Archive for December 2012

Netanyahu: Hamas has no intention of compromising with us

December 9, 2012

Netanyahu: Hamas has no intention… JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
12/09/2012 13:52
PM echoes Peres in saying Khaled Mashaal’s speech in Gaza reveals the Islamist movement’s true colors as a terror group that advocates killing, slams Abbas for failing to condemn terror group’s calls to destroy Israel.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu

Photo: Pool / Haim Zach

Hamas has no intention of compromising with Israel, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Sunday at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting. Echoing comments made by President Shimon Peres earlier in the day, Netanyahu said Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal’s comments in Gaza over the weekend exposed “our enemies’ true face” once again.

“They have no intention of compromising with us; they want to destroy the state. They will fail, of course; in the annals of the history of our people, we – the Jewish People – have overcome such enemies,” he continued.

Mashaal on Saturday reiterated his movement’s refusal to “give up one inch of the land of Palestine.” Mashaal, who arrived in the Gaza Strip for the first time ever on Friday, said: “Palestine from the river to the sea, from the north to the south, is our land and we will never give up one inch or any part of it.” He added, “Jihad and armed resistance are the right and real way to liberate Palestine and restore our rights.”

Speaking at the Globes business conference earlier Sunday, Peres said the Islamist movement’s true face is that of a terror organization which advocates killing, does not compromise and wants to keep Gaza’s poor in a state of poverty.

Netanyahu noted that PA President Mahmoud Abbas did not condemn Mashaal’s remarks advocating the destruction of Israel, “just as previously he did not condemn the missiles that were fired at Israel.” The prime minister expressed regret that Abbas strives for unity “with the same Hamas that is supported by Iran.”

Here Netanyahu’s comments contrasted with the president’s who stressed that Abbas represented the only Palestinian alternative, whom he described as a relatively moderate leader Israel must negotiate with. Peres said Abbas opposes terror and has chosen the path of negotiations.

Addressing the government’s decision to approve building in the E1 area, Peres said the move will only be significant if Israel decides to annex the area. He added that the latest move was just another decision, similar to previous government decisions to build in the area.

Netanyahu’s spokesman, Mark Regev, also slammed Hamas Saturday night, saying, “What we heard from the Hamas leadership in Gaza today should serve as a wake-up call to anyone who has illusions about the extremist and murderous character of Hamas.”

“They unequivocally restated a maximalist and terrorist position that sees as its goal the total destruction of the Jewish state and fundamentally rejects any compromise,” Regev said.

“I would ask the Palestinian leadership in Ramallah, who talks about making a political coalition with these extremists: What does this say about your own stated commitment to peace and reconciliation?”

Meanwhile, Kadima chairman Shaul Mofaz said Mashaal deserved to die and should be the subject of a targeted killing, as should all of Hamas’s leadership.

“Mashaal in Gaza is the result of our diplomatic failure in Operation Pillar of Defense,” Mofaz said.

“Netanyahu and Liberman agreed to this. Hamas is raising its head and we must remove it. If Israel continues weakening [Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas] and avoiding dealing with Hamas, we will see Mashaal in Judea and Samaria in a few years.”

Tovah Lazaroff and Lahav Harkov contributed to this report.

‘Israeli special forces tracking chemical weapons inside Syria’

December 9, 2012

Israel Hayom | ‘Israeli special forces tracking chemical weapons inside Syria’.

According to Sunday Times, troops on the ground to monitor Syria’s non-conventional armaments and sabotage their development • U.N. to reinforce units stationed on Golan Heights after Syrian rebels reportedly capture large areas near Israeli border.

Shlomi Diaz, Daniel Siryoti, Eli Leon, News Agencies and Israel Hayom Staff
An Israeli soldier sits atop his tank overlooking the Syrian village of Bariqa, close the Israel-Syria border on the Golan Heights.

|

Photo credit: AP

Egypt F-16 fighter jets fly low over Cairo amid calls for protest

December 9, 2012

Egypt F-16 fighter jets fly low over Cairo amid calls for protest.

