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Monday, August 17, 2009

Karzai rival draws chaotic Afghan poll rally

By Jonathon Burch

KABUL (Reuters) – Afghan leader Hamid Karzai's main rival drew a chaotic crowd of thousands on Monday, the last day of campaigning before a presidential vote, with the outcome hanging on the threat of violence and the clout of old warlords.

In the north, thousands assembled for a rally in support of a former Uzbek militia chief who arrived in the country overnight promising to help tip Thursday's election for Karzai.

Security guards for Abdullah Abdullah, Karzai's former foreign minister, beat back enthusiastic supporters with rifle butts at the rally in Kabul's National Olympic Stadium, notoriously once used by the Taliban as an execution ground.

Several thousand supporters waved blue flags and cheered as Abdullah gave a passionate address, whipping some in the crowd into a frenzy. A makeshift platform used by television journalists collapsed in the crush, lightly injuring several.

Supporters stampeded through gates and shattered glass doors to get closer to Abdullah, an urbane eye doctor, while others clung precariously to a light tower.

Abdullah's frenetic rally came a day after former Uzbek militia leader General Abdul Rashid Dostum jetted back into Afghanistan from exile in Turkey, perhaps to deliver enough support to swing the election for Karzai in a single round.

Polls have shown Karzai firmly in the lead with about 45 percent of the vote, but not enough to win an outright majority and avoid a run-off against Abdullah, who has strong support among ethnic Tajiks in the north of the country.

The prospect of violence could hurt Karzai's first-round chances. Taliban militants have vowed to disrupt the poll, which could hurt voter turn-out, especially in the Pashtun south which has overwhelmingly supported Karzai, a Pashtun, in the past.

If Karzai fails to win a majority in Thursday's first round, he would face the second-placed candidate, most likely Abdullah, in a run-off in early October.

ALARM

While Karzai has focused on behind-the-scenes coalition building, Abdullah's campaign has built surprising momentum on the strength of popular rallies across the country.

After his Kabul rally on Monday, Abdullah sped off for another appearance in the violent southern province of Paktia.

Karzai has secured the endorsements of ethnic chieftains and former militia bosses, but that tactic has raised the alarm of Western donors fearful of a return to power by warlords whose factional fighting in the 1990s tore the country apart.

Few of the former militia chiefs are viewed with more suspicion by the West than Dostum, a whisky-drinking ex-Communist general whose militia repeatedly changed sides during the civil war. Dostum won 10 percent of the vote during the last election in 2004, and his support could help tip the balance for Karzai.

"We love him like our father. He is our elder and anything he says, I'll accept," said Daoud, an 18-year-old working in a juice shop in Shiberghan, Dostum's dusty northern home city.

A crowd of thousands waited for Dostum, banging drums and chanting "Long live General Dostum!". Some supporters on horseback carried placards for Karzai and Dostum.

Dostum arrived in Kabul late on Sunday shortly after the government announced that he was free to return. The United Nations and the United States both expressed concern at the prospect he could return to a position in government.

Aleem Siddique, a U.N. spokesman in Kabul, said Afghanistan "needs more competent politicians and fewer warlords". A U.S. official said Washington had made its "serious concerns" clear to the Afghan government, and Dostum's reputation "raised questions of his culpability for massive human rights violations".

Karzai also boosted his chances last week by securing the last-minute endorsement of Ismail Khan, a regional potentate with strong influence in the important western city of Herat.

Karzai's two vice presidential running mates are former guerrilla chiefs from the Tajik and Hazara minorities, and he has also secured the support of ex-guerrillas from his Pashtun group.

Four minor candidates announced on Monday they were withdrawing and throwing their support behind Karzai.

The election is a test for U.S. President Barack Obama's strategy of escalating the 8-year-old war in an effort to turn the tide after Taliban advances in recent years.

More than 30,000 extra U.S. troops have arrived in Afghanistan this year, raising the number of Western troops above 100,000 for the first time, including more than 62,000 Americans.

Iran to try 7 'Israeli agents'

Iran will put on trial seven members of an unrecognized sect, who have allegedly conducted “espionage for Israel” and desecrated religious sanctities.

“The court hearing of seven detained Baha'i followers accused of espionage for Israel and insulting sanctities will be held in branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court in Tehran on Tuesday,” the Iranian Student News Agency (ISNA) quoted Hassan Haddad, in charge of security affairs of Tehran's prosecutor office, as saying on Saturday.

He added that the trial of the seven Baha'is will be held in the presence of their lawyers.

Six members of the Baha'i sect were detained in May, 2008. One other was arrested two months earlier.

Followers of the Baha'i sect -- founded in Iran in 1863 -- are not officially recognized by Iran.

Free Gaza Movement Invites Malaysian MPs To Join Mission

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 17 (Bernama) -- The Free Gaza Movement human rights group has invited Malaysian members of parliament to join its next mission in mid-October to ship aid to Gaza to break Israel's blockade on territory and its 1.5 million population.

The movement's chairperson Huwaida Arraf said they intend to embark on the coming mission from a port in Cyprus as it is closer to Gaza, and send books and publications, which are not allowed into Gaza by Israel.

"I hope and welcome as many (MPs) as possible. The public with their own boats can also join us," she told reporters after briefing a group of MPs at Parliament today

The organization had undertaken five such missions successfully between August and December last year, carrying goods such as foodstuff and medicines.

Another three attempts had to be aborted due to Israel's use of force to stop them.

Huwaida said if high profile people such as MPs joined their mission, it would be very hard for Israel to stop the ships or to use force because of the global political ramifications.

Palestine-born Huwaida said the siege had rendered the Palestinian people in Gaza without access and necessary connections to the outside world for their economy and livelihood, thus forcing them to depend on charity.

"We don't want to live on handouts (forever). By just giving money or aid is not helping (very much) as not all reaches Gaza because of the siege. We seek to break the siege so that the people will get access to the outside world and can build their economy and Israel's deliberate policy to impose a blockade can be weakened and confronted," she said.

"More importantly, by undertaking such missions we are sending a message to the people of Gaza that they are not being abandoned. The people and the world community are willing to stand up to resist the blockade," she said.

So far about 16 MPs from countries such as Italy, Ireland, Britain, Greece, Cyprus and Palestine had joined hands in the missions to Gaza, and for the next mission, MPs from Europe as well as from some Arab countries had shown interest to come in.

Huwaida said that former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad on Wednesday had launched the Gaza Fund to raise money to purchase a cargo boat, estimated to cost 300,000 Euros (RM1.5 million) to transport aid to Gaza, while another 200,000 Euros (RM1 million) was needed to purchase an accompanying passenger ship.

Egypt bans Iranian-issued 'Hijab Martyr' stamps

Mon Aug 17, 2009

Iran's release of a commemorative stamp to honor the pregnant Egyptian woman who was murdered in Germany has received an unexpected response from Cairo.

Marwa el-Sherbini, who was about four months pregnant, was brutally murdered on July 1 in a courtroom in the German city of Dresden.

She was suing her neighbor for insulting her and calling her a terrorist for wearing an Islamic head scarf, when the defendant approached the witness stand and stabbed her 18 times in front of her 3-year-old son.

Her brutal murder and the German media's belated and indifferent sent shockwaves around the world with Muslim groups calling for legal action against the courtroom officials who failed to ensure Marwa's safety.

The Tehran government also reacted to the sad incident, urging the German government to act appropriately to bring the perpetrators to justice.

In the days that followed her death, Iranian authorities decided to issue a limited collection of postage stamps as a tribute to her.

Egyptian authorities, however, responded coldly to the goodwill gesture, ordering the postal service to ban the entry of mail bearing this stamp.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/103771.html.

Jordan's Abdullah congratulates Ahmadinejad

Jordan's King Abdullah II has sent a congratulatory message to Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on being sworn in to a second presidential term.

According to a report published by the Islamic Republic of Iran News Network (IRINN) on Saturday, the Jordanian leader wished the Iranian nation success and advancement during President Ahmadinejad's second tenure.

Western leaders, already upset by Ahmadinejad's anti-Israel rhetoric, Holocaust denial and unwavering stance on Iran's nuclear program, refused to congratulate the president on his inauguration, although their counterparts in Japan and Turkey did.

Among those prominent leaders who withheld their congratulations to Ahmadinejad were US President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

In a strong message to the Western leaders, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said he was not awaiting their messages of recognition or congratulation.

"We heard that some of the Western leaders had decided to recognize but not congratulate the new government ... Well, no one in Iran is waiting for your messages," he said. "Iranians will neither value your scowling and bullying nor will they pay attention to your smiles and greetings."

9 killed, 19 hurt in fresh Somalia conflict

Sun Aug 16, 2009

At least nine people have been killed and a projected 19 others injured in clashes between Somali rebels and government troops aided by international forces.

Heavy fighting has been reported in the Somali capital, Mogadishu where pro-government soldiers backed by African Union forces shelled each other's positions with artillery and mortar fire that left nine dead and many wounded, a Press TV correspondent reported.

Also on Saturday AU expanded their operations against the Al Shabaab insurgents in the districts populated by Somali citizens, where the government says Al Shabaab rebels used civilians as human shields in the campaign to obtain control over the 'lawless' state.

Gun battles wage in Wardhiigley, Hamar Jajab and Hamar Weyne districts around the capital in power struggles as conflicting figures of casualties surface from the bloody arena.

Meanwhile pro-government militias claim they have regained control of areas seized earlier by Al Shabaab guerrillas and are pushing to drive the militants group out of the capital.

The latest development comes as Djibouti, Somalia's small northern neighbor, expresses readiness to send troops to the war-torn Horn of Africa nation in a bid to help staunch the decade-long unrest in the poverty-stricken Muslim nation.

