Saturday, April 18, 2015

Manager removed at Philly VA after IG audit slams facility


WASHINGTON — A top manager at the Department of Veterans Affairs office in Philadelphia has been temporarily removed from his position to get “different eyes” on the deeply troubled facility, the department said Friday.


Gary Hodge was head of the Pension Management Center — one of only three such centers in the country — until earlier this week when an inspector general audit found tens of thousands of unanswered inquiries and pieces of returned mail. Hodge was reassigned as an assistant director of the Pension and Fiduciary Service in the VA’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., according to a department spokeswoman.


The Philadelphia audit detailed a variety of issues, including chronic inefficiency, mismanagement and unsafe working conditions. It has also rekindled a national scandal that began a year ago with revelations that the VA systematically manipulated patient records to disguise long wait times at hospitals and clinics.


The department is “shifting leadership in the regional office by bringing in another leader from another Pension Management Center to see if having different eyes on the problem will bring new solutions,” VA spokeswoman Walinda West wrote in an email to Stars and Stripes.


West said the move is “not a promotion, demotion or lateral move.”


Hodge is on temporary assignment that will include ongoing VA projects, and he is slated to resume his duties as manager of the Philadelphia Pension Management Center on Aug. 17, West said.


The IG found that the center was responsible for more than 31,000 veteran inquiries that had languished for an average of 312 days — the standard response time is supposed to be five days — and another 22,000 pieces of returned mail that were never processed.


Also, the devices used to time-stamp received mail were not secured, meaning staff could change the date without supervision. Last year, it was revealed that VA used off-the-books wait lists to hide long delays in veterans receiving requested health care.


The VA has said the audit describes conditions a year ago and that it has since made improvements. But lawmakers on Capitol Hill blasted the findings this week as proof of how deep problems have gotten in the department.


Allison Hickey, the VA undersecretary for benefits, is slated to publicly address the many problems Monday during a news conference.


tritten.travis@stripes.com

Twitter: @Travis_Tritten



Friday, April 17, 2015

Mabus announces name of new littoral combat ship


ST. LOUIS (Tribune Content Agency) — Ray Mabus came here from his home in Mississippi as a young boy to watch the Cardinals play. He returned on Friday as the secretary of the Navy to name a new combat ship the St. Louis.


Mabus announced the name and plans to build the ship, formally known as a littoral combat ship, at a pomp-and-circumstance ceremony in front of the Soldiers’ Memorial.


“This is the coolest job in the world,” Mabus said. “I get to name every Navy ship.”


Mabus — who had to drive to St. Louis on Friday from Chicago, delaying the ceremony, because of a problem with his scheduled flight — spoke of his fond memories of the city burnished by the Cardinals’ greatest hero. He remembered how his father drove him to St. Louis to see Stan Musial play in the early 1960s — and the importance he placed on Musial’s character.


“He said, ‘Stan represents everything that was good about baseball and America,’?” Mabus said.


Mabus recalled being heartbroken when they arrived. Musial didn’t start the game. But then he came in as pinch hitter and knocked a single.


Years later, Mabus, a former governor of Mississippi, remembered Musial when the town of Kosciusko, Miss., wanted a famous Polish-American to attend a ceremony honoring its heritage. Mabus suggested Musial, who agreed to attend. Mabus accompanied him on the trip.


“It remains one of the highlights of my life,” Mabus said.


Mabus said any city that honored Musial, like St. Louis, has “got to be a pretty special city.”


Musial served in the Navy in 1945.


St. Louis, a Midwestern city far from an ocean, seems an ironic name for a seafaring vessel, but five other Navy ships have worn the city’s name. The last was a cargo ship that was deactivated in 1991.


“I think it’s important that we have a St. Louis in the fleet,” Mabus said. “It’s time to keep that storied name alive.”


The first St. Louis, a sloop, hit the water in 1828. The second was an ironclad gunboat built by civil engineer James B. Eads, who later designed the Eads Bridge over the Mississippi River. That boat operated during the American Civil War.


The fourth St. Louis, a light cruiser, was moored in Hawaii during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The ship survived and even shot down Japanese torpedo planes, earning the nickname “Lucky Lou.”


The new St. Louis ship will not be a massive aircraft carrier or submarine buried deep in the ocean. The Navy said it would be about 400 feet in length, “fast and agile,” designed for operation close to shore but capable of cruising the open sea. “It is designed to defeat asymmetric ‘anti-access’ threats such as mines, quiet diesel submarines and fast surface craft,” a Navy statement said.


Mabus has attended many ceremonies for littoral combat ships, which are commonly named after cities. Others have namesakes representing places such as Indianapolis, Detroit, Charleston, S.C., and Tulsa, Okla. About a dozen are currently under construction or in the pre-production phase.


A timeline for the St. Louis’ completion is still in the works.


St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay stood with Mabus as he made the announcement. Afterwards they donned caps showing the USS St. Louis name.


Slay said it was an honor “having this beautiful ship that is defending our nation named after our great city.”


©2015 the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Saddam top deputy dubbed 'king of clubs' killed, Iraqi officials say



BEIRUT (Tribune Content Agency) — Izzat Ibrahim, a fugitive confidant of former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein who helped spearhead a deadly insurgency against U.S. troops and later formed an alliance with Islamic State militants, was shot dead Friday by security forces, Iraqi officials said.


Ibrahim, a former vice president known for his trademark ginger mustache and black beret, was dubbed the king of clubs in the deck of playing cards that the Pentagon issued to identify the most-wanted members of Saddam’s government.


The former general was the highest-ranking Iraqi official to avoid capture after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam in 2003. He was the last surviving member of the late Saddam’s inner circle.


Pro-government militiamen killed Ibrahim and nine bodyguards as they traveled in a convoy north of the city of Tikrit, near the Hamrin mountain range, Iraqi Gen. Haider Basri told state television.


On his official Facebook page, Raed Jabouri, the governor of Salahuddin province, posted a photograph of what he said was Ibrahim’s body. Hadi Ameri, head of the Badr Brigades, a pro-government Shiite Muslim militia, told local reporters that DNA analysis was underway to confirm the dead man’s identity.


Ibrahim has been reported captured or killed several times. Some social media postings said to be from his supporters denied the latest reports of his demise.


Elsewhere in Iraq on Friday, Islamic State militants claimed responsibility for a car bomb that exploded outside the heavily fortified U.S. Consulate compound in the northern city of Irbil, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militants’ websites.


The State Department said no U.S. personnel were killed in the afternoon blast in the bustling capital of Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region. Local news reports indicated that at least three civilians were killed in the explosion, which occurred in a district that is home to many cafes, restaurants and hotels.


In Baghdad, Iraq’s capital, a pair of car bombings also linked to Islamic State killed at least 27 people, news agencies reported. The Sunni Muslim militant group has regularly targeted Shiite neighborhoods and gatherings in Baghdad and elsewhere.


Also on Friday, fierce fighting was reported as pro-government forces held off Islamic State militants trying to overrun the western city of Ramadi and the strategic Baiji oil refinery, north of Baghdad. The dual campaigns have dramatized Islamic State’s continued strength in mostly Sunni areas of Iraq, despite the group’s recent loss of Tikrit.


Pro-government forces recaptured Tikrit this month; the city had been in militant hands since June.


A series of recent airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition backing the Iraqi government has pummeled Islamic State positions near Ramadi and Baiji.


The Tikrit area was the hometown of Ibrahim and his longtime colleague and mentor, Saddam. Both came from humble tribal backgrounds and became loyalists of the Baath Party, which is now banned. Many of Saddam’s closest aides were from Tikrit.


The Shiite-dominated Iraqi government that came to power after the U.S.-led invasion convicted Saddam of crimes against humanity and hanged him in 2006. Many members of Iraq’s Sunni minority viewed the execution of Saddam, a Sunni, as a sectarian lynching. A Sunni-Shiite civil war convulsed the nation for years after the invasion, and sectarian tension still divides Iraq.


It had long been rumored that Ibrahim, said to be in his early 70s, was holed up in the northern city of Mosul, a former Baath Party stronghold. Islamic State, which declared Mosul its capital, controls territory across Iraq and neighboring Syria.


Ibrahim has long been a mysterious figure. Once Saddam was toppled, Ibrahim reportedly ran loyalist Baath Party cells that led the Sunni Muslim insurgency against the U.S. occupation.


Ibrahim was said to be a pivotal interlocutor between pro-Saddam nationalists and the Sunni Islamist militants. The two groups with greatly differing political agendas forged an alliance against the U.S. occupation and the Shiite-dominated government that succeeded Saddam. Ibrahim’s followers included former military officers and intelligence personnel.


Last year, Ibrahim was reported to have formed an alliance with Islamic State militants who captured much of the Iraqi Sunni heartland in June. He was said to have headed a group of pro-Saddam militants known as the Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order. The group is reported to have worked in tandem with Islamic State militants, but the alliance broke down.


Ibrahim and his followers brought valuable military and intelligence expertise to their collaboration with various Sunni extremist groups, analysts said.


Los Angeles Times staff writer McDonnell reported from Beirut and special correspondent Bulos from Amman, Jordan.


