Obama to host tripartite meeting with Israeli PM and Palestinian President

Jerusalem, Sep 20 (ANI): In an effort to renew the peace process in the Middle East, President Barack Obama will host a tripartite meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Tuesday.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said the meeting would take place after Obama meets separately with each of the two leaders.

“These meetings will continue the efforts of President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Special Envoy George Mitchell to lay the groundwork for the relaunch of negotiations, and to create a positive context for those negotiations so that they can succeed,” the Jerusalem Post quoted a White House statement, as saying.

The meetings will take place in New York on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly conference.

The White House announcement of the meeting comes as something of a surprise, since both Israel and the PA until Saturday continued to blame each other for the current stall in peace talks

And recently, Mitchell had failed to make progress in talks with the two leaders.

On Saturday, Mitchell said: “It is another sign of the president’s deep commitment to comprehensive peace that he wants to personally engage at this juncture.” (ANI)

Putin hints at return to presidency for two more terms till 2024

London, Sep 12 (ANI): Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is strongly considering to become President again and swap places with present incumbent Dimitri Medvedev, which will allow the former KGB spy to remain in power till 2024.

Putin insisted that swapping places with Medvedev was no more sinister than the Labour leadership agreement in which Gordon Brown took Tony Blair’s job.

Replying to a question on running for the presidency, Putin said that he would come to an accommodation with Medvedev, just as the two men had done when Putin stepped down in 2008.

“We will come to an agreement because we are people of the same blood and of the same political views,” The Times quoted Putin, as saying.

“According to the reality of the moment, we will make an analysis and take a decision. Did we compete in 2008? No. So we will not compete in 2012,” Putin told foreign correspondents and academics at the annual Valdai Discussion Club.

This is the strongest hint he has given so far that he is considering returning to the Kremlin. Putin stepped down after serving a maximum two terms as President and allowed Medvedev to run largely unopposed in presidential elections last year.

His term ends in 2012 when new constitutional provisions will allow the next president to serve two six-year terms, the paper reports.

It the things go as planned; Putin will be in power until 2024, when he would be 72.

Putin insisted that Medvedev was in control when asked who was in charge in Russia.

“We have nothing to prove to anyone. If someone lives in a dream he needs to wake up, take a shower and look at reality. If you want to co-operate with Russia you need to know that it is the President who heads Russia,” he said.

Putin deflected questions about whether he had met Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister, on a secret visit to Moscow on Monday. He warned that any attacks against Iran would be counter-productive.(ANI)

Israel accuses HRW of hitting a new low by hiring expert who collects Nazi memorabilia

Jerusalem, Sep.10 (ANI): Human Rights Watch’s employment of a man who trades and collects Nazi memorabilia as its “senior military expert” is a “new low” for the organization that frequently criticizes Israel, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s policy director Ron Dermer said Wednesday.

“I thought that nothing could top a human rights organization trying to raise money in Saudi Arabia, but I was apparently wrong,” said Dermer.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Dermer was referring to reports, both in the blogosphere and the press, that Marc Garlasco, HRW’s senior military expert, who has written numerous reports condemning Israel, is an avid collector of Nazi memorabilia.

Omri Ceren, on a blog called Mere Rhetoric, wrote that Garlasco was “obsessed with the color and pageantry of Nazism, has published a detailed 430-page book on Nazi war paraphernalia, and participates in forums for Nazi souvenir collectors.”

Dermer said the revelations made it “easier to understand how an organization that was initially called Helsinki Watch, and was dedicated to helping brave Soviet dissidents fight against tyranny, has turned into an organization that facilitates the assault of some of the worst regimes and terror groups against the very democratic countries that uphold human rights.

HRW issued a statement saying that Garlasco’s family experience on both sides of WWII – his grandfather was in the German army and his great-uncle was in the US air force – led him to collect military memorabilia from that period.

HRW emphatically denied that Garlasco was a Nazi sympathizer because he “collected German [as well as American] military memorabilia.”

HRW said the “accusation is demonstrably false and fits into a campaign to deflect attention from Human Rights Watch’s rigorous and detailed reporting on violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by the Israeli government.” (ANI)

Ex-Mossad head says ‘Netanyahu agreed to Golan pullout’

Jerusalem, Sep.10 (ANI): Former Mossad head Danny Yatom has claimed that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu agreed to withdraw Israeli troops from the entire Golan Heights during his first term in exchange for a peace deal with Syria and the normalization of ties between Jerusalem and Damascus. Yatom told Israel Radio that the proof for his claim was a document that appears in his new book, in which Ron Lauder, Netanyahu’s special envoy for talks with Syria at the time, reported the prime minister’s agreement to then-US president Bill Clinton.

