Archive for March 23, 2013

Netanyahu says Syria was main reason for apology

March 23, 2013

Netanyahu says Syria was main reason for apology – Israel News, Ynetnews.

In Facebook post, PM Netanyahu explains his decision to apologize to Turkey over Marmara raid, normalize relations with Ankara. ‘Changing reality requires that we reexamine our relations with countries in the region,’ he says

Attila Somfalvi

Published: 03.23.13, 19:48 / Israel News

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday rationalized his decision to apologize to Turkey over the IDF‘s raid on the Gaza-bound Marmara ship that killed nine Turkish citizens.

“The fact that the Syrian crisis is constantly intensifying was a prime consideration,” he explained in a post on his Facebook page.

Syria is crumbling, and its massive stockpiles of advanced weapons are starting to fall into the hands of various elements. What we fear most is that terrorist groups will get their hands on chemical weapons.”

The prime minister noted that he spent Saturday resting after a busy week that began with the swearing in of his new government and ended with the visit of US President Barack Obama.

“Before the Sabbath, I spoke to the Turkish premier. Three years after Israel-Turkey ties had been cut off I decided it was time to restore them. The changing reality around us requires that we constantly reexamine our relations with countries in the region.

“In the past three years the State of Israel has initiated several attempts to resolve the crisis with Turkey.”

Netanyahu explained that the situation in Syria warrants a reevaluation of Israel’s relations with Turkey and noted that the presence of Global Jihad terrorists on the Syrian-Israel border in the Golan Heights “creates serious challenges for our defense establishment.”

He further noted that Israel is closely monitoring the situation across the border and is ready to respond to any development .

“It’s important that Turkey and Israel, which both share a border with Syria, are able to communicate with each other and this is also relevant to other regional challenges. In addition, the visit of US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Kerry created an opportunity to end the crisis.

“That is why towards the end of the US president’s visit I decided to call the Turkish prime minister on order to solve the crisis and mend the relations between our two nations.”

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon said that he supports Netanyahu’s decision. “The prime minister has made a responsible decision and the settlement he is leading with Turkey does not contradict the fact that we stood our ground for three years,” he said in a statement.

“Regional developments and US involvement helped end the crisis. It is a shared interest of both Israel and Turkey.” Conversely, former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman slammed the move on Friday calling it a “serious mistake.”

Earlier on Saturday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip said that Israel’s apology “it was offered the way we wanted.”

Addressing the restoration of diplomatic ties through the appointment of ambassadors he said, “We will see what will be put into practice during the process. If they move forward in a promising way, we will make our contribution. Then, there would be an exchange of ambassadors.”

Turkey badly needed to end row with Israel. Netanyahu’s apology gave Obama a diplomatic breakthrough

March 23, 2013

Turkey badly needed to end row with Israel. Netanyahu’s apology gave Obama a diplomatic breakthrough.

breakthrough

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report March 23, 2013, 1:51 PM (GMT+02:00)

A Turkish drone in need of Israeli technology

 

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu granted the Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan a face-saver for ending their three-year rift out of willingness to crown US President Barack Obama’s three-day visit with an impressive diplomatic breakthrough. He swallowed Israel and its army’s pride and, at the airport, with Obama looking on, picked up the phone to Erdogan and apologized for the killing by Israeli soldiers of nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists in 2010 aboard the Mavi Marmara, which was leading a flotilla bound on busting the Israeli blockade of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

The crowing comment by Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu – “Turkey’s basic demands have been met; we got what we wanted” – was out of place, spiteful and ill-mannered.

He knows perfectly well that for the past year, amid a constant stream of ranting abuse from Ankara, Israel has been quietly responding to Turkey’s desperate need for cooperation in four essential fields, which are disclosed here by debkafile:
1. The Turkish armed forces are heavily dependent on Israeli military technologies from the long years of the close alliance between the two countries, which Ankara cut short. This dependence applies most particularly to its drones, the backbone of today’s modern armies. It is also holding up the huge transaction for the sale of American Boeing Awacs electronic warning airplanes to Turkey.

