Archive for April 2019

Pompeo wishes Netanyahu ‘mazal tov’ on his election victory 

April 12, 2019

Source: Pompeo wishes Netanyahu ‘mazal tov’ on his election victory | The Times of Israel

US secretary of state hails ‘unbreakable’ alliance with Israel, vows to ‘continue to work together to address common threats’

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) welcomes US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to his residence in Jerusalem on March 21, 2019. (Jim Young/Pool/AFP)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) welcomes US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to his residence in Jerusalem on March 21, 2019. (Jim Young/Pool/AFP)

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo wished a “mazal tov” Thursday night to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for his victory in the Knesset elections.

“Mazal Tov to PM @Netanyahu on his re-election, and to the people of #Israel on exercising their freedom to vote,” Pompeo tweeted early Friday morning, hours after the all-but-final results showed Netanyahu well-placed to form a stable, right-wing governing coalition.

“The U.S.-Israel alliance is unbreakable. We will continue to work together to address common threats and strengthen the bond between our democracies,” Pompeo added.

According to a Central Elections Committee announcement late Thursday night, with all of the votes counted, checked and rechecked, Netanyahu’s Likud party edged past its rival Blue and White party with 26.45 percent of the vote to win 36 seats in the 120-seat Knesset and head a potential 65-strong coalition.

Earlier in the day and on Wednesday, as the drama over the vote countdragged on in the Knesset, congratulations to Netanyahu poured in from world leaders, especially those who have a close and personal relationship with the prime minister.

As of Thursday evening, Netanyahu had taken congratulatory calls from US President Donald Trump and his VP Mike Pence, Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales and Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández.

Honduras recently declared its intention to open a trade mission in Jerusalem, promising to move its embassy to the city as soon as Israel opens a mission in Tegucigalpa.

Netanyahu’s office scheduled additional calls with foreign heads of state for the coming days.

The leaders of countries the prime minister recently touted good ties with, such as Poland, Chad and Russia, have not yet called to congratulate, but are expected to do so either after the final election results are announced, or when the new government is sworn in, which will likely take place in several weeks.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who visited Israel just a few days before Israelis headed to the polls, congratulated the “great leader” Netanyahu in a tweet.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko issued two tweets on the Israeli elections:

Петро Порошенко

@poroshenko

The leaders of France, Britain and Germany were expected to issue congratulations in the near future.

Austria’s Kurz was the first to send good wishes to Jerusalem, tweeting his congratulations “for an excellent showing” on Wednesday around noon. “While the official results have not yet been published, one matter is clear: you have — once again — gained the trust of the people of #Israel in record numbers,” he wrote.

“I am looking forward to working with you in the future, for the benefit of the people of Israel and the people of Austria.”

On Thursday, after his call to the old-new prime minister, Kurz tweeted to Netanyahu again. “We agreed to further strengthen the excellent bilateral relations between Israel and Austria,” he wrote. “We reaffirmed the need to fight all forms of anti-Semitism. I look forward to welcoming PM Netanyahu to Vienna soon.”

Sebastian Kurz

@sebastiankurz

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated Netanyahu in Hebrew:

Chowkidar Narendra Modi

@narendramodi

חברי היקר ביבי @netanyahu, מזל טוב! הנך חבר יקר של הודו ואני מצפה להמשיך לעבוד איתך לקחת את השותפות הדו-צדדית שלנו

“My dear friend Bibi, Congratulations! You are a great friend of India, and I look forward to continuing to work with you to take our bilateral partnership to new heights,” he added in a second tweet.

Milos Zeman, the president of the Czech Republic, sent a lengthy congratulatory letter to Netanyahu.

“I am pleased that the Israeli people have confirmed their agreement with your political agenda and renewed your mandate, giving you the opportunity to continue to shape not only Israeli politics but also to participate in regional and international affairs,” he wrote.

“I hope that in the future we will have many opportunities to continue our fruitful cooperation and, last but not least, to fulfill my dream, namely to move the Czech embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.”

The country’s prime minister Andrej Babiš tweeted about Netanyahu’s election win, saying he is keeping his “fingers crossed for him to continue his work as Prime Minister.”

Embedded video

Consejo de Secretarios de Estado HN@CSecdeEstadohn

Trump called Netanyahu from aboard Air Force One.

“Prime Minister Netanyahu thanked US President Trump for his great support of Israel, including the recognition of Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, as well as for the strong stand against the Iranian regime, including the President’s recent decision against the Iranian Revolutionary Guards,” the Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement Wednesday.

