Archive for September 20, 2012

America, Waiting Until When?

September 20, 2012

America, Waiting Until When? – YouTube.

New Romney add.

 

 

 

 

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Minister Stresses Iran’s Ability to Wipe Zionist Regime Off Earth

September 20, 2012

Minister Stresses Iran’s Ability to Wipe Zionist Regime Off Earth.

Thursday, 20 September 2012 19:42

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TEHRAN (FNA)- Iranian Defense Minister Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi downplayed Israel’s threats against the Islamic Republic, and warned that Tehran is capable of wiping the regime off the earth.

Iran’s defensive power against Tel Aviv’s threats has become so developed that it would easily wipe off the Zionist regime from the face of the earth, Vahidi told reporters in Tehran on Wednesday.

“Faced with various problems, the usurper regime of Israel makes such absurd threats to compensate for its internal crisis,” the minister was quoted by the Islamic republic news agency as saying.

Israel and its close ally the United States accuse Iran of seeking a nuclear weapon, while they have never presented any corroborative document to substantiate their allegations. Both Washington and Tel Aviv possess advanced weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear warheads.

Iran vehemently denies the charges, insisting that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only. Tehran stresses that the country has always pursued a civilian path to provide power to the growing number of Iranian population, whose fossil fuel would eventually run dry.

Speculation that Israel could bomb Iran mounted since a big Israeli air drill four years ago. In the first week of June, 2008, 100 Israeli F-16 and F-15 fighters reportedly took part in an exercise over the eastern Mediterranean and Greece, which was interpreted as a dress rehearsal for a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear installations.

Iran has, in return, warned that it would target Israel and its worldwide interests in case it comes under attack by the Tel Aviv.

The United States has also always stressed that military action is a main option for the White House to impede Iran’s progress in the field of nuclear technology.

In response, Iran has warned it could target 32 US military bases in the region and close the strategic Strait of Hormuz if it became the target of a military attack over its nuclear program.

Strait of Hormuz, the entrance to the strategic Persian Gulf waterway, is a major oil shipping route.

A recent study by the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), a prestigious American think tank, has found that a military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities “is unlikely” to delay the country’s program.

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A recent study by a fellow at Harvard’s Olin Institute for Strategic Studies, Caitlin Talmadge, warned that Iran could use mines as well as missiles to block the strait, and that “it could take many weeks, even months, to restore the full flow of commerce, and more time still for the oil markets to be convinced that stability had returned”.

In a Sep. 11, 2008 report, the Washington Institute for the Near East Policy also said that in the two decades since the Iran-Iraq War, the Islamic Republic has excelled in naval capabilities and is able to wage unique asymmetric warfare against larger naval forces.
According to the report, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Navy (IRGCN) has been transformed into a highly motivated, well-equipped, and well-financed force and is effectively in control of the world’s oil lifeline, the Strait of Hormuz.

Time is running low for diplomatic solution, US and Europe warn Iran

September 20, 2012

Time is running low for diplomatic solution, US and Europe warn Iran | The Times of Israel.

Statements at UN Security Council meeting signal growing impatience with stalled negotiations

September 20, 2012, 7:36 pm 0
United Kingdom UN Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant, far left, and United States UN Ambassador Susan Rice confer during a Security Council meeting on the situation in Syria at the United Nations in New York, Thursday, July 19 (photo credit: AP/Kathy Willens)

United Kingdom UN Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant, far left, and United States UN Ambassador Susan Rice confer during a Security Council meeting on the situation in Syria at the United Nations in New York, Thursday, July 19 (photo credit: AP/Kathy Willens)

The US, Britain and France warned Iran Thursday that time was running out for a diplomatic solution to curb its nuclear program.

The statements come days after a third round in talks between Iran and the P5+1 group — the US, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany — ended with no progress beyond milquetoast statements of “constructive” negotiations.

“Time is wasting,” US Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice told a UN Security Council meeting on nuclear sanctions against Iran. She added that the diplomatic solution would not be pursued indefinitely, AFP reported.

While sanctions against Tehran have been stepped up in several months, Jerusalem reportedly believes a military strike may be needed to derail the Iranian nuclear drive, which it says poses an existential threat to the Jewish state. It has sought to have the US set out “red lines” which, if crossed would trigger US-led military action, but was rebuffed by the Obama administration.

The United States, Britain and France have all maintained there is still time for sanctions and diplomacy to work.

But the UN Security Council meeting likely signaled growing impatience with Tehran’s obstreperousness.

“The Iranian regime is at a crossroads,” Britain’s ambassador to the UN, Mark Lyall Grant, said, according to AFP. “It can continue to ignore the international community’s concerns over its nuclear program, or it can negotiate a settlement that will help to realize the benefits of a civil nuclear program.”

The meeting was held against the backdrop of reports from the UN’s nuclear watchdog that Iran had been stepping up enrichment activity. On Thursday, Iranian Vice President Fereydoon Abbasi-Davani, who is also the head of the country’s Atomic Energy Organization, told the al-Hayat newspaper that Iran issued false information to protect his country’s nuclear program and to disguise some of the technical advances it has made.

