Troops loyal to Gaddafi renew bombardment despite statement that tribal leaders would be given 48 hours to broker resolution Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi pounded Misrata on Sunday, hours after the Libyan government claimed its troops had pulled back from the besieged city to let tribal leaders try to negotiate a political resolution, or unleash a “bloody” assault. Using multi-barrelled rocket launchers and tanks positioned at the edge of Misrata, loyalist troops fired hundreds of missiles at the city. At least six people, most of them civilians, were pronounced dead at the main hospital by midday. Dozens of injured were also treated. “There has been a lot of shelling,” said Anas Rajab, a doctor. “It looks like today will be another crisis day.” As the attacks continued, Mustafa Abdel Jalil, head of the Libyan rebel national council, said that Kuwait is to contribute 50m Kuwaiti dinars (£109.9m) to Libya’s rebel council. The renewed bombardment contradicted a claim by Libya’s deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, that “armed forces have ceased operations”. The move, he said, was to give a 48-hour window for tribal leaders from the region south of Misrata to negotiate with the rebels over access to the port. If no deal could be reached by Monday night, the deadline, the tribes would launch a military assault to “liberate” the city, Kaim said. Tribal leaders have not confirmed any intervention, and rebel leaders in Misrata are sceptical about the government’s statements. But Kaim said early on Sunday that the tribes were “trying to get in contact with the rebels”. The government’s assertion that tribal leaders are ready to intervene politically and militarily may be an attempt to pressure rebels after the killing and capture of government troops, and to deflect attention from rebel gains. Many rebels expect Gaddafi to make another strong attempt to take the city, but they dismiss claims that the tribes will be sent in instead of soldiers. Ahmed Mohamed Said, a computer engineer turned rebel, said it was ruse to make the conflict look like civil war, rather than a government turning on its own people, and thus prevent Nato from assisting the rebels from the air. “Gaddafi wants it to look like brothers are fighting brothers,” he said. “That will never happen.” Gaddafi’s forces have faced setbacks in Misrata and the western mountain region, close to the Tunisian border. And Kaim acknowledged that loyalist troops had failed to take control of the port city after two months of siege. He said: “The tactic of the army was to have a surgical strike but, with the [Nato] air strikes, that doesn’t work.” He added: “The leaders of the tribes decided to do something to bring normal life back [to the city]. Their main demand is that foreign fighters leave the town or surrender themselves to the army.” The regime maintains that rebels fighting in Misrata and the east of the country are being driven by al-Qaida and Hezbollah militants – a claim rejected by the opposition. Kaim said the tribal leaders want to reopen access to the port, which has been under the control of rebel forces since the siege began. The port served all Libyans, he said, but was of particular interest to tribes south of Misrata. “The leaders of the tribes are determined to find a solution to this problem within 48 hours,” he added. “The other option is military intervention.” He claimed the six tribes in the region could muster a force of 60,000 men to “liberate” the city. Any assault by the tribal forces would be ruthless, he claimed. “The tribal leaders are pushing to intervene militarily,” he said. “We have to do our utmost to stop this. If the tribes move into the city, it will be very bloody and I hope to God we will avoid this.” On the ground, the rebels expanded on their gains of recent days. They said a large hospital under renovation in the city centre, which was used by Gaddafi’s forces as a base, is now clear. A small number of government troops appeared still to be hiding out in residential buildings and gun battles could be heard around the city. But most of the government forces and heavy weaponry remain concentrated beyond Misrata’s southern highway. In areas recaptured by rebels over the past two days, there is evidence of a crushing battlefield defeat of government forces. In the city’s main vegetable market, a large covered area open on the sides, there are six destroyed tanks and a burning petrol tanker. Thousands of machine gun shells litter the ground, along with several cases used to carry mortar bombs. Most of the buildings nearby are badly damaged or destroyed by gunfire or shells. Further south, near the technical college that was the scene of fierce fighting on Saturday, two large houses that had been occupied by Gaddafi’s troops for a fortnight were black with smoke. At least 16 government soldiers were killed there, a rebel fighter said. Two charred bodies lay in the living room. On the southern highway, controlled by the government until Sunday, a tank had nosedived into a trench dug across the road by the rebels. A burnt pickup was nearby, its cargo of rocket-propelled grenade launchers smouldering next to it. Green uniforms discarded by fleeing soldiers had been flung nearby. “There was no retreat, just fighting, and we forced them back,” said Hassan Mohamed, a rebel fighter. Libya Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Xan