Showing posts with label MIDDLE EAST. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MIDDLE EAST. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 December 2013

The Secret of the Wonder Weapon That Israel Will Show Off to Obama

 No tour of Middle East conflict zones could be complete without a stop at Sderot, an Israeli town of 24,000 that stands uncomfortably close to the Gaza Strip. The rain of rockets out of the Palestinian enclave has made Sderot famous for two things: the thickness of its roofs (even bus stops have reinforced concrete tops); and the collection of crumpled missiles arrayed in racks behind the police station. As a visiting VIP in 2008, U.S. Senator Barack Obama dutifully inspected what the machine shops of Islamic Jihad and Hamas fashioned from lengths of pipe and scrap metal. Low-tech doesn’t begin to cover it.

It’s a long way up the Mediterranean coast from Sderot to Haifa, and even farther to the showroom of Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd., the weapons-development branch of Israel’s military-industrial complex. Hi-tech doesn’t begin to cover it. Rafael developed the first precision-guided munitions — the precursor to the American-made Joint Direct Attack Munitions that replaced “dumb bombs” — and scores of other battlefield innovations, from IED detectors to floating drones. But the company’s most acclaimed invention is the one now President Obama will inspect moments after arriving in Israel on Wednesday: Iron Dome. It is a missile-interception system that has performed what Israelis regard as a miracle, draining a good bit of the fear out of the wail of an air-raid siren. During the last Gaza conflict, which lasted a week in November, Iron Dome knocked out of the sky a reported 84% of the missiles it aimed at — that is, the ones headed toward population centers. The rockets headed for open space its computers simply let fall. Rafael executives are understandably proud of Iron Dome, which after a few months on the job is performing at the level of a system that’s had seven years to work out the kinks. But they appear even prouder of the unlikely philosophy behind it. To make the most-tested, if not the most effective antimissile system in military history, Israeli engineers took a page from the Gaza militants they aimed to frustrate. The secret to Iron Dome is that it’s cheap.

(MORE: Iron Dome’s Lessons for the U.S.)
Consider the problem of volume. Since 2005, Gaza militants have fired more than 4,000 of their homemade rockets into Israel. Most cost a few hundred dollars each. Interceptors typically cost a few hundred thousand. “The main question that everyone asks is, ‘You’re firing a very costly missile against something very cheap,’” says Joseph “Yossi” Horowitz, a retired air-force colonel who markets air-and-missile defense systems at Rafael. “So our main mission was to reduce the cost.”

The economizing would be across the board, but the biggest savings were realized by reducing the size of the missile’s eyes — by far the most expensive component. An interceptor missile locks onto its target by following directions from the radar in its nose cone, typically packed with radio-frequency sensors of extravagant unit cost. An interceptor carried by a fighter jet has to be very smart, because it’s expected to find a missile being fired in its direction before it’s even in sight, one that could come from any direction. The nose-cone radar of an AIM/AMRAAM has so many RFs, or radio-frequency nodes, that it runs into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

But a homemade missile coming out of Gaza is simply ballistic: it goes up and comes down. Rafael realized its launch and trajectory can be detected by ground radar, which would then transmit that information to the Iron Dome interceptor launched into the area of the sky where it’s headed. Only when the two missiles come near one another does the interceptor’s own radar come alive, guiding it to the incoming Qassam or GRAD and colliding with its own nose — where the warhead is positioned — in midair. It’s a delicate business, what with each missile traveling at 700 m per second.

“I can bring the interceptor in an accurate way, near the target, which means I can use the radar, the ‘seeker’ for a very short time,” says Horowitz. The shorter the time, the fewer the RF sensors required. “Saves money,” he says. How much? “Two digits: from hundreds of thousands of dollars to several thousand dollars.”

(MORE: ‘Iron Dome’ Protects Israel From Gaza’s Missiles: Will That Embolden It to Strike Iran?)
The savings mount up. Most guided missiles are made of so-called exotic materials, complex polymers designed to prevent the rocket from expanding or contracting as it travels through different altitudes. Again, not necessary for Iron Dome, which ascends only a few thousand feet. “Here we did it with aluminum,” Horowitz says. “Went across the street. Got some pipe.”
The result is visible in this extraordinary YouTube video from a wedding in Beersheba, an Israeli city of 200,000. The incoming missiles are not visible in the night sky until the ascending Iron Dome interceptors find and destroy them — again and again and again. “We can do more, but in this video we do 12,” says Horowitz, a reserve colonel in the Israeli military’s air-defense section. “You are not looking for the best of the best. You are looking for some optimization.”
At about $50 million per battery — the launchers with 20 missiles each, ground radar and command-and-control center, led by an officer equipped with an abort button — Iron Dome still costs plenty, especially since Israel estimates it would need at least 13 of them to protect the entire country. It currently has five. But the U.S. Congress voted about $300 million to help close the gap, which is why the Israel Defense Forces will truck a battery to Ben Gurion Airport on Wednesday to be photographed behind the American President.
That no previous antimissile system has performed so impressively might raise awkward questions about the norms of defense procurement in other nations. (For David’s Sling, the Israeli version of the Patriot 3, the U.S. intermediate-range interceptor that costs about $5 million per interceptor, Rafael is partnering with Raytheon, an American firm, and still aims do the job for one-quarter of the cost.) But for Israelis, the more pressing question is how to define success.

