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  • Apr
    1
    Attack targets alleged hide-out connected to a Taliban leader
     
    pakistanISLAMABAD – A suspected U.S. drone fired two missiles Wednesday at an alleged hide-out connected to a Taliban leader who has threatened to attack Washington, killing 12 people and wounding several others, officials said.

    The attack came a day after Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on a police academy in the eastern city of Lahore, saying it was retaliation for U.S. missile strikes on militant strongholds along the Afghan border. Mehsud also vowed to launch an attack on Washington or even the White House in phone interviews with The Associated Press and local media.

    The FBI, however, said he had made similar threats previously and that there was no indication of anything imminent.

    A local intelligence official told The Associated Press that the compound attacked Wednesday in a remote area of the Orakzai tribal region near the Afghan border belonged to one of Mehsud’s commanders.

    Up to 30 suspected militants were at the compound when it was hit, and the Taliban have moved the dead and injured to an undisclosed location, he said.

    The strike is believed to be the first in Orakzai, another sign the U.S. is expanding its attack zone, possibly because of pressure on militants to keep moving.

    Since the U.S. escalated its missile campaign starting in August, most of the estimated three dozen strikes have landed in North and South Waziristan tribal regions, where Mehsud is strongest.

    Two other senior intelligence officials said they believe 12 people were killed in the strike, including close associates of Mehsud. But it was difficult to confirm the exact identities of those involved because the Taliban surrounded the area shortly after the attack, they said.

    The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

    Liaquat Ali, a local government official in Orakzai, confirmed the attack but could not provide casualty figures or the identities of the people targeted.

    Mehsud in the cross-hairs
    Pakistan has publicly protested the attacks, calling them a violation of its sovereignty that also deepens anti-American sentiment. But President Barack Obama’s administration has signaled it has no intention of backing off. Officials say the strikes have killed top al-Qaida figures.

    Mehsud has no record of attacking targets abroad, although he is suspected of being behind a 10-man cell arrested in Barcelona in January 2008 for plotting suicide attacks in Spain. The U.S. recently placed a $5 million bounty on Mehsud’s head.

    Pakistan’s former government and the CIA have named him as the prime suspect behind the December 2007 killing of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. Pakistani officials accuse him of harboring foreign fighters, including Central Asians linked to al-Qaida, and of training suicide bombers.

    Washington has stepped up pressure on Pakistan to crack down on militants operating in its territory who are believed to pose a threat to U.S. and NATO forces across the border in Afghanistan. Militants have also been increasing attacks within Pakistan, threatening to destabilize the nuclear-armed country.

    Monday’s attack on a police academy on Lahore’s outskirts left at least 12 people dead, including seven police, and sparked an eight-hour standoff with security forces that ended when black-clad commandos stormed the compound. Some of the gunmen blew themselves up.

    Analysts doubt that Mehsud’s Taliban fighters carried off the academy attack on their own, saying the group is likely working more closely than ever with militants based far from the Afghan frontier. It’s a constellation that includes al-Qaida, presenting a formidable challenge to the U.S. as it increases its troop presence in the region, not to mention Pakistan’s own stability.


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  • Feb
    21

    With drug-fueled violence and corruption escalating sharply, many fear drug cartels have grown too powerful for Mexico to control. Why things are getting worse, and what it means for the United States.

    Mexican marines stand guard next to about 7 tons of confiscated cocaine on Feb. 16.

    Mexican marines stand guard next to about 7 tons of confiscated cocaine on Feb. 16.

    Monterrey, Mexico

    Detective Ramon Jasso was heading to work in this bustling city a few days ago when an SUV pulled alongside and slowed ominously. Within seconds, gunmen fired 97 bullets at the 37-year-old policeman, killing him instantly.

    Mr. Jasso had been warned. The day before, someone called his cellphone and said he would be killed if he didn’t immediately release a young man who had been arrested for organizing a violent protest in support of the city’s drug gangs. The demonstrators were demanding that the Mexican army withdraw from the drug war. The protests have since spread from Monterrey — once a model of order and industry — to five other cities.

