Articles

NOVANEWS   Haaretz   Jewish American groups were overwhelmingly united in their praise for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech before ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Reuters   Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas rejected Wednesday Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s vision for peace as outlined in ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Haaretz   Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil el-Araby said he has discussed the possibility of an exchange of ambassadors ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, left, is welcomed by Chinese President Hu Jintao for a meeting at ...Read more

NOVANEWS   WASHINGTON: It’s a subject Americans can’t stop discussing and one Pakistan hates talking about. The Mehran attack has ...Read more

NOVANEWS New York – Israel should end the forced eviction of Palestinians from their homes in the occupied Palestinian territories, ...Read more

NOVANEWS   In an April 2008 secret cable, then US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson stressed to the Strategic Plans ...Read more

NOVANEWS     The former head of Pakistan’s ISI, Hamid Gul, tells Channel 4 News that he is “100 per ...Read more

USA
NOVANEWS   antiwar.com   Most of the attention this week has been at the AIPAC conference, but speaking today at ...Read more

NOVANEWS   By Eric W. Dolan   rawstory.com   CODEPINK activist Rae Abileah was arrested at the George Washington University ...Read more

NOVANEWS by Mitchell Plitnick antiwar.com Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu laid out what he called his vision for peace with the ...Read more

NOVANEWS   antiwar.com Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu today delivered a major policy speech to the US Congress. It is ...Read more

U.S. Zio-Nazi Jewish groups united in support of Nazi-Yahu’s speech to Congress

NOVANEWS
 


Haaretz
 

Jewish American groups were overwhelmingly united in their praise for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech before the joint meeting of Congress on Tuesday, stressing their support for his clear call for Palestinian recognition of Israel as a Jewish State and commitment to peace.

Addressing a broad range of issues, Netanyahu began his speech by saying that “Israel has no better friend than the United States, and America has no better friend than Israel,” gaining a warm round of applause from the members of Congress and guests. “We stand together to defend democracy. We stand together to advance peace. We stand together to fight terrorism,” he added.

Netanyahu also stressed that Israel would not allow Jerusalem to be divided, and that under no circumstance would Israel return to the “indefensible” 1967 borders. His speech came just days after U.S. President Barack Obama clarified that the 1967 borders with agreed land swaps were his vision of the basis for peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians.

Shortly after Netanyahu’s speech, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) leaders applauded the prime minister for reaffirming the close ties between Israel and the U.S., saying that he fully deserved the warm reception he received from Congress.

Netanyahu “made a powerful case for Israel’s unique relationship with the U.S. as the only democracy and stable American ally in a turbulent region,” Robert Sugarman, ADL National Chair and Abraham Foxman, ADL National Director said in a statement, adding that “at the heart of the conflict, as it has been, is Palestinian refusal to accept the existence of a Jewish state.”

B’nai B’rith International President Allan J. Jacobs also praised the prime minister for saying “he was right in calling for the Palestinian Authority to ‘tear up’ its pact with Hamas.”

B’nai B’rith Vice President Daniel S. Mariaschin echoed the support for the prime minister, saying that Netanyahu “summed up the conflict eloquently when he noted that the conflict has ‘always been about the existence of a Jewish state. This is what this conflict is about.”

Chairman of the National Jewish Democratic Council (NJDC) Marc R. Stanley and President and CEO of the NJDC, David A. Harris reiterated the praise, saying “Support for Israel isn’t a Republican issue, it isn’t a Democratic issue, it is an American issue. The future safety and security of a democratic, Jewish State of Israel is safeguarded when we all work together, not when we resort to petty political games and finger pointing.”

“Prime Minister Netanyahu’s address to Congress was truly a tour de force, and his repeated thanks to President Barack Obama and the bipartisan support in Congress were noted by all,” the said.

“It is our hope that in the wake of this historic visit, that both Republicans and Democrats alike speak with one voice,” they added.

The Jewish Council for Public Affairs President Rabbi Steve Gutow strengthened Netanyahu’s call for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to cut ties with Hamas, and return to talks, stating that “tThe vision that Netanyahu laid out to Congress of an economically and politically successful Palestinian state will require the Palestinians to explicitly recognize Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people; two states for two peoples marked by mutually agreed upon borders.”

Conference of Presidents Chairman Alan Solow and Executive Vice Chairman Malcolm Hoenlein stressed Israel ties with the U.S., saying that “the bonds between our countries override partisan differences and involve deep commitments by people on both sides of the aisle.”

Kathy Manning, Chair of the Jewish Federations of North America also issued a statment saying that “as American Jews, we are deeply proud of the extraordinary address by Prime Minister Netanyahu to Congress today,” adding that “the Prime Minister articulated Israel’s dedication to achieving a real and lasting peace that will result in a secure and defensible Israel as the homeland for the Jewish people, and a Palestinian State as the homeland for the Palestinian people.”

Ab-A$$: Netanyahu’s vision for peace is nothing we can build on

NOVANEWS
 

Reuters
 

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas rejected Wednesday Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s vision for peace as outlined in his speech to Congress on Tuesday.

