04/09/09

* Ahmadinejad downplays Israel’s threats on Iran Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Thursday downplayed the Israeli threat to launch a military attack on Iran.

* Hamas Seeks Advanced Weapons through New Tunnels Defense officials have warned that Hamas is building large weapons smuggling tunnels for the smuggling of advanced missiles that could reach Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

* Four Cups of Blood? Hamas ‘Celebrates’ Passover with Libel Hamas actors, several days before the Passover holiday, performed in Gaza its version of an old blood libel against Jews.

* Iran set to unveil nuclear latest Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is expected to announce advances in his country’s nuclear programme in a speech to mark national nuclear day.

* ‘US, Russia mustn’t compete for allies’ Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday that the United States and Russia should not force former Soviet republics to choose between an alliance with Washington and Moscow.

* Pirate stand-off over US hostage Negotiations are continuing for the release of an American captain held by Somali pirates in a lifeboat in the Indian Ocean off the Horn of Africa.

* U.S. to join nuclear talks with Iran, State Department says In a dramatic break from previous policy, the United States will join direct talks between U.N. and European powers and Iran over Tehran’s nuclear program.

* Shia crowds decry US role in Iraq Tens of thousands of supporters of Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr have rallied against the US presence in Iraq, six years after Saddam Hussein’s fall.

* Obama to host Seder Thursday night US President Barack Obama will celebrate Passover Thursday night with staff and friends in what is believed to be the first White House seder attended by an American president.

* Italy extends quake rescue effort The Italian government has extended the duration of its search for survivors of Monday’s earthquake in the Abruzzo region as far as Sunday.

04/08/09

* IDF Tightens Security for Passover, Warning to Sinai Tourists Security officials have issued a severe warning of a terrorist attack in the Sinai Peninsula, a favorite tourist attraction for many Israelis.

* Obama team readying for confrontation with Netanyahu In an unprecedented move, the Obama administration is readying for a possible confrontation with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

* Kremlin to supply PA with new weapons Moscow has promised to supply the Palestinian Authority security forces in the West Bank with new weapons, including two helicopters.

* ‘Golan border only plausible defense for Israel’ Security arrangements for an Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights considered by prime ministers Binyamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak in the late 1990s would not provide Israel with sufficient security.

* Thousands attend special ‘sun’ prayer Over 50,000 people took part in the Birkat Hahama prayers at Jerusalem’s Western Wall on Wednesday morning.

* Blair questions Papal gay policy Tony Blair has questioned the Pope’s attitude towards homosexuality, arguing that religious leaders must start “rethinking” the issue.

* N Korea celebrates rocket launch Tens of thousands of North Koreans have rallied in Pyongyang to celebrate what the official media say was a successful satellite launch over the weekend.

* Iran poses no threat to US: Russia Iran poses no threat to the United States, Russia said Tuesday, rebuffing a key argument of President Barack Obama on whether to go ahead with a European missile shield.

* Electricity Grid in U.S. Penetrated By Spies Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system.

* Chavez in China Touts ‘New World Order’ Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez says his two-day visit to Beijing this week is part of the creation of a “new world order.”

04/07/09

* Obama on unannounced Iraq visit US President Barack Obama has arrived in Iraq on an unannounced visit.

* Obama’s Turkey address draws praise across Middle East Syria’s foreign minister praised President Barack Obama’s address to the Arab and Islamic world in Turkey, and many Arabs were cheered by the American leader’s promises to push for a Palestinian state.

* Mubarak invites Netanyahu for talks Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has invited Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu for a meeting in Sharm e-Sheikh in the near future.

* Death toll rises in Italy quake At least 207 people have been killed by Monday’s earthquake in central Italy, with 100 residents critically injured.

* The G20 moves the world a step closer to a global currency A single clause in Point 19 of the communiqué issued by the G20 leaders amounts to revolution in the global financial order.

* Most Israelis say economy top priority For a clear majority of the Israeli public, the economic crisis is the most important issue facing the new government according to the March 2009 Peace Index poll.

* Piracy ‘surge’ off Somali coast Pirates off the coast of Somalia have gone on the offensive, seizing five ships in 48 hours despite the presence of an international naval task force patrolling the Gulf of Aden.

