Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations
by the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs
Subscribe
Via Smartphone |
July 12, 2011
In-Depth Issues:
Gas Pipeline from Egypt Sabotaged Again (AP-Washington Post)
Masked gunmen blew up a terminal of the Egyptian natural gas pipeline to Israel and Jordan on Tuesday in the fourth such attack since the fall of the Mubarak regime on Feb. 11.
See also Egypt to Be Sued for $8 Billion Over Gas Pipeline Interruptions - Jonathan Ferziger (Bloomberg)
Shareholders of East Mediterranean Gas Co. will take legal action against Egypt, seeking more than $8 billion in damages for interruptions in the natural gas supply from Egypt to Israel, Nimrod Novik, a member of the EMG board, said Monday.
Syria's Army Is Key to the Country's Future - Michael Eisenstadt and Jeffrey White (Washington Institute for Near East Policy)
If current trends persist in Syria, the regime may be forced to deploy army units that are unable or unwilling to continue the brutal crackdown.
So far the regime has relied primarily on select, largely Alawite security forces for violent suppression actions. These units have functioned as "fire brigades," rushing from one hot spot to another.
Given that the security forces have been unable to suppress the demonstrations and mounting civil resistance, the regular army may eventually be called on to play a greater role.
As the situation stands now, the opposition seems to be gaining strength, the regime has few additional resources to call on and lacks the flexibility to adapt, and strains on the security forces are only increasing with the passage of time.
Michael Eisenstadt is director of the Washington Institute's Military and Security Studies Program. Jeffrey White is a defense fellow at the Institute.
Peace Index: 3/4 of Israeli Jews Pessimistic on Peace (Tel Aviv University-Israel Democracy Institute)
According to the June 2011 Peace Index survey of Israeli public opinion, 73% of Jews do not believe that negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority will lead to peace in the coming years.
When asked if they favored having Israel evacuate all the territories in return for a permanent peace treaty with the Palestinians, 70% of Israeli Jews were opposed, while 26% supported this.
When asked if they favored having Israel evacuate the territories except for the large settlement blocs in return for a permanent peace treaty with the Palestinians, 61% of Israeli Jews were opposed, while 32% supported this.
Time Is on Whose Side? - Doron S. Ben-Atar (Jerusalem Post)
Recent demographic studies contradict the demographic timebomb thesis. Arab birth rates are declining sharply, whereas Jewish ones are on the rise.
Moreover, the withdrawal from Gaza means that if Israel established sovereignty over the entire West Bank, Arabs would constitute only about 30% of the newly formed body politic.
The writer is a history professor at Fordham University.
Daily Alert Blog
Search
Key Links
Media Contacts
Back Issues
Fair Use/Privacy
- U.S. Accuses Syria of Unleashing Mob Attacks on U.S., French Embassies - Brian Bennett and Borzou Daragahi
The Obama administration angrily accused Syrian authorities of instigating attacks on the U.S. and French embassies in Damascus on Monday. U.S. Marine guards fired multiple volleys of tear gas, but pro-government demonstrators were able to climb a fence, scale the roof of an embassy building, knock out security cameras, smash windows and raise a Syrian flag, U.S. officials said. Syrian soldiers stood by and did not help disperse the crowd. Protesters tried to break into the French mission with a battering ram, and three employees were hurt. (Los Angeles Times)
See also Syrians Incited to Attack Western Embassies - Liz Sly and Joby Warrick
According to one State Department official, the demonstrations were staged after a program broadcast Sunday on the private pro-government al-Dunia television network, owned by Rami Makhlouf, Assad's tycoon cousin. In the program, Syrians were urged to express their anger at the U.S. and French ambassadors' visits to Hama. Protesters arrived in buses. (Washington Post)
See also Clinton: Assad Is Not Indispensible
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Monday: "The United States strongly condemns Syria's failure to protect diplomatic facilities in Damascus, including the American and French embassies and our ambassador's residence....The Assad regime will not succeed in deflecting the world's attention from the real story unfolding in Syria...the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people for dignity, universal rights, and the rule of law."
"President Assad is not indispensible, and we have absolutely nothing invested in him remaining in power. Our goal is to see that the will of the Syrian people for a democratic transformation occurs." (State Department) - Mediators Unable to Break Deadlock on Restarting Israeli-Palestinian Talks
The U.S. and its partners in the international diplomatic Quartet on the Middle East failed on Monday to reach agreement on how to restart Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. A senior U.S. official said significant gaps are still impeding progress among both the mediators and the parties themselves. (AP-Washington Post) - Witness: U.S. Activist Death in Israel Was Accident - Jaafar Ashtiyeh
A key witness in a civil case brought by the family of U.S. activist Rachel Corrie, killed by an Israeli bulldozer during a demonstration in Gaza in 2003, said on Sunday that she had caused her own death. Retired Col. Pinhas Zuaretz, a former brigade commander in Gaza, said a military police investigation found no fault with the behavior of the bulldozer driver or the officers supervising him.
He said the massive, armored D9 bulldozer was demolishing buildings from which shots had been fired at Israeli soldiers in a highly dangerous zone near the Gaza-Egypt border. He said the bulldozer operator did not see Corrie because she was behind a pile of rubble, and that a concrete pillar among the debris had struck and killed her. "She was killed in an accident caused by her own negligence," he said. (AFP)
- Ya'alon: September Is All About Scare Tactics - Attila Somfalvi
In an interview on Monday, Vice Prime Minister and Minister for Strategic Affairs Moshe Ya'alon said that even Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is not interested in a UN declaration of the establishment of a Palestinian state. "He knows what it means to deal with Hamas without IDF assistance," he said. "Abbas would not wish for an operative decision in the UN that impedes the IDF's freedom of action in the West Bank." Ya'alon admitted that he didn't know if negotiations would resume or not: "In certain conditions he may join negotiations, but those conditions shouldn't be Israeli concessions."
As for relations with Turkey, Ya'alon noted that the pressure was on the Turks. "The [UN] Palmer report doesn't benefit the Turks. That's hard for Erdogan to accept. I told the Turks outright: 'We have nothing to apologize for in light of provocations from a Turkish organization which could have been stopped by the Turkish government.' I suggest that we stand firm, we have no reason to fold." (Ynet News) - Prime Minister Netanyahu Meets with Greek President Papoulias
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Greek President Karolos Papoulias on Monday and thanked him for Greece's great help during the Carmel wildfire and in stopping the flotilla.
Regarding the negotiations with the Palestinian Authority, Prime Minister Netanyahu said that he was ready to sit down with the Palestinians tomorrow morning and begin direct negotiations and expressed his regrets that they were refusing. (Prime Minister's Office) - Israel Offers Cyprus Aid After Blast - Herb Keinon
Prime Minister Netanyahu directed all the relevant bodies Monday to give any aid to Cyprus that Nicosia might request, following a massive blast at a naval base there that killed 12 people, wounded 62, and knocked out the island's main power station. The blast was caused when confiscated Iranian armaments stored at the base exploded. (Jerusalem Post)
- Iran's Nuclear Threat Is Escalating - British Foreign Secretary William Hague
On 8 June, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, Fereydoun Abbasi Davani, announced plans to triple Iran's capacity to produce 20% enriched uranium, making even clearer the fact that Iran's nuclear program is not designed for purely peaceful purposes. Since civilian nuclear power stations need uranium enriched to about 3.5% for fuel, plans to enrich any further rightly prompt questions.
Enrichment from natural uranium to 20% is the most time-consuming and resource-intensive step in making the highly-enriched uranium required for a nuclear weapon. When enough 20% enriched uranium is accumulated, it would take only two or three months of additional work to convert this into weapons-grade material. (Guardian-UK) - The New Flare-Up between Israel and Lebanon Over Gas - Jacques Neriah
The potential oil and gas fields off the Lebanese and Israeli coasts look set to become a source of conflict in the years ahead. The maritime border between Israel and Lebanon has never been delineated because the two states are still formally at war. The area has also become a potential theater of confrontation between Israel and Hizbullah.
Hizbullah already boasts an amphibious warfare unit trained in underwater sabotage and coastal infiltration. Its ability to target shipping - and possibly offshore oil and gas platforms - was exposed in the war with Israel in 2006 when Hizbullah came close to sinking an Israeli missile boat with an Iranian version of the Chinese C-802 missile.
Prime Minister Netanyahu has declared that the offshore gas fields were a "strategic objective that Israel's enemies will try to undermine" and vowed that "Israel will defend its resources." Any damage incurred due to Hizbullah's activities would generate retaliation aimed against the infrastructure of the Lebanese state. (Institute for Contemporary Affairs-Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs) - Misconceptions about the Palestinian Bid for UN Recognition in September - Yonatan Touval
The UN will not vote on recognition of a Palestinian state because it can't. According to international law, only states can recognize other states. The Palestinians are unlikely to declare their independence any time soon. They have stated they have no intention of declaring a state absent a final-status agreement.
While it is possible for the Palestinians to seek full membership in the UN, it is hard to see how they could do so without first declaring statehood (which they are loathe to do). While states need not necessarily be members of the UN - classic examples are Taiwan today or Switzerland until 2002 - only states can become full members of the UN. The international community should do its utmost to spare the Palestinians an awkward letdown at the UN this September. (Ha'aretz)
- A meeting of the Quartet on Monday saw yet another effort to drag the unwilling parties back to the negotiating table. Yet with the Middle East in turmoil, starting a new round of Israeli-Palestinian talks is completely pointless.
- Some European diplomats cling to the idea that the Palestinian issue remains at the heart of the instability in the Middle East. But that is a theological position that can only be upheld by resolutely ignoring actual events. If there is one thing that the uprisings across the Middle East have in common, it is that they have very little to do with the Palestinians.
- The main bearing that the Arab spring has had on the Palestinian issue is to change the calculations of both sides to the conflict, in ways that make them even less likely to risk negotiating a peace settlement.
- It is simply too risky for the leadership of Fatah, the Palestinian faction in control of the West Bank, to enter into tortuous negotiations with the Israelis that will inevitably lead to accusations that they are selling out their own people.
- Israel's regional policy was built around a peace treaty with Egypt, cordial relations with Turkey, a cold peace with Syria and a shared interest with Saudi Arabia in the containment of Iran. The upheavals across the Middle East raise questions about the durability of all of these arrangements.
MP3 Radio | Website News Briefs: | |||||||||||
|
1. Video: First Nefesh B'Nefesh Summer Flight Arrives
by Arutz Sheva TV
Email readers: click HERE to view video.
Two hundred and forty five new olim – Jewish immigrants – from the United States and Canada landed in Israel Tuesday morning on this summer’s first flight organized by Nefesh b’Nefesh with the Jewish Agency.
Hundreds of invitees and guests attended the welcoming ceremony for the olim at Terminal 1 in Ben Gurion Airport, among them the Minister for Aliyah Absorption, Sofa Landver, and Jewish Agency chief Natan Sharansky.
This is the tenth summer since Nefesh B’Nefesh was founded. Approximately 2,500 people from the United States, Canada and Britain are expected to make aliyah with the organization's assistance this summer, half of the estimated 5,000 people that are expected to make aliyah with the group in 2011.
The group expects to reach its 30,000th oleh this year.
Comment on this story
by Arutz Sheva TV
Email readers: click HERE to view video.
Two hundred and forty five new olim – Jewish immigrants – from the United States and Canada landed in Israel Tuesday morning on this summer’s first flight organized by Nefesh b’Nefesh with the Jewish Agency.
Hundreds of invitees and guests attended the welcoming ceremony for the olim at Terminal 1 in Ben Gurion Airport, among them the Minister for Aliyah Absorption, Sofa Landver, and Jewish Agency chief Natan Sharansky.
This is the tenth summer since Nefesh B’Nefesh was founded. Approximately 2,500 people from the United States, Canada and Britain are expected to make aliyah with the organization's assistance this summer, half of the estimated 5,000 people that are expected to make aliyah with the group in 2011.
The group expects to reach its 30,000th oleh this year.
Comment on this story
2. Interview: Building the Land of Israel One Tree at a Time
by Josh Hasten
The loud ring tone blasting from her cell phone interrupts our interview and her train of thought, but Nadia Matar answers it anyway.
Her face becomes animated. “Where is this happening?” she asks the person on the other end of the line. Nadia puts her hand over the mouthpiece and explains, “Bedouins just outside of Jerusalem near Highway One has climbed up a hilltop; they are planning to take it over. They have a bulldozer.”
After getting a few more details she hangs up the phone. “I get calls like this all the time,” she says.
The problem, explains Women for Israel’s Tomorrow (Women in Green or WIG) director, and affirmed by co-director Yehudit Katsover, is that the Arabs are trying to physically take over the entire country starting with the areas within Judea and Samaria. Their methodology is simple: create facts on the ground – plants, trees, or even small buildings and then assume complete ownership.
Ten years of working a plot is legal ground for claiming ownership in Israel. As a result, Nadia and Yehudit have mobilized using a similar approach to ensure that every meter of the ancient Land of Israel remain in Jewish hands.
But this strategy wasn’t always part of the organization’s modus operandi. Founded in 1993, upon the signing of the Oslo Accords between Israel and the PLO, WIG began staging massive weekly demonstrations throughout the country to raise awareness about the potential danger of the agreement. At that time Nadia’s father-in-law and mother-in-law, Michael and Ruth Matar, were at the helm.
During one such demonstration, a group of female activists, dressed in green, stood on Israel’s border with Samaria calling on all Israelis to “wake up” before the government shrunk the country back to the 1949 armistice lines. The image that was embedded in the media's conscious was the green uniforms, and the nickname “Women in Green” was born and stuck ever since. Nadia insists that while Israeli women have always been at the forefront of the organization, plenty of men are involved as well.
From 1993 till the beginning of 2005, the organization was at the forefront of the “Eretz Yisrael Hashlemah (the ‘complete Land of Israel’) movement, vociferous against trading Land for a peace deal. In fact, Nadia has been arrested dozens of times throughout the years at various demonstrations, usually charged with “disturbing the peace.”
In 2005, the movement was at the head of the opposition against Israel’s planned withdrawal from Gaza. Nadia managed to sneak into the Gush Katif community of Kfar Yam and at the same time Yehudit, then a leading activist and the director of the local teacher’s college in Kiryat Arba, was in Gadid, also ini Gush Katif.
Yehudit says that until the very last minute “a lot of the people in Gush Katif were in denial regarding to what was about to happen. I was there as a realist and to inspire the residents to struggle to keep their homes and communities.” Both Nadia and Yehudit were forced to leave along with all of Gaza’s Jewish residents.
After Gush Katif, Nadia and Yehudit decided to join forces under the Women in Green umbrella, determined not to let what happened in Gush Katif repeat itself in Judea and Samaria. While the Gush Katif residents were freshly smarting from their traumatic loss after the expulsion, which the government called “Disengagement,” WIG went right back to work, but with a changed strategy.
“We understood that our methods were no longer effective” says Nadia. “Multiple demonstrations did not save Gush Katif.” Nadia says that WIG held a series of marathon meetings with Judea and Samaria leaders to strategize their next move.
In the end it was decided to change their direction entirely. Instead of organizing demonstrations the group became determined to create “facts of the ground” throughout Judea and Samaria.
The model to be implemented was based on the 1979 takeover of Beit-Hadassah in Hevron, which ultimately led to the establishment of the first Jewish community in Hevron since Israel’s founding. Yehudit herself was part of the group of ten women and their 40 children who sneaked into the historical building in the middle of the night after Pesach in that year.
After a year in the building and living under harsh conditions, one Friday night Arab terrorists murdered six yeshiva students from Kiryat Arba whose custom was to come and sing and dance outside of Beit-Hadassah to strengthen the group’s spirits. The attack along with the presence and sheer determination of the women to remain in Hevron eventually led to the Begin government’s decision to allow Jews to settle in Hevron permanently.
According to Yehudit, the campaign to establish a Jewish presence in Hevron was successful and needed to be implemented in WIG’s arsenal because of its three pronged approach: establishing a presence in the field, backing it up by an effective PR campaign targeting the general public, and lobbying politicians to endorse and support the initiative. Yehudit says that all three facets of that plan were implemented in Hevron, and the results speak for themselves.
Using that model, over the past six years WIG has strategically targeted areas throughout Judea and Samaria (mainly Judea) in order to try and establish a physical Jewish presence. Specifically the group looks to overtake unsettled State land – areas owned by the government under the jurisdiction of the Israel Land Authorities (ILA). Technically, these areas can be leased by the government to expand existing Jewish communities throughout Judea and Samaria, but because of commitments under various peace agreements, and for political reasons according to WIG, the government fails to issue building permits.
Nadia says that while these are State lands, the Arabs constantly confiscate swaths of these areas and take them over for building or agricultural purposes. “The Arabs have no claim to these areas,” says Nadia. “They are specifically designated for the expansion of Jewish communities, but that is not the case. It’s unfortunate when Arab squatters take over these areas, but nothing is enforced. That is why we feel it is integral for us to take these areas over.”
Nadia points to several WIG success stories including the clarification of the status of the Lands known as the Eitam hill, the Northern-most hill in Efrat. She says that while a local Arab family claimed the land as theirs, the fact that WIG had a constant presence on the hill and also held weekly gatherings and events for local residents, supported by Members of Knesset, led the authorities to explore the area’s true ownership. In the end it was determined that Eitam was in fact State Land belonging to Efrat, and the Arabs who claimed ownership have backed off.
