09/24/07

* ‘Chances of war with Syria still high’ The IDF continued to maintain a high level of alert along the northern border on Sunday as senior defense officials told The Jerusalem Post that while close to three weeks have passed since Israel’s alleged air strike in Syria, there is still a chance war could break out.

* ‘IAF strike ruined chances for peace’ The September 6 air strike on a Syrian nuclear facility has destroyed any chances for peace between Syria and Israel, senior Syrian officials said Monday.

* Archeologists find 2nd Temple quarry An ancient quarry where King Herod’s workers chiseled huge high-quality limestones for the construction of the Second Temple, including the Western Wall, has been uncovered in Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority announced Sunday.

* A restless Sarkozy vows to lead Europe into a new era President Nicolas Sarkozy of France strode into the Napoleon III salon of the Elysee Palace and staked his claim to the leadership of Europe.

* Secret US air force team to perfect plan for Iran strike The United States Air Force has set up a highly confidential strategic planning group tasked with “fighting the next war” as tensions rise with Iran.

* Nationalist Camp MKs to Shas, Yisrael Beiteinu: Quit the Gov’t! MKs Tzvi Hendel and Yitzchak Levy, both of the National Union party, call upon the Shas and Yisrael Beiteinu (Israel Our Home) parties to quit the government.

* ‘Rabbis told Jews to shun Evangelicals’ Israeli rabbinic authorities have abruptly called on Jews to shun a major Christian tourism event, baffling and upsetting evangelical groups that traditionally have been big supporters of the Jewish state.

* Quartet announces new peace summit The Quartet of Middle East negotiators has pledged support for another Middle East peace conference, with the US indicating Syria would be one of the “natural invitees”.

* Iranian madman Mahmoud Ahmadinejad walks among us Hatemonger Mahmoud Ahmadinejad landed in a hornet’s nest of outrage yesterday as Columbia University prepared to welcome him with open arms today and stuck by a dean’s outrageous assertion that it would let Adolf Hitler speak, too.

* Abu Mazen: Olmert Agreed to Make Jerusalem Arab Capital The chairman of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), met with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice last week – and told her that Prime Minister Olmert agrees, finally, to turn eastern Jerusalem into the capital of a future state of Palestine.

A restless Sarkozy vows to lead Europe into a new era

By: Elaine Sciolino and Alison Smale – The International Herald Tribune

PARIS: President Nicolas Sarkozy of France strode into the Napoleon III salon of the �lys�e Palace and staked his claim to the leadership of Europe.

He took credit for pushing through a revised treaty for the European Union. He declared that France would return to NATO’s military command if his conditions are met. He announced that the French Navy would help protect food delivery to Somalia. He assailed his fellow Europeans for having no ideas.

“I can’t be criticized for wanting first place for France,” Sarkozy said in an interview with The New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, his first with English-language news organizations since becoming president last May. He added, “If France doesn’t take the lead, who will?”

This projection of French power is like that of General Charles de Gaulle, and every French leader since. But Sarkozy departs from classic Gaullist doctrine by suggesting that the path to that goal sometimes lies in aligning France � and Europe � alongside Washington rather than as a counterpoint to it.

He is, both his critics and admirers agree, a man in a hurry. In the hourlong encounter conducted in French on Friday evening, Sarkozy resisted efforts to be drawn into small talk.

Visibly restless, at times brusque, he greeted his guests with stiff handshakes and unadorned “Bonjours.” Perpetually in motion, he rocked uncomfortably in a green brocade armchair and gripped the backs of the gilt chairs on either side of him. His jaw muscles twitched. His gait was awkward. He cut off his interviewers in mid-sentence.

He stumbled twice on the word “multilateralism,” laughing at himself the second time and turning to his national security adviser, Jean-David Levitte, to finish the word for him.

But there was nothing hesitant about the way Sarkozy, the 52-year-old leader on the French right, laid out his agenda before departing for New York to make his debut at the United Nations General Assembly.

For Sarkozy, the most burning issue is Iran’s nuclear program.

France’s position, he explained, is clear: “No nuclear weapon for Iran, an arsenal of sanctions to convince them, negotiations, discussions, firmness. And I don’t want to hear anything else that would not contribute usefully to the discussion today.”

“For my part, I don’t use the word ‘war,’ ” he said, signaling that he will not tolerate any dissent on the issue.

His words were in sharp contrast to those of his foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, who said in a radio and television interview last Sunday that France was preparing for the “worst” scenario with Iran � “war” � and has spent much of his time since then declaring that he had been misunderstood.