Boeing was unable to deliver the aircraft without Jerusalem’s consent, because a key component, the early warning systems, is designed in Israel. This consent has been withheld in the face of Turkey’s urgent need and the US aviation firm’s impatience to consummate the deal.

Turkey is in need of those planes – not just to monitor events in neighboring wartorn Syria, but to complete its air defense lineup against Iranian ballistic missiles. Without the AWACs, the advanced FBX-radar system the US has stationed at the Turkish Kurecik air base is only partly operational. The Kurecik battery is linked to its equivalent at a US base in the Israeli Negev, a fact which Ankara chooses to conceal.

2.  In view of the turmoil in Syria, the bulk of Turkey’s exports destined for the Persian Gulf and points farther east have been diverted to the Israeli ports of Haifa and Ashdod, whereas just a year ago, they went through Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

Since no end is seen to the Syrian conflict and the closure of the Turkish-Syrian border, more and more export traffic from Turkey is making its way through Haifa port and thence by rail across Israel to Jordan.  Turkish goods bound for destinations in Europe and the US are diverted to Israeli ports too as Egyptian ports are made increasingly dysfunctional by that country’s economic crisis..
3. In the first year of the Syrian uprising, when Davutoglu was still a frequent traveler to Damascus for talks with Bashar Assad, Ankara entertained high hopes of becoming a major player for resolving the Syrian debacle.  But he also sought to strike a deal with the Lebanese Hizballah, Assad’s ally, for obstructing Israeli gas and oil exploration in the eastern Mediterranean
Three years on, Turkish leaders have woken up to the realization that they had better hurry up and jump aboard the US-backed Israeli energy bandwagon or else they will miss out on an outstanding and lucrative economic development, namely, the forthcoming opening up of a Mediterranean gas exporting route to Europe.

4. Turkey, Israel and Jordan are all in the same boat as targets for the approaching large-scale use of Syria’s chemical and biological weapons.
This topic was high on the agenda of President Obama’s talks with Jordan’s King Hussein Friday, March 21, in Amman, after he had explored the subject with Israel’s prime minister in Jerusalem.
Obama presented them with his plan to consolidate into a single US-led Turkish-Israeli-Jordan HQ the separate commands established six months ago in each of those countries to combat the use of unconventional weapons.
This unified command would stand ready to launch units of the four armies into coordinated land and air action inside Syria upon a signal from Washington.
The US president used his visits to Jerusalem and Amman to tie up the ends of this contingency plan with Netanyahu and Abdullah, while Secretary of State John Kerry got together with Erdogan in Ankara.

However, this four-way military effort to combat the Syrian chemical threat could not have taken off with Ankara and Jerusalem not on speaking terms.
This had been going on for three years, ever since Erdogan suspended military ties with Israel and downgraded diplomatic relations pending an Israeli apology for the Marmara incident, compensation for the victims and the lifting of its naval blockade on Gaza.

The Turkish prime minister insisted on the Israeli prime minister paying obeisance to Turkish national honor. And finally Netanyahu relented. But Israel stood its ground on the last condition; a UN probe had pronounced the Israeli blockade legal and legitimate although its raid on the Turkish ship was deemed “excessive.” So the blockade remains  in place and, indeed, Friday, March 23, Israel’s new defense minister, Moshe Yaalon, tightened it by restricting the Gaza offshore areas open to Palestinian Mediterranean fishermen.

This was punishment for the four-rocket attack staged from Gaza on the Israeli town of Sderot Thursday, the second day of President Obama’s visit to Israel.
debkafile’s military sources comment that the new defense minister may have also been directing a reproach at the prime minister for apologizing to Turkey and admitting to “operational errors,” thereby casting aspersions on the professionalism of the Israel Navy’s Shayetet 13 commando unit and its legitimate action in defense of Israel’s legal Gaza blockade.

Erdogan backtracks on understandings with Netanyahu

March 23, 2013

Erdogan backtracks on understandings with Netanyahu | The Times of Israel.

