Wednesday, December 02, 2015

Two stories from Defense News (http://www.defensenews.com)

How much you wanna bet that Republican politicians secretly want ISIS to succeed because that would mean Obama failing?

How much you wanna bet that your garden-variety Tea Partier would denounce Defense News as "a liberal rag" because it doesn't agree with what he or she wants to think is going on with ISIS?

Air campaign cripples ISIL oil industry in Syria

           
A U.S.-led air campaign aimed at crippling the Islamic State's oil business knocked out the militant's main oil infrastructure in Syria, dealing a major blow to the group's finances, U.S. officials said Tuesday.

The airstrikes have largely shut down the Deir ez-Zorfacility in Syria, which accounted for about two-thirds of the Islamic State's oil revenue, said Col. Steve Warren, the U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad. "We do believe we pretty much turned off the Deir ez-Zor oil capacity," he said.

The damage follows a month-long air campaign aimed at crippling the Islamic State's black market oil business.
The Treasury Department has estimated the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS, brings in $500 million a year from selling discounted oil on the black market. The Pentagon says about half the terror group's revenue comes from oil.

Deir ez-Zor is a major oil-producing region in part of eastern Syria controlled by the Islamic State militants.

U.S. officials acknowledge the damage to the Islamic State's revenue may not have an immediate impact on operations.

"It's not a knockout," Warren said. "It's a body blow."

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said in congressional testimony Tuesday that refinements in intelligence allowed coalition aircraft to specifically target parts of the oil infrastructure that directly benefit the Islamic State.

Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the aim is to prevent militants from producing and shipping oil without permanently destroying the infrastructure, so it can be restored once the civil war in Syria ends.

The air campaign is called Tidal Wave II, after the World War II air campaign aimed at destroying oil refineries in Romania to cut off oil for the Axis powers.
The U.S.-led coalition has targeted Islamic State oil infrastructure since bombing began more than a year ago, frequently hitting mobile oil refineries. But militants were able to quickly repair oil infrastructure after it was hit.

This year, Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, commander of U.S. Central Command, ordered a review of the bombing campaign to determine whether more effective targets could be developed.

Staff officers developed a broader list of targets, including well heads, oil collection points, trucks and the distribution network.

As part of the campaign, coalition aircraft destroyed 399 tanker trucks that were used to deliver black market oil, the Pentagon said. Before launching the airstrikes, the coalition dropped leaflets instructing the drivers to abandon their vehicles. To reinforce the message, aircraft dropped bombs in front of and behind the convoys.

Dunford said the drivers were not considered combatants.

Knocking out a large chunk of the Islamic State's revenue is a blow to the militants, but the group still gets much of its money from other sources, including extortion and taxing businesses and individuals in areas it controls, said Jeff White, an analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

The coalition will continue to strike oil infrastructure to ensure militants are not able to rebuild the industry, the Pentagon said.

"You have to keep hitting them," White said. "There's a market for the oil. People are going to try and produce it."

*****

Islamic State defections mount as death toll rises, U.S. official says

           
WASHINGTON — Defections of Islamic State fighters — a closely watched measure by officials of U.S.-led coalition — have begun to thin the ranks of the militants in Iraq in the last month, intelligence reports and drone footage show.

Wholesale defections, sparsely-manned checkpoints and elite foreign fighters pressed into mundane duty indicate that the U.S.-led bombing campaign and advances by Kurdish forces are eroding the forces of the Islamic State, also known as ISIL, said Army Col. Steve Warren, the top spokesman for the counter-ISIL coalition in Baghdad.

Top military officials estimate that the campaign has killed 23,000 Islamic State fighters, raising their death toll by 3,000 since mid-October. Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, who oversees U.S. military operations in the Middle East as chief of Central Command, told troops last week in Iraq that the campaign is inflicting maximum pain on the enemy, according to a military official who attended the meeting but who was not authorized to speak publicly about it.
Warren cautioned that evidence of Islamic State manpower shortages was largely anecdotal. When indicators are combined, however, they show strains on the group's fighting force, he said. Islamic State fighters continues to field about 20,000 to 30,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria, and they hold key Iraqi cities of Mosul and Ramadi, and large portions of Syria.

