EFTA00984479.pdf
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From: J <jeevacation@gmail.com>
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Subject: Fwd: March 4 update
Date: Tue, 04 Mar 2014 15:29:31 +0000
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From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen < IIMIE>
Date: March 4, 2014 at 11:21:53 AM AST
Subject: March 4 update
4 March, 2014
Article I.
NYT
As Obama and Netanyahu Meet, Ukraine Becomes a
Focus of Conversation
Mark Landler and Anne Barnard
Article 2.
The New Republic
How Ukraine will Shape the Future of the Middle East
Dennis Ross
Article 3.
Al Jazeera
AIPAC: American watchdog or Israel's attack-dog?
Marwan Bishara
Article 4.
The Washington Post
Putin's aggression in Ukraine needs a response
Zbigniew Brzezinski
Article 5.
The Daily Star
Jordanian jihadists are on the rise
Mona Alami
Article 6.
Al Monitor
Moscow foresees breakdown in Israeli-Palestinian talks
Vitaly Naumkin
Article 7.
Al Monitor
The Qatar channel between Gaza and Israel
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Shlomi Eldar
Article I.
NYT
As Obama and Netanyahu Meet, Ukraine
Becomes a Focus of Conversation
Mark Landler and Anne Barnard
March 3, 2014 -- President Obama welcomed Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu of Israel to the White House on Monday to discuss a litany of
familiar problems and confront a new one: the Ukrainian crisis, which
threatens American policies throughout the Middle East.
The West's standoff with Russia over its seizure of Crimea, analysts and
former administration officials said, could complicate American efforts to
curb Iran's nuclear program, resolve Syria's civil war and, even in the
short run, broker peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
Russia is a pivotal player on Syria, an influential member of the
negotiating group with Iran and a symbol of resistance to the West
throughout the region. A long-lasting dispute with Moscow, experts said,
would inevitably spill over into these other issues, transforming Russia
from a truculent partner into a potentially disruptive force. "The Russians
will look for ways to show us the consequences of pressuring or trying to
isolate them," said Dennis B. Ross, a former adviser to Mr. Obama on the
Middle East. "But they will also have to consider where that may or may
not make sense for their own interests."
The most obvious target is Syria, experts said, where President Vladimir
V. Putin of Russia would be even less likely to abandon President Bashar
al-Assad. Mr. Putin, most of the experts agreed, would probably follow
through on the agreement with the United States to remove Mr. Assad's
chemical weapons, if only to preserve Russia's national prestige.
But the Russians would most likely drop any pretense of negotiating a
political settlement. Fears of that possibility resonated throughout Syria
and its growing diaspora on Monday, with opponents of the government
questioning whether any future Russian-American cooperation on Syria
would fall victim to the clash in Crimea.
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For Mr. Netanyahu, the biggest threat involves Iran, which has embarked
on negotiations for a comprehensive nuclear agreement with the United
States, Russia and other major powers. While the Russian government
shares America's qualms about a nuclear-capable Iran, the experts said, a
failure of diplomacy would almost certainly block American attempts in
the United Nations to punish Iran with new sanctions.
"Russia could play a critical role in helping us convince Iran to accept the
tight constraints on its nuclear program necessary to produce an
acceptable nuclear deal," said Robert J. Einhorn, a former Iran negotiator
at the State Department who is now at the Brookings Institution. "A
confrontation over Ukraine could make such cooperation on Iran more
difficult."
Cliff Kupchan, an Iran expert at the Eurasia Group, said that without a
nuclear deal, "the Crimean invasion makes it more likely that Russia
would lead an effort to let Iran out of the penalty box."
In the Oval Office, Mr. Netanyahu acknowledged that Mr. Obama was
probably distracted by events outside the Middle East. "I know you've got
a few other pressing matters on your plate," he said to Mr. Obama.
But Mr. Netanyahu reaffirmed the primacy of Iran as a threat to Israel and
insisted that Iran be denied the ability to produce a weapon. "That goal,"
he said, "can be achieved if Iran is prevented from enriching uranium and
dismantles fully its military nuclear installations."
The Israeli leader thanked Secretary of State John Kerry for his "tireless
efforts" to push a peace accord between Israel and the Palestinians. But
Mr. Netanyahu sounded a pessimistic tone, condemning "just incessant
Palestinian incitement against Israel."
Mr. Obama, in his remarks, noted that the "time frame that we have set up
for completing these negotiations is coming near, and some tough
decisions are going to have to be made." But his tone was mild, and he
praised Mr. Netanyahu for taking the talks seriously.
With a major crisis in Europe, several Middle East experts said that now
was not the right time for Mr. Obama to lean too hard on Mr. Netanyahu.
"Who is going to understand the president opening up a significant new
difference of opinion with a close ally when Putin is doing this?" asked
Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East peace negotiator. "It does give
the prime minister additional room to maneuver."
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Administration officials insisted that they could pressure Russia while
continuing to work with it on Iran and Syria. "That's not going to
somehow lead us to not tell the truth and not support Ukraine's
sovereignty and territorial integrity," a senior official told reporters on
Sunday.
