Archive for September 2012

Romney slams Obama for not meeting with Netanyahu

September 14, 2012

Romney slams Obama for not meeting with Netanyahu | The Times of Israel.

Republican candidate calls president’s decision ‘confusing and troubling’

September 14, 2012, 6:00 pm 0
Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney meets with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, in July (photo credit: AP/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney meets with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, in July (photo credit: AP/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney criticized US President Barack Obama Friday for not planning to meet in person with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later this month, calling the decision “confusing and troubling.”

Romney said at a New York fundraiser that Israel is America’s “closest ally” and “best friend in the Middle East.” He urged Obama to meet with Netanyahu when the prime minister comes to the US for the United Nations General Assembly meetings.

Israel’s Ambassador to the United States, Michael Oren, told The Times of Israel on Thursday that no meeting could be arranged because of scheduling problems. ”I know it sounds mundane but the fact is these are two busy individuals and the prime minister was coming to New York between Jewish holidays (in between Yom Kippur and Succot) and the president couldn’t be in New York at that time.”

The White House this week denied claims by aides to the prime minister that Obama rejected Netanyahu’s request for a meeting with the president, saying no such request was made or rejected. An Israeli government official on Wednesday said that was not true. “We requested a meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York and also suggested that the prime minister could come to Washington,” for a meeting, a senior government official in Jerusalem told the German DPA news agency.

The White House said Obama and Netanyahu spoke for an hour Tuesday night and reaffirmed their countries’ commitment to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

At a Rosh Hashanah reception at his residence, on Wednesday, US Vice President Joe Biden said “there is no daylight” between the United States and Israel when it comes to Iran.

Netanyahu is expected to arrive in New York on September 27 to speak before the UN General Assembly. He is expected to use his UN speech to focus on the Iranian nuclear threat. “I am going to the UN General Assembly, to tell the nations of the world in a loud and clear voice the truth about the Iranian regime of terror, which constitutes the greatest threat to world peace,” he said in a statement two weeks ago.

Protests breach Yemen, Sudan US embassies; US sends troops

September 14, 2012

Protests breach Yemen, Sudan US embassies;… JPost – Middle East.

By REUTERS, JPOST.COM STAFF
09/14/2012 18:03
Fire burns at US embassy in Tunis as protesters breach wall, local police gunfire injure 5; gunfire heard at US embassy in Khartoum, protesters climb compound wall; Pentagon says deployment is response to recent events, preventative measure.

Police, protesters near US embassy in Yemen

Photo: Khaled Abdullah Ali Al Mahdi / Reuters

A platoon of US Marines from with the fleet anti-terrorism security team have been sent to Yemen to bolster security at the embassy and are now on the ground in Sanaa, the Pentagon said on Friday.

Elsewhere in the region, protesters against a film denigrating the Prophet Mohammad breached embassy walls in Tunisia and Sudan. Footage on Al Jazeera showed smoke coming from the area of the US Embassy in Tunis and protesters breaching the walls of the mission in Khartoum.

“This is partly a response to events over the past two days at our embassy in Yemen but it’s also in part a precautionary measure,” Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters.

Protesters in Tunisia breached the wall of the US Embassy in Tunis Friday afternoon, setting fire to trees and breaking windows inside the embassy. At least five protesters were wounded by police gunfire near the embassy. A large fire was burning inside the compound.

In Khartoum, Reuters witnesses reported hearing gunfire from the embassy as protesters climbed over the compound’s walls.

Sudanese demonstrators broke into the German embassy in Khartoum on Friday, raising an Islamic flag and setting the building on fire in a protest against a film that demeaned the Prophet Mohammad, witnesses said.

Police had earlier fired tear gas to try to disperse some 5,000 protesters who had ringed the German embassy and nearby British mission. But a Reuters witness said policemen just stood by when the crowd forced its way into Germany’s mission.

Demonstrators hoisted a black Islamic flag saying in white letters “there is no God but God and Mohammed is his prophet,” They smashed windows, cameras and furniture in the building and then started a fire, witnesses said.

Firefighters arrived to put out the flames.

Employees of Germany’s embassy were safe “for the moment,” Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in Berlin. He also told Khartoum’s envoy to Berlin that Sudan must protect diplomatic missions on its soil, a foreign ministry statement said.

Witnesses reported that the protesters were seen moving in cars and buses toward the US diplomatic mission in the city.

In Lebanon, one demonstrator was killed and two others wounded in clashes in the northern city of Tripoli Friday in protests against the film and the pope’s visit to the country.

A security source said the man was killed as protesters tried to storm a government building. Earlier, a US fast food restaurant was set alight. Twelve members of the security forces were wounded by stones thrown by protesters, the source said.

The protests coincided with Pope Benedict’s arrival in Lebanon for a three-day visit.

Lebanese security forces had earlier opened fire after protesters torched a fast food restaurant in Tripoli and threw rocks at a state building, shouting anti-American slogans and chanting against the pope’s visit to Lebanon.

A Reuters journalist at the scene saw hundreds of protesters dodging gunfire and teargas as they hurled stones at security forces in armoured vehicles. Protesters chanted “We don’t want the pope,” and “No more insults (to Islam)”.

Demonstrators furious at the film clashed with police near the US embassy in Cairo on Friday before a nationwide protest called by the Muslim Brotherhood which propelled Egypt’s Islamist president to power.

Protesters also clashed with police in Yemen, where one person died and 15 were injured on Thursday when the US embassy compound was stormed, and crowds gathered against the California-made film in Malaysia, Bangladesh and Iraq.

