Archive for March 2013

To initiate, or hold off?

March 30, 2013

Israel Hayom | To initiate, or hold off?.

Dan Margalit

Within the government, there are — and were — three different conclusions drawn after Israel apologized to Turkey over the 2010 IDF raid on a Turkish ship that resulted in the deaths of nine Turkish activists.

Some people believed that Israel could have apologized to Turkey and ended the row two years ago. These officials included former ministers Ehud Barak, Dan Meridor and Benny Begin, and Israel’s representative to the U.N. investigation into the raid, Dr. Yossi Ciechanover. A second group believed that Israel should never have apologized, and that the very apology itself was wrong. This group included officials such as former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman and former National Infrastructure Minister Uzi Landau. And a third group, which includes Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, believed that Israel waited until the right time came to apologize.

It’s likely that the debate over the Israeli apology will carry on for some time, but, alas, what’s done is done.

Israeli history has had no shortage of such divisive debates. Just in the last decade, two other important issues demanded incisive deliberation: former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s agreement with Hezbollah to free captive Elhanan Tennenbaum, and Netanyahu’s deal with Hamas to free Gilad Schalit. These situations were not identical. Though each deal set the bar for the next kidnapping, the debates surrounding them lost their significance the moment the captive prisoner emerged from his cell and was greeted by sunlight.

In the case of the Mavi Marmara incident, the conclusion is very much the same.

In each of these resolutions — especially in Israel’s apology to Turkey — the preceding debate raised important political and security-related questions: What is the limit to Israeli actions and, more importantly, how bold is Israel’s initiative?

Two opposing approaches to rapprochement with Turkey were developed in the last government. Netanyahu believes that his way will reap the most benefits for Israel.

According to Netanyahu, the party that initiates the apology will be forced to pay a high price; the initiating party is naked in front of the enemy, capitulating just by making the first move, and will be forced to make more concessions throughout negotiations. In addition, critics will slam the government because it didn’t wait for the enemy to initiate reconciliation. However, in Netanyahu’s scenario, the government would score political points and electoral support from its constituents if it could prove that it was forced to make concessions by an external party, proving that the government had “no choice.” The government’s status would remain unchanged and undiminished in the eyes of its supporters if Israel was to be strong-armed into dividing Hebron, halting settlement construction for a year, or declaring support for “two states for two peoples.”

Barak and Meridor — and sometimes other officials — proposed a different idea. In their opinion, despite the advantages of waiting for a “no-choice” scenario to arise, there are many disadvantage that accompany procrastination. Taking the initiative in issues of grave, national concern is an integral part of Zionism, they argue. Israel would do better to look interested in — and not be coerced into — a compromise that comes at such a high price.

For those who back this approach, the recent Israeli apology showed the world — and many young Israelis — that Israel does not pursue its own objectives. Rather, Israel responds only to force, or when it is backed into a corner — bad scenarios for everyone.

Still, when Israel does takes the initiative, greater concessions are often demanded of it; Israel capitulates through force. David Ben-Gurion took the initiative all his life (except when he was forced to withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula in 1957). Menachem Begin initiated three major events: the peace treaty with Egypt, the bombing of Iraq’s nuclear reactor and the First Lebanon War.

So, as the dust settles following Israel’s apology to Turkey, which approach triumphs? In my opinion, the second school of thought: taking the initiative. Many say it’s a draw. Actually, it hasn’t been decided.

Ship carrying Iran weapons for Assad regime en route to Syria: opposition source

March 30, 2013

Ship carrying Iran weapons for Assad regime en route to Syria: opposition source – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

Saturday, 30 March 2013
Vessel heading to Turkey is suspected to make a stop at Syrian port to unload Iranian weapons. (AFP)
Al Arabiya, Dubai –

A ship raising a Tanzanian flag and carrying Iranian arms cargo is expected to cross the Suez Canal within six hours, an opposition source told Al Arabiya Saturday.

‘The ship is said to be carrying 8,500 tons of weapons and ground missiles from Iran to be given to the Syrian regime,’ the source said, adding: ‘It is scheduled to make a ‘fuel stop’ at a Syrian port where it will unload its cargo.’

The source also said that the vessel is owned by Syrians, although he did not specify to whom he was referring. He, however, said that the boat was registered in Lebanon and had links to the Syrian- and Iranian-backed Hezbollah.

There have been various media reports that the Islamic republic has been militarily helping the regime of Bashar al-Assad, which — according to the U.N. — has killed more than 70,000 people in the two years since the uprising began.

A Western official told Reuters earlier this month that Iranian weapons continue to pour into Syria from Iraq as well as other routes, including Turkey and Lebanon, which violates the U.N. arms embargo on Iran. Iraqi and Turkish officials denied the allegations.

