Re: Middle East News and Discussion
Posted: 30 Jun 2008 03:52
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
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Fri, Jul 4 01:35 AM
ISI is not the TSP Praetorian guard. They are only informers for the TSPA which is the Praetorian guard for Nazaria-e- Pakistan. They guard the idea of Pakistan and not any emperor or ruler as the Roman PG did.Sanjay M wrote:Turkey's ISI-style Praetorian Guard:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/07/01/ ... turkey.php
Out of interest, I have just returned from a short trip to a North African nation run effectively as a dictatorship - I lost count of the number of times I was told by the locals of how they wished they had a Hizballah. The Hizballah effect is slowly rippling out of Lebanon and the many dictators and kings of the Arab world fear it far more than any Iranian nuke.
The more "wins" Hizballah have the worse it will get for said leaders.
US President George W. Bush has given Israel the "amber light" to carry out an attack on Iran if diplomatic efforts are unsuccessful in causing the Islamic Republic to back down and relinquish its nuclear program, according to a senior Pentagon official quoted by the British Sunday Times on Sunday morning.
There are lots of Hamas members going to Cairo this week, so I guess the announcement of this deal, is probably why they are headed there. This development has been going on for the last 3 weeks I think............Behind the bonhomie, DEBKAfile’s Middle East sources report that Abbas’ Fatah and its rival, the rejectionist Palestinian Hamas, have never been so close to a peace accord as they are today, largely due to the efforts of Mubarak himself. Success in this effort would write finis to the US-sponsored Palestinian peace track with Israel.This is the real purpose of the lengthy talks the Hamas delegations from Gaza and Damascus have been holding in Cairo. According to our sources, the rival factions have covered considerable ground:
1. Hamas has agreed to relinquish its rule of the Gaza Strip and accept a government manned by nonpartisan technocrats.
2. Parliamentary and presidential elections will be held in the Gaza Strip and West Bank, the date subject to the Hamas proviso that it is admitted to the Palestinian Liberation Organization leadership under a major structural reform.
3. Hamas and Fatah have agreed to Egyptian military forces’ deployment in the Gaza Strip to organize and train Palestinian security and intelligence bodies.
Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah, Hamas and Egypt agreed to leave Israel out in the cold and present the Palestinian reunion as a fait accompli. They reckoned that Israel would swallow the deal if captive Israeli soldier Gilead Shalit were freed. In any case, the prime minister Olmert is not expected to survive the corruption scandals gathering over his head.
The Palestinians groups and Cairo are moving forward as though George W. Bush, whose two-state solution was one of the high points of his international policy, had already left the White House.
A senior Abbas adviser, Yasser Abd Rabbo said in Ramallah last Thursday that A senior Abbas adviser, Yasser Abd Rabbo said in Ramallah last Thursday that his faction is seriously considering putting peace talks with Israel on ice.
JERUSALEM - Israelis pored Monday over every detail of 20-year-old pictures just received of their most famous missing soldier — his injured arm held close, the length of his beard and the Arabic writing on a wall in the background.
Israeli airman Ron Arad was captured in Lebanon in 1986, and his unknown fate has since gripped the nation and become one of the great mysteries of the past generation. Over the weekend, the Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah transferred photographs, diary excerpts and an 80-page report to Israel as part of a prisoner swap planned for Wednesday.
In Wednesday's swap, Israel will free five Lebanese, including the perpetrator of one of the most notorious attacks in Israeli history. In exchange, Hezbollah will return two soldiers it captured in a cross-border raid that sparked the 2006 war. Israel believes the soldiers are dead.
His story is well known. Arad was a 28-year-old navigator when he was forced to parachute out of his fighter jet on a mission over Lebanon in October 1986 after one of his Phantom aircraft's bombs apparently malfunctioned. Israeli forces rescued the jet's pilot, but Arad was seized by guerrillas from the Shiite Amal organization.
Interesting times...Avinash R wrote:Kidnapped troops return in coffins from Lebanon
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki told a German magazine he supported prospective U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama's proposal that U.S. troops should leave Iraq within 16 months.
Some five years after the U.S.-led invasion, there are still some 146,000 U.S. soldiers in Iraq.
