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ramana
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Post by ramana »

Shaymd wrote: Ramana, Rye: Interesting. I find it interesting that Cheney is showing support for India, to enter an area that has traditionally come under US/Brit influence. Well, never the less, it is India's time now. This is a great business opportunity(arms purchases and so on) and hopefully show that we can protect the many Indian nationals who live in the GCC.
The GCC leader on the contrary was saying that area was tradionally under Hindushtna and wanted to know when was India ready to take the role of the Mughal Empire which is the successor state to all previous empires based in Delhi. He recalled how his ancestors were called pirates and took refuge along west coast of India from the British ships of the fleet. Same thing now they are called terrorsits and their resources looted.

In earlier times you would be a Chola. Now you are a expat.
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Post by ramana »

I wonder why Cheney did that. Was it a tacit acknowledgment that they need India in the GOAT? I mean boots on the ground? It would be nice to see quotes of his advising a new security architecture etc. What does Night watch say? What do the usual suspects say?
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Post by Prem »

Raman,
US might be thinking on these lines and want China not part of the following


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://stconsultant.blogspot.com/2008/0 ... n-new.html

Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Sea Change China, India & Africa in a New Century
Martin Walker, interviewed on MhZ's program Dialog, talked about his theory:
Chimea is a region you have probably never heard of. It is composed of China, India the Middle East and Africa. The Indian Ocean is its central trade route. Powered by the dynamic economic growth of China and India, “Chimea,â€
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Post by satya »

shyamd
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Post by shyamd »

MI6 chief visits Mossad for talks on Iran's nuclear threat
[quote]THE head of MI6, Sir John Scarlett, is to visit Israel later this month as Britain forges closer links with Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service.

Iran’s nuclear programme is expected to be high on the agenda in an intelligence-sharing process described by Israeli officials as a “strategic dialogueâ€
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Post by shyam »

ramana wrote:I wonder why Cheney did that. Was it a tacit acknowledgment that they need India in the GOAT? I mean boots on the ground? It would be nice to see quotes of his advising a new security architecture etc. What does Night watch say? What do the usual suspects say?
If true, does it mean that US already has India by balls? I find the report hard to believe, without India signing the nuke deal.
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Post by shyamd »

Crown Prince Sultan of Saudi Arabia is reportedly Dieing of cancer, and is set to be replaced by Prince Nayef (Present Head of the Interior ministry). The crown prince is said to be in his villa in Geneva under the care of Swiss doctors.

King Abdullah who is 85 is also getting too old for the job and takes several hours for rest each day.
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Post by ramana »

Isnt Nayef the fundamentalist?BTW whats Prince in Arabic? In Persian it was Mirzadeh changed to Mirza.
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Post by derkonig »

ramana wrote:Isnt Nayef the fundamentalist?BTW whats Prince in Arabic? In Persian it was Mirzadeh changed to Mirza.
umm...shazada?
Raju

Post by Raju »

Perhaps 60% Of Today's Oil Price Is Pure Speculation

By F. William Engdahl
5-3-8

The price of crude oil today is not made according to any traditional relation of supply to demand. It's controlled by an elaborate financial market system as well as by the four major Anglo-American oil companies. As much as 60% of today's crude oil price is pure speculation driven by large trader banks and hedge funds. It has nothing to do with the convenient myths of Peak Oil. It has to do with control of oil and its price. How?

First, the crucial role of the international oil exchanges in London and New York is crucial to the game. Nymex in New York and the ICE Futures in London today control global benchmark oil prices which in turn set most of the freely traded oil cargo. They do so via oil futures contracts on two grades of crude oil-West Texas Intermediate and North Sea Brent.

A third rather new oil exchange, the Dubai Mercantile Exchange (DME), trading Dubai crude, is more or less a daughter of Nymex, with Nymex President, James Newsome, sitting on the board of DME and most key personnel British or American citizens.

Brent is used in spot and long-term contracts to value as much of crude oil produced in global oil markets each day. The Brent price is published by a private oil industry publication, Platt's. Major oil producers including Russia and Nigeria use Brent as a benchmark for pricing the crude they produce. Brent is a key crude blend for the European market and, to some extent, for Asia.

WTI has historically been more of a US crude oil basket. Not only is it used as the basis for US-traded oil futures, but it's also a key benchmark for US production.

Image

'The tail that wags the dog'

All this is well and official. But how today's oil prices are really determined is done by a process so opaque only a handful of major oil trading banks such as Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley have any idea who is buying and who selling oil futures or derivative contracts that set physical oil prices in this strange new world of "paper oil."

With the development of unregulated international derivatives trading in oil futures over the past decade or more, the way has opened for the present speculative bubble in oil prices.

Since the advent of oil futures trading and the two major London and New York oil futures contracts, control of oil prices has left OPEC and gone to Wall Street. It is a classic case of the "tail that wags the dog."

A June 2006 US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations report on "The Role of Market Speculation in rising oil and gas prices," noted, "there is substantial evidence supporting the conclusion that the large amount of speculation in the current market has significantly increased prices."



What the Senate committee staff documented in the report was a gaping loophole in US Government regulation of oil derivatives trading so huge a herd of elephants could walk through it. That seems precisely what they have been doing in ramping oil prices through the roof in recent months.

The Senate report was ignored in the media and in the Congress. (those who control oil also control the media)

The report pointed out that the Commodity Futures Trading Trading Commission, a financial futures regulator, had been mandated by Congress to ensure that prices on the futures market reflect the laws of supply and demand rather than manipulative practices or excessive speculation. The US Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) states, "Excessive speculation in any commodity under contracts of sale of such commodity for future delivery . . . causing sudden or unreasonable fluctuations or unwarranted changes in the price of such commodity, is an undue and unnecessary burden on interstate commerce in such commodity."

Further, the CEA directs the CFTC to establish such trading limits "as the Commission finds are necessary to diminish, eliminate, or prevent such burden." Where is the CFTC now that we need such limits?

They seem to have deliberately walked away from their mandated oversight responsibilities in the world's most important traded commodity, oil.

Enron has the last laugh

As that US Senate report noted:

"Until recently, US energy futures were traded exclusively on regulated exchanges within the United States, like the NYMEX, which are subject to extensive oversight by the CFTC, including ongoing monitoring to detect and prevent price manipulation or fraud. In recent years, however, there has been a tremendous growth in the trading of contracts that look and are structured just like futures contracts, but which are traded on unregulated OTC electronic markets. Because of their similarity to futures contracts they are often called "futures look-alikes."

The only practical difference between futures look-alike contracts and futures contracts is that the look-alikes are traded in unregulated markets whereas futures are traded on regulated exchanges. The trading of energy commodities by large firms on OTC electronic exchanges was exempted from CFTC oversight by a provision inserted at the behest of Enron and other large energy traders into the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 in the waning hours of the 106th Congress.

The impact on market oversight has been substantial. NYMEX traders, for example, are required to keep records of all trades and report large trades to the CFTC. These Large Trader Reports, together with daily trading data providing price and volume information, are the CFTC's primary tools to gauge the extent of speculation in the markets and to detect, prevent, and prosecute price manipulation. CFTC Chairman Reuben Jeffrey recently stated: "The Commission's Large Trader information system is one of the cornerstones of our surveillance program and enables detection of concentrated and coordinated positions that might be used by one or more traders to attempt manipulation."

In contrast to trades conducted on the NYMEX, traders on unregulated OTC electronic exchanges are not required to keep records or file Large Trader Reports with the CFTC, and these trades are exempt from routine CFTC oversight. In contrast to trades conducted on regulated futures exchanges, there is no limit on the number of contracts a speculator may hold on an unregulated OTC electronic exchange, no monitoring of trading by the exchange itself, and no reporting of the amount of outstanding contracts ("open interest") at the end of each day."


