position:defense minister

  • Important : l’armée livre des vidéos de Assir préparant l’attaque contre l’armée. Al Akhbar oppose ces vidéos à la campagne menée par des députés du 14 Mars contre l’armée :
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/march-14-loses-battle-continues-war-army

    The army and the defense minister provided video footage. Faced with this irrefutable evidence, the Future Movement MPs ate their words. They had no other choice after they saw the footage of Assir, wearing military fatigues and bearing arms, ordering his group to “shred them to bits,” in reference to army soldiers, and how Assir, addressing the army checkpoint at the heart of the controversy, cried, “You animals, we will slaughter to you,” and ordered his fighters to execute the soldiers.

    The hearing did not end well, especially since it was chaired by Future MP Samir al-Jisr, who adjourned the session after a quarrel erupted between the MPs present. But the question remains: Will these MPs feel ashamed and back down on their reckless behavior?

    To be sure, anyone who rereads the statements made by Future MPs, from Muin Merehbi to Khalid Daher and Ahmad Fatfat, will see that their contentions that Hezbollah had fought with the army “against Sunnis” will only continue.

  • US, Japan to establish military bases in the Philippines - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/06/29/phil-j29.html

    US, Japan to establish military bases in the Philippines
    By Joseph Santolan
    29 June 2013

    On June 27, at a press conference in Quezon City, Philippines, Philippine Defense Minister Voltaire Gazmin and his Japanese counterpart, Itsunori Onodera, announced that the Philippines would establish basing arrangements with both the US and Japanese militaries. China was the explicit target of this move allowing the US and Japan to station military personnel and equipment in the Philippines.

    #géopolitique #géostratégie #japon #états-unis #philippines #asie-pacifique

  • Apartheid-building measures - Opinion - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/apartheid-building-measures.premium-1.531037

    For a few days, Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon held the title of the government’s chief spoiler, but he recently lost that honor to Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, who claimed (was he backed by the annual intelligence assessment?) that the Arab Peace Initiative was just spin.

    Danon started out modestly, focusing only on the Palestinians, but Ya’alon went big-time and included all Arabs. Then came Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, who mentioned a friend with shrapnel in his backside as an analogy to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He grabbed the title from Danon and Ya’alon. As my father used to say, “I’d laugh too if that idiot wasn’t one of mine.”

    While the Danon-Ya’alon-Bennett trio is pushing to the limit the public’s right to get tired of what this trio thinks, a strong right-wing axis is forming in the Knesset. It consists of around 40 MKs, most of them from the coalition, who aim to prevent Israel from making territorial concessions and to thwart any peace deal with the Palestinians.

    Although their leader has not yet been crowned, it seems the title must go to a tireless, soft-spoken legislator who makes the impression of a refined person who wouldn’t hurt a fly. His name is Yariv Levin, who chairs both the coalition and the Likud faction in the Knesset. Levin has a clear agenda: Legislation that supports the settlements and the settlers should be advanced, while legislation inimical to the settlements and the settlers should be blocked. The basic principle is that the Arabs, the converts and the migrant workers will have to fend for themselves on the other side of the fence.

    The Knesset’s main job is to pass legislation. In Levin’s book, the chief guideline is “Talk less and just pass more legislation.” If the left-wingers in academia and the courts consider such actions apartheid-building measures, let them suffer. The Land of Israel is acquired only with great pain.

    In the meantime, this approach is proving successful, and intervention from above rarely occurs. One of those rare occasions took place at the cabinet meeting this week, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu opposed branding people responsible for anti-Arab “price tag” attacks members of a terrorist group (as sought by Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch and the Shin Bet security service). Instead, Netanyahu said they should be regarded as part of a banned organization. How pleasant it is to wake up to “Good morning, Abu Ghosh” – the site of a recent price tag attack.

