Tag Archives: middle-east

ABC’s George Stephanopoulos Hectors Netanyahu, Saddles Israel With Responsibility for Peace

Good Morning America’s George Stephanopoulos on Wednesday repeatedly berated Benjamin Netanyahu as to what the Israeli Prime Minister will do for the peace process. Focusing almost entirely on Israel, while excluding the U.S. and the Palestinians, he hectored, “What are you prepared to do? More security autonomy for the Palestinians on the West Bank? Prisoner releases?” Stephanopoulos did highlight the contrast between April’s frosty meeting with President Obama and a more friendly visit at the White House, Tuesday. In the tease for the show, he wondered, “President Obama and Israel’s Prime Minister all smiles at the White House. But, is the friendship as solid as they claim?” Yet, the former Democratic operative failed to ask a single question as to what Obama could do to make the relationship stronger. Instead, he seemed to suggest that since this meeting went better, the burden was now on the Israelis side: “And I guess you couldn’t have asked for a warmer reception from President Obama yesterday. There was the private meeting in the Oval Office. Pretty effusive displays of friendship from the President and the First Lady to your wife, Sara.” Stephanopoulos then pressed as to “what’s going to come” of the visit. He dismissed, “One analyst said, this is a false con. Suggesting that you can’t or won’t deliver what President Obama is calling for in the peace process. So, what concrete steps are you prepared to take?” Although the morning show host did note Obama snubs from the April meeting, such as when the President kept Netanyahu waiting for hours while he ate dinner, he asked no questions on the subject and didn’t ask if this offended the Prime Minister. A transcript of the segment, which aired at 7:13am EDT, follows: 7am tease GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: President Obama and Israel’s Prime Minister all smiles at the White House. But, is the friendship as solid as they claim? Will it create progress towards peace. Prime Minister Netanyahu joins us live in a GMA exclusive. 7:13 GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: We’re going to turn now to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu He met with President Obama at the White House Tuesday, after a series of disagreements and diplomatic gaffes, plunged U.S./Israeli relations into their chilliest period in years. The last time they met in April, there were no public photographs. And President Obama kept the Prime Minister waiting for hours while he ate dinner. Not yesterday. It was smiles all around. And here for his first interview since the meeting is the Isreali Prime Minister. Good morning, Mr. Prime Minister. Thank you for joining us today. PRIME MINISTER BENJAMIN NETANYAHU: Good morning. STEPHANOPOULOS: And I guess you couldn’t have asked for a warmer reception from President Obama yesterday. There was the private meeting in the Oval Office. Pretty effusive displays of friendship from the President and the First Lady to your wife, Sara. But, I guess the big question, is what’s going to come of it? One analyst said, this is a false con. Suggesting that you can’t or won’t deliver what President Obama is calling for in the peace process. So, what concrete steps are you prepared to take? NETANYAHU: I think it was a warm reception. First of all, it was very warm in Washington. Still is. Even for that climate, an unusually warm reception. And my wife and I appreciated it. And the state of Israel appreciates it. We’ve had disagreements. It’s natural between two allies. But in recent weeks and months, we’ve come closer and closer together on a number of important things. How to open up Gaza for civilian traffic and keep the arms blockade. How to make sure to clarify to the world that America’s policy regarding the NPT, the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, that policy, stands firm in the way that it’s always stood. All of this was clarified in the course of these discussions. But the main thing, George, that came out of these very good discussions I had with the President is that we want to advance peace. And the simplest way to advance peace is to put aside all the grievances and all the preconditions and all the excuses that have been put up to prevent me and President Abbas of the Palestinian authority from sitting down. I say I’m ready to sit down with