Gunmen kill 7 in Israel in attack near Egypt border

Gunmen killed seven people in southern Israel on Thursday in three attacks along the Egyptian border, drawing Israeli accusations that militants from Gaza were responsible and that Cairo's new rulers were losing their grip on a porous frontier.

Israel said the assailants infiltrated from the Hamas-run Gaza Strip via Egypt's Sinai desert, despite stepped up efforts by Egyptian security forces in recent days to rein in Palestinian and Islamist radicals.

“This was a grave incident in which Israelis and Israeli sovereignty were harmed. Israel will respond accordingly,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement. He was due to speak further on the most deadly attack in Israel since 2008 in a televised address at 7:30 pm (1630 GMT).

Concern was high in the Gaza Strip that Israel would launch retaliatory attacks. Egyptian security sources said it was unlikely the gunmen had come from Egyptian territory where border patrols had not detected any “suspicious movements”.

Israel's military said the attacks on Highway 12 began when “terrorists shot at a bus on its way to (the city of) Eilat and then fired an anti-tank rocket at another vehicle. At the same time, a military patrol hit an explosive device”.

“I saw two men in fatigues shooting at me,” the bus driver, Benny Bilbaski, told Israel Radio. “I saw that there were wounded on the bus but I continued to drive on, looking straight not looking right or left. Once I got a kilometre past the area and I was out of range we took care of the wounded.”

The Magen David Adom ambulance service said seven people were killed along the road, just metres from the border with Egypt. The military put the number of wounded at around 25.

Israeli special forces were called in and engaged the gunmen as police and the military closed roads around Eilat

, a popular Red Sea resort. The military said between two and four gunmen were killed. Israeli media reports said up to seven were killed.

“It was a grave terrorist incident that took place in several locations,” said Defence Minister Ehud Barak. “It reflects the weakening of Egypt's hold in the Sinai and the broadening of activities by terror elements.”

Mark Regev, a spokesman for Netanyahu, said Israel “has specific and precise information that these terrorists who targeted Israelis today came out of the Gaza Strip”.

A senior Israeli official said the gunmen, unable to cross into Israel through the heavily patrolled border with the Gaza Strip, had gone into the Sinai and then infiltrated from there into southern Israel.

Hamas in Gaza denied responsibility and said it would fight back if it came under Israeli attack. “We will not stand handcuffed and we will spearhead resistance to the occupation,” said senior official Salah Al-Bardaweel.

Israeli officials have voiced concern that militant groups in the Sinai have been making use of a security vacuum left by the overthrow of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in February.

The Israeli shekelfell against the dollar and stocks dipped on Thursday. The violence appeared to take some domestic political pressure off Netanyahu: leaders of escalating protests against high living costs called off weekend demonstrations after news of the Israeli casualties broke.

Egypt, which signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979, recently stepped up security activity in the Sinai.

On Tuesday, Egyptian security sources said an army crackdown on armed groups in the northern Sinai had netted four Islamist militants as they prepared to blow up a gas pipeline.

Israel is building a fence along its 180-km-long frontier with Egypt, but very few sections have been completed.

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Mideast leaders line up to talks to Egypt’s Mubarak

CAIRO, July 18 (Reuters) – Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak hosted Palestinian and Israeli leaders and the U.S. peace envoy on Sunday, with a return to direct talks on the agenda but a breakthrough still seemingly distant.

While Egypt has long played a mediating role in Middle East politics, it is unusual for Cairo to host leaders on the same day, with shuttle diplomacy the preferred way of operating.

Still, none of the visitors saw the others, instead lining up back-to-back appointments with Mubarak, flanked by his foreign minister and top intelligence officer.

U.S. envoy George Mitchell, who is shuttling between the main players since a four-month window for indirect talks was agreed in May, held an hour-long meeting, then hurriedly left the presidency without briefing reporters.

Minutes after Mitchell’s convoy of tinted-window white cars rolled out, a convoy of similarly tinted black cars rolled in, escorting Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who Mitchell met on Saturday in Ramallah.

Half an hour later Abbas was also gone, again without speaking to reporters. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived soon after Abbas’ departure.

State news agency MENA reported that Mubarak’s talks with all three men focused on “efforts to create the conditions necessary to advance the peace process and achieve a two-state solution”. It did not elaborate.

Speaking to reporters in Jerusalem earlier on Sunday, Netanyahu said: “I intend to discuss with President Mubarak the ways to speed up the process of entering direct negotiations with the Palestinians. I know that Egypt is as interested in advancing the diplomatic process as we are.”

Abbas told a Jordanian newspaper on Saturday Israel must agree to the idea a third party, possibly NATO, would secure the borders of a future Palestinian state and set other terms necessary for a return to direct talks. [ID:nLDE66G05M]

Netanyahu did not refer to those terms in his comments.

Israel and the United States are both pushing for a speedy return to direct talks, while the Palestinians say they have yet to receive a clear response from Israel on issues such as the size and shape of a future Palestinian state, security and Israeli settlement activities in the occupied West Bank.

Netanyahu in November ordered a partial freeze on settlements that will lapse in September.

