http://www.debka.com/article/22771/US-plan-for-UN-to-endorse-Khamenei%E2%80%99s-fatwa-Shock-in-Jerusalem-
and....
http://news.antiwar.com/2013/02/15/150-killed-as-battle-for-key-syrian-airport-rages-on/
Rebels have made several moves against the airport in the past, attacking civilian aircraft flying out of the airport and forcing its closure last month. At its peek the airport served some 1.7 million passengers per year.
http://www.blacklistednews.com/Absolute_Lawlessness%3A_Libyan_%E2%80%9CDemocracy%E2%80%9D_Two_Years_After_NATO_Air_War/24252/0/0/0/Y/M.html
Source: Voice of Russia
Libyan-style “democracy”: two years without Gaddafi
Andrei Smirnov
===
“NATO air strikes threw the once prospering country by African standards back into the Middle Ages, and still worse, they plunged it into a civil war. The West used military force to install an obedient yet unpopular regime unable to deal with the religious and tribal feud that is tearing the country apart. Libyan oil and gas – that was the main target of NATO’s military intervention…”
===
Mass protests are sweeping across Libya as the country marks the second anniversary of the beginning of a civil war that ousted Muammar Gaddafi. Two years after the fall of the Gaddafi regime, no new constitution has been drafted.
The new authorities have obviously failed to maintain law and order. Crime is rampaging and popular discontent is on the rise. Prime Minister Ali Zeidan has shut the borders with neighboring Egypt and Tunisia from February 14 to 18 as a security precaution.
Though the anti-Gaddafi revolt erupted on February 17, the main celebrations will take place on the 15th. Airport security is being tightened. Meanwhile, Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines have suspended all flights to Libya until the 17th, citing “tensions on the grounds”. Earlier, Germany, France, Canada and other countries urged their citizens to immediately leave Benghazi over the imminent threat of terrorist attacks. Security is being tightened in the capital Tripoli and also in Benghazi where four U.S. diplomats were killed in a bloody raid on the U.S. consulate last September.
With anarchy and marauding flourishing in border areas where once strict law and order reigned under Gaddafi, most Libyans, particularly in the east, have been outraged by the authorities’ inaction. In addition to local extremists and “adventure seekers”, terrorists of all sorts, including groups of jihadists from Mali, have been pouring in. The “democracy” the West had once been so fervent in forcing upon Libya looks more like medieval rule, says Director of the Cairo-based Java Center for Political Studies Rifaat Sayed Ahmad.
“NATO air strikes threw the once prospering country by African standards back into the Middle Ages, and still worse, they plunged it into a civil war. The West used military force to install an obedient yet unpopular regime unable to deal with the religious and tribal feud that is tearing the country apart. Libyan oil and gas – that was the main target of NATO’s military intervention in the name of the noble goal of freeing ordinary Libyans from Colonel Gaddafi’s dictatorship, as one French TV program put it.”
and.....
http://news.antiwar.com/2013/02/15/iraq-seals-off-sunni-neighborhoods-as-protests-continue/
Tens of thousands rallied in the Anbar Provincial capital of Ramadi, with demonstrators demanding reforms and for the Maliki government to make good on post-election promises to include Sunni officials in the power-sharing deal.
This month’s P5+1 meeting with Iran is going to include an offer of trivial concessions to Iran, effectively rolling back the ban on the gold trade and putting Iran right back to where they were a few weeks ago, in return for closing the Fordo enrichment plant.
US plan for UN to endorse Khamenei’s fatwa? Shock in Jerusalem
DEBKAfile Special Report February 17, 2013, 1:59 PM (GMT+02:00)
Tags:
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared Iran was a “nuclear state” during his Cairo visit two weeks ago. Saturday, Feb. 16, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei shed more light by saying, “Iran is not seeking nuclear weapons but no power could stop Tehran’s access to an atomic bomb if it intended to build it. “
DEBKAfile: Iran’s leaders are therefore quite frank about the state of their nuclear program: the components of a nuclear weapon have been procured - defying Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu red lines - but Tehran has not yet crossed the threshold to assemble it - although this could be done modularly.
And if the Islamic Republic has acquired the components and knowledge for surreptitiously building one bomb, it stands to reason that three or five would be no object.
DEBKAfile: Iran’s leaders are therefore quite frank about the state of their nuclear program: the components of a nuclear weapon have been procured - defying Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu red lines - but Tehran has not yet crossed the threshold to assemble it - although this could be done modularly.
And if the Islamic Republic has acquired the components and knowledge for surreptitiously building one bomb, it stands to reason that three or five would be no object.