him in Jerusalem, in Ramallah, that’s ten minutes away from my office, to discuss peace without preconditions. And if we do it, we can defy the world. STEPHANOPOULOS: I know that’s your position, Mr. Prime Minister. But even yesterday, you did say you were prepared to take concrete steps to advance this process. You know the Palestinians need to see that. What are you prepared to do? More security autonomy for the Palestinians on the West Bank? Prisoner releases? Are you willing to extend the settlement freeze past its deadline of September? NETANYAHU: Well, we’ve done a lot of bit in relaxing hundreds of roadblocks and checkpoints that’s facilitated the West Bank economic boom. I’ve talked about my vision of peace about a demilitarized Palestinian state that recognizes the Jewish state of Israel. We adopted a moratorium seven months ago for the Palestinians to enter the talks. They haven’t so far done that. I think all these things, in word and deed, show that we are interested in launching this peace forward. Now, rather than pile up more preconditions, even though there are more things we’re prepared to do. STEPHANOPOULOS: What are they? NETANYAHU: The important thing is the Palestinians- Additional easing of movements. Some questions of economic projects. There are quite a few. And the point is, we’re prepared to do them. But what we want to see, finally, is one thing. We want President Abbas to grasp my hand, get into a room, shake it, sit down and negotiate a final settlement of peace between Israel and the Palestinians. Believe me, George, it’s hard. The risks for us, for me, also for my country, will have to have very strong security arrangements so that the areas that we vacate do not turn into Iranian strongholds for firing rockets, sending terrorists against us. That’s happened before in Lebanon and in Gaza. So, we have some very clear requirements. The Palestinians will have very clear requirements. The only way that is going to mesh together is if we sit down together, so we can live in peace and security, side-by-side, together. STEPHANOPOULOS: How about extending- How about establishing the settlement freeze? The President said yesterday he hopes there will be progress in the peace talks for the freeze to be extended past September. What exactly do you need to see from the Palestinians in order to extend that settlement freeze past the deadline in September? NETANYAHU: We discussed the concrete steps that need to be taken in the next few days, literally in the next few days and weeks to finally begin direct negotiations for peace. I think once we get there, realities may change. But I think the most important reality is that we don’t stick on, as we negotiate our historic peace between the Israelis and Palestinians, we don’t stick on requirements and grievances. STEPHANOPOULOS: So, you’re open to extending the freeze? NETANYAHU: I’m open to beginning peace negotiations now. And that’s what I want to do. And by the way, I’ve been open for the last year and a quarter. I think we wasted a lot of time with these kinds of excuses, preconditions. All sorts of things that are packed in the way of a simple action. You know you’ve seen these pictures of peace conferences that are- let’s put it in the Middle East as a peace tent. We’re sitting in the tent. We’re waiting for Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, to sit on the other side, across the table, in the tent. And the Palestinians say, we won’t even enter the tent before the tent or the one before that tent, as well. I said, just fold the tents, get into the main arena. Engage in negotiations. Let’s not waste our energies on ancillary things, on minor things. Let’s try to absolve the issues of security, territory, refugees, water. These are huge issues. I think, I’m confident, that I- I’m convinced that our security needs are met, I think I can bring the peace that the majority of the people of Israel will support. And what we’d really like to see is the Palestinians understand that we expect them to end the conflict. That the state that they will receive will not be a platform for additional conflicts against Israel. But an end to the conflict with solid security arrangements. STEPHANOPOULOS: I’m afraid that’s all the time we have, Mr. Prime Minister. I’m sorry for that. But, thank you for joining us this morning. NETANYAHU: Well, don’t be so skeptical. Raise your hopes. It’s summer time. We can perform miracles.

