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Regional geopolitics

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  • Re: Regional geopolitics

    Bulgaria denies airspace use for Russian supply flights to Syria

    Bulgaria has denied use of its airspace for Russian aid flights to Syria due to doubts about the nature of the cargo Moscow sends to the war-torn country. It comes on the heels of a similar Washington request to Greece.


    Bulgaria has denied use of its airspace for Russian aid flights to Syria due to doubts about the nature of the cargo Moscow sends to the war-torn country. It comes on the heels of a similar Washington request to Greece.

    The move has been confirmed by the Bulgarian Foreign Ministry.

    Bulgaria "refused to issue permits for flights through Bulgarian airspace of Russian military transport aircraft en route from the Russian Federation to Syria in the period between September 1 and 24, 2015," Sofia's statement said.

    "We have information which gives us grounds to doubt the correctness of the information stated in the request about the purpose of the flights and the cargo transported," ministry spokeswoman Betina Joteva said, citing the reason behind the refusal.

    Earlier, the ministry official told TASS news agency that Sofia had doubts whether the nature of the goods intended to be carried complied with that stated in the request. The ministry "made the decision independently," Joteva added, giving no further details.

    Earlier Tuesday, Greece’s Kathimerini newspaper reported that Bulgaria had denied Russia use of its airspace, meaning that two Russian planes would have to use Iranian airspace.

    The news from Bulgaria came a day after the Greek Foreign Ministry confirmed it had received a request from Washington asking that Russia be denied use of Greek airspace for aid flights to Syria.

    Russian authorities are yet to comment on the matter.

    Russia has repeatedly delivered humanitarian aid to Syria. In August this year, Moscow sent over 20 tons of humanitarian aid, including tinned meat, fish and milk, sugar and blankets to the city of Latakia. In May, the city received 21.5 tons of supplies from Russia.
    Russian planes also transported hundreds of people, both Russians and foreigners, from the conflict zone.

    War-torn Yemen, Iraq and Ukraine are also among the countries to have received humanitarian aid from Russia this year.

    In 2014 Russia delivered 11,000 tons of humanitarian aid to 24 countries, including Syria, Afghanistan, Yemen and Iraq, the Emergencies Ministry told RIA Novosti. Apart from that, 13,400 tons of aid were delivered to Donbass in eastern Ukraine, where the civil war has already killed almost 8,000 people.
    Politics is not about the pursuit of morality nor what's right or wrong
    Its about self interest at personal and national level often at odds with the above.
    Great politicians pursue the National interest and small politicians personal interests

    Comment


    • Re: Regional geopolitics

      Originally posted by londontsi View Post
      Bulgaria denies airspace use for Russian supply flights to Syria

      Bulgaria has denied use of its airspace for Russian aid flights to Syria due to doubts about the nature of the cargo Moscow sends to the war-torn country. It comes on the heels of a similar Washington request to Greece.


      Bulgaria has denied use of its airspace for Russian aid flights to Syria due to doubts about the nature of the cargo Moscow sends to the war-torn country. It comes on the heels of a similar Washington request to Greece.

      The move has been confirmed by the Bulgarian Foreign Ministry.

      Bulgaria "refused to issue permits for flights through Bulgarian airspace of Russian military transport aircraft en route from the Russian Federation to Syria in the period between September 1 and 24, 2015," Sofia's statement said.

      "We have information which gives us grounds to doubt the correctness of the information stated in the request about the purpose of the flights and the cargo transported," ministry spokeswoman Betina Joteva said, citing the reason behind the refusal.

      Earlier, the ministry official told TASS news agency that Sofia had doubts whether the nature of the goods intended to be carried complied with that stated in the request. The ministry "made the decision independently," Joteva added, giving no further details.

      Earlier Tuesday, Greece’s Kathimerini newspaper reported that Bulgaria had denied Russia use of its airspace, meaning that two Russian planes would have to use Iranian airspace.

      The news from Bulgaria came a day after the Greek Foreign Ministry confirmed it had received a request from Washington asking that Russia be denied use of Greek airspace for aid flights to Syria.

      Russian authorities are yet to comment on the matter.

      Russia has repeatedly delivered humanitarian aid to Syria. In August this year, Moscow sent over 20 tons of humanitarian aid, including tinned meat, fish and milk, sugar and blankets to the city of Latakia. In May, the city received 21.5 tons of supplies from Russia.
      Russian planes also transported hundreds of people, both Russians and foreigners, from the conflict zone.