Then, apparently to make sure the way was opened really wide to potential market oil price manipulation, in January 2006, the Bush Administration's CFTC permitted the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), the leading operator of electronic energy exchanges, to use its trading terminals in the United States for the trading of US crude oil futures on the ICE futures exchange in London ­ called "ICE Futures."

Previously, the ICE Futures exchange in London had traded only in European energy commodities ­ Brent crude oil and United Kingdom natural gas. As a United Kingdom futures market, the ICE Futures exchange is regulated solely by the UK Financial Services Authority. In 1999, the London exchange obtained the CFTC's permission to install computer terminals in the United States to permit traders in New York and other US cities to trade European energy commodities through the ICE exchange.

The CFTC opens the door

Then, in January 2006, ICE Futures in London began trading a futures contract for

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil, a type of crude oil that is produced and delivered in the United States. ICE Futures also notified the CFTC that it would be permitting traders in the United States to use ICE terminals in the United States to trade its new WTI contract on the ICE Futures London exchange. ICE Futures as well allowed traders in the United States to trade US gasoline and heating oil futures on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

Despite the use by US traders of trading terminals within the United States to trade US oil, gasoline, and heating oil futures contracts, the CFTC has until today refused to assert any jurisdiction over the trading of these contracts.

Persons within the United States seeking to trade key US energy commodities ­ US crude oil, gasoline, and heating oil futures ­ are able to avoid all US market oversight or reporting requirements by routing their trades through the ICE Futures exchange in London instead of the NYMEX in New York.

Is that not elegant? The US Government energy futures regulator, CFTC opened the way to the present unregulated and highly opaque oil futures speculation. It may just be coincidence that the present CEO of NYMEX, James Newsome, who also sits on the Dubai Exchange, is a former chairman of the US CFTC. In Washington doors revolve quite smoothly between private and public posts.

A glance at the price for Brent and WTI futures prices since January 2006 indicates the remarkable correlation between skyrocketing oil prices and the unregulated trade in ICE oil futures in US markets. Keep in mind that ICE Futures in London is owned and controlled by a USA company based in Atlanta Georgia.

In January 2006 when the CFTC allowed the ICE Futures the gaping exception, oil prices were trading in the range of $59-60 a barrel. Today some two years later we see prices tapping $120 and trend upwards. This is not an OPEC problem, it is a US Government regulatory problem of malign neglect.

By not requiring the ICE to file daily reports of large trades of energy commodities, it is not able to detect and deter price manipulation. As the Senate report noted, "The CFTC's ability to detect and deter energy price manipulation is suffering from critical information gaps, because traders on OTC electronic exchanges and the London ICE Futures are currently exempt from CFTC reporting requirements. Large trader reporting is also essential to analyze the effect of speculation on energy prices."

The report added, "ICE's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and other evidence indicate that its over-the-counter electronic exchange performs a price discovery function -- and thereby affects US energy prices -- in the cash market for the energy commodities traded on that exchange."


Hedge Funds and Banks driving oil prices

In the most recent sustained run-up in energy prices, large financial institutions, hedge funds, pension funds, and other investors have been pouring billions of dollars into the energy commodities markets to try to take advantage of price changes or hedge against them. Most of this additional investment has not come from producers or consumers of these commodities, but from speculators seeking to take advantage of these price changes. The CFTC defines a speculator as a person who "does not produce or use the commodity, but risks his or her own capital trading futures in that commodity in hopes of making a profit on price changes."

The large purchases of crude oil futures contracts by speculators have, in effect, created an additional demand for oil, driving up the price of oil for future delivery in the same manner that additional demand for contracts for the delivery of a physical barrel today drives up the price for oil on the spot market. As far as the market is concerned, the demand for a barrel of oil that results from the purchase of a futures contract by a speculator is just as real as the demand for a barrel that results from the purchase of a futures contract by a refiner or other user of petroleum.

Perhaps 60% of oil prices today pure speculation

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley today are the two leading energy trading firms in the United States. Citigroup and JP Morgan Chase are major players and fund numerous hedge funds as well who speculate.

In June 2006, oil traded in futures markets at some $60 a barrel and the Senate investigation estimated that some $25 of that was due to pure financial speculation. One analyst estimated in August 2005 that US oil inventory levels suggested WTI crude prices should be around $25 a barrel, and not $60.

That would mean today that at least $50 to $60 or more of today's $115 a barrel price is due to pure hedge fund and financial institution speculation. However, given the unchanged equilibrium in global oil supply and demand over recent months amid the explosive rise in oil futures prices traded on Nymex and ICE exchanges in New York and London it is more likely that as much as 60% of the today oil price is pure speculation. No one knows officially except the tiny handful of energy trading banks in New York and London and they certainly aren't talking.

By purchasing large numbers of futures contracts, and thereby pushing up futures prices to even higher levels than current prices, speculators have provided a financial incentive for oil companies to buy even more oil and place it in storage. A refiner will purchase extra oil today, even if it costs $115 per barrel, if the futures price is even higher.

As a result, over the past two years crude oil inventories have been steadily growing, resulting in US crude oil inventories that are now higher than at any time in the previous eight years. The large influx of speculative investment into oil futures has led to a situation where we have both high supplies of crude oil and high crude oil prices.

Compelling evidence also suggests that the oft-cited geopolitical, economic, and natural factors do not explain the recent rise in energy prices can be seen in the actual data on crude oil supply and demand. Although demand has significantly increased over the past few years, so have supplies.

Over the past couple of years global crude oil production has increased along with the increases in demand; in fact, during this period global supplies have exceeded demand, according to the US Department of Energy. The US Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration (EIA) recently forecast that in the next few years global surplus production capacity will continue to grow to between 3 and 5 million barrels per day by 2010, thereby "substantially thickening the surplus capacity cushion."

Dollar and oil link

A common speculation strategy amid a declining USA economy and a falling US dollar is for speculators and ordinary investment funds desperate for more profitable investments amid the US securitization disaster, to take futures positions selling the dollar "short" and oil "long."

For huge US or EU pension funds or banks desperate to get profits following the collapse in earnings since August 2007 and the US real estate crisis, oil is one of the best ways to get huge speculative gains. The backdrop that supports the current oil price bubble is continued unrest in the Middle East, in Sudan, in Venezuela and Pakistan and firm oil demand in China and most of the world outside the US. Speculators trade on rumor, not fact.

In turn, once major oil companies and refiners in North America and EU countries begin to hoard oil, supplies appear even tighter lending background support to present prices.

Because the over-the-counter (OTC) and London ICE Futures energy markets are unregulated, there are no precise or reliable figures as to the total dollar value of recent spending on investments in energy commodities, but the estimates are consistently in the range of tens of billions of dollars.

The increased speculative interest in commodities is also seen in the increasing popularity of commodity index funds, which are funds whose price is tied to the price of a basket of various commodity futures. Goldman Sachs estimates that pension funds and mutual funds have invested a total of approximately $85 billion in commodity index funds, and that investments in its own index, the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index (GSCI), has tripled over the past few years. Notable is the fact that the US Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson, is former Chairman of Goldman Sachs.

F. William Engdahl is an Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG) and author of A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order. He may be contacted at info@engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net


1 United States Senate Premanent Subcommittee on Investigations, 109th Congress 2nd Session, The Role of Market speculation in Rising Oil and Gas Prices: A Need to Put the Cop Back on the Beat; Staff Report, prepared by the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Washington D.C., June 27, 2006. p. 3.
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Post by shyamd »

ramana wrote:Isnt Nayef the fundamentalist?BTW whats Prince in Arabic? In Persian it was Mirzadeh changed to Mirza.
Nayef has close ties with extremist clerics. Prince in arabic is Amir(ameer) or Emir.
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Post by shyamd »

Lebanese govt has started to confront Hezbollah, by declaring their telecommunications system illegal. They removed the head of Beirut airport security for allowing Hezbollah to install spy camera's to view diplomats and important people entering the country. Hezbollah is not your average terrorist group or ragtag militia, they have a proper intelligence arm etc and function like a govt with Iran's support.
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Post by shyamd »

Okay folks, looks like the Shit is about to hit the fan in Lebanon.

