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WAR REPORT
Top US military chief on first official visit to Israel
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 19, 2012


Top US military chief General Martin Dempsey arrived in Israel on Thursday, the US embassy said, for talks with political and military leaders that are expected to focus on Iran's nuclear programme.

Dempsey's trip is his first to Israel since becoming chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in October.

His brief trip will include talks with Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Benny Gantz, Defence Minister Ehud Barak and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Dempsey will also meet President Shimon Peres and visit Israel's Holocaust museum Yad Vashem before leaving on Friday evening.

His discussions are expected to focus on Iran's nuclear programme, which both Washington and Israel fear masks a weapons drive.

Tehran denies those charges, saying the programme is for peaceful energy and medical purposes. However, it faces increasingly tough international sanctions against its oil exports and financial institutions in a bid to force an end to its uranium enrichment efforts.

Israel fears a nuclear-armed Iran would pose an existential threat to the Jewish state and has raised the prospect of military action against Tehran's nuclear activities.

But the United States has stressed the importance of pushing forward with sanctions and is believed to have privately warned Israel against undertaking unilateral military action.

On Wednesday, Barak tried to calm speculation about the possibility of an impending military strike, saying Israel was "very far away" from such a decision.

"We don't have a decision to go forward with these things. We don't have a decision or a date for taking such a decision. This whole thing is very far away," he told army radio.

He also denied reports suggesting Dempsey had been sent to Israel to convince it to refrain from military action.

"The chairman of the joint chiefs of staff is not coming with a view to putting pressure on the state of Israel," Barak said.

"The United States knows that Israel takes American considerations into account, but the Israeli government... (is) responsible for the security of the state of Israel and we cannot set aside this responsibility for anyone, including our American friends."

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Merkel urges progress from Palestinians, Israel
Berlin (AFP) Jan 19, 2012 - German Chancellor Angela Merkel Thursday urged the Palestinians and Israelis to resume peace talks, saying it was crucial that progress be made.

"It is very, very important that we see progress, that each side sees that good will is there," Merkel told a joint press conference after talks with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

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 Middle East Quartet, which comprises the United States, United Nations, European Union and Russia, in an attempt to kickstart the talks.

"The window of opportunity is not yet closed. The talks in Jordan are still going on. We want to help them achieve a result," Merkel said.

She stressed that both sides were talking to each other which "was not the case for many months".

"We want to now take advantage this situation," she said.

For his part, Abbas said Germany had developed friendships with both Israel and the Palestinians and thus "may have an important role to play in the framework of dialogue in the region."

Abbas is on a week-long tour of Europe which has already seen him meet British Prime Minister David Cameron in London and will also include a stop in Russia.



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India praises Sri Lanka's reconciliation
Colombo, Sri Lanka (UPI) Jan 18, 2012
India's foreign minister urged Sri Lanka to continue reconciliation efforts started at the end of the island nation's brutal 30-year conflict with Tamil separatists. Indian Minister of External Affairs S. M. Krishna, on a four-day visit to Sri Lanka, also praised the Colombo government's efforts to move ahead with recommendations in a report by Sri Lanka's Lessons Learnt and Reconciliat ... read more


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