Saturday, January 10, 2015

Army leaders address changes in virtual forum


(Tribune News Service) — Army leaders discussed new uniforms, training and other issues during a virtual town hall meeting last week.


The forum, featuring Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno and Sgt. Maj. of the Army Raymond Chandler, was broadcast live on YouTube.


Two groups of soldiers at Fort Bragg participated, including the 82nd Airborne Division and U.S. Army Special Operations Command.


The questions ran a fairly wide range.


Odierno said the Army will switch to the MutliCam uniform most associated with current deployments to Afghanistan but urged patience for those waiting on the Army Combat Uniform to be replaced.


He and Chandler addressed a pilot program that allows women to attend Ranger School.


In response to an 82nd Airborne question, Odierno said the Army is "totally dedicated" to increasing training budgets.


Odierno said the Army has to be ready for a dynamic world that "won't get easier."


In the past, there was a fairly predictable rotation to Iraq or Afghanistan, he said.


But in today's world, units could be deployed anywhere in the world and are found on five continents.


"That's changed," Odierno said. "You have to be prepared to deploy anywhere."


Odierno also urged patience in Iraq and Syria. He said defeating insurgents will be a two- to three-year process "at least" and urged caution for those worried about U.S. troops being thrust into combat roles.


"It's their nation, and they need to be the ones to fight for it," Odierno said.


Odierno said the Army needs to be at a higher readiness level than in years past because of the world's uncertainty and the shrinking force.


He acknowledged past training issues related to a lack of funding but said the Army is making progress, although he also said the force is two or three years away from where it needs to be.


"We're better than we were last year," he said.


On women in Ranger School, Odierno and Chandler said it is important that standards not change.


"Whether it's male or female, for us, that doesn't matter," Chandler said.


On the topic of other female units, they said they will look into the state of Cultural Support Teams. Those teams, small groups of female soldiers who are often attached to special operations forces, were used with success in Iraq and Afghanistan.


But training and selection have been limited with those wars shrinking.


Odierno called the teams "invaluable."


"They really did an incredible job both in Iraq and Afghanistan," he said.


———


©2015 The Fayetteville Observer (Fayetteville, N.C.)



Youth is served at season's first big meet


YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE, Japan – To paraphrase the title of a 1979 soundtrack album by “The Who:” The wrestling kids are all right.


Of the 26 weight-class finalists Saturday, 12 were underclassmen, six freshmen and six sophomores, lending a young touch to the revival of the Nile C. Kinnick Invitational “Beast of the Far East” Wrestling Tournament after a year’s hiatus.


“They’re more hungry,” said coach Ben Pak of Seoul Wrestling Club, whose sophomore Jarek Bartel, a transfer from Patch, Germany, won at 158 pounds by technical fall 18-7 over E.J. King’s Kajuan Garrett.


Sometimes, Pak said, veterans “can become overconfident” heading into bouts against their novice counterparts, “who can come in and swipe them away.”


Other winners from the young set were:


-- Host Kinnick’s Lucas Wirth by technical fall 10-0 over Kubasaki sophomore Zane Frilles at 101 pounds.


“I was kind of expecting it,” said Wirth, who may be new to Kinnick but is hardly new to wrestling, having competed in middle school in tournaments in Tennessee and Alabama.


“He’s been wrestling since he was 2, it seems,” Red Devils coach Gary Wilson said of Wirth, who works out in town against Japanese club wrestlers. “He’s a great kid, he practices hard, his parents are such dedicated supporters.”


-- Reigning Far East champ Chang Young Lee, a St. Mary’s International sophomore, pinned Kinnick freshman Calvin Mull at 108.


-- St. Mary’s sophomore Ryo Osawa rallied from 7-0 down to beat Kinnick junior Jianni Labato by technical fall 18-7 at 122.


-- Patrick Sledge, a Robert D. Edgren 180-pound sophomore, pinned Seoul sophomore Brandon Rothe in 1 minute, 18 seconds.


“Not too bad,” Eagles coach Justin Edmonds said of Sledge, who has lived at Misawa for 15 years and has spent winters working out with Edgren wrestling since 2009. “I’ve been dealing with him since the fifth grade. He may be the real deal.”


Other underclassmen who took second included Edgren’s Liam Knowles at 101 (he beat Frilles in a wrestleback), E.J. King’s Ahmeer Dinkins at 129, Seoul’s Hunter Lane at 135 and Kinnick’s Darius Swenson at 141.


“He’s a good wrestler,” said Lane’s conqueror, St. Mary’s Ryan Vasconcellos, the Far East 122-pound champion in 2013.


Vasconcellos, a second-generation Titans wrestler, beat Lane by technical fall 13-3.


Vasconcellos suffered an upset loss to Christian Academy Japan’s Sam Johnson in last February’s 135-pound Far East championship bout, a defeat that he says stays with him constantly and always provides him incentive to do better.


“Every day,” he says he thinks about the loss, adding that while he at times puts on a nonchalant public face, “some days it’s all I think about. It bothers me. It motivates me.”


Vasconcellos, Osawa and Lee were joined on the podium by fellow Titans Lucas Shiraki via a 2-0 decision over Kinnick’s Vincent Soiles at 115, Alberto Orsara by technical fall over Dinkins and Kazuho Kawashima by tech fall over Kinnick’s Brady Yoder at 148.


Other champions were Kinnick’s Dre Paylor, a first-year wrestler and two-time Pacific football rushing leader, at 168; Shinosuke Suwama of Shonan Military Academy at 141; and Kubasaki’s Josiah Allen and Christian Fernandez at 215 and heavyweight.


Paylor, in particular, put on a big-throw clinic, scoring three four-point feet-to-danger back throws. “He wasn’t a great tackler” in football, said Wilson, who serves as Kinnick’s defensive coordinator, “but he’s learning.”


Fernandez said after last season, when the Dragons had just three dual meets to prepare for Far East, the trip to “Beast” was a welcome act. “We’ll get more experience and more time wrestling than we had last year,” he said. “With the tournament, we get more experience so we can do work at Far East.”


While St. Mary’s had six champions, the Titans finished second behind Kinnick, which had only two winners but six seconds and placed wrestlers in the top four in 12 of 13 weights. Despite having just six wrestlers in tow, Seoul placed third with 41 points.


“We just came hoping to get some matches and improve, and that’s what we got,” Pak said.


ornauer.dave@stripes.com



From resupply to evacs, Afghan air support assumes growing role


KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — The maelstrom of dust settled just long enough for the soldiers to hurry a stretcher bearing the latest victim of an insurgent’s roadside bomb to the waiting helicopter.


In the back of the Russian-made Mi-17, the soldiers had to kick aside loose potatoes and onions that skidded across the floor, leftovers from the helicopter’s previous cargo, unloaded just minutes before at another desert outpost.


As international military forces have withdrawn most air support, the handful of Afghan air force helicopters have become more vital to commanders at these isolated military bases in Afghanistan’s restive south. Not only are the aircraft needed to evacuate a steady flow of soldiers and others wounded in the ongoing insurgency back to major hospitals, but they are also needed to transport cheap supplies like potatoes and firewood because ground transport is too dangerous.


The result, Afghan doctors say, is that quick medical evacuation has dried up for many victims, making the job of saving lives and limbs much harder, and sometimes impossible.


Making room


On this January day in Uruzgan province, Afghan National Army soldiers driving an armored Humvee hit an improvised explosive device. Two of the more seriously injured soldiers required evacuation to the Kandahar Regional Military Hospital at the ANA’s Camp Hero, near Kandahar Air Field.


Two Mi-17s were diverted from their planned mission of delivering supplies, but they first had to drop off thousands of pounds of fuel and food to make room for the casualties.


Just another day for the overstretched Afghan air force, which is struggling to fill the void left by the reduction in coalition air operations.


“Imagine you are injured by an IED, and you have to wait for hours or days to get to a hospital,” said ANA Lt. Col. Mohammed Sadiq, chief surgeon at Kandahar’s regional military hospital. “That is a disaster for the patient.”


The hospital Sadiq oversees in Kandahar is funded by international aid and boasts 100 beds with modern equipment in various laboratories, operating rooms, intensive care units and other facilities. But Sadiq says if critically injured patients don’t reach such advanced care in time, all those resources don’t matter.


Last year, Afghan security forces sustained nearly 10,000 casualties as fighting increased in several regions.


Former U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates pushed hard for injured American servicemembers to be able to reach advanced medical care within an hour of being wounded. Statistics show that at the height of U.S. operations, wounded soldiers who lived to make it to a large hospital like at Bagram Air Field had a 98 percent chance of survival.


The pair of ANA soldiers from Uruzgan were lucky; they both arrived within hours and their injuries were treatable.


Many others haven’t been as fortunate, however. Bismullah Hagmal, 24, a member of a local police militia near the border with Pakistan, stepped on an improvised bomb while patrolling a road. Border police drove him halfway to Kandahar, while Hagmal’s brother drove south from Kandahar to transport him the rest of the way.


The trip took 10 hours, leaving doctors little choice but to amputate Hagmal’s right leg, Sadiq said.


