Posted tagged ‘Israel’

Iranian Soldiers Deployed to Protect Damascus

June 4, 2015

Iranian Soldiers Deployed to Protect Damascus as Rebels Advance

Iranian, Iraqi fighters sent to guard against rebel attack on Syrian capital, amid concerns Assad regime is failing.

By Arutz Sheva Staff

First Publish: 6/3/2015, 4:44 PM

via Iranian Soldiers Deployed to Protect Damascus – Middle East – News – Arutz Sheva.


Fighters from Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front in Idlib, Syria Reuters

Thousands of Iranian and Iraqi fighters have been deployed in Syria in past weeks to bolster the defenses of Damascus and its surroundings, a Syrian security source told AFP on Wednesday.

“Around 7,000 Iranian and Iraqi fighters have arrived in Syria over the past few weeks and their first priority is the defense of the capital. The larger contingent is Iraqi,” the source said on condition of anonymity.

“The goal is to reach 10,000 men to support the Syrian army and pro-government militias, firstly in Damascus, and then to retake Jisr al-Shughur because it is key to the Mediterranean coast and the Hama region” in central Syria, he added.

Syria’s government lost control of Jisr al-Shughur in northwestern Idlib province on April 25, as a coalition of opposition forces including Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front swept through the region.

Yesterday, Iran’s official news agency IRNA quoted elite Revolutionary Guards General Qassem Soleimani as saying “in the coming days the world will be surprised by what we are preparing, in cooperation with Syrian military leaders.”

The agency cautioned however that it “takes no responsibility for the information.”

Iran is a key ally of the Syrian government, and it has provided Damascus with financial and military support throughout the conflict that began in March 2011 with anti-regime protests.

That support has included raising a Syrian pro-government militia known as the National Defense Force (NDF) to supplement the badly-stretched regular Syrian army, as well as sending battalions of fighters from the Hezbollah terrorist group, Tehran’s most important and powerful proxies.

Iran had also coordinated the training, arming and mobilization of Iraqi Shia Islamist militias to fight alongside Syrian government forces as well – though since the Islamic State’s lightening offensive through Iraq last summer most have returned home from Syria to fight ISIS there.

Iran has also sent an unknown number of soldiers and commanders from its own elite Revolutionary Guard corps to battle Syrian rebels.

But despite all that aid, in recent months the Syrian government has lost territory in several parts of the country to both an alliance of largely Islamist groups including Al-Nusra, and to the Islamic State (ISIS) jihadist group. In the south of the country as well, a more moderate rebel alliance has been making steady gains.

The rapid succession of defeats have led many to speculate the Assad regime may be nearing its demise, although other analysts have warned it is far too early to write it off yet.

Faced with those setbacks, the government has appealed to Tehran and ally Russia to step up support, a Syrian political figure close to the regime told AFP.

A diplomatic source in Damascus said Iran had been critical of the regime’s failure to achieve the last major offensive operation it undertook – a February bid to cut rebel supply lines to the northern city of Aleppo.

Tehran had opposed the operation, citing lack of preparation, the source said, and subsequently insisted that Syria change its strategy to focus on holding less territory more securely.

Analysts and observers have said the Syrian government now appears ready to accept the de facto partition of the country, focusing on the defense of strategically important areas and leaving others to rebels or jihadists.

According to one source close to the regime, it considers the coast, the central cities of Hama and Homs, and the capital Damascus as vital.

It also regards the Damascus-Beirut and Damascus-Homs highways as “red lines”, the source said.

More than 220,000 people have been killed in Syria’s civil war.

AFP contributed to this report.

US Envoy to Israel: Fight BDS by ‘Negotiating’ with Abbas

June 4, 2015

Obama does not miss an opportunity to force Israel to accept his conditions for an Israeli state.

By: Tzvi Ben-Gedalyahu

Published: June 4th, 2015

via The Jewish Press » » US Envoy to Israel: Fight BDS by ‘Negotiating’ with Abbas.

אֶהְיֶה אֲשֶׁר אֶהְיֶה,

Dan Shapiro and John Kerry.

Dan Shapiro and John Kerry.
Photo Credit: Flash 90

U.S. Ambassador Dan Shapiro told Israel radio stations Thursday that the best way for Israel to fight the Boycott Israel movement is simply to return to negotiations with Mahmoud Abbas, who has conditioned talks on Israel’s agreeing ahead of time to all of his demands.