“The two leaders again expressed their appreciation for the abiding friendship between them and their countries. They agreed to continue to closely work together in the coming years for both Israel and the United States.”

 

An Arab NATO in the making

April 12, 2019
Saudi Arabia plays host to high-level officials from US, Gulf states and Jordan as it prepares to launch Middle East Strategic Alliance – a new body designed to counter Iran’s influence in the region
https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5492981,00.html

Saudi Arabia is preparing for the launch of the so-called “Arab NATO” — the Middle East Strategic Alliance (MESA) — in an effort to combat Iranian hegomony in the region.

The kingdom on April 8 hosted a meeting with the high-level participation of Saudi Arabia, the United States, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Jordan. According to the Saudi WAS news agency, the meeting was “an important step to launching the alliance, which aims to strengthen the security and stability of the region and the world.”

 

Donald Trump with the Egyptian and Saudi leaders in Riyadh in May 2017
Donald Trump with the Egyptian and Saudi leaders in Riyadh in May 2017

Sulaiman al-Oqaily, a Saudi political analyst, says there must be one strategy among the Arab nations that form the alliance, as well as a clear target in order for such an endeavor to succeed.

First, al-Oqaily points out that there must be one united Arab bloc that has agreed that the “Arab NATO” would protect the Arab world from all kind of threats and security challenges. “Its members’ motives and determinants have to be the same,” he says.

Al-Oqaily says that the sectarianism with which Iran targets the Middle East is more dangerous than Israel.

“Iran is taking advantage of its culture and religious links to the Arab world to expand there and destroy it,” he says. “Israel can’t violate the Arab society like Iran, but through its intelligence services.”

He also speculates that if Iran weren’t involved in Iraq, the latter would have peace by now.

 

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and his Syrian counterpart Bashar Assad in Tehran, February 2019 (Photo: EPA)

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and his Syrian counterpart Bashar Assad in Tehran, February 2019 (Photo: EPA)

The US administration has since last year been exploring the creation of a new security body comprising Sunni Middle Eastern countries that would be geared toward countering Shiite Iran’s regional adventurism. Reportedly, MESA member-states would seek deeper cooperation in the realms of missile defense, military training and counter-terrorism, while strengthening broader political and economic ties.

“It would serve as a bulwark against Iranian aggression, terrorism, extremism and will bring stability,” a spokesperson for the White House’s National Security Council asserted in reference to the potential association last year.

“It’s not a new project. However, its implementation is what matters,” says Qassem Qaseer, a Lebanese political analyst. He confirms that the US has been working with Arab states for a while now to form such a body, noting that “the issue remains with the different agendas and political approach of its member of states.”

For example, Qaseer says that the Arab countries don’t agree on more than one critical issue, pointing out that the Arab NATO is still an idea with no structure.

“They aim to pressure Iran on the ground by such initiative, although, they need to make it a reality first,” Qaseer says. It is noteworthy that the Idea of an Arab NATO coalition is one of the results of the Arab-Islamic summit hosted by Riyadh in May 2017.

Jared Kushner with Benjamin Netanyahu (Photo: Reuters)

Jared Kushner with Benjamin Netanyahu (Photo: Reuters)

Over the past year, senior American officials, including President Donald Trump’s adviser Jared Kushner and international negotiator Jason Greenblatt, have conducted shuttle diplomacy among Middle East capitals. Several analysts who spoke to The Media Line confirmed the visits laid the foundation for MESA, although the notion reportedly was first raised by Saudi Arabia.

Regarding Israel, its relations with regional Muslim nations are by most accounts improving, primarily the result of a shared interest in curbing Iran’s potential nuclearization. However, the conflict with the Palestinians remains a major, if not insurmountable, obstacle to the establishment of full diplomatic ties between Israel and more of its neighbors.

Article written by Dima Abumaria. Reproduced with permission of The Media Line

 

For Netanyahu, an unprecedented election haul bodes well for political survival 

April 12, 2019

Source: For Netanyahu, an unprecedented election haul bodes well for political survival | The Times of Israel

The PM made history when his Likud party became the first since Israel’s inception to win more than a million votes — a trove he hopes will fend off his legal woes

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara addresses their supporters as the results in the elections are announced, at the party headquarters in Tel Aviv, on April 09, 2019 (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara addresses their supporters as the results in the elections are announced, at the party headquarters in Tel Aviv, on April 09, 2019 (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

The 2019 elections are over. Officials may yet be recounting votes, but nothing will change the fact that Benjamin Netanyahu has well and truly beaten the generals, the pollsters and the sourpusses. With 1,138,772 votes cast for Likud, Netanyahu’s party is the first in Israel’s history to cross the one-million-ballot threshold.

