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Entries in Israel (29)

Thursday
Dec182008

Breaking News: Hamas-Israel Cease-Fire To End

According to Al Jazeera, a Hamas official has said --- one day before the truce between Hamas and Israel is to expire --- that "the calm is over".

Ayman Taba said after talks between Palestinian groups in Gaza that the cease-fire would not be renewed "because the enemy did not abide by its obligations" to ease the economic blockade and halt military operations.

The Israeli Government has not yet responded to the announcement.
Tuesday
Dec162008

Fact x Importance = News (16 Dec): Camp X-Ray, Khatami, Bad Cheney, Lovely Obama

Other stories we're following:

SHHH! DON'T MENTION THOSE UNLAWFUL COMBATANTS

In contrast to the glare of publicity the Bush Administration shone on its trial of 9-11 planner Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, cut short when he and other defendants tried to plead guilty, all the President's men and women are keeping quiet about the latest developments at Guantanamo Bay.



Three of six Bosnians held at Camp X-Ray will soon released, according to defense lawyers with information from Guantanamo and Bosnian officials. Last month, a Federal judge ruled against the Bush Administration, declaring there was insufficient evidence to show that five of the six, all of whom were born in Algeria, were "unlawful combatants". No word, however, on the fate of the others, including Lakhdar Boumediene, whose name is associated with a Supreme Court decision regarding the legal rights of detainees.

Meanwhile, "the Supreme Court yesterday kept alive a lawsuit by four British citizens who had been detained as terrorism suspects at Guantanamo Bay and had alleged that former defense secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and other Pentagon officials were responsible for their torture and the denial of their religious rights".

TODAY'S NON-APOLOGY: CHENEY STILL GROWLS


For anyone who thought Vice President Dick Cheney might be regretting any of the Executive Power he grasped with his detaining/surveilling/renditioning/torturing/war-fighting/Constitution-shredding hands over the last eight years. Facing the tough interrogation of Rush Limbaugh, he held firm:

Once they get here and they're faced with the same problems we deal with every day, then they will appreciate some of the things we've put in place."



And...

Guantanamo has been very, very valuable. And I think they'll discover that trying to close it is a very hard proposition.



ISRAEL-PALESTINE:

The BBC's Today programme confidently reported this morning that the United Nations was on the verge of endoring "the Arab proposal", first mooted by Saudi Arabia in 2002, for negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

There has been no further word, however, and The New York Times has a different perspective:

Senior Arab ministers met with the quartet of Middle East peace negotiators at the United Nations on Monday and lamented the lack of any concrete results after a year of renewed efforts



KHATAMI: WILL HE RUN, WON'T HE RUN?

From Iran, The New York Times offers a non-too-veiled boost to former President Mohammad Khatami as he continues his Hamlet-like indecision over whether to challenge for the Presidency next spring.

TODAY'S LONGEST LOVE LETTER: I HEART OBAMA


Helene Cooper writes in The New York Times, allegedly on President-elect Obama and foreign policy team:

[Obama] has read “Ghost Wars,” the history of the long adventure by the Central Intelligence Agency in Afghanistan and its fruitless effort to capture or kill Osama bin Laden. He has sought the counsel of an old Republican realist — Brent Scowcroft, the former national security adviser — who has long argued against an ideologically driven foreign policy.


And he has one-upped President Bush’s six intelligence briefings a week by demanding seven, prompting Mike McConnell, who handles presidential briefings as the director of national intelligence, to joke, “I don’t know if there’s some kind of competition going.”



Etc., etc. for 1000 words.
Monday
Dec152008

Gaza: This is News, This is Not News

BBC Radio 4's Today programme has an extended item on Israel and Palestine this morning, as Prime Minister Gordon Brown is meeting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, but its only reference to Gaza is "Palestinian militant groups, of which Hamas is the largest" and "the possibility of incipient violence." The New York Times does consider Hamas but in the context of a possible division in the leadership over continuation of a truce with Israel. The Washington Post is concerned about a parade in which Hamas "bragged about its violent exploits".

Hmmm....what could be missing here? I don't know, maybe....

Gaza Families Eat Grass as Israel Locks Border

Friday
Dec052008

From the Archives: Desperately Seeking a Showdown with Iran? (21 April 2008)

I am currently sitting in a four-day International Roundtable devoted to "cultural dialogue", and part of the discussion has turned to US-Iranian relations.

By unhappy coincidence, as I was setting off for the Roundtable yesterday, the Daily Telegraph put out the story, "Israel Willing to Go It Alone on Iran Attack".

