16.10.2007 09:23
die amerikanische militärpolitik hat versagt in:
· KOSOVO
· AFGHANISTAN
· IRAK
Die israelische militärpolitik hat versagt in:
· LIBANON
Und nun kommt der atomstreit mit iran wiederum in die schusslinie amerikanischer und israelischer militärpolitik, so dass man voraussagen kann:
die amerikanische militärpolitik wird versagen in:
IRAN
Die israelische militärpolitik wird versagen in:
IRAN
Zähneknirschend wird sich amerika angesichts der schwelenden konflikte in kosovo,afghanistan,irak und israel sich in palästina zu einer regelung mit den palästinensern gezwungen sehen. US-Außenministerin Condoleezza Rice müht sich nunmehr ab, den abgang von bush über die lösung des palästinenzerproblems zu versüssen , um ihn nicht als erfolgosen präsidenten scheiden zu lassen, gelingt der palästinenserstaat nicht, woran gedacht werden kann, steht bush als wohl der erfolgloseste präsident da, was für sein buch gar nicht schön ist.
Folgender artikel ist hilfreich für das flagge-streichen der militärpolitik:
Rice bezeichnet palästinensisch-israelische Regelung als Hauptanliegen des Weißen Hauses
15-10-2007 20:11 GAZA, 15. Oktober (RIA Novosti). US-Präsident George W. Bush hat die Beilegung des palästinensisch-israelischen Konflikts in den Rang einer höchsten Priorität gehoben.
http://de.rian.ru/world/
Rice bezeichnet palästinensisch-israelische Regelung als Hauptanliegen des Weißen Hauses
15/10/2007 20:11 GAZA, 15. Oktober (RIA Novosti). US-Präsident George W. Bush hat die Beilegung des palästinensisch-israelischen Konflikts in den Rang einer höchsten Priorität gehoben.
Das sagte US-Außenministerin Condoleezza Rice am Montag auf einer Pressekonferenz in Ramallah, die sie gemeinsam mit dem Chef der Palästinensischen nationalen Administration, Mahmud Abbas, gab. Rice versprach, "alle nur möglichen Anstrengungen zu unternehmen, damit das bevorstehende multilaterale Nahosttreffen in Annapolis (USA) inhaltsreich und fruchtbringend wird".
"Ehrlich gesagt, haben wir etwas Anderes zu tun, als nur Leute zu einer Fotosession nach Annapolis einzuladen... Es ist an der Zeit, einen palästinensischen Staat auszurufen", sagte Rice. Seinerseits brachte Abbas die Hoffnung zum Ausdruck, dass das Treffen in Annapolis, das unter der Schirmherrschaft des Weißen Hauses stattfindet, zu einer Art Sprungbrett für Friedensverhandlungen mit exakt festgelegten Terminen wird. "Beide Seiten sind in der Lage, zu diesem Treffen ein Dokument über die Grundprinzipen der Regulierung vorzubereiten, das alle wichtigsten Aspekte des Konflikts tangiert", sagte Abbas.
pressestimmen
http://de.rian.ru/world/20071017/84249276.html
Russland übt Schulterschluss mit Iran - „Wedomosti“
17/10/2007 13:04 MOSKAU, 17. Oktober (RIA Novosti). Die Hoffnung des Westens, dass Wladimir Putin in Bezug auf Irans Atomprogramm Einfluss auf Mahmud Ahmadinedschad ausüben könnte, ist nach dem gestrigen Treffen der beiden Präsidenten gestorben, schreibt die russische Zeitung „Wedomosti“ am Mittwoch.
In der Abschlusserklärung des Gipfels der Kaspi-Anrainer unterstützten Aserbaidschan, Kasachstan, Russland und Turkmenien Irans Recht auf sein Atomprogramm. Zugleich einigten sich die Kaspi-Staaten darauf, den USA ihre Territorien für einen Militäreinsatz gegen Iran nicht zur Verfügung zu stellen.
Die wirtschaftlichen Vorteile in der Zusammenarbeit mit Iran (vor allem in Atomenergiewirtschaft sowie bei Gewinnung und Transport von Gas) sind zweifellos wichtig für Russland. Auch deshalb, weil sich Russland den geplanten Sanktionen der Weltgemeinschaft widersetzt. Die politische Zustimmung der Kaspi-Staaten und die mögliche Gründung einer Wirtschaftsorganisation der Kaspi-Anrainer können sich noch ändern. Doch gestern zeigte Moskau, dass es seinen politischen Einfluss in der schwierigen Region verstärkt.
Putins Politik gegenüber Iran kann auch als eine gewisse Herausforderung des Westens, vor allem der USA, betrachtet werden: Vor den Wahlen untermauert Russland seine eigenständige Haltung zu einem äußerst komplizierten internationalen Konflikt. Doch in der Kritik an Russland beachtet der Westen ein wichtiges Detail so gut wie gar nicht: Iran ist Russland viel näher als die USA oder Europa.
