Archive for August 28, 2013

Strike on Syria delayed? Britain wants proof

August 28, 2013

Strike on Syria delayed? Britain wants proof – Israel News, Ynetnews.

( The backpedal begins.  Obama instructs Britain to “want proof.” – JW )

UK says Security Council ‘must have the opportunity’ to review findings of chemical weapons inspectors before backing any military action in Syria. Putin, Rohani stress need for ‘diplomatic resolution to crisis’

News agencies

Published: 08.28.13, 23:54 / Israel News

Britain believes that the UN Security Council should see findings from chemical weapons inspectors before backing any military action in Syria, according to a copy of the motion to be placed before the UK parliament released on Wednesday.

“The United Nations Security Council must have the opportunity immediately to consider that briefing and that every effort should be made to secure a Security Council Resolution backing military action before any such action is taken,” the motion, to be debated on Thursday, reads.

Berlin said on Wednesday that the leaders of Germany and Britain believe that Syria’s government should not to go unpunished for an apparent poison gas attack on its own people.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and Prime Minister David Cameron agreed in a telephone discussion that the use of poison gas in last week’s attack near Damascus was now sufficiently proven, the German government said in a statement.

“The Syrian regime must not hope to be able to continue this warfare that violates international law … Therefore an international reaction is inevitable in the view of the chancellor and the prime minister,” it said.

Just four weeks before elections in which Merkel hopes to win a third term, she faces a balancing act in how to respond to pictures of the suspected chemical weapons attack, as German voters are overwhelmingly opposed to military action there.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iranian President Hassan Rohani agreed that the use of chemical weapons is unacceptable and signaled their shared opposition to military intervention in Syria war, the Kremlin said after the leaders spoke by phone.

“Both sides consider the use of chemical weapons by anyone intolerable,” Putin’s press service said in a statement about the conversation on Wednesday, which it said Iran initiated.

“Taking into account the calls being voiced for external military intervention in the Syrian conflict, they also stressed the need to seek a path to a resolution through exclusively political and diplomatic means,” it said.

Fears of a possible US strike against Syria’s regime over an alleged chemical weapons attack rippled across the region Wednesday, as about 6,000 Syrians fled to neighboring Lebanon in a 24-hour period and Israelis scrambled for gas masks in case Damascus retaliates against them.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon pleaded for more time for diplomacy and to allow UN investigators to complete their work. The experts, wearing flak jackets and helmets, collected blood and urine samples from victims during a visit to at least one of the areas hit in last week’s attack.

Seven days after chemical weapons were purportedly unleashed on rebel-held suburbs of the Syrian capital, momentum grew toward Western military action against President Bashar Assad’s regime.

US leaders, including Vice President Joe Biden, have charged that Assad’s government was behind the Aug. 21 attack that Doctors Without Borders says killed at least 355 people. The White House says it’s planning a possible military response while seeking support from international partners.

The US has not presented concrete proof of Syrian regime involvement in the attack, and UN inspectors have not endorsed the allegations, although the UN envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, said evidence suggests some kind of “substance” was used that killed hundreds.

Will UK delay Obama's attack plan? Photos: AFP, MCT, EPA
Will UK delay Obama’s attack plan? Photos: AFP, MCT, EPA

Two senior Obama administration officials said US intelligence agencies are drawing up a report laying out the evidence against Assad’s government. The classified version would be sent to key members of Congress and a declassified version would be made public.

One of the officials said the administration is considering more than a single set of military strikes and “the options are not limited just to one day” of assault.

“If there is action taken, it must be clearly defined what the objective is and why” and based on “clear facts,” the senior administration official said on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss internal deliberations publicly.

President Barack Obama is weighing a limited response that focuses on punishing the Syrian government for violating international agreements that bar the use of chemical weapons. Any US military action, officials say, would not be aimed at toppling the Assad regime or vastly altering the course of Syria’s civil war, which has already claimed 100,000 dead.

As the US, France and Britain push for military action, the UN secretary-general urged restraint to give U.N. inspectors time to finish their investigation, which began Monday.

“Let them conclude … their work for four days and then we will have to analyze scientifically” their findings and send a report to the UN Security Council, Ban said. The UN said the analysis would be done “as quickly as possible.”

Syria’s Ambassador to the UN, Bashar Ja’afari, said he sent Ban a letter demanding that the inspectors extend their investigation to what he described as three chemical weapons attacks against Syrian soldiers in the Damascus suburbs. He said the attacks occurred on Aug. 22, 24, and 25, and that dozens of Syrian soldiers are current being treated for inhaling nerve gases.

Ja’afari also blamed the rebels for any chemical weapons attack, saying “the Syrian government is innocent of these allegations.”

AP, Reuters contributed to the report

Candidly Speaking: The implications of Obama’s failure

August 28, 2013

Candidly Speaking: The implications of Obama’s failure | JPost | Israel News.