The issue of BDS has been flying high this week, first with the empty resolution by the British Students Union to join BDS. That was followed up with yesterday’s bombshell statement by an official of the French-based Orange company that it would like to be rid its agreement with Israel’s Partner mobile phone company because of pressure by BDS, which complains that Israel has built more than 100 transmitting antennas on “occupied land” and operates four outlets in Judea and Samaria and eastern Jerusalem

Here comes the United States of America to the rescue.

Shapiro said on Army Radio and Reshet Bet (Voice of Israel) that of course the Obama administration is against boycotts of Israel, which can count on America as its best friends.

The Hebrew-speaking ambassador said:

We staunchly oppose any effort to delegitimize or boycott or sanction Israel. We will never support this. We will fight together with Israel against all these efforts.

And how will it do that?

Shapiro has the simple answer, which could come only from a simpleton’s mindset: The problem is that now there are no negotiations. Shapiro told Israel Radio:

In the past when there were negotiations, that was the most effective tool to tell other countries, perhaps private companies as well, not to impose sanctions because that would upset efforts to reach a solution.

The boycott movement has deep roots in the Arab world, which boycotted Israel long before the Six-Day War in 1967, when Jordan fled territory, most of which it had occupied since 1948 without a United Nations mandate, and left it in Israel’s hands.

The newer “Boycott, Disinvestment and Sanctions” campaign started in 2005, when Israel still was in the midst of marathon “negotiations” in which it conceded point after point and to the Palestinian Authority, with the forceful hand of the Bush administration.

Shapiro may or not believe what he said was true, but he has to be given an “A” for spouting the Obama administration’s magic potion that is based on a bald-faced lie. Obama is against boycotting Israel because he prefers the “diplomatic process,” but he shares the BDS goal of making Israel too weak to exist, although his too naive to know it.

Since taking office, President Barack Obama never has wanted anything more than a Palestinian Authority country to be established, even more than he wants a nuclear-free Iran.

The President regards  himself as an “honorary member of the tribe” thanks to the well-wishers of J Street and Jewish “liberals” who are uncomfortable being Americans while Israel does not do what their president tell it do.

Obama has craftily convinced himself that Judaism teaches that Arabs must have a new country within Israel’s country’s border, and if it does not, then Judaism is doing something wrong.

He has Shapiro, a Jew, and a few other members of the tribe, acting as “good Jews” to kick their brethren in Israel who simply do not understand their duty as Israelis.

Obama and Shapiro know very well that Israel does not sit down with Ababa for negotiations because the leader of the Palestinian Authority does not want to negotiate. He has no reason to compromise because he has the back of the Obama administration, which on the one hand says that it will not force conditions on Israel and on the other hand lets Abbas set the terms.

It is no wonder that Shapiro also told Israel radio today:

We are in a period without negotiations and there is not even a possibility of launching negotiations in the near future. Negotiations have always been the most effective tool to defeat all of these efforts. This is also the best way to advance toward a solution of two states for two peoples.

He frankly states that is no possibility of negotiations now, and President Obama says the same.

The Obama administration has turned “the two states for two peoples” mantra into some kind of voodoo prayer to be recited every time someone threatens Israel, whether with bombs or boycotts.

Shapiro claimed “that when we held negotiations together with the Israelis and the Palestinian Authority it was the most effective tool to tell other states and private companies, ‘Don’t impose these proposals because you will interrupt the efforts to arrive at a solution.’”

And what is the solution?

It is expelling 10 percent of Israel’s population from Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria and withdrawing the IDF from Judea and Samaria as it did from Gaza in 2005.

That has been the Palestinian Authority tactic. Tear apart the Oslo Accords clause by clause, win a concession and then move in for the lethal blow of making Israel the home for several million Arabs living as prisoners of UNRWA in foreign countries.

Obama supports Abbas’ conditions for a new Arab country, but the conditions actually are Obama’s terms for the existence of Israel, which the President does not realize cannot continue to breathe in his fantasy.

Shapiro maintains that the United States will not prematurely “recognize a Palestinian state that does not exist.”

The Obama administration policy is to create facts on the ground that the Palestinian Authority become a member of the United Nations a de facto state, without Jews, in violation the U.N. charter.

And then, according to Shapiro, BDS will fold up and go away, just like Chamberlain could sleep in peace after Hitler would annex Czechoslovakia.

It is not so much of a problem that Shapiro expresses Obama’s holy delusion.

The real problem is that Obama, the honorary member of the tribe, actually believes it.

Turkey, Our Ally

June 4, 2015

Turkey, Our Ally

June 4, 2015 by Robert Ellis

via Turkey, Our Ally.


