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TERROR WARS
US strategy on IS under attack by lawmakers
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 10, 2014


China tells US to 'correct its ways' after torture report
Beijing (AFP) Dec 10, 2014 - China on Wednesday urged the United States to "correct its ways" after a damning US Senate report detailed use of torture by the CIA.

"China has consistently opposed torture," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a regular briefing.

"We believe the US side should reflect upon itself, correct its ways and earnestly respect and abide by the rules of international conventions."

Rights groups say China's own justice system is riddled with abuses and that it is not uncommon for confessions to be extracted through torture.

Beijing says it attaches great importance to human rights and that it carries out detentions in accordance with the law.

In a report that has drawn international calls for criminal prosecution, the US Senate said that CIA torture of Al-Qaeda suspects was far more brutal than acknowledged and failed to produce useful intelligence.

China and the US regularly spar over human rights, with Washington expressing concern over the detention and jailing of prominent rights activists by China's communist authorities.

A senior Chinese official on Monday defended his country's human rights record against Western criticism, saying Beijing favoured the "right to development and survival" over civil liberties.

Speaking in Brussels after an EU-China rights dialogue, Li Junhua told a press conference: "Neither party should judge the other country's system."

He added that Europe is "focused on civil liberties and the right of government but in China we're talking about the right to development and the right to survival."

China has made "great strides in the last 30 years on human rights," which compare to a hundred years of progress in Europe, he said.

The US administration was under fire again Wednesday, accused of a "flawed" strategy to help end the war in Syria, as a top official admitted training for moderate rebels will only begin next year.

A day after US Secretary of State John Kerry sparred with senators, lawmakers in the House rounded on special envoy to Iraq Brett McGurk for a slow and inadequate response to the threat posed by Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria.

"After four months of the US-led air campaign in Iraq and in Syria, ISIS still controls essentially the same amount of territory that it did in the summer, and one of the reasons for this, in my opinion, is the limited nature of this effort," said representative Ed Royce, chairman of the House foreign affairs committee.

US officials have said that some 1,100 airstrikes have been carried out by the US-led coalition since September.

But in the 2003 conflict against Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, "we had a thousand sorties per day," Royce said, adding Iraqis and Kurds fighting IS had also been denied the "heavy equipment" they need.

In Syria, where the US plan is to train up the moderate US-backed opposition, "these Syrian groups have suffered from dire ammunition shortages in the last several weeks," Royce said.

McGurk defended the US strategy however, and stressed that Washington hoped to begin training the first of about 5,000 Syrian opposition rebels in March 2015.

"Part of the reason is because of the vetting standards and that we're being very careful with this. But we're not sitting on our hands," McGurk insisted, adding the training would take about a year.

But representative Ted Poe argued: "What are we doing in Syria right now? People are dying in Syria and the cavalry's not showing up til 2016."

"So March of 2016 then we have a plan, then we have fighters then we send them to Syria. There's no telling what ISIS can do in that year or however many months it is," Poe said.

"Does the United States have some other strategic plan, other than arming these folks who aren't going to show up til 2016, dropping bombs that is marginal whether it's been successful, helping with military aid to some of these coalition countries?"

"Yes, the train and equip program is just one small element in an overall campaign," McGurk shot back.

"This is a multi-year campaign. Phase one is Iraq. What we're doing in Syria right now is degrading ISIL's capacity."

Kerry on Tuesday called on senators to give the US administration a new war powers authorization to continue the fight against IS.

But he was heavily criticized by some of the senators, including John McCain, who said that the Obama administration was "doing nothing" to stop Syrian President Bashar al-Assad from slaughtering his people.

Switzerland orders community service for returned IS jihadist
Geneva (AFP) Dec 10, 2014 - Switzerland has ordered a returned recruit of the Islamic State group to do 600 hours of community service and will not send him to prison, in the country's first sentencing of a foreign jihadist fighter.

Swiss Attorney General Michael Lauber's ruling went into effect this week, he told public broadcaster RTS late Wednesday.

The 30-year-old recent convert to Islam, from the western Swiss canton of Vaud, had travelled to Syria late last year to join an IS training camp.

The man, whose name was not given, told the broadcaster he had been indoctrinated over the Internet.

"I was new to Islam... The videos I saw and the discussions I had online made me feel like I had to go there," he said.

After two weeks in the training camp however, he asked to leave, only to be jailed by the militant group, which held him for 54 days, RTS reported.

The man, who has been cooperating with authorities and claims to have cut all ties with the jihadist group, was sentenced under a Swiss law against taking part in criminal organisations and under a military law against fighting for a foreign army, according to the report.

Thousands of Western volunteers have joined the IS battle to create an Islamic "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq, heightening fears that radicalised and battle-hardened fighters will launch attacks when they return to their home countries.

Asked about the seemingly light sentence, Lauber insisted his ruling was appropriate for this particular case.

He stressed though that future cases of returned fighters might result in very different sentences, depending on the details of the case.

"This is a verdict for this case, singular," he told RTS.


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TERROR WARS
US defence chief sees 'steady progress' in war on IS
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 09, 2014
US defence chief Chuck Hagel on Tuesday hailed "steady progress" in the war on the Islamic State group but Iraq appealed for increased military assistance to break the back of the jihadists. Meeting Hagel in Baghdad, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said that Iraqi forces were advancing on the ground against IS fighters who have seized large parts of the country. "But they need more air po ... read more


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