Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

U.S. border patrol agent has standoff with armed Mexican soldiers after border crossing

U.S. border patrol agent has standoff with armed Mexican soldiers after border crossing
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Brent McCluskey
guns.com
March 11, 2014


After a tense standoff with raised weapons, a U.S. border patrol agent turned back a pair of armed Mexican soldiers that had crossed the border on foot just outside Sasabe, Arizona, last January.


On the morning of Jan. 26, U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Olaya spotted two armed men walk onto U.S. soil nearly 2 1/2 miles west of the Sasabe Port of Entry. The lone agent confronted the subjects, who were wearing camouflage and appeared to be “Mexican personnel,” and after a harrowing standoff they lowered their Heckler & Koch G3 rifles and turned back towards Mexico, BuzzFeed reports.


The soldiers identified themselves as part of the Mexican military’s 80th Battalion, but the names they provided didn’t match the name on their uniforms. When Olaya questioned why they had crossed the international border, they said they “had been pursing [sic] three subjects that were seen in the area.”


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 at 3:44 pm









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Read more about U.S. border patrol agent has standoff with armed Mexican soldiers after border crossing and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Five Afghan soldiers killed in air strike by NATO-led force





Five Afghan soldiers were killed on Thursday in an air strike by the NATO-led force in Afghanistan‘s eastern province of Logar, Afghan officials and the coalition said.


Coalition airstrikes on friendly targets have helped widen a rift between Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the United States, cementing his resolve not to sign a bilateral security deal to let US troops remain in the country after 2014.


“We condemn the attack on the Afghan National Army in Logar,” said Aimal Faizi, a spokesman for Karzai. “The president has ordered an investigation.”


The airstrike, at around 3:30 a.m., seriously wounded at least eight other soldiers, said district governor Khalilullah Kamal.


“Right now a discussion in the province is going on between Afghan officials and foreign forces to find out the reason for this attack,” he said, describing the attack as having targeted a new outpost of the Afghan army.


A total of 17 people had been injured, his office said.


Coalition forces said the bombing was an accident.


“We value the strong relationship with our Afghan partners, and we will determine what actions will be taken to ensure incidents like this do not happen again,” they said in a statement.


“Dead bodies and wounded personnel have been transferred to Kabul,” the ministry of defense said in a statement, adding that a delegation had been sent to investigate.


(Reporting by Mirwais Harooni in Kabul and Samihullah Paiwand in Gardez; Writing by Jessica Donati; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/asia-pacific/afghanistan/140306/five-afghan-soldiers-killed-air-strike-nato-le




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Five Afghan soldiers killed in air strike by NATO-led force

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Special Operations America"s Secret Soldiers

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Special Operations America"s Secret Soldiers

Monday, February 24, 2014

Taliban kill 21 Afghan soldiers in night raid on Pakistan border


Emma Graham-Harrison
The Guardian
February 24, 2014


The Taliban killed 21 Afghan soldiers on Sunday at a remote outpost near the border with Pakistan, and took at least five others prisoner, in a show of military strength just weeks before a critical election.


The night raid was one of the deadliest single attacks in recent years on the Afghan military, who are stronger and more disciplined than the police and less often targeted directly by insurgents.


President Hamid Karzai cancelled a planned trip to Sri Lanka to deal with the fallout from the deaths, and in a swipe at his neighbour condemned Islamabad for tolerating havens for the insurgents just inside its border.


Read more


This article was posted: Monday, February 24, 2014 at 1:32 pm










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Taliban kill 21 Afghan soldiers in night raid on Pakistan border

Saturday, December 21, 2013

The Untold Story of American Soldiers Wounded in Afghanistan



The Untold Story of American Soldiers Wounded in Afghanistan

Journalist Ann Jones discusses her new book: “How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars – The Untold Story” See more videos: http://therealnews.com.
Video Rating: 4 / 5



The Untold Story of American Soldiers Wounded in Afghanistan

Friday, December 20, 2013

VIDEO: Lawmakers Press VA to Find Lobotomy Survivors









Senior House lawmakers are pressing the Veterans Administration to track down veterans still living today who underwent lobotomies at Veterans Administration hospitals during and after World War II. Michael Phillips joins the News Hub. Photo: Fran Malzahn.

















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VIDEO: Lawmakers Press VA to Find Lobotomy Survivors

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Kenya Soldiers Looted During Mall Attack


yahoo.com
October 29, 2013


Two Kenyan soldiers were sacked for stealing items during the deadly siege last month of Nairobi’s Westgate Mall, Kenya’s military chief said Tuesday.