But the prime minister’s real challenges begin now, just as all eyes are turned toward Washington, in anticipation of President Donald Trump’s peace plan.

Will the reelected prime minister be able to hold onto his seat even if he is indicted for bribery, fraud and breach of trust? Will his renewed right-wing coalition be able to block the peace process, or will the Washington plan threaten his coalition stability? And will Netanyahu succeed in becoming a prime minister for all of Israel’s citizens — as he promised in his rather conciliatory winning speech — when he is so dependent on a coalition composed of radical right-wing and ultra-religious parties?

Ultimately, Netanyahu understands the value of his one million voters, and knows exactly where to invest them: in his own political survival.

The indictment coalition

The prime minister is now assembling a coalition that can prove loyal throughout his legal hearing process and even — if an indictment is served — while he stands trial in the Jerusalem District Court.

After his unprecedented win, and with contrarian Likud MKs Benny Begin and Oren Hazan out of the picture, Netanyahu has all 36 party members at his beck and call — none will dare to disobey or challenge him.

The ultra-Orthodox parties are also tightly bound to Netanyahu — come hell or high water or budget cuts — giving him 15 more seats of unconditional loyalty. The Union of Right-Wing Parties, with five seats, is also allied to the premier, who can be counted among its founders.

A worker prints election campaign posters for the Shas party showing pictures of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, at Canaan Maxi Media Printing House in central Israel on March 7, 2019. (Yossi Zeliger/Flash90)

Meanwhile, Avigdor Liberman’s Yisrael Beytenu, also with five seats, may not be quite as beholden to Netanyahu, but Liberman loathes law enforcement agencies just enough to support the prime suspect.

As for Kulanu, with just four seats: Netanyahu is likely to take advantage of Moshe Kahlon’s deflated party and shaky situation to offer the former Likud MK a carrot and a stick: retain the Finance Ministry and assimilate Kulanu into the Likud mothership, thus guaranteeing the prime minister full political obedience. Kahlon knows firsthand how demanding his old party leader can be; after all, he was once Likud’s central committee chairman.

The gatekeepers’ deterrence

Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit at conference at Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan on March 28, 2019. (Flash90)

Netanyahu’s victory speech delivered a clear message to law enforcement authorities: He won overwhelming national support, despite detailed and severe allegations of wrongdoing by him published by Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit just weeks before the elections.

“One million people voted for us, so one civil servant will not sway public opinion,” a source close to the prime minister told The Times of Israel on Thursday. It won’t be an easy battle for the gatekeepers — both before and after the looming pre-trial hearing.

One million people voted for us, so one civil servant will not sway public opinion

Netanyahu, by the way, is confident he has extraordinary powers and will therefore have no problem standing trial while running the country — and may even continue to moonlight as defense minister.

The Blue and White disappearance

Benny Gantz jumped the gun when he boasted about his party’s “historic achievement” in a premature victory speech. Now, the only “achievement” he can claim is the decimation of the Zionist left, and possibly any opposition to Netanyahu.

Gantz and his Blue and White partners were unable to breach the insular right-wing bloc and effectively did not draw any seats from that side of the aisle. They did, however, destroy the Labor party, its spirit and leadership, leaving it with just six seats — an insignificant force even in Israel’s already shriveled opposition.

And if that were not enough, Blue and White also dented Meretz, completely ignored the Arab parties, and offered no alternatives to the nation-state law, thus contributing to an incredibly low Arab voter turnout.

Benny Gantz, leader of the Blue and White political alliance, claims victory at the end of April 9, 2019’s elections, in a speech in Tel Aviv (MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP)

Gantz’s partner Yair Lapid now talks about building an opposition that will “make this government’s life miserable,” but in reality, Blue and White is an ad hoc political alliance, composed of three different parties, that will disband sooner or later during this term. In over four decades of covering politics, I have seen many centrist parties come and go. None survive.

In 1977 it was Yigal Yadin’s DASH party, later came the Merkaz party and Tomi Lapid’s Shinui, and then there were Kadima and several others — all long forgotten. As Shimon Peres once said, there is no third option. And Netanyahu, who successfully dismantled rivals Kadima and Labor in the previous decade, is not very bothered by the threat posed by his new and inexperienced rivals.

