01/13/11

* A newsletter-publisher said to have ties with the Obama administration has called on Washington to end its strategic alliance with Israel George Friedman, publisher of Stratfor, has published a book that called on the Obama administration to reorder U.S. foreign policy.

* Turkey PM: Netanyahu has worst government in history of Israel Turkish Prime Minister Tayyep Recep Erdogan on Thursday decried Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government as the “worst” in the history of Israel.

* Clinton says Mideast faces disaster without reform US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Thursday delivered a stark warning to Arab leaders that they will face growing unrest.

* Lebanon crisis raises risk of conflict on EU’s southern fringe The threat of a fresh and potentially contagious Middle East conflict has sharply increased after the collapse of the Lebanese government.

* Hamas deploys forces near Israel-Gaza border to enforce truce The Gaza Strip’s ruling Hamas movement has ordered its security commanders to enforce a cease-fire with Israel.

* Biden and Maliki say they are still committed to troop withdrawal by end of year Vice President Biden and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki on Thursday reiterated their commitment to the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Iraq by the end of this year.

* NY: Jewish, Christian Leaders Against 41% Abortion Rate Rabbi David Zwiebel and other NYC religious leaders call for new efforts to reduce the city’s abortions.

* Joschka Fischer: United States of Europe is the only way to preserve EU influence. At a large gathering on Wednesday evening (12 January) in the European Parliament, members of the Spinelli Group, a new network of prominent euro-federalists, called for an acceleration of European integration.

* Israel needs to be concerned Hizbullah’s decision to topple the Lebanese government was exactly what OC Northern Command Maj.-Gen. Gadi Eizenkot expected would happen.

* Netanyahu: Iran Has Been Unmasked Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu conducted on Tuesday his annual meeting with the international press.

01/12/11

* Hezbollah ministers quit over Hariri probe, toppling Lebanon government Eleven Lebanese government ministers, 10 of them from Hezbollah and its allies, announced their resignation.

* Egypt to Hamas: Stop Gaza rockets or face new Israel war Egypt has told Hamas that Israel might launch a Gaza war to curb rocket attacks.

* Netanyahu: WikiLeaks showed three top issues in Mideast are Iran, Iran, Iran Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told foreign journalists Tuesday that the American diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks showed that Iran and its nuclear program were the primary concern for leaders in the Middle East.

* Netanyahu: Only ‘credible’ military threat led by U.S. can stop nuclear Iran Only the convincing threat of military action headed by the United States will persuade Iran to drop plans to build an atomic bomb.

* Outrageous assassination elevates Pakistan to the Numero Uno crisis A Washington mesmerized by entering a new domestic political era may not recognize it, but Pakistan should now be the major — certainly foreign — preoccupation for policymakers.

* Ministers clash over event at pilgrim site A historical ceremony is planned next week to officially reopen the Qasr al-Yahud ritual baptism site on the Jordan River.

* ‘Greater’ Hungary heading for fresh EU controversy with ‘history carpet’ The Hungarian EU presidency is steering into a fresh controversy with the installation of a ‘history carpet’ featuring a map of ‘Greater Hungary’.

* Huckabee Leads in First GOP State Nominations for President Solidly pro-Israel Mike Huckabee leads the polls for the Iowa caucus nomination .

* Barak: Israel closely monitoring Lebanon situation The fall of Lebanon’s national unity government following the resignation of Hezbollah ministers and their allies has raised concerns in Israel.

* More e. Jerusalem Palestinians seeking citizenship Palestinian residents of east Jerusalem are increasingly lining up to request Israeli citizenship.

01/11/11

* Amano: ‘Know too little about Teheran’s nuclear activities’ Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Yukiya Amano said that “we still know too little about Teheran’s nuclear activities.”

* Pope Benedict Urges Pakistan to Repeal Blasphemy Law In a forceful appeal for religious freedom, Pope Benedict XVI urged Pakistan on Monday to repeal contentious blasphemy laws.

* Israel reconsiders deployment of rocket protection system near Gaza border In light of harsh criticism from the Israeli public, Israel’s defense establishment has announced that it may reconsider its policy regarding the Iron Dome missile defense system.

* U.S. sees North Korea becoming direct threat, eyes ICBMs North Korea is becoming a direct threat to the United States and could develop an inter-continental ballistic missile within five years.