(MORE: Psychological Warfare with Missiles: Why Tel Aviv Matters)
Back to the Beersheba wedding. The revelry appears to carry on oblivious to the wail of air-raid sirens competing with the DJ (that song in the background is “Sunday Morning” by Maroon 5). If Israelis no longer scramble to shelters, then Iron Dome really has changed the dynamic. It’s not yet at that point; schools still close when the rockets fly, and parents stay home from work. But Rafael’s head of research and development, who began work on Iron Dome even before the government thought to ask for it, tells TIME that its overarching accomplishment is that it can break the pernicious cycle of escalation that can lead to things like invasions. The batteries can liberate Israel’s elected leaders from the public pressure that comes with mass casualties. “The big success of Iron Dome is not how many missiles we intercept,” says Roni Potasman, the executive vice president for R&D. “The main success is what happened in the decisionmaking civilian population environment. The quiet time. Clausewitz used to say the mission of the military is to provide the time for the decisionmakers to decide. Now, if out of 500 missiles, 10 of them get by and cause casualties, a school or kindergarten, then this is a whole different story.”

The more stubborn problem is that, even though Iron Dome knocked down 400 of the rockets fired out of Gaza in the last round of fighting, Hamas acts as though it prevailed in the conflict. What’s more, polls show 80% of Palestinians think so too, while only 1 in 4 Israelis think their side prevailed. Israeli warplanes killed scores of senior militants and destroyed hundreds of missiles and launchers on the ground, including Fajr-5 from Iran. But Hamas and Islamic Jihad still launched their own version of the Fajr, dubbed the M-75, toward Tel Aviv and Jerusalem — unsettling Israelis who had previously considered themselves out of range and had not heard an air-raid siren since the Gulf War.

“[Gaza militants] were hit badly, much more than four years ago, but still I think they perceive it as a success,” says Potasman. “This is the Middle East….one side is looking at this reality from one angle; the other side looks from a totally opposite angle. That’s why we cannot communicate with them on a regular, normal basis, because you see one reality, and you look at this and you say, ‘Hey, what else can we do, to kill them? I mean, to kill them softly?’ And they look at this and they say, ‘Hey, we were able to hit Beersheba and Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. So our understanding of the reality and their understanding of the reality is totally different. It’s not the same book.”

Yemen says 52 doctors, nurses killed in attack on ministry


Yemen's Higher Security Committee said 52 doctors and nurses were killed in Thursday's attack on the Ministry of Defense and around 162 people were injured.

A suicide bomber and gunmen wearing army uniforms targeted the ministry compound in the capital Sanaa in the worst single attack in Yemen for 18 months.

A statement by the committee said some of those killed were Germans. It did not give a number of officers and gunmen dead.

Thursday, 28 November 2013

Israel Court Fines Woman Over Not Circumcising Son

An Israeli rabbinic court has fined a woman hundreds of dollars for refusing to circumcise her baby son, officials said Thursday, in a landmark case that has sparked a new uproar over the role of religion in the Jewish state.

The case shines a spotlight on a long-running debate over religious coercion in Israel, where generations of leaders have struggled to find a balance between the country's Jewish and democratic character.

Rabbinic courts in Israel have authority over certain Jewish family matters like marriage, divorce, conversion and burial. Their decisions are binding for families that agree to take part in them, though their rulings can be appealed in the country's secular court system. This particular case ended up in the rabbinic court as part of an ongoing divorce battle.

In the proceedings, the woman announced her refusal to circumcise the boy, saying she did not wish to harm him. The Israeli rabbinate's high court ruled last week the circumcision was for the child's welfare and that the woman must pay the equivalent of nearly $150 each day she refuses the circumcision be performed.

"The decision is not based only on religious law. It is for the welfare of a Jewish child in Israel not to be different from his peers in this matter," said Shimon Yaakovi, legal adviser to the rabbinical court.

He said it was the first time a religious court in Israel has punished a parent for refusing to circumcise a child. A year ago, a civil court also ruled in favor of circumcision in a parental dispute.