 

08/28/2013 21:10
To date, US President Barack Obama’s efforts to appease or engage Islamists have either failed or backfired.

A soldier holds his weapon as he stands on an APC in Cairo, August 16, 2013.

A soldier holds his weapon as he stands on an APC in Cairo, August 16, 2013. Photo: REUTERS

To date, US President Barack Obama’s efforts to appease or engage Islamists have either failed or backfired. US influence in the Middle East is at an all-time low and Islamic fundamentalism continues to gain strength at an alarming pace.

Egypt, which until a year ago was regarded by the US as an ally, is perhaps the most dramatic example of Obama’s complete failure to understand the nature of the region and the steps that must be taken to stabilize it. The current horrors and barbarism in Syria should not divert attention from events in Egypt, the outcome of which is likely to have a major impact on the entire region.

Obama’s first blunder in Egypt was the antagonism he displayed toward president Hosni Mubarak. Immediately following his first election, Obama insisted on inviting members of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood to his Cairo address. As a result, Mubarak boycotted the event.

Obama displayed the full extent of his contempt for Mubarak when the public riots first erupted against the Egyptian regime, calling on him to step down immediately. This provided an opening to the Islamists and sent shock waves throughout those Arab regimes that regarded themselves as US allies.

While there is no disputing that Mubarak was an odious, authoritarian leader, he was considered a moderate within the context of the Arab world, a loyal ally of the US, and a combatant of Islamic terrorism – facts the implications of which Obama either inexplicably failed to grasp or naively chose to ignore.

The Obama administration’s greatest failure with regard to Egypt has been its inexcusable and naive mischaracterization of the Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood is a fanatical Islamist organization, established in 1928, with the objective of imposing medieval Islamic Shari’a law throughout the world, employing violence and terror to achieve the goal. The organization was suppressed for most of its 85-year history, and many of its leaders were jailed in Egypt during the Mubarak era.

The Brotherhood opposes freedom of religion and incites hatred against Christians and Jews, demands the death penalty for apostates, homosexuals and adulterers and has relegated women to third-class status. It engineered the assassination of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat.

Despite this damning record, the Obama administration has inexplicably characterized the Muslim Brotherhood as a moderate movement and suggested that it could become part of a multicultural, Egyptian democratic government that could collaborate with other secular, liberal political streams.

Obama could not have been more wrong. When Mohamed Morsi, one of the Muslim Brotherhood’s leading members, took over the reins of government (gaining just 25 percent of the electoral vote due to the organizational chaos of his opponents), he began purging non-Brotherhood government officials and replacing them with Islamists and their cronies.

Instead of focusing on stabilizing the economy and reaching out to other factions, his new parliament concentrated on outlawing foreign languages in state schools and sanctioning female genital mutilation. During Morsi’s brief tenure, Islamists made major inroads in the Sinai Peninsula and the provinces, where radical elements succeeded in killing Egyptian military and police, murdering Christian Copts, who comprise 10 percent of the population, and burning and desecrating more than 50 of their churches.

President Morsi would have confronted the US and introduced amendments to the Egypt-Israel peace treaty, had Egypt’s economic crisis not demanded his full attention. Much like Hitler, Morsi moved determinedly toward dictatorship.

Meanwhile, the vast majority of Egyptians became enraged. More than 30 million people signed a petition calling for Morsi to step down. Defense Minister General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who Morsi had appointed, demanded that the government be more inclusive. But Morsi ignored the calls, and the army intervened. Violence erupted, he and other Muslim Brotherhood leaders were arrested, and more than a thousand Brotherhood supporters were killed in riots. Egyptians strongly supported the army and its imposition of martial law.

As of now, the military has the upper hand and violent resistance from Brotherhood elements has apparently been suppressed.

Throughout this period of chaos and collapse, the Obama administration did nothing more than call for a reinstatement of a democratic government that never existed. In their last conversation, Obama assured Morsi that he continued to regard him as the democratically elected president of Egypt. While Obama hitherto had avoided severing relations with Egypt, he outraged many Egyptians by criticizing General El-Sisi but supporting the repressive and murderous Muslim Brotherhood, whose stated objective is the transformation of Egypt into an Islamist state.

In contrast to Obama’s fantasies, Israeli leaders are focused on realities and fully aware of the risks that Egypt’s instability poses to Israeli security. They recognize that a fanatical Islamic dictatorship allied with an organization that created Hamas and is utterly committed to the elimination of Jewish sovereignty is a disastrous scenario.

However, Israel has also learned from experience that the enemy of our enemy is not necessarily our friend.

Mubarak exploited anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism among the Egyptian people to divert attention from economic and domestic problems.

There is thus always a remote possibility that a desperate Egyptian military government could turn on Israel to divert attention from domestic problems.