The long-stalled indirect talks are about halfway through their agreed four-month duration. (Writing by Alastair Sharp)

Abbas says wants progress for direct Mideast talks

West Bank (Reuters) – Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Saturday he wanted progress in indirect peace talks with Israel before any move to face-to-face talks, which the United States wants the two sides to begin. U.S. President Barack Obama urged the two sides this week to resume direct talks by September. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who met Obama in Washington on Tuesday, says he wants to negotiate directly with Abbas. But Abbas faces heavy domestic criticism over the failure of past negotiations and is wary of agreeing to more direct talks with Netanyahu’s right-wing government.

Speaking in Ramallah, Abbas reiterated the Palestinian demand for progress in the indirect “proximity” talks being mediated by U.S. Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell before any move to direct negotiations.

The indirect talks have been under way for two months.

“We said that if there is progress we will go to direct talks. If no progress happens, what is the benefit of negotiations that will be futile and useless,” he said.

He was speaking at a religious event to mark the Prophet Mohammad’s ascension to heaven.

Abbas said the Palestinians wanted the indirect talks to make progress on two issues: security arrangements and the borders of the state the Palestinians aim to found in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.

Israel occupied the territories in the 1967 Middle East war.

“We are still hoping to realize success that will allow us to launch serious negotiations leading to peace,” said Abbas, who had a phone conversation with Obama on Friday.

The White House said the leaders “reviewed ways to advance to direct talks in the near term.”

Abbas said Israel must stop building Jewish settlements on occupied land in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and remove the enclaves under a final peace deal. He did not repeat his previous demand for a complete halt to settlement building as a condition for direct peace talks.

The Palestinians say the settlements, which pepper the West Bank, will make it impossible to establish a viable Palestinian state alongside Israel — the outcome envisaged by major powers.

Netanyahu signaled on Thursday he would not extend beyond September a 10-month moratorium on new home building in Jewish settlements in the West Bank. He said this week he was prepared to discuss “right away” the future of Jewish settlements if the Palestinians entered direct peace talks.

(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta, editing by Tim Pearce)

Abbas says wants progress for direct Mideast talks

RAMALLAH, West Bank, July 10 (Reuters) – Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Saturday he wanted progress in indirect peace talks with Israel before any move to face-to-face talks, which the United States wants the two sides to begin. U.S. President Barack Obama urged the two sides this week to resume direct talks by September. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who met Obama in Washington on Tuesday, says he wants to negotiate directly with Abbas. But Abbas faces heavy domestic criticism over the failure of past negotiations and is wary of agreeing to more direct talks with Netanyahu’s right-wing government.

Speaking in Ramallah, Abbas reiterated the Palestinian demand for progress in the indirect “proximity” talks being mediated by U.S. Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell before any move to direct negotiations.

The indirect talks have been under way for two months.

“We said that if there is progress we will go to direct talks. If no progress happens, what is the benefit of negotiations that will be futile and useless,” he said.

He was speaking at a religious event to mark the Prophet Mohammad’s ascension to heaven.

Abbas said the Palestinians wanted the indirect talks to make progress on two issues: security arrangements and the borders of the state the Palestinians aim to found in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.

Israel occupied the territories in the 1967 Middle East war.

“We are still hoping to realise success that will allow us to launch serious negotiations leading to peace,” said Abbas, who had a phone conversation with Obama on Friday.

The White House said the leaders “reviewed ways to advance to direct talks in the near term”.

Abbas said Israel must stop building Jewish settlements on occupied land in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and remove the enclaves under a final peace deal. He did not repeat his previous demand for a complete halt to settlement building as a condition for direct peace talks.

The Palestinians say the settlements, which pepper the West Bank, will make it impossible to establish a viable Palestinian state alongside Israel — the outcome envisaged by major powers.

Netanyahu signalled on Thursday he would not extend beyond September a 10-month moratorium on new home building in Jewish settlements in the West Bank. He said this week he was prepared to discuss “right away” the future of Jewish settlements if the Palestinians entered direct peace talks. (Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta, editing by Tim Pearce)

Netanyahu envoy and Turkish minister in secret talks: report

(Reuters) – An envoy for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held secret talks on Wednesday with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on salvaging ties frayed by the Gaza ship raid, Israeli and Turkish media reported.

The envoy, Israeli Trade and Industry Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, met Davutoglu in Brussels, Turkey’s NTV news channel said, adding that they agreed to continue the talks at an undisclosed time and location.

A similar report on Israel’s Channel Two television did not specify the venue for the meeting, but said Ben-Eliezer’s unannounced fence-mending mission had taken him through Zurich.

A spokeswoman for the Turkish embassy in Tel Aviv said she had no knowledge of such a meeting, which could mark an easing of Ankara’s fury at Israel over its killing of nine Turks aboard an aid ship bound for the blockaded Gaza Strip on May 31.

Asked about the Channel Two report, Netanyahu’s office said in a statement: “Minister Ben-Eliezer informed the prime minister of an offer by a Turkish figure to hold an unofficial meeting. The prime minister saw nothing to prevent such a meeting, as in recent weeks there have been various initiatives for contacts with Turkey.”

Israel, which strictly controls Gaza’s borders in what it says is a precaution against arms smuggling, has defended the actions of marines who boarded the pro-Palestinian ship, arguing they opened fire after being attacked with knives and clubs.

But following Western criticism, including from its largest ally the United States, Israel has since eased a land blockade of Gaza where 1.5 million Palestinians live, allowing most civilian goods through, while continuing to enforce a naval embargo of the coastal territory.

