Sunday, September 29, 2013

What Can You Do, When It's an Iranian and a Jew?

From the NSP News Service:  Don't get the idea here that the NSP is Israel's supporter in any way, yet it is true that the sort of espionage described below can be very harmful, certainly when nuclear arms are in the picture. What grabs us at the NSP is the (not unusual) description of Israel as a "Jewish state." Let's remember that there are many people living in Israel who are not Jews, and have been subject to many prejudices and discrimination, not to mention outright unlawful imprisonment and/or execution. Furthermore, what entitles the Jews to their own "state." Do other religions/races have their own state -- with the possible exception of the Vatican City, which serves very different purposes than Israel? Let's work to bring about the eradication of the idea that Jews are specially entitled, anywhere and any time, to get whatever they please -- usually via some sort of underhanded dealings or extortion!

-- Karl Wolff III, Associate Director, NSP.  1488!

Israel says it caught Iranian spy with photos of U.S. embassy

This undated photograph released by Shin Bet, Israel's security service, purports to show Belgian-Iranian businessman Ali Mansouri, who entered Israel with a Belgian passport under the name Alex Mans.

JERUSALEM — Israel disclosed on Sunday the arrest of an Iranian-Belgian citizen on suspicion of spying for Iran, saying he had photographed the U.S. embassy and intended to establish business ties in the Jewish state as a cover for espionage.
Israel and Iran are bitter adversaries. Israel, widely believed to be the Middle East's only nuclear power, says Iran is covertly seeking to develop atomic weapons. Iran says it is enriching uranium solely for peaceful purposes.
Ali Mansouri, in his mid-50s, was arrested on September 11 at Tel Aviv's Ben-Gurion Airport, the Shin Bet intelligence service said in a statement. The disclosure coincides with the start of a visit by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the United States where Iran's nuclear program will top his agenda.
 
 
The Shin Bet said the Iranian-born Mansouri had legally changed his name in Belgium to Alex Mans and used his Belgian passport to enter Israel. It said he was recruited as a spy by Iran's Revolutionary Guards and had visited Israel twice before his arrest.
Photographs which the Shin Bet said Mansouri had in his possession, and which it released along with the statement, included one taken of the rooftop of the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv from a nearby high-rise balcony.
The statement said Mansouri planned to establish commercial ties with Israeli businesses as a cover for intelligence-gathering and "terrorist activities".
The Shin Bet said Mansouri was being held under a court order and that he would be brought before a judge on Monday for a hearing on extending his period of detention. No formal charges have been announced.
Netanyahu was due to meet President Barack Obama on Monday and address the U.N. General Assembly the next day, to try to counter what the Israeli leader called "sweet talk" by Iran's new president, Hassan Rouhani, on reaching a pact with the West to settle the nuclear issue.


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Israel Eyes Syria: Yet More Garbage.

From the NSP News Service: Yes, we agree with the concluding statement to this article: let the Israeli's take care of it. The United States does not belong there in any case, but just the very thought that we should be there is yet another example of "Jewish notions of entitlement", now couched in terms of Israeli concern over the Golan Heights. Moreover, Israel holds the Golan Heights illegally. The Heights are part of Syria, stolen from Syria in the 1967 and 1973 wars of aggression started by Israel in an attempt to grab land for settlement and for a buffer zone between them, Syria and Lebanon. It's the usual nonsense.


Israel eyes Syria warily from border buffer zone in Golan Heights

Baz Ratner / Reuters file
Israeli soldiers from the paratroopers brigade take part in a drill in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, near the border with Syria on Sept. 9.
GOLAN HEIGHTS, Israel – From a closed military zone a few yards inside Israel's border with Syria, the sound of shelling and plumes of smoke are clear -- evidence of the nearby civil war.
Soldiers from a special reconnaissance unit of the Israeli Defense Force look through binoculars from one of their observation points. Syrian government soldiers manning their own lookout post look right back. One gets up from his chair, goes inside and reappears with a rifle slung over his shoulder.
The town across the border is Quneitra, controlled by President Bashar Assad's regime -- for the moment. Villages farther east are in the hands of rebels, and Israelis have observed their columns of weapons and supplies.
 
