Tag Archives: Israeli

Israelis are to step up operations against civilian infrastructure belonging to Hamas in West Bank in breach of a truce already agreed on.

According to Ha’aretz, Israeli forces will soon shut down a large number of Hamas-affiliated charities, confiscate their property, and search computers and documents that detail their activity.

The forces have been carrying out similar raids in the al-Khalil, Qalqilyah and Ramallah areas since the beginning of the year, but the operations will now be expanded to additional parts of the West Bank.

Israeli authorities including prime minister Ehud Olmert and war minister Ehud Barak have approved the plan to target Hamas civilian infrastructure.

Hamas-affiliated institutions that were targeted so far include schools, health centers, charities, and even soup kitchens and orphanages. Dozens of associations were shut down and the food confiscated.

An Egypt mediated truce between Israel and Gaza fighters came into effect on June 19, under which Israel promised to stop attacks on Gaza and ease the blockade in exchange for an end to the retaliatory homemade rocket attacks on Israelis.

But Palestinians say the Israeli regime has broken the Gaza truce more than 28 times since it went into force two weeks ago.

MSH/BGH

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President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says the United States and the Israeli regime will not dare launch any attack against the Islamic Republic.

“Neither the US, nor Israel nor hundreds of others will ever dare launch any attack on Iran. They know full well that they are unable to attack the Islamic Republic,” IRNA quoted Ahmadinejad as telling Malaysian reporters on Monday.

Ahmadinejad is currently in Kuala Lumpur to attend the 6th Summit of Group of Eight Developing Islamic Countries (D-8).

“The US President George Bush harbors evil and inhuman wishes, including confrontation with the Iranian nation but he could fulfill none of them. They (the US) know that they cannot speak to the Iranian nation with a bullying and threatening language. They should submit to the will of the Iranian nation,” he said.

The enemies have used the nuclear issue to put Iran under pressure, the Iranian president said, adding they have no concern about nuclear bombs because there are countries which possess atomic bombs and are not members of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“Our enemies oppose the ideals, views, culture and development of the Iranian nation. We support dialogue on common issues in a fair atmosphere because talks in unfair and unequal conditions would bear no fruit.”

Ahmadinejad characterized the current threats of the US and the Israeli regime as psychological warfare and added that the Iranian people would stand up to the enemies.

He stated that the US used to be the largest producer of oil in the world. There are also other countries that possess the world’s largest gas and energy reserves, but the fact has not prevented them from using nuclear energy as a clean energy.

He went on to say that using nuclear energy would spare countries such crises as pollution, global warming, drought and the resulting food shortages currently gripping large parts of the world.

SF/GM/BGH

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Syria has complained to the United Nations about a series of Israeli wrongdoings in the Golan Heights including burying nuclear waste.

The complaint was made in a report Syria handed to a UN fact-finding committee comprised of Senegal, Sri Lanka and Malaysia’s ambassadors, Ha’aretz said.

The report came after Syria held a third round of indirect negotiations with Israel in Turkey last week. A Turkish government source said Thursday that both sides agreed to hold a fourth round of indirect negotiations in Turkey in late July.

Syria listed in the report a number of human rights violations committed by Israel against the Golan’s Druze inhabitants.

Damascus also charged that Israel confiscates the Israeli ID cards of Druze students who return from studies in Syria, and that Golan residents continue to serve prison terms in Israeli jails, some for dozens of years.

Syria also protested the expansion in the strategic plateau of Israeli settlements, as well as lamenting the fact that Golan residents continue to be injured by mines planted in the region.

Israel seized the Golan Heights in the 1967 Middle East war and annexed in 1981 in a move never recognized by the international community.

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JERUSALEM – The Israeli Cabinet overwhelmingly agreed Sunday to a deal with Hezbollah to swap a notorious Lebanese prisoner for the bodies of two captured soldiers, the prime minister’s spokesman said.

