Trident spending approval condemned by campaigners
NOVANEWS
The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament condemned today’s decision to authorise billions of pounds of further spending on the Trident replacement programme, prior to the major decision point on the nuclear weapons system, not due to be taken until 2016.
However, CND welcomed the launch of a government study into alternatives to Trident, to be led by Lib Dem Defence Minister Nick Harvey as providing the opportunity for other options – so far excluded for reasons of dogma rather than on an evidential basis – to be considered.
A further £3bn is due to be spent ahead of the main decision point in 2016 on top of the 900m spent on planning the replacement to date plus the costs of the current system. Whatever choice is reached in 2016, major elements of the first boats will already have been ordered. It was announced today that £380m is expected to be spent on the first submarine and £145m will be spent on the second, even before Parliament has had a chance to debate whether they are needed.
Kate Hudson, General Secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, said “Committing billions more to this ruinously expensive white elephant is something the government should be forced to justify every time police numbers are cut, hospitals reduce their services or public servants are laid off. The government seems willing to pay whatever it takes for these weapons, with the estimated bill almost doubling since they were first proposed. The cost estimate is now reaching £25bn. Tens of billions more can be added to that for the other parts of the system and for running costs. And that is not taking into account the fact that runaway increases in costs have blighted almost every major defence project in recent years.
“The Defence Secretary told MPs that no country currently has intent and capability to threaten the UK. With the US and Russia ridding themselves of hundreds of nuclear weapons, now is the perfect window of opportunity for Britain to push this global process forward by eliminating our own stockpile. Having city-destroying missiles eight times the power of the Hiroshima bomb patrolling 365 days a year is an expensive and irrelevant hang-over from a different era. Unfortunately, the fact that the Cold war ended 20 ago seems to have passed the government by. As a consequence, British taxpayers are being landed with a bill for a weapons system that actually makes the country and the world less secure. The Prime Minister today said he hoped to ‘elevate’ Trident beyond party political debate – surely due to a desire to exempt from scrutiny the decision to spend billions on a project that has yet to be agreed-upon.
Commenting on the review into alternatives to be led by the Minister of State for the Armed Forces, the Liberal Democrat MP Nick Harvey, she continued:
“We welcome the announcement of the review into alternatives to the current plan, but the disdain with which it was introduced by Liam Fox suggests he will consider nothing but a ‘like-for-like’ replacement which maintains the Cold War posture of continuous submarine patrols. Even if the review proposed a half-way house towards disarmament, such as creating a ‘virtual’ deterrent with the materials and boats on stand-by to be reconstituted if a future threat emerges, it seems that the Conservative part of the Coalition see Trident as such an article of faith that they will not question it regardless of cost or usefulness. We will push for the fullest possible publication of the findings of this review, which should inform the thinking of all political parties who may be taking the final decision on Trident in 2016.
This is Zionism: Zio-Nazi Herrenvolk police slaps a Palestinian lawyer
NOVANEWS
“As morevideos are surfacing and telling of yesterday’s events,one of them is going viral. In it you can see Kobi Bachar, deputy commander of the Galilee District Police, slapping an Arab lawyer roughly in the face after she asked him why he was arresting protesters.”
As more videos are surfacing and telling of yesterday’s events,one of them is going viral. In it you can see Kobi Bachar, deputy commander of the Galilee District Police, slapping an Arab lawyer roughly in the face after she asked him why he was arresting protesters.
Ynet reports:
“The protester, Attorney Maisa Arshid of the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel, had joined around 25 other Arab students in marking the Palestinian day of mourning over Israel’s founding.
Police had come to disperse the gathering, which took place near the border-side town of Avivim, because the protesters did not have a permit. But they refused to vacate the area, which due to escalations in violence across the border had been declared a closed military zone.”
Of course, the police reaction was that they were provoked. “Israel Police had no official comment, but the Galilee subdivision said the protesters had clearly been attempting to create a provocation. ‘Though they were told it was an illegal protest they did not respond to the police’s request to vacate the area and forces were forced to use reasonable force to disperse them. Eight were arrested,’ the district said in a statement”, Ynet continues.
