Blair to Haaretz: Terror is one struggle with many arenas

By: –

Without a doubt, it was Iraq that ended his career at 10 Downing Street. The campaign against Saddam Hussein continues to dog him. It was Iraq that largely prevented him from becoming “the first president of the European Union.” Nevertheless, Tony Blair does not apologize, does not express regrets and does not attempt to justify himself.

“It’s really important to understand that Saddam was actually a threat to the region,” he resolutely says in an interview with Haaretz, during his most recent visit to Israel as the Quartet’s special envoy. “And quite apart from anything else you may remember, he used to pay the families of [the Palestinian] suicide bombers.”

When asked whether the wave of global terror, with its roots in countries like Afghanistan, Somalia and Yemen, proves it was a mistake to focus on a single dictator, he replies: “Personally I think we will defeat this terrorism when we understand it is one battle, one struggle. This is a global movement with an ideology.”

Soon, Blair will appear as the primary witness before a government commission of inquiry, set up in London, in response to public pressure, in order to answer the critical question: How was Britain dragged into a war in 2003 despite having evidence that Iraq no longer possessed weapons of mass destruction? Why was this information concealed, and moreover, who is responsible for the fact that the public was given a distorted, even specious account, according to which Iraq had the capacity to deploy weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes?

These questions are tearing apart the Labor Party, and some members and supporters fear that Blair’s testimony – whose presumed gist may be discerned in this interview – will quash the party’s hopes of maintaining its hold on power when elections are held this spring.

“People sometimes say to me, no, it’s not really Iraq, it’s Afghanistan,” Blair says. “Someone else will say, no it’s Pakistan, and someone else will say it’s Iraq, and someone else will say it’s Yemen. But actually it’s all of these because in different ways, they represent different challenges that are unified by one single movement with a single ideology. And this is going to be resolved, in my view, over a long period of time. But what is important is that wherever it is fighting us, we’re prepared to fight back. And actually if you take the situation, for example, in Iraq, what began as a fight to remove Saddam was over in two months but then what occupied us for the next six years was fighting external elements – Al-Qaida on one hand, Iranian-backed militias on the other, which are the same elements we’re fighting everywhere. Now, ultimately we’ve got to understand that, unfortunately, we can’t say: ‘Look, let’s concentrate it here, but not here, and here, and here,’ because that’s not the way this thing’s working.”

Blair’s equation doesn’t end there. “Actually there is a unifying theme, in my view, between what’s happened in countries like our own country with terrorist activity, and what’s happening in places like Yemen or Afghanistan or Somalia or, I’m afraid, other countries. The key to understanding this is [that] this is a global movement with a global ideology and it is one struggle. It’s one struggle with many different arenas.”

Blair rejects accusations that Britain is not showing the same resolve as France, which is leading the international struggle against Iran’s procurement of nuclear arms. He praises the “clear determination” of Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other Europeans in the face of the regime of the ayatollahs. And while Defense Minister Ehud Barak openly criticized the West last week, saying that it “is not lending sufficient support” to dissident demonstrators in Iran, Blair offers a complex, cautious response.

“People are trying to feel their way toward supporting people who are trying to stand up for freedom and democracy and the right to speak their mind, and to do that in such a way that it doesn’t give the regime even more excuses to start cracking down on people.”

Peace from the ground

For the past two and a half years, Blair has been the Quartet’s Middle East envoy. During this same period, he has repeated the mantra that peace has to be built from the ground up, from the foundations. First you have to build Palestinian civil society and the institutions of state, and only then can you discuss the core issues and disputes over refugees, right of return and Jerusalem.

But when Blair is asked about Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman – who met with Blair this week, and declared that an American draft peace proposal, reported in the press but not formally presented, was unrealistic (“It will not be possible to reach an arrangement on final borders within nine months, nor a complete final status arrangement within two years”) – Blair says, “I’ve learned over time that you can listen to these statements but in a sense just put them to one side and carry on working for peace.”

The concept of economic peace and “bottom-up” activity is important, but it is not enough, Blair admits. At the end of the day, politics is key. Economic and political peace complement one another. One cannot exist without the other.

In reference to Lieberman, Blair says, “I understand what he’s saying. If he’s saying we’re not going to get peace tomorrow, no, of course we’re not. But I think there is a serious prospect of getting a negotiation back together. If that happens, that’s a big plus, a big positive, and the work that we’re doing specifically can help improve that.”