It also launched on Monday a commission of inquiry into the interception of the ship, though the panel’s make-up and limited powers have been criticized by Turkey, which withdrew its ambassador to Israel and canceled joint military exercises.

(Writing by Dan Williams and Ayla Yackley; editing by Philippa Fletcher/David Stamp)

Captive Israeli soldier’s parents march for swap

(Reuters) – The parents of an Israeli soldier held in the Gaza Strip since 2006 began a 12-day march on Sunday from their northern home to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyau’s Jerusalem residence to press for a prisoner swap.

World

“We are strong enough to (trade) hundreds of murderers for Gilad Shalit,” said Shimshon Liebman, head of the public campaign for the soldier’s release. “Then, I am sure that every soldier will know that we are not leaving them behind.”

Shalit, now 23, was captured by Palestinian militants who tunneled from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel in June 2006.

Israel and Hamas Islamists who now run the enclave have failed to agree terms of a swap in which around 1,000 of the 7,000 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails would be released in exchange for Shalit.

Netanyahu has balked at allowing Palestinians convicted of killing Israelis to go free in West Bank areas where they could launch further attacks.

Hamas had accepted that some prisoners would be exiled but wanted to be able to choose their destinations, said sources familiar with the German-mediated negotiations.

Thousands of Israelis were expected to join Shalit’s parents and relatives on the trek from northern Israel to Jerusalem.

Stepping up pressure on Netanyahu to agree to a deal, Shalit’s family said it would camp indefinitely outside his official residence on July 8, two days after the Israeli leader is due to meet U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington.

Netanyahu told reporters he would invite Shalit’s parents to meet him when he returns from his U.S. visit.

“I want to see you. I will happy to meet you. This won’t be our first meeting … Our heart goes out to Gilad and his family,” Netanyahu said, appealing to the international community to press Hamas to release the soldier.

(Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Peter Graff)

Captive Israeli soldier’s parents march for swap

June 27 (Reuters) – The parents of an Israeli soldier held in the Gaza Strip since 2006 began a 12-day march on Sunday from their northern home to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyau’s Jerusalem residence to press for a prisoner swap.

“We are strong enough to (trade) hundreds of murderers for Gilad Shalit,” said Shimshon Liebman, head of the public campaign for the soldier’s release. “Then, I am sure that every soldier will know that we are not leaving them behind.”

Shalit, now 23, was captured by Palestinian militants who tunnelled from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel in June 2006.

Israel and Hamas Islamists who now run the enclave have failed to agree terms of a swap in which around 1,000 of the 7,000 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails would be released in exchange for Shalit.

Netanyahu has balked at allowing Palestinians convicted of killing Israelis to go free in West Bank areas where they could launch further attacks.

Hamas had accepted that some prisoners would be exiled but wanted to be able to choose their destinations, said sources familiar with the German-mediated negotiations.

Thousands of Israelis were expected to join Shalit’s parents and relatives on the trek from northern Israel to Jerusalem.

Stepping up pressure on Netanyahu to agree to a deal, Shalit’s family said it would camp indefinitely outside his official residence on July 8, two days after the Israeli leader is due to meet U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington.

Netanyahu told reporters he would invite Shalit’s parents to meet him when he returns from his U.S. visit.

“I want to see you. I will happy to meet you. This won’t be our first meeting … Our heart goes out to Gilad and his family,” Netanyahu said, appealing to the international community to press Hamas to release the soldier. (Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Peter Graff)

Obama, Netanyahu to meet July 6, discuss Gaza blockade

June 20 (Reuters) – The White House on Sunday hailed Israel’s easing of its land blockade of Gaza and said President Barack Obama would discuss “additional steps” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a Washington visit on July 6.

“We believe that the implementation of the policy announced by the government of Israel today should improve life for the people of Gaza, and we will continue to support that effort going forward,” White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said in a statement.

Israel unveiled new procedures on Sunday to ease its land blockade on Gaza, saying it would start allowing in all goods except for weapons and materials that can be used to make them. Israel has been under pressure to loosen restrictions since a deadly May 31 raid on an aid flotilla bound for the Hamas-ruled coastal enclave. (Reporting by Matt Spetalnick)

Israel unveils procedures to ease Gaza blockade

June 20 (Reuters) – Israel on Sunday announced new procedures to ease its land blockade on the Gaza Strip, saying it would soon start allowing into the enclave all types of goods except for weapons and materials that can be used to make them.

A statement issued by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said Israel would “as quickly as possible” publish a list of the banned goods, and that all items not on the list would be allowed into the enclave, which is controlled by the Hamas Islamist group.

The new procedures would also include allowing in construction material for housing projects under international supervision, and increasing the flow of goods through Israeli-controlled land crossings. (Writing by Joseph Nasr, Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Syria’s Assad says Israeli raid raises war risk

(Reuters) – Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad has said Israel is being run by a “pyromaniac government” and its raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla had increased the risks of war in the region.

World

The Israeli commando attack on a flotilla in which nine pro-Palestinian Turkish activists were killed had “destroyed any chance for peace in the near future,” Assad told the BBC in a television interview aired on Thursday.

He said this was so “mainly because it proved that this government is another pyromaniac government, and you cannot achieve peace with such (a) government.”

Israel, under mounting international pressure, has formed a five-person panel — including two foreign observers — to investigate events surrounding its May 31 interception of a six ship convoy heading to the Gaza Strip.