Gen. Julius Karangi, chief of Kenya’s military, identified the sacked soldiers as Victor Otieno and Victor Ashiundu and said they were in detention pending formal charges.


He said the two soldiers were found with mobile phones, cameras and chargers that were stolen from the mall during the siege.


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, October 29, 2013 at 10:27 am


Tags: foreign affairs, terrorism









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Kenya Soldiers Looted During Mall Attack

Sunday, September 22, 2013

2 Egyptian soldiers injured in Sinai

File photo shows Egyptian soldiers in military vehicles proceeding toward the al-Jura district in el-Arish in northern Sinai.



At least two Egyptian soldiers have been wounded in a roadside bomb explosion in the troubled Sinai Peninsula, security officials say.


The attack took place on Saturday after the bomb went off near a military vehicle carrying the soldiers in northern Sinai, said the officials.


The officials did not reveal further information regarding the attack.


Elsewhere in the peninsula, Egyptian security forces arrested 16 suspected militants.


On September 16, a roadside bomb planted by militants in the peninsula injured at least nine police cadets.


According to security sources, the remote-controlled bomb exploded on the outskirts of the coastal city of el-Arish in northern Sinai near a bus full of police conscripts.


The bus was traveling from the town of Rafah, near the Gaza border, to the coastal city escorted by an armored police car.


The Sinai has long been considered a safe haven for militants who use the region as a base for terror activities. In recent months, the remote desert region has been the scene of growing violence and militant attacks on security forces.


Since the ouster of former Egyptian president, Mohamed Morsi, on July 3, militant groups have launched almost daily attacks in Sinai, killing members of the security forces. In response, Cairo has launched offensives against the militants, sending thousands of troops backed by tanks and heavy equipment into the region.


MAM/MAM




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2 Egyptian soldiers injured in Sinai

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Israeli Soldiers Punished After Dancing “Gangnam Style” With Palestinians


Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Photo: Wikimedia Commons



By JG Vibes
Intellihub.com
August 29, 2013

There is definitely an unfortunate amount of misunderstanding and hate in the Middle East, especially involving the conflict between Israel and Palestine. 


However, despite the current political situation, most of the average people on both sides just want peace, and Independence.  It is the governments and groups seeking political power on both ends of the conflict who keep these tensions stirred up.


Some of the worst encounters in these areas take place during military patrols, where Israeli soldiers who were forced into conscription are sent through Palestinian refugee camps.  Recently though, one friendly encounter with the military was actually aired on local television, but as expected the government had a hostile reaction to the footage.


Stuff.co.nz reported that “the soldiers were making the rounds in the city of Hebron when they entered a dance hall and joined dozens of Palestinian men dancing to the hit ‘Gangnam Style’. The Israeli military said it considers the incident ”serious,” adding ”the soldiers exposed themselves to unnecessary danger and were disciplined accordingly,” without elaborating.  Footage aired on Israeli Channel 2 TV shows the solders in uniform, flak jackets and carrying guns. One was shown hoisted on the shoulders of Palestinian dancers. Other soldiers joined hands and grooved with the partygoers.[1]


Sometimes music can actually bring people together, even when they belong to collective groups that are taught to hate one another.


For well over a year now peace activists in Palestine have been teaming up with other peace activists in Israel as well as the United States and Iran to spread a message of love and unity among people of all geographical locations…..regardless of what all the crazy politicians say.


Some of the most popular of these efforts is the Palestine loves Israel and Israel loves Palestine campaigns, which started out as a viral Facebook phenomena where Palestinians and Israelis would send messages of love to one another and reassure each other that the hateful rhetoric put forward by governments and media outlets are totally out of line with the true feelings of the average person.


Last month we reported that Israeli band Orphaned Land is joining forces with the Palestinian band Khalas for an 18 gig tour that will visit 6 different countries.  The purpose of the tour is to promote peace and unity between the Palestinian and Israeli people.  The bands will live together and share a tour bus for their tour, and they also plan on working together in the future.  Members of each group have told the media that they hope their children will one day form their own band.[2]


Sources:


[1] Israeli soldiers dance with Palestinians – Stuff.co.nz


[2] Israeli and Palestinian Metal Bands Unite for ‘All is One’ Tour – Intellihub


Writer Bio:

VibesJG Vibes is an Intellihub.com investigative journalist, staff writer and editor. He is also the author of “Alchemy of the Modern Renaissance”, an 87 chapter e-book and is an artist with an established record label.