Day after Israeli PM’s apology phone call, Turkish leader says it’s not yet time to drop case against 4 IDF generals over Marmara deaths, won’t send new envoy yet, will visit Gaza

March 23, 2013, 5:05 pm
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses his lawmakers in Ankara, Turkey, Tuesday, March 19, 2013. (photo credit: AP)

Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses his lawmakers in Ankara, Turkey, Tuesday, March 19, 2013. (photo credit: AP)

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan appeared to backtrack Saturday on understandings reached with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a dramatic US-brokered phone call Friday on healing ties between Ankara and Jerusalem.

Erdogan said Saturday it was too early to cancel legal steps against Israeli soldiers who took part in the raid on the Mavi Mamara.

According to the Hurriyet daily, Erdogan also said the exchange of ambassadors between Israel and Turkey would not take place immediately.

“We will see what will be put into practice during the process. If [the Israelis] move forward in a promising way, we will make our contribution. Then, there would be an exchange of ambassadors,” Erdogan was quoted as saying, in remarks at an opening ceremony for a high-speed railway line in the central Turkish province of Eskişehir.

Erdogan said that, in the past, Israel had “expressed regret several times, refusing to offer a formal apology” over the killings of nine Turkish citizens of the Marmara in 2010 — the incident that led to the freezing of Israeli-Turkish ties. However, Ankara had “insisted on an apology,” he said.

That apology had finally been delivered by Netanyahu on Friday, he said. “All our demands have now been met with that apology which was offered the way we wanted,” Erdogan said in comments communicated by Today’s Zaman.

Netanyahu’s office had stated after the call Friday that “The two men agreed to restore normalization between Israel and Turkey, including the dispatch of ambassadors and the cancellation of legal steps against IDF soldiers.”

Erdogan also announced plans to visit Gaza, possibly next month. Hamas’s Gaza prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, calling Netanyahu’s apology “a diplomatic victory for Ankara,” confirmed Erdogan would visit “in the near future,” and said this trip would mark “a significant step to ending the political and economic blockade” of the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

Erdogan told reporters that it wasn’t yet time to talk about dropping the case in which four IDF generals stand accused of war crimes over the incident. The indictment, prepared last summer, sought ten aggravated life sentences for each officer ostensibly involved in the 2010 raid — including former chief of the IDF General Staff Gabi Ashkenazi and former head of military intelligence Amos Yadlin.

The Marmara was part of a May 2010 flotilla seeking to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza — imposed to prevent weapons imports by Hamas for use against Israel. Israeli naval commandos were attacked as they sought to commandeer the vessel on May 30 as it neared Gaza, and they killed nine Turkish citizens as they fought off attackers wielding clubs and iron bars.

In November, IHH vice president Husein Oruch had told Today’s Zaman that “Turkey is the first country in the world that will take the unlawful Israeli actions to court,” adding that the trial was “a very significant case because today will mark the day that the untouchable image of Israel will be damaged.”

Despite the formal apology issued by Netanyahu on Friday in the presence of US President Barack Obama, Erdogan’s Saturday statement indicated that Ankara was not entirely prepared to let bygones be bygones. He stressed that during his conversation with him, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had promised to improve the humanitarian conditions in the Palestinian territories.

“I accepted the apology in the name of the Turkish people,” Erdogan was quoted as saying, adding that he was planning to visit Gaza in April.

“I may eventually visit Gaza and the West Bank in April. This visit would take place in the context of a general effort to contribute to the resolution process,” the Hurriyet daily quoted Erdogan as saying.

Erdogan also reportedly said he had talks with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, Qatari Emir Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani, Hamas leader Khaled Mash’al, and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas during the apology negotiation process with Israel.

President Obama Doesn’t Miss a Beat

March 23, 2013

President Obama Doesn’t Miss a Beat | Jerusalem Post – Blogs.