And then there’s Trump

US President Donald Trump (R) and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu talk while walking to the West Wing of the White House for a meeting March 25, 2019. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP)

According to sources close to Netanyahu, Trump is set to propose a convenient peace plan for Israel. The plan will stipulate that Area A in the West Bank (which the Palestinian Authority already controls fully) will become the land for the Palestinian state, along with some East Jerusalem neighborhoods that will be excised from the capital’s municipal borders.

The Palestinians are not likely to accept such an offer, but Netanyahu could play the unity card and call for the opposition to support him in the peace process. He will find, in such a case, that the real opposition is within his own bloc, and his coalition partners will veto any such move.

This takes us back to Netanyahu’s legal battle: He’s so invested in his indictment-busting coalition that there is little chance of promoting any peace plan — even if it is likely to be the most accommodating settlement Israel will ever receive, from the most accommodating president Israel has ever seen.

 

Gantz calls Netanyahu to congratulate him; PM: We’ll restore calm to Israel

April 12, 2019

Source: Gantz calls Netanyahu to congratulate him; PM: We’ll restore calm to Israel | The Times of Israel

With results finalized, Blue and White leader, in extremely short conversation, tells Likud head ‘we will continue to serve the citizens of Israel’

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and Benny Gantz, right. (Hadas Parush/Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and Benny Gantz, right. (Hadas Parush/Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)

Three days after the election and the day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decisive electoral victory over Benny Gantz was confirmed by a completed vote count, the Blue and White chairman phoned the Likud leader Friday morning to congratulate him.

Gantz indicated in what was apparently a very brief conversation that he had wanted to wait with the call until the Central Election Committee announced the final results, which it did late Thursday night.

“With the end of the vote count and the announcement of final results, I congratulate you on the achievement in the elections. We will continue to serve the citizens of Israel, and I wish you and all of Israel a happy [upcoming Passover] holiday,” Gantz told Netanyahu, according to a readout provided by a Blue and White spokesperson.

“Thank you, I wish you a happy holiday. We will restore calm to Israel, each in his own capacity. Have a good Sabbath,” Netanyahu responded, recognizing the heated nature of the campaign in a readout of the short conversation released by Likud.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu waves to his supporters after polls for Israel’s general elections closed in Tel Aviv, Israel, Wednesday, April 10, 2019. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

Netanyahu was confirmed Thursday night as the big winner of the general elections, when the Central Elections Committee published the completed tallies of Tuesday’s election, a full 60 hours after the polling stations closed.

With all of the votes counted, checked and rechecked, Netanyahu’s Likud party edged past its rival Blue and White party with 26.45 percent of the vote to win 36 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, gaining one more seat in the adjusted final tally. Benny Gantz’s centrist Blue and White faction was confirmed at 35 seats, 26.11% of ballots.

The prime minister is expected to be tasked by President Reuven Rivlin with forming a coalition next week.

Gantz and his Blue and White colleagues have vowed to serve in the opposition after conceding the race on Wednesday evening.

Head of the Blue White political party Benny Gantz speaks to supporters as the results in the Israeli general elections are announced, at the party headquarters in Tel Aviv, on April 09, 2019. (Noam Revkin Fenton/FLASH90)

The former IDF chief of staff gave a premature victory speech on Tuesday night after one exit poll showed his party poised to possibly unseat Netanyahu’s Likud, though two other exit polls predicted a fairly straightforward path to victory for the incumbent. Gantz vowed to “be the prime minister of everyone and not just those who voted for me… We all need to think about how we can work together, how we can bring everyone into the discussion.”

In his victory speech about two hours later, Netanyahu said he would build a right-wing coalition, but would aim to be the prime minister of all Israelis, right and left, Jewish and non-Jewish.

 

A small country thinks big 

April 12, 2019

Source: A small country thinks big – www.israelhayom.com

Beresheet is a good metaphor for the Israeli spirit, which time and again overcomes obstacle by thinking outside the box.

Israel’s attempt to land the spacecraft Bereshit (Genesis) on the moon cannot be defined as a “mission accomplished” but it was nevertheless a noble attempt.

It serves as an important lesson about learning from failure. We have to tell our kids about it and next time, God willing, everything will go as planned.