In this context, he cites his own contribution to the removal of dozens of checkpoints in the territories. “If you just go back two years, people said to me, you know, the Israelis will never lift any of these checkpoints; they will never give you permission for any of this economic stuff; the Palestinians don’t want to do it, it’s hopeless. Two years on, when I drive around in Jenin and Ramallah – I’ll be going to Jericho tomorrow and I’ve been recently in Nablus and elsewhere, Hebron – yes there are still major challenges, of course there are, but you can also see economic activity happening. And all I’m saying to people is: ‘Never lose hope.'”

Blair is determined not to stop at this. “Now we’ve got to take it to a whole further level,” he says.

“When in another 100 years they write a book about the history of the Middle East, Blair’s name will proudly appear in it,” says a high-ranking Israeli Foreign Ministry official who has tracked the activities of the Quartet emissary. “He had humble objectives,” says the official. “He chose to deal with the micro, in areas that no one could imagine an international superstar of his caliber choosing to address. But he carried out all his missions. He took over projects that were going nowhere for years, accumulating dust [the sewage system in Gaza, tourism in Bethlehem, establishment of a second Palestinian cell-phone operator, among other things], and resuscitated them.”

Yet not everyone shares that opinion. Catherine Ashton, for example, the new European foreign affairs chief, whom Blair once appointed as an EU commissioner, came out against her former patron. In her premiere appearance in the European parliament two weeks ago, Ashton denounced continued settlement activity, house evictions in East Jerusalem and the separation fence. “The Quartet must demonstrate that it is worth the money, that it is capable of being reinvigorated,” she declared, in a statement widely perceived as an attack.

Blair chose to interpret Ashton’s words as frustration over the stalled political process. The criticism, he said, was not directed at him, but at the Quartet, and the United States at its head; at the fact that the international body “has not had significant impact” in the region. At the “politics” and not at the “economy.”

“I think that what she’s saying is she would like the Quartet to have a bigger role, which I totally agree with,” he said.

Asked specifically about disappointment in Europe over the Obama administration and its activity in the region, he praises the work of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, envoy George Mitchell (with whom Blair worked to achieve a peace accord in Northern Ireland), and National Security Advisor James Jones. As for Barack Obama and the peace process, he says, “All I say to people on President Obama is he’s just a year into his administration, so let’s give the guy a chance. Let’s hope that over this next period of weeks we can get this thing [the peace process] together.”

When asked if he sincerely believes the declarations by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, including his readiness to advance an American peace plan, Blair answers, “My view has always been that the prime minister is prepared to make peace, provided it’s on terms that guarantee Israel’s security and is fair for Israelis. What I always say to people on the outside when I’m trying to explain this whole issue to them is, first of all, look at a map, you know, look at a map of the region, and then see what a small bit of land it is, Israel and the Palestinian territory. So if you can’t deal with the on-the-ground worry of the Israelis about security, you can’t make peace.”

Is the continued blockade of Gaza the way to achieve this secure peace, and is this even feasible without including Hamas, with which Israel is in any case holding indirect talks?

No and yes, he replies. Blair believes the blockade is boomeranging, in that it encourages an illegal economy as well as goods and weapons imports through the underground tunnels. However, he opposes including Hamas. Unlike the IRA in Northern Ireland, Hamas refuses to abandon its violent ways, he says. Therefore, we have to make do with the indirect talks through the Egyptians.

And aren’t we taking a risk, given the increasing radicalization of Gaza, including the growing Al-Qaida influence?

“There is always that fear, but on the other hand the best way of defeating that possibility is not necessarily to kneel to their demands, I’m afraid,” says Blair.

Given the dead end, we are hearing more and more people talking about “three states for two peoples.” What do you think about that?

“I just don’t think that would work,” says Blair. “You know, I talk to people in Gaza a lot of the time. There are large numbers of people in Gaza who disagree with Hamas. I had a video conference this morning with the Gazan business community. They don’t support the idea of Gaza being run by Hamas, and they don’t support the idea of Gaza being separated from the West Bank. So I don’t think that is ever going to be a realistic solution.”

Blair prefers not to comment on the Goldstone Report (“I’ve got enough on my plate to worry about, trying to do my own things”), yet when asked to explain why British public opinion is now considered the most anti-Israel in all of Europe, Blair falls back on the terrorism equation.

