Archive for June 2013

U.S. expands military presence in Jordan to 1,000 troops

June 22, 2013

U.S. expands military presence in Jordan to 1,000 troops – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

( My guess is it’s a lot more than what is being reported. – JW )

Saturday, 22 June 2013
A U.S. soldier stands on top of a hill during the Eager Lion military exercise near the southern town of Al Quweira, 50 km (30 miles) from the coastal city of Aqaba June 19, 2013. (AFP)
Al Arabiya

The United States has increased to 1,000 the number of forces that will remain in Jordan after a joint military drill, AFP reported, quoting a defense official.

“The total comes to about 1,000” troops, up from about 250 personnel that have been in place for months, the official told AFP.

Earlier, President Barack Obama said the United States has left about 700 combat-equipped troops in Jordan after a training exercise there, at the request of the Jordanian government, according to Reuters.

With both countries keeping a wary eye on the civil war in Syria, Obama said in a letter to Congress that 700 of the troops deployed to Jordan as part of a training exercise will remain behind.

The exercise ended on Thursday. They will remain until the security situation becomes such that they are no longer needed, Obama said.

“This detachment that participated in the exercise and remained in Jordan includes Patriot missile systems, fighter aircraft, and related support, command, control, and communications personnel and systems,” Obama said

The Pentagon on Saturday announced that F-16 fighter jets and a Patriot missile battery would stay in Jordan after having been sent there for the Eager Lion military exercise.

The United States is concerned about a possible spillover of violence from Syria to its southern neighbor Jordan, a key U.S. ally and one of only two Arab states to have signed a peace treaty with Israel.

Jordan is struggling to cope with nearly a half million Syrian refugees, and its territory will likely serve as a conduit for weapons that Washington has said it will supply to the rebels battling against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

(With AFP and Reuters)

Off topic: Cisco CEO: Super-fast Internet will make Israel ‘test case’ for digital world

June 22, 2013

Cisco CEO: Super-fast Internet will make Israel ‘test case’ for digital world | The Times of Israel.

( 40 billion dollars?  That should make up for the 5% reduction in US aid, n’est pas?  – JW )

Blazing-speed fiber-optic connections will change the way society works, says John Chambers

June 21, 2013, 4:20 am John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems Inc., meets with President Shimon Peres (left) prior to the opening of the Israeli Presidential Conference in Jerusalem on June 18, 2013. (photo credit: Mark Neyman/GPO/Flash90)

John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems Inc., meets with President Shimon Peres (left) prior to the opening of the Israeli Presidential Conference in Jerusalem on June 18, 2013. (photo credit: Mark Neyman/GPO/Flash90)

A new, super-fast fiber-optic system to be installed across Israel will turn the country into the world’s first digital state and serve as a test case for the world, Cisco CEO John Chambers said.

The cable system, based on technology developed by Cisco, will offer speeds several magnitudes faster than anything the country has seen before, and will link up nearly all facets of the state into a revolutionary network.

“Imagine a world where fast Internet transforms everything, from health care to education to communications to industry,” Chambers said at a special press event in Jerusalem Wednesday. “It’s a way to solve many of the problems that are big concerns of governments around the world — providing jobs for their citizens, education for their youth, improving security, and integrating minorities into the mainstream.”

The blazing-fast Internet that Cisco will soon begin installing here will be a shining example to the rest of the world of what technology can accomplish — with Israel “ground zero” for the process of “country transformation” that digital technology can bring.

Chambers was in Israel to help Shimon Peres celebrate his 90th birthday. Chambers and Peres have been close friends for years, the Cisco chief said, calling Peres “a visionary, a great man who made a difference because he dreamed and took risks.” Chambers called the president “one of the three men I admire most” — the other two being his father and former American diplomat Henry Kissinger.

But besides coming to bid his friend a happy birthday, Chambers had some other issues on his agenda during the visit, he said — among them closing the details on a deal that will see Cisco providing the technology for Israel’s fast fiber Internet. On Sunday, the eve of Chambers’s arrival in Israel, a special government committee announced after months of deliberation that the ViaEuropa consortium will be installing Israel’s FTTH (fiber to the home) infrastructure and network. FTTH will offer Israelis Internet speeds of up to a gigabit per second (1 Gb/S), 10 times faster than anything Bezeq or cable company HOT can offer on their FTTC (fiber to the curb) network. The new network will be based on Cisco technology, Chambers said, giving the company a major part in the success of the “digital nation” experiment.