A riot police walks in front of a mural of Egypt's President Mohamed Mursi on the wall of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 8, 2012. (Reuters)

A riot police walks in front of a mural of Egypt’s President Mohamed Mursi on the wall of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 8, 2012. (Reuters)

Egyptian F-16 fighter jets made low passes over the center of Cairo on Sunday in a rare maneuver by the air force over the capital amid high political tension, AFP news agency reported.

At the end of October, jets made similar passes as part of a surprise military exercise.

On Saturday, the army released a statement on political unrest that has killed seven people in the capital, urging supporters and opponents of Islamist President Mohammed Mursi to open talks to stop Egypt descending “into a dark tunnel with disastrous results”.

“That is something we will not allow,” it said.

The Egyptian opposition considered Sunday whether to maintain mass protests against Mursi after the Islamist leader announced a key concession in the political crisis dividing the country.

A Mursi aide said the president had agreed “from this moment” to give up expanded powers he assumed last month that gave him immunity from judicial oversight.

However, in a meeting with other political figures on Saturday, Mursi said he would still press ahead with a Dec. 15 referendum on a controversial new constitution drafted by a panel dominated by his Islamist allies.

Calls for protests started late on Saturday from opponents and supporters of Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, shortly after the president’s decision to annul a controversial decree.

“We call on Egyptian youth to hold peaceful demonstrations and sit-ins in all of Egypt’s squares until our demands are met,” the National Salvation Front said, in a statement read to media by one of its leaders, Mohamed Abu al-Ghar.

“The will of the people is turning toward a general strike,” Abu al-Ghar added.

The Front’s statement called on Mursi to disband organized militias, to investigate clashes between rival camps that left seven dead and hundreds injured in Cairo on Wednesday and to denounce violence between protester camps.

It reiterated its two core demands that Mursi annul a Nov. 22 decree putting himself beyond judicial review and that he cancel a Dec. 15 referendum on the new constitution.

The Front said it “maintains its offer for serious and objective dialogue” conditioned on those demands.

The Muslim Brotherhood, on the other hand, said it will organize human chains on Sunday to back up the dialogue’s results in front of its main headquarters in Mokattam, Cairo, according to Al Arabiya.

The protest calls follow Mursi’s decision on Saturday to annul a constitutional declaration he issued last month expanding his powers and that puts his decisions beyond judicial review.

However, the effects of that declaration would stand and a referendum on a draft constitution would still go ahead as planned on Dec.15, said Islamist politician Selim al-Awa.

“The constitutional decree is annulled from this moment,” al-Awa said, as he relayed the substance of a meeting between Mursi and political leaders.

The president was legally bound under the constitution to maintain that date and had no choice, al-Awa explained.

If the draft constitution were rejected, said al-Awa, a new one would be drawn up by officials elected by the people, rather than ones chosen by parliament as for the current text.

The draft constitution has been criticized for its potential to weaken human rights and the rights of women, and out of fear it would usher in Islamic interpretation of laws.

The two issues — the decree and the referendum — were at the heart of the anti-Mursi protests that turned violent this week with clashes on Wednesday that killed seven people and wounded hundreds.

The opposition rebuffed Mursi’s dialogue offer earlier on Thursday as long as those two decisions stood.

In Cairo’s Tahrir Square, a focal point for hardcore protesters, news of the annulled decree sparked no festivities or exuberance.

Gamal Fahmi, member of the Egyptian Journalists Syndicate, told Al Arabiya that those who took part in talk with Mursi represented themselves only, adding that the new constitutional declaration did not address the “fundamental” problem, which he said was in the assembly that was tasked to draft the constitution.

The April 6 Movement dismissed Mursi’s move, saying that he failed to address the constitution.

Tareq al-Khouli, a spokesman for the movement, told Al Arabiya,“ We need to draft the constitution which does not represent the Egyptians as a whole, but only the president and his group.”

What comes first – a Syrian chemical attack or a US-led military showdown?