Hezbollah were able to stop all air traffic coming into Beirut as well as Port traffic. They are litterally going to take over the country with little effort. Civil war likely? Maybe, depends if the US decides to activate their assets.

Debka reports:
Hizballah and fellow Shiite Amal fighters were thus able to seize control of most of pro-government Sunni West Beirut in clashes that have spread to other parts of the Lebanon while the government was left unprotected.

The army has only interfered in extreme situations. Friday, soldiers rescued the anti-Syrian majority leader Saad Hariri and allied Druze leader Walid Jumblatt when their mansions were surrounded and attacked by Shiite forces, but they did not make the assailants move out. The Lebanese army, half of whose members are Shiites, thus permitted Hizballah and Amal clinch their control of the Sunni neighborhoods.

The Lebanese army also took over the pro-government Future TV station and newspaper owned by Hariri after they were blown up. The army agreed to keep the station off the air.
The army chief is openly disobeying the PM in not declaring a state of emergency.

Hassan Nasrallah has said the only way to stop this is for the government to withdraw its decision to close their military telecommunications network in the south and north of the country and restore Hezballah loyalists to key positions at Beirut international airport.

Saudi nationals and foreigners have begun their pull out, out of Lebanon.

Apparently, Syrian Social Nationalist Party’s units who are Syrian Christians used by Syrian mili intelligence service, have entered Lebanon and supported Hezbollah in their take over of the sunni neighbourhoods of west beirut.

This week Hezbollah acquires an Unparalleled Anti-Tank System
Hezbollah will go to war for its telecommunications system because it feeds into the Syrian-Iranian deployment on the borders of Lebanon and Israel.

Iran has deployed sophisticated eavesdropping eqpt on Syrian border to intercept israeli comms. Israel cannot therefore relocate forces without Damascus knowledge. Its brigade, battalion and company commanders have been ordered to leave their cell phones out of briefings at command centers because the Iranian devices can to pick up and relay conversations. For operational calls, officers must stick to secure military lines. (my comment: possible learning from Israel-Hezbollah war of 2006)
---------------------------
Syria has decided to lay blame for Imad Mugniyeh killing, on the ex military intel chief, Asif Shaukat, who has apparently dissappeared. His dissappearance is also linked with the findings on the murder. Asif Shaukat's wife(Assad's sister) has moved to Western europe in mid march as a result of quarrels with bro.
---------------------------
ME rulers saw not only South Iraq falling under Tehran’s sway but also its black treasure.

All the Iranian military and intelligence agents and cells who were working undercover in southern Iraq, e.g charitable foundations, medical facilities and religious seminaries, were quickly mobilised. Armed with fistfuls of dollars, they hired a fleet of hundreds of trucks and pick-ups to ferry Iraqi government forces fighting to dislodge armed groups between Basra, Kut, Nasiriya, Dawiniya, Al Amara and dozens of small townships and villages.

Iranian Revolutionary Guards officers distributed the vehicles among the sectors. They delivered ordnance from Iraqi army stores across the country and food to the soldiers in the South, filling the tanks of Iraqi armored vehicles. Pick-ups rounded up the wounded from the battle arenas and drove them to hospitals.

The adviser at Maliki’s side was Gen. Hossein Shawani, chief of Iraqi intelligence, who acted as his go-between with the Iranians.
--------------------------
Some rumours are circulating that the US secretly negotiated with Ahmadinejad when he visited Baghdad.
--------------------------
Apparently Iran played both sides in the Basra fiasco, giving tank shells to Iraqi army units and promising the Sadr terrorist group that the tanks were too narrow to enter the streets of Basra.
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Post by ranganathan »

Good excuse for US and israel to draw the arabs (Saudi, UAE, Bahrain etc) onto their side and start nuking syria and iran. Really interesting times.
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Post by shyamd »

Apparently Iran is preparing for US invasion,
Ayatollah Khamenei scatters al Quds bases for safety but holds the clandestine force ready to hit back if Iran is attacked by the US or Israel. Hezballah and Hamas are also prepared.

Gen. Suleimani was given more troops and more autonomy within the Revolutionary Guards Corps.

Iran has become a dominant player, they are calling the shots these days. Thing is no one is in a position to take sides apart from maybe the Saudi's. Kuwait - well you got a Shi-ite rebellion going on there, Bahrain - no chance, half population is shi ite(police is looking for Iranian cells operating there), as well as having major financial projects going on there, they can't take a risk. UAE - Mixed bag (going by Johann's advice), they got way too much to lose with all the touristy developments. Oman - main trading partner is Iran, culturally related to Iran, not going to take sides on this issue.

You see GCC is trying to defeat Iranian threat covertly, e.g I reported that Saudi intel agents lent a hand to put down shiite uprising in Kuwait. UAE (Abu Dhabi) implementing a GCC wide patriot defence network.

No one will take sides, they all got fair amount to lose. But they are building up their defences in case something happens.
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Post by shyamd »

Things getting worse for Israel. We are seeing a return of Syrian military into Lebanon. As Damascus is calling developments in Lebanon an "internal issue". In my view, if I was sitting in Langley or Tel Aviv, I would begin transfer of weapons as promised to Samir Gaegea and start re-activating assets. What would the Saudi's be doing? Well they, I am sure will be providing Saad Hariri asylum or will send in people to protect him. The Fatah Al Islam, was actually created by Saudi intel in Saad Hariri's constituency, Hariri allowed the organisation to function before the Lebanese army crackdown, so I wouldn't rule out a re-entry of a similar organisation.

Iran-backed Hizballah offensive closes in on Israeli border
May 10, 2008, 12:05 PM (GMT+02:00)

DEBKAfile’s military sources report: Hizballah’s advance on two key Lebanese locations Saturday, May 10 had immediate effect on the strategic balance between the Iran-backed Shiite group and Israel. Sidon in the south, Lebanon’s second largest city, which provides Hizballah with control of a continuous coastal strip from its southern Beirut district all the way to Tyre.

The second point is on the northern slopes of the Hermon range. After Hizballah seizes control of this enclave and the Syrian 10th and 14th armored divisions step over the border into Lebanon, the two forces can join to form a strong military line opposite Israel near the Litani River.

Our military sources report that the vanguard of the 10th Division has already moved across to the Lebanese side of the border.

Hizballah’s victory in taking over western and central Beirut therefore has had the effect of adding another link to the pro-Iranian chain encircling Israel. In many ways it is a more damaging setback for Israel’s national security than the Palestinian Hamas' seizure of the Gaza Strip

Yet Israel’s prime minister, defense minister and foreign minister are all too busy with the political fallout of the bribery case against Ehud Olmert to lift a finger to arrest Lebanon’s decline to a Tehran satellite before it is too late - any more than Hamas was stopped from developing into a major military menace.

Equally inert are the two presidents who are pledged to support the Siniora regime, George W. Bush and Nicolas Sarkozy. The United Nations, which maintains 15,000 armed peacekeepers in southern Lebanon, backed by marine forces off the shores of Beirut, has no thought of stopping the Iranian-Syrian-backed terrorist militia from capturing the country.
Lebanon slides towards new civil conflict
Pro-Western Siniora government and Iran-Syria-backed Hizballah forces exchanged fire in the streets of Beirut Wednesday, May 7. DEBKAfile’s sources report both have ordered a general call-up of their adherents.