It was unclear why the two European embassies were singled out since the film, which has outraged Muslims, was made in the United States, and US diplomatic missions have been attacked by Islamist protesters in a number of Arab countries.

But Sudan has criticised Germany for allowing a protest last month by right-wing activists carrying a caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad and for Chancellor Angela Merkel giving an award in 2010 to a Danish cartoonist who depicted the Prophet in 2005, triggering demonstrations across the Islamic world.

Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has been under pressure from Islamists who feel the government has given up the religious values of his 1989 Islamist coup.

US President Barack Obama’s administration said it had nothing to do with the crudely made movie, which inflamed Muslims after it was posted with Arabic subtitles on the Internet, and condemned it as “disgusting and reprehensible”.

The film was blamed for an attack on the US consulate in Libya’s eastern city of Benghazi that killed the US ambassador and three other Americans on Tuesday, the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 al-Qaida attacks on the United States.

Iran’s president and mullahs are rooting for the Democrats.

September 14, 2012

Obama and Ahmadinejad – Forbes.com.

Amir Taheri, 10.26.08, 01:33 PM EST

 

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Is Barack Obama the “promised warrior” coming to help the Hidden Imam of Shiite Muslims conquer the world?

The question has made the rounds in Iran since last month, when a pro-government Web site published a Hadith (or tradition) from a Shiite text of the 17th century. The tradition comes from Bahar al-Anvar (meaning Oceans of Light) by Mullah Majlisi, a magnum opus in 132 volumes and the basis of modern Shiite Islam.

According to the tradition, Imam Ali Ibn Abi-Talib (the prophet’s cousin and son-in-law) prophesied that at the End of Times and just before the return of the Mahdi, the Ultimate Saviour, a “tall black man will assume the reins of government in the West.” Commanding “the strongest army on earth,” the new ruler in the West will carry “a clear sign” from the third imam, whose name was Hussein Ibn Ali. The tradition concludes: “Shiites should have no doubt that he is with us.”

In a curious coincidence Obama’s first and second names–Barack Hussein–mean “the blessing of Hussein” in Arabic and Persian. His family name, Obama, written in the Persian alphabet, reads O Ba Ma, which means “he is with us,” the magic formula in Majlisi’s tradition.

Mystical reasons aside, the Khomeinist establishment sees Obama’s rise as another sign of the West’s decline and the triumph of Islam. Obama’s promise to seek unconditional talks with the Islamic Republic is cited as a sign that the U.S. is ready to admit defeat. Obama’s position could mean abandoning three resolutions passed by the United Nations Security Council setting conditions that Iran should meet to avoid sanctions. Seeking unconditional talks with the Khomeinists also means an admission of moral equivalence between the U.S. and the Islamic Republic. It would imply an end to the description by the U.S. of the regime as a “systematic violator of human rights.”

Obama has abandoned claims by all U.S. administrations in the past 30 years that Iran is “a state sponsor of terrorism.” Instead, he uses the term “violent groups” to describe Iran-financed outfits such as Hamas and Hezbollah.

Obama has also promised to attend a summit of the Organization of the Islamic Conference within the first 100 days of his presidency. Such a move would please the mullahs, who have always demanded that Islam be treated differently, and that Muslim nations act as a bloc in dealings with Infidel nations.

Obama’s election would boost President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s chances of winning a second term next June. Ahmadinejad’s entourage claim that his “steadfastness in resisting the American Great Satan” was a factor in helping Obama defeat “hardliners” such as Hillary Clinton and, later, it hopes, John McCain.

“President Ahmadinejad has taught Americans a lesson,” says Hassan Abbasi, a “strategic adviser” to the Iranian president. “This is why they are now choosing someone who understands Iran’s power.” The Iranian leader’s entourage also point out that Obama copied his campaign slogan “Yes, We Can” from Ahmadinejad’s “We Can,” used four years ago.

A number of Khomeinist officials have indicated their preference for Obama over McCain, who is regarded as an “enemy of Islam.” A Foreign Ministry spokesman says Iran does not wish to dictate the choice of the Americans but finds Obama “a better choice for everyone.” Ali Larijani, Speaker of the Islamic Majlis, Iran’s ersatz parliament, has gone further by saying the Islamic Republic “prefers to see Barack Obama in the White House” next year.

Tehran’s penchant for Obama, reflected in the official media, increased when the Illinois senator chose Joseph Biden as his vice-presidential running mate. Biden was an early supporter of the Khomeinist revolution in 1978-1979 and, for the past 30 years, has been a consistent advocate of recognizing the Islamic Republic as a regional power. He has close ties with Khomeinist lobbyists in the U.S. and has always voted against sanctions on Iran.

Ahmadinejad has described the U.S. as a “sunset” (ofuli) power as opposed to Islam, which he says is a “sunrise” (toluee) power. Last summer, he inaugurated an international conference called World Without America–attended by anti-Americans from all over the world, including the U.S.

Seen from Tehran, Obama’s election would demoralize the U.S. armed forces by casting doubt on their victories in Iraq and Afghanistan, if not actually transforming them into defeat. American retreat from the Middle East under Obama would enable the Islamic Republic to pursue hegemony of the region. Tehran is especially interested in dominating Iraq, thus consolidating a new position that extends its power to the Mediterranean through Syria and Lebanon.

During the World Without America conference, several speakers speculated that Obama would show “understanding of Muslim grievances” with regard to Palestine. Ahmadinejad hopes to persuade a future President Obama to adopt the “Iranian solution for Palestine,” which aims at creating a single state in which Jews would quickly become a minority.