The proposed deal would also needs the approval of the Lebanese militant’s group secretive, decision-making Shura Council.

The agreement had sparked a fierce public debate over whether Israel would be giving up too much or carrying out its highest commitment to its soldiers to do everything possible to bring them home if they fell into enemy hands.

The deal would have Hezbollah return two soldiers it captured in a July 2006 cross-border raid that sparked a 34-day war. Israel would release Samir Kantar, imprisoned for a 1979 attack etched in the Israeli psyche as one of the cruelest in the nation’s history.

Hezbollah had offered no sign that Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev were alive and the Red Cross was never allowed to see them.

For the first time, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert declared on Sunday that the soldiers were dead. Before the vote, Olmert told his Cabinet that Israel has concluded that the two soldiers killed during the raid or shortly after.

“We know what happened to them,” Olmert said, according to a prepared statement given to the Cabinet and released by his office. “As far as we know, the soldiers Regev and Goldwasser are not alive.”

Goldwasser’s father, Shlomo, said he was not surprised by the declaration, but wanted proof the soldiers were dead.

“There have been assessments for a long time,” he said. “But none of this matters because it is not fact. … They were alive when they (were) kidnapped and no one has provided us with evidence to the contrary.”

The Mossad intelligence agency and the Shin Bet security service opposed the deal, officials said. Germany has been trying to mediate a prisoner exchange since Israel’s war with Lebanon ended in August 2006.

Kantar is serving multiple life terms in the infiltration attack on a northern Israeli town. Witnesses said Kantar — then 16 — shot Danny Haran in front of his 4-year-old daughter, then smashed her skull against a rock with his rifle butt, killing her, too.

During the attack, Haran’s wife accidentally smothered their 2-year-old daughter in a frantic attempt to keep her quiet so Kantar and his comrades wouldn’t find them. Two Israeli policemen also were killed. Kantar denies killing the 4-year-old.

Critics have argued that swapping bodies for Kantar would offer militant groups an even greater incentive to capture soldiers and less of a reason to keep captives alive.

The debate over the deal taps into a military ethos that runs deep within Israeli society, where most young men and many young women perform compulsory service. Soldiers go out to battle with the understanding they won’t be left behind in the field.

The controversy also has weighed the immediacy of the Regev and Goldwasser families’ anguish against the pain suffered by a family attacked nearly 30 years ago. The woman whose family was killed by Kantar, Smadar Haran Kaiser, has in the past opposed his release.

An aide to Public Security Minister Avi Dichter said Haran Kaiser gave Dichter a letter approving the deal.

Israeli newspapers splashed pictures of the soldiers, their families and military comrades on their front pages.

“Bring them home,” ran the headline of the Yediot Ahronot mass-circulation daily. “Look us in our teary eyes,” ran the headline in Maariv, under a picture of Goldwasser’s parents and Regev’s father.

A recent poll by Israel’s Dahaf Research Institute showed that 65 percent of those questioned said Kantar should be released in exchange for the two soldiers held by Hezbollah, even if it was not known whether they are dead or alive.

The survey of 500 people had a margin of error of 4.4 percentage points.

The soldiers’ families have mounted a concerted public campaign to get the government to approve the deal. Family and friends demonstrated outside Olmert’s office while the ministers were deliberating.

Goldwasser’s wife, who has traveled the globe meeting with world leaders in an effort to bring her husband home, said troops would be less willing to fight for their country if they sensed their country had wavered in its commitment to its soldiers.

“If they won’t bring (the soldiers) back, I believe the message is to the people here is that the country is not going to stand for them, and this is why people in this country are not going to stand for this country,” Karnit Goldwasser told Associated Press Television News.

Some Cabinet ministers took the same view. “I believe in this deal with all my heart. There’s no room for hesitation, not to agree to the deal is to erase our obligation to bring back every soldier,” Cabinet Minister Meir Sheetrit said ahead of the meeting.