December 9, 2012

What comes first – a Syrian chemical attack or a US-led military showdown?.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis December 9, 2012, 12:03 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Anti-contamination gear for chemical warfare
Anti-contamination gear for chemical warfare

For the past week, US officials have kept up a flow of leaks to the media suggesting that Syrian President Bashar Assad was on the verge of ordering his army to unleash chemical weapons. The details built up as the week went by, starting with the detection of “unusual movements” of Syrian chemical weapons units, advancing to reports that the Syrians were “mixing precursor chemicals” for the nerve gas sarin and on Thursday, Dec. 6, that bombs had been made ready with sarin gas for loading onto Syrian Air Force fighter-bombers when Assad gave the word.

Saturday, Dec. 8, British Foreign Secretary William Hague reported evidence from intelligence sources that Syria is preparing to use chemical weapons. British intelligence sources added that Syria’s chemical weapons are concentrated at five air bases and are being closely watched. They said contingency plans have been drawn up if they show signs of being readied to be loaded and used as weapons.
Who are the close watchers and what are the contingency plans?
In its last issue, DEBKA-Net-Weeklys military sources disclosed that US, Israeli, Jordanian and Turkish special forces are spread out on the ground in Syria, armed with special gear for combating chemical arms. They are close enough to count the convoys carrying canisters, shells or bombs loaded with poison gas and their reports are supplemented by orbiting US military surveillance satellites and drones able to pinpoint the position of the chemical munitions at any given moment.
debkafile also reported Saturday that the rebels had seized a “chlorine factor” at Al Safir, the cover name for Bashar Assad’s largest chemical store and base, where also he keeps Syrian Scud D missiles armed with chemical warheads ready to fire at Israel.
The strange thing about these tactics is this: If “US officials” – military and intelligence – were able to keep track step by step of the movements of Syria’s poisonous weapons, believe that sooner or later Assad will use them and have issued grave warnings, why didn’t they take preventive action in good time?
Yet to date, President Barack Obama has held back from ordering an attack on the Syrian army’s chemical units – just as the Syrian ruler is abstaining from issuing the final “go” order to use those weapons.
It seems that neither wants to go first.
We seem to be witnessing a high-stake poker game between Washington and Damascus over a deck of chemical cards, each waiting to see who blinks first.
If the Americans attack, Assad will feel he is justified in releasing his poisonous gas over Turkey, Jordan and Israel.
But if Assad loses his nerve and lets loose with chemical weapons inside or outside Syria, the Americans will come crashing down on him with the full might of the US air, sea and marine forces standing by off the Syrian coast, along with Turkish, Israeli and Jordanian strikes against targets in Syria.

Tuesday Dec. 6, Syrian chemical weapons units positioned near the capital, Damascus were first sighted by military and intelligence personnel heading north on the road to Aleppo armed with shells loaded with nerve agents – sarin and possibly XV. Three days later, the movements continued to destinations unknown.

Intelligence experts are speculating that these convoys may be decoys for distracting attention from still- undiscovered poison gas caches. Large-scale Western naval and marines forces are therefore on elevated readiness for responding to any unexpected Syrian moves.

Those experts offer two theories about the destination of the chemicals weapons. One is that they are not destined for any of the battle fronts against the rebels, but for the Alawite Mountains; Assad is getting ready to retreat from Damascus and barricade himself in his mountain stronghold accompanied by the forces still loyal to him.  Another theory is that from the Allawite Mts. near the coast, the Syrian ruler was planning to hit American and Turkish soldiers with chemical weapons as they came ashore.

PA forces in the West Bank reportedly cease activity against Hamas

December 9, 2012

PA forces in the West Bank reportedly cease activity against Hamas | The Times of Israel.

Move is part of Palestinian reconciliation, with prospects of Fatah-Hamas unity now seen as ‘better than ever’; IDF prepares for ‘new era’ of violence

December 9, 2012, 9:00 am 2
Palestinian police in 2011 (photo credit: Mohammed Othman/Flash90)

Palestinian police in 2011 (photo credit: Mohammed Othman/Flash90)

Palestinian Authority security forces in the West Bank have quietly stopped operations against Hamas in recent weeks, an Israeli newspaper reported on Sunday, as a top Fatah figure in the West Bank said prospects for Fatah-Hamas unity were “better than ever.”