The source also told Reuters that Iran’s acceleration of support for Assad suggests the Syrian war is entering a new phase in which Iran may be trying to end the battlefield stalemate by redoubling its commitment to Assad and offering Syria’s increasingly isolated government a crucial lifeline.

It also highlights the growing sectarian nature of the conflict, diplomats say, with Iranian arms flowing to the Shiite militant group Hezbollah. That group is increasingly active on the ground in Syria in support of Assad’s forces.

‘Hamas PM: Obama’s visit confirms US bias toward Israel’

March 29, 2013

‘Hamas PM: Obama’s visit confirms US bias toward Israel’ | JPost | Israel News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/29/2013 18:34
Haniyeh tells crowd in Gaza that they must reject idea of settling in any land other than ‘Palestine,’ according to Palestinian news agency; protesters clash with IDF soldiers in West Bank ahead of Land Day.

Hamas PM Haniyeh waves to people as they celebrate

Hamas PM Haniyeh waves to people as they celebrate Photo: REUTERS

US President Barack Obama’s visit to the region confirmed his bias toward Israel, Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh told crowds in Gaza in a speech on the eve of the 37th Land Day, Palestinian news agency Ma’an reported.

The Hamas premier reportedly warned his audience that Palestinians face ongoing political, economic, military and media campaigns to give up their land.

“We reject resettlement in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, or the Sinai,” Ma’an quoted Haniyeh as saying, emphasizing that Palestinians must reject the idea of settling in any land other than ‘Palestine.’

He added that Hamas is keen to reach a reconciliation agreement with the rival Fatah party.

Meanwhile, Some 2,000 Arab Israelis took part in a protest in Taibe ahead of Land Day which Palestinians will mark on Saturday.

MKs Mohammed Barakeh (Hadash) and Ahmad Tibi (United Arab List- Ta’al) participated in the rally.

Land Day is held annually on March 30 to commemorate the deaths of six Galilee Arabs in 1976 riots over a government decision to confiscate land.

In the West Bank, protesters clashed with Israeli soldiers on Friday, where Palestinians were also demonstrating in preparation for Land Day.

Palestinian and International activists organized the march between five villages located in the south Hebron hills. The villages are at risk of being cut off from the rest of the West Bank if planned Israeli settlement and wall building goes ahead.

What was supposed to be a peaceful march turned to scuffles when the demonstrators were confronted by IDF soldiers who tried to stop them accessing a local road.

IDF forces fired tear gas to try and disperse the crowd, and several people were seen being detained.

The annexation of land in the West Bank is seen by the Arab community as a way of altering the population demographic of Galilee to create a Jewish majority in the area.

Reuters contributed to this report

Israel – Bits, Bytes and Bombs – NYTimes.com

March 29, 2013

Israel – Bits, Bytes and Bombs – NYTimes.com.

 

READING the news from the wider Middle East and then watching President Obama visiting Israel triggered this thought: The president looked as if he were visiting an atoll in the Pacific, or maybe New Zealand — but definitely some kind of island state surrounded by roiling seas.

Josh Haner/The New York Times

Thomas L. Friedman

Ari Shavit of the daily Haaretz captured this mood in his column the other day, which began: “A few months ago Amnon Dankner published a sharp, amusing article in the new newspaper Sof Hashavua. He described how Shimon Peres’s innovative technological project causes Israel to detach from the Middle East and sail westward through the Mediterranean Sea, like a sort of floating island. Laughter aside, Dankner nailed the spirit of the time. In recent years Israel has been feeling, thinking and behaving as though it is no longer located in West Asia and can exist as an island that has broken off from it. As if there was no Arab world, no Palestine, no Iran. No Arabs, no settlers, no occupation.”

In fact, while President Obama was in Israel there was a report that chemical weapons were used next door in Syria and rockets were fired into Israel from next door in Gaza. But, at the very same time, Globes, Israel’s business newspaper, published this item: “Accel Partners has completed the closing of Accel London IV, a $475 million fund focused on Europe and Israel. … Accel London IV will invest in the firm’s core areas of expertise, including consumer Internet, big data, cloud, SaaS and mobile. Accel partner Kevin Comolli said, ‘The fact that Accel London IV was raised in eight weeks and was significantly over-subscribed is a powerful endorsement of Accel London and the market opportunity in Europe and Israel.’ ”

Rockets arrive from Gaza in the morning and venture capital from London in the afternoon. Israel’s ability to live as if it were disconnected from the rest of the region is impressive and necessary. It’s also illusory and dangerous.