Rice Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …BEIRUT — Syrian security forces fired bullets and tear gas Friday at tens of thousands of protesters across the country, killing at least 75 people in the bloodiest day of the monthlong uprising and signaling that the authoritarian regime was prepared to turn more ruthless to put down the revolt against President Bashar Assad. Among the dead were a 70-year-old man and two boys ages 7 and 10, Amnesty International said. In the southern town of Izraa, a man ran carrying the body of a young boy, whose hair was matted with blood from a gaping wound on his head, as another child wept and shouted, “My brother!” Footage of the scene was posted on the protest movement’s main Facebook pace. In other towns, protesters scattered for cover from sniper bullets, then dragged corpses through the streets. Mobile phone images showed the bodies lined up on the floor inside buildings. The rallies, most marching out from mosques after Friday’s noon Muslim prayers, erupted in towns and cities stretching along the breadth of the country, including in at least two suburbs of the capital, Damascus. The death toll was likely to rise, raising fears that there will be an explosion of violence Saturday as relatives bury their dead in funerals that in the past have turned into new protests. Ammar Qurabi, head of Syria’s National Organization for Human Rights, said another 20 people were missing. Friday’s toll was double that of the previous deadliest day of the uprising, on April 8, when 37 were killed around the country. The heavier crackdown came after Assad warned a week ago that any further unrest would be considered “sabotage” after he made the gesture of lifting long-hated emergency laws, a step he ratified on Thursday. It was a clear sign that regime was prepared to escalate an already bloody response, with nearly 300 already dead in more than five weeks. Previously, Assad has mixed the crackdown with gestures of reform in a failed attempt to deflate the protests. The bloodshed so far has only served to invigorate protesters whose demands have snowballed from modest reforms to the downfall of the 40-year Assad family dynasty. Each Friday, growing numbers of people in multiple cities have taken to the streets despite the near certainty that they would come under swift attack from security forces and shadowy pro-government gunmen known as “shabiha.” “Bullets started flying over our heads like heavy rain,” said one witness in Izraa, where police opened fire on protesters marching in front of the mayor’s office. The town is located in southern Daraa province where the uprising kicked off in mid-March. In Washington, President Barack Obama condemned the latest use of force by Syria against anti-government demonstrators and said the regime’s “outrageous” use of violence against the protesters must “end now.” In a statement, Obama said Syria’s moves to repeal a decades-old emergency law and allow peaceful demonstrations were not serious in light of Friday’s events. He called on Assad to change course and obey the will of his people by giving them what they seek – freedom of expression, association, peaceful assembly and the ability to choose their leaders. Tens of thousands marched Friday in the Damascus suburbs of Douma and Hajar Aswad, the central cities of Hama and Homs, Latakia and Banias on the coast, the northern cities of Raqqa and Idlib, the northeastern Kurdish region, and in Daraa, witnesses said. It was certainly one of the most robust gatherings to date, but it was difficult to gauge whether turnout was larger than heavy demonstrations a week ago. Because the protests were so quickly and violently dispersed Friday, it appeared that many gatherings were broken up before the masses hit the streets. Amnesty International put the day’s death toll at 75, mirroring reports from witnesses to The Associated Press. Friday’s witness accounts could not be independently confirmed because Syria has expelled journalists and restricted access to trouble spots. Witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. As it has stepped up its response, Assad’s regime has seemed little affected by mounting international concern over the violence. White House spokesman Jay Carney said the U.S. calls on the Syrian government “to cease and desist from the use of violence against peaceful protesters” and to “follow through on its promises and take action toward the kind of concrete reform that they’ve promised.” In the U.K., Britain’s Foreign Secretary William Hague condemned the “unacceptable killing of demonstrators by the Syrian security forces.” “I call on the Syrian security forces to exercise restraint instead of repression, and on the Syrian authorities to respect the Syrian people’s right to peaceful protest,” Hague said. The protest movement has been the gravest challenge against the autocratic regime led by Assad, who inherited power from his father 11 years ago in one of the most rigidly controlled countries in the Middle East. The uprising in Syria takes its inspiration from the popular revolts that toppled the leaders in Egypt and Tunisia. But Syria is a highly unpredictable country, in part because of its sizable minority population, the loyalty of the country’s military and the regime’s web of allegiances to powerful forces including Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Shiite