For Chambers, what happens in Israel over the next five or so years as the network is installed and deployed is a “test case” for the rest of the world. “Pretty soon we are going to have 500 billion devices connected to the Internet,” Chambers said. “Those devices will change society profoundly, transforming countries, businesses, and people all over the world. Some will make it in the digital age, and some won’t. We believe that Israel is a good place to start.”

“Israel is truly a start-up nation,” Chambers said. “You are way ahead of every other country in innovation, and your leaders understand the need to get ready for the future. Israelis are educated, the country has a small land mass and the right size population for an experiment like this. In addition, Israelis have the ability to get things done quickly and efficiently, with politicians from all parties much more capable of working together than Democrats and Republicans in the US. I trust your leaders.”

Chambers trusts Israel so much, he said, that he sees it as a great place to invest the $40 billion in cash that the company is sitting on, “trapped outside the United States.” The US, he said, has the world’s highest corporate taxes, and while he would love to bring the profits from Cisco’s activities abroad back to the US, he’s unwilling to pay the taxes the IRS is demanding. “Tax policy is extremely important, and it impacts many aspects of society. I have $40 billion now and it grows by about $5 billion a year,” Chambers said. “I can’t just leave that money lying around, I have to invest it somewhere. I see Israel as a good place for at least some of that money.”

Cisco already has about 2,000 employees in Israel and has acquired several Israeli companies, the most recent one being Intucell, a maker of self-organizing network (SON) software for mobile networks. Over the past 15 years, Cisco has spent $1.5 billion on Israeli start-ups, excluding the $5 billion it paid for NDS, which has a large operation in Israel.

Some of that $40 billion investment money may find its way to Israel in the form of investments Cisco will be making in Israeli cyber-security companies. On Tuesday, Chambers met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss the FTTH rollout, and discussed a number of other items as well, including the establishment of a cyber research-and-development laboratory that will enable start-ups to use its facilities to test their products, and provide research in the security sphere for universities. Cisco is also investing $15 million in “support integration of Israelis and Arabs and the development of innovative security technologies.” The money will be invested via venture capital funds, a Cisco representative said, with most of the money geared to cyber-security start-ups.

A big part of the digital future Chambers envisions is the “Internet of Things,” where ordinary, everyday appliances, cars, doors, desks, and just about everything else is linked up to a network, allowing users to control them via software. “This is where the real revolution is taking place, and we are supplying the architecture for it,” Chambers said. Over the next 10 years, Cisco customers who are implementing wireless connections in traditionally offline products will truly cash in — earning some $14.4 trillion in profits. “And the whole market is four to six times bigger,” Chambers said, “and keep in mind that that’s just the cream — the profit — and not the actual spending or economic activity. If I were an Israeli start-up, this is where I would want to be.”

Like Shimon Peres, John Chambers has a dream — and Israel is where that dream is going to turn into reality. “There are going to be bumps and controversies along the way,” he said. “But world-class countries and companies don’t lose focus, and I am sure we will all keep the momentum going. This is what we are about, and that is what Israel is about.”

US cuts military aid to Israel by five percent

June 22, 2013

US cuts military aid to Israel by five percent | The Times of Israel.

Measure is part of across-the-board spending cuts; reduction expected to affect F-35 purchases, joint exercises

June 21, 2013, 1:56 pm Former defense minister Ehud Barak, center, speaks to US soldiers during a joint Israeli-hosted military exercise, October 23, 2012 (photo credit: Lior Mizrahi/Flash90/File)

Former defense minister Ehud Barak, center, speaks to US soldiers during a joint Israeli-hosted military exercise, October 23, 2012 (photo credit: Lior Mizrahi/Flash90/File)

The US will cut five percent, or $175 million, from its annual military aid package to Israel as part of across-the-board budgetary spending cuts, a Hebrew daily reported Friday.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had instructed Israeli officials in Washington, DC, to not ask the US government for an exception from the fiscal measures, according to Maariv. US military aid to Israel is currently set at $3.1 billion per year.