    Much as Pakistan is fighting for survival against Islamic radicals, Mexico is waging a do-or-die battle with the world’s most powerful drug cartels. Last year, some 6,000 people died in drug-related violence here, more than twice the number killed the previous year. The dead included several dozen who were beheaded, a chilling echo of the scare tactics used by Islamic radicals. Mexican drug gangs even have an unofficial religion: They worship La Santa Muerte, a Mexican version of the Grim Reaper.

    In growing parts of the country, drug gangs now extort businesses, setting up a parallel tax system that threatens the government monopoly on raising tax money. In Ciudad Juarez, just across the border from El Paso, Texas, handwritten signs pasted on schools warned teachers to hand over their Christmas bonuses or die. A General Motors distributorship at a midsize Mexican city was extorted for months at a time, according to a high-ranking Mexican official. A GM spokeswoman in Mexico had no comment.

    “We are at war,” says Aldo Fasci, a good-looking lawyer who is the top police official for Nuevo Leon state, where Monterrey is the capital. “The gangs have taken over the border, our highways and our cops. And now, with these protests, they are trying to take over our cities

    The parallels between Pakistan and Mexico are strong enough that the U.S. military singled them out recently as the two countries where there is a risk the government could suffer a swift and catastrophic collapse, becoming a failed state.

    Pakistan is the greater worry because the risk of collapse is higher and because it has nuclear weapons. But Mexico is also scary: It has 100 million people on the southern doorstep of the U.S., meaning any serious instability would flood the U.S. with refugees. Mexico is also the U.S.’s second biggest trading partner.

    Mexico’s cartels already have tentacles that stretch across the border. The U.S. Justice Department said recently that Mexican gangs are the “biggest organized crime threat to the United States,” operating in at least 230 cities and towns. Crimes connected to Mexican cartels are spreading across the Southwest. Phoenix had more than 370 kidnapping cases last year, turning it into the kidnapping capital of the U.S. Most of the victims were illegal aliens or linked to the drugs trade.

    A service for slain police officers in Tijuana
    A service for slain police officers in Tijuana

    Former U.S. antidrug czar Barry McCaffrey said Mexico risks becoming a “narco-state” within five years if things don’t improve. Outgoing CIA director Michael Hayden listed Mexico alongside Iran as a possible top challenge for President Obama. Other analysts say the risk is not that the Mexican state collapses, but rather becomes like Russia, a state heavily influenced by mafias.

    Such comparisons are probably a stretch — for now anyway. Beyond the headline-grabbing violence, Mexico is stable. It has a thriving democracy, the world’s 13th-largest economy and a growing middle class. And as many as 90% of those killed are believed to be linked to the trade in some way, say officials.

    “We have a serious problem. The drug gangs have penetrated many institutions. But we’re not talking about an institutional collapse. That is wrong,” says Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora.

    Officials in both Washington and Mexico City also say the rising violence has a silver lining: It means that after decades of complicity or ignoring the problem, the Mexican government is finally cracking down on the drug cartels and forcing them to fight back or fight with one another for turf. One telling statistic: In the first three years of President Felipe Calderon’s six-year term, Mexico’s army has had 153 clashes with drug gangs. In the six years of his predecessor Vicente Fox’s term, there were only 16.”

    If Mexico isn’t a failed state, though, it is a country with a weak state — one the narcos seem to be weakening further.

    “The Mexican state is in danger,” says Gerardo Priego, a deputy from Mr. Calderon’s ruling center-right party, known as the PAN. “We are not yet a failed state, but if we don’t take action soon, we will become one very soon.”

    Mexican academic Edgardo Buscaglia estimates there are 200 counties in Mexico — some 8% of the total — where drug gangs wield more influence behind the scenes than the authorities. With fearsome arsenals of rocket-propelled grenades, bazookas and automatic weapons, cartels are often better armed than the police and even the soldiers they fight. The number of weapons confiscated last year from drug gangs in Mexico could arm the entire army of El Salvador, by one estimate. Where do most of the weapons come from? The U.S.