Death toll from the civil war in Somalia has been on the rise in recent months amid mounting pressure by international troops against the Somali fighters who seek more leverage in the Somalia polity.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/103647.html.

Record mass dive in Indonesia: Guinness

JAKARTA (AFP) – Almost 2,500 scuba divers set a new world record Monday for the largest mass dive, Guinness World Records said.

A total of 2,486 divers were involved in the bid off the coast of North Sulawesi, Guinness adjudicator Lucia Sinigagliesi told AFP.

"This event was amazing and well-organized and made possible because of the people who came and participated," she said, after confirming that the group had broken the record for "Most People Scuba Diving Simultaneously."

The previous record was set in the Maldives in 2006, when 958 divers took part in a mass dive, Sinigagliesi said.

The challenge was part of the Sail Bunaken 2009 maritime event being held as part of Indonesia's efforts to establish the Sulawesi town of Manado as a world-class tourist spot, Navy spokesman Iskandar Sitompul said.

To mark Indonesia's 64th Independence Day, the participants unfurled the country's flag underwater.

"We've shown the world that as the world's largest archipelago, we can manage our waters well and there's a lot of tourism potential here," he added.

1,224-pound cupcake sets record as world's largest

MANCHESTER, N.H. – A 1,224-pound triple vanilla cupcake with pink frosting has set a record as the world's largest.

The sugary behemoth was unveiled Saturday at the Woodward Dream Cruise classic cars event in Royal Oak, Mich.

A Guinness World Records adjudicator was on hand to certify the cupcake's girth. It was more than eight times the size of the previous record holder.

The colossal cupcake took 12 hours to bake and included 800 eggs and 200 pounds each of sugar and flour.

Slices of the cupcake were served in exchange for donations to the Susan G. Komen for the Cure breast cancer organization.

Ryan Abood, owner of New Hampshire-based Gourmetgiftbaskets.com who made the cupcake, told the Detroit Free Press that it clocked in at an estimated 2 million calories.

Pandas could be extinct in 2-3 generations: report

BEIJING (AFP) – China's giant panda could be extinct in just two to three generations as rapid economic development is infringing on its way of life, state media said on Monday, citing an expert at conservation group WWF.

The problem is that the pandas' habitat is being split up into ever smaller patches, preventing the animals from roaming freely for mating partners and in turn endangering their gene pool, the Global Times reported.

"If the panda cannot mate with those from other habitats, it may face extinction within two to three generations," said Fan Zhiyong, Beijing-based species programme director for WWF. "We have to act now."

The risk of inbreeding is increasing, threatening to reduce the panda's resistance to diseases and lowering its ability to reproduce, the paper said.

Fan said that highways pose major restrictions on the panda's free movement.

"We may have to give up building some infrastructure," Fan said. "I don't know the solution to this problem."

There are about 1,590 pandas living in the wild around China, mostly in southwestern Sichuan, northern Shaanxi and northwestern Gansu provinces. A total of 180 have been bred in captivity, according to earlier reports.

In addition to environmental constraints, the animals' notoriously low libidos have frustrated efforts to boost their numbers.

Breeders have resorted to tactics such as showing them "panda porn" videos of other pandas mating, and putting males through "sexercises" aimed at training up their pelvic and leg muscles for the rigours of copulation.

Mauritania to send 4,000 troops to Sahara to hunt terrorists

Mauritania will send some 4,000 military staff to the Sahara region to hunt terrorists, according to news reaching here from Nouakchott, citing Saturday's announcement of the Mauritanian Defense Ministry.

The decision was made in line with the outcome of Wednesday's meeting of the chiefs of staff from Algeria, Mali, Mauritania and Niger.

At the meeting, the four discussed their cooperation in fighting crimes, especially terrorist activities, along border areas and decided to launch massive military operations against anal-Qaida branch in the Islamic Maghreb.

The al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, a major terrorist group in North Africa, has intensified their activities in the region in recent years. The latest one was a suicide bombing attack on the French embassy in Mauritania on Aug. 8, killing the suicide bomber and injuring another three people.

Source: People's Daily.
Link: http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90778/90858/90866/6729384.html.

Suspected rebels attack U.N. compound in Somalia

By Abdi Sheikh

MOGADISHU (Reuters) – Suspected Islamist insurgents stormed a U.N. aid compound in southern Somalia overnight, witnesses said on Monday, but U.N. guards fought back and killed three of the attackers in a gun battle.

One U.N. official said about 10 heavily armed men attacked them in Wajid, 70 km (40 miles) northwest of Baidoa town, at a compound used mostly for storing humanitarian supplies.

"After several minutes shooting our security guards repulsed the attackers and killed three of them," the official told Reuters, adding that one U.N. security guard was injured.

"We don't know what they planned, but we think they wanted to take over the whole compound and kidnap foreign aid workers."

Another U.N. official said nine aid workers staying in Wajid had been evacuated to Nairobi, capital of neighboring Kenya.

Western security agencies say Somalia is a haven for Islamist militants plotting attacks in the region and beyond. Violence has killed more than 18,000 civilians since the start of 2007 and driven another 1 million from their homes.

Somali has been mired in civil war for 18 years, and the administration of President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed controls only small pockets of the coastal capital Mogadishu.

Ali Isak, a local resident in Wajid, said it was unclear who launched the pre-dawn attack, but that the town was controlled by al Shabaab rebels. The United States accuses the group of being al Qaeda's proxy in the Horn of Africa nation.

Last month, al Shabaab banned the U.N. Development Programme, U.N. Political Office for Somalia and U.N. Department of Safety and Security from operating in its territory.

Elsewhere in central Somalia, hundreds of pro-government militiamen on trucks fitted with heavy guns occupied Bulahawa town, near the Kenyan border, on Monday without firing a shot.

Local man Ali Hassan said al Shabaab gunmen who had been in control of the area looked to have melted away.

"Now there are armed men, some in military uniforms, in the center of town," Hassan said by phone. "No fighting took place."

Qatar aims for 'green' deserts

Saturday, August 15 - 2009

Qatar is in a bid to to turn deserts into 'green' lands by converting them into pastoral space and dry lands into arable zones, The Peninsula has reported. Qatar's Ministry of Environment has recently inked an agreement with the Damascus-based Arab Center for the Studies of Arid Zone and Dry Lands (ACSAD) to help Qatar make this project a reality. ACSAD is a specialized Arab organization which works on developing scientific agricultural research in arid and semi-arid areas. ACSAD will also support Qatar to develop production of livestock, set up gene banks, re-charging of Qatar's fast depleting groundwater resources and growing multi-purpose drought-resistant plants.

Source: AME Info.
Link: http://www.ameinfo.com/206556.html.

Brunei to buy Jordan military vehicles

Jordan's King Abdullah II Design and Development Bureau (KADDB) has said it has signed an agreement to deliver 18 military vehicles to the Royal Brunei Armed Forces by the end of this year. Under the agreement, KADDB will deliver six Al Tha'lab Long Range Patrol Vehicles and a dozen dual-wheel utility vehicle Rangers, including two Armoured Land Cruisers.

Suicide truck bomb kills at least 12 in Russia

By SHAMSUDIN BOKOV, Associated Press Writer

NAZRAN, Russia – A suicide bomber exploded a truck at a police station in Russia's restive North Caucasus Monday, killing at least 12 people and wounding nearly 60 others, officials said.

The bombing was the deadliest for months in Russia's south and dented Kremlin claims to be stabilizing the North Caucasus region, where 15 years of separatist fighting in Chechnya has increasingly spilled into surrounding provinces.

The attacker rammed the gates of the local police headquarters in the city of Nazran in Ingushetia and detonated his explosives as police officers lined up for a morning check, said Kaloi Akhilgov, a spokesman for the regional president.

At least 12 people were killed and 58 were wounded, said Svetlana Gorbakova of the regional branch of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Prosecutor General's office. She said there were at least nine children among the wounded.

The attacker and the truck, which carried at least 44 pounds (20 kilograms) of explosives, were pulverized by the blast, Gorbakova said. The police building was on fire and nearby apartment buildings were badly damaged.

An Associated Press reporter saw 11 badly burned bodies at a morgue in Nazran, the largest city in Ingushetia, which borders Chechnya to the west.

While large-scale fighting from the two wars that ravaged Chechnya since 1994 has ended, Islamic militants continue to mount regular hit-and-run attacks and skirmishes. Bloodshed has surged in recent months and increasingly spilled into Chechnya's neighbors.

Ingushetia and other provinces in the region have been destabilized by shootings, bombings and other attacks by militants targeting police and government officials.

Ingushetia's Kremlin-appointed president, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, was badly wounded in a bombing in June and hasn't yet returned to his duties.

In a statement issued through his spokesman, Yevkurov said Monday's suicide attack had been organized by militants trying to avenge recent security sweeps in the forests along the mountainous border between Chechnya and Ingushetia.

"It was an attempt to destabilize the situation and sow panic," Yevkurov said.

Speaking in an interview with Russian News Service radio, Yevkurov blamed Chechen separatist warlord Doku Umarov for staging June's suicide attack on his convoy. He said law enforcement had tracked down the perpetrators of the attack and pledged that they will hunt down Umarov and other rebel warlords.

Lebanon Jewish community rebuilds ornate synagogue

BEIRUT (AFP) - Victim of decades of neglect and violence, the Magen Abraham synagogue in central Beirut is coming back to life as workers renovate the imposing structure for a vanishing community.

"We're ecstatic," Isaac Arazi, president of the Lebanese Jewish Community Council which is funding the project through donations, told AFP.

"We hope this initiative will ensure that the community grows once again," said Arazi, whose community is one of the 18 religious confessions that co-exist in the tiny Mediterranean country.

Jews have been living in Lebanon for 2,000 years but their numbers have shrunk from 22,000 before the 1975-1990 civil war to around 300, according to unofficial estimates.

