Archive for August 8, 2013

US decries settlement activity, confirms Indyk headed to Israel

August 8, 2013

US decries settlement activity, confirms Indyk headed to Israel | The Times of Israel.

( Iran months, maybe weeks from the bomb?  Egypt in collapse, both sides blaming the US?  Over 100,000 dead in Syria?  22 US embassies evacuated for fear of Al Qaeda?  Not to worry… Obama’s still tough on Jewish settlements ! – JW )

Special envoy to meet with diplomatic officials in Jerusalem before heading to Jericho for another round of discussions

August 8, 2013, 10:33 pm
US envoy Martin Indyk (photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

US envoy Martin Indyk (photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Washington has criticized Israel for a recent move to support settlements and confirmed that its new Mideast peace envoy will be in Jerusalem and Jericho next week for a second round of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Thursday that Martin Indyk and deputy special envoy Frank Lowenstein would travel to the region to facilitate talks to craft a two-state solution to the long-running conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

On Wednesday, sources in Jerusalem told The Times of Israel that Indyk, who was hand-picked by US President Barack Obama to be Washington’s point man at the talks, was scheduled to meet with officials from the Prime Minister’s Office, the Foreign Ministry, and members of Justice Minister Tzipi Livni’s negotiating team.

Earlier this month, the cabinet expanded its list of West Bank settlements eligible for government subsidies, a decision that came just days after the resumption of the long-frozen peace talks. The cabinet approved a range of housing subsidies and loans for more than 600 Israeli communities deemed “national priority areas.” The list includes poor towns in Israel’s outlying areas as well as dozens of settlements.

Psaki said US officials were speaking with the Israeli government to express US concern about these settlements.

“We do not accept the legitimacy of continued settlement activity and oppose any efforts to legitimize settlement outposts,” Psaki said. “The secretary has made clear that he believes both of the negotiating teams are at the table in good faith and are committed to working together to make progress.”

Meanwhile, a ministerial committee tasked with overseeing the release of 104 Palestinian prisoners — a confidence-building gesture by Israel to ease the talks — is set to meet for the first time on Sunday.

The five members of the panel will decide on the identity of the 25 prisoners to be released in the first of four phased releases, all of whom have been imprisoned since before the 1993 Oslo peace accords.

The committee that will handle the prisoner release process is composed of Netanyahu, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, Livni, Science Minister Yaakov Peri and Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch. It will decide which prisoners on the list of 104 will go free at what stage, determine whether they will be allowed to return to their homes or be sent abroad, and oversee the implementation.

Last month the cabinet approved the prisoner releases, which were a Palestinian precondition for peace talks, and while the decision was widely pilloried by politicians on the right and the Israeli public, Netanyahu said it was for the “good of the country.”

Earlier this week, the Palestinian Authority’s chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat, declared that the first batch of prisoners would be released by mid-August. Livni said that another round of peace talks would be held in Israel by the second week of August after negotiations were restarted in Washington at the end of last month. Livni noted that some prisoners would already have been released by the time the second round of talks commenced.

On the Palestinian side, all Palestinian factions belonging to the PLO with the exception of Fatah have refused to take part in a committee to oversee negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian due to their principled rejection of negotiations, the London-based daily A-Sharq Al-Awsat reported on Wednesday.

One week ahead of the resumption of negotiations in Jerusalem, no Palestinian oversight committee is yet in place, senior Palestinian sources told the daily.

“This committee was meant to be headed by President Abu Mazen [Mahmoud Abbas] and include the secretary generals of the factions as well as a few members of the [PLO] Executive Committee. But all the factions in the PLO refused; the Democratic Front, the Popular Front, the People’s Party, and others,” a source was quoted as saying.

Caustic Light on White House’s Reaction to a Terrorist Threat – NYTimes.com

August 8, 2013

Caustic Light on White House’s Reaction to a Terrorist Threat – NYTimes.com.

WASHINGTON — The gloating among jihadists and their sympathizers began last week, right after the United States shut down almost two dozen diplomatic posts across the Middle East in response to a terrorist threat.

“God is great! America is in a condition of terror and fear from Al Qaeda,” wrote one jihadist in an online forum. Another one rejoiced: “The mobilization and security precautions are costing them billions of dollars. We hope to hear more of such psychological warfare, even if there are no actual jihadi operations on the ground.”

The jihadists are not the only ones who see the new terrorist alert in a caustic light.

The Obama administration’s decision to evacuate so many diplomats on such short notice — however justified by the seriousness of the threat — has upset some of its foreign partners, who say the gesture contributes to a sense of panic and perceived weakness that plays into the hands of the United States’ enemies, and impedes their efforts to engage with people in their countries.

Some American officials have also said they believe the administration overreacted, in large part because of the political fallout from the attack last year on the diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, that killed the American ambassador, J. Christopher Stevens. Since that attack, security procedures have been tightened at American diplomatic outposts across the Middle East. Those embassies are already so heavily fortified against attacks that many diplomats lament it is more and more difficult for them to do their jobs.