Judging by anecdotal evidence and the buzz among Iranian bloggers, while the ruling Khomeinists favor Obama, the mass of Iranians regard (and dislike) the Democrat candidate as an appeaser of the mullahs. Iran, along with Israel, is the only country in the Middle East where the United States remains popular. An Obama presidency, perceived as friendly to the oppressive regime in Tehran, may change that.

Amir Taheri is the author of 10 books on Iran, the Middle East and Islam. His new bookThe Persian Night: Iran Under the Khomeinist Revolutionwill be published by Encounter Books in November.

Anti-Islam Film Protests Spread Through Arab World

September 14, 2012

Anti-Islam Film Protests Spread Through Arab World.

* Egyptian demonstrators clash with police before mass protest

* Protests in Malaysia, Bangladesh, Yemen, expected in Sudan

* Western embassies tighten security

By Edmund Blair

CAIRO Sept 14 (Reuters) – Demonstrators, furious at a film they say insults the Prophet Mohammad, clashed with police near the U.S. embassy in Cairo on Friday before a nationwide protest called by the Muslim Brotherhood which propelled Egypt’s Islamist president to power.

Protesters also clashed with police in Yemen, where one person died and 15 were injured on Thursday when the U.S. embassy compound was stormed, and crowds gathered against the California-made film in Malaysia, Bangladesh and Iraq.

The film was blamed for an attack on the U.S. consulate in Libya’s eastern city of Benghazi that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans on Tuesday, the anniversary of the Sept 11, 2001 al Qaeda attacks on the United States.

In Nigeria, where radical Islamist sect Boko Haram has killed hundreds this year in an insurgency, the government put police on alert and stepped up security around foreign missions.

State-backed Islamist scholars in Sudan called a mass protest after Muslim prayers on Friday and an Islamist group threatened to attack the U.S. embassy in the capital Khartoum. The government also criticised Germany for tolerating criticism of the Prophet.

Security forces in Yemen fired warning shots and used water cannons against hundreds of protesters near the U.S. embassy in Sanaa. “Today is your last day, ambassador!”, and “America is the devil”, some placards read.

The embassy told U.S. citizens it expected more protests against the film. “The security situation remains fluid,” it said in a statement posted on its website.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said the video was “unspeakable” but should not be used as an excuse for violence. He also appealed to nations affected by the protests to strengthen protection of diplomatic missions.

U.S. and other Western embassies in other Muslim countries had tightened security, fearing anger at the film may prompt attacks on their compounds after the weekly worship.

The protests present U.S. President Barack Obama with a new foreign policy crisis less than two months before seeking re-election and tests Washington’s relations with democratic governments it helped to power across the Arab world.

Obama has vowed to bring those responsible for the Benghazi attack to justice, and the United States sent warships towards Libya which one official said was to give flexibility for any future action.

DELICATE BALANCE

Cairo protesters threw rocks at police, who threw them back and fired tear gas. A burnt-out car was overturned in the middle of the street leading to the fortified embassy from Tahrir Square, focus of protests that ushered in democracy.

Egypt has said the U.S. government, which has condemned the film, should not be blamed for it, but has also urged Washington to take legal action against those insulting religion.

President Mohamed Mursi, an Islamist who is Egypt’s first freely elected president, is having to strike a delicate balance, protecting the embassy of a major donor while also showing a robust response to a film that angered Islamists.

“What happened a few days ago was a pernicious attempt to insult the Prophet Mohammad. It is something we reject and Egypt stands against. We will not permit that these acts are carried out,” said Mursi, on a visit to Italy, adding:

“We cannot accept the killing of innocent people nor attacks on embassies. We must defend diplomats and tourists who come to visit our country. Killing people is forbidden…by our faith.”

The Muslim Brotherhood called for a peaceful nationwide protest on Friday. Mursi was the Brotherhood’s presidential candidate, although he formally resigned his membership on taking office saying he wanted to represent all Egyptians.

In Libya, authorities said they had made four arrests in the investigation into the attack that killed Ambassador Christopher Stevens. U.S. officials said it may have been planned in advance – possibly by an al Qaeda-linked group.

Pope Benedict arrived in Lebanon on Friday for a religiously sensitive visit, especially given anger over the film, which depicts the Prophet Mohammad in terms seen as blasphemous by Muslims, although the only protests in Lebanon against it were due to take place far from the capital.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Washington had nothing to do with the crudely made film posted on the Internet, which she called “disgusting and reprehensible”, and the Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff called a Christian pastor in Florida to ask him to withdraw his support for it.

About 300 people protested in Cairo, some waving flags with religious slogans. State media reported 224 injured since violence erupted on Wednesday night after a protest in which the embassy walls were scaled on Tuesday.

“Before the police, we were attacked by Obama, and his government, and the Coptic Christians living abroad,” shouted one protester, wearing a traditional robe and beard favoured by some ultraorthodox Muslims, as he pointed at the police cordon.

Egypt’s Coptic Orthodox church has condemned what it said were Copts abroad who had financed the film.

GERMANY CRITICISED

Sudan’s Foreign Ministry also criticised Germany for allowing a protest last month by right-wing activists carrying caricatures of the Prophet and for Chancellor Angela Merkel giving an award in 2010 to a Danish cartoonist who depicted the Prophet in 2005 triggering protests across the Islamic world.

President Omar Hassan al-Bashir is under pressure from Islamists who feel the government has given up the religious values of his 1989 Islamist coup.

The official body of Sudan’s Islamic scholars called for the faithful to defend the Prophet peacefully, but at a meeting of Islamists, some leaders said they would march on the German and U.S. embassies and demanded the ambassadors be expelled.