On Feb. 12, DEBKAfile revealed that Iranian scientists attended the latest North Korean atomic test. Six days later, the Sunday Times repeated the story, naming Mohsen Fakhrizade-Mahabadi, the senior Iranian scientist of Iran’s nuclear weapons program, as the official present. Our Iranian sources strongly doubt that Mahabadi was there because he is too afraid of kidnapping or assassination to ever leave Iran.
We also revealed how the Iranian-North Korean nuclear partnership worked and the division of clandestine labor between them. Their arrangement – to which Washington and Jerusalem prefer to turn a blind eye –assigns to Iran the development of small nuclear warheads for delivery by missiles and to North Korea the development of ballistic missiles able to land a warhead at any point on the planet.
We also revealed how the Iranian-North Korean nuclear partnership worked and the division of clandestine labor between them. Their arrangement – to which Washington and Jerusalem prefer to turn a blind eye –assigns to Iran the development of small nuclear warheads for delivery by missiles and to North Korea the development of ballistic missiles able to land a warhead at any point on the planet.
The two governments work smoothly in tandem, regularly pooling the data obtained from advances in their respective programs.
One such advance was Iran’s successful launch of a monkey into orbit at an altitude of 120 kilometers on Jan. 28 and its apparent return it to earth. Washington tried hard to throw cold water on the Iranian feat, but Tehran countered by citing Western sources as confirming the launch.
A gap still remains in their accounts: Washington does not question the launch of a space capsule - only the monkey aboard.
However, the North Korean test of a “miniature nuclear device," combined with Iran’s ability to launch a capsule with a monkey payload into orbit, add up to their having achieved a nuclear warhead capacity through shared technology.
One such advance was Iran’s successful launch of a monkey into orbit at an altitude of 120 kilometers on Jan. 28 and its apparent return it to earth. Washington tried hard to throw cold water on the Iranian feat, but Tehran countered by citing Western sources as confirming the launch.
A gap still remains in their accounts: Washington does not question the launch of a space capsule - only the monkey aboard.
However, the North Korean test of a “miniature nuclear device," combined with Iran’s ability to launch a capsule with a monkey payload into orbit, add up to their having achieved a nuclear warhead capacity through shared technology.
After registering these menacing strides, officials in Jerusalem were dismayed to learn that instead of planning to cut them short, US President Barack’s Obama’s circle in Washington was studying a bizarre plan for the opposite objective.
It surfaced in an article published Tuesday, Feb. 12, by Ambassador Thomas Pickering, a veteran American diplomat who is influential in the framing of Obama’s Iranian policy.
This what he wrote: “In years past, he (Khamenei) issued a fatwa condemning nuclear weapons. Washington could take advantage of this fact by drafting a UN Security Council resolution endorsing the fatwa. This could be a small step toward boosting Khamenei’s international profile while simultaneously pressuring Iran to follow its own religious decree.”
Instead of dismantling these rogue nuclear programs, Pickering was proposing to legitimize Iran’s possession of a nuclear bomb capacity that only stopped one step short of assembling a bomb.
For the Shiite republic, UN endorsement as a nuclear power would be an epic triumph with ramifications for many years to come on its standing and the shape of the Middle East and Persian Gulf.
This what he wrote: “In years past, he (Khamenei) issued a fatwa condemning nuclear weapons. Washington could take advantage of this fact by drafting a UN Security Council resolution endorsing the fatwa. This could be a small step toward boosting Khamenei’s international profile while simultaneously pressuring Iran to follow its own religious decree.”
Instead of dismantling these rogue nuclear programs, Pickering was proposing to legitimize Iran’s possession of a nuclear bomb capacity that only stopped one step short of assembling a bomb.
For the Shiite republic, UN endorsement as a nuclear power would be an epic triumph with ramifications for many years to come on its standing and the shape of the Middle East and Persian Gulf.
It would also endow Khamenei’s fatwa with false religious value – and not just for Sunni Muslims. Khamenei has neither the authority nor the erudition for issuing a binding Shiite fatwa either. Yet Pickering proposes extending the supreme leader a religious honor denied him by the leading Shiite clerics of Qom.
This fatwa has always been dismissed until now as a piece of propaganda designed to disguise the military aspects of Iran’s nuclear program and support Tehran’s claim that it was purely for peaceful use and research.
This fatwa has always been dismissed until now as a piece of propaganda designed to disguise the military aspects of Iran’s nuclear program and support Tehran’s claim that it was purely for peaceful use and research.