Hizballah fighters clad in national army and police uniforms are infiltrating government party strongholds in the capital to seize control. In the north and the western Beqaa Valley region of Kharoub, government forces are mobilizing. First units have been sighted heading for Beirut.

During the day, Hizballah blocked the roads leading to the airport and vowed to keep it under siege until the Siniora government goes back on the decision announced Tuesday, May 6, to shut down the private telecommunications network Iran installed for the group and reinstate the pro-Hizballah airport director Gen. Wafiq Shuqeir. To pile up anti-government pressure, Hizballah called labor unions out on strike.

General Shuqeir was removed after Druze Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt accused Hizballah of installing spy cameras at the airport to monitor the movements of Lebanese and foreign leaders. Jumblatt said incoming flights were bringing the Shiite militia supplies of weapons from Iran.

On August 9, 2007, DEBKAfile first revealed that Iranian military engineers were installing a secret underground telecommunications system to support Hizballah’s missile unit. The network runs through south Beirut, the Beqaa Valley’s Yohmor region near the Syrian border – where Hizballah and the Palestinian Popular Front-GC keep their training facilities – and connect the southern towns of Tyre on the Mediterranean with Abassieh, seat of Hizballah’s southern headquarters.

For the ten months during which this military telecommunications network was being installed, the Beirut government did not dare touch it.

Prime minister Fouad Siniora finally decided enough was enough when satellite images provided by Western agencies showed work on connecting Hizballah’s network with the communications and eavesdropping systems set up by the Syrian army along the Lebanese border.

DEBKAfile’s military sources report that the two networks and their linkage are part of military preparations by Iran, Syria and Hizballah for a possible new flareu-up of hostilities with Israel.
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Post by shyamd »

Hezbollah fighters start withdrawing from Beirut
Lebanese army have told Hezbollah to get off the Beirut streets, it is said that the Army has offered them a compromise, as a result Hezbollah is withdrawing.

Debka reports that the PM has agreed to 2 key demands put forward by Hezbollah.

1st: Lebanese army will now take over the telecommunications network, hence still keep it in use in case of attack by Israel. Hezbollah's thinking is probably, as long as the infrastructure exists, the Lebanese army or Hezbollah can use it in case it is invaded by Israel. The telecoms system is linked direct to Damascus where IRGC folks can communicate with the people on the ground.

2nd: The man who was in charge of airport security in Beirut, will be re-instated.
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Post by Nayak »

Israel allows fuel back into Gaza
Israel has resumed fuel deliveries to the besieged Gaza Strip, two days after Gaza's only power plant shut down because of fuel shortages.

An Israeli security official said the Nahal Oz terminal reopened for fuel deliveries on Monday morning.

Israel further curbed fuel supplies to Gaza after militants attacked the terminal five weeks ago.

Israel sealed Gaza off to all but humanitarian supplies after Hamas militants took control in June 2007.

The plant provides electricity to about half of Gaza's 1.5m population, with the rest sent directly from Israel and a small amount from Egypt.

An Israeli official quoted by Reuters said there had been no fuel deliveries in the last week because Israel was marking its 60th anniversary and because of mortar attacks by Palestinian militants.

"We have received three trucks of industrial diesel for the power station so far," the plant official said.

He said he expected the delivery would be enough to run the facility for about three days.

Separately Egypt's powerful intelligence chief, Omar Suleiman, has come to Israel to mediate an Israel-Hamas cease-fire deal in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas demands that Israel lift the blockade of Gaza as part of the truce, but Israel insisting on Hamas's disarmament.
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Post by Philip »

Interesting and welcome news.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/ma ... ians.egypt

Egyptian mediator to meet Israelis after Hamas agrees ceasefire plan·

Islamists make concession to end economic crisis
· Initiative comes ahead of Bush visit over peace talks
Rory McCarthy in Gaza City The Guardian, Monday May 12

A senior Egyptian mediator will today present to the Israeli government a new ceasefire proposal agreed with the Hamas Islamist movement that could halt the conflict in Gaza and begin to resolve the mounting economic crisis that has engulfed the strip.

Omar Suleiman, the head of Egyptian intelligence, is due to meet Israeli officials with the proposal after weeks of talks with Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups. The prospect of an initiative that might start to alleviate the economic blockade on Gaza comes two days before George Bush is due to meet Israeli and Palestinian leaders to discuss the flagging peace talks in the region.

Mahmoud Zahar, the most senior Hamas leader in Gaza, told the Guardian that his movement had agreed to the proposal in order to end the economic crisis. He said it had agreed that the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt could open and function with the involvement of representatives of Hamas's rival, the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, who is based in the West Bank. This amounts to a small but important concession from Hamas.

"For how long are we going to suffer from the Israeli policy of this strict sanction?" Zahar said in a rare interview in his office in Gaza City. "For this reason we can accept this Rafah crossing to be open all the time and we are ready to cooperate with the Egyptian side and the other Palestinian side to run the administration." Rafah has been closed to nearly all Palestinians for months, but was temporarily opened on Saturday to allow out the seriously ill and Palestinians with foreign passports.

Since Hamas won the Palestinian elections two years ago, Israel has imposed and gradually tightened an economic blockade in Gaza, which it now calls a "hostile territory". All exports are prevented and imports are heavily restricted, including fuel. A shortage of industrial diesel forced Gaza's sole power plant to reduce production over the weekend, leaving much of Gaza City without power for several hours at a time.

The economic blockade has brought the private business sector to collapse and is broadly felt across Gaza, home to 1.5 million Palestinians, more than half of whom are children. It has been condemned by many, including the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon. as "collective punishment".

"The preoccupation of every single civilian person in the Gaza Strip is to survive at the moment at a very basic level," said John Ging, director of operations in Gaza for the UN Relief and Works Agency, which supports Palestinian refugees.

"They are struggling to know where the water's coming from, where the food is coming from, how they are going to get their child to school, how they are going to get some sick patient to the clinic. That's what's preoccupying the people here, not the politics."

Zahar said he believed all the armed groups in Gaza, including Islamic Jihad, which is more hardline than Hamas, supported the ceasefire plan. It would run at first for six months and would cover only Gaza. In the past Hamas has pushed for a ceasefire to include the West Bank, but Zahar said the proposal was restricted to Gaza at the prompting of the Egyptians.

Hamas is demanding that Israel reopen all the crossing points into Gaza, but Zahar said his group would also accept a compromise under which there is a ceasefire but only the crossing at Rafah is reopened.

European monitors would, as before, be allowed to observe and monitor the crossing but Zahar said they should not have the right to order it closed. In the past, Israel could effectively close Rafah at any time since it could determine whether it was secure enough for European monitors to be present at Rafah. When they were not present the crossing was closed. Asked about the role of European monitors now, Zahar said: "We have no objection. They have the full right to observe and monitor but not to close or open the gate."

Israel would retain some influence since it still has control of the Palestinian population registry, which determines who can cross into Gaza through Rafah. Otherwise the proposal is broadly in line with a 2005 agreement on Gaza's crossings negotiated by the US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice. It is not clear what happens to Rafah if Israel rejects the ceasefire proposal.

Israel has not admitted it is involved in negotiations about a ceasefire. However, it is thought unlikely that Suleiman would travel to Israel without a serious proposal. "Suleiman will come and we will listen to him. We'll talk and we'll see what he is recommending," Israel's deputy defense minister, Matan Vilnai, told Army Radio. "Until this moment there is nothing on the table open for discussion."

At his weekly cabinet meeting yesterday, the Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, said Hamas bore responsibility for all militant attacks as the controlling force in Gaza. "It is responsible and it will have to bear the consequences and full responsibility for this activity," Olmert said.

"We do not intend to countenance this ... The reality that prevails today must change. Either there is quiet or the state of Israel will take strong action that will ... in the end ... bring quiet."