Abe Foxman

In his visit to Israel, President Obama did not miss a beat.  Having written before his trip about what he should try to accomplish, I conclude that the president did exactly what he had to do to the benefit of Israel and the United States.
Already, one hears interpretations of what the president said and did that try to paint things in a more negative light.  The Jerusalem Post headline saw the president as making nice to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when he was with him and trying to go around him in talking to the students.  On CNN, Martin Indyk, a former Ambassador to Israel, tried to describe the speech by the president as raising expectations “sky high” about the need for Israelis and Palestinians to move forward on peace.
Both comments in my view, misread what the president said.  There was nothing in his address that contradicted the policies of Netanyahu and his government.
President Obama called for a two-state solution as necessary for Israel to maintain a Jewish and democratic state.  He acknowledged that Israel has made offers to the Palestinians in the past that could have moved things forward.  He articulated the American opposition to settlements but, most critically, in Ramallah before the Palestinian representatives, he argued that the settlement issue, like others, must be resolved at the negotiating table.
This was in marked contrast to the most egregious Obama blunder early in his administration, in which he made the settlement issue a precondition for negotiations.
The president, in my view, was neither unduly raising expectations nor was he trying to undermine the Netanyahu government.  What he was doing was appealing to the best instincts of the Israeli people, not to give up on peace, not to allow the very real negatives, particularly in the region, to block positive thinking about the possibility of peace.
In doing so, the president created the right balance between calling on both parties to take constructive steps for peace, while still recognizing the special role that Israel alone has taken to achieve peace.  He sought to link the moral need for peace to Israel’s strategic interest as a Jewish and democratic state.
While doing all this, the president more than lived up to the hope that he would reassure the Israeli people that they have a friend in the White House and that they can count on the special U.S.-Israel relationship enduring under his leadership. His powerful words uttered in Hebrew, “You are not alone,” will continue to resonate long after the trip is a distant memory.
The president reassured Israelis by the tone of his remarks, as well as the substance.  His informal and casual manner, as well as his oratory, could only leave a feeling of comfortableness that hardly existed before. He did that by the places he visited, including the grave of Theodor Herzl, the embodiment of the Zionist dream.
He did it by reiterating America’s determination to prevent Iran from getting a bomb.  He did it by repeatedly referring to Israel as the Jewish state, including before the Palestinians themselves. And he did it, unlike his Cairo speech, by linking Israel’s presence to the thousands of years of connection of the Jewish people to the land of Israel.
Yes, there are a few things that might have been said a little differently.  But they must be seen in the goal of the trip: convince the Israelis they have a friend without denigrating the Palestinians and their leader, Mahmoud Abbas.
So the president indicated that Israel has a partner for peace with Abbas.  Many in Israel would question that, but considering Obama’s goal of strengthening Abbas vis-à-vis Hamas, he probably could not do otherwise.
And in describing the tragedy of the Palestinians while also articulating Israeli steps toward peace, some would have liked him to make clear that it was Palestinian rejection of these peace initiatives that is a major cause of their suffering.  But again, this was left implicit because the president wanted to avoid undermining Abbas.
All in all, it could not have been better.
How it will all play out is to be determined.  But for now, one can only applaud the president for reaffirming to the Israeli people in so many ways that the unique friendship between Israel and the United States remains as strong and as deep as ever.

‘Hamas arrests two in connection with Gaza rockets’

March 23, 2013

‘Hamas arrests two in connection with Gaza rockets’ | JPost | Israel News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF, YAAKOV LAPPIN
03/22/2013 23:01
Israel Radio: Hamas arrests members of Salafi organization after they claim responsibility for rocket attacks during Obama visit.

Rocket fired from Gaza that landed in a home in Sderot, March 21, 2013.

Rocket fired from Gaza that landed in a home in Sderot, March 21, 2013. Photo: Courtesy

Hamas on Friday arrested two members of an Islamic jihadist organization in connection with the firing of rockets from Gaza into southern Israel on Thursday, Israel Radio reported.

The report cites Gazan sources as saying Hamas arrested two members of the Salafi Magles Shoura al-Mujahddin organization, who on Thursday claimed responsibility for firing rockets into Israel. In an Internet statement the group said it had fired the rockets to show that Israeli air defenses could not stop attacks on the Jewish state during Obama’s visit.

Palestinian terrorists launched rockets from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel Thursday morning – the second day of US President Barack Obama’s visit – and in response, newly appointed Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon restricted the fishing area to three miles from the Gaza coast and closed a cargo crossing point.