“The tourniquet wasn’t applied tightly enough, but even without that, had he been here sooner, there is a much higher chance we could have saved his leg,” the surgeon said. While overall evacuation times have dropped, it may take some patients up to 36 hours to reach a hospital, he said.


Soldiers tend to have the best chances, as the army usually has the better developed systems and more resources, Sadiq said. Police and civilians, while often treated by military doctors, often don’t have as immediate access to evacuation.


Military hospital officials in Kandahar say at least 65 percent of their patients are victims of IEDs. Gunshots account for 12 percent of injuries, while car crashes make up most of the rest.


The threat from roadside bombs is a double one: They not only cause injuries or death but can pose a serious danger to rescuers evacuating victims.


International forces, led by the United States, relied heavily on a vast fleet of military and contract helicopters to reduce the risk and to save time navigating bumpy dirt roads that connect many more remote locations in Afghanistan.


Limited resources


Afghan air crews have greatly reduced the amount of time it takes them to respond to evacuation requests, but their small number and limited resources leave most medical rescues to be made by ground across sometimes deadly terrain.


The Afghan Air Force’s Kandahar Air Wing has about 14 Mi-17 helicopters, six of which are usually ready to be flown at any one time. The wing also has 10 Cessna C-208 light fixed-wing aircraft, but these can be flown only to locations with developed runways.


With that small number of aircraft, the wing has responsibility for supporting military forces in six provinces, including some of Afghanistan’s most violent, such as Helmand. On top of evacuations, those six helicopters are tasked with delivering supplies and ammunition, transporting troops, dropping special forces into combat and performing other support roles.


“There are many challenges to overcome,” said Col. Mohammed Asrail Wardak, deputy commander of the Kandahar Air Wing. “We actually need 60 helicopters and crews to cover that territory, but we are making a difference however we can.”


Nooruddin Bakhshi contributed to this report.


Email: smith.josh@stripes.com

Twitter: @joshjonsmith



Boko Haram killed hundreds in Nigeria terror attacks, local officials say


KANO, Nigeria (Tribune Content Agency) — Hundreds of people have been killed in northeastern Nigeria in terror attacks in the past week, local officials say, as Boko Haram militants took control of 16 towns in a new humiliation for the country’s struggling armed forces.


Boko Haram gunmen stormed the town of Baga on Saturday, killing about 100, district head Baba Abba Hassan said. In all, hundreds appear to have died in attacks across the region, local officials said. But Hassan dismissed reports circulated on Internet social media sites that 2,000 people had been killed.


“To say 2,000 people were killed is on the high side. The death toll could run into several hundreds,” Hassan said, adding that no head count had been made.


“To add to our misery, Boko Haram fighters who remained in the area went on a burning spree, setting fire to our homes after looting them,” Hassan said.


Nigerian military authorities say they plan to launch a counterattack to regain control of Baga, a fishing community on the shores of Lake Chad adjacent to a military base. The base is part of a multinational effort to fight the Islamist militants with troops from Nigeria, Niger and Chad. But forces from Chad had not yet been deployed and Niger’s forces had withdrawn from the base before the Boko Haram attack took place.


Gruesome images have sprung up on Twitter, including ones showing hundreds of badly burned corpses laid out on a village square. One shocking image showed a woman and her baby, both burned to death. Images are accompanied by the hashtag #BokoHaramKilled2000People.


But, according to an African fact-checking agency, the picture of the corpses was taken after a fuel tanker explosion several years ago in the Republic of Congo. And the burned baby photo has been circulating since 2011, according to security analyst Yan St-Pierre.


Access to Nigeria’s troubled northeast region is difficult for security reasons, and those displaced by fighting tend to flee in different directions, making it impossible to confirm how many died in the recent attacks. Senator Maina Ma’aji Lawan said in a phone interview that the death toll of the attacks was “impossible to quantify at the moment.”


Babagana Kyari, a resident of Baga who fled to Chad, said hundreds of Boko Haram fighters attacked the town and nearby villages at dawn, driving residents away and attacking the military base.


“They overwhelmed the troops and forced them to abandon the base which the Boko Haram gunmen took over. The insurgents split into groups and attacked Baga, Doron-Baga and Bundaram villages, forcing everybody to flee. Gunmen on motorcycles pursued residents into the bush, shooting them dead.


“I managed to make it to the Lake (Chad) where I boarded a fishing boat along with dozen others and made across into Chad,” he said in a phone interview.


The Baga defeat was a serious blow for regional efforts to contain Boko Haram. Nigerian troops resisted the attack for several hours before running out of ammunition and fleeing, according to agency reports.


Abdullahi Bawa Wase, security analyst, said the loss of Baga was a devastating blow to Nigeria’s efforts to defeat Boko Haram.


“The capture of Baga is of enormous significance,” he said in an interview. “It has put a lie to the Nigerian government claim that it is on top of the situation.


“Baga was the last town in the hands of the Nigerian government in the region and now with the seizure of Baga the whole northern Borno is now under the control of Boko Haram. Their next move is predictable, which is expanding their territory southwards.”


He said Baga is an important regional economic center. “Baga as an agricultural and fishing center will provide huge economic benefits to Boko Haram, who will no doubt exploit its rich potentials for restocking and arming its fighters for its operations.”


Nigerian chief of military staff, Air Chief Marshall Alex Badeh, told journalists that Chadian troops had not reached the base at Baga before the attack, and had withdrawn from the border region. Troops from Niger withdrew from the base before the attack, leaving only Nigerian forces to confront Boko Haram.


However, Badeh said the multi-national effort to fight Boko Haram would continue as planned.


“Everybody is doing his best and trying to improve and reverse any noted setback,” Nigerian military spokesman Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade told the News Agency of Nigeria on Friday.


Baga has been attacked repeatedly in recent years, most recently in November, when militants cut the throats of 43 fishermen, drowning those who didn’t die from their wounds in the waters of Lake Chad.


Boko Haram, which has long terrorized northern Nigeria, kidnapped 276 schoolgirls in the northeastern town of Chibok in April. Hundreds more women and girls have been kidnapped, and thousands — mainly men and boys — have been killed.


The Council on Foreign Relations, which tracks security in Nigeria based on media reports, says that more than 16,000 people have been killed by Boko Haram since 2011, though it cautions that accounts are often sketchy.


The CFR said there has been a major increase in Boko Haram killings this past year, with about 11,000 Boko Haram killings in 2014, of the more than 16,000 killed by the group since 2011.


With Nigeria facing elections next month, the poor security situation in many parts of northeast Nigeria means many citizens will probably be unable to vote. Nigeria’s military has pledged to protect voters, but it does not control large portions in the northeast region. A low turnout in the northeast would probably help incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan, since northern elders have indicated they supported his opponent, 72-year-old former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari.


Some 7,300 people have fled their homes in the wake of Boko Haram attacks during the last week, according to the United Nations. In all, about 850,000 northeastern Nigerian residents have been displaced by fighting.


About 1,000 people are stranded on the island of Kangala in Lake Chad, according to the U.N.


Abubakar Gamandi, head of the fish traders’ union in Borno state, said he had phoned the trapped refugees. “They told me some of them are dying from lack of food, cold and malaria on the mosquito-infested island,” he said in an interview.


A spokesman for UNHCR, the U.N.’s refugee agency, said it and other humanitarian agencies were assisting the Nigerian refugees who have fled to Chad, Niger and Cameroon.


“We’re already providing plastic sheets, jerry cans, mats, blankets and kitchen tools. Other humanitarian organizations are distributing aid too,” UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said Friday in Geneva.


Los Angeles Times special correspondent Abubakar reported from Kano and Times staff writer Dixon from Johannesburg.


©2015 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Friday, January 9, 2015

US issues worldwide travel alert after recent terror attacks




WASHINGTON — The United States has issued a global travel warning after recent terror attacks in France, Australia and Canada.


The alert comes hours after French police killed three hostage-takers in a pair of incidents. Two of the men are thought to be responsible for Wednesday's attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo, a satirical magazine in Paris. Twelve people were killed in that assault, France's deadliest terror incident in decades.


The State Department's warning says attacks against Americans are becoming increasingly prevalent. It also cites an increased risk of reprisals against U.S. and Western targets for the U.S.-led intervention against Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq.


The warning also cited last month's hostage standoff at a Sydney cafe and the October killing of a soldier near Canada's parliament.




Health panel: Agent Orange C-123s may hold risk years after Vietnam


WASHINGTON — The health of some U.S. Air Force reservists could have been put at risk from the residue left in planes that sprayed Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, the Institute of Medicine reported Friday.


There's not much data about the level of contamination, but limited testing years later make it plausible that some reservists exceeded guidelines for exposure to the toxins in the defoliant, the report concluded.


At issue are 24 C-123 planes that, after the military stopped spraying Agent Orange, went on to be used by Air Force reserve units for such things as medical and cargo transport. About 1,500 to 2,100 personnel trained and worked on them between 1972 and 1982. Later, some reservists blamed cancer and other illnesses on residues left in the planes, but they were denied disability claims if they did not serve in Vietnam.


Friday's report, requested by the Department of Veterans Affairs, did not address disability policy but could influence future claims.