The synagogue's last rabbi fled the country in 1997 as Lebanese Jews left the country in droves, particularly after the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, where the words "Jews" and "Israelis" are often synonymous.

Dozens of workers have erected scaffolding inside the Magen Abraham synagogue, one of the largest and most ornate in the Arab world which opened to worshippers in 1926, after clearing wide swathes of bushes and weeds.

Arcades bearing the Star of David and Hebrew inscriptions once hidden by the wild vegetation are now emerging from the shadows.

But political graffiti scrawled by militiamen on the arcades and at the entrance to the temple during the civil war still bear testimony to a time when it was caught in the crossfire of rival factions.

The red-tiled roof also needs restoring as well as the abandoned office of the rabbi which lies close to the entrance of the synagogue.

The temple is located in Wadi Abu Jmil -- once known as Wadi al-Yahud or the 'Valley of the Jews' in Arabic -- a neighbourhood that abuts the restored city centre of Beirut, where battles raged during the civil war.

It also lies close to the prime minister's office and parliament and Lebanese authorities have given their blessings for the renovation project at the synagogue.

The renovation of Magen Abraham has given hope to Jews who have chosen to stay in their native Lebanon despite the upheavals of the past decades.

"If all goes well, we expect the renovation to be completed within 12 to 15 months," Arazi said.

The Lebanese Jewish Community Council has called for donations to help cover renovation costs, which Arazi estimates will reach one million dollars. Some Lebanese Jews who live abroad are financing the project.

"We want to restore the synagogue to the way it was before, with all its furniture, carpets and chandeliers," Arazi said.

Looters had stripped the synagogue of everything during war: benches, windows, tiles and even the marble altar were stolen.

"We really would like those who stole them to return them, because they date back 80 years," Arazi said.

He also expects the council to renovate a Jewish cemetery in Beirut and two other synagogues -- one in the southern coastal city of Sidon and another in the southeastern mountain resort of Aley.

The Aley synagogue is the country's oldest temple built in 1870.

"In principle, we start work on the cemetery next week," he added.

A Talmud-Torah school that stood behind Magen Abraham was razed to the ground at the end of the devastating civil war by real estate giant Solidere which oversaw the reconstruction of Beirut's city centre.

Arazi said that none of Lebanon's religious communities and political parties, including the militant Shiite group Hezbollah, have expressed any reservations concerning the reconstruction project.

"Nobody has protested and we have not received any threats."

Cyber warriors trawl web for extremist threats

By by Martin Abbugao

SINGAPORE (AFP) -

Nur Azlin Mohamed Yasin spends several hours a day trawling the Internet, but she is not your typical young surfer, descending into a world of bomb-making, militancy and extremism.

From her computer, she enters a world where young Muslims openly volunteer to fight against US-led coalition troops in Afghanistan or learn how to make explosives out of everyday materials.

The 24-year-old Singaporean research analyst is constantly on the lookout for attack manuals, video clips of Islamist militants in training and fiery extremist chatter that could hint at an imminent assault somewhere.

It is a place where Al-Qaeda terror network chief Osama bin Laden is venerated and the three Indonesian men executed for their role in the Bali bombings of 2002 are held up as poster boys for would-be recruits.

"This whole thing is worrying," she told AFP in an interview, referring to a growing trend of individuals imbibing radical ideas online.

Nur Azlin is one of five research analysts at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies who monitor extremist websites daily to get a sense of an emerging battleground in the fight against terrorism.

All of them happen to be women and their collective skills include knowledge of Arabic, Bahasa Malaysia, Bahasa Indonesia -- and geopolitical issues.

"After you sit down, think about it and do a trend analysis, you say 'Oh my God! this is really happening,'" said Nur Azlin, who works for the school's International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research.

"You can see the radicalisation process unfold online."

There are an estimated 5,500-6,000 websites worldwide peddling extremist ideas, according to the researchers, who work from a spartan office in a suburban university campus.

Nur Azlin is tasked to monitor and analyse websites in Southeast Asia, a region that hosts notorious organisations such as the Jemaah Islamiyah movement and the Abu Sayyaf group operating in the southern Philippines.

She estimates that there are around 192 extremist websites in the region, many of them individual blogs which have mushroomed since early 2008 when Internet blogging became popular.

Singapore, a staunch US ally and international finance centre, considers itself a prime target for terrorist attacks like last month's deadly hotel bombings in Jakarta aimed at symbols of Western influence.

Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng has warned that "self-radicalised" individuals have emerged as a new security threat.

In 2007, Singapore announced the arrest of five suspected Islamic militants, among them local law lecturer Abdul Basheer Abdul Kader, who allegedly planned to pursue "jihad" in Afghanistan after getting radical ideas from the Internet.

When analyst Nur Azlin started monitoring the websites in early 2007, most of the content was in the form of articles urging Muslims to fight back against perceived oppression, she recalled.

They were usually accompanied by photos like a child allegedly maimed during an attack by coalition forces in Afghanistan or by Israeli troops in Palestine.

In late 2007, computer hacking manuals started to appear on Southeast Asian websites, uploaded by individuals in online forums, she said.

Forum participants, some of whom identified themselves as undergraduate students from Indonesia and Malaysia, urged each other to hack websites they considered to be promoting liberal Muslim views.

"By early 2008, we started to see bomb-making manuals and bomb-making videos," Nur Azlin recalled.

With the appearance of these manuals -- taken from Arabic websites -- the reaction from forum participants got more virulent, as they goaded each other to take action rather than stay passive supporters or sympathisers, she said.

In one of the exhanges, participants tried to organise arms training but some said they did not have money to buy AK-47 assault rifles, Nur Azlin said.

A group called "Indonesian Airsoft Mujahideen" stepped in and offered to facilitate their training using air rifles and paintball machines, which are widely used for play sessions at corporate training seminars in Asia.

"They would rent the place much like a team-building activity," Nur Azlin said. "They used this training in the meantime that they don't have their AK-47s."

Jolene Jerard, 26, a manager at the centre, said the analysts compile a monthly report about their findings.

The extremist videos they download -- now in high definition and professionally taken compared with the grainy amateurish clips of the past -- are put into a database, one of the biggest collections in Southeast Asia.

The centre shares its findings and analyses with the relevant government authorities and foreign diplomats visit the school for briefings.

"The cyberdomain is an area where governments have been gradually moving into," Jerard said.

"It's a changing threat landscape. I think it is increasingly becoming important and governments are definitely enthusiastic about countering it and putting enough resources in place."

Our tribal property being razed say Kashmiri Gujjars

Calcutta News.Net
Sunday 16th August, 2009 (IANS)

Nomadic Gujjars in Jammu and Kashmir are anguished over what they call 'devastation of our tribal properties' along the old Mughal era road, which is being developed as an alternate link between Jammu region and the Kashmir Valley.

The Gujjars forming 20 percent of the about 11 million population of state alleged that government was 'intentionally destroying the tribal properties and other historic monuments alongside the Mughal Road'.

'We have asked them through a legal notice to stop damaging and destroying the nomadic assets and initiate steps for restoration of all the Sarais and other temporary shelters along side the Mughal road being used by the nomadic Gujjars within a month's time, otherwise we will move the court of law with a public interest litigation (PIL) in this matter,' said Javaid Rahi, national secretary of the Tribal Research and Cultural Foundation.

Gujjars have raised strong objection to the 'damage caused' to more than a dozen Sarais (roadside inns) and other places.

Rahi said: 'The property was deliberately ruined during the last few years. It is located on the tribal migration routes, at the side of under-construction road coming up as an alternative link between Jammu and Srinagar through Pir Panjal.'

Tribal Research and Cultural Foundation of Gujjars has served a legal notice to Hindustan Construction Corporation (HCC) and other related parties asking them to stop 'razing of historic and traditional monuments and initiate immediate steps for conservation and preservation of cultural heritage sites'.

The Mughal Road connects Jammu region to Kashmir Valley from mountainous Poonch and Rajouri district. The Mughals are said to have taken cue from the nomad Gujjars and constructed this route to travel to Kashmir during the 16th century. Hence this road has now been named as the Mughal Road. It is 84 km long and passes over Pir Panjal mountain range, at an altitude of 11,500 ft.

Rahi alleged: 'Local land mafia is also involved in destroying the tribal properties constructed under Gujjar Bakerwal sub-plan on tribal migration routes.'

The Gujjars, a Scheduled Tribe, in the state are mostly nomads and migrate along with their livestock to upper reaches of the mountains in summers and come down to the plains in winters. They move to and fro through seven major tribal migration routes, including the route known as Mughal Road.

Somalia: 30 Killed in Central Somalia Clashes Among Islamists

Dhusamareb — At least 30 people were killed in central Somalia fighting between rival Islamist groups, Radio Garowe reports.

The fighting started on Thursday in El Dher district of Galgadud region, which has been the scene of numerous battles between Al Shabaab and Ahlu Sunnah Wal Jamee'a militias.

Sheikh Abdullahi Abdirahman "Abu Qadi," spokesman for Ahlu Sunnah, claimed victory and said Ahlu Sunnah fighters control the town.

"We counted 27 dead bodies as Al Shabaab fighters who attacked us ran away," Abu Qadi said, adding that ten Al Shabaab members were "captured alive."

He stated that the Ahlu Sunnah leadership believes "these young men were misled and will be returned to their families." Al Shabaab, or "the youth" in Arabic, is a group of Islamist hardliners that Western powers accuse of having links to Al Qaeda.

Separately, Al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Ali "Dheere" Mohamud told reporters in Mogadishu that Al Shabaab seized control of El Dher district.

"Praise to Allah, we achieved victory in our battle against Ahlu Sunnah, which is supported by Ethiopia," Sheikh Ali Dheere said.