“Look, there’s criticism everywhere, I think, but that’s partly because people don’t understand how difficult this situation is when you come under attack, your civilians come under attack, and you’re a democratic government and you’re expected to respond. I mean, we face this continually. We face it now, actually, in places like Afghanistan.”

He praises the British political leadership, which condemned the arrest warrant issued last month against Tzipi Livni, and adds: “I think the best way of resolving all that criticism is to move on to the positive agenda for the future” – the political and economic peace process.

“Labor fears Blair will be a liability,” screamed a headline of the London Times this week, regarding Blair’s expected testimony on the Iraq war. History will judge – as the Israeli Foreign Ministry official said – if Blair’s name will be inscribed in the region’s history book; if he will go down as one of the greatest leaders of Britain in the modern era (his wife Cherie was recently quoted as saying that he would go down in history, “up there with Churchill”); or if he will be remembered, conversely, as “George Bush’s poodle,” who led his country into a destructive dead-end war.

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.

01/08/10

* US chief of staff: Iran strike could destabilize Middle East Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff warned Thursday that a strike on Iran could be “very, very destabilizing” and have unintended consequences for the Middle East, adding that diplomacy was crucial.

* US preparing for possible Iran conflict The US does not want to see confrontation with Iran but is still preparing its military for that possibility.

* J’lem rejects 2-year peace deadline Israel doesn’t want to see deadlines imposed on the negotiating process with the Palestinians, even as the US is endorsing the idea of a two-year time frame.

* Inscription indicates Kingdom of Israel existed in the 10th century BCE A breakthrough in the research of the Hebrew scriptures has shed new light on the period in which the Bible was written.

* Settlement activists meet to debate how to fight the freeze “Don’t serve in the army. Don’t pay taxes,” Eviathar H. Ben-Zedeff said on Thursday night as he and other right-wing activists and settlers debated the best strategy to combat the 10-month moratorium on new settlement construction.

* Al Qaida targeting Palestinian camps Al Qaida is reportedly targeting Palestinian refugee camps for indoctrination and recruitment.

* Churches Attacked in Malaysian ‘Allah’ Dispute Three Christian churches were attacked with firebombs Friday as tensions rose in a dispute over whether Christians could use the word “Allah” in this largely Muslim nation.

* Iranian Students: Khamenei’s Family Has Fled to Russia Pro-democracy activists in Iran reported Wednesday that family members of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei have been secretly flown to Russia.

* Blair to Haaretz: Terror is one struggle with many arenas Without a doubt, it was Iraq that ended his career at 10 Downing Street.

* Van Rompuy makes debut at Turkey-sceptic gathering Herman Van Rompuy on Thursday (7 January) delivered his first official speech as president of the EU council at a party gathering of Bavarian conservatives.

01/07/10

* Assad urges US to play stronger role in Mideast peacemaking Syrian President Bashar Assad has urged the United States to play a stronger role in Mideast peacemaking.

* ‘Hamas-Iran alliance harms Palestinians’ A senior Palestinian Authority official on Wednesday accused Hamas of serving Iran’s interests in the region at the expense of the Palestinians and Arabs.

* A right to build Most of the world thinks settlements are illegal. US President Barak Obama calls them “illegitimate.” Defense Minister Ehud Barak casts his crusade against settlers as mere “law enforcement.”

* Defense minister ‘missing’ for 2 days In an echo of the fevered speculation that surrounded Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s initially secret visit to Russia in September.

* Plane ‘plotter’ met radical Yemen cleric al-Awlaki The alleged US plane bomber met radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen, after being recruited in London.

* Germany warms to Turkish EU bid Germany has pledged not to block Turkey’s bid to join the EU, but has urged it to press on with reforms.

* Israel hails rocket shield test ‘successful’ Israel has successfully tested a system to intercept short-distance rockets and plans to deploy it later this year.

* Ahmadinejad: Iran and Syria will create a new world order Iran and Syria plan to create a new world order.

* Belgium to step up security at EU summits Belgian authorities on Wednesday (7 January) said they will step up security at EU summits.

01/06/10

* Syria will back Hizbullah against IDF If Israel were to attack Hizbullah in Lebanon, Syria would respond and not sit idly by, reports quote Syrian sources as saying.

* Iran Shielding Its Nuclear Efforts in Maze of Tunnels Last September, when Iran’s uranium enrichment plant buried inside a mountain near the holy city of Qum was revealed, the episode cast light on a wider pattern.

