Just some quick news stories I found interesting:
Australia will lead the international debate on Syria as of Sept 1/201, when they take the helm at the UN
So called 'activists' are smuggling evidence of chemical weapon use out of Syria
Female fighters of the FSA or Israeli IDF? Smart money says if these really are 'fighters' they are Israeli soldiers. (What's with the covered faces?)
If the activists have little to zero contact with the UN experts as they are admitting, then their will be no samples? Unless they are bogus samples? So called 'smuggled samples' would be useless as evidence.
Australia will lead the international debate on Syria as of Sept 1/201, when they take the helm at the UN
AS president of the UN Security Council from September 1, Australia will lead the international debate on the worsening Syrian crisis amid growing pressure on Moscow and Beijing to bring the Assad regime into line.
Australia takes the chair of the Security Council during the federal election "caretaker period", which means Kevin Rudd and Senator Carr would have to consult closely with Tony Abbott and the Coalition's foreign affairs spokeswoman, Julie Bishop.brian left this link regarding Australian war planners in Washington
Mr Rudd also reiterated Australia’s major alliance with the United States, where Australian military officers are working alongside the the US military in the Pentagon to help draw up war plans for an American-led intervention.Thanks brian!
So called 'activists' are smuggling evidence of chemical weapon use out of Syria
Female fighters in the Free Syrian Army hold their weapons along with banners as they take part in a demonstration condemning what activists say was a nerve gas attack by President Bashar al-Assad's forces in the Ghouta region east of Damascus |
Female fighters of the FSA or Israeli IDF? Smart money says if these really are 'fighters' they are Israeli soldiers. (What's with the covered faces?)
Beirut: Syrian activists say (but are they really ?)they are smuggling out body tissue samples from victims of an alleged chemical weapons attack outside Damascus and are trying to get them to a team of United Nations inspectors staying in a hotel a few miles away.
Only a few activists said they were confident that they had a contact who would be able to hand their samples to the UN inspectors.
Most activists in the area who spoke said they had also prepared samples to smuggle into the capital, but had little to zero contact with the UN experts and were unable to find a way to access the monitors inside their hotel.
If the activists have little to zero contact with the UN experts as they are admitting, then their will be no samples? Unless they are bogus samples? So called 'smuggled samples' would be useless as evidence.
An activist in Damascus who calls herself Alexia Jade confirmed that medics and activists in the suburbs have been trying to get samples out of the suburbs and were sending them to a secret location. She hinted there may be several organisations that the opposition would try to deliver the samples to, but would not give further details.
U.S. military officials have updated their options for a forceful intervention in Syria, a senior defense official told CNN on Friday.“Samples have been collected but the destination is confidential — and there may be more than one destination. The plan is to get the samples to someone who can actually do something about,” she told Reuters on Skype.
U.S. military officials have updated their options for a forceful intervention in Syria, a senior defense official told CNN on Friday.
The changes to previous plans included updating target lists for possible airstrikes, the official said. The official cautioned that these options were updated "to give the president a current -- and comprehensive -- range of choices," but that no decision was made at a national security meeting Thursday at the White House.
The official said that while there are certain static targets such as government buildings and military installations, the forces and equipment of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad "continue to move," and thus require flexibility in planning.
No formal determination has been made on whether the Syrian government used chemical weapons