Home Front: Politix |
Day 2: Hamas Rocket Attack Overshadows AIPAC Conference - jihadi-linked protesters, Sen. Chuck Schumer, SecState Pompeo |
2019-03-26 |
[Jpost] The festive atmosphere of the second day of the AIPAC Policy Conference was overshadowed by news of the rocket attack from Gazoo Monday at dawn that struck Moshav Mishmeret. At the long lines for security checks outside the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, the MKs, journalists and participants from across the US were all regularly checking their cellphone for updates. Maj.-Gen. (res) Amos Gilad told The Jerusalem Post that we are already in a new "round of violence." "Hamas, a contraction of the Arabic words for "frothing at the mouth", attacked Israel. They have all sorts of excuses. But they are in charge in Gazoo, and Israel responses accordingly. We are already in the midst of escalation. We did not initiate it. We are responding, defending ourselves. We should wait and see the outcome of the [IDF] attacks. That looks serious," he said. Eliot Engel, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told the Post that "It is obviously a concern. There were provocations that are not acceptable, and we have to learn more about it. I don’t know all the details yet." When asked if he thinks that we’re getting closer to a military confrontation between Israel and Hamas, Engel replied: "I don’t know. I hope not. But I certainly understand that Israel needs to protect its people, and the United States has always been supportive of Israel, and will continue to do so." In a conversation at the sidelines of AIPAC confab, Engel also addressed the presidential decision to recognize Israel illusory sovereignty over the Golan Heights. "Israel has controlled the Golan Heights since the war in 1967," he said. "I can’t think of anybody who seriously thinks that Israel should leave. Obviously, it is important to the security of Israel to continue to have a strong Israeli presence there. However they do it is fine with me. But I think that everyone realizes that given the situation in Syria, given the fact that there’s no real government there, given the fact that Assad is a murderer, no one thinks that the Golan Heights should return to Syria." Former secretary of cabinet and current Blue and White Knesset candidate Zvi Hauser told the Post that "In moments like this, the political debate is irrelevant. There’s a challenge to the state of Israel. The main challenge to the security is the missiles threat, both in the south and Israel’s north front. Therefore, we can’t live in a situation in which [the] Israeli citizen is the only one in the world that faces this threat on a daily basis." AIPAC Protesters With Terror Ties Compare Zionists To Nazis [Jpost] Protesters outside the AIPAC Policy Conference in Washington, DC compared Israel supporters to Nazis in a demonstration organized by al-Awda, an anti-Israel group with connections to several Paleostinian terrorist organizations. "A progressive Zionist is the same as a progressive Nazi," Abbas Hamideh, an al-Awda leader, chanted at Sunday’s protest, with demonstrators cheering him in response. Hamideh posted a video of the protest on his Facebook page. In a reference to a remark by Rep. Ilhan Omar Somali- AmericanDem representative from Minnesota. She is apparently married to her brother and may be her own grandmaw... (D-MN), which was condemned as antisemitic by many Jewish organizations and members of Congress on both sides of the aisle, Hamideh said: "We are demanding an end to AIPAC’s influence over our American politicians. We demand an end to the Benjamins" ‐ meaning $100 bills ‐ "that go to the politicians." Al-Awda, which is Arabic for "the return," calls on its website for an end to all US aid to Israel, a comprehensive boycott of Israel, the "right of return" for Paleostinian refugees and their descendants, and a Paleostinian state "in all of Paleostine," meaning one that would replace Israel. It refers to Israel in quotation marks, further signaling its refusal to accept the country’s existence. Earlier this month, The Jerusalem Post exposed al-Awda’s ties to terrorist groups. It is a founding member of the Global Paleostinian Right of Return Coalition (GPRRC), part of the Paleostinian BDS National Committee (BNC), which coordinates the anti-Israel boycott, divestment and sanctions movement worldwide. The central organization in the BNC is the Paleostinian National and Islamic Forces (PNIF), which includes five US-designated terrorist organizations: Hamas, the well-beloved offspring of the Moslem Brotherhood,, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine (PFLP), the Popular Front - General Command, the Paleostine Liberation Front and Paleostinian Islamic Jihad ...created after many members of the Egyptian Moslem Brotherhood decided the organization was becoming too moderate. Operations were conducted out of Egypt until 1981 when the group was exiled after the assassination of President Anwar Sadat. They worked out of Gaza until they were exiled to Lebanon in 1987, where they clove tightly to Hezbollah. In 1989 they moved to Damascus, where they remain a subsidiary of Hezbollah... One of al-Awda’s co-founders, Mazin Qumsiyeh, was the coordinator of the Popular Resistance Committee Against the Wall, which, according to the Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center, coordinated its activities with Hamas and the PFLP, among other groups. Qumsiyeh was tossed in the clink Drop the gat, Rocky, or you're