Sarkozy also contradicted his foreign minister a second time, saying that Kouchner’s public offer to visit Iran was a nonstarter. “I don’t think that the conditions for a trip to Tehran are present right now,” he said. “We can talk things over in the halls of the United Nations.”

Asked whether France agreed with the Bush administration that “all options are on the table,” he replied, “The expression ‘all the options are on the table’ is not mine. And I do not make it mine.” He added, “I am not determining my position on the Iranian question based on the position of the United States alone.”

He equally refused to choose between a nuclear-armed Iran and the use of force, saying, “It is exactly what the Iranian leaders want. I am not obliged to fall into this trap.”

Sarkozy has been dropping hints that France wants to return to the military command of NATO more than four decades after de Gaulle abruptly abandoned that wing of the alliance.

In the interview, Sarkozy announced for the first time two conditions that would have to be met beforehand: American acceptance of an independent European military capability and a leading French role in NATO’s command structures “at the highest level.”

Sarkozy’s predecessor, Jacques Chirac, sought to rejoin NATO’s military command, but in 1997 the Clinton administration rejected the conditions set by Paris. Sarkozy also seemed to put the onus not on France but on the United States.

“I would make progress on European defense a condition for moving into the integrated command, and I am asking our American friends to understand that,” he said.

He also made clear that in order to even “consider” returning to the fold, NATO’s “governing bodies” would have to make considerable space for France.

“France can only resume its place if room is made,” he said. “It’s hard to take a place that isn’t reserved for you.”

Sarkozy, a lifelong campaigner and politician, expressed admiration for the American presidential campaign, saying he followed the debates among various candidates during his summer vacation in New England.

“I thought, ‘My God, what a long race!’ ” he said. “What energy you must have to put yourself through something like that! All praise to American democracy!”

He called himself “very proud” that a number of candidates, including former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani of New York City, “quoted my writings.” And he ticked off a number of American political luminaries he has met, including Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican; former Vice President Al Gore, and Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of California, adding that he will again meet Barack Obama, the Illinois Democrat.

“I want to tell the American people that the French people are their friends,” he said. “We are not simply allies. We are friends. I am proud of being a friend of the Americans. You know, I am saying this to The New York Times, but I have said it to the French, which takes a little more courage and is a little more difficult. I have never concealed my admiration for American dynamism, for the fluidity of American society, for its ability to raise people of different identities to the very highest levels.”

Accused of being too enamored of all things American, he put France and the United States on an equal footing and as somehow better than many others, because they believe that their values are universal and therefore destined to “radiate” throughout the world. The Germans, the Spaniards, the Italians, the Chinese, by contrast, do not think that way, he said.

Sarkozy defended his decision to summer in America, and not somewhere in France, saying, “I don’t see why I should have given up going to the United States because a small part of the French elite professes an anti-Americanism that in no way corresponds to what the French people think � in no way at all.”

He listed all the things that appealed to him during his two-week vacation: the countryside, the shopping malls, the restaurants, swimming in the lake, jogging in the woods while his 10-year-old son rode his bike alongside him. “I loved the kindness and simplicity of the people,” Sarkozy said.

Regarding his stay in New York this week, aides to Sarkozy said he did not plan to meet President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, who will also be there to address the General Assembly.

Breaking with traditional French policy, which has long resisted sanctions as a diplomatic weapon, Sarkozy laid out a far-reaching strategy to punish Iran economically � both through United Nations and European sanctions and by exerting pressure on French and other nations’ corporations and banks not to do business there.

Strengthened sanctions, he predicted, “eventually will produce results” in persuading Iran to curb nuclear activities prohibited under Security Council resolutions.

Sarkozy expressed support for the current American-led push in the Security Council for a third sanctions resolution against Iran, but acknowledged that it might not be possible to achieve. Other punitive measures must be pursued, with other countries in Europe, he said, calling such an approach “an international, a multilateral, decision” and as such one that suits him.

Specifically, Sarkozy said France was asking its own companies “to refrain from going to Iran.” France has already recommended to its oil giant Total and its gas firm Gaz de France not to bid for new projects in Iran and urged French banks to stop doing business there.

Turning to the fate of Iraq, Sarkozy made plain that the country must remain intact, and said it would stand a better chance of developing without a foreign military presence. Yet he stated that France itself, which opposed the United States-led invasion in 2003 and has declined to send either police or military trainers there, would offer no initiatives beyond the recent trip to Baghdad by Kouchner.

