Tag Archives: Mideast

Biden hosts Iraqi leader after Iran’s attack on Israel throws Mideast into greater uncertainty – The Associated Press

  1. Biden hosts Iraqi leader after Iran’s attack on Israel throws Mideast into greater uncertainty The Associated Press
  2. Biden to host Iraq’s leader after Iran’s attack on Israel spurs chaos across the Middle East Fox News
  3. Biden hosts Iraqi leader after Iran’s attack on Israel throws Mideast into greater uncertainty WFLA
  4. Analysis: Iran upends decades of shadow warfare in direct attack on Israel as tensions mount at home The Associated Press
  5. Biden says US remains committed to securing ceasefire that will free hostages, prevent conflict from spreading The Times of Israel

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Live: China willing to help ‘restore peace’ in Mideast, Beijing tells visiting diplomats – FRANCE 24 English

  1. Live: China willing to help ‘restore peace’ in Mideast, Beijing tells visiting diplomats FRANCE 24 English
  2. China tells visiting Muslim diplomats it’s willing to help ‘restore peace in the Middle East’ Al Jazeera English
  3. In Beijing, Arab and Muslim ministers urge end to Gaza war Reuters
  4. China to work to ‘restore peace in Middle East,’ FM Wang tells diplomats The Times of Israel
  5. Israel-Hamas war live: world must ‘act urgently’ to stop ‘humanitarian disaster’ in Gaza, China minister tells Arab delegation The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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In Israel, Christie Says Trump Ducked Mideast Progress and Fueled Bigotry – The New York Times

  1. In Israel, Christie Says Trump Ducked Mideast Progress and Fueled Bigotry The New York Times
  2. Chris Christie visits Israel to ‘capture the brutality’ with his ‘own eyes’ — first GOP candidate to set foot since Hamas’ surprise attack New York Post
  3. GOP hopeful Chris Christie visits Israel, says the US must show solidarity in war against Hamas Yahoo News
  4. Visiting Israel, GOP presidential candidate Christie says truce calls ‘make no sense’ The Times of Israel
  5. GOP presidential candidate Chris Christie vows to relay ‘atrocities’ he saw in Israel upon return to US CNN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Israel-Hamas War Live Updates: Hezbollah Chief Nasrallah Breaks Silence; Blinken Returns to Mideast – The Wall Street Journal

  1. Israel-Hamas War Live Updates: Hezbollah Chief Nasrallah Breaks Silence; Blinken Returns to Mideast The Wall Street Journal
  2. Hezbollah praises Hamas terror attack, Netanyahu rejects cease-fire after Blinken meeting Fox News
  3. Hezbollah leader says Hamas attacks on Israel were ‘100% Palestinian’ – BBC News BBC News
  4. Hezbollah leader threatens to escalate his group’s fighting in ‘holy war,’ says US will have to ‘pay dearly’ New York Post
  5. Crowds in Beirut cheer as Hezbollah leader taunts Israel in speech Guardian News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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PM predicts an Israel transformed in Mideast, has no words for internal Israeli peace – The Times of Israel

  1. PM predicts an Israel transformed in Mideast, has no words for internal Israeli peace The Times of Israel
  2. Despite “Symbolic Rebukes” of Israel & Netanyahu, Will Biden’s Legacy Be Apartheid? Democracy Now!
  3. Netanyahu tells UN that Israel is ‘at the cusp’ of a historic agreement with Saudi Arabia Yahoo News
  4. Netanyahu tells UN that Israel is ‘at the cusp’ of a historic agreement with Saudi Arabia The Associated Press
  5. Netanyahu tears into Abbas over Holocaust comments; says Palestinians must reconcile to Jewish rights The Times of Israel
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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On Mideast Trip, Biden Reassures Israelis on Iran Nuclear Talks

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During a four-day trip to Israel and Saudi Arabia, President Biden will focus on securing oil for American gas pumps, slowing Iran’s nuclear program and strengthening relations with Saudi Arabia.CreditCredit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

JERUSALEM — President Biden arrived in Israel on Wednesday to open a four-day Middle East visit that will focus on trying to slow down Iran’s nuclear program, getting oil to American gas pumps and improving relations with Saudi Arabia.

Nearly 50 years after making his first trip to Israel as a newly elected senator, Mr. Biden returned for the first time as president and wasted no time seeking to reaffirm his steadfast support for the Jewish state despite friction over his efforts to negotiate a new nuclear agreement with Iran.