On his visit to Turkey in 2009, U.S. President Barack Obama proclaimed that Turkey and the U.S. can build “a model partnership” and in an interview with Time in January 2012, he spoke of “the bonds of trust” he had forged with certain leaders, including Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Traditional Turkish foreign policy, based on Atatürk’s dictum “peace at home and peace abroad,” has been replaced by a delusion, created by former foreign and now prime minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, that Turkey can restore its former Ottoman magnificence. As Davutoglu proclaimed in Sarajevo in 2009, “Like in the 16th century, when the Ottoman Balkans were rising, we will once again make the Balkans, the Caucasus and the Middle East, together with Turkey, the center of world politics.”

The main thrust of this new policy has been to create a Muslim Brotherhood crescent running from Egypt through Turkey to Syria to rival Iran’s Shia crescent, but this policy has been a dismal failure. Turkish ambassadors have been withdrawn from Syria, Egypt, Israel, Libya and Yemen, and recently from Austria and the Vatican, after their acknowledgement of the Armenian genocide, resulting in what Ibrahim Kalin, Erdogan’s chief adviser, in a tweet two years ago, called “precious loneliness.”

It was the same Kalin who, in a keynote speech at the Istanbul Forum in 2012, rejected the European model of secular politics, democracy and pluralism in favor of what he termed a “value-based” (read: Islamist) foreign policy. However, the AKP government’s attempt to overthrow Syria’s Bashar al-Assad has seriously backfired, but they have still not given up trying to drag the U.S. into the quagmire. Turkey’s proposal for the creation of a safe zone and no-fly zone in Syria has been met with no response, and in return Turkey has denied its NATO ally the use of Incirlik airbase for sorties against Islamic State (ISIL).

Consequently, the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) in Washington has in its April report concluded that Turkey is an increasingly undependable ally, and that because of the fundamental strategic disparities between Ankara and Washington, the U.S. should look to other regional players, for example, the KRG (Kurdistan Regional Government), for support.

An overriding factor in the BPC’s conclusions has been the Turkish government’s ideologically driven backing for extremist Sunni groups in Syria, where it has acted as a highway for would-be jihadists, who have been given free rein to travel through, recruit from, equip, operate and recuperate in Turkey.

Furthermore, a report from the U.N.’s Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team concludes that Turkey has also provided the primary routes for arms smuggled to ISIL and the Al-Nusrah Front, an Al-Qaida affiliate.

In the run-up to the Turkish elections on Sunday, there is a furor about video footage published last Friday by secular daily Cumhuriyet, which shows a shipment of weapons and ammunition disguised as humanitarian aid for Syria on trucks belonging to MIT (Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization), Erdogan’s Praetorian Guard. Reuters has also confirmed how MIT helped deliver arms to parts of Syria under Islamist rebel control during late 2013 and early 2014.

Characteristically, the public prosecutors and gendarmerie officers involved in intercepting the arms shipment have been arrested and charged with attempting to overthrow the Turkish government. A gag order has been imposed on coverage of the scandal and President Erdogan has personally threatened Cumhuriyet’s editor-in-chief with retribution. He has now filed a criminal complaint against the newspaper and its editor, demanding a life sentence.

The Turkish military is also uneasy about the charges brought against the gendarmerie officers involved, as their actions fall under military jurisdiction.

However, there is no reason to believe President Erdogan will give way without a struggle. As the Bipartisan Policy Center notes, losing power would be tantamount to a prison sentence, at best, and is simply not an option.

Ya’alon: Terrorists Should Not Try Our Patience

June 4, 2015

Ya’alon: Terrorists Should Not Try Israel’s Patience

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon vows to continue a strong response to all terror threats against Israel from Gaza or elsewhere.

By Yaakov Levi

First Publish: 6/4/2015, 7:56 AM

via Ya’alon: Terrorists Should Not Try Our Patience – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

one question : what proved Operation Protective Edge ?

Rockets still coming from gaza, and tunnel are constructed again !

Is Israel using hamas as buffer, because the alternative if hamas is gone is worse ?

 

 


Moshe Ya’alon Miriam Alster/Flash 90
Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon stressed Thursday that the IDF would continue attacking all terror threats against Israel, inside Gaza or out.

“Even if the groups that fired rockets at Israel Wednesday night were gangs of disaffected jihadists seeking to challenge Hamas by attacking us, we see Hamas as responsible for these attacks. We will not tolerate attacks on our civilians.”

