Archive for June 25, 2014

Maliki rules out Iraq unity government

June 25, 2014

Maliki rules out Iraq unity government

Shia PM says such a move would be a “coup” in a direct rebuttal of US efforts to tackle a rising Sunni rebellion.

Last updated: 25 Jun 2014 11:10

via Maliki rules out Iraq unity government – Middle East – Al Jazeera English.

The Iraqi prime minister has rejected US calls for the formation of a national unity government to tackle a rising Sunni offensive, calling the idea a “coup” against the constitution.

Nouri al-Maliki’s statement on Wednesday came a day after the US secretary of state, John Kerry, left Iraq after pushing for a agreement between Kurdish, Sunni and Shia leaders.

In his weekly televised address, Maliki said: “The call to form a national emergency government is a coup against the constitution and the political process.

“It is an attempt by those who are against the constitution to eliminate the young democratic process and steal the votes of the voters.”

The speech came a day after US military advisers arrived in Baghdad. The US says Iraqi politicians must create a unity government before it sends futher help.

Al Jazeera’s Imran Khan, reporting from Baghdad, said the prime minister’s comments would be seen as direct rebuttal to the US insistence of a unity deal before more help is sent.

Maliki’s electoral bloc won by far the most seats in April 30 parliamentary elections with 92, nearly three times as many as the next biggest party, and the incumbent himself tallied 720,000 personal votes, also far and away the most.

Refinery takeover

Also on Wednesday, Iraqi State TV broadcasted video claiming to show Iraqi troops in control of the oil refinery at Baiji, amid contesting claims as to who was in control there.

The footage, shot by a journalist sympathetic to the government, shows an army helicoper briefly landing at the site before leaving.

Khan said that the video, which the government said was shot on Tuesday, seemed to suggest Iraqi troops were in control of at least part of the refinery.

The Iraqi government would have been hesitant to send a journalist to the area if it wasn’t confident it was clear of rebels, Khan said.

Turkey’s High-Risk Power Play

June 25, 2014

Turkey’s High-Risk Power Play

June 25, 2014 by Caroline Glick

Caroline Glick is the Director of the David Horowitz Freedom Center’s Israel Security Project and the Senior Contributing Editor of The Jerusalem Post.

For more information on Ms. Glick’s work, visit carolineglick.com.

via Turkey’s High-Risk Power Play | FrontPage Magazine.

Originally published by the Jerusalem Post

 

 

For most Westerners, Turkey is a hard nut to crack. How can you understand a state sponsor of terrorism that is also a member of NATO? How can you explain Turkey’s facilitation of Kurdish independence in Iraq in light of Turkey’s hundred-year opposition to Kurdish independence? What is Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyep Erdogan trying to accomplish here? Is he nuts? On the terrorism support front, today Turkey vies with Iran for the title of leading state sponsor of terrorism.

First there is Hamas.

Last week an Israeli security official told the media that the abduction of Naftali Frankel, Gilad Shaer and Eyal Yifrah was organized and directed by Saleh al-Arouri, a Hamas commander operating out of Turkey.

Turkey has welcomed Hamas to its territory and served as its chief booster to the West since the jihadist terror group won the Palestinian legislative elections in 2006. Erdogan has played a key role in getting the EU to view Hamas as a legitimate actor, despite its avowedly genocidal goals.

Then there is al-Qaida. As Daniel Pipes documented in The Washington Times last week, Turkey has been the largest supporter and enabler of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS).

Erdogan’s government has allowed ISIS fighters to train in Turkey and cross the border between Turkey and Syria at will to participate in the fighting. Moreover, according to Pipes, Turkey “provided the bulk of ISIS’s funds, logistics, training and arms.”

Similarly, Turkey has sponsored the al-Nusra Front, ISIS’s al-Qaida counterpart and ally in Syria.