Speaking in DC, Ambassador Michael Oren said Thursday, “Israel did not seek an exception. We are willing to share in the burden.”

In Jerusalem, officials who were expecting larger cuts in aid, to the tune of half a billion dollars, breathed a sigh of relief.

The planned cuts will likely affect Israel’s ability to purchase advanced F-35 stealth fighters, according to the report, 19 of which were supposed to be delivered by the US in 2016. Because of budgetary cuts in Washington, the Pentagon has slashed production of the F-35s, from 2,500 to 1,200 planes, thereby making each fighter more expensive.

The cuts are expected to affect future joint military exercises between the two countries, and funds for joint missile defense development programs — except for Iron Dome — will be cut, reported Maariv.

News of the planned cuts comes as Israel faces a rising threat from the two-year-old Syrian civil war, with Syrian President Bashar Assad and Iranian proxy Hezbollah threatening to open a new front on the Golan Heights.

In signal to Syria, US to deploy fighter jets in Jordan

June 22, 2013

In signal to Syria, US to deploy fighter jets in Jordan | The Times of Israel.

American officials say the dozen F-16s are not part of a build up to a no-fly zone or military action against Assad

June 22, 2013, 5:11 am An F-16 refueling in the air during a drill. (photo credit: Jeffrey Allen, U.S. Air Force/Department of Defense)

An F-16 refueling in the air during a drill. (photo credit: Jeffrey Allen, U.S. Air Force/Department of Defense)

WASHINGTON (AP) — About a dozen U.S. fighter jets will be flying and conducting training operations in Jordan, poised to respond if needed to protect allies if the war in neighboring Syria spills over the border, U.S. administration officials said Friday.

The increased show of U.S. military might — which brings the total number of U.S. forces in Jordan to as many as 1,000 — should be seen as a signal to Syria that it must confine its 2-year-old civil war within its borders, officials said. The officials said it is meant to show that the U.S. is committed to its defense relationship with Jordan and that America intends to maintain a strong presence in the region.

The officials added, however, that the decision to keep the F-16 fighters there is not a first step toward establishing a no-fly zone around any parts of Syria and should not be interpreted as a move to begin staging American troops there for possible military action in Syria. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the mission publicly.

The F-16 fighters, along with a Patriot missile battery and about 700 U.S. troops, are staying in Jordan beyond an international military exercise, which ended this week. The decision significantly increases the number of U.S. troops in Jordan, adding to the approximately 250 that have been there for some time.

Jordan had asked the U.S. to leave some military troops and equipment behind.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel approved the order last week for the U.S. Air Force to leave the fighters there, and military officials have been working to carve out exactly what the troops’ mission will be in the coming weeks and months. No date has been set for the forces to leave.

In a letter to congressional leaders, President Barack Obama said Friday, “the detachment will remain in Jordan, in full coordination with the government of Jordan, until the security situation becomes such that it is no longer needed.”

The training mission also provides a way for the fighter pilots to meet their flight requirements. F-16 pilots are required to fly nine or 10 sorties a months in order to remain combat ready.

The added U.S. military support to Jordan comes as the Obama administration hammers out details to provide lethal aid for Syrian rebels.

U.S. officials announced earlier this month that they had conclusive evidence that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime has used chemical weapons, including the nerve agent sarin, on a small scale against opposition forces. The White House said multiple chemical attacks last year killed up to 150 people.

As a result, officials said that Obama authorized sending weapons to Syrian opposition groups — a policy shift after months of wrangling over whether or not the chemical weapons had actually been used. Obama had said that the use of chemical weapons would cross a “red line” triggering greater U.S. involvement in the civil war.

Syrian rebels have been pressing for additional weapons, including anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles, but administration officials have worried that high-powered weapons could end up in the hands of terrorist groups. Hezbollah fighters are among those backing Assad’s armed forces, and al-Qaida-linked extremists back the rebellion.

Officials have said that the CIA would largely coordinate the delivery of arms to the rebels.

The CIA has led U.S. outreach to the rebels from outside Syria, meeting them at refugee camps and towns along the Turkish and Jordanian borders. CIA paramilitary officers, as well as special operations trainers, have trained select groups of rebels in Jordan on the use of encrypted communications equipment — the nonlethal aid provided by the Obama administration — and they have helped the rebels learn how to fire anti-aircraft weapons and small arms provided by Gulf states.