(Indeed, some elements within the Tamarod movement, which facilitated the military coups, have displayed anti-Semitic tendencies and called for an end to dependence on the US and the severing of ties with Israel, and Al- Ahram, the most widely circulated Egyptian daily newspaper, has warned of a “Zionist-American-Muslim Brotherhood conspiracy against Egypt.”

Nonetheless, we recognize that a military regime is far preferable to a Muslim Brotherhood dictatorship that created Hamas, considers Israel Muslim territory that must one day be regained, and is notorious for its feral anti-Semitism, with its leaders continuously referring to Jews as “the descendants of apes and pigs” and “vampires.”

However, the Egyptian military has already reined back Hamas and closed many of the tunnels through which arms were being transferred to Islamic extremists in Sinai. There are also reports of close cooperation between Israeli and Egyptian military authorities in neutralizing threats from terrorists in Sinai.

In Egypt today the choice between the Egyptian army and the Muslim Brotherhood is clear. Despite the justifiable repugnance of military juntas, there should be no equivocation. While the Obama administration obsessively attempts to impose democracy on a society that lacks democratic political experience, it is potentially enabling the takeover of most populous Arab state by tyrannical jihadist autocrats.

By failing to support the Egyptian military, the US may also be fostering Egypt’s economic and social collapse.

That Obama is considering abrogating economic aid to Egypt suggests that the US has not absorbed the lessons arising from Jimmy Carter’s naïve and disastrous approach to Iran, which paved the way for the ayatollah’s takeover. Without urgent, remedial aid to Egypt, which depends on imports for the bulk of its food and is rapidly running out of hard currency, total economic meltdown, hunger, riots and even civil war are likely.

In addition, ongoing US pressure to “democratize” Egypt could enable Russian President Vladimir Putin to restore the Russian-Egyptian nexus which prevailed prior to Sadat’s break with the Soviet Union.

Instead of seeking to impose democracy from without, the US should support Egypt’s military government as a mechanism for forestalling the transformation of Egypt into a breeding ground for jihadists and al-Qaida.

Democracy is a gradual process which can only be developed from within and only after the formation of a functioning government authority. The majority of the Egyptian people are clearly totally opposed to an extremist Islamic takeover. The US and the West should welcome the collapse of the Muslim Brotherhood regime, as it represents a major blow to the globalization of Islamic fundamentalism – the greatest threat to the Western world and international stability.

The writer’s website can be viewed at http://www.wordfromjerusalem.com.

US: NATO allies dismiss UN on march toward Syria

August 28, 2013

US: NATO allies dismiss UN on march toward Syria | JPost | Israel News.

By MICHAEL WILNER, MAYA SHWAYDER
08/28/2013 23:21
America says it will proceed with UK, France to act in Syria without UN approval; slighting Russia, US “does not see an avenue forward” at Security Council; UK parliament to consider Syria options Thursday.

United Nations Security Council

United Nations Security Council Photo: Mike Segar / Reuters

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK — The United States, Britain and France will proceed with action in Syria without approval from the United Nations, the US said on Wednesday, after a short but tense afternoon brought NATO allies in direct conflict with Russian obstruction over how to respond to the mass use of chemical weapons.

Britain submitted language for a resolution on Wednesday to the UN Security Council, but ultimately failed to gain consensus on a draft, leaving Western allies with “no choice” but to proceed with a response circumventing the international body.

The permanent five members of the UN Security Council held an emergency meeting on Wednesday morning to discuss the draft, at which the UK Permanent Representative Mark Lyall Grant presented language condemning “the attack by the Assad regime, and authorizing all necessary measure under Chapter seven of the UN Charter to protect civilians from chemical weapons.”

The US now “does not see an avenue forward” through the Security Council, State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said on Wednesday after the meeting adjourned. “We are not proceeding with a vote on this draft resolution.”

“We are making our own decisions on our own timeline,” Harf added. “The Russians have been clear that they have no interest in holding the Syrian regime accountable.”

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said on Wednesday information from a variety of sources pointed to President Bashar Assad’s forces being responsible for the use of chemical weapons in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta on August 21 on a massive scale, killing over a thousand civilians and wounding thousands more.

Speaking after a meeting of NATO ambassadors in Brussels, Rasmussen said any use of such weapons was “unacceptable and cannot go unanswered.”

“This is a clear breach of longstanding international norms and practice,” Rasmussen said. “Those responsible must be held accountable.”

Turkey placed its armed forces on alert on Wednesday, in light of possible security threats from Syria as the West continued planning military action against the Damascus regime in response to the Ghouta attack, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Wednesday.

Davutoglu asserted that “all options are on the table” for Turkey to address the use of chemical weapons in Syria on a massive scale.

Turkey’s allies in Washington, London and Paris have been weighing military intervention in Syria’s harsh civil war since last week. US and British navy destroyers have been deployed to the eastern Mediterranean in the event President Barack Obama chooses to order a strike.