Sure, you can clearly see it. I see it. I totally understand Bachar. He’s not a hotheaded new recruit. He’s an experienced officer, he knows very well what he’s doing. I feel like I can read his mind:
“That female lawyer had the nerve to ask me why I was detaining protesters, the ruler of the land? She even stood two feet away! How dare she?! If that’s not a provocation, I don’t know what is! Bam! Slap across the face! That’ll teach her. A good slap in the face. That’ll teach all them negroes to go back n’ stick to pickin’ cotton and….. oops… wait a minute…. where am I?”
Sick, sick society. Makes me nauseous.
Ynet reports:
“The protester, Attorney Maisa Arshid of the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel, had joined around 25 other Arab students in marking the Palestinian day of mourning over Israel’s founding.
Police had come to disperse the gathering, which took place near the border-side town of Avivim, because the protesters did not have a permit. But they refused to vacate the area, which due to escalations in violence across the border had been declared a closed military zone.”
Of course, the police reaction was that they were provoked. “Israel Police had no official comment, but the Galilee subdivision said the protesters had clearly been attempting to create a provocation. ‘Though they were told it was an illegal protest they did not respond to the police’s request to vacate the area and forces were forced to use reasonable force to disperse them. Eight were arrested,’ the district said in a statement”, Ynet continues.
Sure, you can clearly see it. I see it. I totally understand Bachar. He’s not a hotheaded new recruit. He’s an experienced officer, he knows very well what he’s doing. I feel like I can read his mind:
“That female lawyer had the nerve to ask me why I was detaining protesters, the ruler of the land? She even stood two feet away! How dare she?! If that’s not a provocation, I don’t know what is! Bam! Slap across the face! That’ll teach her. A good slap in the face. That’ll teach all them negroes to go back n’ stick to pickin’ cotton and….. oops… wait a minute…. where am I?”
Sick, sick society. Makes me nauseous.
In an effort to save readers time I provide below copy that can be directly incorporated into New York Times and Washington Post articles:
In a recent flare up of violence (1) in Arab towns in Israel, an Arab (2) protester, a woman according to some Palestinian sources (3), hit the palm of a police officer with her cheek. The police officer was briefly hospitalized but his life is reportedly not in danger. Some Middle East experts (4) see the hand of the Iranian government behind the attack (5).
footontes:
- because normal repression is not violent, only opposition to repression can be violent.
- as in the crowd scenes in “The Mummy.”
- To prevent bias, we send only blind reporters to the Middle East
- the reporter’s brother in law
- what else could cause the happy and pampered Palestinian citizens of Israel to take the streets?
NATO's Secret Ground War in Libya
NOVANEWS

By Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya
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Global Research, |
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The War on Libya – PART III |
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Zio-Nazi Gestapo shoots photographer
NOVANEWS
Palestinians chant slogans during a protest to mark Nakba Day near Erez crossing.
An Israeli soldier has deliberately shot Palestinian photographer Mohammad Othman as he was covering protests in the Gaza Strip, says Reporters Without Borders.
The group said on Tuesday that Othman was clearly identifiable as a journalist at the time of the shooting and was deliberately targeted on Sunday.
The photographer was covering demonstrations near the Erez crossing in northern Gaza Strip.
On Sunday, thousands of Palestinians staged protests to mark the anniversary of the Nakba Day or “day of the catastrophe,” May 15, 1948, when Palestine was occupied by Israel.
Israeli Apache helicopters and F-16 fighter planes flew over the demonstrators, whereas troops fired tank shells near marching protesters on the border crossing.
Medical sources and Othman’s family told AFP on Tuesday that he was still in hospital in a “critical but stable” condition.
“He underwent an operation early this morning to remove a piece of shrapnel from his spine,” said Adham Abu Selmiya, a spokesman for the medical services in Gaza.
A doctor said the 26-year-old Othman was shot in the arm and was hit in the chest by shrapnel, which entered his lungs and spine.
Arsonists set Houston mosque ablaze
NOVANEWS
The Islamic Education Center of Houston
An Islamic center in Houston, Texas has suffered damage after unknown arsonists set it on fire, but no injuries have been reported.
The blaze started after a group of male suspects smashed a window of the the Islamic Education Center of Houston and doused a room with gasoline before setting it on fire, spokesman for Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) Ibrahim Hooper said.
