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Beijing Again Denies Chinese Military Patrols Inside Afghanistan – Breitbart News

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In its most recent defense, Beijing claims the two countries were only carrying out counter-terrorism operations along their common border, reports Reuters.

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Afghanistan borders the autonomous region of Xinjiang, home to Chinas largest concentration of the Muslim Uighur minority in the country.

In December, Indias World Is One News (WION) published pictures purporting to show Chinese military troops patrolling inside Afghanistan.

Yang Yujun, a spokesman for the Chinese Defense Ministry, denied the claims at the time. China and its neighbor India are regional rivals.

Chinas Defense Ministry has recently denied similar claims.

This month, the Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst think-tank said in a report on its website that Chinese troops were on Afghan soil conducting joint patrols with their Afghan counterparts, notes Reuters.

In response, Ren Guoqiang, a spokesman for the Chinese Defense Ministry, reportedly said:

This is law enforcement bodies from China and Afghanistan, in accordance with a bilateral agreement on strengthening border law enforcement, conducting cooperation along the border so as to jointly carry out counter-terrorism and to fight against cross-border crime.

Reports in foreign media of Chinese military vehicles patrolling inside Afghanistan do not accord with the facts, he added.

China has participated in attempts to bring the Taliban to the table to negotiate peace terms with the Afghan government.

In July 2016, Afghan news outlets reported that China has begun to providemilitary aid to Afghanistan at the behest of Kabul.

Afghanistan requested military assistance from China in late March 2016, saying the Afghan government remains committed and willing to work together with China for securing mutual and regional benefits and hailing China for its unconditional support to Afghanistan in the past 13 years, reported Khaama Press (KP).

China reportedly provided the military aid to Afghanistan last year using Russian planes.

The assistance to Afghan government indicates a common cause between China and Afghanistan. That common cause means that terrorism has been deemed a threat to both countries. The assistance is the beginning of a joint plan for combat against terrorism, declared Afghanistans National Security Advisor Mohammad Hanif Atmar at the time.

This big regional initiative initiated by the Afghan government will steadily marginalize supporters of terrorism, he added. Terrorism and its supporters will not have any friends left in the region.

Russia has also provided military aid to the Afghan government and allegedly to its enemy the Taliban as well.

In October 2015, Gen. John Campbell, then-top commander of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan, warned that if the U.S. withdraws from Afghanistan, other superpowers may seek to fill in the security vacuum.

If were not there to provide influence, somebody else is going to be there, whether its Russia, China, Iran you name it, he said.

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Beijing Again Denies Chinese Military Patrols Inside Afghanistan - Breitbart News

Mpofu’s triple strike bundles out Afghanistan for 111 – Cricbuzz

AFGHANISTAN TOUR OF ZIMBABWE, 2017

Cricbuzz StaffLast updated on Fri, 24 Feb, 2017, 06:33 PM

Representational Image: Graeme Cremer took two wickets for Zimbabwe. AFP

Unlike most One-Day Internationals happening across the world, where 300-plus totals are the norm, the ongoing series between Zimbabwe and Afghanistan has brought in quite a change. It has been a series where batsmen have found the going tough. With rain interrupting play time and again, and the soggy outfield slowing the ball down, batsmen have found it difficult to score freely. Coming in to the fourth encounter of the series, none of the batsmen from either sides had aggregated 100 runs in three matches.

Friday (February 24) was no different, with Chris Mpofu snaring three and Tendai Chatara and Graeme Cremer bagging two wickets each to bowl Zimbabwe for 111.

Asghar Stanikzai, Afghanistan skipper, won the toss and elected to bat. It took little time for the hosts to take a commanding position in the match, with Chatara striking twice in his first five overs to remove opener Ihsanullah Janat (0) and Rahmat Shah (1). The start itself was quiet with Zimbabwe's new ball pair of Chatara and Richard Ngarava conceding only five runs off the first eight overs.