One projectile hit and damaged a home in Sderot. A second fell in an open area of the neighboring Sha’ar Hanegev Regional Council. Initial reports spoke of four rockets, two of which are believed to have landed within the Gaza Strip.

There were no injuries.

The US president, who was in Jerusalem, about 80 km. from Sderot, when the rockets hit, later told journalists it was up to Hamas, which controls Gaza, to stop such strikes.

“We condemn this violation of the important ceasefire that protects both Israelis and Palestinians, a violation Hamas has a responsibility to prevent,” Obama said on the next stop on his visit, in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

A police bomb squad and emergency officials arrived at the two blast zones to retrieve the projectiles and document the damage. It was the second ceasefire violation by terrorists in two months. On February 26 a rocket from the Gaza Strip struck a road south of Ashkelon, causing damage but no injuries.

The clampdown on coastal fishing that came in response to Thursday’s attack reduced the open zone to three miles from six. It canceled the expansion that had been in place since the end of Operation Pillar of Defense of last year.

The border crossing that was closed was the Kerem Shalom cargo terminal. The IDF’s Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) unit added that the Erez pedestrian terminal at the northern end of the strip had been ordered to reduce its level of operations.

Returning crossings to their normal levels of activity would be conditioned on security assessments, COGAT added

Obama and Netanyahu: Closer… but still far apart

March 23, 2013

Obama and Netanyahu: Closer… but still far apart | JPost | Israel News.

LAST UPDATED: 03/23/2013 07:50
They made a point of calling each other Barack and Bibi, made jokes about their children’s resemblance to their wives, but many issues still divide Netanyahu and Obama, especially the case of Jonathan Pollard.

US President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyu

US President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyu Photo: REUTERS/Jason Reed

The satirical newspaper The Onion published a mock report about what US President Barack Obama really told Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu when Netanyahu greeted him at Ben-Gurion Airport Wednesday.

“This is a completely pointless visit and a waste of everyone’s time,” Obama told Netanyahu as they smiled broadly and waved to the gathered crowd, according to the satirical newspaper. “You won’t do what I want when it comes to stopping Israeli settlements, and I can’t do what you want in terms of dismissing Palestine. Now, pretend to laugh at what I just said so it appears like we get along.”

The report was published when it looked like Obama and Netanyahu would remain at loggerheads and have yet another confrontation that would make them both look bad.

But the two put on what was at the very least a good show of getting along by two people who were unable to succeed in even faking it in the past.

They made a point of calling each other Barack and Bibi, they made jokes about their children’s resemblance to their wives and Obama touched Netanyahu by quoting from letters the prime minister’s fallen brother, Yoni, had once written home about strength, justice and staunch resolution being on Israel’s side.

When an NBC reporter referred indirectly to polls in The Jerusalem Post that indicated that Israelis have not embraced Obama the way they embraced America’s last two presidents, Netanyahu said “I think that people should get to know President Obama the way I’ve gotten to know him.”

But differences between the two leaders on key issues were not denied.

On Iran, Netanyahu believes a military threat is necessary in order to avoid military action, while Obama wants to continue a diplomatic process that has not succeeded. There are steps Obama would like Israel to take on the Palestinian track that Netanyahu does not want to take.

And on settlements, well, just for fun, do a search on that word in the online transcript of their Jerusalem press conference. There are 5,870 words. “Settlements” is not one of them.

THE ONE issue in which the differences between Netanyahu and Obama appears most stark is the fate of Israeli agent Jonathan Pollard. Netanyahu would like Obama to commute Pollard’s life sentence to the more than 27 years he has served.

This is what Obama had to say about Pollard in an interview with Channel 2 last Thursday: “This is an individual who committed a very serious crime here in the United States. He has been serving his time. There is a justice system that allows for periodic review of his sentence and the potential for him ultimately being released; and the way, you know, I as president function here is to try and make sure that I am following the basic rules of that review.

“I have no plans for releasing Jonathan Pollard immediately, but what I am going to be doing is to make sure that he, like every other American who has been sentenced, is accorded the same kinds of review and the same examination of the equities that any other individual would provide. I recognize the emotions involved in this. One of the strengths of the Israeli people is that you think about your people wherever they are. And I recognize that. I am sympathetic.