powerhouse Iran. Serious, prolonged unrest in Syria would almost inevitably hurt Hezbollah and weaken Iran’s influence in the region. But it is not at all clear what would come next if a power vacuum emerges in Syria. The country has multiple sectarian divisions, largely kept in check under Assad’s heavy hand and his regime’s secular ideology. Most significantly, the majority of the population is Sunni Muslim, but Assad and the ruling elite belong to the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiism. Assad has exploited fears of sectarian warfare – so apparent in neighboring Iraq and Lebanon – by blaming the unrest on a “foreign conspiracy” and armed thugs trying to sow sectarian strife. On Friday, the state-run news agency SANA said masked gunmen on motorcycles opened fire on the guards of a government office in Izraa, killing eight bystanders. SANA also said two members of the security forces were killed “by armed criminal groups,” one in the Muadamiya district of Damascus, the other in the Baba Amr district of Homs. There was no way to independently confirm the account. U.N. Secretary-General condemned the violence and called for it “to stop immediately,” U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said. The U.N. chief reiterated his call for “an independent, transparent and effective investigation into the killings” and reminded Syrian authorities of their obligation to respect international human rights including the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and freedom of the press, Nesirky said. Besides the government crackdown, Assad has been trying to defuse the protests by offering a series of concessions, granting citizenship to thousands among Syria’s long-ostracized Kurdish minority, firing local officials, releasing detainees and forming a new government. The recent lifting of emergency laws – which gave authorities almost boundless powers of surveillance and arrest – had been a top demand. But many protesters said the concessions have come too late – and that Assad does not even deserve the credit, because the protest movement is forcing his hand. The true strength of the protest movement is still murky because the uprising is so loosely organized. To be sure, the protests have expanded in numbers and to more parts of the country. But there are no organized, credible opposition leaders who can rally followers on the ground or be considered as a possible successor. No political parties other than the Baath Party are allowed in Syria, and almost all opposition figures have been either jailed or exiled. Still, many young activists are not deterred by the uncertain future. “This is no reason to stick with this alternative for life,” said one activist in Banias, asking that his name not be used for fear of reprisals. “Syria has many qualified people who were never given a chance.” ___ Kennedy reported from Cairo. AP Writer Edith Lederer contributed from the United Nations.
Continue reading …Tribal leaders given 48 hours to strike deal with Libyan rebels and failure could lead to bloody conflict, says deputy minister Libyan forces have pulled back from their military siege of Misrata to let tribal leaders in the area attempt to negotiate a political resolution, according to the Libyan government. In an acknowledgement that loyalist troops had failed to take control of the city after two months of siege, the deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, said: “The tactic of the army was to have a surgical strike, but with the [Nato] air strikes that doesn’t work.” He said tribal leaders had set a 48-hour deadline, due to expire on Monday night, to strike a deal with the rebels, who hold the port area of Misrata and who have made gains in the centre of the city in recent days. If the talks failed, the tribal leaders would launch a military assault on the rebel strongholds, Kaim said, which could be “very bloody”. Tribal leaders have not confirmed any intervention, and rebel leaders in Misrata are sceptical about the government’s statements. Kaim said the tribes were “trying to get in contact with the rebels”. Gaddafi’s forces have faced setbacks both in Misrata and the western mountains region, close to the Tunisian border. The government’s assertion that tribal leaders are ready to intervene politically and militarily may be an attempt to pressure rebels after the killing and capture of its troops, and to deflect attention from rebel gains. “The armed forces have ceased operations [in Misrata],” Kaim said in Tripoli. “The leaders of the tribes decided to do something to bring normal life back [to the city]. “Their main demand is that foreign fighters leave the town or surrender themselves to the army.” The regime maintains that rebel fighting in Misrata and the east of the country is being driven by al-Qaida and Hezbollah militants, a claim rejected by the opposition. Kaim said the tribal leaders’ wanted to reopen access to the port, which has been under the control of rebel forces since the siege began. The port served all Libyans, he said, but was of particular interest to tribes in the region south of Misrata. “The leaders of the tribes are determined to find a solution to this problem within 48 hours,” he said. “The other option is military intervention.” He claimed that the six tribes in the region could muster a force of 60,000 men to “liberate” the city. Any assault by the tribal forces would