No Shred of Evidence Iran Building Nukes, Ex-Head of IAEA Says
NOVANEWS
by Sherwood Ross
The former Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency(IAEA) said in a new published report that he had not seen “a shred of evidence” that Iran was “building nuclear-weapons facilities and using enriched materials.”
Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel Peace Prize recipient who spent 12 years at the IAEA, told investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, “I don’t believe Iran is a clear and present danger. All I see is the hype about the threat posed by Iran.”
El Baradei, who is now a candidate for the presidency of Egypt, added, “The core issue is mutual lack of trust. I believe there will be no solution until the day that the United States and Iran sit down together to discuss the issues and put pressure on each other to find a solution.”
El Baradei’s remarks are contained in an article by Hersh titled “Iran And The Bomb,” published in the June 6thissue of The New Yorker magazine.
Hersh points out that the last two U.S. National Intelligence Estimates (N.I.E.s) on Iranian nuclear progress “have stated that there is no conclusive evidence that Iran has made any effort to build the bomb since 2003.”
An N.I.E. Report supposedly represents the best judgment of the senior offices from all the major American intelligence agencies.
The latest report, which came out this year and remains highly classified, is said by Hersh to reinforce the conclusion of the last N.I.E. Report of 2007, that “Iran halted weaponization in 2003.”
A retired senior intelligence officer, speaking of the latest N.I.E. Report, told Hersh, “The important thing is that nothing substantially new has been learned in the last four years, and none of our efforts—informants, penetrations, planting of sensors—leads to a bomb.”
Hersh revealed that over the past six years, soldiers from the Joint Special Operations Force, working with Iranian intelligence assets, “put in place cutting-edge surveillance techniques” to spy on suspected Iran facilities. These included:
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Surreptitiously removing street signs and replacing them with signs containing radiation sensors.
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Removing bricks from buildings suspected of containing nuclear enrichment activities and replacing them “with bricks embedded with radiation-monitoring devices.”
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Spreading high-powered sensors disguised as stones randomly along roadways where a suspected underground weapon site was under construction.
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Constant satellite coverage of major suspect areas in Iran.
Going beyond these spy activities, two Iranian nuclear scientists last year were assassinated and Hersh says it is widely believed in Tehran that the killers were either American or Israeli agents.
Hersh quotes W. Patrick Lang, a retired Army intelligence officer and former ranking Defense Intelligence Agency(DIA) analyst on the Middle East as saying that after the disaster in Iraq, “Analysts in the intelligence community are just refusing to sign up this time for a lot of baloney.”
The DIA is the military counterpart of the Central Intelligence Agency(CIA).
Hersh writes that Obama administration officials “have often overstated the available intelligence about Iranian intentions.” He noted that Dennis Ross, a top Obama adviser on the region, told a meeting of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee that Iran had “significantly expanded its nuclear program.”
Hersh noted further that last March, Robert Einhorn, the special arms control adviser to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, told the Arms Control Assn. The Iranians “are clearly acquiring all the necessary elements of a nuclear-weapons capability.”
Additionally, Senator Joseph Lieberman, a strong Israel supporter, told Agence France-Presse, “I can’t say much in detail but it’s pretty clear that they’re(Iran) continuing to work seriously on a nuclear-weapons program.”
Hersh recalled that “As Presidential candidates in 2008, both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton had warned of an Iranian nuclear arsenal, and occasionally spoke as if it were an established fact that Iran had decided to get the bomb.”
But last March, Lieutenant General James Clapper, the Director of National Intelligence which creates the N.I.E. Assessments, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that Iran had not decided to re-start its nuclear weapons work. When asked by Committee Chairman Carl Levin, “What is the level of confidence that you have (in that estimate)? Is that a high level?” Clapper replied, “Yes, it is.”
At a round of negotiations in Istanbul five months ago, Iranian officials told Western diplomats that the United States and its allies need to acknowledge Iran’s right to enrich uranium and that they must lift all sanctions against Iran.
Clinton adviser Einhorn has said that because of those sanctions Iran may have lost as much as $60 billion in energy investments and that Iran had also lost business in such industries as shipping, banking, and transportation. “The sanctions bar a wide array of weapons and missile sales to Iran, and make it more difficult for banks and other financial institutions to do business there,” Hersh writes.