The unofficial move to halt PA West Bank security operations against Hamas, which is expected to have a wide impact on the security situation in the area, is reportedly part of a reconciliation effort between Palestinian organizations in the wake of Operation Pillar of Defense and the UN vote to grant “Palestine” nonmember observer state status.

Palestinian Authority security forces are widely credited as playing a major role in maintaining the relative calm in the West Bank over recent years. The agreement to lay off Hamas, as reported by Maariv, coupled with an increase in security incidents in the West Bank since the Israeli-Hamas ceasefire of nearly three weeks ago and the political changes in the region, has reportedly caused the IDF and Shin Bet to plan for a “new era” in the West Bank, and for the possibility of growing violence and intifada-like activity.

Last week saw several violent incidents in the West Bank. On Friday, two IDF soldiers and a border policeman were injured lightly, one sustaining a broken hand, when a group of about 40 Palestinian protesters bombarded them with stones.

Also on Friday, Palestinians threw stones at several Israeli vehicles traveling on Route 60, the West Bank’s main artery, and some 200 protesters gathered and hurled stones at IDF forces southwest of Bethlehem.

And on Thursday, a group of IDF soldiers on patrol in Hebron clashed with some 250 Palestinians after trying to arrest a Palestinian policeman.

According to Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel’s Shin Bet security service and military intelligence reported a spike in terror alerts, suggesting West Bank based terror organizations are planning to carry out additional attacks.

According to the report, 130 attacks or attempted attacks were launched from the West Bank in November alone.

Last week, the Finance Ministry announced that Israel will withhold NIS 450 million in tax revenues that were to be transferred to the Palestinian Authority, and use the money to offset a NIS 800 million debt to Israel instead. Some of that money was earmarked by the PA for security forces’ salaries.

Fatah, the organization which controls Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and Hamas, based in Gaza, have been bitter rivals since the 2006 electoral victories of Hamas, and the subsequent armed takeover of Gaza by Hamas forces. The two factions signed a reconciliation agreement in 2011 but it has yet to be implemented.

As part of the deal with the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, Hamas has reportedly agreed to release Fatah prisoners held in Gaza jails.

Israel, the US and European Union list Hamas as a terrorist organization. Israel is now holding indirect talks with the group as a result of the ceasefire arrangement that followed the November military escalation.

Ziad Abu Ziad, a veteran senior Fatah official, told Army Radio on Sunday morning that the prospects for Fatah-Hamas reconciliation were “better than ever.” He said a reconciliation meeting in Cairo between PA President Mahmoud Abbas and other Fatah and Hamas leaders had only been delayed because of the instability in Egypt.

Abu Ziad also claimed that Hamas political leader Khaled Mashaal’s declaration in Gaza on Saturday that Hamas would never recognize Israel and would pursue the armed struggle until all of Palestine was liberated “did not represent” Mashaal’s genuine positions, and that his inflammatory rhetoric “was designed to satisfy public sentiment” in Gaza. In practice, Abu Ziad claimed, Mashaal was prepared to accept a Palestinian state along the pre-1967 lines.

“From the sea to the river, from north to south, we will not give up any part of Palestine — it is our country, our right and our homeland,” said the Hamas chief. “We are all one,” he added, referring to Palestinians residing in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and inside Israel. “We are all united in the way of resistance.”

David Ignatius: Mohamed Morsi, our man in Cairo – The Washington Post

December 9, 2012

David Ignatius: Mohamed Morsi, our man in Cairo – The Washington Post.

By , Published: December 8

How did Washington become the best friend of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, even as President Mohamed Morsi was asserting dictatorial powers and his followers were beating up secular liberals in the streets of Cairo? It’s a question many Arabs ask these days, and it deserves an answer.

Morsi and his Brotherhood followers are on a power trip after decades of isolation and persecution. You could see that newfound status when Morsi visited the United Nations in September and even more so during the diplomacy that led to last month’s cease-fire in Gaza, brokered by Morsi and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The Brotherhood leaders had gone from outcasts to superstars, and they were basking in the attention.