Jerusalem to be Israel's capital: Obama
Agence France-Presse
Thursday, July 24, 2008 (Sderot, Israel)
US presidential candidate Barack Obama reaffirmed on Wednesday his position that Jerusalem will be the capital of Israel but insisted its final status must be decided through peace talks.
''I continue to say that Jerusalem will be the capital of Israel. I have said it before and will say it again... but I've also said that it is a final status issue that has to be dealt with by the parties involved,'' he said in the southern Israeli town of Sderot.
The international community, including the United States, does not recognise Israel's claim that Jerusalem is its ''eternal, undivided capital.'' Israel occupied mainly Arab east Jerusalem and the Old City in war in June 1967.
Jerusalem remains one of the most contentious issues in the peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians, who wish to make it the capital of their future state.
DEBKAfile’s Exclusive Middle East sources reveal that not only has prime minister Ehud Olmert’s chief of staff and lead negotiator with Syria, Yoram Turbowicz, decided to resign, but Syrian foreign minister Walid Mualem, the leading proponent of talks with Israel in Damascus, is also on his way out.
Turkey, envisaging the breakdown of its initiative, has hared off in a new direction, a bid to mediate between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas.
In the last 24 hours, Hamas has become the object of hot pursuit by Turkey, Jordan which has decided to patch up its nine-year quarrel with the radical Palestinian group, and Palestinian Authority Chairman, Mahmoud Abbas, who suddenly ordered the release of 200 Hamas prisoners in the interests of reconciliation with Fatah’s rival in the Gaza Strip.
New polls show Tzipi Livni as the favorite to lead Kadima, and possibly Israel's favorite in a general election contest.
A poll published Friday by Israel's daily Yediot Achronot showed Livni, the Israeli foreign minister, ahead of her primary Kadima rival, Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz, by 51 to 43 percent.
The flurry of polling followed Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's surprise announcement Wednesday that he would not compete in the Kadima primary race, slated for Sept. 17.
There is an Iranian/Hezbollah trained Al Qods(some sources call it a Hezbollah cell) cell in India. This cell is ready for action to target Israeli/western interests as part of Imad Mugniyeh's death anniversary. This info is coming from both CIA and Mossad.
Bogus information.sum wrote:There is an Iranian/Hezbollah trained Al Qods(some sources call it a Hezbollah cell) cell in India. This cell is ready for action to target Israeli/western interests as part of Imad Mugniyeh's death anniversary. This info is coming from both CIA and Mossad.![]()
As if our homegrown sunni cells werent creating havoc,we now have even Shia cells!!!!!![]()
Guess, India is turning into a fair game for all and sundry terrorists of all hues...
How many consulates do we have in Iran??Numerous analysts of South Asia infer that there are close security ties between Delhi and Tehran because of the Indian consulate in Zahedan with a likely intelligence presence there. India also established a consulate in Iran's port city of Bandar Abbas in 2001, which will permit India to monitor ship movements in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.[41] From a regional security point of view, the volume of defense trade, measured in dollars, may be less relevant than the kind of activities that appear to be ongoing, many of which may be more qualitative in nature. The presence of Indian engineers at Chahbahar and of Indian military advisors and intelligence officials in Iran confers to India a significant access to Iran. This access has tremendous import for India's ability to project power vis-à-vis Pakistan and Central Asia. It clearly provides India an enhanced ability to monitor Pakistan and even launch sub-conventional operations against Pakistan from Iran. Of late, numerous Pakistani officials opine that India is supporting the insurgency in Pakistan's troubled Baluchistan province and is exploiting its position in Afghanistan to enhance its intelligence activities against Pakistan. Pakistani observers also note that the presence of Indian engineers (and perhaps naval personnel in the future) at Chahbahar has particular utility for monitoring what is happening at Pakistan's Gwador port.
forget the name of the town, but we actually have a consulate in an obscure town inside Iran bordering baluchistan.sum wrote:How many consulates do we have in Iran??
We surely do seem to have significant presence there(military/Intel wise)..... Can now appreciate the Paranoia of the Pakis when the Indians are executing a "string of pearls" of their own around the pakis.....