a dead 'un! by Israeli authorities a dozen times, by his own admission in 2011. Since its establishment, al-Awda has also regularly hosted convicted Lions of Islam and members of terrorist groups at its events. Following the Post’s reporting, the International Legal Forum (ILF) sent a warning letter to GoFundMe, where al-Awda was raising money to organize its demonstration at AIPAC, saying that they are providing services to a terrorism-affiliated organization. GoFundMe told ILF that its "Trust & Safety team will be investigating the page and taking appropriate action." The site did not respond to further inquiries. ILF CEO Yifa Segal said that "providing financial services to terror-affiliated organizations constitutes material support for terrorism which is a severe federal offense under US law. The ILF is committed to exposing and pursuing these matters, making sure that the law is enforced and terror-affiliated organizations are defunded and unmasked." Al-Awda’s GoFundMe page for the protest said it aims to "expose [AIPAC’s] subversion of US foreign policy" and "continue to battle on behalf of the beleaguered Paleostinian people." They promoted the event on social media with the hashtag "#SupportPaleostineInDC2019." The organization sought to match its fundraising from last year’s protest, which reached $10,000, but as of March 25, it only raised half that amount. Chuck Schumer At AIPAC: A Jew Who Lobbies For Israel Is No Less American [Jpost] Schumer bellowed a pro-Israel message at the annual event, while calling out fellow politician Rep. Ilhan Omar Somali- AmericanDem representative from Minnesota. She is apparently married to her brother and may be her own grandmaw... who had questioned the Jewish ability to be pro-Israel and pro-American at the same time. Schumer, born in Brooklyn, is himself Jewish. He has served as the senior United States Senator from New York since the late 1990s. SecState Pompeo To AIPAC: Anti-Zionism Is Antisemitism [Jpost] US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo embraced Israel in a speech at the AIPAC policy conference in Washington DC on Tuesday. "Israel should be admired, not attacked, embraced, not vilified," Pomeo stated at the annual gathering of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. "I’m proud to lead American diplomacy to support Israel’s right to defend itself, stand with the Jewish people, and champion the perennial cause of religious liberty," he said. Pompeo was one of the many elected officials from both Israel and America to speak at the event hosted by the pro-Israeli lobby. The State Department has historically been viewed by many pro-Israel activists as leaning toward pressuring Israel into compromise vis-a-vis the Palestinians. However the Trump Administration seems to have shifted the narrative, recognizing Israel's right to the Golan Heights on Monday. The strategic highlands was controlled by Syria from 1948 - 1967. "The rise of antisemitism & anti-Zionism strikes at the very foundation of freedom," Pompeo added. "The Trump Administration opposes it unequivocally and will fight it relentlessly, from the fever swamp of the UN Human Rights Council to the world’s number one proponent of antisemitism: Iran," the Secretary of State declared. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was scheduled to speak at the conference but returned to Israel early Tuesday morning due to the rocket attack crisis. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
With Russia's help, Arab states speeding up nuclear arms race |
2018-02-13 |
[Ynet] Using Russian knowledge and technology, more and more countries in the Middle East and North Africa are building nuclear power plants, and not just for civilian purposes; according to Dr. Shaul Shay of IDC Herzliya, this is also the Sunni Arab world's way of dealing with the Iranian nuclear program. Arab states in the Middle East and North Africa are pushing forward with the construction of nuclear power plants, according to a new report released by the Institute for Policy and Strategy (IPS) at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya led by Major-General (res.) Amos Gilad. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) will be the first state to operate a nuclear reactor (made in South Korea). Egypt, Soddy Arabia |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |
Hamas leader pledges to stick by ‘the rifle and the tunnel' | |
2016-04-16 | |
[IsraelTimes] Ismail Haniyeh says the issue of incarcerated Paleostinians is ’at the top of our priority list’; dozens riot near Israeli border Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh ...became Prime Minister after the legislative elections of 2006 which Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, won. President Mahmoud Abbas dismissed Haniyeh from office on 14 June 2007 at the height of the Fatah-Hamas festivities, but Haniyeh did not acknowledge the decree and continues as the PM of Gazoo while Abbas maintains a separate PM in the West Bank... said Friday the group remained committed to armed struggle against Israel, in a speech he made ahead of Prisoners’ Day, observed by the terror organization next week. Speaking at a rally in the Gazoo Strip, Haniyeh said, "Our message to the prisoners is a message inked in blood. The rifle and the tunnel are our commitment. "The issue of prisoners is at the top of our priority list. As time passes, we stick to our principles, and the people who walk in the path of deaders and prisoners also stick with us."
