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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Commentary: Israel's endgame

By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE, UPI Editor at Large

WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 (UPI) -- At the birth of Israel, there were 87 million Arabs. Today, there are 320 million. In 2020 -- the same time that has elapsed since 1988 -- Arabs will number half a billion. Gaining time and pushing back are the ingredients of Israeli strategy.

The immediate objective in Gaza against Hamas is to restore Israel's image of military invincibility, badly damaged 2 1/2 years ago when a punitive raid into south Lebanon triggered a hail of Hezbollah rockets and missiles that forced the population of northern Israel into underground shelters. A botched Israeli military operation gave the Israel Defense Forces a black eye -- and invincible Israel, in the eyes of its enemies, became vincible.

Hezbollah on Israel's northern border and Hamas to its south are seen in Israel as extensions of Iran's asymmetrical terrorist capabilities. Given Iran's nuclear ambitions, it became imperative to demonstrate to Iran's strategic planners that Hamas would never be allowed to act as a surrogate for those who plan Israel's destruction. So far, the only demonstration in Gaza is that Hamas now has 1 million Israelis within range of its missiles.

Four Israelis killed by Hamas' unguided rockets provoked a massive retaliation that killed over 500 and wounded 2,500, left 1.5 million Palestinians without power or running water, short of food, overflowing hospitals, too few doctors -- and triggered anti-Israel demonstrations throughout the world. The mobilization of IDF reservists and a massive eight-day aerial bombardment were followed by a tank-led ground invasion of Gaza.

IDF reservists were also needed to reinforce the northern front in Lebanon, should Hezbollah decide to open a second front in solidarity with Hamas. In the south, the Israelis estimate 400 to 600 tunnels run along Gaza's "Philadelphia Corridor," the strip of land along the Egyptian border. Mossad, the Israeli CIA, estimates the amount of explosives smuggled in via tunnels, courtesy of Iran, at 4 tons. Iran's Revolutionary Guard trained some 950 Hamas volunteers, according to Mossad, in building rockets and bombs and in guerrilla warfare tactics. Iran's secret aid to Hamas is estimated at $30 million a year.

Since neither Hamas nor Hezbollah can be eliminated, what is Israel's endgame?

For two of Israel's three principal contenders in the Feb. 10 elections, Defense Minister (and former Prime Minister) Ehud Barak and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, hundreds of air strikes, a massive artillery barrage and a ground offensive against Hamas targets demonstrated they could be just as tough as the challenger, superhawk and former Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu. For those whose priority objective is the creation of a viable Palestinian state -- the United States, the European Union, 22 Arab countries -- it was yet another setback.

The geopolitical can named "Palestinian state" has been kicked down the road one more time. Slowly working its way back center stage was the 2002 Saudi plan that called for the recognition of Israel by all 22 Arab states in return for the territories captured by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War (with minor adjustments in Israel's favor to be negotiated). Originally put forward by Saudi King Abdullah seven years ago, and endorsed by the entire Arab world, moderate Arab leaders have been hinting President Obama would adopt it for his new Middle East roadmap.

Hezbollah in 2006 and Hamas in 2008/09 have convinced an overwhelming majority of Israelis that a Palestinian state cannot coexist peacefully with the Jewish state. The 260,000 Jewish settlers in 140 settlements in the West Bank are not about to upstake to make room for a revanchist Palestinian state. The lessons of Hezbollah's missiles in 2006 and Hamas' in 2008 have convinced most Israelis a Palestinian nation in the West Bank, even if demilitarized under U.N. or even U.S. control, would not give up the dream of recovering the homes their fathers and grandfathers lost 62 years ago.

A month after Israel forced 8,500 Jewish settlers out of Gaza in December 2005, Hamas defeated the corrupt and ineffective Fattah movement in parliamentary elections. By 2007, a civil war drove Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and his government out of Gaza to the West Bank, now under Israeli control.

Another showstopper for a Palestinian state is Jerusalem, specifically Arab East Jerusalem, where several thousand Israelis have moved in piecemeal over the past four decades. No Palestinian leader could accept anything less than a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem, which no Israeli leader, expecting to stay alive politically, could endorse.

Meanwhile, Israel's rekindled status as invincible carried the day, aided and assisted in the midst of the Gaza offensive by the IDF's new YouTube channel, using the blogosphere as another war zone. Israeli politicians, drowned out by the voices of Hezbollah during the 2006 Lebanon war, dominated news networks with footage from unmanned drones and fighter-bombers that showed Hamas loading rockets onto a pickup truck to be driven closer to the border -- but hit by an IAF air strike almost immediately.

Writing in the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper just before Israel's air raids against Hamas targets, former Mossad chief Ephraim Halevy said: "What is changing before our eyes is a clear process of recognition by Hamas leaders that their ideological aspiration is unattainable, and will remain in the foreseeable future. Therefore, its leaders in Damascus take the trouble to say to the many interlocutors who visit their offices, including in the past week, that they are willing or want the establishment of a Palestinian state within the provisional 1967 borders. Provisional until when? They do not say, and they do not know."

Provisional or permanent, that's precisely where Israel's leaders are determined not to go.

News Analysis: History will repeat in Afghanistan?

The end of the former Soviet Union occupation of Afghanistan in 1989 led to lingering factional fighting and eventually to the U.S.-led invasion in the one of the world poorest countries on October 7, 2001.

With the invasion of the U.S.-led Coalition forces in Afghanistan which toppled Taliban fanatic regime and induction of new administration in the war-torn country, the ray of hope had raised among Afghans for lasting peace in their land.

Nevertheless, their hope for bright future has been fading as still the increasing militancy and security incidents have largely hampered their life.

With the invasion of ex-USSR to Afghanistan in 1979, the exodus of Afghans began forcing over 5 million people leave their homeland for safer places, mostly in the neighboring states of Pakistan and Iran, while the U.S.-led invasion enabled them to return home.

Over 3.5 million Afghan refugees, hereby, have returned home as the collapse of Taliban regime in late 2001. However, the process of repatriation has slowed down mostly due to security concerns and poverty in the country.

Interestingly, a considerable number of former refugees who returned over the past couple of years have begun remigration citing unemployment, security problems and poverty at home.

Despite successive invasions and international community's involvement in Afghanistan over the past three decades, little change has been seen in the field of security and living condition of Afghans.

It was December 1979 that over 100,000 former Soviet Union troops invaded Afghanistan under the pretext of defending socialism and rooting out militants while the situation today is little different than 30 years ago.

Today, over 70,000-strong NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and the U.S.-led Coalition forces have been stationed in Afghanistan to stabilize security in this insurgency-plagued country.

Nevertheless, these UN-mandated troops have failed to bring about peace and stability in the war-torn country though it had ousted the Taliban and al-Qaida hierarchy from power.

Like the invading forces of the former Soviet Union, the U.S.-led soldiers in several cases during military operations against militants have killed civilians.

"Killing Afghans by their supporters in fact is the repetition of history. The Soviets also used to kill us under the excuse of defending us against west-backed mercenaries, while today the U.S-led troops kill our people under similar pretext," said a 62-year-old man from eastern Khost province.

Besides infuriating locals, the continued mistake has prompted Afghan President Hamid Karzai to denounce harming non-combatants and called on U.S. leadership to avoid civilian casualties in war on terror over and over again.

Continued failure to wipe out insurgents and strengthen security, the United States has decided to bolster military presence by sending up to additional 30,000 troops to Afghanistan in 2009, with mostly of them deployed to riot southern and eastern region.

Although there have been achievements in several fields particularly in the field of communication, road building and health, security has remained a major concern for Afghans and international community.

More than 5,000 people with some 2,000 of them innocent civilians were killed mostly in air strikes by international troops last year in Afghanistan.

The Afghan President who has been fed up with repeated killing of civilians by the international troops over the past seven years, told a gathering of tribal elders in Khost province weeks ago to convene a Jirga or Grand Assembly to take decision about the presence of international troops in the country if they continue to harm non-combatants.

Bosnia-Herzegovina decides to send peacekeepers to Afghanistan

Bosnia-Herzegovina's three-member presidency on Monday decided to send a small number of peacekeepers to Afghanistan later this year.

The 10 Bosnian army officers will perform operative, administrative and other tasks with the German and Danish contingent as members of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan, a presidency statement said.

The decision, which has to be approved by the Bosnian parliament, is "one more step on the road towards (the country's) integration into Euro-Atlantic institutions," the presidency statement said.

Bosnia-Herzegovina, which joined NATO's Partnership for Peace Program in December 2006, withdrew its 90-strong contingent from Iraq in mid December. The troops were sent in June 2005 at a NATO request to support the U.S.-led coalition forces.

NATO leaders awarded Bosnia-Herzegovina in April 2008 an "intensified dialogue" on its membership aspirations, a step before a formal membership plan is granted. The Balkan country is expected to put forward "action plans" to prepare for membership.

SYRIA PROPOSES MALAYSIA-SYRIA FTA

PUTRAJAYA, Jan 7 (Bernama) -- Syria today suggested Malaysia and Syria sign a free trade agreement to intensify economic, trade and investment ties between the two countries.

Malaysia took note of the proposal and suggested that the idea be further discussed by the Joint Trade Committee including exploring other options to enhance trade and investment between Kuala Lumpur and Damascus.

This was contained in a joint statement issued after the delegation meeting between Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and his Syrian counterpart Mohammed Naji Otri at the Prime Minister's Office.

The two leaders agreed to undertake continuous efforts to expand the scope of bilateral relations and explore new areas of cooperation of mutual interests.

Both sides agreed to expand collaborations in banking and finance by studying the possibilities of cooperation between commercial banks in both countries.

UN proposes Green Zone-style base in Somalia

By TOM MALITI, Associated Press Writer

NAIROBI, Kenya – Three masked gunmen fatally shot a Somali aid worker Tuesday, as the U.N. envoy to Somalia said the United Nations should create a Baghdad-style Green Zone in the African country so he can base all his aid workers there.

The U.N. now keeps its international Somalia staff members in Kenya to shield them from the risk of attacks and kidnappings. In 2008, at least 13 aid workers were killed in Somalia, which has not had an effective government since 1991.

"It is very difficult to address (the) Somali situation from Nairobi (the Kenyan capital). I think it is even negative," the envoy, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, said during a news conference in Nairobi, Kenya. "We should have a Green Zone, if necessary, in Somalia."