Local sources in El Dher district said that the warring factions "remain on the outskirts of town." Ahlu Sunnah militias peacefully took control of El Dher district earlier this week. READ: Ahlu Sunnah take district in central Somalia, Shabaab withdraw

Ahlu Sunnah and Al Shabaab have been fighting for control of Galgadud region since late 2008, when the Ahlu Sunnah militia was formed to fight against Al Shabaab's northbound expansion.

Source: allAfrica.
Link: http://allafrica.com/stories/200908150003.html.

Caucasus: The War That Was, The World War That Might Have Been

Caucasus: The War That Was, The World War That Might Have Been
Politicizing Ethnicity: US Plan to Repeat Yugoslav Scenario in Caucasus

By Rick Rozoff

URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14779

Global Research, August 15, 2009
Stop NATO

Matthew Bryza has been one of the U.S.'s main point men in the South Caucasus, the Caspian Sea Basin and Central Asia for the past twelve years.

From 1997-1998 he was an advisor to Ambassador Richard Morningstar, coordinating U.S. efforts in the Caucasus and Central Asia as well as in Southeastern Europe, particularly Greece and Turkey. Morningstar was appointed by the Clinton administration as the first Special Adviser to the President and Secretary of State on Assistance to the New Independent States of the Former Soviet Union in 1995, then Special Adviser to the President and the Secretary of State for Caspian Basin Energy Diplomacy in 1998 and was one of the chief architects of U.S. trans-Caspian strategic energy plans running from the Caspian Sea through the South Caucasus to Europe. Among the projects he helped engineer in that capacity was the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan [BTC] oil pipeline - "the world's most political pipeline" - running from Azerbaijan through Georgia to Turkey and the Mediterranean Sea.

Trans-Caspian, Trans-Eurasian Energy Strategy Crafted In The 1990s

In 1998 Bryza was Morningstar's chief lieutenant in managing U.S. Caspian Sea energy interests as Deputy to the Special Adviser to the President and Secretary of State on Caspian Basin Energy Diplomacy, where he remained until March of 2001, and he worked on developing what are now U.S. and Western plans to circumvent Russia and Iran and achieve dominance over the delivery of energy supplies to Europe.

Morningstar later became United States Ambassador to the European Union from 1999-2001 and this April was appointed the Special Envoy of the United States Secretary of State for Eurasian Energy, a position comparable to that he had occupied eleven years earlier.

In 2005 the George W. Bush administration appointed Bryza Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs under Condoleezza Rice, a post he holds to this day although he will soon be stepping down, presumably to become the U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan, the nation that most vitally connects American geostrategic interests in an arc that begins in the Balkans, runs through the Caucasus to the Caspian Sea and then to Central and South Asia.

Last June Bryza delivered a speech called Invigorating the U.S.-Turkey Strategic Partnership in Washington, DC and reflected on his then more than a decade of work in advancing American energy, political and military objectives along the southern flank of the former Soviet Union. His address included the following revelations, the first in reference to events in the 1990s:

"Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliyev and Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev welcomed international investors to help develop the Caspian Basin’s mammoth oil and gas reserves. Then-Turkish President Suleyman Demirel worked with these leaders, and with Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze, to develop a revitalized concept of the Great Silk Road in the version of an East-West Corridor of oil and natural gas pipelines.

"Our goal was to help the young independent states of these regions [the Caucasus and Central Asia] secure their sovereignty and liberty by linking them to Europe, world markets, and Euro-Atlantic institutions via the corridor being established by the BTC and SCP [South Caucasus Pipeline natural gas]pipelines....The Caucasus and Central Asia were grouped with Turkey, which the Administration viewed as these countries’ crucial partner in connecting with European and global markets, and with Euro-Atlantic security institutions.

"[C]ooperation on energy in the late 1990’s formed a cornerstone of the U.S.-Turkey strategic partnership, resulting in a successful 'first phase' of Caspian development anchored by BTC for oil and SCP for gas.

Iraq War Part Of Previous Geopolitical Plans

"Today, we are focusing on the next phase of Caspian development, looking to the Caspian Basin and Iraq to help reduce Europe’s dependence on a single Russian company, Gazprom, which provides 25 percent of all gas consumed in Europe.

"Our goal is to develop a 'Southern Corridor' of energy infrastructure to transport Caspian and Iraqi oil and gas to Turkey and Europe. The Turkey-Greece-Italy (TGI) and Nabucco natural gas pipelines are key elements of the Southern Corridor.

"Potential gas supplies in Turkmenistan and Iraq can provide the crucial additional volumes beyond those in Azerbaijan to realize the Southern Corridor. Washington and Ankara are working together with Baghdad to help Iraq develop its own large natural gas reserves for both domestic consumption and for export to Turkey and the EU."

Bryza took no little personal credit for accomplishing the above objectives, which as he indicated weren't limited to a comprehensive project of controlling if not monopolizing oil and natural gas flows to Europe but also in the opposite direction to three of the world's four major energy consumers: China, India and Japan. Since the delivery of the presentation from which the above is quoted the U.S. and its Western European NATO allies have also launched the Nabucco natural gas pipeline which intends to bring gas from, as Bryza mentioned, Iraq and also eventually Egypt and possibly Algeria to Turkey where Caspian oil and gas will arrive via Azerbaijan and Georgia.

Energy Transit Routes Used For Military Penetration Of Caucasus, Central And South Asia

Previous articles in this series have examined the joint energy-geopolitical-military strategies the West is pursuing from and through the sites of its three major wars over the past decade: The Balkans, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Bryza himself made the connection in the above-cited speech of last year:

"The East-West Corridor we had been building from Turkey and the Black Sea through Georgia and Azerbaijan and across the Caspian became the strategic air corridor, and the lifeline, into Afghanistan allowing the United States and our coalition partners to conduct Operation Enduring Freedom."

His work and his political trajectory - paralleling closely that of his fellow American Robert Simmons [4], former Senior Adviser to the United States Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs on NATO and current NATO Special Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia and Deputy Assistant Secretary General of NATO for Security Cooperation and Partnership - has continued through four successive U.S. administrations, those of George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and now Barack Obama, and has taken him from the American embassy in Poland in 1989-1991 to that in Moscow in 1995-1997 to positions in the National Security Council, the White House and the State Department.

While in his current State Department role Bryza has not only overseen trans-Eurasian, tri-continental energy projects but has also been the main liaison for building political and military ties with the South Caucasus nations of Georgia and Azerbaijan and he remains the U.S. co-chair of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group monitoring the uneasy peace around Nagorno Karabakh, one of four so-called frozen conflicts in the former Soviet Union.

Although Azerbaijan is one of the interested parties in the conflict and the nation's president, Ilham Aliyev, routinely threatens war to conquer Karabakh, often in the presence of top American military commanders, aside from being a supposed impartial mediator with the Minsk Group Bryza in his State Department role secured the use of an Azerbaijani air base for the war in Afghanistan. In 2007 he stated, “There are plenty of planes flying above Georgia and Azerbaijan towards Afghanistan. Under such circumstances we want to have the possibility of using the Azeri airfield.”

Bryza also recently announced that U.S. Marines were heading to Georgia to train its troops for deployment to Afghanistan where in the words of a Georgian official "First of all, our servicemen will gain combat experience because they will be in the middle of combat action, and that is a really invaluable experience.

“Secondly, it will be a heavy argument to support Georgia’s NATO aspirations.”

Oil For War: US, NATO Caucasus Clients Register World's Largest Arms Build-Ups

During his four-year stint as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs he has focused on the South Caucasus, and during that period Georgia's war budget has ballooned from $30 million a year when U.S.-educated Mikheil Saakashvili took power after the nation's "Rose Revolution" in 2004 to $1 billion last year, a more than thirty fold increase.

In the same year, 2008, Azerbaijan's military spending had grown from $163 million the preceding year to $1,850,000,000, more than a 1000% increase. In the words of the nation's president last year, "And it will increase in the years to come. The amount envisaged in the 2009 state budget will be even greater.”

Much of the money expended for both unprecedented build-ups came from revenues derived from oil sales and transit fees connected with the BTC pipeline Bryza was instrumental in setting up.

Pentagon's Role In Last August's Caucasus War

Regarding neighboring Georgia, a German press report on the second day of last August's war between that nation and Russia stated that "US Special Forces troops, and later US Marines replacing them, have for the last half decade been systematically training selected Georgian units to NATO standards" and "First-line Georgian soldiers wear NATO uniforms, kevlar helmets and body armour matching US issue, and carry the US-manufactured M-16 automatic rifle...."

On the first day of the war the Chairman of the Russia's State Duma Security Committee, Vladimir Vasilyev, denounced the fact that the Georgian President Saakashvili "undertook consistent steps to increase [Georgia's] military budget from $US 30 million to $US 1 billion - Georgia was preparing for a military action.”

An Armenian news source the same day detailed that "Most of Georgia's officers were trained in the U.S. or Turkey. The country's military expenses increased by 30 times during past four years, making up 9-10 per cent of the GDP. The defense budget has reached $1 billion.

"U.S. military grants to Georgia total $40.6 million. NATO member states, including Turkey and Bulgaria, supplied Georgia with 175 tanks, 126 armored carriers, 67 artillery pieces, 4 warplanes, 12 helicopters, 8 ships and boats. 100 armored carriers, 14 jets (including 4 Mirazh-2000) fighters, 15 Black Hawk helicopters and 10 various ships are expected to be conveyed soon."

"The procurement in recent years of new military hardware and modern weapons systems was indeed in line with Georgia's single-minded commitment to joining NATO."

In addition to the country's standing army the Saakashvili regime has introduced a 100,000-troop reserve force, also trained in part by NATO.

In 2006 Saakashvili mandated a system of universal conscription in which "every man under 40 must pass military trainings" and every citizen should “know to handle arms and if necessary should be ready to repel aggression.”