A committee of the institute, an independent agency that advises the government on health, examined the results of some air and surface tests taken for dioxin and herbicides in the planes between 1979 and 2009. The report stressed that there's little data, and little information about the reservists' activities on the planes.


But because chemical residues were found on interior surfaces, the reservists had some exposure, the committee decided, rejecting assertions that the dried material couldn't have spread. Some levels were in a range that international guidelines say merits "cautionary consideration," the panel said.


"Levels at the time of their exposure would have been at least as high as the taken measurements, and quite possibly, considerably higher," committee chairman Robert Herrick of the Harvard School of Public Health said in a statement Friday.


Put together, the available data "supports the expectation that the health of some of the personnel was adversely affected," the report said.



Army, Hawaii leaders make case against military downsizing in state


FORT SHAFTER, Hawaii — The Army is too important to Hawaii and Hawaii too vital to the Army to tolerate “worst-case” scenario troop cuts in the state, possible under sequestration in 2016.


The top Pacific Army commander, business leaders, legislators and even the newly elected Hawaii governor were in agreement on that simple equation Friday during an annual meeting of the Military Affairs Council of the Chamber of Commerce Hawaii.


The Army is in midst of finalizing force restructuring, with the original goal of reducing the number of active-duty soldiers to 490,000 by 2020.


RELATED: Stars and Stripes coverage of the Pacific pivot

In October, however, the Army released a supplemental report analyzing the reductions possibly necessary should further sequestration take place for fiscal year 2016, which begins in October. Troop levels could be cut to as low as 420,000.


Sequestration is a series of automatic, across-the-board cuts in discretionary spending, much of which is in defense. Congress and the White House enacted sequestration in 2011 after failing to agree on a plan to reduce the federal deficit.


The Hawaii chamber launched the Keep Hawaii’s Heroes campaign in November as a way of galvanizing the public and elected officials to voice opposition to the deep cuts.


“We are one of many states that are going to be in competition,” said David Carey, chairman of the chamber’s military council. “There’s no guarantee we will win, but if we don’t show up to play, we definitely will lose.”


The military is the second-largest economic sector in Hawaii, surpassed only by tourism.


Under the worst-case scenario, about 16,000 of roughly 18,400 soldiers at Schofield Barracks in Oahu would be trimmed. Almost 4,000 of 7,400 soldiers at Fort Shafter would be cut.


With the additional loss of about 30,000 family members, the cuts would reduce Honolulu’s population by about 5 percent.


RELATED: Stars and Stripes coverage of sequestration

“They are not anticipated numbers or planned numbers,” said Gen. Vincent Brooks, commander of U.S. Army Pacific, at the meeting. “They’re certainly not requested numbers.”


“The moral of the story is sequestration has to be relieved, one way or another,” Brooks said.


About 25 domestic bases would suffer “significant” socio-economic impact if the deep cuts were made, according to the supplemental Army study.


Communities surrounding those bases — which include forts Bliss and Hood in Texas and Fort Stewart in Georgia — will undoubtedly argue why deep cuts shouldn’t be made there.


In the meantime, Brooks and other speakers — including Pacific Command commander Lt. Gen. Anthony Crutchfield and Pacific Fleet commander Adm. Harry B. Harris, Jr. — made the case for the military importance of Hawaii.


“Hawaii has become a bastion for defense for U.S. national interests and also a significant point of projection for U.S. capabilities,” Brooks said.


“In Hawaii, there are nine general officers-led headquarters for the U.S. Army. That means that this is the place where we make our decisions.”


The strongest argument for maintaining a robust Army presence in Hawaii is President Barack Obama’s rebalance to the Pacific initiative, said several speakers.


Brooks said that there has been a 60 percent increase in Army forces in the Pacific region since the rebalance began. “That includes 40,000 more soldiers,” he said.


Crutchfield said that Hawaii had been central to the “steady forward progress” of the Pacific pivot.


To quantify that, he said that Pacific Command had received $9 billion in “rebalance initiatives across the theater” from 2012 to 2014.


“That $9 billion was tied directly to the rebalance, and we would not have received those resources had we not had that strategy,” he said.


“We must keep our foot on the accelerator of rebalance,” he said.


Crutchfield said that Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has announced that he will host another defense forum involving the U.S. and Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Hawaii this year. He will also meet with ASEAN defense ministers here as he did for the first time in April 2014.


“(Those are) two very important conferences that will highlight the strategic importance of the state of Hawaii,” Crutchfield said.


Gov. David Ige said that in the 1990s, many were talking about the 21st century being the century of the Pacific. Fifteen years in, “every single trend points to the importance of the Pacific” and of Hawaii’s place in it, Ige said.


“As governor, I’m prepared to work with each and every one of you,” he said to the collection of high-ranking brass and business leaders in attendance.


The Chamber of Commerce Hawaii is trying to get 40,000 signatures on its Keep Hawaii’s Heroes petition by Jan. 27. That’s the day U.S. Army officials arrive in Hawaii on a nationwide circuit of “listening sessions” soliciting comments on the force restructuring.


The first of two sessions in Oahu will be at the Hale Koa Hotel on Waikiki Beach that evening.


olson.wyatt@stripes.com

Twitter: @WyattWOlson



Al-Qaida in Yemen urges jihad, calls Paris attack 'revenge' for Muhammad's honor


CAIRO — The al-Qaida offshoot that claimed Friday to have masterminded the bloody rampage in France has been the most active of the terror network's branches in trying to strike in the West.


Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula said it directed the attack against the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris "as revenge for the honor" of Islam's Prophet Muhammad.


The strike would be the Yemen-based branch's first successful strike outside its home territory — and a triumph for its trademark double-strategy of waging jihad in Yemen to build its strength to strike abroad.


At least one of the two brothers involved in the attack on the weekly traveled to Yemen in 2011 and either received training from or fought alongside the group, authorities say. A U.S. intelligence assessment described to the Associated Press shows that 34-year-old Said Kouachi was trained in preparation to return home and carry out an attack.


Formed in 2009 as a merger between the terror group's Yemeni and Saudi branches, AQAP has been blamed for a string of unsuccessful bomb plots against American targets.


These include a foiled plan to down a Detroit-bound airliner in 2009 using a new type of explosive hidden in the bomber's underwear, and another attempt a year later to send mail bombs hidden in toner cartridges on planes bound to the U.S. from the Gulf.


The group's lead bomb maker, Ibrahim al-Asiri, is believed to have created the explosives used in both foiled plots.


Bill Roggio, editor of the Long War Journal, which chronicles militant activities, said Yemen's branch of al-Qaida has managed to seize territory inside Yemen, provide training and support for extremist groups operating in Syria, Iraq and other regions, and promote "lone wolf" attacks in the West.


"They are active in the heart of the Middle East. They threaten the Yemeni government and they are directing their activities externally as well," he said. "And they are serving to train and support in other theaters."


The group's leader, Nasser al-Wahishi, spent years as Osama bin Laden's personal assistant before returning to his native Yemen. His close ties to bin Laden gave him influence within the group's various branches and led to him assuming leadership of the core group after the al-Qaida leader's death.


His focus on networking with other militant groups in Africa, Iraq and Syria gave the Yemen branch particular prominence in the network.


The group was the first to use English publications to reach out to supporters in the West, with the launch in 2010 of its English-language magazine, Inspire. It featured commentary by a radical U.S.-born cleric, Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed in a U.S. drone strike in Yemen in 2011, but whose words are still influential in cyberspace.


The group has repeatedly threatened Charlie Hebdo and other cartoonists who have satirized the Prophet Muhammad. Charlie Hebdo editor Stephane Charbonnier, one of the 12 people slain in Wednesday's attack on the magazine, was on a hit list published in a 2013 edition of Inspire.


In claiming responsibility for directing the operation, a member of the al-Qaida affiliate said its leadership "chose their target carefully as revenge for the honor of the prophet."


He said France was targeted "because of its obvious role in the war on Islam and oppressed nations."


"The crimes of the Western countries, above them America, Britain and France will backfire deep in their home," he warned, adding that the group will continue al-Qaida chief Ayman al-Zawahri's policy of "hitting the snake's head ... until the West retreats."


He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized by the group to give his name. His comments in Arabic were later posted on Twitter by users known to be supporters of AQAP.


In the latest edition of Inspire, the group stressed its commitment to supporting lone wolf militants and small groups in attacks targeting their home countries. No expertise is needed to prepare attacks against Western targets, it said, urging strikes in "America, if not possible then the UK, if not, then in France."


Yemeni authorities suspect that Said Kouachi fought for al-Qaida in Yemen at the height of the group's offensive in the country's south, a Yemeni security official said Friday.


The group made major territorial gains in 2011, following the uprising that forced the country's longtime leader, Ali Abdullah Saleh, to step down after more than 30 years in power. Kouachi is believed to have joined the militant group's ranks in Abyan province, one of the provinces at the center of the militants' push, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of an ongoing investigation into Kouachi's stay in Yemen.


Al-Qaida militants and their allies seized several towns and cities in the south of the country before they were pushed back in a monthslong, U.S.-aided military campaign by government forces last year.