Another success is the area known as Shedma, a hill on the road linking Jerusalem to the Eastern Gush communities including Tekoa and Nokdim. Shedma was the site of an old dismantled IDF base and at one point several years ago was in the process of being transferred over to the Palestinian Authority. WIG was adamantly against the move for ideological reasons, but also for security reasons since the hill which is adjacent to the road offers panoramic views of the neighboring Arab communities.
In 2008 WIG held weekly gatherings at Shedma where activists and right wing government officials would express their desire to see the hill remain in Jewish hands. As a result the government decided not to turn over the area to the PA and instead reestablished a 24/7 IDF presence there to protect Jewish motorists in the area.
Most recently, Nadia and Yehudit have been taking a “green thumb” approach to re-asserting Jewish sovereignty over State Land, by planting. A special fund called “Yibaneh” assists in funding agricultural Jewish planting in various strategic locations. The most known of these areas is the ‘Netzer’ hill, between the Gush Etzion communities of Elazar and Alon Shvut.
With a detailed map in hand, Nadia gives this reporter an extensive tour of the hill pointing out, which areas are unsettled State lands and which belong to the local Arab farmers. She shows how WIG supporters have planted hundreds of trees and vines – olives, grapes, figs and more – in order to send a message that these areas belong to Israel. The fields have turned into a game of tree “color war,” with the roots and branches of Jewish planted trees wrapped in brown protective sacks (to prevent roaming animals in the areas from grazing) while the Arabs wrap their crops using white.
Nadia details the almost weekly incidents of local Arabs who have uprooted trees and damaged watering mechanisms. “It’s ok,” she says. “If they destroy we will just come back and plant again. Sometimes it’s even good for us because when they trespass and cause damage on Jewish Land, the army is forced to come out and settle the dispute. When the army comes and brings their maps and sees that this isn’t Arab land, this just helps our case.”
Nadia recalls, “the Palestinian Authority Minister of Tourism [Khuloud Daibes] came all the way from Ramallah with about 100 friends to plant in the area. This is almost a badge of honor for us since it shows that they are so bothered by what we are doing and came all the way from Ramallah to try and thwart our efforts."
She is grateful for the support of the local municipality in the Gush. According to Gush Etzion Regional Authority head Shaul Goldstein, “Whenever there is cooperation between WIG and his office there has been success.” He points out how the Gush municipality openly backed WIG’s efforts calling for a full time security presence at Shedma. “The result,” says, Goldstein “was excellent.” He adds that the security situation on the Eastern road to the Gush is much better today as a result.
“However our municipality must wear two hats,” Shaul adds. “We are all for the Jewish right to build in the Land of Israel, but we are the establishment, so we have to make sure what we do is completely within the law. We work very closely with the Civil Administration, the army, police on many matters and this is no different. When there is open communication and coordination most recently in places like Netzer, we [WIG and my office] are like two engines jointly pushing towards the same goal.”
When asked about the future, Yehudit says that she is “optimistic.” She says that more and more people are realizing the importance of this struggle and are willing to lend a hand. Nadia notes that this summer WIG is running a two-week summer camp for teenagers at Netzer. Activities include, of course, planting trees throughout the area and guided sessions on the importance of building in the Land of Israel. Even youngsters from the United States are flying in to participate. Both are hopeful that one day Netzer will be a new flourishing neighborhood which will connect the communities of Elazar and Alon Shvut.
Yehudit adds that “just like in the United States where you can live where you want to, there is no reason you shouldn’t be able to here. This is our land.”
In the midst of typing my phone rings, and its Nadia. She and Yehudit have been called in for questioning by the Gush Civilian administration and the area police. She explains that the previous night at about 2 a.m. a group of WIG supporters, with the help of a local Jewish farmer, planted several large olive trees on Netzer, donated by a farmer in the North. However by 7a.m. she is notified by a witness that local Arab farmers have already started chopping down the trees.
Nadia, Yehudit, and some friends rush to the scene and in her words are “confronted violently” by a group of Arabs lead by someone who is later revealed to be a known Palestinian activist. During the altercation, the police and army arrive to separate the two sides, but everyone involved is taken to the station for questioning. Six hours later Nadia and Yehudit are released, accused of trespassing and disturbing the peace, given a restraining order not to return to Netzer for 15 days while tension simmers down.
Nadia isn’t shaken. “This is a constant battle, for every piece of land. We will struggle over and over till our enemies realize that we won’t raise our hands in surrender.”
Comment on this story
by Josh Hasten
The loud ring tone blasting from her cell phone interrupts our interview and her train of thought, but Nadia Matar answers it anyway.
Her face becomes animated. “Where is this happening?” she asks the person on the other end of the line. Nadia puts her hand over the mouthpiece and explains, “Bedouins just outside of Jerusalem near Highway One has climbed up a hilltop; they are planning to take it over. They have a bulldozer.”
After getting a few more details she hangs up the phone. “I get calls like this all the time,” she says.
The problem, explains Women for Israel’s Tomorrow (Women in Green or WIG) director, and affirmed by co-director Yehudit Katsover, is that the Arabs are trying to physically take over the entire country starting with the areas within Judea and Samaria. Their methodology is simple: create facts on the ground – plants, trees, or even small buildings and then assume complete ownership.
Ten years of working a plot is legal ground for claiming ownership in Israel. As a result, Nadia and Yehudit have mobilized using a similar approach to ensure that every meter of the ancient Land of Israel remain in Jewish hands.
But this strategy wasn’t always part of the organization’s modus operandi. Founded in 1993, upon the signing of the Oslo Accords between Israel and the PLO, WIG began staging massive weekly demonstrations throughout the country to raise awareness about the potential danger of the agreement. At that time Nadia’s father-in-law and mother-in-law, Michael and Ruth Matar, were at the helm.
During one such demonstration, a group of female activists, dressed in green, stood on Israel’s border with Samaria calling on all Israelis to “wake up” before the government shrunk the country back to the 1949 armistice lines. The image that was embedded in the media's conscious was the green uniforms, and the nickname “Women in Green” was born and stuck ever since. Nadia insists that while Israeli women have always been at the forefront of the organization, plenty of men are involved as well.
From 1993 till the beginning of 2005, the organization was at the forefront of the “Eretz Yisrael Hashlemah (the ‘complete Land of Israel’) movement, vociferous against trading Land for a peace deal. In fact, Nadia has been arrested dozens of times throughout the years at various demonstrations, usually charged with “disturbing the peace.”
In 2005, the movement was at the head of the opposition against Israel’s planned withdrawal from Gaza. Nadia managed to sneak into the Gush Katif community of Kfar Yam and at the same time Yehudit, then a leading activist and the director of the local teacher’s college in Kiryat Arba, was in Gadid, also ini Gush Katif.
Yehudit says that until the very last minute “a lot of the people in Gush Katif were in denial regarding to what was about to happen. I was there as a realist and to inspire the residents to struggle to keep their homes and communities.” Both Nadia and Yehudit were forced to leave along with all of Gaza’s Jewish residents.
After Gush Katif, Nadia and Yehudit decided to join forces under the Women in Green umbrella, determined not to let what happened in Gush Katif repeat itself in Judea and Samaria. While the Gush Katif residents were freshly smarting from their traumatic loss after the expulsion, which the government called “Disengagement,” WIG went right back to work, but with a changed strategy.
“We understood that our methods were no longer effective” says Nadia. “Multiple demonstrations did not save Gush Katif.” Nadia says that WIG held a series of marathon meetings with Judea and Samaria leaders to strategize their next move.
In the end it was decided to change their direction entirely. Instead of organizing demonstrations the group became determined to create “facts of the ground” throughout Judea and Samaria.
The model to be implemented was based on the 1979 takeover of Beit-Hadassah in Hevron, which ultimately led to the establishment of the first Jewish community in Hevron since Israel’s founding. Yehudit herself was part of the group of ten women and their 40 children who sneaked into the historical building in the middle of the night after Pesach in that year.
After a year in the building and living under harsh conditions, one Friday night Arab terrorists murdered six yeshiva students from Kiryat Arba whose custom was to come and sing and dance outside of Beit-Hadassah to strengthen the group’s spirits. The attack along with the presence and sheer determination of the women to remain in Hevron eventually led to the Begin government’s decision to allow Jews to settle in Hevron permanently.
According to Yehudit, the campaign to establish a Jewish presence in Hevron was successful and needed to be implemented in WIG’s arsenal because of its three pronged approach: establishing a presence in the field, backing it up by an effective PR campaign targeting the general public, and lobbying politicians to endorse and support the initiative. Yehudit says that all three facets of that plan were implemented in Hevron, and the results speak for themselves.
Using that model, over the past six years WIG has strategically targeted areas throughout Judea and Samaria (mainly Judea) in order to try and establish a physical Jewish presence. Specifically the group looks to overtake unsettled State land – areas owned by the government under the jurisdiction of the Israel Land Authorities (ILA). Technically, these areas can be leased by the government to expand existing Jewish communities throughout Judea and Samaria, but because of commitments under various peace agreements, and for political reasons according to WIG, the government fails to issue building permits.
Nadia says that while these are State lands, the Arabs constantly confiscate swaths of these areas and take them over for building or agricultural purposes. “The Arabs have no claim to these areas,” says Nadia. “They are specifically designated for the expansion of Jewish communities, but that is not the case. It’s unfortunate when Arab squatters take over these areas, but nothing is enforced. That is why we feel it is integral for us to take these areas over.”
Nadia points to several WIG success stories including the clarification of the status of the Lands known as the Eitam hill, the Northern-most hill in Efrat. She says that while a local Arab family claimed the land as theirs, the fact that WIG had a constant presence on the hill and also held weekly gatherings and events for local residents, supported by Members of Knesset, led the authorities to explore the area’s true ownership. In the end it was determined that Eitam was in fact State Land belonging to Efrat, and the Arabs who claimed ownership have backed off.
Another success is the area known as Shedma, a hill on the road linking Jerusalem to the Eastern Gush communities including Tekoa and Nokdim. Shedma was the site of an old dismantled IDF base and at one point several years ago was in the process of being transferred over to the Palestinian Authority. WIG was adamantly against the move for ideological reasons, but also for security reasons since the hill which is adjacent to the road offers panoramic views of the neighboring Arab communities.
In 2008 WIG held weekly gatherings at Shedma where activists and right wing government officials would express their desire to see the hill remain in Jewish hands. As a result the government decided not to turn over the area to the PA and instead reestablished a 24/7 IDF presence there to protect Jewish motorists in the area.
Most recently, Nadia and Yehudit have been taking a “green thumb” approach to re-asserting Jewish sovereignty over State Land, by planting. A special fund called “Yibaneh” assists in funding agricultural Jewish planting in various strategic locations. The most known of these areas is the ‘Netzer’ hill, between the Gush Etzion communities of Elazar and Alon Shvut.
With a detailed map in hand, Nadia gives this reporter an extensive tour of the hill pointing out, which areas are unsettled State lands and which belong to the local Arab farmers. She shows how WIG supporters have planted hundreds of trees and vines – olives, grapes, figs and more – in order to send a message that these areas belong to Israel. The fields have turned into a game of tree “color war,” with the roots and branches of Jewish planted trees wrapped in brown protective sacks (to prevent roaming animals in the areas from grazing) while the Arabs wrap their crops using white.
Nadia details the almost weekly incidents of local Arabs who have uprooted trees and damaged watering mechanisms. “It’s ok,” she says. “If they destroy we will just come back and plant again. Sometimes it’s even good for us because when they trespass and cause damage on Jewish Land, the army is forced to come out and settle the dispute. When the army comes and brings their maps and sees that this isn’t Arab land, this just helps our case.”
Nadia recalls, “the Palestinian Authority Minister of Tourism [Khuloud Daibes] came all the way from Ramallah with about 100 friends to plant in the area. This is almost a badge of honor for us since it shows that they are so bothered by what we are doing and came all the way from Ramallah to try and thwart our efforts."
She is grateful for the support of the local municipality in the Gush. According to Gush Etzion Regional Authority head Shaul Goldstein, “Whenever there is cooperation between WIG and his office there has been success.” He points out how the Gush municipality openly backed WIG’s efforts calling for a full time security presence at Shedma. “The result,” says, Goldstein “was excellent.” He adds that the security situation on the Eastern road to the Gush is much better today as a result.
“However our municipality must wear two hats,” Shaul adds. “We are all for the Jewish right to build in the Land of Israel, but we are the establishment, so we have to make sure what we do is completely within the law. We work very closely with the Civil Administration, the army, police on many matters and this is no different. When there is open communication and coordination most recently in places like Netzer, we [WIG and my office] are like two engines jointly pushing towards the same goal.”
When asked about the future, Yehudit says that she is “optimistic.” She says that more and more people are realizing the importance of this struggle and are willing to lend a hand. Nadia notes that this summer WIG is running a two-week summer camp for teenagers at Netzer. Activities include, of course, planting trees throughout the area and guided sessions on the importance of building in the Land of Israel. Even youngsters from the United States are flying in to participate. Both are hopeful that one day Netzer will be a new flourishing neighborhood which will connect the communities of Elazar and Alon Shvut.
Yehudit adds that “just like in the United States where you can live where you want to, there is no reason you shouldn’t be able to here. This is our land.”
In the midst of typing my phone rings, and its Nadia. She and Yehudit have been called in for questioning by the Gush Civilian administration and the area police. She explains that the previous night at about 2 a.m. a group of WIG supporters, with the help of a local Jewish farmer, planted several large olive trees on Netzer, donated by a farmer in the North. However by 7a.m. she is notified by a witness that local Arab farmers have already started chopping down the trees.
Nadia, Yehudit, and some friends rush to the scene and in her words are “confronted violently” by a group of Arabs lead by someone who is later revealed to be a known Palestinian activist. During the altercation, the police and army arrive to separate the two sides, but everyone involved is taken to the station for questioning. Six hours later Nadia and Yehudit are released, accused of trespassing and disturbing the peace, given a restraining order not to return to Netzer for 15 days while tension simmers down.
Nadia isn’t shaken. “This is a constant battle, for every piece of land. We will struggle over and over till our enemies realize that we won’t raise our hands in surrender.”
Comment on this story
3. Knesset Approves ‘Boycott Bill’
by Elad Benari
The Knesset approved on Monday the second and third readings of the ‘Boycott Bill’ which prevents companies from participating in government bids if they take part in a boycott of a business in Israel.
The bill, which passed by a majority of 47 to 38, stipulates that anyone calling for an economic, cultural or academic boycott against the Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria will be unable to participate in government tenders. In addition, any person who considers himself a victim of a boycott could sue the boycotter for compensation.
Several Knesset members did not attend Monday’s vote, including Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
The other members of Barak’s Independence Party, who earlier said they would not support the bill, were also absent during the vote, with MK Einat Wilf explaining, “We decided not to harm the residents of Judea and Samaria who were sent by the governments of Israel to live in the region, but on the other hand the law is disproportionate and therefore we decided not to participate in this vote.”
Coalition chairman and Likud faction chairman MK Ze’ev Elkin, who sponsored the bill, welcomed its approval.
“The Knesset has put an end to the stupidity of boycotts that originate within us,” he said. “The boycott law is not intended to shut mouths but rather to protect the citizens of Israel.”
Elkin expressed disappointment in the members of Kadima, who denounced the bill and voted against it after originally being among its initiators.
“Kadima’s zigzag, when [opposition leader Tzipi] Livni made the party members remove their names from the law despite them being among the initiators, proves that it is a party without an ideology and that is has acceded to leftist organizations, thus finally placing Kadima on the left side of the map,” Elkin said.
Kadima said in response to the bill’s passing, “Netanyahu’s government hurts Israel and should be the first to pay the price of the boycott law. Netanyahu’s running away from tonight’s vote does not diminish from his responsibility for the harm he causes the State. Netanyahu crossed a line today of political silliness and national irresponsibility. The boycott law is a mark of disgrace on the forehead of Netanyahu’s government and it will cost the State of Israel and its citizens a heavy price.”
MK Aryeh Eldad (National Union) welcomed the passing of the bill, saying, “The law is a big democratic victory over Israel’s enemies at home and abroad and over the Arabs and their allies on the far anti-Israel left, who are concentrating all their efforts to force the will of the anti-Zionist minority on the Zionist majority in Israel.”
After the law was passed, Yesha Council Chairman Danny Dayan asked Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz to issue regulations which would prevent Israeli companies who participate in the Arab boycott of Israel to take part in government tenders.
“Those who preferred to alienate Israelis to make some money from Arabs should not be provided for by the Israeli government,” Dayan wrote Steinitz. “Please follow the section of the boycott law authorizing you to act to prevent this.”
Meanwhile, Balad faction chairman MK Jamal Zahalka denounced the law, calling for a mass violation of it and saying it was a clearly unconstitutional law.
“The Knesset has become the home base of the enemies of democracy and every week it produces a new racist or anti-democratic law,” Zahalka said.
The boycott law was initiated after it became known that several Israeli firms had agreed to boycott Jews in Judea and Samaria in order to win contracts for the new Palestinian Authority city of Rawabi, near Ramallah.
The Infrastructure Ministry subsequently slapped sanctions against those firms, saying it “will not tolerate discrimination between different groups of citizens that is contrary to the basic values of the State of Israel.”
After the boycott law was passed, MK Michael Ben-Ari (National Union) said he was preparing the first lawsuit under its provisions, against Israeli company Teldor which is one of those companies involved in laying infrastructure in Rawabi, and as such has signed a document certifying that it does not do business in Judea and Samaria.
Ben-Ari said that he would file a complaint against Teldor unless it immediately declared that it was not participating in a boycott of Judea and Samaria. “The rule of law must be upheld,” he emphasized.
