MESOPOTAMIA NEWS :  Droughts Threaten 12 Million People in Iraq, Syria

Amid droughts across Iraq + Syria, more than twelve million people are losing access (Al Jazeera) to water, food +electricity, aid groups warned in a new report. Humanitarian organizations called for regional authorities and donor governments to act quickly, both to provide emergency aid +to invest in long-term solutions to the water crisis.This Backgrounder looks at water stress, a global problem that is getting worse.

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 MESOP NEWS : AMERICANS FIRST / KABUL

 

Charles Lister

24-8-2021 -There’s lots of first-hand accounts of this from recent days — intensifying over time. For now, the window’s closing/closed for #Afghans, as the U.S. & others prioritize their citizens’ evacuation. This was all inevitable given the tight timeline, and it’ll worsen too.

U.S. officials are turning away Afghans eligible for relocation in order to prioritize Americans and green card holders. Afghans are waiting days in line after being told to go to the airport, only to be rejected and then kicked out.

 

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MESOP NEWS : Dozens of senior Afghan officials, including spy chief, smuggled to Turkey

by Joseph Fitsanakis INTEL ORG

 

APPROXIMATELY 40 SENIOR OFFICIALS in the government of deposed Afghan President Ashraf Ghani have been secretly smuggled to Turkey in recent days. They include Afghanistan’s intelligence chief, according to reports in Turkish media.

 

They claim that the Afghan officials were smuggled out of Taliban-controlled Afghanistan by Turkish military and intelligence operatives. The latter reportedly hid the officials among crowds of Turkish citizens who were evacuated from Kabul in recent days, as the Taliban were entering the Afghan capital.

Turkish media said the Turkish embassy in Kabul had developed evacuation plans earlier this summer, as the Taliban were conquering large swathes of territory throughout the countryside, including a number of provincial capitals. These plans were put in place for the benefit of Turkish expatriates who lived and worked in Afghanistan. However, according to reports, Turkish embassy officials also reached out to “Afghan officials, who have close ties with Turkey” and informed them of the evacuation plans.

As Taliban forces began to enter Kabul, Turkish embassy officials put the evacuation plans into action, and invited selected Afghan officials to make use of them. Within hours, a Turkish Airlines passenger plane appeared on the tarmac of the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul. Due to a previously agreed-to arrangement between Ankara and Washington, some parts of the airport were being guarded by Turkish troops. These troops reportedly helped guide the evacuees onto the aircraft, while keeping at bay “a large crowd” of people seeking to leave Kabul, who “started to run towards the plane”.

The aircraft eventually left Kabul with 324 passengers on board, including around 40 senior Afghan officials. Among them were Afghanistan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mohammad Hanif Atmar, the country’s Second Vice President, Sarwar Danish, as well as Ahmad Zia Sraj, who headed the National Directorate of Security (NDS). Formed in 2002, the NDS was the national intelligence and security service of Afghanistan until it was dissolved by the Taliban earlier this month. It is reported that most of its 30,000-strong force has no2 dispersed into refugee camps in India, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

Author: Joseph Fitsanakis | Date

MESOP NEWS : AFGHANISTAN WIRD MAN NICHT WIEDER LOS  ……. !

Organisationen schlagen Alarm : Afghanistan droht Hungersnot

FAZ- 24.08.2021

Keine Lebensmittel, keine Medizin, kein Geld: Eine Woche nach der Machtübernahme der Taliban warnen internationale Hilfsorganisationen vor einer rapiden Verschlechterung der Versorgungslage.

Eine Woche nach der Machtübernahme der Taliban droht eine Katastrophe in Afghanistan. Internationale Organisationen warnen, dass sich die Versorgungslage der Menschen akut verschlechtere. Sie schätzen, dass 18 Millionen Menschen, fast die Hälfte der Bevölkerung, auf humanitäre Hilfe angewiesen sind

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MESOP NEWS :  BUNDESWEHR FLIEGT AFGHANISCHE STRAFTÄTER WIEDER NACH DEUTSCHLAND EIN

Innenministerium liegen „polizeiliche Erkenntnisse“ zu einigen Ausgeflogenen vor

DIE WELT  24.8.2021

Der freie Journalist Shams ul-Haq schildert im WELT-Interview, wie sich Unsicherheit und Verzweiflung vor dem Flughafen der Hauptstadt verbreiten. Zwanzig Menschen seien bereits umgekommen, unter ihnen eine afghanische Sicherheitskraft.

Offenbar gelingt es auch polizeibekannten Straftätern, mit Evakuierungsflügen von Afghanistan wieder nach Deutschland einzureisen. Sicherheitsüberprüfungen werden laut dem Bundesinnenministerium erst bei der Ankunft vorgenommen.