The stratagem floating around the White house for buttering up Khamenei and granting his edict international legitimacy just weeks before President Obama’s March 20 visit to Jerusalem is causing consternation among his Israeli hosts. It is a worrying pointer to the direction in which his Iran policy is heading.
and....
http://news.antiwar.com/2013/02/15/150-killed-as-battle-for-key-syrian-airport-rages-on/
150 Killed as Battle for Key Syrian Airport Rages On
Rebels Vow to Continue Offensive Until Aleppo Airport Falls
by Jason Ditz, February 15, 2013
The massive civilian airport in Syria’s largest city of Aleppo has seen a growing series of rebel attacks over the past three days, with estimates putting the overall death toll at 150, split roughly evenly between rebels and military, and no sign of the fighting slowing down.
Rebels have made several moves against the airport in the past, attacking civilian aircraft flying out of the airport and forcing its closure last month. At its peek the airport served some 1.7 million passengers per year.
Local rebel commanders say that they intend to continue the current offensive until they take over the airport, while government forces say they plan to push for control of a military base near the airport, which fell to the rebels recently.
Much as with the battle for control of Aleppo itself or indeed, the entire civil war, the fight for the airport and the base appears stalemated at the moment, with both sides’ predictions of imminent victory seeming very premature.
In the meantime Aleppo, the nation’s industrial and financial hub, remains essentially closed for business, with millions of civilians struggling to go on with their lives in the face of an ever uglier civil war.
Absolute Lawlessness: Libyan “Democracy” Two Years After NATO Air War
February 15, 2013Source: Voice of Russia
Libyan-style “democracy”: two years without Gaddafi
Andrei Smirnov
===
“NATO air strikes threw the once prospering country by African standards back into the Middle Ages, and still worse, they plunged it into a civil war. The West used military force to install an obedient yet unpopular regime unable to deal with the religious and tribal feud that is tearing the country apart. Libyan oil and gas – that was the main target of NATO’s military intervention…”
===
Mass protests are sweeping across Libya as the country marks the second anniversary of the beginning of a civil war that ousted Muammar Gaddafi. Two years after the fall of the Gaddafi regime, no new constitution has been drafted.
The new authorities have obviously failed to maintain law and order. Crime is rampaging and popular discontent is on the rise. Prime Minister Ali Zeidan has shut the borders with neighboring Egypt and Tunisia from February 14 to 18 as a security precaution.
Though the anti-Gaddafi revolt erupted on February 17, the main celebrations will take place on the 15th. Airport security is being tightened. Meanwhile, Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines have suspended all flights to Libya until the 17th, citing “tensions on the grounds”. Earlier, Germany, France, Canada and other countries urged their citizens to immediately leave Benghazi over the imminent threat of terrorist attacks. Security is being tightened in the capital Tripoli and also in Benghazi where four U.S. diplomats were killed in a bloody raid on the U.S. consulate last September.
With anarchy and marauding flourishing in border areas where once strict law and order reigned under Gaddafi, most Libyans, particularly in the east, have been outraged by the authorities’ inaction. In addition to local extremists and “adventure seekers”, terrorists of all sorts, including groups of jihadists from Mali, have been pouring in. The “democracy” the West had once been so fervent in forcing upon Libya looks more like medieval rule, says Director of the Cairo-based Java Center for Political Studies Rifaat Sayed Ahmad.
“NATO air strikes threw the once prospering country by African standards back into the Middle Ages, and still worse, they plunged it into a civil war. The West used military force to install an obedient yet unpopular regime unable to deal with the religious and tribal feud that is tearing the country apart. Libyan oil and gas – that was the main target of NATO’s military intervention in the name of the noble goal of freeing ordinary Libyans from Colonel Gaddafi’s dictatorship, as one French TV program put it.”
The unhappy outcome is hardly a surprise and had been foreseen by analysts even before the intervention began, says Russian political scientist Stanislav Tarasov.
“Not just Russian analysts but Western ones as well made such forecasts. Libya is fragmented and may, in prospect, split into two or even three states. Some territories ruled by certain tribal clans have set up their own borders. In this situation, attempts by the so-called central government to adopt an all-Libyan law, a constitution accepted by all, appear to be doomed. The West which initiated the ‘Arab spring’ in Libya can offer nothing except the use of force.”
No immediate improvements should be expected though. Boris Dolgov, a senior researcher at the Center for Arabic Studies in Moscow, notes that Libya is a long way from stabilization. It is actually the hotbed of instability for the entire North Africa.
“We are witnessing a spread of radical Islamism, as in the case of Mali and Algeria. The events in Mali and Libya are closely intertwined. Gaddafi waged a war on radical extremism and kept the situation under control. More than 600 Islamists were in jails. After the fall of Gaddafi, they walked free and joined radical groups, including those operating in Mali.”