Nine Turks were killed when Israeli commandos boarded one of the vessels heading to Gaza in defiance of an Israeli naval blockade. Israel says the marines opened fire after being attacked by activists wielding knives and clubs.

Assad said that even before the raid, he had not viewed the Israeli government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a “partner for peace” in the region.

“No, we definitely don’t have a partner, we know this,” he said…With this government it’s something different from any previous Israeli government.” Asked if the attack on the aid convoy had increased the risk of war in the region, Assad said: “Definitely, definitely.”

“But realistically you had this danger before the raid because we had… other evidence about the intentions of this government, about the intentions toward the peace, about the intentions toward the Palestinians, the intentions to kill Palestinians.

“This is enough to talk about the danger of war in the region.”

Assad denied he was sending weapons to the Hezbollah movement in Lebanon, despite concerns in Western powers that he is.

(Editing by Michael Roddy)

Israeli ministers weigh easing Gaza blockade

June 16 (Reuters) – Israel’s security cabinet met on Wednesday to consider easing the Gaza blockade, officials said, in the face of world pressure for change since a deadly raid on an aid flotilla to the territory last month.

Ministers may approve a plan to expand a list of more than 100 goods Israel permits the Hamas-ruled territory to import across its border, in coordination with Tony Blair, an official said.

The former British prime minister is the envoy for the Quartet of international powers — the United States, European Union, United Nations and Russia — seeking peace in the region.

Blair, who held talks last week with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said on Monday that Israel had agreed in principle to begin easing the blockade “in days”.

Israeli cabinet minister Isaac Herzog, who has called for the lifting of the blockade, told Army Radio on Wednesday:

“We must understand that the blockade implemented until this time is outdated, and no longer applicable in the current international and diplomatic climate.”

Herzog said on Tuesday that Israel had informed Blair, who briefed EU foreign ministers on Monday, that it intends to “permit an easier passage of goods” to the Gaza Strip.

Israel imposed the blockade soon after Hamas, which has rejected Western calls to recognise the Jewish state’s right to exist, won legislative elections in 2006. Restrictions were tightened after Hamas seized power in Gaza the following year.

The EU wants Israel to move from a policy of banning the entry of many commercial goods into Gaza, except a few designated items, to accepting all products and prohibiting only those proscribed on a list.

Israel has said it wants to prevent the Iranian-backed Hamas from smuggling in any weapons, and officials say Israel would continue to ban the import of building materials to Gaza it says may be used to support military infrastructure.

Pressure had built on Israel to end the blockade since its troops shot and killed nine people on board a Turkish-backed vessel of an aid flotilla on May 31, while enforcing its naval blockade on Gaza.

(Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Israel to set up own inquiry into Gaza ship raid

JERUSALEM, June 13 (Reuters) – Israel said on Sunday it would set up its own investigation into a deadly raid on a convoy of Gaza-bound aid ships, and that its panel would include two foreign observers.

The internal inquiry into the March 31 raid, which falls short of a U.N. proposal for an international investigation, was decided on after consultations with the United States.

The White House welcomed the move as an important step and said Israel was capable of conducting a fair investigation.

“But we will not prejudge the process or its outcome, and will await the conduct and findings of the investigation before drawing further conclusions,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said in a statement.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said in a statement the government would give its final approval on Monday to forming an “independent public commission” into whether or not Israel had conformed to international law in imposing a naval blockade on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

Israel said its commandos killed nine pro-Palestinian Turkish activists when they boarded a Turkish-flagged aid vessel and were attacked by passengers wielding metal rods and knives.

The committee will examine the flotilla members, as well.

Amid an international outcry over the bloodshed, Israel has faced mounting pressure to investigate the events surrounding the flotilla raid and to ease or lift its blockade.

Hamas Islamists, who refuse to recognise Israel and renounce violence, seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007.

FOREIGN PARTICIPATION

Netanyahu said on Sunday Israel would continue discussions with the international community to prevent weapons and military equipment from reaching Gaza and to allow in humanitarian aid, an apparent signal it was open to revising blockade procedures.

The statement said a retired Israeli Supreme Court judge, Jacob Turkel, would head a committee on which two other Israelis and the two foreign observers would sit.

“In light of the exceptional circumstances of the incident, it was decided to appoint two foreign experts who will serve as observers,” the statement said.

The statement listed David Trimble, a Northern Ireland politician and Nobel Peace Prize winner, and Canadian jurist Ken Watkin as the foreigners who would take part in the hearings and deliberations but not have the right to vote.

“The commission may request any information from the Prime Minister, the Minister of Defence, other ministers and the Israel Defence Forces Chief-of-Staff,” the statement said.

The Israeli military has announced its own investigation, focusing on the operational aspects of a raid seen by many in Israel as a fiasco in which planners failed to gauge the strength of resistance on board.

Officers and soldiers would not testify at the government-ordered inquiry, which would rely on the statements they made to the military panel, Netanyahu’s office said.

The commission will publish its report when finished.

“While Israel should be afforded the time to complete its process, we expect Israel’s commission and military investigation will be carried out promptly,” the White House statement said.

“We also expect that, upon completion, its findings will be presented publicly and will be presented to the international community.” (Additional reporting by Caren Bohan in Washington)

Israel to set up own inquiry into Gaza ship raid

(Reuters) – Israel announced Sunday it would set up its own investigation into a deadly raid on a convoy of Gaza-bound aid ships, and that its panel would include two foreign observers.

