02/17/11

* In sharp reversal, U.S. agrees to rebuke Israel in Security Council The U.S. informed Arab governments Tuesday that it will support a U.N. Security Council statement reaffirming that the 15-nation body “does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlement activity.”

* Iran warships cancel request to cross Suez Canal A senior Suez Canal official says two Iranian warships have withdrawn their application to transit the waterway following expressions of concern by Israel over the plans.

* Abbas casts doubt on Palestinian elections Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Thursday that an election promised by September would not be held if Hamas refused to allow voting in the Gaza Strip.

* Bahrain protests banned as military tightens grip Protests have been banned in Bahrain and the military has been ordered to tighten its grip.

* Libya protests: Activists call for ‘day of anger’ Anti-government activists in Libya have been using social networking sites to rally support for protests on what they are describing as a “day of anger”.

* The Land-Grab Competition in Judea/Samaria IDF Central Command officers – whose jurisdiction includes Judea and Samaria – say that in the coming months, Arabs will step up their efforts to take over lands in the region.

* Anarchy in Sinai Peninsula The recent revolution in Egypt has had its effect on the Sinai Peninsula as well.

* Bibi to Nasrallah: Stay in your bunker Israeli response to Hezbollah: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used his speech Wednesday evening at the Conference of Presidents in Jerusalem to send a personal message to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

* Turkey to help negotiate new ‘road map’ for Iran nuclear program Turkey has agreed to cooperate with Iran on a new “road map” for its disputed nuclear program.

* Israel ‘may have to re-enter Lebanon’ Speaking during a tour of the northern border with the new military chief of staff Benny Gantz, the Israeli defence minister said: “Even though it’s quiet and deterrence exists – Hizbollah remembers the heavy beating they suffered from us in 2006.

02/16/11

* Protests in Libya, Bahrain and Yemen as unrest sweeps Arab world Inspired by revolts that have toppled Arab rulers in Tunisia and Egypt, protesters in Bahrain, Libya and Yemen have taken to the streets to demand the resignations of their own heads of state.

* Israel: Iranian Warships in Med are a ‘Serious Provocation’ Israel is “closely monitoring” Iranian plans to deploy warships in the Mediterranean Sea.

* Iranian Lawmakers Call for Opposition Leaders’ Execution In the wake of rising protests Iranian lawmakers have called for the execution of two opposition leaders for incitement.

* Syria considering construction of new nuclear plant Syria is considering building its first nuclear power plant by 2020 to meet rapidly growing electricity demand.

* Gaddafi to Arab ‘Refugees’: March on Israel Libyan dictator Muammer Gaddafi has called for a mass Arab march on Israel, in an attempt to force Israel into accepting Arab demands.

* EU’s Ashton Pressing for ‘Peace’ Talks European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said on Tuesday that the international community still sought to achieve a peace deal and a Palestinian Authority state by September.

* Education minister: Kids to tour Hebron Education Minister Gideon Sa’ar has announced a plan by which schoolchildren will tour Hebron and visit the holy site of the Cave of Patriarchs, located there.

* The Voice of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood This man is a word machine, a one-man talk show that leaves no subject unexamined.

* ‘Iranian nuclear facility recovered quickly from Stuxnet’ In an underground chamber near the Iranian city of Natanz, a network of surveillance cameras offers the outside world a rare glimpse into Iran’s largest nuclear facility.

* New Middle East at a Glance-Country by Country: Part II Arab countries throughout the Middle East and North Africa are experiencing unrest.

* Nasrallah: Hezbollah will conquer the Galilee Hezbollah leader says he is prepared for war with Israel, will avenge Mugniyeh’s death; Nasrallah says Israel has lost its confidence due to Mideast turmoil.

The New Middle East at a Glance

By: Hillel Fendel – Arutz Sheva

The New Middle East at a Glance – Part One

Arab countries throughout the Middle East and North Africa are experiencing unrest. Israel National News brings you a brief review on what’s happening with the Arabs – and the Jews – in the various states:

ALGERIA
Hundreds of protestors clashed with security forces in the capital city of Algiers over the past few days, demanding the ouster of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika. About 100 have been arrested. Bouteflika has agreed to lift the nearly 20-year-old state of emergency with which the country has been ruled.

