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to make miles happy
07/05/2011 9:19 am

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we'll put this here.

An unexpected player has come to Israel's aid in thwarting this year's Gaza-bound flotilla: Greece.

It's a country Israel has been courting since a raid on last year's flotilla ended in the death of nine Turkish citizens, severely damaging relations between the Jewish state and one of its most important Mediterranean allies. Desperate for new friends in the region, Israel reached out to Greece, offering generous military assistance to the debt-ridden state.

The fruits of that emerging friendship have been on display over the past week. First, Greek bureaucrats sought to delay the departure of the ships laden with activists and some aid meant to highlight the humanitarian effect of Israel's blockade on Gaza. When the US and Canadian boats finally departed, armed Greek commandos forced them back to shore.

Now it appears the flotilla is unlikely to sail or else be very tiny – thus exerting little pressure on Israel, which has wielded diplomatic power to greater effect than the military force it displayed last year.

"There seems to be one thing that the [flotilla] organizers failed to take into account: Greece's attitude towards the flotilla, and the dramatic change that has occurred in Israeli-Greek relations in the past year," wrote Menachem Ganz in the Israeli daily newspaper Yediot Ahronot.

The shift in Israeli-Greek relations began within months after an Israeli raid on the Mavi Marmara left nine Turkish activists dead, including one with dual American citizenship. While Turkey kept its ambassador to Israel at home in protest, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou paid a visit to Israel – the first in 18 years. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quickly followed up with a visit to Greece.

That marked something of a break with Mr. Papandreou’s father, Andreas, who as prime minister cultivated close ties with the Palestine Liberation Organization and its leader Yasser Arafat.

While the Israeli and Turkish militaries halted joint exercises, Israeli and Greek air forces began training together, giving Israeli pilots added airspace for practice. The tension in Israel-Turkey ties prompted tens of thousands of Israeli tourists who once flocked to Turkish resorts to look for vacation packages in the neighboring Greek isles instead.

"There’s been intensive investment in ties with Greece since Israeli Turkey ties declined – especially in military ties,’’ says Alon Liel, a former Israeli diplomat who was once posted Turkey.

Mr. Liel said that Israel has offered Greece military supply deals with generous financing terms.

"Greece is a very vulnerable country now, with needs…. They need everything at the moment.’’

The flotilla controversy comes as world attention is fixed on Athens, which last week passed austerity measures to comply with an international debt relief program to avoid defaulting on its sovereign debt.

On Thursday, Mr. Netanyahu thanked European leaders for discouraging the flotilla, and mentioned by name Papandreou – who then asked for help in obtaining tear gas to rein in protesters at home.

In the coming days, Netanyahu is scheduled to visit Balkan states, which Israel has also tried to court in the wake of the falling out with Turkey.

The warmth in ties with Greece is one factor that has spurred recent talks between Israel and Turkey aimed at a reconciliation over the flotilla blow-up last year, analysts say.

Two weeks before Greece’s flotilla clampdown, Turkish government officials also discouraged Turkish activists from participating. Turkish and Israeli negotiators are also reportedly finalizing the details of a United Nations report on the flotilla, which is expected to include words of regret – if not apology – and some sort of compensation for Turkey.

Amid the Arab Spring, both Turkey and Israel have an interest in minimizing tensions in their relationship. With Syria in turmoil next door, Turkey has absorbed more than 12,000 refugees in recent weeks. And while Israel's budding alliance with Greece is paying dividends this week, Athens' weight is no substitute for Ankara's regional heft.

"Turkey was always perceived as a strategic ally, vital ally," said a Western diplomat based in Jerusalem. "Greece certainly cannot replace Turkey. It’s bankrupt, with a smaller population, not as respected in Europe, its military is much smaller. But in the absence of Turkey, having warm relations with Greece is useful, and we are seeing that now.''
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07/05/2011 9:20 am

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might as well throw this in here too.