    Investigating the death of policeman Ramon Jasso
    Investigating the death of policeman Ramon Jasso

    Last year alone, gunmen fired shots and threw a grenade, which didn’t explode, at the U.S. consulate in Monterrey. The head of Mexico’s federal police was murdered in a hit ordered by one of his own men, whom officials say was working for the drug cartels. Mexico’s top antidrug prosecutor was arrested and charged with being on a cartel payroll, along with several other senior officials. One man in Tijuana admitted to dissolving some 300 bodies in vats of acid on behalf of a drug gang.  The publisher of Mexico’s most influential newspaper chain moved his family from Monterrey to Texas after he was threatened and gunmen paid a visit to his ranch. Other businessmen from cities across Mexico have done the same.

    “I have never seen such a difficult situation” in Mexico, says Alejandro Junco, who publishes Reforma in Mexico City and El Norte in Monterrey. Mr. Junco now commutes every week to Mexico from Texas.

    A few weeks ago, a recently retired army general hired to help the resort city of Cancun crack down on drug gangs was tortured and killed. His wrists and ankles were broken during the torture. Federal officials’ main suspect: the Cancun police chief, who has been stripped of his duties and put under house arrest during the investigation.

    Every day brings a new horror. In Ciudad Juarez on Friday, gunmen killed a police officer and a prison guard, and left a sign on their bodies saying they would kill one officer every two days until the city police chief resigns. He quit late Friday.

    Analysts and diplomats worry that drug traffickers may increase their hold on Mexico’s political process during midterm congressional elections scheduled for July.

    Mauricio Fernandez Garza, the scion of a wealthy Monterrey family, says he was approached by a cartel when he was a gubernatorial candidate in 2003 and told the cartel would foot the bill for the campaign if he promised to “look the other way” on the drugs trade. He says he declined the offer. He lost the election.

    Cardenas police officers with alleged links to drug trafficking are detained in September.
    Cardenas police officers with alleged links to drug trafficking are detained in September.

    Mexico has long been in the crosshairs of the drug war. In the 1980s, the drug of choice for local traffickers was marijuana, and much like today, accusations of high-level Mexican corruption were common. In 1985, DEA agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena was tortured to death by local traffickers, with the aid of a former president’s brother-in-law. In 1997, the country’s antidrug czar Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo was jailed after it emerged he was in the employ of a powerful trafficker.

    Drawn by the opportunity to supply the U.S. drug market, powerful trafficking groups have emerged on Mexico’s Pacific coast, its Gulf coast, in the northern desert state of Chihuahua and in the wild-west state of Sinaloa, home to most of Mexico’s original trafficking families. These groups, notorious for their shifting alliances and backstabbing ways, have fought for years for control of trafficking routes. Personal hatreds have marked fights over market share with barbaric violence.

    Several new factors in the past few years added to the violence, however. In 2000, Mexicans voted out the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which had ruled for 71 years. The end of a one-party state loosened authoritarian control and broke the old alliances cemented through corruption that kept a check on drug-related violence.

    Another factor was 9/11. After the attacks, tighter border security prompted some gangs to sell cocaine in Mexico instead, breaking an unspoken agreement with the government that gangs would be tolerated as long as they didn’t sell the drugs in Mexico but passed them on instead to the gringos. Since 2001, local demand for cocaine has grown an estimated 20% per year. The creation of a local market only encouraged infighting over the spoils.

    Protestors in Monterrey demand that the Mexican army leave the city on Feb. 17. Officials say the protests are organized by drug cartels.
    Protestors in Monterrey demand that the Mexican army leave the city on Feb. 17. Officials say the protests are organized by drug cartels.

    Things started getting really nasty in 2004, when Osiel Cardenas, then leader of the Gulf Cartel, killed Arturo “the Chicken” Guzman, the brother of Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman, a leader of the Sinaloa cartel. Mr. Guzman soon tried to take over Nuevo Laredo, the border city controlled by Mr. Cardenas with the help of the Zetas, former elite Mexican soldiers who defected to the drug traffickers, as well as most of the Nuevo Laredo police, who in fact worked for the Zetas. The struggle for Nuevo Laredo culminated in a pitched battle when gunmen used rocket-propelled grenades to attack a safe house belonging to the other cartel. The all-out battle led the U.S. to close its consulate for a week. The violence soon spread as the two groups fought for dominance all over Mexico’s northern border.