Algeria’s Jewish population can be traced back about 2,600 years, to when the First Temple was destroyed.  After Algeria achieved independence from France in 1962, most of the country’s 130,000 Jews – who had long suffered from local anti-Semitism  – emigrated to France. By the 1990’s, most of the remaining Jews had emigrated. In 1994, the rebel Armed Islamic Group declared war on all non-Muslims in the country. The Algiers synagogue was abandoned that year and later became a mosque. Slightly more than 200 Jews remain today in Algeria, mostly in Algiers.

BAHRAIN
Thousands of people are marching in the streets today, demanding the regime’s ousting. At least two protestors have been killed and three police officers hurt. The small island kingdom (population 1.25 million) has been ruled by the Al Khalifa royal family for nearly two centuries, since 1820.

After World War II, riots were focused against the middle-class Jewish community. By 1948, most of Bahrain Jewry abandoned its properties and evacuated to Bombay, India and later to Israel and the United Kingdom. As of 2008, 37 Jews remained in the country; the issue of compensation was never settled. In 2008, King Hamad Bin Isa Al-Khalifa called on the Jews who emigrated to return.

EGYPT
Unrest continues despite the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak on Friday. Banks and the stock market remain closed, while the army attempts to take control until elections are able to be arranged.

In 1956, the Egyptian government issued a proclamation stating that “all Jews are Zionists and enemies of the state” and threatened them with expulsion. As a result, half of Egypt’s 50,000 Jews left, and 1,000 were imprisoned. After the 1967 war, nearly all Egyptian Jewish men aged 17-60 were either thrown out of the country or incarcerated and tortured. Fewer than 100 Jews remain in Egypt today.

IRAN
Tens of thousands of anti-Ahmadinejad demonstrators marched in downtown Tehran on Monday. The Parliament Speaker blamed the United States and Israel for the protests. Opposition activists continue to call for more demonstrations, in which security forces have fired tear gas; dozens of people have been arrested, and two opposition leaders have been placed under house arrest.

“The parliament condemns the Zionist, American, anti-revolutionary and anti-national action of the misled seditionists,” Speaker Ali Larijani  said during a parliament session.

Jews in Iran, formerly known as Persia, date back 4,000 years.  In 1948, the population numbered close to 150,000, and at the time of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the number was 80,000. From then on, Jewish emigration increased dramatically. Estimates of today’s population range from 20,000 to 35,000. Iran’s Jewish community, the largest among Muslim countries, is officially recognized as a religious minority group and as such is allocated one seat in the Iranian Parliament. Tehran has 11 functioning synagogues.

IRAQ
Though Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s regime does not appear to be in imminent danger, thousands of people have rallied in recent days and weeks across the country, protesting poverty, high unemployment, and shortages of food, electricity and water. Al-Maliki has announced a 50% cut in his $350,000 salary and that he would not run for a third term in 2014.

Iraqi Jewry dates back at least 2,600 years, and numbered around 120,000 in 1948. Nearly all the Jews left because of persecution following Israel’s War of Independence, and today fewer than 100 Jews remain.

TUNISIA
The future of Tunisia is still in doubt, following the fleeing of longtime President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali as a result of the December unrest that sparked the protests across the Middle East. The EU’s top foreign policy official, Catherine Ashton, met yesterday with various leaders in an attempt to shape a policy for governing the country.

In 1941, Tunisia was home to roughly 100,000 Jews, and a year later became the only Arab country to come under direct Nazi occupation during World War II. The Nazis forced Jews to wear the yellow Star of David, confiscated property, and sent some 5,700 Jews to forced labor camps, where 150 died in the camps or the bombings.  In the 1950’s, anti-Semitism and other forms of persecution led to the departure of tens of thousands of Jews; each person was allowed to leave with approximately $5 of their own money. As of now, 700 Jews live in the city of Tunis and 1,000 on the island of Djerba.