It's also too soon to tell if apparent strain on the group is a long-term trend, said Michael O'Hanlon, a military expert at the Brookings Institution. "I view those as provisional signs of progress," O'Hanlon said. "Individual metrics like these can be deceptive, especially given the difficulty of measuring things accurately. I'd tend to agree with CENTCOM that these anecdotes and snippets of information sound promising, but just remain a bit more skeptical until we see some more indicators and see what happens when more time passes."

Near Kirkuk in the last week, 90 Islamic State fighters laid down their arms and turned themselves over to Kurdish peshmerga forces, Warren said. The former fighters were local men who had been coerced into joining the jihadists and have grown disillusioned with the cause or simply saw a way to quit the fight by turning themselves in.

The Kurds in Syria and Iraq, backed by U.S. airstrikes and advisers, have dealt ISIL blows recently on the battlefield. A peshmerga-led attack in northern Iraq two weeks ago seized the village of Sinjar, which sits astride a key highway and supply line for Islamic State forces. Meantime, over the last few days, Iraqi security forces completely surrounded Ramadi, capturing the last bridge jihadi fighters had used for resupply.
Another sign of reduced Islamic State manpower has been found at its road checkpoints, Warren said.

Footage from surveillance drones shows fewer fighters manning those posts than in previous months.

One result has been the ability of more civilians to escape Islamic State-held territory, he said, including a group of 22 people who recently fled Ramadi. That city has been held by the jihadists after a larger force fled without a fight.

Increasingly, Islamic State forces have had to call on its better-equipped and trained foreign forces for such mundane duty as manning checkpoints, Warren said. ISIL has employed foreign fighters as its "shock troops" to seize territory and as quick-reaction forces to respond to Kurds and other coalition forces.

Austin's remarks about the number of Islamic State fighters killed are considered sensitive. The Pentagon does not release those figures because, at least publicly, it does not consider death tolls to provide a completely accurate measure of progress. The numbers also evoke the discredited "body counts" from the Vietnam War.

However, the military does keep track the toll of Islamic State dead, indicating that it does consider the death toll a useful metric. In July, officials noted that the U.S.-led bombing campaign, which began in 2014, had killed 15,000 Islamic State fighters. That number has climbed steadily to the 23,000, Austin noted last week.

Despite the heavy loss of Islamic State fighters, the terrorist group continues to replenish its ranks and has shown the ability to strike outside of the Middle East as the attack in Paris showed.

Unnnh...AlterNet dump!

Greetings, Gentle Dot Calm Readers!

I've been meaning to post at least parts of these AlterNet summaries for some time now, as you'll see from the content, but I was too angry about the Planned Parenthood mass shooting incited by Carly Fiorina and the other hate mongers among the Republican presidential candidates, politicians, and media.

Do yourself a favor: scroll down and, if you do nothing else, at least click through on the comics and cartoons. Jen Sorenson and Tom Tomorrow--my favorites--are always honest and insightful.

Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet
For years, other police tried, and failed, to oust the racist cops. READ MORE»

Janet Allon, AlterNet
The Nightly Show host asks the Trump campaign, 'How stupid do you think we are?' READ MORE»

David Smith, The Guardian
Mustafa al-Aziz al-Shamiri was low-level Islamist foot soldier, not al-Qaida courier and trainer as had been believed. READ MORE»

By Amanda Marcotte, Salon
Democrats are always accused of playing 'identity politics.' The reality is that Republicans do it far more. READ MORE»

By Christian Felber, Zed Books
On the free market it is legal and customary to violate the dignity of our fellow human beings. READ MORE»

By Janet Allon, AlterNet
GOP frontrunner wants U.S. to stop "fighting a politically correct war." READ MORE»

By Walter Einenkel, DailyKos
It won’t be surprising to most on the left that the Christians that kill people in order to protest killing are hypocrites. READ MORE»