      War-torn Yemen, Iraq and Ukraine are also among the countries to have received humanitarian aid from Russia this year.

      In 2014 Russia delivered 11,000 tons of humanitarian aid to 24 countries, including Syria, Afghanistan, Yemen and Iraq, the Emergencies Ministry told RIA Novosti. Apart from that, 13,400 tons of aid were delivered to Donbass in eastern Ukraine, where the civil war has already killed almost 8,000 people.
      I still do not get the point:
      Distance from North Kavkaz, over Capian, to Iran, Irak, Damascus: 2500 Km
      Distance from Sotchi, over Tcherno Sea, Bulgaria, Greece, Syria: 3000 Km

      What's the interest of this ban??
      As long as Irak is under Iranian influence, and airspace open, this makes no sense.
      Unless Iran is not open??

      Comment


      • Re: Regional geopolitics

        Originally posted by Vrej1915 View Post
        I still do not get the point:
        Distance from North Kavkaz, over Capian, to Iran, Irak, Damascus: 2500 Km
        Distance from Sotchi, over Tcherno Sea, Bulgaria, Greece, Syria: 3000 Km

        What's the interest of this ban??
        As long as Irak is under Iranian influence, and airspace open, this makes no sense.
        Unless Iran is not open??
        If its so unimportant or irrelevant why is the US doing it.

        The plan of the US is to encircle Russia and it has a huge geopolitical significance.

        If all the current events lead to WW 3 then the strategic decisions would have been fulfilled.

        If you know history, that is how WW 2 started.

        .
        Politics is not about the pursuit of morality nor what's right or wrong
        Its about self interest at personal and national level often at odds with the above.
        Great politicians pursue the National interest and small politicians personal interests

        Comment


        • Re: Regional geopolitics

          Originally posted by londontsi View Post
          If its so unimportant or irrelevant why is the US doing it.

          The plan of the US is to encircle Russia and it has a huge geopolitical significance.

          If all the current events lead to WW 3 then the strategic decisions would have been fulfilled.

          If you know history, that is how WW 2 started.

          .
          That is how US got Japan starting war in pacific.
          U.S. Embargoed Japan of raw materials and got other countries join in.

          Comment


          • Re: Regional geopolitics

            Originally posted by londontsi View Post
            If its so unimportant or irrelevant why is the US doing it.

            The plan of the US is to encircle Russia and it has a huge geopolitical significance.

            If all the current events lead to WW 3 then the strategic decisions would have been fulfilled.

            If you know history, that is how WW 2 started.

            .
            WWIII ... nothing less??
            And who's going to fight whom?

            Comment


            • Re: Regional geopolitics

              Originally posted by Hakob View Post
              That is how US got Japan starting war in pacific.
              U.S. Embargoed Japan of raw materials and got other countries join in.
              Exact, thank you.
              But yet, here it has nothing to do with it.
              No one is starving Russia or pushing it in a corner, by just closing an air corridor, to transport some small amounts of arms..... if it is such an easy thing to avoid it.
              Plus do not forget it, even they do close the Mediterranean and Iranian access, Russia has still the possibility to use ships. From Sebastopol to Tartus/Latakia/Beirut, it will take a maximum 3 days for any decent cargo....

              The real point might be:
              - or it is fuss, Russians trying to force Bulgarians and Greeks to deny their alignement, thus trying to crack the NATO block against them.
              - or it is the versus, the US trying to consolidate its block.
              - or it is really a concerted move by the US, in which cas the real question to be asked is: Does it mean, the US has a real possibility to close the Iraki airspace? If so, this is a major change.... and thus, it implies a huge change in Iran's positioning. That is NEWS....

              Comment


              • Re: Regional geopolitics

                Originally posted by Vrej1915 View Post
                Exact, thank you.
                But yet, here it has nothing to do with it.
                No one is starving Russia or pushing it in a corner, by just closing an air corridor, to transport some small amounts of arms..... if it is such an easy thing to avoid it.
                Plus do not forget it, even they do close the Mediterranean and Iranian access, Russia has still the possibility to use ships. From Sebastopol to Tartus/Latakia/Beirut, it will take a maximum 3 days for any decent cargo....