* Israel successfully tests Arrow 2 The Arrow 2 ballistic missile defense system was successfully tested in southern Israel Tuesday morning, when it destroyed a missile simulating an Iranian Shihab 3.

* Obama Speaks to Muslims From Turkey For the past two days, eyes and ears in the Middle East have been fixed on U.S. President Barack Obama’s visit to Turkey .

* PA steps up measures against Hamas The Palestinian Authority security forces have stepped up their measures against Hamas in the West Bank in the aftermath of the collapse of the “reconciliation” talks between the Islamic movement and Fatah.

04/06/09

* Obama reaches out to Muslim world Barack Obama has declared that the US “is not at war with Islam”, in a major speech during his first visit as president to a mainly Muslim country.

* Israel doesn’t take orders from Obama “Israel does not take orders from Obama,” Environmental Protection Minister Gilad Erdan said.

* Abdullah: Israel holding Mideast hostage Jordan’s King Abdullah II said that an Arab peace initiative offers a solution for peace in the Middle East, adding that Israel should seize the opportunity or risk ongoing conflict in the region.

* Blair steps up fight to be crowned first President of EU Brown gives grudging blessing to his old rival’s return to new job at centre of the global stage

* Italy hunts for quake survivors A desperate search for survivors is on in the mountain city of L’Aquila in central Italy after a quake killed at least 91 people and injured 1,500.

* Putin says Russia can beat crisis This year will be “very difficult” for the Russian economy, but the country will come out of the downturn, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has said.

* Iran defends North Korea rocket launch Iran defended North Korea’s rocket launch, saying Monday that every nation has the right to the peaceful use of space technology.

* Western Wall Gets a Repair Job Israeli archeologists are inspecting each exposed stone of the Western Wall as part of conservation efforts to preserve the nearly 2,000-year-old retaining wall of the Temple Mount.

* EU-US summit exposes divisions over Turkey France and Germany in Prague poured cold water on US calls to press ahead with Turkish enlargement.

04/04/09

* Extra Nato troops for Afghan poll Nato has agreed to boost troop numbers to cover the Afghan presidential election in August.

* Netanyahu urged to back 2-state solution As world leaders wrapped up on Friday an economic summit in London aimed at tackling the global financial crisis, a number of them took the opportunity to touch on another contentious issue.

* G-20 to give $1 trillion to IMF, World Bank G-20 leaders pledged an additional $1 trillion to restore credit, growth and jobs in the world economy.

* North Korea: ‘Satellite will be launched soon’ North Korea has completed preparations for launching what it says is “an experimental communications satellite.”

* Obama Bows to Saudi King, Supports Saudi Initiative United -States President Barack Obama was caught on camera by journalists on Wednesday bowing in deference to Saudi King Abdullah.

* Clock ticks for Iran despite Obama’s offer of talks US to push for new UN sanctions against Tehran later this year if effort to improve relations fails to stop Islamic republic from pursuing its nuclear program.

* Danish PM to be new head of Nato Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the Danish prime minister, has been chosen to be the next secretary-general of Nato.

* Russia to unveil spaceship plans The Russian space agency is expected to unveil development plans for a next-generation manned spacecraft on Monday.

* US envoy: Darfur on brink of deepening crisis The U.S. envoy to Sudan says Darfur is on the brink of a deepening crisis.

* Turkey: Thousands demonstrate against US, NATO Several thousand leftists staged anti-U.S. and anti-NATO protests in Turkey on Saturday, with shouts of “Yankee Go Home!” the day before President Barack Obama’s visit.

04/03/09

* Obama backs Saudi peace initiative US President Barack Obama reiterated his support for the Saudi Mideast peace initiative in a meeting with King Abdullah on Thursday night.

* G20 radically strengthens IMF in ‘new era’ World leaders mixed hubris and humility on Thursday evening (2 April) as they sought to highlight the achievements of the G20 meeting of industrial nations.

* S. Korea Prepares For ‘Almost Certain’ Rocket Launch by North The final hours may be ticking away to a long-range rocket launch by North Korea.