* China conducts first test-flight of stealth plane The confirmation came after images of the 15-minute flight in Chengdu appeared on several Chinese websites.

* Hubble telescope zeroes in on green blob in space The Hubble Space Telescope got its first peek at a mysterious giant green blob in outer space and found that it’s strangely alive.

* Israeli recruitment plans for ultra-Orthodox called ‘significant revolution’ Israel’s military is targeting the huge ultra-Orthodox Jewish community for recruitment.

* Biden Assures Karzai of U.S. Presence Beyond 2014 Visiting Vice President Joseph R. Biden met with Afghan President Hamid Karzai here Tuesday and promised a lasting American commitment to the country well beyond 2014.

* Soccer and Foul Language on the Temple Mount A new video which was recently posted to YouTube depicts Arabs playing soccer on the Temple Mount.

* Al-Qaeda to target royal wedding? Al-Qaeda intends to carry out a massive terrorist attack during Prince William and Kate Middleton’s wedding.

01/10/11

* “Travel Palestine” ad is a step back to rejectionsim Board of Deputies of British Jews responds to text in “National Geographic” ad which seems to blot out Israel’s existence.

* Palestinians to seek UN recognition for independent state in September Move part of Palestinians’ “Plan B” of pursuing alternative to a negotiated peace deal while talks with Israel remain stalled.

* Israel Shocked, Insulted as EU Calls Jerusalem a Settlement Israel is shocked by international criticism of the demolition of a Jewish-owned property in Jerusalem.

* EU envoys: Treat East Jerusalem as Palestinian capital EU envoys in the Middle East are urging Brussels to treat East Jerusalem as the future capital of a Palestinian state.

* Robert Gates in China: Beijing seeks to ease US fears China’s defence minister has sought to play down the country’s military build-up, after talks with US counterpart Robert Gates in Beijing.

* Hamas Leader Joins Ahmadinejad, Calls Holocaust a Lie A senior Hamas leader has followed in the footsteps of his organization’s Iranian benefactor and calls the Holocaust a lie.

* Egyptians chafe under Mubarak’s protracted tenure Arab leader on shakey grounds following church terror attack, endures much speculation about upcoming elections

* Greece blasts EU hypocrisy for opposing Turkey wall plans Athens has slammed the “hypocrisy” of unspecified EU member states criticising its plans to erect a wall at the border with Turkey, while at the same time denouncing its incapacity to stem irregular migration.

* Pope decries attacks against religious minorities In his annual “State of the World” address to the Vatican diplomatic corps, Pope Benedict XVI spoke Monday about religious intolerance and discrimination toward Christian minorities around the world.

* Netanyahu defends settlement after U.S. criticism Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying Jews have a right to live anywhere in Jerusalem, defended a settlement project that drew criticism from U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

01/08/11

* Iraq Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr urges Iraqis to unite Anti-US Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr has told an enthusiastic crowd of followers in Iraq to give the country’s new government a chance.

* ‘US failed to convince Israel to halt settlement building’ Palestinian Authority UN observer says Palestinians are seeking UN resolution demanding Israel immediately stop all settlement activities.

* Help wanted: Real leader to end the death spiral of once-promising Pakistan Pakistan is a difficult country to run. Since its creation, the revolving door of civilian governance and active military rule has paralyzed the country’s growth.

* Obama Eyeing Internet ID for Americans President Obama is planning to hand the U.S. Commerce Department authority over a forthcoming cybersecurity effort to create an Internet ID for Americans.

* Iran claims nuclear technology breakthrough Iran’s nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi says his country is now capable of making the fuel plates and rods used inside nuclear reactors.

* Clinton set to depart for Gulf ahead of Iran talks US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is set to depart for the Gulf Saturday with discussions about Iran sanctions high on the agenda.

* Chile announces recognition of Palestinian statehood After a day of conflicting reports, Chile joined a growing number of Latin American nations on Friday night officially recognizing Palestinian statehood.

* Hungary to change media law if EU deems necessary The Hungarian government has said it is willing to change a controversial new media law.

* Gates Packs Familiar List of Issues for Beijing In late 2007, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates flew to Beijing bearing pledges of harmony and vows.