Ould-Abdallah did not give a time frame for creating a fortified, walled-off area like the Green Zone in Iraq used by U.S.-led forces, but it would be costly and time-consuming.

Somalia is now at a dangerous crossroads. The president resigned in late December, saying he has lost most of the country to Islamic insurgents, and the Ethiopian troops who have been protecting the fragile, U.N.-backed government have begun pulling out, leaving a dangerous power vacuum. Islamic groups are starting to fight among themselves for power.

On Tuesday, three gunmen shot Ibrahim Hussein Duale, a 44-year-old Somali who was a school feeding monitor in the Gedo region of central Somalia, the U.N. World Food Program said. Duale leaves a wife and five children, the agency said in a statement.

Somalia has been beset by anarchy and an insurgency that has killed thousands of civilians and sent hundreds of thousands fleeing. Foreigners, journalists and humanitarian workers are frequently abducted for ransoms in the Horn of Africa nation, which the United States fears could become a haven for al-Qaida.

On Tuesday in the capital, Mogadishu, the spokesman for the small African Union peacekeeping force said an AU soldier was killed during a land-mine clearing operation.

The lawlessness also has allowed piracy to flourish off the coast. In northeastern Somalia, a regional security minister said France had handed over 19 Somali pirates to local authorities.

Ould-Abdallah said he hopes an upcoming parliamentary vote — expected in Somalia by Jan. 28 — to name a new president will not be corrupt like past votes that have been tainted by secret deals.

"Somalis have to work to expand their government, try to have a government of national unity and vote for a new president," Ould-Abdallah said.

US welcomes new Afghan, Pakistan cooperation

KABUL (AFP) – The United States welcomed pledges by Afghanistan and Pakistan to forge better ties and fight extremism together, a top US official said Wednesday, calling cooperation the "only way to beat the menace."

The Islamic neighbors signed a declaration on Tuesday in Kabul, committing themselves to bilateral cooperation and determined efforts against extremism in what Afghan President Hamid Karzai hailed as a "new relationship."

"The United States very much welcomes the cooperation between Pakistan and Afghanistan," US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Richard Boucher told reporters in Kabul.

Pakistan and Afghanistan both have a "strong determination to fight terrorism and to make their citizens safe" that is shared by the United States, said Boucher, who visited Islamabad earlier this week.

"We think that the only way we can beat the menace, beat back the Taliban and terrorists that are threatening Pakistan and the Afghans, is by having that kind of Afghanistan and Pakistan relationship, and both have strong US support for doing that," he said.

The United States led the 2001 invasion that removed the Taliban regime in Afghanistan which had sheltered the Al-Qaeda network blamed for the September 11 attacks that killed around 3,000 people.

The extremists fled across the border into Pakistan, where they are said to have regrouped, establishing sanctuaries and training camps from which they launch attacks into Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Pakistan's military has mounted major anti-militant offensives in the rugged tribal areas on the Afghan border, which Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said Wednesday had been a "great success in the last few months".

Washington has about 33,000 troops in Afghanistan, a number which is due to double this year, as part of multinational efforts to root out the extremists.

Taliban militants kill three policemen in Pakistan: police

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AFP) – Three policemen were killed in northwest Pakistan when Taliban militants stormed their checkpoint in a town near the troubled tribal regions bordering Afghanistan, police said Wednesday.

An unknown number of armed men staged the attack in the Dalman area of Hangu district late Tuesday, killing the three police officials, local police chief Sajjad Khan told AFP.

Two policemen were also wounded in the attack.

The militants also set the post on fire before fleeing the area, he said, adding that the gunmen also suffered casualties but details were not immediately available.

The post was located on a mountainous track used by militants based in the nearby lawless tribal region of North Waziristan.

Northwest Pakistan has been wracked by violence since hundreds of Taliban and Al-Qaeda rebels flooded into the area after Afghanistan's hardline Taliban regime was toppled in a US-led invasion in late 2001.

Local officials meanwhile imposed a curfew in Hangu district in a bid to avert sectarian violence between Pakistan's majority Sunnis and minority Shiites, officials said.

Muslims are currently observing the mourning period of Muharram, during which sectarian attacks have occurred in the past.

Shiites were to stage Ashura processions in cities and towns across Pakistan on Wednesday to commemorate the death of the Prophet Mohammed's grandson Imam Hussain in the year 680.

French leader: Israel, Palestinians OK Gaza plan

By CHRISTINE OLLIVIER, Associated Press Writer

PARIS – French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Wednesday that Israel and the Palestinian Authority have accepted an Egyptian-French plan for Gaza.

Sarkozy made no mention of Hamas, the group that controls Gaza and is fighting with Israel, and an Israeli government spokesman stopped short of endorsing the plan.

The French president said in a statement issued upon his return from the Middle East that he "strongly welcomes the acceptance by Israel and the Palestinian Authority of the French-Egyptian plan presented yesterday by (Egyptian President Hosni) Mubarak."

Sarkozy's statement did not give details of the plan, but appeared to go further than Israel, which said through a spokesman only that it "welcomes" the proposal. Spokesman Mark Regev said Israel could accept the proposal if it halts "hostile fire" from Gaza and includes measures to prevent Hamas from rearming.

Sarkozy's spokesman, Franck Louvrier, seemed to take a more cautious tone than his boss.

Louvrier said Sarkozy's statement was "a reaction to the fact that, according to contacts with different interlocutors, they would accept the plan introduced yesterday as a departure point for discussion, which would allow a renewal of dialogue."

France's government minister for human rights, Rama Yade, also welcomed what he called "the positive reception that Israel and the Palestinian Authority have reserved for this plan."

"This step is today the only one that is realistic and should allow as quickly as possible the reopening of points of access to the Gaza Strip," she told lawmakers in the lower house of France's parliament.

Mubarak proposed the plan, which included calling for an immediate cease-fire between Palestinian militants and Israel, on Tuesday, when he also spoke with Sarkozy in Sharm el-Sheikh.

Israel says its operation has been aimed at halting persistent rocket fire at its territory from Gaza, which Hamas seized from the Palestinian Authority in the summer of 2007. The world community has largely isolated Hamas — which does not recognize Israel's right to exist and is seen by many countries as a terrorist group — and Israel imposed a blockade on the territory, which Hamas officials have cited as the reason for the continuing rocket attacks.

There was no immediate confirmation of his statement from the Palestinian Authority.

In Turkey, a Middle Eastern diplomat said Ankara will be given the task of constructing an international force for Gaza, but did not say what role the force would play. Some European officials have spoken of an international mission to help guard Gaza's borders — a possible means of prompting Israel to remove the blockade.

The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.

Japan to monitor greenhouse gases from space

By Chisa Fujioka

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan's space agency will launch a satellite later this month to monitor greenhouse gases around the world, officials said Wednesday, hoping the data it collects helps global efforts to combat climate change.

The Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT), to be launched on January 21, will enable scientists to calculate the density of carbon dioxide and methane from 56,000 locations on the Earth's surface, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said.

The coverage compares with just 282 land-based observation sites as of last October, said Takashi Hamazaki, manager of the 35 billion yen ($372.9 million) JAXA project.

"To fight climate change, we need to monitor the density of greenhouse gases in all regions around the world and how their levels change," he told a news conference.

"But at the moment, there are very few observation sites on land and they are concentrated in certain areas."

For example, sites monitoring greenhouse gases were lacking in developing countries, he said. GOSAT, nicknamed "Ibuki" after the Japanese word for "vitality," will cover those countries and also the atmosphere over seas.

Equipped with two sensors, GOSAT will track infrared rays from the Earth, which will help calculate the densities of the two greenhouse gases, because they absorb the rays at certain wavelengths.

The satellite will also pick up any sign of clouds, enabling it to process data only when the sky is clear.

GOSAT, set to be in orbit for five years, will collect data once a month, with preliminary data from the satellite expected to be ready for researchers in April or May.

The satellite's launch comes as Japan comes under pressure to meet its 2008-2012 Kyoto Protocol target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions and tries to be more vocal in global talks on fighting climate change.

U.N. talks on climate change are aiming to work out a new treaty by mid-December on cutting emissions, but rich and poor nations have been deeply divided on how new goals should be set.

An Environment Ministry official said he hoped GOSAT's data would be reflected in a report by a U.N. panel of scientists due out in 2014, which was likely to influence future climate talks.

"Whether the data can contribute to talks for a post-Kyoto deal is open to debate," Toru Hashimoto, an Environment Ministry official, told the news conference.

"But we hope the GOSAT data is included the next report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, given that it will be a basis for global climate talks."

NASA is sponsoring its own Orbiting Carbon Observatory to be launched this year which is set to collect measurements on carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere.

All 'possibilities open' against Israel: Hezbollah chief

by Jocelyne Zablit

BEIRUT (AFP) – Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah said Wednesday "all possibilities" are open against Israel and warned the Jewish state's 2006 war with his party would resemble "a walk in the park" in the event of renewed conflict.

"We have to act as though all possibilities are real and open (against Israel) and we must always be ready for any eventuality," said Nasrallah, whose Shiite militant party is backed by Syria and Iran.

His comment marked the first time he has spoken so openly on the possibility of a renewed conflict with Israel since the war in Gaza began on December 27.

Nasrallah, addressing tens of thousands of supporters via video link at his stronghold in Beirut's suburbs on the occasion of Ashura, said that the 2006 conflict would be nothing compared to what awaits Israel if it opens a second front.

"I say to (Israeli Prime Minister Ehud) Olmert, the loser, the vanquished in Lebanon that 'you cannot overcome Hamas or Hezbollah'," Nasrallah said. "Your 2006 war will be but a walk in the park compared to what we have prepared for you in the event of a new offensive.

"We are ready to sacrifice our souls, our brothers and sisters, our children, our loved ones for what we believe in," he added. "We will not abandon the fight or our weapons."

The July-August 2006 war devastated much of southern Lebanon and killed more than 1,200 mostly Lebanese civilians.

Hezbollah, whose powerful militia is the only armed faction in Lebanon, claimed victory over Israel after the war.

There have been fears since the Gaza war began that Nasrallah would call his troops into action but for now he has stuck to almost daily speeches to furiously denounce the Israeli offensive.

And the Lebanese government, in which Hezbollah has a representative, has repeatedly stressed that it is keen on not being dragged into a new conflict.

