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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (56)10/26/2001 4:41:49 AM
From: Scoobah  Respond to of 32591
 
Bahrain is showing promise, based on that report;

Arafat and his henchmen continue unabated:
Sharon will wait for someone to kill Arafat, then deal with a more moderate successor.

Friday, October 26, 2001 Cheshvan 9, 5762 Israel Time: 10:36 (GMT+2)

haaretzdaily.com


07:19 26/10/2001 Last update - 10:05 26/10/2001


IDF kills three attempting to infiltrate Gaza Strip settlement

By Amos Harel, Ha'aretz Correspondent, Ha'aretz Service and Agencies




The Israel Defense Forces killed three Palestinian gunmen early Friday morning after they attempted to infiltrate the Gaza Strip settlement of Dugit.

The Palestinians attempted to cut the fence of the settlement, setting off an alarm system. IDF troops from the Givati Brigade arrived at the scene, confronted the armed infiltrators and killed three of them. A fourth suspect managed to escape.

After conducting searches in the area, the army said it assumed the fourth man had managed to escape back into Palestinian controlled territory.

Hamas took responsibility for the incident. IDF sources said the three infiltrators had been dressed in military clothing and that the IDF brigade had found Kalachnikov assault rifles and large quantities of ammunition at the scene.

Dugit is situated in the northern Gaza Strip near the settlement of Alei Sinai, where last month armed Palestinians managed to infiltrate the settlement and kill two people.

No Israelis were injured in the current incident.

Palestinians also fired a mortar shell at a settlement in the northern Gaza Strip; no injuries were reported.

Force 17 member killed in Bethlehem

Palestinian sources reported that a member of the elite Force 17, Farid abu Jallah, was killed early Friday morning during a gunbattle with IDF troops in the Aida refugee camp near the West Bank town of Bethlehem.

Earlier, Palestinians reported that two other members of their security forces had been injured during the exchange of fire that lasted a number of hours.

Palestinian sources also said that IDF troops had entered the village of Awarta, near the West Bank city of Nablus and arrested a number of people suspected of carrying out shooting attacks on Israeli vehicles. The IDF has closed off the town.



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (56)10/26/2001 8:51:57 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Why Arafat is not responding ??

The issue was raised by Sen. Gordon Smith,
who criticized the Bush administration's
insistence that Israel pull out.

He said he was certain the United States
would pursue terrorists at least as vigorously
as Israel has.

Powell, meanwhile, said President George W.
Bush had sent Arafat a letter over the weekend
insisting on the arrest of the assassins of
Israeli Tourism Minister Rehavam Ze'evi Oct.
17.

A White House spokesman, Sean McCormack,
said Arafat had not replied.

jpost.com



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (56)11/8/2001 8:43:26 PM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Bush Administration Puts Arafat on Notice

9 November: In one of Washington’s most dramatic policy turnarounds in half a century, President George W. Bush has announced that a Middle East peace is not a prerequisite for winning the war against terror.

“There’s no doubt in my mind,” he said, in a joint appearance with visiting British prime minister Tony Blair November 8. “We’ll bring al Quaeda to justice, peace or no peace in the Middle East.”

The US president thus abandoned the diplomatic campaign to buy Arab support for his world war on terror in the coin of a Middle East settlement, announcing he was going ahead with or without the Arabs.

DEBKAfile’s political analysts term this policy somersault a mortal blow to US relations with the Arab world and a turning point in the ties between Washington and Jerusalem.

It also devalues the various European Middle East mediation initiatives hinging on major Israeli concessions to the Palestinians and takes negates the accommodationist policies espoused by Israeli foreign minister Shimon Peres and his left-wing following.

But the worst drubbing of all, the US president reserved for Yasser Arafat in person.

It was articulated clearly and curtly by his national security adviser Condoleezza Rice in a statement in Washington Thursday.

President Bush will not see Yasser Arafat at the United Nations this weekend, she said, believing the Palestinian leader does not take seriously the US war on terrorism and the al Qaeda terror network.

”There are responsibilities that come with being the representative of the Palestinian people, “ she pointed out. “And that means to make certain that you do everything you can to lower the level of violence, everything that you can to root out terrorists.”

Those sentences are interpreted by DEBKAfile’s Middle East sources as a message to Arafat that the United States no longer regards him as a political leader with the requisite attributes for representing the Palestinian people - a blunt threat to Arafat’s leadership.

To sharpen the message, Rice continued: “You cannot help us with al Qaeda and hug Hizballah – that’s not acceptable – or Hamas. The president continues to make that clear to Mr. Arafat and there are no plans to meet with Mr. Arafat in New York.”

Ms. Rice with those words incidentally confirmed what DEBKAfile has been reporting in the last 11 months, that Arafat has established a covert partnership with the Hizballah for collusion in terrorist operations against Israel. By this relationship, the Palestinian leader placed himself in range as a target in the American war on terror.

Now the Americans have put him on notice; he must at this twelfth hour change his ways, drop his ties with terrorist groups such as Hizballah and suppress the Hamas, the Jihad Islami and the Front for the Liberation of Palestinian, or else he and the Palestinian people will take the consequences.

That ultimatum is meant not only for Arafat’s ears, but also for Syrian president Bashar Assad, who explains to the Americans that the Hizballah is only a popular liberation movement; and for Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri, who the day before refused a US demand to freeze Hizballah assets in Beirut banks.

That ultimatum has cleared the way for the United States to take its anti-terror war to Lebanon and fight all those who “hug” terrorist organizations.

The Bush statement and its follow-up by Rice are Washington’s reply to moderate Arab rulers, such as those of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, who made their backing for America’s war on terror conditional on a precise definition of the term terrorist and on a Middle East settlement acceptable to the Arabs.

Those rulers, out of a natural concern to preserve their own regimes, have stalwartly refused to let their domestic terrorist groups be defined as terrorist and therefore fit targets for the US-led war on terror.

The Bush administration has now short-circuited their maneuvers and put them on notice alongside Yasser Arafat.