Addressing a meeting of the Palestine Liberation Organization in Ramallah, Abbas said Netanyahu’s vision for peace contained “nothing we can build on.”

Abbas also said he would seek UN recognition of Palestinian statehood if there was no breakthrough in the peace process by September.

Abbas told the Palestine Liberation Organization Netanyahu’s speech to the United States Congress on Tuesday “traveled far from peace,” dictating solutions before negotiations even begin.

He said he would consult Arab states over the weekend about U.S. President Barack Obama’s latest ideas for restarting the peace process and Netanyahu’s negative response to them.

“We said in the past and we still say that our choice is negotiation, negotiation and nothing but negotiation. But if nothing happens by September we will go [to the UN to ask for recognition],” Abbas said.

“Our aim is not to isolate [Israel] or to delegitimize it. It is not an act of terror and not a unilateral act.”

Abbas’ plan to seek UN recognition was criticized by both Netanyahu and Obama in speeches in Washington last week.

In a major policy speech, however, Obama said a future Palestinian state should be based on the borders as they existed on the eve of the 1967 Middle East, with land swaps mutually agreed with Israel.

In his speech to Congress on Tuesday, Netanyahu said that he is “willing to make painful compromises” to achieve peace but insisted that Jerusalem will not be divided. He said that Israel will be “generous” on the size of a Palestinian state but reiterated his firm stance against the return to “indefensible” 1967 borders.

Top Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat dismissed Netanyahu’s speech, saying it was “full of lies” and that Netanyahu has “no vision and nothing to offer.”

Erekat condemned Netanyahu’s call to break its ties with Hamas, insisting the Palestinians choose unity and “not a man who has nothing to offer.”

Report: Egypt, Iran discuss resuming diplomatic ties after 30 years

NOVANEWS
 


Haaretz
 

Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil el-Araby said he has discussed the possibility of an exchange of ambassadors with his Iranian counterpart, the Egyptians state-run news website Egynews reported on Wednesday.

“We told the Iranian minister that Egypt is opening new chapters with everyone and that it doesn’t want any aggressions with anyone in the world,” el-Araby said, according to the site.

The discussion between el-Araby and Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi reportedly took place during a conference of the Non-Aligned Movement in Bali, Indonesia.

El-Araby, who will soon leave his post in order to assume the role of Secretary General of the Arab League, said an exchange of ambassadors was discussed, but that “this is not the right time” for it to take place, given Egypt’s transitional phase.

Diplomatic relations between Iran and Egypt have been severed since Egypt provided refuge to the exiled Iranian leader Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, following his ouster by the Iranian revolution in 1979.

The two countries have frequently exchanged sharp criticisms, with Egypt accusing Iran of interfering in the affairs of Arab countries and Iran accusing Egypt of supporting Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip.

El-Araby was appointed foreign minister following the ouster of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

Has America miscalculated in Pakistan?

NOVANEWS
 

Has America miscalculated in Pakistan?

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, left, is welcomed by Chinese President Hu Jintao for a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Friday, May 20, 2011.

Should its relationship with the U.S. collapse, Islamabad has another patron to fall back on: China

Washington often acts as if Pakistan were its client state, with no other possible patron but the United States. It assumes that Pakistani leaders, having made all the usual declarations about upholding the “sacred sovereignty” of their country, will end up yielding to periodic American demands, including those for a free hand in staging drone attacks in its tribal lands bordering Afghanistan. This is a flawed assessment of Washington’s long, tortuous relationship with Islamabad.

A recurring feature of the Obama administration’s foreign policy has been its failure to properly measure the strengths (as well as weaknesses) of its challengers, major or minor, as well as its friends, steadfast or fickle. To earlier examples of this phenomenon, one may now add Pakistan.

That country has an active partnership with another major power, potentially a viable substitute for the U.S. should relations with the Obama administration continue to deteriorate. The Islamabad-Washington relationship has swung from close alliance in the Afghan anti-Soviet jihad years of the 1980s to unmistaken alienation in the early 1990s, when Pakistan was on the U.S. watch list as a state supporting international terrorism. Relations between Islamabad and Beijing, on the other hand, have been consistently cordial for almost three decades.Pakistan’s Chinese alliance, noted fitfully by the U.S., is one of its most potent weapons in any future showdown with the Obama administration.

Another factor, also poorly assessed, affects an ongoing war. While, in the 1980s, Pakistan acted as the crucial conduit for U.S. aid and weapons to jihadists in Afghanistan, today it could be an obstacle to the delivery of supplies to America’s military in Afghanistan. It potentially wields a powerful instrument when it comes to the efficiency with which the U.S. and its NATO allies fight the Taliban. It controls the supply lines to the combat forces in that landlocked country.

Taken together, these two factors make Pakistan a far more formidable and independent force than U.S. policymakersconcede publicly or even privately.

The Supply Line as Jugular

Angered at the potential duplicity of Pakistan in having provided a haven to Osama bin Laden for years, the Obama administration seems to be losing sight of the strength of the cards Islamabad holds in its hand.

