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benny balerio
Rice: US won't tell Israel yes or no

US Secretary of State Rice says Washington not handing down orders to Jerusalem on possible strike, slams Iran's answer to latest incentives package. Warning US may seek more sanctions, Rice says hope lies in 'reasonable' Iranians
Ynet

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Thursday that the US would not "say yes or no" to an Israeli military strike on Iran. In an interview with Yahoo News and Politico, she also said that Iran's answer to the incentives package offered by world powers “is not a really serious answer”, and warned that new economic sanctions were the next likely step if the country continued to refuse to freeze its nuclear program.



Iranian Response

Iran submits nuclear letter, no mention of freeze / Reuters

Official in Tehran says letter handed to world powers not an answer to offered package, does not mention idea of freezing nuclear work
Full story



"We don't say yes or no to Israeli military operations. "Israel is its own sovereign. We are in close contact with Israel and we talk about the diplomatic track we're on… They've said diplomacy can work here, and I know they're doing their part to talk with all countries with which they have diplomatic relations to explain why it is important to have a tough edge to our diplomacy," Rice said.



“Iran has a way out if they ever wish, but we will seriously pursue sanctions if they don’t,” she said. “You have to hope that there are reasonable people in Iran who see this as not the way to run a country.”




In her first public comments since a conference call between six world powers on Wednesday to determine their next step on Iran, Rice said the US does not view Iran as “a permanent enemy” and has “been pretty tough with them already” by supporting previous sets of United Nations sanctions.



US officials have claimed that Iran's response was unacceptable and that the US would aim to pile on more UN sanctions, a step that the other world powers have agreed to consider.



"They should have felt like time is running out quite a long time ago,” Rice said. “When you are having trouble getting banks to come in, getting investment, when export credits are going down from around the world, when you have inflation roaring, time is running out.”



Rice said the dictatorship will have to “make a tough decision” to avoid a further financial squeeze from the Security Council, which she believes is likely to act this fall. “What is happening to Iran is that its isolation is costing them,” she said. “It’s having an effect. I think that’s one reason that you’re seeing them trying to give half-answers rather than simply saying no. But the fact is we won’t accept half-answers, either.”



Getting back on track
Rice said there was consensus among Washington’s diplomatic allies on how to respond to the latest talking points from Iran. “They agreed that the Iranian answer is not adequate, that it is not a really serious answer,” she said. “And so we’re now going to begin to consult on how to get back on the second track, which is to move again toward … a Security Council resolution.”





Russia's envoy to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, said his government hadn't agreed to impose further sanctions and hoped for a resolution through further talks. Rice said the Bush administration still believes “that the diplomatic option can work and that there is time for it to work.” She said part of her optimism stems from “elites” in Iran “who don’t want to see this kind of isolation because of business interests or other” reasons.



“I think there is a lot of ferment in Iran right now,” she said. “Even in their newspapers, as controlled as they are, (there is) a lot of questioning of the policies of President (Mahmoud) Ahmadinejad. After all, inflation is running wild in Iran. It’s a country that’s experiencing, of all things, brownouts in a country that has as much energy as it does.”


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benny balerio
Israel Warns Russia: We'll Neutralize S-300 if sold to Iran




Aug. 8….(JPOST) If Russia goes through with the sale of its most advanced anti-aircraft missile system to Iran, Israel will use an electric warfare device now under development to neutralize it and as a result present Russia as vulnerable to air infiltrations, a top defense official has told the Jerusalem Post. The Russian system, called the S-300, is one of the most advanced multi-target anti-aircraft-missile systems in the world today and has a reported ability to track up to 100 targets simultaneously while engaging up to 12 at the same time. It has a range of about 200 kilometers and can hit targets at altitudes of 27,000 meters. While Russia has denied that it sold the system to Iran, Teheran claimed last year that Moscow was preparing to equip the Islamic Republic with S-300 systems. Iran already has TOR-M1 surface-to-air missiles from Russia. A top IAF officer also said this week that Israel needed to do "everything possible" to prevent the S-300 from reaching the region. "Russia will have to think real hard before delivering this system to Iran, which is possibly on the brink of conflict with either Israel or the US, since if the system is delivered, an EW electronic warfare system will likely be developed to neutralize it, and if that happens it would be catastrophic not only for Iran but also for Russia," the defense official said. Neutralization of one of the main components of Russian air defense would be a blow to Russian national security as well as to defense exports. "No country will want to buy the system if it is proven to be ineffective," the official said. "For these reasons, Russia may not deliver it in the end to Iran." Also on Thursday, Defense Minister Ehud Barak told an Italian paper that a nuclear Iran would be "dangerous to world order." Barak emphasized that all options for dealing with threat of a nuclear Teheran were "open and ready," and stressed the importance of "strengthening and accelerating economic sanctions against Iran." "Either way, we need to keep every option open. If they provoke us, or they attack us, our army is prepared to attack and to succeed uncompromisingly

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benny balerio
The Fleet Positions Itself For War Part II



In going through the morning reading, one of the first things I read was the post by Thomas Barnett that declared All systems "go" for war. Dr. Barnett has excellent instincts, but in my study of the Iranian issue, I simply could not see a scenario for war unfold by either the United States or Israel until after we get public statements by the Chinese. I posted some comment to that effect on Dr. Barnett's blog, and thank goodness that blog is moderated, because 10 minutes later I realized the conditions for war are indeed being met. China, and Japan have weighed in.

This is not trivial, this is the first time we have seen global coverage of Chinese and Japanese government concerns to the rising tensions surrounding Iran, and it comes as a result of Iranian military posturing, not Israeli posturing. This was one of several conditions we had previously identified, because it is an economic consideration towards war that Japan and China respectively represent the #1 and #2 importer of oil from Iran. It is very important to note what they are saying and what they doing.


Last Friday, Iran delivered a letter of response to a package of incentives proposed by the six countries -- the permanent UN Security Council members Britain, France, China, Russia and the United States, as well as Germany, aimed at persuading Iran to suspend its uranium enrichment activities.
Liu confirmed Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi had received a letter from his Iranian counterpart, Manouchehr Mottaki, which said Iran was ready to hold constructive negotiations as soon as possible with the European Union and the six countries.


Also consider events. China and India both have increased their domestic price of oil through tweaking their subsidies, but also important is the upcoming restrictions on driving we will see leading up to the Olympics as China attempts to paint the sky blue. These adjustments, combined with continued reduced oil use in the US, will increase oil stockpiles in August while production remains constant.

Last week we discussed the negotiations package offered to Iran and why the details are important. Iran appears to have accepted the negotiated package, and with that comes a condition that simply didn't get enough attention in the media.

The Foreign Office in London tonight confirmed to The Times that the major world powers would refrain from any further action against Tehran at the UN Security Council if Iran refrained from any new nuclear activity, including the installation of more centrifuges for uranium enrichment. This offer was part of an incentives package offered to Iran last month by the US, Britain, Russia, China, France and Germany.

It was “part and parcel of any pre-negotiations which would be limited to six weeks to prepare for the opening of any formal negotiations,” the Foreign Office spokesman said.
We see this as a built in time table, essentially a loose countdown towards war. During the "process" Israel is expected to show restraint while the six party talks attempt a diplomatic solution. We expect this six week time period of pre-negotiations will begin soon, if not already, because another important condition was met today.

Notwithstanding months of partisan wrangling in Congress over the Iraq war, the Senate on Thursday handily confirmed Gen. David Petraeus as the top commander in the Middle East and Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno to replace Petraeus as the chief military officer in Iraq.
A lot of attention was given to the missile launches during the Iranian military exercise over the last two days. A brief word about this. A couple weeks ago we noted that the Iranians had moved ballistic missiles in to a launch position. We speculated it was a bluff, but we were also unaware of the Iranian military exercise. The thing is, the media had the story about the ballistic missiles being moved to launchpads, and everyone apparently knew about it when it happened. When we first heard about the missiles being moved to the launch pad, our first question was whether the missiles were fueled. The fuel used for ballistic missiles is very corrosive, meaning a missile that is fueled either must be launched within a few weeks or the fuel will have to be drained and replaced.

With everyone (including the Times citing defense sources in Israel 3 weeks ago) knowing the missiles were moved to the launch pads, clearly the early warning system for an Iranian ballistic missile launch is effective. If you are watching naval exercises, air power demonstrations, or missile launches and believe you are observing the metrics towards war, you've been distracted. The metrics are not military, they are political. For example:

The fact that the terrorists have failed to strike our shores again, does not mean that our enemies have given up. To the contrary, since 9/11 they've plotted a number of attacks on our homeland. Like members standing up here, I receive briefings on the very real and very dangerous threats that America continues to face.

The most important lessons learned after 9/11 was that America's intelligence professionals lacked some of the tools they needed to monitor the communications of terrorists abroad. It's essential that our intelligence community know who our enemies are talking to, what they're saying, and what they're planning.

I can't say I'm excited about this bill, but I can live with it, perhaps literally. Following an attack on Iran by Israel, Iran is not going to find much success trying to sink the USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) in the Indian Ocean, but they might have a great deal of success killing you and me here in America. We don't believe for one second that Iran is going to abide by the Geneva Conventions and not intentionally support the killing of American civilians in North America. If war happens, they are as likely if not more likely to attack here than in the Gulf. Whether you like it or not, there was absolutely no way the Democrats, including Barack Obama, were going to leave the possibility open that Israel attacks Iran, and the US gets hit by terrorist attacks inside the US while the FISA bill wasn't passed.


This is a key point. The Democratic Party in mass shifted from a core position. This doesn't happen without keen awareness to some strategic condition. Clearly some outside force has produced conditions which are far outside the scope of national politics, because nothing short of insight and real concern for political survival would Democrats find inspiration for such a massive policy shift with virtually no explanation to its core constituency. This is a major reason, and to Democrats scratching still their heads, an obvious sign we believe that Israel has demanded a time table.


We believe we are in the middle of a twelve week period of diplomacy, what will be the last chance for diplomacy before when we believe Israel will take action. Once the six week negotiation period passes, and the real negotiations begin, the clock is ticking. This time period is not an accident, there is a reason why the six week time period was insisted upon by several nations of the six party talks, including China. The six week period insures that war will not break out during the Olympics, and with this condition established heads of state will be in attendance.

You think tensions are high now, you haven't been reading the blog very long. As we noted in early May, the Navy has been positioning itself for an extraordinary level of readiness this fall, and it is obvious enough that even the damage to the USS George Washington (CVN 73) does little to total battle force availability. With the return of the Nassau ESG to port today, the Atlantic Fleet doesn't have any strike groups on deployment, while the Pacific has 3 Carrier Strike Groups and 1 Expeditionary Strike Group at sea. The Lincoln CSG, currently in the Indian Ocean, is to be replaced by late August, which is also around the same time the Kitty Hawk currently participating in RIMPAC 2008 is expected to move to Washington state to prepare for decommissioning.

