Archive for September 9, 2010

Kassam rocket lands in Negev; no injuries reported

September 9, 2010

Kassam rocket lands in Negev; no injuries reported.

A kassam rocket fired from the Gaza Strip landed in open fields in the western Negev Thursday morning.

No injuries were reported and no damage was caused.

Security forces arrived at the scene to investigate the incident.

The rocket attack comes after a mortar shell landed near several childrens’ school buildings on Wednesday in a Sha’ar Hanegev regional council kibbutz, some 30 minutes prior to the students’ scheduled arrival.

One of the buildings sustained light damage, and no injuries were reported. The school building impacted by the mortar was reinforced only at the roof and not at the side walls, like other protected buildings in the area.

Security officials decided to let school continue as usual.

Report: Ahmadinejad to visit Lebanon’s border with Israel

September 9, 2010

Report: Ahmadinejad to visit Lebanon’s border with Israel – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Iran announces official presidential visit to Lebanon next month, Ahmadinejad’s first since taking office in 2005.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will make an official visit to Lebanon next month, the Iranian administration said in an official announcement on Thursday.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran on August  5, 2010. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran on August 5, 2010.
Photo by: AP

The visit will be Ahmadinejad’s first official visit to Lebanon in the five years since he was elected to office.

Lebanese media reported that Ahmadinejad, who is scheduled to arrive in Lebanon on October 13, was expected to tour the southern part of the country and to visit the county’s shared border with Israel.

Lebanese media further reported that during his visit, the Iranian president was expected to meet with his Lebanese counterpart, Michel Suleiman, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri and senior Hezbollah officials.

Last month, tension between Israel and the Lebanon came to a head when Lebanese soldiers fired at Israeli troops across the border, killing an officer and wounding another. A clash ensued in which two Lebanese soldiers and a journalist were killed.

Ahmadinejad met Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah during a visit to Damascus in February. Hezbollah is an Iranian-backed group which fought a month-long war with Israel in southern Lebanon in 2006.

Earlier this week, the International Atomic Energy Agency revealed in a report that Iran had accelerated its nuclear program and currently possesses a sufficient supply of enriched uranium to make three nuclear devices, assuming it speeds up enrichment to 90 percent.

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/un-report-iran-has-enough-uranium-for-three-nuclear-devices-1.312614?localLinksEnabled=false

According to the UN nuclear watchdog, Iran currently has 22 kilograms of uranium enriched at levels of 20 percent, and a total of 2.8 tons of uranium enriched at 3.5 percent. All the uranium is under IAEA supervision and Iran cannot make use of it for military purposes without alerting the international community.

Iran FM: Zionists behind U.S. church’s plan to burn Koran

September 9, 2010

Iran FM: Zionists behind U.S. church’s plan to burn Koran – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Manouchehr Mottaki also blames former U.S. President George Bush for inciting Islamophobia following Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

Tehran on Thursday said that Israel was behind the plan by a United States pastor to burn copies of the Koran on the ninth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the official news agency IRNA reported.

Iranian FM Manouchehr Mottaki in Sarajevo, AP, April 26, 2010 Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki in Sarajevo, Bosnia, April 26, 2010
Photo by: AP

“The software for this plan was made by the Zionists following their defeats against Muslims and the Islamic world,” Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said in a meeting with foreign diplomats in Tehran.

Terry Jones, who leads an evangelical congregation of just 50 people at the Dove World Outreach Centre in Gainesville, Florida, declared this coming Saturday “International Burn a Koran Day.”

Mottaki also blamed former U.S. President George W. Bush, saying Bush’s religious rhetoric after the September 11 attacks led to Islamophobia in the U.S.

“The current U.S. administration should fulfill its duties in guaranteeing the basic rights of American Muslims for avoiding the spread of such inappropriate and devilish moves,” Mottaki said.

Ayatollah Safi Golpaygani, one of the senior clergy figures in Iran, on Wednesday harshly condemned the Koran-burning plan and called on the U.S. administration to arrest Terry Jones.

He further warned that if such a “gruesome and inhuman act” took place, Muslims would hold the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama responsible.

The ayatollah further said that desecrating the Koran would not only insult Muslims worldwide, but also the followers of Jesus Christ, his mother Mary and the prophet Moses.

Iran, Israel ‘Meet’ at Lebanon’s Border

September 9, 2010

Iran, Israel ‘Meet’ at Lebanon’s Border | News | English.

An Iranian flag flies above a hilltop park overlooking Israel, 02 Sep 2010. The garden was a gift from Tehran to the people of South Lebanon.

Photo: VOA – E. Arrott

An Iranian flag flies above a hilltop park overlooking Israel, 02 Sep 2010. The garden was a gift from Tehran to the people of South Lebanon.

The revived Middle East Peace talks are focused exclusively on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  But there are other key actors in the search for an overall peace between Israel and its neighbors.

There is a pretty park on a hillside overlooking Israeli farmland.  Children climb atop a playground equipment here, while adults sit at a picnic table nearby.  There would be nothing remarkable about the scene, except the park is in Lebanon and the flag flying above it is Iran’s.

The Islamic Republic, whose leaders say the Israeli state must disappear from the map, gave the garden to the people of southern Lebanon after the 2006 conflict between Israel and Iran’s proxy in Lebanon, the militant Shi’ite group Hezbollah.

Role of Hezbollah

The park is one transparent display of money spent in the south since the war.  The truckloads of cash handed out by Hezbollah after the war for reconstruction and getting businesses running again is widely believed to have come from Iran.

More difficult to assess are the funds given to keep Hezbollah, which runs much of the south, armed.

Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut, says the group has a wide range of short, medium and long-range missiles, although the exact number and what Hezbollah intends to do with them is unclear.

