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Israel's actions will have consequences, says Syrian US Ambassador
In an interview with Newsweek Magazine, Syria's ambassador refutes reports of Syrian-North Korean nuclear cooperation, warns that 'Israel has made a serious mistake'
Yitzhak Benhorin
Published: 09.15.07, 19:11 / Israel News
"Israel will pay the price for invading Syrian airspace," warned Imad Moustapha, Syria's Ambassador to the US, in an interview published in Newsweek Magazine, Saturday.
"The Israelis didn't bomb anything. When they were detected by our defense systems and we started firing at them, they dumped fuel and turned around," he said, adding that the Israeli bombs dropped by the Israeli Air Force, landed in open areas without causing any damage.
Responding to the reports saying that the IAF was after a nuclear power plant, built with Syrian-North Korean cooperation, Moustapha said: "these are ridiculous claims. Syria does not have nuclear facilities.
"This is a familiar game," he added. "There were those who said that Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction were smuggled into Syria. This is nothing new. We hear stories like that all the time."
Syria, said Moustapha, is one of the few friends North Korea has in the world, adding that while on friendly terms, the two states merely share commerce relations.
As for the rumors of an arms deal between the two, Moustapha simply said "I leave these kinds of things to the military experts. I am not one."
Israel, he added, has made a serious mistake by invading Syrian airspace: "Over the past three months Israel has been sending us calming messages, saying it has no interest in escalating the relations between the two countries and then it sends its fighter jets into Syria that is a serious provocation.
"If the Israelis think they can do whatever they like, they are sorely mistaken, as they were last summer," he said, adding. "Israel's actions will have their consequences. Israel will pay"
Android, 16.9.2007 14:16:
Mielenkiintoiseksi menee, mutta uskon sen vain olevan ajan kysyms milloin Israelin ja Syyrian välillä puhkeaa sota. Teknisestihän maat ovat edelleen sodassa.
(Ma'ariv) Amit Cohen reports that Hamass Executive Force has come to serve as an Islamic vice squad of sorts in the Gaza Strip. Cohen reports about suspicious cars that are stopped at roadblocks, whereupon the passengers are checked for family relationships. If a man and a woman who are neither married nor family are found together, they are called into the stationhouse for questioning and a warning, and have a morality file opened with their names on it. Cohen reports that Executive Force members said that often indecorous behavior by women gets reported back to the womens families. This course of action, explains Cohen, is tantamount to a death sentence against her. In recent months, and particularly since Hamas seized power, the number of women murdered for allegedly disgracing family honor has significantly increased. Recently there has been a series of shocking murders of women in Gaza, in particular a horrifying case in which three sisters were murdered in one night. In most cases the women are murdered by their brothers. Human rights organizations accuse Hamas and the judicial system of showing excessive understanding for the motives for those murders, writes Cohen.
phanatic, 18.9.2007 11:03:
Sairasta.
mku, 24.9.2007 16:29:
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=e4a_1189066259
tbo, 25.9.2007 06:05:
---
on pelkästään ajan kysymys milloiin (...) Pohjois-Korea niitataan.
mku, 16.10.2007 13:46:
Hillary Clinton is jumping out ahead of Bush in urging a more hostile policy toward Iran
Annakins, 24.10.2007 11:05:
Al-Qaida edustaa radikaalin islamin maailmankuvaa
2007 now the deadliest year for U.S. troops in Iraq
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Five U.S. soldiers were killed in Iraq on Monday, making 2007 the deadliest for the American military in the Iraq war.
The grim record came despite lower death rates in recent months, which were not enough to offset death tolls that topped 100 during three months in the spring.
The five were killed in two separate roadside bombings, according to Rear Adm. Gregory Smith, a military official who briefed reporters in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad on Tuesday.
Four of the soldiers were killed when a bomb exploded near their vehicle in northern Iraq's Tameem province; the other died in combat in Anbar province.
According to a CNN count of Pentagon figures, 854 U.S. service members have died so far in 2007. The next highest death toll was in 2004, when 849 were killed.
The total number of U.S. military deaths in Iraq stands at 3,857, including seven civilian contractors of the Defense Department.
The high number of deaths this year corresponds with the U.S. troop buildup in late summer called the "surge" and a crackdown on insurgents in and near Baghdad.
Monthly death tolls were highest in the first part of the year: 83 deaths in January, 81 in February and 81 in March. Numbers peaked in the next three months, with 104 deaths in April, 126 in May and 101 in June.
Bay Area FBI agents wanting to find Iranian secret agents data-mined
grocery store records in 2005 and 2006, hoping that tahini purchases would
lead them to domestic terrorists, according to Congressional Quarterly's
Jeff Stein. The head of the FBI's criminal investigations unit - Michael
Mason - shut down the Total Falafel Awareness program, arguing it would be
illegal to put someone on a terrorist watch list for simply sticking
skewers into lamb, Stein reports.
