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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Conditions not right for intl Gaza force: Prodi
2007-07-10
And never will be, either.
SDEROT, Israel - Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi on Monday played down the prospects of deploying an international peacekeeping force in the Gaza Strip, saying conditions were not suitable. Prodi’s comments during a visit to the southern Israeli town of Sderot came after his foreign minister, Massimo D’Alema, had suggested Italy was prepared to consider sending troops to the coastal strip if requested by the Palestinian government.

‘While in Lebanon we sent international troops because there was a common request from the parties, here (in Gaza) certainly, for now there are not the conditions to do the same thing,’ Prodi told reporters near the Gaza border with Israel.
"No, no, certainly not!"
Prodi toured Sderot, a town that is frequently hit by makeshift rockets fired by Palestinian militants from Gaza, with Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni.
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Europe
Afghan prisoner exchange damages Prodi
2007-03-23
Romano Prodi, Italian prime minister, came under attack again on Wednesday over his government's stance on the Afghan conflict, four weeks after his centre-left coalition nearly collapsed when it lost a parliamentary vote on foreign policy. Opposition deputies criticised the government for arranging with the Afghan government to free five Taliban prisoners in exchange for an Italian journalist who was kidnapped in southern Afghanistan on March 5.

Mr Prodi faces a difficult vote in the Senate, parliament’s upper house, next Tuesday when he will try to win approval to renew funding for military operations in Afghanistan. Italy has 1,900 soldiers in Afghanistan, part of a 31,000-strong Nato-led force. But communists and pacifists in Mr Prodi’s coalition want to withdraw the Italian contingent, and a few may vote against the government next week. When two dissident leftists refused to back the government in a Senate vote on Afghanistan and other foreign policy issues on February 21, Mr Prodi submitted his resignation. He later won a do-or-die confidence vote and stayed in office.

His government’s dilemma was highlighted on Tuesday when Massimo D’Alema, foreign minister, said Taliban insurgents were moving closer to the western Afghan city of Herat, where 750 Italian soldiers are based. “Unfortunately, the guerrillas are arriving even at Herat, and I don’t think the Italian troops are in a good situation. We are going to be facing some difficult moments,” Mr D’Alema said in New York.

Mr D’Alema is trying to remove the poison of the Afghan conflict from centre-left politics by emphasising his government’s efforts to convene a peace conference that would include Afghanistan’s neighbours. The idea has won some support from Italy’s Nato allies but radical leftist politicians have disrupted the minister’s diplomacy by demanding that the Taliban also attend any conference on Afghanistan. Mr Prodi hopes to win the Senate vote without relying on opposition support, as otherwise his government would be exposed as lacking a majority of its own on a vital foreign policy issue.

Except for the populist Northern League party, the opposition supports involvement in Afghanistan. But some centre-right politicians are unhappy about the government’s dealings with the Taliban to free the kidnapped reporter. “Our vote [to renew funding] cannot be taken for granted,” Altero Matteoli, a leader of the rightwing National Alliance party, said yesterday. “The release of five terrorists is the worrying aspect of this affair.”
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Iraq
Iraq FM to hosting meeting of neighboring FMs
2007-01-24
ROME — Iraq’s foreign minister plans to host a meeting in Baghdad of neighbouring countries’ foreign ministers, he said, stressing it could help change how these countries view the strife-torn country. The meeting would mark “an important turning point in these countries’ vision of the situation in Iraq,” Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said Tuesday, following talks with his Italian counterpart. He did not say when the meeting would happen or which countries would participate.

US officials say two of Iraq’s neighbours, Iran and Syria, are supporting the insurgency, and American forces have twice detained Iranians in Iraq. Iraq, however, has recently been making overtures to its two large neighbours.