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



At least 3 dead as gunfights, roadblocks break out in Mexican border city


4 minutes ago




MEXICO CITY — Gunfights and blockades of burning vehicles broke out Friday in the border city of Reynosa, across from McAllen, Texas, leaving at least three dead, Mexican authorities said.


A federal official who was not authorized to be quoted by name said three armed civilians, presumably cartel gunmen, had been killed in a series of confrontations with soldiers, state and federal police throughout the day.


The official said roads had been blocked with vehicles set on fire by gunmen.


The official confirmed reports that a top member of the Gulf cartel's Reynosa faction had been detained. The gang leader has been known by his nickname "El Gafe," but his real name could not immediately be confirmed. The nickname apparently refers to a now-disbanded Mexican special forces military group.


The U.S. consulate in Matamoros issued a message urging U.S. citizens to take precautions because of "several firefights and roadblocks throughout the city of Reynosa." The city government posted a warning on its Twitter site recommending motorists avoid several areas, including the highway leading to the nearby city of Matamoros.


Warring factions of the Gulf cartel in Reynosa and Matamoros have been fighting turf battles around the two cities.




Bombing is 1st attack on US in Iraq since Islamic State took Mosul



IRBIL, Iraq (Tribune Content Agency) — A suicide bomber struck the U.S. consulate building in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil on Friday afternoon.


Kurdish authorities said that at least three people were killed — a Kurdish security official at the scene said the dead were the three attackers — and five wounded. Among the wounded were two Westerners who were in a restaurant across the street, witnesses said.


Brett McGurk, the deputy assistant secretary of state for Iraq and Iran, said in a post on Twitter that all consulate personnel had been accounted for and that there were no reports of injuries among them. He included the hashtag VBIED, short for vehicle-born improvised explosive device.


The Islamic State, which is also pressing offensives in the cities of Ramadi and Baiji, claimed responsibility for the explosion in an Internet post.


The attack was the first direct assault on U.S. facilities in Iraq since the Islamic State took control of much of the northern and central areas of the country last summer, and only the second bombing in Irbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Regional Government, a city considered so safe that the United States moved many of its diplomats here from Baghdad when the Islamic State captured the city of Mosul and threatened Baghdad last year.


The Kurdish official at the scene told McClatchy that three attackers had approached a checkpoint near the consulate in an SUV, apparently intending to attack on foot to make room for a suicide bomber, who was either also on foot or in the car. They were spotted by peshmerga security forces stationed outside the consulate, who opened fire. The security official said the three attackers were killed, though whether they were killed by gunshots or detonated explosives was unclear. The official spoke only on the condition of anonymity, as he wasn’t authorized to talk to journalists.


Gunfire was heard in the neighborhood for several minutes after an initial explosion.


The heavily guarded facility, which houses diplomats and a military command center used to coordinate the air campaign led by the United States against the Islamic State, is in a quiet residential and predominantly Christian section of the Kurdish capital. It’s accessible only through a heavily guarded pedestrian entrance.


The facility is one of three key command centers that coordinate operations among the Iraqi and Kurdish governments — which operate independent security forces in the fight against the Islamic State — and the U.S.-led coalition, which provides air support.


It was unknown whether the attack in Irbil was intended to disrupt the coalition response to the significant Islamic State offensives unfolding elsewhere. One of them is in the western province of Anbar, where the provincial capital of Ramadi is in danger of being overrun, and the other is in Baiji, where the Islamic State is trying to take control of Iraq’s largest oil refinery.


The Iraqi government described the explosion in Irbil as due to an improvised explosive device on the road outside the consulate — a description that might mean a car bomb or one carried by a person.


The explosion was followed by heavy gunfire from security forces, who claimed to have been engaging other gunmen. Kurdish peshmerga, along with Kurdish internal security forces, quickly closed off the area as fires raged through a strip mall of coffee shops and restaurants popular with Irbil’s expatriate community across from the consulate.


A U.S. military helicopter circled the area as at least three ambulances evacuated wounded. One peshmerga guard could be seen being loaded into a pickup by his comrades as security forces attempted to disperse bystanders and journalists from the area by frequently firing automatic weapons into the air.


Prothero is a McClatchy special correspondent.


©2015 McClatchy Washington Bureau. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



'Military Mistress' inadvertently let go after traffic stop, officials say


MOBILE, Ala. — An Alabama sheriff's deputy released a woman dubbed the "Military Mistress," who is wanted in three states, because a radio dispatcher failed to pass along that there were warrants out for her arrest, the agency said Friday.


Bobbi Ann Finley, who got her nickname because of allegations that she moved from military base to military base marrying more than a dozen U.S. servicemembers to gain access to their bank accounts, is wanted on check fraud charges in Colorado, Oklahoma and Oregon.


But a Mobile County deputy who stopped the woman and her husband wasn't informed that she was wanted, said Lori Myles, a spokeswoman for the Mobile County Sheriff's Office.


"The bottom line on all of it was a failure to communicate on our part," said Lori Myles.


The mix-up was revealed publicly by the Marion County Sheriff's Department in Oregon, which issued a news release this week saying Finley had married 14 military men and was wanted on bad-check charges along with her current husband, Zackerie House.


Finley was previously called the "Military Mistress" in news reports about the string of marriages.


A deputy stopped Finley, 39, and House in a vehicle near Interstate 10 on Tuesday morning, Myles said. A records check showed the vehicle was stolen and that Finley was wanted for check fraud charges, but the dispatcher only told the officer about the vehicle and failed to mention the warrant, she said.


"We don't know if it was just an oversight or what," Myles said.


The officer consulted with prosecutors by phone and seized the vehicle since it was listed as stolen, Myles said, but no charges were filed since the woman had paperwork indicating she had purchased the car.


The deputy later found out through Oregon investigators who Finley was and went back to the service station where he had encountered the couple, but surveillance video showed the pair had already left with someone else in a pickup truck, said Myles.


Officials haven't had any contact with the woman since then.


"I don't know where she is now," said Sgt. Chris Baldridge of the Marion County Sheriff's Department in Oregon, which first revealed that Alabama authorities had let the woman go.


Finley and her husband are both wanted on check-fraud charges.


Marion County officials said the couple wrote bad checks totaling almost $13,500 in March and appeared to be purchasing items that could be used for camping or living in rural or remote areas. They were at one point driving a 2005 Cadillac Escalade with an Oregon license plate.


It wasn't clear why Finley might have been in Alabama, but court records show she pleaded guilty to theft of services in the state in 2011. She was credited with serving 252 days in jail and received three years on probation.


Authorities asked an Alabama judge to revoke Finley's probation in January, alleging she owed the state $7,412 in court-ordered payments and hadn't made a payment since May 2014.



Graphic briefing at UN on suspected Syria chlorine attacks



UNITED NATIONS — U.N. Security Council members were moved to tears Thursday as the first eyewitness to the latest suspected chlorine attacks on civilians in Syria emerged from the country to give a graphic eyewitness account of dying children.


A Syrian doctor who treated victims from a half-dozen attacks over the past month, Mohamed Tennari, was helped out of the country by the United States, which arranged for the closed-door briefing.


He showed a video of a suspected chlorine attack March 16 in his town of Sarmin in Idlib province, with images of three children, ages 1 through 3, dying despite attempts to resuscitate them. The medical area was so cramped that one of the children was lying on top of their grandmother, who also died.


"Everyone smelled bleachlike odors" and heard the sound of helicopters, Tennari later told reporters after showing them the video. He said most of the victims were women and children.


The U.S. and other council members have repeatedly blamed the Syrian government for such attacks, saying no one else in the grinding civil war has helicopters to deliver the toxic chemicals.


On Friday, Tennari will meet with Russia's U.N. delegation as the U.S. and other council members try to persuade the Syrian government's top ally to stop using its veto power against proposed action on the four-year conflict.


"These are humans who can be affected," said another doctor at the briefing, Zaher Sahloul, who leads the Syrian American Medical Society. "Everyone agrees children should not be killed." He visited the sites of a number of the recent attacks in Syria over the weekend.


Every country in the 15-member council brought up the need for accountability in the sometimes deadly attacks, except for Russia and allies China and Venezuela, Sahloul said. He said every council member was affected by the video and briefing, and "some of them cried."


Turning that emotion into action that the council can agree on remains a challenge.


"What we've done today is brought individuals who can testify to what happened, brought the facts to the council in as rapid and moving a way as we could do," U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power told reporters just after the meeting. "And it is now, in our view, incumbent on the council to go further than we have been able to come to this point, to get past the old divisions."


The council last month approved a resolution condemning the use of toxic chemicals in Syria and threatening action against any violations, but the U.N.'s most powerful body seems stuck because there is no way to formally assign blame for attacks.


Neither the U.N. nor the global chemical weapons watchdog, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, has a mandate to assign blame in the attacks, though the OPCW this year condemned the use of chlorine in Syria as a breach of international law. Council members have asked the OPCW to look into the latest attacks.


The council found rare agreement on Syria in the fall of 2013 to order the removal and destruction of Syria's chemical weapons, but chlorine was not declared as a chemical weapon. The chemical does not have to be declared because it is also used for regular purposes in industry.



