Friday PM ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
Iran is playing with fire in Syria
by Amos Yadlin & Ari Heistein  
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13 Russian nationals 
indicted for interfering in US elections 
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by Alex Pappas 
A federal grand jury in the District of Columbia on Friday indicted 13 Russian nationals and three Russian entities... accused of interfering in U.S. elections. The announcement came from the office of Special Counsel Robert Mueller. According to the special counsel, the indictment charges the defendants with conspiracy to defraud the United States, three defendants with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud and five defendants with aggravated identity theft. The indictment says the defendants and their co-conspirators used fictitious online personas to interfere with the 2016 presidential election in the United States...  
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FISA Court Presiding Judge Rosemary Collyer
Respondsto Chairman Nunes and Chairman
GoodlatteRequest for FISC Documents
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by sundance
{ theconservativetreehouse.com } ~ Moments ago FISA Court Presiding Judge Rosemary Collyer responded to the requests from the House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes... and House Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte. There are nuances in each response specific to the statutory roles of each Chairman and the specific requests made by each committee.  Reflected in Judge Collyer’s responses is a need for careful consideration of each unique request. Judge Collyer responds to both legislative branch chairman from the position of “never previously receiving such requests.” There are separation of power challenges, but also an understanding inherent in the response to Chairman Goodlatte of the unique statutory oversight his committee holds... Here are the responses.   https://www.scribd.com/document/371621778/FISA-Court-Presiding-Judge-Rosemary-M-Collyer-Response-to-Chairman-Nunes
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Should the US only give foreign 
aid to its friends? Well, define ‘friends.’ 
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by Jessica Trisko Darden 
{ aei.org } ~ President Trump and Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the United Nations... have argued that the United States should withhold foreign assistance to countries that do not support US global objectives. This sort of leverage was the crux of Haley’s threat that the United States would be “taking names” ahead of the recent U.N. General Assembly (UNGA) vote on the US Embassy’s move from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. At his Jan. 30 State of the Union speech, Trump made it clear that US foreign assistance should “always serve American interests, and only go to America’s friends.” But the administration’s fiscal 2019 budget request released this week takes a step back. The 2019 request restored funding to 24 of the 37 countries that were zeroed out in the fiscal 2018 request — a move that Congress rejected  during appropriations. This could signal tacit recognition that the “friends only” policy on foreign assistance — while in line with Trump’s “America First” agenda — is fraught with problems, including identifying who America’s “friends” actually are...  http://www.aei.org/publication/should-the-us-only-give-foreign-aid-to-its-friends-well-define-friends/?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTmpCak1UUTVPVEU0WlRreSIsInQiOiJTQnVDS1wvZlYxRUp5a012UENaVjMrbzBicHFXclRtb3Q5T3JpUWNBdzJRN2NVbHFsTlpSSWpGOGNGRlhpSHNNR2docXFTd0xzWU9WV09BSmlmdUx4WHQzMDV0XC9yWW91eDRmQzlqNUtXbEtcL2YrZU9lQkhcLzlQZ2R1dXJXZ2c2b00ifQ%3D%3D 
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The Iran-Israel War Flares Up 
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by Jonathan Schanzer and Tony Badran
{ defenddemocracy.org } The conflict between Israel and Iran may be heating up after a half-decade simmer. On Friday night Iran dispatched a drone from Syria... that penetrated Israeli airspace in the Golan Heights. Israel destroyed it with an Apache helicopter. Then on Saturday Israel sent eight F-16s across the border to strike the airfield in the Homs governorate, called the T-4 base, where the drone originated, as well as a handful of other Iranian targets. Although the mission was a success, one F-16 was shot down by Syrian antiaircraft fire—though the pilot made it back to Israel, where he and his navigator ejected successfully. This was the most significant clash to date between Israel and the so-called Axis of Resistance—Iran, Syria’s Assad regime and Hezbollah—since Iran began deploying soldiers and proxies to Syria six years ago. Israel insists its response was limited and its intent is to contain this conflagration. Its critics worry that the skirmish could explode into one of the worst wars the Middle East has ever seen. The Iranians have been exploiting the chaos of the Syrian civil war to build up military assets there that target Israel, all the while sending advanced weaponry to Lebanon by way of Damascus, also under the fog of war...   http://www.defenddemocracy.org/media-hit/schanzer-jonathan-the-iran-israel-war-flares-up/
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Why Won’t DNC Turn Over 
Evidence of Russian Hacking?

{ patriotnewsdaily.com } ~ So the big news of the week is that BuzzFeed is apparently sending “a team led by a former top FBI and White House cybersecurity official”... 
all over the world to try and verify even one portion of the infamous Trump/Russia dossier that the site published in full prior to Trump’s inauguration. Why is BuzzFeed going through all of this trouble? Well, first of all, we would be shocked if they are the only news site that has such a team out there, which in itself tells you something about the dossier’s credibility. If there was one true fact in the whole mess, it would have been front page news a long time ago. But BuzzFeed is interested in more than an investigative bombshell; they’re also defending themselves against a libel suit from one of the Russian billionaires named in Christopher Steele’s magnum opus. And to do that, they have to prove that the dossier is at least somewhat true. Good luck with that... http://patriotnewsdaily.com/why-wont-dnc-turn-over-evidence-of-russian-hacking/ 
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Iran is playing with fire in Syria
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by Amos Yadlin & Ari Heistein 
{ jewishworldreview.com } ~ With the Syrian rebels on the run and the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad gaining momentum, Iran is seeking to rewrite the "rules of the game" governing Israel's actions in Syria.