* NATO summit kicks off amid protests European, US and Canadian leaders were set to meet on Friday for the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation’s 60th anniversary summit in Strasbourg.

* US says will push hard for Palestinian statehood The United States will push hard for Palestinian statehood despite a new rightist government in Israel but anticipates a rough road ahead.

* Wobbly Czech presidency prepares for EU-US summit US President Barack Obama’s European peregrination will see him stop in Prague this weekend to talk with EU leaders on Afghanistan and climate change.

* Obama: Europe faces greater terror threat than U.S. Europe is more vulnerable to terrorist attack than the United States, U.S. President Barack Obama said Friday as he arrived in France for a two-day NATO Summit.

* Support for Two States Waning A poll conducted recently among Palestinian Authority Arabs showed that support for a “two state solution” is waning.

* Lower Oil Price May Test Iraqi Sunni Loyalty A drop in the price of oil is not alway good news.

* US Affairs: Unsettling buzz The Obama administration has been taking advantage of the unusually long Israeli political interlude to bat away questions about how it will deal with a Binyamin Netanyahu-led coalition.

04/02/09

* G20 leaders seal $1.1tn global deal Leaders of the world’s largest economies will shortly announce an agreement worth around $1.1 trillion to tackle the global financial crisis.

* ‘Through war or peace we’ll free Golan’ Despite indications that indirect talks between Syria and Israel are soon to be back on track, Syrian President Bashar Assad struck a militant tone on Thursday.

* Medvedev-Obama meeting a win for Russia President Dmitry Medvedev’s first meeting with Barack Obama brought Russia a shot of prestige.

* US general: Israel might choose strike Iran General David Petraeus, the top US commander in the Middle East, said that Israel might feel threatened by Iran and take military action against it.

* PA: Death penalty for those who sell land to Jews The Palestinian Authority has issued yet another warning to Palestinians against selling their homes or properties to Jews.

* Doctors to probe claims Arafat poisoned Nearly five years after former Palestinian Authority president Yasser Arafat died by what French doctors called a massive brain hemorrhage, Arab doctors will meet in Jordan to probe rumors Arafat was poisoned.

* UN Chief Calls Netanyahu to Establish Palestinian State UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed Israel’s newly sworn-in Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu upon his forming his coalition government.

* IAEA chief applauds Russia-US nuke pact The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency is “greatly encouraged” by Russian-US commitments to reduce nuclear arsenals.

* World markets rise as G20 meets World stock markets gained ground on Thursday as G20 leaders met in London to discuss possible solutions to the global economic crisis.

* North Korea fueling rocket for impending launch North Korea has begun fueling a long-range rocket for an impending launch, a news report said Thursday.

04/01/09

* Blair: Mideast peace process in jeopardy Middle East envoy Tony Blair said Wednesday the peace process was in jeopardy and Israel must fully support the goal of living in peace next to an independent Palestinian state.

* Abbas: Bibi doesn’t believe in peace Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu “is not interested in halting building in the settlements.”

* PM: We may be forced to attack Iran The primary imperative for the United States and President Barack Obama is to put an end to Iran’s nuclear race.

* Arab summit in Qatar – a demonstration of weakness The yearly gathering of Arab leaders which took place this week in Doha was supposed to be a summit of reconciliation.

* Lieberman: ‘Only one document obligates us, it’s not Annapolis’ New Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman entered his office with a bang on Wednesday afternoon.

* Iran denies US claims of meeting Iran has denied that a meeting took place between their main representative at an international conference on Afghanistan and a senior US official.

* G20 must produce the goods, says EU Prominent figures within the European Union have upped the ante with increasingly tough rhetoric.

* Seeking New Start, U.S. and Russia Press Arms Talks President Obama and Russian President Dmitri A. Medvedev outlined their plans on Wednesday to push the reset button in Russian-American relations.

* Chavez calls Israeli govt ‘genocidal’ Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez slamemd the Israeli government as “genocidal” on Wednesday in an interview on Al-Jazeera television in Doha.

* ‘Iran must seize diplomacy opportunity’ Iran must restore confidence in the “exclusively peaceful nature,” of its nuclear program.

