Israel failed in ship interception planning-reports

JERUSALEM, July 12 (Reuters) – Israel’s military failed to prepare adequately for what turned into a deadly raid on a Gaza aid flotilla, according to findings of a military inquiry quoted by the Israeli media on Monday.

The official report into the May 31 incident, in which nine pro-Palestiniam Turkish activists were killed, was set to be released later in the day by a military commission led by Giora Eiland, a retired Israeli general.

A civilian panel is conducting a separate investigation into the interception that triggered an international outcry and severely strained Israel’s relations with its once-close Muslim ally Turkey.

Quoting from what it said were portions of the military commission’s report, the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper said the findings pointed to “flawed preparation (in intelligence) prior to the arrival” of the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara.

The “battle guidelines” issued to commandos who raided the vessel were flawed as was the intelligence.

Israel said the troops acted in self-defence in opening fire on passengers who attacked them with metal rods and knives as the Israelis boarded the ship.

PAINTBALL GUNS

Some of the commandos, the military said at the time, were armed with paintball guns — but also carried pistols — in anticipation of only light resistance.

Yedioth Ahronoth and other Israeli media reported that the Eiland commission’s report would not call for any military personnel to resign. But the findings raised speculation that senior officers’ careers could be affected.

Israel has said its commandos were enforcing a naval blockade necessary to prevent weapons from reaching the Gaza Strip’s Hamas Islamist rulers.

In response to Western criticism, including from its biggest ally, the United States, Israel has since eased a land blockade of the enclave where 1.5 million Palestinians live, allowing most civilian goods through, while continuing to enforce the naval embargo.

Eiland’s report is the first to be published in the affair.

The separate civilian panel is led by a former Israeli Supreme Court Justice Jacob Turkel and includes two international observers.

Its narrow mandate does not include an examination of the political decision-making process behind the launching of the raid, although Turkel said it would call for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to testify.

Instead, it focuses on whether the naval blockade and the flotilla’s interception conformed with international law. The panel also will investigate the actions taken by the convoy’s organisers and participants.

Turkey called the bloodshed Israeli “state terrorism”, withdrew its ambassador and cancelled joint military exercises. (Editing by Matthew Jones)

Blast near Istanbul army complex kills 3 – TV

June 22 (Reuters) – An explosion in Istanbul near a bus carrying military personnel killed at least three people on Tuesday, Turkish media reported.

The blast occurred close to a military housing complex, television broadcaster CNN Turk and other TV stations said.

It came a day after Turkish military forces began a major deployment of troops and elite forces along the border with Iraq, as fighting intensified between Turkish military forces and militants of the illegal Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

PKK guerrillas killed 11 soldiers at the weekend and one soldier was killed late on Monday. (Reporting by Thomas Grove; Editing by Charles Dick)

Q+A – U.S. Airbase row in focus as Clinton visits Japan

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is expected to play down a row over a U.S. airbase that has frayed ties with close ally Tokyo and eroded support for Japan’s prime minister when she visits Japan on Friday.

The feud has distracted the allies as they try to cope with an unpredictable North Korea and a rising China, while voter perception that Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama has mishandled the issue is eroding support before a mid-year election his party needs to win to avoid policy paralysis.

Following are some questions and answers about the issue:

WHY HAS THIS DISPUTE COME TO A HEAD NOW?

In the election that swept his Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) to power last year, Hatoyama raised hopes on the southern island of Okinawa that the Marines’ Futenma airbase could be moved elsewhere, despite a 2006 deal to shift it to a less crowded site on Okinawa, host to about half the 49,000 U.S. military personnel in Japan.

Hatoyama has set himself an end-of-May deadline for resolving the issue, and said he would stake his job on meeting it.

But with no new deal in sight Hatoyama has changed tack, saying some Marines would have to stay in Okinawa to deter threats, a shift that outraged many Okinawans and upset a small ruling coalition partner, the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

The Democrats have also promised to take a diplomatic stance more independent of Washington, but talks on reviewing the five-decade-old alliance have been snarled by the Futenma feud.