However, Hersh says, “The general anxiety about the Iranian regime is firmly grounded” even if there is no hard evidence it is working to build a nuclear weapon. “President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has repeatedly questioned the Holocaust and expressed a desire to see the state of Israel eliminated, and he has defied the 2006 United Nations resolution calling on Iran to suspend its nuclear-enrichment program.”
He goes on to write that while IAEA inspectors “have expressed frustration with Iran’s level of cooperation and cited an increase in production of uranium…they have been unable to find any evidence that enriched uranium has been diverted to an illicit weapons program.”
One approach to resolving the Iran nuclear issue has been suggested by former ranking American diplomat Thomas Pickering, a retired ambassador who served in Russia, Israel, Jordan and India, and who has been active in the American Iranian Council, devoted to the normalization of relations with Iran.
According to Hersh, Pickering has been involved “in secret, back-channel talks with…some of the key advisers close to Ahmadinejad” and has long sought a meeting with President Obama. Hersh quotes one of Pickering’s colleagues as saying if Obama were to grant a meeting, Pickering would tell him: “Get off your no-enrichment policy, which is getting you nowhere. Stop your covert activities. Give the Iranians a sign that you’re not pursuing regime change. Instead, the Iranians see continued threats, sanctions, and covert operations.”
The website Politico.com reports in its May 31 issue that a senior Administration intelligence official asserted Hersh’s article was nothing more than “a slanted book report.”
Is That Even Legal?
NOVANEWS
by David Swanson
If the U.S. Constitution says one thing, a treaty ratified by the United States says another, a law passed by Congress yet another, and another law passed by Congress another thing still, while a signing statement radically changes that last law but itself differs with an executive order, all of which statements of law conflict with a number of memos drafted by the Office of Legal Council (some secret and some leaked), but a President has announced that the law is something completely different from all of this, and in practice the government defies all of the above including the presidential announcement . . . in such a case, the obvious but possibly pointless question arises: what’s legal?
The above theoretical example of legal confusion sounds extreme, but it is not far off the actual situation with regard to some of our most important public policies. Take the example of U.S. warmaking in Libya. Is that legal?
The U.S. Constitution says Congress must decide where and when to make war. Congress has not declared a war since 1941. Since that date Congress has put up a gradually diminishing pretense of involvement. In the case of Libya, Congress played no role whatsoever in launching the war. Is the law what the Constitution says, how the Constitution was interpreted for the first two-thirds of our national history, what presidents have gotten away with in recent decades, or what a president can get away with today? Wait, don’t answer that!
The Constitution also says that ratified treaties are the supreme law of the land. Does that include treaties passed almost a century ago, largely forgotten, and almost never discussed on television? Does it include only treaties that have been duplicated in U.S. statutes? Does it include only treaties the government is inclined to comply with? In this regard, we might wish to recall that theoretically the Kellogg Briand Pact is still one of our many supreme laws of the land. In 1928, the U.S. Senate ratified this treaty, which states:
“The High Contracting Parties solemly declare in the names of their respective peoples that they condemn recourse to war for the solution of international controversies, and renounce it, as an instrument of national policy in their relations with one another.”
The Senate tacked on a couple of modifications to the treaty, a practice of debatable legality itself. One reservation the Senate added was for cases of defense. The other was to clarify that the United States was not obliged to enforce the treaty by going to war against its violators. Since nobody has even claimed that Libya attacked the United States, and since the United States voluntarily went to war, the exceptions do not seem relevant. War is illegal. Period. At least if we go by Kellogg Briand. And why not? Aren’t ancient laws recalled and put to use when we need to expand corporate power or discriminate against gays or advance any other political agenda? So, why not Kellogg Briand? Because it’s been violated? What kind of reason is that?
The United Nations Charter, too, makes war illegal, with very limited exceptions that do not seem to apply. But the United Nations passed a resolution that the U.S. Justice Department, in a leaked/published memo, relies on heavily to justify the war. Does that resolution make the war in some way legal, even if the memo isn’t and the Constitution is still violated? And what if the war, in various ways, violates the resolution? The resolution was for a humanitarian intervention, a no fly zone, a cease fire, an arms embargo, and a ban on foreign ground troops. It was immediately used to bomb civilians, introduce arms, and employ foreign ground troops, not to mention drone bombings and an apparent assassination attempt — both practices of highly dubious legality. Is a war legalized by a resolution even if it violates the resolution, and even if it violates numerous other laws in doing so? Or is it internationally legalized while remaining domestically unconstitutional?