For media inquires, interviews, questions or suggestions for this author, email: vibes@intellihub.com or telephone: (347) 759-6075.

Read more articles by this author here.

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Israeli Soldiers Punished After Dancing “Gangnam Style” With Palestinians

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Syrian soldiers see chemical agents in rebel tunnels: state TV




An activist wearing a gas mask is seen in Zamalka area, where activists say chemical weapons have been used by forces loyal to President Bashar Al-Assad in the eastern suburbs of Damascus August 22, 2013. REUTERS/Bassam Khabieh


1 of 18. An activist wearing a gas mask is seen in Zamalka area, where activists say chemical weapons have been used by forces loyal to President Bashar Al-Assad in the eastern suburbs of Damascus August 22, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Bassam Khabieh






BEIRUT | Fri Aug 23, 2013 8:35pm EDT



BEIRUT (Reuters) – President Barack Obama called the apparent gassing of hundreds of Syrian civilians a “big event of grave concern” but stressed on Friday he was in no rush to embroil Americans in a costly new war.


As opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad braved the frontlines around Damascus to smuggle out tissue samples from victims of Wednesday’s mass poisoning, Obama brushed over an interviewer’s reminder that he once called chemical weapons a “red line” that could trigger U.S. action.


A White House spokesman reiterated Obama’s position that he did not expect to have “boots on the ground” in Syria.


Obama’s caution contrasted with calls for action from NATO allies, including France, Britain and Turkey, where leaders saw little doubt Assad’s forces had staged pre-dawn missile strikes that rebels say killed between 500 and well over 1,000 people.


But two years into a civil war that has divided the Middle East along sectarian lines, a split between Western governments and Russia once again illustrated the international deadlock that has thwarted outside efforts to halt the killing.


While the West accused Assad of a cover-up by preventing the U.N. team from visiting the scene, Moscow said the rebels were impeding an investigation.


The United Nations released data showing that a million children were among refugees forced to flee Syria, calling it a “shameful milestone”. And mosque bombings that left at least 42 dead and hundreds wounded in neighboring Lebanon were a reminder of how Syria’s conflict has spread. But, for now, there seems little prospect of an end to the violence.


According to U.S. and European security sources, U.S. and allied intelligence agencies have made a preliminary assessment that Syrian government forces did use chemical weapons in the attack this week and that the act likely had high-level approval from President Bashar al-Assad’s government.


Obama played down the chances of Assad cooperating with the U.N. experts who might provide conclusive evidence of what happened, if given access soon.


Noting budget constraints, problems of international law and a continuing U.S. casualty toll in Afghanistan, Obama told CNN:


“Sometimes what we’ve seen is that folks will call for immediate action, jumping into stuff that does not turn out well, gets us mired in very difficult situations, can result in us being drawn into very expensive, difficult, costly interventions that actually breed more resentment in the region.


“The United States continues to be the one country that people expect can do more than just simply protect their borders. But that does not mean that we have to get involved with everything immediately,” he said, reflecting long-standing wariness to follow the example of his predecessor, George W. Bush, and his ultimately unpopular ventures in Afghanistan and Iraq.


“We have to think through strategically what’s going to be in our long-term national interests.”


RED LINE?


Asked about his comment – made a year and a day before the toxic fumes hit sleeping residents of rebel-held Damascus suburbs – that chemical weapons would be a ‘red line’ for the United States, he replied: “If the U.S. goes in and attacks another country without a U.N. mandate and without clear evidence that can be presented, then there are questions in terms of whether international law supports it.”


Russia and China have vetoed United Nations Security Council moves against Assad in the past and oppose military action.


Having abstained to allow NATO powers a U.N. mandate to back Libyan rebels against Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, Moscow and Beijing have closed ranks against what they see as a desire by Western states to change other countries’ systems of government.


The U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, despite a failure to secure a specific U.N. mandate for it, led to long wrangling over whether Washington and its allies broke international law.


In June, Washington agreed in response to evidence of small chemical attacks to arm rebel groups, despite misgivings about Islamist radicals in their ranks, some allied with al Qaeda. But rebel leaders say it is too little, leaving only a stalemate.


INSPECTION TEAM


International powers, including Moscow, have urged Assad to cooperate with the U.N. inspection team which arrived on Sunday to pursue earlier allegations of chemical weapons attacks.


However, there was no public response from the Syrian government, whose forces have been pounding the region for days, making any mission by the international experts perilous – as well as possibly destroying evidence. Syria denies being responsible and has in the past accused rebels of using gas.


