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August 16, 2014
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BBC: Rocket fired from Gaza hits Israel
August 13, 201413 August 2014 Last updated at 19:42 GMT
Rocket fired from Gaza hits Israel
Thousands of rockets have been fired at Israel by Gaza militants in the past five weeks – file photoA rocket fired from Gaza has hit southern Israel just hours before a three-day ceasefire was due to expire, police say.
The rocket came down in an open area near Ashkelon, but caused no casualties or damage, a spokeswoman said.
Hamas militants denied they had fired any rockets, Reuters reported.
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators have been involved in indirect talks in Egypt aimed at finding a long-term solution to the Gaza conflict.
About 2,000 people have died since the fighting in Gaza began on 8 July.
Those killed include more than 1,900 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the United Nations.
Sixty-four Israeli soldiers have been killed in the violence and three civilians in Israel have also died.
The rocket, which landed in Israel late on Wednesday, was the first to be fired since the current ceasefire began on Monday.

Turkish opposition charges government knew of ISIL training, recruiting
August 13, 2014Turkish opposition charges government knew of ISIL training, recruiting
Special to WorldTribune.com
ANKARA — Despite assurances to the West, Turkey has retained the presence of Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
Opposition sources said ISIL has continued to operate in Turkey amid the Al Qaida wars in neighboring Iraq and Syria. They said ISIL was recruiting and training its fighters in remote areas of Turkey with the knowledge of the intelligence community.
On July 30, an opposition parliamentarian demanded that the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan confirm details of ISIL training in Turkey.
Sezin Tanrikulu, a member of the main opposition Republican People’s Party, said ISIL was operating several training camps, including one near Istanbul.
“Is the claim [correct] that the group alleged to have been the Turkish branch of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant has been allocated a camp ground or other places in Istanbul?” Tanrikulu asked.
Tanrikulu directed his questions to Interior Minister Efkan Ala and cited a video that showed alleged ISIL members training in Turkey. The online video, released by a Turkish website close to Al Qaida, showed hundreds of purported ISIL fighters praying during Id Al Fitr on July 28.
“Who is this group?” Tanrikulu said. “What does it consist of?”
The opposition, echoing assertions by NATO, has accused Erdogan of tolerating ISIL. The ISIL presence was said to have been overseen by Turkish intelligence community chief Hikan Fidan, deemed close to Erdogan.
In the video, ISIL fighters pledged to conduct holy war in Turkey. Over the last year, officials have reported several alerts of imminent ISIL attacks. In June 2014, ISIL stormed the Turkish consulate in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul and took 49 hostage, including consul-general Ozturk Yilmaz.
“Is it true that Istanbul Provincial Police Department and Gendarmerie Command were ordered not to interfere when the group, the extension of a terrorist organization, was calling for jihad in Istanbul?” Tanrikulu asked. “Who gave these orders?”
Why is Turkey Supporting Islamic State Fighters in Iraq?
August 13, 2014Now that U.S. forces are engaged in combat operations against Islamic State fighters in Iraq, the Obama administration must press ISIS on all fronts, targeting its financing, logistics, and weapons providers. Turkey — America’s ally and NATO member — is allegedly involved. Clarifying Turkey’s role would serve U.S.-Turkey relations.
During my visit recent to Turkey, members of Turkey’s parliament and prominent personalities described connections between Turkey, Turks and militant Sunni organizations, such as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). They allege a prominent role for Turkey’s Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (IHH), an Islamic charity with a history of assisting extremist groups. Bilal Erdogan, President-elect Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s son, has ties to the IHH board, and allegedly uses his father’s political network to raise funds for the organization. Some sources say Bilal has served on the IHH board, but the IHH web site does not currently list him as a board member.
Cengiz Candar, one of Turkey’s most respected journalists recently wrote that Turkey’s Intelligence Agency (MIT) was the “midwife” that helped birth the Sunni armed movement. Beginning in 2012, according to Candar, Turkey provided weapons and logistical support to jihadis fighting the Syrian regime and to abort the birth of an autonomous Kurdistan in Syria.