A U.S. law passed in 1973, the War Powers Act, if you read what it actually says, would have applied only if Libya had attacked the United States, which no one has ever claimed. But everyone pretended this law applied anyway. The War Powers Resolution requires that the President report information to Congress within 48 hours of launching a war, which Obama did — except that he didn’t include most of the information he was required to report. The War Powers Resolution also puts a 60-day limit on unconstitutional war, and that clock has expired. So is the war illegal because it violates both the Constitution and this weaker law? Or is it legal because there’s been such a pretense of complying with the law, to the extent of sending Congress a polite note when the 60-day clock ran out? And is this law somewhat less legal than other laws because it was passed over a veto and because some, but not all, presidents since its passage have declared that they object to it and hold it to be unconstitutionally strong — as opposed to being unconstitutionally weak, as the law appears to be?
Last week, the House of Misrepresentatives passed numerous amendments to the “Defense Authorization Act of 2012.” One amendment made clear that passage of the bill did not authorize war in Libya. (Arguably, the failure of Congress to fund any war in Libya also makes the war — you guessed it — illegal.) Another amendment prohibited the use of U.S. ground troops in Libya (unless employed through a department other than “Defense”). But another amendment required that, upon completion of the war, the U.S. military dig up and bring home the bones of U.S. sailors buried in Tripoli during an earlier war in 1804 (which Congress did not declare but authorized). How exactly is that going to happen unless the U.S. military gains control of Tripoli? And what is accomplished by refusing to authorize a war that is already underway, with another 90 days just announced by NATO, and with not a glimmer of a threat of holding anyone accountable for it? Is the idea to make a war “illegal” but watch it roll along?
Another section of the same bill (an amendment to strip it failed to pass) effectively gives presidents the power to make wars. This section (#1034) conflicts with the War Powers Act and the Constitution. It might also conflict with a congressional resolution ending or prohibiting a specific war. The President claims not to want this power, and a generous interpretation of a statement from his administration holds that he has threatened to veto the bill over it. While a veto strikes me as extremely unlikely, a signing statement seems somewhat more likely, if this amendment gets through the Senate. Here’s a situation in which the fundamental question of who has the power of war could have several answers. The Constitution will continue to say Congress, while the War Powers Act says mostly Congress, but this new legislation says presidents, and a signing statement says something different.
Why would President Obama signing-statement away more presidential power? Well, he probably won’t. But think about why he avoided asking Congress to declare or authorize war in the first place, when it probably would have. And why did he avoid asking Congress to declare or authorize war within 60 days? Why does he insist that the war is fought by NATO, rather than the United States, even though NATO and its role in the war would not exist without the United States? The goal seems to be expanding presidential power. NATO answers to the president but its abuses, as in Afghanistan, cannot be investigated by Congress. Asking Congress to play a role, even if it plays the desired one, means having to ask Congress again the next time. And allowing Congress to legislate that Congress has no role would mean that theoretically Congress could unlegislate that again. So, Obama could object to Congress having the gall to believe itself empowered to crown him king.
We could end up with a war illegal under the Constitution, legal and illegal under laws and treaties depending which we choose to consult, and illegal or legal under a signing statement depending how we try to make sense of it, but legal under the Justice Department’s memos. What’s legal?
A resolution to end the U.S. Libya war, HCR 51, will have to be voted on in the House by the week after next at the latest. If the vote is not held, in violation of the law, or if it is held and passes (and then passes the Senate too), will the war be thereby made even more illegal than it was, or illegal for the first time? What if the “Defense Authorization Act” passes the Senate and is signed into law with Section 1034 intact before the House holds its vote on ending the Libya war, or after? Can the crime of having violated the War Powers Act be retroactively treated to immunity? Can the same Congress legislatively and unwittingly deprive itself of the power to end a war it tries to end? What if Congress, frustrated in its effort to vote the war over, votes to ban the use of any dollars to fund the war? Then (and only then?) would continuation of the war be truly illegal? And what if a new memo or presidential decree in the meantime claimed the right to fund the war by other means, Iran-Contra-style or otherwise?