Thursday, April 16, 2015

Senator: Veterans still losing gun rights because of VA reporting












AUSA 2014 attendees check out guns at the SIG Sauer booth in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 15, 2014.






WASHINGTON — A Senate panel chairman rekindled a debate Wednesday over whether veterans who cannot manage their own benefits should be considered “mentally defective” by the FBI and barred from buying guns.


Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder saying veterans issued a fiduciary by the Department of Veterans Affairs are still being automatically flagged in the electronic database used to vet firearms sales across the country.


Past analysis has found over 99 percent of the names listed as mentally defective in the FBI’s database came from the VA, and the issue has caused heated debates on Capitol Hill in recent years.


“Congress needs to understand what justifies taking such action without more due process protections for the veteran,” Grassley, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, wrote in the letter to Holder.


The VA can decide that a veteran is no longer mentally fit to handle benefits and finances and will then appoint what is called a fiduciary, often a family member but sometimes an outside party who manages their affairs.


The names of veterans who receive that designation are also submitted to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, which must be used by gun dealers to run a background check before making a sale. The VA said Thursday that it still reports the information according to the federal requirements in the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act.


The vets must appeal through the VA to regain control of their benefits, which can be a complex and lengthy process. Meanwhile, they may be blocked from buying guns by the database, which is managed by the FBI and falls under Holder’s Department of Justice.


“Under the current practice, a VA finding that concludes that a veteran requires a fiduciary to administer benefit payments effectively voids his Second Amendment rights -- a consequence which is wholly unrelated to and unsupported by the record developed in the VA process,” the senator wrote.


The issue had been championed by Sen. Tom Coburn, a Republican from Oklahoma who retired last year. He held up a defense budget in 2012 attempting to get the rules changed to require that vet cases are heard by a judge.


tritten.travis@stripes.com

Twitter: @Travis_Tritten




2 National Guard members arrested for selling illegal weapons stolen from military


This story has been corrected.


Two National Guard members assigned to the La Mesa armory were arrested Wednesday on suspicion of trying to sell illegal weaponry, including miltary rifles and ammunition, to a member of a Mexican drug cartel.


Jaime Casillas, 22, of El Cajon and Andrew Reyes, 34, of La Mesa wore their uniforms during at least one transaction with what they believed was a cartel member but was actually an undercover federal agent, according to court documents.


The two were taken to the downtown federal prison and are set to be arraigned Thursday in San Diego federal court.


Each faces a charge of dealing in firearms without a federal license. Reyes faces a charge of unlicensed transportation of weapons. Casillas is a Mexican national.


Documents accuse the two of seven transactions in which they sold thousands of rounds of ammunition, four AR-15 rifles, an AK-47 assault rifle, a .40-caliber pistol, and a 7.62-caliber SKS rifle to the undercover agent.


The AR-15 is the civilian equivalent of the M-16 used by the military.


The AK-47, whose invention is attributed to Mikhail Kalashnikov, has been mass-produced in several Eastern Bloc countries and is a favorite weapon of U.S. enemies in Iraq and Afghanistan and of Mexican cartel members. It is known as sturdy and easy to use.


Casillas and Reyes also sold ceramic body armor to the agent that was allegedly stolen from the U.S. military, according to prosecutors.


In one transaction, the two wore their Army uniforms and received $2,150 from agent for an AR-15 rifle. In an eight-month investigation, 10 weapons were purchased, according to court documents.


©2015 the Los Angeles Times

Visit the Los Angeles Times at www.latimes.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly identified Jaime Casillas and Andrew Reyes as Army reservists. The two are members of the Army National Guard.



2 Army reservists arrested for selling illegal weapons stolen from military


Two Army reservists assigned to the La Mesa armory were arrested Wednesday on suspicion of trying to sell illegal weaponry, including miltary rifles and ammunition, to a member of a Mexican drug cartel.


Jaime Casillas, 22, of El Cajon and Andrew Reyes, 34, of La Mesa wore their uniforms during at least one transaction with what they believed was a cartel member but was actually an undercover federal agent, according to court documents.


The two were taken to the downtown federal prison and are set to be arraigned Thursday in San Diego federal court.


Each faces a charge of dealing in firearms without a federal license. Reyes faces a charge of unlicensed transportation of weapons. Casillas is a Mexican national.


Documents accuse the two of seven transactions in which they sold thousands of rounds of ammunition, four AR-15 rifles, an AK-47 assault rifle, a .40-caliber pistol, and a 7.62-caliber SKS rifle to the undercover agent.


The AR-15 is the civilian equivalent of the M-16 used by the military.


The AK-47, whose invention is attributed to Mikhail Kalashnikov, has been mass-produced in several Eastern Bloc countries and is a favorite weapon of U.S. enemies in Iraq and Afghanistan and of Mexican cartel members. It is known as sturdy and easy to use.


Casillas and Reyes also sold ceramic body armor to the agent that was allegedly stolen from the U.S. military, according to prosecutors.


In one transaction, the two wore their Army uniforms and received $2,150 from agent for an AR-15 rifle. In an eight-month investigation, 10 weapons were purchased, according to court documents.


———


©2015 the Los Angeles Times


Visit the Los Angeles Times at www.latimes.com


Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



Germany’s response to Nazism on trial as man, 93, faces 300,000 charges


BERLIN (Tribune News Service) — Nearly 70 years after World War II ended in Europe with Nazi Germany’s surrender on May 7, 1945, what’s likely to be the final criminal chapter of that horrific period is about to unfold in a small German town.


Beginning next Tuesday, Oskar Groening, who’s better known as “the accountant of Auschwitz,” goes on trial for what in any other context would seem an impossible crime: 300,000 counts of accessory to murder.


Innocence is not really an issue, though guilt will be: Groening has freely admitted that he stood on the unloading ramps of the most infamous of the Nazi death camps and counted the cash confiscated from the Hungarian Jews who spilled out of the box cars, headed for selection. What the court will decide is whether that made him an accessory to their murders in Auschwitz’s gas chambers.


But the larger point the trial will make is that decades later, Germany and Germans remain committed to running down perpetrators of the Holocaust, even as they near their natural ends. Groening is 93, sometimes described as in poor health and unlikely to live out much of any sentence handed down, even if he survives the trial, which is expected to stretch over four months.


“Even if someone is physically incapable for reasons of age and health of serving a sentence, moral justice is important, for the victims, but above all to reinforce core societal values,” said Deidre Berger, head of the American Jewish Committee office in Berlin. “It is never too late to hold trials of Nazi perpetrators and accomplices. There can be no statute of limitations on justice for the heinous crime of the Holocaust.”


Groening’s trial is a fitting reminder of “never again” for the murder by Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich of an estimated 6 million Jews and 5 million others — Roma (also known as Gypsies), gays and political opponents. Its start in the city of Lueneburg in northern Germany comes a day after the date Hitler was born 126 years ago.


In the past, Groening has maintained he wasn’t a killer but “a cog in the machine,” and previously German law enforcement had agreed. Prosecutors knew his story when they found him in 1963 but decided not to press charges.


Interpretations of the law have since changed, however, and at least two other people have been charged in similar cases. In addition to counting money, Groening, who was a member of the SS, Hitler’s storm troopers, is accused of hiding luggage so that those aboard later train loads wouldn’t suspect something was amiss.


“But the Groening case is a special one,” said attorney Thomas Walther, who represents Auschwitz survivors and their families. Until now, Groening hasn’t told the full truth of his role at Auschwitz. Once it emerges at trial, Walther said, the full collective guilt of Germany will be on display. “It is obvious that hundreds or maybe thousands of individuals who have similar details for aiding and abetting have not been put on trial,” he said.


Groening’s story: From May 16 to July 11, 1944, he stood on the unloading ramps at Auschwitz as the Nazis’ Final Solution was applied to the Hungarian population. He watched as the healthy and strong were selected to be put to work. And he watched as the very young, the very old, the ill and the weak were moved directly to the gas chambers to be murdered.


Before those in either group met their fate, however, Groening would count any cash they carried and account for any valuables among their belongings, looking for money to support the Third Reich.


A decade ago in a BBC documentary, he claimed he’d done nothing more than “live in a garrison where the destruction of the Jews took place.” But he also noted that in the last decades of his life he was deeply disturbed as it became clear that more and more people around the world were claiming the Holocaust was exaggerated or even fabricated.


“I see it as my task, now at my age, to face up to these things that I experienced and to oppose the Holocaust deniers who claim that Auschwitz never happened,” he said in the documentary. “I want to tell those deniers: I have seen the gas chambers, I have seen the crematoria, I have seen the burning pits — and I want you to believe me that these atrocities happened. I was there.”


Experts agree that the symbolic importance of bringing Groening to trial cannot be overestimated.


Just last month, on March 23, the notorious Danish Nazi Soeren Kam, who’d been convicted in Denmark of the 1943 murder of an anti-Nazi Danish newspaper editor, died of natural causes in Kempten, a Bavarian village in southern Germany. Like Groening, Kam was 93.


