Wednesday, 5 July 2017

Islamic State loses the battle for Mosul, The New Daily, 7 July, 2017.

http://thenewdaily.com.au/news/world/2017/07/05/after-mosul-war-will-go-on/

Islamic State loses the battle for Mosul, but don’t dare to believe the war is won


Iraqi forces have retaken all but a small, rubble-strewn strip of Mosul where Islamist fanatics are fighting to the death. Photo: Getty
John Stapleton
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Islamic State (IS) has released graphic footage of its final hours in war-ravaged Mosul in northern Iraq as experts around the world warn that America and Australia have fallen into a jihad trap.

While the West crows of victory and “liberation”, IS wants everyone to know what has happened there. Pictures of wounded and dying children, shell-shocked mothers and fleeing families are being widely disseminated.

The footage, released through their official media outlet Amaq, shows IS fighters, known as mujahedeen or holy warriors, firing rifles as they fight their way through the city’s severely bombed streets.

Horror stories abound, of children rounded up from orphanages and placed on the front line, of entire families killed by airstrikes.

With water and food supplies cut, more than 800,000 people have fled the city. Humanitarian workers report the civilian population the most traumatised they have ever seen.

There are only a few hundred IS fighters left in a thin strip estimated to run for 300 metres from the Tigris River. All are expected to die in the coming hours.

Thousands of their comrades have been killed in the battle to retake Mosul, which began in October last year. Hundreds more have blown themselves up in suicide attacks.

It was in Mosul that IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared a Muslim caliphate in 2014.

Since then, IS has attracted followers around the world and changed the face of terror forever.
Fighters directed by Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi are being pulverised in Iraq.

Speaking on the third anniversary of that day, Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi praised his troops on “the big victory”.

“Praise be to God, we managed to liberate Mosul,” al-Abadi said.

Both the US-led Coalition forces and the Iraq military have been pounding the city all week. Australia has also been dropping more than $30 million worth of bombs on the city a month, 119 strikes in May alone.

Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Radicalisation Charlie Winter warns that the destruction of Mosul will fuel jihadi propaganda worldwide.

“The truth is, IS has been planning for defeat in Mosul for months, if not years. Losing the city has long been part of its global plan,” he said.

“The caliphate has been doing all it can to make sure it could be seen to be putting up a fight.

“Although IS’s audacious ultraviolence ultimately set the scene for its material undoing, it also meant that it could work towards creating the world it wanted to inhabit – a polarised turbulent place that accommodated the jihadist ideology uncannily well.”

Senior analyst with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute John Coyne told The New Daily he agreed: “Anyone who thinks the fall of Mosul is going to end all this is fooling themselves. We call the Australian political response ‘security theatre’. Kill them at the source, get tough on terror, but whether that is a strategy for victory over the jihadists is hotly contested.”IS fighters paraded through Raqqa when the rebel movement seemed unstoppable. Now their last sanctuary is also poised to fall.

While the Shia-dominated Iraq Army celebrates victory over the Sunni-majority town of Mosul, there are numerous questions over the military’s behaviour. Human Rights Watch says there are numerous reports of wanton killings.

The iman of the al-Nuri mosque, destroyed last week, said he longed for the return of the caliphate:

“The reason we supported Daesh is because of the abuses of the army. People started looking for salvation regardless of what the alternative was.”

At the same time as IS confronts certain defeat in Mosul, it is also facing losses in its de facto capital of Raqqa in Syria, with US Central Command claiming major advances through the Old City.

Friday, 30 June 2017

Iraq Declares the End of the Islamic State Caliphate, The New Daily, 30 june, 2017.



Iraq declares the end of the Islamic State caliphate


Iraqi forces have retaken the area of Mosul where Islamic State officially declared its reign of terror. Photo: Getty
John Stapleton


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The Iraqi government has announced the end of the caliphate after capturing the Al-Nuri Mosque in Western Mosul, the place where Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announced the formation of the caliphate and unleashed a reign of terror on the world.

“Their fictitious state has fallen,” an Iraqi military spokesman, Brigadier General Yahya Rasool, told Iraqi state television.

Only an estimated 350 Islamic State soldiers remain in an area of less than one square kilometre in the ancient city.