“I think since Benghazi the administration has been in a defensive crouch, and they are playing it as safe as they can,” said Will McCants, a former State Department counterterrorism official who is now an analyst at the Center for Naval Analyses in Alexandria, Va.

The government of Yemen issued a rare public rebuke to the Obama administration on Tuesday, declaring in a statement that the evacuation “serves the interests of the extremists” and undermines cooperation with the United States. As if to answer the gesture, Yemen announced Wednesday that it had foiled a spectacular plot to bomb oil pipelines and take over major ports — an assertion that was greeted by analysts both here and abroad as little more than cynical political theater aimed at proving that Yemen was capable of defeating Al Qaeda on its own.

The diplomatic shutdown may have been especially jarring, analysts say, because the administration has portrayed Al Qaeda as a waning force in the past year.

“The impression the administration left was that Al Qaeda was dead or close to dead,” said Bruce Riedel, a former Central Intelligence Agency case officer and a Brookings Institution scholar. “In which case, why are we so worried about a conversation between two Al Qaeda leaders?”

 The intercepted conversation in question was between Ayman al-Zawahri, who succeeded Osama bin Laden as the leader of Al Qaeda, and Nasser al-Wuhayshi, the leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, based in Yemen. American officials and lawmakers have said the conversation revealed one of the most serious terrorist plots against Western interests since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

But the vagueness of the threat has made it easier to question the Obama administration’s response. The two men did not specify the nature or location of the attack, American officials say. The timing was also unclear, though the attack was apparently originally scheduled to take place last Sunday.

In an appearance Tuesday on NBC’s “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno,” President Obama defended the government’s initial decision to shutter 22 embassies and consulates. The State Department said Monday that 19 diplomatic missions would remain closed through the end of this week.

“Whenever we see a threat stream that we think is specific enough that we can take some specific precautions within a certain time frame, then we do so,” Mr. Obama said.

On Wednesday, several American intelligence, defense and Congressional officials described a growing body of intercepted communications among jihadists over the past few months that culminated in especially worrisome conversations between Mr. Zawahri and Mr. Wuhayshi.

“It’s a very high threat environment with Al Qaeda right now because of the quality, quantity and seriousness of the intelligence we’re getting,” said one Congressional official who receives regular updates from the C.I.A. and Defense Intelligence Agency.

By closing the embassies and consulates, the United States and its allies deprive terrorists of potential targets and also buy time to find more clues and pressure extremist networks, hoping to trip up any would-be attackers.

Still, some security analysts, as well as current and former government officials, said the administration, still stinging from the criticism of its handling of the attack in Benghazi last September, was taking extraordinary precautions in this instance.

To some critics, the diplomatic shutdown was reminiscent of the Bush administration’s color-coded terrorism alerts, which were seen by some as efforts to sow fear and broaden political support for stronger antiterrorism policies.

In the Middle East, some government officials saw the alert as an unnecessary blow that was bound to further damage their efforts to lure tourists and foreign investment.

That was especially true in Yemen, whose president, Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi, was in Washington last week meeting with Mr. Obama.

Yemen’s government has worked closely with the United States on counterterrorism measures, and American officials, who had a troubled relationship with Yemen’s former longtime president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, have voiced confidence in Mr. Hadi and increased aid to the country.

“When you do evacuations, you signal that all the effort to build up trust in the Yemeni security establishment amounts to nothing,” said one Yemeni official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “And all the development projects by U.S.A.I.D. and its counterparts in Britain, Germany and elsewhere — everything stops.”

In the Yemeni capital, Sana, the American withdrawal prompted a muscular display of military defiance that left residents puzzled. Jet fighters soared across the sky throughout the day on Tuesday and Wednesday, and soldiers in armored vehicles blocked sections of the city.

Yemeni officials said Wednesday that they had thwarted a bold plot by Al Qaeda to take over ports and destroy oil pipelines. But they provided no evidence of the plot, which was not related to the threats that prompted the embassy closings.

The Yemeni announcement, which echoed other recent statements about foiled terrorist schemes, elicited skepticism and even some amusement among analysts.

“The timing of the plot is deeply suspicious,” said Gregory Johnsen, the author of “The Last Refuge,” a book on Yemen and Al Qaeda. “It doesn’t fit into what we know about Al Qaeda, but it does fit into what we know about the way the Yemeni government plays these things.”

Steinitz: Iran’s nuclear program can be destroyed with a few hours of airstrikes

August 8, 2013

Israel Hayom | Steinitz: Iran’s nuclear program can be destroyed with a few hours of airstrikes.

Exiled opposition group says Iran is building a new nuclear facility east of Tehran • Satellite images suggest new missiles test site being built north of Semnan province • Steinitz: Rouhani is cunning, and he will smile all the way to the bomb.

News Agencies, Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
The Arak heavy-water project, southwest of Tehran [Archive]

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Photo credit: Reuters

Iran’s new president Hasan Rouhani is “charming, he is cunning, and he will smile all the way to the bomb,” Minister for International, Intelligence and Strategic Affairs Yuval Steinitz said in an interview with The Washington Post, published on Thursday. Israel believes the United States and others in the West are being misled by the moderate cleric’s recent election to the presidency. Steinitz told the Post that rather than negotiating with Tehran, the U.S. and the international community should tighten the economic sanctions against Iran’s already stagnating economy.