Israel and many Western countries believe Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapon, a charge Iran denies. Tehran has been in fruitless negotiations with the international community for several years over curbing its enrichment activity.

“We are asking Iran to negotiate, but Iran is not negotiating,” France’s UN ambassador Gerard Araud said.

‘Iran Behind Int’l Terror and May Aim for US’

September 20, 2012

‘Iran Behind Int’l Terror and May Aim for US’ – Global Agenda – News – Israel National News.

Iran’s Quds Force terrorists are behind recent attacks on U.S. officials and may try to strike in the U.S., officials said.

By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu

First Publish: 9/20/2012, 7:15 PM

 

Women supporters of Hizbullah leader Nasrallah shout slogans against US-made anti-Islam film

Women supporters of Hizbullah leader Nasrallah shout slogans against US-made anti-Islam film
Reuters

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force terrorists and their proxies are behind recent attacks on U.S. officials and may soon try to strike in the United States, counterterrorist officials in the Obama administration told a Senate committee Wednesday.

Testimony at the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing so far has largely been ignored by mainstream media and was reported only by the conservative Washington Times.

“We have seen an uptick in operational activity by the Quds Force over the last year or so,” National Counter-Terrorism Center Director Matthew G. Olsen said at the hearing, adding that the elite military cell, “poses a threat beyond the immediate [Middle East] region” as well as U.S. territory.

Olsen noted that the federal government last year prosecuted a senior member of the Quds for his part in a failed plot to assassinate the Saudi Arabia ambassador to the United States by bombing a Washington restaurant.

Another “significant source of concern for us” is the Iranian-funded Hizbullah terrorist organization, said Kevin L. Perkins, associate deputy director of the FBI, citing Hizbullah as “a serious problem, a serious threat.”

Reports from defectors from the Syrian army, most recently Major General Adnan Sillu, confirm fears that the Assad regime has desk drawer plans to give Hizbullah access to chemical weapons for rocket attacks on Israel.

Sillo told the Times of London what most observers suspect – that Syrian President Bashar Assad has “nothing to lose” by letting Hizbullah use chemical weapons because “if a war starts between Hizbullah and Israel, it will be only good for Syria.”

USS Eisenhower on Gulf Alert for Iran Threats Sees ‘No Problems’

September 20, 2012

USS Eisenhower on Gulf Alert for Iran Threats Sees ‘No Problems’ – SFGate.

Sept. 20 (Bloomberg) — Computer terminals glow in the darkened Combat Direction Center of the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower as they process feeds from sensors tracking any air, surface or underwater vessel within striking range.

The center is dominated by a Ship Shelf Defense System made by Raytheon Co. that would display the first signs of an Iranian threat, such as a Silkworm anti-ship missile, a submarine or a swarm of fast patrol boats speeding toward the 1,092-foot-long aircraft carrier and its crew of more than 6,200 men and women.

“No problems at all” have been detected so far as the carrier and the cruiser in its strike group, the USS Hue City, made three transits through the Strait of Hormuz since arriving in July from its home port of Norfolk, Virginia, Navy Commander Steve Wyss told visitors to the carrier in the Persian Gulf.

The Eisenhower is the largest instrument of U.S. power in the gulf, aimed at reassuring allies and keeping open the Strait, through which as much as 20 percent of traded oil is shipped daily, in the face of intermittent threats by Iran to mine it, sink a tanker, or make other moves to close it.

“We still think it’s an international strait,” and “we will continue to move in and out of it,” the Eisenhower’s commander, Captain Marcus Hitchcock, told reporters on his bridge during a Sept. 18 visit to the carrier in the middle of the Gulf about 70 miles (113 kilometers) from Iran.

Iranian officials periodically have threatened to close the Strait, which is 21 miles wide at its narrowest point, in response to economic sanctions from the U.S. and allies aimed at forcing Iran to abandon its suspected nuclear weapons program, as well as Israeli threats to mount a military attack.

Iranian Guard

“If a war takes place in the Persian Gulf with one side being the U.S. and the West, it is natural that the security of the Strait of Hormuz will be harmed,” the commander-in-chief of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari, said Sept. 16, according to the Islamic Republic News Agency. He also said that “nothing will remain” of Israel if it attacks.

So far, oil markets remain unmoved by the Iranian threats. Brent oil for November settlement fell $3.84, or 3.4 percent, to $108.19 a barrel yesterday on the London-based ICE Futures Europe. It was the lowest close since Aug. 2. Brent, a benchmark for more than half of the world’s oil, has risen from $89.23 on June 21, which was the lowest settlement since December 2010.

The Eisenhower is providing air cover for a mine-clearing exercise in the Persian Gulf involving the U.S. and 29 other nations. The Eisenhower alternates on duty in the Gulf with the USS Enterprise, which is in the Arabian Sea providing air support for U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Frequent Dealings

For all the tension over Iran and warnings from its officials, “we deal with the Iranian navy and Revolutionary Guard almost on a daily basis. They are very professional navies,” Hitchcock said. “We have not threatened. They have not threatened.”