World

The internal inquiry into the March 31 raid, which falls short of a U.N. proposal for an international investigation, was decided on after consultations with the United States.

The White House welcomed the move as an important step.

A statement from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the government would give its final approval Monday to forming an “independent public commission” into the incident.

Israel said its commandos killed nine pro-Palestinian Turkish activists when they boarded a Turkish-flagged aid vessel after they were attacked by passengers wielding metal rods and knives.

Amid an international outcry over the bloodshed, Israel has faced mounting pressure to investigate the events surrounding the flotilla raid and to ease or lift its blockade on the Hamas Islamist-ruled Gaza Strip.

Netanyahu said Sunday Israel would continue discussions with the international community to prevent weapons and military equipment from reaching Gaza and to allow in humanitarian aid, an apparent signal it was open to revising blockade procedures.

The statement said a retired Israeli Supreme Court justice, Jacob Turkel, would head a committee on which two other Israelis and the two foreign observers would sit.

“In light of the exceptional circumstances of the incident, it was decided to appoint two foreign experts who will serve as observers,” the statement said.

The statement listed David Trimble, a Northern Ireland politician and Nobel Peace Prize winner, and Canadian jurist Ken Watkin as the international participants who will take part in the hearings and deliberations, but will not have the right to vote.

(Writing by Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Israel to set up own inquiry into Gaza ship raid

June 13 (Reuters) – Israel will set up its own, internal investigation into the events surrounding its raid last month on a convoy of Gaza-bound aid ships, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Sunday.

Israel had rejected a U.N. proposal for an international panel to investigate the deadly May 31 interception of the flotilla, but it agreed to include two foreign observers in its own inquiry.

The final decision on the internal probe will be voted on by the government on Monday, Netanyahu’s office said in a statement. (Writing by Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Blair hopes Gaza blockade could be eased within days

(Reuters) – Middle East envoy Tony Blair said on Sunday he hoped to see movement in the next few days on easing the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip.

World

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, under rising pressure to ease the embargo since a deadly raid on a Turkish-backed aid ship heading to Gaza last month, held talks on the issue with Blair on Friday.

Asked when supplies could begin getting through to Gaza, Blair told the BBC: “I think it’s got to be pretty soon.”

“As fast as the next few days I hope we can get significant movement on this because otherwise I think the pressure will build up,” he said.

“As Benjamin Netanyahu has quite rightly said today, there is a way to distinguish between the security aspect and the daily life aspect. And if we keep that distinction in our mind then I think we will get the right answer and we can start that quickly,” he said.

The former British prime minister said the Palestinian authorities and the European Union, as well as Israel, could play a role in policing the flow of goods into Gaza.

“There are all sorts of different ways that you can help police this material, the main thing is to make whatever policing system you have effective,” said Blair, the envoy for the Quartet of international powers — the United States, European Union, United Nations and Russia — seeking peace in the region.

Arab League chief Amr Moussa visited the Gaza Strip on Sunday, the highest Arab official to do so since its seizure by Hamas Islamists in 2007, and called for an end to Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian territory.

Israel said on Friday it wanted to enlist global support to improve the flow of civilian goods to the Gaza Strip, while ensuring weapons did not reach the territory.

Israeli soldiers shot dead nine Turkish protesters last month after being assaulted with knives and clubs when they boarded the humanitarian aid vessel to prevent it from breaching the blockade.

A variety of goods enter Gaza from neighboring Egypt as well as from Israel, but aid groups have warned of a looming humanitarian disaster in the area home to 1.5 million Palestinians, due to Israel’s restrictions on goods transiting its crossings.

Israel says the embargo it imposed when Hamas rose to power in 2006 is aimed at preventing weapons from reaching the Iranian-backed Islamists who have refused peace initiatives with Israel because they reject its right to exist.

Blair said he believed reconciliation between Hamas and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah faction was possible.

“For people like myself it would be far better if we were engaging with Hamas constructively. The difficulty is when Hamas are still prepared to say ‘we don’t give up the use of violence …’,” he said.

“I hope they decide they do want to be part of it (the peace process) because the door is open if they want to go through it,” Blair added.

(Reporting by Adrian Croft; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Arab League chief visits Gaza Strip

(Reuters) – Arab League chief Amr Moussa visited the Gaza Strip on Sunday, the highest Arab official to do so since its seizure by Hamas Islamists in 2007, and called for an end to Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian territory.

World

Moussa crossed into the enclave from Egypt, two weeks after Israel’s deadly interception of a Gaza aid flotilla.

“This blockade…must be lifted and must be broken and the Arab League decision is very clear in this regard,” Moussa said.

Egypt had kept its Gaza border largely closed, bolstering Israel’s embargo, since Hamas, which won a 2006 election, seized sole control of the Gaza Strip in a war with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah faction three years ago.

But Cairo reopened its Rafah crossing with the enclave after Israeli marines killed nine pro-Palestinian Turkish activists in a May 31 raid on a Turkish-flagged aid vessel where passengers with metal rods and knives confronted the boarding party.

Palestinian and Arab League officials said Moussa’s visit was also aimed at giving momentum to reconciliation talks between Hamas and Fatah that Egypt has sponsored but which have failed to bridge deep mistrust between the two rivals.