There is no law requiring circumcision in Israel, but the vast majority of Jewish boys undergo the procedure at the age of eight days in line with Jewish law, which sees the ritual as upholding a covenant with God.

The mother, whose named was not released in court documents, has argued that the rabbinical court does not have authority over the matter. The Justice Ministry, which is representing the mother, said Thursday it likely would appeal the case to Israel's Supreme Court.

There are no precise statistics on circumcisions in Israel. While most families perform the procedure either out of religious belief or to preserve an ancient tradition, tens of thousands of children are not circumcised, activists say.

Ronit Tamir, an anti-circumcision activist, called the rabbinic court's ruling "dangerous for democracy."
"It turns the government into a theocracy," she added.

Although most Israelis are secular, Israel's founding fathers gave Judaism a formal place in the nation's affairs. This has led to persistent tensions in Israeli society.

Jewish law defines a Jew as one who is born to a Jewish mother or who undergoes a demanding conversion process overseen by rabbinic authorities. People who do not meet these requirements, such as someone with only a Jewish father, can face difficulties with the religious authorities.

Civil marriage, for instance, is all but banned, forcing thousands of couples who either do not want a religious ceremony or don't qualify for one to travel abroad each year to marry. Likewise, soldiers who die in battle but are not Jewish under religious law are buried in separate cemeteries.

Afghan president condemns US airstrike that killed a child, wounded two women

KABUL - Afghanistan's president Hamid Karzai said US forces had bombed a home in Helmand killing a small child and wounding two women on Thursday and condemned the attack as another sign of disregard for civilian life, his spokesman said.

The strike could not have come at a worse time, as Karzai is engaged in a stand-off with the American government over a bilateral security agreement that will help shape the presence of US troops in Afghanistan after 2014.

"It shows that US forces have no respect for the decisions of the Loya Jirga [council of elders] and life of civilians in Afghanistan," said Karzai's spokesman, Aimal Faizi.

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

PM convenes urgent meetings on whether Israel will join Horizon 2020, as EU sticks to settlement guidelines

Guidelines say every agreement with EU must include clause saying that it is not applicable beyond Green Line.


Netanyahu at meeting with Catherine Ashton, EU High Rep for Foreign Affairs, June 20, 2013. Photo: Courtesy - GPO

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu held urgent consultations Sunday to discuss what Israeli officials termed the European Union's refusal to show the necessary flexibility on its settlement guidelines to allow Israel to join the massive Horizon 2020 project.



Israel and the EU have been in intensive talks since August looking for a formula that would enable Israel's participation in the flagship EU Research and Development program in light of EU settlement guidelines published in June barring the transfer of any money or funds to entities beyond the Green Line, including east Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.



Related: EU officially publishes settlement guidelines despite Israeli objectionsEU weighs Israeli proposals to resolve settlement guidelines disputeThe guidelines stipulate that every agreement between the EU and Israel must include a clause saying that it is not applicable beyond the Green Line.



Israel has said it would not join the 80 billion euro program – Jerusalem would be expected to pay some 600 million euros into the project with the expectation of receiving 900m euro back in research grants and investments -- unless explicit understandings with the EU were reached on the implementation of these guidelines.



Intensive negotiations have been taking place on this matter since August.



Earlier this month Israel presented a number of compromise proposals to the EU, including one stating that while Israel accepted that the EU would not fund beyond the Green Line, it wanted to add a clause that this should not be seen as prejudging a final agreement with the Palestinians. .



Israeli officials said Monday, however, that the EU essentially told Israel that while they would like Israel's participation, the "guidelines are what they are," and that the decision to join the program was in Israel's hands. "They only showed flexibility on marginal issues," one official said, adding that a decision whether to accept the conditions had to be made at the political level.



European sources disputed this reading of the situation, saying that the EU did show "flexibility" and was looking for a "pragmatic way of implementing the agreement."



At the same time, one European source said, the EU did not want to be seen as granting a "victory" on this matter to Netanyahu or appear to the European public as backing down from its principles.



Netanyahu met on the matter Sunday afternoon with Education Minister Shai Piron, Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, and Science Minister Yaakov Peri, and was scheduled to hold a second meeting on the matter in the evening. .



One idea that being considered if Israel does not join the project is to invest the 600 million euros directly into Israeli academic institutions and R & D projects.



Various academic bodies, such as the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, have implored the government to sign the Horizon 2020 agreement, arguing that not to do so would be a huge blow to Israeli research.







Thursday, 7 November 2013

Kerry’s Path Steepens in Israeli-Palestinian Talks

The developments could portend a harder line from Israel toward the Palestinians, and increase the pressure on Mr. Kerry to play a more muscular mediating role, three months after his intense personal campaign lured the adversaries back to negotiations after years of impasse. 