“France has no mission to go into Iraq,” Sarkozy said.

Sarkozy is known for his no-nonsense approach, but he seemed especially tense on Friday. Aides said that he was having a difficult day and was determined not to stumble on the sensitive subject of Iran. During the presidential campaign, he admitted that he suffers from migraines, but an aide said he was not suffering from pain during the interview.

The brusque demeanor and nonstop movement during the interview vanished during a brief photo session afterward in his office. At one point, he posed for a photograph with his two female interviewers, gripping his arms around their shoulders. “I have a good job,” he said.

Asked about a long, decorative silver sword that sits on his coffee table, he reinforced what he called his message of peace. “It is,” he said, “a sword of peace.”

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.

09/22/07

* Ahmadinejad warns against attack Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has issued a tough warning to any country considering an attack on Iran.

* Al Qaeda takes ‘media jihad’ to new heights The sixth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks has provided an opportunity for Al Qaeda to show off, once again, its mastery of the Internet as a tool for international propaganda, terrorism experts said Friday.

* Parashat Yom Kippur: Unconditional love A major aspect of our Yom Kippur liturgy is the service of the High Priest on this Day of Forgiveness.

* Iran unveils new missile at parade Iran has unveiled a new long-range missile among an array of armaments displayed in an annual military parade commemorating the country’s 1980-88 war with Iraq.

* Endless talks on Kosovo may lead to ‘hostilities’, US warns Talks on the future status of Kosovo are likely to continue after the 10 December deadline set by the international community, but letting them run into an “endless process” may lead to new hostilities in the region, a senior US diplomat has warned.

* Kadima slams Ramon over call for divided J’lem Vice Premier Haim Ramon faced a firing squad of Kadima ministers and MKs attacking him at Thursday’s Kadima council meeting for his recent call to divide Jerusalem in a final-status agreement with the Palestinians.

* ‘I’m not going to comment,’ says resolute Bush on Syria attack US President George W. Bush emphatically refused to address reports of an Israeli attack on Syria despite persistent questioning during a White House press conference Thursday.

* Two million displaced inside Iraq Nearly two million Iraqis have fled their homes for other parts of Iraq since the US-led invasion, creating a “human tragedy without precedence,” the country’s Red Crescent said.

* Diplomats pushing for Darfur peace Top diplomats from 26 countries met Friday to give political momentum to upcoming peace talks in Darfur and push for an agreement on the composition of a new peacekeeping force that the U.N. warns will not be effective without key contributions from non-African countries.

* Fatah official: Talks with Hamas likely after November summit A senior Fatah official said Saturday that talks with the rival Islamic movement Hamas are likely to be held following an international peace conference slated for November.

09/21/07

* Report: Syria, North Korea hold high-level talks in Pyongyang North Korea and Syria held high-level talks Friday in Pyongyang, the North’s state media reported, amid suspicions that the two countries might be cooperating on a nuclear weapons program.

* 144-nation atomic energy conference criticizes Israel Conference censures Israel for refusing to put its nuclear program under international purview.

* IDF ups alert level on northern border The IDF has raised the level of alert along Israel’s northern border out of concern that Syria will attempt to retaliate for an alleged IAF attack within its borders on September 6.

* Army weighs ‘complete’ Gaza pullout A day after the cabinet defined the Gaza Strip as “hostile territory,” The Jerusalem Post learned Thursday that the IDF is working on a proposal that calls for a “complete disengagement” from the Gaza Strip – involving the closure of all border crossings with Israel and the transfer of all responsibility over the Palestinian territory to Egypt.

* Arctic seabed ‘belongs to Russia’ A Russian expedition has proved that a ridge of mountains below the Arctic Ocean is part of Russia’s continental shelf, government officials have said.

* Israeli archeologists ordered out of court hearing A group of Israeli archeologists and public officials who petitioned the High Court of Justice against Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and the Antiquities Authority over ongoing Wakf infrastructure work on the Temple Mount were ordered out of the courtroom during a hearing Thursday, an archeologist said.

* Crowds attend Lebanese MP funeral Thousands of Lebanese have turned out for the funeral in Beirut of anti-Syrian MP, Antoine Ghanim, who was assassinated on Wednesday.

* Court urges Sudan war crimes arrest The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) has urged world leaders to “break their silence” and press the Sudanese government to arrest one of its ministers for alleged war crimes.