Israeli forces fired into the Gaza Strip on Tuesday to kill two gunmen from an al Qaeda-affiliated Palestinian faction who approached the boundary fence, medical officials and militant sources said.

The two dead and a comrade wounded in the shelling belonged to the Tawheed and Jihad group, radical Islamists who have challenged Hamas rule over the Palestinian enclave, militant sources said.

An Israeli army spokeswoman had no immediate comment on the incident, which disrupted a relative quiet along the frontier.

An Israeli security source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the gunmen were suspected of preparing to fire a rocket across the border into Israel.

A rocket launched from Gaza struck Israel on Sunday, causing no damage or casualties.
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07/05/2011 9:23 am

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AND it looks like one got away.



Paris: A small French pleasure craft with eight protesters on board left Greek waters overnight and set off for Gaza in an attempt to break an Israeli naval blockade, organisers said on Tuesday.

The "Dignite al Karama" is so far the only boat in a planned flotilla organised by pro-Palestinian activists to set sail from Greece, after the authorities there blocked other vessels from taking part in the protest.

The 19-metre (63-foot) motor cruiser is carrying, among others, the former French far-left presidential candidate Olivier Besancenot, Green Party Euro-MP Nicole Kiil-Nielsen and trade unionist Annick Coupe.

They expect to be off Gaza within an day or two, the group said.

"The boat was able to take on board fuel and food. It's heading towards Gaza," said Jean-Claude Lefort, spokesman for "A French Boat for Gaza", the French wing of the international maritime demonstration.

"We are going to send a delegation to the French foreign ministry to ask for protection. Depending on how that goes, we will advise on our progress," he added. Israel has warned it will halt any vessels approaching Gaza.

Asked how the Dignite had managed to slip past the Greek authorities, which have prevented the rest of the flotilla in Athens' port Piraeus, Lefort said, "It wasn't spotted. It wasn't in Piraeus, it was somewhere else."
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07/05/2011 9:32 am

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O-M-G!!


looking on google news (world), there are only two stories that don't pertain to israel or gaza. get a load of all these headlines.

Israel shelling kills two Qaeda-linked Gaza gunmen

Israel's new friend: Why Greece is thwarting Gaza flotilla

OPT: Born at a checkpoint (about gaza)

OIC/Palestine: the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) dispatches ...

French protest boat leaves Greece for Gaza

FM on Gaza initiative

'IAF thwarts terrorists trying to launch rockets from Gaza'

Gaza's children parachute into record books for third year in a row

Fatah 'tiptoeing round accord with Hamas' in run-up to statehood bid

'Gaza or bust for Africa to Gaza convoy'

'Gaza convoys to inspire future aid'

OFID to support UNRWA job projects in Gaza...

Two Killed, One Injured in Israeli bombardment of central Gaza Strip

More setbacks for Gaza-bound flotilla

Gaza shelves stocked, but hope in short supply

Aid group bashes Støre over Gaza

Holocaust Survivor Sails to the Gaza Strip


jesus christ, is anything else going on in the world?!
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07/05/2011 5:08 pm

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Dunno, wasn't there some trial or something going on in florida? ;-P

Are you shocked to see that the news isn't revolving around the US for a change?

Will post a thread about something else so, to keep you happy :-)
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07/05/2011 7:01 pm

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Originally Posted by Kieran Colfer:


Are you shocked to see that the news isn't revolving around the US for a change?



under world news? not at all. but i've never seen the headlines on google news so concentrated. not even when there were conflicts between the israelis and palestinians. just strange.
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07/06/2011 1:42 am

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Originally Posted by Dødherre Mørktre:

but i've never seen the headlines on google news so concentrated.



Didn't you make a tread on the media's attention span once?
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07/06/2011 6:11 am

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Originally Posted by Bryant Platt:

Originally Posted by Dødherre Mørktre:

but i've never seen the headlines on google news so concentrated.



Didn't you make a tread on the media's attention span once?



true.
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