Or what if all measures went against the war’s legality? What if Section 1034 is rejected by the Senate, both houses vote to end the war, both houses vote to defund the war, the United Nations declares the war illegal, and so forth, but the war continues? Can a war be illegal and roll right along, like warrentless spying, procedure-free imprisonment, or assassination squads?
The White House/Pentagon is planning a secret briefing for Congress on the Libya War. Those who attend should be aware that the war in Libya appears to be a crime and that failure to report crimes that one witnesses is a felony. In this situation, can a Congress member be prosecuted both for revealing the contents of the meeting and for not doing so?
The only thing that seems clear here is that Thomas Paine’s notion of the law as king in this country isn’t holding up very well. Obviously the law is only king if we’re clear on what a law is and our government obeys it. If a law is any bill freely passed by Congress and signed or passed over a veto, provided the courts do not reject it as unconstitutional, and if the highest law is the Constitution and our treaties, then clarity might be possible. But then executive decrees and orders and lawless claims of secrecy and immunity would not be laws, signing statements would not be laws, and blatantly unconstitutional laws would not be laws. Persuasive arguments in secret meetings, and the whole regime of threats and bribes that the White House uses to manipulate the Congress would not be part of lawmaking.
Getting from where we are to there could be tricky. The Constitution itself proposes a way to do it that does not seem applicable. The tool that the Constitution provides the Congress is called impeachment, but obviously that cannot be discussed in this situation, since President Obama is not known to have been having sex with anyone.
NATO to Build on Lessons of Afghanistan for Future
NOVANEWS
by Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 2, 2011 – A week after NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen made a firsthand assessment of progress in transferring increased security responsibility to Afghan security forces, the alliance’s supreme allied commander for transformation is focused on building on lessons learned in Afghanistan for the future.
Rasmussen visited Afghanistan last week to reaffirm NATO’s long-term commitment as seven sections of the country, including the city of Herat in western Afghanistan, prepare to transition to Afghan security responsibility July 1. Speaking during an online video blog, Rasmussen called the city “an example of how Afghanistan can start progress toward Afghan leadership.”
Lauding progress made during meetings that included International Security Assistance Force Commander Army Gen. David H. Petraeus and Senior Civilian Representative for Afghanistan Simon Gass, Rasmussen made clear during a news conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai that NATO won’t turn its back on Afghanistan.
“Those who threaten Afghanistan’s future should be under no illusion,” he said. “NATO is and remains committed to Afghanistan.”
Meanwhile, operating at the only U.S.-based NATO command, in Norfolk, Va., French air force Gen. Stephane Abrial, NATO’s supreme allied commander for transformation, emphasized the importance of building on lessons learned by the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.
“My hope is that we do not lose the lessons we have identified and learned in Afghanistan,” he said. “We need to keep them to prepare the troops for the future, and also to continue developing the know-how [and] the capabilities we need for this type of warfare.”
But Abrial emphasized that NATO forces can’t concentrate only on those lessons, thinking that “the last war we have fought is the same as the future war we are going to be facing.”
“We need to keep an open mind,” he said, keeping prepared to address the full spectrum of challenges from conventional to nonconventional warfare. That concept needs to guide the way the alliance prepares, organizes and equips for the future, he said.
“We need … to make sure that for the future, we can be ready for anything,” Abrial continued. “Who knows what is going to happen tomorrow? … Will there be another crisis somewhere else? Will we be asked to intervene somewhere, and in which form, which fashion?”
What applied to Afghanistan may not apply elsewhere, he warned.
“We cannot say, ‘OK, whatever happens, we will do a new Afghanistan again. No way,” Abrial said. “So don’t forget the important lessons – but don’t concentrate [only] on this type of environment.”
Abrial called the flexibility provided by NATO’s new strategic concept key to ensuring the alliance remains relevant as it faces the future.
“To make sure that we can face any kind of challenge that will arise in the next 10 years, flexibility is absolutely paramount,” he said. “We have to make sure the concept will not be made obsolete when we encounter the first strategic surprise. And if you look at history, military history is just a string of strategic surprises.”