I still think this is spin rather than substance, a rather crude and ineffective attempt to press Tehran. The political and economic dynamics, especially in Iraq and in the region, as well as the limits on US action, point to tension but not open conflict. Still, with the unhelpful ratcheting-up of that tension, be it in April 2008 or now, there is always the possibility of a rash over-step....



That was Then....

The first entry in this blog, posted in summer 2007, was on the detention of 15 British naval personnel by Iranian authorities. The British claimed the sailors were patrolling in Iraqi waters; Iran claimed that the crew had crossed into its territory. For several days, there was much huffing and puffing about the crisis and whether it would lead to showdown. Then the Iranians, with President Ahmadinejad smiling broadly and presenting gifts of clothes to the sailors, let the Britons go.
So it was with some nostalgia that I read, in a little-noticed piece, the surprise ending to the story: "Fifteen British sailors and Marines were seized by Iran in internationally disputed waters and not in Iraq's maritime territory as Parliament was told."

What's more, the incident because of no less than an arbitrary attempt by Washington and London to redraw the boundary between Iran and Iraq in waters which have long been a source of contention. "The Britons were seized because the US-led coalition designated a sea boundary for Irans territorial waters without telling the Iranians where it was, internal Ministry of Defence briefing papers reveal."

To be clear, Her Majesty's Government lied. Aware soon after the incident that its armed forces had crossed into disputed waters, aware that the Iranians had long claimed that this was their territory, military commanders and Ministers lied. And they continued to lie. As Minister of Defence Des Browne boldly told Parliament two months after the crisis, "There is no doubt that HMS Cornwall was operating in Iraqi waters and that the incident itself took place in Iraqi waters . . . In the early days the Iranians provided us with a set of coordinates, and asserted that was where the event took place, but when we told them the coordinates were in Iraqiwaters they changed that set and found one in their own waters. I do not think that even they sustain the position that the incident took place anywhere other than in Iraqi waters."

Why should this matter? Bluntly put, those lies could have easily been used as the pretext for military operations against Tehran. Buried on Sunday inside an excellent New York Times front-page story --- uncovering how the US media's military "experts" were little more than Pentagon mouthpieces --- was this revelation about a meeting between the experts and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld:

"Days later, Mr. Rumsfeld wrote a memorandum distilling their collective guidance into bullet points. Two were underlined:

'Focus on the Global War on Terror — not simply Iraq. The wider war — the long war.'”

'Link Iraq to Iran. Iran is the concern. If we fail in Iraq or Afghanistan, it will help Iran.'
Rumsfeld, who had ordered contingency plans in 2003 for operations against Iran to follow the "liberation" of Iraq, left office three months later. The Bush Administration, however, has never publicly let go of the possibility of using the Iraqi mess as the pretext for another confrontation. Ten days ago, the President and his advisors were still spinning the line that Tehran had bolstered Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army in its defence against the Iraqi Government's "Charge of the Knights" into Basra. The President told ABC News:"If they choose to infiltrate and send equipment, then we'll deal with them. And we'll get -- we're learning more about their habits and learning more about their routes. And make no mistake about it: We'll protect our troops and civilians and Iraqis."

This is Now....

All this may change, however, at least for a few months. The Bush Administration's claim that Iran was backing the Sadrist insurgency against the al-Maliki Government took "fatuous" to a new level. Given that the Iranian Government has long backed the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, whose leaders waged their campaign against Saddam Hussein from Tehran, and given that the SIIC is the largest constituency in al-Maliki's Cabinet, it's a pretty long leap to claim that Iran would want the insurgency to topple the Government. Tehran is probably hedging its bets, trying to maintain links with al-Sadr as well as the SIIC and other Shi'a groups as well as watching the Americans get themselves into more and more military trouble. Indeed, Iran claimed the political credit for ending last month's Battle of Basra, inviting all parties to Tehran and brokering a cease-fire.

Today the American newspapers finally caught up with the story. US authorities are changing their tune --- Iran will have to be part of the solution, at least for now, rather than being cast as the primary problem: "The two sides are making nice on the issue of fighting Mr. Sadr, one of Iraq’s most powerful Shiite clerics. As Iraqi government soldiers took control of the last areas of Basra from Mr. Sadr’s militia on Saturday, concluding a month-long effort, Iran’s ambassador to Iraq, Hassan Kazemi Qumi, took the unusual step of expressing strong support for the government’s position and described Mr. Sadr’s fighters as outlaws."

Let's see how long this last before another crisis --- manufactured or real --- puts "Showdown with Iran" back on the screens of CNN and Fox.

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