The Assad regime is not the Turkish- sponsored al-Qaida-aligned forces’ only target in Syria. They have also been engaged in heavy fighting against Rojava, the emerging Kurdish state in northwest Syria. Yet the same Turkey that is sponsoring al-Qaida’s assault on Syrian Kurdistan is facilitating the independence of Iraqi Kurdistan.

In breach of Iraqi law that requires the Kurds to sell their oil through the central government and share oil revenues with the central government, earlier this month Turkey signed a 50-year deal allowing the Kurds to export oil to the world market through a Turkish pipeline. The Kurds are currently pumping around 120,000 barrels of oil a day to the Turkish port of Ceyhan.

Top Turkish officials have in recent weeks come out openly in support for Iraqi Kurdish independence from Baghdad.

Following ISIS’s takeover of Mosul, Huseyin Celik, the spokesman for Erdogan’s ruling AKP party told the Kurdish Rudaw news service, “It has become clear for us that Iraq has practically become divided into three parts.”

Blaming Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for Iraq’s instability Celik said, “The Kurds of Iraq can decide where to live and under what title they want to live. Turkey does not decide for them.”

To date, most Western analyses of the Erdogan regime’s behavior have come up short because their authors ignore its strategic goal. In this failing, analyses of Turkey are similar to those of its Shi’ite counterpart in Iran. And both regimes’ goals are wished away for the same reason: Western observers can’t identify with them.

Iran is not a status quo power. It is a revolutionary power. Iran’s goal is not regional hegemony per se, but global supremacy. As Lee Smith recently noted, two decades before al-Qaida and its goal of establishing a global Islamic caliphate burst onto the scene, Ayatollah Khomeini had already made the Islamic division of the world into the House of Islam and the House of War the basis for Iran’s foreign policy. He viewed his Shi’ite theocracy as the rightful leader of the Islamic empire that would destroy all non-believers and their civilization.

Iran’s first act of foreign policy – the takeover of the US Embassy in Teheran – was a declaration of war not only against the US, but against the nationstate system as a whole.

Iran uses terror, irregular warfare and subversion to achieve its ends because such tactics induce chaos.

As Iran expert Michael Ledeen wrote last week, to defeat the US in Iraq, “the Iranian regime provoked all manner of violence, from tribal to ethnic, because they believed they were better able to operate in chaos.”

The US failed to understand Iran’s strategy because the US was unable to reconcile itself with the fact that other actors do not seek stability as it does.

Like Iran’s mullahs, Erdogan and his colleagues also reject the nation-state system. In their case, they wish to replace it with a restored Ottoman Empire.

Spelling out his goal in a speech in the spring of 2012, Erdogan described Turkey’s mission thus: “On the historic march of our holy nation, the AK Party signals the birth of a global power and the mission for a new world order. This is the centenary of our exit from the Middle East [following the Ottoman defeat in World War I]. Whatever we lost between 1911 and 1923, whatever lands we withdrew from, from 2011 to 2023 we shall once again meet our brothers in those lands.”

To achieve this goal, like Iran, Turkey seeks to destabilize states and reduce peoples to their ethnic, sub-national identities. The notion is that by dividing societies into their component parts, the various groups will all be weaker than one unified state, and all of them will feel threatened by one another and in need of outside support.

This is the same model Erdogan is following in Turkey itself as he remakes it in his Ottoman mold.

As Amir Taheri explained last October, Erdogan has been encouraging members of ethnic groups that long ago melted into the larger Turkish culture to rediscover their disparate identities, learn their unique languages and so separate out from the majority culture of the country. At the same time he is repressing the Kurds, Alevis and Armenians, minorities that have maintained their identities at great cost.

In parallel to his attempt to subsume the Kurds, Alevis and Armenians into a wider morass of separate sub-Turkish ethnicities, Erdogan has been assiduously cultivating hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood associations to enable their takeover of mosques and other key institutions to build a countrywide support base for Islamic supremacism.

By fragmenting Turkish society into long-forgotten component parts while uniting it under radical Islam, he wishes to unite the country under his Sultanate rule while dividing its various factions against one another to maintain support for the regime over the long haul.

