Ruth
The Living Force
I suppose Israel will now have to deny that it actually! Or do they call this an 'about face' now? They really aught to call the Mossad and just ask for their soldier back nicely. Don't think they will though.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19645805-601,00.html
http://www.bigpond.com/news/breaking/content/20060701/1676357.asp
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19645805-601,00.html
Meanwhile, in the US, Ricey is offering a reward of up to 6.7 million for another (and this time 'better') non existant man (al-Zarqawi's replacement, al-Masri). They must have thought that someone was about to hand Zarqawi over for that 25 million dollar bounty, so they had to 'get rid of him'.Israel warns: free soldier or PM dies
Middle East correspondent Martin Chulov
July 01, 2006
ISRAEL last night threatened to assassinate Palestinian Prime Minister Ismael Haniyeh if Hamas militants did not release a captured Israeli soldier unharmed.
The unprecedented warning was delivered to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in a letter as Israel debated a deal offered by Hamas to free Corporal Gilad Shalit.
It came as Israeli military officials readied a second invasion force for a huge offensive into Gaza.
Hamas's Gaza-based political leaders, including Mr Haniyeh, had already gone into hiding.
But last night's direct threat to kill Mr Haniyeh, a democratically elected head of state, sharply raised the stakes.
The bid to free Corporal Shalit was brokered by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who last night warned Hamas it faced severe consequences if it did not curb its "extreme stance" and described the growing conflict as a lightning rod for Palestinian vengeance.
Jerusalem has made no official comment, but Egyptian state media said Israel had found the offer unacceptable. Israel has not spelt out the terms demanded by Hamas, but earlier this week it refused to buy into talk of a prisoner swap.
Thousands of Hamas supporters protested in Gaza City late on Thursday over the arrest by Israeli forces of up to 32 Hamas MPs on the West Bank that day.
A Hamas spokesman said the group would never recognise Israel, in spite of a deal its leaders signed this week offering implicit recognition of the Jewish state in return for easing an economic blockade.
Israeli fighter jets bombed 20 targets in Gaza, including the Interior Ministry, which it said had been used by militants to stage meetings, while artillery hit the northern strip with 500 shells in the 24 hours until yesterday morning.
Jewish settler Eliyahu Asheri, who was murdered by militants this week, was buried on Thursday as leaders of the Popular Resistance Committees pledged to seize more hostages in the West Bank. No further word has emerged about another suspected Jewish hostage, Noach Moskowitz, who Israeli police said was found dead hours after Mr Asheri's remains were found.
Much of Gaza, including two main hospitals, was without power and running water as a UN aid chief warned that the 1.4 million residents of the strip were three days away from a humanitarian crisis.
"They are heading for the abyss unless they get electricity and fuel restored," said emergency relief co-ordinator Jan Egeland, who urged militants to free Corporal Shalit and stop firing rockets into Israel.
Residents complain that sonic booms caused by Israeli jets traumatise children and that shelling confines families to their homes.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has vowed the military will do all it can to avoid civilian deaths if a full-scale assault is launched.
Mr Olmert said the decision to invade northern Gaza had already been delayed to allow Mr Mubarak's negotiations to continue.
The arrested Hamas legislators have been sent to security prisons and many will stand trial on terrorism offences. The detentions have hurt Hamas's already limited ability to govern and are likely to force a regime change.
Israel claims it has intelligence about the area where Corporal Shalit is held, but has been unable to pinpoint the exact location. Mr Olmert said the military would leave the strip if he was unconditionally and safely returned.
Egypt and the neighbouring Arab states of Jordan and Lebanon fear a war between Israel and the Palestinians could lead to uprisings within their own borders, which house many Palestinian refugees.
http://www.bigpond.com/news/breaking/content/20060701/1676357.asp
So where did he get his 'expert' military training from then? And who from? Must of been out of that psyops black ops, black box, lucky dip collection that they have. Better than anything off the back of a cornflakes packet any day! Or out of the Cave Dwelling Goat Herders Manual, for that matter.US posts reward for al-Masri leads
July 1, 2006 - 10:47AM
Source: ABC
United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has authorised a reward of up to $A6.7 million for information leading to wanted Al Qaeda leader Abu Ayyub al-Masri in Iraq.
Deputy State Department spokesman Adam Ereli says the reward has been offered in the hope it would encourage persons to come forward with information on al-Masri.
The State Department says al-Masri is an Egyptian national and a senior Al Qaeda leader in Iraq.
He is a direct associate of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the former leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, who was recently killed by US forces.
"Trained in Afghanistan and Pakistan, al-Masri is an explosives expert specialising in the construction of Vehicle-Borne Improvised Explosive Devices," the same bombs responsible for large numbers of US troop casualties, a statement said.
Zarqawi was the most-wanted man in Iraq until he was killed in a US air strike on his hideout three weeks ago.
He orchestrated a bloody campaign of attacks and beheadings of hostages and had long remained elusive in Iraq, despite a $US25 million bounty, until his killing on June 7.
The true identity of al-Masri remains an enigma in his reported homeland of Egypt.
Zarqawi's successor is believed to have lived in the central Cairo area of Zawyia Hamra before going to Afghanistan in the late 1980s or early 1990s, and then on to Iraq via Iran.