Monday, April 30, 2012

latimes:A get-tough approach now drives Israel policy

A get-tough approach now drives Israel policy

http://www.stripes.com/news/a-get-tough-approach-now-drives-israel-policy-1.175960

JERUSALEM — The traditional Passover retelling of Exodus was barely under way in 2002 when Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer got a note with news of the latest in a string of Palestinian suicide attacks that had terrorized Israel for two years.
He dashed to an emergency meeting of military commanders, all dressed in civilian clothes because they’d left their own Seder dinner tables upon hearing that 30 Israelis had been killed in the attack on the Park Hotel.
After an all-night session, they made a decision that would change the face of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: Ben-Eliezer persuaded Israel’s Cabinet to reoccupy the entire West Bank, even though it meant brushing aside the 1993 Oslo agreements that gave Palestinians control over many cities and their own security force.

Ten years later, many see that move as the start of a strategic shift that put Israel on a go-it-alone course that continues to shape its security policy, whether dealing with Palestinian statehood or responding to Iran’s purported nuclear arms program.
With the military operation in 2002, Israel took a step away from the internationally brokered peace deals that dominated the 1990s and the idea that its security could be achieved through compromise with Palestinians.
The doctrine that evolved in its place has relied instead on military strength and a willingness to take unilateral measures, even though Palestinians say the approach is threatening to kill any hope for a two-state solution and could backfire on Israel in a region where “Arab Spring” uprising memories are fresh.
Soon after the reoccupation of the West Bank came the construction of a massive separation barrier, ruled illegal by the International Court of Justice, which cut off Palestinians from Israel.
Next was the withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, which Israel initiated on its own terms outside the formal peace process.
To many Israelis, this get-tough campaign is working and they see no reason to change it. Suicide attacks have stopped. Palestinian leaders are weaker and more moderate than before. International isolation is seen as manageable and Palestinian statehood is no longer at the top of the global agenda.
“Ten years ago, the actions taken by Israel changed the nature and the history of the behavior of the people in the West Bank,” said Ben-Eliezer, now a Labor Party lawmaker. “We showed that nothing is taboo when it comes to our security. We will cross every line. We will go in and we will hit. It’s a strategy that has kept until today and the results are clear: Quietness until now.”
Some see the success Israel believes it has enjoyed with the Palestinian issues as spreading to other areas of its foreign policy, giving it the confidence to resist the Obama administration’s pressure to freeze settlements, rejecting attempts to mend ties with onetime ally Turkey and openly threatening to launch a military strike on Iran, which many believe is working to join Israel to become the second nuclear power in the region.
Palestinians characterize Israelis as intransigent and arrogant, and worry about an increasingly vocal right-wing faction that advocates “managing” the conflict rather than resolving it.
“The Israelis abandoned the peace process a long time ago,” said Nabil Shaath, a top adviser to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. He said the change began with the collapse of the 2000 Camp David talks, when Israelis realized the gaps with Palestinians were still wide.
“They decided that Palestinian expectations were too high and had to be brought down,” Shaath said. “That meant a more diligent, militant Israeli government to put down the Palestinians’ aspirations.”
But he called the approach shortsighted.
“Israelis are intoxicated with power now,” Shaath said. “It makes you feel you don’t have to give up anything. You can have it all. Settlements. De-Arabization of Jerusalem. Control over movement from Gaza to the West Bank. They think they’ve won and can just walk over us.”
But he predicted that Israel’s overconfidence would eventually backfire, particularly with Palestinians. He noted that similar misguided thinking once led Arab rulers in the region to believe that they would never be toppled by their people as they have been in the Arab Spring.
“There will come a time when Israel will not be able to control it,” he said.
Israeli Deputy Vice Prime Minister Moshe Yaalon, who served as the army’s chief of staff during much of the second intifada, said Palestinians have no one to blame but themselves because they unleashed a campaign of suicide attacks inside Israel.
“It was a turning point, for me personally and the country,” Yaalon said. “It was an awakening. We thought, ‘Enough is enough.’ We had to operate unilaterally because we didn’t have a partner. And we still don’t.”
He credited the strategy over the last 10 years with strengthening the confidence of the Israeli public and putting the government in a stronger bargaining position.
“We know now that Israel has a military capability to defeat terror, and that legacy lives on in the Israeli spirit,” he said. “We have nothing to apologize for, because we tried very hard to reach peace through territorial compromise.”
Yet some warn that Israel’s dominance could boomerang on the country at the negotiating table.
“Negotiations between asymmetrical sides are more difficult because the weaker side has greater difficulty making concessions,” said researcher Shlomo Brom of the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.
“The weaker party fears any concession will lead down a slippery slope, and is very apprehensive of public opinion. Concessions require strength. The other side’s weakness should not make us happy.”
Ben-Eliezer, a former Labor Party leader, said he believes Israel’s get-tough approach was justified in the beginning but that it should have been part of a carrot-and-stick approach, also offering Palestinians a genuine peace deal.
In recent years, he said, Israel’s right-wing parties have failed to do enough to convince Palestinians that Israel is serious about their statehood bid.
“In the long run, this is going to work against us,” he said. “So far Palestinians have kept quiet, but one day they will awake and the explosion will happen. People don’t accept [being] under military rule for 50 years. Maybe the explosion will bring about negotiations. But then negotiations will occur under pressure, and that is what I don’t want to see happen.”
Batsheva Sobelman of the Los Angeles Times’ Jerusalem bureau contributed to this report.

 

jpost:Olmert: Iran not rushing to produce nukes

Olmert: Iran not rushing to produce nukes

http://www.jpost.com/IranianThreat/News/Article.aspx?id=268130

Tehran's calculated approach shows diplomacy can still be effective, former prime minister tells CNN at JPost Conference.

Iran appears to exercise a thoughtful calculated approach to its nuclear program, which shows that diplomacy can still be effective, former prime minister Ehud Olmert told CNN in a brief video interview published on its web site in advance of a more lengthy one due to air in the United States Monday night.
His comments come in the aftermath of statements he made Sunday at The Jerusalem Post Conference in New York against rushing to launch a military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

“The Iranian leadership has not gone beyond a certain line for the time being in the development of the nuclear program,” Olmert told CNN.

“That shows that they are at least thoughtful which means that they are not rushing, but they are calculating their steps, being aware of the possible ramifications of what they do to Iran itself, which is what we want them to understand,” Olmert said in the CNN interview.
Israel still needs to be prepared to defend itself militarily against Iran, Olmert told CNN.
“At the same time,” he said, “we have to create the capacity to defend ourselves,” he said.
“We have to encourage the international community to be quiet, without talking so much, to take measures and sanctions economic pressure and so on and so forth,” Olmert said.
There should not be a “rush for certain military actions [against Iran], which are not essential at this point,” he added.
His comments come at a time when former Mossad Chief Meir Dagan and the former head of the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), Yuval Diski, have questioned the ability of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak to eliminate Iran’s nuclear program through force.
Iran has restarted negotiations with six world powers over the broader dimensions of its nuclear program and the sides have agreed to meet again in Baghdad on May 23.
Washington and its allies believe Tehran is working on developing nuclear bombs. Tehran insists its activities have only civilian energy purposes and has refused to stop enriching uranium, despite a slew of sanctions.
The UN Security Council has demanded that Iran suspend all enrichment activity but Western diplomats have indicated the immediate priority is to get it to halt the higher-grade work.

 

 

alarabiya:Baghdad talks will not resolve all issues: Khamenei aide

Baghdad talks will not resolve all issues: Khamenei aide

http://english.alarabiya.net/articles/2012/04/30/211260.html

May 23 talks in Baghdad between Iran and world powers focused on Tehran’s nuclear program will likely not resolve all issues, an aide to Iran’s supreme leader said on Monday.

But Gholam Ali Hadad Adel, a lawmaker who is a senior adviser to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, insisted that the powers on the other side of the table should lift their “illogical sanctions” at the meeting, according to the Mehr news agency.

“Iran expects the P5+1 group to put an end to the illogical sanctions in Baghdad, because the inefficiency of sanctions is proven even for Western leaders,” he said, referring to the P5+1 grouping comprising the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany.

“They can show their goodwill through a trust-building effort by” lifting the sanctions, Hadad Adel said.

“Although one should not expect for all issues to be resolved in Baghdad, we can assume the (atmosphere) of the talks will follow in the footsteps of Istanbul,” he said.

The Baghdad talks follow on from discussions revived April 13-14 in Istanbul after a 15-month impasse.

While the Istanbul meeting managed to set a positive tone for talks to continue, the Baghdad round is seen as the first substantive meeting in which contentious issues will be broached.

Ali Larijani, speaker of Iran’s parliament, said on Monday that “one should not quickly judge” the Istanbul talks, according to the ISNA news agency.

“So far, the format of the talks was a positive move. But we have to see content-wise how many correct steps will be taken,” he said.

“The current problem is not the appearance of the talks. The problem is that the West imposes sanctions behind the scenes while in public it smiles at us. And these two contradictory behaviors are not compatible. The West should take positive practical steps,” he said.

The United States, which is leading Western economic sanctions imposed on Iran, is reportedly floating a concession to allow Iran minimal enrichment of uranium -- previously a no-go option -- if the Islamic republic in return permits more invasive inspections of its nuclear activities.

Iran has sent signals suggesting it could negotiate over its medium-enriched uranium process, but officials have repeatedly said that the Western sanctions should be eased.

Tehran rejects Western accusations that it is seeking nuclear weapons capability.

Iranian officials are to hold a separate meeting before Baghdad, on May 13-14, with representatives from the International Atomic Energy Agency to address suspicions the UN nuclear watchdog also harbors.

 

abcnews:Depressed Bin Laden thought about ‘al-Qaida' name change, White House says

Depressed Bin Laden thought about ‘al-Qaida' name change, White House says

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/OTUS/depressed-bin-laden-thought-al-qaida-change-white/story?id=16244711#.T57cqNW-d8E

Ever wish you could escape your troubles by changing your name and moving away? Well, according to President Barack Obama's top counterterrorism adviser at the White House, Osama bin Laden knew the feeling.
Hunkered down in his Abbottabad compound, bin Laden anguished as al-Qaida suffered "disaster after disaster," encouraged its operatives to flee to areas "away from aircraft photography and bombardment" and even thought about changing the name of his notorious international terrorist network, John Brennan said in a speech on Monday.
Brennan, Obama's Assistant for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism, told the World Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington that bin Laden's pessimism was on full display in documents seized from his fortified home in the Pakistani garrison city. West Point's Combating Terrorism Center will display the papers this week.
Bin Laden worried about recruiting terrorist talent as U.S. strikes killed some of his veterans, fretting that "the rise of lower leaders who are not as experienced" would "lead to the repeat of mistakes," said Brennan. Al-Qaida's American-born public relations officer, Adam Gadahn, "admitted that they were now seen 'as a group that does not hesitate to take people's money by falsehood, detonating mosques [and] spilling the blood of scores of people,'" Brennan said in his prepared remarks.
Bin Laden himself "agreed that 'a large portion' of Muslims around the world 'have lost their trust' in al-Qaida," he continued.
"So damaged is al-Qaida's image that bin Laden even considered changing its name. And one of the reasons? As bin Laden said himself, U.S. officials 'have largely stopped using the phrase 'the war on terror' in the context of not wanting to provoke Muslims,'" said the U.S. official.

The core of Brennan's speech was a ringing defense of drone strikes at suspected terrorists, including American citizens abroad, which he called "legal, ethical and wise." Critics have called for greater judicial oversight of the process by which the U.S. government carries out targeted assassinations of Americans overseas.
And the United States reserves the right to pursue such attacks at any time and in any country in the world, he said. The attacks have drawn sharp criticisms from people in countries like Pakistan who regard them as outrageous violations of national sovereignty.
"As a matter of international law, the United States is in an armed conflict with al-Qaida, the Taliban and associated forces, in response to the 9/11 attacks, and we may also use force consistent with our inherent right of national self-defense," he said. "There is nothing in international law that bans the use of remotely piloted aircraft for this purpose or that prohibits us from using lethal force against our enemies outside of an active battlefield, at least when the country involved consents or is unable or unwilling to take action against the threat."
Brennan's remarks came as some Republicans ramped up criticisms of Obama's decision to use the raid that killed bin Laden as an argument for his own re-election.

 

abcnews:Israel’s Leaders Increasingly Isolated on Iran

Israel’s Leaders Increasingly Isolated on Iran

http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2012/04/israels-leaders-increasingly-isolated-on-iran/

The past week has seen stinging rejections by former top officials of the war footing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak have put Israel on with regards to Iran.
The harsh criticism, in which the pair was accused of “messianic feelings,” exposed deep misgivings about a potential Israeli military strike to stop Iranian progress toward a nuclear weapon.
“I have no faith in the current leadership, which must lead us in an event on the scale of war with Iran or a regional war,” said Yuval Diskin, the former head Israel’s domestic security service, Shin Bet, akin to the U.S. FBI.
“I don’t believe in a leadership that makes decisions based on messianic feelings,” he said Friday. “They are misleading the public on the Iran issue. They tell the public that if Israel acts, Iran won’t have a nuclear bomb. This is misleading. Actually, many experts say that an Israeli attack would accelerate the Iranian nuclear race.”
Diskin’s comments were all the more notable because he left at the end of his term last May on good terms with the Israeli leadership and hasn’t spoken publicly since then.
His thoughts echoed earlier comments of Meir Dagan, the former head of the foreign intelligence service Mossad, who told “60 Minutes” that an Israeli attack on Iran would have “a devastating impact” on Israel and couldn’t stop an Iranian nuclear weapons program.
At a forum in New York on Sunday, Dagan said he agreed with his friend Diskin who “spoke his truth.” At the same conference Sunday, sponsored by The Jerusalem Post, Netanyahu’s predecessor Ehud Olmert wouldn’t comment on Diskin’s remarks, but said, “There is no reason at this time not to talk about a military effort…but definitely not to initiate an Israeli military strike.”
Netanyahu and Barak have long warned that Iran is intent on obtaining nuclear weapons. At a Holocaust Remembrance Day event on April 18, Netanyahu said Iran was “feverishly working to develop atomic weapons to achieve that goal [of destroying Israel].”
They have expressed doubt about the effectiveness of international nuclear talks with Iran in Baghdad next month and the harsh international sanctions imposed on Iran’s oil industry and financial system.
“The chances that such pressure will cause Iran to answer to international demands to halt its program permanently seems low,” Barak said last Thursday, Israel’s Independence Day. Both have also dismissed others’ talk – - including Dagan’s – of a rational Iran, with Netanyahu telling CNN recently he would not want to bet “the security of the world on Iran’s rational behavior.”
That interview came before the Netanyahu and Barak view of a looming Iranian nuclear bomb was further eroded when their military chief, who rarely gives interviews, said Iran is not only “very rational” but “hasn’t yet decided whether to go the extra mile.”
“I believe [Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei] would be making an enormous mistake, and I don’t think he will want to go the extra mile,” Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz told the Haaretz newspaper last Wednesday.
“Dagan and Diskin’s public condemnation of Netanyahu and Barak’s Iran narrative will mean that the Israeli public could from now on have more questions and less faith in the government’s official narrative on Iran,” Iranian-Israeli analyst Meir Javedanfar from Israel’s IDC Herzliya told ABC News. “This could reduce the probabilities of a unilateral attack as the current public warnings could translate into evidence against Barak and Netanyahu if things go wrong during an attack and they have to answer to a postwar commission.”
Diskin has stayed silent in the wake of his explosive comments, but Netanyahu and Barak allies soon sprang to the leaders’ defense, accusing Diskin of lashing out because he wasn’t named head of Mossad.
“Diskin is acting in a petty, irresponsible way, motivated by personal frustration,” Barak aides told Haaretz. “He’s harming a heritage of generations of Shin Bet heads, as well as the organization’s operational norms and values.”
“If those are his views he should have said them in appropriate circles while in office,” said Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz. “It’s clear that the timing and style of the comments is motivated by personal interests, not the issues at hand.”

 

msnbc:Former Israeli PM Olmert joins chorus criticizing Netanyahu on Iran

Former Israeli PM Olmert joins chorus criticizing Netanyahu on Iran

http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/30/11468261-former-israeli-pm-olmert-joins-chorus-criticizing-netanyahu-on-iran?lite

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has joined a chorus of voices warning against rushing into war with Iran, telling a conference in New York City there was still time to stop Tehran's suspected nuclear program using sanctions and diplomacy.
"There is enough time to try different avenues of pressure to change the balance of power with Iran without the need for a direct military confrontation with Iran," Olmert told a crowd of 1,000 mostly American Jews at the a conference organized by the Jerusalem Post.
Iran says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes. Israel, like the West, believes that Tehran is developing weapons technology, but there is intense debate over whether international economic sanctions accompanying the current round of negotiations might prevent Iran from developing a bomb, or whether at some point a military strike should be launched.

Olmert -- dogged during his time in office by a string of corruption scandals, which played a part in his resignation -- went further than criticizing Israel's stance on Iran.  He said that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was not prepared make a real compromise with the Palestinians, was disrespectful to the U.S. and disrespectful of the world community precisely at a time when the country needed international support, the newspaper reported.

"A nation has the right to determine what it should do to defend itself," The News York Times quoted Olmert as saying.  "But when at the same time we ask the United States and other countries to provide us with the means to do it, no one is entirely independent to act, irrespective of the positions and attitudes and policies of other countries."
Olmert's comments -- which elicited boos and shouts of "naive" and "Neville Chamberlain" -- come days after the former chief of the Israeli security agency indicated the government was lying about how effective a military strike would be.
The former head of Israel's Shin Bet security agency last week accused the country's political leaders of exaggerating the effectiveness of a possible military attack on Iran, in a striking indication of Israel's turmoil over how to deal with the Iranian nuclear program.
Israel ex-spy warns against 'messianic' Iran war
Yuval Diskin said Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak-- who have been saber-rattling for months -- have their judgment clouded by "messianic feelings" and should not be trusted to lead policy on Iran. Diskin, who headed Shin Bet until last year, said a strike might actually accelerate the Iranian program.
"I don't have faith in the current leadership of Israel to lead us to an event of this magnitude, of war with Iran," Diskin said at a public meeting Friday, video of which was posted on the Internet the next day and quickly became the lead news item in Israel.

"I do not believe in a leadership that makes decisions based on Messianic feelings," he continued. "I have seen them up close. They are not messiahs, these two, and they are not the people that I personally trust to lead Israel into such an event."
Shin Bet addresses security in Israel and the Palestinian Territories only and is not involved in international affairs.


 

cnn:'We're on a path to al Qaeda's destruction,' U.S. counterterorrism adviser says

'We're on a path to al Qaeda's destruction,' U.S. counterterorrism adviser says

http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/29/us/sotu-brennan-qaeda/index.html

Washington (CNN) -- Nearly a year after commandos killed Osama bin Laden at a compound northern Pakistan, U.S. officials "still have work to do" in order to defeat al Qaeda, a top counterterrorism official said Sunday.
"We're on a path to al Qaeda's destruction, and the president has committed that we're not going to rest until al Qaeda is destroyed as an organization in the Afghan-Pak area, as well as in other regions of the world," John Brennan, U.S. President Barack Obama's chief counterterrorism adviser, told CNN's "State of the Union."
Killing bin Laden and dismantling the terror group's infrastructure in areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan have been key steps, Brennan said.
Officials believe Ayman al-Zawahir, the longtime deputy of bin Laden who took over leadership of al Qaeda after his death, remains in that region, Brennan said.
"We believe he's in that region of the world, as well as other al Qaeda leaders that continue to borough into areas of...the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. That's why we're working very closely with our Pakistani partners," he said. "We're not going to relent until they're brought to justice one way or the other."
The United States also has its sights set on al Qaeda targets in Yemen and Africa, he said.
When asked about a new political ad featuring former President Bill Clinton praising Obama for the decision that led to bin Laden's death, Brennan, who also worked with the CIA for 25 years, stressed, "I don't do politics. I'm not a Democrat. I'm not a Republican."
"It was a tough decision. As we know, the evidence was not there as far as an iron-clad case. A lot of it was circumstantial," the counterterrorism adviser said. "I just know that President Obama, when the time came for him to make a momentous decision like that, he took the action that did bring bin Laden to justice."
Speaking to reporters Friday, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said there was no "silver bullet" that would destroy al Qaeda.
"The way this works is that the more successful we are in taking down those that represent their spiritual and ideological leadership, the greater our ability to weaken their threat to this country," he said.
The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security last week warned of the possibility of terrorist attacks leading up to and after the anniversary of the May 2, 2011, killing of bin Laden. There is no specific, credible terror threat, the agencies said.
The warning, released by the FBI and DHS, says individuals have posted messages on "violent extremist Web forums" vowing attacks on the United States around the anniversary, but adds that "such threats are almost certainly aspirational."
On Sunday, Brennan said the United States has "reduced significantly" al Qaeda's "ability to carry out attacks against the homeland."
"Their ability has been degraded significantly, and our defenses have improved significantly also in the past decade, so their ability to carry out an attack here in the United States now, compared to 10 years ago, is significantly diminished," he said.

 

abcnews:John Brennan: Al Qaeda Remains Focused on Planes

John Brennan: Al Qaeda Remains Focused on Planes

http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/04/john-brennan-al-qaeda-remains-focused-on-planes/

White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan said on “This Week” this morning that the United States remains “especially vigilant” as the country marks the one year anniversary of the death of Osama bin Laden. But he also cautioned that a threat remains from al Qaeda’s Yemeni affiliate, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
“On a day that marks the one year anniversary of bin Laden being brought to justice, we are especially vigilant,” Brennan said. “At this time we don’t see any active plot that is underway.”
I asked Brennan about the FBI warning this week that there are new efforts to target Western airports by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
“They have demonstrated both the intent as well as the capability to try to carry out an attack,” Brennan said. “They are continuing to try to, again,  carry out an attack against U.S. persons inside of Yemen as well as against the homeland.”
Brennan also confirmed that Yemeni al Qaeda offshoot remains focused on targeting planes.
“Aviation has been a target, has been a traditional target of al Qaeda,” Brennan said. ” We need to maintain our vigilance, particularly overseas at these last points of departure.”
Brennan noted that al Qaeda’s capability has been “degraded significantly” and that bin Laden’s death has made a “tremendous difference.”
“It’s taken away the founding leader of that organization who was … a symbol of al Qaeda’s sort of murderous agenda worldwide,” Brennan said. “And so, that has had I think a profound impact on the organization.”
Brennan declined to address Republican criticism this week that the Obama campaign had politicized the killing of bin Laden in a campaign web video released Friday that suggested that Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney may not have taken action against bin Laden.
“I don’t do politics. I don’t do the campaign. I am not a Democrat or Republican. I’m a counter-terrorism adviser to the president, Brennan said.
“All that I know is that the president made the decision when he was given the opportunity to take a gutsy decision, to carry out that raid with our Special Forces in Abbottabad, Pakistan,” Brennan added. “We’re safer today as a result.”

 

nytimes:Experts Believe Iran Conflict Is Less Likely

Experts Believe Iran Conflict Is Less Likely

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/30/world/middleeast/chances-of-iran-strike-receding-us-officials-say.html?_r=1&hp#

WASHINGTON — After a winter of alarm over the possibility that a military conflict over the Iranian nuclear program might be imminent, American officials and outside analysts now believe that the chances of war in the near future have significantly decreased.

They cite a series of factors that, for now, argue against a conflict. The threat of tighter economic sanctions has prompted the Iranians to try more flexible tactics in their dealings with the United States and other powers, while the revival of direct negotiations has tempered the most inflammatory talk on all sides.
A growing divide in Israel between political leaders and military and intelligence officials over the wisdom of attacking Iran has begun to surface. And the White House appears determined to prevent any confrontation that could disrupt world oil markets in an election year.
“I do think the temperature has cooled,” an Obama administration official said this week.
At the same time, no one is discounting the possibility that the current optimism could fade. “While there isn’t an agreement between the U.S. and Israel on how much time, there is an agreement that there is some time to give diplomacy a chance,” said Dennis B. Ross, who previously handled Iran policy for the Obama administration.
“So I think right now you have a focus on the negotiations,” he added. “It doesn’t mean the threat of using force goes away, but it lies behind the diplomacy.”
The talks two weeks ago in Istanbul between Iran and the United States and other world powers were something of a turning point in the current American thinking about Iran. In the days leading up to the talks, there had been little optimism in Washington, but Iranian negotiators appeared more flexible and open to resolving the crisis than expected, even though no agreement was reached other than to talk again, in Baghdad next month. American officials believe the looming threat of tighter economic sanctions to take effect on July 1 convinced the Iranians to take the negotiations more seriously, and that in turn has reduced the threat of war.
“There is a combination of factors coming on line, including the talks and the sanctions, and so now I think people realize it has to be given time to play out,” one administration official said, who, like the other official, spoke without attribution in order to discuss sensitive matters. “We are in a period now where the combination of diplomacy and pressure is giving us a window.”
In a television appearance on Wednesday, Senator John Kerry, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “I have confidence that there is a way forward.”
Senior Iranian leaders have sought to portray the Istanbul round of negotiations as successful, which might be a sign, American officials and outside analysts said, that the Iranian government is preparing the public for a deal with the West that could be portrayed as a win for Iran.
“I see that we are at the beginning of the end of what I call the ‘manufactured Iran file,’ ” the Iranian foreign minister, Ali Akbar Salehi, said after the talks. “At the Baghdad meeting, I see more progress,” he predicted.
IRNA, the Iranian state-controlled news service, reported last week that a leading Iranian cleric, Ayatollah Kazem Seddiqi, had made positive statements about the negotiations. The news service said that the cleric, in his Friday sermon to thousands of worshipers in Tehran, said that if the United States and other nations negotiating with Iran show “logical behavior in nuclear talks, the outcome will be good for all.”
According to IRNA, Ayatollah Seddiqi said the Istanbul meeting showed “the power and dignity of the Iranian nation and was the outcome of people’s resistance and following the supreme leader’s guidelines.”
At the same time in Israel, the conservative government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been rocked by a series of public comments from current and former Israeli military and intelligence officials questioning the wisdom of attacking Iran.
The latest comments came from Yuval Diskin, the former chief of Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic security service, who on Friday said Mr. Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak should not be trusted to determine policy on Iran. He said the judgments of both men have been clouded by “messianic feelings.” Mr. Diskin, who was chief of Shin Bet until last year, said an attack against Iran might cause it to speed up its nuclear program.
Just days before, Israel’s army chief of staff suggested in an interview with the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that the Iranian nuclear threat was not quite as imminent as Mr. Netanyahu has portrayed it. In his comments, Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz suggested that he agreed with the intelligence assessments of the United States that Iran has not yet decided whether to build a nuclear bomb.
Iran “is going step by step to the place where it will be able to decide whether to manufacture a nuclear bomb. It hasn’t yet decided whether to go the extra mile,” General Gantz told Haaretz. He suggested that the crisis may not come to a head this year. But he said, “Clearly, the more the Iranians progress, the worse the situation is.”
Last month, Meir Dagan, the former chief of the Israeli spy agency Mossad, said he did not advocate a pre-emptive Israeli strike against Iran’s nuclear program anytime soon. In an interview with CBS’s “60 Minutes,” Mr. Dagan said the Iranian government was “a very rational one,” and that Iranian officials were “considering all the implications of their actions.”
Mr. Netanyahu is dealing with the criticisms at the same time as he faces, for domestic political reasons, the prospect of an election this year, rather than next.
The divide within the Israeli establishment is significant because Israel has been threatening to launch a unilateral strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities if the United States is unwilling to do so. Washington has feared that if Israel were to do so, the United States could get dragged into the fight, which could result in a widening war in the region.
The crisis atmosphere seemed most pronounced in March, when Mr. Netanyahu visited Washington. Mr. Obama, fearful of antagonizing American Jewish voters during an election year, tried to strike a balance, appearing supportive of Israel but still stopping short of endorsing military action anytime soon. He said at the time that he “had Israel’s back,” and strongly suggested that the United States would take military action to prevent Iran from ever acquiring a nuclear bomb.
Mr. Obama made it clear that he would not be willing to pursue a policy of “containment” on Iran, in which the United States would accept an Iranian nuclear weapon while seeking to prevent a further nuclear arms race in the Middle East.
Abandoning containment as a policy option was the result of an intense debate within the administration, and moved Washington a bit closer to the Israeli position, and it was considered by the White House to be the biggest reward they were willing to give Mr. Netanyahu during his visit. Yet Mr. Obama also made it clear that he believes now is the time to give diplomacy a chance.
But some analysts warned that the Iran crisis could heat up again if there was not much progress at the Baghdad talks. The Istanbul meetings were designed simply to determine whether Iran was serious about beginning a new round of negotiations, but in the Baghdad sessions, the United States and other countries are expected to demand that Iran begin to discuss the details of a possible deal. That would require that Iran show a willingness to compromise on its uranium enrichment program, perhaps by agreeing to halt its efforts to enrich at 20 percent, a level that is higher than is needed for civilian nuclear power.
Iran has said that its 20 percent enrichment effort is for use in a research reactor, but the United States and Israel suspect that it is actually an interim step in efforts to reach 90 percent enrichment, considered weapons-grade. If Iran does not engage in a substantive discussion of the details of its program in Baghdad, the crisis atmosphere may return.
“I think this could be a temporary lull,” said Paul R. Pillar, a former C.I.A. analyst on the Middle East. “My own expectation is that even after Baghdad, we will only see the most preliminary understandings, and we will hear again people saying we are giving up too much. And the lull right now could just be a lull between the diplomatic meetings.”

msnbc:Clash between Egypt's Islamists, military grows

Clash between Egypt's Islamists, military grows

http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/29/11459070-clash-between-egypts-islamists-military-grows?lite

CAIRO — Egypt's Islamist-dominated parliament said Sunday it was suspending sessions for a week to protest the ruling military's failure to heed repeated calls for the dismissal of the government.
Anger against the country's military rulers also spilled into the streets where a protester was killed late Saturday in a demonstration outside the Ministry of Defense. Protesters clashed for three hours with unidentified assailants supporting the military, throwing rocks, firebombs and glass bottles.
The parliament seated three months ago has been demanding it be allowed to form a Cabinet to replace the one appointed by the country's military rulers late last year. That Cabinet is headed by Prime Minister Kamal el-Ganzouri, a holdover from the era of authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak who was ousted in a popular uprising 14 months ago.
Parliament Speaker Saad el-Katatni of the powerful Muslim Brotherhood announced the suspension after lawmakers spoke in a televised session against el-Ganzouri's government and the ruling generals.

"It is my responsibility as speaker of the People's Assembly (parliament) to safeguard the chamber's dignity and that of its members. There must be a solution to this crisis," el-Katatni told lawmakers before he adjourned the session until May 6.
The legislature's move is likely to fuel tensions between the generals and the Brotherhood, which controls just under half the seats in parliament. It also brings into focus the ambiguity of parliament's actual powers at a time when the ruling generals enjoy near absolute executive powers.
Brotherhood vs military
The Brotherhood and the military are already at odds over what was widely seen as an attempt by the Brotherhood-led Islamists in parliament to dominate a 100-member panel that was to draft a new constitution.
A court disbanded the panel and consultations are under way between political parties and the ruling generals over the composition of a new panel.
Egypt's military ruler, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, has hinted in several public comments in recent weeks that the powerful military would not allow the Brotherhood to dominate the country, a response to what is widely seen as the group's hunger for power after 60 years operating illegally and subject to government crackdowns.
The credibility of the Brotherhood was dented when it announced it was fielding a candidate in presidential elections, reversing an earlier decision to stay out of the May 23-24 race. An expected runoff will be held on June 16-17 and a winner will be announced on June 21. The military has promised to hand over power by July 1.
El-Ganzouri, who is in his late 70s, served as prime minister during the 1990s under Mubarak.
Saturday night's clashes took place when the unidentified assailants set upon the protesters.
Attack on protesters
Neither army troops or police attempted to stop the street battle, witnesses said. They also reported hearing gunshots.
Many of those outside the Defense Ministry were supporters of an ultraconservative Islamist angered by his disqualification from running in next month's presidential election. Hazem Salah Abu Ismail was thrown out of the race because officials ruled his late mother had dual Egyptian-U.S. citizenship in violation of eligibility rules.
Security officials said the dead protester was one of Abu Ismail's supporters. There was no official confirmation of the protester's death, or information about how he died. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Demonstrations in Egypt have frequently been attacked by unidentified assailants, particularly protests which are near or outside the Defense Ministry.
Rights and pro-democracy activists have blamed the attacks on undercover police, petty criminals on the police payroll, plainclothes army soldiers or supporters of the ousted Mubarak regime.
Mubarak-era generals took over the reins of power when their patron stepped down in February last year. Opposition to their rule has built up after they were blamed for killing protesters, jailing critics and putting at least 10,000 civilians on trial before military tribunals.
They have also launched a systematic campaign to undermine the youth groups credited with Mubarak's stunning ouster, using the state media to portray them as irresponsible and linked to foreign powers.
"Crushing peaceful demonstrations, whether we agree with them or not, is a continuation of a regime that has not been removed yet," Egypt's top reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei wrote in his Twitter account. "Will we this time see those involved in violence brought to account whether they from inside or outside the regime?"

'This Week' Transcript: John Brennan

'This Week' Transcript: John Brennan

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/week-transcript-john-brennan/story?id=16228333&page=2

STEPHANOPOULOS: ...this morning. So you know, we know that Al Qaida pays attention to anniversaries. And security has been beefed up, especially at airports. Is there any indication that an actual plot is in the works?
BRENNAN: Well we are vigilant throughout the course of the year, but on a day that marks the one year anniversary of bin Laden being brought to justice, we are especially vigilant. At this time we don't see any active plot that is underway, but we are maintaining our guard. We are following every lead. There always are reports about Al Qaida trying to penetrate our defenses. But at this point, our counterterrorism professionals are doing their job, both here in the United States we well as abroad.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But the FBI and Homeland Security this week did say that they believe the Al Qaida affiliate in Yemen is making new efforts to target western airports.
BRENNAN: We're particularly concerned about Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula which is located in Yemen. They have demonstrated both the intent, as well as the capability to try to carry out an attack. With the underwear bomber, Christmas Day a couple years ago as well as trying to integrate an IED, Improvised Explosive Device into a printer cartridge that was going to come aboard a cargo plane here. They are continuing to try to again, carry out an attack against U.S. persons inside of Yemen, as well as against the homeland. We're working very closely with our Yemeni partners to track down all these leads. And on a regular basis...
STEPHANOPOULOS: Is it still focused on planes?
BRENNAN: Yes. Aviation has been a target -- has been a traditional target of Al Qaida. They continue to do that. 09/11 obviously they used aircraft as weapons. So we need to maintain our vigilance, clearly overseas at these last points of departure and making sure that we're doing everything that we can to work with our -- our partners internationally to -- to protect the traveling public.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Do they have the capability now to carry out anything like a 09/11 attack?
BRENNAN: Their capability has been degraded significantly. We have taken off the battlefield the founding leader as well as other leading operatives. We have degraded their infrastructure. Their capability to train. Their capability to deploy operatives. So their capability has been degraded. Our defenses have increased. But that doesn't mean we can rest. And we're not going to rest until Al Qaida the organization is destroyed and is eliminated from areas in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Africa and other areas. We're determined to do that.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Can you say one year out how much difference killing bin Laden made?
BRENNAN: I think it made a tremendous difference. It's taken away the founding leader of that organization who was symbolic -- a symbol of Al Qaida's sort of murderous agenda worldwide. And so, that has had I think a profound impact on the organization. And Mr. Zawahiri, who is his successor, is somebody who doesn't have the same sort of institutional support. He doesn't have the same charisma.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But he has taken more control than we expected, hasn't he?
BRENNAN: I think, you know, he's now at the top of the Al Qaida leadership structure. And this is something that we're determined to make sure that we're able to dismantle and destroy. So, clearly, Al Qaida has a number of different franchises worldwide. We've degraded them significantly with the help of our Pak (ph) and Afghan partners in that area, but there's a lot of work to be done yet in Yemen, as well as in areas of Africa.
STEPHANOPOULOS: When Leon Panetta left the CIA to become the secretary of defense, he said that we're, quote, "within reach of strategically defeating Al Qaida." Is that victory at hand?
BRENNAN: I don't look at it as a victory. I think, again, we have to destroy the organization. We have to take all of their operatives, their leaders, their training camps, take away their safe havens. And we're not going to rest. The president has made it very clear, we have to do everything possible to protect the American people, and the destruction of that organization is our ultimate goal.
STEPHANOPOULOS: On Friday, President Obama's campaign released a video to mark the anniversary and suggested that Osama bin Laden might be alive today had Mitt Romney been president.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
BILL CLINTON, FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: He took the harder and the more honorable path. And the one that produced, in my opinion, the best result.
WOLF BLITZER, CNN: It's not worth moving heaven and earth spending billions of dollars just trying to catch one person. He was referring to the hunt for Osama bin Laden.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
STEPHANOPOULOS: That drew, as you may know, a very sharp rebuke from Senator John McCain. Here is what he said. He said, "Shame on Barack Obama for diminishing the memory of September 11th and the killing of Osama bin Laden by turning into it a cheap political attack ad. He's doing a shameless end zone dance to help get himself reelected. No one disputes that the president deserves credit for ordering the raid, but to politicize it in this way is the height of hypocrisy." Your response?
BRENNAN: I don't do politics. I don't do the campaign. I am not a Democrat or Republican. I'm a counter-terrorism adviser to the president. All that I know is that the president made the decision when he was given the opportunity to take a gutsy decision, to carry out that raid with our Special Forces in Abbottabad, Pakistan. The president made that decision. I think the American people are, you know, clearly very appreciative and supportive of that decision. We're safer today as a result. And, therefore, all I know is that the president made the decision when he had to.
STEPHANOPOULOS: You said it was a gutsy call. Mitt Romney has said that any president would have made the same decision. Do you agree with that?
BRENNAN: All I know is that the president made the call when he needed to. And as people have said, it was a divided room as far as, you know, some of the principal sentiments on this issue were concerned.
STEPHANOPOULOS: It's been reported that the vice president, the secretary of defense, the secretary of state all against it, yet the president overrode them.
BRENNAN: There was active discussion up until the last moment on this. And there were differences of view, clearly. But the president took all that counsel, looked at what the risks were, looked at the risk (ph) to forces, the chances for a successful mission, and decided that bin Laden's removal from the battlefield was critically important to this country, both in terms of making sure that justice was meted out for the deaths of thousands of not just Americans but also people worldwide. So he made the decision when he had to.
STEPHANOPOULOS: You were right at the center, but what were you most worried about?
BRENNAN: There were -- you know, what we didn't know. We had a certain perspective as far as what the Special Forces might encounter when they got to that compound, but we didn't know whether or not there were going to be tunnels as far as bin Laden's escape route, what type of explosives might have been rigged to that compound, what our Special Forces were going to confront, how they were going to get in there and out safely. So there were a number of the details of that operation that really left many of us very nervous and anxious about the ability to carry out the mission, get bin Laden, and then also get our forces out safely.
STEPHANOPOULOS: This was a raid. Most of the attacks against Al Qaida over the last couple of years have been by unmanned drones. And they have decimated the top leadership. Are you concerned, though, that this is a technology that is now going to be exploited by our enemies? And do you stand by the statement you have made in the past that, as effective as they have been, they have not killed a single civilian? That seems hard to believe.
BRENNAN: Well, what I said was that over a period of time before my public remarks that we had no information about a single civilian, a noncombatant being killed. Unfortunately, in war, there are casualties, including among the civilian population. We've done everything possible in Afghanistan and other areas to reduce any risk to that civilian population. Unfortunately, Al Qaida burrows within these areas, you know, safe havens as well as areas where there are civilians, but we've been very, very judicious in working with our partners to try to be surgical in terms of addressing those terrorist threats. And the president has told us, we want to make sure that we protect the American people. And unfortunately, sometimes you have to take life to save lives, and that's what we've been able to do to prevent these individual terrorists from carrying out their murderous attacks.
STEPHANOPOULOS: John Brennan, thanks very much for your time this morning.
BRENNAN: Thank you, George.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

latimes:Officials: U.S. could agree to limited Iranian uranium enrichment

Officials: U.S. could agree to limited Iranian uranium enrichment

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2012/04/washington-in-a-major-concession-obama-administration-officials-say-they-could-support-allowing-iran-to-continue-a-cruci.html

In a major concession, Obama administration officials say they could support allowing Iran to continue a crucial element of its disputed nuclear program if the government in Tehran took other major steps to curb its ability to develop a nuclear bomb.

The officials told the Los Angeles Times they might agree to let Tehran continue enriching uranium up to concentrations of 5% if the Iranian government agreed to unrestricted inspections, and strict oversight and safeguards that the United Nations long has demanded.
Iran has begun enriching small amounts of uranium to 20% purity in February 2010 for what it contends are peaceful purposes, although most of its stockpile is purified at lower levels. Uranium can be used as bomb fuel at about 90% enrichment.
The question of whether to approve even low-level enrichment is highly controversial within the U.S. government and among its allies because of the risk that Iranian scientists still might be able to gain the knowledge and experience to someday build a bomb.
But a consensus has gradually emerged among U.S. and foreign officials that the Iranians are unlikely to accede to a complete halt to enrichment, and that pushing this demand could make it impossible to reach a negotiated deal to stop Iran’s program short of a military attack.
The United States and five other world powers began talks with Iran on April 14 in Istanbul to try to finally broker a deal, amid threats from Israel that it will bomb Iranian nuclear installations if the program isn’t dismantled soon. The talks are scheduled to resume in Baghdad on May 23.
The proposed shift in the U.S. position is likely to prompt strong objections from some officials in Israel, from presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, and from some members of Congress who have staked out more aggressive positions than the Obama administration.

 

msnbc:Drone attack kills six suspected militants in Pakistan school

Drone attack kills six suspected militants in Pakistan school

http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/29/11457299-drone-attack-kills-six-suspected-militants-in-pakistan-school?lite

Islamabad — A drone attack in North Waziristan, Pakistan on Sunday killed six suspected militants, including foreigners, and injured others. The attack targeted a girl’s high school in Miramshah where the militants were living.
It was the first drone attack since Pakistan demanded a complete halt, and was expected to heighten tensions between the United States and Pakistan. Both American and Pakistani officials have told NBC in recent days that the relationship is already at a low point.
Tribal sources and government officials said the militants had taken over a portion of the school and turned it into their compound and training facility.
The sources said a room where six militants were residing had been destroyed.

"The death toll could rise as over two dozen militants were residing in the school building," according to local tribesman Haji Namdar. "Fire broke out immediately after the drone attack and engulfed the building. No one can go there to help and retrieve the bodies and injured from the building as three drones are still flying over Miramshah town."
He said a number of militants had also gathered outside the school building but were unable to go in to help their fellow fighters.
Pakistani officials in recent days repeated their demand for a complete cessation of drone strikes ahead of and during a visit by U.S. Special Representative Marc Grossman to Islamabad. Grossman is leading the first senior delegation to Pakistan since relations were all but cut off in November.
The drone issue has been central to the current impasse. U.S. officials maintain they respect Pakistan's parliamentary process and wish to re-engage in a mutually-beneficial manner — including their most pressing desire to have the NATO supply lines through Pakistan re-opened — but said the U.S. reserved the right to use drones to target militants in the border area.

 

Weak Pulses

http://www.livestrong.com/article/537195-weak-pulses-in-children/

Photo Credit Keith Brofsky/Photodisc/Getty Images
It can be frightening to hear your pediatrician say that your child has a weak pulse, but there are many common causes for this symptom, including hormonal and nutrient imbalances and overexposure to some drugs and toxins. Unusual causes include congenital heart problems, artery disease and infection. Your pediatrician is best suited to diagnose and treat all symptoms that your child experiences.

 

nytimes:Remarks by Former Official Fuel Israeli Discord on Iran

Remarks by Former Official Fuel Israeli Discord on Iran

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/29/world/middleeast/yuval-diskin-criticizes-israel-government-on-iran-nuclear-threat.html?ref=world

JERUSALEM — The recently retired chief of Israel’s internal security agency accused the government of “misleading the public” about the likely effectiveness of an aerial strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, ratcheting up the criticism of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak from the country’s security establishment.  

Yuval Diskin, who retired last year as the director of Shin Bet, the Israeli equivalent of the F.B.I., said at a public forum on Friday night that he had “no faith” in the ability of the current leadership to handle the Iranian nuclear threat.
“I don’t believe in a leadership that makes decisions based on messianic feelings,” he told a gathering in Kfar Saba, a central Israeli city of 80,000. “I have observed them from up close,” he added, broadening his critique to include the handling of the Palestinian conflict as well. “I fear very much that these are not the people I’d want at the wheel.”
Analysts here say there has long been a rift between the elected leaders and the defense and intelligence professionals over the urgency of the Iran threat, the efficacy of an independent Israeli strike and its likely repercussions. But while the substance of Mr. Diskin’s case echoed that made in recent months by Meir Dagan, the former chief of the Mossad spy agency, the tone was far more blunt, biting and personal.
Coming on the heels of interviews in which the current head of the Israeli Defense Force, Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, appeared to put some distance between himself and his superiors about the effectiveness of sanctions and the rationality of the Iranian government, Mr. Diskin’s remarks triggered a response equally harsh and personal from Mr. Netanyahu’s allies. The swift response appeared to be a sign that the growing volume of an internal debate that has been simmering for months was causing concern.
Officials from the minister of transportation to the one in charge of sports — though, notably, not key members of the security cabinet — decried Mr. Diskin’s comments and questioned his motives, with some saying he was upset not to have been tapped to replace Mr. Dagan at Mossad.
“The brusque and reckless statements made by Diskin attest mainly to the man himself,” said Shalom Simhon, minister of industry, labor and trade.
“His attack on the prime minister is liable to damage the State of Israel among people wishing it ill in the international arena,” added Limor Livnat, minister of culture and sports.
The timing of the critiques of the policy on Iran was largely coincidental: Mr. Gantz spoke during the chief of staff’s traditional Independence Day round of interviews, and Mr. Diskin, having promised to stay silent for a year after his retirement, spoke as the anniversary approached.
But they came as diplomatic and economic pressures on Iran are intensifying, and some analysts said they could feed into increasing doubts among the Israeli public about the advisability of an independent strike on Iran.
Shlomo Avineri, a political scientist at Hebrew University and former director general of the Foreign Ministry, said, “This is bringing the latent disagreement, which has been there for months, into the open, and it gives steam to the public debate.”
“This all fits into the fact that there is now a serious diplomatic effort to stop the Iranians, and obviously things are moving,” he said. “Four or five months ago, an Israeli leadership could say, look, nobody’s doing anything. You can’t say that anymore.”
At the same time, there is a growing sense that Israeli elections will be called this fall rather than next year. And while Mr. Netanyahu’s popularity remains all but impenetrable, coalition politics means a robust campaign filled with charged language nonetheless.
Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian-Israeli who runs the blog Middle East Analyst, said criticism of Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Barak’s approach was growing because they were “ignoring or downplaying” their own achievements in terms of winning support from the Obama administration and the international community, and instead “obsessing with the military option.”
“Netanyahu and Barak are becoming more isolated,” Mr. Javedanfar wrote in an e-mail interview. “The avalanche of public criticism of their Iran narrative is getting bigger and gathering more momentum.” 

Though the Iranian government insists that its nuclear intentions are for civilian purposes, Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Barak have made it clear for months that they believe urgent action is needed to stop it from building a nuclear bomb. The two men are widely considered to be the key, if not lone, decision makers on the issue, but on Saturday, even as Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom expressed “faith in Barak and Netanyahu that they are handling the matter in an appropriate manner,” he made sure to reassure the public that “decisions are made by a broader forum.”  

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, a crucial member of Mr. Netanhyahu’s coalition, joined the chorus of criticism of Mr. Diskin, saying that if he did not trust the leadership, he should have quit, and that on the matter of Iran, “all the chattering needs to stop.” But Mr. Lieberman also told Channel Two that his Yisrael Beiteinu party’s “commitment to the coalition” is over, and that a decision about elections should be made within weeks.
Nahum Barnea, a columnist for the leading Israeli daily Yediot Aharanot, said he did not believe that the attacks would do significant damage to Mr. Netanyahu politically, “but he sweats.”
“I don’t underestimate the importance of it,” Mr. Barnea said. “It is exported right away to every prime minister in the world. The Iranians read it. The Americans read it.”
Many here saw Mr. Diskin’s comments on the government’s dealings with the Palestinians, which was in his direct purview, as even more significant than those on Iran. While Mr. Netanyahu has insisted that the peace process is stalled because he does not have a willing partner, Mr. Diskin declared: “This government has no interest in talking with the Palestinians, period. It certainly has no interest in resolving anything with the Palestinians, period.”
Ronen Bergman, the Israeli author of the 2008 book “The Secret War With Iran,” said that Mr. Diskin’s words carried weight because he left the government in good standing with Mr. Netanyahu — unlike Mr. Dagan, who was forced out — and because he was widely respected “for being professional and honest and completely disconnected from politics.”
Yossi Shain, a political scientist at Tel Aviv University, said he had “no doubt it erodes Netanyahu and Barak’s standing,” but noted that “it’s always a question of alternatives” and that “the center is too fragmented at this stage” to pose any real threat.

nytimes:Support From Islamists for Liberal Upends Race in Egypt

Support From Islamists for Liberal Upends Race in Egypt

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/29/world/middleeast/conservatives-in-egypt-back-liberal-to-oppose-brotherhood.html?_r=1

ABU HOMOS, Egypt — Egypt’s most conservative Islamists endorsed a liberal Islamist for president late Saturday night, upending the political landscape and confounding expectations about the internal dynamics of the Islamist movement.  

