Both the Chinese and Russians would veto such an action by the UNSC.Israel reportedly invokes UNSC Resolution 1701 as a casus belli against Hezbollah unless UNIFIL takes immediate action to remove Hezbollah's presence up to north of the Litani river.
I believe the idea is that UNSC and UNIFIL have no intention of following this request in the first place.
Can you clarify? How can any UNSC member veto a request to act on a resolution that has already been voted into effect in 2006?Both the Chinese and Russians would veto such an action by the UNSC.
They will and it doesn't matter if something similar was passed. They don't care about such niceties. The PRC has signed treaties and UN Conventions that it routinely breaks. Russia did the same with its invasion of Ukraine.Can you clarify? How can any UNSC member veto a request to act on a resolution that has already been voted into effect in 2006?
Under resolution 1701, Hezbollah is to be disarmed and the LAF is to remain the sole armed force within Lebanon. The IDF in return is to avoid any military activity in Lebanon.
But as none really expects a UN peace keeping force to tackle a terrorist organization like Hezbollah, that has been neglected.
Attacking the HQ of Spies Inc. is Iranian jargon (internal consumption) for striking empty targets as a show of force.Not sure if this is the best thread but there are several reports this evening of a missile attack in Erbil, Iraq. The Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps claimed responsibility of the latest missile attack in Erbil, saying they were targeting "headquarters of spies" in the region. According to ABC news 8 locations were targeted in the attack, and a source claimed 3 drones close to the Erbil airport were downed.
Explosions reported near US Consulate in Iraq; Iran claims responsibility - ABC News (go.com)
Iran has also attacked several targets in Syria: Iran Guards Launch Attack On 'Terrorist' Targets In Syria: Media | Barron's (barrons.com)
I hope this is not the start of an escalation but just a coincidence.
1. Let me share my inchoate thoughts on Iran & Pakistan while professing great ignorance on the intel methods of the IRCG & the ideology of the Balochi militants.Both sides appear militant and aggressive but really just strike Balochi targets. Sounds more like cooperation than mutual aggression. Your thoughts?
Interesting, but I personally disagree with the notion that Iran's recent actions were not conscious and deliberate but rather incompetent.2. In comparison to intel agencies of more capable states like Finland & Singapore:
(a) Iranian intelligence agencies have invested hundreds of million supporting attacks on American troops over the years to drive them out but as soon as the Americans under Obama left Iraq (on 18 Dec 2011), the Iraqi Govt lost to ISIS — the IRCG are great at supporting suicide bombing & helping others make IEDs but a total failure at creating a working Iraqi coalition to rule once the Americans depart.(b) Further, the leaders of both Iran & Pakistan have a poor understanding of the intelligence gathering process, that has led to suboptimal outcomes. For example, the IRCG has tried to target Israeli owned ships but gotten it wrong at times. Their proxies, the Houthis have hit a vessel carrying Russian oil, hit a HK flagged vessel & even hit a palm oil cargo from Malaysia — all of which are own goals for the axis of resistance.…
4. Let me share a few details. Information fusion capabilities is not easy to replicate without the needed infrastructure, people & processes — which is why Indonesia-Singapore intel sharing benefits them more than us — the ability of the Singapore Navy to utilise every database on ships to generate useable data to support our counter terrorism efforts at sea is an achievement.
(a) Singapore Army’s information fusion teams have deployed in multiple rotations to support US led coalition efforts in Afghanistan & Iraq — which means the SAF’s fusion teams speak the same lingo as the Australians & Americans. Further, the Republic of Singapore Air Force’s UAV teams have been deployed to Indonesia (earning a combat ribbon for the formation) & to Afghanistan. In Indonesia, a Singaporean UAV team supplied data & needed info to Indonesian special forces for a successful hostage rescue. In Afghanistan, Singaporeans helped kill insurgents with lesser ISAF casualties.(b) An example of good actionable intelligence is Singapore’s intel agencies finding a single social media post (supporting ISIS) made by a crew member while a commercial vessel was sailing through the Strait of Malaya, boarding the vessel & making a timely arrest in Singapore port waters (one of the busiest in the world for ship arrivals), when the vessel arrived.(c) While the Singapore Govt also expects to fail from time to time, these acts in Afghanistan, Indonesia & Singapore demonstrated the country’s technical ability to find a needle in a needle stack in specific terrain & on the World Wide Web that has geographical information (& not just a needle in a haystack).
I agree. There is the internal politics angle to consider as well.Regarding Pakistan, I believe it may be some cooperation rather than real tension. Initiating a real new conflict in a time like this is the exact opposite of rational strategy.