The Reagan Carrier Strike Group which is currently in the Pacific, and the Peleliu Expeditionary Strike Group which is currently in the Persian Gulf, will both remain at sea well into the fall months. More notably, the time for the next round of naval strike group deployments has come, and the Navy is about to deploy a whole bunch of ships, with a massive reserve trained up and available. As chance would have it, the Europeans will be putting large numbers of naval forces to sea over the next few months as well.

Final thoughts.

In the Middle East this year Ramadan begins on Sunday, August 31st at sundown and will continue for 30 days until Monday, September 29th at sundown. It is worth noting there is a new moon on August 30th and September 29th. We still see Turkey as a big wild card, Israel can do an end run around the United States through Turkey, and it wouldn't even be the first time this year. This is not trivial, most people are unaware that Turkey has the second largest standing Army in NATO, second behind the United States. It is an experienced, well trained Army with excellent equipment.

Would Iran really be stupid enough to attack a NATO member with the largest standing Army in Europe, who is already on the border and has the means to completely cut off Iran's northern flank? When one considers the dynamics between the US, EU, Israel, and Turkey, don't dismiss the wild card role Turkey still might play in any scenario. After all, no one saw the Syrian incident coming through Turkey until after the fact.

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benny balerio
Ron Paul Affirms: Iran Attack Plan Has ‘Green Light’
http://www.americanfreepress.net/htm...k_plan_146.htm

By Steve Watson

Rep. Ron Paul (R-Tex.) has warned millions of radio listeners that the United States is heading into an illegal attack on Iran, stating his amazement at members of Congress who have openly voiced support for a criminal nuclear strike.

“If we do (attack) it is going to be a disaster,” the congressman told the Alex Jones radio show. “I was astounded to see on one of the networks the other day that the debate was not are we going to attack, but are we going to attack before or after the election?” Paul continued.

Paul recently voiced concern over House Congressional Resolution 362 which he has dubbed a “virtual Iran war resolution.”

“If that comes up it is demanding that the president [put in place] an absolute blockade of the entire country of Iran, and punish any country or any business group around the world if they trade with Iran,” Paul told listeners.

Experts have predicted gas will rise to $6 per gallon if the resolution passes. Paul believes that may happen anyway, just by anticipation.

“The frightening thing is they say they are taking no options off the table, even nuclear first strike,” Paul said. Paul believes from talking with his contacts in and around Congress that a strike on Iran has already been green-lighted.

“That is my sense because the Democratic leaders in the House are proposing no resistance whatsoever, Paul said. “We saw this when a supplemental bill came up and the president asked for $107 billion for the war, the Democrat leadership gave them $162 billion.

“It is still totally bewildering to me when I see men and women in the Congress that I know and like doing this just to get along. Most of them will say ‘I agree with you on all you say but the Iranians are bad people and they might attack us some day. . . . I hear members of Congress saying if we could only nuke them.’”

Ron Paul also spoke in detail about his new Campaign For Liberty Group and his views on the upcoming election.
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benny balerio
Intelligence Guidance: Week of Aug. 10, 2008

August 8, 2008 | 2106 GMT



VANO SHLAMOV/AFP/Getty Images
A Russian fighter jet fires on a Georgian position near Tskhinvali


1. The conflict in the Caucasus: By swiftly intervening in the Georgia-South Ossetia conflict, Moscow seized upon an opportunity to reassert its prowess along its periphery. The West, particularly the United States, is incapable of responding in any meaningful way, and is still trying to make sense of what is happening. Therefore, this is Russia’s chance to redefine the boundaries of the region. Tactically, we must watch carefully to see where the Russians halt their advance — and be watchful for the possibility that they push on to Tbilisi. Strategically, our focus needs to be on the reactions of the former Soviet states, particularly Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Nagorno-Karabakh and the Baltics, all of which are now seeing the Russians in a very different light.

2. Iraq: A lot of noise is coming out of Iraq. The squabbling between Iraqi factions and shifts in alliances we’re seeing now are a reflection of the progress made thus far in higher-level negotiations between the United States and Iran. There are, of course, a number of sticking points holding up the process, including Iran’s nuclear program, the dispute over Kirkuk, etc. But the hardest part is over with. If the United States is now dealing with a recharged Russian threat, it has to seal up Iraq quickly, and that means speeding up the negotiations with Iran. Will Iran view U.S. urgency as an opportunity to make a deal? Or will it be more interested in enticing Russia into strategic weapons sales that could upset the negotiating process?

3. The Olympics: The Beijing Olympics have begun. While Beijing and much of the world will be preoccupied with the event, we need to look past the fanfare and focus on what steps Beijing takes to cope with the Olympics’ aftermath. A big concern for the Chinese is an expected post-Olympics capital outflow in the construction, real estate and tourism industries. What moves will the Chinese make in trade and currency policies? Will they float the yuan more? Will they try to impose restrictions on the movement of capital? Now is the time when the Chinese government will be making moves to prepare itself and the Chinese public for increased economic strain. We need to monitor these policy shifts.

4. Pakistani politics: The civilian government in Pakistan is trying to force President Pervez Musharraf out once and for all. Musharraf does not matter. What matters is if the political brawl between the president and his opponents rips the government (by this we mean the institutions of state, not simply the current coalition controlling them) apart at a time when the Pakistani military — which has its hands full trying to rein its spy agency and contain a raging insurgency — cannot be fully relied on to restore order and deprive the jihadists of an opportunity to inject more chaos into the system. Does the military have what it takes to contain this political crisis? If not, the insurgency has a good chance of intensifying.

5. The Bolivian referendum: Bolivia will hold a referendum Aug. 10 that will determine whether President Evo Morales gets a political mandate to push through a number of contentious reforms. This referendum vote will reveal just how severely split the country is between the urbanites in the resource-rich lowlands and the poor indigenous populations in the highlands. We need to see if the results of this referendum can push the opposition into becoming a more unified and capable force to challenge the state.

EURASIA

* Aug. 9: Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin will meet with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Beijing during both the Olympics and Russia’s military action in Georgia’s secessionist region of South Ossetia.
* Aug. 15: A meeting is tentatively scheduled for the U.N. Secretary-General’s Group of Friends of Georgia — the United States, Germany, France, United Kingdom and Russia — in Berlin. The Abkhazian separatist leader was supposed to attend, but has since withdrawn. It is unclear if the meeting will be held considering the current military actions involving Russia, Georgia and the latter’s secessionist region of South Ossetia.
* Aug. 15: German Chancellor Angela Merkel will meet with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev in Russia’s Black Sea city of Sochi. Topics are sure to include Europe’s energy reliance on Russia and Russia’s military intervention in Georgia’s secessionist region of South Ossetia.

MIDDLE EAST/SOUTH ASIA

* Aug. 8: Deputy Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency Olli Heinonen will leave Iran after talks over Tehran’s nuclear program.
* Aug. 10: Nechirvan Barzani, prime minister of Iraq’s Kurdistan region, will leave Iran after a two-day visit.
* Aug. 8-15: U.S. envoy to Sudan Richard Williamson will continue his one-week visit during which he is to meet top Sudanese officials, including Foreign Minister Deng Alor.
* Aug. 9: Algerian President Abdel Aziz Bouteflika will visit Iran.
* Aug. 13: Lebanese President Michel Suleiman will visit Damascus to meet with Syrian President Bashar al Assad.
* Aug. 14: Anniversary of the U.N.-brokered cease-fire of the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah conflict.
* Aug. 4-24: The “Vajraprahar” joint Indo-U.S. counterterrorism exercise with U.S. special forces continues at the Indian Army’s Counter-Insurgency and Jungle Warfare School in Vairengte, Mizoram, India.
* Aug. 14: Pakistan to celebrate Independence Day. This is also the deadline established by the All Pakistan Lawyers Representatives Conference for the government to restore the judiciary to the status it held before a state of emergency declared in November 2007.
* Aug. 15: India will hold a national holiday to celebrate its Day of Independence.

EAST ASIA

* Aug. 9: Olympic Game events commence.
* Aug. 10: U.S. President George W. Bush will meet with Chinese President Hu Jintao.
* Aug. 11: Elections will be held in Philippines’ six-province Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.
* Aug. 11: South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kwon Jong Rak will arrive in Cambodia to pay a courtesy call on Prime Minister Hun Sen and Foreign Minister Hor Namhong the next day.
* Aug. 12: Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou will arrive in the United States in the first of three transit stops scheduled for his trips to and from Paraguay and the Dominican Republic. Ma’s stated plan is to keep these transit stops low key by not meeting with any local Taiwanese or U.S. officials.
* Aug. 13: South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kwon Jong Rak will visit Pakistan to meet with his counterpart Salman Bashir and discuss bilateral cooperation and regional security conditions.
* Mid-August: Special U.N. envoy to Myanmar Ibrahim Gambari is planning a return visit to Myanmar after an initial visit planned for May was postponed due to Cyclone Nargis.

LATIN AMERICA

* Aug. 10: Bolivia will hold a national recall referendum that will test the mandates of eight out of nine departmental prefects, Bolivian Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera and Bolivian President Evo Morales.
* Aug. 15: Paraguayan President-elect Fernando Lugo will take office.

AFRICA

* Aug. 9: South African President Thabo Mbeki will visit Zimbabwe to mediate power-sharing negotiations between Zimbabwe’s ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front and opposition Movement for Democratic Change parties.
* Aug. 10: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and Movement for Democratic Change President Morgan Tsvangirai could hold a power-sharing meeting.
* Aug. 14: Nigeria is obligated to hand over control of the disputed Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon.
* Aug. 14-15: South Africa will host the South African Development Community (SADC) Council of Ministers meeting that precedes the SADC summit slated to take place in Johannesburg on Aug. 16-17.
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benny balerio
Aug 10, 2008 0:33 | Updated Aug 10, 2008 2:23
'Israel can decide for itself on Iran'
By HILARY LEILA KRIEGER, JERUSALEM POST CORRESPONDENT
WASHINGTON
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US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice defended Israel's right to make its own decision about whether it takes military action against Iran, in an interview released over the weekend.


Rice stands by as Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni speaks to the media.
Photo: AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week "We don't say yes or no to Israeli military operations. Israel is a sovereign country," she said in response to a question from The Politico Web site as to whether she was concerned that America would be blamed in the case of an IDF attack on the Islamic Republic.

Her statements come amid speculation that Washington has warned Jerusalem not to attack Iran and media reports that the US told Israel it doesn't have the green light to use Iraqi airspace for any such attack.

At the same time, Rice emphasized diplomacy.

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"We are in very close contact with the Israelis and we talk about the diplomatic track that we're on," she said. "They've said that diplomacy can work here. And I know they're doing their part to talk to all of the countries with which they have good relations to explain why it's important to have a tough edge to our diplomacy."