In the Arab world, people see Russia's roles in Ukraine and Syria as
deeply intertwined. Russia has opposed Western policy precisely because
of its antipathy to foreign-backed, pro-democracy demonstrations in its
own sphere of influence, whether in Kiev or even Moscow.
As the Ukrainian crisis mounted, Russian officials framed it in terms
strikingly similar to those they have used to describe the insurgency
against Mr. Assad, referring to the Ukrainian protesters as foreign-backed
terrorists interfering with a legitimate sovereign government.
"President Putin has consistently suggested that the reason for opposing
any further sanction on the Assad regime is respect for territorial integrity,
sovereignty of Syria," a senior American official said. "So there's an
extraordinary amount of Russian hypocrisy in what we see in Ukraine
today." Some antigovernment Syrians even contend that the Ukrainian
crisis is rooted in theirs: They contend, with dismay, that Mr. Obama's
failure to strike the Syrian government after chemical attacks in August
emboldened Russia to act in Ukraine. Others, angry at what they see as
Russian complicity in Syrian state violence against civilians, have cheered
on defiant Ukrainians; demonstrators in the northern Syria town of
Kafranbel posted a picture of themselves with the Ukrainian flag.
A major question is whether Russia and the United States could make
some kind of grand bargain "to exchange Syria for the Ukraine, whereby
the Kremlin will abandon Assad in return for Washington and Brussels'
abandoning their allies in Kiev, or vice versa," as Uraib al-Rintawi, a
commentator at the Jordanian newspaper Al Dostor, put it. But, he added,
"such a deal seems impossible," given that Russia and the United States
rank Ukraine much higher in importance than Syria. In the short term,
supporters and opponents of the Syrian government agree, it is hard to
imagine the United States or Russia devoting much attention to Syria, Iran
or the peace talks.
The sense of slipping beneath the radar has added to the despair among
the many Syrians who want to see the war end and who believe an
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international deal is the only way out.
"If the West and Russia end up bogged down in Ukraine, Assad will still
have Iran, while we have no one," Shakeeb al-Jabri, a Syrian
antigovernment activist in Beirut, said on Twitter.
Mark Landler reportedfrom Washington, and Anne Barnardfrom Beirut,
Lebanon.
The New Republic
How Ukraine will Shape the Future of the
Middle East
Dennis Ross
March 2, 2014 -- Vladimir Putin has done it again. Transnistria, Abkhazia,
and South Ossetia, and now Crimea; wherever there are potentially ethnic
Russian areas in former Soviet republics that are not prepared to toe the
Russian line, there will be separatist movements that will break away as in
the case of Moldova, Georgia, and now Ukraine -- and Russia will support
them. It matters not that there is an international agreement -- in this case
the Budapest Memorandum -- in which Russia, along with the United
States, the United Kingdom, and Ukraine are all signatories and that
Russia has pledged its respect for the territorial integrity of Ukraine; that
was 1994 and Russia, in Putin's eyes, was weak, and now it is 2014, and it
is not, and it can impose its will with little concern for the consequences.
It is ironic that Putin, who worries so much about the territorial integrity
of Syria -- and who rails against external intervention in the internal
affairs of sovereign states -- appears so quick to disregard such concerns
when he determines that Russia's interests are involved. It seems that his
principles are situational, and where he has the power to impose his will,
he does.
The implications for the United States and Europe should be clear. There
needs to be a price. No one is going to war over the Crimea, including the
Ukraine. But there should be a political and economic price. Not going to
the G-8 Summit in Sochi will not impress Putin. He will say he is
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protecting ethnic Russians and if President Obama and European leaders
choose not to go, he will be defiant -- and most likely garner substantial
domestic support in the process. But why not say that if Russia remains in
Crimea, or moves to incorporate it, the Russians will forfeit their
membership in the G-8? How about boycotting all financial and trade
meetings with the Russians? I would favor going further and imposing
targeted sanctions on the Russians. To be sure, some may worry that if we
and the Europeans impose economic sanctions on the Russians, they will
withhold natural gas supplies to Europe and Ukraine and/or cease their
cooperation as part of the P5+1 on Iran. Such responses are certainly
possible. But Putin, too, needs to consider the consequences of such
moves at a time when he is presiding over negligible growth, can ill afford
to lose the revenues, and runs the risk of losing critical natural gas
markets at a time when other suppliers, including the U.S., are becoming
increasingly important. Similarly, does Putin really want Iran to become a
nuclear weapons state?
The point is that we are not without leverage in imposing consequences,
and President Obama, having stated there will be a cost, must be certain
that there is one. That is especially important for those in the Middle East
watching the events in Crimea unfold. Presently, they see another example
of Russia's readiness to defy international norms and act in the service of
its power -- a currency that is often the only one that matters to most
Middle Eastern leaders. They are acute observers of the balance of power.
Many of our Middle Eastern friends believe that the U.S. is increasingly
reluctant to act in the face of regional challenges that are shifting the
balance of power against its friends and its interests in the area. Listening
to Saudis, Emiratis, and Israelis these days can be an excruciating exercise
in hearing criticism of America in retreat. One can challenge their
perceptions and their conclusions but one cannot deny that these fears
exist. No doubt that is perhaps the major reason that the President is now
going to go to Saudi Arabia and will see not only the Saudis but other
Gulf leaders as well.
