Archive for March, 2008

Who leaked the details of a CIA-Mossad plot against Iran?

March 7, 2008

Haaretz, Israel, March 6, 2008

By Yossi Melaman

The Bush administration is prolonging the hunting season against journalists. The latest victim is James Risen, The New York Times reporter for national security and intelligence affairs. About three months ago, a federal grand jury issued a subpoena against him, ordering Risen to give evidence in court. A heavy blackout has been imposed on the affair, with the only hint being that it has to do with sensitive matters of “national security.”

But conversations with several sources who are familiar with the affair indicate that Risen has been asked to testify as part of an investigation aimed at revealing who leaked apparently confidential information about the planning of secret Central Intelligence Agency and Mossad missions concerning Iran’s nuclear program.

Risen included this information in his book, “State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration,” which was published in 2006. In the book, he discusses a number of ideas which he says were thought up jointly by CIA and Mossad operatives to sabotage Iran’s nuclear capabilities.

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UK White working class ‘voiceless’

March 7, 2008

By: BBC on: 06.03.2008

Article image

Many white working class people believe immigration threatens jobs
   

A majority of white working class Britons feel nobody speaks for people like them, a BBC survey has suggested.
Some 58% said they felt unrepresented compared to 46% of white middle class respondents to a Newsnight poll.

White working classes were also negative about the past decade with 62% saying life had generally become worse in the UK.

In response to BBC Two’s White Season, a special Newsnight on 6 March will feature full poll results and debate.

Crime worse

In most areas covered by the survey the white working classes are more pessimistic about the future and more negative about the last decade in Britain than white middle class people.

Of the white working class people questioned 71% believe crime has got worse over the last decade, compared with 66% of middle class white people.

On housing, 80% of the white working classes say that people like them can no longer afford to buy homes in the area they live. A smaller majority – 68% – of middle class people believed they had been priced out of the local housing market.

Overall 62% of the white working classes believe that life in Britain has generally got worse over the last decade compared with 51% of middle class white people.

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A double act of revenge: carefully planned atrocity strikes at Israel’s spiritual heart

March 7, 2008

The Wohl Torah Center in Jerusalem.

Israeli medics and emergency personnel outside The Wohl Torah Center in Jerusalem. Photograph: Nati Shohat/EPA

Atrocities in the Middle East are often carefully planned and the Palestinian gunman who killed eight Israelis in Jerusalem last night may have been carrying out a dual act of revenge for the recent onslaught in the Gaza Strip and the assassination of a Hizbullah commander in Damascus.

The shooting at a Jewish seminary in the west of the city, far from Palestinian areas , matters for several reasons:

· It was the first attack in Jerusalem for four years

· It seemed intended to send the message that Israel’s attacks on its enemies, either in Gaza, Lebanon or Syria would not go unanswered

· It reinforced the assumption that action on one front would bring a response on another.

· It will make it harder than before to achieve progress in the near-moribund peace process.

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Eight killed in Jerusalem school shooting

March 6, 2008

Telegraph, UK, March 6, 2008

At least eight people have been killed after gunmen opened fire at a rabbinical seminary near Jerusalem.

  An injured student is helped from the scene of the attack in Jerusalem
An injured student is helped from the scene of the attack

Ambulances from around the city raced to the scene, where a further 35 people are reported to have been wounded.

“We have counted eight dead and 35 wounded,” an official of the Magen David Adom rescue service, equivalent to the Red Cross, told army radio.

Witnesses said gunmen infiltrated a dining hall at the Mercaz Harav yeshiva in the Kiryat Moshe quarter of the city, where around 80 people were gathered.

Initial reports said the men had opened fire “indiscriminately”.

The seminar is a well-known centre of Jewish studies and is identified with the leadership of the Jewish settlement movement in the West Bank.

“There are at least seven killed and 10 people wounded,” said Eli Dein, director of Israel’s rescue service.

Medic Yaron Tzuker said he arrived as the gunfire was still going on. “They were still shooting when we got here. We took cover and the ambulance was hit. It’s horrible inside – dead bodies and wounded – it’s horrific.”

Jerusalem police spokesman Shmuel Ben Ruby said, “One or two terrorists infiltrated the Mercaz Harav seminary and opened fire in all directions. One terrorist was killed in an exchange of fire.”

