A brief world news roundup for 1 July 2009.
United States & the Americas
- Jurist – A federal judge on Monday dismissed a habeas corpus challenge brought by Afghan national Haji Wazir detained at Bagram Air Base without charges since 2002
- Treasury Dept – The U.S. Department of the Treasury today targeted North Korea’s missile proliferation network by designating Hong Kong Electronics under Executive Order 13382.
- BBC – The US has imposed sanctions on an Iranian firm accused of helping North Korea with its nuclear programme. The US Treasury says Hong Kong Electronics moved millions of dollars to two North Korean companies linked to Pyongyang’s nuclear programme
- Xinhua – Honduras’ post-coup government, led by Roberto Micheletti, on Tuesday extended the curfew for 72 hours on Tuesday, Micheletti’s spokesman told reporters.
- VOA – Thousands of Hondurans have marched in support of the new government that replaced ousted leader Manuel Zelaya earlier this week. Officials have vowed to arrest Mr. Zelaya if he returns to the country.
- LAHT – The member-states of the Venezuelan-led ALBA bloc – Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Honduras, Nicaragua, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Venezuela – on Monday ordered their ambassadors to leave Honduras until President Mel Zelaya, who was forced out by the military over the weekend, is reinstated.
- NY Times – Néstor Kirchner, the former president of Argentina, resigned his post as leader of the Peronist Party on Monday, a day after he and his supporters suffered a crushing defeat in national congressional elections.
- Itar-Tass – Russian citizens will be able to go to Argentina without visas soon after the relevant intergovernmental agreement enters into force on June 29, an official at the Russian consular office in Buenos Aires told Itar-Tass.
- MercoPress – The Brazilian Central Bank announced it had reached an initial understanding with China for the gradual elimination of the US dollar in bilateral trade operations which in 2009 are estimated to reach 40 billion US dollars.
Russia, Caucasus & Central Asia
- Kremlin – Over the past few days I was able to travel across Africa from north to south. My visit to the African continent began in Egypt, where we discussed a variety of issues, starting of course with economic cooperation and ending with the Middle East settlement, the Arab-Israeli conflict. All this is very important, very complicated. And most importantly there are some things that just cannot be understood without immersing oneself in the actual atmosphere of a place. I also had the opportunity to speak to the League of Arab States, which was the first time ever and an unprecedented opportunity for the government of the Russian Federation to interact with Arab countries with whom we enjoy very friendly relations. Arab countries are an important part of the African continent.
- Russia Today – Russia’s army needs to fill its biggest draft quota in years, but there may be not enough men to call up. Army chiefs have vowed to meet the targets, but human rights groups are ringing the alarm after cases of illegal recruitment.
- Oil and the Glory – A narrative familiar to all oilmen with long exposure to Russia is under way: With cash reserves running down and insufficient economic relief in sight, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, his growl turned into a purr, is welcoming back Western oil companies to work Russia’s natural gas fields. So how should Shell and Total — both of them the recipients of Putin’s renewed niceness — respond? Are Putin’s past revocations of deals, expulsions from fields at knock-down rates, and ho-hum attitude toward shakedowns reason not to do business with him now that Russia is trouble?
- Russia MFA – Question: Today, the RNC resumed work, suspended because of the war in Georgia. When does Russia intend to resume relations with Georgia? Foreign Minister Lavrov: The answer is very simple. Russia did not sever relations with Georgia. It was Georgia that severed relations with Russia. So this question is not to me.
- RIA Novosti – A senior militant was killed during a special operation in Russia’s North Caucasus Republic of Chechnya, the republic’s interior minister said on Tuesday. The operation was conducted in the central Chechen town of Shali late on Monday.
- EurasiaNet – Russian President Dmitri Medvedev only visited Baku for a day, but walked away with a gas deal likely to bring Moscow benefits for years to come.
- UPI – Kazakhstan sees a rival to the Baku-Novorossiysk pipeline from Russia to Azerbaijan as a more economically attractive transit option for its gas, officials say. Kazakhstan current transports its natural gas through connections to the 830-mile Baku-Novorossiysk pipeline.
- Xinhua – Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev said on Tuesday that Kazakhstan will never supply nuclear materials that could be used to make weapons of mass destruction to other countries.
