Archive for July 2012

Russia will not deliver fighter jets to Syria as situation remains ‘unresolved’

July 9, 2012

Russia will not deliver fighter jets to Syria as situation remains ‘unresolved’.

( Maybe Putin’s visit to Israel was more than the press knows… – JW )

Russia will not deliver Yak-130 fighter planes to Syria. Moscow reportedly signed an order to deliver 40 fighter-trainer jets to Damascus at the end of last year. (File Photo)

Russia will not deliver Yak-130 fighter planes to Syria. Moscow reportedly signed an order to deliver 40 fighter-trainer jets to Damascus at the end of last year. (File Photo)

Russia will not deliver Yak-130 fighter planes to Syria while the situation there remains “unresolved,” the country’s service for military cooperation said on Monday, according to the RIA news agency.

“In the current situation talking about deliveries of airplanes to Syria is premature,” Vyacheslav Dzirkaln, deputy director of the service, told journalists at the Farnborough Airshow, RIA said.

Russia reportedly signed an order to deliver 40 fighter-trainer jets at the end of last year, despite controversy surrounding its arms sales to violence-torn Syria.

Putin urges for peace in Syria

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that Syria needed dialogue between the regime and opposition rather than foreign intervention to ensure a lasting peace.

“I am convinced that we must do everything possible to force the conflicting sides to find a peaceful political solution to all the disputed issues,” Putin told foreign dignitaries in a televised address.

“Of course, this is more difficult and delicate work than the crude use of outside force. But only this can ensure a long-term settlement and the future stable development of the situation in the region,” he said.

Putin also repeated his earlier warnings against powers ordering armed intervention against Moscow’s Soviet-era ally without prior approval from the U.N. Security Council on which Russia wields veto power.

“We will continue to firmly defend the principles of the UN Security Council charter. We will make sure that in cases when forced intervention is needed, the decision can only be taken by the UN Security Council,” said Putin.

“Supplanting such decisions with unilateral sanctions can only be counterproductive.”

Putin spoke only hours after prominent Syrian opposition leader and intellectual Michel Kilo held talks in Moscow with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

The meeting came amid efforts by Russia to show its ability to speak not only to President Bashar al-Assad’s inner circle but also members of the opposition who have been scathing of Moscow’s stance in the near 17-month conflict.

Kilo told reporters after the meeting that he had initially supported dialogue with Assad but now felt that the situation had degenerated too far for meaningful talks.

“The regime — alas — is not replying to our demands and is saying that we are not representatives of the Syrian people,” news agencies quoted Kilo as saying.

Off Topic: Dershowitz defends Adelson

July 9, 2012

Op-ed: NJDC doesn’t speak for me on A… JPost – Opinion – Op-Eds.

( Dershowitz speaks for me here.  Adelson is an incredible supporter of Israel and Jewish causes.  To demonize him because he is anti-Obama is “self hating” as far as I am concerned. – JW )

07/08/2012 22:03
It’s hard to find anyone who has done as much for the Jewish community as Sheldon Adelson, Alan Dershowitz writes, following call from Nat’l Jewish Democratic Council to stop accepting donations from Adelson.
Sheldon Adelson
David Harris, the president of the National Jewish Democratic Council, has asked Jewish Democrats to sign a petition demanding that Mitt Romney and the rest of the Republican Party stop taking campaign contributions from Sheldon Adelson, and return those already received. They claim his money is “tainted.”This absurd allegation comes from a highly questionable, if not totally discredited, source – namely a former employee who was fired and is suing Adelson. He claims that Adelson approved of prostitution in his Macau casinos. Harris has apparently credited this claim even though no evidence has been submitted to support it and no finding has been made by any court. Has he never heard of “due process” or the “presumption of innocence?”

I know Sheldon Adelson and I have worked with him on several matters relating to Israel and the Jewish community. I have spoken on behalf of the wonderful school he has built in Las Vegas, and have had the pleasure of teaching one of the brilliant graduates of that school.

Adelson was deeply involved in the creation of the Birthright Israel Program, which has had extraordinary success in exposing young Jews to Israel. It’s hard to find anyone who has done as much for the Jewish community as Sheldon Adelson.

Adelson grew up in Boston in near poverty and is a shining example of the American dream. He is a self-made multi-billionaire who has contributed significantly to the world of modern technology and to the economic growth of Las Vegas and other areas. His generosity has helped repair the world.

