Archive for July 6, 2018

EU ministers warn Iran: Stop threatening to renege on nuclear commitments

July 6, 2018

Source: EU ministers warn Iran: Stop threatening to renege on nuclear commitments – Israel Hayom

EU foreign ministers arrive in Vienna to try to salvage the 2015 Iran nuclear accord • France says it is unlikely world powers will be able to finalize an economic compensation package for Iran before second round of U.S. sanctions is imposed in November.

The final nail in the coffin

July 6, 2018

Source: The final nail in the coffin – Israel Hayom

US Air Force flies 24/7 over Syrian battlefield with Israeli overflights

July 6, 2018

Source: US Air Force flies 24/7 over Syrian battlefield with Israeli overflights – DEBKAfile

 A double layer of US and Israeli warplanes is cruising 24/7 over the southwestern Syrian battlefields ready to go into action if shared red lines are crossed.  

DEBKAfile’s military sources report that US F/A-18E and F/A-18F Super Hornets are monitoring the fighting  around Daraa and the Jordanian and Israeli Golan border regions. They have flown in to support Israel’s overflights from the USS Harry Truman, which is deployed in the eastern Mediterranean.

The IDF has prepared for three scenarios in the event of Russian-backed Syrian and Hizballah forces seizing control of the Daraa region and the Jordanian border – whether by force or in negotiation with the rebel defenders:

  1. A possible deal with the Daraa rebels being replicated for Quneitra on the Israeli border.
  2. Daraa’s possible conquest by Syrian-Hizballah forces, with the help of massive Russian air strikes – which increased on Thursday to 100 sorties – being repeated as the tactic for seizing Quneitra.
  3. A possible assault on Quneitra coming from the southeast of the Golan and starting in the town of Nawa, as predicted by US CENTCOM and IDF strategists. They postulate a Syrian-Hizballah assault force, after completing its capture of Daraa, turning west towards Quentra and splitting into two heads: One will turn west toward Yarmuk and the Syrian-Jordanian-Israeli border junction. There, they will try and take the pocket held by Khalid ibn Walid Army, which pledged allegiance to ISIS. The other head will approach Quneitra from the north. If the first contingent defeats the ISIS force, the two will join up on the hills overlooking Israel’s Hamat Gader and Sea of Galilee. Their defeat of the rebels in Quneitra would bring a Syrian-Hizballah force right up to the central Golan borderline.
    In the course of the fighting, the IDF could be faced with three possible quandaries:
  • Russian and Syrian warplanes, which has so far kept their distance from Israel’s borders, may drop bombs on rebel-held Quneitra. How will the Israeli air force and anti-air batteries then respond? and against which targets?
  • Will the Syrian soldiers entering the Quneitra region bring with them the Hizballah and pro-Iranian Shiite militias taking part in the battle for Daraa? Israel has made its intention of countering this move clear in messages to the US and through the Russians to Damascus.
  • What happens if the Syrian army moves into the Golan demilitarized zone set up by the Israel-Syrian ceasefire accord in 1974 and monitored by UNDOF? Both the US and Israel would not accept this.

All these eventualities were explored on Wednesday, July 4, when the IDF Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Gady Eisenkott toured the Golan to inspect the readiness of Israel’s positions for a flare-up of hostilities, shortly after he returned from Washington and talks with top US army chiefs. Eisenkott visited the Bashan Division and conferred with field commanders on the state of the Syrian war and the Northern Command’s preparedness for an escalation. He was accompanied by OC Northern Command Maj. Gen. Yoel Strick and the Bashan commander Brig. Gen. Amit Fisher.

Indirect communications are reported between Israeli and Syrian officers via UNDOF regarding local problems related to the Syrian refugees encamped on Israel’s Golan border and cared for by the IDF. Our sources report that around 12,000 are gathered at present outside the Syrian village of Barika, 1,200 meters from the IDF’s Tel Fares positions.

Hamas’ online terrorism

July 6, 2018

Interesting, have only copied in extracts, each article at each link is not too long however.

Viral social media

Hamas’ online terrorism

https://www.idf.il/en/minisites/hamas/hamas-online-terrorism/

Extract:

The Information Security Department just revealed Hamas’ method of operation on the internet. In response, the IDF has launched Operation Broken Heart. Hamas cyber terrorists operate as stolen identities in order to talk to people, get their personal information, retrieve sensitive security information, and download malicious applications that turn cell phones into weapons. Thanks to IDF soldiers’ vigilance, there was no damage to Israel’s security.