Nasrallah in his speech Wednesday also reiterated criticism of Egypt for refusing to open its border with Gaza and blasted the UN Security Council for failing to denounce the Israeli offensive that has killed nearly 700 Palestinians.

"Does the government in Egypt need more than 650 martyrs and 2,500 wounded to open the Rafah crossing once and for all to help the people of Gaza toward victory?" Nasrallah said. "I am simply asking for the opening of a crossing and not another front."

He also commended Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez for expelling Israel's ambassador to Caracas saying that all countries, including Arab states, must follow his example.

"Chavez's decision is a slap in the face for all countries that host an Israeli ambassador," he said. "Arab governments must learn from this great Latin American leader."

Jordan and Egypt are the only two countries in the Middle East to have diplomatic relations with Israel.

Sam Bradford 'a role model' among Native Americans

By MURRAY EVANS, Associated Press Writer

TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation Chief Chad Smith likes to sport his "OU" hat with the letters written in the tribe's alphabet.

These days, the longtime Sooners fan is even more proud.

Word that Oklahoma quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Sam Bradford has a Cherokee ancestor has given the tribe a special reason to pull for OU while turning the redshirt sophomore into a role model.

"What's great about his leadership style is he's humble and sincere and he's genuine," Smith said. "At the Heisman thing, somebody asked him about being a Cherokee, and he said, 'Well, it's a great blessing.' That's a masterful way (of handling it). ... It came from his heart."

Larry Grigg is the athletic director at Sequoyah High School, a boarding school for American Indians run by the Cherokee Nation in the heart of what is known in Oklahoma as "Indian Country" — where many of the state's 38 federally recognized tribes are based. He's watched as Bradford's local fan base has grown.

"They're looking for a hero, and he is," Grigg said.

Bradford's father, Kent — a former Oklahoma offensive lineman — had a great-grandmother, Susie Walkingstick, who was a full-blood Cherokee, making Sam Bradford of one-sixteenth Cherokee descent.

Bradford certainly knew of that heritage, but it wasn't a major part of his life while growing up in northwest Oklahoma City, about 170 miles from the Cherokees' tribal headquarters in Tahlequah.

Oklahoma athletic department officials began publicizing Bradford's Cherokee ties when he became the Sooners' starting quarterback in 2007. This season, the questions about his heritage became more frequent for Bradford.

After a win on Oct. 4 at Baylor, the quarterback was seemingly surprised when asked how proud he was of his Cherokee heritage, answering, "Uh, very."

He's since become more comfortable talking about it.

"At first it was a little overwhelming to have so many people talk about that and want to talk about it," Bradford said. "But I feel I have learned a little bit more about my heritage and I hope to learn more about it in the offseason, when I have more time to actually sit down and talk to some people about it."

The Cherokees take particular pride in their history, which includes an alphabet developed by the famed leader Sequoyah in the early 19th century. Signs around Tahlequah have both English and Cherokee markings and the local university, Northeastern State, has developed a Cherokee Education degree program. The new gymnasium at Sequoyah High School features Cherokee-language markings on the court.

That Bradford has chosen to embrace, rather than ignore, his Cherokee background is encouraging, Smith said.

"That's one of the reasons he resonates so well in Indian Country," Smith said. "He's not there to capitalize on it or cash in on it. It's something that's obviously very meaningful to him and our folks understand that."

Bradford's demeanor even has won over Sequoyah junior Jarrett Travis, who describes himself as a fan of the Sooners' archrival, Texas.

"I like watching anybody good, but he stuck out to me," said Travis, who added that "it's pretty cool" that he and Bradford share a common Cherokee heritage.

Bradford isn't the only American Indian playing major-college sports. Nathan Stanley, a Sequoyah graduate, is a freshman quarterback at Mississippi, and his former classmate, Angel Goodrich, is a freshman point guard at Kansas.

But the list of star American Indian athletes is short. Perhaps the greatest of all, Jim Thorpe, was, like Bradford, born in Oklahoma, but his exploits were nearly a century ago. It has been more than 44 years since Billy Mills, a Sioux, won a gold medal in the 10,000 meters in the 1964 Olympics.

Smith said American Indians latch onto positive athletic role models like Bradford more than those athletes might imagine.

"I'd give you odds that 99 percent of the Indians in this country know who Sam Bradford is, from California to Maine," Smith said.

Before Bradford, perhaps the most prominent American Indian to play quarterback for a major-college program was Sonny Sixkiller, a Cherokee who starred for Washington from 1970 to 1972.

Like Bradford, Sixkiller — who was born in Tahlequah but spent most of his childhood in Oregon — didn't grow up around the Cherokee culture, but was thrust into the national spotlight because of his heritage.

Growing up, "I didn't have anybody to look up to as a role model from the Native community in athletics," said Sixkiller, who is now an associate general manager for ISP, the University of Washington's sports licensing properties division.

As word of his exploits spread, Sixkiller became that role model, something he said he didn't comprehend at first.

"I didn't understand the impact I would have because of the way I was brought up," he said. "You never thought of yourself as Cherokee, you just thought you were like everyone else."

The reaction of others "made you aware instantly of the impact you could have on young people in the Native American community."

Bradford has handled the attention surrounding his Cherokee heritage remarkably well, said Brent Scott, a Cherokee who started at quarterback for both Oklahoma State and Louisiana-Monroe in the early 1990s.

"A lot of people don't know how to handle it because it hasn't been a part of their life," said Scott, who is now the football coach at Sequoyah. "But he has embraced it and pursued it and asked questions."

Scott said he's heard more talk about Oklahoma football than usual this season from his students as they followed Bradford's progress. The sophomore has passed for 4,464 yards and 48 touchdowns for No. 2 Oklahoma (12-1), which will play No. 1 Florida (12-1) Thursday in the BCS championship game in Miami.

Smith said he's been in touch with Bradford's family and that he'd love for him to someday visit Tahlequah.

"I think he's beginning to understand more and more the great platform and the great opportunity he has," Smith said.

"It's a very simple message, but it's a very powerful message: If I can do it, you can do it."

Troops, militants clash in Kashmir

NEW DELHI, Jan. 7 (UPI) -- Fighting between security forces and militants in a forested and mountainous region of India-controlled Kashmir entered its seventh day Wednesday.

India's army leader said the battle, which began Dec. 31, is taking so long because of the terrain and the force's desire to avoid casualties, the Press Trust of India reported.

"We are trying to avoid (casualties). The area is very rocky and filled with natural caves. That is why it is taking time," Army Chief Gen. Deepak Kapoor said in Srinagar.

So far two soldiers one policeman and four militants have died in the latest fighting, one of the longest exchanges in the 20-year armed insurgency, CNN reported.

Officials said they suspected members of the Jaish-e-Mohammed terror group based in Pakistan were involved in Wednesday's fighting in the Bhati Dhar jungles, PTI said.

"The holed -up militants, who have been exchanging fire with the security forces for the last week, seem to be from JeM based on the intercepts" the military received, Brig. Gen. Gurdeep Singh said.

Will Lebanon be the Next Front?

By CLAUDE SALHANI

Lebanese leaders have been eying the present conflict in the Gaza Strip with apprehension for fear it would spread to Lebanon.

Since the recent spate of violence erupted in Gaza Lebanon's leadership have been pressuring Hezbollah to avoid instigating Israel into opening up a second front in which Lebanon would end up paying a huge price.

At the same time Lebanese officials are playing down concerns that the fighting in Gaza could spread to Israel's northern border and spark a renewal of the 2006 summer war Israel fought with the Lebanese Shiite organization – a conflict which ended in a stalemate, but which was in fact seen as a defeat for Israel and a victory for Hezbollah.

The precariousness permeating the Middle East region is also worrying European leaders who have been trying to secure a cease-fire, but at the same time are actively engaging regional leaders to establish a viable post-conflict plan – hopefully one that would establish the basis for negotiations and a plan that would prevent such violence in the future.

In Beirut, where French President Nicolas Sarkozy arrived Tuesday to discuss the situation in Gaza, Lebanese President Michel Suleiman expressed concern that Israel was responsible for eight missiles recently found in southern Lebanon. Suleiman said Israel had planted the missiles so as to implicate Lebanon and drag it into a conflict.

But does Israel really want – or need – to instigate a second front? Very unlikely. The conflict is now entering its second week. International pressure on Israel to halt hostilities is mounting, and in the United States Barack Obama moves into the White House in just over two weeks. A conflict with Hezbollah, if it were to happen, will take more than two weeks to settle.

Saad Hariri, the son of assassinated former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, and who now heads the majority bloc in the Lebanese parliament, dismissed speculation that Hezbollah would open a new front by launching missiles into Israel to show solidarity with Hamas.

"I'm sure Hezbollah will make no bad mistake this time," Hariri was reported as saying by the French News Agency, AFP.

Eugene Sensenig-Dabbous, a political scientist at Notre Dame University in Beirut, said he did not believe Hezbollah would wage war on Israel, even though Israel was preoccupied in the south.

"Hezbollah always chooses its own fights. They'd never allow Israel or the Palestinians to drag them into a conflict they don't want," Sensenig-Dabbous told The Media Line news agency.

"The strategy of the Israelis in Lebanon, in my opinion, is being refined. Hezbollah is interested in observing what the Israelis are doing in Gaza, because it wants to see how the [Israeli army] is performing. Both sides, Hezbollah and the Israel Defense Forces are studying strategies and tactics for when the war starts again in Lebanon, and I'm sure it will," said Sensenig-Dabbous.

Politically, Hezbollah has a lot to lose from engaging in a conflict with Israel. Hezbollah is expected to make gains in upcoming parliamentary elections in Lebanon and would be jeopardizing their chances to gain more seats.

"I don't see what purpose a war with Israel would serve for them, when they can expand their power base in Lebanon using democratic means," Sensenig-Dabbous said.

Israel and Hezbollah were engaged in a 34-day conflict in the summer of 2006, sparked by a cross-border raid by Hezbollah on an Israeli army convoy and the kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers.

Palestinian refugees residing in Lebanon are viewing the situation in Gaza with concern, but say the situation will not drive them to take up arms against Israel or the Lebanese army.

Palestinian refugees in Lebanon can do precious little to help Gazans, Ali Hweidi, secretary general of the Thabit Organization for the Right of Return told The Media Line.

