Elie Klein is at it again. Last year, the 31-year-old Anglo public relations account executive chowed down 70 sufganiyot (Hanukah donuts) for charity, raising over $9,000 for 44 causes around the world. This year, he set a goal of eating 100 donuts and,…
One of the photos Sebastian took while visiting me in Israel. At the Kotel. You can check out more of his Israel photos here: Sebastian Stewart
Intel Source: Israel Behind Deadly Explosion at Iran Missile Base
Israeli newspapers on Sunday were thick with innuendo, the front pages of the three largest dailies dominated by variations on the headline “Mysterious Explosion in Iranian Missile Base.” Turn the page, and the mystery is answered with a wink. “Who Is Responsible for Attacks on the Iranian Army?” asks Maariv, and the paper lists without further comment a half-dozen other violent setbacks to Iran’s nuclear and military nexus. For Israeli readers, the coy implication is that their own government was behind Saturday’s massive blast just outside Tehran. It is an assumption a Western intelligence source insists is correct: the Mossad — the Israeli agency charged with covert operations — did it. “Don’t believe the Iranians that it was an accident,” the official tells TIME, adding that other sabotage is being planned to impede the Iranian ability to develop and deliver a nuclear weapon. “There are more bullets in the magazine,” the official says.
The powerful blast or series of blasts — reports described an initial explosion followed by a much larger one — devastated a missile base in the gritty urban sprawl to the west of the Iranian capital. The base housed Shahab missiles, which, at their longest range, can reach Israel. Last week’s report from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Iran had experimented with removing the conventional warhead on the Shahab-3 and replacing it with one that would hold a nuclear device. Iran says the explosion was an accident that came while troops were transferring ammunition out of the depot “toward the appropriate site.”
The explosion killed at least 17 people, including Major General Hassan Moqqadam, described by Iranian state media as a pioneer in Iranian missile development and the Revolutionary Guard commander in charge of “ensuring self-sufficiency” in armaments, a challenging task in light of international sanctions.
Coming the weekend after the release of the unusually critical IAEA report, which laid out page upon page of evidence that Iran is moving toward a nuclear weapon, the blast naturally sharpened concern over Israel’s threat to launch airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Half the stories on the Tehran Times website on Sunday referenced the possibility of a military strike, most warning of dire repercussions.
But the incident also argued, maybe even augured, against an outright strike. If Israel — perhaps in concert with Washington and other allies — can continue to inflict damage to the Iranian nuclear effort through covert actions, the need diminishes for overt, incendiary moves like air strikes. The Stuxnet computer worm bollixed Iran’s centrifuges for months, wreaking havoc on the crucial process of uranium enrichment.
And in Sunday’s editions, the Hebrew press coyly listed what Yedioth Ahronoth called “Iran’s Mysterious Mishaps.” The tallies ran from the November 2007 explosion at a missile base south of Tehran to the October 2010 blast at a Shahab facility in southwestern Iran, to the assassinations of three Iranian scientists working in the nuclear program — two last year and one in July.
At the very least, the list burnishes the mystique of the Mossad, Israel’s overseas spy agency. Whatever the case-by-case reality, the popular notion that, through the Mossad, Israel knows everything and can reach anywhere is one of the most valuable assets available to a state whose entire doctrine of defense can be summed up in the word deterrence. But it doesn’t mean Israel is the only country with a foreign intelligence operation inside Iran. The most recent IAEA report included intelligence from 10 governments on details of the Iranian nuclear effort. And in previous interviews, Western security sources have indicated that U.S. and other Western intelligence agencies have partnered with Israel on covert operations inside Iran. Sometimes the partner brings specific expertise or access. In other cases, Iranian agents on the ground who might harbor misgivings about Israel are allowed to believe they are working only with another government altogether.
Saturday’s blast was so powerful it was felt 25 miles away in Tehran, and so loud that one nearby resident with combat experience thought he had just heard the detonation of an aerial bomb. “Frankly it did not sound like an arms depot from where I was because when one of those goes off, it is multiple explosions over minutes, even hours depending on the size of the facility,” the resident says. “All I heard was one big boom. I was sure from the quality of the noise that anyone in its immediate vicinity was dead. Something definitely happened, but I would not trust the [Revolutionary] Guards to be absolutely forthcoming as to what it was.”
— With reporting by Aaron J. Klein / Tel Aviv
Photo: Smoke rises from an explosion at a Revolutionary Guard ammunition depot outside Tehran, which, according to Iranian officials, killed at least 15 people on Nov. 12, 2011 (AP)
this would be incredible.
In a breakthrough development, the Israeli company Vaxil BioTherapeutics has formulated a therapeutic cancer vaccine, now in clinical trials at Hadassah University Medical Center in Jerusalem. If all goes well, the vaccine could be available about six years down the road, to administer on a regular basis not only to help treat cancer but in order to keep the disease from recurring.
