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From: Office of Teqe Rod-Larsen
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7 July, 2012
Article 1. <https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/html/compose/static_files/blank_quirks.html#a>
The Washington Post
Israel's Arab Spring problem
David Ignatius <http://www.washingtonpost.com/david-ignatius/2011/02/17/ABXXoal_page.html>
Article 2. <https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/html/compose/static_files/blank_quirks.html#b>
World-crunch
No Israel, Time Is Not On Your Side
Dominique Moisi
Article 3. <https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/html/compose/static_files/blank_quirks.html#c>
The National Interest
Egypt's Demographic and Environmental Time Bombs
Geoffrey Kemp <http://nationalinterest.org/profile/geoffrey-kemp>
Article 4. <https://mailsgoogle.com/mail/u/0/html/compose/static_files/blank_quirks.html#d>
The Washington Institute
The Muslim Brotherhood's Plots Its Path to Power
Eric Trager <http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/experts/view/trager-eric>
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Article 5. <https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/html/compose/static_files/blank_quirks.html#e>
NYT
Why Russia Is Backing Syria
Ruslan Pukhov
Article 6. <https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/html/compose/static_files/blank_quirks.html#5
The Daily Beast
Are Israeli Agents Assassinating Iranian Scientists?
Dan Raviv <http://www.thedailybeast.com/contributors/dan-raviv.html> , Yossi Melman
Article 7.
Fikra Forum
A Disconnected Gulf <http://fikraforum.org/?p=2370>
Joshua Jacobs <http://fikraforum.orgfiauthor=1.20>
Article 8.
NOW Lebanon
Can Hezbollah give war a chance?
Michael Young
Article 1.
The Washington Post
Israel's Arab Spring problem
David Ignatius <http://www.washingtonpost.com/david-ignatius/2011/02/17/ABXXcOl_page.html>
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July 6 —JERUSALEM -- Whatever else that might be said about the Arab revolutions, it's obvious that they pose a
problem for Israel. But how bad, and what should the Israeli government do to hedge its risks? I heard some interesting
— but not very encouraging — ideas on this subject from top government officials last week.
To sum up: Most officials think that relations with the Arabs are gradually going to get worse, perhaps for
decades, before democracy really takes root and the Arab public, perhaps, will be ready to accept the Jewish state. The
challenge for Israel is how to avoid inflaming Arab public opinion, a newly important factor, while protecting the
country.
The trouble ahead is symbolized by the election of Mohamed Morsi
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_eastimorsi-named-new-egyptian-
president/2012/06/24/g1QAMZaazV_story.html> , a Muslim Brotherhood leader, as president of Egypt. His inauguration
chttp://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/islamist-morsi-is-sworn-in-as-president-of-
egypt/2012/06/30/gJQA84vZDW_story.html> prompted a wary message of congratulation from Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, expressing hope that -Israeli-Egyptian relations will be cooperative and based on mutual interest.
The statement masked deep Israeli anxieties.
Netanyahu fears an erosion of the relationship with Egypt over time and wants to slow that process, if possible,
while preparing for potential trouble. Netanyahu is said to view these precautions as the equivalent of putting up
shutters before a storm.
The most obvious test will be Gaza, where the militant Hamas leadership is closely allied with the Muslim
Brotherhood. Netanyahu has tried to de-escalate crises that have arisen, but if rocket attacks increase, they may draw a
harsh Israeli military reaction — which could worsen relations with Cairo.
Efraim Halevy, the former Mossad chief, says Israel should face reality and begin talking with Hamas. But others
stress the growing threat in Gaza: Israel has intelligence that militants there have tried to buy shoulder-fired anti-aircraft
missiles from Libya, and the Israeli air force now operates on the assumption that such missiles are present in Gaza, in
addition to the array of other rockets.
The Sinai Peninsula is another flash point. This vast desert is becoming a lawless area where al-Qaeda and other
terrorist groups are trying to find a haven. Intelligence officials here believe the extremists' strategy is to provoke an
Israeli retaliation and thereby encourage an unraveling of the Israel-Egypt peace treaty. I didn't hear any clear formula
for how Israel can respond to attacks without falling into this trap.
The chill in Israel's relationship with Turkey adds to the dangers of instability in Egypt, Libya and Syria.
Netanyahu has responded by seeking new allies, including:
• A "Balkan arc" anchored by newly closer relations with Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Romania and Albania. Some
of those countries allow the Israeli air force to train in their airspace, providing an alternative to the now-unfriendly
skies over Turkey.
• An implicit, if unspoken, alliance with Saudi Arabia and other gulf states against Iran and against Muslim
Brotherhood extremism. In this silent courtship, the Israelis are offering an alternative to an America that's no longer
seen as a reliable protector of the conservative gulf regimes.