Other politicians were afraid the emotional appeals of the soldiers’ families could lead the government to bend sacred principles.

“If they are dead, I certainly oppose this deal,” dovish lawmaker Yossi Beilin told Israel Radio. “The principle must be releasing live prisoners for live hostages, and releasing bodies in return for the fallen.”

In addition to the two captured soldiers held in Lebanon, Israel is trying to win back a third soldier captured by Palestinian militants in a June 2006 cross-border raid from the Gaza Strip.

Sgt. Gilad Schalit has sent letters and an audio tape to his parents and is believed to be alive, though he has not been seen since his capture and the Red Cross has not been permitted to visit him.

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Iran says Israel’s recent military maneuvers were meant as a ‘big stick policy’ towards Iran prior to talks between Tehran and the G5+1.

Majlis (Parliament) Speaker Ali Larijani said that Israel’s ‘propaganda campaign’ to prepare for possible attacks on Iran shows Israel’s ‘destitution’ and takes place at a time when Iran’s Supreme National Security Council and Parliament are still reviewing a package of proposals from the G5+1 over Tehran’s nuclear program.

“The negotiations should take place in a calm atmosphere,” IRIB quoted Larijani as saying. “They (Israel) should know that they cannot make Iranians confused through their propaganda campaigns.”

Larijani, who until a few months ago was Iran’s top nuclear negotiator, added that the members of Iran’s nuclear negotiating team pay no attention to Israeli propaganda.

Iran is ‘fully prepared’ to confront any foreign threat, said Iran’s Parliament Speaker, adding that this was not the first time Iran faced such a malign campaign.

HSH/MR/GM

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Former Mossad chief Shabtai Shavit says Israel should be ready to attack if sanctions fail to sway Iran to renounce its nuclear program.

“As an intelligence officer working with the worst case scenario, I can tell you we should be prepared, we should do whatever necessary on the defensive side, on the offensive side, on the public opinion side for the West, in case sanctions don’t work,” Shabtai Shavit told the Sunday Telegraph.

“What’s left is a military action,” he continued.

Israel has stepped up its rhetoric against Iran and is said to be preparing its public for a war against the oil-rich Islamic Republic.

The New York Times quoted Pentagon officials last week as saying that over 100 Israeli F-16 and F-15 fighter jets staged a maneuver over the eastern Mediterranean and Greece between May 28 and June 12.

As part of the maneuver, Israeli jets flew over 900 miles, roughly the distance from their airfields to a nuclear enrichment facility in the central Iranian city of Natanz.

On June 6, Israeli deputy prime minister Shaoul Mofaz told the Yediot Aharonot that Tel Aviv would attack Iran if the country did not halt its nuclear activities.

In his comments to the Sunday Telegraph, the former Mossad chief also warned that American approval was not a necessary pre-requisite for Israel to carry out an air strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

“When it comes to decisions that have to do with our national security and our own survival, at best we may update the Americans that we are intending or planning or going to do something,” Shavit said.

MT/MR/GM

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Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says the Israeli regime is not in a position to embark on another ‘adventure’ in the region.

“We do not see the Israeli regime in a position to commit a new act of adventurism by attacking Iran, considering that it is still suffering from the consequences of its heavy defeat during its 33-day aggression against Lebanon two years ago. Another defeat of the Israeli regime will be further proof of its illegitimacy,” Mottaki told reporters in a joint press conference with his Pakistani counterpart Syed Naveed Qamar after the opening ceremony of the 17th session of the Joint Iran-Pakistan Economic Commission in Tehran Sunday.

“Iran’s mission to the UN will file documents and statements by the Zionist regime’s authorities because their speeches at various times are a clear admission of the regime’s aggressive attitude, its moves against international regulations and its possession of nuclear weapons,” he said.