On Wednesday, Mr. Kerry pressed Israel more forcefully than he had before to limit new construction of settlements “in an effort to help create a climate for these talks to be able to proceed effectively.” But his own effort to cool temperatures came amid growing signs of a poisoned atmosphere, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel bluntly accusing the Palestinian leadership of fomenting distrust and evading difficult decisions.

The acquittal of Avigdor Lieberman, the former Israeli foreign minister who is among Israel’s most powerful and polarizing politicians, of corruption charges could further complicate matters. Mr. Lieberman is an outspoken nationalist and a West Bank settler, though his views on the peace process are not sharply different from Mr. Netanyahu’s. But his triumphant return to power — likely again as foreign minister — makes Mr. Lieberman an unpredictable force. 

Mr. Kerry, who came to Jerusalem to recapture the initiative in the moribund talks, struggled to keep them from slipping into a familiar cycle of recrimination on Wednesday. Under pressure from President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, he declared that the Palestinians had not accepted continued building in settlements as an Israeli condition for restarting talks, despite what Israeli leaders had indicated. 

“That is not to say that they weren’t aware, or we weren’t aware, that there would be construction,” Mr. Kerry said after meeting with Mr. Abbas in Bethlehem, in the West Bank. 

He emphasized that the United States considers the settlements to be “illegitimate.”
But hours before in Jerusalem, Mr. Kerry had sat stone-faced as Mr. Netanyahu said he was concerned about the prospect for progress in the talks “because I see the Palestinians continuing with incitement, continuing to create artificial crises, continuing to avoid, run away from the historic decisions that are necessary to make a genuine peace.” 

The dispute over settlements, officials said, led to a shouting match between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators on Tuesday at their 16th session, as Mr. Kerry arrived here. While increasing expressions of outrage, particularly by the Palestinians, may be as much an effort to appease constituents as a reflection of what is happening at the negotiating table, the need to show steadfastness on both sides is a hint of the hurdles Mr. Kerry faces. 

Add to that delicate and complex equation Mr. Lieberman, 55, an immigrant from the Soviet Union and a populist hard-liner who has alienated international diplomats with undiplomatic outbursts and been both an important partner and an occasional rival to Mr. Netanyahu. Although he will not play a direct role in the peace talks even if he returns as foreign minister, he has embarrassed the prime minister by declaring, at inopportune times, that any agreement is decades away and by accusing Mr. Abbas of “diplomatic terrorism.” 

For Israel’s governing coalition, already deeply fractured over the Palestinian issue, the question now is whether Mr. Lieberman will join those challenging Mr. Netanyahu from the right, making a peace deal even more remote, or shift toward the center to expand his political base for a future campaign to become prime minister. An indication may come at the end of this month when the party he founded in 1999, Yisrael Beiteinu, decides whether to solidify the alliance it forged with Mr. Netanyahu’s Likud Party for this year’s elections and fully merge into a single faction, or break apart and operate independently again. 

“This is a man who works long-term: he’s not a tactician only, he’s a good strategist,” said Prof. Shmuel Sandler, a political scientist at Bar-Ilan University. “I don’t know whether he will split away from Netanyahu and say, ‘I’m the replacement from outside,’ or whether he will say, ‘O.K., I’ll try and support Netanyahu and one day be his successor.’ ”

Why Arabs Fear a U.S.-Iran Détente

PARIS — Tensions between Saudi Arabia and the United States over Washington’s approach to the Middle East were brewing for months before they burst into the open last week. 

First, there was the American inaction in Syria and lack of progress on Israeli-Palestinian peace. Then came America’s withdrawal of aid to the Egyptian military after the July coup. Now President Obama is pursuing a very public rapprochement with Iran, Saudi Arabia’s archrival. 

The mounting disagreements between the two longtime allies is now in full public view. Last week, the head of Saudi intelligence warned that it would stop cooperating with the United States on certain issues. That came just days after Saudi Arabia stunned even some of its own diplomats when it refused a rotating seat on the United Nations Security Council, citing its anger over the world’s failure to respond to the crisis in Syria.
This spat reflects the Arab world’s deepening frustration with American policy toward Syria, Egypt and Palestine — as well as extreme skepticism about a possible thaw in America’s relations with Iran. 

The Arabs have learned from bitter experience that whether by confrontation or collaboration, whatever Iran, America and Israel decide to do leaves them feeling trampled. Like an African proverb says: Whether the elephants fight or play, the grass gets trampled. 