To supply the 100,000 American troops now in Afghanistan, as well as 50,000 troops from other NATO nations and more than 100,000 employees of private contractors, the Pentagon must have unfettered access to that country through its neighbors. Among the six countries adjoining Afghanistan, only three have seaports, with those of China far too distant to be of practical use. Of the remaining two, Iran — Washington’s number one enemy in the region — is out. That places Pakistan in a unique position.

Currently about three-quarters of the supplies for the 400-plus U.S. and coalition bases in Afghanistan — from gigantic Bagram Air Base to tiny patrol outposts — go overland via Pakistan or through its air space. These shipments include almost all the lethal cargo and most of the fuel needed by U.S.-led NATO forces. On their arrival at Karachi, the only major Pakistani seaport, these supplies are transferred to trucks, which travel a long route to crossing points on the Afghan border. Of these, two are key: Torkham and Chaman.

Torkham, approached through the famed Khyber Pass, leads directly to Kabul, the Afghan capital, and Bagram Air Base, the largest U.S. military facility in the country. Approached through the Bolan Pass in the southwestern Pakistani province of Baluchistan, Chaman provides a direct route to Kandahar Air Base, the largest U.S. military camp in southern Afghanistan.

Operated by some 4,000 Pakistani drivers and their helpers, nearly 300 trucks and oil tankers pass through Torkham and another 200 through Chaman daily. Increasing attacks on these convoys by Taliban-allied militants in Pakistan starting in 2007 led the Pentagon into a desperate search for alternative supply routes.

With the help of NATO member Latvia, as well as Russia, and Uzbekistan, Pentagon planners succeeded in setting up the Northern Distribution Network (NDN). It is a 3,220-mile railroad link between the Latvian port of Riga and the Uzbek border city of Termez. It is, in turn, connected by a bridge over the Oxus River to the Afghan town of Hairatan. The Uzbek government, however, allows only non-lethal goods to cross its territory. In addition, the Termez-Hairatan route can handle no more than 130 tons of cargo a day. The expense of shipping goods over such a long distance puts a crimp in the Pentagon’s $120 billion annual budget for the Afghan War, and couldn’t possibly replace the Pakistani supply routes.

There is also the Manas Transit Center leased by the U.S. from the government of Kyrgyzstan in December 2001. Due to its proximity to Bagram Air Base, its main functions are transiting coalition forces in and out of Afghanistan, and storing jet fuel for mid-air refueling of U.S. and NATO planes in Afghanistan.

The indispensability of Pakistan’s land routes to the Pentagon has given its government significant leverage in countering excessive diplomatic pressure from or continued violations of its sovereignty by Washington. Last September, for instance, after a NATO helicopter gunship crossed into Pakistan from Afghanistan in hot pursuit of insurgents and killed three paramilitaries of the Pakistani Frontier Corps in the tribal agency of Kurram, Islamabad responded quickly.

It closed the Khyber Pass route to NATO trucks and oil tankers, which stranded many vehicles en route, giving Pakistani militants an opportunity to torch them. And they did. Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, issued a written apology to his Pakistani counterpart General Ashhaq Parvez Kayani, conveying his “most sincere condolences for the regrettable loss of your soldiers killed and wounded on 30 September.” Anne Patterson, the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, issued an apology for the “terrible accident,” explaining that the helicopter crew had mistaken the Pakistani paratroopers for insurgents. Yet Pakistan waited eight days before reopening the Torkham border post.

Pakistan’s Other Cards: Oil, Terrorism, and China

In this region of rugged terrain, mountain passes play a crucial geopolitical role. When China and Pakistan began negotiating the demarcation of their frontier after the 1962 Sino-Indian War (itself rooted in a border dispute), Beijing insisted on having the Khunjerab Pass in Pakistani-administered Kashmir. Islamabad obliged. As a result, the 2,000-square-mile territory it ceded to China as part of the Sino-Pakistan Border and Trade Agreement in March 1963 included that mountain pass.

That agreement, in turn, led to the building of the 800-mile-long Karkoram Highway linking Kashgar in China’s Xinjiang Region and the Pakistani town of Abbottabad, now a household name in America. That road sealed a strategic partnership between Beijing and Islamabad that has strong geopolitical, military, and economic components.

Both countries share the common aim of frustrating India’s aspiration to become the regional superpower of South Asia. In addition, the Chinese government views Pakistan as a crucial ally in its efforts to acquire energy security in the coming decades.

Given Pakistan’s hostility toward India since its establishment in 1947, Beijing made an effort tostrengthen that country militarily and economically following its 1962 war with India. After Delhi exploded a “nuclear device” in 1974, China actively aided Islamabad’s nuclear-weapons program. In March 1984, its nuclear testing site at Lop Nor became the venue for a successful explosion of a nuclear bomb assembled by Pakistan. Later, it passed on crucial missile technology to Islamabad.