Mit den Evakuierungsflügen aus Afghanistan sind mehrere Menschen in Deutschland eingetroffen, die hierzulande bereits polizeilich in Erscheinung getreten sind. „Wir gehen im Moment im Prinzip so vor, dass Listen angefertigt werden mit Personen, die aus Kabul ausgeflogen werden“, sagte ein Sprecher des Bundesinnenministeriums am Montag in Berlin.

 

Information zur Petition: Feld statt Beton! Stoppt das Bauvorhaben der Stadt Frankfurt für den Erhalt von Natur und Klima

 

FRANKFURTER GRÜNE PARTEI VERNICHTET FELD & FRISCHLUFTSCHNEISE

Frankfurt will auf Gedeih und Verderb um jeden Preis weiter baggern

Heimatboden Frankfurt hat Ihnen eine neue Nachricht zu dieser Petition “Feld statt Beton! Stoppt das Bauvorhaben der Stadt Frankfurt für den Erhalt von Natur und Klima” geschickt:

>>> Hier geht’s zum Video <<<

Frankfurt will auf Gedeih und Verderb um jeden Preis weiter baggern. Das Stadtplanungsamt stellt Informationen zum „Neuen Stadtteil der Quartiere“ in Frankfurts Nordwesten nun auch im Videoformat bereit. Wir kommentieren dies wie folgt:

Nun auch unter der Ägide der Frankfurter GRÜNEN im Namen des Klimaschutzes:
Frankfurt will weiter baggern. Die Regionalversammlung hat längst der geplanten Josefstadt eine klare Absage beschieden, dennoch weigert der SPD Planungsdezernent Mike Josef diese und viele weitere rechtliche Einschränkungen zu akzeptieren und die millionenschwere Planung des mindestens 20.000 Einwohner starken neuen Stadtteils einzustellen.

Bereits im Dezember 2019 haben sich CDU, SPD und Grüne für den künftigen Regionalplan auf 14 Punkte verständigt, die die Bebauung des neuen Frankfurter Stadtteil für 30 000 Menschen ausschließt. Die bisher festgesetzten Regionalen Grünzüge sollen gelten. Eingriffe in diese Grünzüge mit einer Größe von mehr als fünf Hektar sind „grundsätzlich ausgeschlossen. Weiterhin halten CDU, SPD und Grüne fest, dass „der ländliche Raum“ unverzichtbarer und gleichberechtigter Teil der Region sei. Er müsse gefördert und gestärkt werden.“.
Ungerecht sei die Entscheidung der Regionalversammlung schäumt der aggressive Frankfurter SPD Beton Clan , der die Frankfurter künftig in Frankfurts Rechenzentren Innenstadt in der Hitze grillen möchte! Der aggressive Auftritt von Mike Josef in der Region in seiner großspurigen Konfrontation hat eine besondere Sprengkraft.

Heimatboden Frankfurt

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MESOP NEWS : UK names Russian intelligence operatives who allegedly poisoned Alexei Navalny

by Joseph Fitsanakis INTEL ORG  23.8.2021

 

THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT HAS announced sanctions against seven Russian intelligence operatives who, according to London, participated in the poisoning of the Russian blogger and political activist Alexei Navalny. Navalny, 45, remains in prison after being arrested last year by Russian authorities, who accused him of violating his parole. His arrest occurred as soon as he arrived in Russia from Germany. He had gone there to receive emergency treatment after he was allegedly poisoned during a domestic Russian flight that originated from Siberia.

While in Germany, Navalny was in a comatose condition for over three weeks, and then spent a further 32 days recovering in hospital. Medical examiners concluded that he was most likely poisoned with a military-grade nerve agent. Many Western biomedical experts believe that Navalny, a vocal critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, was poisoned with a so-called Novichok substance —a technical term that describes a category of nerve agents developed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Novichok agents are typically designed to asphyxiate their host by paralyzing the muscles they come in contact with.

On Friday —the day that marked the first anniversary of Navalny’s alleged poisoning— the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office announced that it would impose sanctions against seven Russian citizens. They were named as: Ivan Osipov, Alexei Sedov, Vladimir Panyaev, Kirill Vasilyev, Vladimir Bogdanov, Alexey Alexandrov and Stanislav Makshakov. All are believed to be employees of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), which operates as the country’s primary counterterrorism and counterintelligence agency.

British authorities released a statement to explain their decision to impose the sanctions against the seven Russians. The statement notes that the seven alleged FSB officers were identified using “phone and travel records”. These suggest that they were “involved in the use of a chemical weapon in the attempted assassination of Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny during his August 2020 visit to Siberia”, the statement said. In an accompanying statement, Britain’s Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, urged Moscow “to declare its full stock of Novichok nerve agents”. The Russian government has dismissed all allegations that it tried to kill Navalny.