Zahidan. There was a bomb blast near the embassy in 2001. No casualities.Rahul M wrote:forget the name of the town, but we actually have a consulate in an obscure town inside Iran bordering baluchistan.sum wrote:How many consulates do we have in Iran??
We surely do seem to have significant presence there(military/Intel wise)..... Can now appreciate the Paranoia of the Pakis when the Indians are executing a "string of pearls" of their own around the pakis.....
another chance for child rapists to drive bull dozers.August 13, 2008
Gaza: Israel reopened crossings into the Gaza Strip that were closed for a day after Palestinian militants fired an unguided Qassam rocket at a southern Israeli town, an army spokesman said.
The spokesman, who spoke anonymously by regulation, had no further details.
Israel and Hamas, the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza, reached a cease-fire agreement through Egyptian mediation last month that was meant to stop rocket attacks and ease the blockade on the Palestinian seaside territory.
JERUSALEM - Israel's Cabinet on Sunday approved the release of some 200 Palestinian prisoners as a goodwill gesture to the government of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told Abbas he would free some of the 11,000 Palestinians held by Israel to help energize peace talks between the two sides.
The prisoner issue is an emotional one for Palestinians, many of whom know somebody behind bars or have been imprisoned themselves. Palestinians see Israel's justice system as unfair and have elevated prisoners to hero status.
Abbas, known as Abu Mazen, has repeatedly called for a large release to boost his public standing.
"This is a gesture to Abu Mazen and the Palestinian people for the upcoming month of Ramadan," Olmert told the Cabinet, according to a meeting participant who spoke on condition of anonymity because the proceedings were closed.
In the West Bank, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad welcomed the gesture, but said Israel should release even larger numbers of prisoners.
"We welcome the release of any Palestinian prisoner. It is considered a victory for Palestinians," he told The Associated Press during a tour of the northern village of Tubas. "We ask Israeli to change its conditions for releasing prisoners and we ask for the release of all prisoners without exception."
Israeli security officials must still approve the list of prisoners to be freed under Sunday's decision. But the Cabinet official said the release would likely include two Palestinians involved in deadly attacks on Israelis. The official said officials believe the two men, convicted in attacks that occurred in the late 1970s, were unlikely to return to violence.
Israel's official position is that Palestinians involved in fatal attacks cannot be freed. However, it has made exceptions, most recently last month when it released a Lebanese prisoner convicted of killing three Israelis as part of a swap with the Hezbollah guerrilla group.
The Cabinet decision followed Olmert's announcement last month that he will leave office as he battles a corruption investigation. Palestinians have been seeking assurances that the peace talks, which began with great fanfare at a U.S.-sponsored conference last November, will continue despite Israel's political turmoil.
Olmert has said he is determined to press ahead with peace efforts as long as he is in office. His Kadima Party is scheduled to choose a new leader next month, but because of Israel's complicated political system, his term could extend into next year.
Olmert and Abbas had hoped to reach a peace agreement by the end of the year, though both sides have scaled back those expectations.
Israeli officials also said Sunday's vote was meant to send a message that Abbas can make progress through peaceful means, in contrast to his opponents' efforts to use force and abductions against the Jewish state.
Abbas' rival, the Hamas militant group, is demanding the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for a captured Israeli soldier held in the Gaza Strip for more than a year.
As Israel tries to negotiate a peace deal with Abbas, it has boycotted Hamas, which it considers a terrorist group. Hamas violently seized control of the Gaza Strip from Abbas' forces in June 2006.
In Gaza, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said the Israeli prisoner release aimed to widen internal Palestinian divisions between Hamas and Abbas' Fatah movement.
JERUSALEM - The politician with perhaps the best chance to replace Israel's embattled prime minister on Thursday called for a unity government to pursue the creation of a Palestinian state living peacefully alongside Israel.
Deputy Premier Tzipi Livni, who also serves as Israel's foreign minister, said she will try to form such a government if she wins next month's primary election of the ruling Kadima Party, as polls indicate she is likely to do.
"I believe that what we called in the past left and right is something that belongs to the past," she told foreign reporters. Now most Israelis understand that having two states in the lands comprising historic Palestine "is an Israeli interest."