• New links with governments in sub-Saharan Africa, such as Kenya, Uganda and the Ivory Coast, which are
worried that the rise of militant Islam in North Africa will spread south.
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Israeli leaders know these new friendships, however useful, won't alter the basic threat posed by an Arab
awakening that, in most countries, has empowered militant Islamic groups. Within the government, there's a range of
views about just how bad the future will be, but nobody uses the congenial phrase "the Arab Spring" that has been
common in the West.
Among the optimists, relatively speaking, is said to be Defense Minister Ehud Barak. He thinks Egypt and other
neighbors will move toward a version of the "Turkish model" of Islamic democracy, which may be cool toward Israel but
will also be pragmatic. Barak thinks Israel can't simply wait for the storm to pass. The process of change is irreversible
and may eventually be benign as the Arab societies mature.
A darker view is taken by some of the officials who know the Arab world best. They think that for at least the
next several years, as Morsi and other Muslim Brotherhood leaders try to consolidate power, they may appear
cooperative. But at the core of the Brotherhood's ideology is rejection of Israel, and any compromises with Israel will be
tactical moves, rather than real peace.
Israel's existence, never easy, has gotten more complicated and unpredictable. "We are still inside this huge
historical shift," says one senior official, "and we don't know where it's going to take us."
Article 2.
World-crunch
No Israel, Time Is Not On Your Side
Dominique Moisi
July 6th, 2012 - More than a year ago, Israel's reaction to the Arab Spring <http://worldcrunch.com/israel-
starting-feel-touch-arab-spring/3489> was perceived as a cautious wait-and-see attitude, as one more reason to
maintain the status quo with the Palestinians. In any case, says Jerusalem, exactly with whom should we be negotiating?
The Palestinian Authority is no longer considered representative of the people; and Hamas, its rival, is a terrorist
organization. After the second round of the Egyptian presidential election <http://worldcrunch.com/california-engineer-
muslim-brother-meet-egypts-new-president-mohamed-morsi/5722> , the Israelis felt confirmed in their skepticism.
Didn't history appear to agree with them? They can't imagine the Egyptians -- Islamists or not -- foregoing a cold peace
for a hot war. Egypt just doesn't have the financial resources to launch such a reckless adventure. One wonders if it
knows how it will pay public employees in four to five months.
But the Egyptian people's participation in the decision-making process, and a long-term evolution that will
necessarily run counter to the army's interests, does not suit Israel. The country used to boast about being the only
democracy of the region but now regrets the good old stability and predictability of its despotic neighbors.
Nothing good can come from the Arab Spring, according to Israeli leaders, neither for the populations directly
concerned nor for Israel itself. The absolute calm on the southern border with Egypt enabled Jerusalem to fully
concentrate on the Iranian nuclear menace <http://worldcrunch.com/posturing-or-preparing-war-what-s-behind-israel-
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s-tough-words-iran/4073> and to forge an implicit alliance with Saudi Arabia based on a common threat. For the Sunni
monarchies in the Gulf, isn't the existence of a nuclear, Shiite Iran <http://worldcrunch.com/yet-another-round-iranian-
nuclear-talks-fail-where-now/5695> as much a threat to their existence as it is to the Jewish State
<http://worldcrunch.com/new-battle-change-what-it-means-be-jewish-israel/4064> ? Other potentially instable
borders are the ones with Syria <http://worldcrunch.com/israels-syria-conundrum/2905> and Lebanon. Predicting the
unavoidable fall of the Syrian regime as Israeli leaders regularly do isn't just "standing on the right side of history," it's
also, as for Iran, taking a common position with the Gulf monarchies. Israel is clearly taking advantage of a violent and
confusing situation that helps divert the world's attention from the never-ending Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The more events speed up in the Arab world through this long-term revolutionary process, the more it appears
possible for Israel to keep the status quo on the ground with the Palestinians; a political status quo that doesn't prevent
Israeli settlements <http://worldcrunch.com/israel-s-enemy-within-why-radical-west-bank-settlers-put-country-
risk/4322> , far from it. Around Jerusalem, the situation -- with multiple faits accomplis -- has become inextricable. It
would take hundreds of geographers and surveyors to negotiate every inch of an acceptable compromise.
In such a situation, when ones arrives in Israel -- despite the rockets that strike the south of the country from the
Sinai -- it isn't surprising to be struck by a feeling of almost unreal serenity. Is this, like a decade ago, the calm before the
storm? Are we on the verge of a third Intifada, closer to the first than the second (protests by stone-throwing as
opposed to human bombs)?
What is sure is that there is among many young Palestinians an undeniable form of religious and political
radicalization. The convergence between rising Islamism in the Arab world and the humiliation and despair of the
Palestinian youth is pushing them to abandon all spirit of compromise. "Because I am nothing, I want everything, all of
Palestine, without its Jewish occupiers!"