- Vladimir Socor – Chinese demand is voracious for Turkmen gas. Russia’s import stoppage can only strengthen Turkmenistan’s motivation to start exports to China on schedule in early 2010. With Russia demonstrating its unreliability as a gas importer (let alone supplier to others), Beijing is using this opportunity to increase the volume of its future imports of Turkmen gas beyond the volumes already agreed
- Intellibriefs – The status quo in Nagorno-Karabakh lingers, despite international involvement, and the self-declared republic’s foreign minister talks to ISN’s Karl Rahder about the situation on the ground.

Capt. Steven Kendall, company commander, Company B, 4th Battalion, 6th Infantry Regiment, presents a partnership certificate to Lt. Col. Hillal, battalion commander, 3rd Battalion, 41st Iraqi Army Brigade, at a ceremony marking Iraq national sovereignty day, June 30. Following the ceremony, Kendall's unit vacated their combat outpost at a defunct sugar factory while soldiers from the Iraqi army moved in (photo by Maj. Myles Caggins)
Middle East
- MNF Iraq – Today is an important day for the people of Iraq. In accordance with Article Five of the Security Agreement between the United States and the Government of Iraq signed in Baghdad in November of last year, Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) are now responsible for securing their cities.
- Al Arabiya – Twenty-six people people were killed and 56 wounded in a car bomb attack on a market area in Kirkuk on Tuesday as Iraqi forces prepared to take control of towns and cities nationwide as American troops withdrew six years after the U.S.-led invasion
- Haaretz – The head of the Fatah parliamentary faction, Azzam al-Ahmed, reported progress Tuesday in his party’s reconciliation talks with rival group Hamas in Cairo, and said the two sides were set to announce the establishment of a joint security body for the Gaza Strip
- NOW Lebanon – PM-designate Saad Hariri met with each of the parliamentary blocs on Monday to discuss the possible formation of the next government, saying that the meetings were good and showed the openness of all parties. However, opposition blocs are adamant about retaining the obstructing-third vote in the new cabinet.
- Ya Libnan – Gen. David Petraeus, Commander of US Central Command, arrived in Beirut on a military aircraft Tuesday and went directly to Baabda Republican palace for talks with Lebanese President Michel Suleiman. The meeting was attended by U.S. Ambassador Michele Sison and focused on reinforcing the defensive capabilities of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), its training and logistical needs.
- SANA – The Turkish Ministry of Defense said on Tuesday that it began talks with the NATO Maintenance and Supply Agency (NAMSA) for dismantling landmines in the border areas with Syria
- Washington Times – Qatar-Egypt relations tense; Tiny GCC nation expands into Egypt’s traditional sphere of influence
Iran
- MEMRI – A source in the Iraqi border police said that Iranian military forces, using medium and heavy weapons, have occupied an oil field about 400 kilometers (222 miles) south of the city of Basra. The border police, accompanied by a unit responsible for protecting Iraqi oil installations, engaged the Iranian invading force and forced it to retreat.
- Telegraph – Mir-Hossein Mousavi, the leading challenger to Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has issued a fresh call to his supporters to maintain peaceful protests after the government confirmed the result of the disputed election.
- Press TV – The Iranian parliament (Majlis) has passed a new bill to cut military service in the country by 2 to 10 months for conscripts with university degrees. “The military service has been cut by 2 months to 10 months for educated conscripts,” where the term was 18 months, Brigadier General Moussa Kamali said.
- Xinhua – Iran and Russia on Tuesday discussed new ways for the “expansion of peaceful nuclear cooperation”, the official IRNA news agency reported. Deputy head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Mohammad Saeedi held talks in Moscow with Sergei Kiriyenko, head of Russia’s Rosatom State Atomic Corporation, IRNA said.
- Iran MFA – Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said here on Monday that Iran and Bulgaria should use their common stances on the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation to expand bilateral and regional cooperation. “Bulgaria is a member of the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) and Tehran wants to have a observer status in the organization.”