* Hamas 2010 budget mainly ‘foreign aid’ from Iran Hamas has approved a $540 million budget for 2010, the lion’s share of which was said to come from Iranian aid.

* Abbas: ’67 borders precondition to talks Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said he would be the first to negotiate with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, but only if the latter would cease construction in the settlements and recognize the 1967 borders of a Palestinian state.

* China again rejects UN sanctions against Iran China’s ambassador to the United Nations, Zhang Yesui, has said the time is not right to consider more sanctions against Iran.

* Egypt police clash with Gaza aid convoy activists More than 50 people have been hurt in clashes between Egyptian police and pro-Palestinian activists seeking to take a convoy of supplies to Gaza.

* Pro-Life Advocates Plan to Protest Opening of Largest Abortion Clinic in U.S. A coalition of pro-life advocates and religious leaders plan to gather in Houston on Jan. 18 to oppose what is expected to be the largest abortion clinic in the country.

* Emanuel: U.S. is fed up with Israel, Palestinians White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel recently told the Israeli consul in Los Angeles that the Obama administration is fed up with both Israel and the Palestinians.

* Obama admits intel failure on terrorist US President Barack Obama announced changes to his countries airport security measures, and admitted the American intelligence community failed on Christmas Day in what almost became a massive terror attack.

* Ben-Gurion Airport revolutionizes security with Unipass biometric system As international aviation officials look to Israel for techniques to safeguard air travel after the failed Christmas Day bombing, Ben-Gurion airport launched a biometric security system for outbound passengers, heralding a new era of hi-tech passenger screening.

01/05/10

* Spotty enforcement for new US air screening rules On the first day of what was supposed to be tighter screening ordered by the United States for airline passengers from certain countries, some airports around the world have conceded they had not cracked down.

* Iraq to sue Israel over destroyed reactor An Iraqi parliament member said Tuesday that Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki plans to sue Israel for damages done to his country following its destruction of the Tammuz nuclear reactor.

* Yemen fertile ground for terror groups Yemen, a rugged, poor country on the southern Arabian Peninsula, is emerging as a key theater in the international fight against terrorism.

* Jordanian Double Agent Murders 7 CIA, 1 Fellow Jordanian Spy A Jordanian spy sent to Afghanistan to search for top Al Qaeda leaders apparently succeeded in his mission.

* Jordanian Lawyers Seek Arrest of Two Knesset Legislators Lawyers in Jordan have petitioned its courts for an arrest warrant for Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin and National Union Knesset Member Aryeh Eldad for their labeling Jordan a “Palestinian state.”

* Obama’s nuclear weapons plan runs into resistance US President Barack Obama’s plan to begin phasing out nuclear weapons has run up against powerful resistance from officials in the Pentagon and other American agencies.

* FACTBOX-Key 2010 global political risks to markets The risk of sovereign debt default, looming elections, social unrest, populism, and thorny relations between the United States and China could all hit global markets in 2010.

* Iran blocks EU delegation visit Iran has postponed a visit to Tehran by Euro MPs who were going to meet Iranian opposition activists and Majlis (parliament) members this week.

* Iraq – the new destination for daring tourists It doesn’t seem like the ideal location for a vacation, and yet Iraq has managed to appeal to a daring few who are intrigued by the country’s rich history, culture, archeology and more recently, Saddam Hussein’s legacy.

* Is a Taliban-style group taking over Somalia? A hard-line Islamist militia known as Al-Shabab is capturing key areas throughout Somalia, but analysts differ over whether the group can actually take over the country.

Obama’s 2010 Terrorist Challenge

By: – Col. Bob Maginnis

This year — like 2009 — may be historic if only for President Obama’s geopolitical indecisiveness and weakness. Six geopolitical crises — Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and al Qaeda — provide Obama the opportunity to redeem his unnerving reputation. But, if the president continues his 2009 policies, we can expect several disasters.

First, the Islamic Republic of Iran is a hegemonic tyrant that is the world’s leading terrorism sponsor and close to possessing atomic weapons. Most nations want the regime replaced, but none — with the likely exception of Israel — is willing to act.

President Obama has done little more than send notes to Tehran’s leadership offering to talk. In November, Obama said “I continue to hold out the prospect that they may decide to walk through this door” and cooperate on the nuclear issue. But Tehran continues to game the system with delays and empty promises which demoralizes our Arab allies and Israel who view Tehran as a mortal threat.

