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India-Israel Co-operation and Challenges

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India-Israel Co-operation and Challenges
#81
An Axis of Democracy?
By Rajan Menon & Swati Pandey

The transformation in the relationship between India and Israel, from one that was at best cool and correct to one that is now hailed as a strategic alignment is among the striking changes in the post-Cold War landscape. This shift has been widely praised, particularly by Israeli, Indian and American commentators. They believe that its potential significance extends well beyond the dense network of transactions that has developed between the two sides, and out across the entire region of South Asia and the Greater Middle East.

But the emerging relationship between the two countries has been followed by so much anticipation and excitement as to border on irrational exuberance. While it is true that India and Israel have indeed begun a new chapter in their history, it may not have the far-reaching consequences that many expect. Regardless, it is critical to come to a realistic understanding of the vital interests that will pull the two countries together--and those that will push them apart.

As recently as a decade ago, there was little optimism about an Indo-Israeli duet. Despite the commonplace proposition that democracies do not fight other democracies, it scarcely follows that democracies are also invariably well disposed toward each other. They are often not, and for several decades Exhibit A was the frosty relationship between two democracies born but a year apart, India and Israel.

Not until 1992, following the end of the Cold War, did India even grant Israel full diplomatic recognition. But that step set the stage for a flurry of transactions that rapidly recast their entire relationship. Almost every year thereafter, the two countries have signed mutual agreements: a cultural pact encouraging educational and other exchanges in 1993; an agricultural cooperation agreement that same year; telecommunications, trade and economic cooperation agreements in 1994, including the accordance of most favored nation status by both parties; a mutual promise in 1996 to promote and protect foreign investments; and a plan to avoid double taxation, practice custom cooperation and collaborate further on agriculture and technology.

Before, leaders from the two sides were rarely seen with one another. Now there is a cavalcade of high-level visits. In 1996, Israeli President Ezer Weizman became the first Israeli president to visit India. National Security Advisor Brajesh Mishra began making regular trips to Israel beginning in 1998, laying the groundwork for expanded cooperation in the military and intelligence sphere. In 2000, Home Minister L. K. Advani traveled to Israel with the heads of India's intelligence and counter-terrorism agencies, and he was followed in July by Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh. They were the highest-ranking Indian officials ever to visit Israel. While the new trajectory was often ascribed to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) coalition, the left-leaning Congress Party, which took power in May 2004, has not changed course. If anything, it has accelerated the pace of strategic cooperation with Israel.

Arms and More

It is in the area of national security--not trade and cultural exchanges--that the most dramatic and consequential transactions have occurred. Following the Soviet Union's implosion, India decided to replace its Soviet-dominated arsenal by diversifying its purchases. It began to see Israel, a major producer of modern weaponry, as an important potential supplier. Israel soon won many contracts to further India's military modernization. During the 1999 Kargil conflict between India and Pakistan, Israel rapidly dispatched to India a variety of weapons systems. All three branches of the Indian armed forces now rely on Israeli military technology, particularly aircraft and radars.

Israel has sold India two major weapons systems of particular importance. The first is Elta Electronics' Green Pine phased-array radar delivered in mid-2000, a key component of the controversial Arrow Ballistic Missile Defense system, which can detect incoming missiles from hundreds of kilometers away. Because the radar was developed without U.S. technology, Israel was able to sell it without U.S. permission. The second major deal, worth $1.1 billion, was the Phalcon Airborne Warning and Control System, which India plans to integrate with its Russian Il-76 heavy transport aircraft. This was a different matter altogether, because it was developed with U.S. technology, and Washington had blocked Israel's planned sale of the system to China in 1998. But after some debate, the United States, which was developing a new appreciation of India's strategic worth, approved Israel's sale of the Phalcon to India in 2003.

Such arms deals bring obvious advantages to both sides. India gains access to critical high-tech weaponry that weighs the military balance with Pakistan in its favor. And co-production agreements with Israel further India's long-standing goal to create a robust, indigenous complex of defense industries with the ultimate aim of reaching near self-sufficiency. Quite apart from the money generated by Indian military purchases, the orders create economies of scale, which is important to Israel given its small armed forces.

Several additional billion-dollar defense deals are in the works for the coming years, and they are likely to make Israel one of India's biggest arms suppliers, and India Israel's biggest market. Furthermore, the prospects for continued Israeli arms sales could also be brightened by parallel cooperation on related fronts. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's recently released defense budget increases spending on acquisitions and equipment, and the first ever joint air force exercise is planned for later this year. Regular intelligence cooperation, anti-insurgency training and joint exercises are in place, and joint working groups on terrorism, technology and other areas have been organized.

In fact, on the very day of the 9/11 attacks, the two countries' national security advisors were together, discussing a joint security strategy. Within months, there was a bloody illustration of the common threat: India's Parliament was attacked by Kashmiri militants, and 14 people were killed. In the wake of these major attacks, two visits to India by leading Israeli politicians proved to be successes and generated far less opposition in India than might have been expected. Then-Foreign Minister Shimon Peres arrived in 2002, only months after the Parliament attack. As if to drive home the point, on the two-year anniversary of 9/11, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon toured India with a delegation of 150 that was greeted by members of both the BJP and the Congress Party. At the conclusion of that visit, the two countries signed a joint declaration condemning terrorism and countries that aid and abet it. That same year, National Security Advisor Mishra made a much-publicized address to the American Jewish Committee about the necessity for cooperation among democracies--namely India, Israel and the United States--against global terrorism. Given this context, it was hardly surprising that India's rhetoric on Israel changed dramatically in all forums, including the United Nations, even if its votes remained neutral or pro-Arab.

