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TERROR WARS
US Congress may soon vote to arm, train Syria rebels
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 10, 2014


France says ready for air strikes in Iraq 'if necessary'
Paris (AFP) Sept 10, 2014 - French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Wednesday that France was prepared to take part in air strikes on Islamic extremists in Iraq "if necessary."

"In Iraq... we support the formation of an inclusive government. We will participate if necessary in an aerial military action," Fabius said in a speech in Paris.

Last week, French President Francois Hollande had raised the possibility of a "political, humanitarian and if necessary military response in accordance with international law" to fight against Islamic State.

Fabius urged an international alliance to fight the dangers posed by IS "which could reach our own soil," he said, adding: "Several hundred French jihadists are present in Iraq and Syria."

However, Fabius stressed that the "modalities" of French action in Iraq and Syria were not the same.

"In Syria, the situation is different: (President) Bashar al-Assad cannot be a partner, because he has an established link" with IS.

"That is why we will continue to help the moderate Syrian opposition, which is fighting both" the Islamic State and the Assad regime.

Last year, France was in the vanguard of states ready to strike the Syrian regime but backed down after the United States decided against military action.

Washington is now in the process of pulling together an international alliance against the militants, present in both Iraq and Syria.

According to French diplomatic sources, what is preventing France from a military intervention in Syria is the lack of an international legal basis.

In the case of Iraq, any military action would have to come at the request of Baghdad and would be backed up by the "self-defence" article in the United Nations charter, according to diplomatic sources.

White House to hold summit on violent extremism
Washington (AFP) Sept 10, 2014 - The White House will hold a summit on preventing violent extremism, the US Secretary of Homeland Security said Wednesday, warning that terrorists must "be engaged."

The US continues "to face real terrorist enemies and real terrorist threats" from Islamic State jihadists who have overtaken large swaths of Syria and Iraq, Secretary Jeh Johnson said, one day ahead of the 13th anniversary of September 11.

The October summit on domestic and international efforts to prevent extremism, "will address the full life cycle of radicalization to violence posed by the foreign fighters" he said.

Johnson spoke only hours before President Barack Obama was to deliver a White House address in which he appeared poised to authorize air strikes against the Islamic State in Syria.

Although "we have no credible information that ISIL is planning to attack the homeland at present, we know that ISIL is prepared to kill innocent Americans they encounter because they're Americans," Johnson told the Council on Foreign Relations.

The US, he said, is resolved "to degrade and ultimately to destroy" IS, which is also known by the acronym ISIL.

"We are continually on guard against the potential domestic-based homegrown terrorist threat who may be working in our own society," Johnson said, adding that it was the element he feared most and the "most difficult" to detect.

"We're making enhanced efforts to track those who enter and leave Syria and may later seek to travel to the US from a country for which the US does not require a visa from its citizens," Johnson added.

The secretary said that IS was "neither Islamic nor a state" but "a stateless group" of terrorists that no religion would condone.

"We have vastly improved this nation's ability to detect and disrupt terrorist plots overseas before they reach the homeland" he said.

But "this type of terrorist threat simply has to be engaged, we can't avoid it," he said.

US lawmakers could vote within days to authorize the military to arm and train moderate Syrian rebels, with Democrats drafting the legislation Wednesday in an effort to reverse advances by the Islamic State (IS).

The possible move follows a last-minute request by President Barack Obama, who was scheduled to address the nation later Wednesday and lay out his plan to defeat the jihadist group that has rampaged across parts of Syria and Iraq.

With the White House pushing Congress to include the rebel-training authority in a temporary government spending bill, the Republican-led House abruptly suspended that measure, a so-called continuing resolution (CR) which had been unveiled the previous night and was set for a Thursday vote.

"Given the severity of the situation and the need for all members to properly evaluate the president's request, the House will postponse consideration of the continuing resolution," House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced.

Democratic leaders including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid are strongly backing Obama, who appeared poised to green-light air strikes against IS in Syria.

Coordinating with rebels on the ground would be key to that strategy.

"It's clear to me that we need to train and equip Syrian rebels and other groups in the Middle East that need some help," Reid told colleagues.

"The president has tried to get that (authority) from us, and we should give it to him," Reid said.

In June the White House asked lawmakers for $500 million to train and equip vetted Syrian rebels, in what would be a significant escalation of US involvement in the conflict, following months of pressure from some lawmakers to ramp up support.

Reid noted that some Republicans remain concerned about costs, particularly before Obama lays out his strategy, but he stressed "there is money to do" the training.

Reid and other congressional leaders including House Speaker John Boehner met Tuesday with Obama to discuss his strategy.

The White House released details of Obama's Wednesday call with Saudi King Abdullah in which "the president and the king agreed on the need for increased training and equipping of the moderate Syrian opposition."

That authority could come in the form of a stand-alone measure, but momentum appeared to be building for including it in the CR.

The measure would fund the government at current levels until December and must be passed before fiscal year 2015 begins on October 1.

With members of Congress heading home as early as September 19 and not returning until after the congressional mid-term elections on November 4, Democrats see the CR as the safest vehicle for the authorization.

"I would hope that it would be on there," top House Democrat Nancy Pelosi told reporters.

House Appropriations Committee chairman Hal Rogers pushed back.

"I hate to see this attached to a continued resolution at the very last minute," Rogers said.

"This is a complex, complicated policy change that needs to be fully vetted here in the Congress."

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TERROR WARS
Arabs rally behind US efforts for anti-jihadist coalition
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 09, 2014
Arab nations rallied Tuesday behind US efforts to form a broad coalition against jihadists in Iraq and Syria as Secretary of State John Kerry headed to the region to cement their support. Regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia is to host talks Thursday between Kerry and ministers from 10 Arab states and Turkey on joint action against the Islamic State group. The moves came as Britain announce ... read more


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