By Bobby Azarian, Raw Story
Studies may shed some light on why white police officers who aren’t consciously racist are quick to pull the trigger on black men. READ MORE»

By Jay Syrmopoulos, The Free Thought Project
Amateur video taken at the Turkish-Syrian border appears to show Turkish soldiers greeting ISIS militants with open arms. READ MORE»

By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Exxon accused Columbia University journalism students of producing inaccurate and misleading articles. READ MORE»

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In exchange for the digital goods we crave, we willingly give Google, Facebook and others access to our entire private lives. READ MORE»

Valerie Tarico, AlterNet
It's one big "Who, me?" from the religious right after attacks like Colorado Springs. READ MORE»

Naomi Klein, The Guardian
Hollande is silencing those facing the worst impacts of climate change and its monstrous violence. READ MORE»

By Adele M. Stan, The American Prospect
With his lies about black people and the people of Jersey City, the question is why so many Americans want to believe him. READ MORE»

By Chauncey DeVega, Salon
White shooters live and maybe get a Whopper on the way to jail. Black suspects don't get the same royal treatment. READ MORE»

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment
Putin is attempting to shore up the government of Bashar al-Assad, while Turkey hopes to see it overthrown by Muslim fundamentalist rebels. READ MORE»

By Tana Ganeva, AlterNet
"Anti-choice rhetoric must end, or anti-choice violence never will," noted the head of NARAL's Colorado branch. READ MORE»

By Carrie Weisman, AlterNet
At the root of "phallic adoration" is a rich tradition of symbolism; a culture of images that begin and end with the penis. READ MORE»

By Peter Seidel, 360° Editions
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By David Edwards, Raw Story
The church later 'urged the [family] not to pursue criminal charges against the perpetrator,' the lawsuit stated. READ MORE»

By Andrew Emett, The Free Thought Project
These predatory prison departments are willing to sacrifice people’s futures in order to fuel their failing, bloated budgets. READ MORE»

Kali Holloway, AlterNet
A Brazilian group is turning racist social media messages into signs everyone can see in the neighborhoods where they were written. READ MORE»

Barbara Ehrenreich, TomDispatch
A combination of downward mobility and racial resentment may be an invitation to the kind of despair that leads to suicide in one form or another. READ MORE»

Elias Isquith, Salon
It's time we understand inequality as a women's issue, authors of a new report on women in the economy tell Salon. READ MORE»

By Jen Sorensen, AlterNet
What if the spotlight was on white males instead of Syrian refugees? READ MORE»

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The criminalization and mass incarceration of people who use illicit drugs have facilitated the spread of HIV/AIDS. READ MORE»

By Rory Carroll, The Guardian
Pornography’s de facto global ambassador faces backlash after Stoya and other performers accuse him of attacks. READ MORE»

By Molly Redden, The Guardian
Current and former employees across the US have spoken up about the ‘constant state of fear’ in their daily lives. READ MORE»

By Andrew Emett, The Free Thought Project
Unable to clearly explain why the 86 minutes disappeared, Police Supt. Garry McCarthy blamed the missing files on technical difficulties. READ MORE»

Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet
Researchers trace the super rich's biases and political values. READ MORE»

Valerie Tarico, AlterNet
If you keep issuing calls to take up arms, someone is eventually going to take the message and run with it. READ MORE»

Roberto Lovato, AlterNet
Protesters refuse to let talk of terrorism distract from the importance of the climate talks. READ MORE»

By Phillip Smith, AlterNet
Civil asset forfeiture is big business for cops. READ MORE»

By John Cusack, AlterNet
The film maker and actor recorded his chats with the author and the pair documented their recent journeys. READ MORE»

By Devona Walker, PULSE
Invading a country and 'killing the head of terrorism' will not solve the problem. READ MORE»

By Scott Eric Kaufman, Salon
MSNBC's Joe Scarborough asks -- where's the 9/11 video of Muslims cheering the attacks? READ MORE»