The new alignment will certainly face some rough weather down the road, which is why it will require sources of stability beyond mere arms sales. These additional buffers and supports are, however, gradually emerging--and they will help in several respects. Both sides will acquire a bigger stake in preventing a rupture, thanks to what in economic jargon are called "sunk costs." Moreover, public opinion should warm to the entente (and hostility from critics should dissipate) as the benefits become tangible, and powerful organizations and lobbies within each country that gain from the expansion of economic and military contacts should rally support for the new relationship in times of trouble.

Public opinion and tangible public benefit are what make the non-military side of the equation important. Trade, which is certainly part of it, has soared. In only a decade, the volume has grown from $202 million in 1992 to $1.4 billion in 2004. While the latter figure is small by global standards, the liberalization of India's trade policies and the economic complementarities between India and Israel augur well for further momentum. Likewise, with the opening of India's economy to foreign investment, Israeli firms should find many opportunities in India's vast market and thus many reasons to become boosters of the new partnership. Thanks to the flow of contacts between senior Indian and Israeli military and intelligence personnel and key policymakers, and the exchanges within the joint working groups on defense cooperation and counter-terrorism, a shared strategic outlook encompassing means and ends is taking shape, albeit slowly. Thus, a wide and multiform network is emerging. If it succeeds in making cooperation deeper and broader, India and Israel will have more than a ledger of weapons sales to hold on to in rough times.

A Fresh Start

India and Israel have been in separate orbits for most of their histories. India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, shaped the young country's foreign policy around the Non-Aligned Movement, a group of countries that purported to have no allegiance to either superpower and considered Israel a colonial settler state. Nonetheless, Israel accepted the logic of non-alignment, or as it dubbed its parallel policy, non-identification, even sending the director-general of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to meet Nehru in 1950. Israel's first prime minister, David Ben Gurion, sought cooperative relations with states on the outer perimeter of Israel's immediate neighborhood, prompting Israel to seek Indian recognition in the early postwar years. But while many states recognized Israel soon after it declared statehood in 1948, India delayed until 1950 while concurrently trying to win agricultural assistance from Israel, the type of equivocation that would mark decades of Indian policy to come. To lend logic to this curious approach, India devised the tortured formulation that it recognized the Israeli state, if not its borders.

Despite the high ideals of non-alignment and non-identification, the global context of the Cold War determined the policies of India and Israel toward each other, generally for the worse, as the former increasingly became aligned with the Soviet Union, and the latter with the United States. During the 1956 Suez War, for example, India publicly condemned Israel. Five years later, Israel would refuse to praise India's takeover of the Portuguese colony of Goa. But the aftermath of the Six-Day War proved most controversial: Israeli tanks fired on Indian troops serving as UN peacekeepers in Gaza, killing fourteen. Outrage swept through India, and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi condemned the incident as "wanton, deliberate and without provocation."

India's wars with Pakistan had a somewhat different effect on the relationship. During the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war, <b>Israel covertly supplied India with arms, despite Pakistan's alliance with the United States, by then Israel's foremost benefactor. Moreover, Israel reportedly continued to provide intelligence and military support from then onward, no doubt to offset Chinese support for Pakistan, one of Israel's leading non-Arab antagonists</b>. However minor this cooperation may have been, and despite the tumultuous period to come under Indira Gandhi (climaxing with India's friendship pact with the Soviet Union and its support of the "Zionism is racism" UN resolution), it provided a small foundation for the strategic alignment underway.

Once the Soviet colossus collapsed, however, it took with it the conceptual and operational underpinnings of India's national security strategy. India was quick to understand that the new international landscape both enabled and necessitated a new approach to the world, in particular a re-evaluation of past policies toward the United States and Israel. Although India's economic liberalization brought the country closer to the United States and Israel, the rationale for intensifying cooperation among the three countries became all the more clear after the attacks of 9/11 and the assault on India's parliament.

The new cordiality between India and the United States cleared the way for a fresh start between India and Israel. Indeed, given Israel's dependence on the United States, it would not have redefined its policy toward India independently, certainly not to the point of cooperation on critical matters of national security. India similarly sees the United States as the more consequential state while still realizing that cooperation with Israel would help promote U.S.-Indian relations, not least because of the influence of pro-Israeli groups in America who champion military and intelligence cooperation among the three countries.

But the shift in India's policy toward Israel was by no means solely the by-product of its larger aim of strengthening ties with the United States. India sees specific advantages in ramping up cooperation with Israel. Nor is Israel merely mimicking the American post-Cold War shift toward India; it has its own reasons to seek a new beginning. This said, because the alignment between India and Israel touches on sensitive issues (particularly the sale to India of U.S. defense technology), it would have been all but unimaginable had India and the United States remained imprisoned in the past.

Changes Within

The Indian-Israeli strategic convergence stems not just from new international circumstances but from internal conditions as well. In Israel the rise in suicide bombings that accompanied the second intifada, the increasing threat posed by Hamas and Islamic Jihad, and the rise of Al-Qaeda made life for ordinary Israelis dangerous as never before. Pakistan, always a source of concern, looked even more dangerous: It had acquired nuclear weapons in 1998 (hard on the heels of India) and was brimming with militant Muslim organizations hostile to Israel. Israel was on the lookout for allies that were also menaced by militant Islam and terrorism. It did not have to look far.

Meanwhile, a momentous change occurred in India. In 1998 the Congress Party--long associated with social democracy, non-alignment, anti-colonialism and an arms-length approach to Israel--lost its lock on Indian politics to the Hindu nationalist BJP coalition. Important personalities within the coalition were longtime advocates of friendship with Israel. Many BJP leaders in particular had long viewed the Congress's support for the Arabs as a product of its pusillanimous sensitivity to India's Muslims, who, as they saw it, should be made to accept that India was a Hindu homeland (Hindutva).