    In the previous Knesset, the moderate ministerial trio of Benny Begin, Dan Meridor and Michael Eitan were sent home when Likud thinned its ranks. These officials were members of the Ministerial Committee for Legislation. In contrast, the trio’s replacement, the quartet of Limor Livnat, Yuval Steinitz, Gideon Sa’ar and Gilad Erdan, are as fluid as butter on a hot summer’s day.

    And a little child shall lead them. Just go to Levin’s website and you’ll find the following headline: “The Ministerial Committee for Legislation has approved the bill proposed by the coalition chairman on prioritizing citizens who serve the state.” The law would favor such people in areas like jobs, rents and housing.

    Levin is the mover and shaker in the legislative coalition. His next project, subordinating democracy to Judaism in a Basic Law on the Nation-State, will be debated by the Knesset in the next few days. In the previous Knesset, he headed a special committee that considered a mechanism for a referendum to authorize or rule out conceding territory “under Israeli sovereignty.”

  • Israel’s defense minister considering legalizing disputed West Bank outpost - Diplomacy & Defense - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/israel-s-defense-minister-considering-legalizing-disputed-west-bank-outpost

    Defense Minister Moshe (Bogie) Ya’alon is negotiating with settlers to legalize the Havat Gilad outpost, in exchange for their voluntary withdrawal from four structures in Area B of the West Bank.

    Area B is designated under the Oslo agreements as being under Palestinian civil control and joint Israeli-Palestinian security control.

    Following two weeks of intense negotiations, the settlers have agreed to evacuate the four Area B structures – which are slated by the state for demolition – within eight days. In exchange for their voluntary withdrawal, Ya’alon (Likud) has agreed to examine the possibility of officially recognizing the Havat Gilad settlement, beginning with an examination of land ownership rights.

    This is the first time a government source has declared their intention to legalize the Havat Gilad outpost.

    “The possibility of legitimizing part of the disputed area is being examined, in parallel to the vacating of buildings that are clearly on Palestinian land," Ya’alon’s office said. “We abide by the law and will continue to do so. Whatever is illegal will be treated as such.”

    Settlers from Havat Gilad declined to comment.

    The Havat Gilad outpost has about 40 structures. It was established in 2002 by Itai Zar in memory of his brother Gilad, the Shomron security officer who was shot and killed by terrorists.

    Shortly after its establishment the settlement was evacuated twice, whereupon physical altercations ensued. But since then it has prospered and grown, and today it even has its own yeshiva.

    The legal status of the land is complex. According to Civil Administration records, the land used to be tilled by Palestinians and therefore would appear to belong to them. However, Har Vagai – a company owned by Moshe Zar, Itai Zar’s father – has filed to transfer registration of the land to its name after purchasing it. This request is still being processed by the Civil Administration, and a decision has not yet been made.

    In February 2012, residents of the neighboring village of Farata and Yesh Din – Volunteers for Human Rights appealed to the High Court of Justice, requesting the demolition of the four structures built on Area B land which they said belonged to the plaintiffs. (Under the Oslo Accords, the Palestinian Authority has jurisdiction over construction planning, but the Israel Defense Forces is responsible for enforcement among settlers.) The state responded to the High Court by agreeing to tear them down.

    Yesh Din has come out against the news of Ya’alon’s negotiations with settlers. Haim Erlich, Yesh Din’s director general, responded that “Defense Minister Ya’alon is currently encouraging settlers across the West Bank to continue grabbing private Palestinian land.”

    “The legitimization of Havat Gilad will only add power to the settlers’ criminal actions,” Erlich said. "At a time when the state is deliberating whether to define settler violence as acts of terror or as unauthorized assembly, it is becoming an active accessory to criminal acts and the stealing of private Palestinian land.”

    Gershon Mesika, the head of the Shomron Regional Council, and his deputy, Yossi Dagan, are members of Likud and known supporters of Ya’alon.

  • American Jewish leaders: Netanyahu should disown ’irresponsible" statements against two-state solution - Jewish World News - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-news/american-jewish-leaders-netanyahu-should-disown-irresponsible-statements-ag

    American Jewish leaders Abraham Foxman, Rabbi Rick Jacobs and David Harris condemned recent statements by senior Israeli officials about the impossibility of a two-state solution, calling them irresponsible and saying they undermine the credibility of the government.