President-elect Erdogan was outraged by atrocities committed against Sunni Muslims in Syria. He became the chief critic of Syria’s President Bashar al- Assad, hosting opposition groups and the Free Syrian Army’s headquarters in Gaziantep. The West’s failure to support the Free Syrian Army further incensed Erdogan. Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates provided funds, while Turkey coordinated the travel, payments, and weapons supplies for ISIS, Al-Nusra, and the Islamic Front.
According to a March 2010 report of the International Institute for Counter-Terrorism, IHH had an annual budget of $100 million with field operations in 120 countries. IHH works with Muslim Brotherhood affiliates worldwide. The first known shipment of weapons to “Brothers” in Syria occurred in September 2012. Free Syrian Army commanders learned that a boat loaded with weapons docked in Syria. It was registered to members of IHH.
Major contributors to Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s AK Party are “encouraged” to make contributions, lest they fall from favor and lose government contracts. IHH also receives money from international sponsors. IHH is financed by Yasin Al-Qadi, a wealthy al Qaeda-linked Saudi businessman with close ties to Erdogan. IHH is an affiliate of the Saudi-based “Union of Good.” Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi, an advocate of suicide attacks in Israel, chairs the “Union of Good.” Abdul Majid al-Zindani, a radical cleric and “Specially Designated Global Terrorist” by the United States in 2004, serves on its board. In 2010, the German branch of IHH was banned for links to jihadist activity. The U.S. Department of State listed the Union of Good as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO).
Israel banned IHH in 2008 for money laundering funds to Hamas. IHH became known to the international community for organizing the 2010 Gaza flotilla, a stunt to draw attention to the plight of Palestinians and provoke the Israeli Defense Forces.
President-elect Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu tried to diversify Turkey’s alliances in the Middle relying on Muslim Brotherhood chapters around the region and surrogates like IHH. From the West, Turkey looks like a Middle Eastern country. But from the Middle East, Turkey appears decidedly Western. Erdogan’s outreach to ISIS was a fool’s errand. Turkey thought it could control ISIS, but Erdogan was mistaken.
In May 2013, twin bombings in Reyhanli, a Turkish town in Hatay Province near the Syrian border, killed 52 people and injured 146. The Turkish government accused Syria of plotting the attack. But ISIS claimed responsibility.
After Reyhanli, Turks grew wary of entanglements in Syria’s civil war. They also resented the $1.5 billion cost of providing for 800,000 Syrian refugees. Ankara tried to distance itself from ISIS. Suspending support was easier said than done.
Former President and seven-time Prime Minister Suleyman Demirel said, “It is fundamental principle that there is one state. In our country there are two.” He was referring to the so-called “Deep State,” a shadowy network of bureaucrats, intelligence and security officials, and members of organized crime who are involved in arms and drug smuggling and have a history of targeted killings and political assassinations. With or without Erdogan’s knowledge, the ISIS gravy train continued.
An IHH truck was stopped by the gendarmerie near Adana in Hatay on January 1, 2014. It was loaded with arms and ammunition headed for Syria. The Hatay public prosecutor tried to launch an investigation, but was blocked. When he filed a criminal complaint alleging obstruction of justice by Turkey’s Interior Minister and MIT, he was dismissed. Police who stopped the vehicle were fired. The Hatay governor said the operation was a “state secret.”
Ammunition was also found on two passenger buses heading to Syria. Officers from the antiterrorism branch of the Adana Police Department released photos of ammunition on the buses to the media. They, too, were fired.