BJP nationalists also believed that India had gained little from its reflexive support for Arab states in their battles with Israel, and that when push came to shove, the Arabs would always support Pakistan's position on Kashmir, regardless of India's Muslim population. BJP leaders were also prepared to move beyond the Congress's tentative post-Cold War efforts to reshape India's relationship with the United States. As they saw it, that relationship was second to none in importance, given India's goals of liberalizing its highly regulated economy, diversifying its sources of arms, promoting India's high-tech sectors and attracting investment. Israel, America's ally in all but name, was seen as a worthy partner for the same reasons.

This is not to say that the new India-Israel relationship is vulnerable to electoral vagaries. The Congress Party, which regained power in 2004, has pushed cooperation with Israel forward, rather than paring it back. Prominent Congress leaders who decried the partnership as a betrayal of Indian ideals now find themselves in power, and pragmatism has trumped principle. The Far Left may be unhappy with the new friendship, but its ability to shape the direction of Indian foreign policy is limited. It has not seized on the Israeli connection to remind the Congress government that without the Left's support, the coalition will fall. Furthermore, India's strategic cooperation has generated little opposition among Indian Muslims. Indeed, one of the lessons of the India-Israel alignment is that India's Muslims by and large assess India's national security policy on its own merits, not reflexively based on whether it serves the interests of a wider Muslim world.

On the Israeli side, were Labor to regain power, there would not necessarily be a dramatic departure from current policy toward India. For one thing, Labor would face the same strategic context. For another, Labor has hardly been squeamish about pursuing tough-minded, practical national security policies. There is nothing that a Labor government would regard as detrimental and much that it would see as beneficial. The domestic setting is far less fraught for Israeli leaders than for their Indian counterparts, and Israel lacks an ideological legacy that makes a shift in policy as difficult. What is more, the practical advantages are obvious: Israel has few powerful friends outside the West, and the strategic and economic gains of cooperating with India are clear.

Converging Interests

The dynamics of two extended regions, southwest Asia and South Asia, could make for a convergence of Indian and Israeli strategic interests. Just what comes of the alignment between India and Israel will hinge on how long-lasting the common challenges are in these regions, how effectively both sides grasp the opportunities for cooperation and how adroit each is in dealing with the inevitable jolts that will have to be endured along the way.

The first of these regions encompasses Pakistan, Central Asia, Iran, Turkey and the Arab countries. India and Israel are the flanking powers of this region and see a number of common dangers within it--ones that could move fluidly across borders. Economic shocks and radical Islamist movements could radiate from an epicenter created by the fragmentation of a weak state, most notably Pakistan, Afghanistan or Saudi Arabia.

<b>Pakistan's nuclear arsenal is a net minus for the safety of India and Israel, not only if it coheres and grows, but also--perhaps more so--if it disintegrates as a result of Pakistan's implosion or if Pakistani fissile material falls into the hands of terrorist organizations.</b> Afghanistan remains an uncertain bet despite many encouraging trends, and its unsettled fate also draws India and Israel together. Both understand that the tenuous situation in Afghanistan rests less on solid institutions and an effective state than on Hamid Karzai--an admirable figure, but one who lives in a hazardous environment. Karzai's overthrow or assassination could bring back all of Afghanistan's demons quickly and pave the way for the return of the Taliban, which remains a dogged force.

Israel and India are also worried about the dangers of American over-extension. Stable democracies in Iraq and Afghanistan would improve security prospects for both India and Israel, which are observing events there warily and closely. But, should the United States enter a new conflict on the Korean Peninsula or in Iran, America's resources for coping with Iraq and Afghanistan will diminish, putting the democracy projects at risk.

<b>The fall of the House of Saud could also create trouble. While Saudi Arabia has been no friend to Israel, the relevant question is what would follow a revolution there.</b> Almost certainly, there would be a new Saudi regime with an even more viscerally anti-Israeli policy. Meanwhile, the dangers of prolonged anarchy in the Gulf are self-evident and still more frightening. India, for its part, is heavily dependent on Persian Gulf oil and will become all the more so given its surging economy. The thousands of Indian expatriate laborers who live in the Gulf could also become vulnerable. And the technology of the modern age is bringing ever closer militant Kashmiri secessionists and their kindred spirits abroad.

Both countries are also increasingly aware of the dangers that each faces from instability in Central Asia. Sheer proximity--along with New Delhi's determination to challenge Chinese and Pakistani influence and to cultivate Central Asia as an export market and a source of energy--has made Central Asia of growing significance to India. India's stake in Central Asia's future exceeds Israel's, but Tel Aviv sees the region as another location where terrorism and militant Islam could become entrenched.

There is also an asymmetry of interests when it comes to South Asia. Here, India has more at stake--and thus more to gain--from a joint approach. But this fact gives Tel Aviv leverage to elicit Indian cooperation in areas that matter more to Israel. The western edge of this region runs along the Ganges River and ends at the Line of Control that divides Indian- and Pakistani-held Kashmir. The eastern flank runs from Hokkaido down to the Strait of Malacca, and the southern extremity is formed by the Bay of Bengal. This vast zone is increasingly becoming the arena for a contest between India and China, rising powers that have distinct strategic visions and several divergent interests. This hardly means that war will be the terminal point, as both sides are focused on economic growth, easing tensions and widening the circle of cooperation. Nevertheless, one does not have to spend much time with Indian and Chinese strategists to see that each country regards the other as an adversary and that both anticipate that this feeling will intensify.