On Thursday, an IDF officer said both sides were preparing for a future conflict, and while neither side was interested in renewing violence, a miscalculation on either side could bring about another round of fighting. "Hamas suspects that we will initiate offensive action against it by surprise, and so the fear of miscalculation exists," the officer was quoted by the Hebrew website Ynet as saying. "Their level of sensitivity to our public proclamations is high. Hamas saw [the months of violent attacks] in the West Bank as a strategic opportunity, even at the cost of deterioration in Gazoo, and the movement is disappointed with the drop in the number of terror attacks. Since October, 17 Paleostinians were killed in border fence riots and some 800 were maimed," the officer said. The terror group has been investing considerable resources in the Nukhba force, an elite unit of fighters. According to Ynet the number of Hamas fighters in the unit has grown to 5,000 people ‐ a quarter of the group’s fighting manpower. On the other hand, the group’s development and construction of rockets has been severely damaged by Egypt’s closing of smuggling tunnels. Hamas has been finding it difficult to restore its array of short and medium-range projectiles since the end of Operation Protective Edge in the summer of 2014. Speaking earlier this week at a forum dedicated to the situation in Gazoo at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, director of the Defense Ministry’s Political-Military Affairs Bureau Amos Gilad said that the Hamas armed wing, led by Muhammed Deif, ultimately paid no heed to the political wing, headed by Haniyeh. Gilad opined, however, that conflict would not erupt this year between Israel and Hamas. "The good news is that our deterrence is still working. They say that there will be a ’hot’ summer. That’ll only be because of the high temperatures," Gilad said, alluding to the tendency for regional conflicts to take place in warmer summer months. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
U.S. and Israel plans lead to Syria partition, Turkey resists, ISIS obstacle |
2015-07-13 |
[EN.ZAMANALWSL.NET] A prominent figure in the Syrian National Coalition found that a hidden decisions to divide Syria has been taken by external countries, as it seems to be one of the best option to resolve the Syrian crisis amid the current situation and lack of will to overthrow the Syrian regime. Sources explained to Zaman al-Wasl that dividing Syria has become the most convincing option to the international community. "Although it is not suitable to the Syrian revolution, regrettably, Syrians are no longer decisive in planning Syria's future". Robert Ford, the former American Ambassador to Damascus, was the first to put dividing Syria into 6 small statelets as an option: Sunni in the East, North-West and South of Syria, besides Alawite, and Kurds and others. Ford found that dividing could be as fixating the current situation in Syria with small margins for the conflicting forces to expand their control on land, which reflects the unwillingness of America to change the power balance in Syria. It seems that Ford's vision to dividing Syria goes in line with the Israeli goals, as well informed sources from the Gulf mentioned to Zaman al-Wasl that they attended a political seminar in Washington about the Syrian crisis, where a prominent Israeli figure from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs revealed that Israel would not be safe until Syria was divided to form Kurdish and Alawite statelets, with other scattered Sunni statelets. Israelis find that Syria has been successfully divided, as Amos Gilad, the Strategic Advisor for the Minster of Defence revealed that Bashir al-Assad is not controlling more that fifth the Syrian land, and he might finish controlling remains of a country of Alawite majority. Gilad added in a conference for "Israel Defence: "Syria has reach to its end, and history would remember that Bashar was the one who wasted Syria." On the other hand, according to the National Coalition sources, the Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... (ISIS) seems to be a big obstacle facing dividing Syria, because of its Jihadi principles and unstoppable goals which unstable the forces balance and prevent any plan to be implemented, Moreover, controlling Palmyra by ISIS which put it near to Homs's Eastern Countryside, make and dividing the country very difficult. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Israel says Syria's Assad may be left with rump state |
2015-07-01 |
[EN.ZAMANALWSL.NET] A senior Israeli defense official said ![]() Pencilneckal-Assad Light of the Alawites... controlled just a fifth of Syria and may end up in charge of a rump state dominated by his minority Alawite sect. Israel and its neighbor Syria are long-term enemies, but the remarks by Amos Gilad, strategic adviser to Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon, reflect concerns by states across the region that Syria is undergoing a de facto partition after four years of civil war. "Syria is gone. Syria is dying. The funeral will be declared in due time. This Bashir al-Assad, he will be remembered in history textbooks as the one who lost Syria," Gilad told an intelligence conference organized by the Israel Defense journal on Monday. "Until now he has lost 75 percent of Syria ... He is, practically, governor of 20 percent of Syria. And his future, if I may predict it, is shrinking all of the time. And maybe we will have him as the president of 'Alawistan'," Gilad added. Since March, Assad has steadily lost territory in the northwest, south and central Syria to an array of groups including Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... , the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front, and rebels who profess a more moderate vision for Syria. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Lebanon Arrests Man In Connection To Rocket Fired At Israel |