be ruthless, he claimed. “The tribal leaders are pushing to intervene militarily. We have to do our utmost to stop this. If the tribes move into the city, it will be very bloody and I hope to God we will avoid this.” Despite the Libyan government’s claim to have suspended military operations, residents and journalists in Misrata reported continued shelling on Saturday. Twenty-four people were killed and about 75 wounded, according to doctors. US Predator drones have begun flying sorties over Libya and hit a government rocket launcher in Misrata on Saturday. Last week, Nato air strikes took out three command and control centres around the city of Sirte, between Tripoli and Misrata, which is thought to have affected communications, adding to the government forces’ military setbacks. Kaim said the US deployment of Predator drones would result in more civilian deaths. “When President Obama was elected, I was one of those who celebrated” in the hope of a more peaceful world, he said. “But now I’m losing faith with him.” He said 18 warships from Nato countries were blockading the port of Tripoli, in violation of UN security council resolution 1973, which authorised military action to protect civilians. “They are preventing civilian materials reaching the Libyan people,” he said. Libya Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …1,000 fighters continue to defend Ivory Coast’s ex-president after French helicopter crew rescues Japanese envoy United Nations forces have surrounded the last troops loyal to defeated Ivory Coast presidential candidate Laurent Gbagbo after 24 hours of drama in which French forces staged a helicopter rescue of the Japanese ambassador. Gbagbo’s forces, said to number around 1,000, have been desperately defending the recalcitrant former leader against forces loyal to Alassane Ouattara, who won the November presidential election. Gbagbo, who had repeatedly forced postponement of the poll, refused to cede power, alleging fraud. Gérard Longuet, the French defence minister, told the French Senate on Thursday: “At this moment the military situation is as follows; the UNOCI [United Nations mission in Ivory Coast] troops have surrounded in a limited area the last defenders of the previous president, Gbagbo.” The UN deployment came after Gbagbo’s fighters stormed the Japanese ambassador Yoshifumi Okamura’s residence in Cocody on Wednesday, barely allowing time for him to escape with seven staff into a safe room behind a bulletproof door. The fighters then set up rocket launchers and cannons on the roof of the house and began firing into the residential area. Around midnight, French troops with night-vision glasses abseiled from a helicopter into the ambassador’s home. After coming under fire they shot back, the French military said, destroying three vehicles. In a 30-minute operation, the soldiers managed to free Okamura and his colleagues, one of whom was hurt, and airlifted them to a French military camp. Besides taking over the Japanese residence, Gbagbo’s forces also tried to break into the French ambassador’s house, before French forces destroyed their two vehicles. Other countries are now frantically trying to withdraw their diplomats, with Israel requesting help from France in taking its staff to safety. The fierce week-long street battles in the commercial capital Abidjan has caused serious shortages of food and water, with most residents too afraid to leave their homes. More than 1,500 foreigners are taking shelter at a French military base, as well as 20 international journalists who were evacuated from a city centre hotel on Thursday. The UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, has urged Gbagbo to stand down for the sake of his country, which has been plunged back into civil war at a time it was meant to be unifying after years of divisions between the north and south. More than 1,500 people have been killed since the disputed poll. “This is his last opportunity to gracefully exit,” Ban said during a visit to the US. Earlier in the week it appeared that Gbagbo was willing to give himself up after months of failed mediation attempts, but the former history professor remained defiant, despite being confined to his personal residence in the upscale neighbourhood of Cocody. Gbagbo’s spokesman in France, Toussaint Alain, told Associated Press that the 65-year-old leader would not negotiate his surrender but he would talk to Ouattara. Alain said that France, Ivory Coast’s former colonial ruler, should not be involved in the talks. France has becoming increasingly involved in the conflict this week, strafing Gbagbo’s military depots in a joint aerial operation with the UN. The fighters guarding Gbagbo include youth militias and members of the feared Republican Guard, and are equipped with heavy weapons and tanks, according to French media. After talks to secure Gbabgo’s exit failed, they were able to repel a large attack by Ouattara’s forces on Wednesday, even as the Japanese ambassador and his staff remained trapped nearby. Speaking in a video released by the French military after the rescue mission, Okamura described his ordeal. “Unfortunately my residence was attacked by mercenaries and I was locked in my room since the morning. The mercenaries took over my home but in the end I was saved by the Licorne [French peacekeeping troops in Ivory Coast],” he said. “The work was very professional and they secured