“We are now at a more alert position… Turkey will take whatever measures necessary within the framework of its own strategic interests,” Davutoglu told reporters.

“The Turkish armed forces have the mandate to take every measure against any security threat from Syria or elsewhere… and retaliate within the rules of engagement.”

Turkey has been bullish on Syria throughout its civil war, openly supporting rebels fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad– including the al-Nusra Front, an affiliate of al-Qaida.

On Monday, one senior Turkish official told a local media outlet that his government was considering making their Incirlik air base available to NATO should the Western coalition, led by the United States, choose to proceed with military intervention.

Incirlik was used by NATO in operations in Iraq and Kosovo.

But Jordan’s foreign ministry asserted that, despite its deep dissatisfaction with the Assad regime and its tactics, it would not become directly entangled in the military conflict.

A Jordanian official confirmed to The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday that “Jordan will not be a launching pad for any military action against Syria.”

In London, Parliament prepared to convene to debate and vote on UK involvement in an allied attack in response to Ghouta. Prime Minister David Cameron convened his national security council for a crisis meeting on the conflict, and included opposition party leader Ed Miliband.

“The NSC (National Security Council) agreed unanimously that the use of chemical weapons by Assad was unacceptable – and the world should not stand by,” Cameron said on his official Twitter feed after a meeting of the high-level security body.

But the politics facing Cameron are proving tougher than expected. The opposition Labour Party, under Ed Miliband’s leadership, threatened to vote against the motion to participate in military intervention in Syria until UN procedure is fully exhausted, and their investigation completed.

Facing defeat in the Parliament vote, Cameron– after reconvening its members for the crisis meeting– shelved a military response to avoid the standoff.

The move appeared to put the breaks on any immediate action in the coming days.

“We will proceed as far as possible on a consensual basis,” William Hague said. But “we must be prepared to take action… to deter the use of chemical weapons.”

Hague said the motion on how to respond to an alleged chemical attack in Syria to be considered by parliament on Thursday was consistent with the approach adopted by the government so far.

“This motion, that we’re putting to the House of Commons tomorrow, endorses the government’s consistent approach that we must be prepared to take action against the use of chemical weapons by the Assad regime, to deter the future use of chemical weapons,” Hague told the BBC.

Hague said he spoke with US Secretary of State John Kerry Wednesday evening and provided him with an update.

“This is one of the lessons of the last decade,” Hague said of Cameron’s efforts to achieve parliamentary consensus, referring to political fallout from the Iraq War.

Hague said 10 Downing hoped to proceed “with the maximum degree of consent,” adding that the use of chemical weapons in this century “is something on which the world should be able to unite.”

Germany’s Angela Merkel spoke with Cameron, agreeing with the British leader that Syria “cannot go unpunished.”

Syria’s ambassador to the UN Bashar Ja’afari accused rebel forces of executing the chemical weapons attacks, and further said they had obtained the materials from “outside powers, namely Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar.” Ja’fari also emphasized that he wanted a “thorough scientific investigation” by the current UN chemical weapons inspectors team to be presented to the Security Council.

When asked whether Syria would attack Israel, Ja’fari merely said, “We have the right to self-defense according to the charter of the United Nations. It’s up to the military command to determine how we would respond to any military aggressions.”

“The Syrian government is against the use of chemical weapons by all means,” Ja’fari said, and continued, echoing the words of US Secretary of State John Kerry, “This is a moral obscenity. The use of chemical weapons, or biological, or nuclear is a moral obscenity. Is not acceptable by any government.”

“We are not the war-mongerers,” he continued. “We are a peaceful nation seeking stability in the area, because instability will serve only the Israeli interests.”

Ja’fari went on to assert that the entirety of the Arab spring, including the Syrian crisis, “serves only one goal,” which is to distract the world from the Palestinian question. “It has been really unfortunate that for decades to notice that the American diplomacy has always been motivation by defending Israeli interests,” Ja’fari said.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Citing Russian logjam, US says it will act on Syria without UN green light

August 28, 2013

Citing Russian logjam, US says it will act on Syria without UN green light | The Times of Israel.

As Security Council meeting ends with no progress, State Department says it can’t be held up by Moscow’s ‘intrasingence’

August 28, 2013, 10:09 pm
Security Council members voting during a meeting in March. (photo credit: AP/Bebeto Matthews)

Security Council members voting during a meeting in March. (photo credit: AP/Bebeto Matthews)

WASHINGTON — As an internationally coordinated attack against Syrian targets seemed increasingly close, United States State Department officials said Wednesday that America would act with or without approval from the United Nations Security Council.

Deputy Spokesperson Marie Harf repeatedly emphasized that “Russian intransigence” in its opposition to measures that would weaken embattled Syrian President Bashir Assad had caused a logjam in the UN.