 
Suddenly there is a volley of fire. "Get down guys," the soldiers say. Some dive for cover in a concrete trench.
A sergeant explains that bombs and bullets from the Syrian war regularly land inside Israeli territory. The shooting may have been warning shots, or maybe just some stray bullets from a gunfight on the outskirts of Quneitra.
On this most tense of borders, Israel is on alert.
"We have brought here much better forces, much stronger forces," said Gal Hirsch, a reservist general in this highly restricted area. "So we are very well prepared for any situation that develops along this border."
Just a few hundred yards from the trench is a village, Allone Habashan, settled on the fertile ground of the Golan Heights, land which Israel captured from Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War.
The international community did not recognize the move and considers the Golan Heights to be occupied territory. A United Nations force is now stationed in a buffer zone between the two countries.
Yiske Dekel balanced her two-year-old daughter, Emuna on her knee. She was trying to stop her from putting a bottle top in her mouth, but it seemed like the least of her worries.
"Last year we found an unexploded shell stuck between two houses in this neighborhood. The army came to blow it up. We hear shooting all the time," Dekel said. Such are the worries of a young mother who lives a few yards from a war zone. "Something could come down right now as we're talking and that would be it. But you can't live your life in fear."
/
A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.
So how scared should Israelis be? And does the proposed U.S.-Russian deal on Assad's chemical weapons make Israel more secure?
Even for pessimists in Israel, it's difficult not to see at least some good news in the framework agreement.
Hafez al-Assad, Bashar's father, spent decades building up a chemical weapons arsenal in response to what he saw as the nuclear threat from Israel. Nerve agents, and the technology which delivers them, are the very ugly crown jewels in the Assad defense establishment, and they have threatened Israel for years.
That Bashar Assad now seems prepared to give them up is a huge concession. A recent history of Middle Eastern dictators does not reveal many surrendering weapons of mass destruction -- or even letting U.N. inspectors into their countries. Things did not exactly end well for Iraq's Saddam Hussein or Libya's Mummar Gadhafi even after he gave his weapons up.
But the question is what action will be taken if Assad doesn't stick to the timetable. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry came to Israel immediately after he struck the deal with his Russian counterpart. He was scheduled to talk about the peace process with the Palestinians but he will no doubt have given Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu some assurances that the U.S. will take action if Assad starts to play games.
For some old soldiers though, President Barack Obama's reluctance to strike Syria in the immediate aftermath of the sarin attack in Damascus is a sign of America's disengagement from the region.
"If the president talks about red lines and then doesn't act on them, then it's bad news for us," said former IDF brigade commander Kobi Marom. "If the U.S. is not prepared to take action in this part of the world, then the conclusion has to be that we have to take care of ourselves. Israel will do it alone."
 
 
Several times this year, according to reports that the government will not confirm, Israel has been doing exactly that. The Israeli air force is alleged to have destroyed truck-loads of weaponry sent by the Assad regime to its allies in Lebanon, Hezbollah.
A large section of the Israeli intelligence services has been dedicated to knowing what's going on in Syria for years, and they'll be watching very closely over the next 12 months to make sure Assad's chemical weapons are being moved in the right direction. If they think they're not, then America will be the first to know.
And if America doesn't take action, then Israel might.

Monday, September 23, 2013

And What Would Adolf Hitler Think of This?

Locals fight back against neo-nazi plans to turn North Dakota town into a white supremacist community

  • U.S. National Socialist Movement, the largest neo-Nazi group in America, is planning Sunday rally in Leith, North Dakota
  • Craig Cobb, a well-known white supremacist, has bought 12 properties in town of 24 people and plans to create all-white haven
  • But black resident Bobby Harper says he's not afraid and he's staying put
  • Counter-protest is planned to combat hate group meeting in Leith
 
From the NSP News Service: Is this a good example of Adolf Hitler's 1922 take-over of the German city of Coburg, then under Marxist and Social Democrat control?  Or is this yet another ridiculous "stab in the dark" by a small group of insignificant people trying their best to get some media attention? Whatever comes of this National Socialist Movement experiment, oh, time will tell. In the meanwhile, I'd rather live in an area that has indoor plumbing and houses without holes in the roofs!

-- Karl Wolff III, Associate Director, NSP.  1488!


 
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Hundreds of demonstrators turned out in a tiny North Dakota town to protest against plans by an American Nazi group to move in and take over the local government.
The loud but peaceful demonstrators, many of them Native Americans from nearby reservations, made their disgust clear as Jeff Schoep, commander of the National Socialist Movement, and several followers, visited.
The National Socialist Movement is America's largest neo-Nazi organization, founded in 1974 by former members of the American Nazi Party, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Jay Schechter holds a sign, while participating in a protest rally outside Craig Cobb's house in Leith
Jay Schechter holds a sign while participating in a protest rally outside Craig Cobb's house in Leith

Craig Cobb address supporters inside the Leith Town Hall. Cobb a white supremacist, originally from Canada, has purchased many lots in the tiny town
Craig Cobb address supporters inside the Leith Town Hall. Cobb a white supremacist, originally from Canada, has purchased many lots in the tiny town

The group hopes to move enough members into Leith - population 17 - to take over the local government.
'We have to start somewhere,' Schoep said.
'They gotta do something very, very drastic to me to make it unsafe and uncomfortable for me' 