And let’s be honest: The Obama administration has been Morsi’s main enabler. U.S. officials have worked closely with him on economic development and regional diplomacy. Visiting Washington last week, Morsi’s top aides were touting their boss’s close contacts with President Obama and describing phone calls between the two leaders that led to the Gaza cease-fire.

Morsi’s unlikely role as a peacemaker is the upside of the “cosmic wager” Obama has made on the Muslim Brotherhood. It illustrates why the administration was wise to keep its channels open over the past year of post-revolutionary jockeying in Egypt.

But power corrupts, and this is as true with the Muslim Brotherhood as with any other group that suddenly finds itself in the driver’s seat after decades of ostracism. Probably thinking he had America’s backing, Morsi overreached on Nov. 22 by declaring that his presidential decrees were not subject to judicial review. His followers claim that he was trying to protect Egypt’s revolution from judges appointed by Hosni Mubarak. But that rationale has worn thin as members of Morsi’s government resigned in protest, thousands of demonstrators took the streets and, ominously, Muslim Brotherhood supporters began counterattacking with rocks, clubs and metal pipes.

Through this upheaval, the Obama administration has been oddly restrained. After the power grab, State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland said: “We call for calm and encourage all parties to work together and call for all Egyptians to resolve their differences over these important issues peacefully and through democratic dialogue.” Not exactly a thundering denunciation.

“You need to explain to me why the U.S. reaction to Morsi’s behavior is so muted,” one Arab official wrote me. “So a Muslim Brotherhood leader becomes president of Egypt. He then swoops in with the most daring usurping of presidential powers since the Pharaohs, enough to make Mubarak look like a minor-league autocrat in training by comparison, and the only response the . . . [Obama administration] can put out is [Nuland’s statement].” This official wondered whether the United States had lost its moral and political bearings in its enthusiasm to find new friends.

The administration’s rejoinder is that this isn’t about America. Egyptians and other Arabs are writing their history now, and they will have to live with the consequences. Moreover, the last thing secular protesters need is an American embrace. That’s surely true, but it’s crazy for Washington to appear to take sides against those who want a liberal, tolerant Egypt and for those who favor sharia. Somehow, that’s where the administration has ended up.

For a lesson in the dangers of falling in love with your client, look at Iraq: U.S. officials, starting with President George W. Bush and Gen. David Petraeus, kept lauding Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, despite warnings from many Iraqis that he was a conspiratorial politician who would end up siding with Iran. This misplaced affection continued into the Obama administration: Even after the Iraqi people in their wisdom voted in 2010 to dump Maliki, the United States helped him cobble together enough support to remain in power. Arab observers are still scratching their heads trying to understand that one.

When assessing the turbulent events in the Arab world, we should remind ourselves that we’re witnessing a revolution that may take decades to produce a stable outcome. With the outcome so hard to predict, it’s a mistake to make big bets on any particular player. The U.S. role should be to support the broad movement for change and economic development and to keep lines open to whatever democratic governments emerge.

America will help the Arab world through this turmoil if it states clearly that U.S. policy is guided by its interests and values, not by transient alliances and friendships. If Morsi wants to be treated as a democratic leader, he will have to act like one.

davidignatius@washpost.com

David Ignatius: Mohamed Morsi, our man in Cairo – The Washington Post

December 9, 2012

David Ignatius: Mohamed Morsi, our man in Cairo – The Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — How did Washington become the best friend of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, even as President Mohammed Morsi was asserting dictatorial powers and his followers were beating up secular liberals in the streets of Cairo? It’s a question many Arabs are asking these days, and it deserves an answer.

Morsi and his Brotherhood followers are on a power trip after decades of isolation and persecution. You could see that newfound status when Morsi visited the United Nations in September, and even more in the diplomacy that led to last month’s cease-fire in Gaza, brokered by Morsi and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The Brotherhood leaders had gone from outcasts to superstars, and they were basking in the attention.

And let’s be honest: The Obama administration has been Morsi’s main enabler.