Zahar, an English-speaker and a founder of Hamas, is regarded as a hardliner. Asked if he accepted a future Palestinian state in the borders of pre-1967 Palestinian land, he said: "This is not the proper time to speak about this question."
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14,000 cops to secure Bush's visit to Jerusalem
Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Jerusalem: About 14,000 Israeli police officers will man the streets of Jerusalem, safeguarding US President George W Bush's three-day visit to Jerusalem beginning on Wednesday, local daily Jerusalem Post reported on Tuesday, citing the Israeli police.

Jerusalem District Police Commander Aharon Franco said their major concern was terrorist threats, noting that a closure of the West Bank that went into force ahead of Independence Day has been extended until Saturday night. However, the police have not received security threats against Bush yet, Franco said.

People in Jerusalem can expect major traffic jams throughout the city as the police will close off central Jerusalem thoroughfares during the visit, dubbed by the police "Operation Clear Skies 2".

In an effort to alleviate traffic issues, Bush will arrive in Jerusalem by helicopter. He will land at the city's Givat Ram stadium before heading to Jerusalem's landmark King David Hotel, his residence during his trip. "We are trying to minimise as much as possible the damage done to the public," Franco was quoted by Jerusalem Post as saying.

The police plan to close major streets for shorter periods of time than they did during Bush's previous visit in January for "lessons learned". Around 10,000 officers had been deployed for safeguarding Bush's January visit, his first as president, Franco said.

During his visit, Bush will meet Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and President Shimon Peres, and attend an international conference hosted by Peres at the International Convention Centre.

Bush will tour Masada on the Dead Sea on Thursday morning before returning to Jerusalem to address a special session of the Knesset (Parliament) at mid-day. He will interact with the youth at the city's Bible Lands Museum before leaving the country on Friday.

Bush will not visit the West Bank during his trip, but will meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Egypt's coastal city Sharm el Sheikh after his trip to Israel.
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Israel encourages Egyptian Hamas ceasefire effort - against military advice
[quote]Egyptian intelligence minister Gen. Omar Suleiman Monday, May 12, presented the truce plan he negotiated with Hamas leaders in Cairo to Israel’s prime minister Ehud Olmert, defense minister Ehud Barak and foreign minister Tzipi Livni.

DEBKAfile’s sources report Israeli ministers essentially accepted the offer with some caveats and sent the Egyptian general back for a second round of bargaining. They accepted his advice to treat kidnapped Israeli soldier Cpl Gilead Shalit as a separate issue from the emerging truce deal and leave it to a later stage.

Israeli military sources reacted angrily to the truce plan’s outline. They accused the prime minister of yielding to Hamas aggression in the same way as Lebanon’s Fouad Siniora capitulated to Hizballah after the Iran-backed terrorists seize large swathes of Lebanon. Those sources found Olmert’s surrender all the more unacceptable because, while the Lebanese prime minister lacks an army capable of taking on Hizballah, Israel has one of the finest armies in the world which the government is holding back from defending half a million civilians under daily attack.

These are the main points of Suleiman’s truce plan, according to our sources:

1. Israel must lift its blockade on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip and open all the crossings.

2. Israel should heed Hamas political chief Khaled Meshaal’s words to the Egyptian general in private rather than his public rhetoric. He quoted Meshaal as saying on the quiet that Hamas is not a political, military or religious organization; its decisions are not political and not governed by clerics. Hamas therefore deserves to be encouraged in its pursuit of this path.

3. The way to “stifleâ€
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Post by shyamd »

The official in charge of Beirut airport security managed to get a final aircraft of IranAir to land on the evening of May 7 just before the Shi'ite organisation launched its forces against main Sunni strongholds in the western part of Lebanon.
-----------------------------
After forcing the UAE to adopt legislation on reexporting military equipment and dual technology last year, the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry & Security now has a permanent outpost in Dubai. The US has begun to increase its presence in Dubai as a result of increased illicit trade
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American and Iranian envoys met last month in Ankara as reported and are to pursue their talks in Dubai and Berne. The swiss foreign minister negotiated supply of gas to Switzerland and was able to get the Iranians to the table with the US as a result.
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Israeli intelligence failure again:
Dont worry about Hezbollah soldiers heading north, said Israel’s military intelligence chief. US, French and UNIFIL intelligence services also didn't expect this.
----------------------------
Walid Jumblatt and his Druze militia was alone in putting up a fight against the Hezbollah advance. The battle was kept quiet to avoid Hezbollah wanting revenge.

Image
A knife is seen stuck into the picture of anti-Syrian leader Walid Jumblatt inside a home of one of his loyalists in the town of Shwayfat in the mountains southeast of Beirut. The Lebanese army was out in force in areas outside Beirut that were the scene of fierce sectarian clashes at the weekend as the Arab League prepared to send a team to try to end a crisis that has driven the nation to the brink of civil war. Troops moved into the Druze Mountains southeast of the capital, where supporters of the Western-backed government and the Hezbollah-led opposition had engaged in heavy battles.
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Post by Kati »

So Iran has smartly check-mated unkil in Labanon through its bishop Hezb. A great game is being played out in the ME.

Contrary to some BRites' wishes, IMHO it's better to keep unkil bogged down in ME indefinitely, and keep the sheikhdoms on toe. I think the oil price is going us only in anticipation of an attack against Iran, and nothing else. Cheney and Bush's back to back trips are essentially to test the water and calm down nervous sheikhdoms. I expect Hezb starting their secret cells in other ME countries as pressure points.
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These extracts leaked by Iran of Syria's report on killing of Imad Mugniyeh aimed at implicating Saudi intelligence as responsible for the deed in collusion with the Mossad. They claimed that a group of senior Saudi intelligence plotters, led by Saudi Prince Bandar bin Sultan, was on hand to execute the plot and it exited Damascus as soon as it was done.

Tehran followed this up by a statement by its Fars agency claiming that Syria had arrested “a high-ranking defense official in the Saudi embassy in Damascus in connection with the Mughniyeh slaying. The agency added that he was connected to a Syrian woman on whose name the two explosives-laden cars used to kill the Hizballah chief were registered.

Prince Bandar still holds the formal title of Saudi national security adviser, although he has been excluded from the King Abdullah’s inner circle for some months. Other Arab intelligence agencies, including Palestinians, were named as co-conspirators with Israel through the Saudis.
---------------------------------------
Iran felt strong enough to meddle in Saudi Arabia’s internal affairs.

Saudi Arabia is on the brink of a crisis which is best defined as “between kings,â€
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Post by Philip »

I doubt that Saddam could've removed every scrap of covert WMD operations so easily and without trace.Remember that UNSCOM was squatting in Iraq for years and that it was infiltrated with US agents who were secretly intercepting Saddam's communications.It was the ceratin knowledge that he had little to fling at the invaders that encouraged the US to go after him.Also remember that prior to the invasion,when Saddam realised that Bush jr. was determined to invade,openly invited the CIA and Israeli intelligence to check for thems elves whether he had WMDs.Howeve,it is a different case with the Saudis.They have bankrolled the paki nuclear programme,received Chinese ballistic missiles -for what?Conventional warheads? Pak would've given the Saudis first peck at the nuclear cherry for all their help and support over decades.It would've been aprt of the deal from the very beginning.Pak develop the N-weapons and pass it on to the Saudis,who wanted it as insurance against Israel and Iran.

The visit of George Bush to Saudi Arabia,ostensibly to ask for lower oil prices-something that any flunkey like Rice could've done,was to conceal the real reason for the visit,the crisis with the Saudi king's health and the uncertainity over his successor.This is because the "House of Saud and the House of Bush",including the Bin Laden family, are partners in a huge way and have been for decades.The realtionship must not be endangered by a change of guard of the house of Saud.