Author: Joseph Fitsanakis | Date: 23 August 2021

 

 

 

 

MESOP NEWS : NO SANCTIONS ! / AFGHANISTAN

@RoryStewartUK

 

MESOP NEWS : Please no. Sanctions – unless very carefully designed – will inflict pain on innocent Afghans communities and have almost no i@pact on the Taliban. If we impose general sanctions and cut aid inside Afghanistan now, we will deepen a humanitarian catastrophe, + create more refugees

NEW: Britain plans to push world leaders to consider new sanctions on the Taliban when the G7 meet on Tuesday Via @Reuters

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MESOP NEWS : 1 Billion Dollar für Afghanistan = Dafür nun Kosten für 2,5 Mio. Fluchtbereite

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG  23.8.2021 – Laut Zahlen des Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (Sigar) kostete der Krieg die Amerikaner bisher knapp 1 Billion Dollar. Davon floss die grösste Menge (837 Milliarden) in Ausgaben für den Krieg, 133 Milliarden werden als Aufbaukosten ausgewiesen. Die Bilanz ist ernüchternd. Die teuer ausgebildeten afghanischen Streitkräfte mussten sich in Rekordzeit geschlagen geben. Wegen Korruption, Misswirtschaft und mangelnder Kampfmoral blieb der erhoffte Erfolg aus. Doch auch viele der Aufbauprojekte in Afghanistan haben sich nicht ausgezahlt.

 

 

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THE TURKISH COUNTERTERRORISM FACTSHEET TWO DECADES AFTER 9/11- THE SOUFAN CENTER

Monday, August 23, 2021
Bottom Line Up Front:

 

  • The events of 9/11 encouraged al-Qaeda attacks in Turkey and led to the rise of the so-called Islamic State (ISIS), issues that majorly impacted Ankara’s foreign and security policy.
  • U.S.-Turkey relations suffered in the post-9/11 era as a result of the power vacuum in northern Iraq, which helped the PKK gain a stronger foothold and divergence over the People’s Protection Units (YPG).
  • The gradual advances of militant Wahhabi-Salafi ideology and the lack of comprehensive repatriation plans for foreign fighters in Turkey’s regional proximity are major issues in the country’s future security agenda.
  • For Turkey, the diminishing U.S. military presence in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan may engender security and socioeconomic concerns about new waves of refugees, making the issue a Turkish policy priority.

 

Of the countries most affected by the tragic attacks of September 11, 2001, Turkey quite likely makes the top five. The country not only experienced al-Qaeda-linked attacks and arrests in 9/11’s aftermath, but also dealt with the secondary consequences of the attacks with respect to Turkey’s regional policies; domestic terror incidents; local, regional, and global counterterrorism efforts; and the country’s foreign military and diplomatic engagement. Al-Qaeda’s transformation into a decentralized network, combined with jihadist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s move toward Northern Iraq —where he would sow the seeds of the so-called Islamic State and the export of the al-Qaeda brand to Iraq and Syria —deeply impacted Turkey, both inside and outside its borders.

While U.S.-Turkey relations were initially strong following the 9/11 attacks, a series of events later strained relations between the nations. After 9/11, Turkey was one of the first countries to condemn the attacks and support the discourse and implementation of the so-called Global War on Terror. In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, Turkey opened its airspace for flights in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, and later took over the command of the United Nations-mandated and NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) military mission in Afghanistan twice. The U.S.-Turkey relationship became strained in 2003 and 2004 following Turkey’s rejection of direct involvement in the U.S. invasion of northern Iraq. This rejection came at a time when Turkey was struggling with an economic crisis, and the Iraq invasion became one of the first and most significant tests of the new Turkish government. Relations continued to suffer as the overall power vacuum in Iraq allowed al-Qaeda, ISIS, and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) to find safe havens and sanctuary in the region, which was crucial to the PKK’s survival, particularly after its leader Abdullah Öcalan was captured in 1999. The public image of the U.S. in Turkey seriously suffered from not only PKK and northern Iraq-related tensions, but also the abuses uncovered from the Abu Ghraib Prison scandal.