“I think that people have to understand that as the president, my first obligation is to observe the law here in the US and to make sure that it is applied consistently. As you know that there are a lot of individuals in prisons in the United States who have committed crimes who would love to be released early as well. I’ve got to make sure that every individual is treated fairly and equal.”

There are three main problems with what Obama said about Pollard, which Netanyahu might have pointed out if he was not doing his best to get along with the president.

The first is that Pollard is suffering from failing health and multiple ailments that require urgent medical treatment and proper nutrition, neither of which are available to him in prison. Should Pollard die in prison under Obama’s watch, it would deal a devastating blow to the president’s goal of improving his image among Israelis.

“Every day that he survives now is miraculous,” Pollard’s wife, Esther, said. “He is 58 but he is the physical equivalent of a 70- or 80- year-old because he went though seven years of solitary confinement, each of which is the equivalent of multiple years because of the harsh conditions and stress.”

The second problem is that the “periodic review” Obama referred to is a parole procedure that, due to key legal reasons, does not apply to Pollard. Assuming he lives until then, Pollard is technically eligible to request parole in November 2015, on the 30th anniversary of his arrest.

But parole is not relevant for Pollard because his judge, his prosecutor and the government are on record in his sentencing docket as emphatically denying early release at any date, making it certain he will be refused.

Pollard’s lawyers would not be able to effectively contest those recommendations because they have have been prevented from seeing the classified portions of his sentencing file. The lawyers received beyond top secret clearance from the government for the purpose of seeing the file and then they were not permitted to see it because a court ruled that they lacked a need to know.

The lawyers even asked to see the file while being monitored and without taking notes and were told no. They went all the way to the Supreme Court to get the right to view the documents, which have been seen by many people who oppose Pollard’s release. But the Supreme Court refused to hear the case, leaving Pollard no legal redress other than a commuting of his sentence by the president.

If parole would be turned down and the case set aside, it would not be revisited again for 10 or 15 years. It would be hard for a president to go against that kind of recommendation and grant clemency to a prisoner whose case was set aside by the parole commission.

Due to a plea bargain that Pollard signed to avoid a life sentence, but which was not honored by the prosecution, he did not have a trial. Because of mistakes made by his lawyers without his knowledge, he did not have an appeal. The merits of his case have never been heard in court.

The final problem with what Obama said about Pollard is that the parole system was never intended to address an unjust sentence – just good behavior. Parole lets sentences stand but allows for early release.

If the government decides to rearrest a paroled prisoner again for any reason, it may do so and reimprison him for the full term of his original sentence. Due to the laws at the time of Pollard’s sentencing, his life sentence is for 45 years, which would end in 2030 when he would be 70 years old.

There are also conditions for parole, which usually include staying in the US where prisoners can be monitored and subjected to regular review. These would prevent Pollard from moving to Israel and starting a new life.

Former CIA director R. James Woolsey suggested that Pollard’s sentence was unjust in an interview with America’s National Public Radio on Wednesday. He noted that America has caught several spies for friendly countries, including spies for Greece, South Korea and the Philippines, and sentenced them to four to seven years.

“I really take the view now that if someone says he should not be released after 28 years, just pretend that he’s a Filipino-American or a Greek-American and pardon him,” Woolsey said. “I see no reason why people should treat a Jewish- American who spied for Israel on those grounds more harshly than they treat a Filipino-American who spied for the Philippines or a South Korean-American who spied for South Korea.”

Pollard used every available avenue in the justice system to which Obama referred, and none of them have addressed the lack of proportion Woolsey pointed out.

The only remaining avenue is the request for executive clemency that Pollard filed three years ago, which Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres endorsed.

Peres, who reportedly gave Obama a petition for Pollard’s freedom signed by more than 200,000 Israelis, and Netanyahu are not going to complain publicly about what Obama said about Pollard because they desperately want to get along with the US leader.

But if Obama hopes to permanently improve his image in Israel, Pollard arriving at Ben-Gurion Airport would likely make more of an impression on Israelis than the president’s own positive visit to Israel.