* EGYPT: Some Copts and Muslims come together during Orthodox Christmas Christian Orthodox Christmas has long been a nettlesome holiday for Egypt’s Muslims.

01/07/10

* Analysis: No strike at Iran as Pardo takes Mossad baton Military attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would be counterproductive and would exact an enormous diplomatic, economic and military price.

* EU’s Ashton calls for Quartet talks The EU foreign policy chief called on Thursday for the Quartet of Middle East mediators to meet early next month to help Israel and the Palestinians overcome the deadlock in peace talks.

* US defense visit will renew ties with rising China As America’s top defense official visits China next week, its growing military capabilities are redrawing the security landscape in Asia.

* Hitler exhibition in Berlin extended due to throngs of visitors Over 915,000 visitors viewed exhibit in 2010, with 28% from Berlin, just under 40% from the rest of Germany and some 32% from abroad.

* Ashton: EU will not check Iran’s nuclear sites The European Union will reject Iran’s offer to tour its nuclear site.

* Chilean Jews: Gov’t has not recognized Palestinian state Chile has not recognized a Palestinian state contrary to recent reports on the Web.

* Security and Defense: Can Damascus be swayed? When Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi hangs up his uniform next month and vacates his office in the Kirya military headquarters.

* U.S. denies Turkey’s request for combat UAVs The United States has banned a range of advanced weapons for export to Turkey.

* ‘The Best Youth’: 300 Start IAF Pilots Course The Air Force welcomed this week its largest group of pilot course cadets in five years.

* PA seeks UN vote next week on resolution condemning West Bank settlements The Palestinians are hoping for a vote next week on a UN resolution demanding that Israel stop all settlement activities immediately.

01/06/10

* Is Mossad Systematically Killing Iranian Nuclear Scientists? Iran’s state-run Fars News Agency (FNA) is accusing Israel’s international intelligence agency of killing the country’s nuclear scientists.

* China stealth plane still ‘years away’, says Pentagon The US is downplaying pictures which appear to show a working prototype of a Chinese stealth aircraft, invisible to radar.

* US to send 1,400 additional marines to Afghanistan The US is to send an additional 1,400 marines to southern Afghanistan in an effort to counter a Taliban offensive, a Pentagon official has said.

* Ashton meets Abbas, Fayyad; urges return to talks EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salaam Fayyad separately.

* Egypt on alert as Copts gather for Christmas Eve Coptic Christians are preparing to celebrate Christmas Eve amid tight security after a bomb attack on a church in Egypt in which 23 died.

* Arab states work to finalize anti-settlement draft A group of Arab states launched negotiations on a resolution against Israeli building in West Bank settlements.

* Mindsets and geography: China changes the map half a world away In 1938, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, after agreeing to dismember Czechoslovakia to appease Hitler, described it as “a quarrel in a far-away country between people of whom we know nothing.”

* Netanyahu to tell Mubarak: We won’t let Hamas and Hezbollah disturb the quiet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Sharm el-Sheikh on Thursday as part of an effort to revive stalled Middle East peace talks.

* Hamas, Winner of PA Elections, Teaches: Destroy Israel A Hamas member of the PA parliament visited and emphasized his organization’s commitment to liberate all of Palestine.

* Ivory Coast: Deadly ethnic clashes in Duekoue At least 14 people have died in ethnic clashes in Ivory Coast between groups that support opposing sides in the crisis over the disputed election.

01/05/10

* Blair: Serious trouble if no talks soon The Quartet Special Envoy to the Middle East Tony Blair said Tuesday on CNN that Israel and the Palestinians will be in serious trouble if they don’t begin talks in the near future.

* PM, Blair meet as peace process returns to int’l agenda The EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, meanwhile, is expected to arrive on Wednesday for meetings in Jerusalem with Israeli leaders.

* ‘Feminism’ in Gaza: Women Train as Suicide Bombers “Terrorist feminists” in Hamas-controlled Gaza are training to be suicide bombers and to shoot machine guns to kill Israelis.

* Hearings on the ‘radicalization of the American Muslim community’? Not ‘blather’ but ‘sensible’ As a result of the November elections, in which Republicans won control of the House of Representatives, Congressman Peter King is the new Chairman of the Homeland Security Committee.