This week the President will see Prime Minister Netanyahu, and while
Iran and the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations will form the centerpiece of
their discussions, Ukraine, Crimea, and Russian behavior will be a sub-
text. Will Iran see in Russian behavior an example that international
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norms mean little? They certainly mean nothing in Syria. Will they
welcome the potential for a crisis between the U.S. and Russia assuming
that this will permit them to exploit division within the Perm 5+1 in the
negotiations? No doubt our need for a firm response on the Crimea and
the possibility of fall-out on the Iranian issue will come up for discussion
between President Obama and Prime Minister Netanyahu. Israel's prime
minister and his Middle Eastern counterparts will favor a strong response
on Crimea precisely because they are looking for signs that the U.S. will
exercise power and leadership. Regardless of how Iran may seek to
exploit any divisions at this juncture, most leaders in the Middle East will
take comfort from signs of American decisiveness in responding to what
is seen as a Russian provocation.
Many in the region now believe that the Russians (and the Iranians) act
while we only warn. The answer is not for us to be mindless in responses
and to make rash statements that we cannot fulfill. But it is to stake out
meaningful positions and follow through on them. For now, the U.S.
should be seen mobilizing a broad set of political and economic sanctions
-- and material support for Ukraine. Helping Ukraine stabilize its
economy will be a huge task but becomes all the more important now --
and sacrifices may be far easier to justify now in Ukraine than at any other
time. Helping Ukraine will also be one answer to the Russians and a
reminder of U.S. leadership, and that will be observed in the Middle East.
Knowing the Saudis have concerns about our decisiveness at this point
does not mean we cannot challenge them as well. They want us to do
more to change the balance of power in Syria, and to counter the Iranians
there and in the region. And the Saudis -- who so oppose what the
Russians are doing in Syria -- are doing very little practically to express
that opposition. True, they will argue they cannot be a substitute for the
United States, but this is hardly the time for the Saudis to be financing a
$3 billion package of Russian arms for Egypt. Few things more clearly
signal that the Russians pay no price with the Arabs for helping to sustain
Assad's war crimes against Syrian civilians.
Ironically, showing leadership now in our response to the Russian
intervention in the Crimea is likely to get the attention of our friends in
the Middle East. It cannot be a substitute for what we do in the Middle
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East, but it can open a new conversation with the Saudis and others. One
in which we focus on what we can both do in Syria; how we can both act
to ensure that Egypt does not become a failed state; and what we do if
there is a nuclear deal with Iran and what we do if there is not. But
launching a new conversation will be far harder if the U.S. does not
appear to come up with an effective strategy that imposes consequences
for Putin's act of aggression against Ukraine.
Ambassador Dennis Ross is the William Davidson Distinguished Fellow
and counselor at The Washington Institute.
Al Jazeera
AIPAC: American watchdog or Israel's
attack-doe
Marwan Bishara
March 03, 2014 -- The annual "schmooze Israel" convention that opened
in Washington this week has been overshadowed by two issues: the US
administration's preoccupation with the Ukraine crisis and its insistence
on negotiations with Tehran and on Palestine.
Neither, however, seems to have diminished AIPAC conventioneers'
optimism regarding the future of the US Israel relationship. And for a
good reason.
If all politics are more or less local, the upcoming mid term Congressional
elections should provide AIPAC with a huge "carrot or stick" leverage
over the makeup of Congress, especially the Senate, and the legislative
agenda in Washington for the next two years.
Netanyahu to attend AIPAC meeting in Washington
AIPAC is in a good position to influence the hotly contested races
throughout the country. As its outgoing president, Michael Kassen told
AIPAC's members on Sunday, while party politics "divides America", it
"unites" the Jewish lobby.
After all, AIPAC is focused on one issue, one cause: Israel. President
Obama knows that all too well. That's why he decided to dispatch his
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Secretary of State to the convention, and to meet at the White House with
Israel Prime Minister Netanyahu (whom I suspect he detests).
Behind AIPAC's success
Created in the 1950s and empowered by Israel's 1967 war victory, the
American Israel Public Action Committee, better known as AIPAC, has
grown evermore influential since the mid 1970s. Known in Washington
all too simply - and tellingly - as The Lobby, AIPAC's power has
historically stemmed from two major sources: Domestically, from the
influential and organised Jewish communities - all 49 leaders of major
Jewish organization have seats on AIPAC's executive committee; and
internationally, it stems from Israel's regional utility to the United States
in the context of the oil-rich Middle East and Cold War rivalry.
Eventually, these two factors have paved the way for greater political
alignment between the Jewish lobbying group and various interest groups,
ranging from Christian Evangelicals to ideological militarists, to make up
the larger "Israel lobby" in America.
AIPAC's influence over Congress and its legislative agendas are
paramount for its overall lobbying effort in the capital, on the White
House and America's foreign policy in the Middle East and beyond.
AIPAC's strategy is one of barter, pure and simple.