Last weekend's clashes on Israel's northern border occurred within this context. An Iranian drone breached Israeli airspace, Israel retaliated by bombing multiple targets deep in Syrian territory, and Syria then shot down an Israeli fighter jet.

Before last Saturday, Israel had established an expectation that its strikes on Iranian-Hezbollah weapons convoys and production facilities in Syria would not be met with an effective military response; Syria and Hezbollah couldn't afford war with Israel, nor did they have the capabilities to seriously retaliate. This state of affairs was obviously disruptive for Iranian designs in the region and a bitter pill for the Assad regime to swallow.

By launching a sophisticated unmanned aerial vehicle into Israeli airspace on Saturday, Iran set off a chain reaction, which led the Israeli Air Force to strike components of Assad's air defenses and Iranian positions in Syria. This gave the Assad regime an opportunity to set a new precedent by firing on Israeli jets over Israeli territory, downing an Israeli F-16, and provoking further Israeli Air Force strikes on Syrian targets.

Because it was the first time in over three decades that an Israeli jet was brought down by enemy fire, the immediate response by some analysts was to declare that the conflict in the region had entered a "new strategic phase."

The secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council said, "The era of hit and run is over," in reference to Israeli airstrikes on Syrian soil. Even the Israeli news site Walla made the foreboding prediction that this was a sign of ominous things to come along Israel's northern front.

They are wrong. The loss of one Israeli jet should not be exaggerated; it is not a watershed moment that will alter the strategic balance in the Middle East. After all, the Syrians and Russians have lost numerous aircraft over the course of the civil war in Syria including recently, and that has hardly ushered in an era in which they do not control the skies over their respective areas of influence.

When considering air superiority, a single case does not change the strategic balance, as the calculations are about averages, not individual instances. By this metric, because Israel's enemies have succeeded in bringing down only a single plane over the past 30 years despite that fact that it has launched over 100 strikes in Syria since the start of the civil war and destroyed the Assad regime's nuclear reactor in 2007, according to the New Yorker, there is little basis for questioning Israel's air superiority.

To demonstrate that the "rules" had not changed, Israel was quick to re-establish its right to strike immediately following the downing of the F-16. The only way to reaffirm that right is to exercise it. By doing so, the Israeli Air Force took a risk that its pilots would face more anti-aircraft fire, but the lack of resistance it encountered highlighted the fact that the Syrian military was unwilling to risk of escalating the clashes into a wider conflict that it did not want and could not win.

In its far-reaching retaliatory raid on a dozen Syrian air defense sites and Iranian targets, including the command center from which the drone was being remotely piloted, Israel sought to make clear there would be a cost if Assad and his Iranian allies challenged the "rules" again in the near future. By causing heavy damage to Syrian defense infrastructure but not going "all the way" and completely decimating all air defense units, Israel is well positioned to deter future incursions into its airspace. It demonstrated that it could demolish all Syrian forces if necessary to establish complete air superiority, but by not doing so gave Damascus an incentive to avoid future conflict.

The first-ever direct strikes on manned Iranian fixtures in Syria also demonstrated what may become an important component of Israeli strategy to deter Iran in Syria: Iranian forces stationed in Damascus are 800 miles from Tehran and only a few dozen miles from Israel, which leaves them extremely vulnerable to Israeli aerial attacks. Thus, while it is uncomfortable and undesirable for Israel to have an Iranian presence next door, it does also present some opportunities in the sense that Iran is far more exposed and, if Israeli leaders deem it necessary, Israel can attack Iran without entering Iranian territory.

After Israel's counterstrike, the Iranian-led axis appears to have backed down. Russia's statement urging "all sides to exercise restraint" indicated that it was not supportive of Iran's provocations that might put the Kremlin's "project" of saving the Assad regime at risk. The Assad regime barely survived seven years of war against the Syrian rebels, and so it stands little chance of holding up against an advanced and professional military like Israel's.

Considering that the Syrian regime is in tatters, Assad is probably more keen on rebuilding his decimated country than on bearing the brunt of Israeli attacks launched in response to Iranian provocations. Hezbollah may be arming itself with advanced weaponry, but it is not interested in fighting another devastating conflict with Israel that could spread to Lebanon. Finally, the Iranian people's protests against their government's economic mismanagement at home and adventurism abroad indicate that the regime should be wary of increasing its commitments in Syria.

Even if quiet has returned to Israel's northern front, this is unlikely to be the last skirmish. The next escalation in which both sides test each other's boundaries and aim to rewrite the "rules" will come eventually. It is not a matter of if, but when.


http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0218/iran_playing_with_fire.php3 

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