The message was repeated in a briefing for reporters by Rear Admiral Michael Manazir, commander of Carrier Strike Group 8, and in a message he delivered later to the carrier’s entire crew over the Eisenhower’s public-address system.

Should the situation turn hostile, officials said, they’re well-trained and equipped to handle a swarming attack by some of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy’s small boats.

“Fast-attack craft — they are small, they are maneuverable, they carry explosives, they carry small arms,” Manazir told reporters. “They are a threat, but we train to that threat and we can address them with our surface ships, helicopters, and our fixed-wing aircraft.”

Upgrading Vessels

The Navy also has accelerated delivery to the Gulf of specialized Griffin missiles made by Waltham, Massachusetts- based Raytheon and machine guns with laser trackers to upgrade U.S. coastal-patrol vessels to defend against the boats.

Manazir, who served on the carrier USS Nimitz in the Gulf and studied the U.S. Navy’s response in 1986 and 1987, when Iran mined parts of the Gulf, said the threat “is essentially the same.”

“What has gotten more sophisticated is the actual weapons systems and guidance systems,” he said. “Those boats have gotten more capable, and they’ve bought more of them or produced more of them,” he said.

The Pentagon’s 2010 assessment of Iran’s military power listed four midget submarines, 80 patrol craft and 18 guided missile patrol boats under control of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy. The IRGC also “controls hundreds of small patrol boats,” it said.

Italian Speedboats

Since the 1990s, the Guard navy has purchased Italian-made speedboats and has been making them domestically, according a 2009 report by the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence.

It also has Chinese-built C-14 missile boats and North Korean-made “semi-submersible” vessels that can carry two torpedoes.

“When you have a lot of boats” they must be defended against in a multifaceted manner because that’s “a rather difficult threat,” Manazir told reporters. “But we train against it. We have weapons that are effective against them, and I think we would do just fine.”

“It’s very difficult for Iran to operate small boats in high seas,” he said, referring to the Gulf’s sometimes heavy seas. “Sometimes the conditions out here don’t lend themselves to small-boat operations.”

Asked if Iran’s capabilities have made the Eisenhower more vulnerable, Manazir said, “We provide protection around the carrier, either carrier defenses” or “the umbrellas around it” from the 42 Boeing Co. F/A-18 Hornet aircraft on board and the four vessels of the strike group.

“When we go through the Strait we are very well- protected,” Manazir said. “I don’t think the threat changed to the point were we say we can’t bring the carrier in here.”

“These are fairly big ships,” he said. “You start moving an aircraft carrier 33 knots — pretty difficult to catch.”

–Editors: Larry Liebert, John Walcott
To contact the reporter on this story: Tony Capaccio aboard the USS Eisenhower at acapaccio@bloomberg.net

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/business/bloomberg/article/USS-Eisenhower-on-Gulf-Alert-for-Iran-Threats-3880481.php#ixzz271dxXazj

Iran’s Nuclear Program and the Red Line – Council on Foreign Relations

September 20, 2012

Iran’s Nuclear Program and the Red Line – Council on Foreign Relations.

Interviewee: David Albright, President of the Institute for Science and International Security
Interviewer: Bernard Gwertzman, Consulting Editor
September 20, 2012

Debate is growing on curbing Iran’s nuclear development as the Israelis ratchet up pressure on the United States on a so-called “red line” on what would constitute the need for military action. Though Iran has made considerable progress on developing “a fairly robust nuclear weapons capability,” David Albright, a leading expert on Iranian nuclear issues, says, “The key issue is that they haven’t made a decision to do that.” Albright says that even though Israel has concerns about Iran’s uranium enrichment program, he believes an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear enrichment sites would not eliminate the Iranian ability, but would push them further toward nuclear weapons. “I think the Israelis, by attacking, could make the situation much worse, whereas if the United States makes it clear to Iran, ‘don’t cross that line or else there will be horrendous consequences,’ that strategy may be able to keep Iran from building the bomb over the next year or two.”

What is the latest on Iran’s nuclear program?

Iran has made considerable progress at developing a fairly robust nuclear weapons capability, so that if it decided today to enrich uranium up to weapons-grade for making nuclear weapons, it could do so. There’s nothing standing in their way, technically, anymore, and they could produce quite a bit of weapons-grade material. But the key issue is that they haven’t made a decision to do that.

And how would they do that, by upgrading this 20 percent enriched uranium?

They have large stocks of 3.5 percent, enough for several nuclear weapons. They also have a fairly large stock of 20 percent. They don’t have enough 20 percent if used alone to enrich to weapons-grade uranium, but if you use both the 3.5 percent and the stock of 20 percent, then in a facility like Natanz, where there’s 9,000 centrifuges operational, they could produce a significant quantity, which we define as 25 kilograms of weapons-grade uranium in two to four months. Once they get a sufficient stock of 20 percent enriched uranium–and that could be sometime next year–then if they wanted to break out of Natanz, they could do it in little more than a month.