By Brian McFadden, AlterNet
Let's get Bill Nye on the case to fight climate deniers. READ MORE»

By Mark Weisbrot, Oxford University Press
The eurozone crisis is a perfect example of the damage done when people in high places make basic mistakes. READ MORE»

By Nicole Mormann, TakePart
Costco is now one of more than 60 U.S. supermarket chains rejecting the laboratory fish. READ MORE»

By Travis Gettys, Raw Story
A bizarre conversation in a cab leads to tragic violence. READ MORE»

By Stephen Jay Schwartz , The Fix
As a recovering sex addict, I couldn't stop having sex. So my wife and I came up with a simple solution. READ MORE»

Kali Holloway, AlterNet
Turns out the hangovers aren't the worst part about all those keg stands you did back in college. READ MORE»

Nomi Prins, Tom Dispatch
The six top Republican candidates take economic policy into the wilderness. READ MORE»

Ben Jacobs, Dan Roberts, The Guardian
For months, Trump has defied the laws of political gravity by maintaining his lead despite a never-ending string of controversies. READ MORE»

By Robert Brotherton, Salon
There are reams of scientific literature, and then the comfort of conspiracy theory. Why do we favor the latter? READ MORE»

By Phillip Smith, AlterNet
Is it possible that the walls will crumble even faster than we think? READ MORE»

By Gwynne Taraska, Center for American Progress
As always, the potential for discord and deadlock pervades the climate negotiations. READ MORE»

By Ellen Brown, Web of Debt blog
In uncertain times, “cash is king,” but central bankers are systematically moving to eliminate that option. READ MORE»

By Tom Lamont , The Guardian
Sergio Canavero says he will change medical history as soon as 2017 – he even has a volunteer. Can it be done? READ MORE»

By Matt Agorist, The Free Thought Project
To make matters even worse, all the data collected in the process would be a matter of public record. READ MORE»

By David Edwards, Raw Story
Kooiman was amused that the rescue team had used jackhammers to remove the man from the chimney. READ MORE»

By Scott Alexander Hess, The Fix
Acting out sexual fantasies in a safe context can be liberating. But with the explosion of "sex addiction," the kick people get from kink looks increasingly like a symptom. READ MORE»


Janet Allon, AlterNet
The six-hour ordeal has resulted in three fatalities, including one police officer. Nine others were injured, including five officers. READ MORE»

Sonali Kolhatkar, Truthdig
The Trump campaign isn't being discreet. READ MORE»

Thom Hartmann, AlterNet
Criminal legal reform has become one of the very few legitimately bipartisan issues in US politics. READ MORE»

By Paul Buchheit, AlterNet
There exists a common theme amidst these signs of societal decay. READ MORE»

By Arthur Neslen, The Guardian
French police arrest activists for flouting ban on organizing protests during climate talks next week. READ MORE»

By Phillip Smith, AlterNet
Drug enforcement traffic checkpoints are illegal. So what was the Harford County sheriff up to when he started rolling checkpoints? READ MORE»

By Travis Gettys, Raw Story
“I think a sex strike could really work on college campuses where there’s an abundance of sexual harassment or date rapes," said the director. READ MORE»

By Sean Illing, Salon
In his speech last week, Sanders said what every presidential candidate ought to say about ISIS and the Middle East. READ MORE»

By Nicholas Kusnetz , The Center for Public Integrity
This is just embarrassing. READ MORE»

By Phil Miller, Open Democracy
Commercial contractors routinely belt immigration detainees into restraints so extreme that they are rarely used in prisons. READ MORE»

By William N. Grigg, The Free Thought Project
Owing to her privileged status, Sarah Furay has a very good chance to escape the ruinous punishment that would be inflicted on most defendants in her situation. READ MORE»

By Katherine Gammon, TakePart
Scientists have invented a device that uses acoustics to mimic the mating call of an insect that has been devastating Florida's orange groves. READ MORE»

Janet Allon, AlterNet
Details still emerging in developing story. One officer reportedly shot. READ MORE»