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ABC’s George Stephanopoulos Hectors Netanyahu, Saddles Israel With Responsibility for Peace

Obama to NASA Chief: Better Relations With Muslim World is the Foremost Mission

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said in a recent interview that his “foremost” mission as the head of America's space exploration agency is to improve relations with the Muslim world. Though international diplomacy would seem well outside NASA's orbit, Bolden said in an interview with Al Jazeera that strengthening those ties was among the top tasks President Obama assigned him. He said better interaction with the Muslim world would ultimately advance space travel. “When I became the NASA administrator — or before I became the NASA administrator — he charged me with three things. One was he wanted me to help re-inspire children to want to get into science and math, he wanted me to expand our international relationships, and third, and perhaps foremost, he wanted me to find a way to reach out to the Muslim world and engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations. The NASA administrator was in the Middle East last month marking the one-year anniversary since Obama delivered an address to Muslim nations in Cairo. Bolden spoke in June at the American University in Cairo — in his interview with Al Jazeera, he described space travel as an international collaboration of which Muslim nations must be a part. http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/07/05/nasa-chief-frontier-better-relations-… added by: JohnA

Rolling Stone Writer That Took Down McChrystal Gets Book Deal

The Rolling Stone magazine writer that took down General Stanley McChrystal a few weeks ago has been rewarded with a significant book deal. One source says Michael Hastings will get seven figures for his “unprecedented behind-the-scenes account of America’s longest war.” According to Forbes, publishing house Little, Brown will release the following statement later on Tuesday: A forthcoming UNTITLED book by renowned journalist Michael Hastings, author of the Rolling Stone article “The Runaway General” which revealed shocking truths about General McChrystal and the war in Afghanistan, that promises an unprecedented behind-the-scenes account of America’s longest war, to Geoff Shandler, Editor in Chief, Little, Brown and Company, by Scott Moyers at the Wylie Agency. The book will offer an unfiltered look at the war, and the soldiers, diplomats and politicians who are waging it. Based on exclusive reporting in Afghanistan, Europe, the Middle East and Washington, D.C., this landmark work of journalism will elucidate as never before our deeply troubling war in vivid, unforgettable detail. Little, Brown Publisher Michael Pietsch says, “In his brilliant article Michael Hastings has already given us the clearest of insights into the disaster of America’s war in Afghanistan. He is a writer of extraordinary talent and his book will take us deeper and further into the war and its major architects, at a time when we need that clarity desperately.” Mediaite is reporting , “Rumor has it the book went for seven figures, which is a rather serious chunk of change in this publishing environment.” Indeed. This seems pricey for at least two reasons. First, Hastings may have given what he had to Rolling Stone making it possible his book is just an elaboration of what he’s already published. Maybe more importantly, how’s he going to get any new information given his questionable journalistic standards involving telling folks things are off the record when they are apparently not? Regardless, it will be interesting to see whether he offers any new revelations that bring down anyone else. Stay tuned. 

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Rolling Stone Writer That Took Down McChrystal Gets Book Deal

Israel blacklisted some weapons and materials to enter Gaza

The Israeli government announced the list of what goods it will allow to enter the Gaza Strip. A blacklist of items including weapons and materials that could have a military use will be limited or barred, but consumer goods are all allowed. The blacklist includes multi-purpose items that could be used to manufacture explosives and weapons, such as fireworks and ball bearings. Materials such as steel, fertilizers, cement and chemicals will be allowed in for Palestinian Authority-approved projects that are under the supervision and for the use of the UN or other international agencies. Hamas, the one who controls Gaza Strip, dismissed the concessions as of no use and said the blockade should be fully lifted. Its blockade of the Palestinian territory is needed to prevent the supply of weapons to Hamas, Israel says. Israel came under pressure to ease its 4-year blockade of Gaza after 9 activists from Turkey were killed in a an Israeli raid last 31st day of May, on a flotilla that was trying to carry aid to the Palestinian territory. Israel blacklisted some weapons and materials to enter Gaza is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

CNN Senior Editor of Mideast Affairs Mourns Loss of ‘Hezbollah Giant’

They’re a militant Shiite Muslim organization defined by the U.S. government as a terrorist group, but don’t tell that to CNN senior editor of Middle Eastern affairs, Octavia Nasr. In a July 4 post on her Twitter account , Nasr openly admitted to mourning the loss of Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah: Sad to hear of the passing of Sayyed Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah.. One of Hezbollah’s giants I respect a lot.. #Lebanon According to a July 2 Associated Press story , Fadlallah is “considered by many to be the unofficial spiritual leader of Hezbollah,” even though both he and Hezbollah deny that claim. (h/t Weasel Zippers ) The AP also reports Fadlallah is known for “his staunch anti-American stance” and is blacklisted as a terrorist by the U.S. government. But where else but CNN would you see a member of its editorial staff opening mourn the passing of a “terrorist?”

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CNN Senior Editor of Mideast Affairs Mourns Loss of ‘Hezbollah Giant’

Commentary (Jonathan Powers): Why the United States Needs to Free Itself from Oil