Obama’s Atomic Options

By: Robert Maginnis – Human Events


Soon North Korea will have nuclear-armed ballistic missiles with which to threaten its neighbors and the United States. President Obama must either accept the pariah state as an atomic power or stop that regime before it fully develops its nuclear arsenal.

Still lacking is a long-range ballistic missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead as far as America. Later this week, North Korea is expected to test such a missile.

North Korea has announced it will attempt to put a communications satellite into orbit between April 4 and 8. That effort is widely viewed as a thinly veiled pretext for testing its intercontinental ballistic missile, the Taepodong-2. Dennis Blair, the U.S. Director of National Intelligence, told a Senate committee the three-stage Taepodong-2 has the potential to strike the continental U.S.

Another challenge for Pyongyang is the mating of an atomic warhead to a missile. Recently, however, Lt. Gen. Michael Maples, director of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, testified North Korea “…may be able to successfully mate a nuclear warhead to a ballistic missile.”

The last critical component is an effective atomic warhead. In 2006, North Korea exploded a small nuclear device and now claims it has “weaponized” enough of its plutonium stockpile to build four or five bombs. Theodore Postol, a professor of science, technology and national defense policy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, believes the North Koreans already have a small nuclear warhead that could be mounted on a medium range No-dong missile that would make a nuclear strike on Tokyo possible.

These atomic arsenal components — atomic weapons, the know-how to mate a warhead to a missile and a nuclear capable ballistic missile — constitute a serious warning for the U.S. and its Northeast Asian allies.

President Obama has three options to address North Korea’s atomic ambitions.

First, Obama could accept Pyongyang as an atomic power and deal with the potentially dire consequences.

There is, of course, the possibility that North Korea will change its behavior and become a responsible nation state. But that’s wishful thinking at best. It’s far more likely Pyongyang will continue its old ways of intimidation reinforced with deliverable nukes.

An almost certain consequence is a Northeast Asian arms race. There will be irresistible pressure for non-nuclear neighbors — Japan and South Korea — to acquire atomic weapons. China, which already has a large nuclear program, will likely grow its arsenal to off-set the rising threat from Asian rival Japan.

Most worrisome is the likelihood Pyongyang will add nuclear weapons to its catalog of items for sale to the developing world. It is already the biggest supplier of missiles to the third world, and recent activities suggest it has been a source for nuclear technologies.

In 2007, Israeli fighters destroyed a plutonium reactor reportedly built by North Korea in Syria’s eastern desert. There could be other North Korean-built reactors in the Middle East or elsewhere.

Obama’s second option could be to use diplomacy and the threat of sanctions. Candidate Obama advocated “…direct and aggressive diplomacy with North Korea that can yield results, while not ceding our leverage in negotiations unless it is clear that North Korea is living up to its obligations.”

Since the Clinton administration, North Korea has used the threat of nuclear-weapons development to extract concessions — food, fuel and security guarantees — from the U.S. and its Asian partners. A successful Taepodong-2 test would present a new danger — a nuclear tipped rocket that can reach the U.S.

Will “direct and aggressive diplomacy” stop Pyongyang’s atomic program? “Most of the world understands the game they [the North Koreans] are playing,” director Blair testified. “I think they’re risking international opprobrium [disgrace] and hopefully worse if they successfully launch it.”

Blair’s remarks suggest that efforts to restart talks which collapsed in December 2008 and were aimed at convincing North Korea to abandon its atomic weapons program may be fruitless. But not everyone in the Obama administration agrees.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton apparently hasn’t given up on diplomacy and sanctions. She warned “[t]here will be consequences” if North Korea goes forward with the launch. ”They have sought help for fuel and food. It would be difficult to provide those necessities” if the missile is launched.

North Korea labeled any action to punish them with more sanctions a “hostile act,” and Pyongyang cautioned that if its missile is shot down, an idea Clinton rejects, it will “mean a war.”

Apparently, Clinton believes “[t]he leaders of North Korea are not madmen,” an argument made by Cha Du-Hyeogn, a government defense analyst in Seoul. “They want attention, and they want rewards for not using these weapons,” Du-Hyeogn said.