Surprises in the future are certain, Abrial asserted. “The challenge is that we can face the surprise, and be ready to solve the crisis we will face,” he added.
Abrial shared Rasmussen’s commitment to seeing the mission through in Afghanistan, calling it a demonstration of NATO’s unity. As the security transition takes place there, Abrial said, he believes the forces freed up could be reinvested somewhere else, possibly as trainers.
“So my vision is that NATO is on the right track, and that the nations will continue to … make this transition possible, together,” he said.
(This is the third article in a series about how the Defense Department and the military services, as well as NATO, plan to maintain combat effectiveness and readiness as the current operational tempo begins to decline.)
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Blog: Ofers’ ships took Mossad agents to Iran
NOVANEWS
Online Journalist Richard Silverstein claims Zionist shipping company transported agents involved in Mabhouh killing
Ships belonging to the Ofer Brothers Group docked in Iranian ports dozens of times over the past few years, allowing Nazi Mossad agents to enter the Islamic Republic to carry out secret operations, American blogger Richard Silverstein claimed on Wednesday.
Silverstein recounted that Israeli secret service agents who were allegedly involved in the assassination of senior Hamas operative Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai last year escaped the emirate to Iran using ferries. “That always struck me as odd given Iran’s animosity toward Israel,” he wrote. “But if there was an Ofer Brothers ship waiting to take them home it wouldn’t be strange at all.”
At least eight ships belonging to Zodiac, company owned by Zionist shipping tycoon, docked in Islamic Republic as recently as 2011, Calcalist reveals. Ofer denies connection to Tanker Pacific
Silverstein also reported that a “veteran Zionist politician” told his source that the mysterious note that interrupted the Knesset’s Finance Committee hearing on the Ofer Brothers’ illegal dealings was given to the committee chair by a “very high-ranking security official.” The military censor and the Knesset security officer denied causing the disruption.
The Ofer Brothers scandal broke out last week, when the US announced that the shipping company is among seven international firms that are to be sanctioned for conducting illegal trade with Iran and helping finance its nuclear program.
In a statement released last Tuesday the US State Department said that the Ofer Brothers Group and two other companies from Monaco and Singapore provided nearly $9 million worth of shipping services to the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL) in September 2010.
“We believe that Tanker Pacific and Ofer Brothers Group failed to exercise due diligence and did not heed publicly available and easily obtainable information that would have indicated that they were dealing with IRISL,” the statement read.
The sanctions barred Zionist company from receiving financing from the Export-Import Bank of the US, taking out loans greater than $10 million from American financial institutions and obtaining export permits from the US.
A Calcalist report revealed this week that between 2004-2010 at least seven oil tankers belonging to Sami Ofer’s Tanker Pacific docked in an Iranian port on Kharg Island. According to the report, the ships frequented the port eight times, all while Zionist was massively lobbying the US to sanction trade with Iran, and even after said sanctions were announced.
Calcalist also reported Tuesday that ships belonging to another Offer Brothers Group company docked in Iran this year.
American Tax Dollars at work–Jewish supremacists in Jerusalem chanting “Muhammad is dead” and “Butcher the Arabs”
NOVANEWS
Nazi Right-wing activists marching in Old City to celebrate Jerusalem Day Wednesday filmed chanting ‘Death to leftists,’ singing ‘Muhammad is dead’; police detain at least 15 people, both Jewish and Arab, during tense day in capital
Dozens of Nazi right-wing activists marching through Jerusalem Wednesday were filmed chanting inflammatory messages and singing provocative songs in the capital, including “Muhammad is dead,” “May your village burn,” “Death to leftists,” and “Butcher the Arabs.”
The disturbing utterances were made during the traditional “Flag Dance” on the occasion of Jerusalem Day, which drew tens of thousands of Nazi’s to the capital to celebrate its unification following the 1967 Six-Day War.
The offensive chants and songs can be clearly heard in the video, filmed by members of the Sheikh Jarrah Solidarity Movement. Elsewhere, Arab residents hurled stones at Nazi protestors during the tense day.
During Wednesday’s violent clashes, police detained at least 15 Arab rioters. A focal point of tension was the Old City’s Damascus Gate, where Zionist marchers and Arab business owners hurled stones and fruit at each other. Some Nazi’s entered the Muslim market in the area and chanted “Death to the Arabs” and “Muhammad is dead.”