2014-07-11 |
[Jpost] Lebanese media says additional rockets prepared by unknown turbans to be fired toward Israel found at launching site. Lebanese authorities reportedly tossed in the calaboose Keep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please! one person on Friday in connection to the rocket attack from Leb into Israel earlier this morning. The Beirut-based newspaper The Daily Star, cited security forces as saying the suspect's car had blood stains that matched blood traces found at the scene where the rocket was launched. The man was reportedly injured during the attack. According to the report, Lebanese Army Intelligence discovered more rockets intended to be used against Israel at the suspected launching pad, as they continued to search for the turbans behind the incident. Two Grad rockets ...Soviet-developed 122-mm rockets, usually launched from trucks. Newer versions are reported to have a range of up to 30 km.... were defused during the operation. The Lebanese Army also said that some 25 artillery shells were fired from Israel at the outskirts of Kfar Shuba; no casualties were reported. The rocket fired from Leb overnight hit a village in the Upper Galilee. There were no injuries in the attack. Artillery fire was directed at the area from which the rocket was fired, a senior army source said. The rocket was not fired by Hezbollah but by a small radical organization in Leb, Maj.-Gen. (res). Amos Gilad, director of Political-Security Affairs at the Defense Ministry, told Channel 2. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Escalation At Hamas' Request |
2014-07-09 |
[Ynet] Analysis: Out of despair, Islamic organization is doing a lot to draw Israel into Gazoo, seeing it as the only choice it has left. After several days of uncertainty, Israel's confrontation with Hamas in Gazoo became somewhat clearer Monday. Hamas is doing a lot — 100 rockets is a lot — to draw Israel inside, into Gazoo. It is likely doing so out of despair, because according to its perception, it's the only choice it has left. Hamas is facing Benjamin Netanyahu, one of the most restrained prime ministers in the State of Israel's history when it comes to using military force. "When you have to shoot, shoot. Don't talk," said Eli Wallach, the ugly one in "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly," a moment before he shot his rival to death. "When you don't have to shoot, talk. Don't shoot," Netanyahu is in fact saying. Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon, the IDF echelon and the majority of ministers in the cabinet stood behind him until Monday. The flood of rockets from Gazoo on Monday evening made this restraint increasingly difficult. There is no Israeli government capable of dragging over a long period of time a reality in which the life of hundreds of thousands of Israelis is subject to the firing abilities of terror organizations in Gazoo, and the defense abilities of the Iron Dome system — with all due respect to the Iron Dome. What has been happening in the past few days in Gazoo can of course be seen as a classic round: Hamas begins by firing mortar shells at the Eshkol Regional Council; we respond with Air Force strikes on empty targets; they expand their activity to Sha'ar Hanegev, then to Sderot; we expand the bombings; they go for Ashkelon, Netivot, Ofakim; we call up infantry brigades; they go for Beersheba, Kiryat Gat, Yavne; we expand the bombings and threaten to come in; they go for Rishon Lezionâ�� This is where it usually stops. The problem in this game is that there is always the possibility that one of the sides will be too successful: Many civilians will get killed, and there will be no escape from expanding the fighting — from their side, by firing at the Tel Aviv metropolitan area; from our side, by using artillery fire and entering Gazoo with infantry forces. The restraint exercised by the current cabinet is really exceptional: It's unusual both compared to right-wing governments and compared to left-wing governments. "Calm will be met with calm," Netanyahu said. This sentence became part of the political lexicon after being said by Ehud Barak, the defense minister in Ehud Olmert's government. Barak sought a "hudna" (truce) with Hamas, not war. He fought against Olmert and Tzipi Livni, the two other members of the "kitchen cabinet," the narrow forum of the inner security cabinet. When Major-General (res.) Amos Gilad brought a list of Egyptian-brokered understandings reached with Hamas, Barak presented the equation "calm for calm." Here the calm-for-calm was not an agreed upon condition. It was a desire, expressed during and despite massive rocket fire from Gazoo. Naftali Bennett and Avigdor Lieberman, two senior cabinet members, criticized the restraint outside, but were much less aggressive in the internal discussions. In