Ten months later the government announced “a doctrine on total and unconditional defense” and that "service in the reserve troops would be compulsory for every male between the ages of 27 to 50."

Matthew Bryza and his colleagues in the State Department and the Pentagon have served American and NATO interests in the South Caucasus and adjoining areas well over the past decade.

First US-Backed War In The South Caucasus: Adjaria

On August 10 Bryza, "who, as he himself put it, was a more frequent guest to Georgia than any other U.S. official," was awarded the Order of the Golden Fleece by Georgia's Saakashvili in Tbilisi.

"Saakashvili thanked Bryza for assistance rendered in 2004 while solving problems in Adjaria.". The allusion is to events early in that year when Saakashvili, flanked by then U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, was inaugurated president after the putsch that was called the Rose Revolution and introduced his party flag as that of the nation, which as British journalist John Laughlin remarked at the time had not been done since Hitler did the same with the swastika in 1933.

Less than two months later Saakashvili threatened to invade the Autonomous Republic of Adjaria (Adjara), which had been de facto an independent country, and to "shoot down my plane" as Adjarian president Aslan Abashidze reported.

An Agence France-Presse report in March of 2004 said, "The situation was made all the more explosive because Russia has a military base in Adjara....Saakashvili warned in televised comments that 'not a single tank can leave the territory of the base. Any movement of Russia's military equipment could provoke bloodshed.'"

An all-out war was only avoided because Russia capitulated and even flew Abashidze to Moscow, after which it withdrew from the Adjarian base.

Bryza's assistance to the Saakashvili government has also extended to backing it in its armed conflicts with Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which in the second case escalated into all-out war a year ago.

State Department Passes The Baton To Veteran Balkans Hand

Now Bryza, the nominal mediator, is going to pass his role as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs to Tina Kaidanow.

But he will continue until next month as the US co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group on Nagorno Karabakh, where as recently as August 12 he met with Azerbaijani President Aliyev and either arbitrarily expanding the format of discussions or combining his dual functions he also discussed "bilateral relationship between Azerbaijan and the United States, energy cooperation and regional and international issues."

It was also Bryza who recently announced that U.S. Marines were headed to Georgia to train troops for the war in Afghanistan. "Matt Bryza, the outgoing US deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian affairs, said the US would provide training and equipment for Georgian servicemen bound for Afghanistan."

As seen earlier, a Georgian official said of the development that "First of all, our servicemen will gain combat experience because they will be in the middle of combat action, and that is a really invaluable experience," which training under fire could only be intended for future combat operations against Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Russia.

Bryza has also played a role in attempting to insinuate European Union and American observers into the South Caucasus conflict zones.

His successor in the State Department position, Kaidanow, possesses a political curriculum vitae which provides insight into what can be expected from her.

This April, before getting the nod to replace Bryza, Kaidanow said "I worked in Serbia, in Belgrade and in Sarajevo, then in Washington, and I went back to Sarajevo and am now in Kosovo. I don't know where my next challenge will be. It is under discussion."

Ms. Kaidanow is a veteran Balkans hand. She "served extensively in the region, as Special Assistant to U.S. Ambassador Christopher Hill in Skopje [Macedonia] 1998-1999, with specific responsibilities focused on the crisis in Kosovo...." Before that she served in Bosnia from 1997-1998.

Prior to that her first major post in the U.S. foreign policy apparatus began under President Bill Clinton, where she served as director for Southeast European Affairs at the National Security Council.

Kaidanow: From Rambouillet To Ambassador To Kosovo

After transitioning from advising the National Security Council on the Balkans to implementing the U.S. agenda there, Kaidanow attended the Rambouillet conference in February of 1999 where the American delegation headed by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright threw down the gauntlet to Yugoslavia with the infamous Appendix B ultimatum and set the stage for the 78-day war that began on March 24.

From 2003-2006 she was back in Bosnia, this time as Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy, from where she departed to become the Chief of Mission and Charge d'Affaires at the U.S. Office in Kosovo from July 2006 to July 2008; that is, while the Bush administration put the finishing touches to the secession of the Serbian province which resulted in the unilateral independence of Kosovo in February of 2008. Despite concerted pressure from Washington and its allies, a year and a half later 130 of 192 nations in the world refuse to recognize its independence and those who do include statelets like Palau, the Maldives, the Federated States of Micronesia, Samoa, San Marino, Monaco, Nauru, Liechtenstein and the Marshall Islands, presumably all paid handsomely for their cooperation.

Last year the Bush administration appointed Kaidanow the first U.S. ambassador to Kosovo, a post she took up on July 18, 2008.

Reproducing Kosovo In Russia's Southern Republics

On August 12 Russian political analyst Andrei Areshev spoke about her new appointment in reference to the lingering tensions over Nagorno Karabakh which pit Azerbaijan against Armenia and warned that "it is an attempt to sacrifice [Nagorno Karabakh's] interests to Azerbaijan's benefit and in regard to Moscow to give a second wind to the politicization of ethnicity in the North Caucasus with the possibility of repeating the 'Kosovo scenario,'" adding that the same threat would also target Iran.

By the North Caucasus Areshev was referring to the Russian republics of Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetia and North Ossetia where extremist secessionist violence has cost scores of lives in recent months, including those of leading officials. The writer's message was not that the U.S. would simply continue its double standard of recognizing Kosovo's secession while arming Georgia and Azerbaijan to suppress the independence of Abkhazia, Nagorno Karabakh and South Ossetia - none of which "seceded" from anything other than new post-Soviet nations they has never belonged to - but that a veteran of the U.S. campaign to fragment and ultimately destroy Yugoslavia may be planning to do the same thing with Russia. As the author added, "the existing realities in the Caucasus, including the existence of three de facto states, two of which are officially recognized by Russia, still create plenty of opportunities to build different combinations, which would ultimately
result in a long-term military and political consolidation of the United States in the region."

With reference to Areshev including Iran along with Russia as an intended target of such an application of the Yugoslav model, the clear implication is that the West could attempt to instigate separatist uprisings among the nation's Azeri, Arab and Baloch ethnic minorities in an effort to tear that nation apart also.

It is the politicizing of ethnic, linguistic and confessional differences that was exploited by the West to bring about or at any rate contribute to the dissolution of Yugoslavia into its federal republics and then yet further on a sub-republic level with Kosovo and Macedonia (still in progress).

Having worked under the likes of Christopher Hill and later Richard Armitage in the Rice State Department, Kaidanow surely knows how the strategy is put into effect. Much as does her former Balkans colleague Philip Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to Bolivia until that nation expelled him last September for fomenting subversion and fragmentation there based on the Balkans precedent.

Only a week before the announcement of Kaidanow's transfer from supervising the "world's first NATO state" (as a former Serbian president called it) in Kosovo, where the U.S. has built its largest overseas military base since the Vietnam War, Camp Bondsteel, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov again warned of the precedent Kosovo presented and admonished nations considering legitimizing it through diplomatic recognition to "think very carefully before making this very dangerous decision that has an unforeseeable outcome and is not good for stability in Europe."

The situation Kaidanow will enter into is one in which a year ago a war had just ended and currently others threaten.

A Year Later: Resumption Of Caucasus War Threats

A year after the beginning of the hostilities of 2008, August 8, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev warned:

"Georgia's actions in the Trans-Caucasian region continue to cause serious anxieties. Georgia does not stop threatening to restore its 'territorial integrity' by force.

"Armed forces are concentrated at the borders near Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and provocations are committed."

On August 1 the Russian Defense Ministry expressed alarm over renewed Georgian shelling of the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali and stated: "Events in August 2008 developed in line with a similar scenario, which led to Georgia unfolding military aggression against South Ossetia and attacking the Russian peacekeeping contingent."

Two days later South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity announced that "Russian troops will hold drills in the republic. These will be preventive measures, everything will be done in order to ensure security and keep the situation under control."

The following day Andrei Nesterenko, spokesman for Russia's Foreign Ministry, said that "Provocations from the Georgian side ahead of the anniversary of the August events last year are not stopping. In connection with this, we have stepped up the combat readiness of Russian troops and border guards."

On August 5 Russian Duma Deputy Sergei Markov wrote:

"Western countries' accountability for the war in South Ossetia is not recognized altogether. Politically, the West, primarily NATO, supports Saakashvili, and this support made him confident in the success of his military venture. Moreover, during the war preparations and onset of combat, high-ranking officials in Washington did not answer their telephone calls although they must have been in the office at 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. Moscow time....

"The U.S. Congress did not make any inquiry into the conduct of Vice President Dick Cheney or presidential nominee John McCain during the start of the war. Georgian troops were equipped with NATO weapons, and trained in line with NATO standards."

At the same time the above-mentioned Andrei Nesterenko also said that "Georgia continues to receive Western arms and help in modernizing its army....Lasting peace...is way, way off. Over the past 12 months, the Georgians were responsible for about 120 firing incidents. Over the past seven days alone, South Ossetian villages came under Georgian mortar attacks multiple times."

As a reflection of how thoroughly Georgian leader Saakashvili is an American creature and how inextricably involved Washington has been and remains with all his actions, a commentary of early this month reminded readers that:

"Under George Bush, Washington already committed itself to put all Georgian bureaucrats on its payroll, having paid a little more than $1 billion as a compensation for Saakashvili's small war. The first tranche of $250 million has already been transferred....[A] considerable part of these funds will be allocated for compensation and salaries of government officials of all ministries.... In other words, all of Georgia's government officials are already on the U.S. payroll, a fact which nobody even tried to conceal during the last few years of Bush's term."

Russia wasn't alone in attending to the anniversary of the war. A U.S. armed forces publication reported a year to the day after its start that "U.S. European Command has its eyes firmly focused on the volatile Caucasus region, where tensions between Georgia and Russia continue to mount on the anniversary of last year's five-day war....[C]ommanders are on guard for any sign of a repeat.