It’s impressive and necessary because Israel is the only country in the world today that has nonstate actors, armed with missiles, nested among civilians on four out of five of its borders: the Sinai, Gaza, southern Lebanon and Syria. Beyond them lies a hinterland of states consumed by internal turmoil, and Iran. Yet Israel has managed to juggle bits, bytes and bombs — with high walls that neutralize its enemies and high-tech that nourishes its economy.

But there is a fine line between keeping danger out and locking fantasy in, between keeping your people alive and keeping crazy dreams alive. Israel is close to crossing that line.

The dangerous illusion Israel is dwelling in, argues Shavit, is the notion that “it can live like an autarky with no relation to the environment.” But no nation can do that, he argued, “certainly not a nation in which six million Jews share the land with more than five million Palestinians. Certainly not a nation that insists, even in the second decade of the third millennium, on occupying another nation.”

Indeed, the crazy dream Israel is keeping alive is that it can permanently occupy the West Bank, with its 2.5 million Palestinians, to satisfy biblically inspired settlers, who now hold major cabinet positions, like the housing portfolio, in Israel’s new government. With nearly 600,000 Israelis now living in Arab East Jerusalem and the West Bank, the window for a two-state solution “is slowly vanishing from the earth,” notes the Hebrew University philosopher Moshe Halbertal. Amazingly, polls still show a majority on both sides for a two-state deal, “but there is a deep trust problem” that has to be overcome — fast.

Nahum Barnea, the veteran Israeli columnist of Yediot Aharonot, told me Obama made a real “breakthrough” to the Israeli public with his speech on Thursday. “If he was considered an enemy before, he is now considered a friend,” said Barnea. “Even those who still disagree with him don’t think he has bad intentions toward Israel.”

Obama embraced Israelis with both understanding and honesty. He noted in his speech: “As Ariel Sharon said — I’m quoting him — ‘It is impossible to have a Jewish democratic state [and], at the same time to control all of [the land of] Israel. If we insist on fulfilling the dream in its entirety, we are liable to lose it all.’ ”

Which is why Palestinians need to drop all their preconditions and enter negotiations and Israel needs to halt settlements and test and test again whether President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad of the Palestinian Authority can deliver. Thanks to their cooperation with the Israeli security services, no Israeli was killed in the West Bank by terrorism in 2012. But Palestinians won’t sustain that restraint without movement toward a Palestinian state. The best way for Israel to deal with the chaos around it is not to put its head in the sand but to collaborate with Palestinians to build a West Bank state that is modern, secular and Westernizing; one where Muslims, Christians and Jews can work together and that stands in daily refutation of the failing Hamas/Muslim Brotherhood models elsewhere. If Israelis and Palestinians do not try everything — now — to make that happen, this will be remembered not as a lost opportunity but the lost opportunity, and no island will escape the storm that will follow.

‘Israel’s enemies have put the entire civilian population on the frontline’

March 29, 2013

‘Israel’s enemies have put the entire civilian population on the frontline’ – Week’s End – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

In a candid and revealing interview, Head of the Home Front Command, Maj. Gen. Eyal Eisenberg, assesses Israel’s readiness for future conflicts.

By | Mar.29, 2013 | 12:59 PM
Operation Pillar of Defense

November 2012, Operation Pillar of Defense. Residents of Nitzan take shelter during a rocket attack. Photo by Nir Kafri
Moti Milrod

Eisenberg: “Both sides will emerge bruised from the event, though we can rehabilitate faster.” Photo by Moti Milrod

The penny finally dropped in the wake of the 4,200 rockets that rained down on Israel during the 34 days of the Second Lebanon War in 2006. Since then, as all parties to the conflict are now well aware, it has been understood that every large or small military campaign will be accompanied by massive rocket and missile fire into Israel’s populated areas.

The job of Home Front Commander carries a high risk professionally (the HFC in the Second Lebanon War, Maj. Gen. [res.] Yitzhak Gershon, was subsequently forced to retire ), but its importance is no longer in doubt. At the same time, it offers little glory as a reward. While other generals are imagining decisive maneuvers deep inside enemy territory, the HFC must immerse himself in small details – such as how to ensure that infants get milk, or organizing beds in field hospitals in the event of a war.

Like his predecessors, the current HFC, Maj. Gen. Eyal Eisenberg, has few illusions about the character of any future confrontation. He does not want to be considered a scaremonger, he tells Haaretz in an interview, but notes that “the next war will not be easy. If I could [I would] paint it for the individual civilian in the right colors … but I don’t have a point of reference. It will be different. Our enemies have abandoned the approach of vanquishing us, which guided them in earlier wars, and more recently have adopted an attrition approach. You see an impressive process in which they are arming themselves with rockets and missiles whose only purpose is to strike at the Israeli civilian rear. That is a dramatic change.”