The former Mossad chief said that although Netanyahu’s agreement didn’t bind him now, 11 years later, “he has to admit” that he did agree to withdraw from the territory.

Environmental Protection Minister Gilad Erdan (Likud), however, told the radio station that the prime minister had not agreed to such a pullout and had repeated it on numerous occasions.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Yatom also told Army Radio on Wednesday night that only a military strike would stop Iran from attaining nuclear arms status. (ANI)

Only four percent Israelis think Obama is pro-Israel: Poll

Jerusalem, Aug. 28 (ANI): Only four percent Israelis consider the policies of President Barack Obama as pro-Israel, a Smith Research poll conducted by The Jerusalem Post has revealed.

More than half (51 percent) of Jewish Israelis consider Obama’s administration more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israel, according to the survey, while 35 percent consider it neutral.

The support for Obama Administration has fallen 2 percent from an earlier poll published in the paper.

In June, 6 percent Israelis had viewed the policies of the Obama administration more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israeli, while less than four in 10 said the policies were neutral.

The poll of 500 people representing a statistical model of the Jewish Israeli population had a margin of error of 4.5 percent.

Obama’s popularity among Israelis has been plummeting since a May 17 Post poll on the eve of a meeting between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Obama at the White House.

The new poll was taken on Monday and Tuesday, before reports that Obama had agreed to exclude Jerusalem from a deal with Netanyahu on a construction freeze and to allow construction of essential public buildings, such as schools, to continue in Judea and Samaria.

The poll asked Jewish Israelis whether they would support freezing settlement construction for a year as part of an American-brokered deal.

Fifty percent said no, 41 percent said yes and 9 percent did not express an opinion. (ANI)

Goalposts in US-Israel ties have shifted since Netanyahu, Obama took office: Envoy

New York, Aug.26 (ANI): Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Gabriela Shalev has claimed that the goalposts in ties between the United States and Israel have shifted since President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to charge of their respective offices.
Speaking to reporters in New York on Tuesday, Shalev said the two governments were working towards a two-state solution, despite disagreements on the settlements issue.

“There is a change that everybody can feel. We have now a government that is leaning toward the Right . . . and on the other hand we have here in the United States a very different government than what we had during the time of the Bush administration,” the Jerusalem Post quoted Shalev, as saying.

“We are willing to recognize a two-state solution,” she stressed. “While we recognize the Arab state, they must recognize our rights – the Jewish nation – to live in our state. It means both should recognize each other,” she added.

When asked if a three-way meeting between US, Israeli, and Palestinian leaders would be held on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in September, she said “there is a possibility.”

The ambassador’s comments came just hours before Netanyahu was set to meet with US Mideast envoy George Mitchell in London.

Following his meeting with Mitchell in London on Wednesday, Netanyahu will fly to Germany for a day of talks there. He is scheduled to return to Israel early on Friday morning. (ANI)

Recognition of Israel as Jewish state key to peace with Palestine: Netanyahu

Jerusalem, July 13 (ANI): Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has said that Palestine must recognise Israel as a Jewish state, and give up its demand to resettle the descendents of Palestinian refugees in Israel in order to attain peace.

“The key to peace lies in explicit and unequivocal recognition of Israel as the Jewish state on the part of the Palestinians. They must once and for all give up the demand to resettle inside of Israel the descendents of the refugees,” The Jerusalem Post quoted Netanyahu, as saying.

Netanyahu added that the Palestinian leaders must say: “We have had enough of this conflict; we recognize Israel as Jewish; we will live alongside you in true peace.

“As soon as that is stated, a huge window to peace will be opened,” he said.

Earlier, Netanyahu called on Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to meet with him as soon as possible in order to renew peace talks.

“Let’s make peace – both diplomatic peace and economic peace. There is no reason why we can’t meet, the Palestinian Authority president and I, anywhere in Israel, and since we are in Beersheba, I say, let’s meet here,” Netanyahu said at the start of a cabinet meeting in Beersheba hat was held there as an act of solidarity with the Negev capital.

“We’ve removed many roadblocks, we have decided to increase the operating hours of the Allenby Bridge for more goods, and I’ve decided to advance a series of projects with the Palestinians to promote peace. But all these efforts can only bring us to a certain point, and the results will be multiplied by the dozen if there is cooperation from the other side,” he added.

Netanyahu also tried to reach out to Arab countries, saying: “Let’s meet, let’s cooperate… We have the ability to bring many players on board.” (ANI)

Obama “committed” to Israel’s peace and security

London, June 21 (ANI): The Obama Administration has reiterated its support for Israel following a survey that showed that only six percent of Jewish Israelis consider US President Barack Obama to be pro-Israel.