The U.S. troops were in Jordan for a 12-day military exercise, dubbed Eager Lion, which ended this week. It included land, air and sea maneuvers across the country and involved about personnel from 19 Arab and European nations.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

U.S. has secretly provided arms training to Syria rebels since 2012 – latimes.com

June 22, 2013

U.S. has secretly provided arms training to Syria rebels since 2012 – latimes.com.

CIA agents and special operations troops have trained the rebels in anti-tank and antiaircraft weaponry in Jordan and Turkey.

U.S. has secretly provided weapons training to Syria rebels

A photo taken by a Syrian citizen shows a rebel firing a heavy machine gun toward government forces in Aleppo. Members of the opposition have secretly been receiving weapons training from the U.S. (Aleppo Media Center, Associated Press / June 20, 2013)

WASHINGTON — CIA operatives and U.S. special operations troops have been secretly training Syrian rebels with anti-tank and antiaircraft weapons since late last year, months before President Obama approved plans to begin directly arming them, according to U.S. officials and rebel commanders.

The covert U.S. training at bases in Jordan and Turkey, along with Obama’s decision this month to supply arms and ammunition to the rebels, has raised hope among the beleaguered Syrian opposition that Washington ultimately will provide heavier weapons as well. So far, the rebels say they lack the weapons they need to regain the offensive in the country’s bitter civil war.

The tightly constrained U.S. effort reflects Obama’s continuing doubts about being drawn into a conflict that has already killed more than 100,000 people and his administration’s fear that Islamic militants now leading the war against President Bashar Assad could gain control of advanced U.S. weaponry.

The training has involved fighters from the Free Syrian Army, a loose confederation of rebel groups that the Obama administration has promised to back with expanded military assistance, said a U.S. official, who discussed the effort anonymously because he was not authorized to disclose details.

The number of rebels given U.S. instruction in Jordan and Turkey could not be determined, but in Jordan, the training involves 20 to 45 insurgents at a time, a rebel commander said.

U.S. special operations teams selected the trainees over the last year when the U.S. military set up regional supply lines to provide the rebels with nonlethal assistance, including uniforms, radios and medical aid.

The two-week courses include training with Russian-designed 14.5-millimeter antitank rifles, anti-tank missiles and 23-millimeter antiaircraft weapons, according to a rebel commander in the Syrian province of Dara who helps oversee weapons acquisitions and who asked that his name not be used because the program is secret.

The training began in November at a new American base in the desert in southwestern Jordan, he said. So far, about 100 rebels from Dara have attended four courses, and rebels from Damascus, the Syrian capital, have attended three, he said.

“Those from the CIA, we would sit and talk with them during breaks from training, and afterward they would try to get information on the situation” in Syria, he said.

The rebels were promised enough armor-piercing anti-tank weapons and other arms to gain a military advantage over Assad’s better-equipped army and security forces, the Dara commander said. But arms shipments from Qatar, Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries, provided with assent from the Americans, took months to arrive and included less than the rebels had expected.

Since last year, the weapons sent through the Dara rebel military council have included four or five Russian-made heavy Concourse antitank missiles, 18 14.5-millimeter guns mounted on the backs of pickup trucks and 30 82-millimeter recoil-less rifles. The weapons are all Soviet or Russian models but manufactured in other countries, the commander said. Such weapons allow the rebels to easily use captured munitions from the Syrian army, which has a large arsenal of Russian and Soviet arms.

“I’m telling you, this amount of weapons, once they are spread across the province [of Dara], is considered nothing,” the commander said. “We need more than this to tip the balance or for there to even be a balance of power.”

U.S. officials said the Obama administration and its allies might supply anti-tank weapons to help the rebels destroy armored vehicles used by Assad’s forces. They are less likely to provide portable antiaircraft missiles, which the rebels say they need to fight back against Assad’s helicopters and warplanes. U.S. officials fear those missiles would fall into the hands of the largest of the Islamist militias in the rebel coalition, Al Nusra Front, which the U.S. regards as an Al Qaeda ally.