But unlike Groening, Kam was “a totally unrepentant Nazi murderer,” in the words of Efraim Zuroff, the director of the Israel office of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the Nazi hunting organization. That he died a free man in Kempten “is a terrible failure of the Bavarian judicial authorities,” Zuroff said. “Kam should have finished his miserable life in jail, whether in Denmark or Germany. The failure to hold him accountable will only inspire the contemporary heirs of the Nazis to consider following in his footsteps.”


The center keeps a list of most-wanted Nazi war criminals, and Kam was No. 6. Until December, the first name on that list was Alois Brunner, who, despite the fact that he would have been 102, was listed because it wasn’t known whether he was alive or dead. A Wiesenthal Center statement described Brunner as “a key operative of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann … responsible for the deportation of Jewish people from Austria (47,000), Greece (44,000), France (23,500) and Slovakia (14,000) to Nazi death camps during the Holocaust.”


In December, a German intelligence officer was able to confirm that Brunner had died in Syria, apparently of natural causes, in 2010.


German historian Manfred Goertemaker, a professor at Potsdam University who’s spent years studying the German justice system’s approach to former Nazis, said it was essential that Germany kept the hunt going until they were all gone.


“I know many Germans would like to say we’ve done enough,” he said. “But this is incorrect. Such horrible crimes cannot go away easily. There have to be consequences.”


Decades ago, German officials wanted to rely on “the natural end to the issue” and allow those who weren’t at the top of the Nazi chain to move back into society. But today, Goertemaker said, government officials realize that history will judge “how we dealt with our Nazi past.”


“It is important that Germans remember that the people of this nation, in a free and fair election, chose Hitler,” he said. “Hitler was not an exception. He was a reflection of the common will. Others may not have committed such crimes, but they were happy to be led by one who did. That is a lesson we must never forget, and this trial is a part of that lesson.”


———


©2015 McClatchy Washington Bureau


Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau at www.mcclatchydc.com


Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



Cobra Gold planning postponed; no decision made on US participation


TOKYO — The United States has indefinitely postponed a planning meeting with Thailand for next year’s Cobra Gold exercise, a decision that comes months after the U.S. scaled down its part in one of the world’s largest multinational military events.


The postponement of the planned March meeting in Hawaii also comes as the U.S. evaluates its relationship with Thailand, a longtime, steadfast security ally that has shown little sign of returning to democracy since a May 2014 military coup.


“No decisions have been made regarding the 2016 iteration of Cobra Gold,” according to a statement issued by the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok and the U.S. Pacific Command. “Decisions concerning the exercise will be made over the course of the next months in consultations with Thailand, the co-host of the exercise, and other participating countries.”


Cobra Gold, which normally combines combat exercises with humanitarian assistance and disaster response, has served for decades as a foundation for U.S. military relations with the region’s other powers.


The U.S. military values its access to Thailand’s well-developed airfields and bases, which give its forces a stable staging point for operations in Southeast Asia. Meanwhile, the Thai military has gained valuable access to U.S. tactics and procedures.


The Thai military is moving ahead under the expectation that the exercise will proceed in 2016. Officials still expect a meeting in Thailand, which is generally held in the summer.


Exercise planners are standing by to hear about any potential rescheduling of the Hawaii meeting.


“We’re waiting for a letter from the U.S. government on that,” Thai defense spokeswoman Capt. Arada Youdlad said in a phone interview.


In 2014 before the coup, more than 13,000 servicemembers from the U.S., Thailand, and four other countries participated, while about 20 other nations sent staff observers. In February, the U.S. scaled down its presence and declined to participate in combat exercises, as State Department officials cited concerns about Thailand’s political situation.


On Thursday, State Department officials called Thailand “a valued friend and ally,” but again raised questions about the government’s crackdown on democratic freedoms.


“We continue to urge the interim government to end the practice of trying civilians in military courts, remove undue restrictions on freedom of speech and peaceful assembly, institute a genuinely inclusive reform process that reflects the broad diversity of views within the country, and return the country to democracy,” according to an embassy statement.


Thai government head Prayuth Chan-ocha declared an end to martial law on April 1, but then invoked an article of the interim constitution that grants him sweeping veto authority over laws, in the name of national security, according to The Associated Press.


“Article 44 will be exercised constructively,” Prayuth told AP earlier this month. “Don’t worry, if you’re not doing anything wrong, there’s no need to be afraid.”


Prayuth said last year that democratic elections would be held this year but has since pushed the timetable to sometime in 2016.


Prayuth and other military officials ousted former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra last year in a generally peaceful coup. The military’s support came largely from affluent and middle-class citizens who viewed Shinawatra’s government as corrupt.


In 2006, the Thai military ousted his brother, Thaksin, whose strongest support came from the country’s less affluent provinces.


slavin.erik@stripes.com



Locklear: China could use reclaimed islands to deploy missiles, radar


WASHINGTON — The commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific said Wednesday that major land reclamation by China at outposts in the South China Sea could allow it to exert more influence over the contested area and deploy military assets such as long-range radar and advanced missile systems.


Adm. Samuel Locklear also told the House Armed Services Committee that Russia has escalated military activity in the Asia-Pacific in recent months to a near Cold War-level.


Locklear's area of command straddles a vast area of land and ocean where the Obama administration has tried to elevate America's presence, and where other major powers jockey for influence. He was addressing a hearing on U.S. military strategy and posture in the region.


In the past year, China has conducted massive land reclamation at previously submerged reefs in the South China Sea despite a U.S. call for a freeze on such construction to give time for diplomacy to work between China and its neighbors in Southeast Asia.


Locklear said China has aggressive reclamation and construction projects at eight outposts in the Paracel and Spratly island chains, including what appears to be an airfield at Fiery Cross Reef, which is also claimed by Vietnam, the Philippines and Taiwan. It's one of many disputed, tiny land features in that ocean.


Locklear said the artificial islands would allow China to provide basing and resupply for its large and growing fleet of maritime security vessels. He said China eventually could deploy missiles and radar on them, providing a platform for enforcing an air defense identification zone if it tried to establish one in the South China Sea.


"It allows them to exert basically greater influence over what's now a contested area," Locklear said.


China claims much of the South China Sea, and Beijing has asserted its right to undertake any activity in territories it claims. In late 2013, China unilaterally declared an air defense zone over disputed, Japanese-held islands in the East China Sea. The U.S., Japan and others have refused to recognize the move.


Locklear also noted an increase in Russian military activity in the Asia-Pacific, with long-range maneuvers toward the U.S. in the past few months. He said Russia is improving its strategic nuclear deterrent on its east coast in the northern Pacific, and its submarine forces, which operate in the Arctic and in Northeast Asia.


He said there was a greater Russian military presence in Southeast Asia this year, too.


U.S. ally Japan said Wednesday that the number of scrambles by its warplanes has surged to levels nearly matching the Cold War era amid growing activity by China and Russia.



Wednesday, April 15, 2015

MacDill AFB seeking to house displaced KC-135s


Though Tampa’s MacDill Air Force Base isn’t on the latest short list of installations that could receive the new KC-46A Pegasus aerial refueling tankers, the announcement Tuesday by the Air Force Reserve may ultimately prove to be a boon locally.


That’s because MacDill, which is not an Air Force Reserve base and thus was never under consideration for the latest round of new tankers, could be in the running for the KC-135 tankers displaced by the new planes, say community leaders, who are pushing to make that happen.


On Tuesday, the Air Force Reserve announced that Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma, Seymour-Johnson AFB, North Carolina, Westover Air Reserve Base, Massachusetts, and Grissom ARB, Indiana, are candidate bases for the first Air Force Reserve-led KC-46A Pegasus location.


The Air Force hopes to whittle down the list by the summer.


In the meantime, the local effort to bring displaced KC-135 Stratotankers to MacDill, spearheaded by Congressmembers Kathy Castor and David Jolly, continues, said retired Air Force Gen. Chip Diehl, a former MacDill base commander who now serves as vice president of the Tampa Bay Defense Alliance, an organization advocating for MacDill and other military related issues.


“When these bases get the KC-46, we want the KC-135s to continue to come here,” said Diehl.


Air Force officials say no decision have yet been made about relocating the Stratotankers.


“It is too early in the process to determine fleet management decisions which may result from this action,” said Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek.


MacDill currently has 16 of the Eisenhower-era tankers, which are shared by the 6th Air Mobility Wing and its Reserve partner, the 927th Air Refueling Wing. Some of those jets have been used in the fight against Islamic State.


The base is expecting an additional eight tankers, which will begin arriving by 2017. They would come with 220 additional active duty personnel and 75 reservists, an Air Force spokeswoman said last year. Those tankers are coming from bases that will receive the new Pegasus tankers, part of a $50 billion program to replace the aging existing fleet 179 new planes by 2028.


In 2013, the Air Force announced that MacDill was unsuccessful in its bid to be one of the first bases to receive the new tankers.


That first wave of new tankers would have brought 36 jets here, said Diehl, adding that the goal is to prove to the Air Force that MacDill can handle that many planes. With the eight Stratotankers on the way, that means local officials are pushing for an additional 12 jets, he said.