Asked if she would use the opportunity to tell Israel it shouldn't strike Iran, Rice replied that the US and its international partners announced this week that they would be looking at further sanctions against Iran after it failed to meet another deadline to begin negotiations over its nuclear program, as it continued enriching uranium in defiance of the international community.

The US has been holding consultations with the other permanent members of the UN Security Council - Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China - about beginning work on a fourth sanctions resolution.

At the same time, amid indications that will be a slow process, particularly with signs the Russians are hesitant about ratcheting up the sanctions language, the US and EU are taking their own additional measures outside the UN framework.

"We're on a diplomatic course and that's the important thing," Rice said.

In the interview, she also dismissed the concern that Teheran could hold the world's energy markets hostage because of its large role in the international oil market and its control over a key shipping route.

"I don't know what the Iranians would do without the revenue that they receive from selling oil. And so the idea that they would somehow deprive the world of Iranian oil exports would have to have a pretty devastating effect on Iran itself," she said.

The interview was released the day before the Institute for Science and International Security published a report arguing that force wouldn't be particularly effective in ending Iran's nuclear threat.

In the report, titled "Can military strikes destroy Iran's gas centrifuge program? Probably not," David Albright, ISIS president and a former UN weapons inspector, lays out short-comings including a lack of sufficient intelligence to be able to destroy all of the nuclear production sites, Iran's ability to quickly replicate whatever centrifuges are destroyed, and the likely strengthening of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's domestic standing in the wake of such an attack.

Albright and co-authors Paul Brannan and Jacqueline Shire also reject any equivalence between a strike on Iran and that carried out by Israel in Iraq in 1981 to take out the Osirak reactor, or its attack on an alleged incipient reactor in Syria last September.

"This analogy is grossly misleading. It neglects the important differences between a gas centrifuge uranium enrichment program and a reactor-based program, and fails to account for the dispersed, relatively advanced, and hardened nature of Iran's gas centrifuge facilities," they write. "It also ignores the years Iran has had to acquire centrifuge items abroad, often illicitly, allowing it to create reserve stocks of critical equipment and raw materials."
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HeIsFaithful
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26111034

Syria rules out new IAEA visit to bombed site

Foreign ministry justifies act; country denies it has hidden nuclear facilities



updated 5:24 p.m. ET, Sat., Aug. 9, 2008
DAMASCUS, Syria - Syria on Saturday declared that U.N. nuclear sleuths were barred from revisiting the site of a suspected atomic reactor that was bombed by Israeli jets last year.

The decision dealt a blow to efforts by the International Atomic Energy Agency to follow up on intelligence made available to its experts asserting that Syria was hiding a nuclear program that could be used to make weapons.

Justifying the move, a Syrian Foreign Ministry official told reporters that its agreement with the U.N. agency — which already toured the site in June — allowed only one visit. The official, who was not authorized to talk to the media, spoke on condition of anonymity.

The Syrian statement appeared to be prompted by comments made by diplomats accredited to the Vienna, Austria-based IAEA, who told The Associated Press earlier Saturday that Damascus late last month turned down a request from the agency for a follow-up trip.

A return to the bombed facility — alleged by the U.S. to have been a nearly completed plutonium-producing reactor — would have been on the IAEA agenda. Plutonium can be used as the fissile core of warheads.

But a second trip also was meant to focus on the broader issue of whether North Korea was involved in building the alleged Syrian program.

As well, IAEA officials would have pressed for permission to visit three other sites purportedly linked to the alleged reactor destroyed by the Israelis — although Syria has already said that those locations are off limits because they are in restricted military areas.

The diplomats said the agency investigation is based on intelligence provided to the IAEA by the U.S., Israel and a third country they declined to identify.

Syria denies hidden nuclear facilities
In Vienna, a senior diplomat told the AP that "the Syrians said that a visit at this time was inopportune." He and two other diplomats agreed to discuss the issue on condition of anonymity because their information was confidential.

That appeared to leave open the possibility of a later inspection tour. But one of the other diplomats said members of the Syrian mission to the IAEA were spreading the word among other missions that additional trips beyond the one in June were unlikely.

Syria fears the IAEA probe could lead to a massive investigation similar to the probe Iran has been subjected to for more than five years — and to related fallout. Iran is under three sets of U.N. sanctions because of its refusal to heed Security Council demands to curb its nuclear activities.

The diplomats also said Washington had circulated a note among members of the IAEA board opposing a Syrian push for a seat on the 35-nation board. The board normally works by consensus and if Damascus gained a seat it would likely use it to try to hinder further investigation into its alleged secret nuclear activities.

"Syria's election to the board while under investigation for secretly ... building an undeclared nuclear reactor not suited for peaceful purposes would make a mockery" of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, said the note, as read to the AP.

The diplomats said that the U.S. was encouraging Kazakhstan to challenge Damascus for the seat, but the Kazakhs apparently are reluctant to do so, fearing lack of support from its nominating group of Mideast and Central Asian nations.

Searching for graphite

IAEA experts came back June 25 from a four-day visit, carrying environmental samples from the Al Kibar site hit by Israel in September. Those are now being evaluated but the results might be inconclusive.

Because intelligence suggests that radioactive material had not yet been introduced into the alleged reactor before it was hit by Israel, swipes taken in search of radioactive traces were unlikely to have been of use.

So, the inspectors also looked for minute quantities of graphite, a cooling element in the type of North Korean prototype that was allegedly being built with help from Pyongyang. Such a reactor contains hundreds of tons of graphite, and any major explosion would have sent dust over the immediate area.

But — if the Syrians were interested in a cover-up — they would have scoured the region to bury, wash away and otherwise remove any such traces. And although U.S. intelligence says the reactor was close to completion, it is possible that graphite elements were not yet installed at the time of the Sept. 6 bombing.

Such uncertainties — and IAEA hopes of being able to visit the other suspected sites — dictated the need for a follow-up mission.

More broadly, IAEA experts were looking to put questions to Syrian officials based on the intelligence made available to them alleging years of extensive cooperation between the Syrians and teams of visiting North Korean nuclear officials.

North Korea detonated a nuclear device in 2006 in a test. The North is believed by experts to have produced enough weapons-grade plutonium to make as many as 10 nuclear bombs before agreeing to dismantle its weapons program early last year.

But the diplomats said Syria was strenuously denying any concerted North Korean presence in the country — despite intelligence alleging that the building bombed was a reactor of the type only built by the communist state.

They said Syrian officials described meetings between nuclear officials from Pyongyang and their Syrian counterparts as occasional and informal, despite intelligence information to the contrary.


benny balerio
http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news...AxNzA0MDM1Ng==

An unnamed senior official revealed that the government has learnt that two aircraft carriers are scheduled to arrive in the Gulf and the Red Sea in preparation for the expected war at any time.The official said that this information led the government to accelerate its emergency plan preparations, which include arrangements for protecting all sectors and vital installations.

The plan is divided into three parts, said the official - Security, Humanitarian and Vital Services. He added that the Kuwaiti Civil Defense and the Health and Interior Ministries would prepare the plan's outlines in order to discuss them and complete all parts of it.

The official said that Ahmad Al-Abdullah, the Commerce and Industry Minister and State Minister for National Assembly Affairs is preparing the livelihood and supplies plan, while Mohammed Al-Olaim, the Minister for Oil, Electricity and Water and Oil is preparing the electricity plan.

The Ministry of Electricity and Water (MEW) is ready to provide an alternative energy source in case of any conflict affecting power supplies, as well as supplying water from the nation's strategic reserves which stand at nearly two billion gallons and can supply the country for forty days.
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The future's so bright, you'll have to wear shades http://sp1.yt-thm-a03.yimg.com/image/25/f10/417698583[/img]

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benny balerio
Aug 11, 2008 0:14 | Updated Aug 11, 2008 3:03
Analysis: Israel tiptoes around conflict
By HERB KEINON
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When looking at the Georgian-Russian flare-up from an Israeli perspective, there are a couple of key things to keep in mind.


Georgian soldiers march during military parade marking Georgia's Independence Day.
Photo: AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week The first is that this is not about us, and although there is an Israeli angle in that local companies have sold arms to Tbilisi and trained units of the Georgian army, there is not a significant Israeli component to this story.

The estimated $300 million to $500m. in weapons and training that Israel has sold to Georgia over the last decade is not what has equipped the Georgians for a war with Russia.

Israel knows this, as do both the Georgians and the Russians. Israel sold arms, and allowed ex-officers to help train the military there, as did numerous other countries, including the US, France and Ukraine. This is not about us.

The second thing to remember is that, unfortunately, life is not black-or-white. Although for historic, emotional and sentimental reasons, the Israeli tendency is to back the pro-Western, pro-American Georgians in this conflict - the David in this fight - Israel has a real strategic interest in not infuriating the Russians.

Israel wants to support Georgia, wants to help Georgia, but also has to maintain a very special relationship with Russia. The reason is simple: Moscow is a major supplier of arms to Syria and Iran, and Israel would like to keep Russia from selling arms to those two countries that could tilt the region's strategic balance.

"How dare the Russians tell Israel it can't sell arms to Georgia, when it is selling arms to Damascus and Teheran," is the reflexive Israeli response to reports that Moscow is pressuring Jerusalem to end arms sales to Tbilisi. "If they sell arms to our enemies, we can sell arms to theirs."

True, but the Russians could be selling our enemies a lot worse weapons. The Russians maintain that they only sell defensive weapons to Syria and Iran, a point that may be debatable. But what everyone admits is that if Moscow took the gloves off, they could sell much more dangerous weapons systems to our neighbors, such as land-to-land missiles. It should be noted that the much-discussed sale of the S-300 multi-target anti-aircraft-missile systems, one of the most advanced in the world, has not yet gone through.

By the same token, Israel can argue that it is only selling defensive weapons to Georgia, and that the unmanned aerial vehicles and rocket systems that have been sold to Georgia do not significantly alter the balance. The Russians also realize that Israel could provide the Georgians with much more significant weaponry (there were reports over the weekend of a billion-dollar tank deal to Georgia that Israel did not sign).

"Israel has taken into consideration Russian interests," said Zvi Magen, a former Israeli envoy to Ukraine and Russia who is currently chairman of the Institute for Eurasian Studies at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya.

"Israel could have sold a lot more, and didn't," he said. "We lowered our profile [in Georgia], and the Russians have also taken us into consideration and did not sell everything they could have to our neighbors."

Israel wants to help Georgia - up to a point. And that point is where that help begins to hurt Israel's own strategic interests with the Russians.

Israel want to keep the Russians from arming Teheran, and to try to somehow get them on board as far as sanctions are concerned. Israel needs Russia on the Iranian issue, and is not going to get that help by selling too much to Georgia.

At the same time, the Russian-Georgian conflict does give Israel some newfound leverage with the Russians. Because if the Russians do show signs of selling offensive arms to our neighbors, Israel could respond in kind by selling offensive arms to Russia's neighbors, such as Georgia.