Now, the group is surging in strength, finding new support and recruits among the country's Sunni tribesmen, in a backlash to U.S. drone strikes and the rise to power of Shiite rebels who have taken over the capital and other parts of the country since September. The Long War Journal has recorded 149 attacks by the group in 14 provinces since September.


The militant group's ultimate goal, like the Islamic State, is a global caliphate, Roggio said.


"They have been very effective in their leadership, being able to survive a U.S. drone campaign and plotting attacks, as well as coordinating with other jihadists groups, he said. "It is a group that sent its fighters to multiple theaters and then re-tasked them to provide support to other jihadist groups."



Official: Federal prosecutors want felony charges against Petraeus


WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is weighing bringing criminal charges against former CIA Director David Petraeus over the handling of classified information, a U.S. official said Friday night. Investigators have presented senior-level Justice Department officials such as Attorney General Eric Holder with information on the case to help inform a decision on charging the retired four-star general, the official said.


The official was not authorized to discuss the investigation by name and spoke on condition of anonymity.


Robert Barnett, a lawyer for Petraeus, declined to comment Friday night, as did Marc Raimondi, a spokesman for the Justice Department.


Federal investigators have been looking into whether Petraeus improperly shared classified materials with his biographer, Paula Broadwell, with whom he admitted having an affair when he resigned from his position in November 2012. Agents found a substantial number of classified documents on Broadwell's computer and at her home, a law enforcement official has previously said.


Both have publicly apologized for the relationship. They have said their romantic relationship began only after he retired from the military and started at the CIA.


The scandal marked an abrupt fall for Petraeus, a man who led U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq and was thought to be a potential candidate for president. Since leaving the agency, he still makes relatively regular speaking appearances to discuss military combat and national security, including at a Sept. 11 commemoration event in Denver.


It was not immediately clear when any decision would be made on whether to charge Petraeus.


The New York Times reported Friday evening that prosecutors had recommended to Holder that Petraeus be charged and that the attorney general, who plans to leave his position as soon as his successor is confirmed, had been expected to make a decision by the end of last year.


Holder and FBI Director James Comey are frequently quizzed during Capitol Hill appearances about the status of the Petraeus investigation, with some members of Congress critical over the amount of time the investigation has taken.


Rep. Jason Chaffetz, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, told The Associated Press on Friday night that he was frustrated by the pace of the investigation and wanted a decision made soon.


"We need clarity one direction or another — either charge and prosecute him or declare his innocence and let him get on with his life," Chaffetz said. "What's intolerable is to have an American hero in limbo for literally years."


During a meeting with reporters at FBI headquarters last month, Comey was asked if he could say why the investigation had taken so long. Comey said he could, but would not.



French security forces kill al-Qaida-linked Paris attack suspects, accomplice


PARIS — With explosions and gunfire, security forces Friday ended three days of terror around Paris, killing the two al-Qaida-linked brothers who staged a murderous rampage at a satirical newspaper and an accomplice who seized hostages at a kosher supermarket to try to help the brothers escape.


The worst terrorist violence France has seen in decades killed at least 20 people, including the three gunmen. A fourth suspect — the common law wife of the market attacker — was still at large and thought to be armed.


Al-Qaida's branch in Yemen said it directed the attack against the publication Charlie Hebdo to avenge the honor of the Prophet Muhammad, a frequent target of the weekly's satire.


The brothers were not unknown to authorities: One had a terrorism-related conviction for ties to a network sending fighters to battle American forces in Iraq, and both were on the U.S. no-fly list, according to a U.S. official.


President Francois Hollande urged his nation to remain united and vigilant, and the city shut down a famed Jewish neighborhood amid fears of more violence.


"The threats facing France are not finished," Hollande said. "We are a free people who cave to no pressure."


The drama, which played out on live TV and social media, began with the brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi methodically massacring 12 people Wednesday at the Charlie Hebdo offices, stopping to shoot a wounded police officer in the head before escaping by car.


On Thursday, a gunman police identified as Amedy Coulibaly shot a policewoman to death south of Paris, although authorities were not sure at first whether it was related to the Charlie Hebdo shootings.


It all ended at dusk Friday with near-simultaneous raids in two locations: a printing plant in the town of Dammartin-en-Goele, northeast of Paris, where the Kouachis were holed up, and the Paris supermarket where Coulibaly killed four hostages and threatened more violence unless the police let the Kouachis go.


As scores of black-clad security forces surrounded both sites, booming explosions, heavy gunfire and dense smoke heralded the news that the twin sieges finally had ended.


The three gunmen were dead — but the authorities also discovered four dead hostages at the market. Sixteen hostages were freed, one from the printing plant and 15 others from the store.


The attackers had ties both to each other and to terrorist activities that reached back years and extended from Paris to al-Qaida in Yemen. They epitomized Western authorities' greatest fear: Islamic radicals who trained abroad and came home to stage attacks.


After the killings at the Charlie Hebdo offices, Cherif Kouachi, 32, and his 34-year-old brother Said led police on a chase around northeastern France, robbing a gas station and stealing a car before ending up at the printing plant in Dammartin-en-Goele, near Charles de Gaulle airport. One of the brothers was wounded in the neck at one point during a shootout with police after he commandeered a car, Paris Prosecutor Francois Molins said.


Authorities said the brothers temporarily took a man hostage at the plant but let him go, and a second man was later discovered to have been hiding inside the building.


A member of the al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula gave a statement in English to The Associated Press saying the group's leadership "directed the operations and they have chosen their target carefully."


The attack was in line with warnings from the late al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden to the West about "the consequences of the persistence in the blasphemy against Muslim sanctities," the member said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the group's regulations do not permit him to give his name.


The brothers were cornered there for much of the day before the explosions and gunfire rang out in the twilight and a police SWAT team clambered onto the roof.


"They said they want to die as martyrs," Yves Albarello, a local lawmaker inside the command post, told French television station i-Tele.


At the kosher grocery near the Porte de Vincennes neighborhood of the capital, the gunman burst in shooting just a few hours before the Jewish Sabbath began, declaring "You know who I am," the official recounted.


The attack came before sundown when the store would have been crowded with shoppers, and Hollande called it "a terrifying anti-Semitic act."


Coulibaly killed the four people in the market shortly after entering, Molins said.


Several people wounded in the grocery store were able to flee and get medical care, the official said.


About 100 students were locked down in nearby schools and the highway ringing Paris was closed.


The mayor's office also shut down all shops along Rosiers Street in the city's famed Marais neighborhood in the heart of the tourist district. Hours before the Jewish Sabbath, the street is usually crowded with shoppers. The street is also only a kilometer (half-mile) from Charlie Hebdo's offices.


Charles de Gaulle airport, not far from the standoff in Dammartin-en-Goele, briefly closed two runways to arrivals, and Hollande held a series of crisis meetings with his security team throughout the day.


Police released a photo of Coulibaly and his wife, Hayat Boumeddiene, described as an accomplice.


Authorities increasingly grew to see links between the attackers after they discovered that Boumeddiene and the companion of one of the Kouachi brothers had exchanged about 500 phone calls, Molins said.


He added that several people have been given preliminary charges in the investigation. They include relatives of the three gunmen.


Minutes before police stormed both sites, Coulibaly had threatened more violence if authorities launched an assault on the two brothers, a police official said. A group of people holed up in the supermarket's freezer — apparently unbeknownst to the gunman.


BFM also said it spoke with Coulibaly, who said he and the Kouachis were coordinating their actions, and that he was with the militant Islamic State group. The organizations are normally rivals.


The TV station said Coulibaly didn't hang up properly after the phone call and that this allowed police to hear him saying a final prayer before his death, perhaps suggesting that this prompted the police raid.


In the final assault, phalanxes of security forces converged on the store entrance behind a flash from a stun grenade — and fired inside. Frenzied civilians — one of them carrying a toddler — scurried out under escort by helmeted police in body armor.


Police said Coulibaly had been a co-suspect with Cherif Kouachi in a court case involving terrorism that never made it to trial.


Cherif Kouachi was convicted of terrorism charges in 2008 for ties to a network sending jihadis to fight U.S. forces in Iraq.


According to a Yemeni security official, Said Kouachi is suspected of having fought for al-Qaida in Yemen. Another senior security official added that Said was in Yemen until 2012.


Both officials spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because of an ongoing investigation into Kouachi's stay in Yemen.


Both brothers were also on the U.S. no-fly list, a senior U.S. counterterrorism official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss foreign intelligence publicly.


The attacks in France as well as a hostage siege last month in Sydney and the October killing of a solder near Canada's parliament prompted the U.S. State Department to issue a global travel warning for Americans. It also cites an increased risk of reprisals against U.S. and Western targets for the U.S.-led intervention against Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq.


Authorities around Europe have warned of the threat posed by the return of Western jihadis trained in warfare. France counts at least 1,200 citizens in the war zone in Syria — headed there, returned or dead. Both the Islamic State group and al-Qaida have threatened France, home to Western Europe's largest Muslim population.


The publication Charlie Hebdo had long drawn threats for its depictions of Islam, although it also lampooned other religions and political figures. It had caricatured the Prophet Muhammad, and a sketch of Islamic State's leader was the last tweet sent by the irreverent newspaper minutes before the attack.