Last May, Obama pledged to Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu that he would end engagement toward Iran if it were unsuccessful by year’s end. It’s now 2010 and Obama may make yet another diplomatic foray sending Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) to Tehran. But sending Kerry makes Obama appear afraid to follow through with his promise to impose crippling sanctions.

The Washington Post cites Obama officials saying the administration wants sanctions “against discrete elements of the Iranian government” like the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps but not the crippling gasoline embargo floated by the administration last spring. Another Obama official acknowledged, “We have never been attracted to the idea of trying to get the whole world to cordon off their economy.”

That leaves only two choices: conduct a military strike or accept an atomic-armed Iran. Apparently, Iran is preparing for a strike. It has ramped up psychological operations, military exercises and issued instructions to its terrorist proxies.

Expect Israel to attack Iranian facilities this year. It will not wait for more delays and false promises. At this point, U.S. help appears unlikely.

Second, Iraq is half-cooked with political uncertainty and a low level insurgency mixed with horrific terrorist bombings. The U.S. is waiting for the outcome of the March election, the subsequent formation of a new government and then all combat units will exit.

Obama visited Iraq in June to mark the transition from U.S. to Iraqi control. He reminded our troops and the Iraqis that our plan is “By August 31, 2010, our combat mission in Iraq will end and Iraqi security forces will have the full responsibility for major combat missions.” He said “Iraq’s future is in the hands of its own people, and Iraq’s leaders must now make some hard choices.”

But we must not abandon Iraq if conditions worsen. That country began its existence — and remains — politically factionalized. We won’t know until after the March 7 parliamentary elections whether Iraq survives as a viable, unified state. Its fragility is evidenced by the fierce infighting among the Kurds, Sunnis and Shiites. Every time political disputes escalate sectarian violence flares.

The bright spot is Iraq’s oil economy. In December, Baghdad auctioned off 10 oilfields which could eventually help Iraq surpass Saudi Arabia’s total production. But oil production is linked to political and security stability.

Expect Obama to withdraw our forces on schedule in spite of unacceptable violence and political chaos, which could invite civil war.

Third, the eight-year war in Afghanistan morphed into a counterinsurgency pitting that fledgling government supported by Western forces against the Taliban, a radical Sunni Islamism movement. The Taliban control large swaths of Afghanistan, own the momentum in the fight and the support of many Afghans because they distrust their corruption-plagued government.

Obama took several months last fall to construct a new war strategy that surges forces to reverse Taliban gains, win the population’s confidence and build government credibility. His questionable strategy begins withdrawing forces in 18 months.

Obama’s surge will be bloody. Last year was twice as bloody in Afghanistan for Americans than in Iraq and Lieutenant General David Rodriguez, the second highest commander in Afghanistan, said our new approach means we take a less aggressive posture. This approach, according to Adm. Michael Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will make Afghanistan “a tough fight in 2010,” resulting in higher U.S. casualties.

Obama is rushing the war. The average successful counterinsurgency lasts 14 years because it takes time to help the people feel secure, trust their government and prosper. Obama’s minimalist strategy surrenders most of Afghanistan to the enemy and naively accelerates security training and government clean-up before quickly exiting.

Expect higher casualties, improved security in the focus cities and more capable Afghan forces. But the end game will include a compromise with the Taliban which Obama forces on Kabul in time to begin leaving by July 2011.

Fourth, al Qaeda and Taliban forces withdrew from Afghanistan to Pakistan in late 2001 and they continue to use Pakistan to launch attacks. Although Pakistan’s weak government is an ally in the fight, it is insufficiently aggressive against our common enemies, which threatens that country’s stability.

Obama said Pakistan is “inextricably linked” to success in Afghanistan and “We are committed to a partnership with Pakistan that is built on a foundation of mutual interest, mutual respect, and mutual trust.” But Pakistan is not willing to do Washington’s bidding.
Obama desperately wants Pakistan to close ranks with the U.S. to defeat the Haqqani (Taliban) network that operates in both countries and rid the border region of al Qaeda and insurgent sanctuaries. But the Haqqani group does not pose a threat to Pakistan like it does to Afghanistan and besides the Pakistanis have little confidence in Washington, which has previously abandoned Islamabad.

Expect violence to continue deteriorating Pakistan’s security situation. Bombings and attacks in the Punjab, that country’s core province, will further destabilize President Asif Ali Zardari’s government which has little popular support. That will prompt a military coup this year and probably create a major crisis given Western concern over the fate of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons.