The Israeli Air Force attacked three terrorist infrastructures in Gaza on Wednesday night, the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said. The attack came in retaliation for the rocket fire on southern Israel on Wednesday evening.

“The IDF views the incident seriously,” the IDF Spokesperson asserted, adding that Hamas, being the de facto ruler of Gaza, is responsible for any rocket fire from the region.

“Red Alert” rocket sirens were heard on Wednesday at around 11:00 p.m. (local time) in some communities in southern Israel, among them in the Ashkelon and Netivot areas. Two rockets from Gaza exploded in the Sdot Negev region. There were no physical injuries or damages.

“I would recommend that Gazan terrorists not try Israel’s patience,” Ya’alon said Thursday. “We will not compromise on our citizens’ security, and we will not allow a reversion to the ‘drop by drop’ slow, once a day rocket attacks against us.”

“Last night the IDF struck back against terrorists, and if need be we will strike back with even greater force,” Ya’alon vowed. “I think we proved that last summer,” during Operation Protective Edge.

“We operate with determination, responsibility, and intelligence to ensure the security of residents of southern Israel,” he stressed.

ISIS-Affiliated Group: More Rocket Attacks Coming

June 4, 2015

ISIS-Affiliated Group: More Rocket Attacks on Israel Coming

The Islamic State linked group that fired rockets at southern Israel on Wednesday says it will continue “attacking the Jews.”

By Yaakov Levi

First Publish: 6/4/2015, 9:01 AM

via ISIS-Affiliated Group: More Rocket Attacks Coming – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

That happens if you keep playing the thit for that game.

Terrorists in Gaza
Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash 90
The Islamist group that fired rockets at southern Israel Wednesday night said Thursday that it would continue its “way of Jihad” and “attack the Jews” – whether or not Hamas approved. And the next attack, it said, would come within hours.

In a statement, the “Sheikh Amar Hadid Brigades” said that the rockets were fired in revenge for “the death of an Islamic State member in Gaza by Hamas members.”

“We have repeated that we will continue in the way of Jihad against the Jews, the enemies of Allah. No one will stop us from fulfilling our obligation and attacking the Jews.”

Several days ago, the same jihadist group took responsibility for the firing of a Grad rocket at Ashdod last week.

The group has since presented Hamas with an ultimatum demanding that it be allowed to attack Israel from Gaza and on Thursdaysaid it would conduct another attack on the Jewish state within 12 hours.

Earlier this week, a group claiming to be associated with ISIS operating in Gaza claimed it killed a top Hamas commander. According to the group, which calls itself the Army of the Islamic State, Saber Siam was killed when ISIS operatives placed a bomb on his car, blowing it up with him inside.

Siam was killed, the group said, because he was “a partner in a declared war against religion and against Muslims, working for the heretical government in Gaza.”

ISIS warned Hamas to immediately “end its war against religion in Gaza” or “face the consequences.” The group also sent out warnings on social media to Gaza residents to stay away from Hamas offices and buildings, lest they find themselves swept up in attacks against the group.

On Thursday, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon said that the IDF would continue attacking all terror threats against Israel, inside Gaza or out of it.

“Even if the groups that fired rockets at Israel Wednesday night were gangs of disaffected Jihadists seeking to challenge Hamas by attacking us, we see Hamas as responsible for these attacks. We will not tolerate attacks on our civilians.”

 

Israel News – IAF strikes Gaza targets over rocket fire

June 4, 2015

IAF strikes Gaza targets over rocket fire

Overnight, the IDF retaliated after two rockets had been fired from the Gaza Strip at Southern Israel.

Jun 04, 2015, 09:57AM | Yael Klein

via Israel News – IAF strikes Gaza targets over rocket fire – JerusalemOnline.

Thit for that.

Several hours after rockets fired from the Gaza Strip exploded in Israel, the Israel Air Force attacked three Hamas targets. In addition, two Islamic Jihad targets were attacked. “IDF views the rocket fire seriously. The Hamas Terror Organization is behind the attack,” IDF Spokesperson said in a statement.

Overnight, two rockets exploded in unpopulated areas in Sdot Negev Regional Council, causing no injuries or damage to property. Alarm sirens sounded in Ashkelon, Netivot and additional communities in vicinity of the Gaza Strip.

The rockets were fired from the Deir al-Balah area in Gaza.  An organization of extreme Islamic Salafi that has ties with the Islamic State claimed responsibility for the shooting. The rocket fire was a response to the execution of an IS terrorist by Hamas in Gaza on Tuesday. Nonetheless, IDF held Hamas responsible for the fire.