Clinton must be open to this international extortion because she wants to “…get back to the kind of talks that led to the initial steps in their de-nuclearization.” But when she offered to send her special envoy to Pyongyang, “They didn’t want him to come,” Clinton said.

So how does Obama conduct “aggressive diplomacy” with Pyongyang when the communists won’t talk and sanctions don’t work? And how can Obama deal with a regime that insists it won’t give up atomic weapons unless “all other nuclear weapons states” disarm as well?

Obama’s third and only remaining option — if he doesn’t want a nuclear armed North Korea and doubts diplomacy and sanctions can halt Pyongyang’s atomic lust — must be force.

The president could order the interception of Pyongyang’s test missile. The head of the U.S. Pacific Command, Adm. Timothy Keating, said his command will “be ready to respond.”

U.S. and Japanese Aegis-equipped destroyers with Standard Missile-3 interceptors are now in the Sea of Japan. Japan has relocated ground-based Patriot Advanced Capability-3 interceptors to Northern Japan, near the missile’s anticipated flight path. Both anti-missile systems could destroy the North Korean rocket.

It appears, however, that the U.S. systems will not be used. Asked about the possible launch on Fox News Sunday, Defense Secretary Gates said, “I would say we’re not prepared to do anything about it.”

Intercepting the missile — if we’d chosen to do so — could have been just the beginning. The U.S. and its allies should then have been prepared and willing to escalate the use of force based upon North Korea’s response.

In 2007, former Clinton defense secretary William Perry proposed the U.S. should consider military action against North Korea if that nation refuses to end its nuclear weapons program.

“Clearly, this is a dangerous alternative,” Perry testified. “If China and South Korea do not agree to applying coercion, the United States may be forced to take military action which, while it certainly would be successful, could lead to dangerous unintended consequences.”

If Obama follows the diplomacy route with Pyongyang as expected, he must avoid the Bush administration’s mistakes. In June 2008, the North Koreans promised to stop producing plutonium. In exchange, the Bush administration naively took Pyongyang off the State Sponsors of Terrorism list and removed restrictions related to the Trading with the Enemy Act.

Bush’s deal also ignored critical North Korean atomic activities such as its uranium enrichment program and Pyongyang’s proliferation efforts. Bush failed to account for the North’s atomic arsenal as well.

Obama’s duty is to choose the course of action that keeps America safe. In the end, given the three painful options, the use of force to deny Pyongyang atomic weapons may be his best alternative. His propensity to go the diplomatic route despite its history of failure is, I suspect, the path he will take.

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03/31/09

* Netanyahu sworn in as Israeli PM Israel’s parliament has sworn in Benjamin Netanyahu as prime minister and approved the new right-leaning coalition cabinet by 69 votes to 45.

* Nicolas Sarkozy’s threat to walk out of global summit President Sarkozy yesterday threatened to wreck the London summit if France’s demands for tougher financial regulation are not met.

* Russia, China cooperate on new currency proposals: Russia and China are coordinating proposals on a new global currency that could replace the US dollar as a reserve currency to prevent a repeat of the global economic crisis.

* Financial crisis dominates G-20 agenda This week’s London Summit brings together the leaders of the world’s 20 largest economic powers, known as the Group of 20.

* Gadhafi storms out of Arab summit in Qatar Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi stormed out of an Arab summit on Monday after denouncing the Saudi king for his long ties to the West.

* Obama team drops “war on terror” rhetoric U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday the Obama administration had dropped “war on terror” from its lexicon.

* Clinton doesn’t rule out Iran talks at Afghanistan conference Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was coy Monday about whether she would meet Iranian delegates at an international conference on Afghanistan.

* Sudan leader thanks Arab summit for support Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir asked Arab leaders meeting in Qatar on Monday to strongly reject an arrest warrant issued against him by the International Criminal Court for war crimes.

* Abbas to Arab summit: Israel chose settlement instead of peace “Our experience in the aftermath of the Annapolis conference has proven that Israel is still a ways off from abandoning its settlement policy and choosing the path of peace.”

* NATO reaches out to online audience Four days ahead of its 60th anniversary summit in Strasbourg and Kehl, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) has launched a web campaign aimed at raising awareness among young people.