The mission is to show Air Mobility Command and other decision makers that MacDill has the operational and logistical capacity to handle more planes.


Last year, Castor announced that MacDill will likely receive $32 million in military construction funds to help accommodate the new tankers. Diehl said a new hangar may be needed as well as additional fuel hydrants, among other things.


“Our MacDill Means Mobility campaign will not stop there and will advocate for KC-46s to be assigned to MacDill in future years/decades,” said Castor through spokeswoman Marcia Mejia.


Likewise, Jolly, who has also been working to bring 23 Army Reserve Black Hawk helicopters to MacDill from St. Pete-Clearwater International Airport, supports additional tankers coming to MacDill.


“I am advocating for our regional assets including MacDill’s potential growth,” he said. “We need to ensure MacDill has sufficient capacity for additional fixed wing aircraft and helicopters. To that end future budgets should include resources for additional hangars and runways to ensure the base can continue to grow.”


Jolly and other community leaders recently visited Scott Air Force Base in Illinois, home of Air Mobility Command, to lobby on behalf of MacDill.


——


©2015 the Tampa Tribune (Tampa, Fla.)


Visit the Tampa Tribune (Tampa, Fla.) at www.tampatrib.com


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Russia criticizes Canada for sending troops to Ukraine


10 minutes ago




TORONTO — Russia called Canada's decision to send 200 military trainers to Ukraine "counterproductive and deplorable" on Wednesday.


On Tuesday, Canada announced 200 soldiers will be posted in western Ukraine, joining U.S. and British soldiers early this summer.


The mission will last until March 31, 2017. Britain is sending up to 75 military trainers. The U.S. has committed 800 troops to train three battalions in western Ukraine. The move comes after a request from the government of Ukraine.


The Russian Embassy in Ottawa said in a statement that Canada's actions are fueling a military build-up.


"It does not help in any way the settlement of the internal fratricidal conflict in that country," the embassy said. "While foreign ministers of France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine ... called for enhanced intra-Ukrainian political dialogue, it is neither appropriate, nor helpful to assist the military build-up playing into the hands of 'party of war in Kiev'," the statement added.


Canadian Defense Minister Jason Kenney said the deployment sends Russian President Vladimir Putin a message of resolution and deterrence. Kenney emphasized the troops will be far from the conflict zone. About 150 soldiers will be housed at a NATO training center in Yavoriv, near the Polish border. Kenney also said between 25 to 30 troops will be also stationed at the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense Demining Center in Kamyanets-Podilsky, also in western Ukraine.


Canada is home to more than 1 million people of Ukrainian descent.




Doolittle Raiders honored in Capitol ceremony


WASHINGTON — They delivered the bold U.S. counterpunch after Japan’s strike on Pearl Harbor and likely shifted the course of World War II toward victory.


Amid the towering columns of the Capitol’s Emancipation Hall, the Doolittle Tokyo Raiders were honored Wednesday in a ceremony bestowing the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Congressional Gold Medal. The director of the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in Ohio accepted the medal on behalf of the two surviving members, both in their 90s.


The Raiders were comprised of 80 pilots and crew members led by then U.S. Air Forces Lt. Col. James Doolittle, who volunteered in 1942 for a risky mission to strike the Japanese homeland and inflict a psychological blow to its imperial ambitions just as war was breaking out across the region.


“They sought no recognition but, oh, how they earned it,” Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, said. “Thank you for what you did for this country. Because of you we live in a free and grateful nation.”


The ceremony comes nearly 73 years to the day after the raid and included a recorded thank you message from Lt. Col. Dick Cole, 99, who was Doolittle’s co-pilot.


Cole said he requested the medal be permanently displayed in the Ohio museum, which plans to present the medal Saturday to Cole and the other surviving Raiders member, Staff Sgt. David Thatcher, 93, who was an engineer and gunner.


The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 killed about 2,300 Americans and was part of an offensive that took territory throughout the Pacific. It led the U.S. military to conceive of the special aviation project.


“One purpose was to give the folks at home the first good news that we’d had in World War II. It caused the Japanese to question their warlords,” the late Doolittle said in a 1980 interview. “And from a tactical point of view, it caused the retention of aircraft in Japan for the defense of the home islands when we had no intention of hitting them again, seriously in the near future.”


Bombing inside Japan required a bold new tactic — flying medium-range bombers from an aircraft carrier position in the Pacific. At that time, no bomber had ever taken off in less than the 500 feet available on carrier decks.


The military settled on the B-25 Mitchell bomber as the ideal aircraft because it was relatively light and could haul 2,000-pound bombs up to 2,000 miles, which was the range and firepower needed for the targets spread across four Japanese cities.


Doolittle’s pilot proved they could pull it off — one made a takeoff in just 287 feet, according to the National World War II Museum in New Orleans.


The 16 B-25s took off from the USS Hornet aircraft carrier and bombed the cities of Tokyo, Yokosuka, Yokohama, Nagoya and Kobe on April 18, 1942.


The bombing did little physical damage but it accomplished its intent. The Japanese public began to doubt assurances that they were safe from air attacks, and the Imperial forces made a fateful decision to change strategy in June and send its carriers and aircraft forward to fight.


Japan would lose two of its carriers and many aircraft in the summer fighting that followed, setting the stage for a series of sea battle defeats to the United States.


But many of the Raiders did not escape danger.


After the bombing, the B-25s flew to China and Russia where they crash-landed and crew members were captured. Eight of the crew were captured by the Japanese and endured mock trials that resulted in death sentences. Captured Raiders were beaten and starved during 40 months as prisoners of war.


The crew that flew from its targets to Vladivostok, Russia, seeking a safe harbor were captured and imprisoned by Russian forces that had vowed neutrality. Eventually they escaped through Iran, according to the World War II museum.


“If they were here today, the Raiders would tell you they just wanted to help out with our nation’s war effort,” said Lt. Gen. Jack Hudson, director of the Air Force museum.


tritten.travis@stripes.com

Twitter: @Travis_Tritten



In surprise offensive, Islamic State takes 3 villages near Ramadi



IRBIL, Iraq (Tribune Content Agency) — Two weeks after a critical victory at Tikrit, where a combination of U.S. airstrikes, government troops and Shiite Muslim militias overwhelmed an Islamic State force that had held the city for nearly a year, the Iraqi government faced a new challenge Wednesday, a sign of how much remains to be done to defeat the militants.


In a surprise assault, Islamic State fighters captured three villages outside Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province 100 miles south of Tikrit, and pushed to within 500 yards of a key government center in the northeastern section of the city, one of the few population centers in Anbar still under government control.


Government forces were responding with heavy bombardment from military aircraft, but the outcome of the battle was uncertain as night fell. Thousands of residents and troops were reported fleeing the city.


“The soldiers, the militias, the tribes, everyone with a gun who had said they would protect us from Daash has fled the city,” said one resident reached by phone, who asked not to be identified for security reasons. “There wasn’t even any fighting in this area and they just left. The city is a ghost town, and people are scared of Daash if they stay and scared they will be slaughtered by Daash on the road if they flee.” Daash is the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group.


Photos from the city showed massive traffic tie-ups as hundreds of cars jammed roads.


The timing of the Islamic State’s offensive seemed intended to remind the government in Baghdad that the militants remain a potent force and ready to repel the government’s announced next move to liberate Anbar, a vast Sunni Muslim-dominated province that the Islamic State had controlled even before it stormed across northern and central Iraq last summer.


Residents and military commanders said the fighting had been heavy for the villages that fell to the Islamists — Sjariyah, Albu-Ghanim and Soufiya — and the Defense Ministry spokesman, Brig. Gen. Tahseen Ibrahim, acknowledged government troops’ defeat, telling The Associated Press that the militants had “gained a foothold in some areas.”


He said reinforcements had been dispatched to the province and that U.S.-led coalition airstrikes were supporting the Iraqi forces, although there was no immediate confirmation from the U.S. Central Command, whose aircraft generally strike at night, leaving the daytime airspace open to the less advanced Iraqi air force.


An Iraqi official in Ramadi, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to talk to journalists, said militants had pushed to within 500 yards of the provincial command center but were then killed by U.S. airstrikes, part of what the official described as a trap the Iraqis and Americans had set for the Islamic State fighters.


A statement on the Central Command’s website referred to the combat in Ramadi as a clearing operation, suggesting that the Iraqi troops had held off the encroaching Islamic State fighters.


In the statement, the commander of U.S. troops in Iraq was quoted as saying the coalition would act quickly to support Iraqi government troops not only in Anbar but also in the north-central town of Baiji, where government forces holding the country’s largest oil refinery have been besieged by Islamic State fighters since last summer. The siege was recently tightened as militants who had withdrawn from Tikrit refocused their efforts on storming critical oil refinery infrastructure.


“We are supporting Iraqi security forces throughout the country,” said the U.S. commander, Army Lt. Gen. James Terry. “Our support in Baiji, Ramadi and Karmah highlight our commitment towards enabling our Iraqi partners in their fight against Daash and in helping restore security throughout Iraq.”