Magen said Israel's arms sales to Georgia have actually improved the Jewish state's strategic situation, not hurt it by weakening its ties with Moscow. "It has improved our position because we have leverage on Russia. We can now tell them if they sell offensive weapons here, we can sell there - we are also a player on this international field."

Israel, however, has no interest in pushing the envelope too far and going overboard in support of Georgia. It wants to preserve a balance with Russia, despite a sentimental urge of many here - there are some 80,000 Georgian Jews in the country - who would like to see Israel right now do much more to assist Tbilisi.
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benny balerio
Breaking: Cheney Threatens Russia

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WASHINGTON - Vice President Dick Cheney says Russia's military actions in Georgia "must not go unanswered."

Cheney spoke Sunday afternoon with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili. "The vice president expressed the United States' solidarity with the Georgian people and their democratically elected government in the face of this threat to Georgia's sovereignty and territorial integrity," Cheney's press secretary, Lee Ann McBride, said.

Cheney told Saakashvili "Russian aggression must not go unanswered, and that its continuation would have serious consequences for its relations with the United States, as well as the broader international community," McBride said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080811/...P4he2aKnj9xg8F
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Three major US naval strike forces due this week in Persian Gulf

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http://www.debka.com/headline.php?hid=5499

August 11, 2008, 10:37 AM (GMT+02:00)
DEBKAfile’s military sources note that the arrival of the three new American flotillas will raise to five the number of US strike forces in Middle East waters – an unprecedented build-up since the crisis erupted over Iran’s nuclear program.

This vast naval and air strength consists of more than 40 carriers, warships and submarines, some of the last nuclear-armed, opposite the Islamic Republic, a concentration last seen just before the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Our military sources postulate five objects of this show of American muscle:

1. The US, aided also by France, Britain and Canada, is finalizing preparations for a partial naval blockade to deny Iran imports of benzene and other refined oil products. This action would indicate that the Bush administration had thrown in the towel on stiff United Nations sanctions and decided to take matters in its own hands.

2. Iran, which imports 40 percent of its refined fuel products from Gulf neighbors, will retaliate for the embargo by shutting the Strait of Hormuz oil route chokepoint, in which case the US naval and air force stand ready to reopen the Strait and fight back any Iranian attempt to break through the blockade.

3. Washington is deploying forces as back-up for a possible Israeli military attack on Iran’s nuclear installations.

4. A potential rush of events in which a US-led blockade, Israeli attack and Iranian reprisals pile up in a very short time and precipitate a major military crisis.

5. While a massive deployment of this nature calls for long planning, its occurrence at this time cannot be divorced from the flare-up of the Caucasian war between Russia and Georgia. While Russia has strengthened its stake in Caspian oil resources by its overwhelming military intervention against Georgia, the Americans are investing might in defending the primary Persian Gulf oil sources of the West and the Far East.

DEBKAfile’s military sources name the three US strike forces en route to the Gulf as the USS Theodore Roosevelt , the USS Ronald Reagan and the USS Iwo Jima . Already in place are the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea opposite Iranian shores and the USS Peleliu which is cruising in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.
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benny balerio
Gog and the Magog Chess Match
Russian moves, begun this past Friday in the Caucasus region and other parts of what was the former Soviet Union, should sound the siren alarm of things to come for the spiritually attuned Bible prophecy student.

We have watched Iran’s posturing and repositioning during the past months, with the area of ancient Persia coming into focus as a predicted player on the regional chess board that will be part of the end game, as foretold by Ezekiel the prophet. Now, the nation-state that is at the heart of the coalition foretold to storm toward the oil-rich Middle East and Israel seems to be demonstrating intention to achieve its manifest destiny.

Russia’s unabashed moves to solidify its southernmost sectors of hegemony was swift, and without announcement. With much of the Georgian population wanting to be a part of Mother Russia, not an independent state, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev’s and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s collective job of making the strategic moves was made relatively simple.

One report from a respected world strategic analyst organization gave the following assessment:

Given the speed with which the Russians reacted to Georgia’s incursion into South Ossetia, Moscow was clearly ready to intervene. We suspect the Georgians were set up for this in some way, but at this point the buildup to the conflict no longer matters. What matters is the message that Russia is sending to the West. Russian President Dmitri Medvedev summed this message up best: "Historically Russia has been, and will continue to be, a guarantor of security for peoples of the Caucasus."

Strategically, we said Russia would respond to Kosovo’s independence, and they have. Russia is now declaring the Caucasus to be part of its sphere of influence.

We have spoken for months of how Russia would find a window of opportunity to redefine the region. This is happening now.

All too familiar with the sight of Russian tanks, the Baltic countries are terrified of what they face in the long run, and they should be. This is the first major Russian intervention since the fall of the Soviet Union. Yes, Russia has been involved elsewhere. Yes, Russia has fought. But this is on a new order of confidence and indifference to general opinion. We will look at this as a defining moment.

The most important reaction will not be in the United States or Western Europe. It is the reaction in the former Soviet states that matters most right now.

That is the real audience for this. Watch the reaction of Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Nagorno-Karabakh and the Balts. How will Russia’s moves affect them psychologically?

The Russians hold a trump card with the Americans: Iran. They can flood Iran with weapons at will. The main U.S. counter is in Ukraine and Central Asia, but is not nearly as painful.

Tactically, there is only one issue: Will the Russians attack Georgia on the ground? If they are going to, the Russians have likely made that decision days ago. Focus on whether Russia invades Georgia proper. Then watch the former Soviet states. The United States and Germany are of secondary interest at this point (Stratfor Report, Strategic Forecasting Inc., Red Alert - Georgia Intelligence Guidance, August 8, 2008).

Russia can do anything it wants in the region, and it appears it is now are putting all pretense of being a reformed Communist power to rest. The Kremlin is still commanded by a cadre of KGB thugs, of which Putin, known to be the chief thug, ostensibly holds power as great as former U.S.S.R. dictators like Nikita Khrushchev, Leonid Breshnev, and the rest. Certainly America, its military stretched to near limits in Iraq and Afghanistan, can do little more in the aggression by the Russians than offer to broker peace in the matter between the bear and its relatively toothless victims. We know about how much effect that offer will have upon the likes of Mr. Putin and his friends.

I am by no means saying that Putin will end up fulfilling the prophetic role of “Gog, chief prince of Rosh,” as foretold by Ezekiel. But plainly, he--like Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad-is setting the end-of-days chess board in a way we would be foolish to ignore. Christians for the most part haven’t the slightest inkling of this and other prophetic stage settings going on. Most pastors and pew-sitters, it is sad to say, will be a totally clueless part of the prophecy that warns in quite ominous terms what is about to happen to a world ripe for judgment.

“And take heed to yourselves, lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting, and drunkenness, and cares of this life, and so that day come upon you unawares. For as a snare shall it come on all them that dwell on the face of the whole earth. Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man” (Luke 21:34-36).

***Terry
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benny balerio
'Oil, Israel and Iran' Among Factors that Led to Georgia War
Aug. 11….(IsraelNN.com) Analysis of the war in Georgia points to a fight over a major oil route as the main reason for hostilities, but also to an Israeli connection. Channel 2's expert on the Muslim world, Ehud Ya'ari, told viewers of the central evening newscast that Russia and neighboring countries were vying for control of a strategic oil pipeline from the Caspian Sea to the Mediterranean. This relatively new pipeline passes through Azerbaijan and Georgia to Turkey and is the only pipeline between Asia and Europe that does not pass through Russia or Iran. Israel was expecting to receive oil and gas through the pipeline. By using the ethnic Russian population in South Ossetia to destabilize Georgia, Russia was making a play for the pipeline, he said.

The Israeli Connection

The Georgian move against South Ossetia was motivated by political considerations having to do with Israel and Iran, according to Nfc. Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili decided to assert control over the breakaway region in order to force Israel to reconsider its decision to cut back its support for Georgia's military. Russian and Georgian media reported several days ago that Israel decided to stop its support for Georgia after Moscow made it clear to Jerusalem and Washington that Russia would respond to continued aid for Georgia by selling advanced anti-aircraft systems to Syria and Iran. PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT= "Russia bombed a Georgian military plant in which Israeli experts are upgrading jet fighters for the Georgian military. Hundreds of Israeli defense experts are reportedly in Georgia and Israel's military industries have been upgrading Georgia's air force, training its infantry and selling the country unmanned aerial vehicles and advanced artillery systems.

Former minister Ronny Milo was reportedly among the leading Israeli middlemen in the arms deals with Georgia and Brig.-Gen. Gal Hirsch has been training army units through a company he owns.

Russia rejects ceasefire

Georgia has ordered its forces to cease fire, and offered to start talks with Russia over an end to hostilities in South Ossetia, Georgian officials said Sunday. However, Russia has reportedly rejected the offer. Earlier in the day, Georgia said its troops had pulled out of the breakaway region and that Russian forces were in control of its capital, Tskhinvali. Georgian President Saakashvili said Sunday that his country's sovereignty is in danger. After conducting consultations regarding events in Georgia, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said Sunday that Israel "recognizes Georgia's territorial integrity. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gregory Karasin said Sunday that international and western press coverage of events in Georgia were biased in favor of the Georgians. "The West behaved strangely in the first hours of the attack on South Ossetia," Karasin said, and added that "the USA's negative attitude" would be "taken into consideration in the future in contacts about other global questions." The US says it will ask the United Nations to condemn Russia's actions in Georgia.

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benny balerio
SPECIAL REPORT: Kuwait Readying for War in Gulf?

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a massive U.S. & European armada is reported heading for the region....


Leading the U.S. and British naval battle groups, and a French hunter-killer submarine, headed for the Gulf is the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (shown here) with its 80-plus combat planes. (Photo by CVN 71 via Newscom).


Quote:
The small oil-rich emirate of Kuwait – situated between Iraq, Iran and an un-enviable geographic hard place on the northern end of the Persian Gulf – has reportedly activated its "Emergency War Plan" as a massive U.S. and European armada is reported heading for the region.

Coming on the heels of Operation Brimstone just a week ago that saw U.S., British and French naval forces participate in war games in the Atlantic Ocean, the object of which was to practice enforcing an eventual blockade on Iran, the joint task force is now headed for the Gulf and what could easily turn into a major confrontation with Iran.

The naval force comprises a U.S. Navy super carrier battle group and is accompanied by an expeditionary carrier battle group, a British Royal Navy carrier battle group and a French nuclear hunter-killer submarine.


Quote:
Leading the pack is the nuclear-powered carrier, the USS Theodore Roosevelt

and its Carrier Strike Group Two; besides its 80-plus combat planes the Roosevelt normally transports, it is carrying an additional load of French Naval Rafale fighter jets from the French carrier Charles de Gaulle, currently in dry dock.