CAN HATOYAMA STAY ON AFTER DEADLINE?

Hatoyama has been trying to redefine what “resolving” the row means and appears to be putting priority on reaching agreement with the United States.

Domestic media say the two governments will announce on May 28 an agreement to stick to the 2006 plan with minor changes.

That risks outraging many Okinawans, irking the DPJ’s coalition partner and leaving voters wondering what the fuss was all about.

The tiny Social Democratic Party’s votes are no longer needed to pass bills smoothly in parliament after some upper house lawmakers switched sides, but a rift in the coalition ahead of an upper house election expected on July 11 would be ill-timed.

Analysts say Hatoyama will likely stay on despite the fuss, partly because the Democrats had criticised two predecessors from the rival Liberal Democratic Party for quitting after only a year and because time is running out before the upper house poll.

The dispute seems unlikely to spill over into trade and investment ties between the world’s two biggest economies. Trade between the United States and Japan amounted to 14.2 trillion yen ($159 billion) in 2009, while two-way flows between China and Japan totalled 21.7 trillion yen.

But damage to the alliance could create uncertainty in the region, eventually affecting investment flows.

WHY CLOSE THE FUTENMA BASE AND REPLACE IT?

Residents of Okinawa, 1,600 km (1,000 miles) south of Tokyo and the site of a bloody World War Two battle, resent what they see as an unfair burden for maintaining the security alliance.

Outrage flares periodically among residents over accidents, crime and pollution associated with the bases — most strikingly after the 1995 rape of a schoolgirl by three U.S. servicemen.

For the U.S. military, Okinawa provides a forward logistics base strategically located in the western Pacific close to Taiwan and the Korean peninsula.

As part of a 1996 pact to reduce the U.S. military presence, the United States and Japan agreed to close Futenma Air Station, home to about 2,000 Marines and located in crowded Ginowan City, within seven years if a replacement could be found on Okinawa.

An initial plan for an offshore facility in northern Okinawa was opposed by locals and environmentalists. The 2006 plan would shift the facility to the northern city of Nago, where it would be partly built within another base and on reclaimed land.

IS THIS JUST ABOUT FUTENMA?

No. The issue is much broader. Washington and Tokyo agreed in 2006 on a “road map” to transform the decades-old alliance, the pillar of Japan’s post-World War Two security policies.

Part of a U.S. effort to make its military more flexible globally, the realignment fit efforts by the then-ruling Liberal Democratic Party to shed the constraints of Japan’s pacifist constitution and assume a higher security profile.

Central to the pact was a plan to reorganise U.S. troops in Japan, including a shift of up to 8,000 Marines by 2014 to the U.S. territory of Guam from Okinawa. The Marines’ move depends on finding a replacement site for Futenma, although some critics have questioned whether the two really need to be linked.

(Additional reporting by Isabel Reynolds and Chisa Fujioka; Editing by Paul Tait)

Indian Army Military Police help line launched

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): The Indian Army has launched the Military Police help line here.

Army Chief General VK Singh inaugurated the facility on Wednesday during the biannual Army Commanders Conference.

Common Military help line telephone number 155200 can now be accessed across the nation to provide assistance to military personnel.

The number that is available at Military Police Control Rooms has been instituted to provide immediate assistance and be instrumental in solving and mitigating crisis being faced by military personnel.

In addition, it will provide an excellent facility for the civil police and the public to contact the Army Military Police to provide first hand information of any situation where military persons are involved or has potential to affect the military persons.

The telephone number has been allotted in coordination with department of telecommunication and can be accessed locally and from outside the locality by prefixing the STD code of that station.

The facility has been activated presently at some of the metro cities and state capitals, and is likely to be extended across the nation soon. (ANI)

Suspicious over ‘terror links’ US to send more military personnel to Pak

Washington, Apr.29 (ANI): The Obama Administration’s decision to send 50 more military personnel with four new F-16 combat jets to Pakistan has the latter worried, as it is apprehensive about the US’ plans.