Bobby Harper, Leith's only black resident
'So if we start in small towns and spread out from there, it's sort of a test ground in that sense, where if we're able to get off the ground here, then we're able to get off the ground in other places.'
But Leith's only black resident is defiant and say's he's staying put. 
Leaders from across the state joined forces in an effort to show the hate groups that they aren't welcome.
'We are deeply disturbed that one of the residents of our small community has invited hate groups to our town and to the state of North Dakota.
'One of these hate groups, the National Socialist Movement, is planning to hold a meeting in our city hall on Sunday afternoon, and raise neo Nazi flags on property around our town,' the town of Leith said in a statement before the planned visit.
'The values of our town include safety and acceptance for everyone. We stand firmly against the bigoted views of this group, and will not be participating in their events.'
Defiant: Bobby Harper, the only black resident of Leith, North Dakota, says he isn't leaving - even though white supremacists are moving into his tiny town
Defiant: Bobby Harper, the only black resident of Leith, North Dakota, says he isn't leaving - even though white supremacists are moving into his tiny town. He is pictured here with his wife, Sherrill

Supremacist's paradise: Craig Cobb, 61, has invited dozens of neo-Nazi leaders to Leith to start to haven for racist hate groups
Supremacist's paradise: Craig Cobb, 61, has invited dozens of neo-Nazi leaders to Leith to start to haven for racist hate groups

Craig Cobb, a self-described white supremacist, had already bought several homes and properties in Leith when he moved to the town 75 miles southwest of Bismark last year. He had bought at least a dozen properties and given several of them to leaders of major neo-Nazi hate groups.
Often, he paid just hundreds or a few thousand dollars absentee owners who had long ago fled Leith and left their properties in disrepair.

He has grand visions for the town and is determined to revitalize it.
He told National Public Radio: 'It would be extraordinarily beautiful when people enter the town, particularly at night because we will have floodlit flags from both the bottom and the top of all the formerly white nations of the earth.
'We will probably have the National Socialist hunting flag with stag horns and a very small swastika in the center, very discreet.'
Ramshackle: Leith has just 24 residents. It has been in a slow decline for decades. Cobb bought most of the properties for just hundreds or a few thousand dollars
Ramshackle: Leith has just 24 residents. It has been in a slow decline for decades. Cobb bought most of the properties for just hundreds or a few thousand dollars

He plans parks and monuments and a municipal swimming pool, all named after white-power activists.
But the Cobb and his white supremacist ilk have one immediate obstacle to their all-white paradise in Leith: Bobby Harper, the town's only black resident.
'I'm not leaving,' Harper told NPR.
'They gotta do something very, very drastic to me to make it unsafe and uncomfortable for me. Right now, I don't see it happening.'
The U.S. National Socialist Movement, America's largest white  supremacist group, is joining forces with Cobb and is calling its members to Leith for a meeting on Sunday and Monday.
'We have every intention of legally assuming control of the local government,' Socialist Movement leader Jeff Schoep said in a statement.
Video source KXNET.COM
Cobb moved to Leith from Montana and has purchased about a dozen homes and vacant parcels of land
Cobb moved to Leith from Montana and has purchased about a dozen homes and vacant parcels of land

According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, Cobb wants to set up a 'Pioneer Little Europe.'
In an interview with WXMB-TV in Bismarck, Cobb said he had gotten a lot of offers to buy up land from what he termed like-minded people who believe white people should not be punished for wanting to live near each other.
'It's fine for all these other minorities, but not us,' he said in the televised interview. 'If you merely speak about it, you're going to be defamed in this country.'
Schoep said that the visitors would inspect the new property, raise ceremonial flag poles, and hold a town meeting and a news conference.
'We know that opinion is divided in the town and in the media,' Schoep said in the statement, adding that the trip was 'a symbolic gesture of good will and faith.'
Sheriff Bay had his officers, members of the North Dakota Highway Patrol and others come to Leith yesterday to help in crowd control.

Sunday, September 15, 2013

More on: The Stupidity of Our Police!

From the NSP News Service:  Yet another example of "our brave men in blue" who seem to possess a very low I.Q.! As the late John S. Bucalo, Esq., once said ". . . and they give them guns?"

-- Dr. Jacques Pluss, Commander, NSP.  1488!


NYPD had to remind some of its officers that India is in Asia

19 hrs ago
Maybe they've been watching too many Westerns. The New York Police Department's commissioner, Ray Kelly, pictured above, issued a memo reminding officers that "Indian" and "American Indian" are not the same thing. The department's Quality Assurance Division sent the message after realizing that people involved in police investigations, who had apparently Indian — as in the subcontinent — names, had been described as "American Indian" in official documents, a mistake that could imperil future court proceedings. The Daily News reported that a source said only a modest number of identifications were under investigation.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Syria's Assad Seems to Dupe United States and Russia?

From the NSP News Service:  Just think of it! Clever Syrians dupe both the United States and Russia! But why are two foreign powers meddling in Syrian affairs to begin with? We'd have thought that the Americans would fall for Syrian promises, but Russia? The Russians are usually too clever to tumble down a bullshit hole. So, we have to ask, what is really going on?

-- Thomas Folz, Associate Director of Communications and Propaganda, NSP.  1488!

US, Russia reach deal on Syria's chemical weapons


Secretary of State John Kerry says that the US and Russia have reached an agreement on a framework for Syria to destroy all of its chemical weapons.