“Tomorrow we will all get out to defend Prophet Mohammad … We will do this peacefully but with strength,” Salah el-Din Awad, general secretary of the scholars’ body in Khartoum state told reporters after meeting government officials on Thursday.

The Foreign Ministry said in its statement: “The German chancellor unfortunately welcomed this offence to Islam in a clear violation of all meanings of religious co-existence and tolerance between religions.”

Sudan used to host prominent militants in the 1990s, such as Osama bin Laden, but the government has sought to distance itself from radicals to improve ties with the West.

Protesters in Afghanistan set fire to an effigy of Obama and burned a U.S. flag after Friday prayers in the eastern province of Nangarhar.

Directing their anger against the U.S. pastor who supported the film, tribal leaders in province also agreed to put a $100,000 bounty on his head.

Deputy PM Dan Meridor says no need to set red line for Iran

September 14, 2012

Israel Hayom | Deputy PM Dan Meridor says no need to set red line for Iran.

Dan Meridor tells Army Radio “You always consider other options, for when everything else is exhausted. And I think that, for now, we have to continue with the pressure” •  Meridor calls for international sanctions against Tehran to be intensified.

Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Deputy Prime Minister Dan Meridor appeared to break with the prime minister’s position on red lines for Iran.

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Photo credit: Reuters

Don’t wait for a miracle

September 14, 2012

Israel Hayom | Don’t wait for a miracle.

A pre-emptive strike, by definition, is a response to an imminent act of aggression. When it comes to existential issues such as Iran, no one wants to go to war, but can we afford to pay the price of inaction and hope for outside help at the last minute.

Amos Regev
Members of soldiers’ families cheer as a British aircraft carrier returns to a British harbor after participating in the 1982 Falklands War.

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Photo credit: Getty Images

The following story, all about waiting for a miracle from heaven, has been going around American churches and television talk shows for quite some time. It comes from folklore, and has many variations, but here is the gist: A religious, God fearing man once lived on a river bank in a two-story house. He prayed to God every day, but unfortunately, one day a terrible flood struck the area and the river began to overflow.

The man was standing in the yard and suddenly, his neighbor’s truck came barreling up his driveway. “The flood is dangerous,” the neighbor said. “Come with me and let’s get out of here.”

“No, thanks,” said the man. “I’m not worried. I have been praying to God, and I have faith that he will help me. I’m staying home.”

The water began to rise and flooded the yard, so the man climbed to the higher floor of his house. A rescue team arrived by boat. “Jump in,” said a rescue worker. “It is dangerous out here. Let’s get out of here.”

“No, thanks,” the man said. “I’m not worried. I have been praying to God, and I have faith that he will help me.” So the man stayed.

The water rose higher and the man climbed to the roof of his house. Suddenly he heard a loud noise. He looked up and saw a helicopter flying overhead, with a rope ladder dangling in front of him. “Climb on up,” said the pilot. “It is dangerous, let’s get out of here.”

“No, thanks,” said the man. “I have been praying to God, and I have faith that he will help me.”

When he finally drowned in the flood, the man arrived at heaven’s gate, and met the Lord. “What have you done to me?” he said bitterly. “I had faith. I prayed. And this is how you repay me?”

God wrung his hands in frustration. “I sent you a truck, I sent you a boat, I sent you a helicopter — what else could I have possibly done for you?”

There are many versions of this story making the rounds, but they all teach the same lesson: don’t wait for a miracle. Open your eyes, recognize danger and identify opportunities. Sometimes you even get a choice, and you had better make the right choice. Take for example the threat of Iranian nuclear weapons. The global intelligence community has been on to Iran’s maneuvers for years, as it trained scientists, acquired equipment, built facilities and developed centrifuges; as they obtained Pakistani know-how and developed long-range missiles with the help of the North Koreans; as they built a reactor and added more and more layers of underground protection. And the Iranians are talkers, they don’t hide their intentions: to develop, to use, to destroy. Us. The “Zionist cancer.”

At first, the International Atomic Energy Agency, under the leadership of a powerful Egyptian with a vested interest, tried to cover up Iran’s nuclear ambitions. But in recent years, even the IAEA has begun to call Iran’s program what it is: a military program aimed at developing nuclear warheads and long-range missiles capable of carrying those warheads. Two weeks ago, the report issued by the IAEA on Iran’s nuclear program already looked like it was written by concerned Israelis. Indeed, the report concluded, Iran is gunning for a bomb, doubling its efforts, and not giving a damn about anyone.

What will the world do? What will our friend and ally, the U.S., do? After countless declarations and promises and vows and oaths, that same week, the U.S. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the renowned general Martin Dempsey, made it very clear: Nothing. It is not that the man — a four-star general — can’t do something. He simply does not want to. That is what he said. “I don’t want to be complicit if they [Israel] choose to do it [attack Iran],” he said, borrowing a term usually used in reference to criminals.

Let’s go back to the man standing on the roof of his house as the flood water engulfs him. Well, what is he waiting for? What exactly isn’t clear? Maybe he’ll finally understand that he already got his miracle, in that he was forewarned, and that it turned out he wasn’t going to get any more help. Now it is obvious what will happen if he continues to kneel on the roof of his house.

Before the Democratic National Convention last week, there were still Israelis hoping for a miracle that would prompt U.S. President Barack Obama to finally set “clear red lines” for Iran in an attempt to secure much needed votes. There was hope that he would finally make a commitment to take military action against Iran. That certainly didn’t happen.

