Home Front: WoT |
Donald Trump dubs EgyptAir crash ‘another terrorist attack’ |
2016-05-20 |
![]() His comments came after the flight from Gay Paree to Cairo carrying 66 people on board crashed in the Mediterranean sea early on Thursday morning. Egyptian and Greek Sherlocks are scrambling to locate debris and find out the causes of the crash. The de-facto Republican nominee, referring to the plane crash, wrote: "Looks like yet another terrorist attack. Airplane departed from Gay Paree. When will we get tough, smart and vigilant? Great hate and sickness!" Egypt’s minister of civil aviation said Cairo would not rule out the possibility of a terrorist attack behind the missing plane. Around the same time, Russia’s domestic intelligence chief said that "apparently, it is a terrorist attack." It is not the first time the Republican frontrunner has linked a tragedy to terrorism. After the mass shooting in Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, in December, which killed 14 people, Trump blamed "radical Islamic terrorism" and called for temporary ban on Muslims entering the US. In a press statement at the time, the tycoon-turned-politician called "for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on." Former US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a Republican who served in Democratic President Barack Obama teachable moment... ’s administration, said Trump’s tweet came too soon before officials had a chance to discover what happened. "It prejudges the outcome," Gates told MSNBC. "It’s always better to wait until you act - know what the facts are before you open up. I realize that’s a very unusual thing in American politics, but it ought to be tried occasionally." |
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China-Japan-Koreas | |
Gates: US prevented ROK strike against North in 2010 | |
2014-01-19 | |
South Korea declined to comment Wednesday on revelations that the United States talked it down from launching a retaliatory airstrike on North Korea in 2010.
The 2010 incident followed the North's surprise shelling of a South Korean border island in November of that year. The attack triggered what Gates labeled a "very dangerous crisis," with the South Korean government of then-President Lee Myung-Bak initially insisting on a robust military response. "South Korea's original plans for retaliation were, we thought, disproportionately aggressive, involving both aircraft and artillery," Gates wrote in his memoir. "We were worried the exchanges could escalate dangerously," he added. Over the next few days, Gates said he, US President Barack Obama and then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had numerous telephone calls with their South Korean counterparts in an effort to calm things down. "Ultimately, South Korea simply returned artillery fire on the location of the North Koreans' batteries that had started the whole affair," he said. The South Korean government declined to confirm Gates's version of events. | |
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Iraq | |||
Iraqis blast US congressmans war repayment idea | |||
2011-06-13 | |||
BAGHDAD: The suggestion by a US congressman that Iraq repay the United States for the money it has spent in the country has stirred anger, with an Iraqi lawmaker ridiculing the idea as stupid and others saying Iraqis should be compensated for the hardships theyve endured. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican from California, suggested during a trip to Baghdad with fellow lawmakers Friday that once Iraq becomes a rich and prosperous country it should repay the US.
Al-Dabbagh said the government was also upset by comments from the six-member congressional delegation about an Iranian opposition group based in Iraq. The American lawmakers came to Iraq to investigate the deaths of 34 members of the Peoples Mujahedeen Organization of Iran during an April 8 Iraqi army raid on the groups headquarters, known as Camp Ashraf.