 

Hamas’s new espionage system exposed

Hamas plot to upload applications to official Google store to make soldiers download spyware uncovered by alert soldiers.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/248373

Extract:

As of January 2018, the Department of Information Security has begun to receive requests from dozens of soldiers who claim to have encountered suspicious individuals on social media who tried to make them download applications from the official Google app store. Following the soldiers’ reports, the Information Security Department opened an investigation. The investigation revealed that the network was an intelligence operation of the Hamas terrorist organization. The applications included a World Cup app as well as two dating apps.

Proud defender of Israel to step down from Aussie Parliament

July 6, 2018

Michael Danby is most likely not well known among people in the northern hemisphere. He is a politician and member of the Australian national parliament, the House of Representatives.

But he has been a long-time staunch defender of Israel. I have heard him referred to, sympathetically, as the “Member for Israel”.

He has stood firmly and proudly at the front of the battleline to defend Israel and the Jewish people, unwavering in his commitment despite the onslaught against him.

I hope he continues to stand in the shield-wall after he leaves public office!

Here is his wiki page:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Danby

Danby passion will be missed by many

From The Australian, 5 July 2018, behind paywall

By Greg Sheriden

The member for Melbourne Ports is not contesting his seat at the next election.

At the funeral of Sir Zelman Cowen almost seven years ago, former prime minister John Howard ran into the Labor member for Melbourne Ports. Howard remarked: “Ah, Michael Danby, we’ll never win this seat while you remain the Labor member.” Howard was right, but now the Liberals will have a chance. For a Labor lion will roar no more, at least not in parliament. After 20 years and seven successive election wins, Danby has decided to retire from federal parliament at the next election.

Danby’s political career was of a type not much celebrated in Australia but one that should be celebrated much more. He was a courageous and highly influential backbencher who used parliamentary committees and every bully pulpit opportunity afforded by politics to further the causes he cared about deeply.

Because he is so passionate in his commitments, he is sometimes impetuous and prone to overstatement, and I don’t think he is one of nature’s born administrators. But, by God, Australia would benefit if there were more like him in parliament. For Danby is utterly fearless, utterly committed to the causes he believes in, he sticks in good times and bad, and the causes he champions are good causes.

He is not remotely an identikit professional politician. But his straightforward political achievements should not be overlooked.

In 1997 he beat the formidable Tim Pallas, now Victoria’s treasurer, for preselection. He won what was a marginal seat and has held it ever since. Really, Melbourne Ports is a natural Liberal seat with a deep green tinge. It is the eighth most affluent seat in Australia and its electors would make it the fifth biggest beneficiary of Malcolm Turnbull’s tax cuts.

Danby has sometimes achieved swings to him and sometimes recorded swings against him. But his personal vote and his indefatigable networking throughout the electorate and beyond have kept the seat Labor.

I asked him to nominate his three biggest achievements in office. He is immensely proud of all the local work he has done for Melbourne Ports but the three he listed off the top of his head were activism for international human rights in cases such as the Darfuris, the Baha’is in Iran and the Tibetans; activism on national security issues around terrorism, foreign interference and the US alliance; and No 3 was this: “I think over 40 years I’ve had some effect both on people who have worked on my staff and other Labor Party members to help make the Australian Labor Party a middle-of-the-road party that can still credibly be elected to office, unlike the Corbynistas in Britain.” It is hard to capture quite the distinctive political personality of Danby. He is Jewish, and proudly so, as he should be. Melbourne Ports, with Wentworth in Sydney, is one of the two most Jewish federal electorates. Danby’s father escaped from Germany as World War II was approaching. His father’s parents died at Auschwitz.

Danby is a strong, though not uncritical, supporter of Israel. This, too, is a good cause.

Being a Labor right-winger and a strong Israel defender ensured that he never got a fair go from the ABC or Fairfax, and all his parliamentary career he has laboured under the settled hostility of both organisations.

But he has never flinched, never backed down. It is a career that truly exemplifies independence of mind and courage of spirit. And while he occasionally overstates his own arguments, this is as nothing compared with the calumnies routinely flung at him.

But while Danby has been important in Australia’s Israel debate, his effect on politics has been much broader. Because he doesn’t just drift into parliamentary committees but consciously fashions them to advance his issues, and because he is at heart always an activist, he has used the opportunities of parliament’s committees to secure big results.