And even worse: One after another, the senior officials of his administration not only refrained from putting the military option on the table, they expressed their objection to red lines. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton explicitly said that the U.S. would not set any deadlines for Iran. Following the angry response from Jerusalem, the secretary of state clarified: red lines are not helpful. There won’t be any.

And what are we doing, in the meantime? In one of the more embarrassing, strange and irresponsible — and quite frankly, unprecedented — incidents in recent memory, senior officials in Israel are chatting away and revealing secrets. (Last Wednesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu adjourned a high-level briefing on Iran when information from the briefing was leaked). This is not public discourse, it is simply irresponsible. It is a reckless campaign, whose masterminds are rolling their eyes “for the good of the country” but in fact doing the exact opposite: They are exposing our secrets, pointing out our weaknesses and playing with the public’s minds.

No one wants to go to war, especially not one we’ve started. If an enemy attacks, the way an enemy attacked us in 1948 or in 1973, there is no choice. You protect yourself. But if an enemy poses a threat, prepares weapons, arms its forces, deploys its soldiers, readies its missiles, but refrains from firing the first shot — then you are in an entirely different realm. Military jargon makes a distinction between a preventive strike — launching war out of fear that the balance of military capabilities will shift in the enemy’s favor — and a pre-emptive strike — launching a war based on the belief that the adversary is about to attack, or is already preparing to attack.

The decision whether to launch a preventive or pre-emptive strike is a sensitive, problematic, and fateful one. Respected American military strategist Bernard Brodie, one of the pioneers in his field, writes in his book “Strategy in the Missile Age” (published in 1959 and considered one of the mainstays of the field) that in any democratic society, public opinion will always be against launching a war. Therefore, the decision is solely the leader’s to make. He writes that the faith, inner conviction, desire and decisiveness of a president are the only things that decide between war and peace. He explains that the decision to go to war requires an extraordinary amount of faith and decisiveness, and, that since the military generals will most likely go along with whatever the president decides, the decision is made entirely alone, in utter loneliness.

This is called leadership. Just like David Ben-Gurion displayed in 1948 when he declared the establishment of a Jewish state, knowing full well that such a declaration would inevitably elicit an immediate attack by Arab armies. He again displayed leadership when he established the Dimona nuclear project, contrary to all the expert opinions, and again when he led Israel into a war with Egypt — a preventive war — in 1956, a year after then-Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser signed a massive arms deal with Czechoslovakia.

The 1956 Sinai Campaign didn’t eliminate the Nasser threat, it only postponed it by 11 years, to 1967. But during those 11 years, Israel turned from a small, weak nation into a country with a real chance of being able to protect itself.

Menachem Begin’s decision to bomb the nuclear reactor in Iraq has been talked about to death lately, but this was another example of a decision made by a leader, contrary to expert advice, based on conviction and decisiveness. Leadership.

When talking about an attack against the Iranian threat, there are several difficult questions that need to be answered:

The Iranian bomb: Is Iran building a nuclear bomb? Is an Iranian nuclear bomb an existential threat to Israel? Are we to assume that an Islamist Iran — extreme and crazy — will use such a bomb against us?

The answer, unfortunately, is yes on all counts. After more than 20 years of covert work, straw companies, equipment acquisitions, construction of underground facilities, purchase of Pakistani know-how and missile development with North Korean assistance — Iran has become a nuclear threshold state. All the puzzle pieces are there. From the moment the command is handed down, the military-grade uranium and assembly of the warhead are a matter of just a short time.

From the latest IAEA report to the Non-Aligned Movement summit in Tehran, from Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s rhetoric to the ever-growing heaps of enriched uranium, all this leads to the conclusion that Israel will not be able to live in the New Middle East under the threat of an Iranian bomb. As well-known commentator Charles Krauthammer wrote in The Washington Post recently, comparisons to Cold War-era mutual deterrence are irrelevant. Communism, with all of its failures, never preached jihadist suicide as a means of expediting the coming of the messiah. The ruling cult in Iran proclaims that this is precisely the course of action that will bring back the Mahdi (the prophesied redeemer of Islam).

The American ally: After years of diplomacy and half-hearted sanctions and endless talks about talks and futile negotiations, it turns out that the Americans, or at least the current administration, is not willing to attack. No one knows who will sit in the White House after the upcoming election, but in the meantime, American inaction is affording the Iranians more and more time to achieve their goals.

The New York Times reported about a plan to hold a Western naval drill in the Persian Gulf that would bring together minesweepers from 25 countries. In the past, there was gunboat diplomacy, meant to scare the indigenous population with overhead cannon fire. Then there were displays by aircraft carriers. But minesweepers? That will hardly make an impression on the Iranians.

Obama has his own problems on the path to the prize: another four years in the White House. If you saw the crowd of Democrats booing while embarrassed party leaders tried to restore the clause referring to Jerusalem as the capital of Israel to the party platform, after it was intentionally omitted, you can’t possibly delude yourself. These are not people who would cheer if the U.S. attacked Iran. This is Obama’s crowd, and their votes mean more to him than we do.

In the meantime, he has more pressing problems: The Arab Spring illusion was shattered in Benghazi on Tuesday when Islamists murdered the American ambassador to Libya. Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood leadership is looking more problematic than ever. Will he send the American army into Iran?