Comment on this story
by Elad Benari
The Knesset approved on Monday the second and third readings of the ‘Boycott Bill’ which prevents companies from participating in government bids if they take part in a boycott of a business in Israel.
The bill, which passed by a majority of 47 to 38, stipulates that anyone calling for an economic, cultural or academic boycott against the Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria will be unable to participate in government tenders. In addition, any person who considers himself a victim of a boycott could sue the boycotter for compensation.
Several Knesset members did not attend Monday’s vote, including Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
The other members of Barak’s Independence Party, who earlier said they would not support the bill, were also absent during the vote, with MK Einat Wilf explaining, “We decided not to harm the residents of Judea and Samaria who were sent by the governments of Israel to live in the region, but on the other hand the law is disproportionate and therefore we decided not to participate in this vote.”
Coalition chairman and Likud faction chairman MK Ze’ev Elkin, who sponsored the bill, welcomed its approval.
“The Knesset has put an end to the stupidity of boycotts that originate within us,” he said. “The boycott law is not intended to shut mouths but rather to protect the citizens of Israel.”
Elkin expressed disappointment in the members of Kadima, who denounced the bill and voted against it after originally being among its initiators.
“Kadima’s zigzag, when [opposition leader Tzipi] Livni made the party members remove their names from the law despite them being among the initiators, proves that it is a party without an ideology and that is has acceded to leftist organizations, thus finally placing Kadima on the left side of the map,” Elkin said.
Kadima said in response to the bill’s passing, “Netanyahu’s government hurts Israel and should be the first to pay the price of the boycott law. Netanyahu’s running away from tonight’s vote does not diminish from his responsibility for the harm he causes the State. Netanyahu crossed a line today of political silliness and national irresponsibility. The boycott law is a mark of disgrace on the forehead of Netanyahu’s government and it will cost the State of Israel and its citizens a heavy price.”
MK Aryeh Eldad (National Union) welcomed the passing of the bill, saying, “The law is a big democratic victory over Israel’s enemies at home and abroad and over the Arabs and their allies on the far anti-Israel left, who are concentrating all their efforts to force the will of the anti-Zionist minority on the Zionist majority in Israel.”
After the law was passed, Yesha Council Chairman Danny Dayan asked Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz to issue regulations which would prevent Israeli companies who participate in the Arab boycott of Israel to take part in government tenders.
“Those who preferred to alienate Israelis to make some money from Arabs should not be provided for by the Israeli government,” Dayan wrote Steinitz. “Please follow the section of the boycott law authorizing you to act to prevent this.”
Meanwhile, Balad faction chairman MK Jamal Zahalka denounced the law, calling for a mass violation of it and saying it was a clearly unconstitutional law.
“The Knesset has become the home base of the enemies of democracy and every week it produces a new racist or anti-democratic law,” Zahalka said.
The boycott law was initiated after it became known that several Israeli firms had agreed to boycott Jews in Judea and Samaria in order to win contracts for the new Palestinian Authority city of Rawabi, near Ramallah.
The Infrastructure Ministry subsequently slapped sanctions against those firms, saying it “will not tolerate discrimination between different groups of citizens that is contrary to the basic values of the State of Israel.”
After the boycott law was passed, MK Michael Ben-Ari (National Union) said he was preparing the first lawsuit under its provisions, against Israeli company Teldor which is one of those companies involved in laying infrastructure in Rawabi, and as such has signed a document certifying that it does not do business in Judea and Samaria.
Ben-Ari said that he would file a complaint against Teldor unless it immediately declared that it was not participating in a boycott of Judea and Samaria. “The rule of law must be upheld,” he emphasized.
Comment on this story
4. Glenn Beck and the Jewish Problem
by Rachel Sylvetsky
At a special reception held Monday night for broadcaster Glenn Beck in the Ma'ale Zeitim home of philanthropists Irving and Cherna Moskowitz , staunch supporters -and enablers- of the rights of Jews to live anywhere in Israel, this Arutz Sheva writer observed the charismatic Beck give each of the scores of carefully chosen guests who spoke to him the feeling that he was riveted on what that person had to say to him.
A significant number of figures in the activist pro-Israel and pro-Judea and Samaria world were there, including, the head of the Yesha Authority, Danny Dayan, several Gush Katif spokespeople, the heads of Young Israel USA, and the terror victim association Almagor. Also on the scene were the three Israel Day activists who first broached the idea of an Israel visit to Beck, Drs. Brodie and Frager and Odelya Jacobs.
The schedule for this short and unexpected visit includes traveling to Sderot, broadcasting his syndicated radio show from Israel, ascending the Temple Mount, appearing in the Knesset, visiting Yad VaShem and meeting with various Israeli figures.
Beck is a controversial figure because of his outspoken opinions on every subject that interests him, expressed on his just-ended Fox News slot, to be continued on his private media outlets .
There is no question that he goes out on a limb defending Israel and criticizing Obama and George Soros, making him stand out in this period of Israel bashing and virulent anti-Semitism and consequently making the Israeli left uneasy.
There is also no question that he is a devout Mormon, that this is the basis for his worldview and that he sees the world through the parameters of his faith, making some Orthodox rightists uncomfortable.
Consequently, Glenn Beck's visit to Israel sparked the traditional Jewish debate on every subject, typified in the famous anecdote on The Elephant and the Jewish Problem--that is, whether "he is good for the Jews or bad for the Jews."
The anti-missionary Jewish Israel blog wrote:
"Glenn Beck is a master at portraying the Jews as a victims, and Israelis as being in deep, dark straits. Upon announcing the upcoming 'Restoring Courage' event, he declared on the Fox News "O'Reilly Factor" that, 'The Jews are in real trouble.' Beck regularly implies that a second Holocaust is in the making. Beck's concerns about the modern state of Israel appear to be sincere and heartfelt, but his presentation is problematic and inaccurate.
"Jews both in Israel and the Diaspora need to ask themselves and Mr. Beck if this approach, or "scare tactic," is the best way to "restore courage" among supporters of Israel? Wouldn't it be more truthful to present Israel as secure and thriving nation which is fully aware of the challenges she faces?"
The anti-missionary site suggested that he change his style, saying, "...Those who are close to Mr. Beck respectfully convey to him that many Torah observant as well as secular Zionists are naturally uncomfortable with the Christian theological direction and focus of some of his oratory. Perhaps a more universal, and inclusive approach to his stand with Israel - with an emphasis on morality rather than religious faith - would be more appropriate and could heal, rather than exacerbate, political rifts and divisiveness."
MKs and guests in the packed Knesset's Monday meeting with Beck chaired by MKs Danny Danon (who ascended the Temple Mount with Beck) and Nissim Ze'ev (who came despite his son's marriage Monday night) had no such qualms, breaking into warm applause, talking to him as an old, trusted friend to whom they can explain their take on Israel's problems.
A hareidi-religious Israeli partner in a hi-tech firm hired a crane to post a gigantic banner thanking him down the street from the Knesset. The Hebrew words said, "The left is correct in being afraid [of his influence, ed.]" Present at the meeting, he explained that he had to show his gratitude because whenever he is asked abroad by clients to explain Israel's actions, he tells them to watch Glenn Beck and they turn pro-Israel.
MK Nissim Ze'ev (Shas) said that he wished that Israel's mainstream media would sound like Beck. MK Yulia Shamalov (Kadima) said that he gives Israelis hope.
MK Michael Ben-Ari (National Union), seated next to Baruch Merzel of Hevron, told Beck that to understand the miracle of Israel, one has only to read Mark Twain's 19th century description of the barren country he visited and then thank G-d for his being stuck in the nation's endless traffic jams.
MK Dr. Aryeh Eldad (National Union) explained that the real problem is the 300-year-old occupation of Israel by the Arabs, not the other way around, while Jordan is the real Palestine. A physician, he recalled the Arab woman whose life he saved at Siroka Hospital, who was caught with a bomb on her body when she came for a follow up visit.
MK Einat Wilf (Independence) said that the entire Zionist idea is being negated by the world today. Marina Solodkin (Kadima) reminded Beck of Jonathan Pollard's continued captivity, as did leaders of Zionist organizations that were present.
A MyIsrael Organization representative talked about college students' work to present the varied face of Israel to the world.
MK Hotovely (Likud) quoted Prime Minister Netanyahu's remark that the truth can only win out if it is said loudly and often, and that Beck's being religious makes him uniquely able to realize that the conflict is not territorial, but religious.
Comment on this story
by Rachel Sylvetsky
At a special reception held Monday night for broadcaster Glenn Beck in the Ma'ale Zeitim home of philanthropists Irving and Cherna Moskowitz , staunch supporters -and enablers- of the rights of Jews to live anywhere in Israel, this Arutz Sheva writer observed the charismatic Beck give each of the scores of carefully chosen guests who spoke to him the feeling that he was riveted on what that person had to say to him.
A significant number of figures in the activist pro-Israel and pro-Judea and Samaria world were there, including, the head of the Yesha Authority, Danny Dayan, several Gush Katif spokespeople, the heads of Young Israel USA, and the terror victim association Almagor. Also on the scene were the three Israel Day activists who first broached the idea of an Israel visit to Beck, Drs. Brodie and Frager and Odelya Jacobs.
The schedule for this short and unexpected visit includes traveling to Sderot, broadcasting his syndicated radio show from Israel, ascending the Temple Mount, appearing in the Knesset, visiting Yad VaShem and meeting with various Israeli figures.
Beck is a controversial figure because of his outspoken opinions on every subject that interests him, expressed on his just-ended Fox News slot, to be continued on his private media outlets .
There is no question that he goes out on a limb defending Israel and criticizing Obama and George Soros, making him stand out in this period of Israel bashing and virulent anti-Semitism and consequently making the Israeli left uneasy.
There is also no question that he is a devout Mormon, that this is the basis for his worldview and that he sees the world through the parameters of his faith, making some Orthodox rightists uncomfortable.
Consequently, Glenn Beck's visit to Israel sparked the traditional Jewish debate on every subject, typified in the famous anecdote on The Elephant and the Jewish Problem--that is, whether "he is good for the Jews or bad for the Jews."
The anti-missionary Jewish Israel blog wrote:
"Glenn Beck is a master at portraying the Jews as a victims, and Israelis as being in deep, dark straits. Upon announcing the upcoming 'Restoring Courage' event, he declared on the Fox News "O'Reilly Factor" that, 'The Jews are in real trouble.' Beck regularly implies that a second Holocaust is in the making. Beck's concerns about the modern state of Israel appear to be sincere and heartfelt, but his presentation is problematic and inaccurate.
"Jews both in Israel and the Diaspora need to ask themselves and Mr. Beck if this approach, or "scare tactic," is the best way to "restore courage" among supporters of Israel? Wouldn't it be more truthful to present Israel as secure and thriving nation which is fully aware of the challenges she faces?"
The anti-missionary site suggested that he change his style, saying, "...Those who are close to Mr. Beck respectfully convey to him that many Torah observant as well as secular Zionists are naturally uncomfortable with the Christian theological direction and focus of some of his oratory. Perhaps a more universal, and inclusive approach to his stand with Israel - with an emphasis on morality rather than religious faith - would be more appropriate and could heal, rather than exacerbate, political rifts and divisiveness."
MKs and guests in the packed Knesset's Monday meeting with Beck chaired by MKs Danny Danon (who ascended the Temple Mount with Beck) and Nissim Ze'ev (who came despite his son's marriage Monday night) had no such qualms, breaking into warm applause, talking to him as an old, trusted friend to whom they can explain their take on Israel's problems.
A hareidi-religious Israeli partner in a hi-tech firm hired a crane to post a gigantic banner thanking him down the street from the Knesset. The Hebrew words said, "The left is correct in being afraid [of his influence, ed.]" Present at the meeting, he explained that he had to show his gratitude because whenever he is asked abroad by clients to explain Israel's actions, he tells them to watch Glenn Beck and they turn pro-Israel.
MK Nissim Ze'ev (Shas) said that he wished that Israel's mainstream media would sound like Beck. MK Yulia Shamalov (Kadima) said that he gives Israelis hope.
MK Michael Ben-Ari (National Union), seated next to Baruch Merzel of Hevron, told Beck that to understand the miracle of Israel, one has only to read Mark Twain's 19th century description of the barren country he visited and then thank G-d for his being stuck in the nation's endless traffic jams.
MK Dr. Aryeh Eldad (National Union) explained that the real problem is the 300-year-old occupation of Israel by the Arabs, not the other way around, while Jordan is the real Palestine. A physician, he recalled the Arab woman whose life he saved at Siroka Hospital, who was caught with a bomb on her body when she came for a follow up visit.
MK Einat Wilf (Independence) said that the entire Zionist idea is being negated by the world today. Marina Solodkin (Kadima) reminded Beck of Jonathan Pollard's continued captivity, as did leaders of Zionist organizations that were present.
A MyIsrael Organization representative talked about college students' work to present the varied face of Israel to the world.
MK Hotovely (Likud) quoted Prime Minister Netanyahu's remark that the truth can only win out if it is said loudly and often, and that Beck's being religious makes him uniquely able to realize that the conflict is not territorial, but religious.
Comment on this story
5. Gas Line Attack Explodes Egyptian-Israel Agreement
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
The latest Egyptian-Israel gas pipeline blast signals a further erosion of “goodwill” from Cairo, according to Infrastructures Minister Uzi Landau. He also warned that electricity prices will soar by 20 percent.
“Economic ties between Egypt and Israel are eroding,” Landau warned on Army Radio Tuesday. An immediate result will be a hike by approximately 20 percent in the cost of electricity as the Israel Electric Corp. is forced to use expensive diesel fuel as a substitute for natural gas from Egypt. It will take at least two years until Israel’s newly-found offshore gas fields will be online.
Diplomatic relations with Egypt also are worsening, he said, after the uprising that resulted in the ouster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and the installation of a provisional military regime. Israel has allowed Egypt to place more troops in the Sinai to protect the gas pipeline from El Arish to the Israeli port of Ashkelon.
The 1979 peace treaty with Cairo prohibited or limited an armed military presence in the area, but despite Israel’s willingness to overlook the agreement, Egyptian forces have not been able to – or do not want to – protect the pipeline.
The agreement to sell gas to Israel has been the source of anger for Egyptian dissidents and the Muslim Brotherhood.
The natural gas pumping facility ay El Arish and the pipeline have been attacked four times in the past year. "Even if you appoint local tribesmen or anyone to guard such a facility, no one would really protect it because they hate the facility, the gas supply to the enemy and the government that signed such an agreement," Sheikh Ibrahim Abu Elayan, the secretary-general of the Arab Tribes Association, told McClatchy newspapers. "This agreement is a dagger in Egypt's heart."
Security at the gas facility at Bir El Abd, a Bedouin stronghold, is “laughable,” journalist Mohannad Sabry wrote after visiting the site. The Bedouin guards are unarmed and have no monitoring devices or even night-vision goggles.
Comment on this story
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
The latest Egyptian-Israel gas pipeline blast signals a further erosion of “goodwill” from Cairo, according to Infrastructures Minister Uzi Landau. He also warned that electricity prices will soar by 20 percent.
“Economic ties between Egypt and Israel are eroding,” Landau warned on Army Radio Tuesday. An immediate result will be a hike by approximately 20 percent in the cost of electricity as the Israel Electric Corp. is forced to use expensive diesel fuel as a substitute for natural gas from Egypt. It will take at least two years until Israel’s newly-found offshore gas fields will be online.
Diplomatic relations with Egypt also are worsening, he said, after the uprising that resulted in the ouster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and the installation of a provisional military regime. Israel has allowed Egypt to place more troops in the Sinai to protect the gas pipeline from El Arish to the Israeli port of Ashkelon.
The 1979 peace treaty with Cairo prohibited or limited an armed military presence in the area, but despite Israel’s willingness to overlook the agreement, Egyptian forces have not been able to – or do not want to – protect the pipeline.
The agreement to sell gas to Israel has been the source of anger for Egyptian dissidents and the Muslim Brotherhood.
The natural gas pumping facility ay El Arish and the pipeline have been attacked four times in the past year. "Even if you appoint local tribesmen or anyone to guard such a facility, no one would really protect it because they hate the facility, the gas supply to the enemy and the government that signed such an agreement," Sheikh Ibrahim Abu Elayan, the secretary-general of the Arab Tribes Association, told McClatchy newspapers. "This agreement is a dagger in Egypt's heart."
Security at the gas facility at Bir El Abd, a Bedouin stronghold, is “laughable,” journalist Mohannad Sabry wrote after visiting the site. The Bedouin guards are unarmed and have no monitoring devices or even night-vision goggles.
Comment on this story
6. EU Parliamentarians Against Palestinian Statehood Bid
by Elad Benari
More than 100 members of the European Parliament have urged the European Union and its member countries to discourage the Palestinian Authority from seeking a unilateral recognition at the UN of an independent state, The Associated Press reported.
The 106 parliamentarians addressed a letter on Monday to EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in which they argued that issues between the PA and Israel can be resolved only through negotiations.
“It is precisely because we believe in the justness of the Palestinian cause that we urge them to refrain from seeking a UN recognition of a unilaterally declared state, a counterproductive step we fear could set back the chances for peace,” said the letter, which was signed by members of the European Parliament representing a range of parties.
The letter echoes sentiments expressed last month by the President of the EU parliament, Jerzy Buzek, who said that a unilateral move by the Palestinian Authority toward statehood could be “dangerous.”
Buzek made the comments during a meeting in Ramallah with the Palestinian Authority’s Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad. Buzek said he “understood” the PA’s position on statehood, but added that it could complicate peace efforts.