the environment, and that’s why I am here.” According to French military spokesman Colonel Thierry Burkhard, Okamura had managed to alert the Japanese authorities about his plight while in the safe room. The UN, which has a large peacekeeping mission in Ivory Coast, then notified France, which has sent military reinforcements to the country in recent weeks. Burkhard said Gbagbo’s forces had used the Japanese ambassador’s home to fire into residential areas, targeting the French ambassador’s house in particular. “In less than half an hour, the ambassador and his colleagues were evacuated to [the military base of] Port Bouet. Our troops were then engaged, which led to a response, mainly with anti-tank missiles.” No French soldiers were injured in the operation, he said. Ouattara’s forces, which swept into Abidjan last week, are drawn mainly from the Muslim north of the country, which had remained under the military control of the former rebel New Forces movement since the 2002-03 civil war. Gbagbo accused France of supporting the rebels during that conflict. Laurent Gbagbo Ivory Coast Alassane Ouattara United Nations France Japan Xan Rice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Julian Assange hands over tranche of secret files to newspapers in Israel on its co-operation with US and view of neighbours Mohammed Tantawi, the head of Egypt’s ruling generals, was an obstacle to Israeli efforts to stop arms smuggling within the Gaza strip, according to Israeli security forces. The assessment was privately delivered to US diplomats, alongside praise for former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman’s efforts to stop weapons trafficking, according to the WikiLeaks embassy cables. The revelations come in a tranche of the most militarily sensitive cables from the US embassy in Tel Aviv. They have been handed over to Israeli newspapers by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The Hebrew-language paper Yediot this week announced a deal under which it will print an interview with Assange, who has recently had to defend WikiLeaks from accusations of antisemitism. The cables show intimate co-operation between US and Israeli intelligence organisations. Israel’s preoccupation with Iranian nuclear ambitions is well known and the US cables detail the battering on the subject that diplomats repeatedly receive from Tel Aviv. They also shed detailed and sometimes unexpected light on Israel’s military analyses of its other enemies and friends in the region. Egypt is the primary route for weapons and munitions into the Gaza strip, and the US has been facilitating co-operation between Israel and Egypt to tackle this for several years. On arms smuggling across the Egyptian border to Hamas in Gaza, Israeli intelligence chiefs described as “supportive” Omar Suleiman, who was Egypt’s intelligence minister, but said defence minister Mohammed Hussein Tantawi was “an obstacle” in a November 2009 cable . Another cable seen by the Guardian reveals that the King of Bahrain, whose Arab state has recently been shaken by protests, has had friendly links with the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency. The cables report a private talk between the then US ambassador, William Monroe, and King Hamad of Bahrain in the king’s palace on 15 February 2005. Monroe reported back to Washington : “He [the king] revealed that Bahrain already has contacts with Israel at the intelligence/security level (ie with Mossad) and indicated that Bahrain will be willing to move forward in other areas.” The cables also shed light on Israel’s assessment of Hezbollah’s mounting capability to strike directly at Tel Aviv with an arsenal of more than 20,000 missiles. Israeli intelligence chiefs briefed their US counterparts during a regular Joint Political Military Group (JPMG) session on 18 November 2009 about the scale of potential Hezbollah attacks from Lebanon . Washington was told: “Hezbollah possesses over 20,000 rockets … Hezbollah was preparing for a long conflict with Israel in which it hopes to launch a massive number of rockets at Israel per day. A Mossad official estimated that Hezbollah will try to launch 400-600 rockets and missiles at Israel per day – 100 of which will be aimed at Tel Aviv. He noted that Hezbollah is looking to sustain such launches for at least two months.” Other cables detail regular secret talks between the US and Yuval Diskin, head of Israel’s internal security agency, Shin Beth, over the role of Hamas in Gaza. On 12 November 2009 the embassy reported the views of the general responsible for Gaza and southern Israel, Major General Yoav Galant, that Hamas needed to be “strong enough to enforce a ceasefire” . He told the Americans: “Israel’s political leadership has not yet made the necessary policy choices among competing priorities: a short-term priority of wanting Hamas to be strong enough to enforce the de facto ceasefire and prevent the firing of rockets and mortars into Israel; a medium priority of preventing Hamas from consolidating its hold on Gaza; and a longer-term priority of avoiding a return of Israeli control of Gaza and full responsibility for the wellbeing of Gaza’s civilian population.” Galant was to be made Israel’s chief of defence staff earlier this year but the appointment was cancelled due to scandal. The US embassy cables WikiLeaks US foreign policy Julian Assange James Ball David Leigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Julian Assange hands over tranche of secret files to newspapers in Israel on its co-operation with US and view of neighbours Mohammed Tantawi, the head of Egypt’s ruling generals, was an obstacle to Israeli efforts to stop arms smuggling within the Gaza strip, according to Israeli security forces. The assessment was privately delivered to US diplomats, alongside praise for former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman’s efforts to stop weapons trafficking, according to the WikiLeaks embassy cables. The revelations come in a tranche of the most militarily sensitive cables from the US embassy in Tel Aviv. They have been handed over to Israeli newspapers by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The Hebrew-language paper Yediot this week announced a deal under which it will print an interview with Assange, who has recently had to defend WikiLeaks from accusations of antisemitism. The cables show intimate co-operation between US and Israeli intelligence organisations. Israel’s preoccupation with Iranian nuclear ambitions is well known and the US cables detail the battering on the subject that diplomats repeatedly receive from Tel Aviv. They also shed detailed and sometimes unexpected light on Israel’s military analyses of its other enemies and friends in the region. Egypt is the primary route for weapons and munitions into the Gaza strip, and the US has been facilitating co-operation between Israel and Egypt to tackle this for several years. On arms smuggling across the Egyptian border to Hamas in Gaza, Israeli intelligence chiefs described as “supportive” Omar Suleiman, who was Egypt’s intelligence minister, but said defence minister Mohammed Hussein Tantawi was “an obstacle” in a November 2009 cable . Another cable seen by the Guardian reveals that the King of Bahrain, whose Arab state has recently been shaken by protests, has had friendly links with the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency. The cables report a private talk between the then US ambassador, William Monroe, and King Hamad of Bahrain in the king’s palace on 15 February 2005. Monroe reported back to Washington : “He [the king] revealed that Bahrain already has contacts with Israel at the intelligence/security level (ie with Mossad) and indicated that Bahrain will be willing to move forward in other areas.” The cables also shed light on Israel’s assessment of Hezbollah’s mounting capability to strike directly at Tel Aviv with an arsenal of more than 20,000 missiles. Israeli intelligence chiefs briefed their US counterparts during a regular Joint Political Military Group (JPMG) session on 18 November 2009 about the scale of potential Hezbollah attacks from Lebanon . Washington was told: “Hezbollah possesses over 20,000 rockets … Hezbollah was preparing for a long conflict with Israel in which it hopes to launch a massive number of rockets at Israel per day. A Mossad official estimated that Hezbollah will try to launch 400-600 rockets and missiles at Israel per day – 100 of which will be aimed at Tel Aviv. He noted that Hezbollah is looking to sustain such launches for at least two months.” Other cables detail regular secret talks between the US and Yuval Diskin, head of Israel’s internal security agency, Shin Beth, over the role of Hamas in Gaza. On 12 November 2009 the embassy reported the views of the general responsible for Gaza and southern Israel, Major General Yoav Galant, that Hamas needed to be “strong enough to enforce a ceasefire” . He told the Americans: “Israel’s political leadership has not yet made the necessary policy choices among competing priorities: a short-term priority of wanting Hamas to be strong enough to enforce the de facto ceasefire and prevent the firing of rockets and mortars into Israel; a medium priority of preventing Hamas from consolidating its hold on Gaza; and a longer-term priority of avoiding a return of Israeli control of Gaza and full responsibility for the wellbeing of Gaza’s civilian population.” Galant was to be made Israel’s chief of defence staff earlier this year but the appointment was cancelled due to scandal. The US embassy cables WikiLeaks US foreign policy Julian Assange James Ball David Leigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Julian Assange hands over tranche of secret files to newspapers in Israel on its co-operation with US and view of neighbours Mohammed Tantawi, the head of Egypt’s ruling generals, was an obstacle to Israeli efforts to stop arms smuggling within the Gaza strip, according to Israeli security forces. The assessment was privately delivered to US diplomats, alongside praise for former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman’s efforts to stop weapons trafficking, according to the WikiLeaks embassy cables. The revelations come in a tranche of the most militarily sensitive cables from the US embassy in Tel Aviv. They have been handed over to Israeli newspapers by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The Hebrew-language paper Yediot this week announced a deal under which it will print an interview with Assange, who has recently had to defend WikiLeaks from accusations of antisemitism. The cables show intimate co-operation between US and Israeli intelligence organisations. Israel’s preoccupation with Iranian nuclear ambitions is well known and the US cables detail the battering on the subject