The Israeli intelligence minister told The Washington Post that Tehran should hear from the U.S. and the international community that it has only two choices: voluntarily shutter its uranium enrichment program or “see it destroyed with brute force,” which he envisioned as “a few hours of airstrikes, no more.”

Steinitz shrugged at the possible consequences of such a strike and said he could envision Iran firing “several hundred missiles” at Israel in retaliation, producing “very limited damage because we can intercept many of them,” he told the Post.

Iran this week denied an exiled opposition group’s allegation that it was secretly building a new underground nuclear facility. The dissident National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) claims that it had obtained “reliable” information about a tunnel complex under construction in a mountainous area near the town of Damavand, east of the capital Tehran.

The NCRI did not specify what kind of atomic activity it believed would be carried out at the alleged new facility once complete.

“This news is in no way true and is denied,” the Mehr News Agency quoted Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Araqchi as saying.

“These claims are a continuation of the story-telling of the bankrupt group,” Araqchi said, adding the “terrorist” organization lacked credibility.

The report sparked new concerns in the West, which already suspects the Islamic Republic is trying to develop military nuclear capabilities.

The Paris-based NCRI exposed Iran’s uranium enrichment facility at Natanz and a heavy water facility at Arak in 2002, but analysts say it has a mixed track record and a political agenda. The NCRI, which seeks an end to Islamist theocratic rule in Iran, is the political wing of the People’s Mujahideen Organization of Iran (PMOI), which fought alongside Saddam Hussein’s forces in the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

The report drew a cautious international response: the U.N. nuclear watchdog and France — one of six world powers trying to diplomatically resolve the nuclear dispute with Iran — merely said they would look into the matter.

In 2009, Iran stated that it planned to build 10 more uranium enrichment sites on top of its underground Natanz and Fordo plants, alarming the West as it could enable Tehran to faster produce material which can have both civilian and military uses.

Tehran’s refusal to curb sensitive nuclear activity, and its lack of full openness with the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency, have drawn tough Western sanctions and a threat of preemptive military strikes by Israel.

Meanwhile, The Daily Telegraph reported Wednesday that Iran has built a new base where it is likely to test ballistic missiles. The report was based on satellite images of the structure, in the northern Semnan province.

Iran claimed in the past that it was building a new space launch base in the area for its domestic satellite program. According to the report, “the new site is close to Iran’s first space centre, but analysts believe it is designed to test ballistic missiles rather than launch space rockets.”

Satellite images of the site taken in July and obtained by IHS Jane’s, a business intelligence company specializing in military and national security, show a 23-meter (75 feet) tall launch tower sitting on a launch pad measuring 200 meters by 140 meters (656 feet by 460 feet). The satellite images also show a 125-meter (410 feet) long exhaust deflector.

IHS Jane’s analysts said the site has no storage for the liquid rocket fuel — used in the Iranian space program — suggesting it is meant to house ballistic missiles, which use solid fuel.

“This site could be a facility for launching satellites into orbit. However, Iran is already building at least one other site for this purpose and, looking at the satellite imagery we have got, we believe that this facility is most likely used for testing ballistic missiles. IHS editor Matthew Clements was quoted by the Telegraph as saying.

“Its location and orientation would be suitable for long-range missile tests as they would fly over Iranian territory for 870 miles, meaning large quantities of flight data could be gathered before they drop into the Indian Ocean… At the same time, we can’t see any storage facilities for the liquid fuel needed for the rockets that launch satellites, suggesting it will be used for solid-fuel ballistic missiles.”

Clements says there was no indication the Shahrud base was a nuclear facility.

Tehran said it plans to expand its space program.

Minister of Communication and Information Technology Mohammad Hassan Nami said last month that Tehran was “building other [space] centers and we are trying to have a powerful start.”

But according to Clements, IHS findings “along with public Iranian claims, suggest that they would have three launch sites. That seems excessive at a time when Iran is in severe economic difficulties because of Western sanctions.”

When failure carries no cost

August 8, 2013

Column One: When failure carries no cost | JPost | Israel News.

( This OpEd sums up my feelings on the Obama/Iran dilemma better than anything else I have read.  I can’t help but hope my feelings are wrong, but at this point it’s time Israel calls it like it is.  We’re alone… Again. – JW )

08/08/2013 21:38
After 3 and a half year delay, US Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan was finally placed on trial for massacring 13 and wounding 32 at Ft. Hood.

US Army in Afghanistan (illustrative)

US Army in Afghanistan (illustrative) Photo: Reuters

This week, after a three-and-a-half-year delay, US Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan was finally placed on trial for massacring 13 and wounding 32 at Ft. Hood, Texas, on November 5, 2009.Hasan was a self-identified jihadist.

His paper and electronic trail provided mountains of evidence that he committed the massacre to advance the cause of Islamic supremacy.Islamic supremacists like Hasan, and his early mentor al-Qaida operations chief Anwar al-Awlaki, view as enemies all people who oppose totalitarian Islam’s quest for global domination.