The terror group, which calls itself the Omar Brigades, issued a statement, “We are continuing with our jihad against the Jews, the enemies of Allah, and no one will be able to deter us.”  Eyewitnesses in Gaza reported that the airstrike targets were two camps belonging to Hamas.

According to reports in Palestinian websites, Gaza residents said they heard loud explosions and Israeli battle jets hovering above the Gaza Strip. Sources in Gaza told Reuters that damage has been caused but that there were no casualties.

In recent days, battles are taking place between Hamas and groups sympathetic with the Islamic State in Gaza. Arab media reported that IS supporters were killed in heavy clashes in the neighborhood of Sheikh Radwan. It has also been reported that high-ranking Salafi member Saber Siam was eliminated by a bomb attached to his car.

Despite the resumed fire, the Home Front Command has not issued any special security instructions for the residents of Southern Israel.

Pentagon: Iran Continuing Work on Nuclear Systems

June 4, 2015

Pentagon: Iran Continuing Work on Nuclear Systems

Covert support for terrorism ‘unabated’

BY:
June 3, 2015 5:46 pm

via Pentagon: Iran Continuing Work on Nuclear Systems | Washington Free Beacon.

Iran is continuing to develop missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons despite an interim agreement on its nuclear programs, according to a Pentagon report.

“Although Iran has paused progress in some areas of its nuclear program and fulfilled its obligations under the Joint Plan of Action (JPOA), it continues to develop technological capabilities that also could be applicable to nuclear weapons, including ballistic missile development,” a one-page unclassified summary of the report says.

A copy of the report was obtained by the Washington Free Beacon.

The report was due to Congress in January but was not sent to the Armed Services Committee as required by law until this month. Analysts said the delay appeared designed to avoid upsetting Tehran and the nuclear talks.

Disclosure of the continuing development of nuclear delivery capabilities comes amid reports that Iran increased the amount of nuclear material that could potentially be used to build nuclear weapons despite the JPOA.

The State Department sought to challenge International Atomic Energy Agency reports on the increase in Iranian nuclear material, despite President Obama’s claim that the nuclear agreement had halted Iran’s nuclear program.

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said this week that the increase in nuclear production was expected and that the amount has increased and decreased.

Iran’s military also continues to threaten the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the Pentagon report said.

“Iran continues to develop its capabilities to control the Strait of Hormuz and avenues of approach in the event of a military conflict,” the report said, adding that Tehran is “quietly fielding increasingly lethal weapon systems, including more advanced naval mines, small but capable submarines, armed unmanned aerial vehicles, coastal defense cruise missile batteries, attack craft, and ant ship-capable missiles.”

U.S. officials said Iranian backing for Houthi rebels in Yemen is also aimed at gaining access to the strategic Red Sea strait called the Bab-el-Mandeb, which, like the Strait of Hormuz, could be used by Iran to disrupt oil and other shipping.

Tehran’s support for terrorism also has not stopped, according to the Pentagon.

“Iran’s covert activities appear to be continuing unabated,” the report says. “The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods Force (IRGC-QF) remains a key tool of lran’s foreign policy and power projection, particularly in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Bahrain, and Yemen.”

The IRGC Quds Force also is continuing to improve its access within foreign countries and its ability to carry terrorist attacks “to safeguard or advance Iran’s interests,” the report said.

U.S. officials disclosed to the Free Beacon last week that Iran is increasing the number of Quds Force fighters and Lebanese Hezbollah militants it is sending to Yemen, to support pro-Iran Houthi rebels there.

The report asserts that Iran’s military doctrine is “primarily defensive” and seeks to insulate Iran from more aggressive Iranian policies involving covert action and terrorism.

Iranian military forces seek to deter attacks, survive initial strikes, and retaliate against aggressors.

“The ongoing civil war in Syria and the instability in Iraq have tested, but not fundamentally altered, this posture,” the report said. “Meanwhile, over the past year, the tone of publicity surrounding major military exercises has remained tempered, a trend that began in 2013, probably in support of negotiations over Iran’s nuclear activities.”

Iranian forces have been working with Iraq’s government to battle Islamic State forces that have taken over large portions of that Middle East state. They have included IRGC fighters.

The report, dated January 2015, concludes that Iran has not substantively altered its military and security strategies in the past year.

“However, Tehran has adjusted its approach to achieve its enduring objectives, by increasing its diplomatic outreach and decreasing its bellicose rhetoric,” the report said.