He used his position on the electoral affairs committee to secure much simpler and more automatic registration of voters on the electoral roll and helped gain support for these reforms with the Senate crossbench. Perhaps hundreds of thousands more people are entitled to vote at each election as a result.

Most significant of all has been Danby’s activism on human rights and national security. The causes he supports, such as the Tibetans, or the Muslim Uighurs in western China, or the Baha’is, or the Darfuris, don’t lead to promotion, lavish grants or remunerative post-politics career opportunities. But I am very glad that somebody significant supports them.

Although he briefly served as a parliamentary secretary in the Gillard government, Danby’s talents would have been wasted, or misapplied, as a generic minister for potholes and drains or some such. I thought he reached the zenith of his public influence when he was chairman of the foreign affairs, defence and trade committee. Very much like a powerful US congressman, he would call witnesses to highlight issues and achieve outcomes.

His committee got Huawei to talk about the role of the Communist Party committee in its headquarters. It got the vice-president of the Chinese National People’s Congress to testify about the South China Sea.

When Danby was a member of the treaties’ committee, he was a central player in getting Labor to oppose ratification of a mutual extradition treaty between Australia and China. He gave powerful speeches about the unreliability of the Chinese legal system, pointing, for example, to its higher than 99.6 per cent conviction rate. This was one of the most significant moments in our recent history when the Australian polity registered in the starkest manner its objection to the operation of Chinese government law on Australian territory.

A decade ago, with only the small resources of a backbencher’s office, Danby staged in Melbourne a big international conference on human rights in North Korea. For two days in Melbourne, somebody cared about the unspeakably foul wickedness of the North Korean gulag. There was absolutely no political pay-off for Danby in this.

It was at heart an expression of human solidarity.

On another occasion, Danby introduced me to an activist for free trade unions in China. A Labor Party politician actively supporting free trade unions in China – now there’s an idea.

I have known Danby for more than 40 years and have greatly enjoyed his humour and his connoisseur’s delight in ideological eccentricities, the strange and florid plants to be observed if you journey far enough into the labyrinths of political obsession.

There is a Yiddish word perhaps designed to describe such as Danby. He is a mensch.

 

Iranian General Soleimani Praises Rouhani for Threats Against World Oil Supply

July 6, 2018

by TheTower.org Staff | 07.05.18 1:45 pm

Source Link: Iranian General Soleimani Praises Rouhani for Threats Against World Oil Supply

{Wow! Iran verses the US Navy. I’m going to need more popcorn. – LS}

The commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force (IRGC-QF) praised Iranian President Hassan Rouhani for implied threats the president made against international oil supplies, CNN reported on Wednesday.

Gen. Qassem Soleimani, commander of the IRGC-QF, who runs Iran’s foreign military operations, said, addressing Rouhani, “Your valuable statement that said there will be no guarantees for oil exports from this region unless the Islamic Republic of Iran (can) also export its oil was a source of pride.”

Rouhani had said to a group of Iranians currently living in Switzerland on Tuesday that if the United States tried to prevent Iran from exporting its oil, “they do not understand what it means, because it would be totally nonsense that Iran’s oil is not exported while at the same time the region’s oil is exported.”

In a letter to Rouhani, Soleimani called the president’s remarks a “source of pride,” for saying that if “Iran’s oil is not allowed to be exported, then there will be no guarantee that other countries in the region would be able to export theirs.” Soleimani added that he would help implement any policy that would serve Iran’s interests.

The United States has said that it will re-impose  sanction on Iranian oil exports November 4. As a result, at least 50 global firms have announced that they will cease doing business with the Iranian oil industry.

“We have been clear with countries and companies around the world that we are bringing severe economic pressure on Iran until the regime changes its destabilizing policies,” State Department official Brian Hook said at a press conference on Monday.

When he announced that the United States would withdraw from the JCPOA in May, President Donald Trump  observed that since the deal was implemented, Iran’s military budget grew by 40% and its “bloody ambitions have grown even more brazen.”

In addition to threatening the shipping of the world’s oil, Rouhani has been rebuked by Austrian Prime Minister Sebastian Kurz for denying Israel’s right to exist. Rouhani has also threatened to reduce Iran’s cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, since arriving in Europe earlier this week.

[Photo: Tasnim News]