The contrast is much too important between the movements that are speeding up at Israel's borders and the
frozen situation in the Palestinian territories. Of course, compared to the current Syrian situation, they might seem
better off, and they don't want to renew the "savagery" of the second Intifada. But a man cannot live on bread alone.
He needs hope, and Palestinians have none. In the Middle East, in spite of appearances, time is not working in Israel's
favor. <http://worldcrunch.com/rage-and-diplomacy-has-israel-lost-its-last-allies-muslim-world/3745>
Article 3.
The National Interest
Egypt's Demographic and Environmental Time Bombs
Geoffrey Kemp <http://nationalinterest.org/profile/geoffrey-kemp>
July 6, 2012 -- It may take many months for Egyptians to learn whether the Muslim Brotherhood and its newly
elected President Mohamed Morsi have achieved meaningful power or whether the Egyptian Army remains the true
broker in the country. Either way, whoever emerges as the de facto leader of Egypt will be faced with the awkward
reality of more fundamental indicators—Egypt's demography, geography, economy and environment. These pose
predicaments that threaten to overwhelm the country.
Egypt's current population is around eighty-two million, with an annual growth rate of about 2 percent. The
population could reach nearly 115 million in about fifteen years. Most of the population resides in the lush Nile Delta
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and along the narrow strip of greenery along its banks that runs through the center of the country. The actual land area
occupied by this huge population is small—larger than Maryland, smaller than the Netherlands.
The bulk of the population falls between the ages of fourteen and thirty-four. People of this age group
historically have been much more active in seeking social change, and at present they have a tough lot—unemployment
among people between twenty and twenty-four is at 47 percent <http://www.acus.org/egyptsource/egypts-next-
president-will-inherit-unemployment-crisis> [3], even though many are well educated. Opportunities, especially the
secure government jobs that many across the Middle East dream of, are limited. High birth rates are creating job seekers
faster than Egypt's weak finances can create opportunities for them.
Egypt depends on foreign food supplies and is the world's largest importer of wheat and second-largest
importer of maize. These commodities, which have seen sky-high prices, must be paid for in foreign currency. The latest
figures suggest Egypt's foreign reserves are down to the equivalent of $15.5 billion, scarcely surpassing those of Bolivia
or tiny Croatia. This amount covers only about three months of vital imports. To make matters worse, two of its major
sources of foreign income—natural-gas exports and tourism—have seen a precipitous decline since the Arab upheavals.
Egypt increasingly relies on Suez Canal revenues and remittances from foreign workers, but many of the latter no longer
contribute since the problems across North Africa have cut job opportunities.
Without loans from world financial institutions, Egypt will go bankrupt unless it instigates rigorous reforms. But
any austerity measures will be extremely unpopular with the underclasses, which expect to see their lives improve now
that the Mubarak regime has been removed. In the past, Egypt's autocrats have bought off the poor population—a
quarter <http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/3/12/33378/Business/Economy/Quarter-of-Egyptians-now-living-in-
poverty-State-d.aspx> [4] live on less than $500 a year, 40 percent
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204059804577228984285910816.html> [5] on less than $2 a day—
with subsidies on fuel and bread. These subsidies are now worth almost 10 percent
<http://www.cfr.org/egypt/reforming-egypts-untenable-subsidies/p27885> [6] of Egypt's GDP and do as much to
create black markets as they do to help those in need.
And then there are the environmental challenges. The Nile, without which Egypt cannot survive, is under
pressure from both south and north. To the south, the river rises in Ethiopia (the Blue Nile) and Uganda (the White Nile)
and flows through the two Sudans. These primary upper-riparian states are home to a combined 168 million people, a
number that continues to grow. They need more water from the Nile for hydroelectric projects and irrigation schemes.
At the same time, higher levels of evaporation and lower rainfall due to climate change are reducing the amount of
water feeding the great river. These developments are slowing the flow and altering the quality of water reaching Egypt,
thereby reducing agricultural yields. There are no multilaterally binding water agreements among all the states that
share the Nile. Until such agreements on water sharing are reached, serious incidents including violence over water
rights are possible.
To the north, the Nile Delta faces the challenge of rising sea levels in the Mediterranean. This is increasing the
salinity of its soil, in some cases making land uninhabitable. It has made farming more costly. Farmers have taken to
buying bags of sand and spreading them over their land to isolate their plants from the salty soil. All the while, growing
populations are reducing the land available for farming. This phenomenon is not unique to Egypt. Similar environmental
challenges face low-lying coastal regions from Southeast Asia to the southeastern United States.