Libya today is “a territory of absolute lawlessness”, as some Arab analysts call it, or rather it’s a powder keg to which a blazing torch has already been brought.
“Not just Russian analysts but Western ones as well made such forecasts. Libya is fragmented and may, in prospect, split into two or even three states. Some territories ruled by certain tribal clans have set up their own borders. In this situation, attempts by the so-called central government to adopt an all-Libyan law, a constitution accepted by all, appear to be doomed. The West which initiated the ‘Arab spring’ in Libya can offer nothing except the use of force.”
No immediate improvements should be expected though. Boris Dolgov, a senior researcher at the Center for Arabic Studies in Moscow, notes that Libya is a long way from stabilization. It is actually the hotbed of instability for the entire North Africa.
“We are witnessing a spread of radical Islamism, as in the case of Mali and Algeria. The events in Mali and Libya are closely intertwined. Gaddafi waged a war on radical extremism and kept the situation under control. More than 600 Islamists were in jails. After the fall of Gaddafi, they walked free and joined radical groups, including those operating in Mali.”
Libya today is “a territory of absolute lawlessness”, as some Arab analysts call it, or rather it’s a powder keg to which a blazing torch has already been brought.
and.....
http://news.antiwar.com/2013/02/15/iraq-seals-off-sunni-neighborhoods-as-protests-continue/
Iraq Seals Off Sunni Neighborhoods as Protests Continue
Troops Prevent March on Baghdad by Closing All Roads
by Jason Ditz, February 15, 2013
Members of Iraq’s Sunni Arab minority had planned to march on the capital city today in the latest of months of Friday protests, but were stopped by the military, which forcibly closed all roads leading out of Sunni provinces and sealing off every Sunni neighborhood around Baghdad.
Tens of thousands rallied in the Anbar Provincial capital of Ramadi, with demonstrators demanding reforms and for the Maliki government to make good on post-election promises to include Sunni officials in the power-sharing deal.
Initially the Iraqiya Party, which is predominantly Sunni, was promised considerable power in a coalition government, including reports they were going to get the Defense portfolio. Years later, Maliki has still never appointed a Defense Minister, keeping the power to himself, and the two major Iraqiya positions, Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi and Finance Minister Rafi Essawi, have seen repeated government raids on their offices.
Indeed, Hashemi is in exile at this point, with the Maliki government ordering him executed as a “terrorist” even though he has yet to be removed from office. Essawi had gone into hiding after his home was raided by the Interior Ministry, and reports are that troops moved against the Finance Ministry again this week.
http://news.antiwar.com/2013/02/15/west-offers-iran-gold-trade-for-closing-key-centrifuge-plant/
( Funny how West will allow trade in gold at a time when physical gold seems to be drying up everywhere...)
West Offers Iran Gold Trade for Closing Key Centrifuge Plant
Trivial Sanction Reduction Would Close Civilian Enrichment Site
by Jason Ditz, February 15, 2013
The crippling US sanctions on Iran’s economy have barred almost every conceivable type of commerce, initially forcing Iran to move back to the gold standard for international trade by denying them access to international banks, then banning the gold trade as well.
This month’s P5+1 meeting with Iran is going to include an offer of trivial concessions to Iran, effectively rolling back the ban on the gold trade and putting Iran right back to where they were a few weeks ago, in return for closing the Fordo enrichment plant.
Fordo is a large portion of Iran’s civilian enrichment capacity, and is irksome to the US and Israel because, being deep underground it would be much less convenient to attack than Natanz, the other plant.
Though Iran has said it is eager to make a deal, the trivial nature of the offer and the large demand makes it difficult to imagine it will be accepted. After all, if all they get out of Fordo is the right to trade in gold, closing what is left of their civilian program likely won’t get them much more, and will leave them more or less in a state of permanent sanctions.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/02/2013216111212554210.html
Arrests follow fresh Bahrain violence | |
Police and protesters clash in a Shia village of Daih at the funeral of a teenager in killed earlier in the week.
Last Modified: 16 Feb 2013 13:45
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Fresh protests are expected to be held on Saturday after the funeral of a protester [Reuters]
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| Clashes have broken out on at the funeral of a teenager killed in demonstrations to mark the second anniversary of Bahrain's Shia-led uprising, with police firing tear gas to disperse mourners, witnesses said. The security forces blocked access to the funeral of Hussein al-Jaziri in the Shia-populated village of Daih near the capital Manama on Saturday, firing tear gas and stun grenades to disperse dozens of people trying to push their way through.
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