Showing posts with label Political News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Political News. Show all posts

Talking Turkey

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Just four years ago, Turkey was considered one of Israel's closest allies in the region. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Israel was on the verge of losing its best friend in the region. He said Israel's decision to raid the Marmara was an unacceptable violation of international law.

The Turkish government has demanded that Israel lift its blockade of the Gaza Strip and allow an investigation into the raid. Israel has rejected those calls, saying the blockade prevents missile attacks on Israel from the Hamas-ruled territory.
Turkey has also called off planned military exercises with Israel, and some Israeli analysts fear military contracts between the two countries could also suffer.
Israeli analyst Anat Lapidot-Firilla, a professor at Jerusalem's Hebrew University, says that Turkey-Israel relations were once prized by both countries.

Israel regards the Iranian nuclear program as an existential threat.
Yaakov Katz, a military analyst for the Jerusalem Post newspaper, says Turkey's newfound closeness to Iran is ironic, considering Israeli air force pilots are widely reported to have simulated attacks on Iranian nuclear installations during training flights over Turkish territory.
Katz has observed Israeli and Turkish military exercises in the past.

"Israel is a very small country and the air force requires large places to be able to drill and exercise long-range flights — such [as] a potential attack on Iran," Katz said. "Turkey is a very large country [and] has enabled Israel to fly over its airspace, and that has allowed Israel to plan long-range flights, some of which it might have to carry out in the near future."

Lapidot-Firilla says Israel has already contacted a number of countries such as Azerbaijan and Greece to propose joint drills. Still, she says, the deteriorating relationship between Israel and Turkey will be felt acutely within the Israeli military establishment.
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Russia's commitment to the Palestinian Liberation

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Russia is one country that is committed to help the Palestinians get the right to independence. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said "Going forward, Russia will of continue to promotes a settlement in the region on the universally recognized international legal basis," Medvedev said. "Our approach on this issue Principled Remains unchanged - the result of this work Should be an independent Palestinian state will from That live in peace with Israel."

Israeli commandos on Friday stormed a Convoy of vessels in neutral waters in the Mediterranean Sea That Were en route to the Hamas-run Gaza Strip with Some 10.000 tons of humanitarian aid and 700 human rights activists.
Nine activists are confirmed killed but the Arab media reports put the toll at close to 20. Were Dozens reported injured. The international community has widely condemned Israel, with Turkey recalling its ambassador.

The president said that Russia is fully satisfied with the good results of the coordination of its activities with Egypt with regards to the promotion of the Arab-Israeli peace process.
On Friday, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak ordered to open the Rafah crossing on the border with Gaza to deliver humanitarian aid and open access for Those WHO need medical treatment.
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Mr. Romanoff was recommended to the White House

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When Romanoff told the White House he was committed to the Senate run, "that ended the discussion," Gibbs says. Obama had already endorsed Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet. Republicans have accused the White House of trying to manipulate elections by offering administration jobs to politicians running against its preferred candidates.

The White House faced fresh questions over back-room dealmaking after a Colorado Democrat acknowledged he had been encouraged by one of President Barack Obama's top advisers to apply for an international development job instead of challenging the candidate whom the president favored in a Senate race.

The revelation again called into question repeated promises by Obama to run an open government that was above private political horse-trading. In appealing to voters this election year, Republicans charge that Obama's promise to change the ways of Washington has given way to the craven politics he campaigned against.

Former Colorado House Speaker Andrew Romanoff on Wednesday night released a copy of an e-mail in which White House deputy chief of staff Jim Messina described three federal international development jobs that might be available to him if he were not challenging Sen. Michael Bennet for the Democratic nomination.

"He added that he could not guarantee my appointment to any of these positions," Romanoff said in a statement. "At no time was I promised a job, nor did I request Mr. Messina's assistance in obtaining one."

Earlier in the day, a White House official said no formal offer was ever made and insisted there was nothing inappropriate in the contacts — a bit of rhetoric familiar after the White House admitted last week that it orchestrated a job offer to Senate candidate Joe Sestak in the Pennsylvania primary.

"Mr. Romanoff was recommended to the White House from Democrats in Colorado for a position in the administration," White House deputy press secretary Bill Burton said. "There were some initial conversations with him but no job was ever offered."
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