The Syrian Civil War provided fertile ground for al-Qaeda and ISIS recruitment and operations. Turkey’s domestic and cross-border engagement with ISIS and the spill-over of People’s Protection Units (YPG) and ISIS fighting in Syria resulted in ISIS attacks on Turkish soil. These attacks included but were not limited to the Ankara Train Station attack of late 2015; the mid-2016 attack at the İstanbul Atatürk Airport; the Gaziantep wedding attack of August 2016; and the mass shooting at an İstanbul nightclub on New Year’s Eve 2017. Additionally, Turkey was forced to deal with hundreds of YPG rocket attacks to its border towns and increased number of PKK attacks. The local, regional, and global dynamics of the Syrian Civil War also had a direct impact on Turkey’s relations with other actors such as Russia and the U.S., as evidenced by the YPG divergence; S-400 purchase and F-35 crisis—of which Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CATSAA) and NATO-related concerns still prevail—and cross-border operations, during which Turkey experienced varying levels of tension with both Moscow and Washington. Additionally, in order to take advantage of the regional instabilities, Iran’s opportunistic moves to empower its proxies in the region also plagued the two countries’ bilateral relationship and inflamed the rivalry over regional superiority.

Turkey’s counterterrorism portfolio has also expanded and improved since 9/11. Over the past two decades, Turkey has combated a myriad of groups, including the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA), the Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP-C), the PKK, al-Qaeda, and ISIS, among others. Accordingly, Turkey has been forced to re-evaluate and upgrade its counterterrorism toolkit. From this toolkit emerged policies and tactics such as stricter border controls, counter-narrative efforts, effective use of Advance Passenger Information (API) data, entry-bans and risk analysis units, intensified domestic law-enforcement efforts, and cross-border operations—all of which Turkey had to devise and implement quickly as the Syrian Civil War erupted across the border. The country has also been an active player in international efforts as the first co-chair of the Global Counterterrorism Forum (GCTF) and a member of the D-ISIS coalition and its Foreign Terrorist Fighters Working Group. Lastly, Turkey proved to be one of the most effective NATO allies on the ground with its several cross-border operations, including Euphrates Shield, which cleared ISIS’s presence on the Turkish border and crippled some of the group’s key strongholds.

The prestige afforded to al-Qaeda and its militant Salafi brand after the 9/11 attacks also impacted Turkey’s interests outside of its regional proximity. For example, the militant Salafi brand spread to the African continent where Turkey had deepened its diplomatic and military engagement. Over the past two decades, Turkey has been forced to grapple not only with al-Qaeda, but also its offshoots and affiliates like ISIS, Boko Haram, and Al-Shabaab. Furthermore, Turkey’s ethnic and religious ties with Central Asia adds an additional front where Wahhabi-Salafi interpretations and their violent manifestations need to be monitored, which has been a concern for Turkey in the Caucasus and the Balkans since at least the 1990s. At the same time, the country must keep an eye on its efforts to absorb and manage the massive refugee influx resulting from the civil wars and insurgencies plaguing its neighbors. Additionally, ongoing global hesitancy concerning the repatriation of foreign terrorist fighters (FTFs) has also become a major issue on Turkey’s security agenda.

The diminishing U.S. military presence in Iraq and Syria raises concerns that power vacuums could grow and benefit various terrorist groups. Additionally, the U.S. troop withdrawal and Taliban takeover in Afghanistan will undoubtedly provide opportunities for al-Qaeda due in no small measure to its close links with the Taliban. And since Turkey has been a key destination for Afghan refugees, new refugee waves resulting from a U.S. withdrawal could also raise security concerns and stoke negative social and economic fallout. However, Turkey should prepare itself for the possible mid- to long-term consequences of the return of FTFs or insurgents currently hiding out in Turkey, who offer continuing logistical support to ISIS and against whom arrests have been made almost on a daily basis in the last several years. Given the challenges of collecting accountable battlefield evidence, prison sentences are relatively short, and repatriation of FTFs seems to be the exception rather than the norm, which might well help the next generation of militant Salafi terrorists to rise.

Overall, due to the Wahhabi-Salafi encirclement risk, the direct threat to its soft and hard power instruments from Africa to the Balkans and Caucasus, the migrant flows from Afghanistan, and the fate of FTFs in Iraq and Syria, Turkey will remain at the forefront of the global fight against terrorism. This reality not only requires Turkey’s security structure to consolidate and deepen its active engagement in and out of its borders, it also highlights the importance of the country’s future posture in the international system. It will be important to watch how key players approach Turkey’s fight against terrorism, and how its relations with NATO, the U.S., Russia, and even China, will play out on the global stage.

 

Guest Author:

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Goktug Sonmez – Director; Center for Middle Eastern Studies (ORSAM), Security Studies/ Faculty Member, Necmettin Erbakan University (Turkey) focuses on Radicalization and Terrorism, Non-State Armed Actors, and Turkish Foreign Policy. He publishes, comments, and teaches on those subjects in various national and international outlets and universities. 

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