Amidst the Arab demands for the restitution of Arab refugees from the 1948 war, it is largely forgotten that around that time, more than 870,000 Jews lived in the various Arab countries. In many cases, they were persecuted politically and physically, and their property was confiscated; some 600,000 Jews found refuge in the State of Israel. Their material claims for their lost assets have never been seriously considered.

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02/15/11

* ‘Brothers’ in Egypt Present Two Faces Moaz Abdel Karim, an affable 29-year-old who was among a handful of young activists who plotted the recent protests here, is the newest face of the Muslim Brotherhood.

* Nato: Russian hard men not packing much punch Russia could fight one small war in the west but not one in the east or two at the same time.

* Iran parliamentarians call for death of opposition leaders Several Iranian parliament deputies demanded that the country’s opposition leaders be sentenced to death.

* France wants new global finance system France, as current head of the Group of 20 countries, will help the transition to a global financial system based on ‘several international currencies’.

* Khamenei lauds Turkey’s ‘separation from Zionist regime’ Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei praised Turkey for distancing itself from Israel.

* ‘Queen Rania is a corrupt thief’ Will Jordanian Queen Rania Al-Abdullah and her husband be next in line to flee their homeland, as was the case with the leaders of Tunisia and Egypt?

* The New Middle East at a Glance Arab countries throughout the Middle East and North Africa are experiencing unrest.

* Israel Exports ‘Bumper Crop’ of Apples to Syria For the sixth year, Israel has authorized the export of apples grown on the Golan Heights to markets in Syria.

* Tunisia’s ‘Biblical exodus’ pits Rome against Brussels Italy refused EU help in dealing with Tunisian migrants.

* Barak: IDF needs to deal with changing MidEast On a tour of the North with new IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz on Tuesday, Defense Minister Ehud Barak said that despite the upheavals in Tunisia and Egypt, the peace treaty with Cairo will be maintained.

02/14/11

* Gaddafi tells Palestinians: revolt against Israel Libyan leader says refugees should mass on Israel’s shores

* Hamas Chief: China, India to Replace Failing US as Superpowers The US empire is in decline and will fall because of the country’s immorality, promotion of open sexuality, and political injustice, says Mahmoud al-Zahar.

* Iran clamps down ahead of planned pro-Egypt rally Thousands gather in central Tehran, chant “death to the dictator”; 2 opposition leaders under house arrest; police out in heavy numbers to prevent rallies; SMS service reportedly cut.

* Western intel: Post-Mubarak Egypt is ripe for Islamic takeover With the departure of President Hosni Mubarak, the military is mulling the prospect of a partnership with the Islamic opposition.

* China overtakes Japan as world’s second-biggest economy Japan has been hit by a drop in exports and consumer demand, while China has enjoyed a manufacturing boom.

* A Tunisian-Egyptian Link That Shook Arab History As protesters in Tahrir Square faced off against pro-government forces, they drew a lesson from their counterparts in Tunisia.

* Israel Ponders Google Street View Risks Israel is considering whether to allow the powerful Google search engine to send its photographers out to snap photos for its Street View service in major cities in the country.

* Friedman: White House disgusted with Israel Senior New York Times columnist describes Israeli cabinet as “out-of-touch, in-bred, unimaginative and cliché-driven”.

* Thousands flood Cairo square as army struggles to halt rallies Egypt police march on Tahrir in unusual show of solidarity: We and the people are one.

* Egypt presidential hopeful: Peace treaty with Israel is over Dr. Ayman Nur, a secular and liberal member of the opposition, tells Egypt radio that it would behoove the new government to renegotiate the terms of the Camp David accord.

02/12/11

* Egypt will maintain its peace treaty with Israel, military says Egypt’s ruling military reassured its international allies Saturday that there would be no break in its peace deal with Israel.

* Palestinians announce September elections as top negotiator resigns Palestinians will hold presidential and legislative elections by September.

* Last Pharaoh leaves a mixed legacy Hosni Mubarak’s presidency was born amid gunfire and bloodshed, and ended in equally dramatic fashion.