Despite economic reforms, rapid growth rates, a new geopolitical strategy and recent efforts to diversify its sources of weapons, India is far weaker than China in just about any traditional measure of power. These strategic circumstances make for two Indian objectives with respect to Israel. The first is to gain access to Israeli weapons and defense technology that improve Indian military capabilities. The second involves India supplanting China as the principal destination for Israeli arms sales and military technology by making significant purchases of both, increasing trade and investment ties with Israel so that it develops a growing stake in the Indian relationship and banking on the United States to limit Israeli military sales to China.

Whether India will also pursue the goal of limiting or ideally even eliminating the movement of Israeli arms to China by making itself more central to Israeli needs in southwest Asia--despite the risks involved in doing so--remains to be seen, for that is a path laden with minefields. Indeed, India's ability to achieve these goals will depend at least as much on the pace of Chinese military modernization and on America's assessment of China's power and purpose as on the future of the India-Israel alignment. Furthermore, it is one thing for Israel to switch from China to India as its main market for arms exports and quite another to engage in a sustained and practical policy that supplements Indian objectives in South Asia. That would amount to focusing Israel's attention and assets on an area that is hardly crucial to its national security.

Dialing Down the Hype

India and Israel have reframed their relationship in a strikingly short stretch of time. Yet, it is hardly the case that the new partnership, which its proponents in India, Israel and the United States tend to depict with breathless optimism, will necessarily have the staying power required to have far-reaching strategic significance. To begin with, it has yet to be tested: There has not been a controversy or crisis in which the two sides have really been forced to reckon with the complications or costs of their nascent strategic convergence.

Furthermore, India and Israel still face obstacles in moving from recognizing common dangers in southwest Asia to actually implementing joint policies in that space. Iran is a good example. India does not share the Israeli (and American) view of Iran as a dangerous state that must be contained and isolated. It conducts extensive trade with Iran, maintains high-level political contacts, aids Iran's space program and is actively exploring a $4 billion energy pipeline that would link India and Iran via Pakistan. Both Israel and the United States are opposed to the pipeline project, but there is no sign that India will abandon it, let alone participate in a combined strategy against Iran. Nor has India allowed its friendship with Israel to displace its well-established relationship with Syria. The upshot is that India will not join the United States and Israel in any long-term, overt strategy to curb terrorism and militant strains of Islam in the Middle East or to quarantine, much less attack, Syria. Nor will it deploy its troops to help keep order in Iraq. Such ventures would be unpopular at home and create an anti-Indian political backlash abroad. Setting such expectations will have an inevitable result: Israel and the United States will feel let down, and India will feel put upon by demands it sees as unreasonable.

For its part, Israel has sought recognition from Pakistan, no doubt realizing that the new circumstances might make Pakistan receptive and punch another hole in what it has seen as a wall of Muslim solidarity against it. Pakistani leader Pervez Musharraf has created an opening. In June 2004, no doubt in response to the growing strategic cooperation between India and Israel, Musharraf made the controversial suggestion that Islamabad should consider adjusting its attitude toward the Jewish state, despite strong opposition to Israel among Pakistan's Islamic parties.

For Israel, India's chief value is as a prospective partner in southwest Asia. But it does not follow that Israel has compelling reasons, or indeed much capability, to further Indian objectives in South Asia (other than reducing arms sales to China). A significant rethinking of Israeli national security that extends its scope into that region is not easily defensible in terms of Israeli interests, nor feasible given Israel's resources and priorities.

The mere fact that the United States appears to have blessed the Israel-India union also does not ensure substantive cooperation in either of these two regions. And one should not discount the eagerness with which American defense companies are eyeing the lucrative Indian market. Once American defense industries begin to enter the Indian market, Israel's value as an arms supplier could diminish in Indian eyes. Though not inevitable, it is worth keeping in mind at a time when news reports and academic essays trumpet the India-Israel alignment. Moreover, if from New Delhi's standpoint the road to Washington runs through Tel Aviv, what will happen when India reaches its desired destination? What will be the residual value of the Israeli connection, especially given the hazards India could encounter should it join forces with Israel in southwest Asia?

These questions will be easier to answer if the current expansion of the India-Israel relationship continues beyond mere arms sales. The more that high-level political, security and economic links expand, the greater will be the incentive on both sides to deal with the complications that accompany joint action in the two regions identified above. The democratic systems of both countries are also a plus. By creating transparency and allowing for multifarious exchanges and contacts, they can help provide an intangible, but vital ingredient for strategic concord: trust.

The events that could put at risk further cooperation between India and Israel on military and strategic issues will not emerge from within the two countries, but from the world beyond. Two are of particular importance. One is a major conflagration in one country's neighborhood that puts India and Israel on different sides, or exposes a chasm between the envisaged strategic alignment and reality. The second is a deterioration of India's relationship with the United States. The first scenario is far more likely than the second.

Both friends and foes of the alignment between India and Israel see it as an important development. Only once this much ballyhooed entente faces trials that require tough tradeoffs will we know whether it will be limited to mutual gains provided by arms sales and the flow of commerce. Such exchanges would still put India and Israel on a new road, but they will not amount to a strategic partnership that could change the balance of power in pivotal regions. For now, the safe bet is that the collaboration between India and Israel will meet the expectations of neither its foremost proponents nor its most fervent critics.
  Reply
#82
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Israel begins Gaza Strip pullout

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4150028.stm<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#83
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Sharon's speech on Gaza pullout

The following is the full text of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's televised speech on the first day of the evacuation of settlers from the Gaza Strip.
The day has arrived. We are beginning the most difficult and painful step of all, evacuating our communities from the Gaza Strip and northern Samaria (West Bank).

This step is very difficult for me personally. It is not with a light

heart that the government of Israel made this decision on disengagement and the parliament did not lightly approve it.