I AM a Democrat and do not agree with many of Adelson’s political views, but I think it’s outrageous for the National Jewish Democratic Council to level unfounded allegations against Adelson. They do not speak for me, and for the many other Jews who admire Adelson’s contributions to the world, to America, to Israel and to the Jewish community.

I don’t know who Harris purports to speak for as president of the NJDC, but his partisan gamesmanship is an embarrassment to many Jewish Democrats. The attack comes with particular ill grace from a Jewish organization, considering all that Adelson has done for Jewish causes, and considering the fact that there is nothing uniquely “Jewish” about the questionable allegations against him.

Moreover, the demand that Mitt Romney return Adelson’s contributions is absurd. If all candidates had to return the contributions of every businessman against whom questionable allegations were made in a vengeful lawsuit, millions of dollars would have to be returned by hundreds of candidates all around the country.

Consider just one highly publicized example: the million dollars given by comedian Bill Maher to a super PAC supporting Barack Obama.

I single out Maher, whose comedy I generally like, because he said that he “decided to become the Sheldon Adelson of the Obama campaign,” and because extremists on the right have similarly demanded that the super PAC return Maher’s contribution, claiming it is tainted by his misogynistic rants against female Republicans such as Sarah Palin, against whom he has used vile, sexist language.

This is how The Christian Science Monitor delicately characterized Maher’s remarks: “[H]e has said some very bad things about Sarah Palin and other Republican women. He’s started with ‘bimbo’ and then moved on into derogatory gynecological references that are too obscene for us to repeat.”

I’m sure that if the Democrats were to apply David Harris’ “Adelson test” to all the contributions they have received from Hollywood moguls and other wealthy business people, they wouldn’t like the results.

So let extremists in both parties stop this nonsense about returning “tainted” contributions and focus on the real issues that separate the Democrats from the Republicans.

The writer is a Harvard law professor and political commentator.

In search of a Middle East policy

July 9, 2012

Israel Hayom | In search of a Middle East policy.

Elliott Abrams is a senior fellow for Middle East Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. This piece is reprinted with permission and can be found on Abrams’ blog “Pressure Points” here.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s blast at Russia and China last Friday blamed them for holding up international action against the Assad regime in Syria, but surely their position on Syria was not news. Clinton complained that they were “blockading” progress and “paying no price.”

But complaints do not constitute a policy. What Clinton did not supply was any approach or action that would change things — change Russia’s policy, change U.S. policy toward Russia, or change the facts on the ground in Syria. The administration’s diplomatic efforts, which put Kofi Annan at the fore, have failed, but they have not been replaced by anything effective.

The same is true of policy on Iran. The P5+1 negotiations with Iran have failed to produce progress, but the administration has nothing new to say. When the talks get nowhere, the administration calls for more talks, sometimes technical talks, sometimes talks led by the E.U., sometimes full-scale P5+1 negotiations. But this approach is manifestly not changing Iran’s conduct: The centrifuges keep spinning, the missile tests continue, and we must assume that warhead design is also going forward.

This same pattern is visible on the Israeli-Palestinian front, where administration policy has also failed and been replaced by nothing at all. George Mitchell left the scene in 2010, Dennis Ross resigned last year, the notion that a “settlement freeze” by Israel was the magic formula has been discredited, and there are no negotiations in sight. So what is U.S. policy? Have we advanced beyond Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s urgings last December “just get to the damn table,” as if anything positive would happen at that mythical table?

In all three of these theaters, Obama administration policy is frozen solid: no new ideas, no initiatives, and no acknowledgment that what has been tried for three and a half years has failed. Israelis and Palestinians can probably wait this period out, to see if a new president or a re-elected Obama has any new policy ideas. But the Iranian nuclear weapons program is not in suspension, and dozens of Syrians are dying each day. Nov. 6 and Jan. 20 are very far away in those policy contexts.

Consider what Mrs. Clinton said at the international meeting on Syria just held in Paris:

“What can every nation and group represented here do? I ask you to reach out to Russia and China, and to not only urge but demand that they get off the sidelines and begin to support the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people. I don’t think Russia and China believe they are paying any price at all — nothing at all — for standing up on behalf of the Assad regime. The only way that will change is if every nation represented here directly and urgently makes it clear that Russia and China will pay a price. Because they are holding up progress, blockading it. That is no longer tolerable.”