Residents offered a less optimistic assessment of the fighting.


One, Omar al Dulaimi, told McClatchy by phone that the Islamic State attack had surprised residents and government-aligned tribal fighters. Dulaimi said government forces withdrew from their forward positions in Ramadi and Karmah, a strategic town outside the nearby city of Fallujah, leaving many pro-government Sunni tribesmen trapped. The tribesmen were running low on ammunition, he said.


The government “must break this siege or there will be hundreds of innocent people massacred by Daash,” Dulami said.


Wednesday’s fighting came as Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi was in Washington to gather more financial and military support for the fight against the Islamic State. He met with President Barack Obama on Tuesday and had breakfast Wednesday with Defense Secretary Ashton Carter.


U.S. officials have been cautious about overstating Iraqi successes against the Islamic State.


“There are military engagements being conducted across the breadth and depth of this battlefield,” Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, said Wednesday. “It’s a war. There’s a war going on in Iraq.”


Warren described Ramadi as “contested” between the Islamic State and the government. He acknowledged that Islamic State fighters control Baiji and are pushing to take over the refinery and oil field there. “Iraqi security forces retain a majority of the Baiji oil field, but they are under pressure,” he said.


Warren’s description of the battles in Iraq contrasted with a rosier portrait he had provided just Monday, when he displayed a color-coded map comparing areas of the country now under Islamic State control with such areas eight months ago.


The Islamic State had ceded 5,000 to 6,000 square miles of territory, Warren said, as its front lines had been pushed back to the east and to the south.


“ISIL has lost large areas where it was once dominant,” Warren said Monday, referring to the Islamic State by an acronym.


By Wednesday, his tone was more sober.


“We’re concerned with the situation in Iraq,” he said. “There’s a war going on. So there are going to be ebbs and flows. There are going to be setbacks.”


Prothero, a McClatchy special correspondent, reported from Irbil. Rosen reported from Washington. A McClatchy special correspondent in Anbar province, whose identity is being withheld for security reasons, contributed to this report.


©2015 McClatchy Washington Bureau. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Tax extensions available for filers needing more time


HUTCHINSON, Kan. (Tribune News Service) — You can look at these taxing figures two ways: Either, most people don’t wait until the last minute to file their federal tax return or – I'm not the only slacker.


As of April 3, date of the most current information, some 909,000 Kansans had filed returns with the Internal Revenue Service, IRS spokesman Michael Devine said.


That’s 70 percent of the 1.3 million individual returns from Kansas officials expect to receive.


Of those returns, Devine reported, 95 percent, or some 863,000, were electronically filed, with paper returns down 9 percent from last year, or about 45,000.


Nationally, Devine said, 99 million taxpayers had filed their federal returns, with 91 percent of those – 90.6 million – online.


That’s down about 737,000 filers, or 0.80 percent, from the same date last year in terms of the total number of returns, though the number of those filing online was up significantly. At the national level, paper returns are down 12 percent from a year ago, Devine reported.


As of April 3, the IRS had issued 77.2 million refunds, worth $217.351 billion. The average refund was $2,815, up $23 over last year’s average.


Need more time?


Taxpayers who need more time to file their 2014 tax return can request a six-month extension, until Oct. 15, by filing Form 4868. They can find the form online or through a tax preparer, Devine said.


The only caveat is, while the extension grants extra time to file a tax return, it doesn’t allow extra time to pay any taxes owed. Taxpayers must estimate their tax liability on the form and pay any amount due to avoid interest and late-payment penalties.


For those delaying filing because they don't have enough money to pay the IRS, don't wait. Most people can set up a payment agreement with the IRS online in a matter of minutes, which allows up to 72 months to pay the debt. Alternatively, taxpayers can request a payment agreement by filing Form 9465, which can be downloaded from IRS.gov and mailed along with a tax return.


Taxpayers allowed more time to file without seeking an extension include those who are abroad (who have until June 15 to file), and members of the military serving in a combat zone, who have at least 180 days after leaving the combat zone to file.


If you’ve filed a return and are waiting on a refund, the fastest way to check its status is using “Where’s My Refund?” which is available at www.IRS.gov or on the smartphone application IRS2Go 5.0. People can also call 1-800-829-1954.


The IRS updates the information once a day. Taxpayers will need their Social Security number, filing status (single, married, head of household) and the exact refund amount.


Common mistakes on paper returns


People who file paper tax returns are about 20 times more likely to make a mistake than e-filers, Devine stated in a news release, because software programs used to file online are designed to help catch errors.


The most common tax-filing errors include wrong or missing Social Security numbers, misspelled names (they should be spelled as listed in Social Security cards), and filing status errors such as listing Head of Household instead of Single.


Following those are: math mistakes; errors in figure credits or deductions; and not signing forms (both spouses filing jointly must sign.)


The IRS also reminds taxpayers to see if they’re eligible for the Earned Income Tax Credit, or EITC. While the IRS estimates four out of five eligible taxpayers now claim the credit, some are still unaware of the EITC or they don't know how to claim it.


Last year 5,052 Reno County residents received part of more than $11.1 million through the income-qualifying credit, which was created in 1975 as a work incentive. The average credit was $2,210.


The EITC was worth more than $492 million to Kansans last year, with more than 212,500 individuals or families claiming it. The average EITC benefit statewide was $2,317.


To make it easier to determine eligibility for this credit, the IRS has a self-help tool, the EITC Assistant, at the IRS.gov website. The program answers questions about eligibility, filing status, qualifying children and credit amount. It is also is available in Spanish.


“Anyone who made less than $52,427 needs to check their eligibility at www.irs.gov/eitc,” said Devine.


Current and prior year tax forms and instructions are also available at IRS.gov's Forms and Publications page or by calling toll-free: 800-TAX-FORM (800-829-3676).


©2015 The Hutchinson News (Hutchinson, Kan.)

Visit The Hutchinson News (Hutchinson, Kan.) at www.hutchnews.com

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Military is on a quest for bombs that won't accidentally explode


WASHINGTON — For decades they have been an effective and lethal pair, the explosives behind so many of the military's grenades, mortars and bombs. But TNT and Composition B can also be sensitive devils that detonate when they are not supposed to.


And that can have devastating effects.


A fire aboard the USS Forrestal set off a chain reaction of explosions that killed 134 sailors in 1967. In 1991, an ammunition carrier loaded with 155 mm artillery shells caught fire at Camp Doha in Kuwait, setting off massive explosions that left three dead and dozens wounded.


But now the Army is involved in a massive effort that would eventually replace those weapons with what are called "insensitive munitions," which are less susceptible to exploding inadvertently.


The technology, developed by BAE Systems, the large defense contractor, uses an explosive that is far more chemically stable and able to withstand extreme heat and outside interference, including getting hit by bullets or shrapnel.


TNT and Composition B "are generally stable," said Mike Ervin, director of innovation and customer relations for BAE ordnance systems, and aren't going to spontaneously explode. "But the issue with TNT and Comp B is shock sensitivity. Both are sensitive to external stimuli. If they get hit by a fragment or bullet, they could cause a chain reaction. And instead of losing one round, you could lose your whole store of ammunition."


The Army is now using what's called IMX-101 in some of its artillery, a far safer substance, officials say. And the service hopes to one day make all of its munitions "insensitive." But that's not going to happen quickly.


"It'll definitely take a decade or two to turn over the entire inventory," said Raymond Colon, project manager of the Army's Combat Ammunition Systems.


The Army already claims at least one success involving the new technology. When a convoy carrying 60 mm mortar rounds was hit by a bomb in Afghanistan a few years ago and caught fire, the shells didn't explode. And that, officials said, saved lives.



Fierce clashes in Iraq as Islamic State seizes villages near Ramadi



BAGHDAD — The Islamic State group launched an offensive in Iraq's western Anbar province on Wednesday, capturing three villages near the provincial capital of Ramadi, where fierce clashes were underway between the extremists and government troops, residents said.


The dawn push by Islamic State fighters seized the villages of Sjariyah, Albu-Ghanim and Soufiya, which had been under government control, the residents said, adding that the fighting was taking place on the eastern edges of Ramadi, about two kilometers (mile) away from a local government building.


In Soufiya, the militants bombed a police station and took over a power plant. The residents, who spoke on condition of anonymity fearing for their own safety, said airstrikes were trying to back up Iraqi troops.


Iraqi security officials could not immediately be reached for comment.


Around noon Wednesday, the militants opened another front with the government troops on three other villages, to the northeast of Ramadi.


The Islamic State's push comes as the group was dealt a major blow this month, when Iraqi troops pushed it out of Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's hometown.


It also coincides with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's visit to Washington where he met with President Barack Obama on Tuesday and appealed for greater support from the U.S.-led coalition carrying out airstrikes against the militants, who have also captured large areas in neighboring Syria.


Also, a spate of militant attack in and outside Baghdad killed at least 43 people over the past two days.


Meanwhile, Iraqi state TV cited Lt. Gen. Abdul-Wahab al-Saadi, the regional commander of troops in Salahuddin province as saying that troops started a large-scale operation to recapture areas beyond Tikrit. The TV did not provide more details.


