Tag Archives: Russia

Chechens in Boston

The effort to discover and neutralize the perpetrators of the latest Boston massacre has entered a highly dramatic – and dynamic – phase. One suspect has been killed in a gunfight in Watertown, Massachusetts.  Another is, as I speak, the subject of an intense manhunt there.

Police have identified the two as brothers from the Russian province of Chechnya, whose Muslim-population has been radicalized in the course of Vladimir Putin’s protracted repression there. We’ll soon know if they’re responsible for this attack, and – if so – whether they acted alone.

Until then, speculation has become a national pastime – but not a very productive one.  This much is clear, though: The perpetrators of this attack are not the only ones who wish us harm.  Every American must now become part of vigilantly defending our country against them.

Are We Being Compromised by Barack Obama’s Murky Past?

Since he first became a presidential candidate, President Obama must have spent millions of dollars in legal expenses to combat dozens of so-called “birther” challenges seeking the original documents pertaining to his birth.  As president, he famously issued an electronic document on the White House website in 2011; the document purported to be his long-form birth certificate, though it is apparently a forgery.  In addition, he has taken great pains to hide the paper trail of passport records, college transcripts, and other data — all of which a prospective employer might require of a job applicant.

The public’s right to know is but a minor consideration.  Our overriding concern should be what unfriendly foreign intelligence adversaries, particularly Russian, may have obtained on our president’s background.

Among all the foreign intelligence agencies, Russian intelligence (SVR) has a long history and has made a science of studying the backgrounds of American presidents.  Therefore, we must assume that since Russian intelligence is particularly skilled and a persistent practitioner of this art, it is possible to the point of certainty that, using all their resources and “black-bag” tactics, they have long had the biographical background data that President Obama and his team of lawyers have been so diligent in concealing from the American public.

The Russians most likely would have started collecting data during Obama’s university years, when he professed radical Marxist views.  They were certainly focusing on him by the time of his celebrated speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention.

By that time, Russian intelligence had easy access to the true facts concerning Obama’s birth, parentage, and childhood; his mentor (communist Frank Marshall Davis); and his college performance, as well as who provided his finances.  They also would have obtained the information on his passport history and his complete political career and associates.

It is recognized that among all the intelligence agencies, Russian intelligence is the most skillful in looking for information and points of leverage — which are then exploited cleverly and “gently” by Russian statecraft.

By now, the Russians have most likely have told Obama discreetly that they have such information.  How would they use it?  As one old Soviet KGB operator said, “Kompromat [compromising information] is the most powerful tool of espionage.”

Following this thought process, take the issue of how strongly the Russians objected to our ballistic missile defense (BMD) plans for NATO Europe to defend against an Iranian nuclear missile threat.  Now ponder why President Obama told Russian President Medvedev in the fall of 2012 that he would have “more flexibility” to deal with the BMD issue in his second term which he has now basically canceled.  Coincidence?

The current world situation is presenting many complicating challenges to current and future U.S. objectives.  With the Obama administration presiding over the hollowing out of our military forces and prepared to further weaken our strategic nuclear posture, our adversaries are being emboldened to challenge us in a number of areas.  The Middle East is in a continued state of turmoil, with no end in sight.  Iran continues to ignore U.N. sanctions and proceeds with its drive to achieve nuclear weapon capability.  It dismisses the possibility of a U.S. military strike.

In the Pacific, we have to deal with an erratic, unpredictable nuclear-armed North Korea, who has been making outrageous threats to the U.S. and our allies.  China continues flexing its military muscle, trying to enforce its illegal claims in the South and East China Seas.  Closer to home, according to Ambassador Roger Noriega, we have an operational Iranian missile base in Venezuela which can threaten a number of our cities.  We also are witnessing Russia reviving Soviet Cold war tactics in areas of our strategic interest.  Clearly, we are headed into an exceptionally crucial and dangerous round of geo-strategic confrontations which could have a profound impact on our future objectives and way of life.

These challenges cannot be ignored.  We are led by a man who does not believe in American exceptionalism or our capitalist foundation.  His lead-from-behind strategy has forfeited the initiative to our adversaries.  Under such circumstances, we cannot afford to be in a position where our leadership is subject to compromise.

Moscow Rules

In the midst of escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula, the United States has sensibly been beefing up its missile defenses in the region lest North Korea’s erratic regime decide to launch missiles at things we care about.