Secretary of State John F. Kerry headed to Qatar on Friday and will talk with other governments backing the rebels. A senior State Department official told reporters that the talks would include discussions about coordinating deliveries of military aid.

Asked Friday about the CIA training, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said the U.S. had increased its aid to the rebels in the Free Syrian Army, but he refused to provide details.

“We have stepped up our assistance, but I cannot inventory for you all the elements of that assistance,” Carney said,. “We have provided and will continue to provide substantial assistance to the Syrian opposition, as well as the Supreme Military Council.”

The council is the military arm of an umbrella group that represents more moderate rebel factions, including the Free Syrian Army.

CIA officials declined to comment on the secret training programs, which was being done covertly in part because of U.S. legal concerns about publicly arming the rebels, which would constitute an act of war against the Assad government. Other U.S. officials confirmed the training, but disputed some of the details provided by rebel commanders.

Brig. Gen. Yahya Bittar, who defected as a fighter pilot from Assad’s air force last year and is head of intelligence for the Free Syrian Army, said training for the last month or so had taken place in Jordan.

The training, conducted by American, Jordanian and French operatives, involves rockets and anti-tank and antiaircraft weaponry, he said.

Between 80 and 100 rebels from all over Syria have gone through the courses in the last month, he said, and training is continuing. Graduates are sent back across the border to rejoin the battle.

Bittar said sufficient weapons had yet to arrive for the rebel forces and that the Americans had not yet told them when they could expect to receive additional arms.

“Just promises, just promises,” he said.

david.cloud@latimes.com

raja.abdulrahim@latimes.com

Cloud reported from Washington and Abdulrahim from Los Angeles.

Damascus under fire, US deploys hundreds of troops in Jordan

June 22, 2013

Damascus under fire, US deploys hundreds of troops in Jordan – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Fierce battles rage in Syrian capital, Aleppo in north. After series of Assad forces victorie, Syrian rebels receive new arms, promise turn in tide

News Agencies

Published: 06.22.13, 00:29 / Israel News

Assad’s forces, backed by Hezbollah fighters, have launched a campaign to crush the rebel pockets in Damascus, particularly in the north-east of the capital and its surroundings.

Meanwhile, Syrian rebels are not losing hope, and high-ranking officers in the Free Syrian Army said they have received new weapons from friendly countries that could lead to changes on the ground and victories against President Bashar Assad‘s forces.

At the same time, fears of an escalation in the fighting have led the White House to leave about 700 combat-ready troops in Jordan after the military exercise which took place this week in the Hashemite Kingdom.
כוחות אמריקניים במהלך התרגיל בירדן, השבוע (צילום: AFP)

US military drill in Jordan this week (Photo: AFP)

According to a statement made by United States President Barack Obama, per the Jordanian government’s request, the troops will remain in Jordanian territory until the security situation will allow their departure.

According to the White House statement, the remaining force includes Patriot Missile systems, fighter jets among others.

Since Wednesday, Assad’s forces have launched an attack against the rebel pockets in Damascus, and the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights (OSDH) reported the army resumed bombing the Qaboun neighborhood of the capital.
נפילת פצצת מרגמה בדמשק (צילום: EPA)

Mortar shell in Damascus (Photo: EPA)

Also in Aleppo, the army bombed several areas, and two rebels were killed in the fighting. Conversely, state TV channels in Syria reported that army forces killed several “terrorists” near the main Aleppo prison, and destroyed arms stockpiles and ammunition, including anti-aircraft weapons.

But against the backdrop of the seeming turn in the tide in favor of the regime, high rebel officials made clear that the battle is far from over after receiving new arms from friendly countries.

The arms shipments arrived recently from Arab nations and other countries, a spokesman for the opposition fighters, Loay AlMikdad, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

He did not elaborate on the shipments but insisted no weapons have come from the United States so far.

AlMikdad’s comments confirm earlier AP reporting that new weapons were recently delivered to the opposition from allies, enabling them to stall advances by regime forces in the northern city of Aleppo, Syria’s largest, and elsewhere.

Opposition members and experts had told the AP that Gulf countries delivered earlier this month new anti-tank missiles and some anti-aircraft missiles to rebel commanders.