Thus, it doesn't really matter what ideology Egypt's leaders claim to espouse. Addressing the fundamentals of
the fragile economy must be their priority. This will require cooperation with their neighbors, Europe, the UN, major
financial institutions and other world players such as the United States, China, Japan and South Korea. This suggests that
any Egyptian government that gets distracted by other issues—whether a messy fight with Israel over the Sinai or
domestic quarrels over Islamic traditions such as headdresses and alcohol consumption—will reap a whirlwind of
discontent as basic challenges go unaddressed and the economic situation goes from bad to worse. Vigorous, swift
action is essential to avoid a disaster.
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Geoffrey Kemp is the director of Regional Strategic Programs at the Center for the National Interest.
Article 4.
The Washington Institute
The Muslim Brotherhood's Long Game: Egypt's Ruling Party Plots Its Path to Power
Eric Trager <http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/experts/view/trager-eric>
July 6, 2012 -- In the 18 months since the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak, the Muslim Brotherhood has risen
swiftly from the cave to the castle. It founded the now-dominant Freedom and Justice Party last April, won a massive
plurality in the winter parliamentary elections, and, last week, celebrated as its candidate, Mohamed Morsi, won Egypt's
presidential elections. After 84 years of using its nationwide social services networks to build an Islamic state in Egypt
from the ground up, the Brotherhood is, for the first time, poised to shape Egyptian society from the top down. There is,
however, a catch: most of the Brotherhood's gains exist in name only. In early June, a court order invalidated the
parliamentary elections and dissolved the Brotherhood-dominated parliament. Then, just prior to the second round of
the presidential elections, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) issued a constitutional declaration that
seized executive authority from the presidency, ultimately rendering Morsi a mostly powerless figure. But after weeks
of mounting tension with the SCAF, including mass demonstrations against the junta's power grab, the Brotherhood is
dialing things down. It fears that agitating for more authority now could foment unrest and alienate a deeply divided
public. It is also wary of what happened in Algeria in 1991, when the country's military-backed government responded
to the electoral victory of an Islamist party with a harsh crackdown that culminated in civil war. To avoid further violence
and cement its place in Egyptian politics, the Brotherhood now hopes to create a period of calm in the short run so that
it can act more assertively in the future. To begin with, the Brotherhood is attempting to forge a unified front with
Egypt's other political parties. It began these efforts a week before the announcement of Morsi's victory to dissuade the
SCAF from rigging the elections for Mubarak-era candidate Ahmed Shafik. During two days of intense negotiations,
Morsi met with a wide spectrum of political groups and activists, promising to name a woman and a Christian as vice
presidents and to appoint a cabinet that would not be dominated by the Brotherhood. Brotherhood leaders have used
this agreement to prove that they intend to build a representative government. "We are standing with all political
powers for the same demands," Brotherhood parliamentarian Khaled Deeb told me.
Yet this is not the first time that the Brotherhood has attempted to insulate itself by aligning with other factions,
and history suggests that these agreements are typically short-lived. In June 2011, the Brotherhood joined the
nationalist Wafd party in creating the Democratic Alliance for Egypt, an electoral coalition that at one point included
approximately forty political parties ranging from socialist to Salafist. But by September, the Democratic Alliance broke
down over the Brotherhood's insistence on reserving 40 percent of the coalition's candidacies for its own members,
thereby leaving too few seats to satisfy its other partners, most of whom bolted. It hardly mattered: three months of
unity enabled the Brotherhood to build its profile as a leading political entity, and it ultimately won a 47-percent
plurality in the winter parliamentary elections. The Brotherhood's current unity project appears destined for the same
fate. Despite initial reports that Brotherhood figures would fill only 30 percent of the new cabinet, Brotherhood
parliamentary leader Farid Ismail recently said in Al-Ahram that the organization may take up to half. The Brotherhood
also seems intent on controlling the cabinet selection process to ensure that many non-Brotherhood ministers are non-
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ideological experts who are balanced out by Brotherhood-affiliated deputy ministers. "We have more than one
[Brotherhood] candidate for each cabinet position, and some of those might be deputies," Brotherhood parliamentary
leader Saad al-Husseini told me. "And we might nominate someone from a technocratic [background] or ask the other
parties for nominations."