* Sheikdom shakedown: Dubai moves on Nasdaq n a complex set of transactions, Dubai is moving to acquire 19.9 percent of the Nasdaq in New York, placing the Arab government in an ownership position of the key U.S. stock exchange and raising concerns in Congress.

* Israel on alert for most sacred Jewish day Israel shut off the Palestinian territories for the holy Jewish day of atonement, and went on alert for a possible attack, 34 years after Syria and Egypt launched a surprise assault that sparked war.

An uneasy military marriage in Turkey

By: Hilmi Toros – Asia Times Online

Despite the verdict at the polls, Turkey’s staunchly secular military is far from caving in to the Islamic-rooted civilian authority that is now in full control of Parliament, the government and the presidency. At best it appears willing to accept, for the time being, an uneasy co-existence.

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09/20/07

* UN chief urges Israel to reconsider decision on Gaza Ban Ki-moon warns that any cutoff of vital services to Strip would violate international law, punish already suffering civilian population.

* Rice says international peace conference must be ‘substantive’ US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Thursday an upcoming US-sponsored Middle East conference must be “substantive,” and that Israel and the Palestinians must draft a document before the meeting that lays “foundations for serious negotiations.”

* Iran says it successfully tested self-produced fighter jets Iran said on Thursday it had “scared its enemies” by test flying two new generation, domestically-produced jet fighter planes and had shown its battle readiness, the latest riposte to speculation about a war over Tehran’s nuclear plans.

* Defense Minister Barak: Attack on Gaza Coming Nearer Wednesday’s decision by the mini-security cabinet to declare Gaza a “hostile entity” continues to make international waves – while Defense Minister Ehud Barak says a large-scale Israeli attack on Gaza is coming closer.

* Al Qaeda to declare war on Musharraf Osama bin Laden will release a new message soon declaring war on Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, al Qaeda announced Thursday.

* An uneasy military marriage in Turkey Despite the verdict at the polls, Turkey’s staunchly secular military is far from caving in to the Islamic-rooted civilian authority that is now in full control of Parliament, the government and the presidency.

* Israel to launch spy satellite in India Israeli space capabilities will take a giant leap this week when an Indian missile launches the IDF’s most-advanced satellite to date, capable of transmitting tiny images in all weather conditions.

* Euro Hits New High, Crests $1.40 Level The dollar fell to a new low against the euro on Thursday as the european currency breached $1.40 for the first time since its debut in 1999.

* Rep. Peter King: There are “too many mosques in this country” New York Rep. Peter King, a prominent House Republican, said there are “too many mosques in this country” in a recent interview with Politico.

* Yom Kippur Services to be Secular-Friendly In an open pre-Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement) letter to synagogue sextons, communal leaders and others, Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger reminds them of their heavy responsibility vis-a-vis those who come to synagogue only once a year.

Rabbinate bans Jews from Succot march

By: ETGAR LEFKOVITS – Jerusalem Post

The Chief Rabbinate has banned Jewish participation in the Feast of the Tabernacles march in the capital, scheduled to take place next month, due to concern that some of the groups participating are involved in Christian missionary work, officials said Tuesday.

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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.

09/19/07

* Hamas: Decision is an act of war A Hamas spokesperson on Wednesday called the security cabinet’s decision to declare the Gaza Strip an enemy entity a comprehensive declaration of war, for which Israel would bear the consequences.

* ‘Dozens died in Syria-Iran missile test’ Proof of cooperation between Iran and Syria in the proliferation and development of weapons of mass destruction was brought to light Monday in Jane’s Defence Weekly, which reported that dozens of Iranian engineers and 15 Syrian officers were killed in a July 23 accident in Syria.

* Iran promises “response” to Zionism’s supporters on Oct. 12 Supporters of the “Zionist regime” will receive a response from Iran during the world Qods Day rallies on October 12, the IRNA news agency reported government spokesman, Gholam-Hossein Elham, saying Wednesday.

* Rice: Hamas hostile entity to us as well US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Wednesday that the US “will not abandon the innocent Palestinians in Gaza,” shortly after Israel declared the territory to be an enemy entity and said it would cut off power and fuel supplies to it.

* Chief Negotiator Favors Division of Jerusalem, Incl. Old City In a letter to a fellow Kadima politician, the lead negotiator on behalf of the government in talks with the Fatah-run half of the Palestinian Authority confirmed his plan to relinquish sovereignty over much of Jerusalem, including in the Old City.

* Egypt rejects armed strike against Iran Egypt is opposed to any military action against Iran and is working on normalizing its own relations with the Islamic Republic after 28 years of frozen ties, the foreign minister said Wednesday.