A large part of repressing the Kurds at home involves denying them outside assistance. By acting like Iraqi Kurdistan’s best friend, Erdogan hopes to attenuate their support for Turkish Kurds.

While Turkey and Iran are rivals in undermining the international system, their goals are the same, and their strategies for achieving their goals are also similar. But while their chaos strategy is brilliant in its way, it is also high risk. By its very nature, chaos is hard, if not impossible to control. Situations often get out of hand. Plans backfire.

And what we are seeing today in Syria and Iraq and the wider region demonstrates the chaos strategy’s drawbacks.

As Pinchas Inbari detailed in a recent report for the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, the Syrian civil war is causing millions of Syrians to leave the country and their migrations are changing the face of many countries.

For instance, their arrival in Lebanon has transformed the multiethnic state into one with a preponderant Sunni majority, thus watering down Hezbollah’s support base.

The Kurds in Iraq may feel they need Turkey today, but there is no reason to assume that this will remain the case for long. Kurdish unity across Iraq, Syria, Turkey and Iran will destabilize not only Turkey, but Iran, where Kurds make up around ten percent of the population. Iranian Kurdistan also abuts the Azeri provinces. Azeris comprise nearly half the population of Iran.

As for ISIS, it is scoring victories in Iraq today. But its forces are vastly outnumbered by the Baathists and the Sunni tribesmen that defeated al Qaida in 2006. There is no reason to assume that these disparate groups won’t get tired of their new medieval rulers.

Many commentators claimed that Erdogan’s recent foreign policy setbacks in the Arab world convinced him to abandon neo-Ottomanism in favor of more modest goals. But his cultivation of Iraqi Kurdistan, and his sponsorship of ISIS, al-Nusra, the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas tell a different story.

Erdogan remains an Islamic imperialist.

Like Iran he aims to destroy the global order and replace it with an Islamic empire. But like Iran, if his adversaries get wise to what he is doing, it won’t be very difficult to beat him at his own game by using his successes to defeat him.

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Palestinian leaders pay price in hunt for missing teens

June 25, 2014

Palestinian leaders pay price in hunt for missing teens

Israel’s massive search in the West Bank for three abducted teenagers is undermining PA rule, say Palestinian analysts

By Adel Zaanoun June 24, 2014, 10:06 pm

via Palestinian leaders pay price in hunt for missing teens | The Times of Israel.

 

Palestinians throw stones during clashes with Israeli troops (unseen) as they search to find three Israeli teenagers believed kidnapped by Palestinian terrorists, Ramallah, June 21,2014 (photo credit: AFP/ABBAS MOMANI)
 

RAMALLAH (AFP) — A massive Israeli search and arrest operation in the West Bank launched after the suspected abduction of three teenagers is sapping support for the Palestinian leadership, analysts say.

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Israel blames Islamist movement Hamas for the kidnappings and has detained most of its West Bank leaders in its crackdown, but a mounting backlash in Palestinian public opinion is undermining the authority of Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas.

In the West Bank city of Ramallah, where Abbas has his base, scores of protesters took to the streets on Monday to demand an end to his leadership’s cooperation with the massive Israeli military operation which has claimed four Palestinian lives since June 12.

On Sunday night, angry youths torched a police station in the city, displaying growing anger at the search operation for the missing teenagers which has seen the army round up nearly 270 members of Hamas and lock down major city Hebron and other towns.

It has been Israel’s largest operation in the West Bank since the end of the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising, in 2005.

Caricatures of Abbas have multiplied on social media forums, with many showing him in Israeli army uniform with captions deriding him as a “collaborator” and a “traitor.”

Some have even come from media linked to the president’s own Fatah party.

“It’s highly likely the Palestinian population’s reaction will be directed at the Palestinian Authority and its institutions, because it now looks incapable of protecting its own people,” said Samir Awad, a politics professor at Birzeit University in the West Bank.