He pointed to the package of incentives prepared by the six main powers on Iran’s nuclear case, saying, “Iran is studying the 5+1Group’s proposed package carefully and in a constructive spirit. The respectful attitude of the group’s representatives prepared the ground for Iran’s decision to study the package.”

On June 14, the EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana presented a package of incentives to the Iranian Foreign Minister. The package was drawn up by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany (5+1 Group) and requires Iran to renounce its right to uranium enrichment in exchange for a set of political, economic and security incentives.

Iranian officials insist that as a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the Islamic Republic is entitled to acquire nuclear technology for electricity generation and peaceful applications in such important areas as medicine, agriculture and manufacturing.

Iran’s top diplomatic official added that the G5+1 had taken a constructive view of Tehran’s proposed package, which was submitted to a number of countries and international organizations. The package is aimed at tackling a range of issues the world is facing in connection with terrorism, nuclear proliferation, drug trafficking and other criminal activities that threaten peace and security across the world.

He recommended the Group of Eight industrialized countries should take a constructive stance on Iran based on the new circumstances and avoid politically-motivated measures. “This will be beneficial to all.”

In a statement issued on Friday, the Group of Eight urged Iran to accept the West’s new incentive package and suspend its uranium enrichment program.

SF/GM

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Israeli prime minister has rejected speculation that the release this week of a Lebanese prisoner is part of a swap with Hezbollah.

Ehud Olmert denies that Sunday’s release of Nasim Nisr heralds was an exchange that would see Israel release Lebanese prisoners for two Israeli soldiers captured in 2006, APTN reported.

At the time of Nisr’s return to Lebanon, Hezbollah transferred to Israel a box containing the body parts of Israeli soldiers. Nisr said his return was part of a larger deal.

But Olmert says Nisr was released only because his sentence was up and the Zionist regime was surprised to get the body parts.

Speaking to reporters Wednesday in Washington, Olmert has said there was no deal or coordination ahead of time.

On June 1, Lebanese prisoner Nasim Nisr, imprisoned by Israel for six years, was released from the Nitzan Prison in Ramallah.

Following the release of Nisr, Hezbollah returned the bodies of Israeli troops to the International Committee of the Red Cross. The Israeli troops were killed during the Israeli 33-day war against Lebanon in 2006.

MSH/MMN

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ShirSoleiman

Israeli president Shimon Peres says Israeli and Syrian leaders should hold direct talks if both sides are interested in forging trust.

Shimon Peres called for direct Israeli-Syrian negotiations, recalling the groundbreaking visit by Egypt’s then-President Anwar Sadat to al-Quds in 1977.

“Had Sadat not come to Jerusalem [al-Quds], we would not have had peace with Egypt”, said Peres.

“If the Syrians are genuinely seeking peace, then they must hold a summit meeting between Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert,” Shimon Peres said on Sunday in a meeting with New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson. The two met at Peres’ official residence in al-Quds.

Such a meeting could take place either in al-Quds or Damascus, said Peres, adding, “But it is an absolute necessity to break the psychological barrier and build trust between the two sides.”

Peres further noted that the current president’s late father, Hafez al-Assad, refused to meet with him in 1996. He did, however, give his consent in principle to such a meeting through then-US Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who acted as mediator.

Meanwhile the indirect talks between the Israeli and Syrian delegations are continuing in Ankara. A possible meeting between Assad and Olmert at the upcoming Middle East conference in Paris will be on the agenda.

The conference, organized by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, is scheduled to be held on July 13th. The Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad are invited to the conference, but there has been no indication that they plan to meet.

In May, Israel and Syria launched indirect peace talks, with Turkey acting as a mediator, after an eight-year freeze.

The Syrians want the return of all of the Golan Heights which Israel seized in the 1967 Middle East war and annexed in 1981, a move never recognized by the international community.

Israel demands that Syria break off its ties with Iran as a precondition in their talks, but Syria has said it would reject any preconditions in the talks that call on Damascus to change its relations with other countries or movements.

MSH/GM

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