Why America needs to free itself from oil By Jonathan Powers, Special to CNN July 4, 2010 9:37 a.m. EDT Photo: An oil refinery in Los Angeles, seen before dawn. Editor's note: Jonathan Powers, a veteran of the war in Iraq, is the chief operating officer for the Truman National Security Project, which describes itself as an organization that “recruits, trains, and positions a new generation of progressives across America to lead on national security.” . (CNN) — For two years in a row, I celebrated Independence Day in the oppressive heat of Iraq along with fellow soldiers. A few nonalcoholic beers and some locally grown watermelon were our replacement for hot dogs and potato salad. This year, as Americans across the nation celebrate July Fourth with barbecues and fireworks, those most responsible for defending our independence, the military, will continue to fight two wars. And it is a shame that we will let yet another July Fourth pass us by without making substantial progress toward ending our unnecessary dependence on oil, a dependence that is funding the bullets that our enemies fire at our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is for that reason, and many more, that the fight for energy independence is being fought here at home, a struggle I hope more Americans will join in support of those who are fighting abroad. Oil poses a clear threat to America's economic and national security. This spring we have watched as untold millions of gallons of oil flowed into the Gulf. But for years, we have watched as billions of dollars flowed to hostile nations to pay for oil. Every day, we send well over a billion dollars out of this country to pay for oil — money that could and should be used to grow our economy and create jobs. The simple fact is that our dependence on oil from nations in the Middle East and other regions constrains our choices, hamstringing America's flexibility and choices on the world stage. Too often, we are forced to consider the impact our foreign policy will have on our oil supply instead of whether a choice is in line with our values. Every day, we make a clear choice between living up to those values (and strengthening our security) and prolonging our weakness as a dirty-energy nation. Today, thousands of Americans are calling for a new freedom from oil — a dangerous, dirty and vulnerable source of energy. This week, 10,000 American flags were planted on the National Mall, each representing Americans who have pledged to free our nation from a long and damaging cycle of dependence. As Americans look to rebuild our economy, we must consider the massive, alarming and unprecedented transfer of wealth to those who do not share our values. America's ability to underwrite our national security always had, at its heart, the pumping arteries of a vibrant economy. Unless we act soon, we will be held hostage to the rest of the world, not just for oil, but for the clean-energy technology that will power the next century of growth and prosperity. Already dependent on oil, our country needs to act now lest we become dependent on China for solar panels. A more insidious impact of our dependence is clear in America's foreign and military policy. Today we are forced to both pay and protect the nations that supply our oil, the very nations that fuel extremism around the world and turn a blind eye to terrorist funding within their own borders. That money, winding its way through shady front groups and so-called charities, ends up funding not just insurgents in Iraq, but also in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The tragedy in the Gulf of Mexico demonstrates, in clear and often painful terms, just how unreliable our energy sources have become. We are forced to drill to the deepest depths of the ocean, to despoil the richness of our God-given natural treasures, and to rely on dangerously uncontrollable technologies. It is time for us to stand on our own — to take control of our energy — with sources that will not threaten our security, fund our enemies or force us to ignore our values. The long struggle to live up to the challenge of our values has always been difficult, but today we stand at a clear crossroads between moving beyond oil or prolonging our dependence on it. Clean, American power is possible, but only if we commit ourselves to achieving that goal. In the spirit of the holiday and in light of the tragedy in the Gulf, let us dedicate the next two decades to winning a new battle for American independence — from oil. . The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Jonathan Powers. added by: EthicalVegan

Black Eyed Peas To Work With James Cameron On 3-D Tour Movie

‘We have the biggest director, because we are the biggest group on the planet,’ Will.I.Am tells Vibe. By James Dinh Black Eyed Peas Photo: Bryan Bedder/ Getty Images From “Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience” to “Michael Jackson’s This Is It,” the junction of music and cinema has grown very popular in recent years, and the Black Eyed Peas want in. In a recent interview with Vibe, BEP frontman Will.I.Am dished on the group’s plan for the ultimate concert experience with the help of mastermind director James Cameron. “Right now, we are planning our 3-D tour movie, and James Cameron is directing it,” Will revealed. “We have the biggest director, because we are the biggest group on the planet. The Peas are filming it in South America. People will be able to see us in the theater with the 3-D glasses and everything.” With Cameron onboard, Will is convinced that the yet-untitled musical film will stand out among the rest with a “dope” story line. “It’s a full-length film, and it’s based around our tour activities,” he said about the film, tentatively scheduled to hit theaters early next year. “We’ve toured from America and Europe, to the Middle East, South America, Asia and Africa. It’s not like we go, ‘Yo, we are international, you know what I’m saying? London and Paris!’ Nah, that’s just two cities. We want to go across the planet.” Despite Fergie telling MTV News that she wasn’t “even thinking about another solo album” last fall, it seems like she might have had a change of mind. Will.I.Am revealed to the magazine that the songstress does want to do another album on her own to follow up her smash debut, The Dutchess. “Fergie wants to do another solo record, so of course we are going to do that,” he said. “We have material ready for that. But right now, we are focused on the Peas — our world tour and the movie.” Just last week, Will denied rumors that he and Fergie were dueling in a band battle. “Don’t believe gossip about Fergie leaving the group (we are never breaking up) it’s all lies!!!” he tweeted. Would you like to see the Black Eyed Peas hit the big screen? Share your thoughts in the comments below! Related Artists Black Eyed Peas