It is no secret that, like many others, I had believed and hoped we could forever hold onto Netzarim and Kfar Darom.

But the changing reality in the country, in the region, and the world, required of me a reassessment and change of positions.

We cannot hold on to Gaza forever. More than a million Palestinians live there and double their number with each generation.

They live in uniquely crowded conditions in refugee camps, in poverty and despair, in hotbeds of rising hatred with no hope on the horizon.

It is out of strength and not weakness that we take this step. We tried to reach agreements with the Palestinians that would move both peoples towards a path of peace.

These were crushed against a wall of hatred and fanaticism.

'Good for Israel'

The unilateral disengagement plan I announced two years ago is the Israeli answer to this reality.

This plan will be good for Israel in any future scenario. We are reducing daily friction and its victims on both sides.

The Israeli army will redeploy along defensive lines behind the security fence.

Those who continue to fight us will meet the full force of the Israeli army and security forces.

The Palestinians bear the burden of proof. They must fight terrorist organisations and dismantle their infrastructure and show sincere intentions for peace so they can sit with us at the negotiating table.

The world is waiting for the Palestinian response - a hand stretched out to peace or the fire of terror.

To an outstretched hand we shall respond with an olive branch, but we shall fight fire with the harshest fire ever.

The disengagement will allow us to look inward. Our national agenda will change.

In our economic policy we will be free to turn to closing social gaps and to waging a real fight on poverty.

We will advance education and increase the personal security of every citizen in the country.

'Pain and anguish'

The controversy over the disengagement plan has caused difficult wounds, a bitter hatred between brothers, and strong statements and actions.

I understand the pain and anguish of the opponents, but we are one people, even when fighting and arguing.

Residents of Gaza, today we end a glorious chapter in Israel's history, a central episode in your lives as pioneers, as realisers of the dream of those who bore the security and settlement burden for all of us.

Your pain and your tears are an inextricable part of the history of our country.

Whatever differences we have, we shall not abandon you and after the evacuation we will do everything to rebuild your lives and communities anew.

I want to tell the soldiers and police, you face a difficult mission. You do not face an enemy, but brothers and sisters.

Sensitivity and patience are the order of the hour. I am sure that is how you will act. I want you to know the people stand behind you and are proud of you.

Citizens of Israel, the responsibility for Israel's future is mine. I initiated the plan because I reached the conclusion that this action is essential for Israel.

Believe me, the pain I feel with this act is the same as the full realisation that we must do it.

We are taking a new path that also has no small number of risks, but which also contains a ray of hope for us all.

With God's help this path shall be one of unity and not division, and not animosity between brothers, of unconditional love and not hatred.

I will do my utmost to ensure that it will be so.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4154798.stm<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#84
Don't Expect Any Applause

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Why territorial concessions don't make Israel more popular with its critics</b>

For supporters of Israel, the sense of cognitive dissonance about current events is by now commonplace.

This week, Israel is leaving the Gaza Strip 38 years after it conquered the small territory in a defensive war.

Those Jewish residents who have not left voluntarily are being forcibly removed. <b>Farms, towns, homes, synagogues and even cemeteries are either being destroyed or carted back inside the 1949 armistice lines.</b>

In order to do this, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has divided his Likud Party, forced out some of the most talented members of his Cabinet and set in motion a series of events that threatens at times to tear Israeli society to pieces.

<b>In exchange for this angst, Israel is getting from the Palestinians nothing but the knowledge that the retreat will most likely strengthen the hands of those who believe terror is the best way to deal with the Jewish state. </b>

Sharon has powerful reasons for the Gaza move, <b>including the need to keep the area's million-plus Arabs outside of Israel's borders</b>, and create a more defensible position than the current deployment of troops who defended the settlements.

Pious hopes

But disengagement also has led many American Jews to piously hope that this sacrifice will win Israel the plaudits of the world - or at least lessen the drumbeat of criticism that can be found every day in the pages of major daily newspapers and on television news.

By giving up Gaza, they reason, Israel has confirmed its status as the certified good guy of the conflict.

But those who think that giving up Gaza will make Israel more popular are deluded themselves. It's enemies aren't impressed by its desire for peace or its willingness to give up part of its historic territory after winning wars, something no other sovereign state has ever done.

Shimon Peres, currently a member of Sharon's coalition, once famously said that Israel didn't need a smart public-relations effort to tell its story. It just needs smart policies.

<b>By that, he meant that all it had to do was to give the Palestinians what they wanted: a state in Gaza and the West Bank. After he concluded the Oslo accords with former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and made such a state inevitable, Peres was convinced that he'd done exactly that. We all know now just how wrong he was to believe Arafat wanted peace. But what has not yet been fully discussed was just how flawed his information policy turned out to be. </b>

Even more recently, former Prime Minister Ehud Barak - whose bold bid for peace at the 2000 Camp David summit put almost all of the territories (including Gaza) on a silver platter for Arafat - was burned as well. <b>Not only did Arafat say no to Barak's peace offer, within months he launched a bloody terror war. </b>

But Israel gained no credit for its peace offer, and sympathy for the Palestinian cause did not decrease because of the decision to pursue the murder of innocents on the streets of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Instead, for the first time in decades, Israel's existence and the very legitimacy of Zionism become a matter of debate in respectable circles.

Ironically, Israel's image in the West was stronger when it was led by Yitzhak Shamir, a poor communicator who made no secret of his opposition to all concessions to the Palestinians.

Yet once Arafat was installed as head of a Palestinian territory, his "police" armed and terrorists released from Israeli prisons, the false idea that Israel was a murderous occupier that killed babies became far more prevalent throughout the world, not less.