Fifth, Yemen is foundering on the verge of social and economic collapse which makes it ripe to become another al Qaeda sanctuary. It also faces an armed insurgency in the north, which the government claims is funded by Iran and a separatist movement in the south.

Yemen came to Obama’s attention on Christmas day after a Nigerian man tried to set off explosives aboard an airliner. The president said “We know that he [the Nigerian] traveled to Yemen, a country grappling with crushing poverty and deadly insurgencies. It appears that he joined an affiliate of al Qaeda … [which] trained him, equipped him with those explosives and directed him to attack that plane headed for America.”

What should we expect Obama to do about Yemen? It’s virtually certain he won’t invade the country but likely he will use air strikes against al Qaeda camps much as President Clinton did against Afghan terror camps. The administration will also increase special operations forces efforts to train and equip Yemen’s army.

Expect Yemen to become a sanctuary for al Qaeda like Pakistan and the launching pad for more attacks against Western targets.

Finally, al Qaeda has franchised its extremist ideology globally and will use more sophisticated and deadly tactics.

Last fall, Mr. Obama told a Chinese audience “I continue to believe that the greatest threat to the United States’ security are the terrorist networks like al Qaeda.” The Christmas underwear bomber incident earned Obama’s pledge to “…use every element of our national power to disrupt, dismantle and defeat the violent extremists who threaten us.”

The underwear bomber incident demonstrated our vulnerability, which is a warning that Obama had better move fast on his pledge to defeat sophisticated extremists. For example, the same group that trained the underwear bomber concealed explosives inside the suicide bomber Abu al-Kahyr. He passed through multiple levels of security and into the presence of the Saudi deputy interior minister, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef. Al Qaeda bragged that “…nobody knows or will ever know the nature [of this explosives charge] and how it was detonated,” although it failed. The bomber may have hidden the explosives in his rectum.
Expect al Qaeda to try to breach our security with more sophisticated techniques.

These geopolitical crises will provide Mr. Obama an opportunity to shed the labels indecisive and weak or to turn them into multiple major disasters for America and Western civilization.

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.

01/04/10

* France follows Britain and US in shutting Yemen embassy France has become the third Western nation to shut its Yemen embassy, after threats from an al-Qaeda offshoot, the foreign ministry in Paris announced.

* Recent change of atmosphere may mean time is ripe for talks Peace talks with the Palestinians must resume without preconditions, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said.

* Abbas demands full settlement halt Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas stuck by his demand Monday for a complete halt in West Bank settlement building before resuming peace talks with Israel.

* Arab MK: Settlers are a malignant tumor A verbal spat erupted at the Knesset’s Constitution, Law and Justice Committee when MK Taleb A-Sanaa called settlers “a malignant tumor,” setting off a flurry of furious reactions from the assembled MKs.

* MK Rotem: If Settlements are Cancer I Hope it Grows and PA Dies The Knesset received additional doses of radical anti-Zionist rhetoric from Arab representatives Monday.

* Iraq De-Judaizing Ezekiel’s Tomb Early reports that Iraq plans to retain the Jewish nature of the Tomb of the Prophet Ezekiel are apparently false. Sources in Baghdad say that the government plans to turn it into a mosque and erase all Jewish markings.

* Dubai to open world’s tallest building The world’s tallest building is being opened in the Gulf emirate of Dubai.

* Iran’s Opposition Braces for Next Round After Protests Faced with escalating turmoil, Iran’s newly militarized regime now appears to be turning to the Tiananmen model to ensure its survival.

* Destructive tsunami crashes over Solomon Islands A tsunami unleashed by a major earthquake plowed into the Solomon Islands on Monday with the crashing waters devastating at least one village.

* Jordan is helping CIA in Afghanistan One of the victims of a fatal attack on a CIA base in Afghanistan last week was a Jordanian intelligence official.

Profile: Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula

By: BBC News

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) was formed in January 2009 by a merger between two regional offshoots of the international Islamist militant network in neighbouring Yemen and Saudi Arabia.

Led by a former aide to Osama Bin Laden , the group has vowed to attack oil facilities, foreigners and security forces as it seeks to topple the Saudi monarchy and Yemeni government, and establish an Islamic caliphate.