Awad said Israel might even be deliberately moving to “exploit the situation to delegitimize the Palestinian Authority.”
Israel’s ‘strong message’

Naji Sharab, a political analyst at Gaza’s Al-Azhar University, said stoking public resentment was Israel’s way of sending a “strong message” to the Palestinian leadership, after its April deal with Hamas under which a merged administration for the West Bank and Gaza was formed earlier this month for the first time in seven years.

“This is an operation with two goals,” he said.

“It aims to completely dismantle the infrastructure of Hamas, and also to send a strong message to the Palestinian Authority — that its role is purely one of security, not one of sovereignty.”

Abbas is not unaware of the damage being done to his poll ratings.

“What Israel is doing with its arrests and searches will take away the PA’s authority,” he told reporters on Saturday.

Senior Hamas politician Mussa Abu Marzuq said Israel’s aim in locking down swathes of the West Bank under Abbas’s administration was to “drain confidence in it in order to humiliate it.”

It was a deliberate attempt to “put an end to the national consensus government and Palestinian reconciliation,” Abu Marzuq wrote on his Facebook page.

Both the European Union and the United States expressed readiness to work with the new Palestinian government but Israel announced a boycott and has seized on the abduction of the three teenagers as an opportunity to drive a wedge between Abbas and its Islamist foe Hamas.

Abbas aides have acknowledged the damage done to Palestinian reconciliation efforts by the kidnappings.

“If it transpires that Hamas is indeed responsible for the abduction, this could deliver the coup de grace for reconciliation,” said former culture minister Ibrahim Abrash.

US Secretary of State John Kerry has said that “many indications point to Hamas’s involvement” but there has been no formal claim of responsibility and Hamas has described Israeli finger-pointing as “stupid.”

Walid al-Mudallal of Gaza’s Islamic University said that were Hamas to turn out to be responsible, it would make things “very difficult for Abbas”.

“He would have to announce a rejection of Palestinian reconciliation, because he would be under enormous Israeli and American pressure,” Mudallal said.

TOROSSIAN: Israel Was Not Created To Teach Morals To Enemies – Let The IDF Win!

June 25, 2014

TOROSSIAN: Israel Was Not Created To Teach Morals To Enemies – Let The IDF Win!

6.24.2014 Israel Revolt Ronn Torossian

via TOROSSIAN: Israel Was Not Created To Teach Morals To Enemies – Let The IDF Win! | Truth Revolt.

 

 

n these days in Israel, the people are united in their desire to see the three missing Jewish teenagers re-emerge safely. Each passing day sees peoples’ patience waning – and uniquely, a desire to see the strongest army in the region do what needs to be done. As Naftali Frenkel, an American citizen, and two other Israeli teenagers are missing, the United Nations condemns Israel, and the American State Department demands that Israel “exercise restraint” in its search for the Hamas kidnappers.

And in Israel, it’s a major yawn – these are flies swatted off with an annoyance – a non-factor. All that matters is doing all that can be done to ensure the safe re-arrival of the missing boys.

During these times, it is helpful to remember the words of Ze’ev Jabotinsky, the Zionist prophet, the ideological forefather of the Likud Party:

We were not created in order to teach morals and manners to our enemies. Let them learn these things for themselves. We want to hit back at anybody who harms us. Whoever does not repay a blow by a blow is also incapable of repaying a good deed in kind.

When we are in a position where – through no fault of our own – physical force dominates, only one question can be asked: what is worse? To continue watching Jews being killed and the conviction grows that our lives our cheap, and among the whole world that we are spineless?…[T]he blackest of all characteristics is the tradition of the cheapness of Jewish blood, on the shedding of which there is no prohibition and for which you do not pay. The Jew is everywhere in reach; he can be pointed out at any street corner; and he can be insulted or assaulted with only the minimum of risk, or with none at all. ..one permanent assignment that is entrusted to each of us, old and young, men and women, educated and ignorant, as a group and as individuals; this assignment is the defense of our people’s honor. It is always aimed at us, and we must respond. We must end this abuse of ourselves, at all costs. And it is very easy. They spit in our faces without fear, “in passing,” for no reason – not because our insulters are blessed with courage and want to pick a fight with us, but because this pleasure is so cheap for them: they will spit at us and go on their way, and nothing will happen.