Thabit is a non-governmental organization acting on behalf of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon.

"[Palestinians in Lebanon] can only carry weapons inside camps and they are prevented from doing anything against Israel or helping the Palestinians in Gaza," Hweidi said.

Nevertheless, the situation along the Lebanese-Israeli border remains very tense as both sides are cognizant that it would not take much to start another war.

Israel May Be in Violation of Arms Export Control Act

In light of press reports that Israeli forces fired on a United Nations school where civilians were taking shelter, I sent notice today to Secretary of State, Dr. Condoleezza Rice, that Israel's actions in Gaza since December 27th, 2008 may constitute a violation of the requirements of the Arms Export Control Act of 1976 (AECA).

When the president is aware of the possibility of such violations, the AECA requires a report to Congress on the potential violation(s). The AECA outlines the conditions under which countries may use military articles or services obtained from the U.S. government, which include "internal security" or "legitimate self defense." But the AECA prohibits actions that "increase the possibility of an outbreak or escalation of conflict."

The Israeli assault on Gaza creates such a possibility because it is a vastly disproportionate response to the provocation, and the Palestinian population is suffering from those military attacks in numbers far exceeding Israeli losses in life and property.

The full text of my letter follows:


January 5, 2009


The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State

Dear Dr. Rice:

I am writing concerning Israel's military offensive against Gaza, which began on December 27th. I support Israel's security and its right to exist in peace, without the fear of rocket attacks from Hamas. Moreover, I abhor the violence being visited upon the citizens of our firm ally. However, no nation is immune from the legal conditions placed on the receipt of U.S. military assistance. I believe that with the current escalation of violence in Gaza, a legal threshold has been reached, warranting a Presidential examination and report to Congress. I hereby request an examination of Israel's compliance with the provisions of the Arms Export Control Act of 1976 (AECA).

While neither the AECA nor the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (FAA) define "internal security" and "legitimate self-defense," I believe that Israel's most recent

attacks neither further internal security nor do they constitute "legitimate" acts of self-defense. They do, however, "increase the possibility of an outbreak or escalation of conflict," because they are a vastly disproportionate response to the provocation, and because the Palestinian population is suffering from those military attacks in numbers far exceeding Israeli losses in life and property.

Israel's current military campaign in Gaza has inflicted a significant toll on Palestinian civilians and society. Israel's recent aerial and ground offensive against Gaza has killed nearly 600 and injured over 2,500. The Associated Press reported: "children are paying the price. . . . The United Nations has said the death toll includes 34 children. . . . But the broad range of Israel's targets--police compounds, fire stations, homes of militants, Hamas-run mosques and university buildings--means most shelling is occurring in residential areas."[2] The extensive destruction of such civilian institutions violates Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits the wanton destruction of property and collective punishment of a civilian population. There have also been reports of bombings of United Nations (UN) schools, despite the fact that Israeli Defense Forces were allegedly given coordinates of the facilities prior to the current escalation in violence. The blockade that Israel has imposed on Gaza since 2006 has further exacerbated the extent of collateral damage, as hospitals and morgues have been unable to cope with the magnitude of deaths and injuries as a result of the current escalation in violence and hospitals lack proper supplies needed to treat the injured.

I believe that Israel's use of defense articles provided by the U.S in the current Gaza military attacks may constitute a violation of the AECA. At a minimum, the conflict is sufficient to warrant an immediate report to Congress as required by 22 U.S.C. §2753. Please contact my office by close of business on January 7, 2009 with the date the report will be submitted.

Sincerely,

Dennis J. Kucinich
Member of Congress


Comments
16

- + SiberianRat See Profile I'm a Fan of SiberianRat I'm a fan of this user permalink

While I'm very pleased with Obama as our new prez, you were my first choice, Mr. Kucinich. I support your efforts 100% and I would ask you to go even further my moving to withdraw Israeli aid altogether until they comply with international law, UN resolutions, and declare their nukes.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 AM on 01/07/2009
- + Indedave See Profile I'm a Fan of Indedave I'm a fan of this user permalink

With all due respect, Rep. Kucinich, your protest fails to account for the reports that Hamas was using the school as an offensive post. It also omits that using civilian facilities including schools and mosques is a well-documented Hamas tactic. As for the disproportionality of the casualties, I suggest you direct your efforts first to those responsible for the current war in Iraq, where an estimated 25 Iraqis have been killed for every U.S. soldier, and the carnage is three orders of magnitude greater.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 AM on 01/07/2009
- + New johnsopinion See Profile I'm a Fan of johnsopinion I'm a fan of this user permalink

We can always find a 'reason' for doing what we want
to do. After all, the end always justifies the means, right?
Wasn't that GWB's philosophy?

Governments are in the business of granting favors.

You scratch my back and I'll scratch yours and and to
hell with the far-reaching consequences. Don't worry
about tomorrow or what's been written, it is the
'moment' in which we live!
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 07:18 AM on 01/07/2009
- + SiberianRat See Profile I'm a Fan of SiberianRat I'm a fan of this user permalink

You're right about the Iraqi carnage and crimes, but does that mean we should just ignore the nightmare unfolding in Gaza?
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 AM on 01/07/2009
- + LMPE See Profile I'm a Fan of LMPE I'm a fan of this user permalink

Dennis, from the moment that I first read about you in 2003, I supported you for president.

I assume that you realize that not only does Israel's government not give a horse's scrotum whether or not it violates international law, the US government supports it every step of the way.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 01/07/2009
- + ObjectiveRealist See Profile I'm a Fan of ObjectiveRealist I'm a fan of this user permalink

Take note, the deadline is tomorrow, ~5pm EDT. Write your Congress Critters NOW.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 AM on 01/07/2009
- + Jezreel See Profile I'm a Fan of Jezreel I'm a fan of this user permalink

Thank you Rep. Kucinich for this and so much more that you do on behalf of the people of the United States.

You were the first member of Congress to call for an end to Israel's acts of disproportionate violence against the civilians in its care and custody. Your efforts are appreciate greatly.

Sir, I will be writing to Sec. of State Condoleeza Rice to ask her to follow-up to your request for action on this matter.

Citing the IDF's military assault on three UN schools, Haretz and other news sources are reporting that UNRWA is also demanding an independent investigation and the indictment of anyone found to have violated international law, including the state of Israel.

Perhaps our joint efforts will help to hold Israel accountable for the atrocities it has committed against the people of Gaza.

Let's hope so.

Jezreel
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 AM on 01/07/2009
- + rosiebond007 See Profile I'm a Fan of rosiebond007 I'm a fan of this user permalink

... AND FOLLOW UP WITH CONDI - SHE'S SURE TO DELAY HER ANSWER UNTIL AFTER JAN 20 !!
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 AM on 01/07/2009
- + rosiebond007 See Profile I'm a Fan of rosiebond007 I'm a fan of this user permalink

YOU GO, DENNIS
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 AM on 01/07/2009
- + Fireslayer See Profile I'm a Fan of Fireslayer I'm a fan of this user permalink

Hi Dennis,

Thanki you for this courageous stand. However, the point needs to be stressed that the IDF actions, however you want to characterize them, are the biggest Al Queda promotional events of all time. It cannot be understated just how much damage this horror show is doing to the security of the world.

Saddly, Israel is already the big loser and I fear more for my friends in that country now than at anytime since the Yom Kippur War.

Please help end this madness.

peace be with you
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 PM on 01/06/2009
- + 111 See Profile I'm a Fan of 111 I'm a fan of this user permalink

Thank you Rep. Kucinich. You are a true leader and hero.

Aside from being very much against the actions that Israel has taken regarding Gaza over the last few years, I am very concerned about Israel's continued use of cluster bombs and white phosphorous. I understand that the US has chosen to use WP in Iraq and, to that end, has declared that it is not a chemical weapon but we all know that it is exactly what it is. I write letters but feel they are simply ignored. I hope you will take the use of these weapons as an issue you will address.

Thank you again.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 PM on 01/06/2009
- + Fein See Profile I'm a Fan of Fein I'm a fan of this user permalink

Sir, I greatly respect your humanity for trying to stop this slaughter. There is also video of Israel
using white phosphorus weapons in the streets of Gaza which is a war crime.

I have informed all of my representatives of my position and, I've asked them to take note of the overwhelming rejection of their cooperation with the Bush administration's backing of Israel's. war.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 PM on 01/06/2009
- + anachoret See Profile I'm a Fan of anachoret I'm a fan of this user permalink

Keep up the good work, and fighting the good fight Representative Kucinich.
Thank you.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 PM on 01/06/2009
- + ploopy See Profile I'm a Fan of ploopy I'm a fan of this user permalink

thank you dennis
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 PM on 01/06/2009
- + Judah See Profile I'm a Fan of Judah I'm a fan of this user permalink

Why was this article from a sitting U.S. congressman and a Presidential contender not on the Politics page or even the front page? Because it challenges the status quo as it relates to the U.S. policy on Israel.
Reply Favorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 PM on 01/06/2009
- + ObjectiveRealist See Profile I'm a Fan of ObjectiveRealist I'm a fan of this user permalink

My House Representative and Senators have been notified by e-mail that I want them to support your petition, to remind the President of his responsibility to uphold the laws and treaties of the United States.

quote:
While neither the AECA nor the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (FAA) define "internal security" and "legitimate self-defense," I believe that Israel's most recent attacks neither further internal security nor do they constitute "legitimate" acts of self-defense. They do, however, "increase the possibility of an outbreak or escalation of conflict," because they are a vastly disproportionate response to the provocation, and because the Palestinian population is suffering from those military attacks in numbers far exceeding Israeli losses in life and property.
/quote

You're exactly right. The current reported ratio of killed is 600 Palestinians : 10 Israeli soldiers, definitely vastly disproportionate by any reasonable definition.

Military confirms 3-hour lull in Gaza to allow aid

JERUSALEM – Israel's military says it has suspended its Gaza offensive for three hours to allow aid and fuel into the embattled Palestinian territory.

Military spokesman Peter Lerner confirmed the lull had begun. It is set to last from between 6 a.m. EST to 9 a.m. EST, or 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. local time.

The pause is aimed at allowing aid supplies and fuel to reach some of the 1.4 million residents of Gaza.

