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WAR REPORT
Israel fears Hezbollah targets top general
by Staff Writers
Tel Aviv, Israel (UPI) Jan 16, 2012

Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi.

Israel, Palestinians at odds on Quartet deadline
Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 16, 2012 - Israel and the Palestinians are at odds over the Quartet's deadline for proposals on borders and security, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday.

His remarks to MPs came two days after Israel's chief negotiator Yitzhak Molho held a third exploratory meeting in Amman with Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat in a bid to restart direct talks which have been on ice since September 2010.

"Erakat wants to abandon talks on January 26," Netanyahu was quoted as saying by a spokesman, in reference to the three-month deadline set by the diplomatic Quartet of peacemakers from the United States, European Union, Russia and United Nations.

On October 26, Quartet envoys said they were giving the parties three months to "come forward with comprehensive proposals on territory and security."

With the deadline looming, Palestinian officials have made clear they will not continue any form of talks after January 26 unless Israel freezes settlement construction and agrees to base any future talks on the lines which existed before the 1967 Six-Day War.

But Netanyahu made clear Israel was working on a different schedule.

"We are only counting talks from January 3 which means we have until April 3," he said, referring to the date of the first face-to-face encounter between the two sides.

Both parties have been quick to make clear that the Amman meetings did not constitute a return to direct talks, although the two sides exchanged position papers when they first met on January 3.

"We gave (them) a document with 21 points of consensus in Israel," Netanyahu said on Monday. "I hope we can come on January 26 and continue talks."

The Palestinians say they have submitted their position on borders and security, but accuse Israel of failing to reciprocate.

An official in the West Bank town of Ramallah told AFP earlier this month that the Israelis' only proposal was "for a (Palestinian) state on provisional borders -- which we totally reject."


The Israeli military has tightened security around former chief of staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi amid fears that Hezbollah plans revenge attacks to mark the fourth anniversary of the assassination if its iconic military chief.

The move came within days of authorities in Thailand claiming they had thwarted a Hezbollah bombing plot in Bangkok, with one of at least two plotters arrested, while Bulgarian security said it found a "suspicious package" in a bus carrying Israeli tourists from Turkey last week.

Both operations followed Israeli warnings of possible bombings by Hezbollah.

Imad Mughniyeh, who until Osama bin Laden came along was the most wanted terrorist fugitive in the world, was killed in a Feb. 12, 2008, bombing in a highly secure sector of Damascus, Syria.

Along with Iran, that's Hezbollah's main patron. Tehran and Damascus blamed Israel's Mossad intelligence service for the assassination.

"You killed Imad outside the battleground," Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned Israel during Mughniyeh's elaborate funeral.

"Our battle was inside Lebanese territory. You cross the borders. Zionists, if you want open war, let it be open war anywhere."

No one has claimed responsibility for the bombing in the heart of one of Israel's most implacable foes but the Mossad, along with the United States and France, had hunted Mughniyeh since the 1980s.

The Mossad, and the military's crack Special Forces unit, Sayeret Matkal, have made "targeted assassinations" their specialty over the last three decades and Mughniyeh's assassination in Damascus bore the hallmarks of an Israeli operation.

So did last week's broad-daylight assassination of an Iranian nuclear scientist in Tehran. He was the fourth scientist killed there in the last two years in what is widely seen as an Israeli campaign to slow down Iran's contentious nuclear program.

That killing, amid an escalating confrontation in the Persian Gulf between the United States and Iran, has antagonized Tehran, Hezbollah's ideological master, against Israel and could, some analysts suspect, substantially heighten the prospect of a Hezbollah attack on Israelis.

"Hezbollah, a creature of the Iranian Islamic Revolution, has a long history of receiving aid from Iranian embassies in its overseas operations," the U.S. global security consultancy Stratfor observed recently.

Ashkenazi, who was the chief of Israel's general staff at the time of the Mughniyeh slaying, retired from the military in February 2011. At that time he was under round-the-clock protection because he had been targeted in a Hezbollah plot uncovered in August 2009.

An Israeli Arab named Rawi Sultani was arrested by Israel's internal security service, on charges of planning to kill Ashkenazi in a plot supposedly masterminded by Hezbollah.