U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he intends to conduct a “thorough, impartial and prompt investigation” into the latest allegations. Top U.N. disarmament official Angela Kane was due to arrive in Damascus on Saturday to push for access to the site for the U.N. inspectors.


“I can think of no good reason why any party – either government or opposition forces – would decline this opportunity to get to the truth of the matter,” Ban said.


British Foreign Secretary William Hague said he believed the Syrian government was responsible for the casualties, which go on rising as medical staff and others fall sick. “It seems the Assad regime has something to hide,” he said.


“Why else have they not allowed the U.N. team to go there?” he added, saying that the attack was “not something that a humane and civilized world” could ignore.


But Russia, Assad’s main arms supplier, said the opposition was preventing the objective investigation of what happened.


In an apparent rebuttal of that, Syria’s opposition pledged to guarantee the safety of U.N. inspectors.


“We will ensure the safety of the U.N. team … It is critical that those inspectors get there within 48 hours,” Khaled Saleh, spokesman for the opposition Syrian National Coalition, told a news conference in Istanbul.


Opposition activists said they had been in contact with the specialist U.N. team in Damascus and had sent tissue samples with couriers trying to slip across from the Ghouta region into the government-held center to deliver them to the inspectors.


Speaking from the town of Arbin, one of those affected by mysterious deaths from poisoning, opposition activist Abu Nidal told Reuters: “The U.N. team spoke with us and since then we prepared for them samples of hair, skin and blood and smuggled them back into Damascus with trusted couriers.”


Activist Abu Mohammed, in Harasta, said: “We’re being shelled and on top of that Ghouta is surrounded by regime checkpoints. But even that isn’t a problem – we can smuggle them out. The problem is the location of the U.N. committee in the hotel. They’re under heavy guard and government minders.”


Another opposition leader, Syrian National Coalition Secretary General Badr Jamous, said in Istanbul that samples from victims had already been smuggled out of Syria for testing. He declined to say where they were sent.


The rebels’ efforts could prove futile; only material that has a clear provenance and a “chain of custody” would generally be treated as evidence by U.N. inspectors.


The longer the team waits for permission to investigate, the less likely it is to get to the bottom of an incident in which opponents say Syrian government forces fired rockets or missiles laden with poison gas canisters into rebel-held neighborhoods.


Western experts suspect an organophosphate agent, most likely sarin gas, was used in the attack.


“Because they are non-persistent agents, they dissipate very quickly,” said Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, a former head of Britain’s military counter-nuclear, biological and chemical warfare force and now a private contractor.


Images, including some by freelance photographers supplied to Reuters, showed scores of bodies laid out on floors with no visible signs of injury. Some had foam at the nose and mouth.


CALLS FOR ACTION


French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Thursday that world powers must respond with force if allegations that Syria’s government was responsible for the deadliest chemical attack on civilians in a quarter-century prove true. Fabius stressed, however, there was no question of sending in troops.


European officials said that options ranging from air strikes or a no-fly zone to providing heavy weapons to some rebels were all still on the table. But there was little prospect of concrete measures without U.S. backing. “Without U.S. firepower, there’s little we can do,” one said.


Turkey, fearful of instability on its long southern border, called for an end to talk and time-wasting. “There is nothing left to say now,” said President Abdullah Gul. “It is now time for actual concrete action … The price of playing down the events and procrastinating through diplomatic maneuvering and trickery in the U.N. Security Council will be very high.”


(Additional reporting by Dasha Afanasieva in Istanbul, Roberta Rampton and Jeff Mason in Washington and Jack Kim in Seoul; Writing by Alastair Macdonald and Claudia Parsons; Editing by David Stamp and Tim Dobbyn)





Reuters: Top News



Syrian soldiers see chemical agents in rebel tunnels: state TV

Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV



BEIRUT | Sat Aug 24, 2013 6:33am EDT



BEIRUT (Reuters) – Syrian state television said government soldiers found chemical agents in rebel tunnels in the Damascus suburb of Jobar on Saturday and some of the troops were suffocating.


“Army heroes are entering the tunnels of the terrorists and saw chemical agents,” state television quoted a “news source” as saying. “In some cases, soldiers are suffocating while entering Jobar,” it said.


“Ambulances came to rescue the people who were suffocating in Jobar,” it said, adding that an army unit was preparing to storm the suburb where rebels fighting to oust President Bashar al-Assad are based.


Syrian activists accuse Assad’s forces of launching a nerve gas attack in Jobar and other suburbs before dawn on Wednesday, killing between 500 and more than 1,000 people.