Israel launched an offensive against the territory's Hamas rulers on Dec. 27.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

GAZA CITY, Gaza (AP) — Israel was set to pause its Gaza offensive for three hours Wednesday to allow food and fuel to reach besieged Palestinians, and the country's leaders debated whether to accept an international cease-fire plan or to expand the assault against Hamas.

With criticism rising of the operation's spiraling civilian death toll and Gazans increasingly suffering the effects of nonstop airstrikes and shelling, Israel's military said it would open "humanitarian corridors" to allow aid supplies to reach Palestinians.

Israeli military spokesman Peter Lerner said there would be a "recess in offensive operations" during the day to allow in supplies and fuel. Government officials said the lull would last from 1 to 4 p.m. local time. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the plan had not been officially announced.

As Israel's leadership met in the morning in Tel Aviv, sounds of heavy gunfire and thick plumes of smoke engulfed the Zeitoun neighborhood east of Gaza City. Israel said it struck 40 Hamas targets during the hours of darkness. Gaza health officials said new strikes Wednesday morning killed eight people.

Outrage over an Israeli strike Tuesday near a U.N. school that killed 39 people continued, with the U.N. agency responsible for the building demanding an "impartial investigation" into the attack.

About 300 of the more than 670 Palestinians killed so far are civilians, according to Palestinian and U.N. figures. Of those killed, at least 130 are children age 16 and under, says the Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights, which tracks casualties.

The number of armed fighters killed remains unclear. Hamas fighters are known to have begun wearing civilian clothes and the organization is keeping its casualties secret and housing its wounded and dead in undisclosed locations.

Israel has lost six soldiers since launching a ground offensive on Saturday and four other Israelis have been killed by rocket fire, three of them civilians.

Israel's lull in operations could ease the plight of civilians in Gaza, where much of the territory has no power or running water, because pumps are dependent on electricity.

More than 500 aid trucks have been shipped into Gaza since operations began. But even when aid crosses into Gaza military operations have prevented officials from distributing it, leading to food shortages in some areas.

A World Bank statement Wednesday said there are growing signs of a severe public health crisis in Gaza because of a shortage of drinking water and an escalating failure of the sewage system.

Militants hit the Israeli city of Ashkelon on Wednesday with a medium-range rocket, causing no casualties. Rocket fire has fallen off as Israeli troops tighten their hold on Gaza, taking over open areas used to launch rockets, but Gaza residents say militants are still launching from heavily populated areas.

Israel's leaders — including the top troika of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Defense Minister Ehud Barak — were to discuss whether to broaden the operation in Gaza or move to accept a plan being proposed by Egypt and France to end the fighting.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said the initiative calls for an immediate cease-fire by Israel and Palestinian factions for a limited period to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza and an urgent meeting of Israel and the Palestinian side on arrangements to prevent any repetition of military action and to deal with the causes.

International Mideast envoy Tony Blair said Tuesday the key to any cease-fire will be an arrangement to stop weapons smuggling over the Gaza-Egypt border.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Tuesday he saw the proposal as a "small hope" for ending the Gaza violence.

Israeli officials have said any cease-fire agreement must prevent further rocket attacks by Gaza militants and put in place measures to prevent the smuggling of missile and other weapons into the small Palestinian territory. Hamas has demanded that Israel open Gaza's blockaded crossings as part of any agreement.

In the meantime, Israel has been making preparations to continue fighting. The military has called up thousands of reserve troops that it could use to expand the Gaza offensive, supporting the three brigade-size formations of regular troops now inside. Defense officials said the troops could be ready for action by Friday. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the army's preparations are classified.

The Franco-Egyptian plan was given increasing urgency by the Israeli mortar strike near a U.N. school that killed 39 Palestinians and stained the streets with blood.

The United Nations said the school was sheltering hundreds of people displaced by the onslaught on Hamas militants. Israel said its troops returned fire on a Hamas squad that fired mortars at them from nearby.

Israel's military said its shelling — the deadliest single episode since Israeli ground forces invaded Gaza on Saturday following a weeklong air bombardment — was an attack on a military target and accused Hamas militants of using civilians as cover.

Christopher Gunness of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, responsible for the school, said the agency is "99.9 percent certain there were no militants or military activity in its school." That would not necessarily contradict Israel's claim that the militants were just outside.

Gunness demanded an investigation and punishment for anyone found to have violated international law.

Two residents of the area who spoke with The Associated Press by telephone said they saw a small group of militants firing mortar rounds from a street near the school. They spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. Gunness said 1,300 people were taking shelter from the shelling at the school.

The Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights said the presence of militants did not justify Israel's response.

"The presence of armed resistance does not justify in any way the use of excessive force that is disproportionate," the center said in a statement.

The carnage, which included 55 wounded, added to a surging civilian toll and drew mounting international pressure for Israel to end the offensive against Hamas.

Ahmadinejad sends envoys to demand end to Gaza offensive

TEHRAN (AFP) – Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has sent 22 envoys to Europe and Asia to push for an immediate halt to Israel's offensive on the Gaza Strip, the Mehr news agency reported Wednesday.

"Twenty-two members of the government have been sent by the president to European and Asian countries," foreign ministry spokesman Hassan Ghashghavi told the semi-official agency.

The envoys would convey Iran's demand for "an immediate halt to the attacks by the usurper Zionist regime and an end to the blockade of Gaza," the spokesman added.

Ghashghavi also criticized the UN Security Council's failure to adopt a resolution demanding an immediate end to Israel's Operation Cast Lead, saying the offensive was part of a "plot by international superpowers" conducted with the complicity of unnamed regional countries.

The European Union has made several appeals for Israel to end the 12-day-old offensive while Israel's cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss an Egyptian ceasefire initiative.

The Mehr report did not specify which countries the diplomats would visit although Iranian newspapers said the list included Turkey, one of the few Muslim majority countries to have diplomatic ties with the Jewish state.

Iran, whose president has previously called for Israel to be wiped off the map, does not recognize Israel and is a staunch supporter of the Islamist movement Hamas which runs the Gaza Strip.

Since Israel unleashed its attacks against Hamas in Gaza on December 27, at least 680 Palestinians have been killed, including 215 children, and more than 2,950 wounded, according to Gaza medics.

Seven Israeli soldiers and three civilians have been killed during the same time in clashes with Hamas and rockets fired from Gaza.

Southern Lebanon residents look to Gaza with angst

QANA, Lebanon (AFP) - Akil Sayegh will not stick around this time. Like many of his fellow residents in this southern Lebanese town pummeled during the 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel, he stands ready to flee at the first sign of a renewed conflict.

"We will leave the country in the event of war because this time there will be no place for us to hide if Israel strikes," he said, the devastating 2006 war that left some 1,200 mostly Lebanese civilians dead still fresh in his mind.

Qana grabbed headlines at the time after an Israeli raid left nearly 30 people dead, most of them women and children. The village 10 years earlier had also been the scene of Israeli strikes which killed 105 civilians who had sought shelter in a UN base during the Jewish state's "Grapes of Wrath" offensive on Lebanon.

A father of four, Sayegh has already packed a tent in the trunk of his car, purchased extra diapers for his three-month-old and stocked up on essential items.

"I will head straight to the southern coastal town of Tyre at the first sign of trouble and leave by boat," he said as he huddled around a television set with fellow villagers at a local cafe to watch the latest developments in Gaza.

He recalled the wave of panic that spread through the village at the weekend when two Israeli jets overflew the region.

"Suddenly you had everyone in the village running for cover," he said.

Imad Chebli, 32, said locals were living in fear with everyone glued to their television sets since the Israeli offensive on Gaza began on December 27 in a bid to halt rocket attacks by Hamas fighters.

Still, like dozens of residents interviewed this week in several southern Lebanese villages, where Hezbollah has a strong presence, Chebli and Sayegh believe that the Shiite group will come out victorious in the event of a new conflict.

Many say under cover of anonymity that Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran and Syria and is considered a terrorist organization by Washington, has mobilized its troops and readied its weapons arsenal since the Gaza offensive began.

However the Lebanese government, in which Hezbollah is represented, has played down the possibility that the conflict could spill over with another front opening up in southern Lebanon.

"We have not received from Hezbollah any sign that they will risk dragging Lebanon into this conflict," Information Minister Tarek Mitri said Monday.

And residents in southern Lebanon who are still recovering from the 2006 war say they are all but ready to suffer through another conflict despite their adherence to Hezbollah.

In the village of Haris, Zeinab Jawad, 15, said his father had rushed to stock up on gasoline after Hezbollah chief declared that his party was ready to respond to any aggression.

In Ayta Eshaab, a border village, houses still bear the scars of the fierce battles that took place there during the 2006 war.

"The Jews will not dare return here," said confidently Jamal Srour, 62, sitting in his newly rebuilt house.

His wife approves adding: "This time we will wipe them out inchallah (God willing)."

Further north in the village of Al Abassiyeh, Mahmoud Chehab, who owns a small shop facing a UNIFIL (United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon) post warns that in the event the situation in Gaza escalates "we must open another front".

But not everyone shares his opinion.

"Our homes are still destroyed," said Siham Al Saadi, a mother of six who lives in the village of Shebaa. "We suffered too much and lost our loved ones.

"We won't be able to survive another war."

Detainees in Afghanistan seeking right for release

By LARA JAKES, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – Four men being held as terror suspects at a U.S. military base in Afghanistan are asking a federal judge for the right to sue for their release — a right already given to detainees at Guantanamo Bay.

A hearing Wednesday will test whether a 2008 Supreme Court decision — allowing al-Qaida and Taliban suspects at the U.S. naval base in Cuba to challenge their detention — should be extended to detainees held at other military prisons overseas.

The government argues that the detainees should have their cases heard by military tribunals.

"This court has no jurisdiction to review this," the Justice Department wrote in a Dec. 19 motion asking for the case to be dismissed.

It added, "Federal courts should not thrust themselves into the extraordinary role of reviewing the military's conduct of active hostilities overseas, second-guessing the military's determination as to which captured aliens as part of such hostilities should be detained, and in practical effect, superintending the executive's conduct in waging a war."

But lawyers for the four men in Wednesday's case in U.S. District Court say the Guantanamo standard needs to be applied to other prisons.

Otherwise, "a lot of the Guantanamo detainees could be transferred to Afghanistan — basically shifting the problem somewhere the government argues that they cannot challenge," said Kathleen Kelley of the International Human Rights Clinic at Stanford Law School, who is representing three of the four men.