Bush's visit to the region,congratulating Israel on its 60th B'day.drew much criticism for his asinine remarks.Robert Fisk,Middle East expert has his personal views on Bush's idiocy and outrageous policies for the region.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/fisk/ ... 29936.html
Robert Fisk: So just where does the madness end?

All the monsters buried in the mass graves of the civil war have been dug up

I am not sure what was the worse part of this week. Living in Lebanon? Or reading the outrageous words of George Bush? Several times, I have asked myself this question: have words lost their meaning?


So let's start with lunch at the Cocteau restaurant in Beirut. Yes, it's named after Jean Cocteau, and it is one of the chicest places in town. Magnificent flowers on the table, impeccable service, wonderful food. Yes, there was shooting at Sodeco – 20 yards away – the day before; yes, we were already worried about the virtual collapse of the Lebanese government, the humiliation of Sunni Muslims (and the Saudis) in the face of what we must acknowledge as a Hizbollah victory (don't expect George Bush to understand this) and the danger of more street shooting. But I brought up the tiny matter of the little massacre in northern Lebanon in which 10 or 12 militiamen were captured and then murdered before being handed over to the Lebanese army. Their bodies were – I fear this is correct – mutilated after death.

"They deserved it," the elegant woman on my left said. I was appalled, overwhelmed, disgusted, deeply saddened. How could she say such a thing? But this is Lebanon and a huge number of people – 62 by my count – have been killed in the past few days and all the monsters buried in the mass graves of the civil war have been dug up.

I chose escalope du veau at the Cocteau – I am sickened by how quickly I decided on it – and tried to explain to my dear Lebanese friends (and they are all dear to me) how much fury I have witnessed in Lebanon.

When Abed drove me up to the north of the country three days ago, bullets were spitting off the walls of Tripoli and one of the customs officials at the Syrian border asked me to stay with him and his friends because they were frightened. I did. They are OK.

But being from the wrong religion is suddenly crucial again. Who your driver is, what is the religion of your landlord, is suddenly a matter of immense importance.

Yesterday morning (and here I will spoil the story by telling the end of it), the schools reopened round my seafront apartment and I saw a woman in a hijab riding a bicycle down the Corniche and I took a call from my travel agent about my next trip to Europe – Beirut airport reopened – and I realised that Lebanon had "returned to normal".

The roads were open again; the hooded gunmen had disappeared; the government had abandoned its confrontation with Hizbollah – the suspension of the Shia Muslim security chief at the airport (who bought me a bottle of champagne a year ago, I seem to remember – some Hizbollah "agent" he!) and the abandonment of the government's demand to dismantle Hizbollah's secret telecommunication system was a final seal of its failure – and I opened my newspaper and what did I read?

That George Bush declared in Jerusalem that "al-Qa'ida, Hizbollah and Hamas will be defeated, as Muslims across the region recognise the emptiness of the terrorists' vision and the injustice of their cause".

Where does the madness end? Where do words lose their meaning? Al-Qa'ida is not being defeated. Hizbollah has just won a domestic war in Lebanon, as total as Hamas's war in Gaza. Afghanistan and Iraq and Lebanon and Gaza are hell disasters – I need no apology to quote Churchill's description of 1948 Palestine yet again – and this foolish, stupid, vicious man is lying to the world yet again.

He holds a "closed door" meeting with Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara – a man stupendously unfit to run any Middle East "peace", which is presumably why the meeting had to be "closed door" – but tells the world of the blessings of Israeli democracy. As if the Palestinians benefit from a democracy which is continuing to take from them the land which they have owned for generations.

Do we really have to accept this? Bush tells us that "we consider it a source of shame that the United Nations routinely passes more human rights resolutions against the freest democracy in the Middle East than any other nation in the world".

The truth is that it is a source of shame that the United States continues to give unfettered permission to Israel to steal Palestinian land – which is why it should be a source of shame (to Washington) that the UN passes human rights resolutions against America's only real ally in the region.

And what is Washington doing in the country where I live? It has sent one of its top generals to see the Lebanese army commander, signalling – a growing Fisk suspicion, this – that it has abandoned its support for the Lebanese government. The Americans promise more equipment for the Lebanese army.

Yes, always more equipment, more guns, more bullets to the Middle Eastern armies though – I have to say yet again (and I repeat that I do not like armies) – the Lebanese army saved us all this week. Its commander-in-chief, General Michel Sleiman, will become the next president and the Americans will support him and feel safe, as they always do, with a general in charge. "Chehabism", as the Lebanese would say, has returned.

But I am not so sure. Sleiman gets on well with Damascus. He is not going to lead his soldiers into a pro-American war against Hizbollah. And the Lebanese are not going to join Bush's insane "jihad" against the "world terror".

There was a lovely moment in northern Lebanon this week – and here a big cheer for my brave friend Abed – when a Lebanese soldier at a checkpoint spotted me in our car and ran into the road.

"You are Mr Robert!" he shouted. "I have seen you on television! I read your book!" And he gave the thumbs-up sign. And I had to like this man. And I think he will fight for Lebanon. But I do not think he will fight for the Americans.

Robert Fisk's new book, 'The Age of the Warrior: Selected Writings', a
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Post by Rampy »

last time when I wrote a post asking if US will allow Paki to pass few flower patels to Al Saud , I was told I was Day dreaming, but seems I was not 8)

Now I have a question - Going by what is happening in ME and the way US is being checkmated, if US realizes that supporting Israel's cause is mess and has to choose between Saud and them, will US switch its sides ( how UK ditched them) and let Israel deal its own mess? What will that lead to ?
Avinash R
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Post by Avinash R »

^ did you hear what bush said in israel? Link
doesnt it show which side america is going to support?
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Post by NRao »

shyamd
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Post by shyamd »

Apparently BND(German foreign intel) was working very close with Siemens. Siemens sold comms interception equipment to Oman, Egypt and Russia. Siemens had left a back door open to allow the BND to listen into some of the convo's being intercepted.

The BND is also using Siemens as a cover for its operations in Iran, where it had a few contracts.

This is something India needs to be alert about now and hopefully the SAG will do the needful when necessary.
-----------------------------------
There are 2 types of tunnels, ones that were in existance during the British mandate which reach houses of prominent families in Gaza, which is rented out to smugglers. Hamas have dug other tunnels for their own use. The work has been overseen by the same North Korean advisers who helped Hezbollah to build its fortifications in south Lebanon.

300 or so Hamas' soldiers crawl out of Gaza through the tunnels each month.

The tunnels are guarded on the Egyptian side by Bedouins or Hamas sympathizers in the Egyptian security forces. The militants travel on to Damascus via Cairo or Alexandria and then split into two groups, according to how experienced they are. One group trains in Hezbollah camps at Balbek in southern Lebanon and the others are sent to garrisons controlled by the IRGC in Iran, such as the Imam Hussein garrison north of Tehran.

The ties established between Hezbollah and Hamas during training sessions can explain the many similarities in the way the two groups operate, particularly regarding their use of missiles.

Hezbollah is reported to have recently given Iranian built Ra'ad missiles with a 60 km range to Hamas. This puts them within striking distance of the Dimona nuclear power plant in southern Israel. The Ra'ad will gradually replace the Qassams.

When is Israel planning to protect itself?? But oh wait, No on the ground intelligence, oh and Hamas has a war strategy to bleed any Israeli forces entering the territory.

----------------------------
Read Debka's analysis and how the US had planned for Israeli's to strike in Lebanon and decisively defeat Hezbollah. US see's this as a chance for Israel to defeat Lebanon and take away Syrian and Iranian influence, saving the pro West Lebanese govt in the process. The Iranian intelligence sitting in the mountains realised that no Israeli tank was moving, hence gave the go ahead for Hezbollah's take over of Lebanon.

There is also a build up of US naval vessels opposite Lebanon.