President Hassan Ruohani has sought to project a global message of “moderation and pragmatism” in support of those objectives.

Also, Iran is seeking to become the dominant regional power and in pursuit of that aim has “unwaveringly sought to improve its deterrent capabilities and increase its regional influence.”

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who is thought to be ill, “remains atop Iran’s power structure as both the political-spiritual guide and the commander in chief of the armed forces.”

The Senate Armed Services Committee, in its report on the fiscal 2016 defense authorization bill passed May 19, expressed concerns about the annual report on Iran’s military.

The report was due to Congress on Jan. 30 but said as of May it had not been provided.

“The committee remains concerned about the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile development programs,” the report said.

Last year Director of National Intelligence James Clapper testified that Iran “would choose a ballistic missile as its preferred method of delivering nuclear weapons.” And in February, Iran launched a Safir long-range missile system.

“In 2013, the National Air and Space Intelligence Center (NASIC) made the following statement about this system: Iran could develop and test an ICBM capable of reaching the United States by 2015,” the report said.

“Since 2008, Iran has conducted multiple successful launches of the two-stage Safir space launch vehicle (SLV) and has also revealed the larger two stage Simorgh SLV, which could serve as a test bed for developing ICBM technologies.”

The committee asked the secretary of defense to provide an update on Iran’s ballistic missile programs.

As a result of the delay in the annual Iran military power report, the committee directed the Pentagon to provide a briefing on the Iranian missile threat, and to update the January report.

Ilan Berman, an Iran specialist with the American Foreign Policy Council, said the release of the report is good news but “has long been conspicuous by its absence.”

“The study is long overdue, and its delay suggests that the administration has been leery of injecting inconvenient facts into the Iran debate as it closes in on a nuclear deal with the regime in Tehran,” Berman said.

“The findings of the report confirm that Iran’s destructive regional activities have not abated over the past year,” he added.

“If anything, they have increased despite Iran’s dialogue with the West,” Berman said. “The product can be seen in the battlefield victories of Yemen’s Iran-supported Houthi rebels, of the persistence of the Assad regime in Syria, and of the growing profile and capabilities of Iraq’s Shi’a militias.”

“Iran’s activities represent a significant challenge to peace and security in the Middle East,” he said.

“The real question is what, if anything, the White House is prepared to do about it?” he said.

Mark Dubowitz, another Iran expert, said Tehran is continuing to develop long-range ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads, in violation of U.N. Security Council limits.

“The Obama administration ceded to Iranian demands that their missile program was non-negotiable and, instead, has tried to reassure Congress that this missile threat can be mitigated by constraining Iran’s ability to develop a nuclear warhead,” said Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

“This major administration concession to Iran will greatly complicate the U.S. intelligence community’s ability to detect whether Iran has develop a nuclear warhead-carrying ICBM capable of reaching the continental United States,” he added. “By its very nature, it is much more difficult to detect and prevent warhead development, which can take place in small, covert facilities, than it is to determine the nature and extent of a hostile missile program. In yet another example of how deeply flawed the emerging Iran deal will be, Tehran will have a much easier pathway to develop systems.”

 

 

Mobile giant Orange seeking to join Israel boycott, CEO says

June 3, 2015

Mobile giant Orange seeking to join Israel boycott, CEO says

Stephane Richard tells conference in Cairo he would end link ‘tomorrow’ but fears penalties

By AP and Times of Israel staff June 3, 2015, 9:20 pm

via Mobile giant Orange seeking to join Israel boycott, CEO says | The Times of Israel.

No need for cutting ties with Israel, i suspect your done in Israel, there are a 100 other company,s , who are able to fill in your place.BY BY , have a nice day .

The Hebrew version of the Orange Telecom logo. The text says “The future sounds Orange.” (Flash90)

he chief executive officer of French mobile phone giant Orange said he would end his company’s relationship with an Israeli operator that pays to use its name “tomorrow” if he could, but that to do so would be a “huge risk” in terms of penalties.

Speaking Wednesday at a news conference in Cairo laying out the company’s plans for the years ahead in Egypt, Stephane Richard said that his company’s intention is to withdraw the Orange brand from Israel as soon as possible, but that the move would take time.

The statement comes as Israeli leaders have upped their rhetoric against the pro-Palestinian Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement that seeks to isolate Israel for international investment.

On Tuesday, the British university student union voted to cut ties with Israel, drawing harsh Israeli condemnation, including officials who said the move was anti-Semitic.