Irans Atomwaffen könnten für Russland sowie im Falle einer militärischen Operation der USA gegen Iran zu einer Gefahr werden. Eben aus diesem Grund stimmt die russische Strategie in Bezug auf Iran nicht mit der internationalen Strategie überein und stößt in den USA und EU auf Unverständnis. Das Vorgehen des Westens und Russlands, um eine Atombombe im Ayatollah-Staat zu verhindern, ist deutlich unterschiedlich. Moskau hat den Weg der Vorsicht und Freundlichkeit gewählt.
Links zum Thema
21:51 17/10/2007
Laridschani: Westen muss sich mit Irans Besitz von Atomtechnologien abfinden
18:50 17/10/2007
Irans umstrittenes Atomprogramm ist am Dienstag Thema von Solana und Laridschani in Rom
15:49 17/10/2007
Irans Atomprogramm: Solana und Laridschani beraten kommende Woche über Lösung des Streits
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071016/ap_on_re_mi_ea/mideast_rice
10/16/2007 9:32 PM
Rice wins Egypt's support for conference
By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press Writer 15 minutes ago
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice won public support Tuesday for a Mideast peace conference from a skeptical Egypt[kommenta1] , boosting her bid to secure critical Arab backing for pushing Israel and the Palestinians to resume formal negotiations to end their conflict.
Pressing ahead with an intense four-day shuttle diplomacy mission, Rice appeared to have convinced [kommenta2] the Egyptians of U.S. seriousness in organizing the conference to be held in Annapolis, Md. in November or December.
After her talks here with President Hosni Mubarak and other top officials, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said at a news conference with Rice that she had given them "a lot of trust and confidence" about American intentions for the meeting.
"She has helped us to understand the American objective," Aboul Gheit told reporters. "We feel encouraged regarding what we heard from Secretary Rice and promised her that we would help and we would help the parties as well in order to achieve the objective[kommenta3] ."
Gheit said Rice had assured the Egyptian government that President Bush, who announced in July that the conference would be held in the fall, was committed to forging an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal before he leaves office in January 2009[kommenta4] .
"She says that she is determined, and the president of the United States is determined to have a breakthrough during the remaining year of this administration," Aboul Gheit said. "We have to believe them. I cannot doubt them[kommenta5] ."
Just a day earlier, Aboul Gheit had spoken of postponing the conference about which Egypt and Jordan[kommenta6] , the other main Arab player in the peace process, and Saudi Arabia had expressed serious doubts. They all fear the gathering will be merely symbolic[kommenta7] .
Tempering his positive reaction to Rice, Gheit stressed the need for the conference to produce a document that will launch formal Israeli-Palestinian peace talks that includes a "timeline" for results[kommenta8] .
"We have to go into the meeting ready to launch negotiations," he said, adding that a timeline was needed to avoid "endless" talks that produce nothing.
Rice has said she does not believe it's necessary to agree on a timeline — also a demand of the Palestinians and an idea Israelis have rejected. But she has pledged to look at different ways to mark and memorialize progress during what all sides believe will be contentious and lengthy negotiations.
Still, Rice and her aides were buoyant after the meetings in Cairo, which precede a second round of U.S. talks with Israelis and Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank towns of Bethlehem and Ramallah on Wednesday and discussions with Jordan's King Abdullah in London on Thursday.
One senior State Department official traveling with Rice said securing support from Egypt, as well as hopefully Jordan later in the week, would be instrumental in bringing "the rest of the relatively silent Arab world" on board for the conference.
The Bush administration is particularly interested in having Saudi Arabia, which does not have a peace deal with the Jewish state, attend the conference that it sees as a springboard for a comprehensive resolution to the wider Arab-Israeli conflict.
Rice, who is facing daunting challenges in getting the Israelis and Palestinians to agree to a joint declaration to present for the conference, smiled and nodded as Aboul Gheit spoke.
She warned there is hard work ahead but hoped that a specific date for the meeting, which has not been scheduled, and invitations to attend could be announced soon.
"We will continue to work and help them to create this document and we will then be in a position I think fairly soon to talk about when this meeting ought to take place," Rice said.
Two senior U.S. officials said later, however, they did not expect a date or invitation list to be issued this week.
The Palestinians want a document prepared ahead of the conference that deals with core issues of the peace negotiations, including the borders of a future Palestinian state, the status of disputed Jerusalem, the fate Palestinian refugees and Israeli settlements.
But Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert wants a vaguer joint statement and has said agreement on the matter should not be prerequisite for the Annapolis meeting.
Underscoring the difficulty of Rice's work, Palestinian and Israeli negotiating teams met for a second time late Monday to try to thrash out details of the joint document, but made no headway.
"So far, no advances have been made, and we are not deluding ourselves," Palestinian negotiator Yasser Abed Rabbo said Tuesday.