American officials have worked closely with him on economic development and regional diplomacy. Visiting Washington a few days ago, Morsi’s top aides were touting their boss’s close contacts with President Barack Obama, and describing phone calls between the two leaders that led to the Gaza cease-fire.

Morsi’s unlikely role as a peacemaker is the upside of the “cosmic wager” Obama has made on the Muslim Brotherhood. It illustrates why the administration was wise to keep its channels open over the past year of postrevolutionary jockeying in Egypt.

But power corrupts, and this is as true with the Muslim Brotherhood as with any other group that suddenly finds itself in the driver’s seat after decades of ostracism. Probably thinking he had America’s backing, Morsi overreached on Nov. 22 by declaring that his presidential decrees were not subject to judicial review. His followers claim he was trying to protect Egypt’s revolution from judges appointed by Hosni Mubarak. But that rationale has worn thin as members of Morsi’s government resigned in protest, thousands of demonstrators took the streets and, ominously, Muslim Brotherhood supporters began counterattacking with rocks, clubs and metal pipes.

Through this upheaval, the Obama administration has been oddly restrained. After the power grab, State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland said: “We call for calm and encourage all parties to work together and call for all Egyptians to resolve their differences over these important issues peacefully and through democratic dialogue.” Not exactly a thundering denunciation.

One Arab official wrote to me, asking why the “U.S. reaction to Morsi’s behavior is so muted.”

“So a Muslim Brotherhood leader becomes president of Egypt,” the official wrote. “He then swoops in with the most daring usurping of presidential powers since the Pharaohs, enough to make Mubarak look like a minor league autocrat in training by comparison, and the only response the (U.S. government) can put out” is Nuland’s statement. This official wondered if the U.S. had lost its moral and political bearings in its enthusiasm to find new friends.

The administration’s rejoinder is that this isn’t about America. Egyptians and other Arabs are writing their history now, and they will have to live with the consequences. Moreover, the last thing secular protesters need is an American embrace. That’s surely true, but it’s crazy for America to appear to take sides against those who want a liberal, tolerant Egypt and for those who favor Shariah law. Somehow, that’s where the Obama administration has ended up.

For a lesson in the dangers of falling in love with your client, look at Iraq: American officials, starting with President George W. Bush and Gen. David Petraeus, kept lauding Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, despite warnings from many Iraqis that he was a conspiratorial politician who would end up siding with Iran. This misplaced affection continued into the Obama administration: Even after the Iraqi people in their wisdom voted in 2010 to dump Maliki, the U.S. helped him cobble together enough support to remain in power. Arab observers are still scratching their heads trying to understand that one.

When assessing the turbulent events in the Arab world, we should remind ourselves that we’re witnessing a revolution that may take decades to run its course. With the outcome so hard to predict, it’s a mistake to make big bets on any particular player. The U.S. role should be to support the broad movement for change and economic development, and to keep lines open to whatever democratic governments emerge.

America will help the Arab world through this turmoil if it states clearly that U.S. policy is guided by its interests and values, not by transient alliances and friendships. If Morsi wants to be treated as a democratic leader, he will have to act like one.

Contact David Ignatius of the Washington Post Writers Group at davidignatius@washpost.com.

Egypt’s military warns of ‘disastrous consequences’ if crisis not resolved through dialogue

December 8, 2012

Egypt’s military warns of ‘disastrous consequences’ if crisis not resolved through dialogue | The Times of Israel.

Only one opposition politician attends negotiations with Morsi on Saturday; main opposition leaders decline to attend, and many leave midway

December 8, 2012, 6:20 pm Updated: December 8, 2012, 6:24 pm 2
An Egyptian protester holds up a battle of oil and a bag of sugar as he chants anti-Muslim Brotherhood and Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi slogans outside the presidential palace under a banner with a defaced picture of president Mohammed Morsi and Arabic that reads 'the people want to bring down the regime,' in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

An Egyptian protester holds up a battle of oil and a bag of sugar as he chants anti-Muslim Brotherhood and Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi slogans outside the presidential palace under a banner with a defaced picture of president Mohammed Morsi and Arabic that reads ‘the people want to bring down the regime,’ in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s military warned on Saturday of “disastrous consequences” if the crisis that sent tens of thousands of protesters back into the streets is not resolved, signaling the army’s return to an increasingly polarized and violent political scene.