Before the 10th over, even the hard-hitting wicketkeeper-batsman Mohammad Shahzad made his way back when he inside edged a slog to short midwicket off Ngarava. At 12 for 3, in the 10th over, Hashmatullah Shahidi and Stanikzai came together to put up the best partnership of Afghanistan's innings. The duo looked to hit their way out of pressure. The effort paid off with a 28-ball 29-run stand for the fourth wicket, before the skipper edged Mpofu to the keeper.

Wickets continued to tumble at a regular pace from thereon with Shahidi too departing in a similar fashion. There were handy contributions from the lower order with Samiullah Shenwari (13), Mohammad Nabi (17), Gulbadin Naib (10) and Rashid Khan (11) registering double-figure scores. The adjusted target of 105 from 42 may not be big, but given how the series has panned out, it has given the tourists little hope to defend and seal the series.

Brief Scores: Afghanistan 111 in 38.5 overs (Asghar Stanikzai 19, Mohammad Nabi 17; Chris Mpofu 3-25, Graeme Cremer 2-12) vs Zimbabwe

Cricbuzz

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Mpofu's triple strike bundles out Afghanistan for 111 - Cricbuzz

Iran: No to US troops in Syria, nuclear deal to stay – CNN.com

He also said that the agreement with Iran to limit its nuclear program -- brokered in 2015 by the US, Iran and five other world powers -- will stay in place, despite noises to the contrary from members of US President Donald Trump's administration.

Speaking on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, Zarif said there was an international consensus not to let the agreement -- which took two years to negotiate -- unravel.

"I believe everybody, including experts in the United States, know this was the best deal possible for all concerned, not just Iran but the US too," he said.

"It was a triumph of diplomacy over coercion, because coercion doesn't work any more."

Regarding Syria, where Iran is in alliance with Russia in supporting the government of President Bashar al-Assad, the 57-year-old Iranian diplomat said it was the US "occupation" of Iraq that had created ISIS.

"We cannot commit to solutions that are part of the problem," he said. "I believe that the presence of foreign troops in Arab territory is a recipe for those extremists to rally behind and gain new fighters from disenfranchised youth."

Zarif said that sanctions won't work with Iran.

"Everybody (in) the past who has tested Iran know we don't respond well to threats. We respond well to mutual respect and mutual interests."

Zarif said the Obama administration tried to use economic sanctions to curtail Iran's nuclear program, but eventually failed, with Iran increasing their number of nuclear centrifuges tenfold in that period.

"The reason Obama came to the negotiating table was because sanctions did not work," Zarif told CNN.

Zarif said Trump's proposed, but currently stalled, travel ban on seven mainly Muslim countries including Iran "was an affront to the entire nation."

"You cannot find any Iranian who has committed a single act of terror against Americans, in any of these atrocities that have taken place," he said. "Iran has always condemned every single terrorist incident in the United States since 9/11."

Zarif said the ban was a departure from previous US policy that took issue with the government but not the Iranian people, and added that Iranians were among the most successful immigrants to the US.

"They (the US) don't understand in a globalized world you cannot contain threats to one locality. Syria is now a training ground for terrorists creating havoc everywhere," Zarif said.

Amanpour asked the Iranian Foreign Minister why Tehran chose to intervene in Syria on behalf of President Assad. "There are 500,000 people dead, there are twelve million refugees, there is torture, there is mass hanging -- it is not my impression, those are the facts," she said.

"Mistakes were made in Syria, as in the past mistakes have been made," he replied. "The same people who armed Daesh [ISIS], armed the terrorist groups, were the same people who armed Saddam Hussein, were the same people who created and armed al Qaeda."

"We should not continue to repeat history and then blame people who were on the right side."

Responding to a question about people fearing Iran -- partly because of its support for Hezbollah -- Zarif said the Lebanese Shia militia entered Syria on the request of Assad "to prevent these extremist forces (ISIS and other Sunni Islamist groups) from infiltrating into Lebanon, which would be a threat against all of us."