But the United Nations have taken care to cool the rebels’ enthusiasm: a UN human rights investigator warned on Friday that increasing the flow of weapons to Syria’s government and rebel forces will most likely cause an increase in war crimes.

“States who provide arms have responsibilities in terms of the eventual use of those arms to commit … war crimes or crimes against humanity,” said Paulo Pinheiro, who chairs a UN commission of inquiry on rights violations in Syria.

Earlier on Friday, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin stressed that the West shouldn’t send weapons to “terror groups” among the Syrian rebels.

“If the United States … recognizes one of the key Syrian opposition organizations, al-Nusra, as terrorist … how can one deliver arms to those opposition members? Where will they end up? What role will they play?” he wondered during a press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Arab World: Will Egypt’s embattled Morsi weather the storm?

June 22, 2013

Arab World: Will Egypt’s embattled Morsi weather the storm? | JPost | Israel News.

By ZVI MAZEL
LAST UPDATED: 06/22/2013 08:04
The Egyptian president is tightening his grip on key ministries, but his support is sharply down and a new revolutionary movement aims to sweep him out of power.

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi Photo: REUTERS

With mass demonstrations scheduled for June 30, a new poll has shown that the popularity of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi has dropped from 57 percent a year ago to barely 28%.

The revolutionary youths who toppled former president Hosni Mubarak have launched a new movement called Tamarud, or “rebellion,” and are spearheading a campaign to force the president to resign; they accuse him of having betrayed the revolution, setting up a dictatorial regime, oppressing the individual and failed to address the spiraling economic crisis.

They also accuse him of blatantly filling every state position with members of the Muslim Brotherhood – a militant organization which openly states its desire to restore the caliphate – though Morsi had renounced his membership in the Brotherhood upon taking office.

In one of his more flagrant endeavors to complete the Brotherhood takeover of the country, Morsi appointed a devout member of the movement as culture minister. The man immediately fired the heads of the departments of music, theater, literature and visual arts, angering most Egyptians.

A similar process occured in the Ministries of Education and Religion.

It is obvious to all that the Brotherhood is striving to achieve complete control in the realms of education, religion and culture, with the aim of molding new generations in accordance with its ideology.

Earlier this week, Morsi appointed 17 new governors; seven are Muslim Brothers, and one, the governor of the key tourism province of Luxor, is a member of the Gama’a al- Islamiyya, the terrorist organization responsible for the 1997 Luxor massacre that left 57 foreign tourists dead.

With the lower house of parliament disbanded by the courts, Morsi is pressing the upper house of the parliament – to which he granted by presidential decree the legislative powers vested in the presidency by the new constitution – to pass a number of important laws wanted by the Brotherhood concerning NGOs, the electoral process and the political rights of citizens.

These laws severely curtail the fundamental rights of the people, and many have been struck down by Egypt’s Supreme Constitutional Court.

The Tamarud movement has been circulating a petition to strip Morsi of his legitimacy, vowing to gather 15 million signatures before June 30.

Having announced it had garnered seven million so far, the movement is now at work organizing mass demonstrations against Morsi and the Brotherhood regime throughout the country – protests slated to reach their peak on June 30 in order to force the president to resign.

Will they succeed? It is true that most non-Islamic parties have declared their support for the Tamarud initiative and will take part in the mass demonstration at the end of the month. The National Salvation Front opposing Morsi’s legislative power grabs – led by Mohamed ElBaradei, Amru Moussa and Hamdeen Sabahi – has also agreed to the move; Moussa has gone as far as to say that June 30 will see the end of the Morsi regime.

The Front – which unites the liberals, the Left and the popular Nasserist current – is the only organized political opposition, and refuses to dialogue with Morsi until its three demands are met: withdrawal of the new electoral law granting a clear advantage to the Brotherhood party, setting up a neutral government to stay in place until elections are held, and dismissal of the attorney-general appointed in violation of the law.

Morsi and the Brotherhood are pretty much alone; even Salafists and other religious groups – including terrorists who were allowed to come back from their exile abroad – no longer support them, because they disagree on the application of the Shari’a law and are wary of the true aims of the Brotherhood. Incidentally, the Brotherhood does want to implement Shari’a, but cannot yet do so in the face of popular protest and the need to tackle the economy first. Only Gama’a al-Islamiyya openly supports the regime.