The United States and Russia struck a deal Saturday under which Syria will allow its stockpile of chemical weapons to be removed or destroyed by next year — easing a crisis over a threatened American military attack.
Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, announced the deal after a third day of talks in Geneva.
Under the deal, Syria must provide a full catalog of its chemical arsenal within a week and allow United Nations inspectors to start working no later than November. The plan envisions the elimination of Syrian chemical weapons by mid-2014.
“There can be no games,” Kerry said. “No room for avoidance or anything less than full compliance.”
 
 
If Syria fails to comply, it will be referred to the U.N. Security Council, Kerry said. It was not clear what steps the Security Council might be. The deal includes nothing about the potential use of force, Lavrov said.
The Russian foreign minister called it an agreement “based on consensus and compromise and professionalism.” France welcomed it as an “important step forward.” Kerry and his British and French counterparts will talk about the deal’s implementation over lunch Monday in Paris.
The United Nations secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, welcomed the deal and pledged his support. Through a spokesman, he said he hoped that would not just prevent further chemical use in Syria but “help pave the path for a political solution to stop the appalling suffering inflicted on the Syrian people.”
The deal represented a break in an international crisis that has built since Aug. 21, when, the United States says, the forces of Syrian leader Bashar Assad gassed 1,400 people to death, including 400 children.

Philippe Desmazes / AFP - Getty Images
Secretary of State John Kerry, left, holds a joint press conference with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Geneva on Saturday to discuss the agreement they reached on eliminating Syria's chemical weapons.

Syria is mired in a civil war that has left an estimated 100,000 people dead.
The United States threatened an attack, probably with missiles fired from warships in the Mediterranean Sea. Almost the entire world — with the exception of Syria, until this week — bans the use of chemical weapons under any circumstances.
But other countries, including Britain, a reliable U.S. ally, failed to go along. And President Barack Obama faced a Congress that was skeptical if not hostile to the idea, and a public that was weary of further U.S. entanglement in the Middle East.
“We haven’t made any changes to our force posture to this point,” Pentagon Press Secretary George Little said on Saturday. “The credible threat of military force has been key to driving diplomatic progress, and it’s important that the Assad regime lives up to its obligations under the framework arrangement.”
The agreement Saturday came with U.N. inspectors days away from releasing a report on the Aug. 21 attack. It was expected to establish that poison gas was used in the attack, outside the Syrian capital of Damascus, but not necessarily to determine which side in the civil war did it.
The Geneva deal came at the end of an extraordinary week in the crisis. The turning point appeared to have been Monday, when Kerry suggested, offhand and in response to a reporter’s question at a press conference, that Syria might avoid a strike by turning over all its chemical weapons.
“But he isn’t about to do it, and it can’t be done, obviously,” Kerry said.
Within hours, though, the Syrian foreign minister was welcoming the idea, and Syria was talking it through with Russia, a close ally. The administration began signaling that it was open to a deal, careful to say that the use of force was still an option.
By Tuesday night, Obama had to rework a prime-time television address to say that he would give diplomacy more time to work. He also used that speech to build a moral case for U.S. action if Syria stalled or otherwise misbehaved. Kerry and Lavrov began meeting Thursday in Geneva.
While the United States has said it cannot get tied up in Syria’s civil war, Kerry suggested that the deal Saturday might at least provide an opening to “further cooperation that is essential to end the bloodshed.”
“What we agreed on here today could conceivably be the first critical, concrete step in that direction,” he said. “The United States and Russia have long agreed that there is no military salutation to the conflict in Syria. It has to be political.”
The head of the Supreme Military Council, a leading group in the Syrian opposition, said that Assad’s forces had been moving their chemical weapons arsenal Lebanon and Iraq over the past few days. Syrian opposition groups have expressed disappointment that the United States might back away from a strike on Assad.
 
 
“We told them do not be fooled,” Brig. Gen. Salim Idris told reporters Saturday in Istanbul.
Kerry said the removal and destruction of the Syrian arsenal would take place under the auspices of the Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons, a body that grew out of the international treaty that banned chemical weapons in 1992.
Kerry said the destruction should be “expeditious,” but taking control of and destroying chemical weapons is an extremely complex process that could take years and cost billions of dollars, experts have said.
It is also much more complicated, if not impossible, in the middle of a war.
In the case of nerve gas, which the United States says is what Assad used in the Aug. 21 attack, the gas has to be drained from munitions, and the munitions have to be incinerated under the strictest circumstances.
Old chemical weapons can be volatile — the munitions can pop like champagne corks and release gas. And in any case, nations have been known to lie about eliminating their stockpiles of chemicals.
Republican Senator Bob Corker from Tennessee released a statement on Saturday in which the ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee voiced concerns with the absence of a military option in the plan.
“Absent the threat of force, it’s unclear to me how Syrian compliance will be possible under the terms of any agreement,” Corker said in the statement. “I’m still reviewing the details and believe Syria’s willingness to follow through is very much an open question, but I remain supportive of a strong diplomatic solution to Syria’s use of chemical weapons.”
The deal between Kerry and Lavrov could also represent, if only for the moment, a brightening of U.S.-Russian relations.
The United States was furious when Russia granted a year’s asylum to Edward Snowden, the former federal contractor who leaked details of National Security Agency surveillance programs.
And Russian President Vladimir Putin presented a roadblock to any U.S. action on Syria through the U.N. Security Council. Even after Russia floated the idea of having Syria cede its chemical arsenal, Russia insisted that the U.S. renounce any use of force.
Then, on Thursday, Putin wrote an extraordinary Op-Ed for The New York Times in which he said it was “dangerous” for Obama to send that the United States was an exceptional nation.
He also criticized the U.S. for foreign policy adventurism and a “with us or against us” approach, and warned that U.S. military intervention in Syria would only increase violence, perhaps including terrorism