Eight journalists, two police officers, a maintenance worker and a visitor were killed in the newspaper attack, including the paper's editor. Charlie Hebdo plans a special edition next week, produced in the offices of another paper.


Associated Press writers Samuel Petrequin, Sylvie Corbet, Jamey Keaten, John Leicester and Angela Charlton in Paris; Raphael Satter and Trung Latieule in Dammartin-en-Goele, Jill Lawless in London; Eric Tucker in Washington; Ahmed al-Hag in Sanaa, Yemen; Sarah el-Deeb in Cairo contributed to this report.



Female Army veteran has seen horrors of war close-up


Back in 2004, after 17 consecutive months of attacks, U.S. Army Sgt. Cynthia Flores was tired of dodging mortar rounds from pro-Saddam forces, tired of living in the heavy Kevlar vest.


She was stationed in the burned-out buildings of Saddam Hussein’s Taji Air Force Base, 45 minutes north of Bagdhad, temporary home to the U.S., British, Italian and Macedonian armies in Iraq.


At the time, Flores was the only woman in her combat unit.


But she is among the hundreds of thousands of women veterans who have fought for this country — a quiet army of determined women who would not be defeated by sacrifice or pain. And many of them, like their male counterparts, are working on adjustment back to civilian life.


When she fractured her right ankle during a sandstorm on a convoy headed back to Kuwait, she waited 10 days before X-rays at a larger clinic revealed that her ankle was shattered and needed surgery — just one week before she was scheduled to leave for home.


But like a true soldier, Flores knew you just dealt with it — “that’s what you do.”


A lot of strength and courage is packed into her 95 pound, 5-foot frame,


Attributes of a seasoned combat veteran.


She has seen the horrors of war close-up.


Flores is among the women who have served in our military since 9-11-2001 — unsung heroes — women whose stories have rarely been told.


“I was trained with the other soldiers and only saw a handful of women,” Flores said.


In her nearly 14 years of service during three deployments to Iraq and one to South Korea, she was trained for hostage negotiations, trained for entry control points, searching a detainee, riot control, first responder, combat operations, trained as a combat lifesaver, and in satellite communications.


Macedonian Special Forces helped train her in Iraq for searching and clearing a house.


Often, they would find caches of weapons.


She remembers the day in 2004 when Saddam Hussein was captured, triggering the need for riot control outside the base for about a month.


She has fought in hand-to-hand combat.


Now 33, Flores, who was raised in Riverside, calls Moreno Valley home and is in the work-study program at the VA hospital in Loma Linda.


“Females in the military have to meet the same requirements as males,” said Flores, a platoon sergeant.


Almost 280,000 women have served post 9-11 in Afghanistan and Iraq.


Today, women make up about 20 percent of new recruits, 14.5 percent of the 1.4 million active duty component and 18 percent of the 850,000 reserve component.


Although women in uniform have long served with honor and courage in combat environments, their contributions have been under-recognized.


“Historically, women have not received the same status as men in military service,” said Richard Valdez, legislative director for Disabled American Veterans (DAV) of California and member of the National Interim Legislative Committee.


“What this reminds me of is separate-but-equal. This is what I see here, and it doesn’t work,” said Valdez, who is also a past state commander and former commander of San Bernardino DAV Chapter 12.


Purple Heart recipient Joe Moseley, a sergeant in the Iraq War, said he encourages women veterans as much as he can to get involved in support groups.


“It’s tough to get your life back together and the more support you have, the easier it is to talk about it,” Moseley said. “Women went through it just like we did, but they’re not often heard.”


Moseley, who served in Iraq between 1999 and 2010, is a founder of Cal State San Bernardino’s Veterans Success Center.


“The more we learn from women veterans, the better off we’ll be,” he added.


According to the 2014 Disabled American Veterans study on women veterans, the unique needs of women should be addressed.


The 2014 report, “The Long Journey Home,” says in summary, “Women have patrolled the streets of Fallujah and Kandahar, they have driven in convoys on desert roads and mountain passes, they have deployed with Special Forces in Afghanistan on cultural support teams, they have climbed into the cockpits of fighter jets and out of the bloody rubble after IED explosions.


“Many have begun their long journey home. The question we ask in this report is ‘Will they walk alone?’”


Flores has taken awhile to adjust to civilian life.


She had a reputation of being able to “cut it with the guys” — it was like having 24 older brothers, she remembers.


Here in the U.S., she served two years at Fort Irwin, training other soldiers. and was stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, where her unit arrived late or would have been the victims of the November 2009 shooting attack by Army Major Nidal Hasan. She was also stationed at Fort Lewis, Washington.


These days, she plans on getting her graduate degree in clinical psychology and wants to help current and future veterans learn how to deal with PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder), a condition she struggles with every day.


The condition comes with a full-range of nightmares, she said.


One of the hardest things she dealt with was the suicide of her platoon sergeant, Sgt. First Class Richard Quintana.


“He was always an advocate for us, but we never saw that coming for him,” she said. “We had no idea. A lot of us felt guilty. We should have seen it.”


She recalls the first time she had seen the reality of war, passing a U.S. Army tank that had been hit by an IED — and saw a pair of empty boots, all by themselves.


“That was 2003 and we did lose a lot of people,” Flores said.


“We went out and did what we had to do.”


In spite of the rough roads she has traveled, Flores remains positive about the future.


“No regrets at all,” she smiled.


Cynthia Flores’ story is one of the many poignant but little-known stories of military women.


If you have a story of an Inland Empire woman who has served in the U.S. military, I would like to hear from you at michel.nolan@langnews.com.


And here’s a thought for the day: Courage is not freedom from fear — it is being afraid and going on.


Michel Nolan appears in The Sun on Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. Reach her at michel.nolan@langnews.com or on Twitter @MichelNolan.


———


©2015 the San Bernardino County Sun (San Bernardino, Calif.). Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



Official: Cornered French terror suspects want to be martyrs


DAMMARTIN-EN-GOELE, France — Two brothers suspected in a newspaper terror attack were cornered inside a printing house northeast of Paris on Friday, taking a hostage and telling police they "want to die as martyrs," a lawmaker said.


Security forces streamed into the small industrial town near Charles de Gaulle airport in a massive operation to seize the men suspected of carrying out France's deadliest terror attack in decades. One of the men had been convicted of terrorism charges in 2008, the other had visited Yemen and a U.S. official said both brothers were on the American no-fly list.


Authorities evacuated a nearby school around midday Friday after the suspects agreed by phone to allow the children safe passage, Dammartin-en-Goele spokeswoman Audrey Taupenas told The Associated Press.


"They said they want to die as martyrs," Yves Albarello, a local lawmaker who said he was inside the command post, told French television station i-Tele.


The men are believed to be the masked assailants who methodically opened fire on an editorial meeting of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, leaving 12 people dead in central Paris on Wednesday.


As at least three helicopters hovered, Charles de Gaulle closed two runways to arrivals to avoid interfering in the standoff, an airport spokesman said. The town appealed to residents to stay inside.


The siege in Dammartin-en-Goele unfolded after the suspects hijacked a car early Friday in a nearby town.


Tens of thousands of French security forces have mobilized to prevent a new terror attack since the Wednesday assault on Charlie Hebdo, which decimated the editorial staff, including the chief editor who had been under armed guard after receiving death threats for publishing caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad. He and his police bodyguard were the first to die, witnesses have said.


Brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi were named as the chief suspects after Said's identity card was left behind in their abandoned getaway car. They were holed up Friday inside CTF Creation Tendance Decouverte, a printing house. Xavier Castaing, the chief Paris police spokesman, and Taupenas. They said there appeared to be one hostage.


Christelle Alleume, who works across the street, said a round of gunfire interrupted her coffee break Friday morning.


"We heard shots and we returned very fast because everyone was afraid," she told i-Tele. "We had orders to turn off the lights and not approach the windows."


Prime Minister Manuel Valls has said both suspects had been known to intelligence services before the attack.


A senior U.S. official said Thursday the elder Kouachi had traveled to Yemen, although it was unclear whether he was there to join extremist groups like al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, which is based there. Witnesses said he claimed allegiance to the group during the attack.


The younger brother, Cherif, was convicted of terrorism charges in 2008 for his links to a network sending jihadis to fight American forces in Iraq.


Both were also on the U.S. no-fly list, a senior U.S. counterterrorism official said. The American officials also spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss foreign intelligence publicly.


Nine people, members of the brothers' entourage, have been detained for questioning in several regions. In all, 90 people, many of them witnesses to the grisly assault on the satirical weekly, were questioned for information on the attackers, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said in a statement.


A third suspect, 18-year-old Mourad Hamyd, surrendered at a police station Wednesday evening after hearing his name linked to the attacks. His relationship to the Kouachi brothers was unclear.


The Kouachi brothers, born in Paris to Algerian parents, were well-known to French counterterrorism authorities. Cherif Kouachi, a former pizza deliveryman, had appeared in a 2005 French TV documentary on Islamic extremism and was sentenced to 18 months in prison in 2008 for trying to join up with fighters battling in Iraq.