"We are saying that's just not true," Kelley said Tuesday. "Detainees cannot be held without process indefinitely anywhere by the U.S. government."

More than 200 detainees are challenging their imprisonment at Guantanamo, where many have been held for years without being charged with a crime.

But more than 600 are being held at Bagram Air Base outside of Kabul, Afghanistan's capital. In Iraq, officials estimate thousands are imprisoned in U.S.-maintained detention centers.

The evidence against the four men at the heart of Wednesday's case is unknown, and many facts about how and whether they were initially swept up and imprisoned after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, have never been made clear. Their lawyers are largely relying on statements from the International Committee of the Red Cross and other detainees who have since been released to build their case for freedom.

Tina Foster of the International Justice Network said none of the four — two Yemeni, one Tunisian and one Afghan — were in Afghanistan at the time they were captured in 2002. At least two of them disappeared for several years, then turned up in Bagram, Foster said.

It's suspected they were held in secret prisons where they could be interrogated, Kelley said.

The Great Dragon Awakens

China Challenges American Hegemony

By José Miguel Alonso Trabanco

URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11638

Global Research, January 6, 2009

Nowadays, most International Relations analysts acknowledge China’s potential to achieve superpower status over the course of the next decades due to its impressive economic growth, which was triggered by Deng Xiaoping’s economic reforms program (inspired by theorists like Friedrich List).

Chinese power has also increased considerably in military, geopolitical, trade and financial affairs. Some experts have even contemplated the possibility of China becoming the world’s greatest power, overtaking the US. For instance, Goldman Sachs has predicted that China’s GDP will surpass America’s sometime circa 2050.

However, one must always bear in mind that if Beijing indeed succeeds in becoming the ‘first among equals’, it would not be the first time such event takes place. The ‘Middle Kingdom’ was already a mighty empire thousands of years before the US was even founded. Thus, China (both as a State and as a civilization) has flourished for centuries and has outlived the Roman, Persian, Arabian, Turkish, Mongol, and British empires, which is by no means an easy accomplishment.

Needless to say, Washington feels its position might be seriously threatened in the long run. The Project for a New American Century stipulates that the US must prevent any power(s) or coalition thereof (read China and Russia) from effectively challenging American power. Therefore, America’s top policy makers are well aware that China is certainly a serious contender and, for that reason, have been implementing a strategy specifically designed to check Chinese mounting power. Below we will dissect and explore American efforts meant to curb China as well as Chinese countermoves.

The US plans toward China comprises the following components:

Number one: An updated version of classical containment which was an American strategy conceived by US geoestrategist George Kennan during the early years of the Cold War to limit the Soviet Union’s power projection capabilities. This was clearly reflected in the creation of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), an alliance whose purpose was to keep "the Americans in, the Russians out, and the Germans down".

In order to achieve Great Power status, one must ensure regional security in one’s neighboring areas. This can be done by attracting potential allies, establishing a patronage over weak States and by excluding hostile powers from one’s own immediate periphery. The US Monroe Doctrine, formulated at a time when America was an emerging power, is an enlightening example because it expresses American determination to enthrone Washington’s exclusive primacy in the American hemisphere.

In the present day, there is not a formal structure akin to an Asian version of NATO. Nevertheless, the US has been continuously seeking to establish military bases close to Chinese borders. Washington has established a meaningful military presence in Mindanao (the Philippines), Okinawa (Japan), the Korean Peninsula, Kyrgyzstan and Afghanistan (which is in fact NATO-occupied). Moreover, some of China’s neighbors are staunch allies of the West: Japan, Australia, Taiwan and the Philippines. All of them have forged an important degree of military cooperation with Washington and have also purchased a great deal of American-made arms.

So far, Washington has not tried to encircle China’s borders as aggressively and in the case of Russia (expansion of NATO, missile defense facilities in Eastern Europe and so on). This is not because America is somehow friendlier towards China but because Beijing’s military capabilities are not as threatening as those of Moscow, whose military power and huge nuclear arsenal possess the ability to challenge the US in the case of war, to say the least.

Moreover, the American ‘cordon sanitaire’ around China is far from being complete. Beijing has developed a strong partnership with Moscow through the SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organization) which also encompasses Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan Kyrgyzstan. The SCO, curiously referred to as the ‘Shanghai Pact’ by former Chinese President Jiang Zemin, is not yet a full-fledged military alliance but it definitely has the potential to reach that point provided Sino-Russian strategic cooperation continues to thrive in the coming years. It is interesting to highlight that the US membership application was rejected by SCO members.

It would be a severe mistake to underestimate the SCO. If its level of strategic coordination deepens, the SCO’s combined power would turn to be outright frightening for NATO. SCO member States (not including observers):

* Control a vast portion of the Eurasian landmass.

* Contain huge population centers.

* Command large armies equipped with state-of-the-art weaponry (ICBMs, fighter jets, satellites, strategic bombers and fleets of tanks).

* Possess massive reserves of natural resources (oil, gas, uranium, metals and fresh water).

* Own important industrial plants.

* Have accumulated some of the largest amounts of foreign currency reserves.

* Can convince other countries to join their organization as full members like India, Pakistan, Mongolia, Iran, Turkmenistan, Belarus, a post-Yuschchenko Ukraine, Armenia, Syria, etc.

Not long ago, US forces were expelled by fellow SCO member Uzbekistan from the Karshi-Khanabd air base (a.k.a. K2), located in its territory. Tashkent strengthened its links with both Beijing and Moscow after a presumably US-masterminded ‘Color Revolution’ backfired and ultimately failed to produce regime change in that Central Asian republic.

China has also tried to court other neighboring States through an intensification of trade flows. For example, South Korea, although it still hosts a large number of American troops, has implemented a foreign policy carefully crafted not to irritate China. Seoul knows that Beijing, through its leverage and influence on Pyongyang, holds one of the most important keys to an eventual Korean reunification and that China is a force that can contribute to (geo)political stability and offer interesting business opportunities in East Asia.

The ‘Middle Kingdom’ has successfully attracted Myanmar as an ally. Myanmar (a.k.a. Burma) borders the Southern part of the Peoples’ Republic of China and it contains important raw materials like natural gas, marble, gems, precious stones and exotic woods. Myanmar’s government has sided with Asia’s rising powers such as China, India and, to a lesser degree, Russia through closer trade, diplomatic and military relations. Beijing has plans to establish intelligence facilities in Myanmar’s territory and, taking into account a growing Chinese military presence there, it is clear that China intends to intensify its alliance with Myanmar.

In 2007, the world witnessed the ‘Saffron Revolution’ (please note the term, where have we heard something similar before?), a series of protests led by Buddhist monks and political elements prone to adopt pro-Western positions. This unrest was most likely orchestrated by American intelligence personnel, eager to overthrow Myanmar’s current government and replace it with pro-Western rulers. Myanmar’s governmental forces, despite Western isolation and attempts to impose sanctions and backed by full Chinese and Russian support, ultimately prevailed.

This methodology is not new at all and it seems to be almost a carbon copy of other ‘Color Revolutions’ instigated in the post-Soviet space. However, the latest attempts to apply this recipe have failed in Belarus, Uzbekistan and Myanmar. It can also be added that some of the first governments which took over thanks to ‘Color Revolutions’ are already facing a considerable deal of trouble. For instance, Georgia was defeated by Russia when its government decided to invade South Ossetia; furthermore, Mikheil Saakashvili’s impudence was further punished by Moscow’s diplomatic recognition of both Abkhazia and South Osettia. Plus, Ukraine (along with Georgia) was denied NATO Membership Action Plans because of old Europe’s fear of irresponsibly antagonizing Moscow. Serbia has just signed a deal to increase energy cooperation with Russia’s Gazprom.

Number two: The implicit threat of using American sea power to enforce a naval blockade against China to interrupt both its shipment of goods overseas as well as the flow of critical raw materials.

Chinese economic growth fuels an ever-increasing demand of energy and raw materials. However, domestic supplies are not enough to meet those needs. For example the People’s Republic of China is currently the second largest importer of oil. Therefore, the aforementioned means that China’s manufacturers must resort to foreign sources to provide the necessary resources for their production activities. Many of these foreign providers are located in areas far away from China’s borders, namely the Middle East and Africa. That implies that a considerable part of Chinese critical supplies have to be seaborne.

Moreover, the Middle Kingdom’s major industrial production centers are to be found in zones close to China’s Pacific seaboard. Thus, the overwhelming majority of Chinese export products have to be transported by ship as well.

As far as the Chinese flow of imports and exports is concerned, it is significant to highlight the importance of the Malacca Strait, a tight waterway positioned between Peninsular Malaysia and the Indonesian island called Sumatra. Such shipping lane is indeed a chokepoint because, if the United Stated decided to enforce a naval blockade around it, the flow of Chinese imports and exports would suffer a lethal blow.

The US, much like its British predecessor, is the world’s leading sea power and that, combined with all of the above, represents a serious strategic vulnerability to China who obviously does not want to depend on American goodwill to conduct its commercial exchange overseas.

The ‘Middle Kingdom’ is aware of this military gap between American forces and its own. Beijing also acknowledges that developing a competitive sea power is a task which demands a colossal sum of resources in terms of time, manpower, materials, R & D and money. Therefore, China knows that it will not have the ability to directly challenge American naval primacy in one generation or two. Yet, that does not mean that there are not powerful asymmetric equalizers that can be used to counter the US apparently unrivaled sea power.

Beijing’s military doctrine is quite flexible and methodologically creative. If the ‘Middle Kingdom’ perceives an imminent military threat from America, it can make use of its foreign currency reserves (currently the largest in the world), which are denominated in US dollars, as a strategic weapon. If China decides to get rid of its dollars reserves, the consequences will be devastating for the US, perhaps triggering its economic, social, military and political collapse.

Some analysts dismiss this scenario as far-fetched; they argue that China would hesitate to unleash financial hell upon the US because Chinese exporters would also suffer considerably from the dollar’s fall. Nevertheless, they seem to forget that, historically, States are indeed willing to sacrifice some of their meaningful economic interests when their very survival is at stake. One just needs to remember that Germany and Britain were important trading partners right before World War One broke out...