“Every chance to return to this great country where the ancient roots of the Jewish people date back to biblical times is a blessing, because the connection between the Israeli people and the American people is bone deep,” Mr. Biden said during a brief arrival ceremony at Ben Gurion Airport. “Generation after generation, that connection grows.”

Mr. Biden, who noted as he often does that he has known every Israeli prime minister since Golda Meir, whom he met on his first trip in 1973, was making his 10th visit to Israel and seemed intent on dispelling the notion that he is any less supportive of the country than his predecessor, President Donald J. Trump, who made his backing for Israel a cornerstone of his foreign policy.

“Our relationship is deeper in my view than it’s ever been,” Mr. Biden said.

Greeting him as he disembarked from Air Force One, Israeli leaders echoed the sentiment, emphasizing that they viewed Mr. Biden as a friend and making little note of their differences. President Isaac Herzog called him “our brother Joseph,” declaring, “You are truly amongst family.” The country’s interim prime minister, Yair Lapid, called him “a great Zionist and one of the best friends Israel has ever known.”

“It is a very personal visit,” Mr. Lapid said, “because your relationship with Israel has always been very personal. You once defined yourself as a Zionist. You said that you don’t have to be a Jew in order to be a Zionist. And you were right.”

Without dwelling on it, Mr. Lapid confirmed that the two leaders would discuss Iran and their joint efforts to enhance cooperation among Middle Eastern countries. Once isolated in the region, Israel is increasingly involved in regional diplomacy, after landmark diplomatic deals with three Arab countries in 2020 — and officials hope that further progress will be made during Mr. Biden’s visit.

Mr. Biden likewise touched on another area of potential tension, restating his support for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict after criticism that his administration has not prioritized the issue.

“We’ll discuss my continued support, even though I know it’s not in a new term, for a two-state solution that remains in my view the best way to ensure the future of equal measure of freedom, prosperity and democracy for Israelis and Palestinians alike,” Mr. Biden said.

Before his arrival, the Israeli government had made several small gestures to the Palestinians, including granting some new work permits for Gazans. But while Mr. Biden will visit President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority in Bethlehem, restoring communications that were cut off during the Trump presidency, there are few expectations that the visit will bring progress in resolving the dispute.

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving prime minister, cut a peripheral figure at the welcoming ceremony. Now out of office, he is the leader of the opposition and will have only a brief meeting with the president on Thursday.

But he and Mr. Biden have a warm if often fraught relationship that goes back four decades, and the American leader made a point of seeking out Mr. Netanyahu during a group photo for Israeli and U.S. officials. Mr. Biden gave Mr. Netanyahu a long, warm handclasp, and both men gave the impression of being happy to see each other.

The president’s trip comes at a delicate moment in Israeli politics. A fragile governing coalition recently collapsed, leaving Mr. Lapid serving as a caretaker prime minister until November elections in which Mr. Netanyahu hopes to make a comeback.

At the end of the reception ceremony, Mr. Lapid joked about his and Mr. Biden’s respective trajectories since an earlier meeting between the two in Washington.

He told Mr. Biden: “I don’t know if you remember, but eight years ago we met at the White House when you were vice president. You said to me, ‘If only I had hair like yours, I would be president,’ to which I answered, ‘And if only I had your height, I would be prime minister.’”

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Biden shakes hands with Netanyahu after WH vowed he’d avoid the action on Mideast trip

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White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan announced Wednesday that due to concerns about the COVID-19 pandemic, President Biden would not be shaking hands with anyone during this week’s Middle East trip.

Not long afterwards, though, Biden met former Israeli Prime Ministar Bibi Netanyahu, and shook hands with him.

Sullivan had discussed the policy while addressing reporters aboard Air Force One prior to the president’s arrival in Israel, the first stop on the trip.

“I think just the simplest way for me to put it is that we’re in a phase of the pandemic right now where we’re looking to increase masking, reduce contact, to minimize spread,” Sullivan said.

While Sullivan acknowledged that “how exactly that plays out in any given interaction is something that we will see,” the general no-contact policy is a shift in protocol given that the president had participated in hand-shaking sessions with people at the White House during the past two days.

BIDEN HEADS TO MIDDLE EAST TO PITCH IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL TO UNEASY ISRAEL, SAUDI ARABIA

Sullivan insisted, however, that the change “is not abnormal” because precautions are taken on overseas trips like the one Biden is taking. He did note that the president tested negative for COVID-19 prior to Wednesday morning’s flight.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre later backed this up, stating that the decisions are made by Biden’s doctor. Citing the spread of the omicron BA.4 and BA.5 variants, she said “it is reasonable to take expect him to take additional precautions.”

