Category Archives: PRI’s The World

Migron: Deal or no deal?

Reuters has a good feature story today on the Israeli settlement of Migron. The showdown over the fate of this so-called illegal outpost near the West Bank city of Ramallah is a big deal for the settlers, their Israeli opponents, the Palestinians and, potentially, peace process itself (or at least for the hopes of bringing something like a peace process back to life).

Here’s the radio piece about Migron we put on the air at the end of last month. What’s still not clear is how the Netanyahu government is going to come down on this thing. As the Reuters story explains, Bibi is stuck between the Israeli Supreme Court and the pro-settlement wing of his own party. The Obama administration would say there is a great deal at stake for the US here as well. But an election year is no time to talk about all that.

Peace talks are dead. Probably. Yet Again.

Israel is rounding up Hamas people in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Nobody gave the Fatah-Hamas reconciliation effort much of a chance of actually working. And few would have bet real money that the Palestinians would manage to pull off real elections in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem later this year. But the Israelis might be thinking, let’s not take any chances. These arrests might also be a way to add pressure on Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas to stick with embryonic – and also most probably doomed – peace talks with Israel.

 

US issues warnings to friend and foe

A few days ago, President Obama told Iran’s supreme leader that the US would consider closing the Strait of Hormuz to be crossing a “red line” and that the US would respond to such a move. The administration is also sending a message to the Israelis to keep cool. The Wall Street Journal has a story that essentially says US officials are in the dark about Israel’s intentions when it comes to the possibility of launching a military strike against Iran.

U.S. defense leaders are increasingly concerned that Israel is preparing to take military action against Iran, over U.S. objections, and have stepped up contingency planning to safeguard U.S. facilities in the region in case of a conflict.

The U.S. believes its embassy and other diplomatic outposts in Iraq are more vulnerable following the withdrawal of U.S. forces last month. Up to 15,000 U.S. diplomats, federal employees and contractors are expected to remain in Iraq.

In large measure to deter Iran, the U.S. has 15,000 troops in Kuwait, and has moved a second aircraft carrier strike group to the Persian Gulf area.

In all likelihood though, a covert war between Israel and Iran has been under way for years. The conventional wisdom on the latest killing of an Iranian scientist in Tehran says the Israelis were behind it. The US has vehemently denying it played a role in the assassination.

Then there’s this story. It sounds like Hollywood stuff, but the allegations are that Israeli spies were posing as CIA agents to recruit Pakistani terrorists for operations against Iran. The journalist who wrote the story told Al Jazeera he doesn’t think the episode will change anything between the US and Israel. Nonetheless, pretty astounding stuff. And dangerous times.

Thinking about buying one of these to get around Cairo

Photo

Matthew Bell
PRI’s The World
Sent from my iPhone

Arab-Israeli model breaks taboo

Global fashion modeling is my new reporting beat. And the picture’s not bad either, eh? I took it myself. Meet Huda Naccache, a 22 year-old model from Haifa who is the first to appear on an Israeli-Arab women’s magazine cover in nothing but a bikini. After today, I will revert back to mild-mannered Middle East correspondent.

Tuesday morning

Our quick update from yesterday’s program about the implosion of Israeli-Turkish relations.

Akiva Eldar writes that Israel’s problems with Turkey point to bigger – and more worrisome – things for the Jewish state.

Roger Cohen concurs.

Jeffrey Goldberg says outgoing Secretary of Defense Robert Gates was extremely frustrated with Israel for not doing its part to help move the peace process forward.

It turns out US intelligence agencies spy on Israel. Not shocking. But this is sort of an interesting nugget from the NYTimes piece:

Former counterintelligence officials describe Israeli intelligence operations in the United States as quite extensive, ranking just below those of China and Russia, and F.B.I. counterintelligence agents have long kept an eye on Israeli spying.

Israeli officials say Palestinian militants in Gaza have better rockets now.

Someone named Louis Rene Beres – who has written books – paints a somewhat confusing but no-holds-barred doomsday scenario for Israel if the Palestinians succeed in winning UN recognition as a state. In short, this will trigger nuclear war.

Calls to re-visit the Israel-Egypt peace treaty

The Egyptian newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm says Egypt’s army and police have launched a counter-terrorism offensive in the northern Sinai. This is a good thing for Israel, says deputy prime minister Moshe Yaalon. He is quoted in an interview with Israel Radio today saying he hopes “the Egyptian action that has begun against terror cells in Sinai will eliminate them.” For the last couple of days, Israeli officials have been making loud and clear terror warnings in the media. Some of them are quite specific. This is the context to the recent calls in Israel for amending the peace treaty signed by Egypt and Israel in 1979. Here’s my radio story on that, which aired on Monday.

Israel & Gaza militants step back from the brink

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has decided against launching a large-scale military operation against Gaza for now. Egypt helped broker an unofficial ceasefire that appears to be holding for now. Here’s my radio story that went out yesterday about the atmosphere in Beersheba, which was hit by rocket fire over the weekend. Some Israelis are calling for a more robust military response against Gaza. That includes the head of the political opposition, Tzipi Livni. What she seems to be glossing over, however, is how Israel would build ties with Arab moderates while simultaneously attacking Gaza and inevitably killing civilians. Finally, here’s more on the diplomatic row between Israel and Egypt.

Israel blames “Popular Resistance Committees” in Gaza

It seemed like only minutes after news broke of yesterday’s attacks in southern Israel that officials said the assailants came from Gaza. The outfit that Israel says planned the attacks is an umbrella group known as the “Popular Resistance Committees.” Back in January, I met some guys in Gaza City who said they were part of the group. They posed for the camera and showed off their weapons: assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenade launchers, light machine guns and big hunk of steel they said was an improvised explosive device. In a short interview on with a masked member of the group, he told me that peace with Israel would not be possible. Ever. “What was taken by force, must be re-taken by force,” he said. It was impossible to verify who these guys were exactly. There are different factions of the PRC in Gaza evidently, with splinter groups likely operating more or less independently. At the time, the guy I spoke with said his group would adhere to the ceasefire with Israel called for by Hamas. But he also made it clear his group would decide if and when to launch attacks against Israel. Early yesterday evening, Israel said it killed a top leader of the PRC in an air strike in the southern Gaza Strip.

North Korea to welcome US imperialist propagandists

The AP is going to open a news bureau in Pyongyang. Of course, I’m slightly jealous. After filing so many stories on the DPRK over the years and visiting South Korea a couple of times, I would love to have the chance to report in North Korea. Living there long term though? Well, that boggles the mind. I’m trying to imagine my kids coming home from school and telling me about how excited they were when the Dear Leader made it possible for them to glue glitter to colored construction paper. It seems like a good bet that the AP operation will be doomed to a short tenure in Pyongyang, victim of the cycle in which the DPRK swings wildly from hot to cold in its approach toward the west. Still, I would love to see some TV documentary-style stories on regular life in North Korea. Even with tight government controls on where, what and who the AP crew can film, whatever material they can come up with could be really interesting because it’s so rare to get any kind of a glimpse into that place.