The vaccine is being tested against a type of blood cancer called multiple myeloma. If the substance works as hoped — and it looks like all arrows are pointing that way — its platform technology VaxHit could be applied to 90 percent of all known cancers, including prostate and breast cancer, solid and non-solid tumors.
UNESCO grants Palestine full membership
Controversial move endorsed in UN cultural agency vote despite US threat of withholding £50m in funds
Palestine has become a full member of the UN cultural and educational agency in a move that the United States and other opponents say could harm renewed Middle East peace efforts.
The US had threatened to withhold roughly $80m (£50m) in annual funding to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) if it approved Palestinian membership. The United States provides about 22% of Unesco’s funding.
Huge cheers went up in Unesco after delegates approved the membership by 107 votes to 14 with 52 abstentions. Eighty-one votes were needed for approval in a hall with 173 Unesco member delegations present.
“Long live Palestine!” shouted one delegate, in French, at the unusually tense and dramatic meeting of Unesco’s general conference.
While the vote has large symbolic meaning, the issues of borders of an eventual Palestinian state, security troubles and other disputes that have thwarted Middle East peace for decades remain unresolved.
Palestinian officials are seeking full membership in the United Nations, but that effort is still under examination and the US has said it will veto it unless there is a peace deal with Israel. Given that, the Palestinians separately sought membership at Paris-based Unesco and other UN bodies.
Monday’s vote is definitive. The membership formally takes effect when Palestine signs Unesco’s founding charter.
The US ambassador to Unesco, David Killion, said the vote would “complicate” US efforts to support the agency. The United States voted against the measure.
Israel’s ambassador to Unesco, Nimrod Barkan, called the vote a tragedy.
“Unesco deals in science, not science fiction,” he said. “They forced on Unesco a political subject out of its competence. They have forced a drastic cut in contributions to the organisation.”
The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, last week called Unesco’s deliberation “inexplicable”, saying discussion of Palestinian membership of international organisations could not replace negotiations with Israel as a fast track towards Palestinian independence.
(Photo: Reuters)
More Tel Aviv
Some photos from the Tel Aviv tour I took with my Rebel XT
Another post to try and catch up on all that’s been going on since the first posts. These will definitely not be in any great detail, but better than nothing.
-We’ve been to a few other bars/clubs including one in an old prison. The places we’ve gone out recently have luckily not had the same smoke problem as we experienced the first night out at Radio.
-Noam took me and Jonathan out sailing with his friends. It was amazing and they were all really nice and interesting to talk to. They did all the sailing work while we enjoyed the Mediterranean Sea breeze.
-Ulpan got a lot harder.
-We checked out a bunch of the huge grocery stores near us, including one with all kosher products that had a lot of people working in there that were Orthodox. Cheaper buying from those stores, but a huge pain checking out, especially when people don’t care about lines and just try to cut in even though you are clearly waiting.
-We did a tour around Tel Aviv and Jaffa with the Netanya group. It reminded me of birthright, since we went by a lot of the same spots. The spot where my birthright group last stopped to talk was one of the places we stopped near to look inside this old building that had a huge amount of bats hanging out in there. Awesome. The Zoom crew all had their dSLRs out to take photos.
-We’ve had a few more BBQs on our roof, including one were we taught the Israelis how to play flip cup. They beat us. They taught us how to play a game where you can’t show your teeth while going around in a circle saying “sheep” or “sheepoing”. You had to be there to get it, but I thought it was hilarious.
-One day after Ulpan, we walked a block to get to Buddha Burgers, a vegan restaurant here. I got a burger and some potato wedges. Delish, though didn’t compare to Great Sage’s burger. I’ll have to go back and try something different from their huge menu.
-One weekend we went to the north with all four Israel Pathways groups and stayed at a kibbutz we stayed at during birthright. There was a walk a lot of people did (minus me and a few others) through this river thing and a hike where we could get a good look out to the surrounding areas, and a stop in Tiberias before going to the kibbutz for shabbat. After shabbat, we did some social exercises, had an amazing dinner, and then a few of us met a group of Israelis that shared a beer and hookah with us before all going to the kibbutz bar. They knew all the lyrics to Grease Lightning and other random tunes. Lots of dancing. The next day we had some free time to check out the “beach” and then ate some more delish food followed by a lecture on how a kibbutz works. We ended the trip with another trip to Tiberias for a dancing boat cruise on the Sea of Galilee and a drum circle. A lot of fun, minus getting back to our apartments so late.
I think those are most of the highlights. I probably wont be updating for a couple weeks while Sebastian’s here, but then I’ll get back on it.
craziness
A Rabbi whips a man with leather straps as a symbolic punishment for his sins during the traditional Malkot (whipping in Hebrew) ceremony, ahead of Yom Kippur, in Beni Brak, ultra-Orthodox town near Tel Aviv, Israel, Friday Oct. 7, 2011. The ceremony is held before the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, which starts on Friday. Jews traditionally observe this holy day with a 25-hour period of fasting and intensive prayer. (AP Photo)