* Ashton endorses army as ‘guardians’ of Egypt’s transition The European Union appears to have endorsed the role of the army as “guardians” of the “transition process”.

* Iranian diplomat: Egyptian protesters should beware EU help Iran’s ambassador to the EU, Ali Asghar Khaji, has said that Egyptian protesters should be wary of EU and US patronage of the revolution.

* U.S. dispatches military chief to reassure Israel, Jordan after Mubarak’s ouster The top United States military officer heads to Jordan and Israel next week for high-level talks.

* Islamists welcome ‘day of victory’ A senior member of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s biggest opposition group, said Egyptians had achieved the main goal of their popular uprising after President Hosni Mubarak resigned.

* Arab Leaders, Facing Calls for Reform, Consider Next Move Across the Arab world on Friday, thousands of people poured into the streets to celebrate the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak.

* IMF calls for dollar alternative The International Monetary Fund issued a report Thursday on a possible replacement for the dollar as the world’s reserve currency.

* China warns Egypt events could alter peace process China’s state-controlled media downplayed the news of Egypt’s popular uprising that toppled its president.

02/11/11

* Mubarak Reportedly Leaves Cairo The Egyptian military appeared to assert its leadership Friday amid growing indications that President Hosni Mubarak was yielding all power.

* Digging on Temple Mount ‘to Erase Traces of Jewish Altar’ Muslim religious authorities are concluding a clandestine eight-month dig on the Temple Mount that is intended to erase traces of the Jewish Temple’s Altar, Temple activists charge.

* Ahmadinejad: No Israel in new Mideast Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Friday called on Western powers not to “interfere” in the situation in Egypt and Tunisia.

* US spy chief: Muslim Brotherhood secular US Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said during a House Intelligence Committee hearing Thursday that Egypt’s branch of the Muslim Brotherhood movement was “a very heterogeneous group”.

* Mubarak, family leave Cairo amid persisting unrest Al Arabiya television reported on Friday that President Hosni Mubarak and his family had left Cairo from a military airbase in the suburbs.

* Iran marks revolution, puts pressure on opposition Hundreds of thousands turned out on Friday to mark the 32nd anniversary of Iran’s Islamic Revolution in a rally the clerical establishment billed as a chance to show solidarity with “Islamic” protesters in Egypt.

* Sharansky Marks 25 Years of Freedom Friday marks 25 years since Natan Sharansky, now head of the Jewish Agency, was released from prison.

* EU leaders renew call for government change in Egypt EU leaders renewed calls Friday for a new government in Egypt, after President Hosni Mubarak vowed to remain in power.

* Barak: Israel must move ahead toward peace Defense Minister discusses peace and stability in light of developments in Egypt, Tunisia with UN Secretary-General Ban.

* ‘Protests offer chance to build new pact with Arab world’ Natan Sharansky, whose walk to freedom across Berlin’s Glienicke Bridge precisely 25 years ago presaged the collapse of the Soviet Union, has urged the free world to give its backing to the Arab masses.

02/10/11

* Congress wary of Muslim Brotherhood role in Egypt Members of Congress warned about the risk posed by the Muslim Brotherhood’s participation in a new Egyptian government.

* ‘Saudi Arabia: We’ll support Egypt if US cuts aid’ US President Barack Obama spoke with King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia Wednesday to discuss events in Egypt.

* Egypt foreign minister criticises US calls for change Egypt’s foreign minister has rebuffed calls from Washington to speed up the pace of political reform.

* Pakistan appears to be expanding nuclear site, says U.S. think tank Pakistan appears to be building a fourth military nuclear reactor, signaling its determination to produce more plutonium for atomic weapons.

* US to Russia: Hold Your Horses on UN Mideast Mission The United States Wednesday called into question the wisdom of an initiative by Russia to send a United Nations Security Council delegation envoy to the Middle East.

* Egypt’s Mubarak refuses to quit Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak has said he will stay in office and transfer all power only after September’s presidential election.

* Threats to Western Oil: 2 Tankers Hijacked in 2 Days Major oil lines to the West are under severe threat after a second supertanker was hijacked in as many days in the Arabian Sea.