The Pakistan government is worried that the arrival of US troops in the country would add to the already heightened anti-US sentiments prevailing in the country.

There are currently about 200 U.S. military involved in security assistance in Pakistan, including a Special Operations training and advisory contingent. The Central Investigation Agency (CIA) had also sent additional intelligence-gathering operatives and technicians in recent months.

“Certainly, this is a delicate area,” The Washington Post quoted a Pakistani military official, as saying.

Though Islamabad has been sharing intelligence inputs facilitating the CIA operated drone strikes in the ungoverned tribal regions along the Afghan border, a senior ISI official complained that the Obama Administration still remains suspicious of its links with the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.

During a recent briefing in Islamabad, a senior ISI official said the US believes that Pakistan is ‘incapable’ of safeguarding its nuclear arsenals from the threats posed by the extremist groups operating from the terror ‘hot beds’ situated in the tribal regions.

“The United States sees Pakistan as incapable of guaranteeing the security of its nuclear arsenal, irrationally obsessed with the threat from India and generally not serious about either democracy or fighting terrorists,” he said.

On the other hand, US officials believe that Islamabad is concerned over the US’ pull out from Afghanistan, as they fear that America’s withdrawal would give Afghan President Hamid Karzai a free hand to reconcile with the Taliban without even consulting Islamabad.

“They (Pakistan) don’t believe we don’t know what Karzai is doing.They”re afraid that we”re going to cut a peace deal without them. We”ve told them that as soon as we know, they”ll know,” the newspaper quoted a US State Department official, as saying.

Pakistan is of the view that it would need allies among the Pashtun tribes in Afghanistan to maintain its influence and protect its western border from India’s influence. (ANI)

Indonesia says situation under control after attack on Indians

Indonesian government on Friday said the situation at a dry dock, where thousands of local workers attacked their Indian colleagues after being called “dumb”, was under control, even as one of the four Indians injured in the incident remained in critical condition.

Around 41 Indians working for PT Drydock World Graha in Batam island were evacuated to the Barelang police station yesterday by a police patrol boat after some 10,000 Indonesian workers attacked them and torched 38 vehicles.

The local workers went on the rampage after an Indian supervisor allegedly called them “dumb.”

Four of the Indian workers were hurt in the brawl, with one of them reported to be in critical condition, the official Antara news agency said, without identifying them.

Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Hatta Rajasa said the riot at PT Drydock World Graha in the industrialised island of Batam was an “internal incident” and the company’s management had taken steps to localise it.

“It is merely an internal affair of the company. It was not a problem caused by a regulation,” Hatta said.

The situation returned to normal after hundreds of police and military personnel were deployed at the scene.

Hatta said the management of the dockyard company had taken steps to prevent the riot from spreading.

“At our meeting with a number of officials, including those from the Manpower and Transmigration Ministry earlier in the day, we came to the conclusion that the incident did not have a significant impact (on the region’s security conditions),” he said.

Hatta said the government must clarify the cause of the incident to the public. “We must clarify it transparently.”

He appealed to the media, especially the electronic media, not to repeatedly broadcast the incident so as not to create the impression that the unrest had not yet been resolved.

“I call on them not to repeatedly broadcast it,” he said.

Hatta said the dockyard company was employing 8,000 to 10,000 workers mostly through the outsourcing system.

“The number of regular workers is 2,000, including 100 expatriates of whom 28 are Indian nationals,” he said.

All the expatriates were legal workers who held work permits, he said.

Some police and military personnel have been stationed at the location to ensure public order and security, the report said.

Offensive military technology does not lead to shorter wars

Washington, March 30 (ANI): A new doctoral thesis from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, has shown that military technology that is offensive rather than defensive in nature does not lead to shorter wars.

For long, researchers have thought that offensive military technology, such as armoured cars and attack jets, makes it easier to shorten the duration of a war.

It is also generally perceived that when the offensive technology is more effective than the defensive technology, it is more advantageous to start a war.