                The real point might be:
                - or it is fuss, Russians trying to force Bulgarians and Greeks to deny their alignement, thus trying to crack the NATO block against them.
                - or it is the versus, the US trying to consolidate its block.
                - or it is really a concerted move by the US, in which cas the real question to be asked is: Does it mean, the US has a real possibility to close the Iraki airspace? If so, this is a major change.... and thus, it implies a huge change in Iran's positioning. That is NEWS....
                PS: I'm not denying that a containment/encirclment of Russia plan exists. Of course it does, and long ago. Just as similar plans exist at least against Turkey, Iran and China.. but yet, in this specific case, I do not see this marginal detail explained only by that general sheme. There must be an other explanation....
                This simplistic explanation can't match.
                If they do fly as easily over Bagdad, this does not make sense to me.

                Comment


                • Re: Regional geopolitics

                  Originally posted by Vrej1915 View Post
                  Exact, thank you.
                  But yet, here it has nothing to do with it.
                  No one is starving Russia or pushing it in a corner, by just closing an air corridor, to transport some small amounts of arms..... if it is such an easy thing to avoid it.
                  Plus do not forget it, even they do close the Mediterranean and Iranian access, Russia has still the possibility to use ships. From Sebastopol to Tartus/Latakia/Beirut, it will take a maximum 3 days for any decent cargo....

                  The real point might be:
                  - or it is fuss, Russians trying to force Bulgarians and Greeks to deny their alignement, thus trying to crack the NATO block against them.
                  - or it is the versus, the US trying to consolidate its block.

                  - or it is really a concerted move by the US, in which cas the real question to be asked is: Does it mean, the US has a real possibility to close the Iraki airspace? If so, this is a major change.... and thus, it implies a huge change in Iran's positioning. That is NEWS....
                  The plan to isolate Russia on and off exists from early Victorian times. Brits are the architects by their "big game". They had this kind of plans against French and Germsns too by cutting and isolating them from their colonies.
                  However this time it is more likely the issue is about putting political pressure from one block to other.
                  U.S. Is trying to consolidate it's influence in area and Russia playing exaggerating PR theatrical, since U.S. Power being huge, still lacks direction and is not unanimously supported among all members.
                  Russia is always trying to explore cracks in NATO.
                  Denying the airspace automatically puts bulgaria's pro west elite under pressure from pro Russia sector in that country.
                  Last edited by Hakob; 09-08-2015, 06:40 PM.

                  Comment


                  • Re: Regional geopolitics

                    US SEEKS OCCUPATION AS US FIGHTERS FLOOD SYRIA

                    [ Part 2.2: "Attached Text" ]

                    08.09.2015 Author: Tony Cartalucci

                    Column: Politics
                    Region: Middle East
                    Country: Syria

                    300664221 US corporate-funded policy think-tank, the Brookings
                    Institution, published a June 2015 paper titled, "Deconstructing Syria:
                    Towards a regionalized strategy for a confederal country."

                    The signed and dated open-conspiracy to divide, destroy, invade,
                    then incrementally occupy Syria using no-fly-zones and both US and
                    British special forces is now demonstrably underway.

                    The paper would lay out in no uncertain terms that (emphasis added):

                    The idea would be to help moderate elements establish reliable safe
                    zones within Syria once they were able. American, as well as Saudi and
                    Turkish and British and Jordanian and other Arab forces would act in
                    support, not only from the air but eventually on the ground via the
                    presence of special forces as well. The approach would benefit from
                    Syria's open desert terrain which could allow creation of buffer zones
                    that could be monitored for possible signs of enemy attack through a
                    combination of technologies, patrols, and other methods that outside
                    special forces could help Syrian local fighters set up.

                    Were Assad foolish enough to challenge these zones, even if he somehow
                    forced the withdrawal of the outside special forces, he would be likely
                    to lose his air power in ensuing retaliatory strikes by outside forces,
                    depriving his military of one of its few advantages over ISIL. Thus,
                    he would be unlikely to do this.

                    Not only does Brookings lay out an open conspiracy to invade and
                    occupy Syria, it does so with the open admission that the goal is
                    not to degrade the fighting capacity of the so-called "Islamic State"
                    (ISIS or ISIL), but rather to undermine and eventually overthrow the
                    Syrian government. In fact, Brookings makes a point of stating that the
                    goal would be to seize and hold Syrian territory to further advance
                    American ambitions toward regime change, and would move quickly to
                    degrade the Syrian government's ability to resist ISIS if any attempts
                    were made by Damascus to stop the US invasion.