In an apparent bid to avoid any impression of Arab League recognition of Hamas’s Gaza takeover, Moussa met Ismail Haniyeh, head of the Hamas government, in his home rather than in his office.

“We see this visit as a practical step along the way toward breaking the siege,” Haniyeh, with Moussa at his side, told reporters after their hour-long meeting.

But Senior Fatah leader Ashraf Goma said Moussa did not hear anything new from the various political factions and, therefore, ” the visit showed the gap remained wide and reconciliation was yet a far reaching goal.”

Goma said Hamas’s belief it could gain politically from the aftermath of the deadly Israeli raid on the Flotilla made it less willing to reconcile.

BLOCKADE DISCUSSIONS

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held talks on Friday with Middle East envoy Tony Blair on the blockade.

Echoing an Israeli statement after that meeting, Netanyahu told reporters on Sunday Israel would continue discussions with the international community to prevent weapons and military equipment from reaching Gaza and to allow in humanitarian aid, an apparent signal it was open to revising blockade procedures.

Amid an international outcry over the bloodshed in the flotilla raid, Israel has faced mounting pressure to ease or lift a blockade critics have described as collective punishment.

Speaking at a news conference as he concluded a day-long visit, Moussa voiced satire at Israel’s “trivial” ease up of the blockade.

“Taking Mayonnaise and Tomatoe salad off the ban list is not a relaxation of the siege. It is a trivial thing that makes someone laughs,” Moussa said.

Meeting on Sunday with members of his Likud party, Netanyahu said a retired Israeli Supreme Court justice, Jacob Turkel, would head a committee that Israel intends to establish to investigate the raid on the flotilla, officials said.

Pending the outcome of consultations with the United States, Israel has not made any formal announcement of the composition of the committee, which Israeli officials said would likely include foreign observers.

Washington has backed a U.N. Security Council statement that called for a “prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation, conforming to international standards” into the Israeli naval interception.

The White House has said it is open to different ways of ensuring the credibility of an Israeli-led investigation, including international participation.

Israel has rejected any external, international board of inquiry, saying it had a right to launch a probe on its own.

(Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

Arab League chief visits Gaza Strip

GAZA, June 13 (Reuters) – Arab League chief Amr Moussa visited the Gaza Strip on Sunday, the highest Arab official to do so since its seizure by Hamas Islamists in 2007, and called for an end to Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian territory.

Moussa crossed into the enclave from Egypt, two weeks after Israel’s deadly interception of a Gaza aid flotilla.

“This blockade…must be lifted and must be broken and the Arab League decision is very clear in this regard,” Moussa said.

Egypt had kept its Gaza border largely closed, bolstering Israel’s embargo, since Hamas, which won a 2006 election, seized sole control of the Gaza Strip in a war with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah faction three years ago.

But Cairo reopened its Rafah crossing with the enclave after Israeli marines killed nine pro-Palestinian Turkish activists in a May 31 raid on a Turkish-flagged aid vessel where passengers with metal rods and knives confronted the boarding party.

Palestinian and Arab League officials said Moussa’s visit was also aimed at giving momentum to reconciliation talks between Hamas and Fatah that Egypt has sponsored but which have failed to bridge deep mistrust between the two rivals.

In an apparent bid to avoid any impression of Arab League recognition of Hamas’s Gaza takeover, Moussa met Ismail Haniyeh, head of the Hamas government, in his home rather than in his office.

“We see this visit as a practical step along the way toward breaking the siege,” Haniyeh, with Moussa at his side, told reporters after their hour-long meeting.

But Senior Fatah leader Ashraf Goma said Moussa did not hear anything new from the various political factions and, therefore, ” the visit showed the gap remained wide and reconciliation was yet a far reaching goal.”

Goma said Hamas’s belief it could gain politically from the aftermath of the deadly Israeli raid on the Flotilla made it less willing to reconcile.

BLOCKADE DISCUSSIONS

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held talks on Friday with Middle East envoy Tony Blair on the blockade.

Echoing an Israeli statement after that meeting, Netanyahu told reporters on Sunday Israel would continue discussions with the international community to prevent weapons and military equipment from reaching Gaza and to allow in humanitarian aid, an apparent signal it was open to revising blockade procedures.

Amid an international outcry over the bloodshed in the flotilla raid, Israel has faced mounting pressure to ease or lift a blockade critics have described as collective punishment.

Speaking at a news conference as he concluded a day-long visit, Moussa voiced satire at Israel’s “trivial” ease up of the blockade.

“Taking Mayonnaise and Tomatoe salad off the ban list is not a relaxation of the siege. It is a trival thing that makes someone laughs,” Moussa said.

Meeting on Sunday with members of his Likud party, Netanyahu said a retired Israeli Supreme Court justice, Jacob Turkel, would head a committee that Israel intends to establish to investigate the raid on the flotilla, officials said.

Pending the outcome of consultations with the United States, Israel has not made any formal announcement of the composition of the committee, which Israeli officials said would likely include foreign observers.

Washington has backed a U.N. Security Council statement that called for a “prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation, conforming to international standards” into the Israeli naval interception.

The White House has said it is open to different ways of ensuring the credibility of an Israeli-led investigation, including international participation.