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Black Eyed Peas To Work With James Cameron On 3-D Tour Movie

NBC Sees Gaza as ‘Prison Sentence Imposed by Israel,’ Ignores Reports of Food Abundance

Catching up on an item from last week on the Tuesday, June 8, NBC Nightly News, correspondent Tom Aspell portrayed the residents of Gaza as living through a life prison sentence imposed by Israel: “Israel’s blockade on Gaza isn’t just about preventing goods from getting in, it’s about preventing 1.5 million Palestinians from getting out. It sentences them to life inside a 140-square-mile prison.” Anchor Brian Williams set up the piece: “We are back now with a rare look inside a place 1.5 million people call home. The Israelis call it a hotbed of terrorism, but the people who live there say they are prisoners of poverty and misery.” As Aspell asserted that dire conditions exist for those in Gaza, he barely mentioned reports to the contrary , and placed the burden of blame squarely on Israel as, even though Egypt actively takes part in the blockade, the NBC correspondent only indirectly alluded to Egypt’s participation as he mentioned that tunnels that lead from Egypt to Gaza are illegal, and related that “some supplies” are “smuggled through hundreds of illegal tunnels under the border from Egypt.” But last February, FNC’s Mike Tobin devoted a report to the construction of underground walls by Egypt in an attempt to keep up its end of the blockade by closing off the tunnels: “With each elongated piece of steel Egyptians drive 20 yards into the ground down to the water table, they get closer to completing the iron curtain which will close Gaza’s smuggling tunnels. When construction began a month ago, Palestinians in the Gaza strip rioted killing an Egyptian soldier.” And while the Israel Foreign Ministry’s Web site recounts statistics on the amount of basic supplies that are transported into Gaza over land from Israel on a regular basis, Aspell only briefly relayed the Israeli contention that “Israel says there’s no humanitarian crisis,” and only vaguely related that “some food and medicine is allowed in,” adding that “the United Nations says conditions have never been worse.” While Aspell’s report left the impression that there is not enough food in Gaza, in the June 3 Washington Post article, “Getting What They Need to Live, But Not Thrive,” Janine Zacharia reports that food is plentiful in Gaza, and that people’s complaints have more to do with unemployment, limited travel abilities, and the inability to repair infrastructure: Gazans lament where they can’t go more than what they can’t buy. … Once an exporter of fruits and other goods, Gaza has been turned into a mini-welfare state with a broken economy where food and daily goods are plentiful, but where 80 percent of the population depends on charity. She continued: If you walk down Gaza City’s main thoroughfare – Salah al-Din Street – grocery stores are stocked wall-to-wall with everything from fresh Israeli yogurts and hummus to Cocoa Puffs smuggled in from Egypt. Pharmacies look as well-supplied as a typical Rite Aid in the United States. … Gazans readily admit they are not going hungry. But that, they say, is the wrong benchmark for assessing their quality of life. While Gaza has long been poor, the economy has completely crumbled over the past three years. Aspell’s claim that “Israel won’t let cement into Gaza,” is also contradicted by Israeli Foreign Ministry’s Web site : Building for the future: Infrastructure and economic aid Building materials While the import of cement and iron has been restricted into Gaza since these are used by the Hamas to cast rockets and bunkers, monitored imports of truckloads of cement, iron, and building supplies such as wood and windows are regularly coordinated with international parties. Already in the first quarter of 2010, 23 tons of iron and 25 tons of cement were transferred to the Gaza Strip. On 13 May 2010, Israel allowed approximately 39 tons of building material into Gaza to help rebuild a damaged hospital. The construction material for al Quds hospital was transferred after safeguards in place and French assurances ensured that the construction material would not be diverted elsewhere. On 24 May 2010 Israel opened the Kerem Shalom crossing to 97 trucks loaded with aid and goods, including six trucks holding 250 tons of cement and one truck loaded with five tons of iron for projects executed and operated by UNRWA. Below is a complete transcript of the relevant story from the Tuesday, June 8, NBC Nightly News: BRIAN WILLIAMS: We are back now with a rare look inside a place 1.5 million people call home. The Israelis call it a hotbed of terrorism, but the people who live there say they are prisoners of poverty and misery. It’s the Gaza Strip, and it’s once again gotten the world’s attention after that raid on a ship trying to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza to deliver what many say was food and basic supplies. The Israelis say some of those supplies could have been used as weapons. Israel tonight is still saying no to a UN investigation into the raid, but tonight our own Tom Aspell has a report from behind the blockade. TOM ASPELL: This is what you see when you cross the border from Israel into Gaza, children desperately scrambling for pebbles, pebbles to be ground into cement. Israel won’t let cement into Gaza. It says the cement would be used for tunnels to smuggle weapons. So thousands of homes destroyed in the 2009 offensive can’t be rebuilt. Some supplies, like groceries and even animals, are smuggled through hundreds of illegal tunnels under the border from Egypt. Israel says there’s no humanitarian crisis. Some food and medicine is allowed in, but the United Nations says conditions have never been worse. CHRISTOPHER GUNNESS, UNRWA SPOKESMAN: Eighty percent aid dependency, 44 percent unemployment. Deep poverty tripling in the last year. ASPELL: Deep poverty and also despair. Eighty percent of Gazans, like Rushti Abotawela, get their food from the UN. Born deaf, he has no chance of getting a job here. He and his family, two of them also deaf, live on $70 a month from the Palestinian government. Israel’s blockade on Gaza isn’t just about preventing goods from getting in, it’s about preventing 1.5 million Palestinians from getting out. It sentences them to life inside a 140-square-mile prison. Life here is a struggle from birth. In Gaza’s Schiffer Hospital, the best around, there isn’t enough special formula for premature babies, not even enough incubators. So this baby is only one hour old, but there’s no place for him? UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: Yeah. (LOOKS TO ANOTHER MAN AND SAYS SOMETHING UNCLEAR) UNIDENTIFIED MALE VOICE: No place. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: No place. ASPELL: Fifty percent of Gazans are children under 15. Mental health experts say 95 percent of all children in Gaza suffer from trauma and stress. DR. AHMED ABU TAWAHEENA, GAZA MENTAL HEALTH COMMUNITY DIRECTOR: Most important one of them is their violent behavior, aggressive behavior among school students, for example. ASPELL: Eight-year-old Mahmud Kalil has turned to music to erase memories of bombs and missiles during the 2009 offensive when he spent a month hiding in a basement. Mahmud had extreme mood swings, either laughing or crying constantly. His mother, Anwan, says music therapy now keeps him calm. Music may also be his escape. Given the chance, Mahmud says he’d like to pack up his instrument and leave here forever. Tom Aspell, NBC News, Gaza.