Now they can run into problems, and they do. They always run into problems, and so these time frames could get longer, and probably would get longer. But if you look back a year or two, the time to breakout [when they would have all the components necessary to assemble a weapon] using the 3.5 percent enriched uranium with the number of centrifuges they had at the time was measured in a half a year, a year, and so as they’ve produced more enriched uranium, particularly 20 percent material, and gotten more centrifuges operational, the breakout times have come down fairly substantially, and will continue to come down as they produce more 20 percent enriched uranium.

Over the weekend, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was on U.S. television saying that Iran would have the capability to produce nuclear weapons in about six to seven months. So you’re not disagreeing with that?

No. But what I took from his comments is that there are some scenarios that Israel is worried about, and some that it’s not so worried about. I gave the example of breaking out at Natanz. Now, at ISIS, we don’t believe Iran is likely to do that, because the breakout involves kicking out the inspectors and taking the enriched uranium out of safeguards. All those things are very noticeable. Therefore, if Iran broke out of Natanz, it would be discovered, and there would probably be a pretty draconian response from the United States and Israel. We at ISIS think that Iran is deterred from breaking out at Natanz over the next year or so.

Now, the other site at Fordow, which is deeply buried, even with 20 percent enriched uranium in sufficient quantity that you can enrich for a bomb, we think is going to take them at least two months. If and when the Iranians have enough 20 percent enriched uranium, the United States will get plenty of warning time about that breakout and could respond in an incredibly aggressive manner toward Iran. So I think Iran would be deterred from trying over the next year to break out at Fordow.

But Israel is in a different situation. Israel has announced that it can’t destroy the centrifuges deeply buried in Fordow. It’s clear it can shut down Fordow for some number of months through just a bombing, because the site needs electricity, water, and there are tunnels that are operational where the centrigues are located. So Israel can shut it down, but it can’t destroy it. So if Israel attacks, and if whatever is down in the hole is protected and the plant becomes fully operational, which it very well could in six months, then Israel is faced with this real fundamental problem: It attacks Iran, and Iran’s plant at Fordow survives, and in about two months, the Iranians could have their first significant quantity of enriched uranium, which they could then try to, over successive months, turn into a nuclear weapon and keep enriching.

Could the United States take out Fordow?

I think so, because what the United States can do that Israel can’t do is it can do much more destruction at the site. Again, it may not be able to collapse the roof in the deeply buried cavern that holds the centrifuges, but it can certainly collapse the tunnels. The United States can also keep hitting the plant. We have the capability to launch multiple strikes over a long period of time, if necessary, to keep the plant shut down, and to raise the costs to Iran.

In fact, what this argues for is that perhaps Israel shouldn’t attack, because it’s quickly reaching a point where an Israeli attack could be counterproductive. What it means is that if Israel can’t destroy Fordow, then it’s going to motivate Iran to go for the bomb, and certainly before that to kick out the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors, and withdraw Iran from the Non-Proliferation Treaty. So I think the Israelis, by attacking, could make the situation much worse, whereas if the United States makes it clear to Iran: don’t cross that line or else there will be horrendous consequences, that strategy may be able to keep Iran from building the bomb over the next year or two.

Talk about all this from Iran’s point of view. What is it that Iran seems to be doing? Its public posture is it’s developing enriched uranium for power plants. Is that a feasible project for them?

They have an ambition of being able to produce enough enriched uranium for a commercial nuclear power program. That’s a dream. The Iranians are far from being able to realize that dream. And they’ve kind of gotten sidetracked into saying: “Okay, now we’ll make fuel for a tiny little research reactor,” and they’ve made plenty for that reactor already and don’t even need to make any more. And so the civilian side doesn’t really need an enrichment program, and they could stop their enrichment program today, and their nuclear power program wouldn’t suffer at all. But since the 1980s, we’ve seen evidence that they have been developing a nuclear weapons program, and my view is that they would’ve had nuclear weapons by now if the world hadn’t intervened at several points and stopped them from crossing that line.

The big outside intervention was in 2003?

The intervention in 2003, after the invasion of Iraq and the discovery of all these secret centrifuge sites, laser enrichment sites, and even military nuclear sites, so unnerved the Iranians that they decided the best thing was to shut down the nuclear weaponization program, or at least reduce it greatly in size, and to suspend their uranium enrichment program and try to outlast the pressure, which was immense in 2003 and 2004. Since then, most of their effort has gone into getting their centrifuge program working, because in the end, that’s the long pole in the tent. The IAEA evidence says by the end of 2003, they knew how to build a crude nuclear explosive device, and they were working on a deliverable nuclear warhead. They weren’t finished when this abrupt shutdown supposedly happened, but they had gotten fairly far, and the IAEA assessed, in internal documents, that if they spent time on this, they would succeed in building deliverable warheads for a missile.