This is an extremist organization linked to the assassination of Anwar Sadat; It also tried to assassinate Mubarak in the ’90s. The group carried out, with Iranian help, a series of terror attacks throughout Egypt, killing more than 1,000 people, Egyptians and foreign tourists. Under Morsi, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces granted the group a form of legitimacy, releasing its guerrillas from jail.

Ordinary Egyptians are so disenchanted with Morsi that last Friday, as he was leaving the mosque after prayers, he was surrounded by hundreds of people who tried to block his way and abused him verbally. His security detail worked hard to get him safely out of the mosque and into his car.

There are daily attacks against offices of the Brotherhood throughout the country, and protesters remain camped out near the presidential palace in Cairo.

The people’s main worry is the economic situation. So far, the government has managed to import staples and make them available at subsidized prices – but only thanks to generous grants and loans received from Qatar, Saudi Arabia Libya and Turkey.

Yet Morsi cannot bring himself to accept the terms of the International Monetary Fund, which is ready to loan the country $4.8 billion, but demands reforms which would hurt the poorer classes – so far the bulwark of his regime.

To add to this already volatile mix, a crisis is brewing with Ethiopia over its plan to build a dam on the Blue Nile, a move that could impact the amount of water reaching Egypt. Though there are efforts to defuse the situation, Egyptians are angry at what they perceive as their country’s inability to protect their most vital interests.

In a futile attempt to display leadership, Morsi broke off relations with Syria, a move which came as no surprise and stirred little interest.

The Brotherhood is beginning to sit up and notice that the situation is getting serious.

Various reports mention that the younger members of the organization are training in paramilitary groups, in order to defend their leader and their offices against demonstrators.

As for the Egyptian army – which is basking in an unheard-of 94% approval rate – is sitting on the fence, and says it won’t intervene.

The Interior Ministry is putting the final touches on a plan to draft thousands of policemen and use the armored vehicles of the dreaded security forces in order to protect the regime.

Instead of addressing burning issues, the Brotherhood is stepping up its efforts to secure its hold on the country, while Morsi can be heard repeating that Allah will come to his aid.

Time will tell if the opposition is strong enough and determined enough to challenge their domination.

The writer, a fellow of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, is a former ambassador to Romania, Egypt and Sweden.

Don’t Mess With The JEWISH Navy !

June 21, 2013

Don’t Mess With The JEWISH Navy ! – YouTube.

( A short vid I edited to support my old unit.  The IDF Navy faces severe threats of ship to shore missiles from Hiz and Syria.  In addition, they now have to protect Israel’s new gas wells in the Mediterranean. – JW  )

In appreciation of the courageous and dedicated men and women of the IDF Navy.

בהערכה של האנשים ונשים האמיצים ומסורים של חיל ים של צה”ל

From a veteran of the first Lebanon war through the first Gulf war.

!חזק ואמץ

Putin says he is concerned if Assad leaves power ‘now’

June 21, 2013

Putin says he is concerned if Assad leaves power ‘now’ – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

Friday, 21 June 2013
Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses participants of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg, June 21, 2013. (Reuters)
Al Arabiya

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday that his concerned about the risk of political vacuum if embattled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad leaves power now.

“We are concerned about the possible appearance of apolitical vacuum in Syria if some decisions about a change of government in Syria are taken now,” Reuters reported Putting as saying during a press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel,

“Assad goes today, a political vacuum emerges – who will fill it? Maybe …terrorist organizations,” Putin added.

A spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army told AFP on Friday that his group have recently received new weapons that could “change the course of the battle” against the Syrian regime.

“We’ve received quantities of new types of weapons, including some that we asked for and that we believe will change the course of the battle on the ground,” FSA political and media coordinator Louay Muqdad said, according to AFP.

“We have begun distributing them on the front lines, they will be in the hands of professional officers and FSA fighters,” he said.

He did not specify what weapons had been received or when they had arrived, but added that a new shipment was expecting in coming days and recalled that the rebels had asked for “deterrent weapons.”

The apparent influx of weapons comes after the United States said it would provide rebel forces with “military support,” although it has declined to outline what that might entail.