Before, during and following his assault, Hasan made his jihadist motives obvious to the point of caricature in his statements about the US, the US military and the duties of pious Muslims.But rather than believe Hasan, and so do justice to his victims, the Obama administration, with the active collusion of senior US military commanders went to great lengths to cover up Hasan’s ideological motivations and hence the nature of his crime.

On the day of the attack, Lt.-Gen. Robert Cone, then commander of III Corps at Ft. Hood, said preliminary evidence didn’t suggest that the shooting was terrorism. Cone said this even though it was immediately known that before he began shooting Hasan called out “Allahu akhbar.” He called himself a “Soldier of Islam” on his business cards.

In an interview with CNN three days after the attack, US Army Chief of Staff Gen.

George Casey said, “Our diversity, not only in our army, but in our country, is a strength.

And as horrific as this tragedy was, if our diversity becomes a casualty, I think that’s worse.”

The intensity of the Obama administration’s participation in this cover-up became clear in May 2012. At that time, Congress had placed a clause inside the Defense Appropriations Act requiring the Pentagon to award Purple Hearts to Ft. Hood’s victims. Rather than accept this eminently reasonable demand, which simply required the administration to acknowledge reality, Obama’s emissaries announced he would veto the appropriations bill and so leave the Pentagon without a budget unless the clause was removed.

Rather than define Hasan’s attack as an enemy attack or a terrorist act, the administration has defined it as a case of “workplace violence.” Following this determination, those wounded in the attack, as well as the families of the murdered, are denied the support conferred on soldiers killed or wounded by enemy fire.

At the first day of Hasan’s trial this week, he admitted that he perpetrated the murderous attack because he is a jihadist who “switched sides” in the war. That is, he told the court that he conducted the attack as an act of war against the United States to advance the goals of the global jihad.

Hasan’s statement made clear, once again, that in its efforts to describe his actions as “workplace violence,” the administration is engaging in a cover-up. Its purpose is to deny the American people the truth about the nature of the jihadist threat to their country.

Outside the conservative media, and certain circles of the Republican Party, there has been no public outcry over the government’s decision to cover up the nature of Hasan’s actions. The public’s passivity in the face of the government’s mendacious, unjust behavior owes to the fact that the mainstream media have not castigated the administration for its decision to hide that Hasan was not a garden variety disgruntled employee but a traitor who acted in the service of declared enemies of the United States.

In the absence of a media-induced public outcry, the administration has no reason to change its behavior. It has no impetus to acknowledge the truth and act accordingly.

The same is the case with regards to the September 11, 2012, attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi. Already on the day of the attack, it was apparent that the US mission and the CIA annex had been targeted in a premeditated, preplanned attack. Footage of the attack broadcast in real time showed armed men attacking the consulate with rocket-propelled grenades. It was not an act of savage mob violence. Mobs do not carry RPGs or act in a coordinated manner. That is, already at the time of the attack it was apparent that it was not a spontaneous protest in response to an anti-Islamic video on YouTube.

And yet, from the outset, the administration covered up what happened. And the media colluded. Fox News was the only major network that pursued the story. A US ambassador was raped and murdered on the anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks. US personnel were under multi-pronged attack for hours. Their desperate pleas for assistance were denied by the administration. And the US media went along with the fiction that the attack was a spontaneous outburst of rage over a YouTube video no one had ever seen.

The media’s collusion was so great that CNN anchor Candy Crowley threw a US presidential debate when she defended Barack Obama’s handling of the attack by inserting false information in the middle of the debate that she was moderating.

The Benghazi story keeps getting more and more outrageous. Last week we learned that some two dozen CIA personnel were on the ground during the attack. The administration has reportedly scattered these operatives throughout the US and forced them to adopt new identities. They have reportedly been prohibited from speaking to the media or congressional investigators, and subjected to monthly polygraph tests.

US personnel wounded in the attack have been hidden from investigators since the attack took place.

This behavior is scandalous, and unprecedented.

Yet, outside of the “usual suspects” in the conservative media and the Republican Party, there is no outrage. The media coverage of this shocking revelation is nearly nonexistent, and where it exists, the reportage is laconic, indifferent.

Here, too, the administration feels comfortable perpetuating its cover-up. As in the case of Ft. Hood, why come clean if there is no price to pay for lying and covering up? Speaking of the frequent US failures in understanding events in faraway lands, Winston Churchill famously quipped, “We can always count on the Americans to do the right thing, after they have exhausted all the other possibilities.” But what if the other possibilities are never exhausted? The media’s collusion with the Obama administration’s false portrayal of jihadist attacks on US targets gives foreign leaders concerned about the US’s lackadaisical attitude toward jihadist threats no reason for confidence. In the absence of public pressure, the Obama administration has no reason to change course when its policies fail.