Quote:
Also reported heading toward Iran is another nuclear-powered carrier, the USS Ronald Reagan and its Carrier Strike Group Seven; the USS Iwo Jima, the Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal and a number of French warships, including the nuclear hunter-killer submarine Amethyste.

Once the naval force arrives in the Gulf region it will be joining two other U.S. naval battle groups already on site:
Quote:
the USS Abraham Lincoln and the USS Peleliu; the Lincoln with its carrier strike group and the latter with an expeditionary strike group.

Telephone calls to the Pentagon were not returned by publication time.


Quote:
This deployment is the largest naval task force from the United States and allied countries to assemble in the strategic waters of the Persian Gulf since the two Gulf wars.

The object of the naval deployment would be to enforce an eventual blockade on Iran, if as expected by many observers, current negotiations with the Islamic republic over its insistence to pursue enrichment of uranium, allowing it, eventually, to produce nuclear weapons yields no results.

Adding to the volatility is the presence of a major Russian navy deployment affected earlier this year to the eastern Mediterranean comprising the jewel of the Russian fleet, the aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov with approximately 50 Su-33 warplanes that have the capacity for mid-air refueling.

This means the Russian warplanes could reach the Gulf from the Mediterranean, a distance of some 850 miles and would be forced to fly over Syria (not a problem) but Iraq as well, where the skies are controlled by the U.S. military, and the guided missile heavy cruiser Moskva. The Russian task force is believed to be composed of no less than a dozen warships as well as several submarines.

Quote:
However, Russia is unlikely to get involved in a military showdown in the Persian Gulf, particularly at this time when it is engaged in a major confrontation with the Republic of Georgia in South Ossetia.

For Iran however, a naval blockade preventing it from importing refined oil would have devastating effects on its economy, virtually crippling the Islamic republic's infrastructure. Although Iran is a major oil producer and exporter, the country lacks refining facilities having to re-import its own oil once refined.

Iran's oil – both the exported crude as well as the returning refined product – passes through the strategic Straits of Hormuz, controlled by Iran on one side and the Sultanate of Oman – a U.S. ally – on the other. The strait is about 30 miles wide at its narrowest point, making it easy to control, but at the same time placing Western naval vessels within easy reach of Iran's Revolutionary Guards fast moving light crafts that could be used by Iranian suicide bombers.

Although Kuwait is on the opposite end of the entrance to the Gulf and the Straits of Hormuz, Kuwait City is less than 60 miles from Iran – and with good reason to worry.

"Kuwait was caught by surprise last time, when Iraqi troops invaded the small emirate and routed the Kuwaiti army in just a few hours," a former U.S. diplomat to Kuwait told the Middle East Times.
http://www.metimes.com/International..._in_gulf/7724/
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benny balerio
Three major US naval strike forces due this week in Persian Gulf

August 11, 2008, 10:37 AM (GMT+02:00)


New America armada around Iran
DEBKAfile’s military sources note that the arrival of the three new American flotillas will raise to five the number of US strike forces in Middle East waters – an unprecedented build-up since the crisis erupted over Iran’s nuclear program.

This vast naval and air strength consists of more than 40 carriers, warships and submarines, some of the last nuclear-armed, opposite the Islamic Republic, a concentration last seen just before the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Our military sources postulate five objects of this show of American muscle:

1. The US, aided also by France, Britain and Canada, is finalizing preparations for a partial naval blockade to deny Iran imports of benzene and other refined oil products. This action would indicate that the Bush administration had thrown in the towel on stiff United Nations sanctions and decided to take matters in its own hands.

2. Iran, which imports 40 percent of its refined fuel products from Gulf neighbors, will retaliate for the embargo by shutting the Strait of Hormuz oil route chokepoint, in which case the US naval and air force stand ready to reopen the Strait and fight back any Iranian attempt to break through the blockade.

3. Washington is deploying forces as back-up for a possible Israeli military attack on Iran’s nuclear installations.

4. A potential rush of events in which a US-led blockade, Israeli attack and Iranian reprisals pile up in a very short time and precipitate a major military crisis.

5. While a massive deployment of this nature calls for long planning, its occurrence at this time cannot be divorced from the flare-up of the Caucasian war between Russia and Georgia. While Russia has strengthened its stake in Caspian oil resources by its overwhelming military intervention against Georgia, the Americans are investing might in defending the primary Persian Gulf oil sources of the West and the Far East.

DEBKAfile’s military sources name the three US strike forces en route to the Gulf as the USS Theodore Roosevelt , the USS Ronald Reagan and the USS Iwo Jima . Already in place are the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea opposite Iranian shores and the USS Peleliu which is cruising in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

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benny balerio
Turkey's abandonment of the West (Read Israel as West)

Turkey is on the list of who's who in joining the attack against Israel in Ezekial 38
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http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satelli...cle%2FShowFull


Our World: Turkey's abandonment of the West

Aug. 11, 2008
Caroline Glick , THE JERUSALEM POST
Russia's invasion of Georgia should serve as proof that there are some regimes that simply cannot be considered strategic allies of the West. And as the US and NATO try to assess the wreckage of their attempt to forge a post-Soviet alliance with Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, another erstwhile ally is showing that it too, cannot be trusted.

On Wednesday, Iran's genocidal, nuclear weapons-seeking leader, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, will arrive in Istanbul for a "working visit" with Turkish leaders. This visit represents a diplomatic triumph for Teheran. Since assuming office three years ago, Ahmadinejad has feverishly pursued diplomatic ties with Western-allied states in an effort to weaken the West's will to take action to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Turkey is the first NATO member to welcome him to its territory.

According to media reports, during his visit Ahmadinejad is scheduled to meet with President Abdullah Gul and with Prime Minister Recip Tayyip Erdogan. On the agenda are Iran's nuclear program and Turkish-Iranian financial ties. Turkey favors advancing both.

In recent months, the Turkish government has become one of the most outspoken advocates of Iran's nuclear program. At least publicly, Turkish leaders credulously accept Iran's dubious assertions about the peaceful intent of its nuclear program - which it refuses to fully expose to the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency's inspectors.

As for financial ties with Iran, Turkey is working feverishly to expand them. From 2002, when Erdogan's and Gul's Islamic fundamentalist AKP party first assumed leadership of the country through 2007, Turkey's trade with Iran expanded from $1.2 billion to $6.7 billion. In July 2007, Turkey signed a $3.5 billion deal to develop one of Iran's oil fields. Over US objections, Turkey is planning to finalize that deal with Ahmadinejad this week. Trade between the two countries is expanding so quickly that most Turkish businessmen will tell you that Iran is their hottest market.

TURKEY'S WARM ties with Iran are matched by its embrace of Iranian satellites and proxies like Syria and Hizbullah. Turkey was the first Western-allied state and NATO member to host Syrian President Bashar Assad on a state visit after Assad's regime assassinated former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri in 2005. In 2006, Turkey sided with Hizbullah in its war against Israel. It even allowed Iran to transfer weapons to Hizbullah through Turkey.

Then there is Turkey's open support for Hamas. After Hamas's victory in the January 2006 Palestinian legislative elections, Turkey became the third non-Arab state after Iran and Russia to openly embrace Hamas. Hamas's Syrian-based leader Khaled Mashaal paid an official visit to Ankara where he met with then foreign minister Gul and senior AKP party officials a month after his Iranian-sponsored terror group's electoral victory.

The Turkish government's support for Hamas is complemented by its support for al Qaida financiers. In the summer of 2006, Erdogan endorsed his top advisor's donations to senior al Qaida financier Yasin al-Qadi after they were exposed in the Turkish media. And since entering office, Erdogan, Gul and their AKP colleagues have repeatedly accused Israel and the US of committing genocide against Muslims in Gaza, Lebanon and Iraq.

While both the US and Israel have voiced their displeasure with Turkey's embrace of their enemies, neither country has taken any steps to either discredit Ankara or to distance themselves from the Turkish government. To the contrary, both Israel and the US continue to praise Turkey as a strategic ally. Both insist that under the AKP, Turkey is demonstrating that it is possible to be Islamic fundamentalist and pro-Western. And both are enabling and indeed encouraging Turkey to act as an intermediary between them and their sworn enemies.

In Israel's case, Turkey has been mediating the Olmert-Livni-Barak government's negotiations with Syria. And in the US's case, it appears that Turkey has played a mediation role between Washington and Teheran. On July 17, both US National Security Advisor Steven Hadley and Iranian Foreign Minister Manoucher Mouttaki just happened to be visiting Ankara on the same day. Two days later, US Assistant Secretary of State William Burns met with Iran's nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili in Geneva.

In both cases, it is far from clear that either Israel or the US have benefitted from Turkey's increasingly prominent role in their foreign policy. In fact, in both cases, Israel and the US have weakened their position by allowing Turkey to serve as a mediator between them and their adversaries.

IN THE case of Syria, as Assad's recent visit to Teheran showed clearly, Israel's attempt to use negotiations with Syria to pry Damascus away from its strategic alliance with Teheran has failed. To date, the only thing its decision to hold indirect negotiations with Syria in Turkey has done is end Syria's isolation from the West.

As for Iran, the Bush administration's decision to allow Turkey to mediate between it and the ayatollahs has arguably emboldened Turkey to move forward with its Iranian oil deal. Beyond that, Turkey's success in convincing the Americans to actively pursue diplomacy with the Iranians paved the way for the US's humiliation in Geneva last month. During that meeting, Jalili made no attempt to reach an agreement with the US and its partners. And by joining the Europeans and the Russians in directly engaging Iran, the US facilitated Russia's announcement last week that it sees no reason to impose additional UN Security Council sanctions against Iran for its failure to agree to temporarily suspend of its uranium enrichment activities.

Like Russia under Putin, Turkey under Erdogan's leadership has masked its rapid transformation from a flawed but pro-Western democracy under its previous governments into an anti-Western - and in Turkey's case Islamist - regime by paying lip service to the West even as it has taken steps to purge its power structure of pro-Western voices. Just as Putin's popular government has taken brutal action against his political, intellectual and financial foes, so too, Erdogan's popularly elected Islamic fundamentalist regime has worked steadily to discredit, criminalize and intimidate its pro-Western rivals.

SINCE TAKING office in 2002, the AKP under Erdogan has taken control over Turkey's bureaucracy. It has weakened women's rights. It has launched brutal campaigns against its foes in the media, taking over opposition television stations and arresting and intimidating anti-Islamic editors and reporters. It has taken over the Turkish secret police and regular police forces. It has stacked the Turkish courts with its loyalists. It has enabled the opening of radical Islamic madrassas. It has penetrated the military and demoralized and intimidated the senior officer corps. It has ignored court judgments against it.

Through the police, it has launched a massive wire tapping campaign against its political opponents and has leaked embarrassing transcripts of these tapped phone calls to its loyalist press to humiliate and intimidate its rivals. It has used wiretaps of opposition journalists in police interrogations of their editors.