Friday, September 13, 2013

Dr. Jacques Pluss's ADDITIONAL (16-9-2013) Message on Recent Legal Issues.

From the NSP News Service:  Wer versucht, mich oder meine unmittelbare Familie durch ungerecht, unwahr und missbräuchliche Nutzung der rechtlichen Verfahren schaden hat, wird zu gegebener Zeit, zahlen einen sehr hohen (legalen und legitimen) Preis.

  Für diejenigen, die Anfragen zu unseren Kommandanten geschickt haben: Dr Pluss ist in Ordnung, und ist zu Hause auf seinem Battle of Berlin Lautstärke. Es gibt keine neuen Einschränkungen seiner Bewegungsfreiheit, und keine neue Verurteilung jeglicher Art gegen ihn zu diesem Zeitpunkt. Er hat neue Anwälte gehalten und wartet einen kurzen Auftritt vor Gericht. Er entschuldigt sich, dass auf Anraten des Anwalts, er kann es nicht geben genauere Informationen zu diesem Zeitpunkt. Dennoch bleibt er Kommandant der NSP und Chief seiner News Service. - Karl Wolff III, Associate Director, NSP. 1488! September 16, 2013. 






Sunday, September 8, 2013

So, many Americans Agree that Intervention in Syria is a Mistake!

From the NSP News Service: At least a respectable number of American senators and congressmen note that President Obama's strategy on intervention is seriously flawed. Let's also remember that the pseudo-state of Israel lies just south and south-east of Syria, and Jewish lobbyists must be applying very strong covert pressure on American lawmakers to side with the President to intervene forcefully in Syrian affairs. Of course, the Israeli's fear that strong Syria would pose a threat to their safety, but this should NOT be an American concern: as with Syria, let Israel handle its own affairs!

Let's just hope that the blood of American military personnel will not be shed over Syrian affairs. We at the NSP repeat that America has no business being the "world's policeman." That stance puts too many young American men and women in our Armed Forces at far too great a risk.

-- Steven Clay, Assistant Director of Communications, NSP.  1488!