In Israel’s case, the first place where the lesson of this state of affairs needs to be internalized is in regards to Iran’s nuclear weapons program. Since taking office, Obama has repeatedly claimed that he will not allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. But in practice, his actions have enabled Iran to vastly expand its nuclear weapons program. Due to his malfeasance, today Iran has arrived at the cusp of a nuclear arsenal. More than his words, Obama’s actions have made clear that he has no intention whatsoever of conducting military strikes against Iran’s nuclear installations to prevent the regime from developing nuclear weapons.

Obama’s latest ploy for running the clock down is his embrace of the fiction that Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, is a moderate interested, (and perforce empowered), to cut a nuclear deal with the US that would see Iran voluntarily and credibly end its uranium enrichment activities.

Speaking of Rouhani this week, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu referred to him as “a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” and warned US and European officials not to be taken in by his act. Netanyahu also noted that Iran has expanded its nuclear activities since Rouhani was elected two months ago.

But he might as well save his breath.

Rouhani’s act – like that of his supposedly moderate predecessors Mohammad Khatami and Ahkbar Hasemi Rafsanjani – is so thin that it can only work on people who will be taken in by anyone. And indeed, the Obama administration was taken in by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. For five years Obama insisted on conducting self-evidently futile negotiations with Iran while Ahmadinejad – the antimoderate – was serving as president.

The US and Europe are not taken in by Iran because Iran is good at hiding its true intentions.

They are taken in by Iran because they want to be taken in. They want to believe that they don’t have to attack Iran and overthrow the regime to prevent it from becoming a nuclear power. They want to believe they can appease Iran by pretending it isn’t a danger, just as they believe they can end the threat of terror by jihadists in the US military and Benghazi by pretending they don’t exist.

They want to believe these threats can be ignored, or appeased away. And just as Obama and his followers are willing to pretend away Hasan’s actions to protect “diversity,” and to pretend away the September 11, 2012, attack in Benghazi to protect the myth of the Arab Spring, so they are willing to permit Iran to go nuclear to protect the sanctity of appeasement.

The only thing they are willing to put their foot down about is the prospect of an Israeli strike. And they have put their foot down on this issue for the past decade. It isn’t that the US is deliberately enabling Iran to acquire a nuclear arsenal. It is just that the US elite in government and the media care more about protecting their faith in diversity and appeasement than they do about preventing Iran from becoming a nuclear power.

They have convinced themselves that the prospect of appeasing Iran will evaporate if Israel attacks Iran’s nuclear installations. And so we have seen a parade of senior US defense officials descending on Israel every time it appears that Israel is planning to attack Iran. We have seen a parade of former Israeli military and security chiefs with close ties to the US defense establishment declaring before every available microphone that Israel must not strike Iran and that we can count on Obama to protect us.

But we mustn’t believe their assurances or succumb to their pressure. Obama will not change course. He doesn’t have to. So long as he maintains faith with the god of appeasement, the US media will protect him. And so long as they protect him, he will pay no price for his failures. So he will repeat them.

Israel cannot countenance a nuclear Iran. So Israel needs to attack Iran’s nuclear installations.

No more needs to be said.

caroline@carolineglick.com

Gantz gives order to reopen Eilat Airport after closure for security reasons

August 8, 2013

Gantz gives order to reopen Eilat Airport after closure for security reasons | JPost | Israel News.

( I was trying to by a ticket for my son Zohar to fly here from Tel Aviv tomorrow.  No flights!  Now, maybe.  Whatever.  I told him to drive.  As opposed to the US, Israel doesn’t close it’s services unless there’s a good reason.  In the meantime, I’m having another drink. – JW )

By YAAKOV LAPPIN, JERUSALEM POST STAFF
LAST UPDATED: 08/08/2013 21:13
Airport closed for incoming and outgoing flights for some 2 hours following security assessment; IDF order comes as Egypt’s army continues operation to root out terror in neighboring Sinai.

Eilat hotels

Eilat hotels Photo: Wikimedia Commons

IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Bennty Gantz gave the Israel Airports Authority permission to reopen Eilat Airport on Thursday night after it had been closed for some two hours due to unspecified security reasons.

The decision to reopen the airport came following the latest security evaluation held by Gantz. The IDF said it would continue to monitor events.

The airport was closed to incoming and outgoing flights  at approximately 7 p.m. on Thursday evening following a security assessment.

The closure was not due to any ongoing security incident.

The IDF order came as Egypt’s army said on Wednesday that it had killed 60 militants in the lawless Sinai Peninsula in the month since the military overthrew Islamist President Mohamed Morsi.

Citing widening “terrorist operations” in “recent times”, the army said it was conducting an intensified campaign in Sinai in coordination with the interior ministry to crack down on militants that “threaten Egyptian national security.”

Militants based mainly in North Sinai near Israel’s border have escalated attacks on security forces and other targets since July 3, when the army deposed Morsi and installed a new government.

Defense Minister Ya’alon Moshe said last month that Egypt has inserted additional military forces – including assault helicopters – into Sinai after receiving permission from Israel, in line with the peace treaty between the two countries.

Reuters contributed to this report.

BBC News – Eilat airport: Israeli military orders shutdown

August 8, 2013

BBC News – Eilat airport: Israeli military orders shutdown.