practice, they let Netanyahu and Ya'alon deal with the rocket fire from Gazoo according to their perception. Whoever blames or praises Livni and Yair Lapid for the restraint is underestimating Netanyahu, Ya'alon and the military officials. The current conflict is unique in another way: In the past, the main question was what would happen to Israel's relations with Hamas after they reached a ceasefire. There were those in Israel who stressed the deterrence; others pursued an agreement. Both knew that everything achieved would be temporary, until the next round. The question being raised now is different: If Israel deals Hamas a critical blow, who will fill the governmental void it leaves behind? Gazoo could turn into an anarchy like Somalia or into a shelter for terror organizations affiliated with al-Qaeda, like what happened in Sinai, in northern Iraq and in some parts of Syria. In other words, Hamas is bad, but it may be the lesser of two evils. Another unique aspect is the Egyptian involvement, or should I say the lack of involvement. During the Hosni Mubarak ...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011... and Mohammed Morsi eras, Egypt served as an active mediator between Israel and Hamas. General al-Sisi's government is not eager to play this role; it is definitely not eager to pay Hamas a price for delegating the authority of mediator on Egypt. There is another unique event taking place during this crisis: It is accompanied by a crisis within the ruling faction, a crisis which has to do with the Hamas affair in Gazoo only marginally. When missiles fall, the public opinion has no desire for political crises. It tends to support the government and the prime minister, at least in the first days. The timing chosen by Lieberman to split from the Likud Beiteinu faction did not add to his popularity. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |
Israel may not have answer to Syrian missiles | |
2013-05-21 | |
![]() The report was based on reconnaissance satellite photos said to show preparations for the deployment of the missiles, which Israeli analysts say could cause extensive damage to the country. "I'm not sure Israel has an answer to some of the missiles which the Syrians have and I'm not sure that the (anti-missile system) Iron Dome can be successful here," Mordechai Kedar, a former senior military intelligence official and professor of Middle East Studies at Bar Ilan University told The Media Line. "So Israel might be exposed to all kinds of attacks by Syria which could use weapons which are not allowed," he said referring to chemical weapons. "In short, Israel might face a very big problem, especially where there are large concentrations of population like Tel Aviv," he continued. The difference between this and all out war with what's left of the Syrian regime is very close." But other experts believe that Syrian President Bashar Assad is not interested in opening another front against Israel while engaged in his battle to survive. "Syria today is much weaker than it used to be and it will take a long time to regain its military strength," Major-General (res.) Uzi Dayan, former head of Israel's National Security Council, told The Media Line. "Assad is losing more and more control of the periphery of the country and parts of his arsenal." From Israel's perspective, he says, the best option for now is for the stalemate between Assad and rebel fighters to continue. "We don't want to take sides in what's happening in Syria but we also don't want to do anything to accelerate the fall of Assad," Dayan said. "It's not good guys vs. bad guys." Israel has still not confirmed it was behind two recent strikes on weapons that were reportedly on their way to Hezbollah terrorists in south Lebanon. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet that Israel will do whatever is necessary to stop Hizbullah from obtaining more advanced missiles. "Our policy is to stop, as much as possible, any leaks of advanced weaponry to Hezbollah and other terrorist organizations," Netanyahu said. "We will continue to act to ensure the security interests of the citizens of Israel." Israel is also concerned about the S-300 Russian air defense system which Moscow has pledged to deliver to Syria. Netanyahu himself flew to Russia last week in a failed mission to try and stop the sale. "These weapons are dangerous," senior Defense Ministry official Amos Gilad said. "If Hezbollah and Iran support Syria, why shouldn't (the Syrians) transfer these weapons to Hezbollah? It's a threat to us, a threat to the Americans and a threat to the Persian Gulf." The reference to the Persian Gulf seemed to be implying that Iran could also gain control of this system, either from Hezbollah or directly from Russia. According to Kedar, it is even possible that Iran could take over Syria if it feels its proxy, Bashar Assad, is losing his grip on Syria. "Iran can very easily send troops into Syria to take this country (Syria) because Iraq would allow Iranian troops to cross through on their way into Syria," Kedar said. "This is a feasible scenario. Though the world will object and condemn it, I don't see any other army which would try to invade Syria only to fight the Iranian army." Both Kedar and Dayan say the Assad regime will eventually fall, although it could take many more months. Yet, from Israel's perspective, what will come after Assad may be even worse.