The Texas chapter of the CAIR issued a statement calling on the FBI to investigate the incident as a possible hate crime.
The surveillance cameras failed to catch a clear image of the suspects as they were reportedly masked, but arson investigators have started a probe into the attack.
“The number of recent incidents targeting American Muslims points to a disturbing nationwide trend that needs to be addressed by political and religious leaders at the national level,” Hooper said.
He added that in the past year, arsonists have targeted mosques or mosque construction sites in Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, and Michigan. In May last year, a bomb exploded at a Florida mosque.
A number of other hate incidents targeting American Muslims, those perceived to be Muslim and Muslim institutions have occurred since the alleged killing of Osama bin laden by US forces on May 1.
Some analysts have suggested that Islamophobia will decline after the US announcement of bin Laden’s death.
But others say the recent attacks signal that anti-Muslim sentiments still remain a problem for the Muslim communities across the US.
Obama Faces Mounting Arab Disillusionment
NOVANEWS
On the eve of a much-anticipated address by President Barack Obama on U.S. policy in the Middle East, a new survey suggests that disillusionment with both Obama and Washington’s approaches to the region are once again on the rise throughout the Muslim world.
The survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project (GAP) found that Washington’s image, which had largely improved after Obama’s inauguration in 2009, is now approaching the very low levels that predominated during the last years of the administration of President George W. Bush.
The poll, which was carried out between March 21 and April 26, covered six predominantly Muslim nations—Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, and Turkey—as well as Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories. It thus took place before the killing by U.S. Special Forces of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and the Egypt-mediated reconciliation accord between Palestine’s Fatah and Hamas parties.
It found that favorable views of the United States have fallen particularly sharply over the past year in Jordan, Pakistan, and Turkey. In Jordan, the percentage of respondents who said they had a generally favorable view of the U.S. fell from 21 percent last year to 13 percent this year—the lowest level since 2003 after the U.S. invasion of neighboring Iraq.
In Pakistan, the favorable percentage fell from 17 to 11 percent—the lowest percentage since 2002 after the U.S. invasion of neighboring Afghanistan. And in Turkey, it fell from 17 percent to 10 percent—the lowest percentage since 2007.
Only in Indonesia, where Obama spent part of his childhood, did a majority (54 percent) say they held generally favorable opinions of the U.S., although in Lebanon, respondents were roughly equally split, primarily along sectarian lines, with Christians and Sunni Muslims generally more favorable and Shia Muslims more disapproving.
The new survey, which also asked respondents about their attitudes toward the “pro-democracy” movements that have swept through much of the Arab world and toward Islamic fundamentalism and related themes, comes as Obama prepares to deliver a major policy address on U.S. policy toward the Middle East.
He hosted King Abdullah of Jordan Tuesday, and will welcome Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House Friday.
“With respect to Israel and the Palestinian conflict … we both share the view that despite the many changes, or perhaps because of the many changes that are taking place in the region, it’s more vital than ever that both Israelis and Palestinians find a way to get back to the table and begin negotiating a process whereby they can create two states that are living side by side in peace and security,” Obama said at a joint press conference with Abdullah Tuesday.
“Jordan, obviously, with its own peace with Israel, has an enormous stake in this. The United States has an enormous stake in this. We will continue to partner to try to encourage an equitable and just solution to a problem that has been nagging the region for many, many years,” he said.
In recent days, however, administration officials have discouraged speculation that the president will offer a detailed peace plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict—a key source of Muslim, and particularly Arab, disaffection with U.S. policy, according to this and earlier polls taken over the past decade.
After his inauguration, and particularly after his address in 2009 in Cairo, Obama raised expectations that he would make that conflict, as well as a more respectful policy toward the Muslim world, a top foreign policy priority in his administration.
But his failure to persuade Netanyahu to implement a settlement freeze on Palestinian territories, including East Jerusalem, dashed the hopes of many in the greater Middle East. And, in March, when Washington cast the lone veto against a U.N. Security Council resolution that demanded that such a freeze be implemented, the disillusionment appeared to deepen.
Indeed, huge majorities of respondents in Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, and the Palestinian Territories said they disapproved of Obama’s handling of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. More than two-thirds of Turkish respondents agreed, as did 57 percent of Indonesians. A plurality of 45 percent of Pakistanis disapproved, and only six percent said they approved.