Charlie Hebdo had long drawn threats for its depictions of Islam, although it also satirized other religions and political figures. The weekly paper had caricatured the Prophet Muhammad, and a sketch of Islamic State's leader was the last tweet sent out by the irreverent newspaper, minutes before the attack. Nothing has been tweeted since.


Eight journalists, two police officers, a maintenance worker and a visitor were killed in the attack.


Charlie Hebdo planned a special edition next week, produced in the offices of another paper.


Authorities around Europe have warned of the threat posed by the return of Western jihadis trained in warfare. France counts at least 1,200 citizens in the war zone in Syria headed there, returned or dead. Both the Islamic State group and al-Qaida have threatened France, home to Western Europe's largest Muslim population.


The French suspect in a deadly 2014 attack on a Jewish museum in Belgium had returned from fighting with extremists in Syria; and the man who rampaged in southern France in 2012, killing three soldiers and four people at a Jewish school, received paramilitary training in Pakistan.


Associated Press writers Lori Hinnant, Sylvie Corbet, Jamey Keaten and Samuel Petrequin in Paris; and Ken Dilanian in Washington contributed to this report.


© 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.



Suspected hostage-taking as French track shooting suspects


PARIS — A French police official says a pair of brothers suspected in the storming of a satirical newspaper appear to have taken a hostage.


Xavier Castaing, chief spokesman for Paris regional police, spoke as a massive operation unfolded Friday in the town of Dammartin-en-Goele, near Charles de Gaulle airport.


Helicopters and hundreds of security forces backed by ambulances streamed to the town, where the brothers were believed to be holed up.


French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve confirmed the operation to seize the armed pair, who are suspected in the bloody storming of Charlie Hebdo newspaper.


Twelve people died in the central Paris attack on Wednesday.


Shots were fired as the brothers stole a car in the early morning hours, said a French security official.


Thousands of French security forces have mobilized to find Cherif Kouachi, 32, and Said Kouachi, 34, after the attack on the Charlie Hebdo offices on Wednesday.


According to a security official, the brothers stole a Peugeot amid gunfire in the town of Montagny Sainte Felicite, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) northeast of Paris.


The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a situation that was still developing.


Prime Minister Manuel Valls has said both brothers were known to intelligence services.


One brother was convicted of terrorism charges in 2008. Survivors of the bloody assault on Charlie Hebdo said the attackers claimed allegiance to al-Qaida in Yemen. The weekly newspaper had been repeatedly threatened - and its offices were firebombed in 2011 - after spoofing Islam and depicting the Prophet Muhammad in caricature.


Authorities around Europe have warned of the threat posed by the return of Western jihadis trained in warfare. France counts at least 1,200 citizens in the war zone in Syria - headed there, returned or dead. Both the Islamic State group and al-Qaida have threatened France - home to Western Europe's largest Muslim population.


The French suspect in a deadly 2014 attack on a Jewish museum in Belgium had returned from fighting with extremists in Syria; and the man who rampaged in southern France in 2012, killing three soldiers and four people at a Jewish school, received paramilitary training in Pakistan.


Associated Press writers Jamey Keaten, Elaine Ganley and Sylvie Corbet in Paris; and Ken Dilanian in Washington contributed to this report.


© 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.



Lt. Gen. John F. Mulholland Jr., ex-special ops commander, takes CIA job


(Tribune Content Agency) — A former commander of Army Special Operations and the officer who led the first Green Berets on the ground in Afghanistan has joined the CIA.


Lt. Gen. John F. Mulholland Jr. is the new associate director for military affairs at the nation's top intelligence agency, the CIA announced in a statement from Director John Brennan.


Mulholland, 59, was previously deputy commander of U.S. Special Operations Command at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., and, before that, commanded U.S. Army Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg, N.C., from November 2008 until July 2012.


He also served as a special assistant to the commanding general at U.S. Army Forces Command at Fort Bragg from October 2014 until earlier this month.


In a statement to CIA employees dated Wednesday, Brennan said the agency was fortunate to have Mulholland fill his new role.


Brennan said Mulholland has had a distinguished career in Special Forces.


"He commanded special operations task forces in both Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom," Brennan said. ".John's long and outstanding record of service in special operations has given him a deep understanding of the conduct and value of intelligence, and many of our officers know him as a close partner and good friend."


"I look forward to working with John and benefiting from his insights as we confront the wide array of complex global challenges facing our agency," he said.


Previous military and CIA leaders have praised the close relationships between the agency and the military in recent years.


In Afghanistan in particular, the two groups have often worked together, including during the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.


Mulholland is a Clovis, N.M., native who graduated from Furman University in Greenville, S.C., before joining the Army in 1978.


He served in Panama and with the 20th and 5th infantries before training at Fort Bragg to become a Special Forces soldier.


After graduating from the Special Forces Qualification Course in 1983, he served with several Special Forces units at Fort Bragg.


He spent time with the 5th Special Forces Group, which moved from Fort Bragg to Fort Campbell, Ky., in 1988, the 7th Special Forces Group, which moved from Fort Bragg to Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., in 2011 and with 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta, better known as Delta Force.


In 2001, when he was commanding the 5th Special Forces Group, Mulholland commanded the first Green Berets to infiltrate Afghanistan as part of Task Force Dagger and later, led soldiers during the initial campaign of Operation Iraqi Freedom.


Speaking of Task Force Dagger during a memorial dedication at Fort Bragg in 2013, Mulholland said the soldiers never numbered more than 300 men, but — working with the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan — were able to "bring down a regime in less than a few months."


Mulholland said the soldiers had old or poor equipment but succeed in spite of those constraints.


"It was not a pretty picture," he said. "Decades of neglect became apparent.


"What we did have was extraordinary men," he said. "Those A-Teams were what made Task Force Dagger successful."


Mulholland also held other posts at Fort Bragg, including commander of the U.S. Army Special Forces Command and deputy commander of Joint Special Operations Command.


While at the helm of USASOC, Mulholland oversaw rapid growth among the Army's special operations troops.


When he left Fort Bragg in 2012, then-Navy Adm. William H. McRaven, who at the time led U.S. Special Operations Command, called Mulholland "a proud Irishman" and "stubborn as a mule" when it came to compromising on resources for his soldiers.


"He was raised by a tough Irish Catholic mother and a host of nuns, and, consequently, he demands discipline from his troops so they can perform beyond expectations in combat and in garrison," McRaven said. "He has a tough, hard, gruff exterior but hosts the tenderest of Irish hearts. Truth be known, John Mulholland is a softie inside."


Mulholland's family includes his wife of 35 years, the former Miriam Mitchell of Clemson, S.C., and four children.


His military awards include the Distinguished Service Medal, Defense Superior Service Medal and the Legion of Merit.


©2015 The Fayetteville (N.C.) Observer. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Thursday, January 8, 2015

Police officer shot dead in Paris terror attack was Muslim


PARIS — The last of the 12 victims slain in the terror attack on the French newspaper Charlie Hebdo was a police officer — the son of immigrants from mainly Muslim North Africa — who was shot dead on the sidewalk by one of the assailants as they started their getaway.


Police officials identified him as Ahmed Merabet. As details about his death became known, a campaign of solidarity quickly caught fire on social media Thursday, using the phrase "Je Suis Ahmed" — I Am Ahmed. That echoed the campaign of support for the satirical newspaper that spread widely after the attack, using the slogan "Je Suis Charlie."


Merabet also drew attention at the United Nations.


"He himself was a Muslim," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told reporters. "This is yet another reminder of what we are facing together. It should never be seen as a war of religion, for religion, or on religion. It is an assault on our common humanity, designed to terrify and incite."


French news reports gave varying ages for Merabet, though the police union to which he belonged said he was in his 30s. He reportedly had eight years of police service, and was assigned to the neighborhood where Wednesday's attack occurred.


Video footage taken by an onlooker that surfaced on the Internet after the attack appeared to show a wounded Merabet on the pavement, raising a hand as though appealing for mercy before he was fatally shot in the head by one of the three gunmen. During their attack on the newspaper office, the assailants had shouted "Allahu akbar!" — Arabic for "God is great!" — and police were investigating their possible ties to a Yemen-based terrorist group.


Merabet was "very discreet and conscientious," police union spokesman Rocco Contento told the newspaper Le Figaro. "We're all extremely shocked."


Merabet's home town, the suburb of Livry-Gargan in the northeastern suburbs of Paris, announced Thursday that he and the other victims would be commemorated at a ceremony Sunday at the city hall.


A police union official, who cited the sensitivity of the case in requesting anonymity, said Merabet's parents immigrated to France from predominantly Muslim North Africa. The officials said he didn't know whether Merabet was actively practicing the religion.


The other slain officer was Franck Brinsolaro, a married police veteran who served on the bodyguard detail for the slain editor of Charlie Hebdo, Stephane Charbonnier.


The union official said Charbonnier would sometimes invite Brinsolaro for meals at the famed Closerie des Lilas restaurant in southern Paris.


According to French media, Brinsolaro was married to the editor of a weekly newspaper in northern France, and the couple had a 1-year-old daughter.