During this period, China emerged as the main supplier of military hardware to Pakistan. Today, nearly four-fifths of Pakistan’s main battle tanks, three-fifths of its warplanes, and three-quarters of its patrol boats and missile crafts are Chinese-made. Given its limited resources, Islamabad cannot afford to buy expensive American or Western arms and has therefore opted for cheaper, less advanced Chinese weapons in greater numbers. Moreover, Pakistan and China have an ongoing co-production project involving the manufacture of JF-17 Thunder fighter aircraft, similar to America’s versatile F-16.

As a consequence, over the past decades a pro-China lobby has emerged in the Pakistani officer corps. It was therefore not surprising when, in the wake of the American raid in Abbottabad, Pakistani military officials let it be known that they might allow the Chinese to examine the rotor of the stealth version of the damaged Black Hawk helicopter left behind by the U.S. Navy SEALS. That threat, though reportedlynot carried out, was a clear signal to the U.S.: if it persisted in violating Pakistan’s sovereignty and applying too much pressure, the Pakistanis might choose to align even more closely with Washington’s rival in Asia, the People’s Republic of China. To underline the point, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilanitraveled to Beijing two weeks after the Abbottabad air raid.

Gilani’s three-day visit involved the signing of several Sino-Pakistani agreements on trade, finance, science, and technology. The highpoint was his meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao. Following that summit, an official spokesperson announced Beijing’s decision to urge Chinese enterprises to strengthen their economic ties with Pakistan by expanding investments there.

Among numerous Sino-Pakistani projects in the pipeline is the building of a railroad between Havelian in Pakistan and Kashgar in China, a plan approved by the two governments in July 2010. This is expected to be the first phase of a far more ambitious undertaking to connect Kashgar with the Pakistani port of Gwadar.

A small fishing village on the Arabian Sea coastline of Baluchistan, Gwadar was transformed into a modern seaport in 2008 by the China Harbor Engineering Company Group, a subsidiary of the China Communications Construction Company Group, a giant state-owned corporation. The port is only 330 miles from the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf through which flows much of China’s supplies of Middle Eastern oil. In the wake of the Gilani visit, China has reportedly agreed to take over future operation of the port.

More than a decade ago, China’s leaders decided to reduce the proportion of its oil imports transported by tanker because of the vulnerability of the shipping lanes from the Persian Gulf and East Africa to its ports. These pass through the narrow Malacca Strait, which is guardedby the U.S. Navy. In addition, the 3,500-mile-long journey — to be undertaken by 60% of China’s petroleum imports — is expensive. By having a significant part of its imported oil shipped to Gwadar and then via rail to Kashgar, China would reduce its shipping costs while securing most of its petroleum imports.

At home, the Chinese government remains wary of the Islamist terrorism practiced by Muslim Uighurs agitating for an independent East Turkestan in Xinjiang. Some of them have links to al-Qaeda. Islamabad has long been aware of this. In October 2003, the Pakistani military killed Hasan Mahsum, leader of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, and in August 2004, the Pakistani and Chinese armies conducted a joint anti-terrorism exercise in Xinjiang.

Almost seven years later, Beijing coupled its satisfaction over the death of Osama bin Laden with praise for Islamabad for pursuing what it termed a “vigorous” policy in combatting terrorism. In stark contrast to the recent blast of criticism from Washington about Pakistan’s role in the war on terrorism, coupled with congressional threats to drastically reduce American aid, China laid out a red carpet for Gilani on his visit.

Referring to the “economic losses” Pakistan had suffered in its ongoing counter-terrorism campaigns, the Chinese government called upon the international community to support the Pakistani regime in its attempts to “restore national stability and development in its economy.”

The Chinese response to bin Laden’s killing and its immediate aftermath in Pakistan should be a reminder to the Obama administration: in its dealings with Pakistan in pursuit of its Afghan goals, it has a weaker hand than it imagines. Someday, Pakistan may block those supply lines and play the China card to Washington’s dismay.

  • Dilip Hiro is the author of Secrets and Lies: Operation “Iraqi Freedom” and, most recently, Blood of the Earth: The Battle for the World’s Vanishing Oil Resources, both published by Nation Books. More:Dilip Hiro

Three Pakistan nuclear sites attacked in last five years, says expert

NOVANEWS
 

WASHINGTON: It’s a subject Americans can’t stop discussing and one Pakistan hates talking about. The Mehran attack has once again focused world attention on the security of the country’s fast-growing nuclear arsenal.

The Obama administration on Monday did not publicly go beyond “strongly” condemning the attack and appreciating the “service and sacrifices of their brave armed forces,” but the incident has reignited the simmering debate about vulnerability of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons. US analysts noted that Mehran is only 15 miles away from the Masroor air base, where Pakistan is believed to have a large depot of nuclear weapons that can be delivered from the air.

While Pakistan insists that its “crown jewels” are under foolproof security, but at the heart of the debate is a worry that they are vulnerable to internal attack by a “jihadized” military, judging by multiple attacks on military facilities by terrorists who seemingly have the inside track on security , including in the Mehran strike. Add to this, a recent WikiLeaks cable citing Pakistani military officials admitting sabotage of F-16 s by “Islamists amongst the enlisted ranks” has added to the concern.