McDonough says attack on Assad regime would send message to Iran


White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough said Sunday that an impending U.S. attack on Syria would send a message to Iranian leaders that they should not feel free to develop nuclear weapons.
“This is an opportunity to be bold with the Iranians,” McDonough said on NBC’s Meet the Press.
He said, “nobody is rebutting the intelligence; nobody doubts the intelligence” that is the basis for President Barack Obama pinning the blame for an August 21 chemical weapons attack in Syria on President Bashar Assad's regime which is fighting to suppress a rebellion that began in 2011.
White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough visits Meet the Press to discuss recently released footage of a chemical assault on the Syrian people.
McDonough noted that “our troops have not been subject to chemical weapons attacks since World War I” and argued that “we have to make sure that for the sake of our guys – our men and women on the front lines – that we reinforce this prohibition against using chemical weapons.”
If Assad is not deterred, he will put chemical weapons on the front lines in his battle against the Syrian rebels and that would mean “a greater risk of them being proliferated” and perhaps falling into terrorists’ hands, McDonough argued.
He added that “the momentum on the battle field will be changed by a targeted, limited effort” but he said ultimately “there’s not a military resolution” to the civil war in Syria, only a “political, diplomatic resolution.”
McDonough’s appearance on Meet the Press and other Sunday talk shows was one part of an intense public offensive headed by Obama himself, including the president doing interviews Monday with six television networks and culminating in his speech to the nation Tuesday night.
McDonough said Obama wants Congress to be “a full partner” in military action against Assad’s regime.
Obama faces one of the crucial weeks of his presidency with the Senate headed for a vote as early as Wednesday to end debate on a measure authorizing an attack on Syria; the measure’s supporters need 60 votes to move it ahead to final passage.
Reaction from members of Congress has ranged from endorsing an attack to wariness to fervent opposition.
The division on the issue hasn’t followed party lines.
Sen. Tom Udall, D- N.M., who voted against the resolution authorizing use of military force last week in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said on Meet the Press Sunday that he was “very disappointed that the administration has given up” on the United Nations and “on rallying the world.”
The American people, Udall said, “don’t want to be embroiled in a Middle Eastern civil war; this is an act of war that we’re going to take. We haven’t exhausted all of our political, economic, and diplomatic alternatives.” Obama, he charged, “is moving much too rapidly down the war path and not trying to find a political solution….”
Another Democrat, Rep. Loretta Sanchez, D- Calif. said she was leaning against the resolution authorizing use of force. She said it is not clear to her that United States national security is directly at risk from Assad’s regime. “I haven’t heard that Assad wants to use the weapons against us; I haven’t heard that he wants to use the weapons against our allies (or ) that he’s moving them to terrorist organizations.”
She said, “The minute that one of those cruise missiles lands in there, we are in the Syrian war. It’s a civil war and we’re taking sides with the rebels,” some of whom, she said, were linked to al Qaeda.
Sanchez indicated that she’s quite skeptical of Obama’s argument that any military action will be carefully limited: “For the president to say, ‘this is just, you know, a very quick thing and we’re out of there.’ That’s how long wars start.”
Republican Rep. Mike McCaul of Texas, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, who he said he couldn’t support Obama’s plan, agreed with Sanchez: “Once we hit, this is an act of war. Little wars start big wars.”  He called an attack on Assad “kind of a face-saving measure” by Obama “after he drew the red line” against use of chemical weapons by Assad’s regime.
Even Rep. Peter King, R- N.Y., who supports an attack on the Assad regime and warned Sunday of the danger of an “Iran-Syrian axis in the Middle East,” harshly criticized Obama whom he said has been “vacillating. I can’t imagine Harry Truman or John Kennedy or Ronald Reagan or Dwight Eisenhower ever putting the nation in a position like this….”
He said, “I wish he was more of a commander-in-chief than a community organizer.”
In another example of the Syria issue crossing party lines, Sen. Mark Pryor, D- Ark, who is up for re-election next year, announced Saturday that he opposes an attack, while his Republican opponent, Rep. Tom Cotton, has said he strongly supports military action and wants to go even further and topple the Assad regime to achieve “an ultimate victory in Syria” with “a pro-Western, moderate native Syrian government” taking Assad’s place.
Pryor said Saturday that the Obama administration had to “prove a compelling national security interest, clearly define a mission that has a definitive end-state, and then build a true coalition of allies” that would take part in action against Assad. But “based on the information presented to me and the evidence I have gathered, I do not believe these criteria have been met, and I cannot support military action against Syria at this time,” Pryor said.
Obama said Friday, “it’s conceivable that at the end of the day I don’t persuade a majority of the American people that it's the right thing to do,” but he added that sometimes members of Congress must do what they think is right even if they go against their constituents’ wishes.
Obama has not explicitly said whether he might choose to launch an attack anyway even if Congress votes down a resolution authorizing him to attack Syria. He rebuffed reporters’ questions on that point in a press conference Friday at the meeting of G-20 nations in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Meanwhile, Syrian President Bashar Assad has emerged in the U.S. media, granting an interview to CBS' Charlie Rose, which will be aired Monday. While the network did not release direct quotes from the exchange, Rose said Sunday on "Face the Nation" that Assad denied having anything to do with the chemical weapons attack that has the world on edge.
"He does accept some of the responsibility" for the attack that killed almost 1,500 Syrian civilians - including hundreds of children, Rose said. "I asked that very question: 'Do you feel any remorse?' He said, 'Of course I do,' but it did not come in a way that was sort of deeply felt inside. It was much more of a calm recitation of anybody who's a leader of a country would feel terrible about what's happened to its citizens."

Friday, September 6, 2013

Think, Americans, Before You Choose Whom to Support!

From the NSP News Service:  See, readers: one must be very careful when getting involved in the confused and convoluted affairs of foreign nations, especially those with a cultural and religious background different from ours. For this reason, among many others, the NSP urges President Obama to stay the hell out of Syria and to get American troops out of the Middle East! Do any of you remember that in 1979-1980, the American government backed a new Iraqi president named Saddam Hussein in his war with Iran? And look where that got us!

-- Thomas Folz, Assistant Director, Communications and Propaganda, NSP.  1488!


Not one of 'bad guys,' but Syrian rebel group proclaims 'anti-American' bent


Flashpoint Intelligence
A photo-illustration from the Facebook page of the al-Aqsa Islamic Brigades, a faction of the opposition Free Syrian Army fighting to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad, shows Islamic fighters marching away from a burning U.S. Capitol.

As debate grows over the extremism of some armed factions battling to overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime, an incendiary illustration on the Facebook page of one such group leaves little doubt where its leaders envision the uprising ending – with masked Islamic fighters marching through Washington, D.C., as the U.S. Capitol burns in the background.