“We’ve consistently said that we support Security Council action, but we heard nothing different from the Russian delegation today than what we’ve heard in recent months. So we had no reason to believe that efforts at the Security Council would result in any other outcome than previous efforts,” Harf said, speaking shortly after the Security Council failed to advance a British-sponsored resolution against the Syrian government’s alleged chemical weapons attack last week.

Israel’s Channel 2 reported Wednesday that Russian and Chinese envoys walked out of the UK-sponsored Security Council debate on an international response to the chemical weapons use in Syria.

A separate report, credited by Al-Arabiya to the Russian Interfax news service, said that a senior Russian official asserted Wednesday that Russia would stay out of the way in the event of a US-led strike on Syria. But Russia, a major supporter of the Syrian regime, has still said its air defense systems supplied to Damascus would complicate US-led efforts at military intervention.

Reading a pre-prepared list of instances in which the Russian delegation blocked council actions concerning Syria, Harf said the Russians had already vetoed three resolutions on the conflict.

“We see no avenue going forward given continued Russian opposition to meaningful Security Council action,” she said.

“We do not believe that the regime can continue to hide behind the fact that the Russians will block any meaningful actions by the Security Council,” Harf warned. “The Security Council is an important venue…but we cannot be held up in responding by Russia’s continued intransigence.”

Although she was pressed on the question, Harf would not clarify that diplomatic attempts to contact and work with the Assad regime have been exhausted, but she did reiterate the message that “it is important that we send a strong message that this kind of mass scale indiscriminate use of chemical weapons is not acceptable.”

NBC News reported on Wednesday that the US had “passed the point of no return” on a Syria strike, quoting a senior American official. But officials in Washington and London have also cautioned that what form a response to Syria would take had still not been decided.

The US and others have said there is undeniable evidence last Wednesday’s gas attack occurred and was carried out by regime forces, a claim Syria denies.

Harf shined a sliver of light on the content of the soon-to-be declassified intelligence report on last week’s alleged chemical weapons attack that reportedly killed hundreds of Syrian civilians.

“There were multiple rockets fired by a specific delivery system,” Harf said, emphasizing that only Assad’s regime has that sort of capability.

The Salafist al-Nusra opposition forces, she said, definitely did not have the capability to use the type of chemical weapons that were deployed in the attack.

No reason to panic… probably

August 28, 2013

No reason to panic… probably | The Times of Israel.

Assad may indeed be unlikely to strike at Israel, but there are good reasons why many Israelis aren’t convinced by assurances that there’s no cause for alarm

 

August 28, 2013, 5:50 pm

 

Israelis carry boxes with gas masks at a distribution center in Tel Aviv on August 28, 2013. (Photo credit: Roni Schutzer/Flash90)

Israelis carry boxes with gas masks at a distribution center in Tel Aviv on August 28, 2013. (Photo credit: Roni Schutzer/Flash90)

 

Israelis should go about their usual routine, Benny Gantz, the IDF’s chief of staff, said Tuesday evening, speaking off-the-cuff to an Israeli TV reporter moments after he had delivered an address warning Syria’s President Bashar Assad that the army was “sharp” and “ready” to defend Israel against any aggression he might be so foolish as to launch.

The IDF Spokesman issued the same kind of reassuring remarks Wednesday morning, telling the public there was no cause for alarm, despite clear Syrian and Iranian threats that a US-led strike against Assad regime targets would prompt retaliation against Israel.

 

There’s “no reason to change daily routines,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was quoted as telling Israelis on Wednesday afternoon, at the end of an anything-but-routine five-hour consultation with his security chiefs — the third in three days — over the Syria crisis.

 

Ever since last Wednesday’s alleged chemical weapons attack by Assad’s forces killed hundreds of Syrian civilians in the suburbs of Damascus, and the US moved reluctantly into attack mode, the Hebrew media has overflowed with assessments by officials and pundits that the likelihood of an Assad-instigated retaliation against Israel was very, very low.

 

After all, the commentators reasoned, an Assad strike at Israel would inevitably prompt a harsher Israeli strike at Assad, an attack that, if Israel so chose, could easily shift the balance of the civil war definitively in favor of the rebels fighting to oust the Alawite president. Far more likely, the assessments have continued, that Assad will bite his lip, absorb the limited strike the Americans are about to deliver, possibly authorize a terror attack on Israeli or Jewish targets overseas or a minor Hezbollah action on the Lebanon border, and get on with his key business of winning the civil war.

 

But to judge from the dramatic upsurge in Israelis seeking gas mask protection kits in the past few days, not all of the public is entirely persuaded that the daily Israeli routine is going to be completely unaffected by the imminent US-led intervention on the other side of the northern border.