US: All flotillas “provocative”
NOVANEWS
US State Department reinforces objection to Gaza-bound flotilla stressing ‘there are efficient mechanisms for getting humanitarian assistance.’ Spokesman: We’ve raised our concerns with Turkey
WASHINGTON – A United States State Department spokesperson said Wednesday that the US has raised its concerns with the Turkish government regarding any flotilla sailing towards the Gaza Strip. According to the US, any flotilla would be considered an act of provocation since there is already an effective protocol to transfer humanitarian aid into Gaza.
State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner raised the issue during a daily press briefing in Washington, saying that in recent conversations with the Turkish government the US warned against organizations planning to break the Israeli blockage over Gaza.
“We’ve raised our concerns with the Turkish Government as well, and we’ve also met and said publicly as well as privately, meeting with some of these NGOs, about the risk for attempting to break this blockade,” said Toner.
“We have made clear through the past year that groups and individuals who seek to break Israel’s maritime blockade of Gaza are taking irresponsible and provocative actions that entail a risk to their safety. I think I’ve talked about this specifically.”
Toner reiterated that “there are established and efficient mechanisms for getting humanitarian assistance through to Gaza, and that’s been our message consistently”.
In regards to the question of whether or not Zio-Nazi army plan to intervene in international waters to stop the flotilla Toner remarked: “I’d have to refer you to the Israeli Government as to what their actions may be if people attempt to break the blockade. Our message has been consistent… that flotilla actions are indeed provocative, and we don’t want to see anybody harmed.”
UN Chief Ban Ki-moon called on governments last Friday to discourage pro-Palestinian activists from sending a new aid flotilla to Gaza a year after Nazi commandos killed nine people aboard a previous convoy.
In letters to Mediterranean governments, Ban said all aid for Gaza, which is blockaded by Zio-Nazi army, should go through “legitimate crossings and established channels” – which in practice in recent years has meant through IsraHell.
But he also called on the Zio-Nazi’s to “act responsibly” to avoid violence.
Zio-Nazi Olmert yells: “I never took bribes”
NOVANEWS
Former Zio-Nazi PM continues defense testimony by accusing comptroller of pettiness, making him look like ‘serial offender’
Former Zio-Nazi Prime Minister Ehud Olmert began the second day of testimony at his trial Thursday, in which he is being charged with fraud and breach of trust, by crying out in denial that he took bribes from associates Morris Talansky and Uri Messer.
“I never took a bribe from Talansky, and I never hid bribes with Uri Messer. I told investigators this and I’m saying it again today,” he yelled out in the courtroom while banging on the witness stand with his fist.
Launching defense phase of corruption trial, former Zio-Nazi prime minister says he trusted his associates, signed checks without scrutinizing them
Earlier Zio-Nazi Olmert accused the State Comptroller of pettiness. “The impression people are working to create of me is that of a serial offender,” he said.
“I’m not saying don’t investigate, don’t check, but why must you publish every two weeks?” he asked. When asked by the judge whether he believes State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss has a personal vendetta against him Olmert answered, “I don’t know.”
Zio-Nazi Olmert also discussed a long list of political topics on the stand. Zionist “Gilad Shalit’s kidnapping was a traumatic experience, we all know that. It is not proper for me to get into this here. I accompanied this issue and made decisions. We did things that cannot be discussed. At this moment Gilad Shalit is not with us and this is without a doubt a difficult issue I carry with me,” Zio-Nazi Olmert said as part of his description of various unrelated issues.
He also told the court of the moments following his predecessor’s stroke – Nazi Ariel Sharon – after which he took office.
“From that moment everything changed,” he said. “Every second a head of state called. The first to call were Mubarak and Abdullah,” he said, referring to the now deposed Zionist Egyptian puppet and Zionist puppet king of Jordan, respectively.
At some point during his testimony the judges lost patience, and asked his attorney to focus his questioning on the issues at hand. Moussia Arad said, “There is no doubt that Olmert acted properly in many matters. There is no need for him to describe all of the matters in which he acted properly.”