    Earlier this week, Economy Minister Naftali Bennett told a settlers group that the idea of a Palestinian state had reached a “dead end.” His remarks came days after Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon told Israel Radio that the government will not agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders and Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon called the Arab Peace Initiative “spin” during a speech in Washington.

    “I think these are all irresponsible statements which do not in any way reflect the commitment of the Israeli government, not to mention the long-standing position of the U.S., that the two-state solution is the only possible solution,” said Rabbi Jacobs, president of the Union for Reform Judaism.

    Jacobs, who is in Jerusalem this week to attend the President’s Conference, added: “I think President Clinton said it best last night [at the 90th birthday celebration for President Shimon Peres] when he said a two-state solution is not the fantasy; a one state solution is. This is a black and white issue and Bennett and the others are irresponsible to speak otherwise.”

    Foxman, director of the Anti-Defamation League, told Haaretz that the statements “undermine the seriousness of the Israeli government” and compared them to the popular children’s game “whack-a-mole,” in which the furry animals pop up and need to be hammered down time after time.

    “This can happen once in a while, but I feel it is happening way too often,” Foxman said. “Members of the coalition continue to stray from the basic tenants of the government. [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu has made it clear that, even if we don’t know the details, there are contacts going on with the view towards reaching a two-state solution.”

    Nevertheless, Foxman called on Netanyahu to repudiate the comments so as to counteract false perceptions of Israel.

    “Netanyhau has to do this every time these politicians step out of line and undermine the credibility of the government,” Foxman said. “The irony is that these kinds of statements put an added onus on Israel. For, if to go by Bennett or Dannon, it is Israel that is saying no to the two-state solution, that becomes the imagery. When in fact it is not Israel that is not serious, it is the other side.”

    (Netanyahu told Reuters this week that he is responsible for setting foreign policy and that he supports Palestinian independence. “I will seek a negotiated settlement where you’d have a demilitarized Palestinian state that recognizes the Jewish state,” he said.)

    David Harris, the executive director of the American Jewish Committee, called Bennett’s remarks “stunningly shortsighted” in a statement on the organization’s website.

    “Bennett contravenes the outlook of Prime Minister Netanyahu and contradicts the vision presented earlier this month to the AJC Global Forum by Minister Tzipi Livni, chief Israeli negotiator with the Palestinians,” Harris said.

    “Livni stated clearly that a negotiated two-state settlement is the only way to assure that the State of Israel will remain both Jewish and democratic. That is a view we at AJC have long supported.”

  • Pour le pouvoir israélien actuel, mieux vaut avoir des ennemis que des amis...

    Israel is sanctifying the status quo and ignoring the possibility of a new Iran - Diplomacy & Defense - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/for-the-israeli-government-iran-will-never-change.premium-1.530015

    A few hours before the unprecedented political drama unfolded on Friday in Iran, Israel’s Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon reported to the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and laid out his philosophy.

    The head of the Israeli defense establishment declared - without any reservations - that nothing will change as a result of the Iranian election and that, in any event, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei will decide on the country’s next president.

    It did not take long for the depth of Ya’alon’s embarrassment of himself, and of those on whose behalf he flew to Washington, became clear. At best, Ya’alon’s remarks reflected a serious error in judgment on the part of Israeli intelligence and provided additional proof of the limitations of Military Intelligence and the Mossad in predicting internal political shifts in Iran and in Arab states. At worst, his words reflected arrogance, prejudice and shooting from the hip of the very worst kind.

    But how can we complain about Ya’alon, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced in Poland on Wednesdsay that Iran’s “so-called” election will not bring about any meaningful change. Netanyahu’s and Ya’alon’s Pavlovian responses, as well as the statement issued by the Foreign Ministry on Saturday night, reflect the overall approach of the Likud government which rejects all change, exaggerates the threats, plays down the opportunities and sanctifies the status quo.