"[W]ith Georgia prepared to commit troops to the effort in Afghanistan as early as 2010, pre-deployment counterinsurgency training will be taking place. EUCOM also will be working with the Georgians to develop the Krtsanisi National Training Center outside of Tbilisi into a modern pre-deployment combat training center....Following the war, EUCOM conducted an assessment of Georgian forces, which uncovered numerous shortcomings related to doctrine and decision-making."

Last year's war began immediately after the completion of the NATO Immediate Response 2008 military exercises which included over 1,000 American troops, the largest amount ever deployed to Georgia. The day after the drills ended Georgia shelled the South Ossetian capital and killed several people, including a Russian peacekeeper.

The War That Was, The World War That Might Have Been

What a resumption of fighting between Georgia and South Ossetia will entail is indicated by an examination of the scale of the catastrophe that was narrowly averted a year ago.

A few days ago the government of Abkhazia shared information on what Georgia planned had its invasion of South Ossetia proven successful. The plan was to, having launched the war on the day of the Olympic Opening Ceremony in Beijing while world attention was diverted, have Georgian troops and armor rapidly advance to the Roki Tunnel which connects South Ossetia with the Russian Republic of North Ossetia and prevent Russia from bringing reinforcements into the war zone.

Then a parallel assault on Abkhazia was to be launched. The government of Abkhazia documented Georgia's battle plans earlier this week, stating "the attack could have been carried out from the sea and from the Kodori Gorge, where Georgian special forces were building their heavily fortified lines of defense.

"Most people in Abkhazia were almost certain that if Georgia succeeded in
conquering Tskhinvali, their republic would have been next....Military intelligence issued a warning that the Georgian army was planning to
invade Abkhazia from the sea. Another possibility was that the enemy would come from the Kodori Gorge, an area that Georgian special forces entered in 2006, violating international peace agreements.

"On August 9 last year, the Abkhazian army launched a preventive attack against Georgian troops in the Kodori Gorge."

Last week Abkhazian Foreign Minister Sergei Shamba demonstrated that Georgia was not alone in the planned attack on and destruction of his nation when he said "[W]e have always emphasized that the U.S. bears considerable responsibility for the events that took place in August 2008 in South Ossetia.

"Therefore, we do not trust the Americans. All these years the U.S. has been arming, equipping and training Georgian troops and continues to do so, again restoring military infrastructure, and again preparing the Georgian army for new acts of aggression.

"What were the American instructors training the Georgian army for here, on Abkhazia's territory, at the upper end of the Kodori Gorge? For an attack on Abkhazia."

An August 7 report from an Armenian news source substantiated that the plans for last August's war were on a far larger scale than merely Georgia's brutal onslaught against South Ossetia in an attempt to conquer and subjugate it and later Abkhazia. Stating that neighboring Azerbaijan was simultaneously planning for a war against Armenia over Nagorno Karabakh, a political analyst was quoted as saying, "Armenia would be in a state of war should Georgia's plan not have failed in 2008," adding that "last year Azerbaijan thrice attempted attacks on the NKR [the Nagorno Karabakh Republic], yet the attempts were frustrated thanks to NKR forces."

A coordinated attack by Georgia on South Ossetia and Abkhazia and by Azerbaijan on Nagorno Karabakh would have led to a regional conflagration and possibly a world war. As indicated above, Armenia would have been pulled into the fighting and the nation is a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) along with Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

A week ago the secretary general of the CSTO, Nikolai Bordyuzha, was quoted as asserting:

"How will the CSTO react if Azerbaijan wants to get back Nagorno Karabakh in a military way and war begins between Azerbaijan and Armenia?"

"The 4th term of the Collective Security Treaty says that aggression against one member of Collective Security Treaty Organization will be regarded as aggression against all members."

Even if the CSTO had not responded to an Azerbaijani assault on Karabakh which would have ineluctably dragged member state Armenia into the fighting as it was obligated to do, Turkey would have intervened at that point on behalf of Azerbaijan and being a NATO member could have asked the Alliance to invoke its Article 5 military assistance clause and enter the fray. Russia would not have stood by idly and a war could have ensued that would also have pulled in Ukraine to the north and Iran to the south. In fact the U.S. client regime in Ukraine had provided advanced arms to Georgia for last year's conflict and threatened to block the return of Russian Black Sea fleet ships to Sevastopol in the Crimea during the fighting.

Along with synchronized attacks on South Ossetia, Abkhazia and Nagorno Karabakh, Ukraine may well have been ordered to move its military into the site of the fourth so-called frozen conflict, neighoring Transdniester, either in conjunction with Moldova or independently.

A year ago Russian maintained (and still has) peacekeepers in Transdniester, Abkhazia, South Ossetia and, while not in Karabakh, also in Armenia. Over 200 Russian soldiers were killed and wounded in the fighting in South Ossetia and if those numbers had been matched or exceeded in three other battle zones Russian forbearance might have reached its limits quickly.

After Yugoslavia, Afghanistan And Iraq: Pentagon Turns Attention To Former Soviet Space

In June of 2008 the earlier quoted Russian analyst Andrei Areshev wrote in article titled "The West and Abkhazia: A New Game" that "The prevention of a military conflict is Russia’s priority, but it is not a priority for our 'partners.'

"This should not be forgotten....As for experiments undertaken by the United States that acted so 'perfectly' in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, they do not spell any good."

Two months before he had written "The U.S., the ground having slipped from under its feet in Iraq and Afghanistan, is now preoccupied with
gaining control over the most important geopolitical regions in the post-Soviet territory - Ukraine, Transcaucasia and Central Asia....

"The regions of Transcaucasia, integrated in NATO, Georgia in the first place (especially in case of the successful annexation of South Ossetia and Abkhazia), will serve U.S. interests aimed at destabilization of the North Caucasus."

Last week a group of opposition Georgian scholars held a round table discussion in the nation's capital and among other matters asserted:

"The whole August war itself...served the interests of the US. The Americans tested Russia's readiness to react to military intervention, while at the same time ridding Georgia of its conflict-ridden territories so it could continue its pursuit of NATO membership.

"[H]ad Russia refrained from engaging its forces in the conflict, the nations [republics] of the Northern Caucasus would have serious doubts about its ability to protect them. This would in turn lead to an array of separatist movements in the Northern Caucasus, which would have the potential to start not only a full-scale Caucasian war, but a new world war."

What the West's probing of Russia's defenses in the Caucasus may be intended to achieve and what the full-scale application of the Yugoslav model to Russia's North Caucasus republics could look like are not academic issues.

Armed attacks in the republics of Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia have been almost daily occurrences over the last few months. In June the president of Ingushetia, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, was seriously wounded in a bomb attack and two days ago the republic's Construction Minister was shot to death in his office.

Similar armed attacks on and slayings of police, military and government officials are mounting in Dagestan and Chechnya.

The shootings and bombings are perpetrated by separatists hiding behind the pretext of religious motivations - in the main Saudi-based Wahhabism. Until his death in 2002 the main military commander of various self-proclaimed entities like the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria and the Caucasus Emirate was one Khattab (reputedly born Samir Saleh Abdullah Al-Suwailem), an ethnic Arab and veteran of the CIA's Afghan campaign of the 1980s, who also reportedly fought later in Tajikistan and Bosnia.

Assorted self-designated presidents and defense ministers of the above fancied domains have been granted political refugee status by and are living comfortably in the United States and Britain.

That plans for carving up Russia by employing Yugoslav-style armed secessionist campaigns are not limited to foreign-supported extremist troops was demonstrated as early as 1999 - the year of NATO's war against Yugoslavia - when the conservative Freedom House think tank in the United States inaugurated what it called the American Committee for Peace in Chechnya. By the middle of this decade its board of directors was composed of Zbigniew Brzezinski, Alexander Haig, Steven Solarz, and Max Kampelman.

Members included the three main directors of the Project for the New American Century: Robert Kagan, William Kristol and Bruce P. Jackson. Jackson was the founder and president of the US Committee on NATO (founded in 1996) and the chairman of the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq (launched months before the invasion of that nation in the autumn of 2002).

Other members of the American Committee for Peace in Chechnya included past CIA directors, National Security Advisers, Secretaries of State and NATO Supreme Allied Commanders like the previously mentioned Zbigniew Brzezinski and Alexander Haig and James Woolsey, Richard V. Allen and a host of neoconservative ideologues and George W. Bush administration operatives with resumes ranging from the Committee on the Present Danger to the Project for the New American Century like Morton Abramowitz, Elliott Abrams, Kenneth Adelman, Michael Ledeen, Richard Perle, Richard Pipes and Norman Podhoretz.

The American Committee for Peace in Chechnya has evidently broadened its scope and is now called the American Committee for Peace in the Caucasus. Its mission statement says:

"The American Committee for Peace in the Caucasus (ACPC) at Freedom House is dedicated to monitoring the security and human rights situation in the North Caucasus by providing informational resources and expert analysis. ACPC focuses on Chechnya, Ingushetia, Dagestan, North Ossetia, Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachayevo-Cherkessia and Adygeya, as well as the regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia."

Abkhazia and South Ossetia are of course in the South Caucasus and not in Georgia except in the minds of those anxious to expel Russia from the Caucasus, North and South, and transparently have been included as they are targets of designs by U.S. empire builders to further encircle, weaken and ultimately dismantle the Russian Federation.

Russian political leadership has been reserved if not outright compliant over the past decade when the U.S. and NATO attacked Yugoslavia, invaded Afghanistan and set up military bases throughout Central and South Asia, invaded Iraq in 2003, assisted in deposing governments in Yugoslavia, Georgia, Adjaria, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan to Russia's disadvantage and brazenly boasted of plans to drive Russia out of the European energy market.