Pakistani militant attacks over the last five years include strikes against three nuclear facilities, in Wah, Sargodha, and Kamra, according to Prof Shaun Gregory, a security specialist at Bradford University. But each time, the Pakistan military establishment, which has itself suffered attacks at its General Headquarters and training and recruitment centers , insists that there was no danger to its nuclear assets.

But Gregory says the attacks illustrate “a clear set of weaknesses and vulnerabilities” in Pakistan’s nuclear security regime, a danger brought home by the ease with which militants are now penetrating military installations. Concern is growing in the west about the internal dynamics in a military that was once thought to be “westernized and professional” .

The US has forked out over $100 million to improve Pakistan’s nuclear security but Washington now admits it has no idea how the money was spent. There is consternation in Washington about the speed with which Pakistan is ramping up its nuclear arsenal with some analysts predicting that it could soon have the world’s fourth largest nuclear arsenal, behind US, Russia, and China, and ahead of France and UK.

Washington is thick with speculation about US contingency plans in the event of a nuclear heist in Pakistan, notwithstanding assurances that US has no designs on Pakistani nukes. But every US statement is dissected in Pakistan for hidden meanings amid fears that Washington is planning to neutralize its nuclear arsenal.

 

UN: IsraHell should end eviction of Palestinians from their homes

NOVANEWS

New York – Israel should end the forced eviction of Palestinians from their homes in the occupied Palestinian territories, the UN humanitarian emergency coordinator said Tuesday.

Both Palestinian and Israeli civilians are victims of the on-going conflict, Valerie Amos said following last week’s visit to Israel and Gaza Strip. But she singled out the eviction of Palestinians from their homes as having ‘devastating, long-term consequences.’

‘Palestinians are utterly frustrated by the impact of Israeli policies on their lives,’ she said. ‘Their homes are regularly demolished. They cannot develop their communities.’

Her remarks came on the same day that Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu conceded for the first time that some Jewish settlements in the West Bank will be dismantled. But he also insisted that Jerusalem will remain united under Israel and rejected a complete return to 1967 borders.

Netanyahu was speaking to the US Congress in Washington.

Amos defended Palestinians’ right to move freely and in safety throughout the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza so they can have access to services and resources for their economic well-being.

‘Freedom of movement is imperative for Palestinians to develop their economy and reduce dependence on humanitarian assistance,’ she said. She called for Israel to lift the blockade of Gaza and allow economic development and reduce Gaza’s dependence on aid.

Israel’s building of the barrier separating it from the Palestinians has also caused an economic burden on the latter, she said.

She said the 700-km-long barrier, with 85 per cent inside the West Bank, has cut off Palestinians from basic services and access to their homes, and has made them dependent on humanitarian handouts.

Intense US monitoring of Pakistan’s nuclear and missile programmes

NOVANEWS

 

abdul qadeer khan

In an April 2008 secret cable, then US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson stressed to the Strategic Plans Division chief Khalid Kidwai that talk of the “possible release of AQ Khan has caused alarm and concern” among US officials. The ambassador further emphasised the “USG was firmly opposed to lifting the current restrictions on Khan’s activities”.

Dawn.com

Despite Pakistan’s repeated assurances that its history as a nuclear scofflaw was firmly behind it, the US has continued to intensely monitor Pakistan’s nuclear and missile programmes, a survey of US diplomatic cables obtained by Dawn indicates.

Dozens of cables — some confidential, others secret — from US embassies around the world are seen inquiring into purchases by Pakistan’s nuclear and missile complexes on the international market.

For example, at the start of 2008, the US Deputy Chief of Mission Nancy McEldowney at the US embassy in Ankara details her discussions with Turkish authorities about the US desire to see action taken against a suspicious shipment to Pakistan.

US officials, according to the cable, “urged the GOT (Government of Turkey) to contact the governments of Japan and Panama to request the shipment be diverted to another port and returned to the shipper”.

While Turkish authorities “stressed that more lead time was necessary to allow the GOT to take action in such cases”, Ms McEldowney “underscored that, given the proliferation concerns related to this shipment and the fact that Pakistan’s nuclear program is not under full-scope IAEA safeguards, the GOT should take all necessary action to prevent the shipment from arriving in Pakistan”.

The intricate pursuit of suspect Pakistani shipments often involved discussions with Chinese authorities. For example, a secret cable from December 2009 notes that when local authorities were notified of “Beijing-based Nav Technology’s efforts to supply controlled gyroscopes to a firm in Pakistan”, US officials received a satisfactory response “that as with all proliferation cases China would ‘actively cooperate’ on this case”.

In Taiwan, too, Pakistan’s missile programme and related international trade came in for intense American scrutiny. In a secret cable sent out from Taipei in the autumn of 2005, the then director of the American Institute of Taiwan, Douglas H Paal, sent a detailed reported on Pakistan’s trade with a local manufacturer, Xtra Industrial Corporation.