Iran currently is focused on making weapons-grade uranium. And therefore, it’s not so critical that it works on the nuclear weaponization side, but the IAEA has gathered evidence that some part of that weaponisation work has continued. The U.S. national intelligence estimate, from what we understand, felt the structured program was not restarted, and certainly everybody we talked to agrees that Iran hasn’t made a decision to actually build nuclear weapons in the sense of making weapon-grade uranium, making bomb components.

But from a technical point of view, they’re not at the point where they can do that safely, because they’re going to be detected, and they have to worry about us striking militarily and probably putting together an international coalition that would support the United States in what it’s doing. I think Iran’s probably working on some aspects of nuclear weapons, but principally is trying to develop a much greater centrifuge capability so that it could find a way to make nuclear weapons and get away with it without having their country devastated.

There have been negotiations on and off now for several years between the Security Council permanent five and Germany and the Iranians. Are these talks just a total bust or have they accomplished something?

I think they’ve demonstrated that Iran is not really that serious as a regime about making significant concessions. They’ve been handed all kinds of ways to make this problem go away and for them to get all kinds of sanctions lifted, and they have chosen not to do it, and we don’t know why.

I don’t think it’s necessarily because they want a nuclear weapon. I see them as ambivalent. If they could, they would build a weapon, but they understand there’s tremendous forces arrayed against them, that if they build that weapon, their regime may end before they get the weapon. The reasons are not always, “We want a weapon, and therefore negotiations are just a tool for us to buy time.” I think they also have internal problems in their regime where they can’t seem to agree on what to do in the negotiations. There are some concessions Iran could make, they can’t seem to agree. And we went through this for a couple years where Iran would send out its enriched uranium and get research reactor fuel in return, and they agreed to a deal and then they said no, and then they wanted to do it again. Then the Iranians agreed to a deal with Brazil and Turkey but it was a very bad deal, and it had aspects Iran would’ve known the West could never accept.

Al-Jazeera Wafa Sultan discussion on Muslim belief and clash of civilizations. – YouTube

September 20, 2012

Al-Jazeera Wafa Sultan discussion on Muslim belief and clash of civilizations. – YouTube.

A Must See !

Wafa Sulatn


( The most succinct, powerful indictment of Islam in the modern world that I have seen. – JW )

Please send this vid to everyone on your contacts list who might be receptive.  Ask them to do the same.  Let’s get this video viral.

A God Who Hates: The Courageous Woman Who Inflamed the Muslim World Speaks Out Against the Evils of Islam: Wafa Sultan: 9780312538361: Amazon.com: Books.

https://i0.wp.com/c481901.r1.cf2.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/Wafa-Cover1.jpg

Israel MUST rely on itself

September 20, 2012

Israel MUST rely on itself | Opinion | Jewish Journal.

Israeli Flag. Photo by MathKnight/Wikipedia

Israeli Flag. Photo by MathKnight/Wikipedia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Once again, during the year that is drawing to a close, there was no country that was more harshly criticized, no state that was more frequently condemned than Israel.  

“The demonization of Israel increased during the past year,” Natan Sharansky, chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel, told me.

As a direct result of continuously one-sided and often false media reports from Israel, a great deal of uncertainty has been created for many of Israel’s friends. Here is the situation on the ground as I see it:

Illusion and reality

For decades, Israel has attempted to integrate itself into the Middle East. Politicians have long dreamed of the “new Middle East” as a zone of freedom and democracy. The facts that have been established in the meantime are sobering: The sweeping failure of the Islamic world to offer a better form of politics is alarming.

The belief that the challenge in Middle Eastern countries would end positively as a result of the mechanisms of democracy was an illusion. The developments did not have any positive consequences for Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s words in his explanation to me were, “The Arab rebellion has developed into an anti-Israeli, anti-liberal and, above all, completely undemocratic wave.”

Peace with Egypt — quo vadis?

What has changed concretely is the situation in the Sinai. While just 10 or even five years ago, an average Israeli family could take a vacation on one of the peninsula’s beaches, a series of terror attacks has shattered this possibility. Israel’s former ambassador to Egypt, Zvi Mazel, explained, “Egypt has gone from being a military dictatorship to a dictatorship of Islamists.”

The peace treaty with Egypt that was concluded by Menachem Begin 32 years ago withstood the change of regime after the murder of [Anwar] Sadat. It is extremely probable that it will also withstand the revolution of Tahrir Square because Egypt needs this peace no less than Israel does. Umpteen millions of Egyptians are unemployed, millions of university graduates cannot find work in their area of specialty, and the country is dependent upon the United States, which provides $2 billion a year in foreign aid. For this reason, the new regime in Cairo can’t afford to clash with Israel, especially at this point in time, but the dangers for the future are great.

Putting the brakes on peace 

Mahmoud Abbas has turned out to be a chief obstacle for any progress in the peace process. In comparison to Hamas, Fatah is regarded as the moderate wing of the Palestinian Authority. And not rightfully so.

As I know very precisely from research before the production of the film “One Day in September,” Abbas had a central role in the terrorist attack at the Munich Olympics in 1972.  He does indeed act in a more charming and cultivated way than his predecessor, Arafat, but his political goals are exactly the same.