<b>And now, even after weathering four years of heightened terrorism that took more than a thousand Jewish lives and having handed Arafat's successor - and his Islamist allies - all of Gaza without even so much as requiring them to sign another piece of paper, just where does Israel stand? </b>

The Poison Spreads
<b>In Europe, anti-Jewish and anti-Zionist agitation continues to grow</b>. <b>Here in America, liberal Protestant denominations that Jews have always considered allies now line up to denounce even passive Israeli measures of self-defense, such as its security fence, while some also endorse an economic boycott of the Jewish state via divestment. </b>
The poison of anti-Zionism has even leeched into some anti-Iraqi war protests, which are then treated sympathetically in the mainstream press. Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a soldier who fell in Iraq, has become a popular focus of hostility to the Bush administration through her sit-in outside the president's ranch in Crawford, Texas. But some of her views seem to have gone virtually unmentioned by the mainstream press: one of them being hostility to Israel.

<b>Sheehan wrote on the anti-war Web site www.truthout. org that her son was killed for a "neo-con agenda to benefit Israel. My son joined the Army to protect America, not Israel." </b>

<b>She also said, "Get America out of Iraq and Israel out of Palestine, and you'll stop the terrorism." </b>

The fact that she would say such things, <b>and otherwise respectable churches would denounce Israel</b> just as it is giving the Palestinians yet another chance for peace, has to tell us something about this dynamic.

What's the root of this madness? Historians will debate this question in the future, but the most plausible theory is that the moment that Israel's spokespeople and friends abroad began talking about balancing Palestinian rights to statehood and Israel's need for security, it started to lose the media war.

Rights can only be balanced in the public eye with other rights, not pleas for safety. If the Palestinians portray themselves as the only ones with legitimate rights to disputed territories, and Israel repeatedly fails to offer an effective rejoinder, then why won't more people consider the Palestinians in the right?

And once they've gotten editors and church leaders to think of Israel as an "occupier" and inherently in the wrong, then all Palestinian tactics - even murder - become legitimate, and all Israeli countermeasures become illegitimate. <b>That is the challenge as we await the launch of a third Palestinian "intifada," as the head of Israeli army intelligence predicted before a Knesset committee this week. </b>

Israelis had their own good reasons to say good riddance to Gaza, but they should expect no credit for it on the pages of <b>The New York Times, or on CNN or NPR.</b> Years and years of concessions have only served to reinforce the idea that Israel was always in the wrong. And nothing - not giving up Gaza, or even the whole of the West Bank and Jerusalem - will change that.

Until the day when Israel and its friends begin speaking once again of inalienable Jewish rights to this land, the most we can expect is still more of the same.

Jonathan S. Tobin is reachable via e-mail at: jtobin@jewishexponent.com. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#85
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Israel expels Gaza Strip settlers

Israeli police and troops have evicted hundreds of Jewish settlers who were refusing to leave the Gaza Strip.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4159958.stm<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#86
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Bollywood chic comes to Tel Aviv
By TALYA HALKIN

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pag...p=1077768895041<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Jharkhand farmers to train in Israel

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/arti...201564.cms<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#87
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>5 Palestinians killed; rockets fired </b>
Reuters/ Tulkarm
Israeli troops killed five Palestinians in a West Bank raid and Palestinian militants fired a rocket into Israel on Thursday in renewed conflict after Jewish settlers were removed from some occupied territory.

The flareup, which included the fatal stabbing of a British Jew by a Palestinian in Jerusalem on Wednesday, was the first since Israel finished scrapping all 21 settlements in Gaza and four of 120 in the West Bank on Tuesday. A new spiral of violence would jeopardise a ceasefire that largely held as Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon carried out his "Disengagement Plan" and make it harder to capitalise on the pullout by reviving Middle East peacemaking.

Troops who raided Tulkarm refugee camp in the West Bank overnight killed five militants in a gunbattle after they resisted arrest for suspected involvement in two suicide bombings in Israel this year, Israeli security sources said. Palestinian witnesses said three of the dead were unarmed teenagers and two were militants, one from the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, an armed group in Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah movement. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Even after pullout they are still harassing Israel.
  Reply
#88
<b>Currying favor in the wrong places</b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->While the Pakistani leadership continues to maintain ties with the Taliban insurgency, it seems genuinely committed to fighting al-Qaida. Still, there are suspicions that the last thing Islamabad wants is to actually capture Osama bin Laden. He's probably hiding in Pakistan's mountainous border region with Afghanistan. Were OBL captured, there would be less justification for continued US economic aid (to the tune of $3 billion a year) to the military regime in Islamabad.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#89
India should continue cultivating its relationship with Israel. It is in the larger security and strategic interest of India to do so and of late Pakistan has also fallen inline. The meeting between the Pakistan Foreign Minister and the Foreign Minister of Israel a few weeks ago, arranged by the good offices of Turkey is the most recent development on this issue.
In the first few decades of our existence as a Republic, the political leadership felt that any diplomatic interaction will result in the alienation of the entire Middle East, particularly, the oil producing Arabian countries against India. They were also not sure what the vast number of Muslim voters in India will think of the move and what will be their subsequent action at the polling booth.
  Reply
#90
<!--QuoteBegin-Ravish+Nov 5 2005, 12:37 PM-->QUOTE(Ravish @ Nov 5 2005, 12:37 PM)<!--QuoteEBegin-->India should continue cultivating its relationship with Israel. It is in the larger security and strategic interest of India to do so and of late Pakistan has also fallen inline. The meeting between the Pakistan Foreign Minister and the Foreign Minister of Israel a few weeks ago, arranged by the good offices of Turkey is the most recent development on this issue.
In the first few decades of our existence as a Republic, the political leadership felt that any diplomatic interaction will result in the alienation of the entire Middle East, particularly, the oil producing Arabian countries against India. They were also not sure what the vast number of Muslim voters in India will think of the move and what will be their subsequent action at the polling booth.
[right][snapback]40685[/snapback][/right]
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#91
<b>Israel agrees not to convert 'lost tribe' in India </b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Efforts to convert them by a specially despatched team of rabbis were called off after India, a major buyer of Israeli defence exports, voiced its displeasure.