    The only thing missing was for Netanyahu and Ya’alon to call for extending the term of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as in the case of Egypt and former President Hosni Mubarak.

    One thing is clear: Khamenei did not want Hasan Rowhani to win the presidential election. Iran’s supreme leader backed his national security adviser and nuclear talks envoy, Saeed Jalili. Jalilee was trounced, coming in third place and a distant 15 million votes away from Rowhani.

    Another thing is clear, too: The election will change things in Iran. A hint of this could have been found a few days ago, when Reuters published the contents of a letter sent five months ago to Khamenei by Iran’s Foreign Minister, Ali Akbar Salehi, behind Ahmadinejad’s back. Salehi called on the country’s supreme leader to enter into direct talks with the United States as soon as possible. In his written response to Salehi, Khamenei said he was not optimistic about the prospects for success, but would not stop them from reaching out to Washington.

    Rowhani, as former head of Iran’s negotiations team on the nuclear issue, called back in 2005 for direct talks with the United States, made the elimination of the international sanctions against Iran the central plank of his election campaign. He even slammed Jalili for being too tough in the talks with the West.

    The post-election period could be an opportunity for a diplomatic breakthrough in Iran’s relations with the United States in general and on the nuclear issue in particular, especially in light of the results of the election.

    One more point should be mentioned, as for Ya’alon. In his remarks on Friday, the defense minister also dismissed the Arab peace initiative, including the positive change introduced recently as a result of the efforts of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, as nothing but “spin” by the media.

    Ya’alon’s remarks, coming at a time when Kerry is endeavoring to restart the peace process, were much harsher than Netanyahu’s relatively moderate message to the Knesset ten days ago. “We listen to every initiative and are willing to discuss any motion that is not a requisition,” Netanyahu said at the time.

  • AG: State fails to handle construction violations in settlements - Israel News, Ynetnews
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4382804,00.html

    Yehuda Weinstein urges defense minister to ensure criminal enforcement of planning and construction violations in West Bank, which he says go largely unpunished

    Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein sent a letter to Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon on Tuesday accusing the defense establishment of dragging its feet in relation to regulation over illegal construction in West Bank settlements, Yedioth Ahronoth reported.

    “There is hardly any criminal enforcement of planning and construction violations in Judea and Samaria, this largely due to the lack of an investigative body charged with handling the issue,” Weinstein wrote.

    He is demanding that Ya’alon ensure criminal enforcement of planning and construction violations in the West Bank without delay.

    In his letter, Weinstein noted that last year the State had testified in the High Court of Justice that defense forces are working on reinforcing its inspection unit in the Civil Administration.

    #colonies-Cisjordanie

  • Ya’alon: Israel may have to face Iran threat alone

    http://www.jpost.com/LandedPages/PrintArticle.aspx?id=309988

    Israel must prepare for the possibility of striking Iran’s nuclear program on its own, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon warned on Tuesday, during an Independence Day speech he delivered in Herzliya.

    He said that Iran is unimpressed with the West’s steps against its nuclear program and described Tehran’s nuclear program as “the most significant” threat not only to Israel, but to the Middle East and the “modern world.”

    Iran’s drive for nuclear capabilities could end in disaster, Ya’alon added.

    “It could spark an arms race in the Middle East and cause nuclear weapons to spread to terror organizations. This situation could be a nightmare for the Western world,” he warned.

  • Nasr City protesters petition for army coup

    http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/update-nasr-city-protesters-petition-army-coup

    Dozens of protesters took to the Autostrad in Nasr City early on Friday afternoon, joining the “Last Chance” protest against President Mohamed Morsy and his administration.