But in addition to getting backing from Egypt on Tuesday, Rice also seemed to have won over Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa, who just last week derided the planned conference, saying the Americans were just hoping for a photo opportunity.
After seeing Rice in Cairo, Moussa said he "felt American seriousness concerning the peace conference and a great desire on the American side to push matters positively toward a serious conference."
And, Aboul Gheit suggested Egypt would work with the Palestinians and Israelis to help solidify the agenda. "All of us are required to help in drafting the parameters, the principles, the understandings, whatever will launch the negotiations on a sound basis," he said.
Rice arrived in the region on Sunday playing down the chances for a breakthrough.
She has since been urging pushing Israeli and Palestinian leaders to push ahead in their talks on the document and on Monday declared that now is the time for the creation of a Palestinian state, which she said is a key U.S. interest.
[kommenta1]Wie sollen sie auch anders sein , als skeptische, wenn`s ums abdeanken von bush geht?
[kommenta2]Sieger sehen anders aus
[kommenta3]was eigentlich ist aus jimmy carters`buch „palestine“ peace not apartheid, geworden das von cosco in palo alto cal. Aus dem verkauf genommen wurde?
[kommenta4]Deutlicher kann die hintertreibung der gründung des palästinenserstaates nicht beschrieben werden
[kommenta5]die moslem werden verhindern bush zu verherrlichen
[kommenta6]alle westhörig
[kommenta7]zu deutsch leere hülsen
[kommenta8]am besten die israelis machen das und unterschreiben es
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071016/ap_on_re_mi_ea/mideast_rice&printer=1;_ylt=AvJHs1S5W4eYhulXofnrhGQUewgF
16.10.2007 13:26
Rice seeking support for Mideast talks
By MATTHEW LEE, Associated Press Writer 31 minutes ago
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sought support from Egypt Tuesday in her quest to nudge Israelis and Palestinians closer together before a Mideast peace conference.
Egypt's foreign minister, however, warned that planned meeting might have to be postponed unless a substantive agreement can be reached ahead of time.
Rice arrived in Cairo and was scheduled to speak with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who has played a key role in mediating large and small conflicts between Israel and the Palestinians and among squabbling Palestinians factions.
Ahead of Rice's stop in Egypt, the country's Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit accused some in Israel of trying to "deplete American efforts" to have a real peace agreement between the two sides for the peace meeting, tentatively set to take place in the Annapolis, Md., in late November.
"Without addressing these attempts, then we have to seriously think of postponing the conference to another appropriate time," Aboul Gheit said in a statement late Monday. "Rushing into holding the meeting without an agreement over a substantive and positive document may damage opportunities to achieve a just peace."
On Monday, after talks in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Rice said Israel and the Palestinians must agree on how and when to start formal peace talks.
In one of her strongest statements yet on the issue, Rice declared that creation of a Palestinian state is a key U.S. interest and urged the two sides to drop contentious demands and reach consensus on a substantive joint statement ahead of the international conference.
"Frankly, it's time for the establishment of a Palestinian state," Rice told a news conference with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who she saw on the second of an intense four-day Middle East shuttle diplomacy mission.
"The United States sees the establishment of a Palestinian state and a two-state solution as absolutely essential for the future, not just of Palestinians and Israelis but also for the Middle East and indeed to American interests," she said.
"That's really a message that I think only I can deliver," Rice said, explaining her mission to prepare for the conference to be held in Annapolis, Md., as early as late November.
The secretary is facing daunting challenges in trying to bring the two sides close enough to make the conference worthwhile and played down the chances for any breakthroughs before her arrival. She expects to return to the region at least once more before the conference takes place.
Rice will see both sides again on Wednesday after visiting Egypt. Then she will travel to London to meet Jordan's King Abdullah II in a bid to build support for the meeting among skeptical Arab nations.
In her talks in Jerusalem and the West Bank, she is seeking to bridge wide gaps between Israel and the Palestinians over the declaration to be endorsed in Annapolis that President Bush hopes will lead to negotiations for a final settlement of long-running conflict.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has said he does not see the document as a prerequisite for the conference. He wants it as vague as possible on critical so-called "final status issues" like the borders of a Palestinian state, the status of disputed Jerusalem, Israeli settlements and Palestinian refugees.
At the same time, Olmert hinted Monday that he is ready to share control of Jerusalem, saying for the first time that Israel could do without controlling some of the holy city's outlying Arab neighborhoods.
The Palestinians, meanwhile, have said they will not attend the conference without a document that contains details on these matters as well as a specific timeline for their resolution. Arab states share the Palestinian concerns.
"No doubt that before we go to (the conference), the document will be ready," said Abbas, whose authority has been limited to the West Bank since the militant Islamic Hamas movement seized control of the Gaza Strip in June.
"The negotiations should not be open-ended, but subject to a certain time period," he added.
Negotiating teams headed by Israel's foreign minister and a former Palestinian premier met in Jerusalem Monday for more than two hours, Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said. No progress was reported.
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