The charges were reduced after Sultani agreed to cooperate with authorities. On April 6, 2010, a Tel Aviv court sentenced him to six years in prison for giving Hezbollah information on Ashkenazi.

Sultani, a member of a prominent Arab family, was a member of the Kfar Saba Country Club outside Tel Aviv where Ashkenazi regularly worked out at the state-of-the-art gym. That was where the Israeli general was to have been killed.

Sultani, then 23, confessed he had been contacted by a Hezbollah operative in 2008 during an Arab youth summer camp in Morocco.

The plot targeting Ashkenazi is seen by Israeli security authorities as one of as many as 10 attempts by Hezbollah against the Jewish state to avenge the slaying of Mughniyeh.

Apart from the plot against Ashkenazi, all of the attempted strikes were planned to take place outside of Israel where its citizens are more vulnerable. These include a 2008 plot to blow up the Israeli Embassy in Baku, Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic that is Iran's uneasy northern neighbor.

Israeli intelligence has been making major inroads in Azerbaijan in recent years, much to Tehran's dismay, as part of its global shadow war with the Islamic Republic that stretches from Latin America to Central Asia.

Two Lebanese, identified by Azeri authorities as members of Hezbollah and reportedly working with Iran's intelligence apparatus, were arrested with four Azeris. The Lebanese were sentenced to 15 years in prison, but, along with 12 Iranians, were reportedly released in August 2010 as part of a prisoner exchange between Azerbaijan and Iran.

Other apparent Hezbollah revenge attacks were reportedly foiled in the Netherlands, Turkey and elsewhere.

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Britain brands Israel settlements 'deliberate vandalism'
London (AFP) Jan 16, 2012 - British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg Monday condemned Israeli settlements as "deliberate vandalism" as Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas began a European tour to boost his position.

Abbas welcomed the comments by the British official, which came as Israeli and Palestinian negotiators squabbled over the conditions to restart full talks which have been on ice since September 2010.

Speaking after talks with Abbas in London, Clegg said Israel's continued construction of settlements in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem was causing "immense damage" to the faltering peace process.

"It is an act of deliberate vandalism to the basic premise on which negotiations have taken place for years and years and years," he told a joint press conference with Abbas.

Abbas, who is also scheduled to visit Germany and Russia as part of a week-long tour, welcomed Clegg's comments.

"This is exactly what we wanted to hear officially from the government of the United Kingdom," he said through a translator.

The Palestinian leader later met Prime Minister David Cameron, who warned that time was running out for a two-state solution.

"We will do everything we can to help promote these discussions," Cameron said as he met Abbas at 10 Downing Street, the British premier's official residence.

"We think that time, in some ways, is running out for the two-state solution unless we can push forwards now, because otherwise the facts on the ground will make it more and more difficult, which is why the settlement issue remains so important."

Britain is a key ally of Israel but has in recent months stepped up its criticism of Israeli settlement building.

Settlements have proved a consistent sticking point in talks between Israel and the Palestinians, and caused the breakdown in the direct talks that began in September 2010.

Envoys from both sides have since met twice under the auspices of Jordan and the peacemaking Quartet, which comprises the United States, United Nations, European Union and Russia, in an attempt to kickstart the talks.

The Palestinians say they will not negotiate while Israel builds settlements and they want clear parameters for any new talks, including an acceptance by Israel of the lines which existed before the 1967 Six-Day War as a basis for negotiations on borders.

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday that the two sides were still at odds over the Quartet's deadline for new proposals on borders and security.

He said Palestinian negotiators wanted to break off talks on January 26 when they say a three-month deadline set by the Quartet falls.

Israel, however, is working from the last face to face talks on January 3 and says the deadline expires on April 3, Netanyahu said.

The number of Israeli settlers living in the West Bank at the end of 2011 rose by 4.3 percent compared with the previous year to 342,414, an Israeli lawmaker said on Sunday.



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Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 16, 2012
Israel and the United States opted to delay a major joint military exercise because of regional tensions and instability, Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Monday. "The entire world understands that we had to postpone this exercise because of political and regional uncertainties, as well as the tensions and instability prevailing in the region," Lieberman told public radio. ... read more


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