The only remaining secular check on Erdogan's government is Turkey's Constitutional Court. Last week, the court narrowly rejected the court's chief prosecutor's lawsuit calling for the outlawing of the AKP party on the grounds that it is seeking to overthrow Turkey's secular constitutional order. In their ruling, ten out of eleven judges did agree that the AKP is seeking to weaken Turkey's secular identity and ruled that it be denied government funding.

In an apparent bid to both distract the public from the court case and to further delegitimize its opponents, the government claims that it uncovered a conspiracy by senior opposition officials, including leading journalists, businessmen and generals, called the Ergenekon plot to overthrow the government. It alleges that most of the terror attacks carried out by Islamic terrorists over the past several years were actually carried out by members of this secularist cabal. Last month the police arrested two retired generals, a prominent industrialist and a respected journalist along with 17 others in its prosecution of the Ergenekon plot.

In all of this, of course, Erdogan and his associates are mirroring Putin's actions in Russia since he assumed office in 2000. Like Putin, the AKP replaced a deeply corrupt, unpopular pro-Western government. While Putin has built his popularity on xenophobia and hatred of the West, Erdogan and the AKP have built their popularity on a rejection of secular Turkish nationalism in favor of pan-Islamism and hatred of the US and Israel. And as they have moved their countries away from the West, both Putin and Erdogan have managed to maintain good relations with Washington by going through the motions of supporting its war against terror even as they have both embraced terrorists and their state sponsors.

THE LESSON moving forward from all of is not that Israel and the US should turn their backs on Turkey. In an international environment that is increasingly hostile to liberal democracies, there is no reason to cut off ties with hostile regimes just because they are hostile. But at the same time, neither the US nor Israel should delude themselves by thinking that Turkey remains their strategic ally. It is not. And there are consequences to this fact.

For the US, beyond ending immediately Turkey's role as an intermediary with Iran, it would make sense to float the notion of removing Turkey from NATO due to its expanding ties with Iran. Just the suggestion of such a move would no doubt have a profound effect on the Turks. Certainly, the US should be reaching out to regime opponents and calling for Erdogan and his associates to end their attempts to repress the anti-Islamic media and secular politicians, businessmen and military commanders.

If the US is concerned about inflaming Turkish sentiment against it through such moves it should consider that since Erdogan took power, and as the US has bent over backwards to be nice to him, anti-US sentiment in Turkey has risen steeply. According to a recent Pew international opinion poll, today the Turks are the most anti-American society in the world.

For its part, Israel should reassess its willingness to sell sensitive military equipment to Turkey given its close ties to Israel's enemies. It should certainly stop its Turkish-mediated talks with Syria and reject Turkish offers to mediate between Israel and the Palestinians.

Like Russia, Turkey's anti-Western regime is promoting itself to the West by pretending not to be anti-Western. And as was the case with Russia up until it decided to invade defenseless Georgia over the weekend, the US and its allies have been willing to endanger their strategic interests to believe this lie.

It can only be hoped that the West will abandon this policy before it inadvertently paves the way for a new Iranian-allied axis of evil populated by the likes of Russia, Turkey and Pakistan. All of these governments owe much of their power to the West's willingness to believe that their anti-Western regimes could be trusted as strategic allies until it was too late.
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benny balerio
Russia masses naval force opposite Georgia’s third sensitive region, Ajaria
DEBKAfile Exclusive Report

August 12, 2008, 11:41 PM (GMT+02:00)


Georgian president addresses mass rally in Tbilisi
While the world’s attention was fixed on the Russian-Georgian contest over two breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, DEBKAfile’s exclusive military sources reveal that Russia has massed a fleet of warships and marine forces opposite the Gerogia's semi-autonomous Black Sea region of Ajaria.

Moscow is preparing to punish what it regards as Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili’s further provocations by occupying this coastal strip on Georgia’s southwestern border with Turkey.

The appearance of Ukraine’s president Viktor Yushchenko alongside Saakashvili, leaders of the pro-Western Orange and Rose Revolutions, at a huge national rally outside the Georgian parliament in Tbilisi Tuesday night, Aug. 12, may well be seen by the Kremlin as over the top. It came hours after Russian President Dimitry Medvedev’s gesture to the European mediation bid of ordering the Russian military operation in Georgia halted there and then.

Half of Ajaria’s ethnically Georgian population professes Islam, in contrast to the country’s Christian majority. The other half is Russian.

Ajarian has come to mean a Georgian Muslim.

The Russian Black Sea buildup is deployed opposite the Ajurian capital of Batumi, an important port for the shipment of oil from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. Its oil refinery handles Caspian oil from Azerbaijan.

When Saakashvili was elected president five years ago, the region’s leaders refused to recognize his authority and maintained close ties with Moscow up until May 2004 when, after Ajurians demonstrated against Tbilisi, he ordered them to obey the Georgian constitution and disarm.

Russia maintained a military base at Batumi which it agreed to close by November 2007.

DEBKAfile’s sources report that by recovering the base, Moscow will not only punish the Georgian president, but also profit from the turmoil of the past week in three ways:

1. A third semi-autonomous province will be hacked off Georgian territory after the loss of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

2. Russia will gain a strategic Black Sea foothold at Turkey’s back door.

3. It will also control a gateway to Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

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benny balerio
Aug 12, 2008 10:06 | Updated Aug 12, 2008 14:54
'Syria and Hizbullah gaining strength'
By JPOST.COM STAFF
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Defense Minister Ehud Barak said on Tuesday that "it is not a coincidence that the IDF is holding intensive drills in the Golan Heights," adding that UNSC Resolution 1701 was not accomplishing what it set out to do.


Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, left, and Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, right, view a military drill in the Golan Heights Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2008.
Photo: ARIEL HERMONI , AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week "Hizbullah has gained significant strength in the last couple of years," said Barak during an IDF Armored Corps drill in the North. "We are closely following a possible violation [of the resolution] caused by the transfer of advanced weapons systems from Syria to Hizbullah. The necessary preparations have been made, and regarding all the rest - I always prefer not to talk, rather to take action when the time comes."

Barak expressed optimism with regards to the IDF's capabilities. "The army is regaining its strength, and coming back to the right morals, carrying out the right exercises and it is our obligation as the government to ensure that the proper means are available to carry out such drills in a correct and intensive manner."

Referring to a proposed budget cut to the Defense Ministry, Barak said: "We live in a country where security and defense consist not just of tanks and planes, but also of fostering excellence and caring for the population through education and social welfare."

Nonetheless, Barak emphasized that "security and defense take precedence over quality of life and in a country such as ours, we do not have the luxury of cutting the defense budget."

The defense minister also addressed the Gaza ceasefire and the strengthening of the group.

"So far, the ceasefire has proved promising," he said. "There have been ten instances where rockets were launched in the past 6 weeks, compared to the hundreds of attacks that occurred in the past. Every week that passes with the ceasefire in place enables us to gain strength and to maximize the possibility or the probability of bringing about the right conditions for the release of [captured IDF soldier] Gilad Schalit.

Barak added that "in the meantime, the government must care for the social and economic infrastructure as well as the preparation of the home front in the Gaza periphery and the surrounding areas.

Concerning the Georgia-Russia conflict, Barak warned against leaving friends during testing times.

"We view Russia as a very important country both on a regional and global scale," he said. "[At the same time,] we see Georgia as a country with which we have friendly relations, and Israel, particularly due to its experience, must ensure that it does not rush to leave its friends at a testing time."

"This is what we have expected from our friends and it is what our friends expect from us," he continued.

Barak's remarks came amid Russian protests over Israeli weapons sales to Georgia.

The defense minister was accompanied on the drill by IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, OC Ground Forces Command Maj.-Gen. Avi Mizrahi and other senior IDF officers.

"I am pleased with what I see and think that we are heading in the right direction," said Ashkenazi, adding that "the training and the drills serve to restore the army's readiness to act when necessary. Furthermore, we are talking about a process. There is still work to be done, there are no shortcuts, it is very hard work. I think that people understand this, I think that officers understand this. We are all working hard and use every day to strengthen our capabilities and readiness to execute our tasks."
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benny balerio
IDF Exercise in Golan: Warning to Hizbullah

by Hillel Fendel


(IsraelNN.com) Defense Minister Ehud Barak, observing an intensive IDF armored corps training exercise in the Golan Heights, told reporters, "We see that Hizbullah has been receiving many rockets, including anti-aircraft rockets, and UN Resolution 1701 [the ceasefire that ended the Second Lebanon War] is not being implemented."

Barak, together with IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, Ground Forces Commander Maj.-Gen. Avi Mizrachi and other senior officers, paid a pre-dawn visit to the Golan site where the junior officers' live-fire exercise is taking place.

"The very fact that we are training with live fire, and with every soldier fully-equipped, and in an officers' training course," Barak said, "is part of a vital process, led by the Chief of Staff this past year and a half, that will bring about a change from the very foundations in our readiness and ability to carry out these operations during actual wartime, if and when this is forced upon us."

Army Returning to Itself
"The army is thus returning to itself," Barak said, back-handedly acknowledging that the army was not in top form during the recent war, "returning to its right values, to the right training, and it is our obligation as a government to make sure that the necessary means are available to carry out these exercises intensively and correctly."

Barak said the Hizbullah terrorists in Lebanon have been arming themselves very heavily: "They have been receiving modern weapons, including anti-aircraft rockets, and the ceasefire is not being implemented. What are we supposed to do? It's no coincidence that we are training here in the Golan Heights [not far from Lebanon], so intensively and on such a large scale."

Hizbullah Receives Anti-Aircraft Missiles
Barak also referred to the "possibility" that Syria is transferring advanced weapons systems to Hizbullah - a scenario that has been reported as fact by the Sunday Times. The London paper reported over the weekend, based on "Middle East sources," that top Syrian official Muhammed Suleiman supplied advanced Russian-made SA-8 anti-aircraft missiles to Hizbullah. Suleiman, a top aide to Syrian President Bashar Assad, was killed in mysterious circumstances two weeks ago.

The Times also reported that if the rockets are activated, they can present a threat to the Israel Air Force's control of the region.

"In terms of preparations," Barak said, "we are doing what we are supposed to be doing. Regarding the rest, I prefer not to talk about it, but rather - if and when the need arises - simply to do it."

Negev Comes into Range
Last week, Barak said that Hizbullah currently has no fewer than 40,000 rockets that cover not only the northern third of the country, "but also - with the help of heavier warheads - some that can reach Be'er Sheva, Dimona, and the Negev, thus that from this standpoint, the entire country is in their range."

Regarding the budget cuts in the Defense Ministry, Barak said, "Our country is one in which our security is comprised not only of tanks and planes, but also of the pursuit of excellence, dealing with [soldiers as individuals], education, welfare, and the like. Life and security come before quality of life, and in a country like ours, we do not have the luxury of cutting our defense budget."