    In the late afternoon, protesters on Nasr Street distributed petitions to authorize Defense Minister Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to oust Morsy and assume power of the country. They said the petitions would be notarized.
    The demonstrators aised Egyptian flags and photographs of Sisi and late President Mohamed Anwar al-Sadat. They chanted, “Down with the supreme guide rule,” and "The people want the army again.”
    (...)
    More than 30 political parties and groups had called for today’s protest, which demands military intervention against the “brotherhoodization” of the state and to stop what they allege are “Islamist militias” that intimidate the people.
    Military veterans, members of the Independence Coalition, the Maspero Youth Union, the Silent Majority movement and the Egypt Above All coalition were in attendance.
    Controversial talk show host Tawfiq Okasha, former Supreme Constitutional Court Vice-President Tahani al-Gebali and writer Mostafa Bakry also said they would take part.
    (...)
    The Revolutionary Forces Coalition, the Second Revolution of Anger movement, the Maspero Youth Union and the popular movement for the independence of Al-Azhar also called on the people to unite to achieve the demands of the revolution, and fight against the Brotherhood’s attempts to take charge of security with Islamist militias.

  • Israeli Ground Invasion of Gaza Imminent

    Posted: 16 Nov 2012 12:50 AM PST

    IDF heavy weaponry, including tanks and armored personnel carriers are massing near the Gaza border, signalling Israel’s intent to launch a ground invasion of the enclave. 16,000 reservists have been summoned for military service, another sign of a planned assault. The AP has been speaking of tomorrow as the date for launching the new offensive. If these indications prove correct, then the killing machine will move into high gear and we should expect a rise in the casualty count (on both sides).

    My Israeli source tells me that there is one dominant reason why Bibi must invade. He can’t allow himself to be outdone by his rival, Ehud Olmert, who had an invasion of his own in 2009. Ehud Barak too, needs an invasion because he was defense minister during the first Gaza war and couldn’t stand for accepting less than what he “achieved” then. You may argue that this is overly cynical. My response? First, this perspective comes not from me, but from someone who has played senior roles in past governments and knows the players in this game well. Second, this should tell you how much great Israeli decisions of state are motivated by naked ambition, self-pride, and political survival. It may be true that when other world leaders launch a war they do so with strategic objectives in mind and for well-thought-out reasons. Not so, Israel. There, an election or a petty political rivalry is enough to cause the deaths of thousands. It reminds me of Nero’s fiddling while Rome burned.
    no to gaza war

    “No to Gaza War: Protest”

    Till now, 15 Gazans have died (including several small babies) and three Israelis have died. Today, a rocket struck Rishon Lezion, a southern suburb of Tel Aviv and a missile landed in the sea near Tel Aviv. This is the first time these communities have seen such weapons since the 1991 Iraq War.

    Israel has the Iron Dome anti-missile system. But as of yesterday, it only intercepted 20 of 80 projectiles fired into Israel. Even if we discount those which it detected would land harmlessly and which it didn’t target, clearly Iron Dome is quite fallible. It’s supposed to have an 80% success rate. I doubt it’s achieved that level of effectiveness.

    In my ongoing effort to deconstruct the lies and myths of the Israeli propaganda machine, it’s been common to hear Ahmed Jabari, the assassinated leader of Hamas’ military wing, spoken of as Gaza’s Osama bin Laden. It’s a great sound byte, punchy, visceral, dramatic. But as usual with these things, if you spend a few seconds contemplating the parallel, it’s entirely inapt. Jabari and bin Laden have only one thing in common: both were Muslims. Aside from that, little or nothing. Jabari stood for Islamism in the context of Palestine. He was a Palestinian nationalist, unlike bin Laden who dreamed of a world caliphate. Jabari believed in the gun, but only as a tool, not as a permanent strategy. He was, in fact willing to negotiate with Israel when it suited his purposes, which is how the Gilad Shalit deal was reached.

    A much more apt analogy is between Jabari and Israeli pre-state military heroes like Rabin, Sharon, Begin, Shamir or Avraham Stern. They too were radical in their demands. Truculent and willing to kill both the enemy (Arab and British) and their own fellow Jews if it advanced the cause of Jewish-Israeli nationalism. You hear few Israelis concede that if they look closely in the mirror they see Palestinians as reflections of themselves, their own national aspirations, and violent guerrilla past.