    Monterrey, just a hundred miles to the south, seemed unperturbed. Can-do, confident and modern, Monterrey likes to think of itself as more American than Mexican. It’s the home of Mexico’s best university, Tecnologico de Monterrey, modeled on MIT, as well as the country’s most prosperous suburb, San Pedro Garza Garcia, and local units of 1,500 U.S. companies. Its police are considered among Mexico’s best. In the 1990s, the San Diego Padres came to play a few regular season games here and there was heady talk of Monterrey landing a pro baseball team.

    As violence engulfed Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey business leaders, police chiefs and government officials were of one mind: It wouldn’t happen here. “We have drawn a line in the sand and told the drug lords they cross it at their peril,” state governor Natividad Gonzalez said in a 2005 interview.

    What the governor apparently didn’t know is that, for years, Monterrey’s relative calm was due to an unspoken agreement between rival drug lords whose families lived quietly in the wealthy San Pedro enclave, a place where their wealth would not be conspicuous, say local police. But Monterrey was too big a local drug market to ignore for both sides, and soon fighting broke out.

    By 2006, the murder rate spiked and cops were getting shot at point-blank on the streets. San Pedro Police Chief Hector Ayala was gunned down. Months later, Marcelo Garza y Garza, the chief of state police investigations, a well-known San Pedro resident and the DEA’s main contact in the city, was murdered outside the town’s largest Roman Catholic church. U.S. law-enforcement officials believe he was betrayed to the Zetas by a corrupt cop.

    Today, the warring gangs still vie for control, though the Zetas have the upper hand. In much of the city, the gang is branching out into new types of criminal enterprise, especially extorting street vendors, nightclubs and other shops that operate on the margin of the law. These places used to be preyed upon by local cops, but no longer. The owner of a billiards hall says the Zetas told him they wanted a cut of the profits every month, a bill he ponies up. They also ordered him to allow someone to sell drugs at the hall, he says. “What can I do,” he shrugs.

    The scene after a shootout between drug gangs near Monterrey last year.
    The scene after a shootout between drug gangs near Monterrey last year.

    In the street market along the city’s busy Reforma Ave, the Zetas sell pirated CDs, and have their own label: “Los Unicos,” or “The Only Ones,” with a logo of a black horse surrounded by four Zs. In Spanish, “Zeta” is how you pronounce the letter “Z.” One vendor says some Zetas came to the stalls last year and ordered several vendors to start peddling the Zeta label CDs.

    Many Monterrey residents are convinced that even a cut from bribes they pay local cops for traffic violations goes to the Zetas through corrupt cops. That kind of extra money to fund the drug gangs only worsens the balance of power between the state and the traffickers. The drugs trade in Mexico generates at least $10 billion in yearly revenues, Mexican officials say. The government’s annual budget for federal law enforcement, not including the army: roughly $1.2 billion.

    Both the Zetas and the Sinaloa cartels are believed to field as many as 10,000 gunmen each — the size of a small army. The Zetas, for instance, can find fresh recruits easily in Monterrey’s tough barrios, where the unemployment rate is high.

    In Monterrey’s Independencia neighborhood, one of the city’s oldest, it is not the city government that controls the streets but the local pandillas, or gangs. During a recent workday, the streets were filled with young gangsters, sitting around playing marbles, chatting, and looking tough. At the entrance to a local primary school, a group of four men sat and smoked what appeared to be crack cocaine, what locals call “piedra” or rock.

    Outsiders are clearly unwelcome. A reporter visiting in an unmarked SUV along with a state policeman wearing civilian clothes was enough to get plenty of hostile stares and a few mouthed expletives. One or two gang members pulled out their cell phones and began placing a call. “They’re unsure whether we’re cops or another drug gang,” said Jorge, the state policeman, who did not want his full name used for fear of retaliation by the drug lords. “Either way, we move on or we’re in trouble.”

    Jorge, clean cut and with an infectious smile, has been a state cop for more than 20 years. He earns 6,000 pesos — $450 — a month. It’s an old saw in Mexico that police here don’t make enough money to either resist being corrupted by the criminals or care enough to risk their lives going after them. In fact, corruption extends throughout the police forces. A senior state official said privately that he doesn’t trust a single local police commander.