Last year's blitz by the Islamic State, which swept through key areas in the north and west to seize about a third of Iraq, has pushed the country into its worst crisis since the 2011 withdrawal of U.S. troops.



Air Force leaves F-16 squadron at Eielson AFB in Alaska


FAIRBANKS, Alaska (Tribune Content Agency) — Ending speculation that a move might be in the offing, the U.S. Air Force said Tuesday it will keep a squadron of F-16 fighters at Alaska’s Eielson Air Force Base in Fairbanks.


The Alaska congressional delegation praised the decision, with Rep. Don Young calling it “an example of logic prevailing, which is becoming exceptionally rare in the federal government.” Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan said the actions of Russia, North Korea and other nations and the pending move of the F-35 squadrons to Eielson all tend to reinforce the need for this decision about the 18th Aggressor Squadron.


Gov. Bill Walker said having the F-16s available for training operations helps with the nation's readiness. He also said he welcomes the start of the environmental review for the proposed basing of two F-35 squadrons at Eielson, a move that has a bearing on the F-16s.


Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James cited the strategic location and suitability of the mission as key reasons for keeping the F-16s where they are, Fairbanks Mayor Luke Hopkins said in a written statement. Last fall, the Air Force said it would review the possibility of moving the 18 fighters to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage or to Nevada.


“This announcement from James is huge," Hopkins said. "With the F-16s remaining at EAFB, the base will continue to support the mission to be ‘ready to fight tonight.’ I am proud to lead a borough so committed to our status as a military community. For over a decade, our residents have repeatedly made a strong case for maintaining the 354th Aggressor Squadron at Eielson. Today’s announcement is a strong endorsement of the hard work and advocacy of thousands of Interior Alaskans who stood up and supported our fighting men and women," Hopkins said.


The Air Force has also designated Eielson as the future home of two squadrons of F-35 jets. That aircraft remains under development by the Pentagon.


In a phone interview Tuesday, Hopkins said that over the last decade Eielson has gone from the brink of closure to a situation in which it stands to have multiple missions, which is good for the community and the state. As recently as 2013, the Air Force considered moving the F-16s to JBER, which prompted a major lobbying campaign to keep them in the Interior.


“The F-16s were a vestige and they are not a vestige anymore,” Hopkins said. The F-16 Aggressor Squadron flies during the Red Flag-Alaska exercises and it also works with the F-22 fighters from JBER.


Hopkins said Fairbanks business and community leaders have invested a lot of time in recent years trying to make sure that the numbers presented to the Air Force are accurate and responsible. He said that is a key reason why efforts to put the base in cold storage have been rejected.


Murkowski said while the plan to base two squadrons of F-35s at Eielson "gave the Pentagon a reason to re-evaluate the distribution of their assets,” she said, “we once again feel vindicated that our state, our welcoming military community, our location, and our natural environmental assets make Alaska second to none.”


“Given Russia’s recent resurgence and Putin’s aggressive moves into the Arctic, keeping the 18th Aggressors at Eielson is more important than ever,” Sullivan said in a statement.


“Flying out of Eielson, planes can respond more quickly to hot spots in Asia, the Middle East or Europe. Alaskans are ready, and excited, to accept the F-35 mission. Both of these announcements are good news for the Interior,” Walker said in his statement.


In a phone interview, Murkowski said the Air Force secretary found it made sense both in terms of costs and efficiency to leave the fighter jets at Eielson.


She said the experience of the past decade, which included plans to shut down the base at one point, is a reminder that long-range decisions about important infrastructure should not be based on immediate budget demands.


As recently as 2012, the Air Force had considered spending millions to tear down numerous usable buildings on the base to reduce the cost of maintenance and operations.


©2015 the (Anchorage) Alaska Dispatch News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Tuesday, April 14, 2015

20 Special Forces soldiers honored for valor on and off the battlefield


EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (Tribune Content Agency) — It isn’t often that the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) is able to host a medal ceremony at their home compound.


“We usually don’t have everyone here all at once,” group spokesman Capt. Thomas Cieslak said of the frequently deployed outfit.


On Tuesday, the group recognized 20 of its soldiers who displayed extraordinary valor on and off the battlefield.


“The men we honor today don’t realize they’re exceptional, because everyone they work with is exceptional,” Major Gen. Clarence K.K. Chinn, deputy commander of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command, said at the start of the ceremony. “But you have made the extraordinary commonplace.”


Many of the soldiers received medals for the heroism they displayed in a battle with insurgents in Helmand province, Afghanistan, in September 2014. Sgt. 1st Class Andrew Weathers died from wounds he sustained in the firefight.


Six soldiers were recognized with the Bronze Star with Valor Device for their bravery under fire. Another 12 received the Army Commendation Medal with Valor Device, and one Bronze Star recipient also received the Purple Heart.


The highest ranking decoration of the day went to Sgt. Gregory LaFleur, whose heroism earned him the Soldier’s Medal. Established by an act of Congress in 1926, the Soldier’s Medal is an individual decoration that recognizes heroism not involving conflict with the enemy.


“It’s not awarded all that frequently,” Cieslak said of the medal. “It has the highest precedence of the medals being awarded today.”


LaFleur was recognized for risking his life when he helped subdue an erratic gunman who fired multiple gunshots outdoors in Eglin’s Poquito Bayou neighborhood. During an angry confrontation on Jan. 24, 2014, the man drew a .45 caliber pistol and fired several times in the direction of a spot where several neighborhood children were playing. He later pointed the pistol at a woman who came outside to investigate the noise.


LaFleur and his wife were at home when a neighbor began beating on their door, asking for help for her husband, Air Force Tech Sgt. Nick Bateman, who was attempting to subdue the gunman. LaFleur raced outside to where Bateman was trying to talk to the gunman.


While Bateman was facing the gunman, LaFleur came up from behind — “like a ninja” — he said with a laugh. Bateman and LaFleur, who were both unarmed, rushed the man and wrestled him to the ground. LaFleur grabbed the weapon while Bateman held the man to the ground until security police arrived.


Bateman has not been recognized for his heroism by the Air Force yet and could not be recognized Tuesday since it was an Army ceremony.


Both LaFleur and his wife, Nicole, said they don’t regret the decision to act.


“I told him to go,” Nicole said. “That was our neighbor and friend out there who needed help. Besides, what was the point? He would have gone no matter what I said.”


ABOUT THE MEDAL: Established by an act of Congress in 1926, the Soldier’s Medal is an individual decoration that recognizes heroism not involving conflict with the enemy. Among the recipients of the medal are former Secretary of State Colin Powell.


©2015 the (Fort Walton Beach) Northwest Florida Daily News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



SpaceX launches cargo capsule, fails to nail rocket landing


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — SpaceX launched a shipment of groceries to the International Space Station on Tuesday, including the first espresso maker bound for orbit. But the company's third attempt to land the leftover booster on an ocean platform failed.


The first-stage booster rocket apparently landed too hard on the barge and tipped over.


SpaceX chief Elon Musk wants to reuse the rockets rather than discard them in the ocean to reduce launch costs. The company will try again in June on the next supply run for NASA.


"It's not quite clear what happened," said Hans Koenigsmann, a SpaceX vice president. "But certainly it needs more work in the next couple missions."


Despite improvements to the booster and landing platform, Musk still had predicted a less than 50 percent chance of success for the latest effort. He and other company officials repeatedly stressed that the landing test was secondary to getting the Dragon capsule filled with supplies into orbit.


Indeed, NASA congratulated SpaceX on Tuesday's "spectacular" launch, delayed a day by stormy weather. Unprecedented images beamed down from orbit showed the protective covering popping off the Dragon and the two solar wings unfolding, like a newborn chick. Even SpaceX officials were impressed. "That is such a phenomenal picture," Koenigsmann told reporters.


The supply ship holds more than 4,000 pounds of food, science experiments and equipment for the six space station astronauts. At liftoff time, the orbiting lab was soaring over Australia. The delivery should arrive Friday.


"We watched live!" Italian astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti said in a tweet. "Amazing to think that in 3 days #Dragon will be knocking on our door."


The specially designed espresso machine is for Cristoforetti, who has been stuck with American instant coffee since she arrived at the space station in November. The Italians in charge of the project hope to revolutionize coffee-drinking in space.


SpaceX, meanwhile, hopes to transform the rocket business by eventually landing the first-stage booster on a platform floating a few hundred miles off Florida's northeastern coast, near Jacksonville. The ultimate landing site, once the operation is perfected, will be a former missile-launching site at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.


The 14-story booster was programmed, following separation 2½ minutes after liftoff, to flip around and from an altitude of about 78 miles fly to the platform dubbed "Just Read the Instructions." Tuesday's data looked good at a quick glance, including the engine firings to slow the booster, which made the mishap all the more puzzling.


Until a boat with crew arrives at the scene, SpaceX won't know what if anything can be recovered, Koenigsmann said.


The goal, a vertical touchdown, also eluded SpaceX in January and February. The steering fins ran out of hydraulic fluid on the first try, and the booster slammed into the platform and exploded. Rough seas scrapped the second shot. Improvements to both the booster and platform followed, but apparently were not enough.