America chose Iran and Israel, over their Arab neighbors, as its designated “regional cops” in the 1960s and ’70s, at the height of the Cold War. Since the United States and Iran became sworn enemies after the 1979 revolution, America’s military wishes have by and large been carried out by Arab proxies, often at great cost in blood, treasure and stability. Lebanon, Iraq and Syria are among the countries that have suffered immensely.
Strikingly, until last week, it was only Israel, not its Arab neighbors, that had criticized the thaw in U.S.-Iranian relations (even though Israel might gain a lot from a deal that curtails Iran’s nuclear ambitions).
But ultimately, reconciliation between America and Iran will require compromise over Arab, not Israeli, interests. And these interests are neither Washington’s to cede nor Iran’s to brush aside.
Arab powers fear that negotiations between America and Iran are likely to leave Israel as the one nuclear power in the region, while allowing its occupation of Palestine to continue unabated. 

Improved relations between Iran and America could offer benefits: a lifting of Western sanctions and American recognition (however grudging) of Iran’s growing regional influence, starting with Syria, Bahrain and the Gulf region. The United States could use Iran’s help to stabilize Syria — as it helped with Afghanistan after 9/11. 

But sooner than later, what appears to be a great diplomatic breakthrough may be revealed to be no more than hopping over a volcano. 

That’s because Iranian-American détente will likely deepen the sectarian divisions between Iran and Saudi Arabia, setting the stage for an all-out regionwide sectarian conflict. 

Since its 1979 revolution, Iran has become increasingly militarized and religiously radicalized. The Shiite-Sunni tensions that fueled the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88 have only grown worse. 

As the Saudi government made clear last week, authoritarian Sunni regimes in the region will probably seek to undermine — rather than accept — any agreement that foresees growing Iranian influence in their backyard. 

That polarization will inadvertently help Al Qaeda and other extremist Sunni groups, who are bound to see in Iranian-Western rapprochement a tool to multiply their recruits by stoking sectarian hatred. It has already happened in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon, and it’s likely to continue. 

The consequences are potentially disastrous. Shiite-Sunni fault lines extend through most oil-producing countries. The damage to the regional and global economy from a disruption in the supply of oil could be huge. 

But none of this is preordained or inevitable.
The theological roots of the Sunni-Shiite divide might go back 13 centuries, but the violence we are witnessing today is politically motivated and aggravated by foreign intervention in the region. 

The Arab states rejected America’s 2003 war in Iraq, which is now ruled by an authoritarian prime minister who is firmly under Iran’s influence. They are not taking kindly to Iran’s continued meddling in the region, including its military support for Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad. Indeed, the Syrian opposition has rejected any role for Iran in talks over the future of their country. 

While the elephants have been playing, and fighting, Arab leaders have been watching and learning. They know that long-term regional stability is a game they can play, too. 

With 370 million people in 22 countries that range from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, Arabs are bound to disagree about plenty of things. But they generally support a Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction — and that applies to both Iran and Israel. 

The Arab nations, because of their size and strategic significance, are indispensable in shaping the region’s future and its security. Alienating them is wrong — and dangerous. 


Monday, 4 November 2013

Zionist regime is an illegitimate and bastard regime


Iran's supreme leader warns hardliners not to undermine nuke talks; criticizes US's close ties with Israel.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei at NAM Summit.
Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei at NAM Summit. Photo: REUTERS
 
"The Zionist regime is an illegitimate and bastard regime," Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Sunday said of Israel, whose existence Tehran does not recognize.
Khamenei also criticized the United States for its close relations with Israel.

"The Americans have the highest indulgence towards the Zionists and they have to. But we do not share such indulgence," AFP quoted Khamenei as saying.

Khamenei also reiterated his view that he is not optimistic about the outcome of nuclear talks but said he saw no downside to holding the negotiations.

"With God's permission, we will not be harmed by these negotiations ... if the negotiations reach a conclusion then all the better, but if they don't it will mean that the country must stand on its own feet," Khamenei said.
Iran's supreme leader gave strong backing on Sunday to his president's push for nuclear negotiations, warning hardliners not to accuse Hassan Rouhani of compromising with the old enemy America.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's comments will help shield Rouhani, who has sought to thaw relations with the West since his surprise election in June, from accusations of being soft on the United States, often characterized in the Islamic Republic as the "Great Satan".

Iran will resume negotiations with six world powers, including the United States, in Geneva on Thursday, talks aimed at ending a standoff over its nuclear work that Tehran denies is weapons-related.

Rouhani hopes a deal there will mean an end to sanctions that have cut the OPEC country's oil exports and hurt the wider economy, but any concession that looks like Iran is compromising on what it sees as its sovereign right to peaceful nuclear technology will be strongly resisted by conservatives.

"No one should consider our negotiators as compromisers," Khamenei said in a speech, a day before the Nov. 4 anniversary of the 1979 seizure of the US Embassy in Tehran, a pivotal event in US-Iranian relations, the ISNA news agency reported.

