Archive for October 4, 2012

The YouTube Video as a Dress Rehearsal

October 4, 2012

The YouTube Video as a Dress Rehearsal | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner.com.

 

 

President Barack Obama and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan walking along the Colonnade at the White House. Photo: wiki commons.

The Obama administration’s handling of the organized assaults on American Embassies and personnel on September 11, 2012 – and later the other organized protests across the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan and Pakistan – is a window into its possible reaction should Israel conclude that the cost of facing a nuclear-armed Iran outweighs the cost of a military strike against Iranian facilities.

It was a “dress rehearsal,” so to speak, and frightening at many levels – not least of which is that there appears to be no understanding in the White House that there are those who need the United States as their enemy. President Obama said “the tide of war is receding,” but our withdrawal from Iraq and impending withdrawal from Afghanistan are understood by Iran, the Taliban, al Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood and various Salafist groups as unilateral retreats in the fact of their continuing expansion. This is not only true of Islamic organizations and governments; Vladimir Putin threw out USAID last week, undoing yet another part of the administration’s “reset” with Russia, and Hugo Chavez keeps “U.S. imperialism” on his teleprompter for every occasion.

The administration pedaled as hard and fast as it could from association with the junky YouTube that it claimed set off the massive demonstrations across the Muslim world.

  • “Let me state very clearly and I hope it is obvious that the United States government had nothing to do with this video,” Secretary Clinton said. “To us, to me personally, this video is disgusting and reprehensible. It appears to have a deeply cynical purpose, to denigrate a great religion and to provoke rage.”
  • In case she wasn’t clear, she added, “The United States deplores any intentional effort to denigrate the religious beliefs of others.”
  • President Obama weighed in. “The United States has been a nation that respects all faiths… We reject all efforts to denigrate the religious beliefs of others.”
  • A “hateful video” triggered a “spontaneous protest … outside of our consulate in Benghazi,” said Amb. Susan Rice. Rice and Jay Carney insisted that neither U.S. policy nor President Obama was the focus of the outburst.
  • The FBI rousted an American citizen in the middle of the night and took from his home for “questioning,” about a “parole violation,” walking him right by a line of journalists camped outside.
  • The administration asked YouTube to consider whether the clip “violates the terms of use” so it could be removed.
  • The administration spent more than $70,000 to run ads in Pakistan denouncing the video and disclaiming responsibility.

There couldn’t have been a stronger and more concerted effort to ask people not to blame President Obama & Company – time, money and relegation of the First (and maybe the Fifth) Amendment to an afterthought.

It didn’t work. A protester in Malaysia on Friday held a sign that read, “Obama, our patience has its limit. Don’t blame us if your citizens die. Blame yourself. U started it!” In Egypt they raised the al Qaeda flag and chanted, “Obama, there are still a billion Osamas.”

Compare that to Gen. Dempsey’s comment – unquestionably pre-approved by the White House, since he’s still got his stars – that the U.S. didn’t want to be seen as “complicit” in any Israeli strike on Iran. His remark follows a series of high-profile efforts by the Administration to distance itself from Israel in the international arena even beyond administration-sanctioned statements that military action against Iran would be useless or counterproductive or premature.

  • Bowing to Turkish wishes, the administration allowed Israel to be barred from the multilateral air-rescue exercise Anatolian Eagle. Then Israel was publicly slapped by both Secretary of Defense Panetta and NATO Secretary General Rasmussen when Turkey said Iran-related intelligence coming from NATO installations inside Turkey could not be shared with Israel.
  • The U.S. held a Special Operations exercise, Eager Lion 2012, with 19 Arab and Muslim countries in May, just after canceling its vaunted Austere Challenge exercise with Israel. Maj. Gen. Ken Tovo, head of the U.S. Special Operations Forces, told reporters covering Eager Lion 2012 in Amman, “The message that I want to send through this exercise is that we have developed the right partners throughout the region and across the world … insuring that we have the ability to … meet challenges that are coming to our nations.”
  • He was seconded by Rasmussen, who simply waved away Israel’s absence from the NATO meeting in Chicago, even as he acknowledged that 13 other NATO “partner” nations would attend because, “In today’s world security challenges know no borders, and no country or alliance can deal with most of them on their own.”
  • Austere Challenge was slated again and then reduced in size and scope.
  • Israel is not a member of the Obama Administration’s Global Counterterrorism Forum – which has 29 members, 11 of whom are members of the organization of the Islamic Conference. How’s that for distancing? Israel can’t be a member of a counterterrorism forum because it won’t agree that attacks on Israeli citizens constitute terrorism.

The administration claims that bilateral U.S.-Israel relations are just peachy, but abandoning Israel in the international arena strongly enhances the efforts of the delegitimizers and boycotters. And to no end.

Radical Arab and Iranian good will cannot be bought by administration efforts to put distance between itself and Israel or by trying to steer their anger toward a single American exercising his First Amendment rights with a video camera. They are at war with the United States – with this president, with the last two and with the next one (whether in 2013 or 2017). Only by acknowledging the depth of the predicament and by standing with our friends, including Israel, can we hope to defeat our foes. Hiding or sidling away won’t help.

Our enemies are smarter than that.

Khamenei on protests: Iran will never bow to pressure

October 4, 2012

Khamenei on protests: Iran will never bow to pressure – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Amid economic protests in Tehran, supreme leader says West pressuring Iran because it is ‘not bowing to the hegemonic system.’ Top commander: We can destroy Israel in 24 hours

Dudi Cohen

Published: 10.03.12, 19:28 / Israel News

The Iranian regime “has not bowed and will never surrender to pressure, and this has made the enemy furious,” Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Wednesday amid clashes between riot police and demonstrators in Tehran over the collapse of the country’s currency, which has lost a third of its value against the dollar in a week.