Israel has rejected any external, international board of inquiry, saying it had a right to launch a probe on its own. (Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

Netanyahu says ready to testify in flotilla inquiry

(Reuters) – Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday he was willing to testify in an inquiry Israel intends to hold into its deadly raid on a convoy of aid ships bound for the Israeli-blockaded Gaza Strip.

World

A formal Israeli announcement of an investigation of the May 31 bloodshed awaits the conclusion of consultations with Israel’s main ally, the United States, on a format for the probe, Israeli officials said.

“We will be prepared to appear and give all the facts,” Netanyahu said in a speech, mentioning himself, Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Lieutenant-General Gabi Ashkenazi, the military’s chief of staff.

Israeli commandos killed nine Turks, including one who also held U.S. nationality, after boarding the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara and being swarmed by pro-Palestinian activists with clubs and knives.

The bloodshed triggered an international outcry and strained relations between Israel and its once-close Muslim ally, Turkey. Israel called the troops’ actions “self-Defense.” Turkey described the killings as “state-sponsored terrorism.”

Amid world pressure to ease its Gaza blockade and agree to a U.S.-backed U.N. call for a “prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation,” Israel has expressed willingness to involve foreign observers in its own inquiry.

QUESTIONS

“The examination must include answers to questions that some in the international community prefer to ignore: Who was behind the extremist group on the ship’s deck? Who sponsored its members?” Netanyahu said.

All of the nine dead on the Mavi Marmara were members or volunteers for the Foundation for Human Rights and Freecoms and Humanitarian Relief (IHH).

The IHH says it is an Islamic charity group funded entirely by donations. Israel says the IHH supports Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, and other militant Islamist groups. But it does not classify the IHH as a terrorist organization.

“The world needs to know the whole picture,” Netanyahu said. “And we will make sure the whole picture comes to light.”

He said Israel’s investigation would also focus on how “axes, clubs, knives and other light weapons” were brought on board the ship and on the “very large sums of money” he contended were found “in the pockets of those people on deck.”

The Israeli military has announced its own investigation, focusing on the operational aspects of a raid seen by many in Israel as a fiasco in which planners failed to gauge the strength of resistance on board.

Netanyahu, echoing remarks made by a spokesman on Tuesday, said officers and soldiers would not testify at the government-ordered inquiry, which would rely on the statements they made to the military panel.

Israel says its Gaza blockade is necessary to limit weapons smuggling to Hamas.

The U.N. says the Israeli embargo, which includes a ban on cement crucial for reconstruction after the December 2008-January 2009 Gaza war, has caused a humanitarian crisis in the enclave. Israel rejects the allegation, citing its frequent shipments of fuel and medical aid into the area.

(Editing by Diana Abdallah)

Analysis: U.N. rebukes of Israel permitted in U.S. policy shift

(Reuters) – Under President Barack Obama, the United States no longer provides Israel with automatic support at the United Nations where the Jewish state faces a constant barrage of criticism and condemnation.

The subtle but noticeable shift in the U.S. approach to its Middle East ally comes amid what some analysts describe as one of the most serious crises in U.S.-Israeli relations in years.

Under Obama, the United States seeks to reclaim its role as an impartial Middle East peace broker which critics say it lost during the previous administration of George W. Bush.

“Israel became used to unconditional support of the United States during eight years of the Bush administration,” said Marina Ottaway, director of the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington.

She said Bush’s “extreme position” makes even mild criticism appear dramatic to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his cabinet.

However, Washington continues to block what it sees as efforts to use the United Nations as a forum for bashing Israel — which one U.S. official told Reuters was “nine out of 10 initiatives regarding Israel in New York.”

Obama has also pushed hard to get a fourth round of U.N. Security Council sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear program, which Israel sees as its top security threats. A vote on new Iran sanctions is expected this week.

“There have been slight changes (in U.S.-Israeli ties), but they’ve caused a disproportionate reaction on the part of Israel,” said Ottaway. “We haven’t seen any drastic changes.”

Last week the United States backed a Security Council statement on Israel’s commando raid on an aid flotilla that tried to break Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. Nine people on one of the ships were killed in the action.

The statement regretted the loss of life and demanded a “prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation conforming to international standards.

Washington, U.N. diplomats and U.S. officials said, worked hard to dilute the text so the 15-nation council did not call for an independent investigation and to ensure it did not explicitly criticize Israel.

UNITED NATIONS “LYNCH MOB”?

Israel was still unhappy with the statement and its supporters accused Obama of abandoning the Jewish state.

In an article called “Joining the jackals,” Elliott Abrams, who advised two Republican administrations and is now at the Council on Foreign Relations, accused Obama of exposing Israel to a virtual U.N. “lynch mob.”

“The White House did not wish to stand with Israel against this mob because it does not have a policy of solidarity with Israel,” Abrams said. “Rather, its policy is one of distancing and pressure.”

Abrams also criticized the White House over the recent five-year review conference of signatories to the 1970 nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) that Israel, like nuclear-armed Pakistan and India, has never signed.

Washington backed a call for a 2012 meeting of all countries in the Middle East to discuss making the region a zone free of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction — a plan originally proposed by Egypt with Arab backing to add pressure on Israel to give up its nuclear weapons.

After allowing it to pass, the U.S. delegation criticized the NPT final declaration for “singling out” Israel, which neither confirms nor denies having atomic weapons.