"They have a difficult mission and no one must weaken an official who is busy with work," said Khamenei, who wields ultimate power in Iran's dual clerical-republic system, including over the nuclear program.

He also criticized the United States for continuing to impose sanctions and threatening possible military action. Both Washington and its ally Israel say the military option to prevent Iran getting nuclear weapons is something they do not rule out.

"We should not trust an enemy who smiles," Khamenei said. "From one side the Americans smile and express a desire to negotiate, and from another side they immediately say all options are on the table."

In September, US President Barack Obama insisted that the United States would "take no options off the table, including military options, in terms of making sure that we do not have nuclear weapons in Iran."

Sunday, 3 November 2013

The Killing of Pakistani Most wanted Taliban by the U.S. drones has spark a call for review of U.S.relationship with Pakistan.

The Killing of Pakistani Most wanted Taliban by the U.S. drones has spark  a call for review of U.S.relationship with Pakistan.

This was stated by the Prime Miniter on Sunday during a high profile meeting following the killing of Mehsud, who was declared WANTED with a 5Million Dollars bounty on his head.

Lebanese Army Arrested Man Torturing the Alawites in Tripoly


A man has been arrested by the Lebanese army following his suspicion of being involved in beating and torturing Alawites in Tripoly. According to report the man was arrested at the scene of the most heated area by the recent violence in Syria.

The president of Syria, Bashar Al-Assad is from the tribe Alawites in the Northern Syria. Alawites emanate from Shiite Islam. It is believed that Sunni muslims who is the second largest city in Syria is against the regime of Assad and supported vehemently the revolt against the present government.

On Saturday opponent carried out a surprise attack on a bus transporting workers from Beirut to Tripoli as it made a regular stop at the entrance to Bab al-Tebbaneh district.

They forced nine of them off the bus and pushed them into the Sunni-populated neighbourhood before opening fire on them and beating them.

The nine were all wounded, but none critically.
In a statement issued late Saturday, the army said it had detained one suspected assailant and identified other men involved in the attack, including a Syrian.

"As a result of a search and our investigations, we have identified the armed men and all those involved in the shooting operation," said the statement.

"Army units raided their hideouts and detained Yehia Samir Mohammed... and are working on chasing down the other suspects," it added.

Tripoli is the scene of frequent Syria-linked battles pitting Sunnis from Bab al-Tebbaneh against Alawites in neighbouring Jabal Mohsen.

The most recent killings was the  killing of  15 people on both sides and ended earlier this week when the army deployed along Syria Street, which separates the two districts and acts as the makeshift frontline.


Sunday, 27 October 2013

Iranian lawmaker: P5+1 must recognize Iran's right to enrichment

World powers must recognize Iran's right to 20% uranium enrichment within the country, Deputy of National Security and Foreign Policy Commission of the Iranian parliament Mansour Haqiqatpour told the country's official IRNA news agency Saturday. According to the lawmaker, the Islamic Republic enriches uranium at the 20% level for medical purposes and to fuel Tehran's research reactor. Haqiqatpour told IRNA that the enrichment process manufactured medicines needed by some 850,000 Iranian patients.

Saturday, 26 October 2013

Israel saved me


Reverend Mulinda from Uganda and his friend Majed El Shafie from Egypt both converted to Christianity from Islam, and paid a heavy price for sticking to their beliefs. Today they fight against anti-Semitism and advocate human rights and a love for Israel.
Amit Lewinthal

Rev. Omar Mulinda (left) and Majed El Shafie
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Photo credit: Uri Lenz

'Israel will not accept any deal that allows Iran to enrich uranium'

In a briefing to the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, Ya'alon warns that Iran is still pushing forward toward nuclear weapons •Ya'alon says so far Syria is adhering to its commitments to dismantle chemical weapons.
Israel Hayom Staff

Defense Minister Bogie Ya'alon
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Photo credit: Ziv Koren

Adelson: U.S. Nuclear Strike on Iran Ahead of Negotiations imperative

 
 
Video from the blog Mondoweiss showed Sheldon Adelson, a billionaire casino owner who donates heavily to Republicans, speaking on Tuesday at Yeshiva University in New York.