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Iran: No to US troops in Syria, nuclear deal to stay - CNN.com

The Left’s Blatant Hypocrisy on Russia and Iran – National Review

The pretense for leaking information about a late-December call between General Michael Flynn, then Donald Trumps designee for national-security advisor, and Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak was that the call presented some sort of grave threat to U.S. national security, and it was therefore worth committing a felony to get the word out. But so far, the only hint of criminality in this affair is in the leak itself, not in anything Flynn said to the ambassador.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer said that Flynns subsequent departure from his post had everything to do with trust (he had denied making any call to Kislyak) and nothing to do with lawbreaking. It may be too early to know for sure, but it is curious that the leakers have yet to release the transcripts of the call.

Regardless of how the whole Flynn saga shakes out, the newfound concern from the national-security apparatus and mainstream media about U.S. cooperation with authoritarians and government officials negotiating secret side deals is striking. Attempts by the Trump administration to forge a new, positive relationship with the Russians should be viewed skeptically, but reasonable people will save their loudest objections for when and if this administration starts dealing with Russia the way the previous administration did.

Bear in mind that President Obama and his team brokered side deals with the Russians (and Iranians, for that matter) that resulted in enormous advantage for them and loss for us during his entire presidency.

For instance, in 2009 President Obama surreptitiously sent a letter to the Russians, offering to cancel plans to install a missile-defense site in Poland and corresponding radar apparatus in the Czech Republic. These would have provided an additional layer of protection for the United States and its allies from Iranian long-range missiles. All Russia had to do for Obama to cancel the plans was to agree to help pressure Iran to stop its nuclear-weapons program. Whats the big problem with that?

Well, for starters, the missile-defense site had nothing to do with Russia. Its purpose was to protect and defend the United States and its NATO allies from a threat that was just over the horizon. By offering this concession to the Russians, who opposed the site because they didnt want U.S. troops in Poland, the Obama administration showed in its earliest days that it was willing to cave in to Russian demands, even if it meant damaging relations with a NATO ally and canceling a plan that would bolster U.S. security. The Obama administration did end up canceling the planned missile-defense deployment, and the United States to this day remains underprotected from Iranian ballistic missiles, even as the Iranians exploit relaxed U.N. Security Council missile restrictions (thanks to the Obama administration) and test long-range ballistic missiles.

Along those lines, President Obama was caught on an open microphone telling thenRussian president Dmitry Medvedev to pass along a message to thenprime minister Vladimir Putin. That message: On all these issues, but particularly missile defense, this, this can be solved, but its important for him to give me space....This is my last election. After my election, I have more flexibility. In other words, there are certain things the president would like to do for the Russians that would not please the American people, and those things would have to wait until after Obama had been reelected and no longer needed to worry about doing something the pesky American people would object to. Amazingly, this remarkable incident seems to have gone down the memory hole definitely so for at least one media personality.

Then Congress grew increasingly frustrated when it repeatedly and unsuccessfully sought answers from the Obama administration about allegations Russia was in violation of the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. In 2014 the Obama administration finally, publicly admitted that Russia had been testing cruise missiles prohibited by the treaty as early as 2008, and that the United States had determined Russia was in violation of the treaty in 2011. What made this episode so maddening to Congress (and likely would have for the American people if it had been adequately covered by news media) is that the president and his State Department negotiated yet another arms-control treaty with the Russians, the New START Treaty, while Russia was in violation of the INF Treaty. How convenient that it did not publicly announce that Russia was cheating until several years after the Senate ratified the New START Treaty. Now the Russians have gone beyond testing the prohibited missiles and have deployed them.