that diplomats repeatedly receive from Tel Aviv. They also shed detailed and sometimes unexpected light on Israel’s military analyses of its other enemies and friends in the region. Egypt is the primary route for weapons and munitions into the Gaza strip, and the US has been facilitating co-operation between Israel and Egypt to tackle this for several years. On arms smuggling across the Egyptian border to Hamas in Gaza, Israeli intelligence chiefs described as “supportive” Omar Suleiman, who was Egypt’s intelligence minister, but said defence minister Mohammed Hussein Tantawi was “an obstacle” in a November 2009 cable . Another cable seen by the Guardian reveals that the King of Bahrain, whose Arab state has recently been shaken by protests, has had friendly links with the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency. The cables report a private talk between the then US ambassador, William Monroe, and King Hamad of Bahrain in the king’s palace on 15 February 2005. Monroe reported back to Washington : “He [the king] revealed that Bahrain already has contacts with Israel at the intelligence/security level (ie with Mossad) and indicated that Bahrain will be willing to move forward in other areas.” The cables also shed light on Israel’s assessment of Hezbollah’s mounting capability to strike directly at Tel Aviv with an arsenal of more than 20,000 missiles. Israeli intelligence chiefs briefed their US counterparts during a regular Joint Political Military Group (JPMG) session on 18 November 2009 about the scale of potential Hezbollah attacks from Lebanon . Washington was told: “Hezbollah possesses over 20,000 rockets … Hezbollah was preparing for a long conflict with Israel in which it hopes to launch a massive number of rockets at Israel per day. A Mossad official estimated that Hezbollah will try to launch 400-600 rockets and missiles at Israel per day – 100 of which will be aimed at Tel Aviv. He noted that Hezbollah is looking to sustain such launches for at least two months.” Other cables detail regular secret talks between the US and Yuval Diskin, head of Israel’s internal security agency, Shin Beth, over the role of Hamas in Gaza. On 12 November 2009 the embassy reported the views of the general responsible for Gaza and southern Israel, Major General Yoav Galant, that Hamas needed to be “strong enough to enforce a ceasefire” . He told the Americans: “Israel’s political leadership has not yet made the necessary policy choices among competing priorities: a short-term priority of wanting Hamas to be strong enough to enforce the de facto ceasefire and prevent the firing of rockets and mortars into Israel; a medium priority of preventing Hamas from consolidating its hold on Gaza; and a longer-term priority of avoiding a return of Israeli control of Gaza and full responsibility for the wellbeing of Gaza’s civilian population.” Galant was to be made Israel’s chief of defence staff earlier this year but the appointment was cancelled due to scandal. The US embassy cables WikiLeaks US foreign policy Julian Assange James Ball David Leigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …South_Park_Bohemian_Rhapsody South Park – The Best of Eric Cartman – Season 1 South Park Episodes South Park Episodes . When I heard that LeBron James was doing an animated series called “The LeBrons” I thought it was going to be something like Family Guy or South Park. Nowadays, if you don’t have some edge to your animation you get … News Clicker » Watch all high quality South Park Episodes South … Spx is the largest south park fansite on the internet with all working links to South Park Episodes watch south park online now southparkx has all the links to. When do new South Park Episodes air on comedy central chacha answer the new … Mary Bakers News: South Park Episodes South Park Episodes . The one where all the priests are molesting children but not father maxi whats the episode called? Thanks sp fan i think that episode is amazingly funny xD. South Park Episodes ». Barbra Streisand comes to South … News Clicker » South Park, The Simpsons, Family Guy and American … Spx is the largest south park fansite on the internet with all working links to South Park Episodes watch south park online now southparkx has all the links to. When do new South Park Episodes air on comedy central chacha answer the new … News Clicker Rima Fakih is first Muslim winner of Miss USA|www.5E8.net Recent Articles Comments South Park, The Simpsons, Family Guy and American Dad episodes Watch all high quality South Park Episodes South Park ZoneRima Fakih is first Muslim winner of Miss USAMiss USA Rima Fakih Hezbollah babe or just a … FahadBilal says: South Park Episodes http://j.mp/h2ACI7