That summation of America’s policy and our situation today is far grimmer than Clinton appears to recognize. The situation is “no longer tolerable” but there is nothing we plan to do about it except to ask other, smaller, weaker nations to plead with Russia and China to be nicer. With such leadership, and such refusal to acknowledge the bankruptcy of current policies in the Middle East, we can expect a grim summer indeed.

From “Pressure Points” by Elliott Abrams. Reprinted with permission from the Council on Foreign Relations.

Off Topic: El Al wins most beautiful flight attendants

July 9, 2012

El Al wins most beautiful flight attendants – Israel Travel, Ynetnews.

( They are also by far and away the smartest and most capable.  Too bad they get no recognition for that. – JW )

Israeli stewardesses are first in top-10 most beautiful in the world list by AFA, followed by Argentinean, Chinese

Daniel Edelson

Published: 07.09.12, 06:51 / Israel Travel

The Association of Flight Attendants, the world’s largest labor union for flight attendants announced on Saturday that Israeli airline El Al is first place of the ten airlines with most beautiful flight attendants in the world.

The selection was first reported in China over the weekend, where it was explained that the sweet smile of Israeli flight attendants made them the first choice for many travelers.

El Al did not receive an official announcement on its win yet. The company’s response stated that El Al is “proud of its flight attendants around the world, and the service it offers its passengers.”

The airline in the second place is the Aerolineas Argentinas, and third is Shanghai Airlines. Asian airlines dominate the list of the top 10 most beautiful flight attendants of the world by AFA, occupying seven places.

Last year a similar survey was made by an airline review website, where Singapore airlines flight attendants were crowned first place.

Danny Sadeh contributed to this report

Heavy clashes reported in central Damascus as Annan hopes to save peace plan

July 9, 2012

Heavy clashes reported in central Damascus as Annan hopes to save peace plan.

A girl, with Kurdish and the Syrian opposition flags painted on her face, takes part in a protest against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Hasakah. (Reuters)

A girl, with Kurdish and the Syrian opposition flags painted on her face, takes part in a protest against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Hasakah. (Reuters)

Heavy clashes were reported in al-Abbaseyeen area in central Damascus between the Syrian government forces and the Free Syrian Army, Al Arabiya reported on Monday, citing activists at the Local Coordination Committees.

As many as 99 have been killed on Sunday across the country, activists said. Violent crackdown campaigns were resumed by the Syrian government troops in Damascus suburbs, Homs, Hama and Deraa, they told Al Arabiya.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned on Sunday that time is running out to save Syria from a “catastrophic assault,” and scores of people were reportedly killed across the country, most of them civilians.

“The sooner there can be an end to the violence and a beginning of a political transition process, not only will fewer people die, but there is a chance to save the Syrian state from a catastrophic assault that would be very dangerous not only to Syria but to the region,” Clinton told a Tokyo news conference.

She appeared to be referring to the possibility of Syrian rebels launching such an assault on state institutions rather than to any outside intervention.

“There is no doubt that the opposition is getting more effective in their defense of themselves and in going on the offence against the Syrian military and the Syrian government’s militias. So, the future … should be abundantly clear to those who support the Assad regime,” Clinton added.

“The sand is running out of the hour glass.”

Turkey has reinforced its border and scrambled fighter aircraft several times since Syria shot down a Turkish reconnaissance jet on June 22 over what Damascus said were Syrian territorial waters in the Mediterranean. Ankara said the incident occurred in international air space, according to Reuters

International envoy Kofi Annan has arrived in Syria after admitting that his peace plan has so far failed to end nearly 16 months of carnage, as scores more die in the violence-wracked country.

“The Joint Special Envoy for Syria, Kofi Annan, arrived in Damascus late Sunday for talks with President Bashar al-Assad,” his spokesman Ahmed Fawzi said of Annan’s third trip to Syria since the outbreak of the conflict.

Earlier, Syrian foreign ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi had told AFP Annan would hold talks on his six-point plan for peace with the Syrian leadership.

Annan himself has said his U.N.-backed mission has so far failed to halt the bloodshed, while stressing that Russia and Iran must not be sidelined from peace efforts.

“Russia wields influence but I am not sure that the events will be determined by Russia alone… Iran is an actor. It has to be part of the solution. It has influence and we cannot ignore it,” Annan told France’s Le Monde daily.

He also expressed irritation that while Moscow and Iran are mentioned by some as stumbling blocks to peace, “little is said about other countries which send arms, money, and have a presence on the ground.”