The military said serious dialogue is the “best and only” way to overcome the nation’s deepening conflict over a disputed draft constitution hurriedly adopted by Islamist allies of President Mohammed Morsi, and recent decrees granting himself near-absolute powers.

“Anything other than that (dialogue) will force us into a dark tunnel with disastrous consequences; something which we won’t allow,” the statement said. It was read by an unnamed military official on state television.

Morsi had called for a dialogue Saturday to discuss how to resolve the disagreement as his vice president suggested that a Dec. 15 constitutional referendum could be delayed.

But the main opposition leaders declined to attend, saying talks can only take place if Morsi rescinds his decrees and cancels the referendum.

Most of the public figures at the meeting were Islamists, with the exception of liberal opposition politician Ayman Nour.

And at least three members left the talks soon after they started. Ahmed Mahran, a lawyer who was among them, said: “It was a one-way conversation,” accusing presidential advisers of refusing to listen.

Egypt’s once all-powerful military, which temporarily took over governing the country after the revolution that ousted autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak, was largely sidelined weeks after Morsi was elected.

Weeks after he was sworn in, Morsi ordered the two top generals to retire and gave himself legislative powers that the military had assumed in the absence of a parliament, which had been dissolved by the courts.

The current crisis was sparked Nov. 22 when Morsi granted himself authority free of judicial oversight, alleging that judges loyal to the former regime were threatening the constitutional drafting process and the transition to democracy.

But the move touched off a new wave of opposition and unprecedented clashes between the president’s Islamist supporters led by the Muslim Brotherhood and protesters accusing him of becoming a new strongman.

At least six civilians have been killed and several offices of the president’s Muslim Brotherhood torched in the unrest. The two sides also have staged a number of sit-ins around state institutions, including the presidential palace where some of the most violent clashes occurred.

With the increasing polarization and the specter of internal fighting looming, the military began reasserting itself, with soldiers sealing off the presidential palace with tanks and barbed wire. Its warning on Saturday marked the first time the military returned to the political fray.

Failing to reach a consensus, “is in the interest of neither side. The nation as a whole will pay the price,” the military said, adding it “realizes its national responsibility in protecting the nation’s higher interests” and state institutions.

Images of the military’s elite Republican Guards unit surrounding the area around the palace also showed one of the most high-profile troop deployment since the army handed over power to Morsi on June 30.

A sit-in by Morsi’s opponents around the palace continued Saturday, with protesters setting up roadblocks with tanks behind them amid reports that the president’s supporters planned rival protests. By midday Saturday, TV footage showed the military setting up a new wall of cement blocks around the palace.

The president has insisted his decrees were meant to protect the country’s transition to democracy from former regime figures trying to derail it.

Muslim Brotherhood leaders, meanwhile, made their highest profile appearances since the dispute began. The group’s top leader Mohammed Badie and his powerful deputy Khairat el-Shater held press conferences Saturday alleging there was a conspiracy to topple Morsi but presenting little proof.

Badie said the opposition has accused his group of violence but is instead responsible for the attacks on Muslim Brotherhood offices. He also claimed that most of those killed in last week’s violence at the Palace and other governorates were members of the Brotherhood.

“These are crimes, not opposition or disagreement in opinion,” he said.

Meanwhile, with a dialogue largely boycotted by the main opposition players, members of a so-called Alliance of Islamists forces warned it will take all measures to protect “legitimacy” and the president, in comments signaling continued tension.

“We will not allow the revolution to be stolen again,” el-Shater said. “Our main job is to support legitimacy and stop the plot to bring down the president.”

Mostafa el-Naggar, a former lawmaker and protest leader during the uprising that led to Mubarak’s ouster in February 2011, said the conspiracy alleged by the Brotherhood “doesn’t exist.” El-Naggar added that the Brotherhood and military statements suggested the crisis was far from over.

