Summary of DEBKAfile’s Exclusive Articles in Week Ending Jan. 28, 2009
|
|
Gaza ceasefire too fragile to acclaim end of warfare DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis 24 Jan.: Israeli leaders insist the IDF left Hamas seriously crippled – which is undeniable; but the second half of the proposition that Hamas had “lost its appetite for striking Israel targets for a very long time” – is over-optimistic, give the considerations listed here: 1. Hamas is in no state to reach a clear decision because its leadership is divided on this very issue. 2. Jerusalem is beholden to Cairo as the first major Arab power to support a battle with an Arab force, and was thus bound to respect its wishes to teach Hamas – and Iran – a harsh lesson but stop short of finally crushing the Palestinian extremists. 3. Until last week, Egypt enjoyed solid Saudi backing. But then, at the Arab League summit in Kuwait on Jan. 19, the Saudi king changed face and decided to appease the Iran-led radical Arab camp. 4. American and Egypt mechanisms to staunch Hamas’ access to smuggled Iranian and Syrian arms are still tentative. This and the divisions in the Arab world have encouraged Tehran to persist in rearming Hamas and the Hamas-Damascus faction to maintain its intransigent posture, a contest which crackles with inflammatory potential. Egypt cracks the whip for Hamas in long-term truce talks Here are the conditions Cairo put before the Palestinian Islamist organization: 1. Hamas must pledge to halt all smuggling into the Gaza Strip, including arms. 2. and 3. It must accept a long-term truce for Gaza and a half-kilometer off limits zone behind the border… 4. Hamas would have no access to the Gaza crossing facilities. 5. The verbal abuse of Egypt must stop forthwith. Suleiman made it clear that financial aid for rebuilding the Gaza Strip was contingent on Hamas burying the hatchet with Mahmoud Abbas and accepting a power-sharing deal with his Palestinian Authority. Iranian arms ship intercepted by US warship has sealed double holds The Iranian freighter Nochegorsk was intercepted in the Bab al-Mandeb Straits last week by the new US Combined Task Force 151. The Americans decided not to give the Israeli Navy a chance to seize the vessel and tow it to Eilat for fear of a Tehran ultimatum to Jerusalem sparking Iranian attacks on Israeli naval craft patrolling the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea. Iran maintains two warships in those waters as well as a military presence in the Eritrean port of Assab. The option of towing it to a Persian Gulf port would be opposed by the Gulf emirates hosting US bases. Two Guantanamo inmates on al Qaeda video25 Jan.: The two men reaffirmed their dedication to jihad on a video posted in an al Qaeda website shortly after President Barack Obama signed a directive to close the Guantanamo Bay prison camp in Cuba within a year. One was a Saudi identified as Saeed Shihri, one of al Qaeda’s top leaders in Yemen. DEBKAfile adds: He was transferred to Saudi Arabia in 2007. Against a pledge not to revert to terrorism, Shahri won a big Saudi grant for his “rehabilitation.” He did indeed build a big house and take a wife, but on the quiet resumed his affiliation with al Qaeda. The second man on the video, Abu al-Hareth Muhammed al-Oufi, is an al Qaeda field commander. Another 245 prisoners await their release in the camp. According to the US Defense Department, as many as 61 former Guantanamo Bay detainees, about 11 percent of 520 inmates transferred or released so far, have rejoined al Qaeda’s active ranks. Hamas wartime rockets missed US anti-Iranian missile radar near Beersheba Destruction of the FBX-T, which was installed last November to intercept incoming Iranian Shehab-3 ballistic missiles, would have crowned Hamas’ offensive with success. But they missed. Cont. Next Column
|
Our military sources reveal that the American X-band radar, which can track the path of any missile fired in the Middle East, worked hard during Operation Cast Lead, feeding the Israeli command with accurate advance information on the missiles and rockets aimed from Gaza at southern Israel and their trajectories.