Livni pointed to opinion polls that show her party winning a general election if she becomes Kadima head. However, she said she would prefer to keep the existing coalition, and even bring in new partners to strengthen it, rather than go to new elections.
"It's not my choice. It's theirs," she said of parliament members who will have to decide whether to join up with her if she becomes head of Kadima.
The party's current head, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, has promised to step down after next month's primary. He is the target of a series of highly damaging corruption probes that have made his continued stay in office untenable.
The 50-year-old Livni spent much of her career as a member of the hawkish Likud Party, and she is the daughter of a famous fighter of the early militant Zionist group Irgun.
However, she has carved a niche for herself as a leading moderate since leaving Likud and joining the government of former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who formed Kadima in 2005 as a way of pushing through his plan to withdraw Israeli troops and settlers from the Gaza Strip.
In the coming months, Livni will face stiff political competition both inside and outside her party, especially from hardliners such as former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Success, however, would make her Israel's first female prime minister since Golda Meir.
Livni is currently Israel's lead negotiator in peace talks with the Palestinians. On Thursday she sent mixed signals on whether it will be possible anytime soon to sign and implement a peace accord that would presumably enable Israel to remain both Jewish and democratic by allowing it to shed responsibility for millions of Palestinians.
"We decided that time is against us, that time is against the moderates and that stagnation is not an option for the Israeli government," she said in explaining the government's decision to hold peace talks with the moderate Palestinian leadership based in the West Bank.
At the same time, however, she implied that no agreement could actually be implemented until moderate Palestinians established full control of their own territory and regained control of the Gaza Strip, which the militant Hamas group violently took over last year.
"Nobody, nobody can afford in the region a terror state, a failed state or an extreme Islamic state between the Jordan river and the Mediterranean sea," she said.
Israeli and Palestinian leaders vowed at a U.S.-hosted Mideast peace conference last November that they would strive to have an agreement signed by the end of this year. Officials have been backing away from that timetable in recent weeks.
And on Thursday Livni said it is dangerous to rush into an agreement without hashing out key details.
"This can lead to clashes. This can lead to misunderstandings. This can lead to violence," she said.
On other issues, Livni expressed concern about a visit to Russia this week by Syrian President Bashar Assad, who is reportedly seeking to purchase long-range anti-aircraft missiles from Moscow.
"It is of mutual interest of Israel of Russia, of the pragmatic leaders in the region, not to send these kinds of long range missiles to Syria," which she said was working to destabilize Lebanon, strengthen ties with Iran and prop up extremist groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas.
Livni also called for tougher sanctions against Iran, which she said is moving rapidly to enrich enough uranium to build an atomic weapon.
As the West awaits Moscow’s threatened reprisal for the treaty installing American missile interceptors at Redzikowo, on Poland’s Baltic coast – signed in Warsaw Wednesday - the Kremlin is striking back in the Middle East – hence Russian president Dimitry Medvedev’s honeyed words of reassurance to Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert in a call he made to Jerusalem Wednesday, Aug. 20.
DEBKAfile’s military sources disclose that a powerful Russian naval contingent, led by the aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov , left Murmansk on the Barents Sea Aug. 18 to dock at the Syrian Mediterranean port of Tartus Saturday, Aug. 23. It includes the Russian Navy’s biggest missile cruiser Moskva and at least four nuclear missile submarines.
At the Black Sea resort of Sochi, Syrian president Bashar Assad told reporters Thursday, Aug. 21, that he is considering a Russian request to deploy missiles in his country in view of Russian-Western tensions over the Georgian conflict, which he said had polarized East and West anew.
Assad signaled he would also be representing Tehran’s interests in his talks with Russian leaders. Jordan’s King Abdullah is on his way to join them later in the day.
Before the Russian flotilla departed Murmansk, Assad is reported by our sources as having given the nod for Tartus port’s conversion into a permanent Middle East base for Russia’s nuclear-armed warships.
Assad’s arrival coincided with a visit by a large Syrian military delegation Thursday at the Russian weapons manufacturing giant, the Kalinin Machines Plant, east of Moscow. DEBKAfile’s military sources report that this plant makes sophisticated anti-air missile systems, including the S-300 and the BUK M, for which Damascus is bidding.