AIPAC helps congressmen and women get elected - financially and
otherwise — in return for their support of its legislative agenda. Likewise,
AIPAC helps US presidents pass their various agendas through Congress
in return for White House support for Israel.
And that has worked quite successfully over the past few decades as the
US poured more money and arms to Israel than any other country in the
world. And thanks to AIPAC, and other like-minded lobbying groups,
Israel's status continued to improve in Washington despite its many
strategic failures and political fiascos since the 1973 October War.
Expect the Obama administration - like its predecessors - to prod the
weaker Palestinians to make more concessions towards another
framework agreement than to nudge the intimidating Israelis ahead of
midterm elections.
In fact, regional experts argue rather convincingly that the Israel utilitarian
argument fell short on accomplishments - at least - since the end of the
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Cold War. So much so, they argue, that strategically for America, Israel
has been more of a burden than an asset.
But while AIPAC's record on behalf of Israel has been astounding, the
overly confident group has overreached on a number of occasions leading
to major crises in the relations. AIPAC has generally succeeded when it
functioned as an American watchdog over Israel's immediate interests and
its tight relationship with the United States.
But when the lobby acted like an Israeli attack dog aggressively going
after any and all American detractors of a narrow Israeli security agenda
or a colonial agenda, the results have been mixed at best.
AIPAC has started every decade since the early 1980s by picking a fight
with the White House on behalf of Israel. In 1981, it was the AWACS
sales to Saudi Arabia, in 1991 it was the loan guarantees to Israel, after
2001 it was Bush's anti-terror Arab coalition, and since 2011 it has been
negotiations with Iran. Ronald Reagan was the first presidential candidate
to garner more Jewish votes than his Democratic rival, and became the
staunchest supporter of Israel upgrading its relationship to major
international strategic ally.
And yet, there was little or no hesitation at AIPAC when the group
launched a political assault against the Reagan administration and
especially on the likes Secretary of Defense Weinberger for supporting the
$8 bn Airborne Warning and Control System surveillance planes to Saudi
Arabia. AIPAC dragged the issue but lost the battle with complete
humiliation.
The lobby, however, took the offensive once again in 1991, after the Bush
administration had made a $10 bn of loan guarantees contingent on Israel
freezing its illegal settlement building. This was a small price to pay if the
Bush administration was to introduce a new regional Pax Americana after
its Cold War and Gulf War victories. Alas, AIPAC and its Israeli patron
couldn't see the larger picture.
Soon after his election for a second time in 1992, Israeli Premier Yitzhak
Rabin's first challenge was to restrain AIPAC. A dress down soon
followed when Rabin, himself a former ambassador to Washington,
scolded the lobby for unnecessarily straining Israel's relationship with
Washington.
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In no time, Washington had provided the loan guarantees as settlement
building picked like never before. The number of settlers increased by 50
percent during Rabin's rule from 1992 until his assassination in 1995.
Again in October 2001, AIPAC echoed Ariel Sharon's warning to the
United States that it risked appeasing Arab nations the way European
democracies appeased Hitler on the eve of World War II. The nasty
provocation could've easily escalated into an all out political confrontation
between the US and Israel if it weren't for the stanchly pro Israeli stance
of the Bush administration and W Bush's willingness to follow in Israel's
footsteps in his "war on terror".
This was to be repeated again after 2010/2011, as AIPAC began to
confront the Obama administration over the peace process and Iran's
nuclear program. Tensions escalated earlier this year after AIPAC tried to
get Congress to impose new sanctions against Iran in contravention with
the interim deal signed between the US and the World powers with Iran.
Undermined by popular support for the deal and deterred by a presidential
veto, AIPAC has put its sanctions on hold. Meanwhile, the real opposition
to AIPAC is coming not from the White House but rather from the
American Jewish community that has been generally supportive of Israel
but not necessarily AIPAC's way. New Jewish voices critical of AIPAC
and of Israel's colonial policies are on the ascendance even if they remain
a minority within the organised Jewish groups. And relatively new Jewish
groups like J street are also making their imprint on the political scene in
Washington. During a recent Jerusalem meeting with Netanyahu,
according to the Jewish daily Forward, the members of the conference of
presidents of major Jewish organisations were essentially told to "renew
their confrontation with the White House over increased sanctions, just 11
days after the effort was publicly abandoned by AIPAC". It remains to
be seen whether this proves counterproductive and backfires against Israel
or simply works in favor of Netanyahu's ongoing bargaining with Obama
over Iran and Palestine. Israel would backtrack on Iran for now, only if
Washington let go of Palestine. Expect the Obama administration - like
its predecessors - to prod the weaker Palestinians to make
more concessions towards another framework agreement than to nudge
the intimidating Israelis ahead of midterm elections.
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Judging by the mute reactions of the Obama administration to recent
insults against Secretary Kerry by Israeli defense minister, Ya'alon,
Netanyahu has a good reason to be confident about Israel and AIPAC's
capacity to get their way with the Obama administration on a host of
issues.
As Netanyahu told some Israelis during 2001 elections campaign•
"America is a thing you can move very easily, move it in the right
direction. They won't get in their way."