Meanwhile, the Russians recently sent a long-range, nuclear-capable Backfire bomber to simulate strikes on two of our anti-missile assets in the region.  This is but the latest in a series of such provocative Russian flights in recent months against U.S. targets, overseas and here at home.

The Obama administration’s response is pretty troubling, too.  Its feckless Secretary of Defense, Chuck Hagel, is busy announcing still more cuts in our national security capabilities and launching new talks with Russia about curbing our missile defenses.  Rewarding their bad behavior ensures there will be more of it.

The Mysterious Death of Boris Berezovsky

With Robert Zarate, Reza Khalili, Claudia Rosett, Gordon Chang.

ROBERT ZARATE of the Foreign Policy Research Institute raises several questions about Sec. Def. Chuck Hagel’s recent announcement to renew the Bush administration’s commitment to ground based missile interceptors in the U.S. which the Obama administration cut back in its first term.  Will sequestration allow the plan to follow through?  Was the cancellation of long range ICBM interceptors in Europe in fact the more important element of the announcement as it is a strategic step backward and a concession to Russian power in the region?

Former Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp member and CIA agent REZA KHALILI reports new intelligence on a covert Iranian nuclear site, nuclear material, and weapons capability including numbers on weaponized grade Uranium that would seem to exceed stated Red Lines of the United States.

World renowned investigative journalist, CLAUDIA ROSETT, explains the meaning of the strange death in London of a Russian Oligarch who had fallen from the grace of the Putin regime.

GORDON CHANG of Forbes.com breaks down the nuclear threat matrix between the U.S. and China based on new reports of the China’s Carrier Killer 12,000 mile range missile.

Obama, Israel, and Palestine

With Amb. John Bolton, Harold Rhode, Ryan Mauro, Bill Gertz

During the U.S. President’s tour of the Middle East, many have been surprised at how his rhetorical performance has hit the right notes.  The surprise is due to prior absence of policy and strategy to back up strong words for Iran and kind words for Israel.  Former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. JOHN BOLTON of the American Enterprise Institute discusses the consequential realities that remain for heads of state after the televised events.

Gatestone Institute Senior Fellow and former Department of Defense Middle East expert, HAROLD RHODE, walks through the complexities in Israel as well as those playing out in Syria and the broader Middle East in relationship to Turkey, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and to U.S. policy.

Global threat expert RYAN MAURO of the Clarion Project uncovers another failure of vetting by the State Department this time in respect to the newly appointed Prime Minister of the Syrian opposition.  He also reports on the activities of Hezbollah in Syria and their long term strategic objectives, EU hesitation to designate Hezbollah as a terrorist organization, and the formation of religious enforcement militias in Egypt.

Washington Free Beacon Editor, BILL GERTZ, reports on the administration’s down playing of Russian strategic nuclear bombers increasing flights near the U.S. and it’s allies unchallenged.  The administration has simultaneously completely canceled the SM3 Interceptor missile defense capability in Europe which is also a concession to Russian wishes.  This took place last week as the headlines reported a seeming reversal in the administrations actions to diminish American missile defense while claiming strategic enhancement.  The strategic enhancement was perhaps meant to be interpreted as better relations with Russia.  Such an interpretation would be shown nullified by these aggressive nuclear bomber flights unprecedented since the end of the Cold War.

Russian Strategic Missile Force Set to Modernize by 2020

With Mark Schneider, Bill Siegel, Diana West, and Andy McCarthy.

MARK SCNEIDER, a senior analyst with the National Institute for Public Policy, compares what Russia’s modernized and America-proofed missile defense system will look like in 2020 to America’s own nuclear deterrent.

The author of The Control Factor: Our Struggle to See the True Threat, BILL SIEGEL, explains the mental gap that keeps America from completely understanding, and thus, being able to defend ourselves, from our real Islamist enemy.

DIANA WEST, syndicated columnist and author of American Betrayal: The Secret Assault on Our Nation’s Character, exposes how money from jihad-supporting governments is being used to turn the public-opinion tide in American communities, and raises a few vital questions that CIA Director nominee John Brennan should be asked concerning his Saudi ties.

From the National Review Online, ANDY McCARTHY wonders what will happen to the CIA under the leadership of John Brennan, and explains why a progressive, ideological foreign policy can not work in a world where your enemies will act to further their own interests.