But it was Rohrabachers comments about repayment that resonated most with Iraqis who have suffered through years of war. The head of the Iraqi Parliaments foreign affairs committee, Humam Hmoudi, called his comments stupid and said it is the Iraqi people who should be demanding compensation. This provokes us and the Iraqi people as well to demand compensations for losses Iraq suffered during the invasion, he said. Another lawmaker from one of the main political blocs, Etab Al-Douri, called the repayment idea a humiliation. We are the ones who should ask for compensation and not them, and we demand the occupiers withdraw now, she said. The blowup comes at a particularly sensitive time in the US-Iraq relationship. Iraq is weighing whether to ask US troops to stay in the country longer. There are currently about 47,000 American troops in Iraq, and US officials have been pushing Iraq to decide if they want a US military presence past Dec. 31. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said he thinks the US would agree to staying longer in Iraq if asked. Al-Dabbagh played down the suggestion that Rohrabachers comments would have any long-term effect on US-Iraq relations. He described Rohrabachers comments as a personal statement from a congressman who was trying to make himself famous. The US Embassy in Baghdad sought to distance itself from Rohrabachers comments. In a statement Saturday, embassy spokesman David J. Ranz said the embassy has a responsibility to host congressional visitors but that their views do not necessarily reflect those of the administration or a majority of Congress. | |||
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Africa North |
Libyan rebels report gains in Misrata fighting |
2011-04-23 |
[Dawn] Rebels have battled Moammar Gadhafi's troops for control of central Misrata, driving dozens of snipers from tall buildings in hours of urban warfare and gaining a tactical advantage in the only major city held by the opposition in western Libya, witnesses said. Also on Thursday, the Libyan government ramped up its rhetoric against NATO ...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Originally it was a mutual defense pact directed against an expansionist Soviet Union. In later years it evolved into a mechanism for picking the American pocket while criticizing the style of the American pants... , warning that "it will be hell" for the alliance if it sends in ground troops, even though Perfidious Albion's prime minister said the Western nations were not moving toward such a deployment. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said President Barack B.O.Obama has approved the use of armed Predator drones in Libya. The drones allow for low-level precision attacks and are uniquely suited for urban areas such as Misrata, where NATO airpower has been unable to protect civilians when Gadhafi's forces are operating inside the city. Elsewhere, rebels captured Thursday a Libyan border crossing into Tunisia, forcing government soldiers to flee over the frontier and possibly opening a new channel for opposition forces in Gadhafi's bastion in western part of the country. At least seven people were killed in Thursday's fighting for the main Misrata thoroughfare of Tripoli Street, bringing to 20 the number slain in three days in Libya's third-largest city. Misrata has been besieged by government forces for nearly two months, with human rights ...which are usually open to widely divergent definitions... groups estimating hundreds of people killed. Tripoli Street is the site where two Western photojournalists were killed Wednesday as the rebels tried to dislodge the snipers loyal to Gadhafi perched on rooftops. The street, which stretches from the heart of Misrata to a major highway southwest of the city of 300,000 people, has become a front line for the rebels and Gadhafi's forces. The rebels took over several buildings along parts of the street, enabling them to cut off supplies to a Gadhafi unit and dozens of rooftop snipers who have terrorized civilians and kept them trapped in their homes, said a doctor who identified himself only as Ayman for fear of retaliation. "This battle cost us lots of blood and deaders," the doctor said. Residents celebrated and chanted "God is great" after the snipers left a battle-scarred insurance building that is the highest point in central Misrata, according to a witness who identified himself only as Sohaib. "Thanks to God, the snipers decamped, leaving nothing behind at the insurance building after they were cut off from supplies, ammunition, food and water, for days," added another resident, Abdel Salam. He called it a major victory because the structure gave the pro-Gadhafi forces a commanding view of the city. |
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Arabia |
Saudis Forming Anti-Iran War Coalition |
2011-04-19 |
