Road closures in Israel indicate military build-up
The Israeli army said today it was
closing three roads that lead to, or border the Gaza Strip, in an indication of
a probable military build-up in the area.Shortly before, political sources said
Defence Minister Ehud Barak was seeking government approval to mobilise up to
75,000 reserve troops for Israel's Gaza campaign, in a sign of preparations for
a possible ground offensive.Western governments are watching Egypt's response
to the attacks for signs of a more assertive stance towards Israel since an
Islamist came to power in the Arab world's most populous nation.President
Mohamed Mursi is mindful of anti-Israeli sentiment among Egyptians emboldened
by last year's Arab Spring uprising but needs to show Western allies his new
government is no threat to Middle East peace.His prime minister, Hisham Kandil,
visited Gaza today in a demonstration of solidarity after two days of strikes
by Israeli warplanes targeting Gaza militants."We see what is happening in
Gaza as blatant aggression against humanity," Mursi said in comments
carried by Egypt's state news agency. "I warn and repeat my warning to the
aggressors that they will never rule over the people of Gaza."I tell them in
the name of all the Egyptian people that Egypt today is not the Egypt of yesterday, and
Arabs today are not the Arabs of yesterday."The Egyptian foreign minister
also spoke to his counterparts in the US, Jordan, Brazil and Italy on Friday to
discuss the situation in Gaza, a statement from the foreign ministry
said.Mohamed Kamel Amr spoke to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about the
necessity of cooperation between the US and Egypt to end the military
confrontations. Amr stressed the necessity of Israel ending attacks on Gaza and
a truce being rebuilt between the two sides, the statement said.Mursi's toppled
predecessor Hosni Mubarak was a staunch US ally who upheld a cold but stable
peace with Israel.The new president has vowed to respect a three-decade peace
treaty with the Jewish state. But ties have been strained by protests that
forced the evacuation of Israel's ambassador to Cairo last year and
cross-border attacks by Islamist militants.More than 1000 people gathered near Cairo's al-Azhar mosque
after prayers, many waving Egyptian and Palestinian flags."Gaza Gaza, symbol of
pride", they chanted, and "generation after generation, we declare
our enmity towards you, Israel"."I cannot
as an Egyptian, an Arab and a Muslim just sit back and watch the massacres in
Gaza," said protester Abdel Aziz Nagy, 25, a member of the Muslim
Brotherhood.Protesters were marching from other areas of Cairo towards Tahrir
Square, the main rallying point for last year's uprising.
Iran ready to double nuclear work in bunker -IAEA
Iran is set to sharply expand its
uranium enrichment in an underground plant after installing all the centrifuges
it was built for, a United Nations report said, a move likely to increase
Western alarm about Tehran's nuclear course.It also showed Iran's stockpile of
its most sensitive nuclear material grown and was getting closer to an amount
that could be sufficient for a nuclear weapon.The latest quarterly
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report on Iran came 10 days after the
re-election of US President Barack Obama, which raised hopes for a revival of
nuclear diplomacy with Iran following speculation that Israel might attack the
nuclear facilities of its arch-enemy soon.But the UN watchdog's findings
underlined the tough task facing world powers seeking to pressure Iran to curb
atomic activity they fear is aimed at developing a nuclear weapons capability,
a charge Tehran denies."The report paints the picture of Iran's continued
lack of cooperation with the IAEA, and details its continued enrichment and
installation of centrifuges in violation of UN Security Council
resolutions," a senior Western diplomat said.The Islamic state has put in
place the nearly 2800 centrifuges that the Fordow enrichment site was designed
for and is poised to double the number of them operating to roughly 1400 from
700 now, according to the confidential IAEA report."They can be started
any day. They are ready," a senior diplomat familiar with the IAEA's
investigation said.If Iran chose to dedicate the
new machines to produce higher-grade uranium, it could significantly shorten
the time required for any bid to build an atomic bomb. Iran says it needs to
refine uranium to make reactor fuel.In another potentially worrying development
for the West, Iran appears to have virtually stopped converting this uranium
into making civilian reactor fuel since the previous report.As a result, the
stockpile of uranium gas refined to a fissile concentration of 20 percent
increased by nearly 50 percent to 135 kg, the latest report said, still below
the level of 200-250 kg experts say would be sufficient for an atomic bomb if
refined further."This puts added pressure on the West's diplomacy with
Iran, which has to operate on a tighter schedule," said research fellow
Shashank Joshi at the Royal United Services Institute.Israel has recently
signalled that an attack on Iran was not imminent - after months of talk that
it might be on the cards soon by pointing to Iran's decision earlier this
year to use part of its 20 percent uranium for civilian purposes."As Iran's 20% stockpile
approaches around 240 kg, the Israeli sabre-rattling will resume,"
French PM tries to reassure Berlin
France's German-speaking prime
minister has offered a worried Berlin reassurances his government would reduce
the deficit and prevent France from becoming the next victim of the euro crisis
by applying a new economic model.Jean-Marc Ayrault, making his first visit to
Berlin since Francois Hollande became president, told German Chancellor Angela
Merkel that France would find its own way to reduce spending and boost economic
growth and jobs, rather than copying Germany."My challenge, the
government's challenge, is to reform what isn't working, to correct what is too
weak, but to keep the profound values that make France what it is," he
told a joint news conference after talks with the conservative chancellor."The
job that is under way is constructing the new French model," said Ayrault,
a Socialist.A report that Merkel's
finance minister had asked the German government's economic advisers to
consider preparing policy recommendations for France has stirred outrage in
Paris.But Merkel said she would never dare to evaluate the decisions of the
French government and added diplomatically: "We want a strong France just
as France wants a strong Germany, so that together we can become a strong
Europe."Ayrault also held a 20-minute meeting with German Finance Minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble, who emerged saying Germany and France did not
"grade" each others' economic policies.But it was clear French pride
had been stung. Ayrault told a conference in Berlin organised by the Sueddeutsche
Zeitung newspaper that his host country Germany also had its problems."The German population is ageing quicker
than the French, which poses problems for pensions and social security,"
said the French premier."This sort of understanding for other countries'
problems I expect it for my own country too."Paris is under intense
pressure to improve French economic competitiveness relative to Germany and
southern European countries that have implemented painful reforms to bring down
their own debt in the face of a crippling three-year crisis.German officials
are worried that without bolder reforms, France could get sucked into the
crisis which has forced bailouts of Greece, Portugal and Ireland in what would
be a crushing setback for the bloc's efforts to stem the turmoil.In response to
calls by industrialist Louis Gallois for cuts in labour charges to reverse
decades of industrial decline, the French government has now announced plans to
grant companies 20 billion euros in annual tax credits to lower labour costs.Ayrault
cited this as one example of the "courage" France's Socialist
government was showing on economic reforms.His knowledge of Germany and its
language may have been one of the reasons for his appointment. Relations
between Merkel and the new president are often contrasted with the close
partnership - especially on the euro crisis that she enjoyed with Hollande's
conservative predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy.Hollande criticised Merkel's focus on
austerity for the euro zone during his election campaign and the new
Franco-German leadership couple have not got off to the best start."The
main thing is to build a personal relationship," Ayrault said, adding that
although the two governments belonged to opposing political factions, their
relationship had to be "ueberparteilich" the German word for
non-partisan.Ayrault and Merkel both rejected suggestions that the French
premier's plans to meet Germany's centre-left opposition Social Democrats on
Friday - less than a year before federal elections when Merkel will seek a
third term undermined this ideal."The important thing is for us to work
together well," said Merkel.
No comments:
Post a Comment