In an effort to clear Turkey’s name, the government cracked down on IHH in early January 2014. Turkish authorities arrested 23 people, including senior al-Qaeda operatives, associated with IHH, including al-Qaeda’s Middle East deputy leader ?brahim ?en, who is a former Guantanamo Bay detainee, and Al Qaeda’s Turkey representative, Halis Bayancuk. The move against IHH came just weeks before Geneva II, a major international conference aimed at stopping Syria’s civil war, where Turkey was envisioned to play a leading role.
Members of Turkey’s parliament allege that the government still supports jihadis — facilitating their travel at border crossings between Turkey and Syria, providing truckloads of weapons, and offering health care at Turkish state hospitals to wounded warriors.
Parliamentarians wrote President-elect Erdogan and Davutoglu asking for an official explanation of government ties to ISIS, and its knowledge about IHH activities. The letters were conveyed through Parliament Speaker Cemil Cicek. The government did not respond.
Deputies report the steady flow of unmarked trucks in Adana, Kilis, Gaziantep, and Kayseri — towns near the border with Syria. They believe the trucks are transporting weapons. Residents of Kilis describe routine interaction between Turkish officials on one side of the border and ISIS on the other.
According to a Turkish doctor, Turkish ambulances deliver war-wounded to Turkish hospitals on the border with Syria. They have no papers or identification. The Ministry of Health covers their expenses. The notorious ISIS commander, Abu Muhammed, was photographed receiving treatment at Hatay State Hospital in April 2014.
Not all ISIS fighters are foreign fighters. About 10 percent are Turkish citizens, according to a well-known Turkish scholar.
Some Islamist Turks sympathize with ISIS and support its conservative values. Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc recently said, “A woman will know what is haram [forbidden] and not haram. She will not laugh out loud in public.”
Devotion to Islam is one thing. Assisting Islamists to commit genocide in the name of God is another.
Instead of excuses and denial,Turkish officials should condemn the Islamic State. To show the world it is serious about fighting terrorism, Turkey should establish a joint border monitoring mechanism with the UN to make sure no weapons are transferred to ISIS.
Bilal Erdogan should disassociate from the IHH. IHH’s Special Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council should be suspended, pending an investigation into its activities.
To this end, the U.S. Congress should hold hearings on Turkish ties to ISIS. If IHH is implicated, it should be listed as an FTO. Listing would freeze IHH assets and impose travel bans on IHH principals.
Turkey has stood side by side with the United States in the fight against terrorism. At this critical juncture, Turkey must play a helpful role stabilizing Iraq and protecting Iraqi Kurdistan. It is important that Turkey rejoin the coalition of nations in good-standing who oppose violence and extremism.
BBC: Why Iran has finally let go of Maliki
August 13, 201413 August 2014 Last updated at 18:27 GMT
Why Iran has finally let go of Maliki
PM Nouri Maliki was seen as being close to Iran during his time in officeLess than two months ago, Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, spelled out his position on Iraq.
Iran was against US intervention, he said, and the world should respect the results of Iraq’s April election which saw victory for Nouri Maliki’s alliance.
But the ayatollah has been overtaken by events.
“Start Quote
When Maliki started losing and alienating Kurds and Sunnis, Iran didn’t like it”
Ghassan AttiyahAnalyst
The past week has seen the US launch air strikes against Islamic State (IS) militants in northern Iraq, while in Baghdad Mr Maliki has failed in his bid to return to the prime minister’s office.
Although this all goes contrary to Iran’s stated wishes, officials in Tehran have said almost nothing.
“Iran’s silence shows they are happy with what’s happening in Iraq,” says Ghassan Attiyah, president of the Baghdad-based Iraqi Foundation for Development and Democracy.
Mr Attiyah says that Iraq’s new Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi has strong ties to Iran and for this reason the Iranians have not tried to block his nomination.
“They were not happy with Maliki from the beginning but they accepted him because the Shia bloc supported him in parliament,” he says.
“But when he started losing and alienating Kurds and Sunnis, Iran didn’t like it.”