With Sequestration, There Goes World Stability

With General Jack Keane (Ret.), Michael Davidson, Reggie Littlejohn, and Gordon Chang

Remember Afghanistan? What will become of U.S. investment in its stability?  Retired Four Star General JACK KEANE describes the consequences of our flawed policy in Afghanistan in stark terms.

Former CIA Clandestine Services officer MICHAEL DAVIDSON gives his take on the snubbing of new Secretary of State John Kerry by his Russian counterpart, arguing that Putin and his fellow-KGB alums are purposely making a show of their displeasure with the United States.

What can we believe about human right’s news on China’s one child policy?  REGGIE LITTLEJOHN of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers deciphers the reporting from the reality.

GORDON CHANG of forbes.com predicts that despite the lack of demographics sense China’s One Child Policy makes, the regime will keep it in order to maintain control. Based on China’s growing aggressiveness, Chang also believes that once sequestration goes into effect, shortly after it will be reversed for the Pentagon in order to meet its military needs in East Asia.

National Security Policy Proceedings, vol. 5: Spring 2011

National Security Policy Proceedings, vol. 5 – Spring 2011 (Web)

This is the fifth issue of the Center for Security Policy’s National Security Policy Proceedings, a new quarterly journal. It is available in paperback at Amazon.com for $8.00.

From Ben Lerner’s Editor’s Note:

National Security Policy Proceedings represents the Center’s compilation of transcripts of remarks given by featured speakers at these gatherings. In some cases, speakers have chosen to submit their remarks to Proceedings as original articles. Additionally, Pro- ceedings includes book reviews of recently published national security-themed books, reviewed by eminent scholars in the field.

In publishing Proceedings, the Center has sought to provide the reader with authoritative yet accessible commentary on the most pressing issues of national security, foreign affairs, defense policy, and homeland security. Because the speakers and those in atten- dance are routinely in contact with one another and are often col- laborating on analytical and educational efforts, it is our intention that Proceedings give the reader a unique window into how those in the national security policy community convey and exchange ideas with one another, among friends and colleagues.

 

National Security Policy Proceedings

Vol. 5: Spring 2011

 

 

 

Order the book at
Amazon
now.

 

Download the PDF

BEN LERNER
Editor’s Note

MICHELLE VAN CLEAVE Wikileaks: Damage and Remedies

JEFF KUETER
The Obama Administration in Space

TED R. BROMUND
The Flaws of the Ottawa Convention

MACKENZIE EAGLEN
The Dangers of Shredding the Defense Budget

MARK A. GROOMBRIDGE
Countering the Ongoing North Korea Threat

DAVID SATTER
The Nature of the Russian Regime

SARAH STERN
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt: The View from Israel

GORDON G. CHANG
China Now Rules the Waves

CLARE M. LOPEZ
Revolution in Middle Earth: Towards Catastrophe or Democracy?

TOM BLAU
The Public Diplomacy Void

 

Peace Despite Weakness?

Two recent episodes offer an insight into a world in which the United States deliberately adopts a policy of pursuing international peace despite weakness, rather than practice what Ronald Reagan called “peace through strength.”
 
First, prior to and during Secretary of Defense Robert Gates’ present trip to Communist China, his hosts lifted the veil of secrecy on a brand new, “fifth-generation” stealth fighter aircraft.  This “J-20” is clearly intended to compete with, and perhaps defeat, America’s inventory of such planes – the F-22, whose production Mr. Gates insisted on terminating prematurely, and the F-35, whose production he is now slowing.
 
U.S. intelligence evidently was taken by surprise that the Chinese have made such progress in so sophisticated an area of military design and manufacturing.   In part, faulty estimates about the likelihood of “peer competitors” fielding stealthy air superiority fighters and the like have been used to justify – or at least rationalize – the sorts of unilateral-disarmament-measures-via-budget-cuts that Bob Gates is affording President Obama the political cover to make.
 
As it happens, a further pall was cast on the Pentagon chief’s visit to the Middle Kingdom by another revelation:  Just after Christmas, the commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, Admiral Robert Willard revealed that Beijing had achieved “initial operational status” on a new ballistic missile designed to destroy aircraft carriers at sea at ranges up to 2,000 miles from China.  
 
The technical term for these sorts of developments is “game-changers”: They are clearly meant to threaten access to and freedom of operation in the Western Pacific for the United States’ most important power-projection forces.   
 