    One of the most disturbing developments today, is this article published by Haaretz, which reveals for the first time that Gershon Baskin, who was the Israeli mediator with Jabari in the Shalit deal, had transmitted to the Hamas leader only a few hours before his murder, a draft for a permanent truce agreement. The Israeli government appointed a staff committee to work on the project. The deal would’ve provided for Israel and Hamas to put down their weapons over an extended period of time. The agreement, if implemented, might have radically transformed the southern front and created room for further peace initiatives.

    For those of you with longer memories of the conflict, this will echo another historic assassination of a Hamas leader, Saleh Shehadeh in 2003. At that time, news reports spoke of his exploration of a long-term deal that would’ve called for a de-escalation of the conflict with Israel.

    This tells you that Israel doesn’t want stability on the Palestinian side. It doesn’t want a responsible partner. If a potential partner is responsible, better that he be killed.

    There is yet another historical parallel here to what happened among the Palestinians in the 1970s and 80s. Those who pursued a pragmatic approach that involved accommodation with Israel were pursued and assassinated by the radical elements of the Palestinian movement: Issam Sartawi was but one example. The rejectionists, whether Israeli or Palestinian, need chaos in order to achieve their ends. For Bibi, the end is permanent decimation of the Palestinians so they pose no threat to his expansionist national agenda.

    Do not believe another Israeli government representative who tells you Israel wants peace, Israel wants a ceasefire (as Michael Oren mendaciously told NPR today), etc. Israel wants war until it pulverizes the Palestinians into permanent submission.

    Speaking of Michael Oren, if you heard his interview, did you note both the interviewers relatively softball questions (BBC interviewers are MUCH tougher), and the fact that they interviewed no one critical of the Gaza assault to balance his hasbara? It reminds me of Oren’s last visit to Seattle during which Steve Scher of KUOW interviewed him for 20 minutes during which there was no guest to offer a counter-perspective, nor were listener call-ins permitted. Our U.S. media has caved shamefully to the hasbara steamroller. Instead of being journalists, they allow themselves to be exploited on behalf of Israel’s national interests.

    I was also tickled by Oren’s practically beseeching Hamas to accept a ceasefire, one that the Islamist movement offered Israel a day or so before it murdered Ahmed Jabari. The Gentleman Liar wants the world to believe that Israel doesn’t want to kill Gazans, but that the victims simply give them no choice. Diabolical, as is so much of Israeli hasbara these days.

    The hasbarafia of UK Jewry has rallied to Israel’s defense, touting the IDF’s “Jewish ethical ethos.” This is a moral abomination. Killing babies is neither Jewish nor ethical. Support this travesty if you wish. But not in the name of Judaism.

    Rabbi Eric Yoffie, former leader of Reform Judaism, has also attempted to co-opt Jewish progressives by arguing that this war is just, and that continuing the intolerable status quo:

    …Undermines the sovereignty of the Jewish state and strikes a fatal blow at the very raison d’etre of Zionism.

    L’hefech, learned rav. Murdering babies does far more to undermine Israeli sovereignty and the Zionist Idea. I was raised to respect rabbis and the rabbinate. But such nonsense reminds me that even rabbis can be just as stupid as the rest of us.

  • Worrying praise for a resounding failure - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/worrying-praise-for-a-resounding-failure.premium-1.470456

    When people start praising failures, it’s time to worry. And that’s exactly what happened a week and a half ago: Defense Minister Ehud Barak praised the chief of staff and the air force commander for the “sharp, effective performance in which a #drone was intercepted and shot down in the area south of Hebron.” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also praised the drone’s interception.

  • UNESCO agrees to declare 2013 year of Piri Reis

    http://www.todayszaman.com/newsDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=294065

    via @alaingresh

    2 October 2012 / TODAY’S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

    The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has agreed to declare 2013 the year of Piri Reis on the occasion of the 500th anniversary of a map he drew up that included seven continents, reported the Anatolia news agency.