The Brotherhood's promise to nominate a Christian and female vice president is also more about symbolism
than genuine power sharing. Brotherhood sources have suggested that Morsi may appoint up to five vice presidents,
thereby watering down the influence of the Christian and female deputies. Moreover, to prevent Morsi from being
succeeded by either a woman or a Copt in the event of his death, the Brotherhood will seek to maintain the current
constitutional clause mandating that the speaker of the parliament -- currently Brotherhood leader Saad al-Katatny --
assume the presidency. "A state with a Muslim majority can't be ruled by a non-Muslim," Brotherhood Guidance Office
leader Mahmoud Hussein told me, citing a sharia principle. The second prong of the Brotherhood's strategy for
temporary calm involves its coordination with the military. "This relationship was established from the first day," Deeb,
the Brotherhood parliamentarian, told me. "No clash, no total agreement." In the week leading up to the announcement
of Morsi's victory, Brotherhood leaders Katatny and Khairat al-Shater, among others, met frequently with SCAF generals,
apparently hashing out a deal to ensure Morsi's election while tabling other areas of disagreement. The existence of
these meetings, which now include Morsi, have led to a shift in the Brotherhood's rhetoric. After months of accusing the
SCAF of seeking to engineer the presidential elections and stage a coup, Brotherhood leaders are now praising the
SCAF's stewardship. At an inaugural event on Saturday, Morsi declared, "The SCAF has fulfilled its promises and the oath
it made, to not be an alternative to popular will." The Brotherhood has also signaled that it will now accept several key
SCAF demands that it had previously opposed. In this vein, immediately after his electoral victory was announced, Morsi
stated that he would only be sworn in before the parliament, thereby pressuring the SCAF to reverse the parliament's
dissolution. Yet he ultimately agreed to be sworn in before the Supreme Constitutional Court, which implicitly
recognized the validity of the SCAF's constitutional declaration. Brotherhood leaders have also intimated that they can
live with the power that the SCAF appropriated to itself via the constitutional declaration, at least for now. "The
constitutional declaration doesn't give the SCAF full power -- just the right for legislation," al-Husseini, the Brotherhood
parliamentary leader, told me. "The president has veto power." The Brotherhood even seems willing to accept SCAF's
autonomy over military budgets, a key SCAF demand, so long as a small civilian committee is briefed on the details. "I
can't bring the military budget in front of the parliament and discuss it publicly," Brotherhood parliamentarian Azza al-
Garf told me. "It should be discussed among a few people in parliament secretly." As a result, the military's vast business
holdings, which are said to encompass between 15 and 40 percent of the Egyptian economy, appear safe for the time
being.
The Brotherhood's arrangement with the SCAF is not surprising. It is consistent with the organization's long-held
strategy of avoiding confrontation with more powerful authorities by negotiating the extent of its political activities. In
fact, Morsi was the Brotherhood's point man in these negotiations during the last five years of Mubarak's rule, using the
dealings to coordinate the Brotherhood's participation in parliamentary elections and limited interaction with various
protest movements. As a cohesive, 84 year-old society, the Brotherhood typically places organizational goals, such as
achieving power incrementally, over broader societal goals, such as ending autocratic rule more immediately. "Our
program is a long-term one, not a short-term one," Morsi told me in August 2010. "If we are rushing things, then I don't
think that this leads to a real stable position." This hardly means, however, that the Brotherhood intends to
accommodate the military indefinitely. Last November, for example, the SCAF and the Brotherhood struck a deal in
which the Brotherhood agreed to avoid violent Tahrir Square protests in exchange for the SCAF's agreement to hold
parliamentary elections on time. But the pact broke down in March, when the SCAF first threatened to dissolve the
parliament and the Brotherhood suddenly dropped its promise that it would not run a presidential candidate. Moreover,
the Brotherhood appears unlikely to accept long-term limits on the authority that it has won in the elections. "The army
is owned by the people," said Brotherhood parliamentarian Osama Suleiman told me. "[Civilian oversight of the military]
is the popular will -- and nobody can stop popular will." In short, the long-anticipated confrontation between the SCAF
and Brotherhood has been delayed -- and, for that, many Egyptians are thankful. After all, Cairo seemed on the brink of
disaster a few weeks ago, when tens of thousands of mostly Islamist protesters packed Tahrir Square, some declaring
themselves ready to die if Shafik was named president. But the current calm, and the Brotherhood's attempt to appear
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inclusive while also accommodating the SCAF, will not last. The Brotherhood will use this period to build its legitimacy as
Egypt's next ruling party, and resume its push for more authority once the temperature cools down.
Eric Trager is the Next Generation fellow at The Washington Institute.
Article 5.
NYT
Why Russia Is Backing Syria
Ruslan Pukhov
July 6, 2012 -- Moscow -- MANY in the West believe that Russia's support for Syria stems from Moscow's desire
to profit from selling arms to Bashar al-Assad's government and maintain its naval facility at the Syrian port of Tartus.
But these speculations are superficial and misguided. The real reason that Russia is resisting strong international action
against the Assad regime is that it fears the spread of Islamic radicalism and the erosion of its superpower status in a
world where Western nations are increasingly undertaking unilateral military interventions.
Since 2005, Russian defense contracts with Syria have amounted to only about $5.5 billion — mostly to
modernize Syria's air force and air defenses. And although Syria had been making its scheduled payments in a fairly
timely manner, many contracts were delayed by Russia for political reasons. A contract for four MiG-31E fighter planes
was annulled altogether. And recently it became known that Russia had actually halted the planned delivery of S-300
mobile antiaircraft missile systems to Syria.