Marwan Bishara is the senior political analyst at Al Jazeera. He was
previously a professor of International Relations at the American
University of Paris. An author who writes extensively on global politics,
he is widely regarded as a leading authority on the Middle East and
international affairs.
Anecic 4
The Washington Post
What is to be done? Putin's aggression in
Ukraine needs a response
Zbigniew Brzezinski
March 3, 2014 -- Regarding the Russian aggression against Ukraine,
much depends on what Vladimir Putin does next. But what Putin does
depends on not only his calculation of the likely NATO (and especially
the U.S.) response but also his estimate of how fiercely the Ukrainian
people would respond to any further escalation by Russia. And, to
complete the circle, the Ukrainian response would be influenced by
citizens' reaction to any further repetition of Putin's Crimean aggression
and by whether the nation believes that the United States and NATO are
truly supportive.
Putin's thuggish tactics in seizing Crimea offer some hints regarding his
planning. He knew in advance that his thinly camouflaged invasion would
meet with popular support from the Russian majority in Crimea. He was
not sure how the thin and light Ukrainian military units stationed there
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would react, so he went in masked like a Mafia gangster. In the event of
serious Ukrainian resistance, he could disown the initiative and pull back.
His initial success may tempt him to repeat that performance more
directly in the far eastern provinces of Ukraine proper. If successful, the
conclusive third phase could then be directed, through a combination of
political unrest and increasingly overt use of Russian forces, to overthrow
the government in Kiev. The result would thus be similar to the two
phases of Hitler's seizure of the Sudetenland after Munich in 1938 and the
final occupation of Prague and Czechoslovakia in early 1939.
Much depends on how clearly the West conveys to the dictator in the
Kremlin — a partially comical imitation of Mussolini and a more
menacing reminder of Hitler — that NATO cannot be passive if war
erupts in Europe. If Ukraine is crushed while the West is simply watching,
the new freedom and security in bordering Romania, Poland and the three
Baltic republics would also be threatened.
This does not mean that the West, or the United States, should threaten
war. But in the first instance, Russia's unilateral and menacing acts mean
the West should promptly recognize the current government of Ukraine as
legitimate. Uncertainty regarding its legal status could tempt Putin to
repeat his Crimean charade. Second, the West should convey — privately
at this stage, so as not to humiliate Russia — that the Ukrainian army can
count on immediate and direct Western aid so as to enhance its defensive
capabilities. There should be no doubt left in Putin's mind that an attack
on Ukraine would precipitate a prolonged and costly engagement, and
Ukrainians should not fear that they would be left in the lurch.
Meanwhile, NATO forces, consistent with the organization's contingency
planning, should be put on alert. High readiness for some immediate
airlift to Europe of U.S. airborne units would be politically and militarily
meaningful. If the West wants to avoid a conflict, there should be no
ambiguity in the Kremlin as to what might be preciptated by further
adventurist use of force in the middle of Europe.
In addition, such efforts to avert miscalculations that could lead to a war
should be matched by a reaffirmation of the West's desire for a peaceful
accommodation with Russia regarding a joint effort to help Ukraine
recover economically and stabilize politically. The West should reassure
Russia that it is not seeking to draw Ukraine into NATO or to turn it
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against Russia. Ukrainians themselves can define the depth of their
closeness to Europe and the scope of their economic cooperation with
Russia, to the benefit of peace and stability in Europe. And after their May
elections, they can revise some of the arrangements for a special status for
Crimea, but they should not do so under duress or attack from a neighbor
driven by imperial or personal ambitions.
Zbigniew Brzezinski was national security adviserfrom 1977 to 1981.
The Daily Star
Jordanian jihadists are on the rise
Mona Alami
March 04, 2014 -- Jordanian fighters have come to play an important role
in the protracted Syrian conflict. Unlike the previous generation of
Jordanian jihadists — Al-Qaeda leaders from a decade earlier who
professed their belief in a global jihad — this new generation currently
fighting in Syria is prioritizing regional and local causes. The outcome of
their engagement in Syria will define the vision and goals of this rising
generation of Jordanian fighters. Perceived success in Syria will embolden
them and likely lead them to seek a more active political role in Jordan —
and perhaps to draw attention to the needs and grievances of their
communities through violence.
Estimated to number about 5,000 members, Jordanian Salafist-jihadists
are only one part of Jordan's broader Salafist population, unofficially
estimated to total 15,000 individuals (according to local journalist and
Salafist specialist Tamer Smadi). Jordanian jihadists exist alongside
traditional Salafists and Salafist reformers. Until 2011, Jordanian Salafists
and the jihadists among them were largely underground, but the protests
the country witnessed that year allowed them to surface and gain more
visibility by participating in demonstrations.
The war in Syria was another turning point; they witnessed an ideological
shift with a new focus on the "near enemy" and are thus attempting to
create what they refer to as a "fortified house" (Diyar al-Tamkeen) in
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Syria. In other words, they are seeking to secure a fortress from which
they could expand their activities to other countries by building on the
training they acquired.