The US has carried out air strikes in Iraq – but there has been no angry respnse from IranChange in tone
Iran has also confounded expectations that it would issue an angry condemnation of the US air strikes this week on IS positions in northern Iraq.
In fact, in a striking change of tone, an advisor to Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Monday that Iran and the US should work together to counter IS in Iraq.
Observers say the realisation that the militants are now just 25km (16 miles) from Iran’s western border may well have influenced thinking in Tehran.
It is clear that the threat posed by the Islamic State is another factor in Iran’s decision not to actively oppose the appointment of Mr Abadi as Iraq’s new prime minister.
Unlike US President Barack Obama, Iran’s president has yet to congratulate Mr Abadi on his appointment.
But in a phone call on Monday to congratulate another newly elected leader in the region, Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said a government must be formed in Iraq “as soon as possible”, and that Iran would support “the person who is approved by the majority of Iraqi lawmakers”.
It was the first clear indication that Iran was not intending to stand firmly behind Mr Maliki as it has done for its other regional protege, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Groups supported by Iran hold considerable sway in Iraqi politics and societyTime’s up
There was more bad news for Mr Maliki on Tuesday when the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, Ali Shamkhani, also voiced support for the move in Baghdad to choose a new prime minister.
“Start Quote
Maliki won’t leave easily”
Mohsen MilaniDirector of the Center for Strategic and Diplomatic Studies
Mr Shamkhani’s call for all Iraqi groups and coalitions to keep united and work together to protect national unity seemed like a coded message to Mr Maliki that his time was running out.
The hardline Javan newspaper, affiliated to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, adopted a similar tone.
In an editorial, it called on him to show “selfless compliance” to the Iraqi president’s decision.
The final nail in the coffin was Ayatollah Khamenei lending his support to Mr Abadi’s appointment on Wednesday.
“I hope the designation of the new prime minister in Iraq will untie the knot and lead to the establishment of a new government and teach a good lesson to those who aim for sedition in Iraq,” Ayatollah Khamenei said in a speech to foreign ministry officials and diplomats.
“Maliki won’t leave easily,” says Mohsen Milani, the Iranian-born director of the Center for Strategic and Diplomatic Studies in Washington.
“But if both Iran and the US support the new government, he has to go.”
Mr Maliki said Mr Abadi’s nomination was a “violation of the constitution” but for Iran what is important at the moment is to see a unified Shia bloc in Iraq and a new government formed without further delay.
And if Mr Maliki cannot deliver either of these things, then as far as Iran is concerned, his time is up.
Saudi king grants Sisi medal of honour
August 13, 2014
The visit by Al-Sisi is his first to the Kingdom since he assumed office on June 8. During the trip the leaders discussed bilateral relatios and issues of mutual concern, especially the developments in Gaza, Anadolu reported.
Saudi’s King Abdallah presented Egypt’s President Abdel Fatah Al-Sisi with the highest medal of honour in the Kingdom during their meeting in Jeddah yesterday.
The visit by Al-Sisi is his first to the Kingdom since he assumed office on June 8. During the trip the leaders discussed bilateral relatios and issues of mutual concern, especially the developments in Gaza, Anadolu reported.
The two sides are expected to discuss the preparations for the donors’ conference for Egypt, promised by the Saudi king and endorsed by the United Arab Emirates.
A day before his trip to the Kingdom, Al-Sisi called for the formation of an “Arab Alliance” to counter the danger of the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham (ISIS) which has seized control of vast swaths of Iraq and Syria.
Following the military’s ouster of President Mohamed Morsi in July last year, Gulf countries were quick to lend support to the new regime, led by Al-Sisi. Gulf aid to Egypt since Morsi’s ouster amounted to $15.9 billion, including $6.9 billion from the UAE, $5 billion from Saudi, and $4 billion from Kuwait.
Following his visit to Saudi, Al-Sisi is scheduled to pay a brief visit to Russia tomorrow based on an invite from Russian President Vladimir Putin.





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