The death of Merabet — with his North African origins — recalled a series of gun attacks in southern France in 2012 that killed three French paratroopers of North African descent, as well as several Jewish civilians.


Crary reported from New York. Associated Press writer Cara Anna at the United Nations contributed to this report.



Thailand begins impeachment hearings of ousted prime minister


BANGKOK — Thailand's military-appointed legislature began impeachment hearings Friday against former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, a move analysts say is aimed at ensuring the ousted leader stays out of politics for the foreseeable future.


The charges, dismissed by Yingluck's supporters as politically motivated, relate to her alleged role in a disastrous government rice subsidy scheme.


The lawmakers are expected to vote on their verdict by the end of the month. If impeached, Yingluck could be banned from politics for five years.


Yingluck was forced from office in early May by a court verdict that declared she had illegally transferred the nation's security chief. That verdict came one day before Thailand's anti-graft commission indicted her on charges of dereliction of duty in overseeing a widely criticized rice subsidy program.


Yingluck, who came to power in a landslide election in 2011, had insisted for months that the Southeast Asian nation's fragile democracy was under attack from protesters, the courts, and finally the army, which staged a May 22 coup that wiped out the remnants of her administration.


Yingluck's brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, was also ousted by the army in a 2006 coup.


Analysts say Friday's hearing is more about the curbing the power of the Shinawatra family and keeping them out of politics. The junta has spoken of holding elections in 2015, but no date has been set.


"The impeachment is geared to keep Yingluck at bay. If she's allowed to run in the next election, there's a good chance that she might win," said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, the director of the Institute of Security and International Studies at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok.


If Yingluck is prosecuted, however, the government "could risk incurring the wrath of the pro-Thaksin camp. At the same time, it would also deepen the polarization and divisions that we have seen in Thailand."


The National Legislative Assembly, hand-picked by the junta and dominated by active and retired military officers, will deliberate on whether Yingluck neglected her duty and failed to halt the rice subsidy program, which accumulated losses of at least $4 billion and temporarily cost Thailand its position as the world's leading rice exporter.


The scheme, under which the government paid farmers double the market price, was a flagship policy that helped Yingluck's government win votes in the 2011 general election.


Arriving at Parliament early Friday, Yingluck told reporters she was "confident" she would be exonerated and said she was "ready to clarify in every charge."


Last year, Yingluck said the anti-graft commission's deliberations in the case against her were unfairly rushed.


On Thursday, the legislature began separate impeachment hearings against a former house speaker and a former senate speaker for allegedly trying to amend the constitution, which the army suspended when it seized power.



Pentagon to request 20 percent less for war funding, officials say


WASHINGTON — The Pentagon will request about $51 billion in war funding for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, a 20-percent reduction from the $64 billion Congress approved this year and the least since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, officials and congressional aides said.


The Overseas Contingency Operations funding, as it is known, will be sent to Congress in addition to basic defense spending of about $534 billion when President Barack Obama offers his proposed fiscal 2016 federal budget Feb. 2, according to the officials and aides, who asked not to be identified before the details are made public.


While the decline in war funding largely reflects the continued withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan — from the 10,600 now there to half that planned by year-end — it remains enough to draw questions about why the Defense Department shouldn't pay to fight wars as part of its basic mission.


"The continuing drawdown in Afghanistan is not having a proportionate effect on" the war budget because it's "being used for a lot of things other than Afghanistan," said Todd Harrison, a defense budget analyst with the nonpartisan Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington.


"It's a budgetary shell game for getting around" the caps imposed by the automatic spending cuts known as sequestration, Harrison said in an email.


News of the planned decrease in war spending damped today's gains for defense stocks.


The shares have proved resilient in the face of Defense Department spending cutbacks. A Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of the four largest Pentagon contractors — excluding Boeing Co., whose civilian airplanes business is larger than its military unit — surged 30 percent in 2014, outstripping the 11 percent increase for the Standard & Poor's 500 index.


Sequestration cuts are scheduled to resume again in fiscal 2016, after a two-year break, unless Congress overturns them. Obama's base defense budget for the coming year assumes about $34 billion more than the cap would permit.


Money requested for overseas contingency operations is exempt from sequestration.


The $51 billion request would be for military operations and does not include money from the fund that goes to the State Department and Department of Veterans Affairs. The previous low was $17 billion in fiscal 2002, the second year of war funding.


Over the years, the Pentagon and Congress have added items less directly related to waging war, even as each chastises the other over the practice.


"The use of war funding expanded to cover issues with only tenuous links to combat operations," Emil Maine and Diem Salmon wrote in an essay on the website of the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based policy group. They said the fund shouldn't be used as "a safety valve to cover defense spending shortfalls" and should be phased out.


The most war spending was in fiscal 2008, when Congress approved $187 billion, largely to fund the Bush administration's Iraq surge that swelled troops to a peak of 165,000 in November 2007. They fell to 148,000 in July 2008.


Navy Cmdr. William Urban, a Defense Department budget spokesman, declined to comment directly on the upcoming request.


Future requests "will be based on actual contingency operations" so it's "impossible to predict" whether the current downward trend in war spending will continue, he said.


This year's war-spending request initially was $58.6 billion. It grew to about $64 billion with the addition of $5 billion requested in late November.


Those funds will be used to retrain and equip the Iraqi army to attack Islamic State extremists and to provide a counterterrorism fund for allies as well as the European Reassurance Initiative after Russia annexed Crimea and supported Ukrainian separatists with military forces.


The 2016 request is likely to include additional funds to pay for flying hours and munitions dropped in anti-Islamic State airstrikes.



Navy submariners in video recording scandal face 'significant' penalties


GROTON, Conn. — Sailors involved in the secret video recording of female officers in the dressing area of a U.S. Navy submarine will face "significant penalties," the admiral in charge of the submarine force said Thursday.


A dozen sailors are under investigation in the scandal aboard the USS Wyoming, one of the first American submarines to have female officers.


"What some people thought was a high-schoolish prank was a serious sexual offense, with significant penalties," Vice Adm. Michael Connor said.


The recording and distribution of the videos are a setback for the high-profile introduction of mixed-gender crews on submarines, which had been one of the last areas of the armed forces closed to women before the Navy reversed a ban in 2010. More than 50 women are serving aboard submarines, a female officer in Connecticut became the first woman assigned to a Los Angeles-class attack sub last week, and the Navy is expected soon to introduce enlisted female submariners as well as officers.


The recording took place in a changing area that is used by male and female officers aboard the Wyoming, a nuclear-armed submarine based at Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base in Georgia. Typically, female officers put up a sign to indicate when the shower area is in use by women.


Connor, who was visiting Connecticut for a change of command ceremony aboard a Groton-based submarine, said in an interview with The Associated Press that the biggest concern is that the recordings did not come to authorities' attention until recent months, even though they had been taken a year ago and shared among a number of sailors. He said it happened despite the Navy's best efforts to prepare the submarine-force culture for coed crews.


"Out of a force of 17,000 people we have a very small number of folks who didn't get it, and they're going to learn," Connor said during a talk earlier in the day at a veterans' hall in Groton.


Twelve sailors are being investigated for the creation and distribution of the recordings, according to Lt. Cmdr. Tommy Crosby, a Navy spokesman. He said the investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service has been completed and military lawyers are reviewing how to proceed with prosecution.


Connor said the actions of a few sailors should not take away from the successful integration of women. He said more than 100 women are in the submarine program, including those in training, and some female officers will soon be teaching at the Navy's submarine school in Groton.


The integration of women began in 2011 on ballistic-missile subs, which were seen as more capable of accommodating mixed-gender crews because they have more room than the cramped attack submarines. USS Minnesota, which is based at Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton, last week became the first attack sub of its class to receive a female officer, Crosby said.


The Wyoming case also highlights the difficulty faced by the Navy as it tries to develop a policy for iPhones and other electronic devices that can pose security risks but are also seen as boosting morale.


"We thought and we continue to think we had struck the proper balance between having them on the ship," Connor said. "Obviously, they were misused in this case."



Expect more US casualties in Afghanistan, top NATO commander says



KABUL, Afghanistan — Americans must be prepared for more U.S. casualties in Afghanistan even after the declared end to NATO’s combat mission in the country, the alliance’s supreme commander warned Thursday.


“All of us as commanders have reminded our senior leadership ... the war in Afghanistan has not ended, (just) the combat mission for NATO,” Gen. Philip Breedlove told Stars and Stripes.


“It’s hard to say, but we are going to continue to have (American) casualties” in Afghanistan, Breedlove said in an interview at Bagram Airfield.


“It is going to be unavoidable,” he added.


Breedlove’s comments came just days after American and allied forces officially closed the book on the 13-year International Security Assistance Force mission in Afghanistan, shifting to a lower-key advisory role supporting, named Resolute Support.


At the time, the Obama White House and top U.S. commanders in Afghanistan heralded the transition as crucial milestone in ending America’s longest war. The move represented “an end of an era and the beginning of a new one” in Afghanistan, ISAF commander Gen. John Campbell said at the command’s end-of-mission ceremony in Kabul on Dec. 28.