 

Confidence in the capacity of the Israeli security establishment to assess what is about to unfold around us, after all, has hardly been bolstered by the hierarchy’s consistent incapacity since the outbreak of the amusingly named Arab Spring to predict the radical twists and turns of regional instability and how they might affect little Israel.

 

This is, it must be said, a pretty difficult period for those whose job is to make sense of intelligence information emanating from the unstable nations in the neighborhood. Difficult or not, though, the fact is that the recent track record is one of failure — including, but not limited to, failure to foresee the revolution that ousted Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak, failure to predict that Syrians would put their lives on the line and take to the streets to try to oust Assad, even failure to anticipate Hasan Rouhani winning in the first round of the Iranian elections.

 

If there’s one thing Israelis are certain of, indeed, it’s that just about anything can happen in the Middle East right now. Oh, and that the doubtless well-intentioned Israeli authorities, and their more dutiful pundits, can by no means be guaranteed to give them credible advance word about it.

 

Sure, many Israelis have likely been reasoning in the last few days, a pragmatic Assad would hardly provoke his own demise by striking at Israel. But equally, they might counter, a pragmatic Assad would hardly have prompted US-led military intervention by gassing hundreds of his own people. Maybe Assad is a pragmatist. Maybe he isn’t. Perhaps more relevantly, maybe Assad is in full control of those branches of his armed forces that are equipped to gas Syrian civilians and those that are equipped to fire on Israel. And maybe he isn’t.

 

Yes, indeed, Israelis might further have been musing, Assad ought well be deterred by Netanyahu’s Tuesday vow to hit Syria hard if Israel detects so much as a threat in our direction. But then again, Assad may believe Israel isn’t actually interested in his demise — only in him being weakened — since the beneficiaries of his ouster would include highly unsavory al-Qaeda-affiliated forces. He might therefore think he could get away with a limited but face-saving swipe at Israel.

 

Most relevant of all, though, for Israelis’ willingness to continue their daily routines, or not, is the knowledge that the home front authorities have not stocked up on enough gas masks for the whole population. As the former IDF spokesman, now Labor MK, Nachman Shai, bemoaned for the umpteenth time on Wednesday, there are sufficient gas mask kits for only some 60% of the population. So hearing assurances from the authorities later Wednesday that the home front command is “ready to provide any assistance” that might be necessitated by ongoing developments would not have been received with universal confidence. And the latest rush on the gas mask distribution centers, with phone systems collapsing, and insufficient kits on hand, underlined public concern.

 

The best way to ensure that the public stays calm is to provide clear, credible information, to acknowledge when a situation is so uncertain as to render any predictions pointless, and crucially to plan ahead so that citizens are as well protected as possible from the unpredictable. Simply telling people to stay calm when those conditions have not been met is almost guaranteed to ensure the opposite result.

 

Assad may indeed be unlikely to strike at Israel. And few Israelis doubt the IDF’s capacity to hit back with devastating force if needed. But they’d be more comfortable in their normal routines if the authorities were straighter with them, in acknowledging that, actually, there are no guarantees about what’s about to happen, and if they all already had at home the gas mask kits they’re being assured they almost certainly won’t have to use.

IAEA: Iran pushing ahead with nuclear program

August 28, 2013

IAEA: Iran pushing ahead with nuclear program | News | DW.DE | 28.08.2013.

IAEA: Iran pushing ahead with nuclear program

Iran has continued to install advanced nuclear enrichment centrifuges and plans to test them, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has reported. Concerns are rife that Iran is seeking to develop nuclear weapons.

Iran has installed a total of 1,008 high-tech centrifuges at its central enrichment facility, which it is preparing to test, the UN’s atomic energy agency said in its quarterly report released on Wednesday.

“Iran has continued to install IR-2m centrifuges in one of the units” at the Natanz site, the IAEA said.

According to the IAEA report – the first to be released since the election of relative moderate President Hassan Rouhani in June – the Islamic Republic has put the centrifuges under vacuum. Such a move is said to usually be one of the final steps before the machines start spinning uranium gas. This can then be used as reactor fuel or as the core of nuclear warheads, depending on its enrichment level.

When the IAEA last reported in May, it said Iran had 698 IR-2 centrifuges. They would allow Tehran to enrich uranium faster, enabling it to obtain the amount of fissile material needed for a nuclear bomb more quickly.

Tehran has long insisted that it is enriching uranium for peaceful purposes only.

Western nations have been awaiting signs from the new president that he is prepared to ease tensions with the international community, particularly in light of fears that Iran is attempting to develop nuclear arms.

Envoys accredited to the IAEA have been quick to note that the contents of Wednesday’s report mainly reflect developments prior to Rouhani taking office on August 3.

The IAEA confirmed Wednesday that nuclear talks with Iran would resume on September 27.