Furthermore, China has been studying American over-reliance on real-time information feed collected through spy satellites in order to wage war. Thus, the ‘Middle Kingdom’ has discovered that US ground, sea and air forces would be left almost blind if deprived of data provided by its satellite network. Not surprisingly, Beijing’s military-industrial complex has been busy designing and testing a variety of anti-satellite weapons. In 2006 a Chinese land-based laser illuminated an American satellite. A year later, China destroyed one of its own weather satellites by using a modified version of ballistic missile technology.

The Chinese government has actively engaged in diplomatic talks in order to foster land-based oil and gas pipeline projects in order to secure its energy security and to diminish its dependence on seaborne supplies of oil. Beijing has succeeded in establishing an oil pipeline which provides China with both Russian and Kazakh petroleum. Likewise, the ‘Middle Kingdom’ plans to build pipelines connecting oil and/or gas producing-countries (like Iran, Myanmar and the Russian Far East) with Chinese territory.

It is worth mentioning that there have been many rumors in strategic circles concerning Chinese plans to open a military base in Iran and to set a naval outpost in Gwadar, Pakistan. It is way too early to confirm authoritatively weather these projects will indeed materialize. At least, one can confidently assert that the motivation is clear, i.e. to enhance Chinese power projection capabilities beyond its borders and to protect its uninterrupted energy supply.

Number three: Divide and rule, i.e. American efforts to dismantle Chinese territorial integrity and dissolve China’s internal political uniformity. The US and the West know that China is a lot harder to balkanize than Serbia; nevertheless, they have used their intelligence agencies in order to create a persistent irritant that can distract Beijing and force it to divert its resources.

The People’s Republic of China, like most other nation-States on Earth, is not a country which is ethnically or geographically homogenous. The ‘Middle Kingdom’

is home to different ethnicities, cultures and religions.

China’s largest ethnic group is the Han people. They comprise the majority of the country’s population. Both China’s Eastern seaboard (the area where the wealthiest cities are located) and its (more agricultural) heartland are inhabited by Han Chinese.

However, there are regions of the Chinese territory whose main population are not Han Chinese. The most important cases are the Xinjiang-Uyghur Autonomous Region and the Tibet Autonomous Region.

Xinjiang-Uyghur, located in the Northwestern part of China, is strategically important because it borders Russia, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Thus, this piece of land represents China’s territorial contact with Central Asia. It is essential to indicate that this autonomous region contains large deposits of minerals and oil. Xinjiang-Uyhgur is populated by people who profess the Islamic religion and who belong to the Turkic ethnicity, which is why this zone is also called ‘Eastern Turkestan’.

Western intelligence agencies have predictably provided covert support for both Islamic and separatist forces inside Xinjiang-Uyghur. In fact, these forces have already demonstrated both their political willingness as well as their operational capability to carry out terrorist attacks.

On the other hand, Tibet is an issue Washington and Brussels have exploited in order to fracture Chinese internal unity. It is vital to take into consideration that even open source intelligence material confirm that the Dalai Lama himself was working undercover along the CIA in order to undermine Chinese control over Tibet during the early decades of the Cold War. One can only wonder if such collaboration continues today. Natural resources play an important part as well: Tibet might have some the world’s largest reserves of uranium. Moreover, this autonomous region is rich in gold, copper, drinking water and could even possess valuable deposits of both oil and gas.

In March 2008 a series of riots broke out all over Tibet and especially in its capital Lhasa. Beijing accused the ‘Dalai Lama gang’ of inciting unrest which was eventually restrained by Chinese law enforcement. The Dalai Lama’s Western supporters took political advantage of this situation and launched a PR attack against China’s government. Some Western leaders even threatened to boycott the Beijing Olympics. The somewhat naïve ‘Free Tibet’ crowds even held protests in some Western capitals. During these events, it is critical to take into account that Moscow expressed a strong diplomatic and political support for Beijing.

The Han Chinese themselves are not immune to foreign geoestrategists prone to balkanize their rivals. For example, the Falun Gong movement (described by some as a ‘cult’) has been outlawed by the Chinese government. In strategic circles, it has been argued that Beijing regards Falun Gong as a CIA front whose task is to provoke instability and induce turmoil in the Chinese mainland.

Moreover, China’s rural population who live in the country’s heartland can also become an attractive target to someone willing to spread political discontent because they have not yet caught up with the wealth and prosperity experienced by the coastal industrial cities.

Conclusion

It seems that China is continuously advancing toward a greater role in the international system’s distribution of power. The ‘Middle Kingdom’ is increasingly assertive in defending its interests. The West (North America plus Europe) along with its followers (Japan, Australia, et al.) are willing to counter China’s rise. Nevertheless, Beijing is more determined than ever to recover its great power position and has forged strategic alliances (with Moscow and the Central Asian Republics) as well as partnerships in East Asia, the Middle East and elsewhere. Additionally, China and its allies have been perfecting a strategy to challenge Western plans to contain Eurasia’s rising powers. We can therefore anticipate that such rivalry will intensify as the stakes become higher and higher.

Source: Global Research.
Link: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11638.

Islamic spiritual leaders in Lebanon call for Palestinian unity

The Islamic spiritual leaders in Lebanon Sunday called on Palestinian leaders of Hamas, Fatah and other factions in the Gaza Strip to overcome differences and unite ranks to face the Israeli aggression, NBN TV reported.

Sunni Mufti Sheikh Mohamed Rashid Kabani, Shiite head of the higher council Sheikh Abdul Amir Kabalan, and Druze higher spiritual leader Naim Hassan met Sunday afternoon in Beirut to adopt a unified Islamic stand towards the attacks in the Gaza Strip.

A statement read after the meeting called on members of the Arab League, and the Organization of the Islamic Conference to bear their responsibilities and adopt measures to force Israel to cease the aggressions and to protect the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

The Islamic spiritual leaders also contacted Christian Maronite Patriarch Mar Nasrallah Boutros Sfier and they agreed to hold a Christian-Islamic spiritual summit to adopt a unified stand on the Israeli raids on Gaza.

The besieged Gaza Strip is under intensive Israeli air strikes on Sunday for the second successive day, in which 285 Palestinians have been killed so far in a powerful offensive which the Jewish state said was aimed to halt nearly daily cross-border rocket attacks.

Afghans condemn Israeli attacks on Palestinians, call for immediate halt

Hundreds of Afghans once again expressed their solidarity with the people of Palestine and strongly denounced the ongoing Israeli barrage in Gaza Stripe on Saturday.

Gathered in a historic Blue Mosque in Kabul, speakers described Israel attacks as barbaric and called on the international community to help stop the aggression.

"Killing innocent civilians including women and children by Zionist forces is an open violation of human rights and deserve strong condemnation by the international community," one of the speaker stressed in his speech.

Assembled in a chilly and snowy day, while cordoned off by police, several persons announced their readiness to fight for the people of Palestine.

"I am ready to go for Jihad (holy war) and fight against the Zionists in Israel," 19-years-old Ahmad Tamim said.

The demonstrators by issuing a nine-article resolution called on the United Nations and the Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC) to force Israel stop cruelty in Gaza Strip.

This is the third demonstration held against Israeli onslaught in Gaza Strip.

Thousands of Afghans by holding similar peaceful processions in Kabul and Herat demonstrated their sympathy with the people Palestine on Friday.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai in December has described the ongoing Israeli attacks against Palestinians in Gaza Stripe as barbaric and strongly denounced it.

Lebanese majority leader: Palestinians should be united

Lebanese Druze majority leader Walid Joumblat said Saturday that the Palestinians should be united and not divided like the Lebanese, local Elnashra website reported.

"Do not fall in the trap which we have fell after the 2006 war, your cause is more important than any other cause in the world, Joumblat said to crowd visiting him at his residence in Mouktara in the Shouf mountain.

He also said the Palestinian unity will win no matter how difficult the situation would be.

Lebanese majority and opposition have been severely divided over Hezbollah arsenal, leading to a political deadlock following the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah.

Joumblat told the Palestinians to accept all "aid" even rockets, but warned them not to give up their decision and will to those who donate the "aid".

Lebanese majority leaders have showed increasingly moral support to the Palestinians in Gaza, but none of the pro-government leaders has called for an urgent Arab summit to discuss the situation in Gaza.

Israel has been carrying out unprecedented intensive airstrikes on Hamas movement targets in Gaza, killing 434 Palestinians, most of them militants, and wounding some 2,290 people.

Lebanese President Michel Suleiman and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri have been urging Arab leaders to convene in an urgent Arab summit to reach a unified Arab stand.

Jordan's king warns of plot against Palestinians

Jordan's King Abdullah II on Tuesday warned of a plot against the Palestinian people, their future and right to establish an independent state behind Israel's offensive on Gaza.

The king made the remarks to Al Jazeera channel after meeting with a visiting delegation of the World Federation of Muslim Scholars headed by Sheikh Yusuf al Qaradawi.

"I see a conspiracy against the Palestinian people and the future of Palestine," said the king, adding that Jordan is concerned and upset, and fears about what will happen after the Israeli Gaza offensive.

"We must be aware of the conspiracy, and along with Arab and other states we will stop the Israeli agenda quickly," Abdullah said.

The king affirmed that he is working with the Arab and Western countries to stop the aggression on Gaza immediately.

"We, as Arab and in cooperation with some Western countries are exerting our utmost efforts and we pressure on the Israeli government and Israeli army to stop the aggression immediately," Abdullah said.

According to the royal Hashemite court, the king said when meeting al Qaradawi that Jordan will continue to exert its utmost effort to stop the Israeli aggression, provide medical and humanitarian support for Palestinians and foil any plot targeting their right to establish their independent state.

More than 600 Palestinians have been killed and 2,700 others injured since Israel launched airstrikes on the Gaza Strip on Dec.27 and a ground assault a week later.

Official: UN plans to move operations to Somalia

NAIROBI, Kenya – The U.N. envoy to Somalia says the United Nations must establish a proper base inside the country in order to help it overcome almost 20 years of conflict, hunger and disease.

Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah says the U.N. plans to move its Somalia operation from neighboring Kenya, where it is now based. But he didn't say when.

He said Tuesday that given the widespread violence in Somalia, the move could involve creating a fortified, walled-off area like the Green Zone in Baghdad used by U.S.-led forces.