The Israeli homefront: We all remember that unlucky brigadier-general who, before the first Gulf War, declared with great confidence that there was no way Saddam Hussein would fire missiles at Israel. He was proved wrong within a week. Iran will try to retaliate, but it would be wise to investigate Tehran’s capabilities. Iran possesses several hundred missiles capable of reaching Israel, all fitted with conventional warheads. In simple terms: missiles like the ones Saddam Hussein had. Some of them will be destroyed before they are launched, in weapons depots or silos. Let’s say, for argument’s sake, that Iran launches 100 missiles at Israel (Saddam fired about 40). Israel’s missile interceptor, the Arrow, has a success rate of more than 90 percent, but let’s say it intercepts 80%. Still, only a relatively small number of missiles will actually hit Israeli targets. The bigger questions are whether Hezbollah will begin firing missiles, like it did during the Second Lebanon War, and what Hamas will do.

The cautious statements issued by both Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah and Hamas leader in Gaza Ismail Haniyeh indicate that the answer is inconclusive. If an Israeli attack on Iran is successful, and serves to prove Israel’s capabilities, the leaders in Beirut and Gaza will have to think long and hard before they enter into a war with us. There will always be global jihad organizations, al-Qaida and the Salafists, but they can’t fire thousands of rockets. Simply put: The apocalyptic forecasts of what’s in store for the Israeli homefront seem exaggerated. They will be true only when Iran has a nuclear weapon and uses it.

Will a strike succeed?: In 1982, Argentine forces invaded the Falkland Islands and conquered them with ease. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher decided not to give up without a fight, and ordered a military operation 13,000 kilometers (7,900 miles) away. The British fleet had dwindled by then, the air force had done away with several bomber squadrons and the ground forces were battling cutbacks. American navy experts, who wanted to help their British ally and fellow NATO member, surveyed the satellite images, made lists, pored over maps, and concluded: militarily impossible.

The rest is history: A small British force did the impossible. They won back the Falkland Islands, and the Argentine military junta collapsed. Today, 30 years on, the Argentines still claim ownership of the Malvinas. The British offensive may not have eliminated those claims, but it certainly bought at least 30 years worth of time.

Two historical situations are never identical. Even if the calculations and the statistics suggest that the damage to the Israeli homefront in the wake of an Iran strike will be limited, no one wants to be the one whose home, or person, was hit by an Iranian missile or a Hamas rocket. There are casualties in every war. We have a long, painful list of casualties in Israel’s numerous wars and terror attacks. Other countries have annual remembrance days for the soldiers who fell in battle and the civilians who died when cities were bombed. But when a country’s very existence is on the line, when the flood threatens all its citizens, and when the warning bells are so loud, real and immediate, the decision-making moment rapidly approaches.

French thinker Raymond Aron, another nuclear age pioneer posed the question: When the conspiracies of a neighboring country are revealed, is the intended victim expected to sit idly by? That is the question every Israeli must ask him or herself. Unfortunately, the Jewish people have a long, difficult history with precisely this question. Praying for miracles is always good, but national security policy, and national existence, can’t rely on miracles. Ask that man from the flood

Something is amiss in the United States of Obama

September 14, 2012

Israel Hayom | Something is amiss in the United States of Obama.

On Thursday, several top American journalists — some of whom work for The New Yorker — brutally attacked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for supposedly aiding Republican candidate Mitt Romney to defeat President Barack Obama. Reaching such a conclusion is not illogical, and Netanyahu should remember how Ezer Weizman got Israel in trouble by endorsing then Democratic candidate Jimmy Carter. Everyone should tread lightly on the matter. But I do not think Netanyahu’s motive is to support Romney, as much as it stems from a deep concern over Iran’s nuclear armament.

Netanyahu has not been able to carry on a conversation without mentioning Iran for years. It would make more sense if he was accused of being obsessed with Iran, but accusing him of acting for the wrong reasons? Impossible. However the current drama unfolds, the relationship between the U.S. and Israel will not break down. This is because, as the Hebrew saying goes, any dispute that stems from a mutual understanding of one another should be allowed to be carried out.

Working on the assumption that Israel and the U.S. are indeed allies, the present argument raises a lot of anger. Those who listen to Netanyahu, Defense Minister Ehud Barack, Atomic Energy Minister Dan Meridor and Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe Ya’alon will notice different shades in their positions regarding the U.S.’s stance on Iran. Netanyahu is convinced that the subject is so important it has to be publicly debated with Obama, knowing that such a debate comes at a price. Barack, and as of recently Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, prefer conversing in private to conceal any disagreement that could escalate into a serious rift in the public arena.

It is clear that two months before elections, Obama is not going to sit idly by. Though the American media does not serve as Washington’s press release agency, both the White House and the Pentagon brief the press on a regular basis, and recent headlines in the U.S. media have slammed Netanyahu. This is the nature of any conflict between democratic countries.

However, the force with which Obama has approached the conflict with Netanyahu is a bit astounding. At the end of the day, he can see what is taking place in Egypt and Libya, and even at the Islamic movement demonstrations in Tel Aviv. He is witnessing a growing hostility toward the U.S., encouraged by al-Qaida at present and I expect, by Iran and Hezbollah during future rounds. Yet Obama only promises to examine, in a cool and neutral manner, the Muslim Brotherhood government in Egypt, and to meet President Mohammed Morsi, as if nothing happened at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo.

There is something amiss with Obama’s current attitude. This is especially true from an Israeli perspective, but also from every conceivable American perspective. It just doesn’t add up: Both the U.S. and Israel have a clearly defined stance against Iran’s nuclear development project, and yet here they are, quarreling in the city square. The numerous cases of mob violence in cities throughout the Arab world go against the very essence of democracy — an ideal held sacred by Americans. And yet the White House is determined to work with the Muslim Brotherhood. That is quite the double standard.