“The weapons will be used for one objective, which is to fight the regime of (President) Bashar al-Assad,” Muqdad insisted.

“They will be collected after the fall of the regime, we have made this commitment to the friends and brotherly countries” who supplied the weapons, he said.

On Thursday, Muqdad said rebels needed short-range ground-to-air missiles, surface-to-air missiles known as MANPADS, anti-tank missiles, mortars and ammunition.

(With AFP and Reuters)

Lavrov: US actions may derail Syria peace conference

June 21, 2013

Lavrov: US actions may derail Syria peace conference | The Times of Israel.

Russia’s foreign minister calls arms shipments to rebels a ‘very big mistake,’ says it’s unrealistic that Assad will step down

June 21, 2013, 5:53 pm
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks to the media June 15 (photo credit: AP/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks to the media June 15 (photo credit: AP/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) — Russia’s foreign minister said Friday that Washington is sending contradictory signals on Syria that could derail an international conference intended to end the civil war, warning that U.S. talk about a possible no-fly zone would only encourage the rebels to keep fighting.

Sergey Lavrov, speaking in an interview with The Associated Press and the Bloomberg news agencies on Friday, also criticized demands that Syrian President Bashar Assad step down.

“Not because we like the regime, not because we want the regime to stay, but because it’s for the Syrians to decide,” Lavrov said. “And to say you must capitulate and deliver the power to us is just not realistic.”

In addition, he dismissed allegations by the United States, Britain and France that Assad’s regime has used chemical weapons.

Russia has been the key ally of Assad’s regime throughout a two-year civil war, which has killed more than 93,000 people, shielding it from U.N. Security Council sanctions and continuing to provide it with weapons.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has confirmed that his country signed a contract for the delivery of S-300 state-of-the art air defense missile systems to Syria, but said it hasn’t been fulfilled yet.

Lavrov defended the S-300 deal, pointing to the deployment of U.S. Patriot air defense missiles and fighter jets to neighboring Jordan.

“The contract on S-300s is absolutely legal, it’s transparent and it’s fully in line with the international norms and with the Russian export control legislation,” he said.

“Second, the contract hasn’t been yet finalized. Third, the Americans are leaving Patriots after this exercise in Jordan, together with F-16 planes, and no one is asking them not to do this. The region is really full of weapons, including offensive weapons which have been supplied in the past to the countries of the region, and some of these weapons are infiltrating into Syria.”

He said supplies of weapons to the Syrian opposition, which have been promised by Washington and are being considered by the European Union, would be a “very big mistake.”

Lavrov was asked if Russia is warning the West in particular against providing the rebels with shoulder-fired air defense missiles that could challenge Assad’s air dominance. He replied: “We believe this is absolutely illegitimate, and we aren’t going to legitimize it by starting discussing some conditions on which these supplies could be justified.”

He said that while the U.S. says it favors sponsoring a Syria peace conference in Geneva, it has made statements that have sent a conflicting signal to the rebels. Lavrov said that the U.S. talk about a possible no-fly zone in particular has encouraged the opposition to step up fighting instead of sitting down for talks.

“The message the opposition is getting: Guys, don’t go to Geneva, don’t say you are going to negotiate with the regime, soon things will change in your favor,” Lavrov said. “It’s either the conference or the instigation of the opposition not to be flexible. I don’t think it’s possible to do both at the same time.”

The date and location of the international conference on Syria haven’t been announced yet, but it’s already being dubbed “Geneva 2″ since a similar event was held there a year ago.

“If our goal is the conference, then we must avoid any discussions and, of course, any action designed to establish a no-fly zone. We must avoid confrontational debates and one-sided resolutions in the General Assembly and in the Human Rights Council because all this isn’t helping to create the atmosphere necessary to convene a conference,” Lavrov said.

He shrugged off the U.S., British and French statements about the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime as ungrounded, saying they “smack of politics and speculation.”

“We have been told by the Americans, by the French, by the British that they have proofs,” he said. “What they showed to us is absolutely unconvincing. It’s not based on facts, and it can’t be taken as a proof.”

He said that a new international probe must determine the truth and added that after the conflict is over, Syria could be encouraged to destroy its chemical weapons stockpiles.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.