France wants to begin withdrawing its 4,000 soldiers from Mali from March
bbc.co.uk · 5 February 2013 · BBC
"Several hundred" Islamist militants have been killed since France launched an offensive in Mali last month, the French defence minister has said.

Jean-Yves Le Drian said they had been killed in airstrikes and direct combat with French troops.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius has said that France may begin pulling out of Mali as early as March.

In a newspaper interview, he said that "if everything goes as planned, the number of troops should diminish".

France has an estimated 4,000 troops in Mali and officials from multilateral institutions and dozens of countries have been meeting in Brussels to discuss how to replace them.

The defence minister said the last major town in northern Mali to remain in the hands of the rebels, Kidal, was now under French control.

Air attacks are continuing on suspected rebel hideouts north of the town.

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Jim Robinson:
Got to be very careful posting html for now. I don't have a validate routine in place yet for HTML and if tags are left open it screws up the page formatting (like FR in the old days). Hoping to borrow John's routine for this if I can talk him out of it. If a post does get screwed up though, you can edit to fix it.
02/07/2013 13:2:21 PST ·
Enterprise:
In time, militant Islamists will target Paris, and I'm not talking about taking over a school or a shopping mall.. Take it to the bank!
02/11/2013 10:59:45 PST ·
Jim Robinson:
Howdy Enterprise!
02/11/2013 13:1:23 PST ·

Tens of thousands of neo-Nazis rallied in support of Greece's Golden Dawn party, in its largest demonstration of support
israelnationnews.com · 2/4/2013 · By Rachel Hirshfeld


Tens of thousands of neo-Nazis rallied in Athens in support of Greece's far-right Golden Dawn party, in the movement's largest demonstration of support since its rise to power in last June's general election.

Men dressed in military uniforms, holding torches, donning swastikas and chanting anti-immigrant slogans, marched through central Athens in what was reportedly a memorial event paying tribute to the party's 'fallen soldiers,' The International Business Times reported.

"This is a day of remembrance. It's a day to remember that Golden Dawn is here to stay. And so long as it does, there will be hope for the country," Golden Dawn spokesman Ilias Kassidiaris told supporters.

Hundreds of riot police and security officials were deployed to the scene of the march, which took place near the prime minister's office and the Turkish embassy in Athens, according to The Times.

The party, which has become notorious for its blatant anti-Semitic and xenophobic rhetoric and has been responsible for perpetrating attacks on Jews and foreigners, has begun spreading its anti-immigration message in schools and youth clubs, as well as through online social media networks, according to recent reports in the international press.
Jim Robinson:
Just damn.
02/04/2013 16:8:9 PST ·