Like Hansel and Gretel hoping to follow their bread crumbs out of the
forest, the FBI sifted through customer data collected by San
Francisco-area grocery stores in 2005 and 2006, hoping that sales records
of Middle Eastern food would lead to Iranian terrorists.
The idea was that a spike in, say, falafel sales, combined with other
data, would lead to Iranian secret agents in the south San Francisco-San
Jose area.
The brainchild of top FBI counterterrorism officials Phil Mudd and Willie
T. Hulon, according to well-informed sources, the project didnt last long.
It was torpedoed by the head of the FBI's criminal investigations
division, Michael A. Mason, who argued that putting somebody on a
terrorist list for what they ate was ridiculous and possibly illegal.
A check of federal court records in California did not reveal any
prosecutions developed from falafel trails.
It's not clear how the FBI got the records to sift through in the first
place - did grocery stores volunteer the data or get served with national
security letters or the dread Section 215 of the Patriot Act.
The other fun tidbit from the story - program stopper Mason is headed to a
new job as head of security for Verizon. Sounds like a good hire since
Verizon seems to need someone to say no to ridiculous FBI projects.
(Note: THREAT LEVEL is aware that Persian cuisine isn't falafel-dominated,
but well, Stein was rolling. We know with near-certainty that tracking
saffron and egglant purchases at Safeway surely would have led the feds
right to the mess hall of the San Jose chapter of the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards.)
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/11/fbi-mined-groce.html
U.S.: Iran not building nukes
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Iran halted work toward a nuclear weapon under international scrutiny in 2003 and is unlikely to be able to produce enough enriched uranium for a bomb until 2010 to 2015, a U.S. intelligence report says.
A declassified summary of the latest National Intelligence Estimate found with "high confidence" that the Islamic republic stopped an effort to develop nuclear weapons in the fall of 2003.
The estimate is less severe than a 2005 report that judged the Iranian leadership was "determined to develop nuclear weapons despite its international obligations and international pressure."
But the latest report says Iran -- which declared its ability to produced enriched uranium for a civilian energy program in 2006 -- could reverse that decision and eventually produce a nuclear weapon if it wanted to do so.
Enriched uranium at low concentrations can be used to fuel nuclear power plants, but much higher concentrations are needed to yield a nuclear explosion.
"We judge with moderate confidence that the earliest possible date Iran would be technically capable of producing enough highly enriched uranium for a weapon is late 2009, but that this is very unlikely," the report says. A more likely time frame for that production is between 2010 and 2015, it concludes.
Iran has insisted its nuclear program is strictly aimed at producing electricity, and the country has refused the U.N. Security Council's demand to halt its enrichment program.
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Monday's report represents the consensus of U.S. intelligence agencies. It suggests that a combination of "threats of intensified international scrutiny and pressures, along with opportunities for Iran to achieve its security, prestige and goals for regional influence in other ways," could persuade the Iranian leadership to continue its suspension of nuclear weapons research.
Available intelligence suggests the Iranian leadership is guided "by a cost-benefit approach," not a headlong rush to develop a bomb, the report concludes.
The International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog, has reported that Iran is cooperating with inspectors by providing access to declared nuclear material, documents and facilities. However, the agency also said Iran is withholding information in other areas, and as a result, the IAEA's knowledge about the status of the program is "diminishing."
Iran says its uranium enrichment work is allowed under the 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty. The Security Council has passed two rounds of sanctions against Tehran, but Washington missed its goal of reaching consensus on tighter restrictions by the end of November, the State Department said last week.
U.S. National Security adviser Stephen Hadley expressed hope after Monday's announcement, but he said Iran remains a serious threat.
"The estimate offers grounds for hope that the problem can be solved diplomatically -- without the use of force -- as the administration has been trying to do," Hadley said in a statement.
"But the intelligence also tells us that the risk of Iran acquiring a nuclear weapon remains a very serious problem."
The report comes amid widespread accusations that the Bush administration is attempting to maneuver the United States into a conflict with Iran, which it accuses of meddling in the war in Iraq. In October, the United States designated elements of Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps as supporters of terrorism.
NIEs examine current capabilities and vulnerabilities and, perhaps more importantly, consider future developments. Policymakers usually request the estimates, but the intelligence community also can initiate them.
U.S. report contradicts Bush on Iran nuclear program
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A new U.S. intelligence report says Iran halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003 and it remains on hold, contradicting the Bush administration's earlier assertion that Tehran was intent on developing a bomb.
The new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) released on Monday could hamper U.S. efforts to convince other world powers to agree on a third package of U.N. sanctions against Iran for defying demands to halt uranium enrichment activities.
Iran says it wants nuclear technology only for civilian purposes, such as electricity generation.
Tensions have escalated in recent months as Washington has ratcheted up the rhetoric against Tehran, with U.S. President George W. Bush insisting in October that a nuclear-armed Iran could lead to World War Three.
But in a finding likely to surprise U.S. friends and foes alike, the latest NIE concluded: "We do not know whether (Iran) currently intends to develop nuclear weapons."