* Muslim School in Jerusalem Teaches Children to Seek Death The Palestinian Media Watch organization, which monitors PA media, often finds cases of incitement to terrorism and hatred of Israel, including incitement targeting young children.

* EU pushes Mideast talks, says ‘no alternative’ to negotiated deal Progress in Middle East peace talks is urgently needed because there is “no alternative” to a negotiated deal.

* World Bank issues its 1st yuan bonds in Hong Kong The World Bank is issuing its first bonds denominated in China’s yuan in Hong Kong.

* Anti-US cleric Muqtada al-Sadr returns to Iraq Iraqi officials say anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr has returned to Iraq after a nearly three-year absence.

* UN Nixes Lebanese Attempt to Stop Israeli Offshore Drilling The United Nations has rejected an attempt by Lebanon to stop Israel from drilling for oil and natural gas in the Mediterranean.

* Egypt Church Bombing Fuels Sectarian Rift It was a tragic year for Egypt’s minority Coptic Christian community that began with a drive-by shooting at a church in southern Egypt, and ended in deadly clashes near Cairo after authorities halted construction of a church.

A Triage to Save the Ruins of Babylon

By: Steven Lee Myers – The New York Times

The damage done to the ruins of ancient Babylon is visible from a small hilltop near the Tower of Babel, whose biblical importance is hard to envision from what is left of it today.

Across the horizon are guard towers, concertina wire and dirt-filled barriers among the palm trees; encroaching farms and concrete houses from this village and others; and the enormous palace that Saddam Hussein built in the 1980s atop the city where Nebuchadnezzar II ruled.

Something else is visible, too: earthen mounds concealing all that has yet to be discovered in a city that the prophet Jeremiah called “a gold cup in the Lord’s hands, a cup that made the whole earth drunk.”

On the hillside during one of his many visits to the ruins, Jeff Allen, a conservationist working with the World Monuments Fund, said: “All this is unexcavated. There is great potential at this site. You could excavate the street plan of the entire city.”

That is certainly years away given the realities of today’s Iraq. But for the first time since the American invasion in 2003, after years of neglect and violence, archaeologists and preservationists have once again begun working to protect and even restore parts of Babylon and other ancient ruins of Mesopotamia. And there are new sites being excavated for the first time, mostly in secret to avoid attracting the attention of looters, who remain a scourge here.

The World Monuments Fund, working with Iraq’s State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, has drafted a conservation plan to combat any further deterioration of Babylon’s mud-brick ruins and reverse some of the effects of time and Mr. Hussein’s propagandistic and archaeologically specious re-creations.

In November, the State Department announced a new $2 million grant to begin work to preserve the site’s most impressive surviving ruins. They include the foundation of the Ishtar Gate, built in the sixth century B.C. by Nebuchadnezzar’s father, Nabopolassar, and adorned with brick reliefs of the Babylonian gods Marduk and Adad. (The famous blue-glazed gate that Nebuchadnezzar commissioned was excavated in the early 20th century and rebuilt in the Pergamon Museum in Berlin.)

The objective is to prepare the site and other ruins — from Ur in the south to Nimrud in the north — for what officials hope will someday be a flood of scientists, scholars and tourists that could contribute to Iraq’s economic revival almost as much as oil.

The Babylon project is Iraq’s biggest and most ambitious by far, a reflection of the ancient city’s fame and its resonance in Iraq’s modern political and cultural heritage.

“This is one of the great projects we have, and it is the first,” Qais Hussein Rashid, the director of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, said in an interview in Baghdad. “We want to have it as a model for all the other sites.”

The task at hand is daunting, though, and the threats to the site abundant. In the case of some of the Hussein-era reconstructions, they are irreversible. The American invasion and the carnage that followed brought archaeological and preservation work to a halt across the country, leaving ruins to wither or, in the case of looting, much worse.

The American military turned Babylon into a base. It was later occupied by Polish troops and, though it was returned to the control of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage in 2004, the detritus of a military presence still scars the site.

The World Monuments Fund has been carrying out what amounts to archaeological triage since it began its conservation plan in 2009. It has created computer scans to provide precise records of the damage to the ruins and identified the most pernicious threats, starting with erosion caused by salty groundwater. “What we’ve got to do is create a stable environment,” Mr. Allen said at the site in November. “Right now it’s on the fast road to falling apart.”

