town near Ramadi, on December 7, 2015 (AFP Photo/Ahmad Al-Rubaye)


Ankara (AFP) - Turkey on Wednesday called on its citizens to leave all areas of Iraq, excluding Iraqi Kurdistan, due to increased security risks, the foreign ministry said.

"The scope of our travel warning to Iraq has expanded to include all provinces except for Dohuk, Arbil and Sulaymaniyah," all of which are in the northern region of Iraqi Kurdistan, the ministry said in a statement posted on its website.

The foreign ministry warned against non-essential travel to several provinces in Iraq including Basra, Najaf, Anbar and Kirkuk and said: "We strongly advise those whose stay is not essential to leave those provinces as soon as possible."

Ankara cited increasing threats targeting Turkish companies recently, as well as declarations encouraging violence, abduction and attacks.

The foreign ministry also called on citizens living in the Iraqi Kurdish region to stay away from areas where operations are taking place against the Islamic State group and to obey warnings and guidance from the Iraqi Kurdish administration.

The warning comes amid growing strains between Ankara and the central Baghdad government over the deployment by Turkey of up to 300 soldiers to train local Iraqi forces to retake the Iraqi city of Mosul from IS jihadists.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/11/2015 10:30:19 AM

US keeps wraps on new commando force for Iraq

Associated Press

Defense Secretary Ash Carter testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 9, 2015, before the Senate Armed Service Committee. Carter said the U.S. is prepared to assist the Iraqi army with more personnel and equipment to help them fight Islamic State militants. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)


WASHINGTON (AP) — The commando force that President Barack Obama is dispatching to Iraq to conduct clandestine raids against the Islamic State group does not fit neatly into a picture of the U.S. military strategy for defeating the extremist army.

Even the name — "specialized expeditionary targeting force" — is a bit of a riddle.

The main point is that the force is intended to ratchet up pressure on Islamic State militants by using a small group of special operations troops — possibly fewer than 100 — to more aggressively use intelligence information, including capturing and killing the group's leaders. In theory, this would generate even more and better intelligence, feeding what the military calls a "virtuous cycle" of intelligence-driven air and ground operations.

It will be combat, but on a relatively small scale. Obama remains opposed to major U.S. ground combat in Iraq or Syria. Several weeks ago the administration said it would send up to 50 special operations troops to Syria as trainers and advisers.

The Pentagon has been spare in its description of this new commando force in Iraq. It has not even said when it will deploy.

Offered a chance by the Senate Armed Services Committee on Wednesday to expand on the Pentagon's cryptic outline of the force's makeup and mission, Defense Secretary Ash Carter demurred. In fact he said less about it than when he announced the move a week ago. He said then that the force would be positioned to gather intelligence, conduct raids and free hostages in Iraq while partnered with Iraqi forces. He also said it could conduct unilateral hit-and-run raids into Syria.

But Carter told the committee that he preferred to keep details under wraps.

"This is a no-kidding force that will be doing important things," he said, adding that describing it too fully would jeopardize its security.

This kind of military force typically works in the shadows; the very fact of its existence normally would be classified secret. In this case the Pentagon lifted that veil to bolster its argument that the U.S. military strategy is building momentum at a time when its critics claim the Islamic State is winning.

Obama alluded to the new commando force when he said in an Oval Office address Sunday that thousands of Iraqi and Syrian ground forces are trying to retake territory from IS and that U.S. special operations forces are being deployed to "accelerate that offensive." He didn't go into details, and other officials say the Pentagon has yet to fully develop what was little more than a concept when Carter announced it last week.

Some private analysts are skeptical that adding 100 more special operations troops in Iraq will make a significant difference.

Anthony Cordesman, a long-time Middle East defense expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, says the commando force could be helpful if used as part of a broader U.S. strategy for developing effective local ground forces in both Syria and Iraq.

"Like stepping up the number of coalition air sorties, however, it also risks being one more step in a process of strategic incrementalism where the Obama administration reacts to every new problem with ISIS by making a limited increase in military force that is too little and too late," Cordesman wrote recently, using another acronym for Islamic State, which has been branded a terrorist group by the U.S. government.

Linda Robinson, a senior policy analyst at the RAND Corp., a federally funded think tank, says the raids and follow-on exploitation of intelligence gained through interrogation of captured IS leaders will significantly increase pressure on the extremist group.

Writing in Foreign Affairs magazine, she called this the start of a "new phase" of the U.S. military campaign. She said it should be coupled with a ramping-up of the effort to build indigenous ground forces in Iraq and Syria.

___

Associated Press writer Deb Riechmann contributed to this report.

___

Follow Robert Burns on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/robertburnsAP


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/11/2015 10:38:32 AM

Police sergeant witnesses killing of 6-year-old in Louisiana

Associated Press

FILE - These undated file booking photos provided by the Louisiana State Police shows Marksville City Marshal Derrick Stafford, left, and Marksville City Marshal Norris Greenhouse Jr. Stafford and Greenhouse Jr. were arrested on charges of second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder in the Nov. 3, 2015 fatal shooting of Jeremy Mardis, a six-year-old autistic boy, in Marksville, La. The shooting also wounded Mardis' father, Chris Few. Grandmother Cathy Mardis of of Hattiesburg, Miss., on Thursday, Dec. 10, 2015, called for the release of police body camera footage from the incident. (Louisiana State Police via AP, File)


MARKSVILLE, La. (AP) — A police officer who witnessed two city marshals open fire on a 6-year-old autistic boy and his father told investigators he didn't fire his own weapon because "he didn't fear for his life," according to a court filing released Thursday.