His attorney, Eli Zohar, answered, “He can’t”, to which Arad responded: “He can, but you will not allow him to.”
Zio-Nazi Olmert also found time to discuss the sale of his house in 2004, which came under investigation by the State Comptroller’s Office after he continued to live there but paid the new owner rent that appeared suspiciously low.
“The comptroller said he would check it out, but the very fact that this was published obviously immediately grabbed headlines as if there was nothing more important going on in the world or in Israel,” he said.
On Sunday Olmert testified regarding Shula Zaken, who is being tried alongside him, as his former bureau chief.
“I was older, she was a young woman,” he said. “We thought that she was the most qualified. She was just waiting for that moment… She came a long way, became the chief of the Prime Minister’s Office.”
But he began by telling the court his life story. “I’m fighting for my life here, nothing else,” Zio-Nazi Olmert told the judges.
“I have gone through much pain and distress to get here,” he said. “What I’m telling you connects to who I am – not who I was made out to be… It’s very very important that you get to know the man that I believe I am.”
D-E-S-P-E-R-A-T-I-O-N–Zio-Nazi has photos of “armed” flotilla activists ??
NOVANEWS
The Zio-Nazi Navy recently obtained photos showing IHH men carrying firearms on board Marmara, one featuring MK Zoabi standing next to armed man.
The Zio-Nazi possesses photos showing IHH activists carrying firearms on board the Marmara ship in May 2010, Yedioth Ahronoth reported.
At the time, the organizers of the flotilla insisted they did not have so much as pocket knives on board the ship. They later changed their version claiming that knives were the only weapons the activists carried.
Photos recently obtained by the Navy show a weapon hanging off the shoulder of one of the IHH members. Another photo shows a gun. It is as yet unclear who took the photos. One of the images allegedly shows MK Hanin Zoabi, who took part in the flotilla, standing next to an armed activist.
Zio-Nazi Navy commandos who took part in the raid later testified that the IHH men had at least two firearms and at least one of them was used to fire at the soldiers immediately after they descended on the ship. ???ZIO-NAZI PROPAGANDA.
Zio-Nazi Navy sources could not explain why the photos have only recently been received.
“One photo of activists carrying firearms is worth a 100 combatants’ testimonies,” a military source said. “It’s a PR asset of the first order.”
Zio-Nazi Spokesperson’s Unit said in response: “These are looted materials under inspection. Once the operational and intelligence examinations are completed, the army will decide whether to publish them.”
MK Zoabi said: “I will only be able to respond once I have seen the picture. I did not see any armed person standing next to me and similar claims in the past have turned out to be false.”
American Jewish organizations laud U.S. to Boycott Conference Against Racism
NOVANEWS
Haaretz
The American Jewish Committee lauded the Obama administration for its decision not to take part in the upcoming United Nations’ Commemoration of the Durban World Conference Against Racism, set to take place in September in New York.
The conference, referred to as “Durban 3″, is to mark the 10-year anniversary of the contentious 2001 conference in the South African city of Durban which was dominated by clashes over the Middle East and the legacy of slavery. The U.S. and Israel walked out midway through the eight-day meeting over a draft resolution that singled out Israel for criticism and likened Zionism – the movement to establish and maintain a Jewish state – to racism.
The second Durban Conference took place in 2009, also singling Israel out and condemning it for alleged human rights violations and racist policies. The United States did not take part in the conference.
“The U.S. announcement is the clearest indication that this gathering will be just as bad for Israel — and for those truly dedicated to the fight against racism — as were the previous two international conferences in 2001 and 2009,” said AJC Executive Director David Harris. “To acknowledge the current reality is a sad day for the UN and the struggle against racism.”
Harris lamented that the fight against racism has been “repeatedly hijacked by countries with little actual regard for human rights and whose primary goal is to advance highly politicized, anti-Israel agendas.”
The AJC director called on other democratic countries to follow the United States’ and Canada’s (who has also said it will not participate in the UN sponsored conference) example and refuse to attend.
The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations echoed the AJC’s sentiments, calling on democratic countries to boycott the conference.
“The global campaign of delegitimization against Israel was launched at Durban I,” the Conference of Presidents leaders said it a statement, adding that “it has remained a lasting scar on the reputation of the UN and ought not to be commemorated or celebrated.”