South Asia
- AFPS – Coalition forces launched precision air strikes overnight against senior Haqqani commanders and command posts in the remote mountains of western Khost province. The militants are believed to have aided in the movement of foreign fighters through the Khost-Gardez Pass and throughout Afghanistan. Elsewhere, Afghan forces, assisted by coalition forces, conducted multiple operations in Khost, Ghazni and Kandahar provinces June 28
- Daily Times – Taliban slaughtered 18 of their injured men ahead of an operation in Biha valley on Tuesday, apparently because they could not take the wounded along as they retreated. The ISPR said in a daily update that troops killed another 18 Taliban and arrested 23 from Swat and Dir
- Dawn – Jetfighters continued to run bombing missions over parts of North Waziristan tribal region, killing seven people on Tuesday, sources and residents said. However, it could not be known whether the dead were militants or non-combatants. In a related development, the militants who pulled out from a peace deal with the government on Monday have slapped a ban on the assembly of five or more persons, formation of peace committees, and have told tribesmen to refrain from going to the political administration offices or seeking employment in government departments or the Khasadar force.
- IslamOnline – Fighting a hard-to-win battle against the well-armed, well-trained militants of Pakistan Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud in troubled Waziristan, the government has lost yet another powerful ally and arch rival of Mehsud who had earlier announced support to the military operation. “The peace deal with the government is no more intact after perpetual US drone attacks and security forces’ violations of the agreement,” Ahmedullah Ahmedi, a spokesman for Hafiz Gul Bahadur, a powerful commander in North Waziristan.
- Geo – Eight militants were killed and seven injured by national lashkar in Upper Dir as operation ‘Rah-e-Rast’ is underway in Malakand Division. The national lashkar also regained control of Shotkas. Curfew has been relaxed in different parts of Dir and Swat.
- Daily Times – In the first-ever suicide attack in a Baloch-populated area of Balochistan, at least four people were killed and 11 seriously injured when a bomber ripped through a hotel in Kalat on Tuesday, as another suicide attack on the Torkham border killed at least seven people and injured 12.
- Times of India – Terrorist groups banned by Pakistan, including the Lashker-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, are expanding operations and recruitment in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, according to a secret government report. The detailed report, submitted by regional police to the PoK cabinet on March 25, states that three banned groups – Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Jaish-e-Mohammad and Lashker-e-Taiba – are active in PoK capital Muzaffarabad
- Xinhua – India Tuesday named its Ambassador to China Nirupama Rao as the country’s next Foreign Secretary, said Ministry of External Affairs sources.
Far East & Pacific
- Reuters – North Korea appears to be enriching uranium, potentially giving the state that has twice tested a plutonium-based nuclear device another path to making atomic weapons, South Korea’s defense minister said on Tuesday.
- Newsday – A U.S. official says a North Korean ship has turned around and is headed back the way it came, after being tracked for days by American vessels on suspicion it was carrying illicit weapons.
- Irrawaddy – Japanese police arrested three top businessmen on Monday on suspicion of attempting to export to Burma a measuring instrument that could be used to develop long-range ballistic missile systems, Japanese newspapers reported.
- Japan Times – The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate climbed to 5.2 percent in May, nearing a six-year high as job availability dropped to its lowest level on record, the government said Tuesday
- RSIS – Singapore’s recent acquisition of submarines with air-independent propulsion (AIP) is being matched by similar purchases by other regional navies. While AIP-equipped submarines do not necessary upset regional military balances, they are part of a larger trend in regional naval expansion which could have far-reaching repercussions
- Bangkok Post – The army plans to reduce troop numbers around the disputed Preah Vihear temple in a bid to ease border tensions with Cambodia. Army chief Anupong Paojinda yesterday said there would be a reduction soon in the number of soldiers deployed around the mountain, where the ruins of the ancient Hindu temple sit, to comply with a recent agreement reached with Cambodia.
- Gulfnews – Three bombs were found in suburban Quezon City over the last three days, raising fears of destabilisation a year before the elections, local papers said.
- Australia DoD – These are very early days for me as Minister for Defence. But since taking on this portfolio I’ve set myself the challenge of working through the myriad of complex issues facing defence as methodically as I can. I want to satisfy myself that in tackling these issues we are all – Ministers, the Department, and the ADF – doing the best we possibly can. The timing of this conference has led me initially to focus on the issues of defence planning and capabilities.
Europe
- RIA Novosti – At present, Poland consumes 13.7 billion cubic meters of gas annually, out of which 7 bcm is supplied by Gazprom, according to the International Energy Agency. Therefore, the deal with Qatar, which may reduce Russian gas supplies by 20%, is Poland’s first step toward lowering its dependence on Russian gas. However, Gazprom is itself to blame for the appearance of a rival company, Qatargas, in Europe. It was because of its efforts to maintain its monopoly position in the European market and to purchase all gas produced in the CIS that Europeans started searching for ways to diversify gas routes.