He added that the dead gunmen was wearing a vest at first thought to be explosives, but that it was later found to contain ammunition.

He said students had been evacuated from the building and that police were searching from room to room.

Jerusalem Mayor Uri Lupolianski said: “It’s very sad tonight in Jerusalem – many people were killed in the heart of Jerusalem.”

In Gaza City, residents went out into the streets and fired rifles in celebration in the air after hearing news of the attack on the seminary.

Between 2001 and 2004, Jerusalem was a frequent target for Palestinian terrorist attacks, although there have been no incidents in the last year.

There has been no immediate claim for the shootings but the Palestinian Hamas movement has praised the attack.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said: “This heroic attack in Jerusalem is a normal response to the crimes of the occupier and its murder of civilians.”

The Election That Might Not Happen

March 6, 2008
by Betsy Hartmann

It’s springtime in American politics. It’s only early March, but there’s a giddy, hopeful feeling to this election season, a sense that new leadership is blossoming. We could have a Democrat in the White House next year. But winter isn’t over yet and we need to balance our hope with a little fear. In 2000 Bush and Cheney stole the election in Florida. In 2004 they played dirty tricks in Ohio. In 2008 could they go one step further — and suspend the election altogether?

The necessary architecture may already be in place. On May 4 last year, the White House issued the National Security and Homeland Security Presidential Directive, key parts of which remain classified and hence shrouded from public view. The directive outlines procedures to respond to a “catastrophic emergency,” defined broadly as “any incident, regardless of location, that results in extraordinary levels of mass casualties, damage, or disruption severely affecting the U.S. population, infrastructure, environment, economy, or government functions.” Of course previous administrations also had emergency plans. But the Bush directive transfers power from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to the White House, where the Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism is assigned the job of “National Continuity Coordinator”.

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Women unite to defend their rights

March 6, 2008

A protester uses a megaphone in front of Federal police officers in Oaxaca city's main plaza, Mexico November 1, 2006A protester uses a megaphone in front of Federal police officers in Oaxaca city’s main plaza, Mexico November 1, 2006

© REUTERS/Henry Romero

Amnesty International | 6 March 2008

On 8 March, International Women’s Day, women across the world will take to the streets to express their commitment to the defence of human rights, often at great risk to their safety.

These rights include freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, the right to be treated equally under the law, sexual and reproductive rights, and the rejection of violence against women. But, in promoting these rights, activists come face to face with discriminatory laws, policies and practices.

Aline Castellanos is a leading member of the Committee for Parliamentary Dialogue and Equality in Mexico. She documented and publicized human rights violations in the Oaxaca region of the country during widespread protests in 2006. At that time, Aline Castellanos was working to encourage women’s activism and heighten women’s visibility in public life.

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Israel’s Right to Terrorism

March 6, 2008

By Ghali Hassan | Axis of Logic exclusive, Mar 5, 2008,

In response to Palestinian Resistance to Israel’s terror, Matan Vilnai, Israel’s deputy defence minister, threatened Palestinian with a holocaust. Vilnai told Israeli Army Radio: “[the Palestinians] will bring upon themselves a bigger shoah (holocaust) because we will use all our might to defend ourselves”. An occupying power (aggressor) has no right to self-defence. The deliberate killing of innocent and defenceless Palestinians is not self-defence; it is terrorism.

For nearly sixty years, Jews – Israeli in particular –, have exclusively used the word “holocaust” to describe crimes committed against Jews by the Nazis, ignoring the Nazi’s millions of none-Jewish victims. The holocaust is not only being used as a Zionist tool (a weapon) to shield Israel from any criticism, but also to manipulate the public and gain Israel sympathy as a “victim state”. In addition, Israeli leaders use the holocaust as a justification for ongoing Israel’s terror and war crimes against the Palestinian people. The creation of Israel brought unimaginable suffering on the Palestinian people and turned them into holocaust victims.