The White House declined to comment on the specifics of the poll. But National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer told the Jerusalem Post: “We remain committed to peace and security for Israel.”

Hammer recalled the line from Obama’s recent speech in Cairo in which he said, “America’s strong bonds with Israel are well known. This bond is unbreakable,” one of several recent reiterations of strong US support for Israel.

A new Jerusalem Post-sponsored Smith Research poll had also found that one out of every two Israelis consider the policies of Obama’s administration more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israeli, while less than four in 10 said the policies were neutral.

The views were in stark contrast to the last poll published on May 17, on the eve of the meeting between Netanyahu and Obama at the White House.

The recent views expressed by Israelis follow Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s speech in support of a demilitarised Palestinian state.

However, Ira Forman of the National Jewish Democratic Council also emphasized that Obama has repeatedly affirmed the US-Israel special relationship and that he “is a great friend to Israel.”

“I have no doubt that Israelis will remember Barack Obama and his presidency as one that was tremendously favorable to Israel when all is said and done,” he said.

Matt Dorf, who did Jewish outreach for the Democratic National Committee during the presidential campaign, was more blunt when it came to the survey results.

“I don’t trust the poll,” he said, calling the Post a newspaper that has “not been friendly toward Obama,” he said. (ANI)

Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement can be reached within a year: Blair

Jerusalem, June 19 (ANI): Middle East envoy Tony Blair has said that an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement could be reached “within the year,” but only if all sides agree to peaceful negotiations.
The former British Prime Minister said there was a “great sense of hope and expectation” in the Middle East after US President Barack Obama’s recent outreach speech to the Islamic world delivered in Cairo.

“If President Obama gets the right partner, on the Israeli side but also on the Palestinian side, his determination to do this I have no doubt about at all,” The Jerusalem Post quoted Blair, as saying.

“I have no doubt at all of his sincerity or his determination,” he said on Frost Over The World, on Al Jazeera’s English-language channel.

“So if everyone would commit themselves to a peaceful political negotiation to a two-state solution, you could have this deal within the year. But people have got to be prepared to commit to it.

“I think the Obama speech was really a huge event… I think this was a very big moment, a vital moment, for the region and for the wider world. I think there is a great sense of hope and expectation,” Blair said.

Blair said Sunday’s speech by Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, in which he endorsed a demilitarized Palestinian state, was a “step forward,” but said he recognized the criticism. (ANI)

Only 1 in 3 Israelis thinks Obama is pro-Israel

Jerusalem, May 18 (ANI): Only 31 percent of Israelis consider US President Barack Obama’s approach pro-Israel, a survey conducted ahead of the meeting between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu revealed.

According to a Smith Research poll, 31 percent Israelis labeled Obama pro-Israel, while 14 percent said he was pro-Palestinian and 40 percent felt he was neutral. The remaining 15 percent didn’t have any views on the issue.

The poll, conducted on 500 Israelis last week, has an error margin of 4.5 percent, The Jerusalem post reports.

Obama’s numbers contrast sharply with those of his predecessor, George W. Bush, whose administration was considered pro-Israel by 88 percent of the respondents.

Obama’s ratings may have gone down after condemnations of Israeli policies by US Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and others.

Obama is expected to unveil his policies on the Arab-Israeli conflict in Cairo on June 4.

Currently, he is in a “policy review period” that he will conclude only after Netanyahu, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak visit the US by the end of the month.

Israelis, according to the poll, view governments of other European countries even less favourable than the US.

Among those nations, only the government of German Chancellor Angela Merkel was seen as being more pro-Israel (37 percent) than pro-Palestinian (21 percent).

The pro-Palestinian tilt was even more pronounced for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government (a 14 percentage point spread). (ANI)

CIA’s Panetta visited Israel to stop it from bombing Iranian nuclear plant

Jerusalem, May 15 (ANI): Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) chief Leon Panetta was sent on a secret mission to Israel to warn its leaders not to launch a surprise attack on Iran without notifying Washington.

As Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister, prepares to visit Washington, it emerged yesterday that Panetta, went to Israel two weeks ago to seek assurances from Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak that their hawkish new Government would not attack Iran without alerting Washington.

Concerns have been rising that Netanyahu could launch a strike on Tehran’s atomic programme, in the same way that Israel hit Saddam Hussein’s Osirak reactor in 1981.

According to The Times, Israel has been preparing for such an eventuality. It has carried out long-distance manoeuvres and is due to hold its largest civil defence drills this summer.

The country’s leaders reportedly told Panetta that they did not “intend to surprise the US on Iran”.