Mr Paal writes about how “Pakistani manufacturer ‘Mechanical Engineering Workshop (MEW)’ possibly purchased 14 sets of ‘hydraulic cylinders’ from Xtra Industrial Corporation in March 2005, from Taiwan-based Design Engineering Centre (DEC) transferred to Pakistan’s National Development Complex (NDC) for research and development of short-mid range missiles.” As with other cases Taiwanese authorities were recommended that they place Xtra under an inspection target list even though the manufacturer did not violate Taiwan’s strategic high tech commodity export control regulations.

On one occasion, French authorities rebuffed US requests to intercept a “shipment of telemetry equipment from the French firm In’ Trad to Pakistan, with the possible end-user being New Technologies Islamabad, which is associated with Pakistan’s ballistic missile programme”.

In a secret cable from January 2005, a French non-proliferation official, David Bertolotti, is quoted as providing US officials with “comprehensive comments on the shipment and the reasons behind the Government of France’s decision not to examine its contents and to allow it to continue onto Pakistan”.

While the French officials emphasised that the “GOF wanted to be more helpful regarding the suspect corporation between In’Trad and Pakistani missile entities” they also pointed out that they needed “more precise information regarding the type of equipment being exported as well as clearer indications that the end users were associated with Pakistan’s ballistic missile programme”.

The fate of Abdul Qadeer Khan is also seen to be exercising the minds of American officials determined to ensure Mr Khan remains in detention.

In an April 2008 secret cable, then US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson stressed to the Strategic Plans Division chief Khalid Kidwai that talk of the “possible release of AQ Khan has caused alarm and concern” among US officials. The ambassador further emphasised the “USG was firmly opposed to lifting the current restrictions on Khan’s activities”.

In a separate meeting with Asif Zardari, then co-chairman of the PPP, Ambassador Patterson reminded him of Pakistan’s financial dependence on the United States and therefore the need to pay heed to matters of concern to the US government. “Not coincidentally, Ambassador raised the issue during a briefing on the extensive nature of US aid to Pakistan.”

Cables referenced: WikiLeaks # 2385841372694191025185150415. All cables are available on Dawn.com.

Karachi attack ‘a US operation’, claims ex Pakistan general

NOVANEWS
 

 

The former head of Pakistan’s ISI, Hamid Gul, tells Channel 4 News that he is “100 per cent sure” a Taliban attack on a major naval air base in Karachi was an “American operation”.

The Pakistani Taliban have claimed responsibility for a major assault on the headquarters of the naval air force in Karachi that killed at least thirteen officials and injured 14 others.

Eleven navy officers and two paramilitary rangers died in the attack at the PNS Mehran base in Karachi after 16 hours of intense fighting, involving 130 Pakistani commandos.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said just six militants were believed to be involved in the attack, destroying or damaging two aircraft and laying siege to a main building in one of the most heavily-guarded bases in the unstable, nuclear-armed country.

Eight major blasts were reported throughout the night as fighting intensified.

The Pakistani Taliban said the attack was to avenge al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden’s killing on 23 May.

“It was the revenge of martyrdom of Osama bin Laden. It was the proof that we are still united and powerful,” Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan told reporters by telephone from an undisclosed location.

But General Hamid Gul, a retired three-star general who headed the Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) from 1987-1989 and has been criticised by the US for his links with the Taliban, told Channel 4 News “there is absolutely no doubt that this was a US operation.”
He insisted: “The Karachi incident was clearly an operation by special forces, it must have taken months to plan, and the level of intelligence gathered is far too sophisticated for it to have been a raid by al-Qaeda or the Taliban,” he said.

“The reconnaissance and the surveillance to target three or four planes is far too advanced.”

Gul, who served as director general of the ISI when President Zardari’s late wife Benazir Bhutto was Prime Minister, said instability in Pakistan is: “the price for American friendship.

“There have been betrayals by Americans in the past, and there will be betrayals by Americans in the future. Absolutely they want to destabilise Pakistan because they want joint custody of nukes, to consolidate their position in the region, so a Karachi naval blockade is a natural move.”

The US State Department was contacted by Channel 4 News for a comment, but has not yet responded to the request.
Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani responded to reporters by condemning the attack.

“Such a cowardly act of terror could not deter the commitment of the government and people of Pakistan to fight terrorism,” Gilani said in statement.

Operation details

Interior Minister Malik said the six militants aged 20-25 used two ladders to scale the 5ft walls of the base and jumped in by cutting barbed wire.

He said the militants had used guns and grenades in their attack on the base, which is 15 miles (24 km) from the Masroor Air Base, Pakistan’s largest and a possible depot for nuclear weapons.

Malik said 17 foreigners – including 11 Chinese and six Americans – were inside the base at the time. All had been evacuated safely.
Mullah Omar

In a separate incident, the Taliban in Afghanistan have rejected unsourced media reports that its reclusive leader Mullah Mohammad Omar has been killed in Pakistan, saying that he is alive and in Afghanistan.