Continue reading …Ed Schultz is so gungo ho for the Libyan war that he wants Obama to provide weapons to anti-Qadhafi forces — without scrutinizing who gets them. Seeing how Qadhafi's opponents in Libya could include al Qaeda and Hezbollah, according to the U.S. NATO commander, what could possibly go wrong? Here's Schultz engaging in his singular brand of bellicosity while talking to a caller on his radio show yesterday, followed by an unintentionally hilarious remark by Democratic congressman Adam Smith later in the same show ( audio ) — CALLER: I'm with you on this. I mean, I feel comfortable standing behind this administration a lot more than I did the last. And given the situation, I would think that we definitely have to have some kind of covert action going on and it shouldn't have been leaked out. But, I mean, we can't just go in there and start arming random people. We gotta know who we're arming, for one thing. But I like to think that we're trying more to disarm Qadhafi more than we actually are trying to arm people. And I would think that that would actually take some covert action or, you know, somebody on the ground … SCHULTZ: Well, why are we concerned with who gets arms? I'm just, for conversation now. … I mean, if they're going to take out Qadhafi, hell, they can't be all that bad! To his credit, Congressman Smith wasn't on board with this an hour later on Schultz's show — SCHULTZ: Do you think we should arm these freedom fighters? Do you think that we should give them a chance to defend themselves from being butchered by Qadhafi? SMITH: Well, I think we are defending them. I mean, part of the problem with the last two or three days, I know part of the problem, has been bad weather which has limited the ability of our air campaign to stop Qadhafi from … SCHULTZ: No, but they want arms, congressman … SMITH: Oh, let me get to that, let me get to that. I mean, what I'm saying is, yes, I think we should help. As far as whether that we give them arms, we gotta figure out who they are first. Smith, an infrequent Schultz guest, just got scarcer.
Continue reading …Unlike Hamas and Hezbollah, the young want peace and progress in our region The Middle East has to make a historic choice: to join the new global age of democratic peace and liberal economy, or to stay clinging to its history of closed societies and autocracy. A great revolt has been initiated by young people and women , to gain freedom, bread and hope. Israel is watching with great expectation. These events are both unprecedented and unplanned. The internet, Facebook and Twitter have created mass communications and social spaces that regimes cannot control. These developments allowed young people to compare notes with their contemporaries in other countries, and to see clearly how their own governments wasted wealth and time to enhance their own power while ignoring the needs of their people. It opened their eyes. The upheaval we see today in our region is driven by a clash of generations rather than a clash of civilisations. The older generation had greater respect for land than science. But we live in an age when science, more than soil, has become the provider of growth and abundance. Living just on the land creates loneliness in an age of globality. Israel is an example of that today: technology and not territory are the drivers of wealth. We have shown that with a small piece of land, little water and no oil, it is possible to create a thriving economy and a sustainable democracy. Israel welcomes the wind of change, and sees a window of opportunity. Democratic and science-based economies by nature desire peace. Israel does not want to be an island of affluence in an ocean of poverty. Improvements in our neighbours’ lives mean improvements to the neighbourhood in which we live. Israelis understand that this is no less true of the Palestinians . That is why successive Israeli governments have given their full support to the efforts of Palestinians in the West Bank to build their own economy, their own institutions, and their own security forces. Economic growth in the West Bank is now close to 10% annually. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians see the tangible fruit of this co-operation. Knowledge, freedom and peace are inseparable. Peace is needed and can be achieved by direct negotiations. This was the case with Egypt and Jordan, and can happen with the Palestinians. The gap between ourselves and the Palestinians is more psychological than material. Bringing an end to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians may help the young Arab generation to realise their aspirations. Israel is more than willing to offer our experience in building a modern economy in spite of limited resources to the whole region. We seek only the acceptance from our neighbours and the opportunity to play a full role in the life of the region. Israel was born under the British mandate. We learned from the British what democracy means, and how it behaves in a time of danger, war and terror. We thank Britain for introducing freedom and respect of human rights both in normal and demanding circumstances. It was a great lesson and a necessary one for a country such as Israel, which has been attacked seven times in the 63 years of its existence without compromising democracy and without giving up our quest for peace. However, there are other forces in our region that want to resist the spread of these values. They are ready to abuse democratic institutions to gain power, but without the commitment to maintain the integrity of those institutions once they are in power. Hamas and Hezbollah, backed by Iran, are representatives of these forces. Those reactionary forces, that would hijack their countries back down the path of radicalism, are also the enemies of peace with Israel. That is why we hope our neighbours will choose to join the family of democratic nations. Shimon Peres is president of Israel Palestinian territories Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Israel Social media Digital media Shimon Peres guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …