November 27, 2010

Photostream : Nation mourns two marines killed by N. Korean attack


Nov. 27, SEONGNAM, South Korea -- South Korea holds a nationally televised funeral for two marines killed in an artillery clash with North Korea earlier this week, at a military hospital in Seongnam, south of Seoul, on Nov. 27. The two marines and two civilians were killed in the Nov. 23 North Korean artillery attack on Yeonpyeong Island. (Yonhap)

Honor guards carry the coffins of two dead marines who were killed by North Korea's artillery shells attack on Yeonpyeong Island, during a funeral at a military hospital in Seongnam, south of Seoul November 27, 2010. Four people were killed when North Korea lobbed scores of artillery shells on a South Korean island near the disputed sea border on Tuesday. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

Lieutenant General Yoo Nak-Joon, commander of South Korean Marine Corps, salutes during the funeral ceremony for two marines killed during North Korea's attack on Yeonpyeong Island, at a military hospital in Seongnam. South Koreans vowed revenge and a tough line against North Korea as the nation grieved for two marines killed in the regime's artillery strike that caused global alarm this week. (AFP/Jung Yeon-Je)

Soldiers salute for two dead marines who were killed by North Korea's artillery shells attack on Yeonpyeong Island, during a funeral at a military hospital in Seongnam, south of Seoul November 27, 2010. Four people were killed when North Korea lobbed scores of artillery shells on a South Korean island near the disputed sea border on Tuesday. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

The mother (R) of South Korean dead marine Seo Jung-woo, who was killed by North Korea's artillery shells attack on Yeonpyeong Island, cries during a funeral at a military hospital in Seongnam, south of Seoul November 27, 2010. Four people were killed when North Korea lobbed scores of artillery shells on a South Korean island near the disputed sea border on Tuesday. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

MARINE Military officers escort the mother of South Korean dead marine Seo Jung-woo, who was killed by North Korea's artillery shells attack on Yeonpyeong Island, after a funeral at a military hospital in Seongnam, south of Seoul November 27, 2010. Four people were killed when North Korea lobbed scores of artillery shells on a South Korean island near the disputed sea border on Tuesday. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

Nov. 27, SEONGNAM, South Korea -- Families mourn as South Korea holds a nationally televised funeral for two marines killed in an artillery clash with North Korea earlier this week, at a military hospital in Seongnam, south of Seoul, on Nov. 27. Two civilians also died in the Nov. 23 North Korean attack on Yeonpyeong Island. (Yonhap)

President Lee checks follow-up measures after N. Korea's deadly attack


File : South Korean President Lee Myung-bak receives a briefing at the control centre of the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Defence Ministry in Seoul November 23, 2010. North Korea on Tuesday fired dozens of artillery shells at a South Korean island, setting buildings on fire and prompting a return of fire by the South, Seoul's military and media reports said. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Jo Bo-Hee/Yonhap )

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SEOUL, Nov. 27 (KATAKAMI / Yonhap) -- South Korean President Lee Myung-bak was presiding over a security-related meeting on Saturday to check follow-up measures after North Korea fired a barrage of shots on a South Korean island earlier this week, officials said.

The meeting also comes one day before the U.S. and South Korea are set to begin military exercises in the Yellow Sea in a show of force that North Korea warned will take the peninsula to the "brink of war."

Lee was discussing measures to counter another possible North Korean attack and studying ways to levy sanctions on the communist state, according to the officials.

On Tuesday, North Korea fired artillery on Yeonpyeong Island, a populated island in the Yellow Sea, killing four people, including two civilians.

The North Korea's attack marked the first civilian deaths in an attack since the bombing of a South Korean airliner in 1987.

South Korea and the U.S. were set to launch large-scale naval exercises Sunday in another potent show of force against North Korea.

The nuclear-powered USS George Washington, with more than 6,000 sailors and 75 fighter jets aboard, prepared for the naval drills with South Korea in the Yellow Sea. The drills are set to run through Wednesday, and about 10 warships have been mobilized for the exercises.  (*)

SKorea mourns 2 marines killed in NKorea attack


Family members of Seo Jeong-woo, a South Korean marine killed in Tuesday's North Korean bombardment, cry during a funeral service at a military hospital in Seongnam, South Korea, Saturday, Nov. 27, 2010. South Korea honored two marines killed in the artillery attack that was one of the worst bombardments of its territory since the 1950-53 Korean War (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

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November 27, 2010 SEONGNAM, South Korea  (KATAKAMI / AP)  – South Korea's marine commander vowed severe revenge at a funeral Saturday for two marines killed in a North Korean bombardment, as the country prepared military maneuvers with the U.S. that have enraged the North and concerned China.

The commander, Maj. Gen. You Nak-jun, said the retaliation would be "thousand-fold" as dignitaries and relatives laid white flowers at a funeral altar following Tuesday's attack on a South Korean island, which also killed two civilians in one of the worst artillery attacks on the country's territory since the 1950-53 Korean War.

As protesters in Seoul demanded their government take sterner action against North Korea, the North issued new warnings against the war games scheduled to start Sunday with a U.S. nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in the Yellow Sea.

The North called the games an "unpardonable provocation" and warning of retaliatory attacks creating a "sea of fire" if its own territory is violated. The comments ran on North Korea's state-run Uriminzokkiri website a day after the North's warnings that the peninsula was on the "brink of war."

China, under pressure from the U.S. and South Korea to rein in its ally Pyongyang, urged both sides to show restraint while Washington played down the belligerent rhetoric, noting that the weekend war games were routine and planned well before last week's attack.

"The pressing task now is to put the situation under control and prevent a recurrence of similar incidents," Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton by phone, according to the ministry's website.

The North's artillery fire Tuesday destroyed civilian homes as well as military bases on Yeonpyeong Island in a major escalation of their sporadic skirmishes along the disputed sea border. The attack — eight months after a torpedo sank a South Korean warship, killing 46 sailors — laid bare Seoul's weaknesses in defense 60 years after the Korean War.

North Korea does not recognize the maritime border drawn by the U.N. at the close of the three-year war in 1953, and considers the waters around Yeonpyeong Island, just 7 miles (11 kilometers) from its shores, as its territory.

The heightened animosity between the Koreas comes as the nuclear-armed North undergoes a delicate transition of power from leader Kim Jong Il to his young, inexperienced son Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s and is expected to eventually succeed his ailing father.

Tuesday's attack came days after North Korea revealed a new uranium enrichment program that could improve its ability to make and deliver nuclear weapons, sending the message that new regime is as tough and unpredictable as ever and highlighting the urgency of restarting disarmament talks with the North.

South Korea's government, meanwhile, struggled to recoup from the surprise attacks, firing one defense minister and naming a new one Friday.

About former 70 special forces troops, wearing white head bands, scuffled with riot police in front of the Defense Ministry to protest what they called the government's weak response to the attacks, pummeling the riot troops' helmets with wooden stakes and spraying fire extinguishers.

"Let's go!" the activists shouted.

The police, numbering several hundreds, pushed back with shields. Elsewhere in Seoul several hundred activists held a peaceful, but noisy rally to denounce North Korea.

China's foreign minister met with the North Korean ambassador to Beijing, Chinese state media said — an apparent effort to trumpet China's role as a responsible actor, and placate the U.S. and the South. China has expressed mild concern about the impending war games, in contrast to its strong protests over earlier rounds.

"The Chinese government is trying to send Pyongyang a signal that if they continue to be so provocative, China will just leave the North Koreans to themselves," said Zhu Feng, director of Peking University's Center for International and Strategic Studies.

China is impoverished North Korea's biggest benefactor and one of its only allies.

In Washington, the Pentagon played down any notion that the weekend maneuvers with South Korea — set to include the USS George Washington supercarrier — were a provocation.

"We have exercised there regularly," Capt. Darryn James, a Defense Department spokesman in Washington, said Friday. "And all of these exercises are in international waters."

President Lee Myung-bak also has ordered reinforcements for the 4,000 troops on Yeonpyeong and four other Yellow Sea islands, as well as top-level weaponry and upgraded rules of engagement.

Most of the islanders fled to the mainland after Tuesday's hail of artillery set off fierce blazes that destroyed many of their communities. It will take six months to two years for island communities to rebuild, disaster relief official Kim Sang-ryul said.

Soldiers assembled toilets Saturday for temporary shelters being built on the island by teams of relief workers.

In Seongnam, near Seoul, South Korea's prime minister and marine commander joined some 600 mourners attending the funeral for the two dead marines at a packed gymnasium at a military hospital.

As a brass band played somber music, they placed chrysanthemums — a traditional mourning flower — before framed photographs of the two men, posthumously promoted and awarded medals of valor. One marine's mother pressed her hand to her mouth, and fell forward in her seat in grief.

"Our marine corps ... will carry out a hundred- or thousand-fold" retaliation against North Korea for Tuesday's attack, said You, the marine commander. He did not elaborate.

Passersby paused at Seoul's main train station to watch funeral footage on a big screen.

"Once the enemy attacks us, it is our duty to respond even more strongly," said student Jeon Hyun-soo, 19. "The South Korean people want this."   (*)

Photostream : Russian President Dmitry Medvedev meets Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych


Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, right, welcomes Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych during their meeting in the Gorki residence outside Moscow, Friday, Nov. 26, 2010. (Getty Images / AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Dmitry Astakhov, Presidential Press Service)

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (R) welcomes Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych (C) at the Gorki residence outside Moscow on November 26, 2010 ahead of their meeting for interstates negotiations. Medvedev held talks with Yanukovych to press on with the rapid expansion of ties after the pro-Kremlin president's election earlier this year. (Photo by SERGEI CHIRIKOV/AFP/Getty Images)

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (R) and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych give a press conference at the Gorki residence outside Moscow on November 26, 2010. (Photo by SERGEI CHIRIKOV/AFP/Getty Images)

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, right, and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych exchange documents at a signing ceremony following their talks in the Gorki residence outside Moscow, Friday, Nov. 26, 2010. The talks are focused on energy and trade. The sign partly visible in the background says "Meeting of the Russian-Ukrainian intergovernment commission. Moscow, Nov. 26, 2010." (Getty Images / AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Dmitry Astakhov, Presidential Press Service)

November 26, 2010

Russian foreign minister to visit India next week


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
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November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) --- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will travel to India on November 29 ahead of President Dmitry Medvedev's visit in December, a ministry spokesman said.

Lavrov will meet with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Foreign Minister Somanahalli Mallaiah Krishna during his visit.

Russia-India relations have been blossoming in recent years, with India being one of the biggest importers of Russian military hardware.

Aung San Suu Kyi : Gilad Shalit will not be forsaken


FILE : Aung San Suu Kyi holds a sign reading "I love the public too" while addressing supporters outside her National League for Democracy party headquarters in Yangon November 14, 2010. The pro-democracy leader called for freedom of speech in army-ruled Myanmar on Sunday and urged thousands of supporters to stand up for their rights and not lose heart, indicating she might pursue a political role. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun )

In an interview to Haaretz, recently released Burmese opposition leader calls for peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / HAARETZ) _-- Abducted IDF soldier Gilad Shalit should stay strong and remember that he is not forgotten, while Israelis and Palestinians should consider whether it wouldn't be nicer to just be friends, Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi told Haaretz in an exclusive telephone interview this week.

Suu Kyi, who was released earlier this month after having spent most of the last two decades under house arrest, said she has seen some changes for the better in her country since her last interlude of freedom.

She said that cell phones, for instance, have boosted her pro-democracy movement by allowing people, especially the young, to be better informed about what is happening both in their country and around the world.

"The number [of cell phones in Burma] will only increase, and this is for the good," she said.

Nevertheless, she stressed, more than 2,000 political prisoners remain behind bars in Burma (which is also known as Myanmar ), and real change is unlikely to come until they are free. She therefore urged the international community to strive for their release.

In a previous interview, conducted in 1997, Suu Kyi had told me she was very moved by Natan Sharansky's memoir about his years as a Prisoner of Zion in the Soviet Union. In light of that, I asked whether she had any message today for Shalit, who has now been held captive for more than four years without being permitted any visitors, even from the Red Cross.

"I would like to send a message to all political prisoners all over the world," she responded. "Keep strong and don't forget that there are many, many people who have you in their hearts and in their minds and would do whatever they can for your release."

Suu Kyi also said she is "very, very concerned about the hostilities going on now" between
North and South Korea. "If we are a global village, we can't get away from what is happening anywhere in the world," she said.

Given this, I asked whether she had any message for Israelis and Palestinians.

"I just wonder whether they could not sit down and think that it would be so much nicer if they could be friends," she said. "It seems a very simple thought, but sometimes great things begin with very simple thoughts."  (*)

PM Netanyahu: "Palestinian Authority Denial of the Link between the Jewish People and the Western Wall is Reprehensible and Scandalous"


FILE : Israel's President Shimon Peres, right, listens, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the opening of the winter session in the Knesset, Israel's parliament, in Jerusalem, Monday, Oct. 11, 2010.  (Getty Images / AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)

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November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / PRIME MINISTER OFFICE) --- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, this evening made the following remarks:

"The Palestinian Authority Information Ministry's denial of the link between the Jewish People and the Western Wall is reprehensible and scandalous.

The Western Wall has been the Jewish People's most sacred place for almost 2,000 years, since the destruction of the Second Temple.

This is not the only instance in which Palestinians are trying to distort historical facts in order to deny the deep and historic link between the Jewish People and its homeland.

When the Palestinian Authority denies the link between the Jewish People and the Western Wall, it calls into serious question its intentions of reaching a peace agreement, the foundations of which are coexistence and mutual recognition.

The Government of Israel expects Palestinian Authority leaders to disavow and condemn the aforesaid document, refrain from distorting historical facts and encourage the creation of a bridge to peace that will lead to an historic reconciliation between the two peoples." (*)

PM Erdogan : Turkey 'will not be silent' if Israel attacks


Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan reviews an honour guard with his Lebanese counterpart Saad al-Hariri (L) during an official welcoming ceremony upon his arrival at Beirut international airport, November 24, 2010. (Getty Images / REUTERS/ Jamal Saidi )

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'Does Israel think it can enter Lebanon with most modern aircraft and tanks to kill women and children, use cluster bombs to kill kids in Gaza, and expect us to remain silent?' asks Turkish prime minister on visit to Beirut.

November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / YNET) --- Turkey will not remain silent if Israel attacks Lebanon or Gaza, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in Beirut on Thursday, as ties between the longtime allies remained at an all-time low.

"Does (Israel) think it can enter Lebanon with the most modern aircraft and tanks to kill women and children, and destroy schools and hospitals, and then expect us to remain silent?" Erdogan said at a conference organised by the Union of Arab Banks.

"Does it think it can use the most modern weapons, phosphorus munitions and cluster bombs to kill children in Gaza and then expect us to remain silent? "We will not be silent and we will support justice by all means available to us."

Turkey was once Israel's closest military and diplomatic ally in the Middle East but ties began to deteriorate when Ankara criticised Israel's December 2008 to January 2009 offensive against Gaza.

Relations then nosedived on May 31, 2010 when Israeli naval commandos stormed a Turkish-registered protest ship, the Mavi Mara, part of a flotilla attempting to break the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian territory. Nine Turkish activists were killed in the operation.

Erdogan has said his country will not begin to restore relations with Israel until it apologizes for its "savage attack" on the vessel. Thursday was the final day of the Turkish premier's two-day visit to Lebanon.

Hundreds of Lebanese of Armenian descent have clashed with army troops during a protest over a visit to Beirut by the Turkish prime minister.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan is on a two day trip during which he met with officials and visited the north and south of the country.

He was inaugurating a hospital in the southern port city of Sidon Thursday as hundreds of protesters gathered in the capital's Martyrs' Square. When demonstrators tore up a large poster of Erdogan and pelted troops with rocks, security responded by beating up a number of them.

There were no reports of major injuries.

Lebanon has 150,000 Armenians, or nearly 4 percent of its population, which harbors deep animosity toward Turks over the 1915 killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians.  (*)

AFP and AP contributed to the story

President Medvedev believes in success of army reforms


At the meeting with participants in the assembly of commanders of the Armed Forces formations. With Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov (left) and Chief of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces Gen. Nikolai Makarov.

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Medvedev's Opening remarks at the meeting with Armed Forces commanders

November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / KREMLIN.RU) --- The ongoing reforms of the Armed Forces have already lead to their better equipment and improvement in social guarantees for servicemen, despite certain problems, the Commander-in-Chief said at a meeting with participants in the assembly of Armed Forces commanders.
Dmitry Medvedev noted that the Armed Forces have been actively undergoing modernisation in recent years. The deadline for the completion of the basic organisational and staffing changes required for the transformation of the Armed Forces is December 2010. The goal is to make the Armed Forces more compact and efficient, equipped with modern weapons and technology, President Medvedev stressed.


Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (R) and Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov (November 25, 2010)


From 2010 to 2020, the annual volume of defence allocations will remain at 2.8 percent of GDP thus allowing to equip the military units with new technology in accordance with the State Arms Procurement Programme and to end the involvement of the servicemen with non-professional activities. The Armed Forces should focus exclusively on operational and combat training.

Earlier in the day, the Commander-in-Chief watched the exercises of land forces at the Gorokhovetsky military training ground in the Nizhny Novgorod Region. Dmitry Medvedev was also shown military and special equipment, and inspected an autonomous field camp.

In addition, the President held a meeting with the Defence Ministry’s senior officials. (*)

Putin in Germany to meet with Merkel, address economic forum


Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin

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November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) --- Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Thursday arrived on an official visit in Germany.

During his visit, to last until Friday, he will meet with Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss bilateral trade, economic, scientific and technological cooperation.

He will also address an annual economic forum of German corporate managers and meet with representatives of business circles.  (*)




BERLIN, November 25

November 25, 2010

South Korean defense minister resigns over North's artillery attack


South Korean Defense Minister Kim Tae-young

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November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) --- South Korean Defense Minister Kim Tae-young resigned after the handling of the deadly North Korean artillery attack, Yonhap news agency said on Thursday.

North Korea opened artillery fire on the South's Yeonpyeong Island in the Yellow Sea Tuesday, killing at least two South Korean marines and two civilians. Sixteen others were injured, along with three civilians. The South retaliated and warned of further strikes. The North later accused South Korea of attacking first.

The agency said South Korean President Lee Myung-bak accepted Kim's resignation.

The Korean Herald said Kim stepped down because of the recent series of incidents and for the Armed Force's disputed response to the North 's attack.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov expressed hope on Thursday the United Nations Security Council in the near future will make a statement on the armed conflict.


South Korean Defense Minister Kim Tae-young, left, consoles the families of the victims of North Korea's artillery attack at a military hospital in Seongnam, South Korea, Thursday, Nov. 25, 2010. Kim resigned Thursday, two days after an artillery attack by North Korea killed four people on a small island near their disputed frontier.(Getty Images / AP Photo/Korea Pool)

South Korean media said heir-apparent Kim Jong-un and his father, Kim Jong-il, visited the military base from where the South Korean island was shelled shortly before the attack.

A top U.S. military official, Admiral Mike Mullen, called for international pressure on North Korea, including on the part of China.

"The one country that has influence in Pyongyang is China and so their leadership is absolutely critical," he said.

The attack is the second incident in the tense Yellow Sea border area this year. In March, a North Korean submarine was alleged to have torpedoed a South Korean naval ship, the Cheonan, causing the loss of 46 lives.  (*)


MOSCOW, November 25

Opinion : Why not leave Afghanistan tomorrow?


US President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks during a press conference on November 20, 2010 in Lisbon, as part of a NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) Summit of Heads of States and Government held on 19-20 November 2010. (Photo by PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU/AFP/Getty Images)

 
By : Ed Koch ( Jpost )


November 24, 2010 (KATAKAMI / Jpost) --- President Barack Obama met with his NATO counterparts in Lisbon last week.  According to the November 21 New York Times, they agreed “to the goal of a phased transfer of security responsibility to the Afghan government by the end of 2014, but NATO officials acknowledged that allied forces would remain in Afghanistan at least in a support role well beyond that date.”

Further, if the Afghan army isn’t ready by the end of 2014 to “manage its own security, 2014 was not a hard and fast deadline for the end of combat operations.”  Why would anyone think that Afghan forces will ever be combat ready and able to defend their own country against the Taliban? Surely it is by now an unsolvable mystery why the Afghan military forces, trained for 9 years by US and NATO troops, is currently unable to defend their country while the Taliban is capable of major successful strikes in Kabul, the capital, and apparently governs large parts of the country either by night when US army patrols return to their bases, or 24 hours a day when US forces don’t dare enter the neighborhood.

 We know that the Taliban is supplied with substantial funding from the local drug trade.  We know that drug trade is dominated by the Karzai family, and that President Karzai’s own brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, is acknowledged to be a drug kingpin.  We know that Afghanistan is one of the most corrupt countries in the world.  We know that Iran regularly sends millions of dollars to President Karzai for his personal use.  We know all of these things because The New York Times reporters day after day, week after week, year after year, have reported how the Karzai government has cooperated with the Taliban forces seeking to bring them into the Afghan government.  Bizarrely, the US government has cooperated with those efforts, while our soldiers die in the killing fields of Afghanistan.

In June of this year, the Wall Street Journal reported:

“More than $3 billion in cash has been openly flown out of Kabul International Airport in the past three years, a sum so large that US investigators believe top Afghan officials and their associates are sending billions of diverted US aid and logistics dollars and drug money to financial safe havens abroad.  The cash -- packed into suitcases, piled onto pallets and loaded into airplanes -- is declared and legal to move.

But US and Afghan officials say they are targeting the flows in major anticorruption and drug trafficking investigations because of their size relative to Afghanistan's small economy and the murkiness of their origins.  Officials believe some of the cash, if not most, is siphoned from Western aid projects and US, European and NATO contracts to provide security, supplies and reconstruction work for coalition forces in Afghanistan.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization spent about $14 billion here last year alone.  Profits reaped from the opium trade are also a part of the money flow, as is cash earned by the Taliban from drugs and extortion, officials say.  The amount declared as it leaves the airport is vast in a nation where the gross domestic product last year totaled $13.5 billion.  More declared cash flies out of Kabul each year than the Afghan government collects in tax and customs revenue nationwide.  ‘It's not like they grow money on trees here,’ said a US official investigating corruption and Taliban financing.  ‘A lot of this looks like our tax dollars being stolen. And opium, of course.’”

We also know that President Karzai endangers American and other NATO troops (we have about 100,000 troops in Afghanistan while the rest of NATO has 40,000) by demanding according to The Times, “that the NATO led coalition stop carrying out night raids and limit airstrikes, which military commanders consider among their most effective tools but which have caused civilian casualties."

President Obama in response to Karzai’s demands that the US limit its military responses said, “If we’re ponying up billions of dollars to ensure that President Karzai can continue to build and develop his country, then he’s got to also pay attention to our concerns as well…He’s got to understand that I’ve got a bunch of young men and women who are in a foreign country being shot at” and “need to protect themselves.”

Nevertheless, despite his protestations, our young men and women continue to die to protect a corrupt government and country where many people hate us.

The Times reported on November 21 that “At a closed door meeting here, General David H. Petraeus, the top American and NATO commander in Afghanistan, set out his strategy for the transition, confirming that the kind of operations Mr. Karzai has criticized, including drone missile strikes and nighttime raids would continue aggressively.”

If the Afghan government persists in denouncing and objecting to our tactics, I have no doubt that they, not we, will prevail.  Our being in Afghanistan and the way we conduct ourselves is subject to his approval.  We have said many times that we will leave Afghanistan whenever and if ever the Afghan government demands we do.  Why should they ever demand we leave?  We are their piñata.  The US obviously doesn’t want to leave.  To date, we have spend over $300 billion on the Afghan war and we have suffered 1,273 US troop deaths.  NATO has suffered 822 troop deaths.  We have suffered over 7,000 combat injuries.  Those injuries are the worst kind, coming primarily from Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) roadside bombs, causing many amputations and brain injuries.

What do we have to show at this point for the bloodbath we have suffered and the billions we have expended?  We are hindered in defending ourselves by a corrupt Afghan government with a particularly corrupt Afghan President playing a double game with our sworn enemy, Iran.  The latter sees Afghanistan as a satellite tribal area to be bought not only with Iranian bribes, but also with religious and ethnic ties.

Afghans know that Iran will be there forever, while the US will ultimately leave if not tomorrow, and not in 2014, sometime in the future when ultimately a now apparently lethargic American public finally wakes up and demands we leave.  We would have left long ago were we still defended by a draft army instead of a volunteer army.

Surely, the combination of spilled blood with the expenditure of billions of dollars on the war in Afghanistan, when we are now contemplating reductions in Social Security benefits and educational funds for teaching our children, will cause the American public to rise up in wrath and say “No,” with a mighty roar.  The question of remaining in Afghanistan, while not even an issue in the 2010 election, will become one in the presidential election of 2012.

Why this ongoing stupid war which cannot be won on the ground because there is nothing worth winning has not received the attention that it deserves from the American public is a conundrum.  Nevertheless, the American public, even if at times it acts too slowly, will ultimately act.  Getting out of Afghanistan now, not in 2014 or thereafter, is the right thing to do.  (*)

Abbas to reshuffle Palestinian government: official


File : Palestinian authority President Mahmoud Abbas looks on during a presser following his meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, not pictured, at the Presidential palace in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Nov. 21, 2010. Talks come within the framework of efforts aimed at reviving the Middle East peace process. (Getty Images / AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

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RAMALLAH, Nov. 25 (KATAKAMI / Xinhua) -- Palestinian National Authority President Mahmoud Abbas will reshuffle the government soon, a Fatah official said Thursday.

Abbas told a meeting of the Fatah Revolutionary Council in Ramallah Wednesday that discussions to carry out the reshuffle have started, said Amin Maqboul, a member of the council.

Meanwhile, another Fatah official said on condition of anonymity that Abbas has agreed with his movement that Salam Fayyad, the current prime minister who is not a Fatah member, would lead the new government.

Fatah has always been demanding a reshuffle to take more senior portfolios into the government. Abbas asked Fayyad to form a government in June 2007, after Islamic Hamas movement routed pro- Abbas forces, ousted Fatah and seized control of the Gaza Strip.

"The ministerial change is a national demand that Fatah strongly supports," Maqboul said, but he denied that Fatah aimed to take more ministries through the change.

Hamas routed pro-Abbas forces and seized control of Gaza in 2007, one year after it won the parliamentary elections. The Hamas government, led by Ismail Haneya, which was deposed by Abbas, has refused to recognize the Fayyad government in the West Bank. (*)

Indonesia : Former Deputy Attorney General named new Attorney General

Basrie Arief


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November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / THE JAKARTA POST) — President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono finally names former deputy attorney general Basrief Arief as the new attorney general, bringing the latter out of his retirement from 2007.

The President said Thursday that Basrief would be inaugurated as the new attorney general, replacing Hendarman Supandji, on Friday.

“After a number of considerations and listening to views of many parties, including the Vice President, I’ve decided to name Basrief Arief as the new attorney general,” he told a press conference at the Presidential Office.

Yudhoyono said Basrief had been head of the Jakarta prosecutors’ office, junior attorney general for intelligence and deputy attorney general before retiring in 2007.

He said he would soon appoint head and members of the Prosecutors Commission to oversee and ensure reforms in the prosecutors’ offices. (*)

SKorea to boost troops as NKorea issues warning


A South Korean woman who is on the way out of the island, brings her bicycle and her belongings near the destroyed houses on Yeonpyeong Island, South Korea, Thursday, Nov. 25, 2010. South Korea's president vowed Thursday to boost troops on the island targeted by a North Korean artillery barrage, while the North stridently warned of additional attacks if the South carries out any 'reckless military provocations.' (AP Photo / Lee Jin-man)

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November 25, 2010 YEONPYEONG ISLAND, South Korea (KATAKAMI / AP)  – South Korea's president vowed Thursday to boost troops on an island targeted by a North Korean artillery barrage, while the North stridently warned of additional attacks if the South carries out any "reckless military provocations."

Seoul and Washington ratcheted up the pressure on China to use its influence on ally North Korea to ease soaring tensions after an exchange of fire Tuesday that left four South Koreans dead — including two civilians. China urged both sides to show restraint.

The North's bombardment of this tiny South Korean island along a disputed maritime frontier — the first such attack on a civilian area — alarmed world leaders, including President Barack Obama, who reaffirmed plans for joint maneuvers with Seoul involving a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in the Yellow Sea starting Sunday.

"We should not let our guard down in preparation for another possible North Korean provocation," South Korean President Lee Myung-bak said during an emergency meeting in Seoul on repercussions of the attack, presidential spokesman Hong Sang-pyo said. "I think a similar North Korean provocation could come at any time."

Yeonpyeong Island, home to military bases as well a fishing community of 1,300 residents, looked like a war zone Thursday, with homes and shops completely flattened and the streets strewn with blackened rubble, mangled window frames and shattered glass.

Hundreds of residents have already fled the devastation for the mainland, but a few were still rooting around the rubble looking for personal belonging and spending cold nights in underground shelters.

Hong said that South Korea will boost ground troops on Yeonpyeong and four other islands in western waters in response to this week's attack, reversing a 2006 decision calling for an eventual decrease. He declined to discuss specifics for the increase, but said troops there currently amount to about 4,000.

His comments came as South Korea's defense chief visited the island, located about 50 miles (80 kilometers) from the port of Incheon west of Seoul but just 7 miles (11 kilometers) from North Korean shores.

The military was analyzing debris from North Korea's artillery and has not ruled out North Korea's use of thermobaric bombs, which burn more violently and increase casualties and property destruction, a Joint Chiefs of Staff official said. He asked not to be identified, saying he was not authorized to speak to reporters.

The two Koreas are required to abide by an armistice signed at the close of the three-year war, but the North does not recognize the maritime line drawn by U.N. forces in 1953 and considers South Korean maneuvers near Yeonpyeong island a violation of its territory.

The attack added to animosity from the March sinking of a South Korean warship in nearby waters that killed 46 sailors in the worst military attack on the nation since the Korean War.

Skirmishes occur from time to time around the sea border, but Tuesday's attack was the first to target civilians and raised concerns about escalating hostilities leading to another war.

The shelling also comes as North Korea is undergoing a delicate transition of power from leader Kim Jong Il to his young son Kim Jong Un. The son, who is in late 20s, was made a four-star general and nominated to high-ranking Workers' Party posts in the first steps toward eventually succeeding his father.

The previously scheduled U.S.-South Korean drills set to begin Sunday and involving the carrier USS George Washington are sure to infuriate North Korea.

The North made no specific mention of those exercises in its statement but warned that its military would "launch second and third strong physical retaliations without hesitation if South Korean warmongers carry out reckless military provocations."

The North also said Washington was to blame for the South Korean artillery drills on Yeonpyeong that prompted the North to respond with its artillery barrage Tuesday.

Washington "should thoroughly control South Korea," it said. The warning was issued by North Korea's military mission at the truce village of Panmunjom and was carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

South Korea says its artillery exercises Tuesday were aimed away from North Korea, and a top military official on the island Thursday showed reporters a trajectory heading to the southwest.

"North Korea argues that we fired at them first, but this is the direction that we fired," Lt. Gen. Joo Jong-hwa said.

Meanwhile, the Obama administration urged China to rein in ally North Korea, with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, saying: "We really think it's important for the international community to lead, but in particular China."

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao called on all sides to show "maximum restraint." He repeated calls for renewed six-nation talks aimed at persuading North Korea to dismantle its nuclear programs. Wen said those talks, involving the two Koreas, China, Russia, Japan and the United States, are the best way to ensure stability on the peninsula and its denuclearization.

Wen's remarks were made in Russia on Wednesday on a state visit and posted on the Chinese Foreign Ministry's website.

South Korea said it will increase diplomatic efforts to get China, which supplied North Korea with troops during the Korean War and remains its main ally and biggest benefactor, to put pressure on Pyongyang.

On Thursday, the coast guard transported two white coffins carrying the bodies of civilians pulled from the rubble Wednesday.

In Seongnam, just outside Seoul, military officers and family members mourned the two marines killed in the attack, laying flowers and burning incense at an altar. Funerals are to take place Saturday.

Yeonpyeong residents arrived in Incheon with harrowing tales of fiery destruction and narrow escapes.

Survivor Ahn Ae-ja said the artillery barrage caught her by surprise.

"Over my head, a pine tree was broken and burning," Ahn told AP Television News on Wednesday. "So I thought 'Oh, this is not another exercise. It is a war.' I decided to run. And I did."

About 10 homes suffered direct hits and 30 were destroyed in the barrage, according to a local official who spoke by telephone. She asked that her name not be used.

"I heard the sound of artillery, and I felt that something was flying over my head," said Lim Jung-eun, 36, who fled the island with three children, including a 9-month-old strapped to her back. "Then the mountain caught on fire."

The shower of artillery from North Korea was the first to strike a civilian population. In addition to the two marines and two civilians killed in the exchange, at least 18 people — most of them troops — were wounded.

Officials in Seoul said there could be considerable North Korean casualties but there was no mention in North Korean state media of casualties.  (*)

Medvedev says will use ideas received on Twitter




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November 25, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) — Russian President Dmitry Medvedev thanked Twitter users who send him proposals on various problems and said he will use some of them.

“I think I will use a number of those ideas in the address to the Federal Assembly,” Medvedev replied on Twitter to a user of the microblogging site who asked him whether the Russian leader reads the tweets he receives.

The technologically savvy Russian leader registered on Twitter in June during his visit to the United States. More than 127,000 people are currently following him on the micro-blogging site. The English version has more than 54,000 followers.

Last week Medvedev renamed his popular account on Twitter to make it more informal. The account’s new name is MedvedevRussia (MedvedevRussiaE) is the English version). (*)

November 24, 2010

Russia’s Putin calls Leonardo DiCaprio ‘a real man’ at tiger forum


Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
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November 23, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) --- Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Tuesday called Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio "a real man" for his efforts in making it to the tiger forum.

DiCaprio was on his way to Russia to attend the International Tiger Conservation Forum when his plane was forced to land in New York's JFK airport late on Sunday due to an engine flame out and malfunction.

"We need to praise the American pilots who showed bravery, calm and professionalism by turning on the fire extinguisher system and shut down all the engines, putting the plane into a free-fall for several seconds," Putin said, adding: "I don't think anyone would want to continue their trip, but Mr. DiCaprio isn't one of them."

Putin said DiCaprio began his journey on November 21 on a flight out of New York and once the plane gained altitude, one of the engines caught on fire. After the engines were restarted, the plane returned safely to New York.

However, the premier continued, DiCaprio didn't stop at that and his adventures continued.


"Because of strong winds over the ocean, the airplane used up its fuel [before arriving to its destination] and was forced to land in Helsinki," Putin said under a roar of laughter from the audience.
"That's not funny," Putin said with a smile.

The airplane was refueled in Helsinki and continued its flight to St. Petersburg.

"DiCaprio didn't just come [to St. Petersburg], he busted into St. Petersburg across the Front Line," Putin added under a round of applause.

"That's what we call a real man!" Putin said.

Earlier on Tuesday it was reported that DiCaprio had committed $1 million to World Wildlife Fund for urgent tiger conservation efforts through his Fund at the California Community Foundation.

Putin also told the audience that he was thankful to DiCaprio for his donation to the fund.

DiCaprio, who shot to fame for his role in the 1997 blockbuster Titanic, is known for his participation in tiger conservation programs. Earlier this year, he joined WWF in its effort to raise $20 million through the Save Tigers Now campaign. As a WWF board member he recently visited tiger parks in Nepal and Bhutan.

The World Wildlife Fund plans to spend $85 million in the next five years on programs aimed at restoring the global tiger population.

According to the WWF, there are about 3,200 tigers left in the wild in 13 countries worldwide.

A century ago, there were some 100,000 wild tigers across Asia and the Russian Far East. The wild cats have been steadily pushed to the verge of extinction by poaching, illegal trade, and habitat loss.

The International Tiger Conservation Forum, hosted by the northwestern Russian city of St. Petersburg running November 21-24, is discussing a plan to double the animal's population in 12 years, which will require up to $350 million from the international community.  (*)


ST. PETERSBURG, November 23

President Barack Obama says US strongly affirms commitment to defend South Korea


File Photo : South Korea's President Lee Myung-bak and President Barack Obama hold bilateral talks Thursday at the presidential Blue House in Seoul (November 11, 2010)

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In Interview with Barbara Walters, Obama Calls on China to Take a Stand Against North Korea

November23, 2010 (KATAKAMI / ABCNEWS.COM ) --- President Obama today strongly condemned North Korea's attack on South Korea and, in an exclusive interview with ABC News' Barbara Walters, urged China to take a stand against aggression.

"This is a -- just one more provocative incident in a series that we've seen over the last several months, and I'm going to be talking to the president of Korea -- South Korea this evening and we'll be consulting closely with them in terms of the appropriate response," the president said. "We've strongly condemned the attack… we are rallying the international community once again to put pressure on North Korea."
 
Obama wouldn't comment on military actions the U.S. may take, except to reiterate that South Korea is "one of our most important allies" and "a cornerstone of U.S. security in the Pacific region."

"We want to make sure all the parties in the region recognize that this is a serious and ongoing threat that has to be dealt with," the president added.

He specifically called on China to stand firm and "make clear to North Korean that there are a set of international rules that they need to abide by," Obama said.

Tensions escalated on the Korean peninsula this morning after North Korea fired artillery shells at South Korea's Yeonpyeong Island. The South Koreans responded with their own artillery fire.

Authorities said two South Korean soldiers were killed, 16 others were injured and at least three civilians were killed.

South Korean naval forces were conducting a routine drill in the waters near the island earlier in the morning, which authorities say may have triggered off a reaction from North Korea.

The western sea border has been at the center of dispute where the two Koreas fought bloody skirmishes in 1999, 2002, and most recently November 2009. But this is the first time since the end of the Korean war in 1953 that North Korea has fired on South Korea's civilian territory.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon called the attack one of "gravest incidents since the end of the Korean War" and said he "is deeply concerned by the escalation of tension on the Korean peninsula."

There were no U.S. forces involved in the annual South Korean training exercises, according to the Pentagon. In years past, U.S. marines have participated in the exercise, but a scheduling conflict prevented their participation this year. Planning is still underway for a joint U.S.-South Korean exercise in the Yellow Sea, but the timing hasn't been announced.

Defense Secretary Gates called his South Korean counterpart today and reiterated the U.S. stance against "this act of aggression."

"In a phone call this morning, Secretary Gates told Minister Kim the United States strongly condemns the attack by North Korea, views it as a violation of the armistice agreement and assured him that we are committed to South Korea's defense," Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters. "He expressed sympathy for the loss of life and appreciation for the restraint shown to date by the South Korean government."

The exchange of fire came days after North Korea revealed its upgraded and strengthened uranium enrichment plant to western scientists.

Siegfried Hecker, the Stanford professor and former head of the Los Alamos lab who was invited to North Korea last week to witness their new uranium program, said today the country's nuclear capability is much farther along than previously estimated.

He added that the Obama administration should undertake a thorough review of North Korea, since the last one was in 2000.  (*)

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague condemns North Korea's 'unprovoked attack' on South Korea




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November 23, 2010 (KATAKAMI / FCO.GOV.UK) --- Foreign Secretary William Hague has spoken following this morning's artillery attack by North Korea on the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong.

"The UK strongly condemns North Korea’s unprovoked attack on the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong Island.  Such unprovoked attacks will only lead to further tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

We strongly urge North Korea to refrain from such attacks and adhere to the Korean Armistice agreement. I welcome President Lee Myung-bak’s call for restraint.”  (*)

November 23, 2010

US condemns North Korean attack on South Korea


South Korean President Lee Myung-bak receives a briefing at the control centre of the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Defence Ministry in Seoul November 23, 2010. North Korea on Tuesday fired dozens of artillery shells at a South Korean island, setting buildings on fire and prompting a return of fire by the South, Seoul's military and media reports said. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Jo Bo-Hee/Yonhap )


November 23, 2010 WASHINGTON (KATAKAMI / AP) – The White House on Tuesday condemned North Korea's artillery attack against the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong, the latest in a series of provocations that have reawakened concerns about the threat posed by the communist country and its reclusive leadership.

In a statement released before dawn, Press Secretary Robert Gibbs called on North Korea to "to halt its belligerent action and to fully abide by the terms of the armistice agreement," the 1953 pact that ended the Korean War.

North Korea fired barrages of artillery onto a South Korean island near their disputed western border Tuesday, setting buildings ablaze and killing at least two marines after warning the South to halt military drills in the area, South Korean officials said.

Gibbs said the White House "is in close and continuing contact" with the South Korean government.
"The United States is firmly committed to the defense of our ally, the Republic of Korea, and to the maintenance of regional peace and stability," he said.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell concurred with Obama in condemning the attack.

"As the people of the Republic of Korea question what new belligerent action may come from the North, they should not have any question that the people and forces of the United States stand ready as a devoted ally committed to the defense of their nation," McConnell, R-Ky., said in a statement. "I join the president in his strong condemnation of what is sadly just the latest in a long string of hostile actions. North Korea's neighbors should unite in condemning this attack."

 A senior administration official said the president was woken up shortly before 4 a.m. by National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, who updated the president on the situation. Obama will get further updates during his daily intelligence briefing before heading to Indiana, where he's scheduled to make remarks on the economy.

None of the more than 28,000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea were involved in the military drills, said Lt. Col. Mark Ballesteros, a Pentagon spokesman in Washington.

U.S. troops have participated in the annual exercise in the past, said Marine Col. Dave Lapan, another Defense Department spokesman at the Pentagon. An earlier plan to have U.S. Marines participate in a landing maneuver with the South Koreans this year didn't work out because of American scheduling issues, Lapan said Tuesday.

The attack came amid high tension over North Korea's claim that it has a new uranium enrichment facility and just six weeks after North Korean leader Kim Jong Il unveiled his youngest son Kim Jong Un as his heir apparent.

On Monday, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters the administration is studying the evidence a group of visiting American scientists used to conclude the North was building the enrichment facility, which presumably could be used to produce fuel for nuclear weapons.

"We will not be drawn into rewarding North Korea for bad behavior," he said. "They frequently anticipate doing something outrageous or provocative and forcing us to jump through hoops as a result. We're not going to buy into this cycle."

The North's artillery on Tuesday struck the small South Korean-held island of Yeonpyeong, which houses military installations and a small civilian population and which has been the focus of two previous deadly battles between the Koreas.

South Korea returned fire and dispatched fighter jets in response, and said there could be considerable North Korean casualties as troops unleashed retaliatory fire. The supreme military command in Pyongyang threatened more strikes if the South crossed its maritime border by "even 0.001 millimeter," according to the North's official Korean Central News Agency.