Pakistan security officials, US military commanders and government officials in Afghanistan have offered tentative rejection of reports that Omar had been killed while travelling between Quetta and North Waziristan in Pakistan.

“He is in Afghanistan safe and sound,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. “We strongly reject these baseless allegations that Mullah Mohammad Omar has been killed.”

“This is the propaganda by the enemy to weaken the morale of fighters,” Mujahid said.

In Kabul, senior diplomats and US military officials also could not confirm the report and would not comment publicly. Some described the reports as “speculation.”

Gates: Keep Troops in Iraq to Make Iran Uncomfortable

NOVANEWS

 

antiwar.com
 
Most of the attention this week has been at the AIPAC conference, but speaking today at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), Secretary of Defense Robert Gates struggled to lay out the reason(s) to keep  troops in Iraq. Gates described it as “my last major policy speech.”
And among his flimsiest, as Gates’ entire argument for keeping the troops in Iraq was because it would make Iran uncomfortable. The comments came in the wake of an AEI “report” earlier in the day claiming Iran is a “serious threat” to Iran’s security.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has recently left the door open for keeping troops, but only if a “consensus” is reached on the matter. This would be impossible, however, because top Shi’ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, whose bloc controls the Iraqi National Alliance, has repeatedly condemned the notion, demanding an end to the US occupation.
Gates shrugged off Sadr’s opposition, however, and insisted within the speech that he wasn’t sure how much opposition Sadr actually had and how much his comments stemmed from “Iranian backers.”

 

Protester who heckled Nazi-Yahu in Congress allegedly beaten, arrested at hospital

NOVANEWS
 

By Eric W. Dolan
 
rawstory.com
 
CODEPINK activist Rae Abileah was arrested at the George Washington University Hospital in Washington D.C. after heckling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to the anti-war group.
The 28-year-old Jewish American woman was allegedly tackled by members of the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) during Netanyahu’s speech to Congress after she yelled, “stop Israeli war crimes.”
WATCH: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heckled during address to Congress
Abileah was taken to the George Washington University Hospital, where she was being treating for neck and shoulder injuries.
“You know I take it as a badge of honor, and so should you, that in our free societies that you can have protest,” Netanyahu said after being interrupted by Abileah. “You can’t have these protest in the farcical parliaments in Tehran or in Tripoli. This is real democracy.”
Speaking from her hospital bed, Abileah said she was in “great pain” but that it was nothing “compared to the pain and suffering that Palestinians go through on a regular basis.”
“I have been to Gaza and the West Bank, I have seen Palestinians homes bombed and bulldozed, I have talked to mothers whose children have been killed during the invasion of Gaza, I have seen the Jewish-only roads leading to ever-expanding settlements in the West Bank.”
“This kind of colonial occupation cannot continue,” she added. “As a Jew and a U.S. citizen, I feel obligated to rise up and speak out against stop these crimes being committed in my name and with my tax dollars.”
During his speech, Netanyahu said Israel was willing to make “painful” land concessions for peace.

 