"The Indian authorities, through official channels, told us they do not view positively initiated efforts at conversions to other religions," Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev said.
................
Decades after being converted to Christianity by missionaries, descendants in various areas began to reconnect with Judaism in the 1970s.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#92
Mudy that link doesnt work. I get error.

BTW is this normal (and consistent) procedure for GoI to object to conversions ?
  Reply
#93
Yahoo must have removed news.
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->BTW is this normal (and consistent) procedure for GoI to object to conversions ?<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
No, it’s not normal; UPA government now days only cares about minorities and believes in oppression of majority Hindu population e.g. Arrest of Sheer on eve of Diwali, opening of LOC to reward Islamist who murdered Hindus on Diwali eve in Delhi.
Missionaries must have protested Sonia and Mudmohan that Jews are stealing their herd.
  Reply
#94
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->India to launch Israeli TechSAR spy satellite in 2006

“Defense News”: Using India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle will cost less than Israel’s Shavit launcher.

Ran Dagoni, Washington   
15 Nov 05   16:00 

“Defense News” reports that Israel’s next spy satellite “TechSAR” will be launched via India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), rather than by an Israeli launcher, the practice until now. The launch is scheduled for October 2006.

“Defense News” says, “Government and industry sources here conceded that Israel’s embrace of the PSLV was driven in large part by a loss of confidence in the Shavit, which has had reliability problems over the past decade.” It added, “While supporters of the Shavit were disappointed by the move to the Indian launcher, they insisted that the Israeli government has not forsaken its policy of space launch self-reliance.”

“Defense News” adds, “Officials here say Israel’s Ministry of Defense and Israel Aircraft Industries Ltd. (IAI) are wrapping up the political and contractual agreements with their Indian counterparts for the planned October 2006 launch of the TechSAR, Israel’s first synthetic aperture radar imaging satellite…A preexisting bilateral accord on strategic cooperation already covers most aspects of the mission.”

A Ministry of Defense source told “Defense News” that the estimated PSLV launch cost was no more than $15 million, whereas the launch cost of Israel’s Shavit launcher was $15-20 million. The 260-kg TechSAR is slated to be the sole payload aboard the PSLV, which will be launched from the Indian Space Research Organization’s Satish Dhawan Space Center on the nation’s southeastern coast.

“Defense News” says, “If all agreements are finalized in the coming months, as expected, IAI will ship the satellite to the Indian launch site by summer.”

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news - www.globes.co.il - on November 15, 2005
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#95
<b>PAKISTAN-ISRAEL RELATIONS: IMPACT ON INDIA</b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Concluding Observations</b>

The underlying tenor of questioning in the interview was to discern whether the Pakistan–Israel dialogue had caused some serious concern in India in terms of its policy formulations. It evidently has not.

After the first flush of basking in the self-congratulatory glow of the Istanbul meeting, Pakistan in the wake of domestic uproar and uproar in the Islamic World, came out with impossible stipulations for Israel on official and presidential websites. This is likely to negate further movement in relations.

<b>Pakistan’s intended objectives of diluting India-Israel political and strategic relationships by opening up to Israel is therefore unlikely to materialize</b>. <!--emo&Big Grin--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/biggrin.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='biggrin.gif' /><!--endemo-->
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#96
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Israel readies forces for strike on nuclear Iran
Uzi Mahnaimi, Tel Aviv, and Sarah Baxter, Washington

ISRAEL’S armed forces have been ordered by Ariel Sharon, the prime minister, to be ready by the end of March for possible strikes on secret uranium enrichment sites in Iran, military sources have revealed.

The order came after Israeli intelligence warned the government that Iran was operating enrichment facilities, believed to be small and concealed in civilian locations.

Iran’s stand-off with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) over nuclear inspections and aggressive rhetoric from Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, who said last week that Israel should be moved to Europe, are causing mounting concern.

The crisis is set to come to a head in early March, when Mohamed El-Baradei, the head of the IAEA, will present his next report on Iran. El-Baradei, who received the Nobel peace prize yesterday, warned that the world was “losing patience” with Iran.

A senior White House source said the threat of a nuclear Iran was moving to the top of the international agenda and the issue now was: “What next?” That question would have to be answered in the next few months, he said.

Defence sources in Israel believe the end of March to be the “point of no return” after which Iran will have the technical expertise to enrich uranium in sufficient quantities to build a nuclear warhead in two to four years.

“Israel — and not only Israel — cannot accept a nuclear Iran,” Sharon warned recently. “We have the ability to deal with this and we’re making all the necessary preparations to be ready for such a situation.”

The order to prepare for a possible attack went through the Israeli defence ministry to the chief of staff. Sources inside special forces command confirmed that “G” readiness — the highest stage — for an operation was announced last week.

Gholamreza Aghazadeah, head of the Atomic Organisation of Iran, warned yesterday that his country would produce nuclear fuel. “There is no doubt that we have to carry out uranium enrichment,” he said.

He promised it would not be done during forthcoming talks with European negotiators. But although Iran insists it wants only nuclear energy, Israeli intelligence has concluded it is deceiving the world and has no intention of giving up what it believes is its right to develop nuclear weapons.