According to the Fars news agency, Khamenei told a group of “young Iranian elites” in the capital that “during the last 33 years, Iran has been faced with a wide range of political, security, military and economic pressure and sanctions, but the Iranian nation has not only neutralized these pressures through resistance, it has grown more powerful through resistance.”

The Iranian website Press TV quoted the supreme leader as saying that “the Iranian nation has never bowed to pressure and never will, and this is the cause of enemy’s fury.”

He told the “young gifted talents” that “the cause of all these pressures is the Iranian nation’s independent position and not bowing to the hegemonic system.”

Protests in Tehran

 

Meanwhile, Khamenei’s representative in the elite unit of the Revolutionary Guards said it would take Iran 24 hours to destroy Israel should it launch an attack on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear installations.

“If a war with Israel does happen, it wouldn’t be a long one, and it would benefit the entire Muslim world,” Hojjat al-Eslam Ali Shirazi said in an interview with Iran’s Jahan News.
העימותים בטהרן, היום (צילום: AFP)

Clashes in Tehran, Wednesday (Photo: AFP)

During Wednesday’s clashes near Tehran’s main bazaar, police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators and merchants angered by the plunge in the value of the Iranian rial. The protesters yelled out slogans against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, saying his economic policies had fuelled the economic crisis.

Protesters further criticized the Iranian government for aiding the Syrian regime at the expense of dealing with the economic situation in Iran.

The rial has been plunging to record lows against the US dollar almost daily as Western economic sanctions imposed over Iran’s disputed nuclear program have slashed Iran’s export earnings from oil, undermining the central bank’s ability to support the currency.

The protesters further criticized the Iranian government for aiding the Syrian regime at the expense of dealing with the economic situation in Iran.

News agencies contributed to the report

CNN poll: ‘Obama got spanked tonight’

October 4, 2012

CNN poll: ‘Obama got spanked tonight’ | The Times of Israel.

Romney earns high marks in first presidential debate

October 4, 2012, 5:35 am 2
Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and his wife Ann wave toward the audience after the first presidential debate at the University of Denver, Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2012, in Denver. (photo credit: Charlie Neibergall/AP)

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and his wife Ann wave toward the audience after the first presidential debate at the University of Denver, Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2012, in Denver. (photo credit: Charlie Neibergall/AP)

A CNN poll of registered voters showed a decisive victory for Republican candidate Mitt Romney in the presidential election debate at the University in Denver on Wednesday night, as 67% of respondents saying that Romney won while only 25% said President Barack Obama won.

The poll showed a clear preference for Romney in several specific fields, as well, including which candidate respondents felt would handle the economy better, which one would handle health care better, and which one would handle taxes better.

“What this means,” said one CNN analyst, “is that a lot of the president’s supporters are saying that he got spanked tonight.”

NATO backs Turkey in emergency summit on Syrian ‘threat’

October 4, 2012

NATO backs Turkey in emergency summit on Syrian ‘threat’.

NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen agreed with Turkey hold an urgent military bloc summit on in response to Syrian attacks that killed five Turkish people. (Reuters)

NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen agreed with Turkey hold an urgent military bloc summit on in response to Syrian attacks that killed five Turkish people. (Reuters)

NATO in an emergency meeting on Wednesday backed Turkey in its military response to Syrian cross border shelling that killed five Turkish nationals and called on Syria to abide by international law.

NATO ambassadors met under the alliance’s article 4, for consultations when a member state feels its territorial integrity is under threat.

“The Alliance continues to stand by Turkey and demands the immediate cessation of such aggressive acts against an Ally and urges the Syrian regime to end flagrant violations of international law,” a statement said after the meeting was called at Ankara’s request.

Turkey on Wednesday bombed Syrian targets in response to Syrian mortar shelling, the prime minister’s office said.

“Our armed forces in the border region immediately retaliated against this heinous attack… by shelling the targets spotted by radar,” Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s office said in a statement.

Syria said it is looking into the origin of the deadly attacks.

“The concerned parties are currently studying the origin of the fire against Turkey,” Information Omran Zoabi said.
said in a statement reported by state television.

“Syria offers it sincere condolences to the families of the victims and to our friends the Turkish people,” he added.

The United States condemned the “depraved” Syrian shelling and said it was monitoring the tense situation closely.

“This is yet another example of the depraved behavior of the Syrian regime, and why it must go,” Pentagon spokesman George Little said.

“We regret the loss of life in Turkey, a strong ally, and continue to monitor the situation closely.”

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton voiced American outrage at Syria’s shelling of Turkish territories and described the situation as “very dangerous.”

“We are outraged that the Syrians have been shooting across the border. We are very regretful about the loss of life on the Turkish side,” Clinton told reporters after Syrian shells hit the Turkish town of Akcakale.

She added it was a “very, very dangerous” situation, and would be talking later with Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoglu about “what the best way forward would be.”

“This also comes down to a regime that is causing untold suffering to its own people solely driven by their desire to stay in power,” Clinton said after talks in the State Department with Kazakh Foreign Minister Yerlan Idrisov.

The United States has long insisted Syrian President Bashar al-Assad should step down and end a 19-month rebellion that has claimed some 30,000 lives.

Damascus is “aided and abetted by nations like Iran that are standing firmly by the Assad regime regardless of the loss of life, the damage that is happening both inside Syria and now increasingly across Syria’s borders with their neighbors,” Clinton added.

All “responsible nations need to band together” to persuade the Assad regime to agree to a ceasefire and begin a political transition, she said.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said earlier that the cross-border shelling was a clear violation of Turkey’s sovereignty.