The wicking of groundwater into mud bricks, compounded by a modern concrete walkway and the excavations conducted by the German archaeologist Robert Koldewey more than a century ago, have already eaten away some of the 2,500-year-old brick reliefs at the Ishtar Gate’s base.

“They took care of Ishtar Gate only from the inside, because you had visiting leaders and dignitaries who would come,” said Mahmoud Bendakir, an architect who is working with the fund, referring to the site’s caretakers during the Hussein era. “The outside is a disaster.”

The grant from the United States will pay for repairs to channel the water away from the gate’s foundation, which stands several yards beneath the surrounding area. Similar repairs are planned for two of Babylon’s temples, Ninmakh and Nabu-sha-Khare, the most complete sets of ruins, though they too suffer from erosion and harmful restorations with modern bricks.

“It’s difficult to say which is doing more,” Mr. Allen said, “but the two together are nearly toxic for the preservation of monuments.”

The American reconstruction team has refurbished a modern museum on the site, as well as a model of the Ishtar Gate that for decades served as a visitors’ entrance. Inside the museum is one of the site’s most valuable relics: a glazed brick relief of a lion, one of 120 that once lined the processional way into the city.

The museum, with three galleries, is scheduled to open this month, receiving its first visitors since 2003. And with new security installed, talks are under way to return ancient Babylonian artifacts from the National Museum in Baghdad.

The fate of Babylon is already being disputed by Iraqi leaders, with antiquities officials clashing with local authorities over when to open it to visitors and how to exploit the site for tourism that, for the most part, remains a goal more than a reality. Even now they are clashing over whether the admission fee should go to the antiquities board or the provincial government.

Another of the more dire threats to the site has been unchecked development inside the boundaries of the old city walls, enclosing nearly three square miles. The fund’s project has plotted the old walls on a map, causing trepidation among Iraqis who live along them now.

They fear the preservation of Babylon’s ruins will force them from their homes and farmlands, as when Mr. Hussein expelled residents of a local village to build his palace. “They took them from their lands,” said Minshed al-Mamuri, who runs a civic organization for widows and orphans here. “It’s psychological for them.”

Mr. Allen, who oversees the fund’s work, said the preservation of Babylon would require collaboration among competing constituencies that is extremely rare amid Iraq’s political instability.

“We’re looking at not just archaeology,” he said of the project. “We’re looking at the economic opportunities and viability for local people. They need to see something out of this site. That’s possible, and possible at the same time to preserve the integrity of the site.”

Please note: These stories are located outside of Prophecy Today’s website. Prophecy Today is not responsible for their content and does not necessarily agree with the views expressed therein. These articles are provided for your information.

01/04/11

* Tower of Babel’s Ruins Waiting for Archaeologists Archaeologists are hoping to save the ruins of the Biblical era Tower of Babel, located in Iraq.

* A Triage to Save the Ruins of Babylon The damage done to the ruins of ancient Babylon is visible from a small hilltop near the Tower of Babel.

* Iran invites foreign diplomats to nuclear sites Iran has invited foreign diplomats to tour its nuclear facilities, ahead of fresh talks with key world powers over its controversial nuclear program.

* China’s strategic game plan in the Persian Gulf Realpolitik is now a more important guide to Chinese political thinking than revolutionary ardor.

* Al Qaida tied to bombing of church in Egypt Al Qaida is believed to have conducted a mass-casualty strike in Egypt.

* UK: Number of Muslim converts doubled in 10 years The number of Britons choosing to become Muslims has nearly doubled in the past decade.

* Egypt’s pope: State must address Copts woes In rare criticism, the head of Egypt’s Coptic Orthodox Church has called on the government to address Christian grievances about discrimination.

* Guard kills governor of Pakistan’s Punjab province The governor of Pakistan’s central Punjab province, a senior member of the ruling party, was shot dead by one of his bodyguards in Islamabad on Tuesday.

* Islamists ‘build their scapegoat’ for church bombing The New Year’s Eve suicide bombing at an Egyptian Coptic church that killed 21 people is stoking fears of a new onslaught against Christians by radical Islamists.

* Indirect Talks with Syria to Trade ‘Apples for Water’ Israel and Syria are involved in indirect talks for a novel proposal to export Israeli apples in return for Syrian water.