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has accused the United States and its allies of opposing Assad’s regime with the goal of dominating the Middle East and propping up Israel.

Iran’s deputy foreign minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said on Sunday in Jordan that any attack on Syria would be “stupid” and “catastrophic.”

Syria’s state news agency SANA reported that the country’s navy staged live fire exercises to “simulate the scenario of repelling a sudden attack from the sea.”

Earlier, Clinton acknowledged in Tokyo that efforts led by Annan to get Assad’s regime to halt its crackdown were proving difficult.

“The sooner there can be an end to the violence and a begetting of a political transition process, not only will fewer people die, but there’s a chance to save the Syrian state from a catastrophic assault that would be dangerous not only to the country, but the region,” she told reporters.

“It should be abundantly clear to those who support the Assad regime their days are numbered.”

Clinton was speaking after talks in Paris on Friday where countries pledged to increase pressure on Assad to step down by seeking a tough U.N. resolution backed by a threat of sanctions.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, also speaking in Tokyo, renewed his call on the Security Council for collective action to pressure Syria to stop the violence.

“President Assad must understand that things cannot continue as they are. Fundamental change is needed,” Ban said.

But Assad remained defiant.

The United States is “part of the conflict. They offer the umbrella and political support to those gangs to… destabilize Syria,” he told German public broadcaster ARD in an interview to be broadcast later on Sunday.

Assad said the Annan plan had failed to stop bloodshed because “many countries don’t want it to succeed.”

More than 17,000 people have now died since the uprising began in March last year, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

On Sunday 99 people, including 61 civilians, were killed in violence across Syria, said the Observatory, which gathers its information from a network of activists and witnesses.

The death toll also included 36 regular army troops and two deserters.

Syrian forces attempted to storm the rebel strongholds of Qusayr and Rastan in the central province of Homs, the watchdog said.

Both towns have been outside regime control for months and are rebel strongholds.

Sunday’s violence followed another bloody day in which 77 people were killed, mostly civilians, the watchdog said.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton’s office released a statement saying she “strongly condemns the recent shelling of the Lebanese border area by Syrian artillery, causing several deaths and injuries.”

Rocket fire along the border on Saturday left two girls dead and 10 other people wounded in northern Lebanon.

The rebels have gained confidence in recent weeks, staging bolder attacks, holding pockets of territory across the country and clashing with troops only a few miles from the presidential palace in Damascus.

It’s all up to the IDF chief

July 9, 2012

It’s all up to the IDF chief – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

All the weight of the decision over whether or not to attack Iran has been placed on the narrow shoulders of a single army officer.

By Alon Ben David Jul.09, 2012 | 3:00 AM

So when do we reach the moment of truth? Have Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who until now have been threatening the world with an Israeli strike on Iran to spur the international community into action, started to believe their own threats and the need to implement them? Army people who are likely to be involved are walking around like they’re carrying a heavy burden.

Time is short. Netanyahu and Barak believe that a strike must take place before the U.S. presidential election in November, and one has to wait a few weeks to at least appear to be giving the new sanctions imposed on Iran earlier this month a chance to work. Therefore, the narrow window of opportunity lies between August and October.

The cabinet – which observers believe nearly always has a majority to support an attack – will only be convened right before the strike to prevent leaks. Both Netanyahu and Barak know there are several people prepared to lie on the tracks to prevent an unnecessary war. First among them is President Shimon Peres, who is liable to go as far as informing the White House if he knew in advance about an attack. In the public arena, there are Meir Dagan, Yuval Diskin and maybe even Gabi Ashkenazi, who will put aside for a moment the Harpaz report considerations to halt the approaching disaster.

But the truly key person, the one who has the power to stymie this foolishness, is the Chief of General Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz. The State of Israel cannot go to war without the support of the chief of staff, and Gantz, whether by direct confrontation or by dragging his feet, will stand between us and the “only 500 dead,” promised by Ehud Barak.

The burden that has been placed on the shoulders of this pleasant man, who so dislikes personal confrontations, is visible on him. The Mossad head, the head of military intelligence and the Israel Air Force commander don’t have the same ability to block Netanyahu and Barak’s crazy vision, even though all three oppose it.

Gantz, who will soon be completing half of his term, still doesn’t have the aura of authority that his predecessor, Ashkenazi, had, but he does have an accurate moral compass. He has avoided confrontation with Barak over promotions to general’s rank and the appointment of the IDF chief prosecutor, and might even capitulate over the appointment of the deputy chief of staff. But he knows that an attack on Iran and the war that would follow is a totally different matter.