Under the White House’s plan, roughly 11,000 U.S. troops and about 2,000 NATO troops remain on the ground to train and advise Afghanistan’s army and police and conduct counterterrorism operations. The American troop number is slated to drop to 5,500 by the end of this year, with all U.S. forces scheduled to leave Afghanistan by 2016.


After the collapse last summer of Iraq’s U.S.-trained army when confronted by a surprise attack by fast-moving Islamist forces, analysts and U.S. lawmakers have warned that a similar scenario could unfold in Afghanistan if international troops pulled out too precipitously, leaving the government forces to fend for themselves.


While American and NATO troops are no longer the main fighting force in Afghanistan, U.S. troops will continue to be in the line of fire on a regular basis during the follow-on mission, Maj. Gen. John Murray, deputy commanding general for U.S. Forces-Afghanistan, said Tuesday.


“We are not going out on kill/capture missions anymore, (but) this is still a very dangerous place,” Murray said in an interview at the command’s headquarters at Bagram. “There are going to be some hard questions when we lose (the first) soldier” under Resolute Support.


Despite those risks, American troops in postwar Afghanistan “can’t just sit on the FOB” and completely disengage from the security threats facing Afghan forces, Murray said, referring to the 23 remaining U.S. forward operating bases scattered across Afghanistan.


The upcoming fighting season, the first under Resolute Support, will be American commander’s “last good year to have an impact” on Afghanistan’s post-war future.


With so much at stake, top U.S. commanders have voiced concerns over whether President Barack Obama’s plan for Afghanistan will be enough to ensure the country’s security beyond 2016.


In November, Campbell, the top U.S. officer in Afghanistan, said he was reviewing whether Afghan forces were ready and whether he should recommend through his chain of command that additional NATO forces stay longer. Earlier this month, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani suggested Washington re-examine its future plans because of a resurgent Taliban and the possible threat from other insurgent groups in the region.


“Are we looking at contingencies? Absolutely,” Murray when asked about possible changes to the postwar mission. But “this is not (Operation Enduring Freedom) ... that is part of the mind-set we are going to [have to] get used to,” he said.


munoz.carlo@stripes.com



FBI identifies El Paso VA gunman, says he was former employee


EL PASO, Texas — An Army veteran who fatally shot a psychologist at a West Texas veterans' hospital before killing himself was a former clerk at the clinic and had threatened the doctor in 2013, the FBI said Wednesday.


The FBI identified the gunman in Tuesday's shooting as Jerry Serrato, a 48-year-old was medically discharged from the Army in 2009 after serving in Iraq two years earlier. Douglas Lindquist, who heads the FBI's El Paso office, said Serrato used a .380-caliber handgun to shoot Dr. Timothy Fjordbak, 63, and himself at the El Paso Veterans Affairs Health Care System at Fort Bliss.


Fjordbak was a psychologist who left private practice after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks because he wanted to work with military veterans, officials said. Serrato had served in the Ohio Army National Guard from 1985 to 1993, then enlisted in the Army in July 2006, military records show. He served in Iraq for five months in 2007.


Officials did not provide a motive for the shooting. However, Fjordbak had reported Serrato made an unspecified verbal threat against him at an El Paso supermarket in 2013. Lindquist said Serrato had some sort of perceived or real grievance against Fjordbak and had said something to the effect of, "I know what you did and I will take care of it."


It was something in public at a grocery store where Mr. Serrato approached Dr. Fjordbak, who did not recognize him, and he made a verbal threat, and that was the extent of the report. As far as we can tell, that was the only connection that they had," Lindquist said.


Both men worked at the VA at the same time in 2013, but authorities do not believe they had a working relationship, Lindquist said. There also was no immediate indication the gunman was a patient, the FBI said.


A security assessment is underway at the clinic in the wake of the shooting, said Peter Dancy, the VA hospital and clinic's acting director.


Hundreds of patients, staff and others were at the clinic when the shooting happened.


The shooting comes just four months after the Fort Bliss Commanding Officer Maj. Gen. Stephen Twitty announced new security measures after a military assessment found the base was not fully in compliance with Department of Defense directives. The measures included random vehicle checks and limiting access to Defense Department personnel at some gates. However, four gates still remained open to the public, according to a press release.


On Wednesday, civilians were still able to access the post with only a driver's license, passing through just a single checkpoint manned by several soldiers. Investigators talked outside the closed VA clinic, warning of broken glass, while soldiers entered the adjacent William Beaumont Army Medical Center.


Sutton Smith, a worker at the VA clinic, said a "code white" was issued over the intercom system Tuesday indicating an active shooter and ordering people to seek shelter.


Smith said he hid with about a dozen people in a locked room with the lights off for some two hours. Apart from the initial alert and some communication among managers via cellphone, no official updates were provided during the lockdown, he said.


The El Paso clinic came under scrutiny last year after a federal audit showed it had among the longest wait times for veterans trying to see a doctor for the first time. A survey last year of more than 690 veterans living in El Paso County found that they waited an average of more than two months to see a Veterans Affairs mental health professional and even longer to see a physician.


The VA said in a statement that it was "deeply saddened" by the attack and was assisting in investigations.


"The safety and continued care of our veterans and the staff will be our focus throughout," the agency said.



RAF Mildenhall to close amid other Europe consolidations


39 minutes ago




STUTTGART, Germany — A major U.S. Air Force base in the United Kingdom and 14 other installations scattered across Europe will close as part of sweeping reorganization of forces on the Continent, the Pentagon announced.


Operations at RAF Mildenhall, home to Air Force special operations forces, air refueling tankers and 3,200 military personnel, will end and missions carried out there will be moved to other locations such as Germany. Two other facilities in the U.K. — RAF Alconbury and Molesworth — also will close as part of a consolidation effort. Most of the missions there will be moved to RAF Croughton.


Meanwhile, the Pentagon plans to station two squadrons of F-35s at RAF Lakenheath by 2020, which ensures the continuous presence of U.S. air power in the country.


As a result of the moves, there will be a slight reduction in overall force levels. However, Germany and Italy are expected to gain troops through the Pentagon’s moves.


In all, the Pentagon expects to save about $500 billion annually from the consolidations, which have been under review for more than a year.


Other announced closures and consolidations involve support facilities rather than major bases.


vandiver.john@stripes.com




Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Airman found guilty in Lackland hospital sex assault trial


(Tribune Content Agency) — A psychriatrist who was sexually assaulted by an Air Force medical technician tearfully told a military court Wednesday that the incident left her with post-traumatic stress disorder issues that still linger.


Her husband said the incident had caused her to become badly scarred, transforming a once kind and happy personality into someone who was “hard core,” and that their lengthy marriage had come under tremendous strain.


“I just worry about how this changed my wife,” he said. “She’s not the same person she was before.”


Airman 1st Class Michael Lightsey was found guilty earlier in the day on two counts of improperly touching the woman, a captain. However, a military judge also found him not guilty of attacking two other patients after they had surgery in June 2013 at Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.


Lightsey could get 14 years in prison and be branded a sex offender in the wake of the verdict. He was charged with improperly touching the patients during a three-week span that summer.


The punishment phase of the trial opened with comments from the victim, her husband and Lightsey’s family. In an unsworn statement, Lightsey tearfully told the court that being a registered sex offender would dramatically alter life with his family, once he and his wife have children.


His mother vowed to stick by him, saying, “I am saddened by the decision of the court, I understand the decision has been made, but I want you to understand he is a kind and gentle man who is looked up to by many.”


Lightsey was found guilty Wednesday of assaulting the captain as she came out of anesthesia following surgery at Wilford Hall. All three women gave similar accounts, saying that he touched them sexually while they rested on gurneys after surgery. The incidents occurred three times in the summer of 2013.


Prosecutors and the defense battled for close to two hours Wednesday morning in front of Lt. Col. Marvin Tubbs II, using slides to help bolster their arguments in a case with high stakes.


Two of the women said they wanted to scream but could not. A prosecutor, Capt. Christopher Porter, likened the scene to a horror film, with Lightsey pretending to remove EKG leads and adjust blankets or IV lines before assaulting them. Only one alleged victim identified Lightsey as her attacker, but Porter said victim and witness testimony, and evidence that included recovery-room log books, put Lightsey at the crime scene.


But a civilian lawyer leading the defense, Jeffrey King, said his client was fighting for his freedom simply because he had done his job and told the judge there was plenty of reason for doubting his guilt. A key part of the defense’s case was its insistence, backed by a physician, that powerful drugs used to anesthetize patients left them in a mental fog. He also noted that just one victim positively identified her attacker and disputed the infallability of log books.


While the defense contended that the victims could have imagined being attacked and that sloppy Air Force investigators planted the idea in their minds that Lightsey was their assailant, prosecutors countered that the similarities in their recollections and supporting evidence bolstered their case that crimes had occurred in the hospital.


“All the puzzle pieces demonstrate a three-dimensional picture of sexual assault,” Porter said, standing next to a gurney that had been brought into the courtroom.


King, in turn, said the case was full of possibilities but little certainty.


“Throughout this case, there is reasonable doubt for every element of every offense,” he said.


©2015 the San Antonio Express-News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.