Marksville Police Sgt. Kenneth Parnell III's statement was disclosed in documents released by Louisiana Attorney General James "Buddy" Caldwell's office following the indictment on murder charges of the two marshals, Norris Greenhouse Jr. and Derrick Stafford.

The document also said Parnell's body camera shows that "Christopher Few's empty hands are raised and visible inside the vehicle when gunfire becomes audible." Few was critically wounded by two gunshots, while his son, Jeremy Mardis, received five gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at the scene.

Police say Stafford, a full-time police lieutenant, and Greenhouse, a former police officer, were moonlighting as deputy city marshals in Marksville on the night of Nov. 3 when they fired at least 18 rounds at a car driven by Few.

Stafford and Greenhouse were arrested on second-degree murder charges last month but not formally charged until Thursday. The indictment handed up by an Avoyelles Parish grand jury charged Stafford, 32, of Mansura, and Greenhouse, 23, of Marksville, with one count each of second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder.

"The body camera video is approximately 13 minutes and 47 seconds long. At approximately 26 seconds into the video, the driver, Christopher Few's empty hands are raised and visible when gunfire becomes audible," the document states.

Caldwell vowed Thursday to "continue (a) detailed and thorough investigation as we prepare for trial."

The boy's grandmother wept as state District Judge William Bennett read the indictment aloud in court.

"We don't get Jeremy back, but we got what we wanted today," Cathy Mardis said.

Earlier, she spoke to the news media outside the courthouse, calling for the release of the body camera footage of the shooting and describing the pain the shooting had inflicted on the family.

"It's been pure hell. I can't explain what it's like to bury your 6-year-old grandchild," said Mardis, 46, of Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

Bennett lifted a gag order on people involved in the case but prosecutors declined to disclose any additional details about the incident or describe what the video depicts.

Defense attorneys said prosecutors haven't turned over any evidence for them to review yet.

George Higgins III, an attorney for Greenhouse, said, "We've yet to see any evidence for ourselves. I just know there's a lot more to this story than what has been talked about."

Jonathan Goins, a lawyer for Stafford, declined to describe his client's account of the incident, but said evidence will show he "acted in a very lawful way."

State Police Col. Mike Edmonson cited the video when he announced the arrest of the two officers, calling it the most disturbing thing he's seen. But he gave no indication of what's on the video.

Last month, an attorney for Few told The Associated Press that video from another officer's body camera showed Few had his hands up inside the vehicle and didn't pose a threat when the officers opened fire. The judge hearing the case then swiftly imposed a gag order, keeping those involved from speaking to the media.

Cathy Mardis said she has not seen the tape and can only imagine what is on there but added: "I thank God the tape is there."

"I want justice for Jeremy. I want justice for Chris," she said. She said the family had an open casket funeral for her grandson even though there were signs of trauma on his body.

She quoted the funeral director as saying, "Don't touch his head. It might fall back apart."

The grandmother wore a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles T-shirt, in honor of her grandson who loved the characters. Standing by her side outside the courthouse was Samantha Few, the mother of Chris Few.

Cathy Mardis spoke lovingly of her grandson. He was autistic and non-verbal but very bright, she said.

"He was the most loving child you could have met. He was always smiling and happy. He taught himself to read at 3 years old just from watching YouTube," she said. Jeremy Mardis has a younger sister who still cannot understand what happened, the grandmother said.

"She's still asking to see her brother every day," she said.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/11/2015 10:50:15 AM

Feds Arrest 'Emir' of an ISIS-Related Recruitment Effort in Minnesota

    Dec 10, 2015, 9:44 AM ET

Watch video


Federal authorities have arrested a Minnesota man for allegedly leading an effort inside the United States to send others to join ISIS in Syria.

Abdirizak Mohamed Warsame,20, was arrested Wednesday night and charged with one count of conspiring to provide material support to a terrorist organization.

He is among at least 10 youth from Minnesota who allegedly began planning to join ISIS more than a year ago. Nine have now been arrested, and one -- 18-year-old Abdi Nir -- made it to Syria, where since May 2014 he has been recruiting and assisting others inside the United States to join ISIS, authorities said.

Warsame’s arrest comes several months after a round of arrests in the case.

According to charging documents, Warsame and others began watching propaganda videos together in the spring of 2014, when they also began talking about how to get to Syria.

At one point, when one of the leaders of the group was planning to leave for Syria imminently, Warsame was appointed “emir” of the effort, and he subsequently began encouraging and helping others plan to join ISIS, according to charging documents.

In fact, Warsame and Nur considered robbing people to pay for travel to Syria, but Nur rejected the idea and said they should steal from the government instead, prosecutors allege.

Warsame called Nur “a genius,” charging documents say.

In addition, the documents say Nur described risks involved in the entire effort this way to Warsame: “It’s like playing a game of chess, bro. One thing you move you can be in danger, or you could win.”

Warsame is one of nearly 90 people from inside the United States identified by U.S. authorities as having been inspired to take some sort of action on behalf of ISIS.

(ABC News)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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