Disapproval—albeit not quite as overwhelming—was not confined to U.S. policies on Israel and Palestine, however. Majorities ranging from 52 percent (Pakistan) to 87 percent (Jordan) said they disapproved of Obama’s handling of Afghanistan. Majorities as high as 80 percent (Palestinian Territories) disapproved of Obama’s handling of Iran.
Perhaps most disappointing to the administration, however, was the general disapproval of Obama’s handling of the popular movements for political change that have swept the Arab world since January. Majorities or strong pluralities in every country said they disapproved of the way Obama has dealt with unrest, although in Egypt, where Obama, after some hesitation, eventually called for former President Hosni Mubarak’s resignation, respondents were more evenly split than in the other countries.
In addition to disapproval of specific administration policies, however, the survey found that some of the same concerns that drove U.S. standing in the Muslim world toward the cellar during the Bush administration remain pervasive.
Thus, strong majorities in the greater Middle East, ranging from 60 percent in Pakistan to 77 percent in Egypt, said that they do not believe that Washington considers their countries’ interests when it makes policy. Even in Indonesia, a plurality of 49 percent said that was the case.
Asked whether their governments cooperate too much, too little, or the right amount with the U.S., majorities in Jordan, Lebanon, and Pakistan and a plurality in Egypt said opted for “too much.” In Turkey and Indonesia, both of which have asserted greater independence from U.S. foreign policy positions in recent years, opinions were evenly split.
With the exception of Indonesia, majorities ranging from 61 percent (Lebanon) to 80 percent (Jordan) said they opposed U.S.-led efforts to fight terrorism, while substantially higher majorities ranging from 68 percent in Pakistan to 87 percent in Jordan said they believed Washington should withdraw from Afghanistan.
The survey also found a loss of confidence in Obama himself, even in Indonesia over the past year. In Indonesia, 62 percent of respondents expressed confidence in Obama, down from two-thirds last year. In Turkey and the Palestinian Territories, confidence has dropped more sharply. In Turkey, only 12 percent said they retained confidence in Obama, down from 23 percent last year; in the Territories, 14 percent said they had confidence in him, down from 23 percent in 2009.
Only 10 percent of Pakistanis said they had confidence in Obama, while 65 percent said they had little or no confidence at all.
U.S. Drone Strikes Kill 238 Pakistani Civilians So Far This Year
NOVANEWS
PESHAWAR: Two hundred thirty eight innocent civilians were killed while forty got injured in the drone attacks in tribal areas in the contemporary year sine 1st January till date.
According to government sources, important members of Al-Qeada were the target of these drone missile strikes.
According to locals, the killed people were locals. From 1st January 2011 till 17th May 2011, 24 drone missile strikes were carried out in North Waziristan and 15 drone missile strikes were carried out in South Waziristan.
45 people were killed in the drone attack on a Jirga soon after the releases of Raymond Davis, after which Chief of Army staff strongly condemned this drone attack.
In the first month of the current year no drone strike was carried out in South Waziristan while 10 were carried in North Waziristan.
In the month of February, out of total three drone strikes, 2 were targeted on North Waziristan and one on South Waziristan.
In the month of March, 6 attacks were carried out in North Waziristan while two on South Waziristan.
From the month of April till date 43 people died in two drone missile strikes. These strikes were carried out in North Waziristan while American Senator John Kerry was present in Pakistan.
Iran condemns Nakba Day Zio-Nazi terror at UN
NOVANEWS

Iranian Ambassador to the United Nations Mohammad Khazaei
The Islamic Republic of Iran has condemned Israel for its massacre of peaceful Palestinian, Lebanese, and Syrian protesters who were holding Nakba Day rallies and marches on Sunday.
The Iranian ambassador to the United Nations told a UN Security Council session on Tuesday that the killing of the demonstrators is a blatant example of state-sponsored terrorism and Israel must be held accountable for its terrorist operations.
Ambassador Mohammad Khazaei said that Israel is distorting the truth to divert the international community’s attention from the criminal policies that the terrorist regime has adopted toward the people of Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria and the merciless aggression it is directing toward them.