OIL, IRAN AND NORMALIZATION TOP THE AGENDA AS BIDEN EMBARKS ON TRIP TO ISRAEL AND SAUDI ARABIA

One reporter, referencing Biden shaking hands on the White House’s South Lawn, asked if the no-handshake precaution was a new change in policy and if it had anything to do with concerns over being seen shaking hands with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Biden is set to travel to Saudi Arabia from Israel later this week, and he will be seeing the crown prince and his father, King Salman.

“This is up to his doctor,” Jean-Pierre insisted, claiming that this is not an official change in policy, but just an effort “to minimize contact as much as possible.”

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“We want to make sure that we’re taking those precautions to keep him safe and to keep all of us safe, and we just want to be very clear on that,” she added.

As he disembarked from Air Force One, Biden was greeted by several Israeli officials. While he did not shake hands with them, the president did fist bump nearly all of them and placed a hand on their shoulders while saying a few words to each.

After that, he and Netanyahu shook hands.

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IDF chief says Israel accelerating Iran strike plans, acting throughout Mideast

Israel has “greatly accelerated” preparations for action against Iran’s nuclear program, army chief Aviv Kohavi said in an interview published Monday.

Kohav told Walla news that “a significant chunk of the boost to the defense budget, as was recently agreed, was intended for this purpose. It’s a very complicated job, with much more intelligence, much more operational capabilities, much more armaments. We’re working on all these things.”

The head of the Israel Defense Forces said the military’s current main objective is “minimizing Iranian presence in the Middle East, with an emphasis on Syria…but these operations take place throughout the Middle East. They’re also against Hamas, against Hezbollah.”

Kohavi said Israeli strikes and other operations had “greatly diminished Iran’s presence and weaponry in the northern arena, certainly in comparison to what they sought.” He said the army was “very active in disrupting the smuggling routes of Hezbollah, of Hamas, of Iran, in all regions.”

The IDF “is operating at much greater depths, at 360 degrees throughout all the Middle East. It doesn’t wait for the threat to come. It prepares, it meets [the threat] head-on, neutralizes it, roots it out.”

Defense Minister Benny Gantz also issued threats against Iran last month, telling foreign diplomats that Israel may have to take military action against Iran.

An F-35 fighter jet takes off during a surprise exercise, ‘Galilee Rose,’ in February 2021. (Israel Defense Forces)

“The State of Israel has the means to act and will not hesitate to do so. I do not rule out the possibility that Israel will have to take action in the future in order to prevent a nuclear Iran,” Gantz said.

“Iran is only two months away from acquiring the materials necessary for a nuclear weapon. We do not know if the Iranian regime will be willing to sign an agreement and come back to the negotiation table and the international community must build a viable ‘Plan B’ in order to stop Iran in its tracks towards a nuclear weapon,” he added.

Though Iran is believed to be two months away from obtaining the fissile material needed for a bomb, the IDF has assessed that it would take at least several more months from then before Tehran would be capable of producing a deliverable weapon, needing that time to construct a core, perform tests and install the device inside a missile.

On Sunday Kohavi visited the home of a Border Police sniper fatally wounded during a riot along the Gaza border last month to express his condolences to the fuming family.

Barel Hadaria Shmueli was shot in the head at point-blank range by a Palestinian gunman on August 21 and succumbed to his wounds just over a week later. On Friday, the IDF released the initial findings of its investigation into Shmueli’s death, blaming it principally on the way in which troops were deployed along the Gaza border barrier during the riot.

IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kohavi pays a condolence call on September 5, 2021, to the home of Barel Hadaria Shmueli, a Border Police officer who was shot dead by a Gaza gunman at the border last month (Via Facebook: צועדים בדרך בראל)

His family, along with right-wing activists and opposition lawmakers, accused the military of issuing overly restrictive rules of engagement that they claim prevented troops from keeping the rioters away from the border fence. Shmueli’s father has suggested Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and top military commanders should resign over the incident, his mother has said she does not trust the government or the army, and the family has rejected the IDF’s investigation, demanding an independent inquiry.

The IDF has denied that the open-fire regulations were to blame — noting that Shmueli himself fired at the rioters when they rushed the border — and said that at issue was the way in which troops were deployed.

In Monday’s interview, Kohavi said that while mistakes “will happen” in combat, the military must back its officers or it will remain without any.