Then there was all that Russian hacking that went on throughout the Obama presidency. Russian entities hacked private companies, Nasdaq, and banks, as well as government agencies including the State Department, the White House, and the Pentagon. Sure, government officials testified in open hearings about some of what Russia was up to, but other than that, the administration didnt raise the profile of the issue with the American people. Ask the average American if he recalls the onslaught of Russian attacks and pilfering of American intellectual property. Its likely that the only hacking he recalls is what went on leading up to the most recent American presidential election, which earned Russia a very public and direct, however belated, slap on the wrist from the White House. Hacking the Pentagon? Worth managing quietly. Hacking the Democratic National Committee and John Podesta? Time for a public scolding and sanctions.

Perhaps the main driver behind the Obama administrations unwillingness to confront Russia, and its decision to ignore or downplay Russias trespasses, is thatit wanted Russias help with what would become Obamas signature foreign-policy achievement, the Iran deal. And help it got. From billion-dollar anti-missile sales to cooperation in bolstering Syrias Bashar al-Assad, the RussianIranian partnership wouldnt be flourishing the way it is now if it werent for the Obama administration.

Although several of the deals problems are well known, many details about the Iran deal were negotiated secretly, avoiding congressional oversight and public scrutiny, and remain classified to this day. As the president of the Institute for Science and International Security, David Albright, recently testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, First, the workings of the deal have been far too secret. Some portions of the parallel or side deals and secret Joint Commission and Procurement Working Group (PWG) decisions and actions have been publicly revealed. Although the Joint Commission decided after Donald Trump won the presidency to release its major decisions, likely feeling increasing pressure to do so, much still remains secret. Congress repeatedly fought for access to the side deals and annexes related to the Iran deal. Two such prominent officials were Senator Tom Cotton (R., Ark.) and then-Representative Mike Pompeo, who is now the director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

And of course we cant forget the time the Obama administration released Iranian criminals to Iran and shipped $400 million in cash on pallets to Iran on the day the Iranians released some American hostages. The Obama administration insisted that the hostage release and the pallets of cash did not amount to the United States paying a ransom, and that the transactions were unrelated. Members of the media reported this narrative as though it were true, even after the State Department spokesman eventually conceded that the timing of the cash transfer was leveraged to secure the hostage release.

Then, while the media frenzy was focused on the American election results and whether the incoming U.S. president was saying nice things about the Russian president, the United States and the five other world powers that negotiated the Iran deal (including Russia) authorized the shipment of 116 metric tons of natural uranium from Russia to Iran. David Albright noted to the press that the amount could be enriched to make more than tennuclear bombs.

Bottom line: Russia is an adversary of the United States. It was true during the Obama administration despite Obamas insistence to the contrary, and because of his constant stream of capitulations, it remains true today, only now Russia is more powerful.

Rebeccah Heinrichs is a fellow at the Hudson Institute. She can be reached on Twitter @RLHeinrichs.

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The Left's Blatant Hypocrisy on Russia and Iran - National Review

Minister to visit Iran and UAE – Scoop.co.nz (press release)

Hon Nathan Guy

Minister for Primary Industries

24 February 2017

Minister to visit Iran and UAE

Primary Industries Minister departs for Iran and the United Arab Emirates today on a trip to build closer trading relationships.

Iran has been an important trading partner for New Zealand in the past and there is great opportunity to increase our two-way trade. This is an exciting step for New Zealand companies who are working with importers in Iran, says Mr Guy.

This will be the third ministerial visit to Iran in 12 months and reflects the growing importance of this relationship. This is an opportunity to strengthen our agricultural relationship, following the signing of an Agricultural Cooperation Arrangement in 2016.

Mr Guy is also attending Gulfood, the worlds largest food tradeshow being held in Dubai

Over ten New Zealand exporters will be attending this major event which is attended by global buyers.

The trip also involves bilateral meetings with members of the UAE Government in Dubai.

Accompanying Mr Guy on the trip is a business delegation including representatives from Fonterra, the Meat Industry Association and Zespri.

Mr Guy departs today and returns to New Zealand on 2 March.

ends

Scoop Media

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Minister to visit Iran and UAE - Scoop.co.nz (press release)