Meanwhile, AP reported that the PA has not decided whether to apply to the UN General Assembly or the Security Council first. The report was based on a 25-page “work plan” the news agency obtained on Monday.
The paper, prepared by negotiator Saeb Erekat, lays out the options for gaining recognition of a state and notes that if the Security Council does not approve its membership, the fallback position would be obtaining non-member state status. The paper also notes that the application to the General Assembly would have to be submitted by the end of July. Erekat suggests broad discussions with Arab nations and others over how to proceed.
Last week, it was reported that the UN Security Council plans to discuss the possibility of Palestine becoming a United Nations member state in an “open debate” scheduled for July 26.
German Ambassador Peter Wittig, UN Security Council president, said the debate “will be an occasion to explore the various options that might exist on the Palestinian side.”
The United States has publicly said it would be a mistake for PA Arabs to create their country through an appeal to the United Nations, insisting such a state must be achieved through peace negotiations.
The U.S. has been trying to get Israel and the PA back to the negotiating table, but the PA has sent a list of four preconditions, insisting that it would not agree to renew negotiations unless Israel and the European Union agreed to meet every one of its demands.
These demands include a complete halt to all Israeli construction in Judea and Samaria and east Jerusalem, an agreement that the 1949 Armistice lines with mutually-agreed land swaps are the basis for talks, European Union support for PA reconciliation efforts between Fatah and Hamas, and EU support for a PA declaration of statehood in the UN.
Comment on this story
by Elad Benari
More than 100 members of the European Parliament have urged the European Union and its member countries to discourage the Palestinian Authority from seeking a unilateral recognition at the UN of an independent state, The Associated Press reported.
The 106 parliamentarians addressed a letter on Monday to EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in which they argued that issues between the PA and Israel can be resolved only through negotiations.
“It is precisely because we believe in the justness of the Palestinian cause that we urge them to refrain from seeking a UN recognition of a unilaterally declared state, a counterproductive step we fear could set back the chances for peace,” said the letter, which was signed by members of the European Parliament representing a range of parties.
The letter echoes sentiments expressed last month by the President of the EU parliament, Jerzy Buzek, who said that a unilateral move by the Palestinian Authority toward statehood could be “dangerous.”
Buzek made the comments during a meeting in Ramallah with the Palestinian Authority’s Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad. Buzek said he “understood” the PA’s position on statehood, but added that it could complicate peace efforts.
Meanwhile, AP reported that the PA has not decided whether to apply to the UN General Assembly or the Security Council first. The report was based on a 25-page “work plan” the news agency obtained on Monday.
The paper, prepared by negotiator Saeb Erekat, lays out the options for gaining recognition of a state and notes that if the Security Council does not approve its membership, the fallback position would be obtaining non-member state status. The paper also notes that the application to the General Assembly would have to be submitted by the end of July. Erekat suggests broad discussions with Arab nations and others over how to proceed.
Last week, it was reported that the UN Security Council plans to discuss the possibility of Palestine becoming a United Nations member state in an “open debate” scheduled for July 26.
German Ambassador Peter Wittig, UN Security Council president, said the debate “will be an occasion to explore the various options that might exist on the Palestinian side.”
The United States has publicly said it would be a mistake for PA Arabs to create their country through an appeal to the United Nations, insisting such a state must be achieved through peace negotiations.
The U.S. has been trying to get Israel and the PA back to the negotiating table, but the PA has sent a list of four preconditions, insisting that it would not agree to renew negotiations unless Israel and the European Union agreed to meet every one of its demands.
These demands include a complete halt to all Israeli construction in Judea and Samaria and east Jerusalem, an agreement that the 1949 Armistice lines with mutually-agreed land swaps are the basis for talks, European Union support for PA reconciliation efforts between Fatah and Hamas, and EU support for a PA declaration of statehood in the UN.
Comment on this story
7. Did Eskimos Attack Hadassah Hospital?
by Gil Ronen
The Knesset’s Labor, Welfare and Health Committee is holding a discussion Tuesday on the repeated attacks by Arabs on Hadassah Hospital at Har HaTzofim (Mt. Scopus). In the lead-up to the debate, an interesting discussion regarding the possible culpability of Eskimos has developed.
The most serious recent attack on the hospital occurred on “Nakba Day,” when Arabs from neighboring village Isawiya hurled rocks and fire bombs at the hospital.
MK Prof. Aryeh Eldad (National Union) requested that the committee hold a discussion of the ongoing attacks after being approached on the matter by Prof. Tzvi Stern, the hospital’s director. Eldad – a physician – noted that the police seem unable to guarantee the hospital’s security.
Another physician member of the Labor, Welfare and Health Committee, MK Dr. Afu Agbariya of the communist Hadash party, protested in a letter to the committee that the attackers might not be Arabs at all. “How can the committee determine that the rocks were thrown by Arabs before the relevant bodies’ responses are heard?”, he asked.
MK Eldad responded by noting: “Indeed, there is diplomatic intelligence that thousands of Eskimos have infiltrated Israel, that they reside in Arab villages, that they have learned the Arabic tongue and that as they hurl fire bombs at the hospital they yell ‘Allahu Akbar’ in order to deceive the public.”
Eldad continued with the acerbic tone, adding that: “Therefore it is possible that Dr. Agbaria is right in saying that we should not speak of ‘Arab attacks on Hadassah Har HaTzofim Hospital’ but rather ‘attacks by people suspected as being Arabs on Hadassah Har HaTzofim Hospital’ or alternatively ‘attacks by Arab speaking people who live in Isawiya and mark Nakba Day by transporting rocks from one place to another and recycling glass bottles, rags and fuel into light- and heat-producing objects.'”
Comment on this story
by Gil Ronen
The Knesset’s Labor, Welfare and Health Committee is holding a discussion Tuesday on the repeated attacks by Arabs on Hadassah Hospital at Har HaTzofim (Mt. Scopus). In the lead-up to the debate, an interesting discussion regarding the possible culpability of Eskimos has developed.
The most serious recent attack on the hospital occurred on “Nakba Day,” when Arabs from neighboring village Isawiya hurled rocks and fire bombs at the hospital.
MK Prof. Aryeh Eldad (National Union) requested that the committee hold a discussion of the ongoing attacks after being approached on the matter by Prof. Tzvi Stern, the hospital’s director. Eldad – a physician – noted that the police seem unable to guarantee the hospital’s security.
Another physician member of the Labor, Welfare and Health Committee, MK Dr. Afu Agbariya of the communist Hadash party, protested in a letter to the committee that the attackers might not be Arabs at all. “How can the committee determine that the rocks were thrown by Arabs before the relevant bodies’ responses are heard?”, he asked.
MK Eldad responded by noting: “Indeed, there is diplomatic intelligence that thousands of Eskimos have infiltrated Israel, that they reside in Arab villages, that they have learned the Arabic tongue and that as they hurl fire bombs at the hospital they yell ‘Allahu Akbar’ in order to deceive the public.”
Eldad continued with the acerbic tone, adding that: “Therefore it is possible that Dr. Agbaria is right in saying that we should not speak of ‘Arab attacks on Hadassah Har HaTzofim Hospital’ but rather ‘attacks by people suspected as being Arabs on Hadassah Har HaTzofim Hospital’ or alternatively ‘attacks by Arab speaking people who live in Isawiya and mark Nakba Day by transporting rocks from one place to another and recycling glass bottles, rags and fuel into light- and heat-producing objects.'”
Comment on this story
8. Quartet at a Loss for Words
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
The “Quartet” not only has been unable to advance a deal between the Palestinian Authority and Israel, it also cannot find the words to say so.
Representatives of the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia are meeting for the second day in a row in Washington Tuesday after failing the day before – for the first time ever – to come up with a summary statement of their discussions.
PA negotiator Saeb Erekat jumped on the Quartet’s silence by stating, "There is no other option but to support the Palestinian plan to go to the United Nations to seek full membership for the state of Palestine on the 1967 borders."
The United States, several leading EU countries and Israel oppose the Palestinian Authority plan, which violates the essence of the Oslo Accords and American Roadmap.
While the Quartet tries to come up with some kind of statement to keep alive the term “peace process” by forging some kind of language acceptable to Israel and the Arab world, Erekat rejected any criticism of the Palestinian Authority and any compromise.
The only way the PA may be convinced to relent is if it comes to the conclusion that its UN gambit for unilateral recognition of a PA state won’t work. Although most of the nations in the U.N. General Assembly back the PA bid for recognition based on its territorial demands, it does not have the support of most of the world's leading nations.
However, the PA has gone so far out on the cliff, repeatedly insisting on “all” without taking into consideration they might end up with “nothing,” its leaders face trouble if it cannot deliver on their promises.
Comment on this story
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
The “Quartet” not only has been unable to advance a deal between the Palestinian Authority and Israel, it also cannot find the words to say so.
Representatives of the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia are meeting for the second day in a row in Washington Tuesday after failing the day before – for the first time ever – to come up with a summary statement of their discussions.
PA negotiator Saeb Erekat jumped on the Quartet’s silence by stating, "There is no other option but to support the Palestinian plan to go to the United Nations to seek full membership for the state of Palestine on the 1967 borders."
The United States, several leading EU countries and Israel oppose the Palestinian Authority plan, which violates the essence of the Oslo Accords and American Roadmap.
While the Quartet tries to come up with some kind of statement to keep alive the term “peace process” by forging some kind of language acceptable to Israel and the Arab world, Erekat rejected any criticism of the Palestinian Authority and any compromise.
The only way the PA may be convinced to relent is if it comes to the conclusion that its UN gambit for unilateral recognition of a PA state won’t work. Although most of the nations in the U.N. General Assembly back the PA bid for recognition based on its territorial demands, it does not have the support of most of the world's leading nations.
However, the PA has gone so far out on the cliff, repeatedly insisting on “all” without taking into consideration they might end up with “nothing,” its leaders face trouble if it cannot deliver on their promises.
Comment on this story
More Website News:
2012: Iran's Atomic Daydreams | |
NY Synagogue Nearly Burns Down, Five Firefighters Lightly Hurt | |
IDF Chief of Staff: 'Entebbe's Yoni Netanyahu Was a Hero' | |
Netanyahu and Peres thank Greek President for Stopping Flotilla | |
Israel's Go Green Campaign Promotes Energy Independence |
Messages In This Digest (17 Messages)
- 1.
- Afghan War: French Death Toll Reaches 63 From: Rick Rozoff
- 2.
- U.S. Marines: AFRICOM "Adding Muscle" To Counterinsurgency Campaigns From: Rick Rozoff
- 3.
- Japan: U.S. To Open New Battle Systems Center For Afghan-, Iraqi-Sty From: Rick Rozoff
- 4.
- Australia: 22,000 U.S., Canadian, Local Troops In Full-Spectrum War From: Rick Rozoff
- 5.
- Top Chinese General Criticizes U.S. Military Policy In Asia From: Rick Rozoff
- 6.
- Serbia: U.S., Britain, France Block UN Kosovo Organ Trafficking Prob From: Rick Rozoff
- 7.
- NATO Awards Dutch Commander For Mediterranean, Horn Of Africa Roles From: Rick Rozoff
- 8.
- ACT: NATO, Pentagon Integrate Global Military Transformation From: Rick Rozoff
- 9.
- Afghan Officials: NATO Air Strike Kills Up To 16 Civilians From: Rick Rozoff
- 10.
- U.S. Drone Strikes Kill At Least 45 "Militants" In Pakistan From: Rick Rozoff
- 11.
- Libya: Almost 15,000 NATO Sorties, 5,588 Combat Missions From: Rick Rozoff
- 12.
- Afghanistan: Italy Loses 40th Soldier From: Rick Rozoff
- 13.
- Video/Text: France, NATO Make Mockery Of UN Resolution On Libya From: Rick Rozoff
- 14.
- Video/Text: Libyan Campaign Staged To Start Conquest Of Africa From: Rick Rozoff
- 15.
- "Militaries Are All About Peace": AFRICOM Launches 39-Nation Exercis From: Rick Rozoff
- 16.
- U.S. Navy Trains Special Forces In Uganda From: Rick Rozoff
- 17.
- Ellen Tauscher, Colin Powell: U.S. Missile System To Cover All Of Eu From: Rick Rozoff
July 12, 2011
Tomgram: Engelhardt, Making Earth a Global Free-Fire Zone
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: It’s the quiet summer season online, but the tens of thousands of you
who get email notices whenever a new piece is posted, as well as those
who bookmark TD or read its pieces reposted elsewhere, can support this
site by encouraging new readers to sign up. TomDispatch spreads mainly
thanks to word of mouth, a formidable force in the online world. For
those of you already hooked on this website, I urge you to lend it a
little more of that word-of-mouth power. Please consider putting
together a modest list of friends, colleagues, relatives, or, for that
matter, people you like to argue with who might benefit from getting
TomDispatch regularly. You could urge them to go to the "subscribe"
window to the right of the main screen, enter their e-mail addresses,
hit “submit,” answer the confirmation email that will quickly arrive in
email boxes (or, fair warning, spam folders), and join the TD crew.
Many thanks in advance for your efforts. They do matter. Tom]
Obama’s Bush-League WorldIs the Obama National Security Team a Pilotless Drone?
By Tom Engelhardt
George W. who? I mean, the guy is so over. He turned the big six-five the other day and it was barely a footnote in the news. And Dick Cheney, tick-tick-tick. Condoleezza Rice? She’s already onto her next memoir, and yet it's as if she's been wiped from history, too? As for Donald Rumsfeld, he published his memoir in February and it hit the bestseller lists, but a few months later, where is he?
And can anyone be surprised? They were wrong about Afghanistan. They were wrong about Iraq. They were wrong about Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction. They were wrong about what the U.S. military was capable of doing. The country imploded economically while they were at the helm. Geopolitically speaking, they headed the car of state for the nearest cliff. In fact, when it comes to pure wrongness, what weren’t they wrong about?
Americans do seem to have turned the page on Bush and his cronies. (President Obama called it looking forward, not backward.) Still, glance over your shoulder and, if you’re being honest, you'll have to admit that one thing didn’t happen: they didn’t turn the page on us.
They may have disappeared from our lives, but the post-9/11 world they had such a mad hand in creating hasn’t. It’s not just the Department of Homeland Security or that un-American word “homeland,” both of which are undoubtedly embedded in our lives forever; or the Patriot Act, now as American as apple pie; or Guantanamo which, despite a presidential promise, may never close; or all the wild, overblown fears of terrorism and the new security world that goes with them, neither of which shows the slightest sign of abating; or the National Security Agency’s surveillance and spying on Americans which, as far as we can tell, is ongoing. No, it's scores of Bush policies and positions that will clearly be with us until hell freezes over. Among them all, consider the Obama administration’s updated version of that signature Bush invention, the Global War on Terror.
Yes, Obama’s national security officials threw that term to the dogs back in 2009, and now pursue a no-name global strategy that’s meant not to remind you of the Bush era. Recently, the White House released an unclassified summary of its 2011 “National Strategy for Counterterrorism,” a 19-page document in prose only a giant bureaucracy with a desire to be impenetrable could produce. (Don’t bother to read it. I read it for you.) If it makes a feeble attempt to put a little rhetorical space between Obama-style counterterrorism and what the Bush administration was doing, it still manages to send one overwhelming message: George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, et al., are still striding amongst us, carrying big sticks and with that same crazed look in their eyes.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.
Primaire EELV : Eva Joly gagnante avec 58,16 % des voix
EN DIRECT. Le Parlement vote sur la guerre en Libye
|
58% des Français souhaitent que Sarkozy ne se représente pas
Seulement 18% des sondés pensent qu'il serait le meilleur candidat pour représenter la droite, selon notre enquête exclusive LH2-Le Nouvel Observateur. |
Les bourses européennes poursuivent leur plongée
La cotation a repris après des problèmes techniques. A 13h45, le CAC 40 reculait de 1,79% |
Le 14 juillet doit rester un jour férié!
OPINION. Cessons de transformer notre fête nationale en fête commerciale. Par Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, président de Debout la République. |
Hortefeux, prochaine cible dans l'affaire Karachi
La justice va interroger l'ex-ministre de l'Intérieur sur son rôle dans le financement de la campagne de Balladur en 1995. Par Olivier Toscer |
Chez Estrosi, le bac mention très bien pèse 200 euros
Le maire de Nice a décidé de féliciter les "très bons" bacheliers par un gros chèque. |
Primaire : qui soutient qui au PS ?