We must accustom them to the thought that from now on this pleasure will come at a hefty cost. A new commandment must enter our hearts: that even where there is only one Jew, the word ‘Zhid’ must not be heard without response.

Wise people will come and try to dissuade us – But it is not our purpose to win in every single incident. Our objective – to create about us the belief that a slur on our national feelings is no longer what it once was, a small diversion free of cost – but will rather, with an absolute certainty and a mathematical precision, result in a sharp and unpleasant confrontation.”

In this battle of good vs. evil, it is quite simple: Let the Israel Defense Forces take every action to ensure the protection of the only Jewish State. Let the IDF Win.

Ronn Torossian is an entrepreneur and author.

Gang of 20 Attacks Jewish Kids In Paris Library

June 25, 2014

Gang of 20 Attacks Jewish Kids In Paris Library
The scourge of anti-Semitism continues to grow in France

6.24.2014 Israel RevoltJeff Dunetz

via Gang of 20 Attacks Jewish Kids In Paris Library | Truth Revolt.

 

The scourge of anti-Semitism continues to grow in France. According to reports, on Monday, a gang of 20 attackers assaulted visibly Jewish students wearing kippot (yarmulkes). The students were studying at a local library in Paris. The attackers, described as being of North African descent (probably Muslim immigrants), approached the Jewish students from two directions in the library, pouncing on them and beating them until they were bloody. The Jewish kids ran from the scene, and in the process two students were stabbed, leaving them with light wounds. Police were called and some of the attackers were brought in for investigation.

Monday’s attack comes on the heels of an anti-Semitic attack against a rally supporting the three Israeli youths kidnapped in Hebron two weeks ago. That attack at the rally in Paris on June 19 involved anti-Semitic attackers hurling flares at the rally (see video above).

Other recent attacks include:

Two Saturdays ago, attackers reportedly approached a Paris synagogue in the city’s 20th District armed with an AK-47 assault rifle and a handgun.

According to reports they began aiming their guns at bystanders and the building itself and pretended to open fire, but fled the scene when they saw armed French police officers guarding the synagogue. Reports say they escaped on a scooter.

The Saturday prior to that, two visibly Jewish teenagers wearing kippot reported being sprayed with tear gas in Sarcelles, a northern suburb of Paris, by North African assailants. A week before that, two other Jewish teenagers, aged 14 and 15, narrowly escaped an axe-wielding man of Arab appearance in another Paris suburb.

Almost ten years ago, then Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon caused an international incident when he told French Jews to move to Israel immediately to escape the country’s growing anti-Semitism. Both the French government and the French Jewish community blasted Sharon’s words.

He told a meeting of the American Jewish Association in Jerusalem that Jews around the world should relocate to Israel as early as possible. But for those living in France, he added, moving was a “must” because of rising violence against Jews there.

France’s foreign ministry said it had asked Israel for an explanation of the “unacceptable comments”.

French Jewish leaders, interviewed on France-2 Television, said Mr Sharon’s remarks were unhelpful. “These comments do not bring calm, peace and serenity that we all need,” said Patrick Gaubert, of the International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism (Licra). “I think Mr. Sharon would have done better tonight to have kept quiet.”

“It’s not up to him to decide for us,” said Theo Klein, honorary president of Crif, which represents French Jewish organisations.

Ten years after Sharon spoke out, the Jews of France are listening. According to the Jewish Agency for Israel, during the first three months of this year, 1,407 of France’s roughly 500,000 Jews left for Israel. This is a rate four times higher than for the same period last year. 3,288 French Jews immigrated to Israel last year; in a 72 percent increase over 2012. French émigrés surpassed the number of American émigrés for the first time since 1948, the year Israel was founded. The Jewish Agency says it expects some 5,000 to make the trip this year.