Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Israel Has A Few Good Reasons For Bombing Syria

 2 hours 59 minutes ago
By Geoffrey Ingersoll and Gus Lubin | Business Insider
Source: Yahoo! Finance

Comment:  The Zionists bombed a chemical plant in Syria. They decided that they did not want advanced weapons to get into the hands of the Syrian people. These advanced weapons include: " advanced air defense systems, ballistic missiles, sophisticated shore-to-sea missiles, and chemical weapons". They are not acting against Assad. They know that he will be overthrown soon and they do not want the advanced weapons to be in the control of a Syrian Government which can not be manipulated. Therefore, they have decided to take steps to keep such a government from being able to use such weapons. 
Here is the article:

 "According to unconfirmed reports by the Free Syrian Army and others, Israeli jets flew over Damascus on Saturday morning, circled Assad's palace, and then  bombed a chemical plant .
If it really happened, the strike could be a both risky and prudent move for Israel.
One analyst recently advocated a "one-off" strike  as  the most measured response to Syrian chemical weapon use :
"The most proportional response (to limited chemical weapons use) would be a strike on the units responsible, whether artillery or airfields," said Jeffrey White, a former senior official at the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency and a Middle East expert who is now a defense fellow at the Washington Institute For Near East Policy told Reuters.
It would demonstrate to Assad that there is a cost to using these weapons  - the problem so far is that there's been no cost to the regime from their actions."
One-off strikes are among the most viable ways to intervene in Syria, with the U.S. and allies wary of getting too deeply involved.  They may also serve as a way to rein in Assad without deposing him and risking the chaos that follows.
Israel also has defensive reasons for bombing Syria.
Amos Yadlin, a former chief of Israeli military intelligence who directs the Institute for National Security Studies, told Washington Post there are four types of weapons whose transfer to militant groups would not be tolerated: advanced air defense systems, ballistic missiles, sophisticated shore-to-sea missiles, and chemical weapons.
Israel has decided that stopping the spread of these weapons is worth conducting targeted strikes, and the risk of starting a war.
But there is a gamble with this aggressive strategy.
The last time Israel bombed Syria — in January when its planes supposedly bombed a weapons convoy and a military research center  without even entering Syrian air space — Russia and various antagonistic Middle Eastern states immediately condemned the action . Syria delivered a letter to the United Nations declaring its right to self-defense.   Iran promised there would be "grave consequences."
Another strike, this time supposedly in Syrian air space and attacking Syrian infrastructure, would represent a significant escalation.
It would also confirm that we have entered "a new and more volatile phase in the regional repercussions of Syria's civil war," as described by Washington Post's Joel Greenberg and Babak Dehghanpisheh after the January attack.
Finally, there's the question of whether the U.S. was involved at some level of the supposed Israeli air strike.
Israeli Ambassador to the United States Michael Oren told Fox News Sunday that while the U.S. and Israel  "can't discuss details, we are working out ways we can address this threat" — indicating that the U.S. may have been involved if there really was an attack."

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US Embassy in Cairo deletes tweet on Jon Stewart

3 hrs ago
By MATTHEW LEE | Associated Press
Source: Yahoo News

 WASHINGTON (AP) — Oh, the perils of digital diplomacy!
The U.S. Embassy in Cairo temporarily shut down its Twitter feed on Wednesday and deleted a tweet linking to a video of "The Daily Show," in which host Jon Stewart mocked Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi. The monologue about the arrest of an Egyptian satirist offended the Egyptian government and sparked an unusual diplomatic incident.
The embassy's Twitter account was deleted — and then restored minus the Stewart post — afterEgyptian authorities objected to a tweet that contained a link to Stewart's Monday show in which he joked about the arrest of a high-profile satirist, Bassam Youssef, who has poked fun at Morsi, U.S. officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
In the clip tweeted by the embassy, Stewart came to the defense of Youssef and criticized Morsi for his arrest and interrogation as being undemocratic and petty. Youssef has been a guest on Stewart's program.
Replying to the embassy on Twitter, Morsi's office wrote, "It's inappropriate for a diplomatic mission to engage in such negative political propaganda."
The Twitter development comes as tensions between Washington and Cairo have soared in recent days over concerns that the Egyptian government is backsliding on the protection of human rights.
Secretary of State John Kerry said on Tuesday that Washington has "real concerns about the direction Egypt appears to be moving in," adding that Egypt is at a "tipping point." His comments followed a blistering riposte from Egypt's ruling Muslim Brotherhood to criticism of Youssef's arrest leveled on Monday by State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.
Nuland spoke of a "disturbing trend" of growing restrictions on freedom of expression in Egypt, pointing to the questioning of Youssef and the arrest warrants.
"There does not seem to be an evenhanded application of justice here," Nuland added, saying the Egyptian government has been slow to investigate police brutality or attacks on anti-Morsi protesters and journalists.
The Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party then denounced Nuland's comments as "blatant interference" in Egypt's internal affairs.