Experts warn that the brutal nature of the Mosul occupation is fuelling extremism around the world. While the exact numbers are concealed in the rubble of the ancient city, the mujahideen soldiers of Islamic State, civilians and Iraqi personnel have died in their many hundreds.

As streams of Sunni muslims flee from the pulverised ruins of their neighbourhoods they pass bodies rotting in the intense heat.

More than 860,000 people have fled the city since the Iraq Army, backed by Coalition airstrikes, including from Australia, began pounding the city last October.

Eight months of gruelling combat later Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city and encompassing the ancient Assyrian city of Nineveh, and whole districts of what the Bible refers to as the “Great City”, look like scenes from an apocalypse.

Back then, Army officers boasted it would be mere days before they retook the city where al-Baghdadi declared an Islamic Caliphate in 2014.

While some of the civilians being “liberated” from the city display gratitude, or ingratiate themselves with their new conquerors, it is clear from footage of the frontline that the civilian Sunni population are as terrified of the Coalition-backed Shias of the Iraqi Army as they may once have been of Islamic State.

Human Rights Watch says thousands of Sunni Muslims have been tortured, killed or disappeared.

There are numerous concerns over the behaviour of the conquering Iraq Army, which is backed by both America and Australia. Footage from French television shows officers laughing at dead Islamic State soldiers.

Belkis Wille, Senior Iraq Researcher with Human Rights Watch, told The New Daily the civilian population is “extremely traumatised”.

“The civilians are highly traumatised. Mosul is the largest urban war in modern history. The west of the city and the neighbourhood still under ISIS control are extremely densely populated,” she said.

“Every direction you look you have hundreds of civilians packed into buildings. People who come out don’t complain about the horrific three years under ISIS, they complain about the airstrike that killed their family, despite them having made it through those three years.

“People have lost entire families, their homes, their livelihoods. They are coming out with absolutely nothing.”

Ms Wille said the Iraqi Army had also perpetrated abuses against the Sunni minority with impunity – the exact same conditions which led to the formation of the Islamic State.

“This battle is going to have very negative long term consequences for the country. If it’s not ISIS today, then it’s ISIS 2.0 tomorrow.”

All sides talk of God, from the Islamic State ‘martyrs’ to the conquering army to the devastated civilians.

“I have lost five children, there is no God but Allah,” says one shellshocked woman as she stumbles across the frontline, recorded by French television.

Dr Clarke Jones, terror expert at the Australian National University, told The New Daily the Coalition might trumpet the fall of Mosul as a symbolic triumph over terrorism, but it had not made the world safer.

“Many can see that military conflict is a greater driver of militancy than the military victory itself,” he said.

“It is all very well for the West to say it has won against Mosul. The West forgetting the back channels of reporting of the death of innocent civilians.

“That has a far greater impact and is fuelling the ideology of Islamic State and the narrative of the persecution of Muslims.”

Martin Chulov, one of the world’s leading experts on Islamic State, told The New Daily: “The genie is out of the bottle in the sense that the virulent ideology that ISIS fosters by tapping into grievances of the disenfranchised – in their case ‘persecuted’ Sunnis – will be fed by their ousting.

“They have given up, for now, on controlling geography, in favour of controlling populations – through terror attacks abroad. These will continue, even after they are chased from their last strongholds in Syria.”

Wednesday, 21 June 2017

Australian War Planes Dropping More bombs on Iraq than ever, The New Daily, 22 June, 2017.

http://thenewdaily.com.au/news/national/2017/06/21/australian-military-iraq/

Australian warplanes dropping more bombs on Iraq than ever


Australia has temporarily halted air operations over Syria. Photo: Australian Defence Force: Sgt Pete
John Stapleton
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At the same time as Australia has withdrawn from Syrian airspace under threat of being bombed out of the sky by Russia, the Australian Defence Force is dropping historically high numbers of bombs on Iraq.

Australia is the second-largest contributor to the American-led coalition efforts to defeat Islamic State in the increasingly controversial quagmire of the Middle East.

This week Australia suspended flights over Syria as a “precautionary measure”.

The US shot down a Syrian military jet on Sunday and Russia has threatened retaliation. It declared Australian jets a target and has threatened to shoot down any coalition planes flying west of the Euphrates River.

The latest figures just released by the ADF show that so far this year Australian FA/18 Super Hornets have dropped 390 bombs on Islamic State positions in Iraq, 119 in the month of May alone. This is the highest number since Tony Abbott took the country into the conflict in September 2014.