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Africa Horn |
Sudan Denies Iran Role in Bombed Arms Factory |
2012-10-30 |
[An Nahar] Sudan's foreign ministry on Monday denied that Iran had any involvement in a military factory which Khartoum says was attacked by Israeli aircraft last week. "The Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirms what is known by all: that Iran has no need to manufacture weapons in Sudan, for Iran or for its allies," the ministry said in a statement. "We want to deny any relation between Sudan's military manufacturing and any foreign partner." Sudan's links to Iran have come under scrutiny after Khartoum accused Israel of sending four radar-evading aircraft to strike the Yarmouk military factory in the heart of the capital at midnight last Tuesday. Israeli officials have expressed concern ...meaning the brow was mildly wrinkled, the eyebrows drawn slightly together, and a thoughtful expression assumed, not that anything was actually done or indeed that any thought was actually expended... about arms smuggling through Sudan and have long accused Khartoum of serving as a base of support for snuffies from the Islamist Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, movement that rules the Gazoo Strip. Israel refused all comment on Khartoum's allegations about the factory blast. But a top Israeli defence official, Amos Gilad, said last week that Sudan "serves as a route for the transfer, via Egyptian territory, of Iranian weapons to Hamas and Islamic Jihad ...created after many members of the Egyptian Mohammedan Brotherhood decided the organization was becoming too moderate. Operations were conducted out of Egypt until 1981 when the group was exiled after the liquidation of President Anwar Sadat. They worked out of Gaza until they were exiled to Lebanon in 1987, where they clove tightly to Hezbollah. In 1989 they moved to Damascus, where they remain a subsidiary of Hezbollah... terrorists." Sudan's foreign ministry called Israel an "outlaw state... trying its best to pass fabricated information through different sources that have a link with Israel, in an effort to provide reasons for its aggression. "This includes talk about claimed relations between the al-Yarmouk compound and Iran and Syria, and the Hamas Islamic struggle movement in Paleostine, and Hezbollah in Leb." |
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Africa North |
Sudan: A Front For Israel's Proxy War On Sinai Jihadis? |
2012-10-26 |
[Ma'an] If Israel bombed a Sudanese munitions factory, as Khartoum alleges, the raid was part of its widening proxy war against Islamist bully boyz in neighboring Egypt which Israel is reluctant to confront directly. A huge kaboom destroyed the factory near the Sudanese capital Khartoum on Tuesday, killing two people, with Sudan swiftly accusing Israel of sending four military planes to take out the complex. The poor Mohammedan east African state, with its ties to Iran and Sunni jihadis, has long been seen by Israel as a conduit for weapons smuggled onward to the Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason,-ruled Gazoo Strip, via the Egyptian Sinai desert. With Sinai itself becoming a seedbed of al Qaeda-inspired cadres during Cairo's political upheaval, the Israelis now fear such arms could be used against them from within Egyptian territory. That puts Israel in a strategic bind, laid bare by the half-dozen guerrilla attacks it absorbed over the Egyptian border in recent months. The countries' landmark 1979 peace accord precludes Israeli military action, whether preventive or retaliatory, in the Sinai, and Israel is highly unlikely to risk even a one-off breach given Egypt's unsympathetic new Islamist-led government. Israel's response, government and military sources said, has been to hit first against those on Egypt's periphery suspected of links to the Sinai jihad boys. That has meant stepped-up up air strikes on Gazooks accused of plotting operations in Sinai, and - to judge by reports from Khartoum - similar escalation in Sudan, to Egypt's south. Israel has never confirmed or denied carrying out attacks on Sudanese targets. But Israeli defense officials admit placing a high priority on tracking arms trafficking through the country. The monitoring, one retired official said, dates back to the previous government of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. Since early in 2009, shortly before the centrist Olmert was succeeded by the right-wing Benjamin Netanyahu, Sudan has accused Israel of carrying out several strikes on its territory. The sense of a far-flung covert campaign was further fueled by the Israelis' alleged liquidation of a senior Hamas armourer in Dubai in 2010 and abduction for trial of a suspected Paleostinian rocket expert from Ukraine the following year. Commenting tersely on Israel's strategy, the ex-official said it aimed to "stem the flow of arms (to Sinai and Gazoo) without triggering major confrontations." "This