![]() After giving up on US and Israel ever confronting Iran, Saudi Arabia has placed itself at the forefront of an independent Sunni campaign for cutting down the Islamic Republic's drive for a nuclear bomb and its expansionist meddling in Arab countries. Two US emissaries sent to intercede with Saudi King Abdullah -- US Defense Secretary Robert Gates on April 6 and National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, who arrived in Riyadh six days later -- were told that Saudi Arabia had reached a parting-of-the ways with Washington, followed actively by Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman. King Abdullah first defied the Obama administration's policy of support for popular uprisings against autocratic Arab regimes on March 14 by sending Saudi troops into Bahrain to prop up the king against the Shiite-led disturbances organized by Tehran's Lebanese surrogate, Hizballah. This force has been expanded continuously, split now between units suppressing the uprising and the bulk deployed on the island's coast, 320 kilometers from the shore of Iran. Saudi ground-to-ground and anti-air missiles have been transferred to the Bahraini capital of Manama and naval units, including missile vessels, positioned in its harbor. Bahraini Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa announced that Saudi and allied GCC troops would stay in the kingdom until Iran no longer poses a menace. "Gulf force is needed to counter a sustained campaign by Iran in Bahrain," he said. Saudi Arabia was therefore determined to lead the Gulf region on the road to a confrontation with Iran -- up to and including military action if necessary -- to defend the oil emirates against Iranian conspiracies in the pursuit of which the king accused US-led diplomacy of giving Tehran a clear field. Monday, April 18, the foreign ministers of the Gulf Cooperation Council, GCC, asked the UN Security Council to take action for stopping Iran's "provocative interference in their countries' domestic affairs." This "flagrant interference" posed a "grave security to, and risked flaring up sectarian strike, in the GCC countries." The resolution went on to state: "The GCC will not hesitate to adopt whatever measures and policies they deem necessary vis-à-vis the foreign interferences in their internal affairs." The phrase "measures and policies deemed necessary" is diplomatic parlance for a military threat. It implies that Saudi Arabia and the rest of the regional group are confident that together, they command the strategic resources and assets necessary for a military strike against Iran. Our military sources report that the Saudis are convinced that their combined missile, air force and naval strength is fully capable of inflicting in-depth damage on mainland Iran. Iran's response: Thousands of Iranian students, mobilized by the Revolutionary Guards and Basijj voluntary corps have laid the Saudi embassy in Tehran to siege for most of the past week, launching stone and firebomb assaults from time to time, but so far making no attempt to invade the building. Then, Saturday, April 16, the Iranian foreign ministry summoned the Pakistani chargé d'affaires to warn him sternly against allowing Saudi Arabia and Bahrain to continue conscripting Pakistani military personnel. Tehran claims that by offering exorbitant paychecks, Riyadh has raised 1,000 Pakistani recruits for its military operation in support of the Bahraini king and another 1,500 are on their way to the Gulf. Iran also beefed up its strength along the Pakistani border to warn Islamabad that if it matters come to a clash with Saudi Arabia, Pakistani and its military will not escape punishment. Tehran-Sunni tensions are rippling into other arenas: On April 11-12, the chronically disaffected Arabs of Ahwaz in the western Iranian province of Khuzestan (1.2 million inhabitants) staged a two-day uprising against the Iranian government. In their first crackdown, government forces killed at least 15 demonstrators before cutting off Ahwaz's links with the outside world.' So too does Syrian president Bashar Assad, who claims the spreading revolt against his regime, now entering its second month, was instigated from Riyadh. In the event of such a war, Bahrain and Riyadh would in effect be shielded from Iranian missiles by any US 5th fleet assets in the area, who would have to assume it was an attack on themselves as well. |
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Arabia |
Soddy Arabia and China to sign nuclear cooperation pact |
2011-04-13 |
![]() The new move comes after the Kingdom signed its first ever nuclear treaty with La Belle France in February. Yamani, who signed that agreement, said it would pave the way for the Kingdom's long-term plans to build power stations utilizing alternative energy sources to produce electricity and water. The agreement allows the two countries to cooperate in the fields of production, use and transfer of knowledge regarding the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. Soddy Arabia has decided to make use of alternative resources such as atomic, solar, geothermal and wind power to meet its growing energy requirements. Power demand is forecast to increase by 8 percent annually in the Kingdom. Demand for electricity in Soddy Arabia is expected to triple by 2032, which will give rise to the need for energy plants with a total of 80 gigawatts of installed capacity. King of the Arabians, Sheikh of the Burning Sands, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah, who chaired the Cabinet meeting at Al-Yamamah Palace in Riyadh, briefed the ministers on the outcome of his talks with US Defense Secretary Robert Gates and the content of a letter he received from Bahrain's King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa. The Cabinet discussed the latest developments in some Arab countries. It also welcomed the GCC's call on the Yemeni government and opposition to meet in Soddy Arabia for talks aimed at reinforcing peace and stability in the country and achieving the hopes and aspirations of the Yemeni people. |