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benny balerio
The Russo-Georgian War and the Balance of Power

August 12, 2008




By George Friedman <STRATFOR>

The Russian invasion of Georgia has not changed the balance of power in Eurasia. It simply announced that the balance of power had already shifted. The United States has been absorbed in its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as potential conflict with Iran and a destabilizing situation in Pakistan. It has no strategic ground forces in reserve and is in no position to intervene on the Russian periphery. This, as we have argued, has opened a window of opportunity for the Russians to reassert their influence in the former Soviet sphere. Moscow did not have to concern itself with the potential response of the United States or Europe; hence, the invasion did not shift the balance of power. The balance of power had already shifted, and it was up to the Russians when to make this public. They did that Aug. 8.
Let’s begin simply by reviewing the last few days.
On the night of Thursday, Aug. 7, forces of the Republic of Georgia drove across the border of South Ossetia, a secessionist region of Georgia that has functioned as an independent entity since the fall of the Soviet Union. The forces drove on to the capital, Tskhinvali, which is close to the border. Georgian forces got bogged down while trying to take the city. In spite of heavy fighting, they never fully secured the city, nor the rest of South Ossetia.
On the morning of Aug. 8, Russian forces entered South Ossetia, using armored and motorized infantry forces along with air power. South Ossetia was informally aligned with Russia, and Russia acted to prevent the region’s absorption by Georgia. Given the speed with which the Russians responded — within hours of the Georgian attack — the Russians were expecting the Georgian attack and were themselves at their jumping-off points. The counterattack was carefully planned and competently executed, and over the next 48 hours, the Russians succeeded in defeating the main Georgian force and forcing a retreat. By Sunday, Aug. 10, the Russians had consolidated their position in South Ossetia.



(click image to enlarge)

On Monday, the Russians extended their offensive into Georgia proper, attacking on two axes. One was south from South Ossetia to the Georgian city of Gori. The other drive was from Abkhazia, another secessionist region of Georgia aligned with the Russians. This drive was designed to cut the road between the Georgian capital of Tbilisi and its ports. By this point, the Russians had bombed the military airfields at Marneuli and Vaziani and appeared to have disabled radars at the international airport in Tbilisi. These moves brought Russian forces to within 40 miles of the Georgian capital, while making outside reinforcement and resupply of Georgian forces extremely difficult should anyone wish to undertake it.
The Mystery Behind the Georgian Invasion
In this simple chronicle, there is something quite mysterious: Why did the Georgians choose to invade South Ossetia on Thursday night? There had been a great deal of shelling by the South Ossetians of Georgian villages for the previous three nights, but while possibly more intense than usual, artillery exchanges were routine. The Georgians might not have fought well, but they committed fairly substantial forces that must have taken at the very least several days to deploy and supply. Georgia’s move was deliberate.
The United States is Georgia’s closest ally. It maintained about 130 military advisers in Georgia, along with civilian advisers, contractors involved in all aspects of the Georgian government and people doing business in Georgia. It is inconceivable that the Americans were unaware of Georgia’s mobilization and intentions. It is also inconceivable that the Americans were unaware that the Russians had deployed substantial forces on the South Ossetian frontier. U.S. technical intelligence, from satellite imagery and signals intelligence to unmanned aerial vehicles, could not miss the fact that thousands of Russian troops were moving to forward positions. The Russians clearly knew the Georgians were ready to move. How could the United States not be aware of the Russians? Indeed, given the posture of Russian troops, how could intelligence analysts have missed the possibility that t he Russians had laid a trap, hoping for a Georgian invasion to justify its own counterattack?
It is very difficult to imagine that the Georgians launched their attack against U.S. wishes. The Georgians rely on the United States, and they were in no position to defy it. This leaves two possibilities. The first is a massive breakdown in intelligence, in which the United States either was unaware of the existence of Russian forces, or knew of the Russian forces but — along with the Georgians — miscalculated Russia’s intentions. The United States, along with other countries, has viewed Russia through the prism of the 1990s, when the Russian military was in shambles and the Russian government was paralyzed. The United States has not seen Russia make a decisive military move beyond its borders since the Afghan war of the 1970s-1980s. The Russians had systematically avoided such moves for years. The United States had assumed that the Russians would not risk the consequences of an invasion.
If this was the case, then it points to the central reality of this situation: The Russians had changed dramatically, along with the balance of power in the region. They welcomed the opportunity to drive home the new reality, which was that they could invade Georgia and the United States and Europe could not respond. As for risk, they did not view the invasion as risky. Militarily, there was no counter. Economically, Russia is an energy exporter doing quite well — indeed, the Europeans need Russian energy even more than the Russians need to sell it to them. Politically, as we shall see, the Americans needed the Russians more than the Russians needed the Americans. Moscow’s calculus was that this was the moment to strike. The Russians had been building up to it for months, as we have discussed, and they struck.
The Western Encirclement of Russia
To understand Russian thinking, we need to look at two events. The first is the Orange Revolution in Ukraine. From the U.S. and European point of view, the Orange Revolution represented a triumph of democracy and Western influence. From the Russian point of view, as Moscow made clear, the Orange Revolution was a CIA-funded intrusion into the internal affairs of Ukraine, designed to draw Ukraine into NATO and add to the encirclement of Russia. U.S. Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton had promised the Russians that NATO would not expand into the former Soviet Union empire.
That promise had already been broken in 1998 by NATO’s expansion to Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic — and again in the 2004 expansion, which absorbed not only the rest of the former Soviet satellites in what is now Central Europe, but also the three Baltic states, which had been components of the Soviet Union.

The Russians had tolerated all that, but the discussion of including Ukraine in NATO represented a fundamental threat to Russia’s national security. It would have rendered Russia indefensible and threatened to destabilize the Russian Federation itself. When the United States went so far as to suggest that Georgia be included as well, bringing NATO deeper into the Caucasus, the Russian conclusion — publicly stated — was that the United States in particular intended to encircle and break Russia.
The second and lesser event was the decision by Europe and the United States to back Kosovo’s separation from Serbia. The Russians were friendly with Serbia, but the deeper issue for Russia was this: The principle of Europe since World War II was that, to prevent conflict, national borders would not be changed. If that principle were violated in Kosovo, other border shifts — including demands by various regions for independence from Russia — might follow. The Russians publicly and privately asked that Kosovo not be given formal independence, but instead continue its informal autonomy, which was the same thing in practical terms. Russia’s requests were ignored.
From the Ukrainian experience, the Russians became convinced that the United States was engaged in a plan of strategic encirclement and strangulation of Russia. From the Kosovo experience, they concluded that the United States and Europe were not prepared to consider Russian wishes even in fairly minor affairs. That was the breaking point. If Russian desires could not be accommodated even in a minor matter like this, then clearly Russia and the West were in conflict. For the Russians, as we said, the question was how to respond. Having declined to respond in Kosovo, the Russians decided to respond where they had all the cards: in South Ossetia.
Moscow had two motives, the lesser of which was as a ----for-tat over Kosovo. If Kosovo could be declared independent under Western sponsorship, then South Ossetia and Abkhazia, the two breakaway regions of Georgia, could be declared independent under Russian sponsorship. Any objections from the United States and Europe would simply confirm their hypocrisy. This was important for internal Russian political reasons, but the second motive was far more important.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin once said that the fall of the Soviet Union was a geopolitical disaster. This didn’t mean that he wanted to retain the Soviet state; rather, it meant that the disintegration of the Soviet Union had created a situation in which Russian national security was threatened by Western interests. As an example, consider that during the Cold War, St. Petersburg was about 1,200 miles away from a NATO country. Today it is about 60 miles away from Estonia, a NATO member. The disintegration of the Soviet Union had left Russia surrounded by a group of countries hostile to Russian interests in various degrees and heavily influenced by the United States, Europe and, in some cases, China.
Resurrecting the Russian Sphere
Putin did not want to re-establish the Soviet Union, but he did want to re-establish the Russian sphere of influence in the former Soviet Union region. To accomplish that, he had to do two things. First, he had to re-establish the credibility of the Russian army as a fighting force, at least in the context of its region. Second, he had to establish that Western guarantees, including NATO membership, meant nothing in the face of Russian power. He did not want to confront NATO directly, but he did want to confront and defeat a power that was closely aligned with the United States, had U.S. support, aid and advisers and was widely seen as being under American protection. Georgia was the perfect choice.
By invading Georgia as Russia did (competently if not brilliantly), Putin re-established the credibility of the Russian army. But far more importantly, by doing this Putin revealed an open secret: While the United States is tied down in the Middle East, American guarantees have no value. This lesson is not for American consumption. It is something that, from the Russian point of view, the Ukrainians, the Balts and the Central Asians need to digest. Indeed, it is a lesson Putin wants to transmit to Poland and the Czech Republic as well. The United States wants to place ballistic missile defense installations in those countries, and the Russians want them to understand that allowing this to happen increases their risk, not their security.
The Russians knew the United States would denounce their attack. This actually plays into Russian hands. The more vocal senior leaders are, the greater the contrast with their inaction, and the Russians wanted to drive home the idea that American guarantees are empty talk.
The Russians also know something else that is of vital importance: For the United States, the Middle East is far more important than the Caucasus, and Iran is particularly important. The United States wants the Russians to participate in sanctions against Iran. Even more importantly, they do not want the Russians to sell weapons to Iran, particularly the highly effective S-300 air defense system. Georgia is a marginal issue to the United States; Iran is a central issue. The Russians are in a position to pose serious problems for the United States not only in Iran, but also with weapons sales to other countries, like Syria.
Therefore, the United States has a problem — it either must reorient its strategy away from the Middle East and toward the Caucasus, or it has to seriously limit its response to Georgia to avoid a Russian counter in Iran. Even if the United States had an appetite for another war in Georgia at this time, it would have to calculate the Russian response in Iran — and possibly in Afghanistan (even though Moscow’s interests there are currently aligned with those of Washington).
In other words, the Russians have backed the Americans into a corner. The Europeans, who for the most part lack expeditionary militaries and are dependent upon Russian energy exports, have even fewer options. If nothing else happens, the Russians will have demonstrated that they have resumed their role as a regional power. Russia is not a global power by any means, but a significant regional power with lots of nuclear weapons and an economy that isn’t all too shabby at the moment. It has also compelled every state on the Russian periphery to re-evaluate its position relative to Moscow. As for Georgia, the Russians appear ready to demand the resignation of President Mikhail Saakashvili. Militarily, that is their option. That is all they wanted to demonstrate, and they have demonstrated it.
The war in Georgia, therefore, is Russia’s public return to great power status. This is not something that just happened — it has been unfolding ever since Putin took power, and with growing intensity in the past five years. Part of it has to do with the increase of Russian power, but a great deal of it has to do with the fact that the Middle Eastern wars have left the United States off-balance and short on resources. As we have written, this conflict created a window of opportunity. The Russian goal is to use that window to assert a new reality throughout the region while the Americans are tied down elsewhere and dependent on the Russians. The war was far from a surprise; it has been building for months. But the geopolitical foundations of the war have been building since 1992. Russia has been an empire for centuries. The last 15 years or so were not the new reality, but simply an aberration that would be rectified. And now it is being rectified.
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benny balerio
Report: U.S. Refuses Israel Weapons to Attack Iran
Wednesday, August 13, 2008

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AP


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
JERUSALEM — The United States has rejected an Israeli arms request that would have improved Israel's capability to attack Iran's nuclear facilities, a frontpage report in Israel's Haaretz newspaper said on Wednesday.