A la veille de la date limite pour le dépôt des parrainages, Le Nouvel Observateur fait le point sur les soutiens de chaque candidat. |
News Of The World : les députés veulent entendre Murdoch
Les députés anglais demandent des comptes au magnat des médias sur les méthodes de son groupe. |
Visite surprise de Nicolas Sarkozy en Afghanistan
"Il faut savoir finir une guerre", a dit le président en annonçant le retrait d'un quart des soldats français d'ici à fin 2012. |
Torture : pourquoi Obama refuse toute poursuite contre Bush
Barack Obama voulait clore ce chapitre qui a entaché l'Amérique après le 11 septembre. Mais on ne pourra tourner la page tant que les responsables ne seront pas jugés, estime Human Rights Watch. |
Les révolutionaires égyptiens déchantent
"Ceux qui ont manifesté pour la chute de Moubarak se rendent compte que les militaires n’ont jamais partagé leur projet démocratique", estime Jean-Noël Ferrié. |
DSK : audience reportée au 1er août
Elle était initialement prévue le 18 juillet. L'objectif est de "permettre aux deux parties de poursuivre leur enquête", selon le bureau du procureur. |
Julian Assange entendu à Londres pour faire appel de son extradition
Le fondateur de WikiLeaks est arrivé à la Haute Cour de Londres pour interjeter appel de son extradition vers la Suède. L'audience durera deux jours. |
Rumeur : Aubry persiste et signe
La candidate à la primaire PS répète qu'elle portera plainte si les rumeurs sur son compte continuent. |
Le Livret A passe à 2,25% le 1er août
Cette hausse s'opère en raison de la progression des prix à la consommation de 2,1% sur un an. |
33 départements menacés par des orages violents
Une large bande s'étendant du Sud-Ouest au Nord-Ouest a été placée en vigilance orange. |
La France ouvre un bureau de coopération en Corée du Nord
Conseillé par Jack Lang, ce projet doit notamment concerner le domaine culturel ou linguistique. |
Le Tour se félicite de la collaboration des instances antidopage
"Le combat continue, c'est un combat de longue haleine", estime le directeur du Tour Christian Prudhomme. |
Albert et Charlene font chambre à part en Afrique du Sud
Le père de Charlene confirme que la princesse et le prince de Monaco n'ont pas dormi dans le même lit. Pour des raisons pratiques... Par Jean-Frédéric Tronche |
Foot féminin / foot masculin : l'impossible comparaison
OPINION. Que ce soit en termes économiques, sportifs, ou d'image, il ne faut pas placer les deux équipes sur le même terrain. Par Christophe Lepetit, économiste du sport. |
La religion du téléchargement illégal ?
"L'Eglise Missionnaire du Kopimism" a tenté, en vain, de se voir reconnue comme religion par la Suède. |
SYRIE. Bachar al-Assad a "perdu sa légitimité", estime Clinton
Notre objectif "est que la volonté de transformation démocratique du peuple syrien se réalise", fait savoir la secrétaire d'Etat américaine. |
HERAULT. Cinq personnes tuées dans un accident de voiture
Quatre autres sont grièvement blessées. Les deux véhicules se sont percutés de face à Lattes, dans la banlieue de Montpellier. |
Le bac 2011 établit le record de 71,6% d'une génération diplômée
Les résultats des séries générales et technologiques sont en hausse, ceux des séries professionnelles en baisse. Léger mieux pour le bac S. |
Vers une autorité chargée du blocage des sites web ?
Un manifeste appelle à la création d'une "Haute Autorité du Net", chargée de bloquer les sites web litigieux, sans contrôle judiciaire. |
"On ne peut pas conduire sur le Tour de France sans avoir été coureur"
"Désolant". Ancien coureur et directeur sportif, Maurice Le Guilloux, chauffeur sur le Tour, revient sur l'accident de dimanche. Interview par Samuel Auffray |
Copa America : Messi réveille l'Argentine
Tenue en échec lors des deux premiers matches, l'Albiceleste a facilement dominé le Costa Rica (3-0). |
Festival d'Avignon : des lapins et des hommes
Avec "Mademoiselle Julie" de Strindberg, Juliette Binoche a gagné, dans la douceur, le pari de son retour au théâtre. Par Odile Quirot |
Prix de l'essence : la polémique sur les profits pétroliers relancée
Ll'UFC-Que choisir propose notamment une taxation exceptionnelle citoyenne des "marges amonts" pour financer la recherche afin de diminuer la dépendance pétrolière. |
Ce que contiendra la future carte d'identité biométrique
Du format d'une carte bleue, elle sera composée de deux puces électroniques : une "régalienne" et une "vie quotidienne". Un marché de 12 millions d'euros annuels qui fera le bonheur des fabricants. Par Boris Manenti |
Des chiffres et des lettres
La culture du chiffre envahit les esprits. Le vôtre, le nôtre. Bientôt, plus de lettres, que des chiffres. Par Jacques Drillon |
L'apéro "saucisson vin rouge" provoque l'embarras à l'UMP
Cette initiative du collectif de la droite populaire n'est pas sans rappeler les apéros organisés par l'extrême-droite. Par Emmanuelle Hirschauer |
Google+, la réussite par le spam ?
Les développeurs d'applications pourraient délaisser Facebook pour le réseau social de Google, plus "viral". |
Notes de frais : des "erreurs" qui ont été régularisées selon Baudis
Le Défenseur des droits a précisé que le redressement de l'Urssaf sur 36.000 euros de notes de frais portait "en fait sur quatre ans et demi". |
VIDEOS | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Une descente vertigineuse |
Maxime Simoens : Collection Automne-Hiver 2011-2012 |
Clinton condamne le gouvernement syrien et l'attaque des ambassades |
2012 : Martine Aubry portera plainte si les rumeurs persistent |
La bande-annonce de "BioShock Infinite" |
Blogs | |||
---|---|---|---|
Festival d'Avignon: des lapins et des hommes Par Odile Quirot |
Vive Bourguiba ! Par Jean Daniel |
||
FUKUSHIMA (suite 40) Des décennies pour nettoyer la centrale de Fukushima Par Dominique Leglu |
La ”Youtubisation” de la vie privée Par Jérôme Hourdeaux |
||
Voir tous les blogs |
Developer News
The good, the bad and the future.
Source: 2ality
Model View Confusion.
Source: MysteryCoder
Installing a new OS is a good time to re-evaluate tools and
workflows.
Source: Shawn Blanc
"Sorry about the mess."
Source: Hack a Day
Performance as the altar at which all the other code is sacrificed.
Source: Matt Wilcox
The New Republic Daily Report
07/12/11
The Bizarre, Strategically Bankrupt Evolution of the Parties' View on Defense Spending Lawrence F. Kaplan *|FACEBOOK:LIKE: http://www.tnr.com/article/crossings/91746/defense-budget-deficit-obama-romney-mckeon-hawks|*
The Obama administration has managed to upend the laws of ornithology. The simple fact of a Democratic commander-in-chief has transformed yesterday’s Republican hawks into today’s doves. No less miraculously, and certainly for no more high-minded reasons, Democratic doves have metamorphosed into something like hawks.
In both cases, however, the transformation has been less than complete. Democrats, beginning with a president who currently presides over wars in three countries and periodically launches fusillades at several more (if a commander-in-chief earned a ribbon each time he ordered U.S. forces into action, Barack Obama would be well on his way to acquiring a chestful), have proved reluctant to fund the means for their military aims—namely, the U.S. military itself. As for Republicans, the GOP attachment to large defense appropriations endures (though just barely), but the ghost of Robert Taft haunts the party once more, making it wary of foreign entanglements. The Republican paradox has been neatly exemplified by congressional votes to deny approval for the air campaign in Libya, and then to fund the same operation to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars
Continue reading "Evolution of the Parties' View on Defense Spending"
Tutti i Video
Il ginnasta con la gamba amputata diventa il fenomeno del web
Gallery
Ufunk - 2
המגזין השבועי של אתר בית חב"ד
|
|
Non
solo Bulgari: ecco il made in Italy... indiano/ Affari sotto il vestito/ Ha
rilevato 5 marchi della gioielleria italiana (Stefan Hafner, Valente, Nouvelle
Bague, Io si, Porrati) e ora è pronto a investire 25 milioni in 2 anni per farli
crescere. Lo rivela ad Affaritaliani.it Choksi, presidente del colosso indiano
Gitanjali. Che annuncia: "Management, sede e lavorazioni resteranno italiane". E
spiega perché il nostro Paese è pieno di marchi eccellenti ma non riesce a...
Svelati i
retroscena dello smantellamento delle centrali italiane. Treni carichi
di scorie nucleari in viaggio di notte da Saluggia verso la Francia per
il riprocessamento.
Importanti
investimenti sulle rinnovabili attesi dai due "colossi" mondiale.
Brasile e Russia, con tempi e proporzioni diverse, iniziano la loro
corsa verso la "green energy".
Durerà fino a
settembre la "Riserva Renault Z.E.", un'opportunità esclusiva per
entrare nel mondo dei veicoli a zero emissioni di Renault diventando
protagonisti attivi della "rivoluzione elettrica"
Linea
anticonformista e tecnologia innovativa sono le basi della Renault
Twizy, citycar elettrica in arrivo nel 2012 ma già prenotabile tramite
il programma Riserva Renault Z.E.
Nel processo
in corso contro la multinazionale dell'amianto arriva la richiesta della
Regione Piemonte per un maxi risarcimento da 69 milioni.
Il ministro
Romani torna sulla riduzione degli incentivi e ribadisce la validità del
Quarto Conto Energia, uno strumento utile per raggiungere la grid
parity
La fusione
fredda continua a far parlare di sé. Possibili utilizzi nel campo dei
trasporti, riesumando i vecchi "motori a vapore" di sapore ottocentesco
Coldiretti
presenta il "super pomodoro", una variante che promette maggiori
proprietà anti invecchiamento e non si tratta di un OGM
Secondo l'UNEP
nel 2010 sarebbero stati in investiti 211 miliardi di dollari, circa il
32% in più rispetto rispetto all'anno precedente
Le proposte
per le rinnovabili dell'istituto bancario Cariparma. Si segnalano
soprattutto le opportunità per le aziende, con finanziamenti davvero
sostanziosi
RFE/RL Russia Report
7/12/2011 5:10:23 PM
A review of RFE/RL reporting and analysis about domestic and foreign-policy developments in Russia.
For more stories on Russia, please visit and bookmark our Russia page . |
Neo-Nazi's Sentences Welcomed
Anti-racism campaigners have welcomed the tough sentences handed down by a Moscow court against a group of serial killers as part of a recent government crackdown on ultranationalist groups that follows years of leniency. More Russia, a country famous for its architectural confections, is commemorating the 450th anniversary of one of its best-known structures, St. Basil's Cathedral. More Russian authorities have opened a criminal investigation into the sinking of a tourist boat on the Volga River, as the country observed a day of mourning for the more than 100 victims of the tragedy. More A Moscow military court has handed down five life sentences to members of a neo-Nazi group in connection with a killing spree that shocked Russia into tougher hate-crime laws. More Russia has declared July 12 a day of mourning after more than 100 people, including many children, drowned when their overcrowded cruise boat sank in the Volga River. Raynur Shakir of RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service spoke to a passenger on another river boat that was among the first to help survivors escape the scene. More It's no secret Germany has one of Europe's closest relationships with Russia. Berlin is Moscow's largest customer for natural gas and its biggest trading partner in general. The close ties worry those who believe Russia is using its natural resources for political advantage as well as commercial profit, but there are signs the relationship might be changing. More Divers began to recover the bodies of around 100 people who drowned after an overcrowded cruise boat sank on July 10 on Russia's Volga River. More Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian today praised his country's expanding commercial ties with Russia, particularly the growing rate of exports to Russian markets. More Uzbek comedian Obid Asomov is a household name in the former Soviet states due to his role in the popular Russian satirical serial "Krivoe Zerkalo" (Distorted Mirror). But the comedian is essentially blacklisted in his native Uzbekistan. Asomov says he has an idea why. More "The Blender" is reaching its sixth-month mark, so for Episode 26, we decided to take a look back at some of the highlights of the first half-year. More A computer error has been blamed for the mistaken notification of 22,000 foreign nationals that they'd been picked for U.S. Green Cards. Dozens of the "selectees" have banded together to try and launch a class-action lawsuit claiming damages. More One of Russia's most prominent opposition figures says he will return to Russia despite being barred from leaving the country for six months. More Later this month, an illustrious roster of Hollywood stars will once again jet over for another stab at the haphazard charity fundraiser last attended by action man Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. More Chelsea Handler insults Serbia -- plus crazy communist architecture, a Kyrgyz kindergarten teaches tolerance, and some nice noises from Georgia in our special "Ear to the Ground" music segment. More Russian diplomats have expressed concern over the fate of a Russian blogger detained in Chisinau on suspicion of inciting riots more than two years ago. More One would think that being asked to move from being the leader of Russia's second largest city to a post that puts one second in line for the presidency would be seen as a promotion. But outgoing St. Petersburg Governor Valentina Matviyenko didn't exactly see it that way. More The legendary Yury Lyubimov is leaving the theater company he founded in 1964 after falling out with his actors while on tour. Russia's culture minister has publicly called for an end to the conflict, but Lyubimov has made it clear he is bowing out for good. More Poland, which has grown from a troublesome new member to one of the EU's key states, takes over the bloc's six-month rotating presidency amid high expectations. More A senior U.S. military official says close defense ties with Russia do not impede Armenia's growing military cooperation with NATO and the United States in particular. More It was a rather bizarre video-conference in the European Parliament with Polish opposition leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski, chairman of the Law and Justice Party. More The father of two teenage girls shot dead on June 27 in northeastern Chechnya has been taken into custody as a suspect. More Maybe Russia's leaders should just stay away from cars. During his visit to Kazan over the weekend, President Dmitry Medvedev's car nearly crashed into a crowd of people. Somebody apparently forget to put on the handbrake after parking the car on a hill. More The Republic of Ingushetia Security Council categorically rejected on June 27 claims by security officials in neighboring Chechnya that self-proclaimed Caucasus Emirate leader Doku Umarov has returned to the Caucasus after undergoing medical treatment in Turkey and may be hiding in the mountainous Jeyrakh district of southern Ingushetia. More Over the past several days there have been ample signs that changes in how Russia is governed are indeed in the works. Whether these will be meaningful and lasting, or simply cosmetic, is still an open question. More The French Foreign Ministry says French, Russian, and U.S. diplomats co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group will begin the next round of regional shuttle diplomacy "in coming weeks" in an effort to "prepare the continuation of negotiations" in the stalled Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process. More The self-styled president of South Ossetia, Eduard Kokoity, could be reaffirming his loyalty to Moscow -- the breakaway region's biggest supporter -- by naming the streets after Medvedev and Putin, who many South Ossetians believe saved the territory from Georgian forces during 2008 Russian-Georgian war. More |
RFE/RL Belarus, Ukraine, and Moldova Report
7/12/2011 5:19:34 PM
A review of RFE/RL reporting and analysis about Belarus, Ukraine, and Moldova.