This statement did not satisfy commentators like Abrams, who said Obama had “abandoned Israel in the U.N. and in the NPT conference in the course of one week.”

Some analysts say Washington wants to improve ties with Arab nations and regain lost status as a neutral peace arbiter while being careful not to alienate pro-Israel voters.

“During the George W. Bush years, Washington’s automatic siding with Israel on any issue seriously eroded what had been America’s long-standing posture as an honest broker in the Middle East,” said Mark Fitzpatrick of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.

“Obama has been trying to reclaim that status, while keeping in mind the domestic political need of not being seen as anti-Israel,” he said.

Outside the United Nations, analysts say Obama tried to ease strains with Netanyahu after tensions spiked earlier this year over Jewish settlement construction on occupied Palestinian land.

He coaxed Israel into indirect talks with the Palestinians, his biggest tangible achievement in Middle East diplomacy.

But an Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the jury is still out on the Obama administration’s approach to the Jewish state.

“It’s still difficult to decipher the intentions behind the changing U.S. policy at the United Nations, and not just in regard to the Middle East,” the official said.

“If the Americans are convinced that, through adopting a softer approach … they will achieve support from countries that heretofore opposed their policy — they will discover that they are wrong,” the official added.

(Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick in Washington and Dan Williams in Jerusalem; editing by Alan Elsner)

ANALYSIS-UN rebukes of Israel permitted in US policy shift

UNITED NATIONS, June 8 (Reuters) – Under President Barack Obama, the United States no longer provides Israel with automatic support at the United Nations where the Jewish state faces a constant barrage of criticism and condemnation.

The subtle but noticeable shift in the U.S. approach to its Middle East ally comes amid what some analysts describe as one of the most serious crises in U.S.-Israeli relations in years.

Under Obama, the United States seeks to reclaim its role as an impartial Middle East peace broker which critics say it lost during the previous administration of George W. Bush.

“Israel became used to unconditional support of the United States during eight years of the Bush administration,” said Marina Ottaway, director of the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington.

She said Bush’s “extreme position” makes even mild criticism appear dramatic to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his cabinet.

However, Washington continues to block what it sees as efforts to use the United Nations as a forum for bashing Israel — which one U.S. official told Reuters was “nine out of 10 initiatives regarding Israel in New York.”

Obama has also pushed hard to get a fourth round of U.N. Security Council sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear program, which Israel sees as its top security threats. A vote on new Iran sanctions is expected this week.

“There have been slight changes (in U.S.-Israeli ties), but they’ve caused a disproportionate reaction on the part of Israel,” said Ottaway. “We haven’t seen any drastic changes.”

Last week the United States backed a Security Council statement on Israel’s commando raid on an aid flotilla that tried to break Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. Nine people on one of the ships were killed in the action.

The statement regretted the loss of life and demanded a “prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation conforming to international standards.” [ID:nN01269378]

Washington, U.N. diplomats and U.S. officials said, worked hard to dilute the text so the 15-nation council did not call for an independent investigation and to ensure it did not explicitly criticize Israel.

UNITED NATIONS “LYNCH MOB”?

Israel was still unhappy with the statement and its supporters accused Obama of abandoning the Jewish state.

In an article called “Joining the jackals,” Elliott Abrams, who advised two Republican administrations and is now at the Council on Foreign Relations, accused Obama of exposing Israel to a virtual U.N. “lynch mob.”

“The White House did not wish to stand with Israel against this mob because it does not have a policy of solidarity with Israel,” Abrams said. “Rather, its policy is one of distancing and pressure.”

Abrams also criticized the White House over the recent five-year review conference of signatories to the 1970 nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) that Israel, like nuclear-armed Pakistan and India, has never signed. [ID:nN05194015]

Washington backed a call for a 2012 meeting of all countries in the Middle East to discuss making the region a zone free of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction — a plan originally proposed by Egypt with Arab backing to add pressure on Israel to give up its nuclear weapons.

After allowing it to pass, the U.S. delegation criticized the NPT final declaration for “singling out” Israel, which neither confirms nor denies having atomic weapons.

This statement did not satisfy commentators like Abrams, who said Obama had “abandoned Israel in the U.N. and in the NPT conference in the course of one week.”

Some analysts say Washington wants to improve ties with Arab nations and regain lost status as a neutral peace arbiter while being careful not to alienate pro-Israel voters.

“During the George W. Bush years, Washington’s automatic siding with Israel on any issue seriously eroded what had been America’s long-standing posture as an honest broker in the Middle East,” said Mark Fitzpatrick of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.

“Obama has been trying to reclaim that status, while keeping in mind the domestic political need of not being seen as anti-Israel,” he said.

Outside the United Nations, analysts say Obama tried to ease strains with Netanyahu after tensions spiked earlier this year over Jewish settlement construction on occupied Palestinian land.

He coaxed Israel into indirect talks with the Palestinians, his biggest tangible achievement in Middle East diplomacy.

But an Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the jury is still out on the Obama administration’s approach to the Jewish state.

“It’s still difficult to decipher the intentions behind the changing U.S. policy at the United Nations, and not just in regard to the Middle East,” the official said.

“If the Americans are convinced that, through adopting a softer approach … they will achieve support from countries that heretofore opposed their policy — they will discover that they are wrong,” the official added.

(Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick in Washington and Dan Williams in Jerusalem; editing by Alan Elsner)