Iran has been hit by four rounds of UN sanctions, as well as EU and US sanctions on its oil and banking sectors. The UN Security Council has also passed several resolutions urging it to halt enrichment.

ccp/ipj (AFP, AP, Reuters)

Israeli security cabinet approves limited enlistment of IDF reservists

August 28, 2013

Israeli security cabinet approves limited enlistment of IDF reservists | JPost | Israel News.

( The calling up of reserves is the only thing of consequence in this piece.  Maybe it really is “limited” or maybe it’s 20,000.  There’s no way of finding out.  Only the Gov. knows the true number. – JW )

LAST UPDATED: 08/28/2013 16:08
Netanyahu urges Israelis to carry on with daily lives, despite events in Syria; information indicates “low probability” that Syrian President Bashar Assad will respond to US action by striking Israel.

PM Netanyahu speaks to Jewish immigrants at BGU

PM Netanyahu speaks to Jewish immigrants at BGU Photo: REUTERS

Even as Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu on Tuesday called on Israelis to carry on with their daily routines in light of a possible US strike on Syria, the security cabinet approved a limited call-up of reservists in vital military capacities.

Security sources would not specify how many reservists were to be called up, or to which units, though some reservists attached to the Home-Front command were expected to be among those called up.

In addition, the sources said that the government approved the deployment of advanced anti-missile batteries in the north.

The security cabinet was briefed by Chief of General Staff Benny Gantz, as well as other senior defense officials.

The information presented at the meeting indicated a “low probability” that Syrian President Bashar Assad would respond to US military action by striking Israel. Nevertheless, the sources said, Israel was preparing for any eventuality, which explained the limited reserve call-ups.

Following the security cabinet meeting, the second urgent security consultation in as many days, Netanyahu issued a statement Wednesday saying Israelis need not alter their daily routine.

“The IDF is ready to defend against any threat and prepared to respond severely against any attempt to harm Israeli citizens,” he said.

One of the reasons for the “low probability” assessments of a Syrian response against Israel is the assessments in Jerusalem that Syrian President Bashar Assad is cognizant of messages Israel has sent indicating that an attack on Israel would ignite a counter-attack that would bring his regime down.

Netanyahu’s appeal to the country’s citizenry to carry on with their daily lives came amid a rush on gas mask distribution centers around the country.

Middle East upheaval has Hamas on the brink

August 28, 2013

Israel Hayom | Middle East upheaval has Hamas on the brink.

The West and some of the Arab and Islamic nations are gearing up for a possible military strike against Syrian President Bashar Assad’s criminal regime, and their preparations coincide with the changes in Egypt and the recently renewed Israeli-Palestinian peace process. This situation highlights Hamas’ confusion in the Gaza Strip.

The series of events plaguing Hamas as a result of the regional upheaval jeopardizes its position in Gaza Strip and in the Palestinian theater. Some say it is on the verge of catastrophe, while other hedge that this is a time of opportunity for the organization.

A glance at the geostrategic climate in which Hamas was operating prior to the events in Syria, Lebanon and Egypt reveals the kind of heaven even Hamas co-founder Ahmed Yassin never dreamed of before he went to hell. Syria was its extended headquarters, providing it with funding, weapons and a link to Hamas leaders worldwide, while the Gaza regime served as a de facto government, challenging the Palestinian Authority’s legitimacy by adamantly refusing to reconcile with it.

Hamas has fired missiles at Israel and its leadership declared its intention to annihilate the Jewish state. Gaza’s rulers were popular with various countries worldwide, especially with Turkey, which sent the Mavi Marmara to its shores in a show of solidarity. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Muslim Brotherhood man, even planned to visit Gaza Strip.

Hamas’ government was an example for a “Brotherhood revolution.” It received millions of dollars in suitcases that traveled through the underground tunnels in Rafah and fostered thriving “tunnel economics” policies. It allowed Hamas to bring weapons and vehicles into Gaza and pay collaborators with cash and jobs. This method was successful, and Hamas deliberately manufactured conflicts with Israel to prevent the transfer of goods though the crossings.

Shiite Iran offered Hamas terrorists training and sent money and weapons to the Gaza Strip, inspiring Hezbollah to do the same. Qatar lent Hamas Al-Jazeera’s services as its mouthpiece, seeking to remain in the good graces of Hamas politburo chief Khaled Mashaal, his top delegate in Gaza Mahmoud al-Zahar and Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh. Other Persian Gulf states, wary of the Muslim Brotherhood’s growing power, paid the leaders of the “besieged and struggling” Gaza Strip a fortune.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s rule in Egypt facilitated Hamas’ paradise, as he was willing to overlook the booming tunnel industry and the arms flowing through them from Iran, Lebanon and Africa. The Sinai Peninsula had become an extraterritorial terror hub controlled by al-Qaida and global jihad, serving as the base of operations and logistics for Hamas in Egyptian territory.