Today, the Salafist-jihadist movement is a loose group with several
influential leaders such as Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi and Abu
Muhammad al-Tahawi, a prominent sheikh who encouraged Jordanians to
fight in Syria in 2012. "I called for any man able to go for jihad in Syria;
it is the responsibility of any good Muslim to stop the bloodshed
perpetrated by the Nusayri regime," Tahawi said in June 2012, referring to
the ruling Alawite regime in Syria.
The Jordanian Salafist-jihadist community is among the biggest
contributors of fighters to Syria. Salafist-jihadist experts believe that
about 700 to 1,000 Jordanian jihadists are currently fighting there, roughly
comparable to the number of Tunisian jihadists, who make up about 800
of those fighting alongside the rebels in Syria.
The majority of Jordanian jihadists in Syria have joined the Nusra Front,
in which two Palestinian-Jordanians, Iyad Toubasi and Mustafa Abdul-
Latif, occupy leading positions. Toubasi (Abu Gelebeb) is the emir of the
Nusra Front in Damascus and Deraa; he is also the brother-in-law of one
of Jordan's better-known Salafist-jihadists, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and is
believed to have fought with him in Iraq.
Abdul-Latif (Abu Anas al-Sahaba) is also a commander in the Nusra
Front. Jordanian representation in the Nusra Front is more prominent than
that in the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS) — "due to
ideological differences," says Abu Sayyaf, a leading jihadist figure in
Jordan, in reference to ISIS's extreme views on minority rights and
relationships with other Islamist factions.
Syria's significance for the rising generation of Jordanian jihadists
currently fighting on the plains and hills of "Bilad al-Sham" (Greater
Syria) is threefold. First, the war in Syria against an Arab despot embodies
the recent shift in the jihadists' priorities, who instead of targeting the
West are now focusing their efforts on the "near enemy," or regional
rulers, which could well expand to Jordan. Although those who have
returned home to Jordan have yet to organize, the country's security
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services have been cracking down on Salafist-jihadists since the
beginning of the war in Syria, fearing this very possibility.
Nationwide arrests have targeted between 150 and 170 jihadists as of
January. This past December, Jordan's intelligence services arrested Raed
Hijazi, known as Abu Ahmad al-Amriki, who is believed to have ties with
Al-Qaeda, as part of efforts to prevent further coordination between local
jihadists and Al-Qaeda's international network.
Second, the concept of jihad emerging in Syria has slowly taken on a
Sunni versus Shiite sectarian dimension, reflecting the escalation in
hostility between the two branches of Islam since the region's Shiites have
backed the Assad regime. "This jihad is to defend Ahl al-Sunna [the Sunni
people]. It became obligatory when the war turned sectarian, especially
after Hezbollah and Iran interfered. Hezbollah is the enemy of the Surma,"
Abu Sayyaf says.
According to Smadi, this new rivalry was crystallized in January when
local media reported that an attack targeting the Syrian Embassy by ISIS
had been foiled (this information was later denied by state agencies). This
hostility might also lead Jordanian jihadists to participate in other nearby
theaters and across the region in an overall sectarian fight that fits in with
their new regional focus. Abu Qatada, a prominent figure within Jordanian
Salafism-jihadism who is currently on trial for terrorism in Amman,
seems to have endorsed this strategy by justifying suicide bombings
targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon. The Nusra Front has claimed several of
these attacks.
The third important aspect is the plan to build what they refer to as a
Diyar al-Tamkeen. This would serve as a first step in the holy war to
achieve and expand their transnational Islamic state based on Shariah. A
starting point to achieve that is winning in Syria and then turning back to
Jordan to reunify "Bilad al-Sham," of which Syria is a key part; securing a
Syrian base is likely to continue to be a long-term goal. Recent clashes on
Feb. 17 pitted an armed group entering from Syria with Jordanian border
guards. "These clashes are erupting in the area spreading between Ramtha
in Jordan and Deraa in Syria, in a sector known as the Old Custom,"
Smadi points out. While military statements only confirmed that the
armed group came from Syria, no mention was made of the nationality of
the fighters. There are fears among the Jordanian security agencies that
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these fighters might be comprised of Jordanian nationals, which would
have negative implications for the Hashemite Kingdom's stability.
Like Zarqawi before — whose experience in Iraq inspired his triple hotel
bombing in Amman in 2005 — the new generation of Jordanian jihadists
will be shaped by Syria. Any successes there could embolden this new
generation and encourage them to adopt a more aggressive stance at
home. However, unlike during Zarqawi's time, Jordan has been plagued in
recent years by worsening economic conditions, political protests and the
influx of a massive Syrian refugee population, which according to the
UNHCR totals about 600,000.
Al-Qaeda franchises have always been known to take advantage of
situations of political turmoil, and Jordan is no exception. Whether local
jihadists decide to exploit the large refugee population and turn these
difficult conditions in their favor will depend to a great extent on the
crackdown they face in Syria and at home.
Mona Alami is a French-Lebanese journalist who writes about political
and economic issues in the Arab world. This commentaryfirst appeared at
Sada, an online journal published by the Carnegie Endowmentfor
International Peace.
Antcle 6.