* Barroso-II team rated as ‘average or below’ in its first year European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso has defended his team’s performance one year into his second term.

* In its quest to go green, the old Hebrew language seeks new words The Hebrew Language Academy is looking for Hebrew words for terms like “compost” and “composter.”

* Egypt asks Ashton to cancel her trip The Egyptian foreign ministry has told Catherine Ashton they do not want her to visit the country in the coming weeks as she had planned.

02/09/11

* Muslim Brotherhood text reveals scope of radical creed On Tuesday, two Brotherhood representatives participated in an opposition delegation that met with Vice President Omar Suleiman for the first set of talks over implementing political reforms.

* Egypt protests: People’s Assembly rally amid strikes Soldiers are guarding the People’s Assembly building after a 16th consecutive day of protests.

* Janet Napolitano: US terror threat highest since 9/11 The threat of terrorism against the US homeland is in some aspects “at its most heightened state” since the 9/11 attacks, US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has said.

* Egypt regime warns of crackdown as revolt spreads Egypt’s embattled regime warned of a military crackdown on Wednesday as massive protests demanding its overthrow spilled out across the country and deadly unrest flared in the remote south.

* ‘Despite Egypt unrest, Arab world and Israel are unified on Iran’ Israel and Arab states have a common interest in containing nuclear Iran and that has not been affected by protests in Egypt against President Hosni Mubarak.

* Jordan tribes break taboo by targeting queen Popular discontent in Jordan has taken a new turn with unprecedented public criticism of King Abdullah II’s wife, Queen Rania, who stands accused of “corruption” by large tribes.

* The Geneva Accord of Cyberwarfare The international community should create a modern equivalent of the Geneva Convention to govern cyberwarfare, according to a joint report by United States and Russian experts.

* Catholics Remove ‘Holocaust’ from Bible The Catholic Church is planning the release of a new translation of the Bible in early March. The new version will change several words, among them the term “holocaust.”

* Facebook page urges Gazans to topple Hamas government A Facebook page created by anonymous people is calling on Palestinians to take part in mass protest against Hamas in the Gaza Strip on Friday.

* Judea Tourism on Display at Intl. Expo Tourist attractions in Judea and Samaria were on display Wednesday at the international tourism exposition IMTM. The Tourist Minister stopped at booths advertising Judea, Binyamin, Samaria and the Hevron region.

02/08/11

* Egypt protests: Hosni Mubarak’s concessions rejected Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have poured into Cairo’s Tahrir Square for the latest protest calling for Hosni Mubarak’s government to step down.

* Army Chief Ashkenazi: Prepare for all-out war Given recent changes in the Middle East, Israel must prepare for a battle in several theaters.

* Beware of Middle East Democracy The Western world has traditionally strongly supported the process of democratization in the Middle East.

* ‘Erdogan: Israel must not intervene in Egypt’s matters’ Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday that “Israel must under no circumstance interfere” in what is happening in Egypt.

* Assad’s days numbered, dissident tells ‘Post’ A prominent US-based dissident Syrian blogger said on Monday he believes his homeland isn’t ripe for the kind of unrest that has rocked other Arab states in recent weeks.

* Jordan tribes threaten revolution over country’s Palestinian Queen Rania Jordanian tribal figures have issued a petition urging King Abdullah to end his Palestinian wife’s role in politics.

* Ashton aims to visit Tahrir Square, scene of Egypt’s revolutionary drama U foreign policy head Catherine Ashton hopes to visit revolutionaries camped out in Tahrir Square in Egypt next week.

* Indonesia: Angry Muslim crowd attacks Java churches The attacks in Temanggung happened after a Christian man was sentenced to five years in jail for distributing leaflets deemed insulting to Islam.

* Violence continues in Iraq as US mission changes The White House says the U.S. combat mission in Iraq is over, but Army Lt. Daniel McCord and his fellow American soldiers feel anything but safe.

* US looks to reassure Israel as protests roil Middle East As domestic turmoil sweeps moderate Arab countries and emboldens Islamic groups across the Middle East, the US assured Israel Tuesday that it was attentive to its security concerns.