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Iraq |
US pushes Iraq to decide on troop extension |
2011-04-08 |
BAGHDAD - Months before the United States is due to complete its withdrawal from Iraq, Washington is stepping up pressure on Iraqi leaders to decide whether US troops should stay to help fend off a still-potent insurgency. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, speaking ahead of meetings with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and other Iraqi leaders during a visit to Baghdad, said the United States would be willing to consider extending the US military presence in Iraq beyond the end of this year. A bilateral security pact requires Washington to withdraw its remaining force of around 47,000 troops by years end. If folks here are going to want us to have a presence were going to need to get on with it pretty quickly in terms of our planning and our ability to figure out where we get the forces, what kind of forces we need here and what specifically the mission they want us to do, Gates told troops on a sprawling US base next to Baghdad airport. I think there is interest in having a continuing presence, but the politics are such that well just have to wait and see because the initiative ultimately has to come from the Iraqis. More than eight years after the US-led invasion to oust Saddam Hussein, Iraq is struggling to halt violence from a weakened but still lethal Islamist insurgency and to put an end to a long period of political instability following general elections more than a year ago. A statement on Malikis website said the prime minister had told Gates that our armed forces in the military and police have the power to confront any attack, and their capabilities to impose security and stability increase day by day. It did not say whether an extended US presence would be requested. US officials have said they expect to accelerate the removal of remaining US troops, which mostly focus on training their Iraqi counterparts, in the late summer or fall so that, barring a deal to extend the US presence, the entire force can be removed by the end of the year. The United States has also been dismantling bases, removing equipment and handing over facilities to Iraqi forces. General Lloyd Austin, who commands US forces in Iraq, told reporters he had not yet made a recommendation to the White House on how many troops would stay if such a deal is struck. But he said there might be a drop-dead point after which it would be too expensive or difficult to keep troops in Iraq, or send them back once they have left. The clock is ticking, he said. We will reach a point ... where it will be very difficult to recreate things that weve disassembled. You can do anything but it costs more money and more resources and, quite frankly, our country right now as you know is not interested in having to expend more resources because we wasted an opportunity. Austin said political wrangling that preceded the formation of Malikis new government in December, and the continuing lack of new interior and defence ministers, had contributed to Iraqs failure to decide whether to ask for a troop extension. Even more instrumental, however, may be the political pressure that Maliki faces within his tenuous Shia-led coalition government, which was formed only after Maliki made a deal with Moqtada al-Sadr, the anti-American cleric who opposes the presence of US troops on Iraqi soil. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Spengler: What do you do when there isn't a solution? | |
2011-03-31 | |
The Arab bazaar speculates in foodstuffs as aggressively as hedge funds, and the Syrian government's attempt last month to keep food prices down prompted local merchants to hoard commodities with a long shelf life. Fruit and vegetable prices, by contrast, remain low, because the bazaar does not hoard perishables. The fact that prices rose after the government announced high-profile measures to prevent such a rise exposed the fecklessness of the Assad regime. In response to the Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings, President Assad reduced taxes on oil and sugar, and cut import tariffs on basic foodstuffs. Bloggers report that the prices of basic foodstuffs have risen by 25% to 30%. What happened is seen frequently in Third World command economies: local importers bribe customs officials to control the flow of goods, and then hoard them. "The only beneficiaries of the price-reduction decrees," the blogger concluded, "are the traders." What are essentially dictatorships like Syria rule through corruption. It is not an incidental fact of life, but