Even though the Second Lebanon War, in which Eisenberg fought as a division commander, ended with mixed results, Hezbollah continues to perceive its rocket fire at the civilian population as a relative success. “That’s the easiest investment for the organization,” Eisenberg notes, “a simple means of combat that creates a comparatively large impact for a limited financial outlay. It’s like a low-cost insurance policy. Before 2006, Hezbollah was capable of launching 500 warheads at Metropolitan Tel Aviv. The reason that didn’t happen is that the Iranian-made Fajr rockets were destroyed by the air force on the first night of the war, and the longer-range Zelzal rockets were destroyed in the days that followed. At present, Hezbollah has the capacity to launch about 10 times that number, with the warheads both heavier and more accurate.”

In practical terms, this means that in the event of a war with Hezbollah, the metropolitan Tel Aviv region “will come under a massive missile barrage. Hezbollah has at its disposal about 5,000 warheads, weighing between 300 and 800 kilograms each. In my estimation, the first days will be extremely difficult. I am preparing for a scenario in which more than a thousand missiles and rockets a day are fired at the civilian rear.”

Israel is not looking for this confrontation, Eisenberg says. “That kind of war will not be worthwhile for the other side,” he says. “Israel is capable of inflicting serious damage on its enemies on a scale of hundreds of percent more than they are capable of inflicting on us,” with the use of the far more destructive and precise munitions in the Israel Air Force’s possession. “The adversary will have to choose if he wants to see heaps of rubble when he comes out of the bunker at the end of the war. The problem is that, in the end, both sides will emerge bruised from the event, though we can rehabilitate faster.”

The new frontline

A year and a half ago, at the height of the public debate over the necessity of an attack on Iran, then-Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Army Radio that “in no scenario will there be even 500 civilian casualties” following a missile war. Even though the collective public memory is that Barak was referring to the number of Israelis who would be killed, he was actually talking about killed and wounded together, and drawing on estimates of operations research in the defense establishment. “We are examining whether to reevaluate this,” Eisenberg admits. “The threat is changing before our eyes. In the next war, for the first time, we might have more civilians killed on the home front than soldiers on the combat front.” (In fact, this was already the case in the second intifada, because of the Palestinian suicide bombings against the civilian population in Israel. )

To some degree, the HFC says, this will amount to “breaking the state’s pact with the citizen – who always knew he was in the rear, and suddenly will find himself on a second front. We will not be able to sustain the war with military means alone. We have to do much in the way of ensuring steadfastness, the ability of people to stand firm for the long haul. I prefer not to engage in frightening people, but in training and drills that provide civilians with knowledge, instill confidence and generate the ability to cope with the challenge.

“In the south of the country,” he continues, “people have learned how to cope with the rocket threat from Gaza. I don’t say they have learned how to live with it, heaven forbid – it’s not sane to live with missiles. But they are able to cope in moments of crisis. If a war breaks out, it can be ended with fewer than the hundreds of dead being talked about in the scenarios, given the right behavior by the civilian population. Obedience to instructions in the past, in previous confrontations, saved many lives. Today, after missiles were fired at Tel Aviv during Operation Pillar of Defense last November, I think that people in the center of the country grasp just how concrete the threat is.”

Since last fall, media preoccupation with a possible Israeli attack on Iran has declined, only to be replaced by growing fears that the deterioration of the civil war in Syria will eventually bring about an escalation between Israel and Hezbollah. The bombing of a convoy carrying advanced antiaircraft missiles from Syria to Hezbollah ‏(for which Israel did not officially take responsibility‏) heightened the public interest in developments. Eisenberg says, laconically, that although Military Intelligence does not see a war initiated by an Arab army as a likely possibility, “The quantity of gas fumes in the region has risen greatly. There is a high possibility that an errant match will ignite the Middle East. A tactical clash could lead to an all-out war. We are very uneasy, but that is part of our job. Israelis pay high taxes, in part for this, too. The country’s citizens have to go on living their lives,” he advises. If and when a war breaks out, “every citizen will have to understand that he will become a soldier in the campaign, in his personal behavior, in the way he expresses himself, in demonstrating resilience and determination over time.”

The chemical weapons stocks of the Assad regime in Syria are under constant surveillance by regional and Western intelligence services, including those of Israel, and Eisenberg does not “envisage chemical warfare being launched against us.” However, he continues, “Is it possible that chemical weapons of one kind or another will fall into the wrong hands and be used? Definitely. Is there some possibility of a terrorist attack with nonconventional weapons in the future? Unequivocally, yes. That will not vanquish Israel. We are ready and able to handle that type of event.”