Syria is among Russia's significant customers, but it is by no means one of the key buyers of Russian arms —
accounting for just 5 percent of Russia's global arms sales in 2011. Indeed, Russia has long refrained from supplying
Damascus with the most powerful weapons systems so as to avoid angering Israel and the West — sometimes to the
detriment of Russia's commercial and political ties with Syria.
To put it plainly, arms sales to Syria today do not have any significance for Russia from either a commercial or a
military-technological standpoint, and Syria isn't an especially important partner in military-technological cooperation.
Indeed, Russia could quite easily resell weapons ordered by the Syrians (especially the most expensive items,
like fighter jets and missile systems) to third parties, thus minimizing its losses. And even if the Assad government
survives, it will be much weaker and is unlikely to be able to continue buying Russian arms.
The Russian Navy's logistical support facility at Tartus is similarly unimportant. It essentially amounts to two
floating moorings, a couple of warehouses, a barracks and a few buildings. On shore, there are no more than 50 seamen.
For the Navy, the facility in Tartus has more symbolic than practical significance. It can't serve as a support base for
deploying naval forces in the Mediterranean Sea, and even visits by Russian military ships are carried out more for
demonstrative purposes than out of any real need to replenish supplies.
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Russia's current Syria policy basically boils down to supporting the Assad government and preventing a foreign
intervention aimed at overthrowing it, as happened in Libya. President Vladimir V. Putin is simply channeling public
opinion and the expert consensus while playing his customary role as the protector of Russian interests who curtails the
willfulness of the West.
Many Russians believe that the collapse of the Assad government would be tantamount to the loss of Russia's
last client and ally in the Middle East and the final elimination of traces of former Soviet prowess there — illusory as
those traces may be. They believe that Western intervention in Syria (which Russia cannot counter militarily) would be
an intentional profanation of one of the few remaining symbols of Russia's status as a great world power.
Such attitudes are further buttressed by widespread pessimism about the eventual outcome of the Arab Spring,
and the Syrian revolution in particular. Most Russian observers believe that Arab revolutions have completely
destabilized the region and cleared the road to power for the Islamists. In Moscow, secular authoritarian governments
are seen as the sole realistic alternative to Islamic dominance.
The continuing struggles in Arab countries are seen as a battle by those who wear neckties against those who do
not wear them. Russians have long suffered from terrorism and extremism at the hands of Islamists in the northern
Caucasus, and they are therefore firmly on the side of those who wear neckties.
To people in Moscow, Mr. Assad appears not so much as "a bad dictator" but as a secular leader struggling with
an uprising of Islamist barbarians. The active support from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey's Islamist government for
rebels in Syria only heightens suspicions in Russia about the Islamist nature of the current opposition in Syria and rebels
throughout the Middle East.
Finally, Russians are angry about the West's propensity for unilateral interventionism — not to mention the
blatantly broad interpretation of the resolutions adopted by the United Nations Security Council and the direct
violations of those resolutions in Libya.
According to this view, the West, led by America, demonstrated its cynicism, perfidy and a typical policy of
double standards. That's why all the Western moralizing and calls for intervention in Syria are perceived by the Russian
public as yet another manifestation of cynical hypocrisy of the worst kind.
There is no doubt that preserving his own power is also on Mr. Putin's mind as his authoritarian government
begins to wobble in the face of growing protests that enjoy political approval and support from the West. He cannot but
sympathize with Mr. Assad as a fellow autocratic ruler struggling with outside interference in domestic affairs.
But ideological solidarity is a secondary factor at best. Mr. Putin is capitalizing on traditional Russian suspicions
of the West, and his support for Mr. Assad is based on the firm conviction that an Islamist-led revolution in Syria,
especially one that receives support through the intervention of Western and Arab states, will seriously harm Russia's
long-term interests.
Ruslan Pukhov <http://www.cast.ru/eng/about/managment/puhov/> is director of the Center for Analysis of
Strategies and Technologies, a research organization.
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Article 6.
The Daily Beast
Are Israeli Agents Assassinating Iranian Scientists? A New Book Argues
Dan Raviv <http://www.thedailybeast.com/contributors/dan-raviv.html> , Yossi Melman
July 7, 2012 -- Another wave of hangings by Iran's Islamic government is expected, after officials announced that
twenty Iranians were arrested, allegedly for helping Israel assassinate Iranian nuclear scientists
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/01/13/has-israel-been-killing-iran-s-nuclear-scientists.html> . Executions
are just a matter of time, as Iran's Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) is out to show that it is not completely
helpless in the face of four assassinations and one failed attempt in the streets of the capital, Tehran, over the last two
years. Israeli officials refuse to comment on who specifically might be guilty or innocent, but they publicly expressed
their joy that "God's finger" had acted against Iran's nuclear program. They also indicate that no credence should be
placed in the "confessions" that will doubtless be televised by Iran. Before Majid Jamali Fashi was hanged two months
ago, as the convicted "murderer" of a nuclear scientist in January 2010, the 24-year-old kick boxer was shown on official
TV reciting a tale of having been flown to Israel for training by the Mossad. His interrogators, who probably wrote the
confession for him, had seen far too many B-movies about spies and were wrong on many details, including the location
of Mossad headquarters.