is all the more relevant today," the ex-official said, referring to instability in Egypt and surging Sinai militancy. Drone to jets Foreign intelligence sources said Israel carried out a unmanned drone raid on a convoy south of Khartoum last month that destroyed 200 tonnes of munitions, including rockets, intended for Gazoo. Tuesday's blowing up of the Sudanese munitions factory was different to previous incidents, in that a state asset was hit. In a further suggestion of escalation by Israel, witnesses said the sortie was carried out by piloted fighter jets. Amos Gilad, a senior Israeli defense official, made clear that Sudan should be considered fair game - an enemy like Hamas and Iran - and that Cairo's interests were also at stake. "It is clear that it (Sudan) supports the smuggling of munitions, or it helps Gazoo. In actuality, these munitions pass through Egypt, so it is endangering its major neighbor, Egypt. It harms national security because tomorrow these arms could also be used against the Egyptians," Gilad told Army Radio. Sudanese Information Minister Ahmed Belal Osman declined to say whether any weapons from the attacked Yarmouk arms factory in Khartoum had ended up in Gazoo, saying on Wednesday that only "traditional weapons in line with international law" were produced there. A Swiss-published 2009 Small Arms Survey sponsored by several European governments found that Iran was a major supplier of light munitions to Sudan. Khartoum has not said whether Iran was in any way involved in the factory that was bombed. A non-Israeli source briefed on the incident said the air strike focused on the main open area between the plant's main buildings, leaving open the possibility the target was specific personnel or production lines, rather than the whole complex. Given the some 1,900 km distance between Israel and Sudan, some Israeli commentators saw in the alleged raid a warning to Iran, whose similarly remote nuclear facilities the Netanyahu government has hinted it could attack should diplomatic efforts to shut them down fail. Alex Fishman, senior defense analyst for Israel's top-selling newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, dubbed the Sudan raid a "live-fire practice run" for Iran. But the Israeli ex-official, who has an extensive military background, was skeptical about comparing a fenced, open-air Khartoum factory with antiquated air defenses to Iran's dug-in nuclear facilities. The ex-official also noted the further difference between flying along the Red Sea toward Sudan, an international aviation corridor, to the prospect of Israeli jets reaching Iran through the unfriendly skies of Arab states like Jordan, Iraq, and Soddy Arabia ...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in their national face.... "Israel isn't 'signaling' to Iran, just as it's not 'signaling' to the faceless myrmidons in Sinai," the ex-official said. "Whatever actions might be taken in Sudan are taken to counter a real, immediate threat." Though attacks on Israel by Sinai jihadis have been mainly with small arms, there have been occasional short-range rocket launches and Israeli officials worry about possible attempts to down airliners with shoulder-fired missiles. |
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Africa North |
Report: US embassy in Sudan closed shortly after blasts |
2012-10-26 |
[Ynet] Sources in Khartoum say closure indicates US knew Israel was behind strike on arms facility. Top Israeli Defense Ministry official: Sudan is a dangerous terrorist state The US embassy in Khartoum closed its gates on Wednesday, shortly after a weapons facility just south of the Sudanese capital was attacked, the London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Hayat reported. Sudan claims Israel was behind the attack on the 'Yarmouk' arms factory. Analysts say Sudan is used as an arms smuggling route to the Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason,-controlled Gazoo Strip via neighboring Egypt. According to Al-Hayat's report, published Thursday, the American embassy in Khartoum stopped providing consular services in September after it was attacked by rioters who were protesting against the anti-Islam film "Innocence of Moslems." The report said sources in Khartoum speculated that the fact that the embassy closed before Sudan accused Israel of launching the attack indicates that the US knew the Jewish state was behind the strike and feared it would be targeted by angry protesters. Egypt's foreign ministry said it opposes any attack that violates Sudan's illusory sovereignty, and that it will cooperate with the authorities in Khartoum in the investigation into the strike. Israel refused to comment on Sudan's accusations. 