Assad’s government has dismissed the accusation and its major ally Russia has suggested rebel fighters may have launched the attack themselves to provoke international action.


U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Angela Kane arrived in Damascus on Saturday to push for access to the suspected chemical weapons attack site for U.N. inspectors, who are already in Syria to investigate months-old accusations.


So far Assad’s government has not said whether it will allow access to the site despite being under increasing pressure from the United Nations, Western and Gulf Arab countries and Russia. If confirmed, it would be the world’s deadliest chemical attack in decades.


(Reporting by Oliver Holmes; Editing by Andrew Heavens)





Reuters: Top News



Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV

Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Syrian state television said government soldiers found chemical agents in rebel tunnels in the Damascus suburb of Jobar on Saturday and some of the troops were suffocating.


Reuters: Top News



Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV

Saturday, August 17, 2013

No fantasy: Souped-up soldiers are coming


Security



48 minutes ago


Image: Elysium

TriStar Pictures


In “Elysium, Matt Damon’s character sports a black-metal exoskeleton plugged into his mind and spine, boosting his strength and allowing him to download others’ thoughts. That technology may only exist on the Silver Screen, but the military is working on real, high-tech upgrades to improve the safety and abilities of troops.



Hollywood’s summer of the super soldier — featuring tech-bedecked troops like Matt Damon in the No. 1 movie “Elysium” — offers a flicker of futuristic battle gear as the real U.S. military explores innovations from exoskeletons to advanced armor to outfit the next-gen combat fighter.


At the laboratories of Special Operations Command (SOCOM) in Tampa, Fla., one project is dubbed TALOS — tactical assault light operator suit — and the blueprint involves blending an array of emerging technologies into a single, gizmo-rich, body-shielding uniform.


“How do we take the best of what’s out there — being academia, large industry, small industry or just three guys with a bright idea — and focus that energy toward the (special) operator to give him better protection and better capability?” said Jim Geurts, who oversees science and tech development, procurement and production for Special Operations. The command includes elite forces like Army Rangers and Navy SEALS.


“Certainly that involves body armor. But it also involves: How do I get them better situational awareness? How do I get them better communication? How do I allow them to move better without getting hurt?” Geurts said. “How do we continue to focus technology innovation and the good-old-American-monster-garage kinds of things to continue to help the operator?”


In July, SOCOM held a unique trade show in Tampa that mixed private scientists who are ramping up designs on exoskeletons (high-powered, wearable machines) or who are bolstering display technologies or creating tomorrow’s armor. The goal was to assemble the masterminds in the same room, Geurts said.


Image: Exoskeleton

U.S. Special Operations Command


At Special Operations Command, military innovators are working to develop exoskeletons that someday may help troops in combat.



“There’s not a place right now where all of them get together with a (special) operator and say, ‘OK, can I put this radio on your exoskeleton, and how much power does it need?’” Geurts said. “Everybody brought their LEGO building blocks and we could see all the types of LEGO building blocks, and we could start to think about how we put those blocks together to build something to give the operators capability that they don’t have now.” 


The public can glimpse the creative thinking behind such revolutionary gadgetry in pop films like “Elysium,” in which Matt Damon’s character sports a black-metal exoskeleton plugged into his mind and spine, boosting his strength allowing him to download others’ thoughts. In another summer movie, “Pacific Rim,” pairs of soldiers mutually operate giant exoskeletons to combat sea monsters.


Do these sci-fi films marry today’s silver-screen fantasy with any tiny germ of tomorrow’s battlefield reality?


“Maybe conceptually,” Geurts said. “Certainly, the idea of having mobility with protection with the ability to understand the environment around you and communicate to others around you — those facets are all important.”


Similar techno advances are in play across other branches as military commanders collaborate with top science minds to push the bounds of soldier suits.


Norman Wagner, a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the University of Delaware, has worked with the U.S. Army Research Laboratory in Maryland to co-invent a liquid armor called Shear Thickening Fluid. His material could coat Kevlar vests and Kevlar helmets, transforming them into something better: When a bullet or bomb fragment strikes the service member, miniscule particles in the liquid ceramic instantly reorganize themselves and harden to block the projectile.


“The idea is, you want a body armor that’s flexible so you can wear it,” Wagner said. “But at the point of impact, the fluid acts more like a solid in protecting the person behind it.”


Wagner has another project in the works that similarly seems tailor-made for military use: He, a University of Delaware colleague and a student are investigating a chemical-polymer technology that allows material to self mend. 