But intensifying the destabilization of its southern republics and turning them into new Kosovos is more than Moscow can allow.

Yemen expands offensive against Shiite rebels

Ahmed Al-Haj

Associated Press

SANAA, Yemen: Yemen widened a military offensive against Shiite rebels in the country’s north on Saturday, blasting the fighters’ positions with artillery and airstrikes, a local government official said. The fighting took place in an area closer to the capital city, Sanaa, than other battles over the past several days and killed 17 rebels and six government troops, said the official in Amran Province.

The government began the offensive Tuesday with bombing raids on several districts of the northern Saada Province, bordering Saudi Arabia, after rebels claimed they had wrested more control of the area from government troops.

The rebellion began in 2004 and is led by Shiite militants who say the government is corrupt and too closely allied with the West.

The escalation over the past week is raising fears in Yemen’s neighbor Saudi Arabia and in the US because increased lawlessness could provide cover for Al-Qaeda militants who have sought sanctuary in the impoverished nation on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula.

Yemen has allied with the US in its fight against terror, but the government has little authority in the mountainous areas outside the major cities.

The country, the ancestral birthplace of Osama bin Laden, is also facing a growing separatist movement in the south.

The local official who reported Saturday’s fighting spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not permitted to talk to reporters.

The new fighting is centered on the district of Harf Sofiyan, which is believed to be a significant base for the Shiite rebels. It is about 120 kilometers north of Sanaa.

The fighting throughout the north has forced thousands of civilians to leave their homes over the past week, the local government official said.

Rebel leader Abdel Malik al-Hawthi on Saturday described the new round of government attacks as “a crime that is annihilating civilians.” He denied that any of his followers have been killed in the past week.

Several opposition parties and human rights organizations appealed to the government on Saturday to halt its operations and condemned an airstrike on Wednesday that hit a marketplace in the town of Haydan in Saada Province, killing several civilians.

“It is a must that we find a serious solution to end the turmoil … and follow the peace option rather than the military actions that the past five years have proved are useless,” said lawmaker Abdel-Kareem Jadban, of Saada Province.

Arab, Kurdish leaders trade barbs over Iraq unrest

August 17, 2009

Mujahid Mohammed

Agence France Presse

MOSUL, Iraq: Arab and Kurdish politicians in northern Iraq traded accusations of responsibility on Sunday over a series of bloody bombings that have rocked the region in recent days. In the latest bombing, a politician from Iraq’s tiny Kurdish-speaking Shabak community and two aides were wounded in the city of Mosul, Iraq’s second largest, less than a week after twin truck bombs killed dozens of members of the sect, police said.

Sunday’s attack against Qussai Abbas, the only Shabak member of Nineveh provincial council, sparked a war of words between Kurdish politicians and the Sunni Arabs who lead the council.

Initially, Arab politicians accused Kurds of carrying out the attacks to push the local population to demand the deployment of Kurdish peshmerga militiamen across the province.

The accusation drew a sharp rebuke from Kurdish authorities.

“We are sorry to see that some of the leaders of the [Sunni Arab] Al-Hadba list stand against the principles of democracy and peaceful coexistence by accusing the Kurdistan region of taking part in the latest attacks in Nineveh,” a spokesman for the Kurdish regional government said.

At least 34 people were killed and 155 wounded on August 10 when two massive truck bombs exploded, leveling dozens of homes, in the Shabak-majority village of Khaznah near Mosul.

That attack was one of a string across the country which killed 51 people in one of the bloodiest days since the withdrawal of US troops from Iraqi towns and cities on June 30.

“We have been patient and suffered a lot in order to preserve tranquility and stability and to prevent them from dragging us into a confrontation that would have dire consequences,” the Kurdish spokesman said.

“The reality is that in Nineveh province, the terrorist campaign of bombings and assassinations was targeting Kurdish Yazidis, Kurdish Shabaks, Turkmen and Christians, not to mention the displacement of hundreds of Christian and Kurdish families.

“Some of the members of the Al-Hadba list bear responsibility for these crimes, especially the two brothers [of the governor].” Nineveh Governor Athel al-Nujaifi hit back describing the Kurdish remarks as “hasty” and stemming from frustration at the loss of control of Nineveh council to the Sunni Arab list in the last provincial elections in January.

“The Kurds did not like the entire election process, so they made hasty statements and threats,” he told AFP. “It is our right to talk about the security situation.” Nujaifi called on Kurdish leaders to accept that none of Nineveh Province would be joined with the three far-northern provinces that currently form the autonomous Kurdish region.

Kurdish leaders have long demanded that the region be expanded to include historically Kurdish-inhabited parts of Nineveh and Diyala provinces as well as the whole of Kirkuk province.

Kurdish peshmerga continue to patrol some districts of Nineveh which they occupied during the US-led invasion of 2003 but Nujaifi demanded that the Iraqi army deploy across the whole province.

Despite a reduction in violence in the recent months, attacks against security forces and civilians remain common in Mosul as well as in Kirkuk and Baghdad.

The number of violent deaths fell by a third last month to 275 from 437 in June, following the pullout of US forces from urban areas. The figure for May was 155, the lowest of any month since the invasion.

The Shabak community numbers an estimated 30,000 people, who are living in some 50 villages in Nineveh province, and many want to become part of the autonomous Kurdish region.

Source: Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/Aug/17/Arab-Kurdish-leaders-trade-barbs-over-Iraq-unrest.ashx.

Fatah elects Jew-turned-Muslim to governing body

RAMALLAH, Occupied West Bank: The Fatah movement of Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas has elected an Israeli Jew-turned-Muslim to one of its governing bodies for the first time in the secular nationalist movement’s half-century history. Uri Davis, a sociology professor at the Palestinian Al-Quds University on the edge of Arab East Jerusalem, was elected to the movement’s Revolutionary Council, official results released after a 10-day-long party congress showed.

The academic, now aged 66, has long advocated a secular democratic state in all of historic Palestine, rejecting the Zionist project of a Jewish state in part or all of the Holy Land that has been supported by the vast majority of his fellow citizens.

“I hold Israeli and British passports but I consider myself Palestinian above all else,” Davis told Fatah delegates at the party’s first congress on Palestinian soil and its first since the launch of the Middle East process in 1991.

The academic added that he wanted to represent within Fatah’s 120-member Revolutionary Council the “hundreds of non-Arab sympathizers who have supported the Palestinian cause.”

“I am very moved by my election which I see not only as a vote of confidence in me but as an expression of support for the line I have taken which is inspired by the struggle led by [former South African president] Nelson Mandela against the apartheid regime in South Africa,” he told AFP.

Davis, who has written widely on the Middle East conflict, first joined Fatah in 1984, four years before the party led the Palestine Liberation Organization in accepting a two-state solution. He won renown in the 1960s as a human rights activist campaigning against the seizures of Israeli Arab land by the Jewish state and para-state organizations.

Davis, who has a Palestinian wife, won 31st place among the 80 elected seats on Fatah’s Revolutionary Council.

Israel has long had an anti-Zionist community of ultra-Orthodox Jews who are particularly vocal in religious neighborhoods of occupied Jerusalem but, among secular citizens, opposition to Jewish statehood has generally been confined to a far-left minority.

Efforts to form cabinet hit brick wall over portfolios

BEIRUT: While the weekend did not mark any new developments on the government formation front, reports indicated that all efforts are seemingly back to square one when it comes to the assignment of portfolios.

So far, the share and portfolios assigned to the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) seem to be the main obstacle in the way of the formation of the cabinet.

On Sunday, Prime Minister- designate Saad Hariri was still waiting for a response from FPM leader MP Michel Aoun to an invitation for lunch to discuss pending issues pertaining to the formation of the cabinet.

Aoun is expected to hold a news conference on Monday to reveal his stances concerning the cabinet formation process.

A statement by Aoun’s press office said the news conference aimed at “responding to the campaign being waged against him by the March 14 Forces.”

The March 14 Forces have taken on Aoun over his alleged insistence to have his son-in-law, caretaker Telecommunications Minister Jebran Bassil, remain in cabinet. The March 14 Forces argue that since Bassil failed to make it to Parliament when he lost the June parliamentary polls in the district of Batroun, he should not be allowed a seat in the cabinet.

However, sources told LBCI television on Sunday that the problem with Aoun “goes deeper than that and can be tied to more serious issues.”

The sources added that Aoun’s insistence to retain the Telecommunications Ministry, a demand backed by Hizbullah, was another source of deadlock.

Aoun hopes for the nomination of three Maronite ministers, which according to the sources would jeopardize the chances of Maronite figures from the March 14 Forces such as MP Butros Harb and caretaker Minister of State Nassib Lahoud making it to the cabinet.

A Hizbullah source told pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat in comments published on Sunday that the party backed Hariri in his efforts to form a national unity cabinet.

“However,” the source said, “supporting Premier-designate Saad Hariri’s does not prevent the party from expressing solidarity with Aoun in the face of the campaign against him.”

Sources from the parliamentary majority told Al-Hayat that such a statnce from Hizbullah “encourages Aoun to show more inflexibility.”

On Sunday, Maronite Patriarch Nasrallah Sfeir said during his Sunday sermon that many politicians were “looking after their own interests” thus hindering the formation of a cabinet.

“The political squabbling shows that many of those who work in politics do not care about the good of the country and are looking after their own interests thus hindering the formation of a government that works for the interest of this country,” Sfeir said.

Caretaker Public Works Minister Ghazi Aridi said Sunday that the next cabinet would be formed based on the formula that was agreed on by all Lebanese parties.

“The government will be formed based on the agreed formula. The formula has settled on 15-10-5,” Aridi said in the Bekaa city of Baalbek.