Al Monitor
Moscow foresees breakdown in Israeli-
Palestinian talks
Vitaly Naumkin
March 2, 2014 -- As the deadline approaches for Israel and the
Palestinians to reach a final agreement, optimism that it will actually
happen is fading in Moscow and in many other capitals, despite the
energetic though unilateral efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry.
Most Russian analysts believe the parties are not ready to resolve the
many complex matters so quickly. In addition to the difficulty of resolving
the key issues themselves, one obstacle to reconciliation is the tension
between the Palestinians and the Israelis over Israel's very recent demand,
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as a precondition, that the Palestinians recognize Israel as a Jewish state. I
will not reiterate the Palestinian arguments against meeting this demand
— they are already well known.
It is appropriate to note in this regard that in his last book, My Promised
Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of Israel, Ari Shavit called this
redefinition of the Israeli nation "a new Jewish Israeli narrative." My
Israeli colleagues have hinted to me recently that, despite his declarations
that this narrative is unacceptable, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
nevertheless might be moving toward a recognition of the Jewish
character of Israel.
In Russia, some experts fully share the Palestinians' concern that
recognizing Israel as a Jewish state would only enshrine in law
discrimination against Palestinians as second-class citizens, and would
take the issue of the return of refugees off the agenda, even in truncated
form. Other experts believe that the UN has decided to create two states
anyway — an Arab state and a Jewish state, because Israel is by definition
a Jewish state, so the creation of an Arab state is long overdue.
Russian analysts also note that both the American and Israeli expert
communities are debating the legitimacy of that demand. For example, in
an article published on March 9 in The New York Times, Josef Levine, a
professor of philosophy at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst,
writes about an "unavoidable conflict between being a Jewish state and a
democratic state."
The Palestinian side has made it clear that it will not accept partial,
interim solutions and expressed its willingness, if the negotiation process
fails, to act independently with an appeal to the international community.
Apparently, the Israeli side is also prepared to take action independently
and outside the negotiations. Naturally, Moscow is studying various
scenarios of steps the parties to the conflict might take in this context.
Israeli representatives talk about an alternative "Plan B," which would
start a transition period of partial, temporary solutions intended to prepare
the soil for a future final resolution based on confidence-building
measures. Only certain reconciliation matters would be resolved, in
stages, where each new step would be taken only when the prior one is
deemed successful. For example, first Israeli outposts would be
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evacuated, followed by isolated settlements, while simultaneously
preparing Israeli public opinion for the drawing of temporary borders, etc.
Under this plan, Israel would give up a portion of the areas surrounding
large settlement blocs, but these blocs themselves would remain a part of
Israel. The border between them would be considered temporary only if
the Palestinians express a desire to continue the negotiations on land
swaps. If they rejected these negotiations, Israel would consider these
borders permanent. On the settlement issue, it appears that there could be
several options for a solution, given the extreme sensitivity of the issue of
the potential evacuation of such a large number of residents. There is also
the option of preserving some of the settlements within a newly created
Palestinian state as autonomous entities, possibly even granting
Palestinian citizenship to the residents. Such a bold option would likely be
possible only if a final agreement is signed between the Palestinians and
Israel.
Analysts in Moscow do not quite understand how Plan B takes into
account the factor of intra-Palestinian relations. On the one hand, we see
Israel's desire, by linking Palestinian autonomy to the implementation of
the plan, to present the plan as the result of efforts by Fatah and thereby
bolster its chances in its competition with Hamas. Apparently, this takes
into account the fact that Hamas could be an effective "spoiler" in the
implementation of the plan. On the other hand, it is possible that Israel is
hoping for the further evolution of Hamas, which, compared with the
terrorist groups based in the Sinai and Gaza, is looking like a less radical
organization. True, we cannot yet say that Israel is ready to accept Hamas
as a legitimate negotiating partner. But can we say it is moving in that
direction (of course, subject to compliance with certain conditions)?
It is not clear how Israel will react to the problematic yet possible
reconciliation of Fatah and Hamas, leading to the formation of a coalition
government — if it keeps moving toward a peace process. Will Israel
accept such a government? For its part, Moscow, as far as we can tell, is
sympathetic to this possibility and may even help bring it about.
As far as we can tell from the information available here, Plan B does not
mean that the two key issues will be resolved — the status of Jerusalem
and the return of Palestinian refugees. Israeli representatives indicate that
Mahmoud Abbas could agree to significant concessions to Israel on these
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issues, as long as he can "save face," if the Israelis take very specific steps
toward creating an independent Palestinian state.
According to well-informed Israeli sources, the Israeli government could
accept Plan B as an alternative to the final bilateral agreement, if
movement toward such an agreement has hopelessly stalled. As it appears
from Moscow, Israel is using it to demonstrate its willingness to create a
Palestinian state, hoping to enhance Israel's standing in the international
community and help President Barack Obama achieve the goals of his
Middle East policy.
Evaluating Plan B, analysts in Moscow think Netanyahu may have
rejected the concept of preserving the status quo, as was thought here until
now. Does this mean that he has come to terms with the need to make an
agreement with the Palestinians and even evacuate a significant portion of
the Israeli settlements in order to get this done? Some analysts believe he
has, but that he will prolong the implementation of the agreement for a
much longer time than the Palestinians have in mind (three to five years).