Our in-depth study of fifty years of assassinations by Israel's foreign espionage agency—including conversations
with current and former Mossad operatives and those who work with them in countries friendly to Israel—yields the
conclusion that Fashi and the twenty other suspects now being held were not the killers. The methods, communications,
transportation, and even the innovative bombs used in the Tehran killings are too sensitive for the Mossad to share with
foreign freelancers. Instead, the assassinations are likely the work of Israel's special spy unit for the most delicate
missions: a kind of Mossad within the Mossad called Kidon (Bayonet). Kidon operatives are even more innovative,
braver, and physically fitter than other Mossad men and women. Again and again, they have fulfilled their missions
without leaving much of a trace. The Israeli government has never confirmed Kidon's existence or its actions.
The assassinations of physicists and nuclear scientists in Iran have been what Israelis call "blue and white"
operations, referring to the colors of their nation's flag. Without giving full details, senior Israeli officials have revealed
that fact to counterparts in the CIA and the White House. In at least one instance, U.S. officials were obviously
displeased that the Mossad took action at a delicate juncture in multilateral nuclear talks with Iran.
Although Iran has no diplomatic relations with Israel and bans any visits by Israelis, Mossad operatives seem to
have no trouble entering and leaving the country. Despite being a heavily patrolled police state, Iran has long borders
that stretch across mountains and wasteland. Two of the neighboring former Soviet republics, Azerbaijan and
Turkmenistan, provide an excellent launching pad for cross-border penetrations. Also, for over half a century now, the
Mossad has cultivated close cooperation with Kurds— who were stateless, but now run the Kurdish autonomous zone of
northern Iraq which borders Iran. Israel used to secretly help Kurds when they were oppressed by Iraq's government,
and the Mossad has excelled in living by the ancient dictum that the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
Israeli intelligence has also expressed an interest in collaborating with disaffected minority groups inside Iran.
Meir Dagan—the director of the Mossad from 2002 through 2010—was quoted in a State Department cable obtained
and released by Wikileaks. He is said to have told a senior American official in 2007 that disaffection among Baluchi,
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Azeri, and Kurdish minorities could be exploited by the United States and Israel. In addition, Dagan suggested supporting
student pro-democracy activists, if only to cause unrest inside Iran.
The official summary said Dagan felt sure that the U.S. and Israel could "change the ruling regime in Iran and its
attitude toward backing terror regimes," and that "we could also get them to delay their nuclear project." According to
the cable, Dagan said, "The economy is hurting, and this is provoking a real crisis among Iran's leaders." The minority
groups that the Mossad and CIA could support or exploit are "raising their heads and are tempted to resort to violence."
Economic woes and high unemployment have only become worse in Iran, as U.S.-led sanctions have begun to
bite. From the Mossad's perspective, unhappy and aimless young males in Iran represent an opportunity to recruit
sources of information, agents who can be trained, and even mercenary or rebel armies.
Yet for such a sensitive, dangerous, and daring mission as a series of assassinations in Iran's capital, the Mossad
would not depend on hired-gun mercenaries. They would be considered far less trustworthy, and there was hardly any
chance that the Mossad would reveal to non-Israelis the unique methods developed by the Kidon unit.
Mossad chief Dagan was pleased by the missions in Iran and the "cleanliness" of their execution: no clues, no
fingerprints, not even motorcycles left behind.
Naturally, no one in Jerusalem was talking about any operational details of how Israelis entered and left Iran—or
where they stayed while inside the Islamic Republic. Since the beginning of the State of Israel in 1948, its covert
operatives have never found it difficult to masquerade as locals in every corner of the vast Middle East.
There were many possibilities. Obviously, Israeli operatives traveled using the passports of other countries,
including bogus documents produced by skilled Mossad forgers and genuine passports where the photographs might be
altered slightly. The spy agency's use of phony, borrowed, and probably stolen non-Israeli passports has been
inadvertently revealed several times, over many years. After a Mossad team led by Kidon assassins killed a Palestinian
Islamist militant in a hotel in Dubai in January of 2010, the local police chief gleefully displayed video footage from
security cameras that showed surveillance teams doing their shadowy work —frequently changing wigs and eyeglasses—
and even the men wearing tennis whites, shorts, and others with baseball caps who were almost certainly the killers.