“Our goal has never been peace,” said Kifah Radaideh, a confidante of Abbas in Fatah. “Peace is a means; the goal is Palestine.” A new diplomatic tug-of-war at the U.N. with regard to the efforts by Abbas to receive nonmember status appears to be imminent.

Iran’s most important ally

The civil war in Syria makes it clear how full of hatred the Alawites, Sunnis and Shiites are toward each other. Syria’s president Bashar al-Assad is Iran’s most important ally. Both Hamas and Islamic Jihad have their headquarters there, and the Damascus airport was the trans-shipment point for tens of thousands of rockets for Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia. Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, emphasized, “The most valuable weapons come from Syria — not just in Lebanon, also in Gaza.” It seems to be in Israel’s interest to massively reduce Iranian influence on Syria. Israel’s ambassador to the U.N. for many years, Dore Gold, stressed to me, “The old order will be replaced by chaos. Chaos never represents a positive opportunity.” King Abdullah of Jordan formulated it this way: “Syria’s chemical weapons could fall into enemy hands.” This danger is concretely present, because according to Israeli estimates, Hezbollah possesses an arsenal of 70,000 rockets with which weapons of mass destruction can be used.

What about Jordan?

Jordan consists of a vague but totally real possibility for a new arrangement. There are voices in the Middle East that prophesy that King Abdullah’s time will come after the end of Assad because the chances of a revolt by the Palestinians, who make up 70 percent of the population of Jordan, exist in concrete terms.

In Israel, the greatest supporters of the Hashemite monarchy and all those who consider Jordan to be a strategic asset for Israel also know that a change of regime could bring an anti-Israel government to power. Israel’s friendship with the Hashemites has historically been based upon the mutual knowledge of the Palestinians as an adversary of both sides. If the circumstances change, then Israel’s strategy would also have to change. Jordan could become another “Hamastan” and resort to weapons in the unresolved Arab-Israeli conflict.

Aryeh Eldad, a member of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee of the Knesset, views this differently, and he explains in that regard: “That would be a way out of the impasse in which the Palestinians find themselves. They understand that in view of the internal problems of the Palestinian Authority and the endless postponing of elections, it is improbable that they will be able to found a Palestinian state in Judea, Samaria and Gaza with Jerusalem as its capital, but a viable Palestinian state could exist in Jordan.” Parts of the West Bank could be incorporated into it.

Iran’s nuclear arms 

An Iran with nuclear weapons is one of the worst things that could happen to Israel. If the arming of Iran with atomic weapons is not stopped now, then we will find ourselves in a Middle East that is completely armed with nuclear weapons. Atomic capacities could fall into the hands of terrorists. The effects of such a development would be extremely serious.

“One single atomic bomb will be the final stroke on Zionist history,” Akbar Rafsanjani, Iran’s fourth president, has said. “In contrast to that, the Islamic world numbers 1.5 billion people and dozens of countries.”

With full acknowledgement of the massive military assistance from the United States, Netanyahu emphasized that Washington’s strategy of sanctions and diplomacy has come dangerously close to failure.

“Without the credible threat of a military intervention, diplomacy and other strategies with which the nuclearization of Iran is to be stopped or delayed would in any case be ineffective,” explained Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin.

Only if the mullahs really believe that the U.S. will never allow Iran to develop atomic weapons would they be able to decide that the problems that are caused by sanctions are not offset by continued rabble-rousing propaganda against Israel.

Upon pressure from Israel, Obama finally ensured that if Israel refrains from an attack on Iran and if Iran crosses a certain red line, then the U.S. will actively react. In order for this policy to be effective, both Iran and Israel have to take this declaration seriously. No one disputes that an attack is to be considered only as the least of all means and even then, it would still be problematic. Israel would bear the brunt of an Iranian reprisal.

A stain on humanity

The most recent Tehran summit of 120 nations will go down in history as “a stain on humanity,” as Netanyahu said.

Five kings, 27 presidents, eight prime ministers and 50 foreign ministers took part in the summit in Tehran. India, the world’s most populous democracy, was present with 250 delegates, led by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Even U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon traveled to Tehran. In his speech there, he did in fact condemn “threats by any member state to destroy another or outrageous attempts to deny historical facts, such as the Holocaust.” But through his presence, he lent Iran legitimacy, instead of supporting the efforts at its isolation as an ostracized state whose regime serves as the starting point for global terrorism.

On the occasion of the inauguration of the conference, the top leader Ayatollah Khamenei once again delivered an anti-Semitic harangue in which he asked the world without restraint to “eliminate the cancerous tumor of Israel.”

Pressure on Israel

These events during the year that is drawing to a close have emphatically underscored the futility of Israel’s trust in the international community to be able to resolve potential conflicts.  Nothing illustrates this more clearly than the prominent role that Syria, Iran, Libya, Cuba and comparable dictatorships have taken on in the formulation of the policy of the U.N.’s so-called Human Rights Council.