“While this may be seen in some wars where the attacker is clearly superior, it is not true on average. This means that the improved military technology has not resulted in any advantages for the attacking force, at least not in terms of war duration,” said Marco Nilsson, who recently earned his PhD from the Department of Political Science at the University of Gothenburg.

To investigate the effect of offensive technology on war duration, Nilsson statistically analysed all wars in the state system from 1817 to 1992.

Interestingly, he did not find any effect at all.

“I found that, in reality, the potential advantages of attack-oriented technology is limited by for example terrain, technological development, training of military personnel, climate, weather and norms,” said Nilsson.

“Due to these limitations, attack-oriented technology normally does not allow a state to run over an enemy as easily as expected. Unless the attacked country collapses right away, the duration of most wars is decided at the negotiation table,” he added.

Nilsson’s study of four different wars (the Winter War 1939, the Continuation War 1941-1943, the Iran-Iraq War 1980-1988 and the war between India and Pakistan 1965) shows that states do not always base their demands at the negotiation table on military capacity.

“A major problem arises when a state has offensive expectations that do not match what is actually seen on the battlefield. These seemingly unrealistic expectations can for example be a result of a conviction that God will step in and influence the outcome of a war,” said Nilsson.

“Another reason may be that a country for some reason expects its offensive ability to soon improve,” he added.

Unfortunately, some states start wars expecting their attack-oriented technology to warrant quick success.

Therefore, too much confidence in offensive technology may increase the likelihood of new wars and speed up arms racing, all due to a misunderstanding among decision makers. (ANI)

U.S. ‘respects’ Japan’s request on airbase – Pentagon

The Pentagon said on Monday it respected Japan’s request to consider alternatives to the relocation of a U.S. air base on Okinawa island but stopped short of pledging to explore new options to soothe strained ties between the allies.

The comments by a Pentagon spokesman came as U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates met Japan’s foreign minister at the Pentagon, talks that touched on the future of Futenma Air Station, which is home to about 2,000 Marines.

“We respect Japan’s request to explore alternatives,” Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said. “But with respect to any discussions or details, we’ll conduct those discussions through diplomatic channels.”

The dispute, which is eroding Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s ratings before a mid-year election, centers on a 2006 accord that included shifting the Marines’ base to a less crowded spot on Okinawa.

During the campaign that swept his party to power last year, Hatoyama raised hopes Futenma could be moved entirely off the island, which plays reluctant host to most of the roughly 49,000 U.S. military personnel stationed in Japan.

But there was still no sign of a feasible alternative before Hatoyama’s self-imposed May deadline to resolve the matter. Washington wants to go ahead with the accord, as-is.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton discussed the matter later on Monday with Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada in Ottawa, but U.S. officials gave no indication Washington was ready to change its mind.

“Basically there was no change here from previous conversations,” a U.S. official said after the meeting, adding that the Japanese did not provide details of their new ideas for Futenma during the conversation with Clinton.

WRAPPING UP THE REVIEW

Japanese opposition to keeping the base in Okinawa has centered on safety concerns and air pollution tied to training flights over residential areas but has also been stirred by anti-American feelings.

Mass protests erupted in 1995 when three U.S. servicemen abducted and raped a 12-year-old Okinawan girl.

The Pentagon offered few details of the Gates-Okada meeting. It stressed Gates underscored his view that “the Marines in Okinawa are critical to the alliance,” according to a Defense Department statement.

The United States expected Tokyo “to help ensure (the Marines’) presence remains operationally and politically sustainable,” the statement added, without elaborating.

Okada and Gates also agreed on the importance of quickly completing the review on Futenma, it said.

The Futenma relocation is part of a broader realignment that also involves shifting 8,000 Marines to Guam from Okinawa by 2014, a deadline that looks increasingly difficult because of foot-dragging on Futenma.

Japanese media have reported Tokyo’s alternative could involve the creation of an artificial island off Okinawa or the use of a different island for the base.

Admiral Robert Willard, head of U.S. Pacific Command, told lawmakers in Washington last week he was optimistic Hatoyama would stick to the current 2006 agreement on Futenma.