‘CIA feeding intel to Syrian rebel forces’

March 23, 2013

‘CIA feeding intel to Syrian rebel forces’ | JPost | Israel News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/23/2013 12:45
WSJ: US sharing information with secular rebel groups in hopes of neutralizing pro-al Qaida militants.

MEMBERS OF A Syrian opposition group are seen on the front lines in Aleppo

MEMBERS OF A Syrian opposition group are seen on the front lines in Aleppo Photo: REUTERS

Attempting to circumvent al-Qaida’s increased influence in a potential post-President Bashar Assad Syria, the CIA has begun to trickle intelligence information to select rebel fighters, The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday, citing US officials.

At the moment only limited intelligence is being passed along as it is unclear at this point which rebel groups can be trusted by the CIA, according to the officials.

US, European and Arab officials said the move is based on the US and Israel’s changing preference for dealing with secular groups amid hopes that they will be more cooperative when rebuilding Syria’s leadership structure if Assad falls.

According to the officials, a similar motivation behind the move could be US counter-terrorism reports that the al Nusra Front, a terrorist group operating in Syria, is possibly strengthening its connections to the al-Qaida leadership based in Pakistan.

The US’ wealth of information comes from a variety of sources, including use of satellites, and working closely with Israeli and Jordanian spy agencies, both of which have extensive networks in place in Syria.

Though there has been a rise in CIA involvement in the Syrian civil war, there are currently no plans to be directly involved in the military actions as reiterated by US President Barack Obama on Friday.

Beyond the sharing of information, the CIA has been working with Jordanian, French and British intelligence services to provide training for several types of weapons.

There has been rising pressure on Obama from forces within the US government calling for an increase in US involvement, as Michigan Democrat Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin sent a letter to Obama urging him to take “more active steps to stop the killing in Syria and force Bashar Assad to give up power.”

As al Nusra’s influence grows, so much so that one specialist termed them “an organization that resembles an army,” Israeli officials have become more concerned with the situation unfolding in Syria.

The Wall Street Journal quoted a highly placed Israeli official who said, “Israel would welcome America’s influence in shaping the post-Assad Syria.”

Steinitz: Obama Won’t Interfere in Defense

March 23, 2013

Steinitz: Obama Won’t Interfere in Defense – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Obama told Netanyahu that he will not tell him how to act when it comes to matters of Israel’s defense, says Minister Steinitz.

By Elad Benari

First Publish: 3/22/2013, 12:15 AM

 

Minister Yuval Steinitz

Minister Yuval Steinitz
Flash 90

International Relations Minister Yuval Steinitz is optimistic that U.S. President Barack Obama will not interfere if Israel chooses to attack Iran’s nuclear sites.

Speaking to Channel 10 News on Thursday, Steinitz referred to Obama’s remarks during his visit to Israel and said that the President’s visit is “very important and very good”, adding that Obama said in meetings with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu that just as Israel does not interfere with the White House’s decisions, he will not tell Netanyahu how to act when it comes to matters concerning Israel’s security.

Steinitz, who took part in the closed door the meeting between Obama and Netanyahu on Wednesday, before the two held a joint press conference, said that the Israeli media exaggerated in its predictions about Obama’s attitude towards Israel and Netanyahu during his second term.

“Three months ago we heard about the disconnect and the coolness between Obama and Netanyahu,” he said. “I sat there for three hours and tried to find a hint of that, but couldn’t. The atmosphere was very good and the conversation was very open.”

“Obama told the Palestinians, ‘Do not demand preconditions or a settlement freeze in exchange for negotiations.’ He implied that it was only a Palestinian excuse to avoid negotiations,” added Steinitz, referring to Obama’s press conference in Ramallah on Thursday.

Netanyahu said on Wednesday that Israel “will never hand over the right to defend ourselves, even to our best friend – and we have no better friend than the United States.”

He added, “Sanctions on Iran have not succeeded in stopping the nuclear move, and you know that a credible military threat must be added to the sanctions.”