During his visit to Washington, Netanyahu will meet Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama, whom he will try to convince of the need for tougher action against Iran.

Obama favours trying to engage Tehran, but his efforts have been received coolly by President Ahmadinejad.

The Israeli leader is expected to insist that the US stays focused on Iran, rather than tackling stalled talks with the Palestinians. (ANI)

CENTCOM chief Petraeus warns that Israel might strike Iran

Washington, Apr.2 (ANI): General David Petraeus, the top US commander in the Middle East, has told the US Congress that Israel could take matters into its own hands vis-à-vis Iran, should that country go ahead with its plans on the nuclear front.
“The Israeli government may ultimately see itself so threatened by the prospect of an Iranian nuclear weapon that it would take preemptive military action to derail or delay it,” The Jerusalem Post quoted General Petraeus, as saying.
General Petraeus, who appeared before the US Senate’s Armed Services Committee to provide an update on the situation in Afghanistan and the wider region, backed the Obama administration’s diplomatic initiatives as potentially helping to undermine Iran’s bid for greater influence.

“A credible US effort on Arab-Israeli issues that provides regional governments and populations a way to achieve a comprehensive settlement of the disputes would undercut the idea of militant ‘resistance,’ which the Iranian regime and extremists organizations have been free to exploit,” he assessed.

He also argued that “progress on the Syrian track of the peace process could disrupt Iran’s lines of support to Hamas and Hizbullah.”
“Our cooperative efforts with the Arab Gulf states, which include hardening and protecting their critical infrastructure and developing a regional network of air and missile defense systems, can help dissuade aggressive Iranian behavior,” he told the senators.

His remarks, part of prepared testimony for the committee, came on the same day that an article in The Atlantic magazine indicated that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was prepared to act unilaterally to prevent Iran from going nuclear. (ANI)

Netanyahu-Livni meeting ends without success

Jerusalem, Feb. 28 (ANI): In a bid to form a national unity government in Israel, Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu met Kadima leader Tzipi Livni. The meeting, however, collapsed without tangible results.

Insisting that she would head the opposition in the Israeli Parliament, Livni said Netanyahu failed to make a commitment that the government’s platform would include pursuing an Israeli-Palestinian two-state solution.

“I came for a second meeting with the Likud leader to hear his vision and the way he believes is correct. Israel is facing challenges and I told him that Kadima would support the correct moves made by the government,” the Jerusalem Post quoted Livni, as saying.

“But to deal with the challenges, I wanted three basic principles that you know of. Two states for two peoples is not an empty slogan. It is the only way Israel can remain Jewish and fight terror. It’s a fundamental issue,” she told reporters after her meeting in Tel Aviv.

Livni said that Netanyahu failed to build a consensus on plans for a two-state solution, changes to the electoral system and other Interior Ministry reforms.

“This meeting has ended without agreements on issues that I see as essential. There could be a government that advances these issues. At the moment, based on the discussions I held in the adjacent room, that government won’t be Netanyahu’s,” she said.

However, Netanyahu blamed Livni for not having any “willingness for unity”, despite her pre-and post-election promises.

“I didn’t find that Livni had the willingness for unity. Unity requires compromise and I was prepared to go in that direction. I also offered an equal number of ministries, including two out of the top three, I said I intended to move peace negotiations forward, and that we would act to advance civil unions and to introduce electoral reforms,” he said.

“If there’s a will, there’s a way; and if there is a will there is unity. In my opinion, the gaps can be bridged, but I was met with total rejection and a refusal to even agree to set up dialogue teams in order to strike a partnership,” he added.

Likud chief negotiator MK Gideon Sa’ar said the Kadima head had “stubbornly held onto her refusal” to join such a coalition, and claimed that her motives were personal.

“She didn’t even agree to setting up special negotiating teams. For unity, compromise is required, but Livni’s motives to sabotage unity are personal,” he said. (ANI)

Peres may ask Livni to join Israel national unity government

Jerusalem, Feb.20 (ANI): Israeli President Shimon Peres is expected persuade Kadima leader Tzipi Livni to join a national unity government headed by Likud Chairman Binyamin Netanyahu.

Netanhayu said Israel is facing a difficult situation, and there is a need for a broad-based government.

“A wide national-unity government is especially necessary in light of the major challenges Israel is facing from Iran, terror and the international economic crisis,” The Jerusalem Post quoted Netanhayu, as saying.

Netanhayu’s attempts have not persuaded Livni or Ehud Barak’s Labor party to join on one platform.

Livni, who is Israel’s Foreign Minister, has sent out a text message to some 80,000 Kadima workers last week in which she said : “The path of such a government is not our own and we have nothing to look for there. You didn’t vote for us in order to provide a kosher certificate for a right-wing government, and we need to provide an alternative of hope from the opposition.”

