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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (15510)6/14/2007 10:15:35 PM
From: sea_urchin  Respond to of 22250
 
Crimson > "Ultimately, the Palestinians are going to have to sort out their politics and figure out which pathway they want to pursue — the pathway toward two states living peaceably side-by-side, or whether this sort of chaos is going to become a problem."

That's a joke if ever there was -- two-states living peaceably side-by-side is a fairy tale. The more the violence (within reason, of course) the more Izzy loves it. Then there's no chance of negotiations or peace and that mythical two-state solution nonsense disappears over the horizon.

Meanwhile, the Palestinians are further than ever from any negotiation process with Israel. Indeed, it's touch and go that the rift between Fatah and Hamas will not be permanent and the Palestinians will therefore remain in a condition of quasi civil war for a very long time. As far as the Zionists are concerned, however, this can hardly be considered to be a mess but a victory -- and all by remote control.



To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (15510)6/15/2007 1:08:10 PM
From: Brasco One  Respond to of 22250
 
why Failmore?? Car bomb kills NATO soldier, 5 children By FISNIK ABRASHI, Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 6 minutes ago


KABUL, Afghanistan - A suicide car bomber targeting a NATO convoy Friday in southern Afghanistan killed 10 people, including five children and a Dutch soldier, amid a fresh wave of violence that also left more than 24 militants dead, officials said.

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In the east, another coalition member was killed in a battle early Friday.

The car bombing in Tirin Kot in Uruzgan province targeted a NATO convoy but killed the children as well as the Dutch soldier, said Dutch Defense Minister Eimert van Middelkoop.

Four Afghan men were also killed, said Gen. Abdul Qasem Khan, the provincial police chief.

Three Dutch troops and seven Afghan civilians, including two women, were wounded when the bomber drove a car out of a side street in Tirin Kot and detonated the bomb near a Dutch armored car, officials said.

Some 2,000 Dutch troops are involved in a reconstruction mission in southern Afghanistan. It was the second time a Dutch soldier was killed here and the seventh Dutch fatality since the mission began in August. Three died in air accidents, one in an armored car crash and another in an apparent suicide.

"This cowardly attack shows what kind of enemy we are faced with," said Van Middelkoop. "An enemy who just wants to kill, whether it be soldiers or children."

Purported Taliban spokesmen have warned civilians to stay away from military convoys, but suicide bombings commonly kill or wound far more civilians than the intended military targets.

Violence has spiked in Afghanistan in recent weeks. More than 2,300 people have died in insurgency-related violence this year, according to an Associated Press count based on figures from U.S., NATO, U.N. and Afghan officials.

Much of it has been focused on the southern province of Helmand, where a coalition and Afghan patrol was attacked by militants near Sangin district Thursday. The troops fired back and called in airstrikes.

"More than two dozen enemy fighters were estimated killed during the nine-hour battle and there are no reports of Afghan civilian injuries," a statement said.

In neighboring Zabul province, coalition and Afghan troops "killed a few militants" and detained three others Friday in a raid on a compound in Shahjoy district, the coalition said. During a brief firefight at the compound, two civilians were caught in the crossfire. One teenager died of gunshot wounds and another boy was wounded.

Also in Zabul, militants attacked a joint coalition and Afghan patrol with machine-gun fire and rocket-propelled grenades near the village of Baylogh in Daychopan district Thursday. A "few enemy fighters" were killed in the five-hour firefight, a statement said.

In eastern Afghanistan, a coalition service member was killed in a clash in Paktika province Friday, the coalition said. The soldier's nationality was not released, but most troops in the east are American.

Elsewhere, U.S.-led troops fired at a group of militants who were setting up a rocket in Shah Wali Kot district, Kandahar province, killing several militants and destroying their vehicle, another coalition statement said.

In Belgium, the NATO allies agreed to deploy more trainers with the Afghan army, aiming to build it up so it can eventually replace the 50,000 international troops here.

But the offer fell short of requirements and NATO's top diplomat joined Afghanistan's defense minister in urging a greater commitment from allied governments.

NATO commanders are seeking to deploy almost 50 teams with about 50 military experts each who can integrate into Afghan units and provide in-field training as they battle insurgents.

At a meeting of NATO defense ministers, France offered to form three such units. Italy, Canada, Latvia, Poland, Romania and Slovakia also stepped forward. NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said those offers would bring the total to almost 30.

Afghan Defense Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak said an eventual handover to local forces was the only way to sustain long-term security in the country. "We do not want to be a permanent burden on the international community," he told reporters. "We want to stand on our own two feet."

The Afghan army currently numbers about 50,000 and but is due to increase to 70,000 by the end of 2008. Training facilities are being expanded to accommodate up to 3,000 new recruits monthly, in contrast to about 600 at the moment.

However, NATO officers say the army can field only about 20,000 soldiers at any one time, and that low salaries and poor morale contribute to a 40 percent desertion rate from the force. NATO planners acknowledge international troops will need to stay for the foreseeable future. The alliance has raised its troop levels to almost 40,000 and the United States maintains about 13,000 troops in a separate counterinsurgency force.

___

Associated Press writers Mike Corder in The Hague, Netherlands, and Paul Ames in Brussels, Belgium, contributed to this report.



To: Crimson Ghost who wrote (15510)6/15/2007 7:25:06 PM
From: Brasco One  Respond to of 22250
 
your people caught!! Britons jailed over al Qaeda plot to bomb NYSE By Michael Holden
Fri Jun 15, 8:25 AM ET


LONDON (Reuters) - Seven Britons linked to a plot to blow up U.S. financial institutions, including the New York Stock Exchange, and stage a series of attacks in Britain were jailed for a total of 136 years by a London court on Friday.

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Prosecutors said the men were part of a group headed by senior al Qaeda operative Dhiren Barot and described as "one of the most dangerous and ambitious terrorist cells ever to operate in this country."

Barot is currently serving a life jail term after admitting last year he had planned bomb attacks in Britain and the United States.

Six of the men, Mohammed Naveed Bhatti, Junade Feroze, Zia Ul Haq, Abdul Aziz Jalil, Nadeem Tarmohamed and Omar Abdur Rehman pleaded guilty to conspiring with Barot to cause explosions between 2001 and 2004.

The seventh, Qaisar Shaffi, was found guilty on Wednesday.

Barot, a Muslim convert, was considered by some U.S. officials to be either al Qaeda's cell leader in Europe or at least the head of bin Laden's organization in Britain.

In early 2001, he had carried out surveillance on the NYSE, Citigroup, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and Prudential in New York, Washington, and Newark, New Jersey.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, he turned his attention to Britain and had plotted coordinated attacks using a radioactive "dirty bomb," limousines filled with gas cylinders and the blowing up of an underground train beneath the River Thames.

Had their plans come to fruition, Barot's trial judge said they would have caused "carnage and butchery ... on a colossal and unprecedented scale."

His seven accomplices had helped put the plans together and scope out targets.

Peter Clarke, head of London's Counter Terrorism Command, said the men were vital to the plots.

"They were the planning team and were needed by Barot to contribute expertise in areas that he was lacking," he said.

"They were the trusted few who researched, carried out reconnaissance and supported Barot."

At Woolwich Crown Court in south London, Feroze was jailed for 22 years; Bhatti and Tarmohamed to 20 years; Ul Haq to 18 years; Jalil to 26 years; Rehman and Shaffi to 15 years.

Last month, the High Court cut Barot's jail term from 40 to 30 years after it was ruled the initial sentence was too harsh.