We must resolve this New Year that Israel does not have to submit to pressure from those who have attempted to prevent it from taking the necessary steps to counter the threat to its survival. “We have learned from bitter experience that we have to rely upon ourselves,” explained Vice Prime Minister Moshe Ya’alon. “We have to prepare ourselves as if no one else will stand up for us.”

Muslim extremism: Historical lessons

September 20, 2012

Israel Hayom | Muslim extremism: Historical lessons.

Isi Leibler

There is an iron law in history. Appeasing xenophobic or totalitarian regimes invariably leads to disaster. Far from avoiding conflict, it emboldens extremists to escalate their demands to levels which make conflict inevitable.

Had then British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain stopped appeasing the Nazis, we might have avoided World War II, or at least been better prepared and possibly substantially reduced casualties.

Former U.S. President Ronald Reagan, besmirched by liberals as a warmonger and Cold War warrior, assumed a hardline position against Soviet expansionism which led to the collapse of the Evil Empire.

His philosophy, expressed in a speech he delivered back in October 1964 to launch his political career, resonates eerily with the current situation:

“There is no argument over the choice between peace and war, but there is one guaranteed way you can have peace — and you can have it in the next second — surrender.

“Every lesson in history tells us that the greatest risk lies in appeasement, and this is the specter our well-meaning liberal friends refuse to face — that the policy of accommodation is appeasement, and it gives no choice between peace and war, only between fight and surrender. If we continue to accommodate, continue to back and retreat, then eventually we have to face the final demand, the ultimatum. And what then? You and I know and do not believe that life is so dear and peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery. If nothing in life is worth dying for, when did this begin — just in the face of this enemy? Or should Moses have told the children of Israel to live in slavery under the pharaohs? …

“The martyrs of history were not fools, and our honored dead who gave their lives to stop the advance of the Nazis did not die in vain. Where then, is the road to peace? It is a simple answer. You and I have the courage to say to our enemies, ‘There is a price we will not pay,’ ‘There is a point beyond which they must not advance’ … We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on Earth, or we will sentence them to take the last step into a thousand years of darkness.”

Thirty-three years ago, when the Iranians invaded the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and kidnapped diplomats, President Jimmy Carter, instead of confronting the ayatollahs, “reached out” and sought to “engage” them. All he achieved was to embolden the radicals and intensify the humiliation of the U.S., ultimately costing him the presidency.

Now we witness President Barack Obama and his acolytes repeating the same mistakes. His first international initiative was to address a gathering in Cairo which included members of the then illegal Muslim Brotherhood. His message was that he was going to reverse the “harsh” approach of his predecessors by reaching out and engaging all levels of the Muslim world. To further placate the Islamists, he diplomatically distanced the U.S. from Israel.

Obama also refused to condemn the Iranian ayatollahs’ regime when it brutally suppressed the people during the Green Revolution. He sided with the “democratic” Islamic street mob against Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a long-standing U.S. ally, and then sought to “engage” with the ruling Muslim Brotherhood, which is emerging as a far more repressive regime than its authoritarian predecessor.

On the 11th anniversary of 9/11, on the pretext of outrage against an obscure and primitive anti-Muslim film which “insulted” the Prophet Muhammad, radical Muslims orchestrated a global campaign to rally mobs throughout the Islamic world to launch violent riots against U.S. embassies.

An assault on the U.S. Embassy in Libya resulted in the murder of the U.S. ambassador and diplomats while the replacement of the U.S. flag with the black flag of al-Qaida.

The initial U.S. response was to grovel and repeatedly condemn the anti-Muslim film (in which it had no involvement) rather than the riots, the slaughter of innocents and failure of governments to adequately protect foreign embassies.

This kowtowing to Muslim violence has precedents — the 1989 Salman Rushdie outrage, the riots over the Danish cartoons of Muhammad, the killings following allegations of U.S. troops desecrating Qurans, and similar incidents used to exploit the primitive Islamic street.

Despite the fact that the U.S. provides Egypt with $2 billion of aid annually, the police stood idly whilst Cairo’s U.S. Embassy was attacked by mobs chanting “we are all Osama.”

President Mohammed Morsi waited 24 hours before making a mealy-mouthed criticism (on Facebook!) of the violence. He also warned the world of future reprisals over “insults to the prophet,” and the ruling Muslim Brotherhood actually had the gall to call for more protests and demand a further U.S. apology.

Morsi will soon be hosted by Obama in Washington, where he will request that the U.S. president release Sheik Omar abd al-Rahman, a former ally of Osama bin Laden, who is serving a life sentence in prison for conspiring to blow up the World Trade Center.

By failing to adequately condemn Morsi’s tepid response to the embassy outrage or postpone his visit, Obama is signaling to Islamic radicals that by employing violence and killings, they will succeed in intimidating the infidels and impose on them their objective of criminalizing any criticism of Islam.

I do not support the U.S. First Amendment, which provides that, unless it engenders immediate violence, unlimited freedom of expression is sacrosanct. As a Jew whose people have suffered for 2000 years from vile defamations, obscene lies and blood libels, I believe that carefully drafted legislation should provide protection for groups or individuals against demonstrable lies which generate incitement to hatred and racism. This also applies in many European countries and neither undermines democracy nor meaningfully curtails freedom of expression.