In this fateful debate, every word he says will carry significant weight. Gantz will not be able to act like a waiter presenting the different courses on the menu and the price of each offering. On this issue he will have to point to what he believes is the proper course of action, which doesn’t include an attack right now on Iran.

Gantz is familiar with the widespread assessment that an attack will not only not scuttle the Iranian bomb project, it is liable to intensify the pace of its development. Israel will be dragged into a painful war, which will not defeat it but will paralyze it and deliver a critical blow to the home front, after which Israeli society may be irrevocably changed. It will be a war that is liable to lead many Israelis to reconsider their future in this place.

Israel will not be defeated by a conflict with Hezbollah, Iran and maybe even Syria, nor will it be destroyed. But when the smoke clears and we understand that this war wasn’t necessary and didn’t even achieve its objective, it will be hard to accept, even if there are fewer than 500 dead.

All the weight of this decision has been placed on the narrow shoulders of a single army officer.

McCain: U.S. leadership on Syria “shameful and disgraceful” – CBS News

July 8, 2012

McCain: U.S. leadership on Syria “shameful and disgraceful” – CBS News.

Leigh Ann Caldwell

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. (CBS/Chris Usher)

(CBS News) The top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee said Sunday the United States is not doing enough to help the rebels defeat Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, saying the U.S. should be providing the Syrian rebels with weapons.

“The fact is, the United States has played no leadership role,” Senator John McCain, R-Ariz., said on “Face the Nation.”

“The United States of America’s performance so far has been shameful and disgraceful,” he said. “The President of the United States should be speaking out for the people of Syria.”

McCain’s comments comes one day after Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said “the sand is running out of the hourglass” for the Assad regime.

McCain had strong words for Senator Clinton and the Obama administration. “How many times has Secretary Clinton said that in the last 14 months?” McCain asked. “And by the way, when was the last time the President of the United States stood up and said we are with these people.”

McCain said Washington can’t continue to sit on the sidelines and just talk about a Syrian defeat. He told host Bob Schieffer that in addition to speaking out for Syrian rebels, the U.S. should be providing them with weapons.

“Right now, Bashar al-Assad is able to massacre and slaughter people and stay in power, thanks to the supply of Russian arms, thanks to Iranians that are on the ground,” McCain said.

Schieffer asked McCain how the U.S. knows which rebels to give aid to, amid concerns of a lack of information on the factions of the regime’s opposition.

“The fact is that these people are not, have not been taken over by extremists or al Qaeda, but they could be if this conflict drags on for months and even years,” McCain said. “I am confident that if we overthrow Bashar al-Assad the people of Syria will do exactly what the Libyan people did yesterday and that is vote for a democratic and freely-elected government.”

Turning to another conflict, Afghanistan, one in which the United States is deeply involved, McCain said President Obama is not focused on winning there.

“The president continues to announce withdrawals rather than strategies for victory,” McCain said, who just returned from a visit there.

International donors on Saturday pledged $16 billion in civilian aid at a conference in Tokyo. The money is to assist the country as international security forces withdraw.

On “Face the Nation,” McCain said Afghan President Hamid Karzai needs to fight corruption plaguing his country. “He has pledged to do that. We must hold him to that,” McCain said, adding that the other major challenge to Afghanistan’s success is the militant group, the Haqqani network, that is working with the Pakistan spy agency.

“We have to go after the Haqqani network and we have to go after them wherever they are. And we have to see progress in cleaning up and corruption,” McCain said.

Abbas accepts Ahmadinejad invitation to visit Tehran

July 8, 2012

Abbas accepts Ahmadinejad invitation to visit Tehran – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Palestinian president to attend Non-Aligned Movement Summit in Tehran at end of August

Elior Levy

Published: 07.08.12, 15:21 / Israel News

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has accepted an invitation to attend the Non-Aligned Movement Summit in Tehran, extended by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Sunday. This will most likely be Abbas’ first visit to the Islamic Republic.

Abbas received the invitation from Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African Affairs Hossein Amir-Abdollahian during a meeting in Amman on Sunday. The Palestinian leader thanked the Iranian deputy minister for the invitation, sent his regards to Ahmadinejad and promised to attend the summit.