“If you get a cut or a puncture, the material would heal itself the same way that biological systems respond to skin wounds,” Wagner said.


While Wagner said the price for his Shear Thickening Fluid is relatively low and on par with “commercial costs,” this is the age of federal sequestration. At Special Operations Command, the innovators are taking lean times to heart.


“The challenge is two-fold: one, the collection of items called TALOS and, two, reinventing the next-generation business-acquisition model that let’s us quickly and cheaply attract those technologies to help the guys,” Geurts said.


Special Ops wants to tap the best ideas and the newest technologies — where ever they may be — allowing the command to collaborate with “non-traditional suppliers.” That is far different from picking a large contractor and paying big bucks to complete a project.


Military leaders acknowledge they have learned hard lessons in bolstering body protection and other battlefield gear for troops during 12 years of war, leading to better equipment already in place. But as the next phase of upgrades rolls from concept to the laboratory to the production line, they will be quickly installed in the field. The re-outfitting of troops in soldier suits 2.0 is not a distant theory, Geurts said. 


“We’re creating the environment where we can continue to improve and improve and improve,” he said. “And if I can do something in two weeks that helps the guys, then that’s two weeks better than what I can give them today.”






No fantasy: Souped-up soldiers are coming

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan

SRINIGAR, India (Reuters) – Five Indian soldiers were killed in an attack on their post along the disputed border with Pakistan in Kashmir, a senior Indian official said on Tuesday, just as the two countries were moving towards resuming stalled peace talks.



Reuters: Top News



India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan

India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan


NEW DELHI | Tue Aug 6, 2013 1:11am EDT



NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Five Indian soldiers were killed in an attack along the disputed border in Jammu and Kashmir, the state chief minister said on Tuesday, in an attack that comes just days after Pakistan proposed resuming stalled peace talks with India.


The talks were called off in January following an attack on the border in which one Indian soldier was decapitated.


“Was briefed early this morning about news that 5 of our soldiers had been killed on the LOC. My heartfelt condolences to their next of kin,” Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah said in a Tweet, referring to the Line of Control dividing the two countries in the region.


“These incidents don’t help efforts to normalize or even improve relations with Pak & call in to question the Pak Govt’s recent overtures,” he said.



Reuters: Top News



India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan

Monday, July 15, 2013

TA soldiers" deaths investigated






























Cemlyn Davies reports from the Brecon Beacons



Investigations are continuing into the deaths of two soldiers on a training exercise on the hottest day of the year in the Brecon Beacons.


They were serving with the Territorial Army, the BBC understands.


A third soldier is in a serious condition after Saturday’s incident in Powys, which is thought to have been linked to the hot weather.


The Ministry of Defence (MoD) refused to comment on reports they were taking part in an SAS selection process.




Start Quote





We were working alongside military personnel who remained extremely calm and professional during this tragic incident”




End Quote
Mark Moran
Central Beacons mountain rescue


The Brecon Beacons is home to the Infantry Battle School and makes up one of Britain’s largest military training areas.


The MoD has released little information about the two soldiers who died, but BBC News understands they were with the TA.


An investigation is focussing on the weather conditions and the nature of the exercise.


The deaths occurred on the hottest day of the year so far in Wales, with temperatures reaching 30C (86F) in Powys.


It is understood live ammunition was not involved.


The MoD said it was working with Dyfed-Powys Police.


A statement added: “The two servicemen’s next of kin have been informed. More information will be released in due course but it would be inappropriate to comment further at this stage.”









Two local people, one a former serviceman, explain how the military like to use the Brecon Beacons for training exercises



The Brecon Beacons national park is used for military training because of its relative remoteness.



‘Meltingly hot’

The infantry regiments of the British Army train at Sennybridge in the area and there is an Army base in Brecon.


Kirsty Williams, leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats and AM for Brecon and Radnorshire, said it was a “meltingly hot” day in the area on Saturday.


She added: “It’s very very said to think that people that were serving with our armed forces have lost their lives in this way”.


Ms Williams said it was a beautiful area which could also be very “treacherous” and the military trained there “for a reason”.


She said she hoped “any lessons that can be learned from this tragedy will be learned”.


About 30 members of the four south Wales mountain rescue teams (MRTs) were called out to help in the emergency on Saturday near Pen y Fan.


Col Mike Dewar, a defence analyst, told BBC Radio Wales he found it difficult to understand what happened in apparently “perfect conditions”.


He said the training session may have been pre-booked a long time before, and the soldiers would have been warned to take plenty of water in the hot weather conditions.