It also tracked the rockets fired twice at Nahariya and Kiryat Shemona from Lebanon and kept watch for possible missile action from Syria and Iran. Major Israeli reprisal pending for Palestinian roadside bomb which killed Israeli soldier 27 Jan.: An Israeli soldier was killed and three others injured, one seriously, Tuesday, Jan. 27, by a large roadside bomb detonated from Gaza against a routine Israeli military patrol near the Kissufim crossing. Eight hours later, an Israeli air strike killed a Hamas operative involved in the attack riding a motorbike near Khan Younis. Defense minister Ehud Barak warned Israel would respond to the Palestinians’ unacceptable breach of the ceasefire. Our sources say Hamas initiated the clash for the benefit of US president Barack Obama’s Middle East envoy George Mitchell the day before he arrives for his first visit to the region. The time-lag between the Palestinian attack and Israel’s response exposes Jerusalem’s commitment to consult with Washington and Cairo before taking further action in Gaza. The understandings with the US, reached by Israel’s war troika, the prime minister, defense minister and foreign minister Tzipi Livni, are proving now too ungainly and unclear to fit the realities of Gaza. They tie Israel down for launching the necessary response for stamping hard on Hamas’ war initiatives. Hamas is determined to belie Israel’s claim of restored deterrence strength from Operation Cast Lead and assertion that Hamas would need a very long time to revert to violence. US military chief confirms interception of Gaza-bound Iranian arms ship28 Jan.: Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm, Mike Mullen said Jan. 28 the US Navy had intercepted a Cypriot-flagged ship in the Red Sea last week and searched it with the captain’s permission for Iranian arms bound for the Gaza Strip. The Iranian arms ship on its way to the Gaza Strip for Hamas was first revealed exclusively by DEBKAfile on Jan. 20 and tracked further on Jan. 23 and Jan. 25. The Navy had done all it could do legally but was not authorized to seize the weapons,” said Mullen, adding he would like authority to act in such cases. DEBKAfile’s military sources disclose that it is bound for Latakia, where it will dock alongside the Russian guided missile destroyer Admiral Chabanenko. In the Suez Canal, the Iranian vessel’s captain called Tehran for instructions and was told to proceed to this Syrian port. Upon entering the Mediterranean on Jan. 26, the Iranian ship was blocked by Israel missile ships from access to the shores of Gaza. Israeli air force bombs Philadelphi corridor in three waves 28 Jan.: Israeli towns and communities within rocket and missile range of the Gaza Strip were once again on tense alert after the Israeli air force struck the Philadelphi corridor border tunnels before dawn Wednesday, Jan. 28. Punishment was promised Hamas after a large roadside bomb blew up an Israel border patrol jeep outside Gaza early Tuesday, killing one Israel soldier and injuring three, one seriously, one week into the Gaza ceasefire. Several smuggling tunnels caved in under the aerial bombardment. Barack Obama’s Middle East envoy George Mitchell may find himself landing Wednesday in the middle of another Gaza war. Two Qassam missiles aimed at Sderot early Thursday shatter ceasefire 29 Jan.: Israeli air raids struck a Hamas target in Khan Younes, inflicting at least 10 Palestinian casualties Thursday, Jan. 29, after two missiles were aimed at Sderot from Gaza early Thursday, Jan. 29. Overnight, the Israeli Air force struck a missile workshop in the southern Gaza town of Rafah. I n expectation of a major Gaza flare-up, defense minister Ehud Barak canceled his trip this week to Washington for talks with US defense secretary Robert Gates. Wednesday, as Barack Obama’s Middle East envoy George Mitchell met with Israeli leaders in Jerusalem, Hamas fired two Qassam missiles and several mortar rounds into southern Israel for the first time since the 22-day conflict was halted by ceasefires. In Damascus, meanwhile Hamas and other radical Palestinian leaders rejected Cairo’s plan for a long-term truce, demanding the reopening of all the Gaza crossings first. But Hamas’ rejection has taken Cairo’s diplomatic initiative back to square one. The Egyptians believe that a good military hiding by Israel will bring the Palestinian Islamist extremists back to the negotiation table in a more reasonable frame of mind. Turkish premier storms out of Davos after run-in with Israeli president 29 Jan.: At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Thursday, Jan. 29, reproached Israeli president Shimon Peres over the Gaza offensive, saying “You kill people,” continuing the abuse he has leveled against Israel in recent weeks. Israeli president Shimon Peres said, raising his voice, Israel’s 22-day offensive was launched in reaction to eight years of rocket fire. Turning to Erdogan, who had said Israel had made Gaza an “open air prison,” Peres asked: “Why did they fire rockets? There was no siege against Gaza. There was never a day of starvation in Gaza.” The former Norwegian prime minister, Khell Magne Bondevik, said he had never seen Shimon Peres so passionate. I think he felt Israel was being attacked by so many in the international community. He felt isolated.”
|
Category: Palestinian N.A.