US officials are also blaming Israel for continuing to take the missile onslaught from Hamas.

Israel’s Missed Boat in Lebanon
Sunday night, May 11, the Israeli army was poised to strike Hizballah. The Shiite militia was winding up its takeover of West Beirut and battling pro-government forces in the North. When he opened the regular cabinet meeting Sunday, May 11, prime minister Ehud Olmert had already received the go-ahead from Washington for a military strike to halt the Hizballah advance. The message said that President George W. Bush would not call off his visit to Israel to attend its 60th anniversary celebrations and would arrive as planned Wednesday, May 14 - even if the Israeli army was still fighting in Lebanon and Hizballah struck back against Tel Aviv and Ben-Gurion airport.

American intelligence estimated that Hizballah was capable of retaliating against northern Israel at the rate of 600 missiles a day.

Olmert, defense minister Ehud Barak and foreign minister Tzipi Lvini, the only ministers in the picture, decided not to intervene in Lebanon’s civil conflict. Iran’s surrogate army consequently waltzed unchecked to its second victory in two years over the United States and Israel.

DEBKAfile’s US and military sources disclose the arguments Washington marshaled to persuade Israel to go ahead: Hizballah, after its electronic trackers had learned from the Israel army’s communication and telephone networks that not a single troop or tank was on the move, took the calculated risk of transferring more than 5,000 armed men from the South to secure the capture of West Beirut.

This presented a rare moment to take Hizballah by surprise, Washington maintained. The plan outlined in Washington was for the Israeli Air force to bombard Hizballah’s positions in the South, the West and southern Beirut. This would give the pro-government Christian, Sunni and Druze forces the opening for a counter-attack. Israeli tanks would simultaneously drive into the South and head towards Beirut in two columns. (My Comment: I don't know how because some of the militia wasn't even activated, the Druze only offered a small resistance, Walid Jumblatt picked up the phone and told an intermediary between him and Nasrallah "Tell him, he(Nasrallah) wins")

1. The western column would take the Tyre-Sidon-Damour-Beirut coastal highway.

2. The eastern column would press north through Nabatiya, Jezzine, Ain Zchalta and Alei.

Sunday night, Olmert called Lebanese prime minister Fouad Siniora and his allies, the Sunni majority leader Saad Hariri, head of the mainline Druze party Walid Jumblatt and Christian Phalanges chief Samir Geagea and informed them there would be no Israeli strike against Hizballah. Jerusalem would not come to their aid.

According to American sources, the pro-Western front in Beirut collapsed then and there, leaving Hizballah a free path to victory. The recriminations from Washington sharpened day by day and peaked with President Bush’s arrival in Israel.

Our sources report that, behind the protestations of undying American friendship and camaraderie shown in public by the US president, prime minister and Shimon Peres, Bush and his senior aides bitterly reprimanded Israel for its passivity in taking up the military challenge and crushing an avowed enemy in Lebanon.

While the president was busy with ceremonies and speeches, secretary of state Condoleezza Rice and national security adviser Stephen Hadley took Israeli officials to task. Hadley in particular bluntly blamed Israel for the downfall of the pro-Western government bloc in Beirut and its surrender to the pro-Iranian, Pro-Syrian Hizballah. If Israeli forces had struck Hizballah gunmen while on the move, he said, Hassan Nasrallah would not have seized Beirut and brought the pro-government militias to their knees.

One US official said straight out to Olmert and Barak: For two years, you didn’t raise a finger when Hizballah took delivery of quantities of weapons, including missiles, from Iran and Syria. You did not interfere with Hizballah’s military buildup in southern Lebanon then or its capture of Beirut now.

IDF generals who were present at these conversations reported they have never seen American officials so angry or outspoken. Israel’s original blunder, they said, was its intelligence misreading of Hizballah’s first belligerent moves on May 4. At that point, Israel’s government military heads decided not to interfere, after judging those moves to be unthreatening.

The Americans similarly criticizes Israel for letting Hamas get away with its daily rocket and missile attacks on Israel civilians year after year. A blow to Hizballah would have deterred Hamas from exercising blackmail tactics for a ceasefire. In Sharm el-Sheikh Sunday, May 18, President Bush called on Middle East countries to confront Hamas and isolate terror-sponsors Iran and Syria.
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Post by shyamd »

French have been asked by the Israeli's to mediate in the Gilead Shalit release.

In an interview Saturday, May 17, outgoing Israeli Air Force commander, Lt. General (res.) Eliezer Shkedi likened Hamas’ missile stockpile to that of Hezbollah, stressing it was still growing.

The truce talks that are taking place are going to see a possible joint Fatah - Hamas government. It may also mean the recognition of Hamas and cement the Hamas control of Gaza and may begin focusing on the West Bank aswell.

-----------------------------
Sunni's HATE Shia, and on the operational level the Sunni's and Shia organisations co-operate, but they leave the religious stuff to their Mullah's.

Osama bin Laden attacks Hizballah’s Nasrallah and Shiite Iran

[quote]May 20, 2008, 11:17 AM (GMT+02:00)

Examination of the full text of the al Qaeda leader’s second audio-taped message in three days, aired On May 18, shows him exploiting the Palestinian issue to fan the flames of the Sunni-Shiite dispute raging in Iraq and Lebanon - and carry it over to the Gaza Strip.

His 22-minute diatribe calls Arab leaders “agents of crusaders,â€
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Post by Philip »

Flash:

The Israeli PM has asked for a naval blockade of Iran if it does not stop its controversial nuclear programme.With the US led by Texan marshal George Dubya Bush and his sidekick-deputy Dick Cheney,anything is possible with those lunatics still in the White House.If imposed,it will have massive untold ramifications for the global petroleum supplies from the Gulf and oil prices could go into space as a result. It may also indicate that Iran may have spread its nuclear facilities around several heavily defended sites across the country,making it harder for any military attack by Israel or a joint US/Israel strike to succeed.A naval blockade is equally risky as Iran could terrorise Gulf shipping as it has not insignificant supplies of anti-ship missiles which would be far more effective aagainst merchant shipping,sending tanker owners to the shelters! It could likewise attack soft targets with its Kilo subs and revolutionary guard units,who earlier on seized British naval personnel in the Gulf,instead of attacking naval warships which would be far more efective.

With India about to come aboard the "peace pipeline" ,the Indo-Iranian-Pak gas pipeline project,it would cause a lot of heartburn for the MEA and GOI which will be most unlikely to applaud any such military venture,always wanting the IAEA to take any action if need be.Nevertheless,it only reinforces Israel's great anxiety of the possible acquisition by Iran of nuclear weapons or even nuclear weapons grade enriched fuel,as Iran's leader,Pres. Ahmed-in-a jacket has openly vowed to send the sate of Israel into the sea.The Israeli PM's words might very well be an open signal to more reasonable power centres in Iran,like the Ayatollahs,many of whom do not approve of their president's actions,to restrain Ahmed-in-a-jacket's nuclear ambitions or face an uncertain future.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5h8f ... UC8FHCqT1w

Israel PM calls for naval blockade of Iran
3 hours ago

JERUSALEM (AFP) — Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has urged the United States to impose a naval blockade on Iran to pressure it to stop its controversial nuclear programme, the Haaretz daily reported on Wednesday.

Olmert raised the issue during a meeting in Jerusalem on Tuesday with US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the newspaper said.

"The present economic sanctions on Iran have exhausted themselves," Olmert was quoted as telling the California Democrat.

Asked about the report, Olmert's spokesman Mark Regev would say only: "We do not confirm this information."

Rafi Eitan, a member of Olmert's security cabinet, said he also favoured air travel restrictions against Iran.

"A blockade of maritime and air routes against Iran is a good possibility," Eitan, the minister in charge of pensioners' affairs, told public radio.