Despite the growing danger that chemical weapons will be used, the government has not decided to allot greater funds for the purchase of protective kits. ‏(Presently, less than 60 percent of the public is equipped with the appropriate kits.‏) Even though Home Front Command has recommended this in the past, Eisenberg knows it is unlikely to happen. “If you ask me where I would put the first extra shekel,” he says, “I choose the warning system.”

HFC has worked out a plan to ensure more precise warnings about incoming missiles, down to the level of a warning siren covering areas of just a few square kilometers, with relatively normal life being enabled elsewhere during the missile event. Money, as usual, is the challenge. The price tag for the plan, which is based largely on upgrading software in the existing computer system, is NIS 338 million. Eisenberg is convinced that the project will be cost-effective − indeed, will pay for itself − within a few years. “Just think of the benefit to the economy if we could avoid shutting down industrial plants,” he says.

Responsibility and steadfastness

Operation Pillar of Defense was the last round of fighting in which rockets were fired at the civilian rear. Some 1,500 rockets were launched from the Gaza Strip over eight days. They took the lives of six Israelis − four civilians and two soldiers. The big cities in the south − Be’er Sheva, Ashkelon and Ashdod, along with Sderot − bore the brunt of the rocket fire. The Iron Dome antimissile system successfully intercepted about 85 percent of the rockets that posed a danger ‏(according to IDF figures‏).

Eisenberg cautions against drawing conclusions from this about the character of a broader confrontation. “That was a small operation against an enemy with limited offensive strength, even though the daily average of rockets that were fired from Gaza was far higher than the average in Operation Cast Lead or from Lebanon in 2006.”

The operation last November allowed the Home Front Command to examine its full-scale operational doctrine for the first time. The local authorities functioned well, Eisenberg says: “The mayors and council heads displayed responsibility and steadfastness. The political decision makers thus had considerable maneuverability. No pressure was put on the prime minister to end the operation sooner than was necessary. The Be’er Sheva Municipality, for example, deserves praise. Twenty minutes after a missile struck, the municipality already had an official at the scene, the damage was repaired and regular life was restored. The heads of the local governments understand that national resilience is not dictated by a government decision. It starts with the citizen and continues with the local leadership.”

At the start of the operation, Eisenberg reveals, “we had a major dilemma. We knew they could fire at Metropolitan Tel Aviv. Should we declare a special situation at a distance of 80 or 40 kilometers from Gaza? It is clear to me that Israel’s national resilience is also linked to the ability to maintain functional continuity [the functioning of the country’s vital systems during bombardments] and to avert serious economic damage.

“At our recommendation,” he continues, “Defense Minister Ehud Barak declared a ‘special situation’ only in the 40 kilometers adjacent to the Gaza Strip. In the 40 kilometers beyond that, we prepared the population for the possibility of missile fire. When missiles were fired, the people of Metropolitan Tel Aviv were not taken by surprise. Hamas was out to create panic. But Hamas encountered a different civilian rear. The people behaved superbly and their behavior showed that Israeli society is not made of spider webs [Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah claimed in 2000 that Israel was ‘more fragile than a spider web’]. The resilience was seen precisely in the open cafes in Metropolitan Tel Aviv.”

Israel’s rocket interception system claimed most of the attention during the operation. “Because of the success of Iron Dome, the civilian population perceived the confrontation as being less intensive than it actually was,” Eisenberg says. “But it has to be remembered that the antimissile batteries only protect specified zones, mainly in the big cities. From the viewpoint of our basic assumption, we are still operating without active protection. Self-defense instructions are issued to civilians as though there were no such defense systems. We are not talking about 100 percent success. In the end, some rockets might slip through. Therefore, along with the implementation of the intercept systems, I say to the civilian population: Go into a protected space. You can also be hit by fragments.”

The five operational Iron Dome batteries were barely enough to accord protection from missiles for most of the population in the south of the country and in Metropolitan Tel Aviv during Operation Pillar of Defense. They will not be enough in a confrontation with Hezbollah, which possesses far more rockets than the Palestinians in Gaza. For years, there have been arguments within the defense establishment about where to deploy the antimissile batteries in wartime.

For the first time, Eisenberg presents the approach of the HFC on the issue. “I will recommend protecting the country’s functional continuity and the ability to maintain an IDF offensive effort over time, until the war is won,” he says. “That means protecting power plants and the air force bases before the big cities. Possibly in the future we will be able to do both. But as of now, with the order of battle of batteries and intercept missiles available to us, we will have to introduce an order of priorities in resources.

“We will have to make a tough, trenchant and clear decision,” he adds. “Afterward, we might be able to provide protection for the majority of the country’s population in the regions under threat. But that will happen with a model of ten-plus batteries, and we are not yet there.”