The Syrian ruler has said he is seeking closer military cooperation with Russia. The deal emerging from his visit is expected to cover the Russian Navy’s use of Tartus in return for a mutual defense accord providing Syria with a Russian nuclear umbrella and generous terms for his arms purchases.
Aug. 17, DEBKAfile first revealed Russia’s planned nuclear military deployments in the Middle East and Baltic to punish America for its missile deal with Poland and Georgia's attack in South Ossetia. They would included the installation of Iskandar surface missiles in Syria and Kaliningrad.
There is definet Al Qods/Hezbollah presence in India, there are repeated warnings from Mossad and CIA of imminent attacks by Hezbollah/Al Qods on Indian soil against western/Israeli interests. I would think that it is concentrated in the J&K region. This is due to the fact that intelligence reports last year stated that Iranian embassy had organised a couple of big anti war protests in J&K.New intelligence on Hezbollah's intentions to abduct Israelis abroad prompted the government's counterterrorism unit this week to issue a warning to travelers, who were advised to take special precautions.
In its warning Wednesday, the Prime Minister's Office Counterterrorism Bureau explained that intelligence reports suggested Hezbollah is planning abductions as its revenge for the assassination of Imad Mughniyeh, the militia's operations chief, who was killed in a Damascus car bombing in February. Israel has denied any involvement in the bombing. But the Sunday Times in London quoted "informed Israeli sources" that the Mossad spy agency carried out the car bombing that killed Mughniyeh.
Hezbollah has vowed to avenge Mughniyeh's death by attacking Israel or Israelis abroad. The travel advisory was a general warning, applicable to the entire world, not any specific travel destinations. According to people within the intelligence community, Israel does possess specific information regarding the location where Hezbollah plans to attack. But the Counterterrorism Bureau's warning says it applies to all countries.
The warning came one day after Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Israel would dispense with restrictions it has so far imposed on itself in combating Hezbollah on Lebanese soil should Lebanon "become a Hezbollah state."
The prime minister's comments were made while discussing the decision of Lebanon's unity government two weeks ago to approve the right of Hezbollah to use all means in order to "liberate territory occupied by Israel." The Lebanese decision followed the formation of a new national-unity government in which Hezbollah enjoys ample representation.
Israeli security officials earlier this month warned Israelis living and working in West Africa that Hezbollah intended to carry out abductions there. In recent months, Jewish and Israeli institutions outside Israel have bolstered security in anticipation of a possible Hezbollah attack, as have Israeli aircraft and ships.
"It won't be long before the conceited Zionists realize that Imad Mughniyeh's blood is extremely costly, and it makes history and brings about a new victory," Hezbollah's head of the southern Lebanon region, Sheikh Nabil Kauk, said a week after Mughniyeh's death.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak said then that he anticipated Hezbollah would try to retaliate for the assassination, possibly with help from Syria and Iran. Israeli security officials, including Barak, said they expected Hezbollah would opt to strike abroad instead of inside Israel or along the border so as to make it easier for the Shi'ite organization to maintain a plausible denial of its involvement, thus possibly escaping immediate Israeli retaliation.
Security experts said Hezbollah is more likely to attempt a terrorist attack in Third World countries, especially in South America, India and southeast Asia, than in developed European countries or in North America.
However, in June the American ABC News Network revealed that suspected Hezbollah operatives had conducted surveillance of the Israeli embassy in Ottawa, Canada and of several synagogues in Toronto. In addition to the Jewish community in Toronto, Jewish institutions in Rome were also mentioned as possible or desirable targets.
Let the traveler beware
In the statement, the Counterterrorism Bureau urged Israelis abroad to be wary of "unusual events," to turn down unexpected, tempting business or recreational offers and to avoid letting anyone suspicious or unknown visitors into their hotel rooms or apartments.
The warning also cautioned Israeli travelers not to linger in remote locations, especially after dark, and to attend business meetings or take part in recreational activities only in the company of reliable companions and to avoid regular and predictable routines.
The statement named no specific country as a potential focus of a terror attempt but classified the threat as "high" and "concrete."