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NBC Sees Gaza as ‘Prison Sentence Imposed by Israel,’ Ignores Reports of Food Abundance

Al Jazeera’s Middle East broadcast of World Cup opener disrupted by ‘sabotage’

Millions of football fans across the Middle East and North Africa were unable to watch the first World Cup match between South Africa and Mexico brodcast exclusively on Al Jazeera Sport. The coverage was badly disrupted amid claims of sabotage. Al Jazeera’s Charles Stratford reports from Doha.

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Al Jazeera’s Middle East broadcast of World Cup opener disrupted by ‘sabotage’

Wikileaks Founder Julian Assange Hunted by Pentagon Over Massive Leak

Anxious that Wikileaks may be on the verge of publishing a batch of secret State Department cables, investigators are desperately searching for founder Julian Assange. Philip Shenon reports. (This story has been updated to reflect new developments on Assange's whereabouts.) Pentagon investigators are trying to determine the whereabouts of the Australian-born founder of the secretive website Wikileaks for fear that he may be about to publish a huge cache of classified State Department cables that, if made public, could do serious damage to national security, government officials tell The Daily Beast. The officials acknowledge that even if they found the website founder, Julian Assange, it is not clear what they could do to block publication of the cables on Wikileaks, which is nominally based on a server in Sweden and bills itself as a champion of whistleblowers. “We’d like to know where he is; we’d like his cooperation in this,” one U.S. official said of Assange. American officials said Pentagon investigators are convinced that Assange is in possession of at least some classified State Department cables leaked by a 22-year-old Army intelligence specialist, Bradley Manning of Potomac, Maryland, who is now in custody in Kuwait. And given the contents of the cables, the feds have good reason to be concerned. As The Daily Beast reported June 8, Manning, while posted in Iraq, apparently had special access to cables prepared by diplomats and State Department officials throughout the Middle East, regarding the workings of Arab governments and their leaders, according to an American diplomat. (more @ link) added by: Omnomynous