We are a people of pioneers who have inspired the world. The greatest discoveries in human history happened after such failures, which often saw many casualties.

We made it all the way to the moon but couldn’t quite land the way we had hoped. But the mere fact that we got there underscores the extent of our audacity, our courage and our scientific know-how. How dare such a small country think so big.

America used massive missiles to send its manned missions to the moon at a high cost. But the Israeli project managed to minimize the financial burden by using elliptical orbits that increased the spacecraft’s speed until it entered the moon’s orbit.

This is a good metaphor for the Israeli spirit, which time and again overcomes obstacles by thinking outside the box, not just through brute force.

The moon is a gateway to space and humanity is destined to expand beyond our small planet into the vast expanse of the universe.

Even our small country has contributed immensely to this human conquest and the great excitement we felt on Thursday when the spacecraft took a selfie showing Israel’s flag just above the moon’s surface would pay off.

This excitement will ultimately propel Israel back to the moon; next time we will make it all the way.

We should commend all those involved in Beresheet. Let’s hope we get to see them next year celebrating a moon landing.

 

Israeli spacecraft crash lands on moon’s surface

April 12, 2019

Source: Israeli spacecraft crash lands on moon’s surface – www.israelhayom.com

( Heartbreaking… – JW )

The spacecraft lost communication with ground control during its final descent. Moments later, the mission was declared a failure. “We will try again,” says PM Benjamin Netanyahu. “We reached the moon but we want to land more comfortably and that is for the next time.”

The spacecraft lost communication with ground control during its final descent. Moments later, the mission was declared a failure.

“We definitely crashed on the surface of the moon,” said Opher Doron of Israel Aerospace Industries.

He said the spacecraft’s engine turned off shortly before landing, and scientists were still trying to figure out the cause. The spacecraft, called Beresheet, was in pieces scattered at the landing site, he said.

Doron nonetheless called the mission an “amazing success,” for reaching the moon and coming so close to landing successfully.

“It is by far the smallest, cheapest spacecraft ever to get to the moon,” he said. Beresheet was about the size of a washing machine.

Beresheet captures a “selfie” with the Israeli flag during its lunar descent | Photo: SpaceIL

The mishap occurred in front of a packed audience that included Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and was broadcast live on national television.

“We will try again,” Netanyahu said. “We reached the moon, but we want to land more comfortably, and that is for the next time.”

It had been hoped that the small robotic spacecraft, built by the non-profit SpaceIL and state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries, would match a feat that has been achieved only by U.S., Russia and China.

The failure was a disappointing ending to a 6.5-million-kilometer (4-million-mile) lunar voyage, almost unprecedented in length, which was designed to conserve fuel and reduce price. The spacecraft hitched a ride on a SpaceX rocket launched from Florida in February.

For the past two months, Beresheet, which means “Genesis” or “In the Beginning,” traveled around the Earth several times before entering lunar orbit.

Around 20 minutes before the scheduled landing, engine firings slowed Beresheet’s descent. Engineers watched in silence as the craft, its movements streamed live on dozens of screens, glided toward a free-fall.

But then the screens showed the engine misfiring, and the velocity surging as it headed toward the lunar surface. Radio signals from the spacecraft abruptly cut off.

Standing before darkened computer screens, controllers declared the mission a failure. The craft crashed near the historic Apollo landing sites.

President Reuven Rivlin hosted dozens of youngsters at his official residence, one of several celebrations scheduled across the country. The children, some wearing white and blue spacesuits, appeared confused as the crash unfolded.

“We are full of admiration for the wonderful people who brought the spacecraft to the moon,” Rivlin said. “True, not as we had hoped, but we will succeed in the end.”

Beresheet carried a small laser retroreflector from NASA intended to measure magnetic fields and provide insight on the moon’s iron core. It also had a time capsule that included a Bible, Israeli cultural symbols and a picture of famed Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon, who died in the crash of the U.S. space shuttle Columbia in 2003.

The head of NASA, Jim Bridenstine, said he regretted the mission didn’t succeed, but “I have no doubt that Israel and SpaceIL will continue to explore and I look forward to celebrating their future achievements.”

The Google Lunar X Prize Competition, which offered $20 million for the first privately funded venture to make it to the moon, is what first drove SpaceIL to get Beresheet off the ground.

Beresheet made the final cut, but after several deadline extensions, the competition ended last year without a winner.

SpaceIL pressed on with its dream, convinced the mission would help inspire Israel’s next generation to study science and engineering.