The defense establishment has already decided to acquire ten batteries, with American aid. But it will take at least two years before ten operational batteries are deployed.

Expert: Israel not in position to attack Iran

March 29, 2013

Expert: Israel not in position to attack Iran – Israel News, Ynetnews.

‘Father of Iran’s nuclear program’ says there is no way out of current deadlock between western powers, Islamic Republic; says neither US nor Israel in position to attack

Ynetnews

Published: 03.29.13, 13:32 / Israel News

He was once the president of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization; the man dubbed “the father of Iran’s nuclear program” now in an interview given to the BBC, Akbar Etemad says he doesn’t believe there is a way out of the current deadlock between Iran and the West and adds: “Neither Israel or the US are in a position to attack Iran.”

Now in his 80s, Akbar Etemad was the man who launched the Islamic Republic’s nuclear project. According to Etemad, in the 70s the Shah of Iran had announced that he wanted to build nuclear power plants in the country, a plan supported by the United States.

The goal was for Iran to produce 23,000 megawatts of electrical power. But Etemad says the US soon tried to impose conditions.

Iran's growing nuclear facilities
Iran’s growing nuclear facilities

The Americans, he recalls, were initially supportive “because they thought they were going to be a partner of Iran in the application of nuclear technology.

“I had the impression that the Americans wanted to impose their views on Iran and I refused to deal with them. We were discussing for four years the terms of the bilateral agreement and we never came to a conclusion.”

He says that the Americans told him then that ”Iran is not a problem for us but the conditions we impose on Iran are those that we want to impose on other countries” such as Yugoslavia and the Philippines.

In the interview with BBC’s Today program, Etemad says that between 1974 and 1978 there was regular contact with the US, and Iranian students went to study nuclear research there.

‘Have to go nuclear’

And he reveals that the Shah wanted to leave all options on the table in terms of developing a nuclear bomb.

“The Shah had the idea at the time that he’s strong enough in the region and he can defend our interests in the region (and) he didn’t want nuclear weapons. But he told me that if this changes ‘we have to go for nuclear’. He had that in mind.”

”My mission was to go for all the technologies imaginable in the field of nuclear technology,” Etemad added.

After the 1979 Iranian revolution the nuclear program was stopped for a time.

Etemad has been back to Iran since but has not got involved in the nuclear program. ”It’s too late for me to get back into that,” he says.

As for the current nuclear stand-off Etemad believes “there’s no way out. I think Iran has the right to do the research that they are doing and I don’t see why the Western countries impose sanctions against Iran.

‘Iran should not give in’

“They pressure Iran. Why didn’t they do it with India, Pakistan with Israel?” he asks. Etemad currently sees no solution but thinks that ”Iran should not give in”.

As for those who talk about striking Iran’s nuclear facilities, he believes that “neither Israel or the US are in a position to attack Iran.”

These days Etemad prefers to remain in Paris – he has refused offers from many countries to work on their nuclear programs.

Last week, Iran’s clerical supreme leader said the Islamic Republic would destroy the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv and Haifa if it came under attack from the Jewish state.

“At times the officials of the Zionist regime (Israel) threaten to launch a military invasion but they themselves know that if they make the slightest mistake the Islamic Republic will raze Tel Aviv and Haifa to the ground,” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in an address to mark the Iranian new year.

Khamenei also called for Iran’s “natural right” to enrich uranium for nuclear energy to be recognized by the world. Western powers have refused, saying Iran has hidden nuclear work from UN inspectors and stonewalled their investigations.

Talks between Iran and six world powers – the United States, China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany – are to resume early next month in a further attempt to strike a deal on Iranian nuclear aspirations.

‘France ready to blacklist armed wing of Hezbollah’ | JPost | Israel News

March 29, 2013

‘France ready to blacklist armed wing of Hezbollah’ | JPost | Israel News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/29/2013 11:16
‘Al Hayat’ reports Burgas attack, support for Assad has Paris ready to designate Hezbollah’s armed wing a terrorist organization.

US Sec of State John Kerry (L) meets with France's Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius in Paris March 27

US Sec of State John Kerry (L) meets with France’s Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius in Paris March 27 Photo: REUTERS

France is prepared to designate the military wing of Hezbollah a terrorist organization, the London-Based Arabic daily Al Hayat reported on Friday, citing a French official.

The European Union has been under pressure from the United States and Israel to blacklist the Shi’ite organization, a demand which has intensified since last month when Bulgaria implicated Hezbollah in the Burgas bus bombing, in which five Israeli tourists and a Bulgarian bus driver were killed.