It would be outrageous to be restricted by Shariah-validated blasphemy laws and denied the right to expose criminal behavior carried out in the name of Islam. We would be prohibited from condemning capital punishment for the conversion of Muslims to other faiths, stoning adulterers to death, employing female circumcision, cutting off limbs from thieves, public floggings, and more.

We would also be forbidden from exposing state-sponsored denial of freedom of religion, the desecration of churches and synagogues, and pogroms against Christians, Copts and Jews — all of which are today ongoing phenomena in many Islamic countries.

As Jews, we would be obliged to remain silent in the face of Islamic state-sponsored anti-Semitism, including TV dramas of lurid Jewish stereotypes employing the blood of Muslim children to bake matzot on Passover, and imams in mosques continuously depicting Jews as descendants of apes and pigs and urging the faithful to murder them.

We live today at a time when the forces of Islamic extremism are testing our resolve to stand up and resist their efforts to achieve global supremacy of their evil totalitarian ideology. Currently, the Obama administration’s policy of appeasement even prohibits use of the term “Islamic terrorism.”

If we continue burying our heads in the sand and minimizing the threat emanating from these barbaric reincarnations of the Dark Ages, we will be paving the way for our children to inherit a world which has reversed the great advances of Western civilization, especially the Judeo-Christian heritage.

The writer’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com

We are seeing an Islamic winter, not an “Arab Spring.”

September 20, 2012

Israel Hayom | Romney tells the truth.

Dror Eydar

This is an extremely fateful time for the West. So much is hanging in the balance that U.S. presidential candidate Mitt Romney and his team cannot afford to supply their opponents with damaging material. The liberal media and the American Left are masters at blowing up inconsequential remarks and putting them front and center, instead of addressing the fundamental problems: the faltering economy, rising unemployment and the deterioration of the U.S.’s status as leader of the free world.

After all, what did Romney actually say? He told the truth. He said there was no possible solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; that the Palestinians “have no interest” in peace with Israel; that they are “committed to the destruction and elimination of Israel.” He said further that “you hope for some degree of stability” (meaning: manage the conflict), but that he “recognizes that this is going to remain an unsolved problem.” Romney also added that the existence of a Palestinian state just a stone’s throw from Tel Aviv would pose a threat to Israel and fuel a process similar to what happened in Lebanon or in Gaza.

Is there anyone who is decent and realistic — and not a member of the peace cult — who doesn’t think the same thing? Ron Pundak, one of the architects of the Oslo disaster, continued to mumble fundamentalist verses about Israel’s duty during an interview on Wednesday, stating that there was “still a chance.” The Book of Proverbs teaches us: “Though you grind a fool in a mortar, grinding him like grain with a pestle, you will not remove his folly from him.” It is the same old Soviet method in which the revolutionary geniuses’ theory trumps the contradictory facts.

For the last 20 years we have been repeatedly ground with a pestle for being foolish enough to let gangs of terrorists into western Israel. These gangs never wanted peace; they only ever wanted to improve their firing vantage point. For 20 years we have been gathering evidence proving the Palestinians’ desire to destroy Israel, starting with anti-Semitic incitement in the Palestinian education system and the media, through terror attacks and incessant rocket salvos, to a rejection of any Israeli proposal to end the conflict.

Have we learned anything in these 20 years? Nothing. The same religious chants in the so-called peace camp. But the public has an accurate view of reality and understands that the Oslo accords were just a pipe dream that has come with a heavy price of blood and has undermined our standing in the world.

Everyone was asking this week how the authorities could possibly release a potential murderer — a Herzliya man who was never jailed for the suspected murder of his first wife, instead spending 14 years in a mental facility, and who now has allegedly murdered his second wife. Why is everyone so shocked? Didn’t we let gangs of proven murderers into our home, despite the warnings, and try to convince ourselves that they were peace lovers?

So what did Romney say that we didn’t already know? Were his remarks necessarily a “gaffe”? How about U.S. President Barack Obama’s reckless response to the murder of the American ambassador in Benghazi? Or the feeble response by left-wingers of the world to the bloody Muslim riots now underway? No, Romney told the bitter truth, indirectly suggesting that the current president has led the Americans, and the entire West, down a dangerous path. A path that has disintegrated the precarious world order and has borne political and military chaos, favorable to terror cells within the heart of Western civilization, and surrounding it.

Perhaps that is what the current American presidential election is all about: a battle between those who tell the truth and those who pretend that the Arab world is undergoing an “Arab Spring” rather than an Islamic winter, and that if we only take just one more step (what step, other than political suicide?) there will be peace and other “truths” straight out of the liberal media’s Ministry-of-Truth lexicon. The dangers currently facing the West are so severe that even the liberal mumbo jumbo can’t disguise them. Instead of talking, we have to face the dangers courageously. That starts with telling the truth.