The Iranian president also invited his Egyptian counterpart, the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohammed Morsi to attend the summit. According to Iran’s state news agency IRNA, Ahmadinejad told Morsi that Tehran is not placing any restrictions on expanding bilateral ties which had been cut off in 1979 following the EgyptIsrael peace treaty.
היה כבר בטהרן. הנייה ואחמדינג'אד לפני כמה חודשים (צילום: רויטרס)

Haniyeh and Ahmadinejad in Tehran (Photo: Reuters)

He stressed that Iran is willing to cooperate with the new Egyptian government in regional and international issues. Morsi, on his part, accepted the invitation and stressed that the Non-Aligned Movement is protecting the interests of Islamic and other developing states.

Iran will receive the rotating presidency of the movement from Egypt for three years during the Tehran summit.

In the past, Abbas accused Iran of impeding reconciliation efforts between Fatah and Hamas several times while Ahmadinejad slammed him for his lack of mandate to negotiate on behalf of the Palestinians.

Meanwhile, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad is urging Arab countries to keep their promises and send tens of millions of dollars to his cash-strapped government.

Charles Krauthammer Predicts Israel Will Attack Iran if They Think Obama Will Win November Election

July 8, 2012

Charles Krauthammer Predicts Israel Will Attack Iran if They Think Obama Will Win November Election | Video | TheBlaze.com.

Israel will attack Iran if they think President Barack Obama will win again in November, syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer predicted Friday.

“If they think Obama will win the election, I think it‘s likely they will attack before because afterwards there’s no telling how Obama would punish Israel, and Israel would be vulnerable to any sanctions or other measures from the United States,” Krauthammer said Friday on Fox News.

Pointing out Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s words earlier this year that Israel would attack Iran in April, May or June, Krauthammer said the “clock is running.”

“I think they’re simply waiting to make sure that these sham negotiations are declared over rather than put on life support as a way to say all options have been tried, now we have to defend ourselves,” he said.

Iran on Saturday said it has a plan to block the Strait of Hormuz if it feels its interests are “seriously threatened,” and last week issued a new threat to “wipe” Israel “off the face of the earth” if the Jewish state attacks.

In show of force, Syria holds large-scale military drill

July 8, 2012

In show of force, Syria holds large-scale military drill | The Times of Israel.

Maneuvers begin with naval forces repelling a simulated attack from sea

A Syrian soldier aims a light machine gun from his position in a foxhole during operation Desert Storm 20 years ago (photo credit: Tech. Sgt. H. H. Deffner/Department of Defense)

A Syrian soldier aims a light machine gun from his position in a foxhole during operation Desert Storm 20 years ago (photo credit: Tech. Sgt. H. H. Deffner/Department of Defense)

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Syria’s military began large-scale exercises simulating defense against outside “aggression,” the state-run news agency said Sunday — an apparent warning to other countries not to intervene in the country’s crisis.

The exercise began Saturday with naval forces in a scenario where they repelled an attack from the sea, and will include air and ground forces over the next few days, SANA agency said. State TV broadcast footage of missiles being fired from launch vehicles and warships.

Some in the Syrian opposition have appealed to the West for foreign forces to step in to stop bloodshed that they say has left more than 14,000 dead since an uprising against President Bashar Assad began in March 2011. So far, the West has shown little appetite to intervene.

Special U.N. envoy Kofi Annan acknowledged in an interview published Saturday that the international community’s efforts to find a political solution to the escalating violence in Syria have failed.

“The evidence shows that we have not succeeded,” he told the French daily Le Monde.

Annan, the special envoy for the United Nations and the Arab League, is the architect of the most prominent international plan to end the crisis in Syria.

His six-point plan was to begin with a cease-fire in mid-April between government forces and rebels seeking to topple Assad. But the truce never took hold, and now the almost 300 U.N. observers sent to monitor the cease-fire are confined to their hotels because of the escalating violence.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Sunday that time is running out on Syrian peace hopes and warned that the Syrian state could collapse.

Speaking in Japan, Clinton said Annan’s acknowledgement that his peace plan is failing “should be a wake-up call for everyone.”

She said last month was the deadliest for the Syrian people in the 16-month revolt, but added that the opposition “is getting more effective in defense of themselves and going on the offensive against the Syrian military.”

Defense Minister Dawood Rajiha attended the maneuvers and praised the “exceptional performance” of the naval forces which showed “a high level of combat training and ability to defend Syria’s shores against any possible aggression.”

“The navy carried out the training successfully, repelling the hypothetical attack and striking at given targets with high precision,” the report said.