The image is one of eight photos posted on the official Facebook page of the “Al-Aqsa Islamic Brigades,”  a small armed Sunni rebel faction fighting with the Free Syrian Army, the main umbrella military organization of the opposition forces. Two other photos posted on the group’s page feature the widely recognized black flag of the al Qaeda in Iraq terrorist group, which operates freely in Syria.
Evan Kohlmann, a senior partner with the security firm Flashpoint Intelligence and an NBC consultant on terrorism, who discovered the image on Facebook and provided it to NBC News’ investigative unit, said Al-Aqsa has not been designated as a terrorist group by the United States. But he noted that it fights alongside another Free Syrian Army force, the Tawhid Brigade, that has been linked to Jabhat al-Nusra, one of two rebel factions labeled terrorist groups by the U.S. government.

"As a group that claims affiliation to the generally pro-Western Free Syrian Army, it is difficult to reconcile the fact that it has plastered such a lurid anti-American image as the banner on its own official Facebook page," Kohlmann said. "It raises the unfortunate but inescapable fact that not every group within the Free Syrian Army is closely aligned with U.S. interests in the region."

Flashpoint Intelligence
Gallery on the Al-Aqsa Islamic Brigades Facebook page includes photos featuring the black flag of al Qaeda in Iraq.

Such murky alliances and rivalries within the Free Syrian Army help explain the skepticism that greeted U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday when he told members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee that “bad guys” – Islamic extremists – constitute “maybe 15 to 25 percent” of the opposition forces.
Several lawmakers questioned Kerry’s assertion and a senior military official told NBC News that actual percentage is “way higher than that.” Defense officials estimate that al Qaeda and related extremists groups now constitute “more than 50 percent” of the rebel force, which is made up of at least 70 different factions, “and it’s growing by the day,” according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The al-Aqsa Brigades ties to the al Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra were in the news earlier this year, when a former Army medic was indicted in March by the U.S. Attorney's office in Alexandria, Va.
The indictment charged that Eric Harroun had fought with Jabhat al-Nusra, firing rocket-propelled grenades in combat. In his defense, Harroun's lawyer said that his client had actually fought with a splinter group of the al-Aqsa Brigades, not the terrorist group, and asked for bail. The judge declined and Harroun remains in federal custody in Arizona. In a video posted to YouTube earlier this year, Harroun expressed his support for the rebels.

While details of the Al-Aqsa Islamic Brigades leadership and goals are unclear, Kohlmann said, the group makes no secret of its Islamist orientation and general antipathy for the West. He noted, that in late February, the group issued a report lambasting “the role of Western Crusader intelligence in the Syrian revolution."
Despite the group's anti-Western philosophy, al-Aqsa announced that the group was aligning itself with The Tawhid Brigade and the Free Syrian Army, the umbrella group that the U.S. is working with, in a video posted on YouTube on Nov. 2, 2012. In the 19-second video, a spokesman, surrounded by apparent rebel fighters, stated, “We from the Al-Aqsa Islamic Brigades in Aleppo and its suburbs announce that we are joining Liwaa at-Tawhid.” 

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Obama: Stay OUT of Syria! Syria is NOT an American Problem!

From the (reorganizing) NSP News Service:  As expected, President Obama pushes the most idiotic and arrogant agenda possible! No, the NSP does not condone the use of chemical weapons (if that, in fact, is truly the case, and not a bunch of ZOG propaganda!). BUT Syria is a nation for Syrians, and the United States has no business going in there on any basis or at any rate. And NO American blood ought to be shed over this nonsense, not to mention that not one thin dime should be paid for a problem in a nation thousands of miles away. LET'S STAY OUT!!!

-- Karl Wolff III, Deputy Commander and Head of Propaganda and Communications, NSP.  1488!