Obama said, “We do not have a policy of containment when it comes to a nuclear Iran,” Obama said. “We prefer to resolve this diplomatically, and there is still time to do so. The international community will continue to increase pressure on Iran, and we will continue to consult closely with Israel.”

Obama’s Israel visit wins over Jews at home

March 23, 2013

Obama’s Israel visit wins over Jews at home | The Times of Israel.

Every side of the American Jewish debate over Israeli-Palestinian peace found something to cheer about

March 22, 2013, 11:52 pm US President Barack Obama delivers a speech at the Jerusalem Convention Center, March 21 (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

US President Barack Obama delivers a speech at the Jerusalem Convention Center, March 21 (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s much-lauded speech Thursday before a crowd of young Israelis earned widespread praise across the American Jewish ideological spectrum.

The speech dealt with the broad sweep of issues on the US-Israel agenda, giving a wide range of American Jewish groups something to cheer about.

Obama’s criticism of both past Palestinian rejectionism and of their resort to terror earned him high praise from the Anti-Defamation League, among others.

The influential group praised the president for recognizing “the risks Israel has taken for peace, steps often not met with reciprocity from the Palestinians.”

That was the only mention of the Palestinians in the group’s Thursday statement, which went on to thank Obama for emphasizing “the millennia-old connection the Jewish people have to the land of Israel” and “the grave security challenges facing Israel, including terror threats from Hamas, and the dangers posed by a nuclear-armed Iran.”

In a statement Friday, AIPAC “saluted” Obama for the security agreements announced on the trip and his call on the Palestinians to drop preconditions to peace talks.

That tone was echoed in a statement by Jewish Federations of North America board chair Michael Siegal, who praised Obama Friday for having “underscored America’s unshakable bond with the Jewish State at a critical time and expressed a profound understanding of the challenges Israel faces.”

More conservative groups were also broadly supportive of the speech.

The Orthodox Union’s Nathan Diament, head of the organization’s public advocacy arm, told the Times of Israel Friday that the group was “very pleased with [Obama’s] explicit embrace and acknowledgement of thousands of years of history of the Jewish people in the land of Israel. We’re very appreciative of the support, the clear and strong policy, toward Iran obtaining nuclear weapons and the security of Israel.”

When it came to Obama’s call for establishing a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Diament was noncommittal. “The president laid out his view,” he said, but added: “What was important was that [Obama] made it very clear that whatever the details, whatever is going to be decided regarding borders and everything, it’s ultimately going to have to be decided by the parties in negotiations. It can’t be imposed from the outside.”

For their part, left-wing groups seemed thrilled by the speech, which they said forcefully laid out the case for peace.

J Street’s Jeremy Ben-Ami praised Obama for “making the two-state solution a top priority for his administration.”

In a conversation with the Times of Israel Thursday, he pointed to the moment in the speech when Obama told Israelis, “the only way for Israel to endure and thrive as a Jewish and democratic state is through the realization of an independent and viable Palestine.”

“What I saw as the point of the speech was [Obama’s] laying out clearly and starkly the crossroads Israel is at,” Ben-Ami said. Obama spoke of US-Israeli friendship, of Jewish ties to the land of Israel, and then explained to Israelis “that all of that is at risk, the entirety of Israel is at risk, without peace,” Ben-Ami said.

In an email to J Street supporters, Ben-Ami wrote that the speech represented “our moment — our time to lead! Never has anyone expressed with greater clarity and with greater conviction everything that our movement fights for and holds dear.”

The left-leaning Israel Policy Forum, in an email that quoted the same line from Obama’s speech, said simply, “We could not agree more.”

One US Jewish official who asked not to be named offered a reason for the widespread praise the speech garnered.

While Obama emphatically and passionately called for peace talks, he separated the issue of peace from the issue of security, the official said. “Security is something Israel needs fundamentally, and Obama has secured it for them regardless of peace. All the tangible things that were announced were on Iran and security. He could have announced new talks. He could have announced that [Secretary of State John] Kerry would host a meeting of the sides. There was nothing like that. No deadlines, nothing.”

So while Obama issued perhaps the most impassioned call for peace yet in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, “his position is that ultimately the two sides have to figure it out themselves.”