It has claimed responsibility for a number of attacks in the two countries over the past 12 months, and has been blamed by President Barack Obama for attempting to blow up a US passenger jet as it flew into Detroit on Christmas Day.

A Nigerian man charged in relation to the incident, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab , has allegedly told investigators that AQAP operatives trained him in Yemen, equipped him with a powerful explosive device and told him what to do.

He also warned there were others like him who would strike soon.

Beheading

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula first came to prominence in Saudi Arabia in May 2003, when it claimed responsibility for simultaneous suicide bombing attacks on three Western housing compounds in Riyadh , which left 29 dead.

Despite a subsequent crackdown on Islamist militants and radicals by the Saudi security forces, the group was able to mount an attack on the Muhayyah residential compound in the capital that November, killing 17 people.

In 2004, it suffered a major blow when its leader, Khaled Ali Hajj – a Yemeni and former bodyguard of Bin Laden – was ambushed and killed by Saudi troops.

However, the group soon recovered under the guidance of a veteran Saudi militant, Abdul Aziz al-Muqrin , and launched a series of spectacular attacks.

On 1 May 2004, militants shot dead five Western workers at a petrochemical complex in the north-western Red Sea city of Yanbu. On 29 May, more than 20 foreign and Saudi nationals were killed in attacks on three sites in the city of al-Khobar, increasing fears of political instability and pushing up global oil prices.

The following month, members of AQAP abducted and beheaded a 49-year old American aerospace worker named Paul Johnson .

The triumph was short-lived, however, as when security forces stormed a hideout in Riyadh looking for Johnson’s murderers Muqrin was shot dead.

Although militants killed at least nine people in a raid on the US consulate in Jeddah in December 2004, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula enjoyed notably less success under Muqrin’s successor, Salih al-Awfi .

The Saudi security services gradually gained the upper hand, and succeed in preventing any major attacks the following year, when Awfi was himself killed during a police raid in the holy city of Medina.

In spite of the large numbers of Saudis who then travelled to militant training camps and gained experience fighting in places such as Iraq, the group found it increasingly difficult to organise operational cells inside the kingdom. Its last attempt a significant attack was at the Abqaiq oil facility in February 2006 .

Prison escape

Meanwhile in Yemen – the ancestral home of Bin Laden – Sunni militants took advantage of the weak central government, whose authority does not extend far outside the capital Sanaa, and established strongholds in its many remote regions.

Although al-Qaeda cells were held responsible for several attacks inside Yemen since the suicide boat attack on the USS Cole near the port of Aden in 2000 that killed 17 US sailors, it was not until the second half of the decade that a fully-functioning affiliated group was formed.

According to the Gregory Johnsen of Princeton University, between 2002 and 2003 the Yemeni government co-operated closely with the US to fight al-Qaeda. By the end of that period – which included one leader being killed in a strike by a US drone aircraft – al-Qaeda appeared to be substantially weakened and so both countries shifted focus.

The policy appeared to have worked until February 2006, Mr Johnsen says, when 23 suspected al-Qaeda members managed to escape from a prison in Sanaa , including Jamal al-Badawi, the alleged ringleader of the USS Cole bombing, and Nasser Abdul Karim al-Wuhayshi, a former personal assistant to Bin Laden in Afghanistan.

A 33-year-old from the southern governorate of al-Baida, Wuhayshi spent time in religious institutions in Yemen before travelling to Afghanistan in the late 1990s. He fought at the battle of Tora Bora in December 2001, before escaping over the border into Iran, where he was eventually arrested. He was extradited to Yemen in 2003.

After escaping from prison, Wuhayshi is said to have then overseen the formation of al-Qaeda in Yemen, which took in both new recruits and experienced Arab fighters returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Protected by tribes who were wary of government interference, the group established bases from which to launch fresh attacks.

The group claimed responsibility for two suicide bomb attacks on Western tourists before being linked to the assault on the US embassy in Sanaa in September 2008 , in which militants detonated bombs and fired rocket-propelled grenades. Ten Yemeni guards and four civilians were killed.

Four months later, Wuhayshi announced in a video the merger of the al-Qaeda offshoots in Yemen and Saudi Arabia to form “al-Qaeda of Jihad Organisation in the Arabian Peninsula”.

Analysts say the move was designed to bring Saudi al-Qaeda members who had fled their country and Yemeni militants together under one umbrella as a first step towards launching attacks throughout the region.