An existential threat to the West

September 14, 2012

Israel Hayom | An existential threat to the West.

( I don’t think I have ever AGREED MORE with an article on this site. – JW )

Dror Eydar

Faced with graphic photos of the tortured dead body of the late U.S. ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens, being dragged through the streets of Benghazi by a mob, one can’t help but think that, together with the ambassador’s body, the country at the helm of the free world was also dragged through the mud and humiliated. The attack on the American Consulate in Benghazi this week was yet another horrendous chord in the symphony of terror that is offending the ears of the West. The West, for its part, is shutting its ears and closing its eyes and avoiding the recognition that, for quite some time now, it has been under existential attack.

Let’s stop pretending that these are just “radical Islamists” or “extremist Salafists” or any other restrictive, politically correct definition meant to disarm the West’s defenses, instead of giving it the tools to deal with the menacing Islamic wave that is threatening to destroy Western civilization from within. The Western world shouldn’t really care that some idiot made a movie that desecrates Islam (titled “Innocence of Muslims”). The Internet is full of movies and texts and lectures by Muslims that desecrate Judaism, Christianity and other faiths. Freedom of expression and freedom of thought are the foundations of Western life. The madness of the Arab masses is their problem, but an attack on an American Embassy as a result of an individual’s exercising of his freedom of expression — that is an attack on Western values.

The leader of the free world issued a flaccid reaction, demonstrating the entire West’s deep seated problem. What Obama said was, “While the United States rejects efforts to denigrate the religious beliefs of others, we must all unequivocally oppose the kind of senseless violence that took the lives of these public servants.” Take note: First he condemns the film, providing the killers with justification for their actions. The Arabs interpret this to mean that the U.S. leader is taking responsibility for the deed. Second, he describes the barbaric lynching of his emissaries as “senseless violence” that “took lives.” God help us all in the wake of this Chamberlain-style response.

It would be wise to look into what kind of herbs former New York Times editor Bill Keller was on when he described the White House response as “containing two strong (!) messages” and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s response as “either a complete misreading of a dangerous situation, or a classic act of cynicism.” A classic case of the pot calling the kettle black.

David Remnick’s slander-filled piece in The New Yorker this week also demonstrated the total collapse of the American Left in the face of threats not only to Israel but to the entire West, including the U.S.

In 1972, Harold Glidden wrote an important article characterizing Arab culture as a “shame-oriented society,” where honor is a top priority — not the law, not freedom, and not any other nonsense flaccid liberals like to use to mask situations that don’t jive with their theories. Like other disillusioned intellectuals, Glidden was crucified by the political correctness brigade, but the recent events of the so-called Arab Spring prove his argument.

The West needs to adopt a zero tolerance policy for these types of violent acts. To paraphrase King David, who knew a thing or two about vanquishing enemies, we should say that when dealing with villains, one must be a villain. The West, too, has its pride, and if someone humiliates us, we must respond with force, not issue lukewarm reactions that only serve to embarrass the West tenfold in the eyes of that same someone. Do we need another wake-up call?

Muslim protest reaches Israel; riots in Jerusalem

September 14, 2012

Muslim protest reaches Israel; riots in Jerusalem – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Violent riots break out in Jerusalem while hundreds rally against anti-Islam film in Akko. Protests continue to wreak havoc across Arab world; rioters storm German embassy in Sudan

Ynet reporters

Published: 09.14.12, 14:47 / Israel News

Hundreds of worshippers leaving the al-Aqsa Mosque after Friday prayers hurled stones at police officers and rioted near Jerusalem’s Damascus Gate.

The demonstrators, protesting against the anti-Islam film that sparked riots across the Middle East, started marching towards the US Consulate but were blocked by police officers who used shock grenades against them. Several officers were lightly injured by stones. Some protesters were detained.

Hundreds in Akko also rallied after prayers at the al-Jazer Mosque calling for the struggle against all those trying to hurt Islam to continue. Akko Police chief Victor Buskila said that order is being maintained.

“The protesters are crying ‘Allahu Akbar’ and pro-Muhammad calls, not swear words or slander,” one bystander said. “It’s not against the State.”

The film “Innocence of Muslims” ignited riots across the Muslim world on Tuesday which led to the killing of US Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens and three embassy staff. Friday saw the riots spread beyond the Middle East as dozens in Bangladesh, Pakistan, the Philippines and Indonesia rallied after prayers. Protests were also held in Egypt, Yemen, Kuwait, Iran, Qatar and Sudan.
שוטרים ופרשים מנעו מהמפגינים להגיע לקונסוליה האמריקנית במזרח ירושלים (צילום: נועם (דבול) דביר)

Police in east Jerusalem (Photo: Noam Dabul Dvir)

Media in Jordan reported that hundreds of Salafi followers were marching towards the US Embassy in Amman. The protesters cried out “Listen Obama, We’re all Osama here” and burned US flags. Jordan has arranged for reinforced security around the embassy.

In Lebanon, one demonstrator was killed and two others were wounded in clashes with security forces in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli in Islamist protests over the offensive film and against the pope’s visit to Lebanon.
זעם ושנאה גם בעזה (צילום: רויטרס)

Gaza riots (Photo: Reuters)

A security source said the man was killed as protesters tried to storm a government building. Earlier Hundreds of protesters torched a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant in the city, witnesses said, chanting against the pope’s visit and shouting anti-American slogans. Twelve members of the security forces were wounded by stones thrown by protesters, the source said.

Meanwhile, thousands of Palestinians held a protest march in Gaza heading towards the Legislative Council building.