'Sudan a terrorist state' Following the attack, which left two people dead, Sudanese Information Minister Ahmed Belal Osman said his country "reserves the right to strike back at Israel." Sudan has accused the Jewish state of launching similar attacks in the past. A top Israeli defense official said Thursday that Sudan is a "dangerous terrorist state," although Israel has refused to directly comment on the claim it was responsible for the attack. "Sudan is a dangerous terrorist state. To know exactly what happened (there), it will take some time to understand," Amos Gilad told Israel's army radio. Asked directly whether Israel was involved in the attack, Gilad, who serves as director of policy and political-military affairs at the Defense Ministry, refused to reply directly. The Israeli air force, he noted, was "one of the most prestigious in the world, a fact which had been proved many times in the past." Residents living near the Yarmouk factory told AFP an aircraft or missile had flown over the facility shortly before the plant went kaboom!in flames. An AFP news hound several kilometers away saw two or three fires flaring across a wide area, with thick smoke and intermittent flashes of white light bursting above the state-owned factory. Sudan appeals to UN Sudan took its case to the UN Security Council, where its envoy Daffa-Alla Elhag Ali Osman called on the council to condemn Israel. "We reject such aggression and expect your esteemed council to condemn this attack because it is a blatant violation of the concept of peace and security" and the UN charter, the ambassador said. The envoy also accused Israel of arming rebels and helping to transport rebel leaders in Sudan's Darfur states, and said Israel was "jeopardizing peace and security in the entire region." In 1998, Human Rights Watch ... dedicated to bitching about human rights violations around the world... said a coalition of opposition groups had alleged that Sudan stored chemical weapons for Iraq at the Yarmouk facility. Government officials strenuously denied the charge at the time. In August of that year, US cruise missiles struck the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory in North Khartoum, which Washington alleged was linked to chemical weapons production. Evidence for that claim later proved questionable. The sprawling Yarmouk facility is surrounded by barbed wire and set back about two kilometers (one mile) from the main road, so signs of damage were not visible later Wednesday when an AFP news hound visited. But state-linked media said 65 houses in the area had been "affected." The Yarmouk factory made "traditional weapons", Information Minister Osman said. "The attack destroyed part of the compound infrastructure, killed two people inside and injured another who is at death's door," he said. There have been other mysterious blasts in Sudan - and allegations of Israeli involvement. In April last year, Sudan said it had irrefutable evidence that Israeli attack helicopters carried out a missile and machine-gun strike on a car south of Port Sudan. Last year's attack mirrored a similar strike by foreign aircraft on a truck convoy reportedly laden with weapons in eastern Sudan in January 2009. Khartoum is seeking the removal of US sanctions imposed in 1997 over its alleged support for international terrorism, its human rights One man's rights are another man's existential threat. record and other concerns. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Egypt brokers informal Israel/Gaza truce: Israeli official |
2012-10-25 |
Palestinian militants held fire overnight on Thursday and Israel refrained from air strikes as an informal truce brokered by Egypt appeared to take hold following two days of violence along the Israel-Gaza border. Palestinians had launched dozens of rockets into Israel over the preceding two days and Israel conducted a number of air raids on the coastal enclave, raising fears of a prolonged, bloody confrontation between the two sides. An Israeli military spokeswoman said the last known rocket was fired from Gaza on Wednesday at 8.00 p.m. (2 p.m. EDT). An Israeli defense official said no formal agreement had been reached with Hamas, the Islamist faction which controls the Gaza Strip, although Egyptian defense officials had been instrumental in restoring calm. "The Egyptians have a very impressive ability to articulate to (Hamas) that its primary interest is not to attack and use terror against Israel or other targets," Israeli defense official Amos Gilad told Israeli Army Radio. But he added that there was no direct agreement with the Islamist faction which refuses to recognize the Jewish state and calls for its destruction. "It can be said categorically that there is no agreement with Hamas, there has never been and there will never be. ... The only thing that has been set and said is that there will be calm. We are not interested in an escalation," Gilad added. On Wednesday, Israel killed a Hamas militant in an air strike which it said was intended to stop rocket launches. On Tuesday, Israel killed three Hamas men, saying they had either launched attacks or were about to do so. |
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