Second, the Washington Times’ Bill Gertz revealed last week that the chief of the Russian armed forces staff had just made a no-less-portentous announcement: General Nikolai Makarov declared that his country would have by 2020 an “impenetrable” defense against missile attack: "The state will have an umbrella over it which will defend it against ballistic missile attacks, against medium-range missiles, air-based cruise missiles, sea-based cruise missiles, and ground-based cruise missiles, including missiles flying at extremely low altitudes, at any time and in any situation."
 
Presumably, U.S. intelligence and Mr. Gates were surprised by this revelation, too.  After all, no mention was made of the Russians’ commitment to provide comprehensive protection against all missiles a month ago, when the U.S. Senate was being coerced into hastily approving the New START Treaty.  One wonders whether senators would have voted differently had they known what is now clear:  They approved an accord that the other party insists will effectively preclude us from making “any qualitative or quantitative improvements” to our missile defenses.  This despite the fact that our present anti-missile systems are: a) only designed to shoot down ballistic missiles, not cruise missiles that fly aerodynamically, and b) too limited to prevent any attack, including ones from Russia or China – just the relatively small threat of a couple of missiles launched by “rogue states.”  These would include Iran and North Korea (which curiously happen to be Moscow and Beijing’s allies/clients/proxies).
 
When told of Gen. Makarov’s pronouncement, a friend who had warned one of his senators against rushing to approve the New START Treaty during the lame-duck session asked me whether such a formidable Russian defense would violate that pact.  Answer:  It would not, since the Obama administration evidently assumed that the Kremlin opposed missile defenses in general, not just ours.   In the event, U.S. senators have now recklessly approved a treaty made even more lopsidedly contrary to our interests by giving Vladimir Putin a de facto veto over our protection to the American people – while leaving the Russians free to do whatever they want to protect theirs.  
 
If these developments make you uneasy about America’s place in the world, let alone its security, get used to it.  Our adversaries – actual or potential – are taking our measure, and responding as bullies, thugs and dictators have time and time again in the past:  They are becoming more assertive and, in some cases, more aggressive in filling the vacuum they perceive we are creating by retreating from global responsibilities and conflicts, ceding our preeminence technologically and in terms of industrial capabilities, running up our debt and, most especially, by slashing our defenses.
 
We better not kid ourselves.  Secretary Gates’ China visit – in which he was reduced to pleading for improved military-to-military communications (as though they would actually mitigate the danger posed by PRC’s steadily increasing offensive power) and for Beijing’s “help” in containing North Korea (as though the latter poses a threat to the United States, but Communist China does not) – is but a taste of what is to come.
 
History suggests that when bullies, etc. perceive this sort of opening, it does not conduce to peace.  As one of Secretary Gates’ predecessors, Donald Rumsfeld, put it: “Weakness is provocative.”  And what it provokes is not peaceable impulses, but warlike ones, on the part of freedom’s foes.  
 
To those who say we can no longer afford to be strong and must make at least the $178 billion in cuts in defense spending sought by Messrs. Gates and Obama, there is a time-tested reality:  We can pay now for peace through strength, or pay later and vastly more in lives and treasure for the costs of failing to achieve that peace through our provocative weakness.

 

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. is President of the Center for Security Policy, a columnist for the Washington Times and host of the nationally syndicated program, Secure Freedom Radio, heard in Washington weeknights at 9:00 p.m. on WRC 1260 AM.

Reports: Iran to buy jets from Russia

August 01, 2007

By Christopher Holton

The reported Russian sale of Su-30 aircraft and aerial refueling tankers to the Islamic Republic of Iran is a very serious development.

This development demonstrates two things:

1. Getting Russia to help with UN sanctions is a pipe dream. The Russians don’t give those birds away. Iran’s paying for them.

They sell Iran nuclear technology. They sell Iran weapons. They drill for oil in Iran. They are capitalists now and if they can make money off of selling weapons to our enemies, they are doubly happy to do so. In the absence of true international sanctions which, thanks to our Russian and Chinese friends, will be impossible, a divestment program offers the greatest leverage against the Iranian regime.

2. Narrow divestment which only targets Iran’s energy sector completely misses these deals. The Russians are capitalists with stock exchanges now. Sukhoi, or some of its subcontractors for avionics and other components, almost surely trades on an exchange. But under the Iran-energy sector only model, they can sell Iran 250 advanced fighter bombers and not be targeted.

http://www.centerforsecuritypolicy.org/p14768.xml?cat_id=220