“The military is saying it is still here and will interfere when necessary. This is believed to be when there is widespread infighting,” he said.

Meanwhile, he said Morsi and his group are threatening to widen the conflict by portraying the opposition as conspirators against Islam.

“As it stands, Egypt is captive to internal decisions of the Brotherhood,” he said.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Egypt’s Morsi preps decree for martial law

December 8, 2012

Egypt’s Morsi preps decree for martial law – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Reports suggest president will allow military to crush protests, arrest demonstrators

AP, Roi Kais

Published: 12.08.12, 18:37 / Israel News

With thousands of protesters still crying for his ouster on Cairo’s streets, President Mohamed Morsi has prepared a decree to impose martial law, according to Egyptian media.

Morsi hasn’t issued it yet, but the order comes on the heels of the military warning of “disastrous consequences” if the crisis is not resolved.

The al-Aharm newspaper reported that the government has allowed armed security forces to assist the police in “maintaining the country’s safety and stability” including arresting protesters.

The decision is pending Morsi’s approval but signals a new stage in the struggle between the country’s new Islamist leader and his secular opponents.

According to al-Ahram, Morsi is slated to announce “the participation of security forces in defending vital national institutions” very soon. The defense minister is slated to determine the extent of the military’s role.

An unnamed military official said on television that dialogue is the “best and only” way to settle differences over Morsi’s recent power grab and a draft constitution slated for referendum vote next Saturday, reports the New York Times.

“Anything other than (dialogue) will force us into a dark tunnel with disastrous consequences; something which we won’t allow,” the official said, reports the AP.

Reaching no consensus “is in the interest of neither side,” he said. “The nation as a whole will pay the price.”

Iranian Warships Dock in Sudan, Again

December 8, 2012

Iranian Warships Dock in Sudan, Again – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

For second time in five weeks, Iranian warships dock in Port Sudan. More Fajr-5 missiles en route to Gaza?

 

By Gil Ronen

First Publish: 12/8/2012, 6:17 PM
Iranian warship in Port Sudan

Iranian warship in Port Sudan
Reuters

 

Two Iranian warships docked in Port Sudan on Saturday, a witness told AFP. This marks the second port call by the Iranian navy in Sudan in five weeks.

 

The Iranian navy said the 1,400 ton frigate Jamaran and the 4,700 ton support ship Bushehr “docked in Port Sudan, after successfully carrying out their assignments in the Red Sea, and were greeted by high-ranking Sudanese naval commanders.” It did not say how long the warships would stay in port.

 

Khartoum said it was a “normal” port call but Israeli officials have expressed concern about arms smuggling through Sudan.

 

They have long accused the African country of serving as a base of support for the terrorists of Hamas, which rules Gaza.

 

Sudanese army spokesman Sawarmi Khaled Saad told reporters on Friday night that the visit is part of diplomatic and military exchanges between the two countries,” and will last for three days.

 

A pair of Iranian navy vessels, the supply ship Kharg and corvette Admiral Naghdi, spent about two days at Port Sudan in late October.This took place immediately after an October 23 strike against the Yarmouk military factory in the capital, which led to speculation that Iranian weapons were stored or manufactured there. Sudan blamed Israel for the blast, while Israel refused all comment on the accusation.

 

But a top Israeli defense official, Amos Gilad, said Sudan “serves as a route for the transfer, via Egyptian territory, of Iranian weapons to Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists.” Eight days of fighting between Israel and Hamas ended on November 21 with an Egyptian-mediated truce after 174 Palestinian Authority Arabs and six Israelis were killed. The Jewish state has accused Iran of supplying Hamas with the Iranian-made Fajr 5 missile, which was used to target Tel Aviv during the conflict

 

Khartoum said Israel was spreading “fabricated information” about links between the Yarmouk military factory, Hamas and Iran.

 

Sudan’s foreign ministry denied Iran had any involvement in the plant.

 

On Tuesday, Foreign Minister Ali Karti said Sudan welcomes the navies of any country, “except Israel.”

A Pakistani frigate visited Port Sudan in late November