the primary means of maintaining loyalty to the regime. Under normal circumstances such regimes can last indefinitely. Under severe external stress, the web of corrupt power relations decays into a scramble for individual advantage. The doubling of world food prices over the past year has overwhelmed the Assad family's ability to manage through the usual mechanisms. The Syrians sense the weakness of the regime, which rests on the narrow base of the Alawi religious minority. Virtually every sector of Syrian society has a grudge against the Assads, most of all the Muslim Brotherhood, which led an uprising in the city of Hama in 1982 that Hafez al-Assad crushed with casualties estimated at between 10,000 and 20,000. Ethnic fractures have not yet contributed to the unrest, but the country's Kurds are "ready, watching and waiting to take to the streets, as their cause is the strongest", as Robert Lowe, manager of the Middle East Center at the London School of Economics, told CNN on March 24. From the Straits of Gibraltar to the Hindu Kush, instability will afflict the Muslim world for a generation, and there is nothing that the West can do to stop it. Almost no-one in Washington appears to be asking the obvious question: what should the United States do in the event that there are no solutions at all? No one, that is, but US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who told Washington Post columnist David Ignatius March 22 that "the unrest has highlighted 'ethnic, sectarian and tribal differences that have been suppressed for years' in the region, and that as America encourages leaders to accept democratic change, there's a question 'whether more democratic governance can hold ... countries together in light of these pressures'." The implication [Ignatius writes]: ''There's a risk that the political map of the modern Middle East may begin to unravel too, with, say, the breakup of Libya.'' Former president George W Bush wanted to build democracy, and the Barack Obama administration has embraced the "Arab spring" with the enthusiasm of a Sorbonne undergraduate in May 1968. "Helping to get them right" is "a challenge for American foreign policy as any we have faced since the end of the Cold War," as William J Burns, the Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee March 17. This flight of fancy was flagged by the Israel-based analyst Barry Rubin (at rubinreports.blogspot.com). The administration's romantics, such as Samantha Powers, the Irish human-rights activist who once called for UN troops to take over the Israel-Palestine conflict, and United Nations ambassador Susan Rice, appear in charge of Middle East policy. Anyone who doubts that ideology trumps raison d'etat in the Obama White House should read Stanley Kurtz' just-published book, Radical-in-Chief. The Republicans for the most part are competing with Obama to show that they can do a better job of fixing the Middle East. "Barack Obama's union base is looking like a national security issue," complains Daniel Henninger in the March 24 Wall Street Journal, because the unions oppose free trade agreements that he thinks would fix Egypt's economy. Never mind that two-fifths of Egyptians are illiterate and that (according to Egypt's new Finance Minister Samir Radwan) ''the products of the education system are unemployable." Like most of his colleagues in the commentariat, Henninger feels obliged to offer a solution. He writes, "Many people in US public life don't want to get involved with this Middle East tangle. Alas, the gods do not ordain a timeline for crises. These insurrections - now spread across 11 separate nations - are a big, historic moment, similar in some ways to what happened around Eastern Europe before the Berlin Wall fell. The US didn't blow that one. What's needed now is an equivalent level of leadership and strategic thinking to ensure we don't fall on the wrong side of this one." It is worth recalling just what happened after the fall of the Berlin Wall. America won the Cold War not by enticing the Soviet Union into democratic reforms but by proving to Russia's generals that they couldn't win - by installing missiles in Germany that could hit Moscow in four minutes, by shredding Russian forces in Afghanistan, by demonstrating the weakness of Russian avionics, and by threatening (in part as a bluff) to build a missile defense system. The result was to bring ruination to the Russian economy and ruin tens of millions of lives. Male life expectancy plunged into the mid-50-year range largely due to alcoholism, and millions of Russian women turned to prostitution. After the Cold War, American free marketeers fanned out like missionaries to spread the capitalist gospel around the world. In some respects we succeeded. Asia listened, and flourished. Yeltsin had not yet invited the oligarch Roman Abramovich to move into an apartment at the Kremlin, which he did in 1996. But it did not take long to see that the job description of an "economic adviser" was to find means for Russian officials to steal everything available and bank the proceeds abroad. This was not so much corruption as free-for-all looting. There were no restraints because communism