    The state’s former head of public security resigned amid allegations that he was in league with the Sinaloa cartel. The man who took his place is Mr. Fasci, a former top prosecutor. Mr. Fasci says officials are trying to improve coordination among Mexico’s alphabet soup of different law enforcement bodies. In Monterrey’s metropolitan area, there are 11 different municipal police forces, a state police, three branches of the federal police, and the army. Statewide, there are 70 different emergency numbers for the police. Making matters worse, narcotics smuggling is a federal crime, so local cops aren’t supposed to prosecute it.

    Mr. Fasci says the protests are organized by drug gangs, who go to barrios like Independencia and pay $30 to each person to block traffic, hold up signs like “no military repression.” Mr. Fasci thinks the gangs are trying to goad the police into a crackdown that would generate antipathy for the authorities and the army. “We’re not going to fall for it,” he says.

    Neither will the Mexican government call off the soldiers. Mexico has no choice but to deploy the army to do what corrupt and inefficient state and local police forces can’t, says Mr. Fasci. And the protests are likely a sign the military is having success pressuring the drug gangs, say officials. Meanwhile, Mexico has passed a law that calls for an ambitious reform of all its state and municipal police forces. The problem: It could take 15 years or longer to complete, says Mr. Medina Mora, the attorney general.

    The U.S., which is providing Mexico with some $400 million a year for equipment and training to combat drug traffickers, backs Mexico’s stand. U.S. law enforcement officials are ecstatic about Mr. Calderon’s get-tough approach. A U.S. law enforcement official says the Mexican military is trying to break down powerful drug cartels into smaller and more manageable drug gangs, like “breaking down boulders into pebbles.” He adds: “It might be bloody, it might be ugly, but it has to be done.”

    Demand in the U.S., of course, is the motor for the drugs trade. Three former respected heads of state in Latin America, including Mexico’s former president Ernesto Zedillo, issued a joint report recently saying the drug war was too costly for countries like Mexico, and urged the U.S. to explore alternatives like decriminalizing marijuana.

    Indeed, Mexican officials long ago gave up on thinking they might one day eliminate the drugs trade altogether. Victory now sounds a lot like what victory in Iraq might be for the U.S.: lower violence just enough so that people won’t talk about it anymore.

    Jorge Tello, an adviser to President Calderon on the drugs war, defines it like this: “It’s like a rat-control problem. The rats are always down there in the sewers, you can’t really get rid of them. But what you don’t want are rats on people’s front doors.”


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  • Feb
    21

    Leaves post hours after gunmen threaten to kill more officers

    mexicoCIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico – This border town’s police chief stepped down Friday after criminal gangs made a chilling demand: Resign or we will kill more local officials.

    Public Safety Secretary Roberto Orduna announced he was leaving his post only hours after gunmen killed a police officer and a jail guard and left signs on their bodies saying they had fulfilled a promise made Wednesday to slay at least one officer every 48 hours until Orduna quits.

    The slayings were a grim sign that criminal gangs are determined to control the police force of the biggest Mexican border city, with a population of 1.3 million people across from El Paso, Texas.

    Mayor Jose Reyes insisted earlier Friday the city would not back down. “We will not allow the control of the police force to fall in the hands of criminal gangs,” he said.

    But Orduna said he didn’t want to endanger more officers. “We can’t allow men who work defending our citizens to continue to lose their lives,” he said. “That is why I am presenting my permanent resignation.”

    The resignation was effective immediately. Authorities said an interim chief would be named soon, and a permanent replacement would be found in the coming weeks.

    Police hit lists
    A retired army major, Orduna took over as chief in May after former Public Safety Secretary Guillermo Prieto resigned and fled to El Paso following the slaying of his operations director.

    For Orduna’s protection, the city built his bedroom at the police station so he didn’t have to go home. He also travels in different vehicles when he does go out.

    Ciudad Juarez police have long come under attack, and many officers have quit out of fear for their lives, some after their names appeared on hit lists left in public throughout the city. Police officer Cesar Ivan Portillo was the fifth officer killed this week in Mexico’s deadliest city.

    Police were placed on “red alert” — meaning they could not patrol alone — after cardboard signs with handwritten messages appeared taped to the doors and windows of businesses Wednesday, warning Orduna that one officer would be killed every two days if he did not quit. That alert continued Friday after Orduna stepped down. Police have also been asked to patrol with their guns in their hands.