French human rights organizations have been pushing their government, which has a quarter stake in Orange, and the company itself, to end the relationship over Partner Communications Ltd.’s activity in Israeli settlements, which are considered illegal by the international community.

The carrier, one of three major providers in the Israeli cell market, is available in Palestinian territories.

According to Partner Communications CEO Haim Romano, the company has an agreement with Orange to use the name for 10 more years, after a deal was recently renewed, according to Israeli news site Ynet.

Romano said the company regretted Stephane Richard’s statement which he said could hurt his company’s bottom line, and raise the ire of Israeli subscribers of the brand.

In Egypt, local Orange franchisee Mobinil has also come under pressure from BDS activists protesting Orange’s business with Israel.

Canadian FM Calls Israel a ‘Beacon of Light, Source of Democracy, Example to the World’

June 3, 2015

Canadian Foreign Minister Nicholson tells reporters Israel is a “beacon of light, hope, a source of democracy and an example to the whole world.”

By: Hana Levi Julian

Published: June 3rd, 2015

via The Jewish Press » » Canadian FM Calls Israel a ‘Beacon of Light, Source of Democracy, Example to the World’.

 


Photo Credit: Mark Neyman / GPO

President Reuven Rivlin was brimming with praise for Canadian Foreign Minister Robert Douglas Nicholson in a joint news conference on his first visit to Israel, calling him “a dear friend of Israel.” Rivlin said “we listen to your comments with respect, even when we disagree.

“I know that the Canadian government follows closely what is happening in our region, in particular in Iran and in Syria, it is a complicated situation in which your enemies’ enemy is not always your friend.

“Sadly, Mahmoud Abbas has chosen not to sit at the negotiating table but instead is turning to international institutions to take unilateral steps against Israel,” Rivlin continued. The president was referencing the recent pressure on Israel to find a way to somehow facilitate the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian country within the current borders of the Jewish state, despite Palestinian violation of every requirement of the Oslo Accords to which they agreed more than a decade ago.

“We know that the only way to bring a solution to the conflict and to build mutual trust is through direct negotiations and not by one-sided, unilateral measures,” Rivlin went on. The reference notes the Palestinian evasion of its obligations to negotiate a final status agreement through direct talks with Israel via its application for membership at the United Nations, requesting recognition as a sovereign nation. The ploy succeeded in gaining non-member observer state status for the entity — just a step below full recognition as an independent, sovereign country — and allowed the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to gain membership in hundreds of global agencies and treaties, causing endless complications and difficulties for Israel on the international front.

The Canadian leader thanked the president and commented that he has “taken an interest in Israel since I was a child and always wanted the chance to visit.

“I am honored to have this opportunity,” he continued, “representing my country as foreign minister.

“Israel is a beacon of light, hope, a source of democracy and an example to the whole world, and I am proud of Canada’s steadfast and consistent support for Israel.

“Even though we are far from here, we understand the challenges facing the region and they are on everybody’s doorstep. We are not ones to stand on the sidelines and hope for the best, but want to be part of the solutions to the challenges that we face in the world.”

Part of his visit, said Nicholson, is to demonstrate that commitment and to show that the strong relationship between Israel and Canada will continue into the future.

About the Author: Hana Levi Julian is a Middle East news analyst with a degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from Southern Connecticut State University. A past columnist with The Jewish Press and senior editor at Arutz 7, Ms. Julian has written for Babble.com, Chabad.org and other media outlets, in addition to her years working in broadcast journalism.

Egypt Says NY Times Promoting Muslim Brotherhood Agitprop

June 3, 2015

Egypt Says NY Times Promoting Muslim Brotherhood Agitprop, The Clarion ProjectRyan Mauro, June 3, 2015

(Obama has spread and relied upon much the same meme as the NY Times and Washington Post. — DM)

New-York-Times-Building-IP_1The New York Times building in New York City

If the New York Times values objective reporting, then it must mention the Brotherhood’s calls to violence in its coverage as well as the many other instances of violence that the group has been involved in.

*********************

The Egyptian ambassador to the U.S. has written a public letter toThe New York Times protesting “its unquestioning adoption of Moslem Brotherhood’s propaganda” and false characterization of the Islamist group as non-violent.

Ambassador Mohamed Tawfik’s letter was written around the same time that the Egyptian embassy released three videos of calls to violence made on Muslim Brotherhood television networks based in Turkey.