                    News reports have trickled out regarding US and British "fighters"
                    operating in Syria. Their backgrounds, affiliations, logistical
                    support, and transportation to the battlefield have been intentionally
                    left ambiguous by the Western media. Occasionally, open admissions
                    are made that US and British special forces are operating in Syria,
                    with one recent report indicating British Special Air Service (SAS)
                    operators were in Syria "dressed as ISIS fighters." The UK Express
                    reported in their article, "SAS dress as ISIS fighters in undercover
                    war on jihadis," that:

                    The unorthodox tactic, which is seeing SAS units dressed in black and
                    flying ISIS flags, has been likened to the methods used by the Long
                    Range Desert Group against Rommel's forces during the Second World War.

                    More than 120 members belonging to the elite regiment are currently
                    in the war-torn country on operation Shader, tasked with destroying
                    IS equipment and munitions which insurgents constantly move to avoid
                    Coalition air strikes.

                    Of course, this alleged and very risky military operation to "destroy
                    IS equipment and munitions" in Syria begs belief as all of ISIS'
                    equip first enters Syria at the very Turkish-Syrian border the SAS
                    likely staged to begin their operation. Strategically and tactically,
                    interdicting ISIS' supplies before they reach Syria would effectively
                    cripple ISIS' fighting capacity in the matter of weeks. It is clear
                    that the SAS and other Western special forces are not in Syria to
                    fight ISIS, but as Brookings itself admits, to take and hold Syrian
                    territory from which terrorist groups, including ISIS can more safely
                    wage war against Damascus.

                    As the number of US and British forces on the ground in Syria grow,
                    a variety of cover stories have been invented. The latest has been
                    posited by Foreign Policy magazine. In their report titled, "Meet
                    the Americans Flocking to Iraq and Syria to Fight the Islamic State,"
                    they claim:

                    ...the number of Americans traveling abroad to fight the Islamic
                    State is picking up, with 44 percent of all fighters identified in
                    the report arriving between May and mid-August of 2015. Whether you
                    think of them as brave patriots stepping up to oppose a pressing
                    threat or meddlesome war tourists taking foolish risks, one thing
                    seems certain: More Americans will be arriving in Iraq and Syria to
                    take up the fight against the Islamic State in the near future.

                    The anecdotes used to qualify Foreign Policy's claims that these
                    fighters are "volunteers" and not special forces or paid mercenaries
                    are the clearest indication that the article, and many like it,
                    are a cover story. Ironically, it would be one of Cass Sunstein's
                    "independent credible voices," Eliot Higgins - who regularly claims
                    Russian volunteers in Ukraine are in fact sanctioned by Moscow -
                    who would publish a "report" supporting Foreign Policy's "volunteer"
                    premise.

                    In reality, Foreign Policy is covering up the immediate implementation
                    of admitted and documented US foreign policy to invade and occupy
                    Syrian territory using special forces. A growing number of US and
                    British special forces in Syria to take and hold territory will
                    be impossible to cover up perpetually, so alternative narratives
                    explaining the large and growing numbers of Western fighters in Syria
                    has been fabricated.

                    And while the prospect of volunteers travelling to Syria is not
                    entirely fantastical, the transportation, funding, arming, and both
                    tactical and political support of these fighters requires state
                    resources. The fact that American citizens are forbidden by law to
                    partake in foreign conflicts in this manner, yet are able to freely
                    enter Turkey, then cross at Turkish-controlled checkpoints to fight in
                    Syria - like the flow of weapons, supplies, and fighters to bolster
                    ISIS at these same checkpoints - suggests stated US foreign policy
                    to both use armed terrorist groups to overthrow the Syrian government
                    by proxy, and now the use of US and British military forces to do so
                    directly, is being executed before the eyes of the world.

                    Tony Cartalucci, Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer,
                    especially for the online magazine"New Eastern Outlook".

                    Firstappeared:http://journal-neo.org/2015/09/08/us...-as-us-fighter
                    s-flood-syria/
                    Hayastan or Bust.

                    Comment


                    • Re: Regional geopolitics

                      Assange on 'US Empire', Assad govt overthrow plans & new book 'The WikiLeaks Files' (EXCLUSIVE)

                      VIDEO


                      Afshin Rattansi goes underground with the world's most wanted publisher – the founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange. He just co-authored a book called “The WikiLeaks Files,” which paints a picture of systemic US torture and killing as well as the destruction of the lives and livelihoods of billions of people right around the world.

                      We speak to Julian about the UK/US special relationship, when he is going to be free, and the war on Syria.

                      .
                      Politics is not about the pursuit of morality nor what's right or wrong
                      Its about self interest at personal and national level often at odds with the above.
                      Great politicians pursue the National interest and small politicians personal interests

                      Comment

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