The main missionary and political groups of the ultraconservatives, known as Salafis, threw their support behind Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, a dissident former leader of the Muslim Brotherhood known for his tolerant and inclusive view of Islamic law.
The endorsement goes a long way toward making Mr. Aboul Fotouh the front-runner in a campaign that could shape the ultimate outcome of the revolt that ousted the former strongman, Hosni Mubarak.
Mr. Aboul Fotouh’s liberal understanding of Islamic law on matters of individual freedom and economic equality had already made him the preferred candidate of many Egyptian liberals.
His endorsement on Saturday by the Salafis now makes him the candidate of Egypt’s most determined conservatives, too. Known for their strict focus on Islamic law, the Salafis often talk of reviving medieval Islamic corporal punishments, restricting women’s dress and the sale of alcohol, and cracking down on heretical culture.
The decision was announced by officials of the preaching group the Salafi Call and on the Web site of its allied party, Al Nour. Neither group gave a definitive reason for their pick.
But Salafi leaders described their decision in part as a reaction against the presidential candidate of the Muslim Brotherhood, the powerful and established Islamist group that now dominates Parliament. Though more moderate than the Salafis, the Brotherhood also favors the fashioning of an explicitly Islamic democracy in Egypt, and on social and cultural issues the group is closer to the Salafis than Mr. Aboul Fotouh is.
But in television interviews on Saturday night, some Salafis said they believed the Brotherhood’s current candidate, Mohamed Morsi, was weaker than either Mr. Aboul Fotouh or the Brotherhood’s original nominee, Khairat el-Shater. Others said the group was wary of giving a monopoly on political power to the Brotherhood, which recently abandoned its pledge not to seek control of the presidency as well as the Parliament.
Abdel Moneim El Shahat, a spokesman for the Salafi group, acknowledged a big difference with Mr. Aboul Fotouh over his understanding of a verse of the Koran declaring, “There is no compulsion in religion,” which he interprets to mean that the state should not compel people to follow religious rules. But such compulsion “in reality is not possible now” in any case, Mr. Shahat said.
Leading Salafis hinted in recent days that they did not expect quick fulfillment of their goals for a state governed by Islamic law. Instead , they wanted a president who could deal with Egypt’s pressing needs while allowing them freedom to preach and advocate.
“We don’t want the sheik of Islam,” Sheikh Hassan Omar, a Salafi leader and lawmaker in the upper house of Parliament from the Delta province of Behaira, said this week as Mr. Aboul Fotouh was campaigning nearby.
But the Salafi endorsement also appeared to provide an unexpected validation for Mr. Aboul Fotouh’s argument that mixing preaching and politics would be “disastrous” for both Islam and Egypt, as he put it in an interview last week with El Rahma, a major Salafi satellite channel.
Mr. Aboul Fotouh, a physician who led the Brotherhood-dominated medical association, was a founder of a 1970s student movement that revitalized Islamist politics here. He was expelled from the Brotherhood last year for defying the decision of its leaders to bar members from running for president or engaging in politics outside its own political party.
Although the Salafis are more conservative on many cultural issues, they also typically disapprove of the Muslim Brotherhood’s emphasis on internal obedience and orthodoxy.
In recent interviews with Salafi satellite networks, Mr. Aboul Fotouh has explained that his candidacy and his expulsion from the Brotherhood are part of a larger dispute over whether in a democratic Egypt the Brotherhood should control its own political party, or instead go back to its roots in preaching and charity while its members apply their own values to political life. 

In some interviews, he has alluded to threats to the credibility of religious leaders in the unseemly day-to-day of political life, ranging from the appearance of compromises in the interest of power to more vivid embarrassments like the recent case of a Salafi lawmaker who was caught fabricating a beating by unknown assailants to cover up a nose job.  

“The overlap between what’s partisan politics and what’s missionary is disastrous for the religious mission and a disaster for the party as well,” Mr. Aboul Fotouh said of the Brotherhood in the El Rahma interview. “They will see in the future the result of this threat, which is a threat to the homeland and to religion.”
And if his conclusions often seem strikingly liberal, Mr. Aboul Fotouh also speaks fluently in the language of Salafis. He has talked at greater length and in greater detail about what Islamic law demands than the other Islamist candidates, including those of the Muslim Brotherhood, who fear alarming moderates. Among other things, he often argues that the first priorities in advancing Islamic law should be individual freedom and social justice.
Addressing a rally of thousands in this Salafi stronghold in the Nile Delta this week, he argued that Egyptian Muslims were not waiting for a president to teach them to follow their faith. They wanted a president to develop their agriculture and industry, as he said Islamic law also required.
“Whoever sleeps full while his neighbor is hungry is not a believer,” he declared, quoting the Prophet Muhammad.
Those appeals may have touched on a difference in social class between the Brotherhood and the Salafis. The Brotherhood skews to the middle and business classes; its leaders often hold advanced degrees in law, medicine or science. Its platform emphasizes business-friendly free-market economics, and Brotherhood leaders sometimes sound condescending toward the less sophisticated or less politically experienced Salafis.
Salafi politicians, on the other hand, are often local preachers close to their village constituents. And rather than selling puritanism, they practice a brand of populism that plays more on the resentments of poor Egyptians toward the cosmopolitan elite, potentially including leaders of the Brotherhood.
The Salafis also lead a broad grass-roots network of preaching and social service groups, which makes their support a powerful asset. They won about a quarter of the seats in recent parliamentary elections, and since their own standard-bearer was disqualified on a technicality about two weeks ago, they have emerged as a coveted swing vote.
Mr. Aboul Fotouh, who spent more than six years in jail for his Brotherhood leadership, brought to the competition for the Salafi vote a special authenticity. Many Salafi leaders came out of the Islamist student movement that Mr. Aboul Fotouh led in the 1970s, before he and some others from the student group joined and revitalized the Brotherhood.
In another appearance on the channel El Rahma, he laughed out loud at a request to introduce himself to Salafi viewers.
“Some of these leaders I hold dear since the days of the 1970s,” he said. “One of them was joking with me and said to me, ‘We will never forget, sir, that you were our emir,’ which is the term we used to use in the ’70s. So it’s impossible to say the Salafi movement doesn’t know Dr. Abdel Moneim!”

CNN:Is the core of al Qaeda on its last legs?

Is the core of al Qaeda on its last legs?

http://security.blogs.cnn.com/2012/04/27/is-the-core-of-al-qaeda-on-its-last-legs/?hpt=hp_bn2

No one is writing al Qaeda's obituary yet. But one year after its leader Osama bin Laden was shot dead by U.S. commandos, U.S. officials and experts say the terror network's core group holed up in Pakistan is hemorrhaging and could be in its final days.
CNN National Security Analyst Peter Bergen, for one, maintains that al Qaeda - at least its components based in south central Asia - is in terrible shape.
"Their record of failure speaks for itself: No success in the west since the London attacks of 2005, no attacks in the United States since 9/11 (2001), almost the entire top leadership dead or captured," said Bergen.
Adds Robert Grenier, the former head of the CIA's Counterterrorism Center, "The movement has essentially been marginalized."
And a senior U.S. official describes al Qaeda as "largely in survival mode, putting most of its energy into coping with the losses and changes of the last year with a disjointed focus on global jihad."
Ayman al-Zawahiri replaced bin Laden at the helm, but by most all accounts he is a shadow of the cult-like figure of bin Laden.

According to the U.S. official, al-Zawahiri "lacks the charisma of his predecessor and his messages lack the inspiration that was bin Laden's hallmark."
In al-Zawahiri's defense, "He inherited a bit of a lemon" - an organization in decline - "and he's not making lemonade out of it," said Bergen, who has just written a book entitled, "Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for Bin Laden from 9/11 to Abbottabad."
Related: Who's dead, captured and still most wanted?
Last July, then CIA Director Leon Panetta said that with bin Laden dead, the United States was "within reach of strategically defeating al Qaeda." He went on to say that the group's remaining leaders were on the run, and it was time "to put maximum pressure on them because... we really can cripple al Qaeda as a threat."
One of the tools being used, to this end, are missiles launched by unmanned CIA aircraft against members of al Qaeda and other terrorist groups operating from the tribal areas of Pakistan.
While the pace has waned since the May 2011 bin Laden raid, drone strikes have been central to the strategy of President Barack Obama's administration - as evidenced by a dramatic increase since he took office.
Fran Townsend, a CNN National Security Contributor who was President George W. Bush's counterterrorism advisor when these attacks were first launched in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan, called them "very effective in making it difficult for (terrorists) to communicate, travel, plan and train."
She added that she feels it is crucial the drone program doesn't become a bargaining chip in U.S.-Pakistan relations.
That relationship - which has been tension-filled for years - spiraled downward in 2011, after U.S. forces' secret raid into Pakistan to take out bin Laden and a later attack on Pakistani troops near the Afghanistan border that left 24 dead. U.S. officials characterized the latter attack as an accident.
The Pakistani parliament recently recommended to its government leaders that they clamp down further on U.S. activities within their borders, including the drone program.
There are no sure bets what comes out of back-room discussions among government, military and intelligence officials from both countries that could ultimately shape the U.S. approach going forward.
But U.S. officials and experts generally said they expect drone strikes to continue.
Rep. Mike Rogers, a Michigan Republican and chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, would not discuss the drone program specifically, but he was adamant that "the United States should not give in on anything that we do to disrupt attacks to the homeland. To me any of those options are just non-negotiable."
Senior U.S. officials told CNN's Elise Labott that Pakistanis have some part in the drone program, and they're not preventing or saying anything about strikes going after high-value targets. And the officials said U.S. forces are still committed to going after targets they feel pose a threat.
"The program is going to continue in some way, shape or form irregardless of whether we reach some firm new agreement with the Pakistanis," added Grenier.
That's because - even as many key players have gone deeper underground since the bin Laden raid, making it more challenging to organize a spectacular 9/11-type attack - officials and experts insist al Qaeda remains a threat in the region.
"Lower level(al Qaeda) fighters are already joining other militant groups in Pakistan-locals and foreigners-to plot against the West," said the senior U.S. official. "The reality is that Pakistan remains a permissive environment for terrorism."
For that reason, the United States must keep the pressure on, said Townsend.
"It's not over, because they've got money and they've got some capability, and all they really need to regenerate is time and space," she said, pointing to the possibility al Qaeda could find another safe haven where it can operate freely to plot attacks and train recruits.
Experts are quick to note that, while the capabilities of the al Qaeda organization in and around Pakistan and Afghanistan seem to have diminished, its offshoots in places like Yemen and North Africa are alive and well.
"The greatest threat right now is with the affiliates," the U.S. official said. "A diffused enemy is not less of a concern."
While al-Zawahiri and his core cohorts aren't necessarily directing these affiliates' day-to-day actions, Grenier said the links between the arms of al Qaeda are "important from a psychological and motivational standpoint, to the extent al Qaeda ... is able to present itself publicly as a united front."
Deputy Director of National Intelligence Robert Cardillo predicts that al Qaeda will be in a transitional period over the next two to three years, becoming more decentralized as its regional affiliates launch "the bulk of the terrorist attacks."
"We also believe multiple voices will provide inspiration for the movement and that there will be vigorous debate about local versus global jihad within and among the terrorist organizations," Cardillo added.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, based in Yemen, is the affiliate the intelligence community worries most about, said a senior U.S. counterterrorism official.
"We are convinced they continue to plot against us ... (and) their propaganda is both widespread and effective," the official said.
Bergen sees the potential for Yemen to become the next main sanctuary for al Qaeda, much like Afghanistan was prior to the U.S. invasion, following the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
"Yemen is the nearest analogue to Afghanistan in the Arabian world, topographically, (with a) lack of government control, heavily weaponized ... all of those things," Bergen said.
That's very disturbing to Rogers, the Michigan congressman, as is the fact al-Zawahiri remains at large.
"We have al Qaeda actually holding ground in Yemen. And the number two guy who was with (bin Laden) from the very beginning, al-Zawahiri, is still out providing guidance and orders and they're looking for attacks," said Rogers. "The disruption of (drone) attacks is going along very well. But ... we shouldn't fool ourselves that this is a fight that's over."
Although most officials have said the degradation of al Qaeda's core has virtually eliminated the possibility of a catastrophic attack against the United States, they don't completely rule it out. And there is still the concern about smaller scale or "lone wolf" attacks.
That has left many in the U.S. national security apparatus adopting what Grenier calls a 1% doctrine.
"If there is a 1% chance it could happen, you have to treat it as though it were a near certainty," he said.