Palestinian National Authority
-
DAVOS & ERDOGAN IB DEPKA FILES
-
Davos; Video
details were given in Turkish language section
Hürriyet Video’larını izlemek için Flash 7 veya daha yüksek eklenti yüklenmeniz gerekmektedir. Yüklemek için tıklayınız!!! -
Turkish PM leaves stage during debate with Peres over Gaza
Javid Huseynov
show details 12:29 AM (8 hours ago)ReplyTurkish PM leaves stage during debate with Peres over GazaJan. 29, 2009
Associated Press , THE JERUSALEM POSTTurkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stalked off the stage at the World Economic Forum red-faced after verbally sparring with President Shimon Peres over the fighting in Gaza.
Erdogan was flustered after he tried to speak as the scheduled session was ending at the forum in Davos, Switzerland, asking the moderator, Washington Post columnist David Ignatius, to let him speak once more.
“Only a minute,” Ignatius replied.
Erdogan said that “I remember two former prime ministers in your country who said they felt very happy when they were able to enter Palestine on tanks,” he said in Turkish.
“I find it very sad that people applaud what you said. There have been many people killed. And I think that it is very wrong and it is not humanitarian,” he said.
Ignatius said “We can’t start the debate again. We just don’t have time.”
Erdogan said “Please let me finish.” Ignatius responded “We really do need to get people to dinner.”
The Turkish premier then said, “Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I don’t think I will come back to Davos after this.”
The confrontation saw Peres and Ergodan raise their voice shouting – highly unusual at the elite gathering of corporate and world leaders, which is usually marked by learned consensus seeking and polite dialogue.
The packed audience at the Ergodan and Peres session, which included US President Barack Obama’s close adviser Valerie Jarrett, appeared stunned.
Afterward, forum founder Klaus Schwab huddled with Erdogan in a corner of the Congress Center. A press conference with both men was scheduled for 8:30 p.m.
“I have know Shimon Peres for many years and I also know Erdogan. I have never seen Shimon Peres so passionate as he was today. I think he felt Israel was being attacked by so many in the international community. He felt isolated,” said former Norwegian Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik said.
“I was very sad that Ergodan left. This was an expression of how difficult this situation is.”
Amr Moussa, the former Egyptian foreign minister who now leads the Arab League, said Ergodan’s action was understandable. “Mr. Ergodan said what he wanted to say and then he left. That’s all. He was right.” Of Israel, he said, “They don’t listen.”
-
MPs join Gaza protest against BBC
By Mark Hookham
Political EditorTHREE Leeds MPs have added their voices to the mounting criticism of the BBC for its refusal to televise an appeal for victims of the humanitarian disaster in Gaza.
John Battle (Leeds West, Lab), Fabian Hamilton (Leeds North East, Lab) and Greg Mulholland (Leeds North West, Lib Dem) have joined more than 100 other MPs in signing a parliamentary motion urging the corporation to reverse its decision.
The Disasters Emergency Committee’s two-minute Gaza Crisis Appeal was screened on Monday by ITV, Channel 4 and Five.
However, BBC bosses have insisted that airing the film would threaten its impartiality and that the corporation should not give the impression it was “backing one side” over the other.
Protests
The decision has sparked more than 15,500 complaints and protests at BBC Broadcasting House.
Mr Battle, a former junior minister, has also raised the issue with ministers at a Commons international development select committee.
Relatives of his sister’s husband live in Gaza and have given him first hand reports of the intense suffering caused by the bombing.
Fabian Hamilton, a member of Labour Friends of Israel, said: “To a child who has lost his parents and whose house is a pile of rubble it doesn’t matter whether it was Israelis or an earthquake. That child needs aid and our help. We have a duty to relieve that suffering.”
Greg Mulholland said he thought the BBC’s reasoning was “utterly flawed.”
A RALLY is to be staged outside the BBC’s regional HQ in Leeds to protest at the corporation’s refusal to broadcast a charity appeal for funds to help the people of Gaza.
The rally takes place this evening from 5pm to 7pm outside BBC Broadcasting Centre in St Peter’s Square, near Leeds bus station.
The BBC has refused to broadcast the appeal by the Disasters Emergency Committee which includes charities such as Christian Aid and Oxfam.
It says to do so might lead to accusations of “bias.”
Source: Yorkshire Evening Post, 28 January 2009
-
Major American-Jewish Organizations May no Longer Back Turkey in Congress
From: BENJAMIN YAFET [mailto:byafet@juno.com]
Subject: American Jewish organizations are ready to support the Armenian Genocide resolution !!!
Major American-Jewish Organizations
May no Longer Back Turkey in Congress
There are serious indications that Israel and American-Jewish organizations are no longer willing to support Turkey’s lobbying efforts to block a congressional resolution on the Armenian Genocide.