- Javno – A former U.S. spy at the centre of a kidnapping trial in Italy appeared to acknowledge a role in the abduction of a Muslim cleric but said he was only following orders, according to a rare interview published on Tuesday.
- AKI – Minority Muslims living in Serbia’s southern Sandzak region have demanded more rights and a reorganisation of the region in the future decentralisation of power in the country. The Bosniac National Council which represents Sandzak Muslims, adopted a declaration made public on Tuesday, protesting plans to split Sandzak into two administrative units.
- Sweden MFA – On 1 July, the Swedish Embassy for Iraq will return to Baghdad, having previously operated from Amman. On the same day, the Embassy will take over the local Presidency of the European Union in Iraq
- euobserver – The Czech Republic in the past six months helped to end a severe EU gas crisis and to ease Ireland’s Lisbon Treaty problem. But its cack-handed diplomacy and internal battles risk it going down as “the worst EU presidency in history.”
- EUCOM – Adm. James G. Stavridis became the 14th U.S. European Command (USEUCOM) commander during a change of command ceremony at Patch Barracks here June 30.
Africa
- Shabelle – The Islamic administration in the port town of Kismayu 500 kilometers south of the Somali capital Mogadishu has said that they will attack Ethiopia and Kenya, official said on Tuesday. Abdikani Mohamed Yusuf, a deputy chairman of the Islamic administration in Kismayu town said that they will assault the neighboring countries as Ethiopia and Kenya adding that they will target mainly Ethiopia asserting that they had defeated the enemy urging all the Islamist fighters to be ready to attack them.
- Mareeg – Somalia’s deputy prime minister and finance minister Sharif Hassan Sheik Aden said Tuesday that two thousand foreign fighters were fighting against his fragile government in Somalia
- Sudan Tribune – Sudan has described statements by Chadian foreign minister about the absence of Darfur rebel in Chad as false and belied by the facts. The Chadian foreign minister Moussa Faki Mohamed had stated that Justice and Equality Movement rebels do not have any presence in Chad, adding they only come to the capital to meet international officials who request to allow their presence there.
- Daily Star – African leaders open a summit Wednesday with a slate of conflicts demanding their attention, but were distracted by Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi’s drive to create an “African government.” Gadhafi was elected president of the African Union in February, and the self-styled “king of kings” is using his term to press his scheme for African unity.
- Magharebia – Two bombs exploded on Monday (June 29th) in Khenchela province, killing one soldier and injuring four security officers, El Watan reported. The incident happened during a major search operation for the terrorists who killed five Algerian municipal guards and kidnapped two others on June 22nd in Chechar.
- New Times – After killing several DRC soldiers including a Major and a Captain, the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) have been blamed for killing two more Congolese soldiers. FDLR is said to have struck again over the weekend in Kiseguru village of Rutshuru territory, about 90 kilometers north east of DRC’s eastern provincial capital Goma.

The amphibious dock landing ship USS Tortuga is pier side at Trinity Wharf. Tortuga is part of the Essex Amphibious Ready group, underway for summer deployment and scheduled to participate in military exercise Talisman Saber 2009 with the Australian Defense Force. (photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Nardelito Gervacio)
The Global War
- SAAG – ISLAMISM – A historical background: The Saudi Angle
- NY Times – Viktor Bout, a Russian businessman suspected of arms trafficking who faces possible extradition to the United States, is pursuing what his lawyer calls a rare legal procedure that accuses American officials of overstepping their jurisdiction in a sting operation here last year.
- ynet – Al-Qaeda’s North Africa wing threatened on Tuesday to take revenge on France for its opposition to the burqa, calling on Muslims to retaliate against the country, the US monitoring service SITE Intelligence reported.
- UK MoD – By leading specific training courses British soldiers have been at the forefront of international efforts to develop the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Armed Forces to ensure peace in the region. In the last couple of months various training courses have been run by British soldiers for the Congolese Armed Forces (FARDC) in their new, UK-funded £500,000 training facility in the country’s capital city, Kinshasa
Sights & Sounds
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