 

Saturday, April 28, 2012

washpost:Al-Qaeda is weaker without bin Laden, but its franchise persists

Al-Qaeda is weaker without bin Laden, but its franchise persists

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/manhunt-details-us-mission-to-find-osama-bin-laden/2012/04/27/gIQAz5pLoT_story.html?hpid=z1

As U.S. helicopters approached in darkness a year ago, Osama bin Laden was woefully unprepared: no means of escape, no way to destroy files, no succession plan.

But U.S. intelligence analysts scouring the trove of data he left behind continue to find evidence that al-Qaeda was making provisions for the long term, plans that in some cases remain on track.

Among the previously undisclosed records is a lengthy paper by bin Laden’s successor, Ayman al-Zawahiri, laying out the al-Qaeda strategy for Afghanistan in the years after the United States withdraws, current and former U.S. officials said.
Other files show that through his couriers, bin Laden was in touch not only with al-Qaeda’s established affiliates but also with upstarts being groomed for new alliances. Among them was Nigeria’s Boko Haram, a group that has since embraced al-Qaeda and adopted its penchant for suicide attacks.
Tracing clues in the trove against developments of the past year has been a focal point for U.S. counterterrorism officials seeking to assess what has become of al-Qaeda since the U.S. Navy SEAL raid on bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
The emerging picture is of a network that is crumpled at its core, apparently incapable of an attack on the scale of Sept. 11, 2001, yet poised to survive its founder’s demise.
U.S. officials have debated “since bin Laden’s death what is the trajectory of this organization and when will we know that we’ve actually defeated it,” a senior U.S. counterterrorism official said.
The answer so far is split.
“The organization that brought us 9/11 is essentially gone,” said the official, among several who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss U.S. intelligence assessments of al-Qaeda with reporters a year after bin Laden was killed. “But the movement . . . the ideology of the global jihad, bin Laden’s philosophy — that survives in a variety of places outside Pakistan.”
That assessment is considerably more measured than some that were offered in the afterglow of the raid in Abbottabad. Most notably, Leon E. Panetta, after leaving his post as CIA director to become secretary of defense, said he was “convinced that we’re within reach of strategically defeating al-Qaeda.”
That prospect seemed to grow more tantalizing through the remainder of last year, as CIA drones picked apart al-Qaeda’s upper ranks.
Among those killed in the flurry of strikes were Ilyas Kashmiri, an operative bin Laden tasked with finding a way to kill President Obama, and Atiyah Abdul Rahman, who was in day-to-day charge of al-Qaeda and served as the main link between bin Laden and the network he built.
When a CIA drone killed Anwar al-Awlaki, the U.S.-born cleric accused of helping al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen plot attacks, even the network’s most aggressive franchise seemed suddenly vulnerable.
Since then, however, the momentum has slowed, and al-Qaeda has maneuvered past problems that U.S. officials hoped would hasten its demise. Zawahiri, for example, has defied predictions that he would fail to hold al-Qaeda together without bin Laden to safeguard the brand.

U.S. officials still describe Zawa­hiri as a divisive figure who lacks bin Laden’s charisma. He is “less compelling,” Robert Cardillo, deputy director of national intelligence, said in a conference call with reporters to discuss the status of al-Qaeda. The group’s followers “will not offer and have not offered [Zawahiri] the deference provided bin Laden.”
Still, no rivals to Zawahiri have emerged. And instead of coping with defections, Zawahiri has added groups to the al-Qaeda fold.

“I don’t think he’s been the disaster people expected,” said Bruce Hoffman, a counterterrorism expert at Georgetown University. Noting that al-Shabab, a militant group in Somalia, formally joined al-Qaeda just two months ago, Hoffman said, “terrorist groups don’t hitch themselves to falling stars.”
Under Zawahiri, a bespectacled physician from Egypt, al-Qaeda has made subtle strategic shifts. He is seen as less preoccupied than bin Laden with mounting large-scale attacks against the United States, instead emphasizing regional struggles at a time when that message is more likely to resonate with Muslims in the Middle East.
By necessity, Zawahiri has narrowed al-Qaeda’s short-term ambitions. Unable to point to a sequel to the Sept. 11 attacks, Zawahiri has sought to find victories in the course of world events.
In his taped messages, Zawahiri has depicted the pending U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, budget cuts for the Defense Department and even the Arab Spring as evidence of America’s “shrinking and retreat.”
“He’s trying to jump on the bandwagon,” said Bruce Riedel, a former CIA analyst and terrorism expert at the Brookings Institution. Zawahiri has “gotten the endorsements of the entire global al-Qaeda empire,” Riedel said, but he presides over a core that has been “staggered and set back.”
As a result, U.S. counterterrorism officials are increasingly focused on a roster of regional affiliates. “Those groups, in total, will surpass the core al-Qaeda remaining in Pakistan,” Cardillo said.
Several have showed renewed strength over the past year.
The network’s once-dormant franchise in Iraq has carried out a string of deadly attacks across the country. It has also reversed smuggling routes that used to bring fighters and weapons in through Syria but are now being used to export violence to the uprising against that country’s president, Bashar al-Assad.
In North Africa, al-Qaeda’s franchise has made millions of dollars through kidnappings and other criminal enterprises, U.S. officials said, and is now using the money to stock up on weapons that have flowed out of Libya after dictator Moammar Gaddafi was overthrown.
Still, it is al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen that “we’re most worried about, the affiliate we spend the most time on,” said the senior U.S. counterterrorism official. “They’re operating in the midst of essentially an insurgency, a multi-polar struggle for the control of Yemen. And that allows them the opportunity to recruit, to fundraise, to plot.”
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, as the Yemen-based group is known, has fused itself with a regional insurgency that has seized large portions of the country’s southern provinces over the past year.
The United States has responded by escalating a covert campaign of airstrikes by the CIA and the U.S. military’s Joint Special Operations Command. Earlier this month, Obama gave the agency and JSOC expanded authority to conduct strikes against targets that appear to be part of AQAP, even if the identities of those who could be killed is unknown.
AQAP is tied to the most recent major attacks on U.S. targets, including the mailing of parcels packed with explosives to addresses in Chicago in 2010, as well as the failed attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner on Christmas Day in 2009.
AQAP has devoted more of its recent energies to regional ambitions — a shift that U.S. counterterrorism officials attribute to opportunism as well as bin Laden’s death.
“It doesn’t mean they’ve abandoned their global jihadist intentions,” the U.S. counterterrorism official said. “But they are more focused on their local situation partly so they can free up time and space, so that in the future they can take up the mantle again of the global jihad.”