The 15-10-5 make-up grants the majority 15 ministers, the opposition 10 and President Michel Sleiman five seats, which guarantees him the tipping vote while both March 14 and the opposition would respectively be denied the absolute majority or veto power.

Aridi said the issue of portfolios could be solved through dialogue. “We call for a serious dialogue to speed up [cabinet] formation so that we all focus on facing political challenges.”

Aridi toured Baalbek and the northern Bekaa on Sunday to inspect infrastructure works carried out by his ministry.

Asked whether the Public Works Ministry would be part of the Progressive Socialist Party’s share in the new government, Aridi said: “The PSP holds onto the ministry.”

In other news, caretaker Youth and Sports Minister Talal Arslan told Hizbullah’s politburo head Ibrahim Amine al-Sayyed Saturday he was willing to give up his own post in a future cabinet but he could not forego the right of his party to representation.

Arslan insisted on the need to reach a shape-up “as soon as possible for the good of the country and to preserve its unity.” He called for a government of national unity and of “real national partnership in order to be able to confront Israeli threats and others on the domestic, regional and international levels.”

The leader of the Lebanese Democratic party said his meeting with Sayyed was part of “constant coordination between him and Hizbullah” and stressed that the “resistance is his strategic path that he cannot deviate from.”

For his part, Sayyed also called for the speedy formation of a government that “can achieve real and effective partnership.” He said the timing for the government’s birth was “up to Premier-designate Saad Hariri,” adding that the opposition provided “all the required facilitations to form a government.”

He accused “some sides of trying to raise malicious points and wanting to settle political and electoral scores with some members of the opposition in order to cover up problems or crisis within their ranks.”

Magnitude-6.8 quake strikes off Japan

TOKYO – A magnitude-6.8 earthquake hit off Japan's southern coast Monday, prompting the Meteorological Agency to issue a tsunami warning.

The quake struck off the coast of Ishigaki island, near Japan's southern island of Okinawa, around 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) south of Tokyo. It struck at a depth of about six miles (10 kilometers), the agency said.

Naoto Ohtake, a police official on Ishigaki, said there were no immediate reports of damage or casualties on the island, a popular resort destination with a population of 40,000.

"Nothing fell off during the quake. Electricity, water and gas are all working," Ohtake said.

Japan is one of the world's most earthquake-prone countries. The most recent major quake in Japan killed more than 6,400 people in the western port city of Kobe in January 1995.

Iran defies condemnation, expands opposition trial

By NASSER KARIMI, Associated Press Writer



TEHRAN, Iran – Iran expanded a mass trial of opposition supporters on Sunday with the addition of 25 defendants — including a Jewish teenager — in defiance of international condemnation, as France said Iran agreed to release a French woman held on spying charges from prison.

The defendants are among more than 100 people charged with plotting a "soft revolution" against the Islamic theocracy during the postelection protests. The mass trial is part of an attempt to put an end to the protests by those who say Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's June 12 re-election was the result of fraud.

In apparent attempt to fend off criticism and move ahead with his second term, Ahmadinejad named three women who, if confirmed, would be Iran's first female Cabinet ministers since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The trial, now in its third session, has included a number of televised confessions and has drawn international condemnation from human rights groups that allege the confessions are coerced. The U.S. last week labeled the event a "show trial."

The trial and official acknowledgments that some detainees have been abused in prison have only added to anger among both opposition supporters and some conservatives upset with the treatment of protesters.

The additional defendants brought the total number being tried to 135.

The defendants include a number of high-ranking politicians linked to the country's pro-reform movement as well as employees from the British and French embassies and an Iranian-Canadian reporter for Newsweek magazine.

A 24-year-old French academic, Clotilde Reiss, who had appeared during one of the previous court sessions, was freed Sunday from an Iranian prison, the French president's office said late Sunday.

She was arrested July 1 for attending a postelection demonstration. During her court appearance, Reiss apologized for attending the demonstration but said she did so because she was curious. The French Foreign Minister has said the statement was "worked on," suggesting it was coerced.

The French president's office said it was asking for all charges to be dropped against Reiss and that she'll be residing at the French Embassy in Tehran until she can return home.

France is also asking for all charges to be dropped against another of its citizens, Nazak Afshar, who has dual French-Iranian citizenship and worked at the French Embassy. She appeared during a previous court session before being released from prison. She's now residing at the French Embassy in Tehran.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner later said on the iTele TV station that bail was paid for Reiss but that the sum was "not enormous."

While she stays at the embasssy, Reiss will prepare her defense "to make her innocence known," Kouchner said in a statement. He also reiterated the charges against her and the French-Iranian embassy employee, Nazak Afshar, were "unfounded."

At Sunday's hearing, officials showed a film of attacks on public property, cars and a mosque by protesters, and the prosecutor accused the defendants of plotting the postelection turmoil years in advance.

One of the new defendants was Yaghoghil Shaolian, 19, a member of Iran's Jewish community, which numbers about 25,000 people. He was quoted by the semiofficial Fars news agency as saying that he was not an activist but that he got caught up in the moment and threw stones at a Tehran bank during a protest.

Iran's only Jewish parliamentarian, Siamak Mereh Sedq, confirmed the detention of Shaolian and his Jewish identity to The Associated Press. He said the detention was not connected to his religion and that Shaolian is innocent.

Ahmadinejad's decision to appoint three women to his Cabinet appeared to be an attempt to mollify the opposition and some of his conservative supporters while currying favor with women.

Marzieh Vahid Dastgerdi, a 50-year-old gynecologist, will become health minister and Fatemeh Ajorlu, a 43-year-old lawmaker, will be minister of welfare and social security, Ahmadinejad said. He said he'll nominate at least one more woman to the Cabinet, but did not give a name.

Ahmadinejad's chances of using the nominations to win over the opposition seems slim as the two women he named are considered fellow hard-liners.

Women took part in large numbers in the street protests that followed the disputed election. Ahmadinejad's attempts as president to enforce a strict dress code on women and the jailing of many female activists has won him few favors with women.

Female politicians are not unheard of in Iran. Although they are barred from the presidency and religious posts, many Iranian women are in parliament and other political offices. Ahmadinejad currently has a female vice president.

But Iran has not had a female Cabinet minister since the 1979 revolution that brought the cleric-led regime to power. The last female minister, Farrokhroo Parsay, was executed on charges of corruption after the revolution.

Ahmadinejad is slated to present his new Cabinet to parliament on Wednesday. Every minister has to be approved by parliament — an uncertain prospect given that some lawmakers have criticized Ahmadinejad for not consulting with them prior to making his nominations.

Ahmadinejad also named cleric Haidar Moslehi as the new intelligence minister to replace Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehi, who lost his job in July in an apparent dispute over the handling of the clampdown on the unrest.

The Iranian president on Sunday also appeared to criticize President Barack Obama in a thinly veiled reference.

"The excellency who talks about change made a big mistake when he openly interfered in Iran's domestic issues," Ahmadinejad told a group of clerics Sunday, according to the semiofficial Mehr news agency.

Iran has tried to taint the unrest by asserting that it is a product of international meddling rather than internal anger.

Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims he was the true election winner, is also consolidating his political forces. According to newspaper reports Sunday, he has announced he will form a new political organization aimed at regaining people's constitutional rights.

Mousavi has not been arrested since the unrest began, although some hard-liners have called for him to be put on trial along with other opposition leaders.

NKorea agrees to resume joint projects with SKorea

By HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated press Writer

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea agreed Monday to lift border restrictions with South Korea to allow reunions of separated families and restart stalled tourism ventures in its latest gesture of conciliation toward Seoul after nearly 18 months of rising tensions.

The North, however, said in a separate statement it was putting its army on "special alert" because of South Korea's joint military drills with the United States this week, a sign that tension between the rival countries is still running high.

The North's official Korean Central News Agency said in a dispatch early Monday that it agreed to restart tours to the scenic Diamond Mountain resort and ancient sights in Kaesong in the North. The tours had been suspended in tensions after the inauguration of a conservative government in Seoul early last year.

The report did not say when the tours would resume.

The state news agency said the North also agreed to resume reunions of families separated by one of the world's most heavily fortified borders at Diamond Mountain before this year's annual "Chuseok" autumn harvest holiday in early October. Chuseok is one of the two biggest Korean traditional holidays celebrated in both Koreas and is equivalent to Thanksgiving in the United States.

The North said the agreement was reached with Seoul's Hyundai Group, the main South Korean investor in North Korea and followed a meeting between conglomerate Chairwoman Hyun Jung-eun and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang on Sunday.

Both tours to Diamond Mountain and Kaesong had been run by Hyundai's North Korea business arm, Hyundai Asan.

Kim had "a cordial talk with Hyun" and "complied with all her requests," the statement said.

Hyundai Asan in Seoul said it was aware of the North's announcement but couldn't immediately confirm it.

The agreement was seen as a conciliatory gesture toward Seoul and Washington amid the standoff over its nuclear weapons program.

On Thursday, the North freed a Hyundai worker whom it had detained for months for allegedly denouncing the communist country's political system. Pyongyang accused the worker of denouncing North Korea's government. It also followed the North's release of two jailed U.S. journalists after former President Bill Clinton made a surprise trip to Pyongyang.

Meanwhile, the North said Monday that its military will be on "special alert" because of South Korea's annual computer-simulated war games with the U.S. that started Monday.

The Supreme Command of the (North) Korean People's Army said in a statement that its troops and the entire nation would go on "special alert" starting Monday, calling the drills "a blatant challenge and grave threat" to the peace on the Korean peninsula.

The statement, carried by KCNA, said the North would retaliate mercilessly at the "slightest military provocation" from South Korea and the U.S.

The North sees the exercises as preparation for an invasion, but the U.S. and South Korea say the maneuvers are purely defensive.