According to the French source, Paris’s openness to label the military wing of Hezbollah a terror organization stems from its responsibility for the Burgas attack and its participation in Syria’s civil war on the side of Presisdent Bashar Assad.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius discussed the matter with US Secretary of State John Kerry on Wednesday, according to the report.

According to the source the move is more symbolic than practical because it will not lead the EU to blacklist the “political branch” of Hezbollah, and therefore, will not stop the organization from receiving funds from Europe.

The report came after a criminal court in Limassol, Cyprus, on Thursday sentenced Hossam Taleb Yaacoub, an admitted Hezbollah operative, to four years in prison for plotting to kill Israeli tourists on the island.

Yaacoub’s conviction may add greater urgency to European Union talks on whether to include Hezbollah in its terror list. EU countries such as Austria and Germany have not included Hezbollah on its terror list because of insufficient legal evidence. The Cyprus conviction represents the first conviction of a Hezbollah member in a European court.

But many European governments are cautious about imposing sanctions on Hezbollah, arguing it could fuel tensions in the Middle East.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said earlier this month that Britain would be in favor of Hezbollah’s military wing being blacklisted at the European level.

France had until now resisted including Hezbollah in the EU terror list, because of fears it could lose diplomatic leverage in Lebanon. The Netherlands lists Hezbollah’s entire organization as a terror entity.

Benjamin Weinthal and Reuters contributed to this report.

Iran could have bomb by July, security sources say

March 29, 2013

Iran could have bomb by July, security sources say | The Times of Israel.

Disgruntled official quoted by Maariv says Obama ‘threw sand in Israel’s eyes’ during visit last week, which seemed to convince Jerusalem to hold back on military action

March 29, 2013, 6:13 am
US President Barack Obama, right, talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a state dinner in his honor last week, at the President's Residence in Jerusalem. (photo credit: Avi Ohayon/Flash90)

US President Barack Obama, right, talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a state dinner in his honor last week, at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem. (photo credit: Avi Ohayon/Flash90)

Iran could have the capability to build a nuclear bomb by July, unnamed security sources said in a report published Friday.

The sources added that Israel’s leadership had been mollified by US President Barack Obama’s visit earlier this month, which saw Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seemingly cotton to Washington’s later timeline on when Iran could have a nuclear bomb.

The security sources, said to be close to Netanyahu’s talks with Obama, claimed that after seeing North Korea wield nuclear weapons despite heavy Western opposition, Tehran’s leadership had also decided to break out toward the bomb, which could be ready between July and September.

“The Iranians aren’t messing around after North Korea. What Kim Jong Un has Ahmadinejad has,” a source told the Israeli daily Maariv, referring to North Korea’s and Iran’s respective leaders. “At the end of 2012 the Iranians carried out a simulation of a nuclear explosion and since then have been advancing at a murderous pace every day.”

Last year, Netanyahu told the UN General Assembly that Iran could have the bomb by spring 2013, but Israeli officials have revised the assessment several times to later dates. Obama, who visited Israel last week to discuss cooperation on Iran, among other things, seemed to convince Netanyahu to go along with the US timeline, which holds that Iran is still a year away and has not yet decided to pursue a nuclear weapon.

However, the sources said Obama’s charm offensive had managed to “buy” Netanyahu — and Israel ended up losing out, with Jerusalem’s hands now tied on Iran.

“The president threw sand in our eyes and now we are reaping the storm,” one source said. ”They bought us with flattery and displays of friendship, but managed to evade any responsibility for a strike.”

While Israel has urged for a military option against Tehran’s nuclear program, the US has maintained that time remains for diplomacy and sanctions to end the standoff. Netanyahu’s statements during Obama’s visit seemed to indicate Israel would not act without US backing, which many analysts say would be necessary for an effective attack.

Iran claims its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but several rounds of talks over allowing in inspectors or curbing enrichment have yielded few results.

‘Post’ poll: Huge drop in Israelis who see Obama as hostile

March 29, 2013

‘Post’ poll: Huge drop in Israelis who see Obama as hostile | JPost | Israel News.

03/29/2013 05:14
Smith Research survey shows percentage of those who consider US president pro-Palestinian falls to four-year low; the more left-wing Israelis defined themselves, the more they deemed the Obama administration more pro-Israel.

US President Barack Obama speaks in Jerusalem on March 21, 2013.

US President Barack Obama speaks in Jerusalem on March 21, 2013. Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post

US President Barack Obama’s trip to Jerusalem last week made a significant impression on Israelis, but not the impression he was trying to make, according to a Smith Research poll taken for The Jerusalem Post in the aftermath of the visit.

The percentage of Israelis who consider the Obama administration more pro- Palestinian than pro-Israel fell by a whopping 20 percent since before the visit, the poll, taken on Sunday, found.