Amanda Marcotte, Salon
New numbers prove that Trump is pulling support from the highly xenophobic Republican contingent. READ MORE»

David Neiwert, Southern Poverty Law Center
White supremacists involved in Minneapolis mayhem left behind a trail of emails, chat rooms, websites, reveling in the extremist right. READ MORE»

Agence France-Presse
Rivals and party leaders are starting to wonder how committed Trump is to democratic values. READ MORE»

By Janet Allon, AlterNet
The columnist looks at Europe for a lesson in how to be an imperfect union. READ MORE»

By Agence France Presse, Agence France Presse
Trump is not alone among the candidates in distorting the truth, according to fact-checkers. READ MORE»

By Ben Lilliston, YES! Magazine
The next big trade deal is poised for a congressional vote in 2016. Here's what that means for the planet. READ MORE»

By Justin Gardner, The Free Thought Project
Does using criminals or actually becoming them, justify the path to security? American law enforcement tends to think so. READ MORE»

By Dan McCue, Courthouse News
Its smirkily subversive message finds new adherents every year, while in its familiar glow longtime acquaintances grow young again. READ MORE»

Kali Holloway, AlterNet
Does the company's stated policy contradict the newly announced change? READ MORE»

Hunter, Daily Kos
Can someone call this guy out? READ MORE»

Leo Gerard, AlterNet
They intend to gorge themselves until there’s nothing left for workers. READ MORE»

By Kali Holloway, AlterNet
Wet nursing isn't so common anymore, but these moms are still practicing it, saying it's only natural. READ MORE»

By Andrew O'Hehir, Salon
There's a message in Todd Haynes' luminous, lesbian-themed movie masterpiece: Love hurts, and keeps us alive READ MORE»

By Claire Phipps, The Guardian
Republican front-runner twisted his arms in apparent imitation of reporter's arthrogryposis. READ MORE»

By Sophia Tesfaye, Salon
Doocy and Kilmeade will lose their Curvy Couch partner come year's end. READ MORE»

Media Matters for America
Kilmeade says Kool-Aid 'reminds him of the summer.' READ MORE»

Kali Holloway, Adam Johnson, AlterNet
Fox spends 364 days a year misinforming your loved ones. Do your part one day a year setting them straight. READ MORE»

Heather Digby Parton, Salon
The bizarre spectacle of Trump's candidacy has one word on everyone's mind: 'Fascism.' READ MORE»

Reynard Loki, AlterNet
A look on the bright side of the environment, sustainability, renewable energy, food safety, food security, organic food systems and animal welfare. READ MORE»

By Brandon Smith, The Guardian
The lack of sound in the recording and the perfunctory way the officers moved and behaved made a horrifying act seem normal. READ MORE»

By Jim Hightower, AlterNet
We face a momentous choice: a food future rooted in the ethic of sustainable agriculture or in exploitative agri-industry. READ MORE»

By Carrie Weisman, AlterNet
What you might not know about the traditional Thanksgiving feast. READ MORE»

By David Ferguson, Raw Story
Files include psychiatric assessments of the five men, records of abuse allegations and the abbey’s responses dating back from the 1960s. READ MORE»

By Patrick Cockburn, CounterPunch
Leaders of NATO countries will want to prevent further Russian-Turkish hostilities. READ MORE»

By Jeff Bryant, Campaign for America's Future
What you really need to know about the chains that run charter schools. READ MORE»

By Matt Agorist, The Free Thought Project
As hundreds of thousands of rape kits collect dust and remain untested, cops are quick to raid a group of elderly women playing mahjong. READ MORE»

Janet Allon, AlterNet
It comes to you courtesy of John Oliver. READ MORE»

Scott Timberg, Salon
The media accepts that ‘people who resort to violence are left-wing or Arab or both.’ READ MORE»

Janet Allon, AlterNet
Who could have predicted the totally predictable? Why, the Donald, of course! READ MORE»