The project – which cost around 100 million dollars – was financed largely by philanthropists Dr. Miriam and Sheldon Adelson together with SpaceIL President Morris Kahn, as well as other donors from around the world.

The XPrize Foundation congratulated the SpaceIL team despite the failed landing.

“We’re extraordinarily proud they made it this far,” said Peter Diamandis, XPrize founder.

Spacecraft crash more on other planets than they do on the moon, but the moon has had seen failed missions previously, said American University professor Howard McCurdy, who has written several books about space.

In the 1960s, before the Apollo lunar landings, NASA sent seven unmanned Surveyor flights to the moon and two failed, he said.

“What makes it hard is the conditions – the geological and atmospheric conditions are different on the moon and the planets than they are on Earth,” McCurdy said. “It makes it really hard to test” the spacecraft’s landing back on Earth.

Phil Larson of the University of Colorado, who was a space adviser in the Obama White House, said the Israeli effort underlines that “space is still extremely hard, and landing human-made objects on other worlds is an utmost challenge.”

But, he added, “While it failed to land successfully, overall it was a path-breaking and innovative project.”

The Adelson family owns the company that is the primary shareholder in Israel Hayom. Dr. Miriam Adelson is the publisher of Israel Hayom.

 

Is Iran Winning in Yemen?

April 11, 2019

 

 

Iran Restarts Advanced Nuclear Work

April 11, 2019

‘In honor of all the jihadi efforts of our country’s nuclear industrialists’

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani / Getty Images

 

BY:

Iran Restarts Advanced Nuclear Work

Iranian leaders have authorized and begun spinning a set of advanced nuclear centrifuges to mark the country’s Iran National Nuclear Day, which leaders said is in honor “of all the jihadi efforts of our country’s nuclear industrialists.”

In unveiling a set of IR-6 nuclear centrifuges, which are the key component in enriching uranium to amounts that could be used as fuel for a weapon, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani claimed that Tehran has “acquired missiles and weapons you could not have imagined.”

“Today, and throughout the past year, we have launched 114 new technologies via the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran,” Rouhani was quoted as saying in remarks translated by the Middle East Media Research Institute, or MEMRI. “This is the message to the world: You have not succeeded and you will not succeed in preventing the progress and development of the Iranian people and [their] scientists. If yesterday you feared our IR-1 centrifuges—well, here you go!

As the nuclear centrifuges began to spin, Rouhani reportedly urged those in attendance at the event to “gloriously wave your [Iranian flags]” in “honor of all the jihadi efforts of our country’s nuclear industrialists,” according to MEMRI.

The installation of these centrifuges marks yet another increase in Iran’s nuclear know-how, elements of which remain legal under the landmark nuclear deal that President Donald Trump abandoned last year.

While the United States is no longer party to the deal, it has kept in place certain sanctions waivers that permit Iran to engage in sensitive nuclear research. Congressional Iran hawks in recent weeks have expressed anger over the waivers, which remain in place due to the State Department.

Rouhani, in his remarks, said that U.S. sanctions have not stopped Iran from making strides in the nuclear technology arena.

“If you claim that you can block advanced technology with your sanctions—you are lying and you know it,” he said.

Rouhani went on to claim that Iran is on the cusp installing an even more advanced generation of these nuclear centrifuges, called IR-8.

“Today, we launched a chain of 20 IR-6 centrifuges,” he said. “If you persevere in your injustice and wrongdoing, you will also see a chain of IR-8 centrifuges in the not-so-distant future. You cannot prevent the scientific progress of the Iranian people. If the purpose of your sanctions was to diminish Iran’s military power, know that in the past year—as you are fully aware—we have acquired missiles and weapons that you could not have imagined.”

Report: Egypt pulls out of US-led anti-Iran security initiative 

April 11, 2019

Source: Report: Egypt pulls out of US-led anti-Iran security initiative – www.israelhayom.com

U.S. has been trying to forge an “Arab NATO,” with key allies in Arab world • Sources say Egypt announced decision at meeting in Riyadh on Sunday • Move seen as blow to Trump administration’s strategy on Iran.

Egypt has pulled out of the U.S. effort to forge an “Arab NATO” with key Arab allies, according to four sources familiar with the decision, in a blow to the Trump administration’s strategy to contain Iranian power.

Egypt conveyed its decision to the United States and other participants in the proposed Middle East Security Alliance, or MESA, ahead of a meeting held Sunday in Riyadh, the capital of Saudi Arabia, one source said.