“There was a mistake in the way we prepared from the moment the rioting began,” Kohavi told Walla of the Gaza riot. “The initial preparation was very good. There was a mistake there, a mistake that occurred as a result of decision-making in real-time, under pressure, in conditions of uncertainty. This has happened, does happen and will happen in any war.”

But, he said, “We remember that [commanders] also make a great many good decisions that protect Israeli citizens… Mistakes can happen but we need to remember to back them up. If we don’t back them up we’ll end up without commanders. Without anyone to guard the borders.”

His comments were similar to ones he made in a letter to commanders Sunday.

“A society that does not back its soldiers and commanders, including when they make mistakes, will discover that it has nobody to fight for it,” Kohavi wrote in his missive.

It was the IDF’s obligation to thoroughly investigate, “to get to the truth and learn the lessons, but mistakes of judgment on the battlefield are not matters for blame and punishment,” he declared.

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Biden Trimming Forces Sent to Mideast to Help Saudi Arabia

WASHINGTON—President Biden has directed the Pentagon to begin removing some military capabilities and forces from the Gulf region in the first steps of an effort to realign the U.S. global military footprint away from the Mideast, changes that come as Saudi Arabia endures rocket and drone attacks from inside Yemen and Iraq.

In moves that haven’t been previously reported, the U.S. has removed at least three Patriot antimissile batteries from the Gulf region, including one from Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, that had been put in place in recent years to help protect American forces.

Other capabilities, including an aircraft carrier and surveillance systems, are being diverted from the Middle East to answer military needs elsewhere around the globe, according to U.S. officials. Additional reductions are under consideration, officials said.

Mr. Biden pledged after taking office that he would recalibrate the U.S.-Saudi relationship, taking several tough steps against the kingdom, including freezing the sale of offensive weapons that Riyadh has used in its six-year military intervention in Yemen. He also made public an intelligence report saying Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the country’s de facto leader, approved the operation that led to the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

But administration officials also have said they don’t want to destroy the U.S.-Saudi relationship, and have said they will seek ways to help Riyadh defend against rocket and missile attacks from militant fighters.

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B-52s again fly over Mideast in US military warning to Iran

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — A pair of B-52 bombers flew over the Mideast on Sunday, the latest such mission in the region aimed at warning Iran amid tensions between Washington and Tehran.

The flight by the two heavy bombers came as a pro-Iran satellite channel based in Beirut broadcast Iranian military drone footage of an Israeli ship hit by a mysterious explosion only days earlier in the Mideast. While the channel sought to say Iran wasn’t involved, Israel has blamed Tehran for what it described as an attack on the vessel.

The U.S. military’s Central Command said the two B-52s flew over the region accompanied by military aircraft from nations including Israel, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. It marked the fourth-such bomber deployment into the Mideast this year and the second under President Joe Biden.

Flight-tracking data showed the two B-52s flew out of Minot Air Base in North Dakota, something Central Command did not mention in its statement on the flights though authorities later published images of the flight crew preparing its departure there.

The military did not directly mention Iran in its statement, saying the flight was to “deter aggression and reassure partners and allies of the U.S. military’s commitment to security in the region.”

However, such flights had become common in the last months of former President Donald Trump’s administration. Trump’s 2018 decision to unilaterally withdraw from Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers sparked a series of escalating incidents in the region.

Biden has expressed a desire to return to the deal if Iran honors the deal’s limits on its nuclear program. However, tensions remain high after militias in Iraq — likely backed by Iran — continue to target American interests.

Biden last month launched an airstrike just over the border into Syria in retaliation, joining every American president from Ronald Reagan onward who has ordered a bombardment of countries in the Middle East.

Meanwhile Sunday, Beirut-based channel Al-Mayadeen aired footage of the Helios Ray, a Bahamian-flagged roll-on, roll-off vehicle cargo ship hit by the blasts Feb. 26 in the Gulf of Oman.

The grainy footage included areas blurred out on the video, likely coordinates and other information displayed by the Iranian military drone. The footage at one point showed what appeared to be a hole in the side of the vessel.

Al-Mayadeen did not say when the footage was shot, nor explain the circumstance by which the Iranian drone was following the ship. The U.S. Navy’s Bahrain-based 5th Fleet, which patrols the Mideast and often has tense encounters with Iran, declined to comment on the footage.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has blamed Iran for the blasts, something denied by Tehran. However, the Gulf of Oman saw a series of similar attacks in 2019 that the U.S. Navy then blamed on Iran.

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