"There are voices we hear in Washington that indicate the military option remains open," he added.

Israel, the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear power, suspects, like Washington, that Tehran's nuclear programme is cover for a drive to develop an atomic bomb, something Iran strongly denies.
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Post by shyamd »

Indirect Israel-Syrian peace talks as announced by Olmert’s office have dragging on for years
May 21, 2008, 2:13 PM (GMT+02:00)

Referring to the announcement from Ankara and Jerusalem May 21, confirmed by Damascus, DEBKAfile’s Jerusalem sources point out that indirect Israel-Israeli peace talks have been afoot on and off since Ariel Sharon was prime minister from 2000 and before - with no results. The announcement, together with Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert’s unrealistic proposal to impose a sea blockade on Iran, are maneuvers to try and blot out the media headlines focusing on the police inquiry into his alleged past bribe-taking.

There is no chance of Washington imposing a naval blockade on a major oil producer such as Iran, as Olmert suggested to visiting US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi Tuesday, May 20, and so sending the already skyrocketing oil prices through the roof. The price in London Wednesday hit $130.05 the barrel.

In any case, the Bush administration would never take this belligerent step against Iran without the backing of the UN Security Council, a highly-improbable prospect.

As for the Turkish foreign minister’s disclosure of indirect Israel-Syrian talks mediated by Ankara, DEBKAfile’s Middle East sources warn that the Erdogan government’s initiative is in fact marking time rather than going forward.

Turkish officials toiled for months to bring low-ranking Syrian and Turkish representatives together for direct talks. Their plan ran aground in early May, when Syrian president Bashar Assad stated finally that there was no point in going on unless Israel agreed to certain pre-conditions, including the evacuation of the Shebaa Farms enclave on Mt Hermon. Assad also remarked that he would rather hold peace moves with Israel in abeyance until after the Bush presidency ended.

Syrian foreign minister Walid Mualem claimed later that the Olmert government had agreed to pull back to the pre-1967 war lines.

To draw a curtain over this impasse, the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem announced that when Olmert’s senior aides, Yoram Turbovitch and Shalom Turjeman, visited Ankara Tuesday, May 20, they learned that Syria is willing to go back to the negotiating table. In reality, both Israel’s and Syrian leaders toss the peace talk ball in the air whenever it suits their respective political agendas.
shyamd
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Post by shyamd »

In Lebanon: The talks in Doha have confirmed that Hezbollah is in control of Lebanon. They have agreed that Hezbollah will take 11 ministerial portfolio's out of 16. Also agreed is the Pro US President Sinoura is ousted by the end of the week or soon. The only candidate for president, chief of staff Gen. Michel Suleiman, expects to be elected by a parliamentary consensus before the end of the week.

This is the biggest strategic defeat that the West, Israel have experienced since Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip and Israel’s failure to smash the Hezbollah.
shyamd
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Post by shyamd »

What is now coming to light is that Syria and Iran told Nasrallah not to sign the peace agreement in Doha and instead keep on fighting.
Philip
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Post by Philip »

Welcome development.Something that could've begun years ago.A Syrian rapproachment with Israel could also resolve major issues in Lebanon.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstop ... talks.html

Israel and Syria hold peace settlement talks
By David Blair, Diplomatic Editor
Last Updated: 1:31AM BST 22/05/2008
Israel and Syria are holding indirect talks designed to achieve a comprehensive peace settlement, both countries announced.

REUTERS
The Golan Heights have long been a point of contention between Israel and Syria

The negotiations, mediated by Turkey, are the first for eight years. If an agreement is reached, the map of the Middle East would be redrawn and the region's strategic balance changed dramatically.

Both sides have much to gain from a settlement. Syria wants the return of the Golan Heights, which Israel occupied during the Six Day War of 1967. Meanwhile, Israel wants Syria to break its alliance with Iran and stop supporting Hizbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.

Syria's foreign ministry said that negotiations through Turkish mediators had begun and both sides "expressed their desire to conduct the talks in goodwill and decided to continue dialogue with seriousness to achieve comprehensive peace".

The office of Ehud Olmert, Israel's prime minister, said the countries were talking "in good faith and openly".

But critics suspect that the talks are a ploy to divert attention away from the corruption allegations that are rapidly overwhelming Mr Olmert's government.

The chances of agreement between Israel and Syria are slim. Years of American mediation between Israel and Hafez al-Assad, Syria's previous president, in the 1990s failed to produce an agreement. This effort collapsed in 2000, with Syria accusing Israel of breaking an earlier pledge to hand over all of the Golan Heights.

But a senior Israeli official in Jerusalem said a settlement with President Bashar al-Assad, who inherited Syria's leadership from his father in 2000, was still possible. He described Mr Assad as a "serious interlocutor" and "an astute decision-maker, very much in control", adding: "There's a respect here for the leadership there."

At present, Syria has lined up with Iran, Hizbollah and Hamas as a crucial member of the "alliance of resistance" in the Middle East, opposing America and supporting attacks on Israel.

But Israeli officials believe Syria is an unnatural member of this front.

While Iran's regime and Hizbollah embody Shia radicalism – and Hamas stands for the Sunni version – Mr Assad leads a secular regime dominated by the tiny Alawite strand of Islam.

Detaching Syria from this alliance would be a crucial strategic gain for Israel. But most Israelis oppose any withdrawal from the Golan Heights, where 18,000 Jewish settlers live. America's role in the peace talks is uncertain. In the past, Washington has opposed openings to Mr Assad.
shyamd
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Post by shyamd »

Apparently these talks were going on during Ariel Sharon's time aswell.

Olmert, Assad stage peace stunt to stave of political woes
DEBKAfile’s Middle East and Washington sources report fury in Washington with Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert, who is accused of keeping President George W. Bush in the dark on the moves he has set in train with Syrian president Bashar Assad.
Our Middle East sources reveal that Hizballah’s Hassan Nasrallah preferred to sign off on an intra-Lebanese factional deal that gives him veto power in the new government in Beirut, instead of following directives from Damascus and Tehran to carry on fighting the pro-Western majority factions.

To punish him for his show of independence, the Syrian president trumpeted his resort to peace talks with Israel. The message to Nasrallah was plain: If the talks go well, Hizballah’s legitimacy as a “resistanceâ€
shyamd
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Post by shyamd »

Syria asks for Missiles, MiGs, Submarines in Moscow
Damascus has passed the simple goal of defence against Israeli tanks and is going for air, missile and naval superiority: Iskander-E missiles, MiG-29SMT and Amur-class submarines.

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ranganathan
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Post by ranganathan »

Pointless going in for Mig29's, F-15's will make short work of them. Iskander-E might piss Israelis off a little but nothing they can't handle. Amurs won't stand much of a chance against dolphins but will be a threat to the saar-5's
shyamd
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Post by shyamd »

Apparently Khaled Meshaal met up with IRGC Chief in Tehran secretly and was given a tour of the roadside bomb making facilities. There is a possibility of Hamas receiving the roadside bombs which have accounted for 5 pcnt of US casualties in Iraq.

The internal security minister of Israel, mentioned of how the Hamas will soon be launching missiles deeper into Israel, being able to target Ashdod (Israel's main port).

Internal security minister Avi Dichter divulged to the cabinet ministers the mechanism whereby the Israeli taxpayer indirectly bankrolls Hamas.

The Israeli government last year transferred $1 billion to the PA headed by Mahmoud Abbas and Salam Fayyad. The funds covered the PA’s public sector payroll, which expanded this year from 160,000 to 200,000 earners. They include members of the various terrorist groups, such as the ruling Fatah and its branches, but also a massive transfer to the Gaza Strip to pay 70,000 administrative workers, most of them members of Hamas. In this way, Dichter reported, the Israeli government is indirectly funding Hamas.
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