The most recent fortnightly update of the conflict issued by the ADF shows virtually all the activity in Iraq is centred around Mosul, where the last of the Islamic State forces are holed up. Mosul is a major city in northern Iraq, located on the Tigris River opposite the ancient Assyrian city of Nineveh.

Worldwide condemnation of civilian deaths from coalition bombs in the narrow, medieval streets of West Mosul is blighting the war effort.

The Defence Department and Defence Minister Marise Payne have repeatedly ignored questions from The New Daily on the size of the bombs Australia is dropping and any available estimates of civilian casualties.

However, a report from Human Rights Watch this month documents evidence of bombs between 500 and 2000 pounds.Islamic State’s stronghold in Mosul is being surrounded by US-led coalition forces.

The report, titled Iraq: Civilian Casualties Mount in West Mosul, states: “Munitions of this size can pose an excessive risk to civilians when used in populated areas, given their large blast and fragmentation radius. The … attacks may have caused disproportionate civilian harm in comparison to the military advantage gained, in violation of international humanitarian law.”

More than 600,000 civilians have fled Mosul this year, but 200,000 remain.

There are fears civilian deaths will rise rapidly in the final days of the conflict.

The Iraq army, backed with coalition airstrikes, are claiming to control more than 90 per cent of the city.

Military experts have told The New Daily civilian casualties are almost inevitable.

Melbourne-based medic Derek Ross, who has just returned from working with the group Global Outreach Doctors in Mosul, told The New Daily: “I treated civilians for the same bullet and blast injuries as the soldiers on the front line. We would often treat multiple members of the same family who were all injured by the same mortar attack.

“The uninjured children that were brought to the trauma centre with their injured family members were numb and silent.”

Former secretary to the Department of Defence Paul Barratt told The New Daily: “In an urban environment civilian casualties are almost inevitable. If you don’t want to have pictures of dead children on the evening screens you have to avoid operations that involve killing children.”

Dr Clark Jones, a terrorism expert at the Australian National University, told The New Daily there was an extremely high chance of civilian casualties.

“The public does not have much appetite for pictures of dead children, women and older people.”

Thursday, 27 April 2017

Senior Liberal speaks out against Turnbull: 'The party will be decimated', The Australian, 27 April, 2017.

http://thenewdaily.com.au/news/national/2017/04/27/liberal-party-insider-speaks-out/





Senior Liberal speaks out against Turnbull: ‘The party will be decimated’


Malcolm Turnbull
“Turnbull is running the country with a group of 25-year-old political brats. He doesn’t listen.” Photo: Getty
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“The Turnbull government is at war with the people. This is a government which hates their own constituents. The Liberal Party has lost touch with what it stands for and will be decimated unless it changes tack. Across the next electoral cycle the Liberals will lose power federally and in every state with the exception, perhaps, of Tasmania.”
Those are not the words of the opposition, but of one of the Liberal Party’s leading strategists of the past 20 years.
Geoffrey Greene has worked as Liberal Party state director in both South Australia and Queensland and was one of the architects behind John Howard’s successful election campaigns between 1996 and 2007.
Mr Greene spoke to The New Daily in the hope of shocking his party back from the brink.
Known for his ruthless political savvy, Mr Greene was an old-fashioned, behind-the-scenes political operative. His public declaration of despair follows on from the resignations this month of Liberal federal director Tony Nutt and his deputy John Burston.
“They would not have supported the warfare this government has declared on its citizens,” Mr Greene said.
“The Turnbull government has attacked every core constituency, small business, superannuants, pensioners, families with children, all because they have a budget that is out of control.
“They have not done anything about their own backyard. Public servants still fly at the front of the plane.”
He warns that the crashing political fortunes of his party is being accompanied by administrative collapse at federal, state and branch levels, with membership and donations in freefall.
Mr Greene said a major Liberal Party constituency was small business, yet they had been burdened with excessive regulation.
“This is a government which only listens to big business,” Mr Greene said. “Small business has been annihilated.”



geoffrey greene
Geoffrey Greene says the Turnbull government “is at war with the people”.