He said “all sorts of training takes place there” – from special forces to regular servicemen and women – and the soldiers may have been carrying heavy packs.



‘Incredibly sad’

Col Richard Kemp, former infantry commander, told the BBC Breakfast programme that the Brecon Beacons were valued by the military for training because they were hard to navigate and cross on foot and provided extremes of heat and cold.


He said soldiers on special forces selection were likely to be operating alone which made it harder for signs of heat exhaustion to be spotted quickly.


He said: “When you begin to get engulfed by heat illness, your thought processes blur.


“The staff at the check points should be looking to see if anybody is having particular problems.”


Mark Moran, from Central Beacons MRT, said: “We were working alongside military personnel who remained extremely calm and professional during this tragic incident.


“Our thoughts are now with the families of those involved.”


Mayor of Brecon and Powys county councillor Matthew Dorrance said: “It’s incredibly sad for the friends and family of the people who have lost their lives and thoughts are with the person who is injured.


“In one way we’ve been blessed with the weather but for people working in this heat, they’re tough conditions.”


Mr Dorrance said local people regularly saw troops training in the area and were “proud of our links with the military”.




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TA soldiers" deaths investigated

Friday, July 12, 2013

Israel"s Internal Battle Over Ultra-Orthodox Soldiers





An Israeli soldier in a platoon reserved for the ultra-Orthodox leans on the doorway of the unit’s makeshift synagogue. The military accommodates the religious needs of ultra-Orthodox soldiers by allowing time for Torah study and prayers three times daily.



Emily Harris/NPR



An Israeli soldier in a platoon reserved for the ultra-Orthodox leans on the doorway of the unit’s makeshift synagogue. The military accommodates the religious needs of ultra-Orthodox soldiers by allowing time for Torah study and prayers three times daily.


Emily Harris/NPR



Moshe Haim always wanted to be a soldier. The 20-year-old is now a sergeant, more than halfway through three years of service in the Israeli military.


But when he goes home on leave, he doesn’t talk about his military experiences to any of his eight siblings, especially his brothers.


“I know that for my parents and my brothers the first, best choice is to be in the yeshiva and study there,” he says at a small West Bank outpost where he’s stationed. “It wasn’t good for me, but my brothers are still pure.”





Soldiers close the gate to the tiny West Bank outpost, right next door to a Jewish settlement, where the HaHod platoon of the ultra-Orthodox Netzah Yahuda battalion is stationed.



Emily Harris/NPR

Soldiers close the gate to the tiny West Bank outpost, right next door to a Jewish settlement, where the HaHod platoon of the ultra-Orthodox Netzah Yahuda battalion is stationed.



Soldiers close the gate to the tiny West Bank outpost, right next door to a Jewish settlement, where the HaHod platoon of the ultra-Orthodox Netzah Yahuda battalion is stationed.


Emily Harris/NPR



Haim grew up in an ultra-Orthodox Jewish family in Israel. Tradition and deeply held values in that community dictate that boys study the Torah and other religious texts at school and into adulthood.


If they do, they are excused from military service in Israel. This exemption to the otherwise universal draft for Israeli Jews has been in existence for as long as Israel has been a country — part of an early bargain struck between religious and Zionist leaders.


Haim thought it would be impossible to serve in the military and remain part of his community. But in his teens, he learned of a special battalion that is entirely made up of ultra-Orthodox men.


“I heard about it from people in my neighborhood who went and remained religious,” Haim, now a sergeant, says. “It was a good solution for me because it combines Torah with fighting.”


Like Haim, Lt. Yoel Bagad left yeshiva for the military.


“It was too hard for me to study from seven in the morning to eleven at night,” he says.


The number of ultra-Orthodox men leaving full-time religious study and serving in the Israeli military has grown significantly in the past five years. In 2007, slightly fewer than 300 ultra-Orthodox served. Last year, 1,500 did.


Now the Israeli government is moving to end the exemption for religious scholars. This week, the Cabinet approved a draft law that, if it passes parliament, would phase in mandatory ultra-Orthodox service over four years. About 1,800 Torah students would still be excused, compared to about 8,000 a year now.


A Matter Of Israel’s Future


This would be an enormous change in Israel, and it has fanned the flames of an already highly charged debate about the role of conservative religious communities in the country. Tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox have protested the military proposals — demonstrating in Europe and New York as well as in Israel. Some ultra-Orthodox soldiers have been attacked when they return to their neighborhoods.