A plane lands to land at Eilat airport in the centre of the Israeli Red Sea resort (file image)
Eilat airport was shut in April after rocket fire from Sinai hit the city

The Israeli military has ordered the closure of airspace around Eilat airport, meaning the airport is closed to departures and arrivals.

The military said “security assessments” based on “intelligence and other regional developments” had prompted the move.

The closure would remain in force until further notice, a spokesman said.

Eilat has been targeted in the past by rockets fired by Islamist militants in the neighbouring Sinai peninsula.

Sinai has become increasingly lawless amid the instability generated by the overthrow of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi in early July.

However, there is no suggestion that this closure is the result of an immediate threat to attack the airport.

Eilat airport is a major Red Sea tourist destination.

On Thursday, the Israel Aviation Authority said eight flights scheduled to land at the city would be diverted to another airport, Uvda, some 60km (36 miles) away, reported Reuters news agency.

Eilat sits on the border with Sinai and is an obvious target for militants organising there, reports the BBC’s Middle East correspondent Kevin Connolly.

Rocket fire prompted the closure of Eilat airport most recently in April. In July, remnants from a rocket fired from Sinai were found in the hills north of the city.

The Israeli government is completing a fence that runs the entire length of the border, has stepped up military patrols and has in the past deployed batteries of its Iron Dome anti-missile system in the area, our correspondent says.

But the closure of the airport indicates it still sees a threat from the Sinai desert, he adds.

Regional War ?

August 8, 2013

Articles: World War III?.

By Fay Voshell

Bill Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard and regular commentator at Fox news, has said the closing of U.S. embassies in 21 countries is a sign of weakness on the part of the U.S. and suggests capitulation to al-Qaeda.

He may be partly right, but chances are that the closing of the embassies auger something far more ominous.  The shutdowns may be a sign of an increased conflagration in the Middle East and Northern Africa.  We may be looking at the onset of World War III.

For some time, the power-struggles of the listed nations have been largely characterized as civil wars among various Muslim factions, including the Muslim Brotherhood.  But civil wars are confined within national boundaries.  Once the boundary lines have bled into one another, as is presently the case with Syria, the wars become a generalized struggle, with various factions joining with the likeminded of surrounding nations.  As World Wars I and II demonstrated, when war escapes national boundaries or aggressive entities invade other national boundaries, nations with a vested interest in maintaining or extending their power bases begin to team up with one another according to ideological empathies.  The fighting then spreads as more and more nations get sucked into a black hole of conflict.

As the West has gradually abandoned its former role in the area, the national lines the Allied Powers drew in the Versailles Treaty, which basically carved up the ancient Ottoman Empire, have been under incessant pressure.  The pressure increased exponentially since 1979, when extremist Islamists attacked the U.S. embassy in Tehran, capturing 60 American hostages, whom these Islamists held for 444 days.

The Islamist movement spread from nation to nation, placing the area in constant chaos.  Those nations had been carved into supposedly manageable European-sized entities with the probable hope that each nation would gradually take on democratic form, with the League of Nations as a calm and judicious mentor.  But the creators of the Versailles Treaty were oblivious to the intransigently authoritarian nature of Islamism, as the Middle Eastern and North African countries were at the time relatively subdued.

Now, however, the national boundaries established in 1919 are becoming increasingly meaningless, as the Islamist movement is more about empire-building than nation-building.  The West, with its long tradition of democracy, has never fully grasped the Islamist preference for authoritarianism and empire, and so it has believed that the national lines it drew would encourage the growth of democracy.  What the Islamist impulse for empire means, however, is that war among the Middle East and North African nations is inevitable, as national boundaries mean nothing to those determined to re-establish the equivalent of a caliphate.

All the above is to say that the probable reason for the closure of the U.S. embassies is that the hostilities in the area have reached such proportions that the civil wars afflicting the area are no longer containable in any meaningful way.  Further, al-Qaeda and its ilk, not long ago described by the current U.S. administration as completely defeated, have doubtless metastasized to such a degree that they feel safe to attack Big Satan in its most vulnerable outposts — outposts that have long been islands of diplomacy that is no longer possible. 

The vanishing of the Western centers of diplomacy in the Middle East and northern Africa may mean that the West has been warned — perhaps by Israel? — and finally sees that there is no diplomatic solution possible, regardless of the present posturing of the so-called “peace talks” between Palestinians and Israel.  The “peace talks” probably should be regarded as a complete charade, kept up to the bitter end while the entire area is about to go up in flames as America exits stage left.

Meanwhile, two chief players, Iran and Russia, are in a deadly chess game designed to ensure hegemony in the area — a hegemony that will almost certainly be successful if Iran already has the nuclear bomb. 

But another chief player may already have signaled the U.S. that she is about to do a pre-emptive strike.  While the world is focused in the utterly useless Middle East “peace talks,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, knowing beforehand that the talks will be absolutely fruitless, could have already made the decision to strike Iran’s nuclear facilities.  It may be that he has already sent word to President Obama, who, with the Benghazi fires still burning in the minds of the conservative media as well as in the hearts of some congressmen, is now committed to retreat.  The administration does not want a dozen Benghazi-type incidents to occur before the elections of 2014 and 2016.  It would be more politically expedient to close the embassies and warn Americans not to travel rather than to risk protecting either the diplomatic outposts or American citizens.