Cairo did not send a delegation to the meeting, the latest gathering held to advance the U.S.-led effort to bind Sunni Muslim Arab allies into a security, political and economic pact to counter Shiite Iran, the source said.

Egypt withdrew because it doubted the seriousness of the initiative, had yet to see a formal blueprint laying it out, and because of the danger that the plan would increase tensions with Iran, said an Arab source who, like the others, spoke on condition of anonymity.

Uncertainty about whether U.S. President Donald Trump will win a second term next year and whether a successor may ditch the initiative also contributed to the Egyptian decision, the Arab source said.

“It’s not moving well,” a Saudi source said of the initiative.

The initiative, which Saudi Arabia first proposed in 2017, also is aimed at limiting the growing regional influence of Russia and China, according to a classified White House document reviewed by Reuters last year.

The Egyptian Embassy in Washington and the White House did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

In addition to the United States and Saudi Arabia, the MESA participants include the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and Jordan.

Two days after the Riyadh meeting, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi visited Washington for talks with Trump. Before the meeting Trump said they would talk about security issues, but it was not clear whether they discussed MESA issue.

Two sources said the countries remaining in MESA were moving ahead with the initiative and would press Egypt diplomatically to revoke its withdrawal, with one saying that the decision did not appear to be final.

“We all want them back,” said the other source.

The Arab source, however, said Cairo could not be convinced to return.

The withdrawal of Egypt, which has the Arab world’s largest military, is the latest setback to the MESA initiative, informally referred to as the “Arab NATO.”

The plan already was complicated by international outrage over the October 2018 murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, which Turkish officials and some U.S. lawmakers have accused Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of ordering. Riyadh denies the allegation against Salman.

Other obstacles have been feuds among the Arab allies, especially a Saudi-led economic and political boycott of Qatar.

The problems have forced several postponements of a summit meeting in the United States at which a preliminary accord on the alliance would be signed.

John Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser, has been a key proponent of the MESA plan and an architect of the administration’s strategy for containing Iran, according to U.S. officials.

 

Iran’s Rouhani slams Israel elections as ‘meaningless’

April 11, 2019

Source: Iran’s Rouhani slams Israel elections as ‘meaningless’ – www.israelhayom.com

Rouhani: “Crystal clear” Washington’s designation of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards as terrorist organization aimed at paving the way for Netanyahu’s re-election • “If they want to hold elections, it’s the Palestinians that should vote, not the occupiers,” he says.

“It is crystal clear to Iranians what the U.S. is pursuing with the move,” Rouhani said.

“All the crimes and wrong measures of the U.S. were meant to pave the way for one person to succeed in the occupied territories’ elections,’ he said, referring to Netanyahu.

Shortly after Washington announced its decision to blacklist the IRGC, Netanyahu praised U.S. President Donald Trump, saying he had responded to a “request of mine.”

Rouhani went on to say that “if they want to hold elections, it’s the Palestinians that should vote, not the occupiers.”

Rouhani also proposed holding a referendum in the Middle East to find out who the “oppressor” was.

“The U.S. policies have always been supported by a few states, but in the international arena – the big powers in Europe, Asia-Pacific as well as other regions – have backed Iran on the nuclear deal, and endorsed Syria and the Palestinians in the cases of the Golan Heights and Al-Quds [Jerusalem],” Rouhani said.

The Iranian president accused Washington of waging “psychological warfare against Tehran aimed at isolating the Islamic Republic. “

Washington’s decision to designate the Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organization on Monday marked the first time the U.S. branded the arm of a foreign government a terrorist group.

It effectively means that anyone who deals with the Revolutionary Guards could be sentenced to prison in the United States.

Trump called the 125,000 strong Revolutionary Guards Tehran’s “primary means of directing and implementing its global terrorist campaign.”

Tehran swiftly retaliated by blacklisting U.S. Central Command as a terrorist organization, a move that will likely impact U.S. troops serving in the wider Middle East from the Horn of Africa to Afghanistan.

Both Israel and the U.S. have repeatedly said their goal is to contain Iran in the region, calling it the main reason for instability due to its support of terrorist groups.

Following Trump’s announcement on Monday, Netanyahu said Israel would continue to coordinate with the U.S. in its efforts aimed at preventing Iran from establishing itself militarily in Syria.

Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes in Syria against Iranian military targets and convoys destined for Hezbollah.