The U.S. warned Israel against attacking, saying such a strike would undermine American interests, the paper said. The unsourced report also says the U.S. demanded that Israel give it a heads-up if it decides to strike Iran.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak did not deny the Haaretz story and refused to discuss it in an interview with Israeli Army Radio,

"It would not be right to talk about these things," Barak said, according to Reuters.

Iran is a "threat to the whole world order, and there are many actions to be made in the realm of intelligence and preventive measures," Barak said.

The United States "does not see an action against Iran as the right thing to do at the moment," the defense minister said, but shared Israel's view that "no option should be removed from the table".

Israel believes Tehran will be capable of building a nuclear bomb by 2010, and has been pushing for greater international pressure on Iran to stop building nukes.

Both the U.S. and Israel have said they would prefer a diplomatic solution to the standoff but have not ruled out other options — including a military one.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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benny balerio
Aug 11

“A Mighty Few Friends”

By Jim Fletcher

When the Old West outlaw Bill Longley was standing on the gallows, he was asked if he had any last words. He looked out at the crowd and said, “I see a lot of enemies, and mighty few friends.”

Israel finds herself in similar circumstances, although I would argue that the perception of her place in history is largely wrong. By that I mean while Israel’s enemies and her indifferent “friends” see her on the gallows (terrorists like to say that Israel’s end is coming swiftly), in reality she is closer than ever to final safety.

However, the point remains that as the world puts Israel on the gallows, in order to appease terrorists and terror regimes, things seem dire.

Reports are coming in that Hezbollah is urging its followers to refrain from attacking Jews in foreign countries, preferring to fight Israel on her home turf. This could be an attempt to appear reasonable to the outside world, which needs little convincing to cower. In fact, the international community is eager to welcome Hezbollah and Hamas as reasonable, “freedom-fighters” who are making the transition from beleaguered nationalists to statesmen.

This is a sign of the sickness that has enveloped our society. It is popular today to bash President Bush. Well, I don’t know enough to say that he is a) naïve and bumbling or cool.gif part of a dark, Skull & Bones conspiracy. What I do know is that he’s made hard decisions and since 9/11, we haven’t been hit again.

That is how history will judge him.

History will judge the appeasers harshly, however. Selling-out Israel to keep oil flowing won’t cut it when the appeasers stand before History.

I’ve been getting a lot of feedback lately in which readers wonder about the possible link between current events and Psalm 83. The famous passage that describes some kind of coalition of Arab countries against Israel represents a real, future event; of that I have no doubt. The terrorists groups like Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, etc., are operating as paramilitary groups, at the behest of host countries like Iran and Syria.

It was revealed this week that Egypt “discovered” 20 tunnels in the Gaza Strip. That’s like Brad Pitt discovering several scripts for his consideration at his agent’s office. He didn’t know that?

Egypt knows full well what goes on in Gaza.

During a one-week span in June, rockets and mortars hit the Israeli towns of Sderot, Kibbutz Gevim, Kibbutz Mefalsim, and the Karni border crossing. The alleged moderate Palestinian group Fatah (the absurdly named Al-Aksa Martyr’s Brigade) fired the rocket at Kibbutz Gevim. The others were not claimed by any terrorist organization.

A couple weeks ago, the barbarian, Samir Kuntar, who murdered a Jewish family 30 years ago, was released in a “prisoner swap.” Hezbolla returned the bodies of two dead IDF soldiers, while Kuntar was released to a wave of jubilant hysteria all through Judea and Samaria. It is a sick society that celebrates the homecoming of a child-killer.

Several weeks ago, several Palestinian youth lobbed Molotov cocktails at Israeli soldiers, who opened fire. One of the Palestinians killed was with Islamic Jihad. He was 17!

These so-called independent operators are, to my way of thinking, part of a first-wave that are preparing the ground for some type of future invasion.

So we see how this coalition will develop: terrorist groups will operate “independently,” with the goal of softening-up the Israelis. Then the neighboring states themselves will see an opportunity — as Egypt’s Nasser, Syria’s Assad, and Jordan’s Hussein — saw a generation ago, to move in and finish-off the Israelis.

But it’s events like this that leave me exhilarated, like breathing fresh mountain air, because since I believe the Bible is true, I know — we know — that Psalm 83 also has a conclusion, and that conclusion leaves Israel safe.

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benny balerio
Aug 12, 2008 15:30 | Updated Aug 13, 2008 15:55
Syria reportedly wary of IDF Golan drill
By YAAKOV LAPPIN AND JPOST.COM STAFF
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"The Syrian leadership has undertaken emergency preventive and deterrent measures, fearing that Israel will turn the military exercise in the Golan Heights to an attack against Syria," Damascus officials reportedly told the Qatari-based paper Al Watan on Wednesday.


Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, left, and Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, right, view a military drill in the Golan Heights Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2008.
Photo: ARIEL HERMONI , AP

Slideshow: Pictures of the week Israel was holding wide-scale tank maneuvers in the territory on Tuesday.

The paper quoted other Syrian officials as saying the IDF maneuvers were not in line with peace overtures Syria had been sending Israel over the past few months.

"The risk of such drills lies in the fact that they take place near the ceasefire line with Syria and also because Defense Minister Ehud Barak and IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi came to supervise them personally," the officials said.

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Furthermore, a former Syrian advisor to the regime, George Jabour, said there was a connection between the IDF maneuvers and the conflict between Russia and Georgia. Jabour claimed that the US administration might attempt to "heat up" the Golan front as an indirect response to Russia's attack on Georgia. "The exercise is a provocation against Syria's peaceful intentions," Jabour said.

The Jerusalem Post could not confirm the Al Watan report.

Syria has been sponsored by Russia since the days of the Soviet empire.

Earlier on Tuesday, Barak said the flow of arms reaching Hizbullah from Syria could disrupt a "balance" between the Shi'ite terror organization and the IDF.

Barak, was observing the Golan drill accompanied by IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, the commander of the army's ground forces, Maj.-Gen. Avi Mizrahi, and other senior military brass.

Barak has repeatedly warned in recent days that Hizbullah's ambitious rearming program formed an immediate threat to Israel's national security.

"The other side is getting stronger. It is not a coincidence that we are holding a large-scale intensive exercise here in the Golan," Barak said.

"[UN] Resolution 1701 has not succeeded in its mission. There has been a very significant strengthening of Hizbullah in recent years. We are monitoring the possibility of a violation of a balance by the transfer of advanced weapons systems from the Syrians to Hizbullah," he added.

"What needs to be done in the field of preparations is being done. As for the rest - I prefer to not always talk about this, but, if and when there will be a need, to act."

The exercise involved soldiers using live ammunition and missiles, and was described by Barak as "changing from the foundation up the IDF's state of readiness and the ability of units to afterwards carry out missions in [actual] fighting, if and when this is forced on them."

Asked to address the cease-fire in Gaza, Barak said the truce was holding up. "Until now the truce has been successful. There were around 10 incidents of firing over the past six weeks. But this must be compared to the hundreds of incidents in the past. Every passing week of calm allows us to become stronger," he said.

The defense minister also commented on the Georgian-Russian conflict, saying Israel should not look to abandon Georgia in its time of need.

"We can't influence what is happening in Georgia," he said. "We view in Russia an important element in the regional and global existence, while we view Georgia as a place with which we have friendly relations. Because of its experiences, the State of Israel should ensure that it does not intervene, and that it does not abandon friends during their hour of need. This is what we expected of our friends, and this is what our friends expect of us, and we all hope that matters there will be straighten out quickly and that a cease-fire and talks are reached."

During the exercise, Ashkenazi shared his view of the incident in the West Bank village of Ni'lin, in which a bound Palestinian was shot in the leg with a rubber-coated bullet in July The shooting resulting in the dismissal of Lt.-Col Omri Burbarg.

"I think what happened to Omri is an unfortunate incident. He understands this. He did not mean [for the soldier] to shoot, but we must be the ones who set the norms. I view this as a failure at the command level, and I've told Omri this. Omri will change roles, undergo the process he needs to undergo, and I don't rule out the possibility that he could return [to his position] in the future," Ashkenazi was quoted by Ynet as saying.
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benny balerio
Aug 14, 2008 1:20 | Updated Aug 14, 2008 3:39
Israel fears war could hurt Iran effort
By HERB KEINON
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Russia's war with Georgia and the infuriated reaction in the West to what US President George W. Bush calls Moscow's "disproportionate response" could make it harder to enlist Russian help on the Iranian issue, according to Israeli diplomatic officials and academics.


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Photo: AP [file]

Slideshow: Pictures of the week According to one diplomatic official, Russia's policy toward Iran is linked to a basket of other issues.

"Russia's position right now is that they are trying to reaffirm their status in their world," the official said. "They have an interest in showing that they are tough in South Ossetia, and that they are also not going to be pushed around by the West when it comes to Iran."

While it was too early yet to fully judge the ramifications of the Georgian conflagration on the Iranian issue, at some point Moscow would have an interest in showing the world that Russia was not a belligerent country, the official said.

"That is in the long term," the official said. "In the short term the Russian interest is likely to say that they will not be pushed around, not relative to Georgia, or on other issues."

The Russians might also conclude that they now needed Iranian support to maintain stability in the south of Russia, including in Chechnya, which borders Georgia, the official said.

And having Iran "on board" may, for Moscow, mean not pressing overmuch on the Iranian nuclear issue. According to this thinking, were the Iranians so disposed, they could make things much more difficult than they already are for the Russians in Chechnya.

Brenda Shaffer, a lecturer on Central Asia and the Caucasus region at the University of Haifa, said the Georgia-Russian conflict must be seen within the larger context of Russia's relations with the US.

Shaffer said that when the US recognized Kosovo's independence in February, Russia's current Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who was then president, said that as a result Moscow would recognize the separatist movements in Georgia.

"He meant it," she said.

There was a direct correlation between Russia's policy toward Iran and its relationship with the US, Shaffer said.

"If they feel the US is cooperative, then they are cooperative on Iran," she said. "And if not, they feel they can hurt the US on Iran."

She said that on the eve of the fighting in Georgia, Russia did appear to be on board for another round of sanctions against Iran, largely because Teheran had been so unyielding on any kind of compromise on uranium enrichment.

It was likely that Russia would go along with sanctions now, Shaffer said.

However, she said that if the West - including the expanded EU that included former Soviet satelli