When embassies are closed, it is usually because war is imminent.  The lines of the Versailles Treaty are dissolving as nations disintegrate and new entities take shape.  What those new lines will look like is anyone’s guess, but it could be that Iran allied with Russia will be the biggest power-broker in the Middle East, but not without a dreadful struggle.

The question before Israel is whether or not she will allow Iran the capacity to annihilate her, as Iran’s leaders have expressly said they would like to do.  Will Israel passively face another holocaust?

Not likely.

The survivalist mentality that has served Israel so well is probably already kicking in.  Israel has often said, “Never again.”  For her, it is indeed now or never.  It may be that the chaos and confusion now gripping the Middle East will afford her the opportune moment to strike as the nations surrounding her fight one another. 

As for the United States, it is anyone’s guess as to the role this administration sees for our nation regarding Israel.  There is warrant for suspecting that our president will opt out of any meaningful alliance with Israel, leaving her to face the consequences of a strike alone while he mouths empty words of support. 

Time will tell, of course.

But in the meantime, some reading of the tea leaves is warranted, as the unprecedented closing of our embassies gives us a big clue that ominous events are happening behind the scenes, soon to burst into the open with consequences we can scarcely imagine.

Fay Voshell may be reached at fvoshell@yahoo.com.

‘Explosion that hurt troops was a Hezbollah ambush’

August 8, 2013

‘Explosion that hurt troops was a Hezbollah ambush’ | The Times of Israel.

Lebanese militia said to have intentionally detonated two IEDs as an elite IDF force crossed the border, injuring four

 

August 8, 2013, 7:01 pm

 

A picture published by Shi'ite terror group Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV station shows Lebanese soldiers at the scene of an explosion which left four Israeli soldiers injured, Wednesday, August 7, 2013 (photo credit: Al-Manar News)

A picture published by Shi’ite terror group Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV station shows Lebanese soldiers at the scene of an explosion which left four Israeli soldiers injured, Wednesday, August 7, 2013 (photo credit: Al-Manar News)

 

The explosion along the Israeli-Lebanon border that left four IDF soldiers wounded Tuesday was in fact a planned Hezbollah ambush, a Lebanese newspaper reported Thursday.

According to Al-Akhbar, which is affiliated with the Shiite terrorist group, Hezbollah prepared two IEDs, each consisting of four small containers filled with iron ball bearings, and detonated them 20 seconds apart as the soldiers crossed into Lebanese soil. The newspaper said that the incident showed the reach of Hezbollah’s intelligence.

 

“The Israeli force fell into a prepared ambush,” read the Lebanese article. “Apart from the great intelligence secrets that accompanied this confrontation, the enemy now finds himself facing a tough question: How did Hezbollah know about us?”

 

Israeli officials assessed Wednesday that the explosion would not lead to an escalation along the border, as UN peacekeepers opened an investigation into the incident and asked the IDF for details.

 

Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV station on Wednesday ran purported footage from the scene of the explosion, but did not claim responsibility for it. Al-Manar accused Israel of misleading peacekeepers with regard to the incident.

 

The TV station said that the clip, which was said to have been taken near the Lebanese town of Naqoura, provided evidence that IDF troops had violated Lebanese sovereignty by operating over the border.

 

The soldiers were on a security mission in Lebanon when a land mine exploded near the Labbouneh road, some 400 meters (440 yards) from the Lebanese-Israeli border, the TV station said.

 

According to Al-Manar, Israel did not inform the UN peacekeeping force in the area of the event despite the fact that it took place only several hundred meters from a UNIFIL post. When peacekeepers first turned to the IDF, according to the Hezbollah-based report, the military responded that it was shooting off flares.

 

The IDF said the incident happened during routine “overnight activity adjacent to the northern border.” The army said it would “continue to act to maintain security along the northern border,” but did not provide further details.

The IDF’s spokesperson unit said that the soldiers injured by the explosion were taken to Western Galilee Hospital in Nahariya. Two of the soldiers were rushed into surgery, while the other two were in the intensive care unit, according to a report by Israel’s Channel 10.

 

One of the soldiers was released on Wednesday afternoon.

 

A UN spokesman said that UNIFIL was investigating the incident and added that a team of peacekeepers had traveled to the location where the Lebanese army said the blast occurred. UNIFIL has requested that the IDF provide it with details about the incident, reported Israel Radio.

 

Lebanon’s foreign minister, Adnan Mansour, said Beirut would file a complaint with the UN Security Council. Reports overnight Wednesday indicated that the government had done so. Mansour said that the incident “reveals again the Israeli enemy’s hidden intentions through its infiltration of Lebanese territory.”

 

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon said that the IDF had yet to determine the source of the explosion.

 

“We’re investigating the incident in order to understand whether it was a new or old explosive charge,” Ya’alon said. “Of course we will learn from this and draw conclusions but activities will continue in a levelheaded fashion in order to ensure the security of Israel’s citizens.”