    More than 6,000 people have been killed in drug violence across Mexico over the past year as gangs battle each other for territory and fight off a nationwide crackdown by the army. Nearly a third of the slayings have taken place in Ciudad Juarez, and more than 50 of those dead are city police officers.

    Violence also has spilled across the border into the U.S., where authorities report a spike in killings, kidnappings and home invasions connected to Mexico’s murderous cartels.

    ‘Spreading like wildfire’
    Homeland Security officials have said they will bring in the military if the violence continues to grow and threatens the U.S. border region.

    “The violence is spreading like wildfire across the Rio Grande,” said George Grayson, a Mexico expert at the College of William & Mary in Virginia. “It’s a major national security problem for us that is much more important than Iraq and Afghanistan.”

    Robert Almonte, executive director of the Texas Narcotics Officers Association, said that, while El Paso has been spared most of the violence, the escalating killings across the border in Juarez are worrisome.

    “I think it’s jarring … we can’t even fathom those kinds of things happening here in the United States,” Almonte said.

    Also Friday, the U.S. State Department renewed a travel advisory warning Americans about the increased violence along the U.S.-Mexico border.

    Some Mexicans have questioned whether President Felipe Calderon’s two-year, nationwide crackdown on drug gangs was worth all the killings.

    But Calderon and his administration have defended the fight, with Economy Secretary Gerardo Ruiz Mateos saying on Wednesday that if Mexico gave up its fight against the cartels, “the next president of the republic would be a drug dealer.”

    Portillo and city jail guard Juan Pablo Ruiz were killed as they left their homes before dawn to head to work, city spokesman Jaime Torres said.

    Three days earlier, assailants fatally shot police operations director Sacramento Perez, the chief’s right-hand man, and three other officers who were sitting with him in a patrol car near the U.S. consulate.

    The bodies of Perez and one of the officers were sent to their home states Thursday to be buried, and the city planned to hold a ceremony Friday for the two others from Ciudad Juarez.

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  • Feb
    20

    Benjamin Netanyahu, the leader of the right-of-centre Likud party, has been asked to form Israel’s next government.

    nat

    Mr Netanyahu said Israel faced “great challenges” including the global economic crisis and what he said was Iran’s wish to obtain nuclear weapons.

    He said he would try to form a unity government with his political rivals.

    But Tzipi Livni, leader of the centrist Kadima, has suggested she would rather be in opposition than join a government led by Mr Netanyahu.

    Kadima narrowly defeated Likud in the election held on 10 February, but Mr Netanyahu has the support of religious and right-wing parties in the Israeli parliament.

    President Shimon Peres and Mr Netanyahu held a news conference to officially announce the move and the Likud leader now has six weeks to put together a coalition.

    He told the news conference he wanted to open talks with his political rivals to form a “broad national unity government for the good of the people and the state”.

    He said: “I call on Kadima chairwoman Tzipi Livni and Labour Party chairman Ehud Barak and I say to them – let’s unite to secure the future of the State of Israel.”

    On Iran, Mr Netanyahu returned to a key campaign theme, suggesting that Tehran had emerged as Israel’s greatest security threat.

    The Islamic Republic was seeking to develop nuclear weapons, he said, as well as sponsoring the Hezbollah and Hamas militant groups in Lebanon and Gaza.

    ‘Pawn’

    The BBC’s diplomatic correspondent, Jonathan Marcus, says the decision to choose Mr Netanyahu marks the beginning of a period of serious horse-trading.

    He says Mr Netanyahu will have a real job on his hands – either to persuade Ms Livni to join his government, or to reconcile the differences among the various factions on the right.

    Minutes before the news came out that the Likud leader would be asked to form a government, Ms Livni said what was being proposed was a government “without political vision, a government with no values”.

    “I will not be a pawn in a government that would be against our ideals,” she said.

    One of the main points of contention between the two parties is how to handle the Palestinian territories.

    Ms Livni favours more talks and the creation of a separate state for the Palestinians.

    Mr Netanyahu says he does not want Israel to rule the Palestinians, but says they should not be allowed things he considers a threat to Israeli security, such as an army, or control of airspace or the Jordan Valley.