Next to Wuhayshi in the same video sat the new group’s deputy leader, Said Ali al-Shihri, a Saudi national who was released from the US military detention centre at Guantanamo Bay in November 2007.

Another former detainee, Mohammed Atiq al-Harbi, also known as Mohammed al-Awfi, appeared alongside them and was described as a field commander.

The group’s first operation outside Yemen was carried out in Saudi Arabia in August 2009 against the kingdom’s security chief, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, though he survived.

After news of the failed attempt to destroy the Northwest Airlines Airbus A330 emerged, AQAP released a statement saying it had sought to avenge recent raids by Yemeni forces aided by US intelligence , in which dozens of militants are reported to have died.

“We tell the American people that since you support the leaders who kill our women and children… we have come to slaughter you [and] will strike you with no previous [warning], our vengeance is near,” the group said.

“We call on all Muslims… to throw out all unbelievers from the Arabian Peninsula by killing crusaders who work in embassies or elsewhere… [in] a total war on all crusaders in the Peninsula of Muhammad.”

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01/02/10

* Saudi FM says Israel is acting like a ‘spoiled child’ The Saudi foreign minister on Saturday criticized Israel’s settlement construction and said the country acts like a “spoiled child”.

* Obama blames al-Qaeda for Christmas Day jet ‘bomb’ US President Barack Obama has for the first time publicly accused an offshoot of al-Qaeda over the alleged Christmas Day bomb plot to blow up a US plane.

* PA: 11 million Palestinians around the world At the end of the decade there are 10.9 million Palestinians in the world, over half of them living in the Diaspora.

* Mousavi ‘ready to die’ for reform in Iran Iranian opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi has said he is not afraid to die for the cause of reform.

* Deputy FM Ayalon: Iran regime may be replaced this year Deputy Foreign Minister Daniel Ayalon on Saturday said he believes that after the sanctions the international community will impose against Iran over its nuclear program.

* Karzai Choices for Afghan Cabinet Mostly Rejected In a clear signal to President Hamid Karzai that he cannot count on Parliament for support.

* 29 MKs Challenge Construction Ban in Letter to PM Nearly 30 members of Knesset sent a joint letter to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu (Likud) this week challenging the government’s current ban on Jewish construction in Judea and Samaria.

* Profile: Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula Led by a former aide to Osama Bin Laden, the group has vowed to attack oil facilities, foreigners and security forces.

* Top US general stresses importance of Iraq vote Upcoming elections in March that will determine who will lead Iraq as American forces go home are of “enormous importance” to the country’s future.

* Muslim World: Iran – The end is not nigh The ongoing demonstrations in Iran are testimony to the continued strength and resilience of Iranian civil society.

12/31/09

* Aharonovitch: indict MK Taleb A-Sanaa Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch asked Attorney General Menahem Mazuz on Thursday to put MK Taleb A-Sanaa to trial for supporting a terror organization.

* CIA workers killed by ‘Afghan soldier’ Eight Americans working for the CIA have died in a bomb attack in Afghanistan, the worst against US intelligence officials since 1983.

* World Begins to Ring In the New Year Under explosive bursts of crimson, purple and blue, more than 1 million New Year revelers in Sydney got one of the world’s biggest parties started Thursday.

* Jet Plot Shows Growing Ability of Qaeda Affiliates The plot to blow up a Northwest Airlines flight over American soil on Christmas Day represents an ominously new and lethal ability by a branch of Al Qaeda to attack the United States directly.

* Palestinians: Dramatic development in peace process possible A dramatic development in the peace process is expected in the coming weeks.

* Russia ‘plans to stop asteroid’ The head of Russia’s federal space agency has said it will work to divert an asteroid which will make several passes near the Earth from 2029.

* As decade ends, Israelis more pessimistic A decade has passed, and a new decade is beginning. There were wars, talks of peace, economic prosperity, and an alarming crisis.

* Iran troops reportedly move into Tehran ahead of opposition rally An Iranian opposition website said on Thursday the government was moving troops and armored military vehicles to the capital.

* Spain test drives new model of EU leadership Spain takes over the rotating presidency on 1 January, but it will be a six-month tenure with a twist, as Madrid is the first to grapple with the complexities of the EU’s new legal framework.

* Egypt allows foreign activists to march into Gaza Some 1,400 activists from 43 countries had gathered in Cairo since Sunday to mark the first anniversary of the Israeli three-week offensive on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.