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reacted to the incident while on a tour of a new IDF training facility under construction in the Negev.

 

“There’s something that unites the south and the north and all our other frontiers — the IDF soldiers who defend us and our borders,” he told troops during his visit.

 

“That’s what happened last night,” he added. “We’ll continue to act responsibly to protect Israel’s borders.”

 

Times of Israel staff and AP contributed to this report.

US Air Force chief completes secretive week-long visit to Israel

August 8, 2013

US Air Force chief completes secretive week-long visit to Israel | JPost | Israel News.

Visit by Gen. Mark A. Welsh reportedly kept secret due to an American request for confidentiality, in light of regional tensions and against the background of Israeli threats to strike Iran.

US Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh

US Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh Photo: REUTERS

The Chief of Staff of the US Air Force, Gen. Mark A. Welsh, completed a secretive week-long visit to Israel in recent days, ahead of the expected arrival of the Chairman of the Joints Chief of Staff, Martin Dempsey, due here on Monday.

News of Welsh’s arrival was broken by the Walla news agency and independently confirmed by The Jerusalem Post, though few details about his visit are available.

Welsh arrived as a guest of Israel Air Force chief Maj.-Gen. Amir Eshel.

According to Walla, the visit was kept secret due to an American request for confidentiality, in light of regional tensions and against the background of Israeli threats to strike Iran if it continues developing its nuclear program.

The report added that the visit, Welsh’s first to Israel, was highly productive and produced “new channels of communications.”

Dempsey, who will arrive as a guest of IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz, is expected to discuss developments in Iran, Syria, and Egypt with Israeli leaders.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has signaled that Israel’s patience is running out over Tehran’s nuclear progress, and Dempsey might use the visit to guage Israeli intentions, and possibly to try and convince Israel to refrain from dramatic decisions in the near future, in order to give diplomacy with newly-inaugurated Iranian President Hassan Rohani a chance.

Ongoing instability in Syria, the country’s chemical weapons arsenal, and the growing radical jihadi presence in the country will likely form another top-priority point for discussions during the visit.

Saudi Arabia tries to woo Russia away from Syria with arms deal

August 8, 2013

Saudi Arabia tries to woo Russia away from Syria with arms deal | The Times of Israel.

Kingdom reportedly made $15 billion offer to buy weapons in return for reduced support of Assad and more cooperation at UN

August 8, 2013, 9:20 am
In this undated file photo a Russian S-300 anti-aircraft missile system is on display in an undisclosed location in Russia (photo credit: AP)

In this undated file photo a Russian S-300 anti-aircraft missile system is on display in an undisclosed location in Russia (photo credit: AP)

Saudi Arabia offered to buy billions of dollars worth of arms from Russia in return for a Moscow commitment to ease its support for Syrian President Bashar Assad and to not block any future United Nations Security Council resolutions against the Damascus regime.

According to a Wednesday report from Reuters, based on several unnamed sources from across the Middle East, Saudi Intelligence Chief Prince Bandar bin Sultan made the proposal to Russian President Vladimir Putin when the two met in Moscow last week.

Syrian opposition sources claim Bandar offered to buy $15 billion worth of weapons and also pledged to ensure that Gulf gas producers will not challenge Russia’s position as the leading gas supplier to Europe.

A Lebanese source told Reuters that at the end of the four-hour meeting “the Saudis were elated about the outcome.”

Neither Russian nor Saudi officials publicly confirmed the report. Russia has remained Assad’s staunchest ally during the two-year-long civil war that has killed over 100,000 people.

However, an unnamed Western diplomat was pessimistic about the likelihood that Russia would give up its influential position in the region in return for even such a lucrative arms deal. The diplomat told Reuters that Russian officials are also wary about whether the Saudis have a coherent plan for maintaining stability in a post-Assad Syria.

A senior Syrian opposition figure said there had been a “build-up of Russian-Saudi contacts prior to the meeting.”

“Bandar sought to allay two main Russian fears: that Islamist extremists will replace Assad, and that Syria would become a conduit for Gulf, mainly Qatari, gas at the expense of Russia,” he said. “Bandar offered to intensify energy, military and economic cooperation with Moscow.”

According to the report, it was Russia that persuaded Assad to allow UN investigators to begin looking into the suspected use of chemical weapons that both sides blame on each other.

The UN gave a green light for the investigation last week following an “understanding” reached between the Syrian government and UN disarmament chief Angela Kane and Sellstrom who visited Damascus at the end of July.

The team will visit the village of Khan al-Assal, a village on the southwestern outskirts of the embattled city of Aleppo, which was captured by the rebels and was under attack by government forces last week. The government and rebels accuse each other of being behind a purported chemical attack on the village on March 19 that killed at least 30 people.

Reuters said that in 2008 Russia agreed to sell Saudi Arabia 150 T-90 tanks along with 100 Mi-17 and Mi-35 attack helicopters and additional BMP-3 infantry fighting vehicles, but although signed and sealed, the deal never went through.