For more stories on Eastern Europe, please visit and bookmark our Eastern Europe page . |
Belarus
A Belarusian Protester Walks Into A Bar... RFE/RL's Belarus Service asked its readers on the web if they'd heard any good jokes lately regarding current events in Belarus. More Mikhail Karnevich, who photographed the July 3 demonstrations in Minsk, called today's sentence "fabricated" and insisted on his right to practice journalism. More A senior EU diplomat for Eastern Europe says the restrictive measures put in place on Belarus are working despite the latest crackdown on demonstrators by the regime. Miroslav Lajcak also says the regime's recent brutality is a sign it's losing its grip over the country. More Belarusian police have arrested hundreds of protesters and bystanders since the latest wave of antigovernment demonstrations began on July 6. RFE/RL Belarus Service correspondent Oleg Hruzdzilovich was among those detained. In this video, shot from inside the police van, he gets to know the stories of some of his fellow passengers. More Courts in Belarus have begun hearing cases and imposing short jail sentences and fines on some of the estimated 400 people detained during demonstrations in Minsk and other cities on July 6. Belarusian rights activists say 1,730 protesters have been convicted over the past month over a wave of protests against President Alyaksandr Lukashenka. More Belarus has jailed or fined dozens of activists for taking part in peaceful antigovernment protests, rights activists say. Some 400 people were arrested on July 3 when police cracked down on protesters voicing their dissatisfaction with the regime by simply clapping their hands. More Belarusian police have brutally dispersed antigovernment rallies across the country, firing tear gas and detaining dozens of protesters. More Courts in Minsk and other cities have been passing sentences on some of the more than 150 people detained during demonstrations on June 29. More Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka has used most of the instruments in the dictator’s toolbox to repress his people. On the evening of June 29, he employed a novel weapon: disco music. More Belarusian police today detained dozens of people during an unauthorized antigovernment protest in Minsk. More The trial of a prominent Polish-Belarusian journalist charged with insulting Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka has been adjourned until next week, when a verdict is expected. More In its 2011 annual "Global Trafficking in Persons Report," the State Department also maintained Russia on the list for the eighth consecutive year for similar alleged failures. More Greece and Belarus are both bankrupt. But Minsk shouldn't be expecting any bailouts from the international financial agencies. More The Belarusian government's crackdown on dissenters in the aftermath of December's disputed presidential election will feature in next week's Community of Democracies meeting in the Lithuanian capital. More They're called "silent demonstrations;" thousands of people clapping their hands during weekly protests in more than 30 cities across heavily policed Belarus. The applause is for themselves, for overcoming their fear of police beatings and arrest. More Finland has finally announced its new six-party coalition government after months of negotiations. The Euroskeptic True Finns party was left out, but two appointments to the new government might nonetheless have an impact on how the European Union is run. More Officials have tried to survey the property of Polish-Belarusian journalist Andrzej Poczobut, who is on trial for insulting President Alyaksandr Lukashenka. More Russia Concern Over Blogger Detention Russian diplomats have expressed concern over the fate of a Russian blogger detained in Chisinau on suspicion of inciting riots more than two years ago. More Polish EU Presidency Views Moldova As Model Of 'Success' A European Parliament member says Poland will push for closer relations with Eastern Partnership countries during its European Union presidency and will use Moldova as a "success model." More Before his brutal slaying in 2001, Ihor Aleksandrov had authored a series of television programs, called "Bez Retushi" (Without Touching Up), focused on the connections between officials in the Donetsk regional city of Sloviansk and criminal gangs. More A computer error has been blamed for the mistaken notification of 22,000 foreign nationals that they'd been picked for U.S. Green Cards. Dozens of the "selectees" have banded together to try and launch a class-action lawsuit claiming damages. More Bare breasts, hijabs, and fried eggs are not common ingredients in social protest movements. More Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko has lambasted the judge hearing her abuse-of-power trial as a "puppet" of President Viktor Yanukovych. More Several political parties in the eastern Ukrainian city of Dnipropetrovsk commemorated the country's Constitution Day by unfurling what is thought to be the world's largest national flag. More What do a World War II monument and driving rights for Saudi women have in common? More Officials in eastern Ukraine say a murder suspect has committed suicide by hanging himself with his shoelaces. More |
------------------------------------------------------------------------ DEBT CRISIS HITS ITALY ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Berlusconi's Last Stand Italy is used to crises -- the government is rudderless, the economy is stagnant and Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is mired in scandals. Now the country may become embroiled in the euro crisis, and its fate lies in the hands of its finance minister. Berlusconi, for his part, faces the ruins of his political career. http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,774042,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ THE NEXT DOMINO? ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Italy Suffers from Euro-Zone Contagion Fears Italy has slid into the speculators' crosshairs amid concerns that the euro-zone crisis could hit the country next. In many respects, Italy is much better off than its neighbors on the periphery. But unlike Greece, it is definitely too big to fail. http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,773818,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ THE WORLD FROM BERLIN ------------------------------------------------------------------------ For Euro Zone, It's Euro Bonds or Else Markets in Europe are being hit hard by fears that the debt crisis will spread to Italy, which is regarded as too big to rescue. German media commentators say the time has come to stop the piecemeal bailout efforts and to make the member states share liability for their debt -- via euro bonds. http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,773893,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ HARIRI OR HARAKIRI? ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Indictments Come at Key Moment for Hezbollah's Nasrallah The United Nations Special Tribunal has indicted four senior Hezbollah members for the murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah is raging against the West, Israel and SPIEGEL. The indictments come at a time of financial woes for Hezbollah, but also one in which the Shiite group has massively increased its power. http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,773913,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 'GERMAN HISTORY ISN'T BEAUTIFUL' ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Dresden Museum Seeks to Tell Truth about War A revolutionary German military museum, designed by the star architect Daniel Libeskind, will soon open in Dresden. Although set up by the German armed forces, the Bundeswehr, its curators hope the museum will cast new light on war and the suffering it causes. As such, it is a very German project. http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,773221,00.html#ref=nlint -------------------- Photo Gallery: Dresden's New Military Museum http://www.spiegel.de/fotostrecke/fotostrecke-70207.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ FILLING ACKERMANN'S SHOES ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Power Struggle Hampers Search for New Deutsche Bank CEO Deutsche Bank is locked in an internal management dispute over who should succeed Josef Ackermann as chief executive. The rift has been exarcebated by personal tensions between Ackermann and the head of the bank's supervisory board, Clemens Börsig. But Börsig now looks set to get his way. http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,774005,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ CONTRADICTION COALITION ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Tank Deal Reveals New Arms Exports Approach A secretive plan to sell tanks to Saudia Arabia has caused a furor within Germany's governing coalition, members of which are demanding an explanation. The deal, which violates a tradition of avoiding weapons sales in conflict areas, signals a fundamental shift in German arms trade. Is Chancellor Angela Merkel's foreign policy still credible? http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,773931,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ THE ORIGIN OF THE ANTI-NUCLEAR EMBLEM ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 'We Wanted a Logo that Was Cheerful and Polite' Danish activist Anne Lund designed the "Nuclear Power? No Thanks" logo that has become the symbol of the anti-nuclear movement around the world. She spoke with SPIEGEL about how the "Smiling Sun" was born and why she never made any money from her design. http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/0,1518,773903,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ BORDER BARBS ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Danish Populists Have Harsh Words for German Critics European Union members have heavily criticized Denmark's recent decision to reinstate border controls, with Germany leading the pack. One politician even suggested a boycott of the nation. But the right-wing populist party behind the controversial measures refuses to back down, and its anti-German rhetoric has grown increasingly acerbic. http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,773731,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 'AT THE EDGE OF COLLAPSE' ------------------------------------------------------------------------ EU Fisheries Reforms Aim for Sustainability On Wednesday, the European Commission is set to propose reforms to its Common Fisheries Policy, which critics say has led to the systematic devastation of fish stocks in the region. In an interview, expert Rainer Froese says the situation, among the world's worst, will now finally begin to improve. http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,773876,00.html#ref=nlint ------------------------------------------------------------------------ PICTURE THIS ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Heavy Load http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,774061,00.html#ref=nlint
|
+++ Werbung in eigener Sache: +++ Dossier: Fußball-WM 2011 http://www.neues-deutschland.de/dossiers/147.html Die LINKE, Israel und der Antisemitismus http://www.neues-deutschland.de/dossiers/150.html +++ Fotogalerie: Dürre in Afrika Afrika erlebt eine katastrophale Dürre – Hilfsorganisationen wollen das Schlimmste verhindern http://www.neues-deutschland.de/weiteres/fotogalerie/index.php?sid=258 Gedenken in Srebrenica Zehntausende Menschen gedenken der Opfer des Völkermordes vor 16 Jahren http://www.neues-deutschland.de/weiteres/fotogalerie/index.php?sid=265 Liebe Leserinnen und Leser, hier erfahren Sie, welche Themen im ND vom 13.07.2011 behandelt werden. +++ Titel: Dürre bedroht 10 Millionen Afrikaner Größte Hungerkatastrophe seit Jahrzehnten / Bundeskanzlerin auf Wirtschaftssafari Von Martin Ling --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202002.duerre-bedroht-10-millionen-afrikaner.html +++ Inland: Reformer machen Pulverfass Bundeswehr wieder auf Zustimmung zu gefundenen Kompromissen im Programmentwurf der LINKEN – aber Änderungsanträge mit Sprengkraft Von Uwe Kalbe --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201979.reformer-machen-pulverfass-bundeswehr-wieder-auf.html Der Bürger, das Blut und die Wut Wo die kruden »Thesen« des Windmachers Thilo Sarrazin herkommen Von Tomasz Konicz --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201973.der-buerger-das-blut-und-die-wut.html Wo der Müll der Nazis strahlt Lagert Uran in der »Asse«? Von Reimar Paul --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201974.wo-der-muell-der-nazis-strahlt.html Maschmeyer und der NDR schließen Frieden AWD-Gründer und Norddeutscher Rundfunk legen monatelangen Rechtsstreit bei Von Fabian Lambeck --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201975.maschmeyer-und-der-ndr-schliessen-frieden.html Telefoniert wird im Café gegenüber BND-Verantwortliche vermissen Bauunterlagen und Politiker Antworten nach dem Warum Von René Heilig --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201976.telefoniert-wird-im-cafe-gegenueber.html Zuwanderung bremst Bevölkerungsrückgang BRD hatte 2010 81,75 Millionen Einwohner --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201970.zuwanderung-bremst-bevoelkerungsrueckgang.html Empörung über Preis für Putin Grünen-Chef Özdemir verlässt Kuratorium --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201971.empoerung-ueber-preis-fuer-putin.html Betreten und Erkunden verboten? Initiative CO2ntra Endlager über ihren Protest gegen Vattenfall / Mario Eska ist Sprecher der Bürgerinitiative CO2ntra Endlager und Bürgermeister von Neuhardenberg --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201960.betreten-und-erkunden-verboten.html Dresden: LINKE geht vor Gericht Weiter Kritik am Vorgehen der Polizei am 19. Februar --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201954.dresden-linke-geht-vor-gericht.html Wieder Attacken auf Politikerbüros im Nordosten Mecklenburg-Vorpommern: Bereits 28 Vorfälle in diesem Jahr --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201955.wieder-attacken-auf-politikerbueros-im-nordosten.html Vergoldeter Ruhestand? Kohle zum Abschied: Mögliche Änderung des Ministergesetzes in Niedersachsen Von Hagen Jung --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201956.vergoldeter-ruhestand.html Kein Konsens über Nachatomzeitalter Opposition in Hessen kritisiert geplanten Ausbau von Kohlekraftwerken Von Hans-Gerd Öfinger --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201989.kein-konsens-ueber-nachatomzeitalter.html »Fallada-Diplom« für Kinder Carwitzer Museum: Mit Audioführer und Rätselheft auf Schriftsteller-Spuren Von Winfried Wagner, dpa --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201990.fallada-diplom-fuer-kinder.html Prozess beginnt mit Geständnis Mörder von Mirco: »Tat ist unentschuldbar« --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201945.prozess-beginnt-mit-gestaendnis.html +++ Ausland: Schwere Propaganda-Gefechte in Afghanistan Attentat auf Halbbruder von Präsident Karsai / Alle Kriegsparteien sehen sich auf dem Vormarsch Von René Heilig --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202003.schwere-propaganda-gefechte-in-afghanistan.html Feier oder Offenbarungseid? Der NATO-Generalsekretär möchte heute die künftige Führung Libyens präsentieren Von Roland Etzel --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201980.feier-oder-offenbarungseid.html Die Wirtschaft entdeckt Afrika wieder Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel bereist den Kontinent gemeinsam mit einem Unternehmertross Von Katrin Gänsler, Abuja --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201977.die-wirtschaft-entdeckt-afrika-wieder.html Endlose Karawanen nach Dadaab Die Dürre am Horn von Afrika lässt das größte Flüchtlingslager der Welt täglich wachsen Von Philipp Hedemann, Dadaab --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201978.endlose-karawanen-nach-dadaab.html Murdoch benutzte »bekannte Kriminelle« Ex-Premier Brown zur britischen Abhöraffäre --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201969.murdoch-benutzte-bekannte-kriminelle.html US-Drohnen weiter auf Todeskurs Dutzende Menschen in Pakistan getötet / Islamabad droht mit Rückzug aus Unruhegebieten --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201972.us-drohnen-weiter-auf-todeskurs.html Bei Boykott droht Strafe Israels Parlament beschloss Knebelgesetz Von Oliver Eberhardt --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201964.bei-boykott-droht-strafe.html Verdruss im Ulmental Schweden: Politikerwoche im Zeichen von Spannungen in den Blöcken Von Gregor Putensen --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201965.verdruss-im-ulmental.html Erekat optimistisch Palästinenser beharren auf Staatsausrufung --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201966.erekat-optimistisch.html »Klare Einmischung« Damaskus rügt Äußerungen aus Washington --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201967.klare-einmischung.html »Ohne den König geht nichts« Viele Marokkaner halten die neue Verfassung trotz deren Möglichkeiten für unzureichend Von Alfred Hackensberger, Tanger --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201968.ohne-den-koenig-geht-nichts.html Unbestechlich Eva Joly / Präsidentschaftskandidatin der Grünen in Frankreich Ralf Klingsieck --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201959.unbestechlich.html +++ Wirtschaft/Soziales: Im Kampf gegen Jugendarbeitslosigkeit Dänisches Bildungsministerium startet mehrere Initiativen zur Weiterbildung Von Andreas Knudsen, Kopenhagen --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201949.im-kampf-gegen-jugendarbeitslosigkeit.html Studie: Zeitarbeit macht krank --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201950.studie-zeitarbeit-macht-krank.html AKW-Gegner campen in Rostock --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201951.akw-gegner-campen-in-rostock.html Strategische Partnerschaft Geld spielt keine Rolle beim Einstieg von Gazprom bei RWE Von Irina Wolkowa, Moskau --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201952.strategische-partnerschaft.html Mehrere Banken durchgefallen Erste Ergebnisse vom Stresstest --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201953.mehrere-banken-durchgefallen.html Den Panikmachern nicht auf den Leim gehen Was die griechische Staatsschuldenkrise für die deutschen und europäischen Staatsfinanzen wirklich bedeutet Von Achim Truger --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201946.den-panikmachern-nicht-auf-den-leim-gehen.html Banken profitieren von Hilfspaketen Finanzminister Schäuble pumpt sich neue Schulden über eine private Agentur Von Hermannus Pfeiffer --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201947.banken-profitieren-von-hilfspaketen.html Kommunen unter Druck Kämmerer: Städte und Gemeinden an den Rand des Ruins getrieben Von Velten Schäfer --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201948.kommunen-unter-druck.html +++ Feuilleton: Karajan wäre nach dem ersten Titel von der Bühne gegangen Sting präsentierte seine Hits beim 45. Montreux Jazz Festival in orchestralem Gewand Von Christoph Nitz, Montreux --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201983.karajan-waere-nach-dem-ersten-titel-von-der-buehne-gegangen.html Erster Auftritt in Tübingen Liao Yiwu: --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201942.erster-auftritt-in-tuebingen.html »Mut zur Wut« --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201943.mut-zur-wut.html Nicht die Partei, sondern das System Oskar Lafontaine über ein Buch zur Stalinismus-Kritik --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201944.nicht-die-partei-sondern-das-system.html Berlusconi? Nur Projektion! Blick auf das italienische Theater Von Anja Laabs --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201998.berlusconi-nur-projektion.html »Ich mache erwachsene Filme« Iris Berben über Johannes Mario Simmel, Diven und Maßstäbe Von Jan Freitag --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201999.ich-mache-erwachsene-filme.html +++ Berlin/Brandenburg: Bus und Bahn per Handy bezahlen --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201991.bus-und-bahn-per-handy-bezahlen.html Bewerbung für Olympia nicht ausgeschlossen --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201992.bewerbung-fuer-olympia-nicht-ausgeschlossen.html Laut gegen Flugrouten Volksbegehren gegen Nachtflüge geplant --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201993.laut-gegen-flugrouten.html Stopp für neuen Polizeichef Gericht verhindert Neubesetzung des Amtes --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201994.stopp-fuer-neuen-polizeichef.html Straftäter flieht erneut aus Klinik --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201995.straftaeter-flieht-erneut-aus-klinik.html Neue Runde --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201996.neue-runde.html Mit Facebook gegen teure Mieten DGB und Diakonie fordern soziale Wohnungsbaupolitik und nutzen Internetportal zur Vernetzung Von Jenny Becker --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201997.mit-facebook-gegen-teure-mieten.html Gegen Windmühlen Strafgefangene spielen »Don Quijote« Von Anouk Meyer --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201957.gegen-windmuehlen.html Der Regisseur, der die Frauen liebte Das Lichtblick-Kino präsentiert eine François-Truffaut-Retrospektive Von Kira Taszman --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201958.der-regisseur-der-die-frauen-liebte.html Tausendfüßler wandern zur Musik Kneipp-Kita, musische Früherziehung und der 8. Feriensommer in Marzahn-Hellersdorf Von Ariane Mann --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202007.tausendfuessler-wandern-zur-musik.html Neuzelle bekommt Museum Kutschstall der Klosteranlage wird mit Millionen saniert --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202004.neuzelle-bekommt-museum.html Verdunkelungsgefahr Brandenburger Hotelchef Hilpert bleibt in U-Haft --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202005.verdunkelungsgefahr.html Viadrina feiert 200 und 20 Jahre Doppeljubiläum der Universität an der Oder Von Steffi Prutean, dpa --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202006.viadrina-feiert-200-und-20-jahre.html +++ Sport: Zu lange trainiert? Fehlersuche nach dem Aus der DFB-Frauen --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201985.zu-lange-trainiert.html »Big Mama« schaut zu --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201986.big-mama-schaut-zu.html Auf den Willen kommt es an Auf Augenhöhe: Die offensivstarken Teams aus den USA und Frankreich wollen unbedingt ins Finale Von Mark Wolter, Mönchengladbach --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201987.auf-den-willen-kommt-es-an.html Spaßfraktion gegen zögerliche Techniker Auch nach dem deutschen WM-Aus erwartet Frankfurt ein hochklassiges Halbfinale zwischen Schweden und Japan Von Oliver Händler, --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201988.spassfraktion-gegen-zoegerliche-techniker.html Argentinier erleichtert Sieg in der Copa, Maradona im Unfall-Glück --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201981.argentinier-erleichtert.html »Positive Wendung« Die Tour 2011 hat ihren ersten Dopingfall: Alexandr Kolobnew aus Russland Von Tom Mustroph, Carmaux --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201982.positive-wendung.html Paul Biedermann will loslegen WM in Shanghai: 14 Medaillen sind das Ziel des Deutschen Schwimm-Verbandes Von Marc Zeilhofer und --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201984.paul-biedermann-will-loslegen.html +++ Meinung/Kolumne: Unten links --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202000.unten-links.html Tödlich versagt Standpunkt von Martin Ling --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/202001.toedlich-versagt.html Deutsche Verantwortung Kommentar von Wolfgang Hübner --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201961.deutsche-verantwortung.html Konsequent ignoriert Kommentar von Haidy Damm --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201962.konsequent-ignoriert.html Brückenbauer Kommentar von Olaf Standke --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201963.brueckenbauer.html +++ Außer Parlamentarisches: Verdächtig links Eine Diskussion über die umstrittene Idee von extremistischen Rändern und warum sich Linke diesen Schuh anziehen --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201941.verdaechtig-links.html +++ Ratgeber: Neuer Bundesfreiwilligendienst löst den bisherigen Zivildienst ab Ab 1. Juli 2011 --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201940.neuer-bundesfreiwilligendienst-loest-den-bisherigen-zivildienst-ab.html Operation mit »Schutzbrief« Urteil --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201936.operation-mit-schutzbrief.html Patienten müssen demnächst mit höheren Zahnarztkosten rechnen Krankenkassen --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201937.patienten-muessen-demnaechst-mit-hoeheren-zahnarztkosten-rechnen.html Strandsegler fährt Frau um Schmerzensgeld --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201938.strandsegler-faehrt-frau-um.html Einbeziehung von Mahngebühren bisher ohne gesetzliche Grundlage Hartz IV --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201939.einbeziehung-von-mahngebuehren-bisher-ohne-gesetzliche-grundlage.html Zur Lage freiberuflicher Hebammen --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201933.zur-lage-freiberuflicher-hebammen.html Teilzeitwünsche nicht beliebig oft änderbar Urteile --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201934.teilzeitwuensche-nicht-beliebig-oft-aenderbar.html Ist eine Erwerbstätigkeit während des Urlaubs grundsätzlich verboten? Leserfragen zum Bundesurlaubsgesetz --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201935.ist-eine-erwerbstaetigkeit-waehrend-des-urlaubs-grundsaetzlich-verboten.html Trinkwasseranlage im Heim regelmäßig kontrollieren Hygiene --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201929.trinkwasseranlage-im-heim-regelmaessig-kontrollieren.html Bietet das Gesetz mehr Schutz für sozial schwache Mieter? Berliner Wohnraumgesetz --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201930.bietet-das-gesetz-mehr-schutz-fuer-sozial-schwache-mieter.html Verbraucherzentrale gibt coole Tipps für heiße Tage Energieberatung --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201931.verbraucherzentrale-gibt-coole-tipps-fuer-heisse-tage.html Betreutes Wohnen – mit welchen Kosten für die Unterkunft ist zu rechnen? Literaturtipp --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201932.betreutes-wohnen-mit-welchen-kosten-fuer-die-unterkunft-ist-zu-rechnen.html Blendendes Solardach Nachbarrecht --> http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201924.blendendes-solardach.html Das Ferienhaus kostet das ganze Jahr über Geld Ferienimmobilien --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201925.das-ferienhaus-kostet-das-ganze-jahr-ueber-geld.html Keine Protestplakate im Fenster Wohnungseigentum --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201926.keine-protestplakate-im-fenster.html Bauabnahme ohne Druck Baurat --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201927.bauabnahme-ohne-druck.html Vorsicht – »verdeckte« Bauträgermodelle Hausbau --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201928.vorsicht-verdeckte-bautraegermodelle.html Was bringt das neue Steuervereinfachungsgesetz 2011? --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201920.was-bringt-das-neue-steuervereinfachungsgesetz-2011.html Klassenfahrt Sonderbedarf? Urteile in Kürze --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201921.klassenfahrt-sonderbedarf.html BFH-Urteil: Samenspenden sind steuerlich absetzbar Korrektur der bisherigen Rechtsprechung --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201922.bfh-urteil-samenspenden-sind-steuerlich-absetzbar.html Pfändungsurteil zwang Vater zur vollen Zahlung Unterhalt --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201923.pfaendungsurteil-zwang-vater-zur-vollen-zahlung.html Keine Tricks bei einer Überschuldung Privatinsolvenz --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201917.keine-tricks-bei-einer-ueberschuldung.html Geldscheine mit Stempelaufdruck Zahlungsverkehr --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201918.geldscheine-mit-stempelaufdruck.html Die Pflegerentenversicherung steht in der Kritik ND-Serie: Welche Versicherungen Sie wirklich brauchen (Teil 12) --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201919.die-pflegerentenversicherung-steht-in-der-kritik.html Keine Vollkaskoversicherung bei einer Trunkenheitsfahrt Verkehrsrecht --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201914.keine-vollkaskoversicherung-bei-einer-trunkenheitsfahrt.html Gericht verbietet pauschale Werbung mit Flugreisen Reiserecht --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201915.gericht-verbietet-pauschale-werbung-mit-flugreisen.html Wenn Werber an der Haustür klingeln Verbraucherschutz --> [für Abonnenten] http://www.neues-deutschland.de/artikel/201916.wenn-werber-an-der-haustuer-klingeln.html
A la découverte du paquebot Costa Favolosa Nous vous emmenons aujourd'hui à bord du dernier-né de la compagnie Costa Croisières. Construit par les chantiers Fincantieri de Marghera, le Costa Favolosa a été baptisé le 2 juillet à Trieste et a appareillé pour s... |
Un nouvel Intercepteur en essais au large de Cherbourg Les observateurs avisés ont pu remarquer, la semaine dernière devant Cherbourg, les évolutions d'une vedette rapide en livrée camouflage. Un navire présentant une étonnante particularité puisque doté sur le roof d'un... |
Royal Navy : Les mises en garde du First Sea Lord sur les coupes budgétaires Mise au régime sec par les économies budgétaires, la Royal Navy peine de plus en plus à accomplir ses missions et va, estime nombre d'experts, droit à la catastrophe. Le patron de la flotte britannique sort lui-même ... |
La Marine nationale au 14 juillet Comme chaque année, les marins français défileront pour le 14 juillet sur, et au-dessus, des Champs Elysées, à Paris. Cette année, c'est l'Outre-mer qui est à l'honneur. Les unités de la Marine nationale participant au... |
La principale base navale chypriote ravagée par des explosions Située entre Limassol et Larnaca, la base navale Evangelos Florakis de Zygi, la plus importante de Chypre, a été ravagée hier matin par une série d'explosions. Le sinistre a fait 12 morts, ainsi que des dizaines de b... |
Dramatique naufrage d'un navire de croisière sur la Volga Le Bulgaria, navire de croisière fluvial russe, a fait naufrage le 10 juillet alors qu'il naviguait sur la Volga en direction de Kazan. Long de 80 mètres et transportant 208 passagers et membres d'équipage, le bateau... |
Un bateau de pêche coule près de Saint-Vaast-La-Hougue Hier, vers 6H15, le Christelle-Corinne, un navire de pêche de Caen, signalait au Centre Régional Opérationnel de Surveillance et de Sauvetage (CROSS) de Jobourg qu'il avait récupéré trois marins pêcheurs à l'eau suit... |
Eolien offshore : Le cahier des charges de l'appel d'offres est publié La Commission de régulation de l'énergie a publié, hier, le premier appel d'offres portant sur les installations d'éoliennes offshores sur les cinq sites retenus, dans un premier temps, au large des côtes françaises. L... |
MSC aligne une flotte de 452 porte-conteneurs La barre symbolique a été franchie. Pour la première fois de son histoire, l'armement suisse Mediterranean Shipping Company a dépassé le cap des 450 porte-conteneurs. Fin juin, MSC totalisait 452 navires en flotte, ... |
Journées internationales sur la gouvernance et les communautés portuaires en Europe Les Journées internationales sur la gouvernance et les communautés portuaires en Europe se dérouleront les 20 et 21 octobre prochains à l'Ecole Nationale Supérieure Maritime de Nantes. Ces journées sont issues d'... |
Formation : Chargé de mission Environnement « Activités Littorales et Portuaires » A Bruz et Saint-Malo, en Ile et Vilaine, L'Ecole des Métiers de l'Environnement (EME) ouvre à la rentrée prochaine un Diplôme d'Etudes Professionnelles Spécialisées consacré à la gestion opérationnelle de projet en ... |
Montoir - Gijon : Le gouvernement se félicite de la première année d'expérience Thierry Mariani, ministre chargé des Transports, se félicite de la montée en puissance de l'autoroute de la mer, ouverte en 2010 par LD Lines et reliant, à raison de trois allers-retours par semaine avec le Norman As... |
Brest : Le nouveau pont de Recouvrance va arriver par la mer Le pont de Recouvrance, qui surplombe la rivière brestoise de la Penfeld ainsi que la base navale de la Marine nationale, vient d'être fermé à la circulation pour plusieurs semaines en raison des travaux liés au passage ... |
Nouvelles escales inaugurales de paquebots à La Seyne-sur-Mer La rade de Toulon accueille cet été de nouvelles escales inaugurales avec notamment, aujourd'hui, la venue du Celebrity Solstice. Premier d'une série de cinq paquebots, dont le dernier, le Celebrity Silhouette, sera ... |
Ulstein va équiper deux navires sismiques W-Class en système de communication Ulstein Power&Control vient de signer un contrat record avec les chantiers japonais Mitsubishi Heavy Industries de Nagasaki pour installer son système de communication ULSTEIN COM sur deux navires sismiques de nouvelle g... |
Surveillance maritime : Thales présente le Coastwatcher 10 aux Etats-Unis Thales a achevé avec succès une campagne de démonstration de son radar de surveillance maritime Coastwatcher 10 à la base aéronavale de Patuxent River (Maryland). Le site, qui accueille notamment le quartier général ... |
Un 100ème hélicoptère MH-60R Seahawk livré à l'US Navy La marine américaine a pris livraison, le 28 juin, de son centième hélicoptère MH-60R Seahawk, connu sous le nom de Romeo. Conçu pour remplacer les SH-60B et SH-60F, la nouvelle machine a été commandées à 140 exemplaires... |
L'USS Scranton en escale en France Le sous-marin nucléaire d'attaque USS Scranton (SSN 756) était en escale à Toulon la semaine dernière. Le bâtiment, du type Los Angeles, mesure 109.7 mètres de long et présente un déplacement de plus de 6900 tonnes ... |
Le HMS Duncan bientôt prêt pour ses essais Le sixième et dernier destroyer-lance-missiles britannique du type 45 va bientôt entrer en phase d'essais. Dix mois après son lancement aux chantiers BAE Systems de Govan, le bâtiment verra en août le démarrage de se... |
RFE/RL Headlines
7/12/2011 8:01:20 PM
A daily digest of the English-language news and analysis written by the staff of Radio Free Europe/Radio LibertyRFE/RL is looking for guest bloggers, preferably writing from and about our broadcast region. If you're interested, drop us a line at webteam@rferl.org. |
Features
Profile: Why Was The Afghan President's Brother Ahmad Wali Karzai So Controversial? Ahmad Wali Karzai, the assassinated head of Kandahar's provincial council and the brother of Afghanistan's president, was one of the country's most controversial public figures. More For months now, those who follow the tortured U.S.-Pakistani relationship have been predicting that Washington was on the verge of losing patience with its partners in Islamabad. Now it's finally happened. More Facts About Turkmen Blast Hard To Come By Nearly a week after a deadly series of blasts outside the capital, Ashgabat, many in Turkmenistan still don't know the extent of what really happened as they await permission to return to their homes. More Anti-racism campaigners have welcomed the tough sentences handed down by a Moscow court against a group of serial killers as part of a recent government crackdown on ultranationalist groups that follows years of leniency. More Kazakh officials have said a total of 16 prisoners were killed when inmates attempted to escape from a Kazakh prison late on July 10. More Russian authorities have opened a criminal investigation into the sinking of a tourist boat on the Volga River, as the country observed a day of mourning for the more than 100 victims of the tragedy. More A brother of Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai and powerful political player in southern Afghanistan has been killed at his home in Kandahar. Some reports suggested that Ahmad Wali Karzai, who was the head of the Kandahar Provincial Council, was shot dead by a current or former bodyguard. More Tajikistan: IMU Terrorism Trial Starts The trial in Tajikistan of 53 people suspected of belonging to the banned Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) thought to be behind a suicide car-bomb attack last year began today. More The Azerbaijani government has received copies of 60 rare medieval manuscripts from the Vatican's secret archives. More One of the two journalists protesting media censorship in Uzbekistan has ended her hunger strike after being forcibly hospitalized. More The relatives of two jailed Iranian political activists have expressed concern about the health of their loved ones. More Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and his governing coalition have formed a team to hold talks with the Armenian National Congress (HAK) in what is seen as another concession to the opposition alliance. More Another Tajik soccer club has been fined for its unruly behavior. The Tajikistan Football Federation took disciplinary action on July 11 against the first-division team Hosilot for its attack on match officials. More An exiled Turkmen opposition leader says President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov's call for dissidents to return and take part in the 2012 presidential election is unrealistic because most have been sentenced in absentia. More The British mining company Oxus Gold says the Uzbek government is attempting to seize its assets by forcing its joint venture to be liquidated. More A Tajik man has been charged with creating a women's organization that belongs to the banned Islamic group Jamaat ut-Tabligh. More St. Basil The Doodled Russia, a country famous for its architectural confections, is commemorating the 450th anniversary of one of its best-known structures, St. Basil's Cathedral. More RFE/RL's Belarus Service asked its readers on the web if they'd heard any good jokes lately regarding current events in Belarus. More Attack Of The Clones In Belarus Our Belarus Service received the usual treatment -- journalists arrested and website attacked -- but this time around their YouTube page was also cloned. More Murdoch Papers' Intrusion May Shock Brown, But It Doesn't Surprise Me The hacking scandal that has closed Rupert Murdoch's "News Of The World" has spread to other newspapers in his empire amid revelations that "The Sun" and "The Sunday Times" systematically targeted former U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown. Yet the revelation that Murdoch's papers took a keen interest in him and his family are less of a surprise to me. More Video Archive: Ahmad Wali Karzai In an interview with RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan recorded at his Kandahar home in 2010, Ahmad Wali Karzai talked about what the international community could do for Afghans. More |
Transaction Tracing
Through Complex Web ApplicationsSlow
web application performance impacts customers and end users. To
troubleshoot performance problems, IT often traces transactions from the
source across the domains.
But this consumes time and resources! Understand how application
performance monitoring makes troubleshooting fast and easy. Learn about
the components of a transaction as it crosses the various application
domains and the difficulty in connecting them for monitoring purposes.
Modernizing Backups to Accelerate the Journey to
VirtualizationFor datacenter managers today, the
advantages of virtual infrastructure (VI) are real and compelling. In
this paper, IDC examines the solutions from EMC and explains how they
speed the benefits of virtualization while modernizing the backup and
recovery
process. Gain mobility, and recovery advantages of VI, while increasing
backup and easy recovery – all while reducing costs.
Social Media’s Impact on the Multichannel Contact Center Live Webcast: July 28, 2011 11:30AM EDTJoin
our experts as they share
their insight and research results about what foundation you need to
have in place before adding social media as a communication channel.
What metrics matter in social media? How can customer service can
flourish in social communities? Who inside your organization should own
it? Why is simply monitoring social media mentions not enough? What
technology is available that will help you succeed?
Email in the
Cloud? A Comparative Cost AnalysisAccording to
Forrester, "Google is setting a new price floor on email and archiving
costs." Download the independent research report comparing the costs of
email from Google and other providers.
VIDEO: Move Your ‘Big Data’ Faster With Bulk LoadAs
the data and information used by businesses grow
exponentially, IT organizations face a daunting challenge moving what is
now termed in the enterprise as “Big Data”. What is the quickest and
most efficient way to move, extract, backup, archive, and access
mountains of critical information paramount to the success of the
business? Discover how easy it can be to move bulk data from one
database into the other by streaming, thus avoiding the need to load the
data into memory.
Storage
Usability as a Critical Requirement for SMB and Remote OfficesThe
IT function in small and medium-sized businesses (SMB) – as well as
departments and remote offices of the enterprise - suffers many of the
same dynamics as more classic IT data centers, just on a smaller
scale. Server sprawl poses storage system deployment and management
challenges. In today’s challenging business environment a more highly
optimized approach is required and reducing storage complexity is a
major hurdle.
The Foundation of Your Organization's Online BusinessWatch
a new on demand webcast “The Foundation of your Organization's Online
Business” and learn from the
leading experts in this area, including Mick MacComascaigh from featured
analyst firm Gartner, Inc. and Thomas Aidan Curran, DT Fellow, SVP
Technology and Innovation, Deutsche Telekom AG.
VA NEWS JOBS EDUCATION VA LOAN CENTER BENEFITS | July 12, 2011 |
Inside Job: More Proof of 9/11 Duplicity My 4th of July article, "Inside Job: Seven Questions about 9/11", raised questions about the events of 9/11 and whether more may have been involved than the official account of nineteen Islamic fundamentalists hijacking four commercial carriers. Read More »» |
|
|
|
|
Principais Notícias
São Tomé e Príncipe festeja 36 anos de independência sob o signo das eleições
Com as atenções viradas para a campanha eleitoral, os Santomenses quase que esqueceram o dia da independênciaBispo de Cabinda lamenta a situação política no enclave
Numa visita ao Lubango, D. Filomeno Viera Dias confessa preocupação com incapacidade de diálogoAumenta tensão política na Guiné- Bissau
Governo e oposição convocam manifestaçõesANGOLA, FALA SÓ - Ernesto Bartolomeu, pivot da TPA, respondeu às perguntas dos nossos ouvintes
Inscreva-se para participar. Ouça aqui as emissões anteriores e as respostas de Ernesto Bartolomeu na última 6ª feiraKilamba: Inaugurada a maior urbanização de Angola
Localizada a pouco mais de 20 quilómetros do centro de Luanda, a nova cidade é uma parceria público-privadaFome na África Oriental afecta mais de 6 milhões
O PAM está a multiplicar esforços para ajudar as vítimas da devastadora seca na região do "Corno de África".Moçambique: Governo não quer pedintes
Autoridades lançam campanha para que esomlas sejam dadas a organizações "especializadas"Meios da ONU no Sudão transferidos para o Sul
O Sudão solicitou a retirada do contingente de paz de mais de dez mil homensNigéria: Extremistas muçulmanos causam nervosismo em Lagos
Todos os autocarros que entram na cidade estão a ser revistados em busca de engenhos explosivos.Braço de ferro entre Obama e o Congresso sobre o aumento do limite da dívida
O presidente Obama disse que se vai reunir diariamente com os líderes do Congresso até que se resolva o assunto do deficit e da dívida.Still Falling
As political change continues across the Middle East, a visit by the secretary of state to meet with Yemen’s vice president can help push the political transition along and form a stable government that can tackle the country’s many challenges, say Ken Gude, Ken Sofer, and Aaron Gurley.More: Secretary Clinton Should Go to Yemen
From the Cartoonist Group.