Italian Premier Romano Prodi has said that both Iran and Syria should be involved in talks if the region is to be stabilized. Foreign Minister Massimo D’Alema reiterated in a joint news conference with Zebari that “Iraq’s stability can be achieved through an active participation by countries in the region to avoid Iraq being seen ... as a battlefield.”
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Europe
Hezbollah, Hamas are not Al Qaeda: Italian FM
2006-08-29
ROME—The Italian foreign minister said that groups such as Lebanese guerrillas Hezbollah and Palestinian militants Hamas are not purely terrorist organizations and that efforts to bring them into the political fold should be encouraged. “Hamas and Hezbollah are not Al Qaeda,” Italian Foreign Minister Massimo D’Alema said in an interview with Corriere della Sera published Tuesday. “Besides their well-known responsibilities for terrorist actions, they have a political side, they are engaged in assistance.” “IRA and ETA have become political movements from (being) terror groups,” D’Alema said, referring to groups that have carried out terrorist attacks in Northern Ireland and in Spain.
Ummm, no. They have political fronts that they use to demand a piece of the action, but they are both still terrorist groups
“We must encourage this metamorphosis in the Middle East,” D’Alema said. “Instead, organizations that are purely dedicated to terror must be fought and defeated,” he told Corriere, the country’s leading newspaper. Both Hezbollah and Hamas are on a U.S. list of terror organizations. The European Union considers Hamas a terrorist organization but does not list Hezbollah.

D’Alema made the remarks as Italy was sending troops to Lebanon as part of a reinforcement of the U.N. peacekeeping force in the southern part of the Middle East country. The Italian government approved sending 2,500 troops on Monday evening, the largest national contingent so far. A thousand Marines and engineer corps specialists were leaving later Tuesday as a vanguard of the contingent.

Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said Tuesday that “in my eyes, an organization that supports terror cannot be part of a political system—these organizations use democracy to spread their antidemocratic ideas.” “If Hezbollah were really to take the decision to lay down its weapons and stopped representing this extremist Iranian ideology, the destruction of Israel, then they could be part of the political system in Lebanon,” Livni said, speaking on Germany’s ZDF television.
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Iraq
Italian FM says troops will leave Iraq by end of year
2006-06-08
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Italy announced its intention on Wednesday to pull out all its troops by the end of the year, an action that further reduces the number of international troops supporting the United States in Iraq. Italian Foreign Minister Massimo D’Alema said Italy would begin reducing the number of Italian troops in Iraq this month and “the Italian military presence in Iraq will end by the end of the year.”
My sprize meter wriggled a bit. I thought for sure they'd gone within days of Prodi's election.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said Iraqis would be ready to take over responsibility for the southeastern area where the Italians are based. “This withdrawal will not begin suddenly but it will be gradual,” he said during a joint news conference at the Iraqi Foreign Ministry. “We have a security plan to transfer the security tasks from the Italian forces to the Iraqi forces starting end of this month.”
Thanks for the help, and wish you'd stay til the end. Your troops deserve the honor of finishing what they started.
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Europe
Italy’s Prodi immediately hit by coalition strife
2006-04-22
Posted because nobody does political theater better than the Italians.
ROME - Just two days after his election victory was confirmed, Italy’s prime minister-in-waiting Romano Prodi struggled on Friday to contain a row within his centre-left coalition that boded ill for his future government.

Opponents always said Prodi would be unable to hold together his broad alliance, which spans diehard communists to Roman Catholic moderates, but few expected the cracks to emerge even before Prodi had formally taken office.
Oh please, this is Italy!
The fight centres on who should be appointed speakers of the two houses of parliament. The posts are highly prestigious and Prodi’s three main coalition partners are all pressing hard for their own candidates to be elevated.

The major tussle is over the lower house, with two political heavyweights -- Communist Refoundation head Fausto Bertinotti and the chairman of the Democrats of the Left (DS), Massimo D’Alema -- demanding the job. La Stampa newspaper quoted Bertinotti as saying he might withdraw from Prodi’s Union alliance if he does not get the nod while the DS has indicated that as the largest party within the centre-left coalition, it deserves the job.

Prodi told reporters on Friday he was working to resolve the dispute, saying all sides had promised to accept his decision. “It is not going to be a difficult decision, even if it is obviously going to be a painful one,” said Prodi, whose previous term as prime minister ended after just two years in 1998 when Bertinotti turned against him.

Adding to Prodi’s woes, the head of another small coalition party, the centrist Democratic Union for Europe (UDEUR), said he was unhappy with the centre-left leader’s first steps and threatened to quit the alliance unless things changed quickly. Clemente Mastella, in a pugnacious interview in the Roman Catholic daily Avvenire, did not spell out what his demands were, but other newspapers speculated that he was seeking to be named either upper house speaker or defence minister.
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