    A meeting was held on Tuesday by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism with the attendance of Transportation Minister Binali Yıldırım and Defense Minister İsmet Yılmaz. Minister of Culture and Tourism Ertuğrul Günay stated that they applied to UNESCO in 2011 to receive approval for 2013 to be the year of Piri Reis and UNESCO had responded positively. The minister further stated that Reis would be promoted to younger generations through many activities such as symposiums, documentary film festivals, book launches and exhibitions both in Turkey and abroad.

    #cartographie #onu #unesco #cartographie-historique #piri-reis #empire-ottoman

  • Israël Palestine Occupation Colonisation

    No Occupation, No Problem : Netanyahu Committee Recommends Moving Toward De Facto Annexation — FMEP

    http://fmep.org/reports/archive/vol.-22/no.-4/no-occupation-no-problem-netanyahu-committee-recommends-moving-toward-de-facto

    Settlement Report | Vol. 22 No. 4 | July-August 2012

    By Geoffrey Aronson

    The last two years of the administration of U.S. president Barack Obama have been notable for the almost complete absence of serious diplomatic effort to resolve the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. Israeli defense minister Ehud Barak recently warned that “political inaction is not an option, and if it becomes evident that it is impossible to reach an agreement, we need to think about an interim arrangement, or even unilateral action. Israel cannot allow itself to remain in a state of deadlock.”

    The secret negotiations that lead to the Oslo Declaration in 1993 and the decision of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to “disengage” from the Gaza Strip in 2005 offer instructive examples of Israel’s ability to shape the international diplomatic agenda. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been singularly successful in frustrating efforts by the international community to conduct negotiations based upon the armistice line separating Israel from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

  • Defense minister, Assad brother-in-law killed in Damascus blast
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/state-tv-suicide-bomb-targets-damascus-security-base

    Syrian Defense Minister Daoud Abdullah Rajiha and Assef Shawkat, President Bashar al-Assad’s brother-in-law, have been killed in an apparent suicide attack on a key security building in Damascus on Wednesday, Syrian and Lebanese media reported.

    En français:
    http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/la-revolte-syrienne/20120718.OBS7525/syrie-guerre-civile-a-damas-deux-ministres-tues-dans-un-attenta

    Selon les mêmes sources, le ministre de la Défense, le général Daoud Rajha, a été tué dans l’attaque. Selon elles, ce dernier est « tombé en martyr » lors de cet attentat qui s’est produit lors d’une réunion de ministres et responsables de la sécurité. Assef Shawkat, chef du Renseignement et beau-frère du président Assad, est également mort dans l’attentat, annonce la chaîne du Hezbollah, al-Manar.

  • Hamas figure assassinated in Syria, Israel accused
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/hamas-figure-assassinated-syria-israel-accused

    A senior Hamas member has been killed in a suburb of the Syrian capital Damascus, a member of the group told AFP on Thursday, accusing Israel’s spy agency of being behind the attack.

    Israel’s defense minister responded coyly to the suggestion, telling army radio: “I’m not sure that that’s necessarily right.”

    Hamas said the member, Kamal Hussein Ghanaja, was killed on Wednesday.

    “A group of people entered his home in Qudsaya ... where he was liquidated,” the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

    “According to our information, Mossad was behind the assassination,” he added, referring to Israel’s foreign intelligence agency.

    Au rayon « pas de partenaire pour la paix », se souvenir que, tout juste la semaine dernière : Hamas ready for truce after Israel kills child
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/hamas-ready-truce-after-israel-kills-child

    Hamas said on Wednesday they were ready to sign up to an Egyptian-brokered truce after three days of Israeli airstrikes killed eight Palestinians, including a 14-year-old boy.

  • Lebanon combatants to receive war decoration
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4175217,00.html

    Israel held military presence in Lebanon for nearly 18 years and soon every IDF combatant that took part in the lengthy campaign and spent over a month in Lebanon will finally receive the recognition they deserve.
     