had erased Russian civil society and made the people passive and despondent. Russian democracy under Yeltsin allowed the sheep the right to vote about whatever it liked while the wolves ate their fill. It took a restoration of the old security services in the person of Vladimir Putin to restore a degree of order. Russia remains a crippled giant, a raw-materials monoculture dependent on more than ten million foreign workers to compensate for its demographic decline. And Russia was a superpower that nearly beat America in the Cold War, the first country to send a man into space, the home to many of the world's best scientists and mathematicians. The Muslim world has not produced an innovation of note in seven centuries; except in Turkey, it lacks a single university that can train students to world standards (and only 23% of Turkish students finish high school). To expect the Arab Middle East to compete with Asia in light manufactures or information-technology outsourcing is whimsical. Iran might have had a chance before Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, but most of its human capital has long since fled. Pakistan is a half-illiterate failed state. Turkey has kept its head above water, but just barely, as I reported last week (The Heart of Turkness, March 22, 2011); Indonesia and Malaysia have more to do with emerging Asia than the Middle East. The only pocket of Arab population with an economic future might be the West Bank territories, where the gravitational pull of Israel's high-tech economy draws in Arabs educated at universities founded after Israel conquered the region in 1967. At the University of Samaria on the other side of the Green Line, one sees scores of young Palestinian women in headscarves. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt understands the local situation much better than American policymakers of both parties. As Israeli officials observe, it has no ambition to rule Egypt for the moment, for the Brothers believe that Egypt's position is hopeless for the time being. No matter who is in power for the immediate future, the country will descend into chaos. The Brotherhood will wait in the wings, hoping to emerge as a national savior at some future date. What might emerge from the Arab world two or three generations from now is beyond anyone's capacity to foresee. As individuals, Arabs are as talented and productive as anyone on earth. For the time being they are caught in the maelstrom of a failing culture. The social engineers of the neither the American left nor right will ''get them right," in Undersecretary Burns' grammatically challenged expression. Gates is right: the existing political structures will not hold. As he told David Ignatius, ''I think we should be alert to the fact that outcomes are not predetermined, and that it's not necessarily the case that everything has a happy ending ... We are in dark territory and nobody knows what the outcome will be.'' As I said of Egypt in my February 2 essay: we do not know what kind of state will follow Basher Assad. We only know that it will be a failed state. | |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Israelis hindering efforts to establish Palestinian state |
2011-03-27 |
![]() ...Fayyad's political agenda holds that neither violence nor peaceful negotiations have brought the Paleostinians any closer to an independent state. The alternative to both, violent negotiations, doesn't seem to be working too well, either... on Friday said that the Israeli measures in Paleostinian territories "undermine" the Paleostinian Authority's efforts to establish a Paleostinian state and enforce security. Fayyad said during a meeting with visiting US Defense Secretary Robert Gates that the "suppressive control by (Israeli) occupation, the settlement expansion and the military incursions in Paleostinian territories" undermines the Paleostinian Authority's (PA) readiness to establish a state. The Western-backed prime minister stressed the necessity of ending the Israeli occupation of Paleostinian lands occupied in 1967, the Paleostinian people's right of self determination, and the establishment of this state by September 2011. He also warned of the Israeli military escalation in Gazoo Strip. For his part, Gates praised the achievements of PA despite the challenges and difficult conditions it faces. The official WAFA news agency quoted Gates as saying that the US Administration is "committed to achieve peace based on two-state solution." Gates is on a tour throughout the Middle East reported to be part of a farewell trip ahead of his planned retirement this summer. He also met with Israeli leaders on Thursday and on early Friday before meeting with Fayyad. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier said that Israel will keep its troops on the eastern boundary of the West Bank, which borders Jordan, in any future agreement with the Paleostinians. Fayyad rejected Netanyahu's announcement saying that there would be no Paleostinian state without Jordan Valley and without East Jerusalem as its capital. The Jordan Valley and East Jerusalem "are undivided parts of the Paleostinian land that has been occupied since 1967," Fayyad said in his weekly speech on Wednesday. The Paleostinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad on Friday said that the Israeli measures in Paleostinian territories "undermine" the Paleostinian Authority's efforts to establish a Paleostinian state and enforce security. Fayyad said during a meeting with visiting US Defense Secretary Robert Gates that the "suppressive control by (Israeli) occupation, the settlement expansion and the military incursions in Paleostinian territories" undermines the Paleostinian Authority's (PA) readiness to establish a state. The Western-backed prime minister stressed the necessity of ending the Israeli occupation of Paleostinian lands occupied in 1967, the Paleostinian people's right of self determination, and the establishment of this state by September 2011. He also warned of the Israeli military escalation in Gazoo Strip. For his part, Gates praised the achievements of PA despite the challenges and difficult conditions it faces. The official WAFA news agency quoted Gates as saying that the US Administration is "committed to achieve peace based on two-state solution." Gates is on a tour throughout the Middle East reported to be part of a farewell trip ahead of his planned retirement this summer. He also met with Israeli leaders on Thursday and on early Friday before meeting with Fayyad. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier said that Israel will keep its troops on the eastern boundary of the West Bank, which borders Jordan, in any future agreement with the Paleostinians. Fayyad rejected Netanyahu's announcement saying that there would be no Paleostinian state without Jordan Valley and without East Jerusalem as its capital. The Jordan Valley and East Jerusalem "are undivided parts of the Paleostinian land that has been occupied since 1967," Fayyad said in his weekly speech on Wednesday. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Gaza factions offer truce, if Israel reciprocates |
2011-03-27 |
[Ma'an] Paleostinian factions in Gazoo agreed Saturday to commit to a truce with Israel if its military stopped attacking the coastal enclave. The decision was made at a meeting in Gazoo City, initiated by Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason,, to discuss Israel's escalation in attacks on the Gazoo Strip. Over the last week, Israeli forces have bombarded the coastal enclave, killing 10 Paleostinians including civilians and children. Dozens more were maimed. Israel's army says it is responding to a barrage of projectiles fired by Islamic fascisti into Israel, which have injured one Israeli in the last week. Hamas initiated the meeting Saturday, which was attended by representatives of the ![]() ... Paleostinian Marxist movement, founded in 1967. It is considered a terrorist organization by more than 30 countries including the U.S., European Union, Australia, Canada, and Antarctica. The PFLP's stated goal is the establishment of a socialist State in Paleostine. They pioneered armed aircraft hijackings in the late 60s and early 70s... the ![]() ... a breakaway faction of the Pöpular Frönt för the Liberation of Paleostine. The are regarded as the most intellectual of Paleostinian fedayeen groups, smoking cheap cigarettes and drawing heavily on Marxist-Leninist theory to explain their crappy lives. They can occasionally be seen strutting through the streets of Paleostine, dressed up like soldiers and lugging firearms, though they seldom manage to hit anything and then usually by accident. This may be because of their habit of wearing black masks that cut off most of their vision. That would also explain their habit of occasionally walking into walls, which is a well-known attribute of those immersed in true understanding of the dialectic... and several other parties. Fatah and five other PLO factions did not participate. Khader Habib, an Islamic Jihad leader, told AFP after the meeting that "everybody confirmed that they respect the national consensus by calming things with the Zionist enemy." But he said this "depends on the nature of Israeli behavior, and we insist on the need to respond immediately to each escalation by the occupiers." And Osama al-Haj Ahmed, a Popular Front leader, said "the factions confirmed their commitment to national consensus in order not to give the aggressors any pretext" for attacking. Hamas already pledged on Wednesday to "to restore calm" in the coastal enclave. "We confirm that our stance in the government is set on protecting the stability," Hamas front man Taher al-Nunu said in a statement. "We will work to restore the field conditions that were prevalent over the last few weeks." And Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas premier in Gazoo, said he had been making contacts with other factions "with a view to Gazoo avoiding new confrontations with the Israeli occupation." In particular, he said he had spoken with Ramadan Shallah, the Damascus based chief of Islamic Jihad, which has grabbed credit for many of the projectiles fired on Israel in the past week. Meanwhile, ...back at the buffalo wallow, Tex and his new-found Indian friend were preparing a little surprise for the bandidos... Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Friday that Israel had been "subjected to bouts of terror and rocket attacks" and that "we stand ready to act with great force and great determination to put a stop to it." Friday was calm, but the Israeli army said Paleostinian Islamic fascisti fired two rockets from Gazoo into Israel overnight and damaged a house. No one was injured, the military said. As Netanyahu spoke on Friday, Defense Minister Ehud Barak toured the Gazoo border with army chief Lieutenant General Benny Gantz saying calm seemed to be returning to the area. And he indicated that if the rocket attacks stopped, Israel would also halt its strikes into Gazoo. "We don't intend to let the terror organizations again disturb the order but we will do all we need to to return the [military] activity to the border line itself," he said. In a visit to Israel this week, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Washington firmly backed Israel's right to respond both to the rocket fire and the Jerusalem bombing, which he described as "repugnant acts." But he suggested Israel should tread carefully or risk derailing the course of popular unrest sweeping Arab and Mohammedan countries in the Middle East. Gates pressed Israeli and Paleostinian leaders to take "bold action" for peace despite soaring tensions, saying political upheaval in the region offered an opportunity. Some Israeli leaders have appeared reluctant to be dragged into another bloody war with Hamas, especially as they lack international support for any new offensive on Gazoo. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Israel: Rocket from Gaza strikes Eshkol area |
2011-03-27 |
[Ma'an] A rocket landed early Saturday morning in the Eshkol Regional Council and damaged a house, Israeli media said. No injuries were reported in the attack and another rocket landed in an open field nearby, the Israeli news site Ynet reported. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told US Defense Secretary Robert Gates Friday that Israel is ready to act with "great force" in response to a spate of rocket fire and a deadly bus bombing in Jerusalem. Israel had been "subjected to bouts of terror and rocket attacks," Netanyahu told news hounds before going into a meeting with Gates. "We stand ready to act with great force and great determination to put a stop to it," he added, with officials saying Israel had not been hit by any projectiles Friday morning. "Any civilized society will not tolerate such wanton attacks on its civilians," he said. However, The emphatic However... as Netanyahu spoke, Defense Minister Ehud Barak toured the Gazoo border with army chief Lieutenant General Benny Gantz, saying that the situation seemed to be calming down. "In the last 24 hours there has been no fire into our territory, but we continue to monitor the situation," Barak said, according to a statement from his office. And Barak indicated that if the rocket attacks stopped, Israel would also halt its strikes into the Gazoo Strip. "We don't intend to let the terror organizations again disturb the order but we will do all we need to to return the [military] activity to the border line itself," he said. Also, Barak said, Israel will deploy its "Iron Dome" multi-million-dollar missile defense system in southern Israel for the first time next week in the wake of rocket attacks. "I authorized the army to deploy in the next few days the first battery of "Iron Dome" for an operational trial," he said. The deployment of the Iron Dome interceptor, designed to combat short-range rocket threats from Gazoo and Leb, has been delayed until now with officials saying operating crews needed more training and suggestions the system was prohibitively expensive. Gates, a former CIA director with years of experience in Washington, said US-Israel security ties were as strong as they had ever been at a time when the region was in "turmoil." On Thursday, he said in Tel Aviv that Washington firmly backed Israel's right to respond both to the rocket fire and the Jerusalem bombing, which he described as "repugnant acts". But he suggested Israel should tread carefully or risk derailing the course of popular unrest sweeping Arab and Mohammedan countries in the Middle East. The US defense chief is pressing Israeli and Paleostinian leaders to take "bold action" for peace despite soaring tensions, saying political upheaval in the region offered an opportunity. |
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Africa North |
Like the Crusades |
2011-03-22 |
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's![]() remarks on Monday, reported by Russian news agencies, said the military actions against Libya prove that Russia is correct in its drive to strengthen its own defenses. Putin's remarks came as US Defense Secretary Robert Gates began a visit to Russia aimed at easing Moscow's worries over a proposed NATO missile defense shield in Europe. His statements indicated that Russian suspicion of the West and the United States in particular remains strong. Russia abstained in the UN Security Council vote on the resolution authorizing force in Libya. |
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