But the number of Israelis who consider the administration more pro-Israel than pro-Palestinian rose by only 1 percentage point, despite what was billed as Obama’s “charm offensive” to reach out to citizens of the Jewish state.

Obama’s statements in Hebrew about how good it was to return to Israel and that Israelis are not alone apparently failed to make a significant impression on them. Apparently, neither did more substantive steps such as securing funding for Israel’s missile defense systems and facilitating rapprochement with Turkey. But the results indicate that the negative feelings that came from Obama’s visit to Ramallah did resonate with Israelis.

Palestinian disappointment with Obama’s pro-Israel message and his not visiting former leader Yasser Arafat’s grave was widely reported in the Hebrew press.

Obama was greeted in Ramallah by 150 demonstrators chanting anti-American slogans, and the only heckler at his Jerusalem speech to left-wing Israeli students was an Israeli Arab.

Smith Research has asked Israelis in 10 Jerusalem Post polls in four years whether Obama’s administration is more pro-Israel, more pro-Palestinian or neutral, which is seen as the ultimate bellwether of whether Israelis believe a US president is on their side.

To test the effectiveness of Obama’s efforts to reach out to Israelis, pollster Rafi Smith took a poll on Sunday, March 17, three days before the US president’s arrival, and exactly one week later, two days after he left.

The gap between Israelis who consider his administration more pro-Israel and those who say it is more pro-Palestinian rose from minus 10% to plus 11%, and the share declaring him neutral rose by 13 percentage points.

The new poll of 500 Israelis representing a statistical sample of the adult population found that 27% consider the administration more pro-Israel, 16% more pro-Palestinian, 39% neutral, and 18% did not an express an opinion.

By contrast, in last week’s poll, 26% said it was more pro-Israel, 36% more pro- Palestinian, 26% neutral, and 12% did not an express an opinion.

The proportion saying the administration is more pro-Israel in this week’s poll is the highest since May 2009, while the share saying it is more pro-Palestinian is the lowest since that same poll. In a sign that many Israelis’ minds have not been made up, the percentage who declined to express an opinion is the highest it has been in any of the 10 surveys.

After the Obama visit, in which he called upon left-wing students to push their government to make peace, the more dovish Israelis defined themselves, the more likely they were to deem the Obama administration more pro-Israel. Among Labor voters, it was 51%, for Yesh Atid voters 29%, for Likud Beytenu and Shas supporters 27%, and for those who supported Bayit Yehudi 20%.

The proportion considering the administration more pro-Palestinian was 40% among Shas voters, 20% for those who voted Bayit Yehudi, 19% Likud Beytenu, 11% Yesh Atid and among Labor voters 6%.

The survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

‘Hacktivists’ prepare to ‘erase Israel from the internet

March 28, 2013

‘Hacktivists’ prepare to ‘erase Israel from the internet’ – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

Wednesday, 27 March 2013
A group of online hackers have launched ‘#OpIsrael,’ a planned cyber attack against the country on April 7. (AFP)
Al Arabiya –

‘Hacktivist Anonymous,’ a group of international hackers, has promised to ‘erase Israel from the internet’ in a coordinated attack against the country on April 7.

A hacker, who adopted the pseudonym ‘Anon Ghost,’ initiated the event and named it #OpIsrael, according to the Arabian Gazette on Wednesday.

Many more known hacktivists, notorious for carrying out state-targeted attacks, are supporting the campaign. One hacking team told The Hackers Post website their reason for participation; “Israel isn’t stopping human rights violations. It’s to show solidarity with newly recognized Palestinian state.”

Israel has taken the threats seriously, especially since several state-run websites have already been affected, subsequently, defensive preparations are already underway.

Officer Ben Avi, Director of online webpage Accessible Government, told Israeli news source Haaretz, “what distinguishes this plan when compared to previous attacks is that it really seems to be organized by Anonymous-affiliated groups from around the world in what looks like a joining of forces.”

The first #OpIsrael cyber-attacks were launched by the hacktivist group during Israeli’s Pillar of Defense assault on Gaza in November 2012.

Some 700 Israeli websites have already fallen victim to repeated cyber-attacks, including high-profile government systems such as the Foreign Ministry and the Israeli President’s official website.

The Israeli Finance Ministry reported an estimated 44 million unique attacks on government websites, according to online media source RT on Wednesday.

The Hacktivist group has also posted personal data of 5000 Israeli officials, containing names, I.D. numbers and personal emails.

Anon Ghost told The Hackers Post, “the hacking teams have decided to unite against Israel as one entity…Israel should be getting prepared to be erased from the internet.”