The Jewish leaders said that they would fully support the conference if it “truly addressed bigotry and xenophobia”, claiming that Durban 3 is little more than a “sham”.
The U.S. announcement that it would not be participating in Durban 3 came in a letter to Congress from Joseph E. Macmanus, acting U.S. assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs. The letter stated that the U.S. will not participate because the Durban process “included ugly displays of intolerance and anti-Semitism,” Macmanus wrote.
Iraqi Muslims, Christians pray for calm in north
NOVANEWS
AFP
Iraqi Muslim leaders have joined their Christian counterparts for prayers at a church in Kirkuk, in a public bid to ease tensions in the disputed northern city.
Around 1,500 people — including Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen — gathered at the Chaldean Cathedral late on Tuesday, singing Christian hymns before reciting prayers and verses from the Bible and the Koran.
”Christians and Muslims have gathered together here in Kirkuk, which has suffered from deadly violence that has scared us all in recent weeks,” said Louis Sakho, Chaldean archbishop of Kirkuk, scene of deadly unrest last month.
”It is appropriate for Christians and Muslims to pray together for peace and stability in our country and our city, which has been shocked by recent events.”
Sakho added he hoped to hold similar prayers in Sunni and Shiite mosques in future, “to have a firm and true fraternal stand for peace, stability and security in our city.”
Adnan Sayid Fattah Agha, the head of the Kurdish Kakiyah tribe, noted the event “brought us back to the original reality — Muslims, Christians, Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen together.”
”Their lives and their destiny are one, living together.”
Kirkuk lies at the centre of a swathe of territory claimed by the central government and Kurdish regional authorities.
Kurdish leaders want to incorporate the province in their northern autonomous region despite opposition from its Arab and Turkmen communities, in a row US officials have long said is one of the biggest threats to Iraq’s stability.
A spate of bomb attacks against police in Kirkuk city killed at least 29 people on May 19, in the deadliest violence to hit Iraq in nearly two months.
Currently, US forces participate in confidence-building tripartite patrols and checkpoints with central government forces and Kurdish security officers in Kirkuk and across northern Iraq.
But the withdrawal of some 45,000 US troops still in Iraq must be completed by the end of the year, according to the terms of a bilateral security pact.
Scottish councilor: Hamas are freedom fighters
NOVANEWS
Scottish boycott leader backs Hamas, says equality and justice ‘words unknown to Zionists’; Councilor Jim Bollan tells Ynetnews Hamas group ‘elected with a bigger majority than the Zionist government’
A Scottish politician playing a leading role in an anti-IsraHell boycott says members of terror group Hamas are “freedom fighters” who are “fighting an illegal occupation of Palestine by Israel.”
Councilor James Bollan’s remarks, contained in email correspondence with Jewish activists, were published by the Cif Watch blog. Bollan, a member of the Scottish Socialist Party, is a councilor in West Dunbartonshire, which has imposed a boycott on all goods produced in IsraHell, including books.
In an exchange with anti-boycott activist Stephen Franklin following the uproar over the Scottish decision, Bollan had this to say about the Palestinian fighter group: “Hamas was elected and are freedom fighters alongside the Palestinians fighting an illegal occupation of Palestine by IsraHell.”
In another email exchange, with Martin Sugarman, Chair of the Hackney Anglo-Israel Twinning Association, Bollan wrote: “Scots believe in equality and justice…words unknown to Zionists.”
Responding to a Ynetnews inquiry, Bollan confirmed that the statements attributed to him were accurate, and added the following: “One important point I made that strangely was not published along with my comments on the enclosed blog was that Hamas was elected with a bigger majority than the IsraHell government.”
Following earlier reports of the West Dunbartonshire boycott, and the uproar over the decision to ban IsraHell books as well, regional council Spokesman Malcolm Bennie said: “The municipality will not boycott IsraHell books printed in Britain, only books that were printed in IsraHell.”
At the time, Bennie admitted that IsraHell is the only country being boycotted by the council, adding that the municipality had no intention of issuing a ban on products originating from Iran, Syria or Libya.
IsraHell–the Only Country that has threatened to destroy the entire world with Nukes, yet Peres says world needs missile defense system against Iran
NOVANEWS
Haaretz