A recent poll published in the Sankei newspaper showed nearly half of those who responded said Hatoyama should quit if he fails to resolve the air base issue.

More than 73 percent of voters polled by the Sankei said they were unhappy with his management of the problem, while nearly 85 percent of respondents said they were unimpressed with Hatoyama’s leadership skills overall.

(Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell and Andrew Quinn in Ottawa; editing by Paul Simao and Todd Eastham)

Obama arrives in Kabul for unannounced Afghan trip

KABUL, March 28 (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama arrived in Kabul on Sunday for an unannounced visit to Afghanistan, where he planned to meet with President Hamid Karzai, the Afghan cabinet, and American military personnel. (Reporting by Jeff Mason; editing by Patricia Wilson and Doina Chiacu)

U.S. ‘optimistic’ on Japan base decision – military

A top U.S. military commander said on Wednesday he was optimistic Japan would soon agree to the planned relocation of a U.S airbase, a dispute that has strained U.S.-Japan ties.

Admiral Robert Willard, head of U.S. Pacific Command, told lawmakers he believed Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama would stick to a 2006 accord that included shifting the Marines’ Futenma airbase to a less crowded spot on Japan’s Okinawa island.

“We are optimistic that the government of Japan will fully reaffirm the 2006 (government of Japan)-U.S. agreement by May 2010,” Willard said in testimony on Capitol Hill.

During the campaign that swept his party to power last year, Hatoyama raised hopes Futenma could be moved off the southern island, host to the bulk of America’s 47,000 military personnel.

But there is still no sign of a feasible alternative ahead of Hatoyama’s self-imposed May deadline to resolve the matter.

Willard also said he thought the Japanese government understood the time pressure and would stick to the timetable.

“There is a level of urgency in getting Futenma resolved,” Willard told reporters after a congressional hearing on military construction in the Pacific command. Moving the base elsewhere on Okinawa is a critical element of the Pentagon’s plan to relocate of 8,000 Marines to Guam, Willard said.

“We’re very anxious to hear what the government (of Japan) thinks.”

A poll published in the Sankei newspaper on Tuesday showed nearly half of those who responded said Hatoyama should quit if he fails to resolve the airbase row.

More than 73 percent of voters polled by the Sankei said they were unhappy with his management of the problem, while nearly 85 percent of respondents said they were unimpressed with Hatoyama’s leadership skills overall.

(Reporting by Susan Cornwell, Editing by Stacey Joyce)

US taxpayer money may be funding Taliban

New York, Sep. 4 (ANI): American taxpayers’ money which is meant for building roads, bridges and schools in Afghanistan, may be getting salted away into protection payments to the Taliban.

According to CBS News, US funded contractors have been spending a hefty chunk of development aid to the Taliban – for years.

“That translates into money that the Taliban are using to attack and kill American military personnel, and that’s just simply outrageous,” said Rep. Bill Delahunt.

The report quoted several contractors who said 20 percent of their budgets – or more – go to pay off the Taliban so it won’t bomb their projects, or their people.

It’s a protection racket far more sophisticated than the typical mob-style shakedown.

“The Taliban literally has an office in Kabul where it works out what percentage will be charged on these contracts. This is so open,” said Charles Sennott, the executive editor of the GlobalPost.

The US State Department has spent more than 4 billion dollars on development contracts in Afghanistan since 2002.

Contractors have good reason to fear the Taliban. As of last September, 291 State Department-funded contractors, most of them foreigners, had been killed by Afghan insurgents.

The US State Department has launched an investigation into the alleged protection payments.

“In Afghanistan, any diversion of funds for any reason makes it that much more difficult for us to achieve our objectives,” said P.J. Crowley, an assistant secretary of state for public affairs.

Especially because the public support for the war in America, which has fallen lately, could sink ever further if taxpayers fear their money is going to fund our adversaries. (ANI)

British forces destroy second Chinook helicopter to prevent Taliban access

London, Aug 31 (ANI): The British special forces in Afghanistan have destroyed their second Chinook helicopter, after it crash-landed with 19 people on board, to prevent it from being accessed by the Taliban.