A “massive” Israeli intelligence operation has been underway since Iran was designated the “top priority for 2005”, according to security sources.

Cross-border operations and signal intelligence from a base established by the Israelis in northern Iraq are said to have identified a number of Iranian uranium enrichment sites unknown to the the IAEA.

Since Israel destroyed the Osirak nuclear reactor in Iraq in 1981, “it has been understood that the lesson is, don’t have one site, have 50 sites”, a White House source said.

If a military operation is approved, Israel will use air and ground forces against several nuclear targets in the hope of stalling Tehran’s nuclear programme for years, according to Israeli military sources.

It is believed Israel would call on its top special forces brigade, Unit 262 — the equivalent of the SAS — and the F-15I strategic 69 Squadron, which can strike Iran and return to Israel without refuelling.

“If we opt for the military strike,” said a source, “it must be not less than 100% successful. It will resemble the destruction of the Egyptian air force in three hours in June 1967.”

Aharon Zeevi Farkash, the Israeli military intelligence chief, stepped up the pressure on Iran this month when he warned Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, that “if by the end of March the international community is unable to refer the Iranian issue to the United Nations security council, then we can say the international effort has run its course”.

The March deadline set for military readiness also stems from fears that Iran is improving its own intelligence-gathering capability. In October it launched its first satellite, the Sinah-1, which was carried by a Russian space launcher.

“The Iranians’ space programme is a matter of deep concern to us,” said an Israeli defence source. “If and when we launch an attack on several Iranian targets, the last thing we need is Iranian early warning received by satellite.”

Russia last week signed an estimated $1 billion contract — its largest since 2000 — to sell Iran advanced Tor-M1 systems capable of destroying guided missiles and laser-guided bombs from aircraft.

“Once the Iranians get the Tor-M1, it will make our life much more difficult,” said an Israeli air force source. “The installation of this system can be relatively quick and we can’t waste time on this one.”

The date set for possible Israeli strikes on Iran also coincides with Israel’s general election on March 28, prompting speculation that Sharon may be sabre-rattling for votes.

Benjamin Netanyahu, the frontrunner to lead Likud into the elections, said that if Sharon did not act against Iran, “then when I form the new Israeli government, we’ll do what we did in the past against Saddam’s reactor, which gave us 20 years of tranquillity”.

TEHRAN MINISTER MET MILITANTS BEFORE NEW OFFENSIVE

Iran’s foreign minister met leading figures from three Islamic militant groups to co-ordinate a united front against Israel days before a recent escalation of attacks against Israeli targets shattered fragile ceasefires with Lebanon and the Palestinians, writes Hugh Macleod in Damascus.

The minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, held talks with leaders of Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah in Damascus on November 15.

Among those who attended the meeting were Khaled Meshaal, the Hamas leader, and a deputy leader of Islamic Jihad, which claimed responsibility for last Monday’s suicide bombing of a shopping mall in Netanya that killed five Israeli citizens.

Ahmed Jibril, leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine- General Command, was also present. “We all confirmed that what is going on in occupied Palestine is organically connected to what is going on in Iraq, Syria, Iran and Lebanon,” said Jibril.

Seven days after the talks, Hezbollah fired a volley of rockets and mortars at Israeli targets, sparking the fiercest fighting between the two sides since Israel’s withdrawal from south Lebanon five years ago.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,...74,00.html <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#97
<!--emo&:angry:--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/mad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='mad.gif' /><!--endemo--> Indian farmers on strike in Israel
[ Thursday, March 23, 2006 10:49:38 amPTI ]


RSS Feeds| SMS NEWS to 8888 for latest updates

The farmers recently called off the fifteen day hunger strike but are continuing with the general strike after agriculture minister Boim explained to them that the government would be able to act only after the forthcoming elections.

Bezalel, who immigrated to Israel in 1955 from Chendamangalam in Kerala, was bestowed with the highest civilian honour on non-resident Indians earlier this year.

From a humble beginning as a shepherd on his immigration, he became a renowned farmer winning the best exporter award from Prime Minister Levi Eshkol in 1964 for making the desert bloom in south Israel.

The Israeli parliament (Knesset) rewarded Bezalel with the Kaplan prize in 1994 for his unique contribution to the farming sector of the country.
< Previous|1|2|3
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#98
that desert is the negev desert i supose.
  Reply
#99
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Israeli couple opt to wed the Hindu way
14 May 2006 # ANI

Varanasi: In yet another example of East meeting West, an Israeli couple have tied the knot according to Hindu rituals in Varanasi.

The bride, Moran, for whom Varanasi has become a second home, says the Indian culture has touched the inner core of her heart.

"I like India's culture very much. It touches my heart. There is a lot of difference between the Israeli culture and the Indian culture, particularly the wedding, which is not the same. In Israel, there is no marriage ceremony like this," says Moran.

Many friends of the couple attended the wedding ceremony, which took pace on Friday.

Yuki, a Japanese friend of the couple, also expressed her love with Indian culture saying, "I think Ganga means India. Many tourists also think the same way. It's a very important river and getting married in Varanasi, which is situated near Ganga, is Nice".

Moran, who was looking resplendent in a red saree and gold jewellery on her wedding day, met her husband Alet in Varanasi six months ago and fell in love with him.

Heeranand Pandey, the priest who solemnised the marriage, says more and more foreigners are getting enchanted by Hindu culture and want to imbibe its ethos.

"When they came here as tourists, they came across the culture and customs of India, its spirituality and so on. So, they tried to mould themselves according to our traditions," Pandey says. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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<b>Let Israel be Jewish by <i>Kalavai Venkat</i>

TinyURL : http://tinyurl.com/s5uu4</b>
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