The U.N. now keeps its international Somalia staff members in Kenya to shield them from the risk of attacks and kidnappings. In 2008, at least 13 aid workers were killed in Somalia, which has not had an effective government since 1991.

A Palestinian family huddles together in Gaza City

By Safwat al-Kahlout

The Israeli drones are driving me crazy. I go outside only to buy food, water, and medicine, or to recharge my cellphone at a nearby mosque that is powered by generators. Inside my Gaza City apartment, electricity and phone lines are out. Heat is a luxury. We sleep with the windows open in case an Israeli shell lands nearby, which would shatter the glass.

All around Gaza City, this coastal strip's largest urban area, fighting has intensified since Israel launched its ground invasion Saturday. So far, even though more than 530 Gazans have been killed and 2,000 wounded in the conflict, support for Hamas does not appear to be weakening.

At the long bread lines, customers listen to their transistor radios while they wait. When they hear of a Hamas missile striking Israel, cheering begins. Others lash out at Arab states because of their alleged cooperation with Israel, some trade stories about the wounded, the dead, and worsening life for Gazans since the start of the assault, now in its 10th day.

Many Gazans see no end in sight and say that unless there are high numbers of Israeli casualties, nothing will change despite the increasing calls for a cease-fire. They say: If the Palestinians are the only ones dying, no one will care.

The sound of fighting could be heard throughout the city Monday even as those efforts to forge a diplomatic solution moved ahead across the border in Israel. French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Middle East special envoy Tony Blair called for a cease-fire and Hamas is sending a delegation to Egypt for talks.

But Israel has been steadfast in its resolve. On Monday, Defense Minister Ehud Barak said: "Hamas has so far sustained a very heavy blow from us, but we have yet to achieve our objective, and therefore the operation continues."

Since Saturday, when troops crossed the border, more than 20 family members – an aunt, uncle, four cousins, and their families – have been sharing our three bedroom apartment.

My cousin Anas reached our house following the invasion.

"Where is all the rest of the family?" I asked him after he entered, referring to my uncle and the rest of his kids. Anas responded that they tried to flee, but the situation was too difficult. Only after two hours did my uncle, Abu Khaled, reach my house with four of his five children.

He was in the same situation as dozens of families living east of Jabaliya, a refugee camp outside Gaza City where fighting has been heavy.

"I was forced to leave the house that I worked 30 years for," Abu Khaled told me. "I took my clothes and underwear and ID cards so I could be identified if killed in one of the explosions."

The moment Abu Khaled reached my house, he entered one of the rooms and immediately fell asleep. When he woke, he told me what he had been through. "I didn't sleep for 48 hours because of the continuing shelling. Once the tanks came over the eastern border, the explosives began falling from all directions."

His wife added: "This time is the worst of all. The Israeli army is shelling mosques and ambulances without any sort of care. So we decided to flee and leave all of our possessions behind."

The Israeli army entered Gaza by what used to be the Jewish settlement of Netzarim, before Israel pulled out of the strip three years ago. The Israeli assault has essentially split the strip in two and surrounded Gaza City.

Monday, Israel hit at least 30 targets, Reuters reported, and bombed homes of Hamas members. At least three children were killed Monday when their home was struck.

On Sunday, the grocery story was full of people. I asked one person why he was buying lentils and fava beans. He looked at me as if I were from a foreign country.

"You don't know that there's nothing else to buy except for fava and lentils? I bought five kilos of each type, hoping that the crisis would finish before the supplies ran out."

Much of Gaza's supply of fruits and vegetables has been destroyed by Israeli rockets.

Since the beginning of the assault, on Dec. 27, the streets here have largely been empty except for funerals, mourning tents, ambulances that rush to every bombing, and Palestinian press cars heading toward the scene of Israeli attacks.

One night, a cellphone call woke me up. It was my friend Abu Ahmed and he was very afraid.

He said that his wife had gotten a call on her cellphone and that it was a recorded message by the Israeli intelligence.

It said: "To the civilians of Gaza, we are warning you not to carry any weapons and have weapons in your home. Otherwise we will bomb your house.... If you deal with terrorists, you will be our target."

Fighting continues as Israel considers peace plan

By IBRAHIM BARZAK and ARON HELLER, Associated Press Writers

GAZA CITY, Gaza – Plumes of smoke engulfed a neighborhood east of Gaza City on Wednesday as Israel's leaders considered a peace plan put forth by France and Egypt on the 12th day of their campaign to stop rocket fire into Israel.

Sounds of heavy gunfire engulfed the Zeitoun neighborhood east of Gaza City and Israel said it struck 40 Hamas targets during the hours of darkness. One morning airstrike killed four people, Gaza officials said, but their identities were unclear.

The Islamic militants said they ambushed an Israeli tank and set it ablaze. However, the Israeli military said it had no information on any such incident and previous Hamas announcements of hitting Israeli troops have proved unfounded.

The fighting comes a day after France and Egypt announced a plan to stop the fighting, an initiative spurred on by an Israeli mortar strike near a United Nations school that killed at least 30 Palestinians and stained the streets with blood.

The U.N. said the school was sheltering hundreds of people displaced by the onslaught on Hamas militants. Israel said its troops returned fire on a Hamas squad that fired mortars at them.

In the wake of the criticism over civilian casualties, Israel agreed to set up a "humanitarian corridor" to ship vital supplies into the Gaza Strip. Under the plan put forward by the Israeli Defense Ministry, Israel would suspend attacks in certain areas to allow people to get supplies.

The Egyptian and French presidents released no details of their proposal, saying only that it involved an immediate cease-fire to permit humanitarian aid into Gaza and talks to settle the differences between Israel and Hamas, which rules the small coastal territory.

They said they were awaiting a response from Israel. Officials in Jerusalem declined comment on the announcement, which came amid diplomatic efforts by the U.S. and other nations to resolve a conflict that has seen 600 Palestinians killed.

Eleven Israelis have been killed since the offensive began: three civilians and a soldier by rocket fire and seven soldiers in the ground offensive, according to Israeli officials.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice welcomed the initiative but cautioned that no agreement would succeed unless it halted Hamas rocket attacks on Israel and arms smuggling into Gaza.

Earlier on Tuesday, President-elect Barack Obama broke his silence on the crisis, saying that "the loss of civilian life in Gaza and in Israel is a source of deep concern for me." He declined to go further, reiterating his stance that the U.S. has only one president at a time.

Israel's military said its shelling at the school — the deadliest single episode since Israeli ground forces invaded Gaza on Saturday following a weeklong air bombardment — was an attack on a military target and accused Hamas militants of using civilians as cover.

Two residents of the area who spoke with The Associated Press by telephone said they saw a small group of militants firing mortar rounds from a street near the school, where 350 people had gathered to get away from the shelling. They spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

An Israeli defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to make the information public, said it appeared the military used 120-mm shells, among the largest mortar rounds.

U.N. officials demanded an investigation of the shelling. The carnage, which included 55 wounded, added to a surging civilian toll and drew mounting international pressure for Israel to end the offensive against Hamas.

At a news conference in Sharm-el-Sheik, Egypt, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said the truce proposal offered by him and French President Nicolas Sarkozy envisioned an immediate end to combat, so humanitarian supplies can safely enter Gaza.

Mubarak said the plan also calls for an urgent meeting between Israel and the Palestinians to discuss ways to resolve the conflict and provide necessary guarantees to ensure fighting doesn't erupt again.

There was no indication of the plan's chances. Sarkozy said at the news conference that he saw it as a "small hope" for ending the Gaza violence.

Sarkozy said he had spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to inform him of the initiative and was awaiting a response. In Jerusalem, Olmert's spokesman, Mark Regev, told AP: "We are holding off comments on that for the time being."

At U.N. headquarters, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas welcomed the proposal. "I express my support for the plan set in motion today by President Mubarak and President Sarkozy," said Abbas, who was in New York for a Security Council meeting on the Gaza crisis.

Israeli officials have said any cease-fire agreement must prevent further rocket attacks by Gaza militants and put in place measures to prevent the smuggling of missile and other weapons into the small Palestinian territory.

Rice told the Security Council meeting that the U.S. understood the growing desire for a cease-fire and commended the initiative. But she added that any solution must address Israel's security.

"There must be a solution this time that does not allow Hamas to use Gaza as a launching pad against Israeli cities. It has to be a solution that does not allow the rearmament of Hamas, and it must be a solution that finds a way to open (border) crossings so that Palestinians in Gaza can have a normal life," she said.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the Israeli bombardment of U.N. facilities in Gaza "totally unacceptable." Israel's shells have fallen around three schools, including the girls school hit Tuesday, and a health center for Palestinian refugees.

Ban added that it was "equally unacceptable" for militants to take actions that endanger Palestinian civilians, referring to the practice of militants making attacks from residential areas.

In Gaza, U.N. official Christopher Gunness hoped an investigation would show whether militants were using U.N. schools for weapons or activities. "It is just not in our interests to have militants, whether in war or peace, in our installations," he said in a statement.

Some 15,000 Palestinians have packed the U.N.'s 23 Gaza schools because their homes were destroyed or to flee the violence. The U.N. provided the Israeli military with GPS coordinates for all of them.

The three mortar shells that crashed down on the perimeter of the U.N. school struck at midafternoon, when many people in the densely populated camp were outside getting some fresh air, thinking an area around a school was safe.

Images recorded by a cameraman from AP Television News showed crowds fleeing the scene, pavements smeared with blood and battered bodies being carried off by medics and bystanders. A youth who limped away was helped along by several others. Sandals lay scattered on the pavement by a pockmarked wall.

"There's nowhere safe in Gaza. Everyone here is terrorized and traumatized," said John Ging, head of Gaza operations for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency.

Two residents who spoke to an AP reporter by phone said the two brothers were known to be low-level Hamas militants. They said a group of militants — one of them said four — were firing mortar shells from near the school.

An Israeli shell targeted the men but missed and they fled, the witnesses said. Then another three shells landed nearby, exploding among civilians, they said.

An Israeli military statement said it received intelligence that the dead at the girls school included Hamas operatives, among them members of a rocket-launching squad. It identified two of them as Imad Abu Askar and Hassan Abu Askar.

A total of 71 Palestinians were killed Tuesday — with just two confirmed as militants, Gaza health officials said. An Israeli infant was wounded by one of about two dozen rockets fired into southern Israel by Gaza militants.