The dispute between the two strategic allies began with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan harshly denouncing Israel’s incursion into Gaza and accusing the Jewish state of committing crimes against humanity. He suggested that Israel be barred from the United Nations as mass demonstrations were held throughout Turkey with banners that read: “Gaza will be a grave for Israel” and “Put Israel on trial for war crimes.” Israel’s Consul General in Istanbul, Mordehai Amihai, told Milliyet that the consulate received hundreds of anti-Semitic e-mails every day during the fighting in Gaza.
Initially, Israeli officials expressed their displeasure through diplomatic channels. But as the anti-Israel rhetoric intensified, Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister publicly warned Turkey that Tel Aviv might retaliate by acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. Last week, Israel’s Prime Minister Olmert invited the leaders of France, Britain, Germany, Italy, Spain and the Czech Republic to dinner in Jerusalem after their summit meeting in nearby Egypt. Significantly, Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul, who also had attended the summit, was excluded from the dinner.
American-Jewish organizations, which had for years supported Turkey’s denialist agenda on the Armenian Genocide in the U.S. Congress, were highly incensed by the Turkish condemnations of Israel. The American Jewish Committee sent a letter to Erdogan on January 8, to express its “grave concern over recent official statements” by Turkey’s Prime Minister and Foreign Minister. On January 21, a second letter was sent to Erdogan, this time signed by five leading American-Jewish organizations, expressing their “profound concern over the current wave of anti-Semitic manifestations in Turkey.”
In their joint letter, the American Jewish Committee, Anti-Defamation League, B’nai B’rith International, Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, and Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs complained about “gravely distressing” recent incidents: “Protestors besieging the Israeli Consulate in Istanbul have expressed their hatred of Jews. Billboards around Istanbul are full of anti-Jewish propaganda posters. The door of a Jewish-owned shop near Istanbul University was covered with a poster that said, ‘Do not buy from here, since this shop is owned by a Jew.’ The defacing of an Izmir synagogue has brought about the temporary closure of all but one of that city’s synagogues.” The American-Jewish groups also stated that the Jewish community in Turkey feels “besieged and threatened. A connection is clearly perceived between the inflammatory denunciation of Israel by Turkish officials and the rise of anti-Semitism.”
Ironically, Abraham Foxman, ADL’s National Director, who is now complaining to Prime Minister Erdogan about anti-Semitism in Turkey, had presented a prestigious award to him in 2005. Foxman conveniently overlooked the fact that four days before he gave that award to Erdogan, the Middle East Media Research Institute, based on a report from Hurriyet, revealed that Erdogan in 1974 had written, directed and played the lead role in a play called “Maskomya,” an acronym for the triple “evils” of Masons, Komunists (Communists), and Yahudis (Jews).
Having given Erdogan one of ADL’s highest awards, Foxman must have been shocked by the Turkish Prime Minister’s recent criticisms of Israel. Foxman told Milliyet last week: “Turkey was our friend. We were friends. I still can’t believe it. I am very sad and confused. The Jews in Turkey are threatened…. They feel encircled…. The Prime Minister spoke very harshly. We were friends. How did we come to this situation?” Jacob Isaacson, an official of the American Jewish Committee, was also unhappy with the Turkish reaction. “Once you start poisoning the well, you do not know where it leads,” he said. Moreover, an unnamed American-Jewish leader was quoted as saying: “This time, we are going to face great difficulty. In the past, we defended the Turkish position, not only because Turkey was right, but also because we were friends.” Yet another American-Jewish official, washing his hands from further involvement in Turkey’s lobbying efforts on the Armenian Genocide, told Milliyet: “Count us completely out of this problem. We don’t believe Congress should deal with it. Let Armenia and Turkey resolve it between them.”
In another indication of diminishing support for Turkey among Jewish circles, Prof. Benjamin Yafet advised this writer that he had “very reliable information that all major American Jewish organizations are now fed up with Turkey and are ready to support the Armenian Genocide resolution.”
It appears that this time around Israel and American-Jewish organizations will not be as forgiving as they have been in the past, in the face of persistent and vicious anti-Semitic attacks emanating from Turkey. After the loss of lobbying support from American-Jews, Pres. Obama’s election, and Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress, Turkey is expected to have great difficulty in the coming months to block a renewed attempt to pass a congressional resolution on the Armenian Genocide. Faruk Logoglu, Turkey’s former Ambassador to Washington, should know! He told Milliyet: “The Jewish lobby is the strongest in the United States and the only one supporting Turkey. Therefore, the letter of disappointment sent to Erdogan [by 5 Jewish groups] is of great importance.”
To listen to this writer’s hour-long interview with radio KZSU Stanford on this subject, please go to: .< >< >< >< ><–>