The Chinook, with a crew of four, was ferrying soldiers from the 2nd Battalion when it landed heavily, east of Sangin in northern Helmand, suffering severe damage to the undercarriage, nose and front rotor, The Times reported.

“Despite all options being investigated, due to the location and the environment the decision was taken that it could not safely be recovered and so it was subsequently destroyed by military personnel using explosives,” the British Defence Ministry said.

The troops continued with their planned operation and the crew was picked up by one of the two other Chinooks on the mission.

On August 19, a British Chinook being used to drop Special Forces soldiers came under enemy attack, causing one of the engines to catch fire.

The pilot made an emergency landing and no one was hurt. Both Chinooks were reduced to scrap to prevent the Taleban gaining access to equipment on board.

The loss of two such valuable helicopters means that the British military now has only about 11 Chinooks to transport troops and supplies around Helmand.

Eight Chinook Mk3s that were bought for the Special Forces are being reverted to ordinary utility helicopters at a cost of more than 90 million pounds. However, the first of these will not be ready for operations in Afghanistan until next year, the paper reported. (ANI)

British Govt’s new Afghanistan strategy: Wean Taliban-supporting warlords away

London, Aug. 30 (ANI): In a bid to end the war in Afghanistan, the Gordon Brown Government has chalked out a radical new strategy, which aims at approaching and swaying the Taliban supporters away.

The three important steps of the new British approach will include sending hit squads from the SAS to hunt down and assassinate Taliban commanders, deploying extra troops to destroy deadly roadside bombs, and increasing military personnel to speed up the creation of the Afghan army.

However, the main focus is going to be a major diplomatic offensive to win over warlords and tribal leaders who have backed the Taliban in the past, The News of the World reports.

A source close to Brown was quoted, as saying: “The more reconciliation among the Afghan people, the better. The priority is to target loose supporters who have backed the Taliban in their area because it is in their best interests.”

“That means the foreign Taliban fighting in Afghanistan will become more isolated from the general population, which makes them easier to hunt down and destroy,” he added.

And a diplomatic source in Helmand commented: “Many locals who have been aligned to the Taliban are ready to talk to the Afghan government. Once we can isolate them, the military effort can concentrate on the hard-liners. It is time to start that dialogue.”

On Saturday, Brown met troops, military commanders and political leaders at the British Military HQ in Lashkar Gah and Camp Bastion base.

“I think we can get another 50,000 Afghan army personnel trained in a year. That will mean you will see, over the next year, the Afghan government taking more responsibility for their own affairs,” he said. (ANI)

Students wish ongoing security operation in Lalgarh to finish soon

Lalgarh/Kolkata, June 25 (ANI): While security forces are carrying out operation in the Maoist infested area Lalgarh in West Bengal to free it from criminals’ grip, local students lament that their studies are getting affected.

A section of students complains that studies are getting affected due to the ongoing operation by the security forces in the jungles of Lalgarh region in Medinipur district of West Bengal.

Security forces, who are taking on the armed Maoists in the region, are using school buildings and campus as camps, as a result, the students cannot attend their school buildings.

Certain examinations, scheduled to take place in the month of May and June, have been cancelled by authorities due to the ongoing security operations.

“Because of the ongoing conflict, the police have set up camps in this area for the past seven to eight days in different schools. In Satpati too they have come today to set up camp. Today, the schools were supposed to begin after summer vacations but couldn’t. Admissions were to take place and even exams but because of the conflict all these planned schedules stand cancelled,” said Nirodhban Nandi, a student.

Local villagers fear that the ongoing conflict between the security forces and the Maoists may last longer than expected until security forces manage to flush out the Maoists from the region.

The state police and para-military personnel recently started the combing operation to flush out Maoists from Lalgarh, after the ultras in the guise of supporting the People’s Committee against Police Atrocities (PCAPA), torched a police station and offices of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and killed several of the party activists. (ANI)

Spinal cord stimulation ‘helps military personnel with chronic pain perform efficiently’

Washington, June 21 (ANI): A new study has revealed that electrical spinal cord stimulation (SCS) might provide military personnel, suffering from back and other chronic pain, to perform strenuous duties efficiently.

“We present six cases that demonstrate SCS can be a viable option for motivated patients in a physically and mentally challenging environment,” said the researchers.

The equipment is surgically implanted to generate electrical current to the spinal cord, disrupting the nerve signals responsible for perceived pain.

Because of the need for implanted equipment, SCS has generally not been considered a good option for patients who are physically active.

However, present study led by Dr. Anthony Dragovich of Womack Army Medical Center, Ft. Bragg, N.C. has shown that SCS may be useful in managing the unique medical challenges posed by pain problems in military personnel.

“Due to advances in medical science and the physical and mental fortitude of our soldiers, many previously career-ending and life-altering disabilities have been overcome,” said the researchers.

“Many soldiers desire to remain in military service, but unremitting pain is often the last standing hurdle,” they added.

All six patients were able to be deployed or redeployed after implantation with SCS hardware and effective electrical stimulation programs.

For example, one patient was able to return to duty with a special forces unit in Iraq and another patient, having completed an overseas assignment without pain, was in the process of applying to dive school. (ANI)

Spinal cord stimulation ‘helps military personnel with chronic pain perform efficiently’

Washington, June 21 (ANI): A new study has revealed that electrical spinal cord stimulation (SCS) might provide military personnel, suffering from back and other chronic pain, to perform strenuous duties efficiently.

“We present six cases that demonstrate SCS can be a viable option for motivated patients in a physically and mentally challenging environment,” said the researchers.

The equipment is surgically implanted to generate electrical current to the spinal cord, disrupting the nerve signals responsible for perceived pain.

Because of the need for implanted equipment, SCS has generally not been considered a good option for patients who are physically active.

However, present study led by Dr. Anthony Dragovich of Womack Army Medical Center, Ft. Bragg, N.C. has shown that SCS may be useful in managing the unique medical challenges posed by pain problems in military personnel.

“Due to advances in medical science and the physical and mental fortitude of our soldiers, many previously career-ending and life-altering disabilities have been overcome,” said the researchers.

“Many soldiers desire to remain in military service, but unremitting pain is often the last standing hurdle,” they added.

All six patients were able to be deployed or redeployed after implantation with SCS hardware and effective electrical stimulation programs.

For example, one patient was able to return to duty with a special forces unit in Iraq and another patient, having completed an overseas assignment without pain, was in the process of applying to dive school. (ANI)

Older population may be less prone to swine flu after past exposures to H1N1 strains

Washington, June 19 (ANI): A Rhode Island Hospital expert believes the swine flu virus may have enough similarity to the previously circulated H1N1 strains or those used in past vaccines, and thus it may lead to protection of older individuals.

Leonard Mermel, an infectious diseases specialist at the hospital, has identified characteristics of the outbreak of H1N1 in 1977 and speculated its impact on the current pandemic in a letter to the editor, published in the journal the Lancet.

Mermel notes that in the late 1970s, an influenza H1N1 reappeared in humans. It had a pandemic-like spread that began in younger aged individuals.

He points out that the strain, known as the “Russian flu” H1N1, was similar to H1N1 strains that circulated internationally between 1946 and 1957.

The expert further writes in the letter that the Russian flu spread rapidly across the former Soviet Union, initially affecting individuals between the ages of 14 and 20 in schools, as well as young military personnel, and later spread to preschool children.

Individuals older than age 30, however, had dramatically lower attack rates and the overall mortality was low. The epidemic peaked rapidly, with a relatively short duration.

According to the letter, the first outbreak of the Russian flu in the US occurred in a Wyoming high school. The attack rate there was over 70 percent, but it affected students only and no faculty were reported to have the illness.

High attack rates were seen in schools as well as military bases throughout the US, similar to the outbreak in Russia. There were few reports of the H1N1 strain in individuals older than age 26, and again, the mortality rate was low.

In his commentary, Mermel hypothesizes that older population may have had enough exposure to past H1N1 flu strains to avoid infection. (ANI)

Gurkhas guarding Britain’s Olympic stadium from any terrorist attack

London, May 10 (ANI): A secret battalion of Gurkhas has been deployed to guard Britain’s Olympic stadium from any terrorist attack.

The decorated veterans, many of them heroes of the Falklands War, patrol the perimeter of the 9.3 billion pounds site in east London day and night. But, scandalously, according to their better-paid colleagues, profiteering bosses who pay barely the capital’s recommended minimum wage are exploiting them.

Their daily shifts last 12 hours, which is often spent well away from toilets and shelter, The Daily Express reports.

The former British Army men, some of whom are in their 50s, have been so desperate to keep dry from heavy rain that in one part of the site, they have assembled a makeshift shelter under a small tree.

Yet despite their conditions, they never fail to smile politely at passers-by. One security colleague said: “Only in Britain does this happen. Everywhere else in the world, they get paid way more for the expertise they have. They’re being taken advantage of.”

About 100 unarmed Gurkhas work on the site for Group 4 Securicor, Britain’s biggest private security firm, and Senator Security Services.

All ex-British military personnel, their distinguished service records include deployments in Borneo, the Falklands, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Together with dogs trained to sniff out explosives, they scout the public footpaths and waterways that surround the huge construction site.

One man who works closely with them said: “There’s no way anyone’s going to mess with those guys.”

Like other site workers, Gurkhas are barred from talking to journalists, but last week they told passers-by they were proud to continue serving Britain by protecting its Olympic dream. (ANI)

Pak officers don’t want to fight their own people: US expert

New York,May 3 (ANI): Even though the Pakistan Army has initiated military operation against the Taliban in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and has claimed success in some areas, the offensive might not yield the desired results, because Pakistani officers are hesitant to carry out an attack against their own people, a US expert believes.

A retired US Army colonel and author, Ralph Peters said Washington must understand that Pakistani military personnel might be facing problems fighting their own people.

“Pakistani officers just don’t want to fight against their people,” The Daily Times quoted Peters, as saying.

“Our diplomats and generals can’t understand why Pakistan’s million-man military avoids confronting the Taliban as the extremists tear into the country’s flesh,” he added.

Peters, while comparing the struggle in Pakistan with America’s civil war said : “Look to our own history. Along the Indus River, 2009 looks worrisomely like 1861 did on the Potomac, the river which flows through West Virginia and Washington.”

“After the attack on Fort Sumter, President Abraham Lincoln offered command of the Union forces to the most respected officer in the US Army, Colonel Robert E Lee. Lee was not in favour of secession,” he said.

“Lee declined the offer. For all of his patriotism, he felt he couldn’t lift his sword against his native Virginia, against his relatives, friends and neighbours,” Peters said. (ANI)

Fresh clashes in conflict-riven Madagascar

Antananarivo – Fresh clashes have broken out in the strife- torn Indian Ocean island of Madagascar, following last month’s seizure of power by former Antananarivo mayor Andry Rajoelina, media reports said Monday. After a military crackdown on protestors last week left seven demonstrators dead, a military personnel carrier was blown up on Sunday by Molotov cocktails.

This triggered explosions at the ammunitions store at the barracks outside the capital Antananarivo, which injured one soldier.

In the ensuing panic soldiers fired at random.

The violence is the latest incident in a months-long power struggle, in which Rajoelina with the help of the military ousted president Marc Ravalomanana in a transfer of power last month.

Ravalomanana went into exile after seven weeks of opposition protests over his increasingly authoritarian style and controversial spending

The protests left at least 100 dead.

Rajoelina, 34, was entrusted with power by the military but the international community refuses to recognize his leadership, saying the manner of his arrival to power was tantamount to a coup.(dpa)