The networks’ coverage promoted explicit calls for killing Egyptian police officers and attacking foreign companies and embassies. A threat was also made to carry out regional attacks against the interests of countries who support the Egyptian government.

Egypt is infuriated at the Times as well as the Washington Post for repeatedly asserting that the Brotherhood is non-violent. In response to the Times suggestion that the Egyptian government’s prosecution of the Brotherhood is pushing it towards terrorism, the Egyptian ambassador writes:

This statement demonstrates, at best, a complete misunderstanding of the roots of radicalism. At worst, it amounts to a justification for violent extremism. Today, terrorists in Egypt are part of a network of extremists who are bound by a singular distorted ideology, and by a shared goal of taking our region back hundreds of years. They are inspired by the radical teachings of the former Moslem Brotherhood leader Sayyid Kutb [Qutb]. Terrorists in Egypt share the same evil goals as terrorists in Iraq, Syria and Libya.

Indeed, Ambassador Tawfik is correct that the New York Times separates Islamists from terrorists and extremists. The Times editorial condemns “relentless and sweeping crackdown on Islamists, under the baseless contention that they are inherently dangerous.”

The New York Times described sentencing to death of former President Morsi and 100 other Brotherhood members as “deplorable.” It describes the Brotherhood as having renounced violence in the 1970s.

However, Morsi and the defendants were sentenced for his involvement in prison breaks in 2011 that freed 20,000 inmates, including Morsi himself. The Egyptian government says the attacks were well-orchestrated and involved participation by the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas and Hezbollah.

Tawfik chastises the Times for failing to mention that the prison break was a violent operation that resulted in the deaths of prison guards and inmates and freed members of Hamas and Hezbollah.

The Egyptian ambassador also excoriated the Washington Post in February for “toeing the Muslim Brotherhood line” and advised it to be more balance in order to “save whatever is left of your credibility in the Arab world.”

Egyptian President El-Sisi came into power after the popularly-supported military intervention in July 2013 overthrew the Muslim Brotherhood government. The move had the support of a broad spectrum of Egyptian society with public endorsements from secular-democratic activists, the Grand Sheikh of Al-Azhar University and the leader of the Coptic Orthodox Church.

The overthrow came after Morsi (whose election itself was marred bycharges of voter fraud) seized far-sweeping powers for himself, essentially negating any semblance of a democratic government.

El-Sisi is often characterized as an anti-democratic strongman; a depiction that his government is now challenging.

He argues that these strongman tactics are necessary because a democratic transition cannot be completed without stability, economic development and a confrontation with Islamism (also known as Political Islam). He asks the West to understand that there is a “civilizational gap between us and you” and it will take time to modernize.

A study commissioned by the Egyptian government criticized its heavy-handedness but concluded that banning Islamist parties is required for the country’s stability and democratic development. It recommended a program to separate politics and religion.

The Egyptian government sees the Islamic State (ISIS) as a natural outgrowth of the Muslim Brotherhood. Its website warns that the Muslim Brotherhood has a network of fronts in America that are disguised as civil society organizations.

El-Sisi called for a reformation in Islamic interpretation in January 2014 and made a dramatic call on the Islamic religious establishment to address problematic teachings this January that received widespread media coverage. He has explicitly said that Egypt should be “a civil state, not an Islamic one” and defined the ideology of the enemy as Political Islam in an interview on FOX News Channel.

El-Sisi is also confronting Islamist terrorism internationally, in addition to its fight against Islamic State in the Sinai Peninsula. His government is an enemy of Hamas and is as minimally anti-Israel as can be expected of an Arab leader.

Egypt has conducted airstrikes on ISIS in Libya and is materially supporting the Libyan government in its civil war against Islamist forces. Egypt and Libya are complaining about a lack of American backing. A new Egyptian-backed offensive is said to be in the works.

El-Sisi is assembling an Arab rapid-reaction force of 40-50,000 troops that can quickly be deployed to fight Islamic State and other terrorists. Egypt is also taking part in the Arab military intervention against the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.

El-Sisi also made a historic visit to a Coptic Christian church during mass on Christmas Eve. He challenged the Egyptian honor culture when he apologized to a woman who was raped in Tahrir Square.

Major American media outlets have fallen for the falsehood that the Muslim Brotherhood is non-violent. It is true that the Egyptian government is often criticized for its human rights record, but coverage of those accusations should not automatically exempt the Brotherhood and other Islamists from blame.

If the New York Times values objective reporting, then it must mention the Brotherhood’s calls to violence in its coverage as well as the many other instances of violence that the group has been involved in.