Mr Greene sheets home blame for the Liberal Party debacle to a lack of professionalism.
“Generally speaking, the whole malaise of this government is due to inept advice, ministerial and organisational,” he said. “The Liberal Party once possessed a professional caste of political operatives and campaign staff who helped politicians nuance their messages and understand the voters.
“We knew from our polling how every person voted in every street and why. We understood how to ensure policy platforms met the expectations of the citizenry.”
Mr Greene said Malcolm Turnbull did not represent the traditionally socially conservative Liberal voter.
“The rise of Pauline Hanson is a reflection that the Liberal Party has walked away from their values. It permeates the brand across the country. It is offensive.”
Mr Greene said the party’s drift from its base was compounded by the lack of professional political operatives now working in parliamentary offices.
“I have never seen a set of government ministers more captured by their departments,” he said. “Managers sourced from the department are loyal to their departments, professional advisers are loyal to their parties, and to those who voted for them.
“Turnbull is running the country with a group of 25-year-old political brats. He doesn’t listen.”
From Centrelink robo-calls to the botched implementation of the NBN, government incompetence is at the forefront of public concerns.
“It will be a hard road to win them back,” Mr Greene said.
In recent weeks there have been frantic attempts by Mr Turnbull to seize control of the national narrative, including the “dog-whistling” of citizenship tests and attacks on so-called dole bludgers, many of whom, with the destruction of manufacturing, are simply unable to find a job.
All this activity barely lifted Mr Turnbull’s dismal standing in the polls a single point.
“Turnbull has nothing left,” Mr Greene said. “There are no other constituencies his government can attack.”

Republished here:

http://www.news.com.au/national/politics/howardera-liberal-slams-inept-turnbull-government/news-story/9ab2881a802b8d9ac5eeaa4326d70d83


Howard-era Liberal slams ‘inept’ Turnbull Government

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Citizenship talk strengthens Turnbull support

Staff writerNews Corp Australia Network
A VETERAN Liberal Party strategist has publicly slammed Malcolm Turnbull, saying the government has “walked away from their values” and is at war with the people.
Geoffrey Greene, one of the minds behind John Howard’s campaigns and a former Liberal Party state director for both South Australia and Queensland, says the Turnbull Government has “attacked every core constituency” and has nothing left.
In a scathing interview with The New Daily to shock the party into action, Mr Greene says it will be “a hard road” for the government to win back the public.
Liberal Party veteran Geoffrey Greene, centre, says it will be a hard road for the Turnbull Government to win voters back.
Liberal Party veteran Geoffrey Greene, centre, says it will be a hard road for the Turnbull Government to win voters back.Source:News Corp Australia
“The Turnbull government has attacked every core constituency, small business, superannuants, pensioners, families with children, all because they have a budget that is out of control,” Mr Greene said.
“They have not done anything about their own backyard.
“Public servants still fly at the front of the plane.”
Mr Greene said former Liberal federal director Tony Nutt and his deputy John Burston, who resigned this month, would not have supported “the warfare this government has declared on its citizens”.
Geoffrey Greene’s opposition to Malcolm Turnbull’s values dates back two decades when he directed the “No Republic“ campaign.
Geoffrey Greene’s opposition to Malcolm Turnbull’s values dates back two decades when he directed the “No Republic“ campaign.Source:News Limited
He said the rise of Pauline Hanson was a reflection that the Liberal Party had walked away from its values.
One Nation’s influence now permeated the Liberal Party brand across the country.
“Generally speaking, the whole malaise of this government is due to inept advice, ministerial and organisational,” he said.
“The Liberal Party once possessed a professional caste of political operatives and campaign staff who helped politicians nuance their messages and understand the voters.
“We knew from our polling how every person voted in every street and why.
“We understood how to ensure policy platforms met the expectations of the citizenry.”
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull visiting Incitec Pivot factory on Gibson Island in Brisbane. Pictures: Jack Tran
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull visiting Incitec Pivot factory on Gibson Island in Brisbane. Pictures: Jack TranSource:News Corp Australia
Greene also accused the Turnbull Government of only listening to big business but annihilating small business — a key part of its base — with regulation.
He attributed much of the drift from the party’s base to a lack of old-school party operatives working in Parliamentary offices.
“I have never seen a set of government ministers more captured by their departments,” he said. “Managers sourced from the department are loyal to their departments, professional advisers are loyal to their parties, and to those who voted for them.
“Turnbull is running the country with a group of 25-year-old political brats. He doesn’t listen.”
Greene labelled recent attempts to regain control of political debate, including the recent citizenship test changes “dog-whistling”.
“Turnbull has nothing left,” he said. “There are no other constituencies his government can attack.”