“Who’s to say?  But apparently, they have a massive capacity to harm Israel through missile systems.  Now Hezbollah doesn’t want to repeat what happened in 2006.  They do not want a war with Israel, if they can help it,” he said.

Although Hezbollah claimed victory in that conflict, Lebanon paid a heavy price, and Hezbollah was largely blamed.  Cluster bombs still mar the countryside and an estimated 200,000 people remain internally displaced.

Salem argues that Hezbollah has evolved dramatically from the revolutionary Islamist model of its creators to a more integrated part of Lebanon’s multi-religious society.  Its past attacks on American targets have earned it a place on the U.S. list of terrorist groups.  But Hezbollah also holds seats in parliament and ministerial posts in the Lebanese government.  And it is continuing its social work, running hospitals, schools – even organic farms.

Signs of normality

Such activities have helped make the past four years ones of relative calm.  Among the surprising signs of normality is a young English actor, star of a popular children’s movie series, vacationing at the elegant villa of his grandfather, a British-Lebanese historian who lives part-time in what has been referred to as “Hezbollahland.”

The quiet is attributed in part to a boosted presence of the United Nations peacekeeping mission, UNIFIL, after 2006, and a return of the Lebanese Armed Forces, or LAF, to the area after an absence of decades.

“The situation has been one of the calmest periods in recent history, and also the relation and coordination with the LAF has been good.  And as an important part of this cooperation is that recently the Lebanese Army has also decided to enhance its strength in the south, adding an additional brigade,” said UNIFIL spokesman, Andrea Tenenti.

Lebanese Army involvement

But it was the Lebanese Army, not Hezbollah, that was involved in the most serious incident of recent years — a firefight with Israel last month over the demarcation of the Blue Line.  A senior Israeli military officer, three Lebanese soldiers and a journalist were killed.

Despite what was seen as the Lebanese Army’s mishandling of the confrontation, its willingness to take on its much better-equipped neighbor raised the idea that it could perhaps undercut Hezbollah’s main argument for maintaining its vast arsenal — national defense.

Retired Lebanese General Elias Hanna says it is unlikely that the army will replace Hezbollah any time soon, not only because he says it is ill-prepared.

“Is there some competition between Hezbollah and the army?  For sure, because if you have an army similar to Hezbollah and ready to defend, you don’t need Hezbollah.  But Hezbollah, really is connected to regional issues, and Hezbollah says it from time to time, the ‘Axis of Resistance’ — Lebanon, Syria and Iran,” he said.

Iran and regional issues

One of Iran’s more immediate regional issues is the possibility of an Israeli airstrike on its nuclear facilities.  Israel, along with the United States and other nations, say Iran is seeking to build nuclear weapons, with Israel as an obvious target.

Paul Salem of the Carnegie Middle East Center says that if Israel were to carry out a pre-emptive strike, Iran’s only real way to retaliate would be through Hezbollah.

“Now, is anybody happy about that?  Are Lebanese happy about that?  No.  But did Iran arm this force for years and spend hundreds of millions of dollars on this force so as not to be used when they want it?  No.  That is not the case,” he said.

Salem says Iran is not going to allow “a few Lebanese” to block its retaliation for any Israeli attack.

France calls on Syria to cooperate with IAEA inspectors

September 9, 2010

France calls on Syria to cooperate with IAEA inspectors.

France on Wednesday called on Syria to show more transparency in its dealings with the International Atomic Energy Agency concerning its the site of a suspected nuclear reactor it was allegedly building before it was destroyed in an Israeli air strike. The IAEA issued a report earlier this week claiming that Syria had refused to allow agency inspectors to visit the site.

“[The IAEA report] tackles the recent IAEA-Syria developments according to the general warranty agreement concluded by Syria. However, there are still some pending issues, namely regarding the nature of the Dair Alzour site,” said a French foreign ministry spokesperson. “France backs all IAEA check-up activities and calls on Syria to show the concrete cooperation and transparency needed to shed light on its past and current nuclear activities.”

On Tuesday, the US representative to the IAEA said that the organization may consider a special inspection of Syria to answer nagging questions over its nuclear activities.

Glyn Davies said a number of countries on the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency’s board of governors support plans to invoke the rarely used sanction.

Like Iran, Syria is suspected of hiding weapons-related nuclear activities and has blocked access to a suspected nuclear site destroyed by Israeli warplanes in September 2007.

“We need to keep the focus very much on Iran — but stay tuned on Syria, because Syria I think would love to just stave off any serious action to get to the bottom of what they were doing,” Davies told reporters in London.

A recent IAEA report said that uranium particles found at the Dair Alzour desert facility indicate possible covert nuclear activities. The finding supported Western allegations that the bombed target was a nearly completed nuclear reactor which the US alleges was of North Korean design and intended to produce weapons-grade plutonium.

On Tuesday, the US representative to the IAEA said that the organization may consider a special inspection of Syria to answer nagging questions over its nuclear activities.

Glyn Davies said a number of countries on the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency’s board of governors support plans to invoke the rarely used sanction.

Like Iran, Syria is suspected of hiding weapons-related nuclear activities and has blocked access to a suspected nuclear site destroyed by Israeli warplanes in September 2007.

“We need to keep the focus very much on Iran — but stay tuned on Syria, because Syria I think would love to just stave off any serious action to get to the bottom of what they were doing,” Davies told reporters in London.

A recent IAEA report said that uranium particles found at the Dair Alzour desert facility indicate possible covert nuclear activities. The finding supported Western allegations that the bombed target was a nearly completed nuclear reactor which the US alleges was of North Korean design and intended to produce weapons-grade plutonium.