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Billionaire Venture Capitalist Michael Moritz Gives $30 Million For UC San Francisco Basic Science PhDs

Michael Moritz, the chairman of Sequoia Capital and a billionaire venture capitalist, is giving $30 million to fund an endowment for basic science PhD students at the University of California, San Francisco, the university announced Tuesday. UCSF is matching the grant with $25 million in institutional funds, making it the largest endowed program for PhD students in the history of the University of California.
“The basic PhD science programs are under threat because of cutbacks in government funding,” Moritz told FORBES in a call from Europe. “Without people stepping in to help, there is a real risk of programs getting cut back.”
UCSF has also made a commitment to raise an additional $5 million from at least 500 participating donors. Moritz said he hopes UCSF alumni and faculty will participate, and that it will generate a culture of giving.
Moritz and his wife, Harriet Heyman, want to make sure that UCSF stays at the forefront of basic science PhD programs globally. “Our gift is also intended to ensure that really talented young scientists don’t have financial hurdles stand in their way.”

Large research universities like UCSF typically cover the cost of tuition and living expenses for basic science PhD students. But federal funding from the National Institutes of Health has remained flat since 2007. From 2000 to 2010, state education appropriations to UCSF dropped by 54% on a per-student basis. Meanwhile, tuition and fees for graduate programs at the University of California have skyrocketed, climbing to $15,700 a year for in-state students in 2013 from $9,075 in 2006. (Out-of-state students pay an additional $15,000 in tuition the first year.)

“Graduate students in the life sciences play a vital role in faculty research and innovation and bring curiosity and new ideas to the laboratories where they work,” said UCSF Chancellor Susan Desmond-Hellmann, MD, MPH.

Moritz’ wife Heyman also has a personal connection to UCSF. One of the couple’s children had worked years ago in a neuroscience lab at the university, and Heyman became interested. For about a year she has been volunteering at a UCSF neuroscience lab. “She’s really taken it up with a vengeance,” said Moritz. “She works five days a week — and on the weekends she reads scientific textbooks.”

Moritz, 59, was born in Wales, worked early on as a journalist in the U.S. and wrote a book about Apple AAPL +4.97% in 1984. At Sequoia Capital, he has been part of a team that invested early in Apple, Cisco, Google GOOG -1.92%, Yahoo YHOO -2.12% and PayPal. For the new Forbes 400 list of richest Americans, FORBES estimated his net worth at $2.2 billion. Moritz and Heyman, who joined the Bill Gates/Warren Buffett Giving Pledge in April 2012, have been generous donors to the University of Oxford, Moritz’s alma mater. In 2008, the couple made a $50 million gift to Oxford. Last year, they pledged $116 million to Oxford for scholarships, to be paid in three installments. The second installment will be in 2014. Moritz and his wife also donate funds to the Julliard School.

“There will be other [gifts] coming,” Moritz said. “We don’t intend to expire with any money in our pocket.”
In 2012, Moritz stepped back from management responsibilities at Sequoia, saying that he had a rare, incurable disease (he did not disclose the specific disease). But he has remained active as an investor, and is on a trip to Europe because of investments he has made for Sequoia there. In June he was knighted by the Queen of England, an honor bestowed upon a select few who have made significant contributions to national life.