This was the seventh supply run by the California-based company for NASA.


The Dragon — the only supply ship capable of returning items intact — will remain at the space station until around May 21.


NASA is eager to get the Dragon's contents to the space station. The agency still has a month-or-two backlog for food and equipment in the wake of the October loss of an Orbital Sciences Corp. cargo carrier. The unmanned rocket exploded at liftoff.


The espresso maker was among the items delayed by the accident. It should have arrived in January, two months after Cristoforetti moved into the space station. With her departure coming up in just one month, she won't have much time to waste unpacking the Dragon and cranking out the espresso. Twenty coffee packets are included.



Australian grocery chain's ANZAC Day website ordered taken down


CANBERRA, Australia — The government has ordered Australia's biggest supermarket chain to pull down a website that has been widely accused of commercializing Australia's Veterans' Day near its centenary.


Woolworths, which brands itself as "The Fresh Food People," briefly launched a website titled "Fresh in Our Memories" late Tuesday to commemorate ANZAC Day on April 25.


ANZAC stands for the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, which was part of a disastrous British-led ground invasion of Turkey's Gallipoli peninsula on April 25, 1915.


Although a resounding defeat for the multinational British Empire force, the anniversary of the start of the nine-month campaign has become a major national day for both Australians and New Zealanders.


Woolworths invited customers to upload photographs of veterans on to the website. The images were displayed with the slogan "Fresh in Our Memories," the Woolworths logo as well as "Lest We Forget. ANZAC 1915-2015." The campaign immediately drew strong criticism on social media.


Veterans Affairs Minister Michael Ronaldson on Wednesday described the site as an "ad." He said he contacted Woolworths as soon as he became aware of the campaign and "asked them to end it."


Under the Protection of Word "ANZAC" Act 1920, permission for the commercial use of the word "ANZAC" must be granted by the government, he said.


"The Australian community quite rightly expects that the word 'ANZAC' is not trivialized or used inappropriately and as minister for veterans affairs, I am responsible for ensuring that any use of the word 'ANZAC' does not provide commercial benefit to an organization," Ronaldson said in a statement.


Woolworths confirmed that the site had been taken down and apologized.


"The site was developed to give our staff and customers a place to put their stories to mark the Centenary of ANZAC," the company said in a statement.


"We regret that our branding on the picture generator has caused offense. This was clearly never our intention," it said.


The legislation passed in 1920 to prevent commercial exploitation of the ANZAC legend carries a potential 12-month prison sentence as well as fines of 50,000 Australian dollars ($38,000) for a corporation and AU$10,000 ($7,600) for an individual.


Ronaldson said he had accepted Woolworths' explanation that it did not know permission was needed to use the word. Because the company quickly closed the site, Ronaldson said he did not believe it should be prosecuted.


"I hope that the events of last night are a salutary reminder to everyone that this is a very, very special word for all Australians," he told reporters.



Obama agrees to let Congress have a say in Iran nuclear deal


WASHINGTON — Bowing to pressure from Republicans and his own party, President Barack Obama on Tuesday relented to a compromise empowering Congress to reject the emerging nuclear pact with Iran.


The rare and reluctant agreement between the president and the Republican-led Congress came after the White House maintained for weeks that congressional interference could jeopardize sensitive negotiations with Tehran. But lawmakers refused to back down from their insistence that Congress have a formal role in what could be a historic nuclear weapons deal.


The Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously approved the compromise bill shortly after White House spokesman Josh Earnest conveyed the president's decision to sign it.


"Maybe they saw the handwriting on the wall," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said after the White House dropped its opposition.


The bill, which cleared the committee 19-0, is now likely to clear both houses of Congress. It's expected to come before the full Senate as soon as next week.


A vote on an actual agreement to lift economic sanctions in exchange for Iranian nuclear concessions would come later, if negotiations between the Obama administration, Iran and five other nations come to fruition.


Obama retains his right to veto any attempt by Congress to scuttle such a pact if the time comes. To override a veto would require a two-thirds majority of both the House and Senate, meaning some Democrats would have to oppose their president to sink a deal.


The White House's announcement came after an intensive administration effort to prevent Democrats from signing on to legislation requiring Obama to submit any pact with Iran to Congress.


International negotiators are trying to reach a deal that would prevent Iran from being able to develop nuclear weapons. In exchange, Tehran would get relief from economic sanctions that are crippling its economy.


"We believe it is our role to ensure that any deal with Iran makes them accountable, is transparent and is enforceable," said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., chairman of Foreign Relations Committee.


Corker said Secretary of State John Kerry was lobbying against it on Capitol Hill a few hours before the vote. The Republican said the White House's sudden support was dictated by the number of senators — Republicans and Democrats — backing the measure.


Obama, whose foreign policy legacy would be burnished by a deal with Iran, has been in a standoff for months with lawmakers who said Congress should have a chance to weigh in and remain skeptical that Iran will honor an agreement.


The United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China reached a preliminary agreement with Iran on April 2 to curb its nuclear program and hope to finalize a pact by June 30.


Earnest said the White House would withhold final judgment on the bill while it works its way through Congress, wary that potential changes could be made in committee that would render it unpalatable. But he said the White House could support the compromise in its current form.


"Despite the things about it that we don't like, enough substantial changes have been made that the president would be willing to sign it," Earnest said.


An earlier version of the bill sought to put any plan by Obama to lift sanctions on Iran on hold for up to 60 days while Congress reviewed the deal. The compromise approved by the committee shortened the review period to 30 days. During that time, Obama would be able to lift sanctions imposed through presidential action, but would be blocked from easing sanctions levied by Congress.


Under the terms of the bill, if a nuclear deal is submitted after July 9 — a short time after the final agreement is to be reached — the review period would revert to 60 days. The president would be required to certify to Congress every 90 days that Iran is complying with terms of the agreement.


The panel rejected the sole amendment offered. Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., tried again to add a requirement for the president to certify that any sanctions relief will not facilitate Iran's participation in terrorism. But the new version's proponents said the amendment would be a deal-killer, and the panel rejected it.


Other GOP senators backed off their anti-Iran amendments.


Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who announced his candidacy for president on Monday, had proposed an amendment that would require Iran's leaders to accept Israel's right to exist. Rubio said his amendment probably could have passed in the committee, but ultimately "could imperil the entire arrangement."


Rubio said the new version has language on Israel that "is better than not having it at all" and that his original amendment might still come up during a debate by the full Senate.


Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., said he felt confident that the compromises will hold, but said Democrats would withdraw their support if Republicans successfully push amendments that would pull the bill "sharply to the right." He was referring to amendments proposed by Republicans to make the administration certify that Iran is not supporting terrorism and had publicly renounced its threat to destroy Israel — two obstacles that would be nearly impossible to scale.


Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said she opposed the bill in its original form, but now supports it.


"There's no longer language in the bill tying extraneous issues to the agreement," Boxer said. "That would be a deal breaker."


Associated Press writers Charles Babington, Josh Lederman and Alan Fram contributed to this report.



Pentagon eyes recruiting cyber talent through National Guard, Reserve


WASHINGTON — The Defense Department still doesn't have the capabilities and resources needed to defend against a major cyberattack from another nation or other tech-savvy criminals, Pentagon officials told members of a Senate panel Tuesday.


But officials said they are looking for more creative ways to attract high-tech experts into the military and the department, including beefed up National Guard and Reserve recruiting in places such as California's Silicon Valley.


Eric Rosenbach, the principle cyber adviser to Defense Secretary Ash Carter, told senators that the Pentagon wants to find ways to bring talent into the department without individuals having to go through one of the military services.


"We're thinking about ways we can get new pipelines or tunnels of talent into the department from non-traditional places," Rosenbach told the Senate Armed Services subcommittee on emerging threats.


Rosenbach said he expects Carter to have more to say on the matter next week, adding that the Pentagon chief is willing to spend more money on cybersecurity if needed. So far, about half of the planned 133 military cybersecurity teams are in place, with the remainder set to be ready by the end of September 2016.


Air Force Lt. Gen. James K. McLaughlin, deputy commander at U.S. Cyber Command, said the military services are making sure that all Guard and Reserve troops are trained to the same standards and expertise levels as the active duty so that they can be used in an emergency when more forces are needed.


Rosenbach and McLaughlin were blunt when asked about the ongoing cyberthreats to the nation. They acknowledged it's a bit easier to deter attacks from nations such as China and Russia than more rogue countries such as North Korea or Iran.


They told the panel that a big challenge is keeping up a persistent level of training, exercises and mission certification for the military's cyberforce.


Rosenbach also said that even though the U.S. has the ability to launch a cyberattack against an enemy, officials should try to avoid taking that step because America would be vulnerable to a counterattack. The U.S., he said, "is a glass house," and officials need to avoid launching cyberattacks that would only escalate hostilities.


"I'm very worried about how vulnerable we are, and that someone would then follow our example and just try to show the U.S. that they could also take down part of the infrastructure to demonstrate that," Rosenbach said during a hearing Tuesday. "So, I think a cautious approach where we're conservative and we try to keep things stable is quite important.