In Sudan, demonstrators stormed the German embassy in Khartoum and raised an Islamic flag above the mission during a protest against the US-made film.
מפגינים בחרטום, היום (צילום: AFP)

Protests in Khartoum  (Photo: AFP)

A Reuters reporter saw protesters enter the embassy building in central Khartoum, smash windows and start a fire in front of the main gate. It was not immediately clear why European missions were being targeted.

Police had earlier tried to disperse some 5,000 protesters who had surrounded the German and nearby British embassy by firing volleys of teargas but no officers could be seen at the front gate after the storming.
שורפים דגלי ישראל וארה"ב בבנגלדש (צילם: רויטרס)

Burning flags in Bangladesh (Photo: Reuters)

In Bangladesh, 10,000 people protested in capital Dhaka, burned US and Israeli flags and held their shoes up.

Legislators in Pakistan passed a bill that condemns the film and called on the US to take appropriate measures.
דגלים שחורים בג'קרטה (צילם: AFP)

Black flags in Jakarta (Photo: AFP)

In Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim country, worshippers demonstrated outside the US Embassy in Jakarta and raised signs reading “Prophet Muhammad is the symbol of Islam.”

Thousands are also demonstrating in Tehran and calling “Death to the United States and Death of Israel”, Iranian TV reported.
אלפים הפגינו באיראן וקראו "מוות לישראל", "מוות לאמריקה"

Iranians chant ‘Death to Israel’ in Tehran

In Cairo, Al-Jazeera reported that citizens were placing small barriers preventing the protesters from reaching the US embassy. According to reports, few heeded the call to take part in the “Million-man march.”

It was later reported by Britain’s The Guardian that the Muslim Brotherhood canceled the protests in Egypt. Earlier, President Mohammed Morsi said that it’s up to Muslims as part of their Islamic duty to protect embassies and foreign diplomats who are guests in the country.

Noam (Dabul) Dvir, Roi Kais, Hassan Shaalan, Dudi Cohen, Maor Buchnik and Reuters contributed to this report

Sudan: Protesters set fire to German embassy over film

September 14, 2012

Sudan: Protesters set fire to German embas… JPost – Middle East.

By REUTERS, JPOST.COM STAFF
09/14/2012 16:25
One killed in clashes outside government building in Lebanon’s Tripoli in protests over anti-Islam film, the pope’s visit; clashes continue in Cairo, Yemen; German FM: Embassy staff are safe “for the moment.”

Police, protesters near US embassy in Yemen

Photo: Khaled Abdullah Ali Al Mahdi / Reuters

Sudanese demonstrators broke into the German embassy in Khartoum on Friday, raising an Islamic flag and setting the building on fire in a protest against a film that demeaned the Prophet Mohammad, witnesses said.

Police had earlier fired tear gas to try to disperse some 5,000 protesters who had ringed the German embassy and nearby British mission. But a Reuters witness said policemen just stood by when the crowd forced its way into Germany’s mission.

Demonstrators hoisted a black Islamic flag saying in white letters “there is no God but God and Mohammed is his prophet,” They smashed windows, cameras and furniture in the building and then started a fire, witnesses said.

Firefighters arrived to put out the flames.

Employees of Germany’s embassy were safe “for the moment,” Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in Berlin. He also told Khartoum’s envoy to Berlin that Sudan must protect diplomatic missions on its soil, a foreign ministry statement said.

Witnesses reported that the protesters were seen moving in cars and buses toward the US diplomatic mission in the city.

In Lebanon, one demonstrator was killed and two others wounded in clashes in the northern city of Tripoli Friday in protests against the film and the pope’s visit to the country.

A security source said the man was killed as protesters tried to storm a government building. Earlier, a US fast food restaurant was set alight. Twelve members of the security forces were wounded by stones thrown by protesters, the source said.

The protests coincided with Pope Benedict’s arrival in Lebanon for a three-day visit.

Lebanese security forces had earlier opened fire after protesters torched a fast food restaurant in Tripoli and threw rocks at a state building, shouting anti-American slogans and chanting against the pope’s visit to Lebanon.

A Reuters journalist at the scene saw hundreds of protesters dodging gunfire and teargas as they hurled stones at security forces in armoured vehicles. Protesters chanted “We don’t want the pope,” and “No more insults (to Islam)”.

Demonstrators furious at the film clashed with police near the US embassy in Cairo on Friday before a nationwide protest called by the Muslim Brotherhood which propelled Egypt’s Islamist president to power.

Protesters also clashed with police in Yemen, where one person died and 15 were injured on Thursday when the US embassy compound was stormed, and crowds gathered against the California-made film in Malaysia, Bangladesh and Iraq.

It was unclear why the two European embassies were singled out since the film, which has outraged Muslims, was made in the United States, and US diplomatic missions have been attacked by Islamist protesters in a number of Arab countries.

But Sudan has criticised Germany for allowing a protest last month by right-wing activists carrying a caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad and for Chancellor Angela Merkel giving an award in 2010 to a Danish cartoonist who depicted the Prophet in 2005, triggering demonstrations across the Islamic world.

Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has been under pressure from Islamists who feel the government has given up the religious values of his 1989 Islamist coup.

US President Barack Obama’s administration said it had nothing to do with the crudely made movie, which inflamed Muslims after it was posted with Arabic subtitles on the Internet, and condemned it as “disgusting and reprehensible”.

The film was blamed for an attack on the US consulate in Libya’s eastern city of Benghazi that killed the US ambassador and three other Americans on Tuesday, the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 al-Qaida attacks on the United States.