Sunday, 22 September 2013

WORLD MOST POWERFUL CELEBRITIES

Name Pay Money Rank TV/Radio Rank Press Rank Marketability Rank Social Rank
1

Oprah Winfrey

$77 M 14 2 10 25 19
2

Lady Gaga

$80 M 9 7 2 65 3
3

Steven Spielberg

$100 M 2 12 6 4 89
4

Beyonce Knowles

$53 M 33 1 5 25 5
5

Madonna

$125 M 1 13 25 73 22
6

Taylor Swift

$55 M 29 9 11 41 7
7

Bon Jovi

$79 M 11 35 47 25 17
8

Roger Federer

$71 M 17 45 7 41 33
9

Justin Bieber

$58 M 27 4 4 96 1
10

Ellen DeGeneres

$56 M 28 31 46 19 9
11

Hugh Jackman

$55 M 29 32 27 14 32
12

Jennifer Lopez

$45 M 42 21 15 21 14
13

Rihanna

$43 M 44 10 1 60 2
14

Coldplay

$64 M 20 50 37 41 11
15

Tiger Woods

$78 M 12 19 9 86 47
16

LeBron James

$60 M 25 22 17 76 20
17

Simon Cowell

$95 M 3 56 31 68 43
18

Katy Perry

$39 M 51 23 16 32 4
19

David Beckham

$47 M 39 40 26 39 16
20

Robert Downey Jr

$75 M 15 64 54 4 68
21

Leonardo DiCaprio

$39 M 51 33 24 4 35
22

Tyler Perry

$78 M 12 51 67 50 34
23

Channing Tatum

$60 M 25 54 41 36 40
24

Kobe Bryant

$62 M 23 43 36 75 23
25

Dwayne Johnson

$46 M 40 60 49 4 27
26

Ryan Seacrest

$61 M 24 34 71 50 29
27

Tom Cruise

$35 M 56 5 3 56 39
28

Mark Wahlberg

$52 M 35 58 48 4 53
29

Seth MacFarlane

$55 M 29 37 55 37 54
30

Donald Trump

$63 M 21 18 38 95 59
31

Cristiano Ronaldo

$44 M 43 47 8 92 6
32

Jay-Z

$42 M 45 3 14 71 66
33

Dr. Phil Mcgraw

$72 M 16 39 62 68 64
34

Glenn Beck

$90 M 7 26 87 90 62
35

Will Smith

$23 M 73 44 33 1 12
36

Ben Affleck

$25 M 69 8 12 4 78
37

Rush Limbaugh

$66 M 18 16 66 87 71
38

David Letterman

$42 M 45 17 35 41 77
39

Lionel Messi

$41 M 48 49 19 88 10
40

Adam Sandler

$37 M 55 74 57 4 13
41

Angelina Jolie

$33 M 59 14 20 32 76
42

E.L. James

$95 M 3 68 51 100 79
43

Toby Keith

$65 M 19 75 83 54 45
44

James Patterson

$91 M 6 89 70 78 57
45

Howard Stern

$95 M 3 52 95 93 73
46

Carrie Underwood

$31 M 61 56 64 14 28
47

Kenny Chesney

$53 M 33 64 92 41 41
48

Usain Bolt

$24 M 71 29 22 60 26
49

Jennifer Lawrence

$26 M 67 20 21 32 88
50

Drew Brees

$51 M 36 79 69 41 61
51

Rafael Nadal

$26 M 67 63 18 67 25
52

Phil Mickelson

$49 M 38 77 44 50 81
53

Ashton Kutcher

$24 M 71 41 60 54 18
54

Sofia Vergara

$30 M 62 52 73 25 50
55

Peter Jackson

$50 M 37 66 30 78 94
56

Serena Williams

$20 M 75 48 23 47 52
57

Jon Stewart

$16 M 79 11 59 39 51
58

Jerry Bruckheimer

$80 M 9 89 100 73 85
59

Kanye West

$20 M 75 25 29 99 21
60

Jerry Seinfeld

$32 M 60 61 91 21 44
61

Michael Bay

$82 M 8 84 84 97 94
62

Maria Sharapova

$29 M 66 72 34 65 36
63

Dr. Dre

$40 M 49 85 82 64 30
64

Jennifer Aniston

$20 M 75 36 58 1 97
65

Tom Brady

$38 M 53 69 56 57 69
66

Kim Kardashian

$10 M 91 15 28 98 15
67

Charlie Sheen

$10 M 91 28 45 60 31
68

Calvin Harris

$46 M 40 95 79 90 37
69

Rachael Ray

$30 M 62 81 93 21 48
70

Kristen Stewart

$22 M 74 37 13 83 80
71

Gwyneth Paltrow

$10 M 91 46 40 14 70
72

Sean Hannity

$30 M 62 6 86 84 72
73

Meryl Streep

$7 M 97 27 32 4 92
74

David Guetta

$30 M 62 99 68 76 8
75

Stephen King

$20 M 75 80 63 25 55
76

Christopher Nolan

$40 M 49 76 42 81 94
77

Gordon Ramsay

$38 M 53 97 65 58 67
78

Manny Pacquiao

$34 M 57 82 81 60 56
79

Tina Fey

$10 M 91 30 61 19 81
80

Mark Burnett

$63 M 21 100 99 89 91
81

Gisele Bundchen

$42 M 45 85 88 80 65
82

J.K. Rowling

$13 M 88 59 50 37 58
83

Alec Baldwin

$8 M 96 24 39 47 75
84

Emma Stone

$16 M 79 67 43 25 97
85

Charlize Theron

$15 M 83 69 53 14 87
86

Neil Patrick Harris

$15 M 83 78 94 4 49
87

Suzanne Collins

$55 M 29 97 89 94 93
88

Floyd Mayweather

$34 M 57 92 90 85 42
89

Mila Kunis

$11 M 90 61 52 14 97
90

Sandra Bullock

$14 M 86 69 75 1 97
91

Danica Patrick

$15 M 83 55 74 53 74
92

Amy Poehler

$7 M 97 42 72 32 81
93

George Lopez

$12 M 89 94 98 21 38
94

Ray Romano

$16 M 79 89 96 4 90
95

Kevin Hart

$14 M 86 92 97 58 24
96

Zooey Deschanel

$6 M 100 88 77 25 46
97

Louis C.K.

$16 M 79 82 84 68 63
98

Melissa McCarthy

$10 M 91 72 76 47 81
99

Joss Whedon

$25 M 69 95 80 82 86
100

Miranda Kerr

$7 M 97 87 78 71 60