Selling Syria: White House makes its case to Congress for an attack

President Obama affirms his confidence that he will get the votes needed in Congress to pass authorization to take military action in Syria.
The White House is making the hard sell for a strike on Syria — meeting with strategically important Republicans, trying to persuade skeptical Democrats and sending top members of the Cabinet to testify before Congress.
The administration won a critical show of support Tuesday from the top elected Republican in Washington, House Speaker John Boehner, who said he backed President Barack Obama’s call for military action.
Obama and Vice President Joe Biden huddled with the heads of key congressional committees in the White House Cabinet Room. Boehner, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell were among those at the meeting.
In brief remarks to reporters, Obama stressed that American action would be limited and meant to “degrade” the capability of Syrian leader Bashar Assad, suspected of using chemical weapons against his own people last month.
“This is not Iraq, and this is not Afghanistan,” Obama said.
Among the day’s other major developments in the Syria crisis:
— Secretary of State John Kerry, who twice last week made a forceful moral argument for an attack on Syria, and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel were due in front of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Israel test-fired a missile over the Mediterranean Sea, adding to tension in the region. U.S. military officials told NBC News that no American ships took part in the test, and called the test fairly routine.
— The United Nations said that more than 2 million Syrians have poured into neighboring countries, about 5,000 per day. A U.N. commissioner said Syria had become “the great tragedy of this century.”
— U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was to meet with reporters early Tuesday afternoon.
Alice Martins / AFP - Getty Images
A look at the conflict that has overtaken Syria.
— A spokesman for the Syrian opposition said that a Syrian forensic medicine expert has evidence of Assad’s involvement in a chemical weapons attack in March and has defected to Turkey.
The Senate hearing, which also will include Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, follows a long weekend during which the administration backed off what appeared to be an imminent strike and began making its case to Congress and the public.
The administration argues that Assad must be punished for firing chemical weapons into a suburb of the capital last month, killing more than 1,400 people, including more than 400 children.
Obama said Tuesday that he is confident that Congress will authorize military action against Syria. He said he would be willing to rewrite his draft resolution to Congress, “so long as we are accomplishing what needs to be accomplished which is to degrade Assad.”
The timing of a vote in Congress could be tricky. The nation marks the 12th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks next week, and the U.N. opens its General Assembly on Sept. 17.
Russia and China both have veto power in the U.N. Security Council and would presumably block any American attempt to secure U.N. support for a Syria strike.
Pete Souza / White House via Getty Images
In this photo provided by the White House, President Barack Obama meets with Sens. John McCain and Lindsey Graham and National Security Adviser Susan Rice to discuss Syria in the Oval Office on Monday.
On Monday, Obama met with two key Republican senators, John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. McCain, after the meeting, called on Congress to pass a resolution approving force against Syria.
Both Republicans said the goal of military action should be to “degrade” the capabilities of the Assad regime and “upgrade” those of the Syrian opposition, which has fought the Assad government for more than two years into a civil war.
McCain and Graham also criticized Obama for failing to make a clear case for intervention.
Also Monday, Kerry, Hagel and National Security Adviser Susan Rice were among the administration officials who spoke to 127 House Democrats by conference call to argue for a Syria strike.
Sources told NBC News that Pelosi came to the administration’s defense, telling colleagues that preventing the spread of weapons of mass destruction was an important piece of U.S. national security policy.
Kerry told the call that Congress faces a “Munich moment,” a reference to the 1938 agreement that ceded part of Czechoslovakia to Nazi Germany, and that was judged by history to be an appeasement of Adolf Hitler.
Kerry will go before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday.
The president planned to fly overnight Tuesday to Sweden to meet with Scandinavian leaders there. He arrives Thursday in Russia for a meeting of the Group of 20 world economic powers.
Obama, preparing to argue his case before Congress and the American public, said Saturday: “We should have this debate, because the issues are too big for business as usual.”

Monday, September 2, 2013

More Third Reich Hero Elder Abuse: Siert Bruins.


From the (now being reorganized) NSP News Service:

Former Nazi guard goes on trial for murder of resistance fighter

Frank Augstein / AP
Siert Bruins, 92-year-old former member of the Nazi Waffen SS, sits in a courtroom in Hagen, Germany, Monday, Sept. 2, 2013. Dutch-born Siert Bruins, who is now a German, is on trial on allegations he executed a Dutch resistance fighter in 1944. Bruins, who volunteered for the SS after the Nazis took the Netherlands in 1941, already served time in Germany in the 1980s after being found guilty in the wartime killing of two Dutch Jews.
A 92-year-old former member of the Nazi party went on trial Monday in Germany — 69 years after he allegedly shot a Dutch resistance fighter in the back at the end of World War II.
Siert Bruins, who served with the Nazi Waffen-SS, appeared in court in the western city of Hagen with a walker and was reportedly alert as the proceedings began, the AP reports.
Bruins is accused of killing Aldert Klaas Dijkema, but claims although he was present during the murder, another soldier had shot him. That soldier has since died.
"I walked on the right (of Dijkema), he was on the left, then suddenly I heard the shots and someone fell," he told broadcaster Das Erste recently.
Bruins’ attorney, Klaus-Peter Kniffka, said that it’s unlikely that his client will address the court during the proceedings.
"I will probably deliver a defense declaration, but it depends upon the course of the trial," Kniffka told reporters.
The Dutch-born Bruins, who’s now a German citizen, was already sentenced to seven years in prison in 1980 for being an accessory to the murder of two Jewish boys in 1945.
German federal prosecutors are also expected to announce this week that they are recommending the pursuit of charges against 40 former Auschwitz guards.
The renewed probes of former Nazis comes after the death of Ohio autoworker John Demjanjuk who was appealing his 2011 conviction of accessory to murder after it was alleged that he served at a death camp in Sobibor.
The trial is expected to last until the end of September.


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We at the NSP could not help but convey this sad story of more "elder abuse" at the hands of European officials. Here, a 92-year-old hero of the Third Reich, Herr Siert Bruins, is being tried for allegations he murdered some partisan -- who was probably a communist, if the event took place at all. And to think, he'd already been found "guilty" of Third Reich-related "crimes" and been sentenced to 7 years incarceration in Germany. When will enough be enough? When will the Jewish conspiracy against former German soldiers and officials stop? Must Jewish vengeance go this far? How bloodthirsty! And let's also remember that the Waffen-SS was a fighting unit, engaged mostly on the Russian Front, and was too busy fighting off Russian sub-human invaders to go about shooting anybody in the back!


-- Thomas Folz, Associate Director, NSP Communications and Propaganda Office.  1488!