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WAR REPORT
Palestinians face choices that will 'change face of region'
by Staff Writers
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Nov 3, 2011


The Palestinian leadership faces decisions about the peace process that will "change the face of the region," presidential spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeina said on Thursday.

"The coming weeks and months will be crucial and form an important crossroads, particularly in terms of the peace process in the region," the spokesman for president Mahmud Abbas told AFP.

"The Palestinian leadership faces a major test including taking big decisions that will change the face of the region," he said.

The Palestinians are currently waiting for the outcome of a UN Security Council meeting on November 11, when members will discuss Abbas's request for full state membership, despite fierce opposition from Israel and the United States.

Last week, Abbas raised the issue of the future of the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the face of the persistent deadlock in peace talks.

Created in 1994 after the signing of the Oslo accords, the PA was set up to prepare for the emergence of a state following a final peace deal with Israel.

Abbas has said that if talks remain stalled, the Palestinians might consider dismantling the PA entirely, although no serious steps in that direction have yet been taken.

The two parties have had no direct contact for more than a year, and attempts by the so-called Quartet of Middle East diplomatic players to jumpstart the process have led nowhere.

The Palestinians say they will not enter peace talks while Israel builds settlements on land they want for a future state.

And Israel says it will only enter negotiations if there are no preconditions laid down.

The distance between the sides has only increased in recent days with the admission of Palestine as a full member of the UN cultural organisation, UNESCO.

The move infuriated Israel, prompting the Jewish state to announce it was speeding up settlement construction and suspending the transfer of tax money to the Palestinian Authority.

Israel holds major missile defence drill
Tel Aviv (AFP) Nov 3, 2011 - Israel began a major civil defence drill in the Tel Aviv region on Thursday aimed at simulating the response to conventional and non-conventional missile attacks, the military said.

"The rescue units of the civil defence, police, fire service and Magen David Adom (emergency services) will participate in the exercise," an army statement said.

The exercise began shortly after 10:00 am (0800 GMT) with the sounding of sirens for a full minute and a half throughout the region around the coastal city of Tel Aviv.

Rescue teams were then dispatched to "evacuate hundreds of wounded after conventional and non-conventional missile attacks" to hospitals participating in the simulation, civil defence official Colonel Adam Zussman told army radio.

"We are going to test all the possible scenarios, including attacks causing significant damage," he said.

Israeli media reported that evacuation and absorption centres would be opened across the region and that gas masks would be distributed.

Military officials said the exercise was long planned, but it comes as speculation in Israel grows about the possibility of a pre-emptive strike against Iran, with media here reporting that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seeking cabinet support for such an operation.

On Wednesday, Israel tested a rocket-propulsion system that local media said was capable of firing ballistic missiles, although officials here declined to comment on the specifics of the system and said the test was also long scheduled.

A poll published by the Haaretz daily on Thursday found Israeli public opinion divided on a strike against Iran's nuclear facilities, with 41 percent in favour, 39 percent opposed and 20 percent undecided.

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Israeli strike kills two in northern Gaza: medics
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Nov 3, 2011 - Two Palestinians were killed and one was wounded on Thursday by an Israeli air strike in the northern Gaza Strip, a spokesman for the Hamas emergency services said.

The Israeli military confirmed the strike, saying the air force had targeted a "terrorist squad" that had opened fire on troops in an area near Gaza's northern border with Israel.

Emergency services spokesman Adham Abu Selmiya said the attack, which took place in Al-Sudaniyya near the seafront, had killed two and left a third person in moderate to serious condition.

"The martyrs were taken to Kamal Adwan hospital in Jabaliya," he told AFP, referring to a nearby town.

Abu Selmiya named the two men as Mohammed Abu Hanina and Nasser Eliyan and said the men were farmers working their land when the air strike hit.

The attack occurred as both sides reported an exchange of fire between troops and gunmen near the border as an Israeli helicopter hovered overhead.

The Israeli military said its troops came under fire during "routine activity adjacent to the security fence in the northern Gaza Strip," and sustained damage to a vehicle.

"In response to the fire, IDF (Israel Defence Force) soldiers targeted the terrorist squad aided by IAF (Israel Air Force) aircraft. A direct hit was confirmed," a statement said.

The strike came after several days of calm in and around Gaza following a spike in violence at the weekend which left 12 Palestinian militants and an Israeli civilian dead.

Militant groups say they are observing an Egyptian-brokered truce agreement but have reserved the right to reply to any Israeli fire.

Israel says it will continue to act against any militants poised to fire rockets across the border.



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WAR REPORT
Secret teams guarded Kadhafi mustard gas in war
Waddan, Libya (AFP) Nov 1, 2011
Libyan and NATO secret agents kept watch over hidden stocks of mustard gas, stockpiled by ex-dictator Moamer Kadhafi, throughout the war which toppled him to prevent his forces using them. While one stockpile was known to the United Nations, the new Libyan regime on Tuesday revealed the existence of two other, formerly unknown, sites with stocks prepared by Kadhafi. One contained weapons ... read more


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