A white metal trailer serves as the makeshift synagogue at the West Bank outpost of an all-ultra-Orthodox Israeli military platoon.



Emily Harris/NPR

A white metal trailer serves as the makeshift synagogue at the West Bank outpost of an all-ultra-Orthodox Israeli military platoon.



A white metal trailer serves as the makeshift synagogue at the West Bank outpost of an all-ultra-Orthodox Israeli military platoon.


Emily Harris/NPR



Yitzak Pindrus, an ultra-Orthodox Jew and a deputy mayor of Jerusalem, says this is a political debate much bigger than the military draft. He says it’s about the future of Israel.


“We believe deeply that the future of the Jewish nation depends on the people that study the Torah,” he says. “[Supporters of this law] are trying to make our community not legitimate. They are frightened of the growth of the ultra-Orthodox community.”


That growth rate is significant — nearly twice as high as the general population. At the same time, employment levels among ultra-Orthodox men are significantly lower. This means lower tax receipts and higher social support costs for the government.


The military sees service as a way to get more ultra-Orthodox men into the workforce.


“When they are in the Israeli Defense Forces we give them training and education which helps them find jobs,” says Lt. Col. Amir Badmani in the planning department of the Israeli military. “About 90 percent of the ultra-Orthodox who serve in the IDF join the workforce afterward.”


Other Minorities’ Experiences


The IDF is laying the groundwork to incorporate thousands of new draftees. A new pre-military academy for ultra-Orthodox is due to open in a few months. The military is also drawing on its experience with other Israeli minorities, like the Druze, an Arabic-speaking religious group who also have their own military units. The special units are not obligatory, but one Druze commander, Lt Col. Sha’adi Abu Faris, says it’s a good option for many draftees.





An Israeli police officer arrests an Ultra-Orthodox Jew during a protest against the draft law in Jerusalem on May 16.



Marco Longari/AFP/Getty Images

An Israeli police officer arrests an Ultra-Orthodox Jew during a protest against the draft law in Jerusalem on May 16.



An Israeli police officer arrests an Ultra-Orthodox Jew during a protest against the draft law in Jerusalem on May 16.


Marco Longari/AFP/Getty Images



“When the commanders themselves are Druze, they understand the soldiers’ faith. They are able to be much more accommodating,” Faris says. “Also, there is a major effort to help soldiers with whatever they need, for example, improving Hebrew, even at the expense of training time.”


Ending the draft exemption for yeshiva scholars was a promise of Yesh Atid, the new political party that rose to prominence in January elections. Supporters, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, call this a way to equalize the “burden” of contributing to society.


“Our objective is two-fold,” he said before the Cabinet vote approving mandatory military service. “Integrating young ultra-Orthodox into IDF and national service and, no less important, integrating them into the labor force.”


But Haim Zicherman, who grew up in an ultra-Orthodox family but no longer practices Judaism in that tradition, says integration is coming naturally, as the number of “modern” members of the community grows.


He says there are many legal problems with the draft law, including inequity — most ultra-Orthodox women will still be excused from military service — and potential corruption in whatever system is finally set up to choose the 1,800 young men who will still be allowed to study religious texts full time.


But Zicherman’s biggest fear is that attempts to enforce the law will lead to more divisions and confrontations among Israelis.


“What are you going to do if at the end of the process the yeshiva students say, ‘I don’t want to go to the army,’” he asks. “Are you going to come with tanks and take everybody to jail?”




News



Israel"s Internal Battle Over Ultra-Orthodox Soldiers

Sunday, June 23, 2013

U.S. Soldiers Prepare to Deploy Against Egyptian Citizens


Infowars.com
June 23, 2013


Instead of deployment to the U.S. border, American soldiers will be sent to Egypt to protect the border there with Israel. The soldiers will perform “riot control” duties in response to Egyptian citizens upset over the military dictatorship ruling their country.


Following the engineered color revolution overthrowing the regime of former longtime client Hosni Mubarak, the United States bestowed the installed Muslim Brotherhood government with $ 1.3 billion in U.S. taxpayer money.


The blue blood skull and bones elitist now acting as the U.S. Secretary of State, John Kerry, said the “aid” should be handed over to president Mohamed Mursi and the thugs in the Egyptian military despite the lack of “more inclusive democratic process and the strengthening of key democratic institutions” in the country, Reuters reported earlier this month.


This article was posted: Sunday, June 23, 2013 at 7:50 am


Tags: foreign affairs, government corruption, police state









Infowars



U.S. Soldiers Prepare to Deploy Against Egyptian Citizens