Moody's
downgraded Ireland's bonds to junk status, a sign that plans to get
private sector investors to share in the burden of dealing with Greece's
debt problems could have ramifications for other highly indebted
euro-zone economies.
China Premier Signals Pressure on Prices
Chinese
Premier Wen Jiabao sounded a hawkish note on inflation ahead of key
data expected to show slowing economic growth, emphasizing that the
government will continue to make cooling prices its key priority.
Contaminated Beef Reaches Market in Japan
Japan
grappled with a fresh radiation scare after authorities found that beef
from Fukushima contaminated with radioactive cesium had been shipped to
shops and restaurants throughout the country.
2 • What's News 3 • U.K. Parliament Summons News Corp. Leaders • CIC Taps New Investment Chief 4 • Fateful Move Exposed Japan Plant 5 • Progress in Tohoku— And a Perilous Reminder • India Removes Top Environment Minister • BOJ Upgrades View of Economy 6 • Karzai's Brother Assassinated in Kandahar • Financial Crisis Slowed Migration to Industrialized Nations 7 • WikiLeaks Founder Back in Court 8 • U.S. Set to Sell Fighters to Iraq 9 • PERSONAL TECHNOLOGY: The Satellite: Extra Storage for Tablets on the Go 10 • Australia Sees Rise of Superyachts
Alberta,
one of the world's newest petroleum powerhouses, plans to double oil
production. But the U.S.—the biggest consumer of Alberta petroleum—may
not want the additional oil.
16 • U.S. Trade Gap Widens
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Information Clearing House Newsletter
News You Won't Find On CNNJuly 12, 2011 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
Come On Folks!
I Really Need You To Get Behind ICH
Information Clearing House is one of the webs only truly independent sources of news and opinion
ICH is not affiliated with any political party, ideology or religion.
ICH is completely non commercial and does not sell books, advertising or editorial space.
ICH
can speak truth to power because we do not rely on any
individual or group as a sole source of funding.
ICH
is a cooperative of individuals who refuse to be force
fed a diet of nonsense and half facts, while
watching the plunder of our values and resources.
ICH
readers believe that each person has a right to just
treatment, and a reciprocal responsibility to
ensure justice for others .
ICH
works to make visible any act or omission, which makes
injustice possible, regardless of who is the victim and
who is the perpetrator.
ICH is free and independent because we have nothing left to loose but our own self respect.
Paul
Craig Roberts says "Information Clearing
House is a courageous site that delivers information
and commentary not otherwise available and in my opinion
is worthy of your support"
If you agree, Click here now!
Or
if you prefer, send a check or money order, (US
Dollars) Information Clearing House, PO Box 365 Imperial
Beach, CA 91933. USA.
Low income readers: DON'T send money, just encourage others to subscribe.
To all who have assisted in the past. Thank you. Your help is greatly appreciated. Tom Feeley
===
How The Empire Rationalizes Murder
Drone strikes are police work, not an act of war? By Sanjeev Miglani The idea that the United States can arrogate to itself the right of life and death of people around the world can set off a dangerous precedent. Continue
United States: Investigate Bush, Other Top Officials for Torture
By Human Rights Watch Overwhelming evidence of torture by the Bush administration obliges President Barack Obama to order a criminal investigation into allegations of detainee abuse authorized by former President George W. Bush and other senior officials, Human Rights Watch said. Continue
U.N. Official Says U.S. Is Breaking Rules In Torture Investigation
By Eyder Peralta The United Nations chief torture investigator said the United States was violating U.N. rules, after the country denied him unmonitored access to Bradley Manning. Continue
Rage & Outrage Are Waiting
By Jim Kirwan Our 'troops' have been murdering unarmed people around the world for so long that most see this as just part of the inevitable price we pay for our place as the leaders of the world. Continue
A War Against Descent
A Cautionary Tale : Carlos Montes and the Security State: By Chris Hedges On May 17 at 5 in the morning the Chicano activist Carlos Montes got a wake-up call at his home in California from Barack Obama's security state. Continue
The Fourth Estate is Bankrupt
By William Bowles The abysmal failings of Western 'democracy' are all around us. We have governments that regardless that an 'opposition' exists are effectively one-party states and have been ever since the early years of the 20th century. Continue
Murdoch's
News Corp Generated $10.4 Billion Profits And Received
$4.8 Billion In "Taxes" From The IRS
By Tyler Durden News Corp, which after generating $10.4 billion in profits over the past 4 years, and which would have been expected to pay the IRS $3.6 billion at the statutory corporate tax rate, instead received $4.6 billion back from Uncle Sam. Continue
What
do you think the following profitable corporations paid
in actual total federal income taxes in that period:
American Electric Power, Boeing, Dupont, Exxon Mobil,
FedEx, General Electric, Honeywell,
International, IBM, United Technologies, Verizon
Communications, Wells Fargo, and Yahoo? Nothing! Continue
Why is the Pentagon Not Part of the Deficit Discussion?
By David Morris Republicans ignore incompetence, bloat and corruption at the Pentagon. Continue
Obama's Betrayal
Don't Cut Care, Mr. President
Must watch - By Keith Olbermann President Obama must firmly fulfill his obligation to take care of the least of our fellow Americans.Continue
The Great Unraveling
The Economic Assassination of the USA
By Stephen Lendman On July 8, the Labor Department reported 18,000 new jobs created. Its Household Survey showed 445,000 lost. Continue
US Kills 45 People In Pakistan::
US attacks over the past 24 hours in Pakistan have
killed at least 45 militants, local officials
said on Tuesday.
US has killed at least 2,587 people in Pakistan in last 9 years:
Pakistan's army chief, General Ashfaq Kiani, recently
rejected US claims that there existed some private
agreements between the two countries on drone hits and
American intelligence activities in Pakistan.
Pakistan might withdraw border troops, defense minister says:
"The majority in Pakistan and also many in the ranks of
the military are angry at Washington," a Pakistani
military official said, adding that Pakistan and China
are discussing air and naval projects.
NATO occupation forces kill 12 Afghan civilians: Local officials:
"Twelve civilians, including women and children, were
killed last night when NATO planes targeted two houses,"
he said
Karzai's brother shot dead in Kandahar :
The Taliban immediately claimed responsibility. A
spokesman said the bodyguard had been groomed by
the Taliban for some time and, on its orders, killed
Mr. Karzai with a shot to the head inside his heavily
fortified compound in Kandahar city.
Sarkozy announces French Afghan drawdown:
President says a quarter of France's 4,000 troops
will leave by end of 2012 during visit to
Afghanistan.
Car bombing kills 3 Sunni paramilitary members west of Baghdad:
A car bomb struck members of the Awakening Council
group in west outskirt of Baghdad on Tuesday, killing
three group members and wounding six other people, a
local police source told Xinhua.
US forces 'still attacking Iraq Shiite insurgents':
US forces are carrying out operations against Shiite
insurgents, almost a year after the military
announced a formal end to its combat operations in
Iraq, US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta said on Monday.
Iraq's Sadr lashes out at US for unilateral attacks:
Sadr's spokesman Salah Al Obeidi charged in the
Shiite holy city of Najaf, south of Baghdad, that
Panetta had "openly mocked Iraq's sovereignty and
flaunted security agreements" signed by Washington and
Baghdad in November 2008.
Tensions Mount Over Iraq, Nuke Sanctions:
In recent weeks, a chorus of U.S. officials has
accused Iran of providing lethal weapons to Iraqi
Shiite militias that have targeted U.S. soldiers and
caused a spike in U.S. death tolls. Similar charges have
been made against Iran in the past.
US Official: No Tangible Evidence at Hand to Prove Iran's Aid to Iraqi Militants:
A senior US State Department official confessed
that Washington has no proof to substantiate its
allegations about Iran's arms shipment to militant
groups in Iraq.
Yemen security: 5 "militants" killed in airstrike:
A government airstrike in a patch of southern Yemen
overrun by radical Islamists killed five militants as
the country's security deteriorates amid a five-month
uprising, a security official said Tuesday.
4 rebels killed, 22 wounded in clashes in Libyan town:
Four rebels were killed and 22 wounded in overnight
clashes against forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar
Qadhafi in the western town of Zliten, rebels said on
Monday.
Regime change: US prepared to back Russian mediation deal that will see Libya's Gaddafi quit
: "President Obama thanked President Medvedev
for Russia's efforts at mediation in Libya,
emphasizing that the United States is prepared to
support negotiations that lead to a democratic
transition in Libya as long as Gaddafi steps aside."
Some NATO allies in Libya exhausted in 90 days-US: "The
problem right now, frankly, in Libya is that ...
within the next 90 days a lot of these other
countries could be exhausted in terms of their
capabilities, and so the United States, you know, is
going to be looked at to help fill the gap," Panetta
said, speaking to occupation force troops in Baghdad.
The arrogance of Empire : Clinton: Syria's Assad has lost legitimacy to rule
: Syria's President Bashar al-Assad is "not
indispensable," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
said on Monday as tensions soared
Syria Lashes Out at US Following Clinton Comments:
The news agency quotes an official who calls her
comments "further evidence" of "blatant U.S.
interference" in Syria's internal affairs.
US Defense Secretary Has a Long History of Cooperation with Israel:
Four decades in the political limelight have made
newly minted Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta a
familiar and trusted figure to the Jewish and
pro-Israeli communities.
The story of the flotilla is not over:
The story of the second Freedom Flotilla is not over.
Israel and the international community have deployed
multiple deterrent tactics, falsely accusing
participants of terrorism, chemical warfare and plans to
murder Israeli soldiers. Boats have been sabotaged,
boarded and blockaded with crews and owners arrested.
Million man march in Tahrir Square gets underway:
Tens of thousands of protesters are in Tahrir
Square right now as the sit-in steps up a notch
on its fourth day with a march on Cabinet headquarters
Robert Fisk: In Tahrir Square the anger is growing again. Where is the revolution the crowds fought for?
Egypt's deputy PM resigns amid protests:
Essam Sharaf, Egypt's prime minister, has accepted the
resignation of his deputy, whose removal had been called
for by protesters, the cabinet's Facebook page has
said.
The CIA's Secret Sites in Somalia:The
CIA uses a secret prison buried in the basement
of Somalia's National Security Agency (NSA)
headquarters, where prisoners suspected of being Shabab
members or of having links to the group are held. Some
of the prisoners have been snatched off the streets of
Kenya and rendered by plane to Mogadishu.
UN: Somalia is 'worst humanitarian disaster':
Head of UNHCR appeals for "massive support"
over drought affecting about 10 million people in
the Horn of Africa.
George W Bush should be prosecuted over torture, says human rights group:
Human Rights Watch claims Obama administration 'failing
to act on evidence', and also names Cheney and Rumsfeld
in report
Julian Assange's lawyer tells extradition appeal arrest warrant is invalid:
WikiLeaks founder's counsel claims in high court that
Swedish judges were misled about sexual assault
and rape allegations
WikiLeaks' Brilliant MasterCard Commercial Parody
: A spoof of the fact that major credit card and online
payment companies have withheld over $15 Million in
donations to WikiLeaks.
Rupert Murdoch is effectively a member of Blair's cabinet:
Only a spin doctor would deny that the media baron has a
say in all major decisions taken in Downing Street
Hackers release 90,000 military emails:
In what they dubbed "military meltdown
Monday", a hacking collective has published 90,000
military email addresses and passwords stolen from a
large US contractor.
Moody's cuts Ireland to junk, warns of second bailout:
- Moody's Investors Service on Tuesday cut Ireland's
credit rating to junk status, saying the country will
likely need further official financing before it can
return to international capital markets.
British bank shares plunge 5% : Italy and Spain woes ratchet up eurozone debt crisis
Greece `Running Out of Road' as EU Aid Talks Fail: European governments failed to agree on a payment to spare the country from default.
Paul Ryan says U.S. facing debt crisis like other countries:
Powerful House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan on
Tuesday said the United States is facing a debt crisis
comparable to other countries and officials in
Washington need to get in front of it before it spirals
out of control.
Playing politics with peoples fears: Obama says he cannot guarantee Social Security checks will go out on August 3:
President Obama on Tuesday said he cannot
guarantee that retirees will receive their Social
Security checks August 3 if Democrats and Republicans in
Washington do not reach an agreement on reducing the
deficit in the coming weeks.
US trade deficit grows to 31-month high:
Oil imports helped widen the U.S. trade deficit
to $50.2 billion in May from $43.6 billion in
April, pushing the gap to its highest level in 31
months, according to Commerce Department figures.
Cisco To Fire 10,000 People:
Cisco is planning to fire as many as 10,000 people,
Bloomberg reports According to the plans, which
have yet to be finalized, the company will can
7,000 employees by the end of August. Another 3,000 have
accepted buyouts.
Friends With Benifts: US Unemployment Silence : Video
- The chairman of the President's Council on Jobs and
Competitiveness, Jeff Immelt, is known for heading a
company that famously paid no taxes last year and not
only shed domestic jobs but added a staff overseas.
|
*** Japan Times E-mail News Service *** __________ Wednesday, July 13, 2011 ________________ TODAY'S TOP STORIES ========================= [NATIONAL NEWS] Radioactive beef already sold, eaten The meat of six cows shipped from a Fukushima Prefecture farm was distributed to at least nine prefectures and officials believe some of it has been eaten. [MORE] -> http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a1.html --- [NATIONAL NEWS] Fukushima plant site originally was a hill safe from tsunami Mostly to cut costs, Tepco removed a 35-meter-high bluff to build the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant that would have kept it safe from any tsunami. [MORE] -> http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a2.html --- [NATIONAL NEWS] Life term urged for Ichihashi Prosecutors demand life in prison and not the death penalty for Tatsuya Ishihashi over the March 2007 rape and murder of English teacher Lindsay Ann Hawker. [MORE] -> http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a3.html [More news] http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news.html OTHER NEWS ========================= [NATIONAL NEWS] Kan plan set to end nuke goals NATSUKO FUKUE http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a4.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Prefecture cannot gauge cows' internal exposure MINORU MATSUTANI http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a5.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Sharp cut in aid for China called off http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a6.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Poverty rate hit record high in '09 http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a7.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Brazil's new ambassador plugs business http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a8.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Ash in Chiba is radioactive http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713a9.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Cattle disaster-stressed; industry left in jeopardy http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713f1.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Postwar prisoner makes Russia home for final chapter of his life OSAMU HIRABAYASHI http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713f2.html [NATIONAL NEWS] Disaster zone students to visit U.S. as 'envoys' http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20110713f3.html BUSINESS ========================= [BUSINESS NEWS] BOJ trims 2011 growth estimate http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20110713a1.html [BUSINESS NEWS] Rice prices soaring as wholesalers increase inventories http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20110713a2.html [BUSINESS NEWS] Political turmoil casting doubt on public finances SHINYA AJIMA http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20110713a3.html [BUSINESS NEWS] Disaster sent beer loads to new low http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20110713a4.html [BUSINESS NEWS] Elpida eyes \79.7 billion via share, bond sales http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20110713n1.html [BUSINESS NEWS] Fukushima crisis won't slow Virginia reactor plan: Dominion CEO http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20110713n2.html [Text ad in Japanese] ===================================================================== ジャパンタイムズでご結婚のお祝いをしてみませんか? ご同僚、お友達、ご家族のご結婚を今までとは一味違ったサプライズと 感動のメッセージで祝福してみませんか? 詳細はこちら URL: www.japantimes.co.jp/wedding ===================================================================== OPINION ========================= [JT EDITORIAL] The quest for food security http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/ed20110713a1.html [OPINION] Rupert Murdoch's troika GWYNNE DYER http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/eo20110713gd.html [OPINION] China raises undersea ante MICHAEL RICHARDSON http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/eo20110713mr.html [More Op-Ed stories] http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion.html FEATURES ========================= [COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY NEWS] Toys for all ages at Tokyo show RICK MARTIN http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nc20110713rm.html [For features] http://www.japantimes.co.jp/life.html http://www.japantimes.co.jp/entertainment.html ===================================================================== Follow The Japan Times on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/thejapantimes and Twitter: http://twitter.com/japantimes ===================================================================== SPORTS ========================= [BASEBALL] Cano edges Gonzalez in HR Derby http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sb20110713a1.html [BASEBALL] Iguchi's sacrifice fly helps Lotte top Seibu http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sb20110713j1.html [AMERICAN FOOTBALL] Vegas D.A. monitoring Pacman case http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sf20110713a1.html [AMERICAN FOOTBALL] ESPN files lawsuit against Ohio State http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sf20110713a2.html [GOLF] Ryu gets best of Seo in U.S. Open playoff http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sg20110713a1.html [GOLF] Steinberg joins ESM; Woods silent http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sg20110713a2.html [ICE HOCKEY] First Czech allowed in NHL dies at 71 http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sh20110713a1.html [BASKETBALL] Veteran coach Pierce to take over in Sendai ED ODEVEN http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sk20110713b1.html [SUMO] Hakuho mows down Yoshikaze on third day http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/ss20110713b1.html [INTERNATIONAL SOCCER] Argentina awakens, whips Costa Rica to make quarters http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sw20110713a1.html [INTERNATIONAL SOCCER] U.S. ready for France http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/sw20110713a2.html [More Sports Stories] http://www.japantimes.co.jp/sports.html http://www.japantimes.co.jp/sports/sumo.html