* EU monies ‘should fund Galileo’ The European Commission has outlined its plan to get the Galileo satellite navigation system back on track.

* Rice attacks UN watchdog on Iran US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has attacked the head of the UN nuclear watchdog for urging caution in the dispute over Iran’s nuclear programme.

* Rabbinate bans Jews from Succot march The Chief Rabbinate has banned Jewish participation in the Feast of the Tabernacles march in the capital, scheduled for October 2, due to concern that some of the groups participating are involved in Christian missionary work, officials said Tuesday.

* Air Force activates provisional Cyber Command At a celebration of the Air Force’s 60th birthday Tuesday, Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne moved forward on the service’s Cyber Command, officially activating it as a provisional unit with its headquarters, for now, at Barksdale Air Force Base.

09/18/07

* J’lem downplays Iranian threat; Olmert: I respect Assad Israeli officials are treating Iran’s latest claims that it has 600 Shihab-3 missiles aimed at targets throughout the country the same way it treated Teheran’s claims.

* Peres: Israel Gave Land Before, but Rec’d No Peace, No Security President Shimon Peres says the “land for peace” formula on which Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is working has not worked for Israel.

* N. Korea denies cooperating with Syria North Korea strongly denied Tuesday that it has secretly helped Syria develop a nuclear program.

* Russia ‘worried’ by Iran war risk Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has expressed fears over the threat of war in Iran after talks with his French counterpart, Bernard Kouchner.

* Syria: U.S. nuclear claims are ‘false,’ biased toward Israel Syria criticised the United States on Tuesday, accusing it of spreading false claims of Syrian nuclear activity and cooperation with North Korea.

* Indonesia’s big one ‘on its way’ An international team of earthquake specialists says Indonesia faces another potential “giant” quake in the near future.

* Oil Hits New Intraday High Above $81 Oil prices climbed to a new high, above $81 a barrel, on expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve would cut benchmark federal funds rate later.

* Report: India to launch Israeli spy satellite in upcoming days India plans to launch an Israeli spy satellite over the coming days.

* Europe is not a ‘threat’ Barroso tells UK European commission president Jose Manuel Barroso has told UK politicians they have nothing to fear from Europe and they should back the new Reform Treaty.

* Independence for Kosovo is off the agenda, envoy reveals The international community is backing away from a clear endorsement of independence for Kosovo.

9/17/07

* 600 Iranian missiles said to be pointed at targets in Israel Six hundred Iranian Shihab-3 missiles are pointed at targets throughout Israel, and will be launched if either Iran or Syria are attacked, an Iranian website affiliated with the regime reported on Monday.

* Israelis ‘blew apart Syrian nuclear cache’ It was just after midnight when the 69th Squadron of Israeli F15Is crossed the Syrian coast-line.

* France warning of war with Iran French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner says the world should prepare for war over Iran’s nuclear programme.

* PA Chairman Abbas threatens to boycott November peace summit Palestinian authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas will not attend Washington’s regional peace summit in November unless Israel agrees to a reach an agreement with the Palestinians there, Abbas’ associates told Haaretz Sunday, adding the summit could “prove dangerous”.

* Sadr group quits Iraq ruling bloc The political movement loyal to radical Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr has withdrawn from Iraq’s governing Shia alliance.

* Israeli astrophysicists help find oldest-known planet outside solar system The discovery of the oldest planet yet identified outside our solar system – just announced in the prestigious journal Nature – illustrates the process that is likely to lead to the sun burning out in approximately five billion years.

* Oil industry ‘sleepwalking into crisis’ Lord Oxburgh, the former chairman of Shell, has issued a stark warning that the price of oil could hit $150 per barrel, with oil production peaking within the next 20 years.

* ‘Settlers must move to save their lives’ Anita Finkelstein almost tossed the personally addressed letter from the “One House” movement warning that her home in the Tekoa settlement would soon be in “trapped in hostile territory” because it is located on the Palestinian side of the security barrier.

* Interior Ministry eyeballs biometric passports Interior Minister Meir Sheetrit recently declared that as Israel’s passports and identity cards are easily counterfeited, he will push to replace all of them to increase security and meet the increasingly stringent requirements of other countries admitting Israeli visitors.

* Bush setting America up for war with Iran Senior American intelligence and defence officials believe that President George W Bush and his inner circle are taking steps to place America on the path to war with Iran, The Sunday Telegraph has learnt.