According to sources Livni is in no mood to backtrack from her stance.

“She knows that only the Prime Minister decides things in this country and she isn’t willing to be a bumper, a stain remover or a whitener for a Bibi-Lieberman government that her voters didn’t want her to join,” a close-aide of Livni said. (ANI)

Three in five Israelis want Kadima-Likud unity government

Jerusalem, Feb.17 (ANI): Three out of every five Israelis want a unity government in the country, The Jerusalem Post quotes a survey, as saying.

The survey was conducted among 498 Israelis who voted in last week’s general election and ahead of the “Forming a Government” gathering to be held on Tuesday in ZOA House in Tel Aviv.

According to the survey, 47 percent of the people questioned thought a day after the elections that Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu should form the next government, while 39 percent thought Kadima leader Tzipi Livni should.

Sixty-five percent said they would like to see Kadima and Likud in a unity government and 54 percent of them, most of whom were Netanyahu supporters, said it should not be a rotation government.

More than half of those surveyed said Labor should stay in the opposition, but 55 percent said they wanted its chairman Ehud Barak to keep the Defense portfolio.

“The survey proves that most people don’t think they erred in the way they voted and therefore another general election in the near future is not necessary,” said Yigal Tzahor, the director of The Ideological and Educational Center of Berl Katznelson Fund, who initiated the survey and will host the convention in Tel Aviv. (ANI)

Netanyahu, Livni likely to form next Israeli Government

Jerusalem, Feb 12 (ANI): The Likud and Kadima parties will be able to form the new Israeli government together under the leadership of Likud chairman Binyamin Netanyahu.

A day after Kadima leader Tzipi Livni and Netanyahu declared victory separately in Tuesday’s election, they both began a race against time to form a coalition on paper before President Shimon Peres started the process of appointing one of them to build a government next week, the Jerusalem Post reported.

Netanyahu and Livni both met with the leader of the third largest party, Israel Beiteinu’s Avigdor Lieberman, in an attempt to woo him. But Lieberman raised several demands that either prime ministerial candidate would have a hard time accepting.

Livni appointed a coalition negotiating team of five top Kadima ministers and the party will continue with its political horse-trading in an effort to persuade Peres to let Livni form a government.

Senior Kadima officials said they were well aware that Peres would ask Netanyahu to form a government because of the Right bloc’s 65-55 advantage over the Left, and that if Likud offered Kadima a sweet deal, they should take it.

Netanyahu’s associates revealed that he would be willing to give Kadima the same number of ministries as the Likud, including two of the top four cabinet positions.

Likud would get the premiership and the Treasury, while Kadima could be given the Foreign and Defense ministries.

Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu would reportedly offer Kadima leader Tzipi Livni two out of the top four ministries to join his government.

“We’re ready to be very generous to Kadima in plum portfolios and power, to lock them into our government. You have to pay a price to get that kind of stability, and I think he would be willing to pay a heavy price,” a source close to Netanyahu said. (ANI)

Six EU leaders pledge to end arms smuggling into Gaza

Jerusalem, Jan.19 (ANI): Six European leaders arrived in Jerusalem on Sunday and made a commitment to ending the arms smuggling into Gaza.

Earlier in the day, the militant group Hamas announced its own one-week cease-fire and issued an ultimatum to Israel to withdraw its troops from Gaza within that time.

The announcement was made by Hamas officials in Syria. Later, Hamas representatives in the Strip also issued a statement saying they would honor the cease-fire.

Despite the uncertainty over the tenuous cease-fire, the Jerusalem Post quoted Prime Minister Ehud Olmert as telling a gathering of European leaders that Israel is determined to withdraw its troops.

“We didn’t set out to conquer Gaza, we didn’t set out to control Gaza, we don’t want to remain in Gaza, and we intend on leaving Gaza as fast as possible,” Olmert said in an address to the European leaders at the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem.

He noted that the leaders of Britain, Italy, Germany and France had pledged in a letter to Israel that they would work to stop the flow of weapons from getting to the “murderous organizations” in Gaza.

“This is in the supreme interest of all those who fight the forces of evil,” Olmert said.

The delegation consisted of Czech Prime Minister and current EU President Mirek Topolanek, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.

It was followed by a gala dinner at Olmert’s residence, which was also attended by Defense Minister Ehud Barak, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and opposition leader Binyamin Netanyahu.

The lightning visit by the six leaders, who came to Israel after attending a peace summit earlier in the afternoon at the Egyptian resort of Sharm e-Sheikh. (ANI)