The government formed by Mohammed Morsi in the post-Mubarak era, which was endorsed by Hamas even after it was deposed, tried to appear as if it was fighting Islamist terror to appease the West, and slowly razed a few tunnels in Sinai, but for the most part, it overlooked what was going on in the area, opting to participate in the Brotherhood’s Gaza-based charade.

The storm clouds gathering over Hamas are the product of the backlash against it in Egypt, as the Egyptian public pushed back against the dozens of terror attacks that were attributed to Hamas in Sinai, where it is in cahoots with radical Islamists. These attacks killed dozens of Egyptian soldiers, compromised the gas pipeline, and tried to drag Israel and Egypt into war.

The Egyptian opposition accused Morsi of conspiring with Hamas against Cairo’s interest, with the intent of giving Sinai to the Palestinians, and allowing the smuggling of goods into Gaza at the expense of the Egyptian public. The coup led by Defense Minister Col. Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, which targeted Hamas as well, has all but obliterated the tunnel industry, blocking Hamas’ arms and money route.

The massacre performed by Syrian President Bashar Assad has driven Hamas’ top operatives out of Syria, and there is no love lost between them and Jordan, as everyone knows. Tehran and Hezbollah, which support Assad against the Muslim Brotherhood, have cut off the flow of funds and arms, and other Arab nations have distanced themselves from them as well. Hamas is on the verge of bankruptcy and is losing its popularity in Gaza. It is likely to fall from grace in the West Bank as well.

Some believe that Israel would prefer the weakened Hamas to remain in charge in Gaza, which will perpetuate the Palestinian rift and allow Israel to avoid reaching an agreement with the Palestinian Authority. Hamas’ imminent downfall — despite Turkey’s backing — is unlikely to push it to pursue reconciliation with the PA, let alone negotiations with Israel. After all, “he who talks to Allah, does not talk to Abdullah.”

‘Syria has missiles trained on strategic facilities in Israel’

August 28, 2013

Israel Hayom | ‘Syria has missiles trained on strategic facilities in Israel’.

Syrian sources say Damascus has Scud, M-600 and Yakhont missiles aimed at Israel • Syrian foreign minister warns attack will meet “surprising” response • Netanyahu calls second security cabinet meeting in three days • Iran denies Assad fled to Tehran.

Daniel Siryoti, News Agencies and Israel Hayom Staff
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem

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Photo credit: Reuters

Assad, listen well…

August 28, 2013

Israel Hayom | Assad, listen well.

Dan Margalit

The forecast for impending events in Syria contains a mixture of certainty and uncertainty. It appears that the U.S. Air Force and Navy will attack targets belonging to Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime. The only questions are to what extent, what will be the defined goal of the mission and when will it start?

As is customary when a war is about to break out in the region, Arab officials have been issuing classic anti-Semitic statements. Although Israel has refrained from becoming involved in the fighting in Syria, it is serving as the target for spokesmen of the Syrian and Iranian governments. The Jews are always guilty and always responsible.

Similar things have happened in the past. During the First Gulf War, Saddam Hussein launched dozens of missiles at Israel, but then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir acceded to U.S. pressure and did not respond, leaving punishment of the Iraqi leader to the Americans. Shamir’s decision to not retaliate against Iraq is still controversial. In my opinion, he acted wisely. But others disagree. And in any case, the current situation is different.

One should remember that when two Israeli soldiers were kidnapped by Hezbollah in July 2006, the world accepted Israel’s response, which included the destruction of the Shiite neighborhood of Dahiya in Beirut. The West, as well as most Arab countries, gave Israel a long leash for military action. Israel has only itself to blame for the failures of the Second Lebanon War. It had plenty of time to act.

The freedom of action Israel was given after the July 2006 kidnapping would be multiplied several times if it was forced to act against Assad, who has massacred his own citizens with chemical weapons. Given its aversion to the brutal Assad regime, the world would understand if Israel had to strike back after being attacked by Syria for no reason.

If I were Assad, I would listen very carefully to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon and Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, all of whom have said that any attack on Israel prompt a harsh response, which could mean the toppling of the Assad regime. Netanyahu essentially set a Syrian attack on Israel as a casus belli that would necessitate an all-out war against Assad. Netanyahu almost will not have a choice in such a scenario. But the situation likely won’t come to that.

Assad is a mass murderer, but he is also rational. Israel has the power to eliminate his ability to fight against the rebels and determine the outcome of the Syrian civil war. Israel could paralyze Syria’s airports and would certainly take the opportunity to reduce the strategic threat represented by Assad’s chemical weapons arsenal.

One can understand the vigilance of the Israeli public, which is flooding gas mask distribution centers. But panic seems unnecessary. If Israel is attacked, the IDF will have great freedom of action and there will not be a repeat of the Second Lebanon War. Israel is not interested in a war, but if it is compelled to act, its response will be shorter and sharper than the pessimists are predicting.