Also run in Murdoch regional press including Toowoomba Chroncile and Rockhampton Bulletin.
Also published in sister paper here: http://indaily.com.au/news/2017/04/28/turnbull-govt-war-people-former-sa-liberal-director/

Monday, 10 April 2017

The experts agree, Turnbull's NBN is 'a national tragedy', The New Daily, 10 April, 2017.

http://thenewdaily.com.au/news/national/2017/04/10/the-experts-agree-turnbulls-nbn-is-a-national-tragedy/

The experts agree, Turnbull’s NBN is ‘a national tragedy’


Experts agree Malcolm Turnbull's decision to scrap fibre connections has saddled the NBN with slow speeds and the tangles of Telstra's ancient wiring.
John Stapleton
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The disastrous rollout of Australia’s NBN is a national tragedy, according to new research by one of the country’s most respected engineers.

Professor Rodney Tucker, of Melbourne University, argues that Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s fateful decision as Communications Minister to opt for Fibre to the Node (FTTN), has been an extremely costly disaster.

While the rest of the world is opting for Fibre to the Premises (FTTP), Australia is embracing an obsolete technology.

Professor Tucker’s paper, The Tragedy of Australia’s National Broadband Network, just been published in the Australian Journal of Telecommunications and Digital Technology, argues that a worldwide tipping point has been reached.

Globally, the majority of connections are now through FTTP. Australia is one of the very few countries using mass deployment of FTTN, with poor results.

Professor Tucker concludes: “This situation is nothing short of a national tragedy and a classic example of failed infrastructure policy that will have long-term ramifications for Australia’s digital economy.”

The news comes hot on the heels of the latest reports that Australia has slower internet speeds than Kenya or Latvia – and is continuing to sink dramatically down the world rankings.

America now has 250 “gigabit” cities using FTTP, proving a boon for local economies. Australia has none.

Professor Tucker told The New Daily: “The NBN is a great loss of opportunity. We are becoming a broadband backwater. It will have profound effects.”

Associate Professor Mark Gregory, of RMIT University in Melbourne, was equally scathing when he spoke to The New Daily.

“Every Australian expert could see what was happening with technology,” he said. “The economic case used by the Coalition government was nonsense from the outset.

“This is the largest single waste of public funds in Australia’s history. Turnbull must take ownership of this mess. The cost to the taxpayer is currently at $49.5 billion and there is every indication the government will have to tip in another $5-10 billion.”

Paddy Manning, author of the Turnbull biography Born to Rule, told The New Daily that Malcolm Turnbull had been sceptical of the NBN from day one. Manning has written extensively on the NBN, including an essayappearing in the current issue of The Monthly.A tangle of copper wires in a puddle of stagnant water sums up the NBN, experts say.

“In the 1990s Turnbull made a fortune from the internet, more than $40 million. Unfortunately he drew the wrong lessons from his experience. He thought there would not be enough demand for superfast broadband.

“There was also a knee-jerk ideological wariness of government enterprise and an unwillingness to embark on genuine long term nation building infrastructure projects.

“The Coalition has to shoulder the blame for FTTN. It is a mistake. It will prove an even bigger mistake when we have to find an untold amount of money to upgrade it.”

Chief Executive of Internet Australia Annie Hurley told The New Daily the government urgently needed to rethink the failed NBN. She advocated a bipartisan approach, bringing together the finest engineering minds in the country, including Professor Tucker, to plan a way forward.

“We have turned a vision into a quagmire,” she said. “There is sufficient evidence from around the globe that FTTN is an obsolete technology, yet it continues to be rolled out. We are throwing all this money at it, and we are going to have to come around and do it all again. That is the tragedy.”

Andrew Johnson, chief executive of professional association the Australian Computer Society told The New Daily: “We further reiterate that the reach, speed and quality of an NBN is critical to Australia’s future economic prosperity.”

A spokeswoman for the NBN did not respond to Professor Tucker’s criticisms.

Another mention:
http://modernasian.com.au/many-australians-offline-about-nbn-11720.html