    Yedioth Ahronoth reported Friday that Defense Minister Ehud Barak decided last week that combatants who took part in the campaign that took place between the Lebanon War of 1982 and the time that Israel left Lebanon will receive a special decoration.

    Je suis trop trop ému, là.

  • Netanyahu Gags Shabak Director, Subverts Knesset Oversight Regarding Eilat Attack – Tikun Olam
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/tikun_olam/2011/09/04/netanyahu-gags-shabak-director-subverts-knesset-oversight-regard

    For those of you who harbor quaint notions about Israeli democracy, tonight’s post should further disabuse you of your illusions.

    [...]

    I’ve reported in the recent past, that Defense Minister Ehud Barak refused to allow chief of staff Benny Gantz to testify to a Knesset committee about Israel’s covert programs to contain Iran. Now, none other than the prime minister himself has directed the Shabak chief to refuse to appear before the same committee to address questions about the Eilat terror attack. Yoram Cohen, Shabak director, sent an underling in his place who also refused to discuss the terror attack when asked point-blank by the committee, which is chaired by former chief of staff Shaul Mofaz.

    Haaretz has only reported the latter fact, that a Shabak officer refused to answer questions about Eilat. In truth, my own well-placed source confirms that Netanyahu refused to allow Cohen to even appear before Mofaz’ committee. Perhaps one should even question the Israeli media itself as to why it hasn’t reported that Netanyahu actually refused to allow Israel’s most senior intelligence officer to testify before the Knesset.

  • 08BEIRUT681 - LEBANON : MINDEF MURR MEETING ON 11 MAY 2008 | الأخبار
    http://www.al-akhbar.com/node/11447

    1. (C) In a May 11 meeting, Defense Minister Elias Murr told Charge that Hizballah fighters were moving into his neighborhood to take up positions around Michel Aoun’s residence. Murr thinks that the incidents of 8-10 May prove that Army Commander Sleiman and Army Intelligence Chief Georges Khoury are “in the pocket” of Hizballah and that everyone has made a deal for their own benefit. Murr expressed an unwavering commitment to the government saying they (Hizbullah) would have to enter his house and kill him before he gives up on the two cabinet decisions that led to Hizbullah’s actions on the streets of Beirut. Murr anticipates trouble among army officers, especially the Sunnis, based on the Army’s performance in Beirut where they allowed Hizballah to take over Sunni-dominated West Beirut. Murr feels that Saudi Arabia and Egypt are the most important players to affect the current situation in Beirut, “if they are in the deal.” Murr has been under increasing criticism from Lebanese politicians about his relationship with the USG saying his alliance has been a “failure” because there has been no real assistance to help Lebanon against Syria and Iran.

    #cablegate #liban

  • Hamas must pay dearly - Israel Opinion, Ynetnews
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4054090,00.html

    Now we are preparing for several days of fighting in the Strip, including the possibility of rocket attacks at civilians beyond the Gaza region. The IDF Southern Command presented the plan for the upcoming days of fighting to the defense minister. Barak approved, and postponed his trip to the United States.
     
    This time, Israel intends to exact a very heavy price from Hamas, as the State of Israel and IDF have no solution that would fortify civilian transportation in the Gaza region. The only immediate solution is deterrence – and deterrence can only be achieved via plenty of fire.
     
    This time, officials will not accept a Hamas request for a lull via secret channels of UN officials in the area, as happened in the past. In the coming days, the cannons, missiles, tanks, jets and rockets will do the talking, until the blood quota is filled.

    « Until the blood quota is filled » ? Quand le prochain massacre commis par Israël à Gaza sera terminé, quand un BHL viendra vous parler des humanistes de Tsahal, quand un nouveau Goldstone viendra s’excuser d’avoir décrit la guerre israélienne contre les civils palestiniens, souvenez-vous de ce que vous venez de lire.

    #israël #gaza