Nazi-Yahu Conditions Denounced as ‘War’ by Palestinians

NOVANEWS
antiwar.com
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu laid out what he called his vision for peace with the Palestinians Tuesday, but listed a set of conditions the Palestinians immediately called “a declaration of war.”
Speaking before a joint meetingof the U.S. Congress that capped five days of speeches by Netanyahu and President Barack Obama on the Middle East, Netanyahu insisted on a unified Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, reiterated his rejection of the borders that existed before Israel began its occupation of the West Bank 44 years ago, and declared that Israel must maintain a military presence in the Jordan Valley.
Palestinians have repeatedly declared their desire to negotiate a two-state solution where Jerusalem would be the capital of both states, with borders based on the June 4, 1967 lines with agreed and equivalent land swaps, and full sovereignty over the West Bank, of which the Jordan Valley is a large part.
Netanyahu was elaborating on some remarks he had made the previous day, before the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), a lobby group described by CNN as “a major force in U.S. politics.” Obama had spoken to AIPAC the day before, and his speech was well-received by the audience and observers.
Obama stressed the importance of immediate movement on the peace process.
“There is an impatience with the peace process – or the absence of one,” he told the AIPAC audience. “Not just in the Arab World, but in Latin America, in Europe, and in Asia. That impatience is growing, and is already manifesting itself in capitals around the world.”
Consistent with his call in a speech three days earlier, Obama then outlined his vision for borders and security, which he had said should be the first two issues tackled.
“The United States believes that negotiations should result in two states, with permanent Palestinian borders with Israel, Jordan, and Egypt, and permanent Israeli borders with Palestine. The borders of Israel and Palestine should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps… As for security, every state has the right to self- defense, and Israel must be able to defend itself – by itself – against any threat… The full and phased withdrawal of Israeli military forces should be coordinated with the assumption of Palestinian security responsibility in a sovereign, non-militarized state.”
The following day, Netanyahu and Obama met in the Oval Office, with the subsequent press briefingfeaturing comments from Netanyahu that many observers, including leading Israelis, saw as crossing the line.
“Netanyahu understood that he had broken a rule that an Israeli leader must not break – he had come between the two American parties in an election period,” Nahum Barnea and Shimon Shiffer, two leading Israeli commentators, wrote in the leading Israeli daily, Yediot Ahronot.
Staunchly pro-Israel columnist Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic called Netanyahu’s behavior at the press conference “pedantic” and “shocking.”
On Monday, Netanyahu struck a more conciliatory tone at AIPAC, stressing bipartisan support for Israel among U.S. citizens and in Congress.
He promised that, in his speech at Tuesday’s joint meeting of Congress, he would “describe what a peace between a Palestinian state and the Jewish state could look like.”
But his vision seemed only to make the stalemate with the Palestinians even more intractable, this time with the overwhelming enthusiasm of both Houses of Congress backing him.
“Rather than committing to a return to negotiations without preconditions, as he demands from the Palestinians, Netanyahu introduced his own preconditions,” said Debra DeLee, president and CEO of Americans for Peace Now.
“Rather than extending his hand to the Palestinians to come back to the negotiating table, Netanyahu laid out unyielding positions which he knows cannot serve as the basis for, or be the realistic outcome of, negotiations. Such preconditions are a non-starter and such positions are anathema to reviving negotiations and to achieving real peace and security for Israel.”
The speech was “a declaration of war against the Palestinians,” said leading Palestinian official, Nabil Sha’ath. “This is an escalation and unfortunately, it received a standing ovation. We have nothing but to continue our struggle in the international arena and to continue building our state and to continue our popular struggle. We don’t have a partner for peace.”
Nabil Abu Rdainah, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, said, “What Netanyahu put in his speech before the U.S. Congress does not lead to peace, but puts more obstacles to the peace process. For us, peace must be the establishment of a Palestinian state on 1967 borders and East Jerusalem as its capital. We will not accept any Israeli presence in the Palestinian state, especially on the Jordan River.”
But while many applauded President Obama’s speech at AIPAC and his insistence on the 1967 borders as a starting point for negotiations, other observers blamed Obama for the failure to take a strong enough stand with Netanyahu.
“Obama did not call for a complete withdrawal of Israeli troops and settlers from occupied Palestinian territory,” Professor Stephen Zunes, chair of the Middle Eastern Studies programme at the University of San Francisco, told IPS.
“Unfortunately, despite Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas agreeing to reciprocal territorial swap… Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu has refused to consider trading any land within Israel while simultaneously insisting on annexing large swathes of occupied Palestinian territory,” he said. “How such ‘mutually agreed-upon’ swaps will take place without the United States exerting enormous leverage is hard to imagine.
“This raises serious questions regarding Obama’s commitment to being an honest broker in resolving the conflict,” Zunes said.
Despite the unanimous support Netanyahu’s speeches received, at AIPAC and in Congress, both talks were disrupted by protesters.
Five protesters at AIPAC and one in Congress were removed from the proceedings after interrupting Netanyahu’s speeches, shouting slogans in defense of Palestinian rights.
Rae Abileah, the protester arrested for her disruption of the Congressional meeting, is a 28-year-old Jewish American of Israeli descent.
“Prime Minister Netanyahu says that the 1967 borders are indefensible,” Abileah said. “But what is really indefensible is the occupation of land, the starvation of Gaza, the jailing of dissenters and the lack of equal rights in the alleged Israeli democracy. As a Jew and an American taxpayer, I can’t be silent when these crimes are being committed in my name and with my tax money.”

 

Nazi-Yahu Speech Pleases Congress, Virtually No One Else

NOVANEWS

 

antiwar.com

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu today delivered a major policy speech to the US Congress. It is about the easiest audience in the world for an Israeli official, and virtually each statement of policy of slogan he barked from the podium was met with a standing ovation by the assembled Congressmen.

But of course the Israeli government isn’t trying to make peace with the US Congress – and the indications are that they won’t get far with the Palestinians on the basis of this speech. Netanyahu’s speech was met with uniform condemnation from Israel’s left and right and top Palestinian officials.
Israeli opposition MPs referred to it as an “election commercial,” while the settlers who back the right-far-right coalition government condemned the suggestion that Israel might even end the occupation of even a fraction of the nation’s 1967 conquests.
Palestinian leadership insisted that the prime minister’s comments, despite being couched as part of a march toward peace, actually made even more onerous demands on the Palestinians, and make the situation even more difficult.
A particular issue is the Palestinian unity government, which Netanyahu demanded be split up. Israeli officials have repeatedly insisted they could not negotiate peace with the Palestinians since they were split up. but now insist that united they are unacceptable.
Another key obstacle is Netanyahu’s demand that all of Jerusalem, including the occupied East Jerusalem, remain eternally part of Israel. He insisted only Israel allows all religions access to the holy sites in the region. This netted massive applause, but came just a week after Israel severely curbed access to the Muslim holy sites in the city to prevent public protests.