The police chief, General Dahi Khalfan, showed the visages of 27 men and women, displaying photos from their
apparently bogus passports. Although the British, Australian, and Irish governments expressed anger at the Mossad for
abusing their passports, diplomatic damage to Israel was minimal. In fact, Meir Dagan was fully satisfied with the
outcome of the Dubai operation: The target—Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in charge of arms acquisition for Hamas—was
dead. All the Mossad operatives returned safely to Israel. And no one was arrested or even accurately named.
Over the years, some stories about Kidon's prowess have leaked to the public. With the little that was known
about them, The Team's operatives were considered synonymous—in Israel and outside—with assassins, liquidators,
and murderers.
More broadly, there is a Mossad mythology that is based on decades of half-truths and rumors. Many of those
stemmed from the secret agency's "war of the spooks" against Palestinian radicals in the 1970s all over Europe—as a
response to the massacre of eleven Israeli athletes at the Summer Olympic games in Munich, Germany, in September of
1972.
"Our attitude was that in order to defend ourselves, we have to go on the attack," former Mossad chief Zvi
Zamir told us. 'Those who accuse us of being motivated simply by revenge are talking nonsense. We didn't wage a
vendetta campaign against individuals. It was a war against an organization, aiming to halt and prevent concrete
terrorist plans. We concentrated on what was expected to happen."
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Zamir's analysts found it satisfying that PLO activists in Europe and at their headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon—
rather than devoting their energies to terrorist planning—were now looking over their shoulders, out of fear that they
themselves were about to be attacked.
The truth, however, about the myth is that since the Mossad's creation in the early 1950s, it has been involved
in only a few dozen killing operations—certainly fewer than 50. But the public imagination worldwide has been captured
by the notion of constant assassinations, and the Mossad might find it difficult to refute the image with facts. So it does
not bother.
Dagan clearly believed in assassinations, and he did not shy away from planning missions in the heart of enemy
countries. A Kidon squad managed to plant itself in Damascus, Syria, long enough to locate and kill Imad Mughniyeh in
February of 2008. Mughniyeh, the Hezbollah faction's military chief and a veteran hijacker and bomber, had long been
on America's list of most wanted terrorists.
Overall, Dagan could be proud that during his eight years in charge, there were more killings by the Mossad in
enemy or "target" countries—Lebanon, Syria, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates—than ever before. In the past, such
activities had mostly been confined to the safer "base" countries where Israelis did not necessarily have to pretend to be
something else. The change to a bolder pattern was the "dagger between the Mossad's teeth" that Ariel Sharon, the
prime minister who appointed pagan, had demanded.
Despite tactical successes in Iran, the Mossad and its top political master —Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu—know that the entire Iranian nuclear weapons program will not be demolished by assassinations of nuclear
scientists and military officers.
Yet, any delay in Iran's nuclear work represents an achievement for Israel. Their strategic thinking—exercised in
Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and elsewhere—holds that temporary disruptions to an enemy's dangerous projects are sufficient
cause for taking significant risks.
This was even truer when it came to killing Iranian specialists, who worked on unique tasks that required years
of study. These men were not available in abundant supply, despite Iran's relatively large and advanced technological
infrastructure. The assassinations have also had a strong psychological objective: sending a loud and clear message to
scientists that working for the nuclear program was dangerous. The Mossad was telling them, in effect: Stay in your
classrooms. Do your academic work. Get your research published. Enjoy the university life. But do not help Iran go
nuclear. Otherwise, your career could be cut short by a bullet or a bomb.
Indeed, Israeli intelligence noticed that the assassination campaign was paying off, with what it called "white
defections": Iranian scientists were scared, many contemplated leaving the program, and some actually did.
With rare exceptions, they did not depart Iran and defect to the Western or Israeli side, but they dissociated
themselves from the nuclear program. There were also indications of scientists being reluctant to join the program,
despite lucrative terms offered by the Iranian government.
The intimidation campaign definitely showed an impact on foreigners. While in the past, Chinese, Russians,
Pakistanis and others were happily accepting invitations—and high pay—to work in Iran, the only ones who still seemed
attracted were North Koreans.
Mossad chief Dagan was pleased by the missions in Iran and the "cleanliness" of their execution: no clues, no
fingerprints, not even motorcycles left behind. Iranian authorities could only guess who was attacking, in broad daylight,
in their capital.
Yet the deeply intimidating impact that Dagan aimed to create in Iran seems to be exhausted. This is apparent to
Tamir Pardo, the new head of the Mossad who had been Dagan's deputy. (Dagan actually advised Netanbyahu to
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appoint another candidate.) The baby-faced Pardo is soft spoken, but h
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