    Mr Netanyahu’s position was bolstered on Thursday when the far-right Yisrael Beiteinu party, which favours tightening the Israeli blockade on Gaza, said it wanted him to be prime minister.

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  • Feb
    20

    clinton1SEOUL, South Korea – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton named a special envoy for North Korea on Friday but warned the communist nation that ties with the United States will not improve unless it stops threatening South Korea.

    Amid a disturbing rise in belligerent rhetoric from the North toward the South and signs it may be getting ready to test-fire a ballistic missile, she urged Pyongyang to halt “provocative and unhelpful” gestures and rejoin stalled six-nation nuclear disarmament talks.  “North Korea is not going to get a different relationship with the United States while insulting and refusing dialogue with (South Korea),” Clinton told reporters at a news conference with South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan.

    “We are calling on the government of North Korea to refrain from being provocative and unhelpful in a war of words that it has been engaged in because that is not very fruitful,” she said.

    Military briefing
    Clinton, who also received a military briefing on the situation along the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea and discussed broader issues with South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak, praised Seoul for its democracy and prosperity.

    She said that was “in stark contrast to the tyranny and poverty across the border to the North” and commended the “people of South Korea and your leaders for your calm, resolve and determination in the face of provocative and unhelpful statements and actions by the North.”

    She declined to comment on intelligence suggesting the North could soon fire a missile but noted such an act would violate U.N. Security Council Resolution 1718, which was passed after Pyongyang detonated a nuclear device in 2006.

    “The North should refrain from violating this resolution and also from any and all provocative actions that could harm the six-party talks and aggravate the tensions in the region,” Clinton said.

    She demanded that the North follow through on promises it made to dismantle and verifiably disable its nuclear weapons program during negotiations with China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the United States last year, saying Washington is not willing to engage with Pyongyang until it does so.

    Clinton said the new U.S. special representative for North Korea, Stephen Bosworth, a former U.S. ambassador to South Korea, would work with South Korea, Japan, China and others to look at ways to get Pyongyang back to the negotiating table and deal with broader policy.

    Bosworth will also deal with North Korean human rights and humanitarian issues, she said, praising him as “a capable and experienced diplomat” who will report to her and President Barack Obama.

    Fears of succession crisis
    En route to South Korea from Indonesia on Thursday on her first overseas trip as America’s top diplomat, Clinton surprised reporters traveling with her when she spoke candidly about a possible succession crisis in North Korea and its impact on restarting the talks.

    Those comments marked a rare, if not unprecedented, instance of a senior U.S. official publicly discussing such a diplomatically sensitive matter.

    On Friday in Seoul, Clinton again acknowledged concerns over a potential power struggle to replace ailing North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, but she stressed that the United States was still addressing its concerns to the existing government.

    Kim, 67, inherited leadership from his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, in 1994, creating the world’s first communist dynasty. Last year, South Korean and U.S. officials said Kim suffered a stroke and underwent brain surgery in August.

    North Korean officials have steadfastly denied Kim is ill but state-run media made no mention of Kim’s public appearances for weeks last fall, feeding fears that his sudden death without naming a successor could leave a power vacuum and spark an internal struggle.

    Kim’s father had cultivated a powerful cult of personality that encompassed him and his son, and recent dispatches in North Korea’s state-run Korean Central News Agency have stressed the importance of bloodline and inheritance in what is seen as references to the succession plan.

    Kim Jong Il is believed to have at least three sons: Kim Jong Nam, in his late 30s; Kim Jong Chul, in his late 20s; and Kim Jong Un, a son in his mid-20s by another companion.

    The eldest is believed to have been the favorite to succeed his father until he was caught trying to enter Japan on a fake passport in 2001, reportedly to visit Tokyo Disneyland.

    Last month, the South Korean news agency Yonhap said the youngest, Kim Jong Un, was named Kim’s heir apparent.

    And, on Thursday, citing unidentified sources in Beijing, Yonhap said Kim Jong Un had registered his candidacy for March 8 parliamentary elections in a sign the son is poised to become the country’s next leader.

    Fueling speculation of possible power struggle, the North’s state-run news agency reported last week that Kim Jong Il had replaced his defense minister and chief of the military’s general staff.

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