According to Gaza-based journalist Mohammed Omar of rafahtoday.org, at least 130 Palestinians, including 39 children and 10 women were murdered by the Israeli army in the last days of February 2008. Even babies as young as six-month-old are targeted by Israel’s terror. In addition, more than 370 children were injured. Only one Israeli settler and two Israeli soldiers were killed by Palestinian resisting Israeli aggression against the people of Gaza, the perfect pretext for mass murder of Palestinians. The home-made Palestinian rockets used by the Palestinian Resistance are nothing compared with the F-16s bombers, helicopter missiles, cluster bombs and artillery shells used by the Israeli war machine against defenceless Palestinian population under brutal occupation.

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Israel arrests 27 Palestinians in West Bank

March 6, 2008

China View, March 5, 2008

RAMALLAH, March 5 (Xinhua) — Israeli troops arrested 27Palestinians in West Bank on Wednesday as part of overnight raids that the army carried out on a near-daily basis, Palestinian security sources said.

Eleven Palestinians were arrested in Jenin, seven in Qalqilya, four near Nablus and five in Ramallah city, the sources said, adding that the Israeli army cordoned off Qalqilya without revealing the reasons.

Israel arrested scores of Palestinians in regular incursions in the occupied West Bank, saying the people were detained for interrogation and many of them were wanted by Israel.

The detentions did not scale down despite efforts to revive Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

US makes show of force at sea in Mideast

March 6, 2008

US Maintains Ships in Mediterranean As Regional Tensions Mount

PAULINE JELINEK | Wiredipatch.com, March 5, 2008 EST

AP News

The U.S. Navy switched out warships patrolling in the Mediterranean on Wednesday, maintaining a show of strength during a period of tensions with Syria and political uncertainty in Lebanon.
Officials said it was a routine, planned deployment but it was an action sure to draw attention in the Mideast, where an announcement on U.S. presence last week caused a political stir in Lebanon.

The USS Cole guided missile destroyer and support ships passed through the Suez Canal at midday Wednesday, heading from the Mediterranean Sea into the Red Sea, canal officials said. In Washington, a Navy official said the Cole had been relieved by the guided missile destroyer USS Ors and the guided missile cruiser USS Philippine Sea.

Both the canal official and navy official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of talking about ship movements.

“It’s a sign of our commitment to stability in the region … a stabilizing force and commitment to our allies,” Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman said Wednesday of the U.S. presence.

“I think it prevents miscalculations,” he told Pentagon reporters.

The deployment of the USS Cole had sparked criticism from Hezbollah and from pro-Syrian groups in Lebanon, who are locked in a political standoff with the pro-U.S. government. It also sparked criticism from Syria.

Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora has said his government did not ask for the ships and that they were not in territorial waters. Some in his coalition said they were surprised by the deployment.

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Democracy is ill served by its self-appointed guardians

March 6, 2008
By Simon Jenkins | The Guardian, March 5, 2008

This week’s Russian elections were “limited” and “less than free and fair”, according to western monitors. The last elections in Iraq, by contrast, were “a triumph for democracy”. The forthcoming elections in Zimbabwe and Iran have been pre-emptively dismissed as a travesty. Those in Pakistan were, by general consent, an affirmation of freedom.

Democracies are like two-year-olds: adorable when they belong to you, but you never see them as others do. Downing Street had a problem with the new Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, since the procedure by which he was chosen was little short of feudal. Yet Gordon Brown could hardly slap him on the back as the victor in some great electoral tourney. Medvedev might hit back with a joke about western leaders also being slid into office by friends and predecessors – and at least he had an election of sorts. The British prime minister wisely muttered something noncommittal and put down the phone.

We are in the midst of an astonishing festival of elections in countries as diverse as Russia, Pakistan, Iran, Taiwan, Kenya, Georgia, Armenia, Cyprus, Thailand, Serbia, Zimbabwe, Spain and Italy. And then there is the daddy of them all, America’s primaries. Only one generalisation can be made of them, that no generalisation applies.

Democracy is the new Christianity. It is the chosen faith of western civilisation, and carrying it abroad is the acceptable face of the Crusader spirit. In reinterpreting Tony Blair’s interventionism, the foreign secretary, David Miliband, spoke recently of the west’s “mission” to promote democracy, even by economic and military warfare. With his eyes fixed on Iraq and Afghanistan, Miliband contrived both to assert that “we cannot impose democratic norms” and then demand that we do just that.

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