On May 15, Israeli troops launched attacks on rallies and marches held in Palestine and bordering countries to protest against the establishment of Israel 63 years ago, killing dozens of people.
Demonstrators gathered in cities across the Middle East to remember the May 15, 1948 occupation of Palestine, known as Nakba Day, which means Day of the Catastrophe in Arabic.
In the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military killed two protesters, including a Palestinian teenager, and injured at least 65 others.
A journalist suffered a critical injury from Israeli fire in the northern city of Beit Hanoun.
One person was killed and at least 150 injured in the village of Qalandiya near the city of Ramallah in the central West Bank.
Two other Palestinians were killed and scores were injured by Israeli troops in other parts of the West Bank.
Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh urged Palestinians to continue the resistance against Israel and expressed hope that the Palestinians would one day return to their homeland.
In Syria’s Golan Heights, at least 12 protesters were killed and 30 wounded by Israeli military fire.
Israeli forces also fired into Lebanon, killing six protesters and injuring 71 others, 13 of them seriously.
No jail time for Katsav before outcome of appeal against rape conviction
NOVANEWS
Haaretz
The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that former President Moshe Katsav will not serve time in prison pending the outcome of his appeal of his rape conviction.
Last week, the court convened to hear Katsav’s appeal, who claimed that the sexual relations with the complainant were consensual.
Katsav was convicted in December of two counts of rape against the complainant publicly identified as A. from the Tourism Ministry, and was sentenced to seven years in prison.
He was supposed to begin his sentence on Sunday, but was allowed to remain free, when the Supreme Court accepted his request to stay out of jail pending the outcome of his appeal.
Katsav’s attorney Avigdor Feldman said at the start of the hearing that there was no concern that his client would evade justice if his prison term was delayed, and added that he did not pose a threat to society.
Feldman also said that the court should take into account special circumstances, such as the fact that Katsaz is a former president, adding that the court should avoid the possible occurance in which Katsav will enter the prison as a former president, and will be equated of the charges shortly after.
Suspected bomb maker arrested
NOVANEWS
By: Coerscentandcross
Police detain Hanan Yadgarov, 36, for allegedly constructing four explosive devices with intent to harm. Suspect has criminal record.
Ed note–WHAAAATTTT???? A JEW building bombs??? NOT AN AY-RAB???? INCONCEIVABLE. Obvously the police who arrested him, the prosecuting attorney charging him and the newspaper running the story must be anti-Semites. NO WAIT, THEY ARE IN ISRAEL, so that obviously means they are all self-hating Jews.
Seriously folks, the real story here is that more than likely this guy was part of some far-right, ultra-religious and fanatical version of Meir Kahane’s Kach movement responsible for perpetrating violence against Arabs (sanctioned quietly by the Israeli government) and part of the same group that was planning to blow up mosques and blame it on someone else. Until the rest of the world–and especially Americans–learn this fact, that False Flag Terrorism is THE ace in the sleeve of worldwide Jewry, we will never get anywhere with fixing today’s problems viz-a-viz the Middle East and the ability of sovereign nations to develop their own rational foreign policies.
Jerusalem police detectives arrested Hanan Yadgarov, 36, a few weeks ago under suspicion that he assembled four explosive devices, which were ordered by criminals, with the intent of targeting other criminals.
Yadgarov admitted his involvement, and was remanded to police custody. An indictment is expected to be filed against him on Thursday.
The covert investigation began after Jerusalem police detectives received a tip about Yadgarov’s involvement in assembling explosive devices.
After following him for a few weeks detectives discovered he was building a sophisticated demolition charge in his home, activated by remote control and containing large amounts of shrapnel, nails and metal parts.
On May 4, around 2:00 am the investigations spotted Yadgarov as he was driving his car in Jerusalem and arrested him.
A medium-sized demolition charge intended to target criminals and a bag with bomb making components were found when investigators searched his home. Yadgarov later confessed to making the explosive device.
Investigators examined other devices they had discovered across the country to check whether they matched the components used by Yadgarov. They found three matching bombs in Jerusalem and in Lod.
Yadgarov was released from jail only a year ago, after serving five years behind bars for a similar offense, according to police.
West Pushing for More Moves Against Syria
NOVANEWS

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke to her EU counterpart today, and the two agreed to