Others do not believe in this possibility and ask themselves: Does the
Israeli prime minister really need this? This is the question that one of
Moscow's prominent Middle East experts asked Nabil Shaath at the
meeting in Moscow.
Of course, the issue of how long Israel will maintain its military presence
in the West Bank is still a highly sensitive issue, an issue that will have to
be dealt with in later stages of the peace process.
Dr. Vitaly Naumkin is a columnistfor Al-Monitor. He is the director of the
Institute of Oriental Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences. He is also
professor and chair at thefaculty of world politics, Moscow State
niv ^0 and president of the Moscow-based Centerfor Strategic and
Political Studies.
Article 7.
Al Monitor
r eQatar channel between Gaza and Israel
Shlomi Eldar
EFTA00984498
March 3, 2014 -- Hamas has already come to terms with the fact that its
southern border with Egypt — including its only gate to the outside
world, the Rafah crossing — will not open up in the near future. After the
initial shock and anxiety over the anti-Hamas mood prevalent among the
new Egyptian regime, the time has come for the movement's leadership to
recognize and accept this. In the absence of any other option, vital
communication channels with the Israeli side were developed to ensure
that life goes on as normally as possible in the Gaza Strip.
One Israeli security source described the situation thusly: "Hamas realized
that if they have any chance of finding a light at the end of the tunnel, it
won't be in the Rafah region, but actually at the Erez and Kerem Shalom
crossings, which link Gaza to Israel."
Hazem Balousha, a contributor for Al-Monitor's Palestine Pulse, gave a
very accurate description of the enormous embarrassment felt by the
movement's leaders over the relationship between senior Hamas
member Ghazi Hamad and the Israeli Gershon Baskin, a relationship that
emerged out of necessity because there were no other options. It is worth
remembering that the private channel between Baskin and Hamad
succeeded in the past, when all others failed, in obtaining the release of
abducted Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in exchange for 1,027 Palestinian
prisoners in Israeli jails. This channel has continued to operate on
occasion, even after the deal was reached, particularly when it became
necessary to relay messages rapidly between the two parties to avoid
military escalation.
But the Baskin-Hamad channel is not the only channel of communication
between Hamas and Israel. Another important and even more intricate
means has been put together via Qatari representatives who link Israel and
Hamas, and even relay position papers between the leaders of the two
sides, doing so with the support of senior leaders in the wealthy emirate.
Ever since the fall of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt in July 2013,
Qatar has been accused by the new Egyptian regime of supporting the
Muslim Brotherhood. The charge is based mainly on the openly critical
position taken by the Qatari news network Al Jazeera toward the
overthrow of deposed President Mohammed Morsi by the Egyptian
military.
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Suddenly, and with no prior collusion, Hamas and Qatar find themselves
sitting together in the defendant's chair. They have both been accused of
collaborating with the Muslim Brotherhood, arch-nemesis of the new
Egyptian regime.
Qatar currently funds several large economic projects in Gaza, such as the
establishment of a large hospital. It also funds the building of new
infrastructure and the renovation of existing decrepit infrastructure. This
includes Gaza's crumbling sewer system, which poses a health risk to
Gazans (while threatening Israel's groundwater resources). Qatar also
invested tens of millions of dollars to pave Salah al-Din Road connecting
the northern Gaza Strip with the south.
Furthermore, Qatari architects, engineers and other professionals, along
with some foreign experts representing Qatar, enter Gaza through the Erez
Crossing with permits issued by Israel in coordination with Qatar's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Economy Ministry.
Additionally, the Qataris have committed to procuring all required raw
material from Israel, not only because they have no other choice, but
intentionally, out of the belief that this would soften the Israeli position.
The purchases are currently valued at tens of millions of dollars, and in
the coming years the total investment could amount to hundreds of
millions of dollars. In other words, Israeli corporations benefit from the
existence of projects funded by the Qataris in the Gaza Strip.
Hamas also benefits because the projects enliven Gaza's battered
economy by providing employment for hundreds of locals. And the
Qataris believe it benefits them because they see Israel as a vital bridge to
the heart of the US administration.
One of the Qatari intermediaries offered the following cynical description
of the emirate's activities in the Gaza Strip: "We are rebuilding the ruins
left by Israel in Gaza, while at the same time helping the Israeli
economy."
This business collaboration has also resulted in the creation of a
"diplomatic" channel of communication between Qatar, Israel and Hamas.
Qatar is helping to relay messages between the head of Hamas' political
bureau, Khaled Meshaal, and Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh on
one side, and Israeli contacts on the other. One of these is a prominent
Israeli businessman, known to be a close confidante of Israeli Prime
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Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Unlike the Baskin-Hamad channel, which
is used to relay messages as quickly as possible in times of crisis (or to
prevent an impending crisis), the Qatari channel was created to establish
long-term strategic understandings between Hamas and Israel.
Hamas and Israel, through Qatari mediation, realize now more than ever
that neither
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