That marked a sharp contrast to an intelligence report two years ago that stated Iran was "determined to develop nuclear weapons."
But the new assessment found Iran was continuing to develop technical capabilities that could be used to build a bomb and that it would likely be capable of producing enough highly enriched uranium for a nuclear weapon "sometime during the 2010-2015 time-frame."
Iran has already been hit with two rounds of U.N. sanctions over its defiance. Washington, which insists it wants to solve the problem diplomatically while leaving military options open, is pushing for a third package.
The nuclear standoff has become a major issue of debate in the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign, with candidates from both major parties weighing in on the prospects for military action against Iran.
This brutal siege of Gaza can only breed violence
Palestinian suffering has reached new depths. Peace cannot be built by reducing 1.5m people to a state of abject destitution
Karen Koning AbuZayd in Gaza City
Wednesday January 23, 2008
The Guardian
Gaza is on the threshold of becoming the first territory to be intentionally reduced to a state of abject destitution, with the knowledge, acquiescence and - some would say - encouragement of the international community. An international community that professes to uphold the inherent dignity of every human being must not allow this to happen.
Across this tiny territory, 25 miles long and no more than 6 miles wide, a deep darkness descended at 8pm on January 21, as the lights went out for each of its 1.5 million Palestinian residents. A new hallmark of Palestinian suffering had been reached.
There have been three turns of the screw on the people of Gaza, triggered in turn by the outcome of elections in January 2006, the assumption by Hamas of de facto control last June, and the Israeli decision in September to declare Gaza a "hostile territory". Each instance has prompted ever tighter restrictions on the movement of people and goods in and out of Gaza. Each turn of the screw inflicts deeper indignity on ordinary Palestinians, breeding more resentment towards the outside world.
Gaza's border closures are without precedent. Palestinians are effectively incarcerated. The overwhelming majority cannot leave or enter Gaza. Without fuel and spare parts, public health conditions are declining steeply as water and sanitation services struggle to function. The electricity supply is sporadic and has been reduced further along with fuel supply in these past days. Unicef reports that the partial functioning of Gaza City's main pumping station is affecting the supply of safe water to some 600,000 Palestinians.
Medication is in short supply, and hospitals are paralysed by power failures and the shortage of fuel for generators. Hospital infrastructure and essential pieces of equipment are breaking down at an alarming rate, with limited possibility of repair or maintenance as spare parts are not available.
It is distressing to see the impact of closures on patients who need to travel outside Gaza to get medical treatment. The demand for such treatment is rising as medical standards fall inside Gaza, yet the permit regime for medical referrals has become more stringent. Many have had their treatment delayed or denied, worsening their medical conditions and causing preventable deaths.
Living standards in Gaza are at levels unacceptable to a world that promotes the elimination of poverty and the observance of human rights as core principles: 35% of Gazans live on less than two dollars a day; unemployment stands at around 50%; and 80% of Gazans receive some form of humanitarian assistance. Concrete is in such short supply that people are unable to make graves for their dead. Hospitals are handing out sheets as funeral shrouds.
As the head of a humanitarian and human development agency for Palestinian refugees, I am deeply concerned by the stark inhumanity of Gaza's closure. I am disturbed by the seeming indifference of much of the world as hundreds and thousands of Palestinians are harshly penalised for acts in which they have no part.
In discharging its mandate, Unrwa delivers a variety of services to improve living conditions and prospects for self-reliance. It is impossible to sustain our operations when the occupying power adopts an "on, off", "here today, gone tomorrow" policy towards Gaza's borders. To take one example, this week we were on the verge of suspending our food distribution programme. The reason was seemingly mundane: plastic bags. Israel blocked entry into Gaza of the plastic bags in which we package our food rations.
In today's Gaza how can we foster a spirit of moderation and compromise among Palestinians, or cultivate a belief in the peaceful resolution of disputes? There are already indications that the severity of the closure is playing into the hands of those who have no desire for peace. We ignore this risk at our peril.
What we should be doing now is nurturing moderation and empowering those who believe that Gaza's rightful future lies in peaceful co-existence with its neighbours. We welcome the new efforts to resuscitate the peace process, revive the Palestinian economy and build institutions. These pillars, on which a solution will be built, are the very ones being eroded.
Yesterday, the people of Gaza received a temporary reprieve when the occupying power allowed fuel and other supplies to enter: 2.2m litres of fuel per week for the Gaza power plant and 0.5m litres a week for industrial usage, hospitals and clinics. We have been informed that the crossings into Gaza will be partially open, allowing Unrwa and other organisations to bring in about 50 trucks a day. No one knows how long the reprieve will last as the resumption of Qassam rocket fire, which we ourselves strongly condemn, will lead to further closures.
The people of Gaza have been spared from reaching new depths of anguish - but only for the moment.
There has never been a more urgent need for the international community to act to restore normality in Gaza. Hungry, unhealthy, angry communities do not make good partners for peace.