By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
The national director of Black Youth Project 100 explains why she declined a meeting with Mayor Rahm Emanuel. READ MORE»

By Jen Sorensen, AlterNet
We've (sadly) come a long, long way from the true meaning of Thanksgiving. READ MORE»

By Janet Allon, AlterNet
New York's transit authority bizarrely decides to accept advertising for Amazon's "Man in the High Castle," then yanks it. READ MORE»

By Tom Tomorrow, AlterNet
John Kasich even proposed a propaganda bureau to spread 'Judeo-Christian values.' READ MORE»

By Yessenia Funes, YES! Magazine
Like refugees everywhere, my mom gave her children the gift of a better life — and an understanding of what it means to risk everything for it. READ MORE»

By William N. Grigg, The Free Thought Project
Police are prey where powerful, murderous gangs have declared a very real war on cops. READ MORE»

By David Edwards, Raw Story
The former neurosurgeon noted that he changed his mind about abortion after realizing it was like 'slavery.' READ MORE»

By Jordan Hoffman, The Guardian
The filmmaker is back at the top of his game with this incendiary look at life in a gang-ravaged Chicago. READ MORE»

Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet
The latest Iowa polls show Ted Cruz closing in on Donald Trump. READ MORE»

Chauncey DeVega, Salon
Minneapolis shooting is no surprise. Trump, O'Reilly and others have ratcheted rhetoric toward violence for months. READ MORE»

Zach Stafford, The Guardian
State’s attorney says the officer's actions ‘were not justified or the proper use of deadly force.' READ MORE»

By Kali Holloway, AlterNet
The right wing is full of paranoia. READ MORE»

By Don Hazen, AlterNet
We believe that we can help create a more sane and caring world. READ MORE»

By Rebecca Gordon, TomDispatch
According to the Corruption Perception Index of Transparency International, our country comes in 17th in the least-corrupt sweepstakes. READ MORE»

By Travis Gettys, Raw Story
The men, described by some witnesses as white supremacists, wounded five demonstrators in Minnesota. READ MORE»

By Sarah Burris, Salon
It's a disaster, and not getting any better. READ MORE»

By Laura Flanders, AlterNet
Dorothy Day, co-founder of the Catholic Worker Movement, was clear that soup lines weren’t the answer to poverty. READ MORE»

By William N. Grigg, The Free Thought Project
Cops murder with impunity and the taxpayer is held responsible - and they call this 'justice.' READ MORE»

By Kimberley A. Johnson , Huffington Post
My open knees are none of your business. READ MORE»


Kali Holloway, AlterNet
Half of white Americans think the racial tables have turned against them. READ MORE»

Sophia A. McClennan, Salon
Colbert's ratings are down. Republicans are crowing they won't watch him. Indeed, they are afraid to be challenged. READ MORE»

Reynard Loki, AlterNet
One of America's once-most-trusted brands funds research downplaying the link between sugary drinks and obesity. READ MORE»

By Robert Kuttner, Huffington Post
There is no easy solution for the deepening disaffection from politics of society's most vulnerable. READ MORE»

By Joel Blaeser, Big House Publishing
An excerpt from the new book, Letters from Marion, will take you into the life and rage inside a Federal prison. READ MORE»

By Carrie Weisman, AlterNet
Women aren't the only ones who need to exercise their pelvic floor muscles. READ MORE»

By Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet
The candidate urges President Obama to act to stop the deal. READ MORE»

By Jessica Valenti, The Guardian
Forcing women to have babies is not only Isis-like, it's anti-family. READ MORE»

By Mari Ilona Szutenberg, xojane
Being an introvert is currently even more popular than being allergic to gluten, but for me, it's just a facade. READ MORE»

By Travis Gettys, Raw Story
“You can’t shoot somebody for a hypothetical citizen who never entered the fray,” said Marc Lamont Hill. READ MORE»


   
By Justin Gardner, The Free Thought Project
Citizens of Colorado are increasingly employing the use of jury nullification to keep innocents people out of cages - and it's driving prosecutors crazy. READ MORE»