Earlier this month, during a speech to U.S. troops stationed in South Korea, President Barack Obama said: "Pyongyang should not be mistaken: The United States will never waver in our commitment to the security of the Republic of Korea. We will not waver." (*)

U.N. Security Council plans North Korea meeting: source


South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, center, arrives with Defense Minister Kim Tae-young, second right, at the Joint Chiefs of Staff as the military was put on top alert after North Korea's artillery attack on South Korean island of Yeonpyeong, in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2010. (Getty Images / AP Photo/Yonhap)

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November 23, 2010 (KATAKAMI / Reuters) - The United Nations Security Council could hold an emergency meeting in the next day or two over an attack by North Korea on a South Korean island, a French diplomatic source told reporters on Tuesday.

Asked whether the Security council would meet, the source said: "It's in the works for either today or tomorrow. We are for it and (planning) is ongoing."

French Foreign Minister Michele Alliot-Marie condemned the North Korean shelling, which killed two soldiers and set dozens of houses ablaze.

"I condemn firmly the artillery strikes from North Korea on the Yeonpyeong island and that resulted in two deaths among South Korean military forces and several injured among the civilian population," Alliot-Marie said in a statement.

"France calls on North Korea to halt the provocation and refrain from any further acts that could worsen tensions in the region."

The attack by reclusive North Korea against its southern neighbor was one of the heaviest yet and followed revelations at the weekend that Pyongyang is fast developing another source of material to make atomic bombs.

It also comes after moves by North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il to make his youngest son heir apparent to the family dynasty. (*)

North Korea launches attack on South Korean island


Smoke rises from South Korea's Yeonpyeong island near the border against North Korea on November 23, 2010 in Seoul, South Korea. Dozens of artillery shells fired by North Korea hit the South Korean Island of Yeonpyeong reportedly causing injuries and prompting return fire from South Korean forces. The incident comes amid tensions over North Korea's nuclear program and the announcement of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il's youngest son as his successor. (Photo by Getty Images)


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November 23, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI ) — North Korea opened artillery fire at a South Korean island on Tuesday, killing one soldier and provoking a retaliatory attack from the South, Seoul’s YTN television reported.

An eyewitness told the TV station that some 60 to 70 houses were ablaze on the Yeonpyeong island in the Yellow Sea. The island, which is off the countries’ west coast, is populated by some 1,200 people.

A spokesman for South Korea’s joint chief of staff said “scores of rounds” were fired by the North. South Korean military retaliated by firing some 80 rounds, Yonhap said.

At least one South Korean marine is reported to have died, with three seriously injured. It is not immediately known if there were any civilian casualties.

The South Korean military is on its highest non-war alert and the Air Force has deployed fighter jets to the island.

Yonhap said Seoul was considering the evacuation of its nationals currently in North Korea.
“We will decide whether we should evacuate them or not after looking into the safety of those at the Mount Kumgang resort and the Kaesong industrial park,” the South Korean agency quoted a Unification Ministry official as saying.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak ordered an emergency meeting of security ministers in connection with the attack.

Tuesday’s exchange of fire came amid large-scale military exercises in South Korea. The drills, involving some 70,000 troops, were launched Monday and are to last through November 30.

“Our army was carrying out military training, and there was a telegram from North Korea with a protest and questioning whether this was an attack,” the spokesperson was quoted as saying by South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.

He did not rule out that subsequent artillery fire from the North was a response to the drills.

The attack is the second incident in the tense Yellow Sea border area this year. In March, a North Korean submarine was alleged to have torpedoed a South Korean naval ship, the Cheonan, causing the loss of 46 lives. An international investigation said the North was to blame, but the reclusive regime denied involvement.

North and South Korea remain technically at war, since no peace treaty was signed following the Korean War in 1953. The Demilitarized Zone between the countries is the most heavily armed border in the world.
The latest attack comes after the revelation that the North has created a new uranium enrichment facility.

Despite the development, South Korea will not seek the return of U.S. tactical nuclear missiles over fears that the move could scupper international efforts to persuade North Korea to halt its nuclear program, the South Korean deputy defense minister said.

“Redeploying U.S. tactical nuclear weapons in South Korea would cross the line of the denuclearization policy on the Korean Peninsula,” deputy defense minister Chang Kwang-il told Yonhap.

He added that “South Korea has had no talks with the United States over the issue.”  (*)

MOSCOW, November 23

Israeli President Shimon Peres begins official visit to Ukraine


Israeli President Shimon Peres

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November 23, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) --- Israeli President Shimon Peres begins on Tuesday his four-day official visit to Ukraine to enhance cooperation between the countries in the spheres of diplomacy, economy and technologies, the Israeli presidential press service said.

Peres, who will be accompanied during the visit by Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, is scheduled to hold talks with Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych and Volodymyr Lytvyn, the speaker of the country's parliament.

"During the talks Peres intends to touch upon a broad range of important bilateral diplomatic issues. The president will also voice Israel's position concerning the counteraction to the Iranian nuclear program and concerning relations with the Palestinians," the press service said.

The Israeli president will also take part in the signing of an agreement on protection of mutual investments, deliver a lecture to students majoring in politics and diplomacy and meet with representatives of the Jewish Diaspora in Ukraine.

Peres is taking a regular commercial flight to Ukraine for his visit, the press service added. (*)




TEL-AVIV, November 23

Saudi King arrives in U.S. for treatment


Saudi King Abdullah bin Abd al-Aziz, left, speaking with Prince Salman bin Abdel Aziz, the Saudi King's brother and Riyadh Governor, right, before his departures to United States in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Monday, Nov. 22, 2010. King Abdullah flew on Monday to the United States for medical treatment, seeking treatment after a blood clot complicated a slipped spinal disc, the state news agency SPA said. (Photo : Getty Images / AP Photo/HO)

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November 23, 2010. (KATAKAMI / Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's aging King Abdullah arrived in the United States for medical treatment on Monday, while a frail Crown Prince Sultan hurriedly returned from abroad to govern the world's largest oil exporter.

The kingdom is keen to show its allies in Washington and elsewhere there will be no power vacuum as health problems beset its octogenarian rulers, but the question of whether a reformist or a conservative will take over remains a matter of concern.

Abdullah, thought to be around 86 or 87, asked Crown Prince Sultan to fly home from Morocco to run the kingdom during his absence.

The king will be seeking treatment after a blood clot complicated a slipped spinal disc, the state news agency SPA said. It did not say when Abdullah would be back.

"Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz is currently visiting the U.S. for medical treatment, and we hope for his speedy recovery," the U.S. State Department said on Twitter on Monday afternoon.

With both Abdullah and Sultan in their 80s, speculation arose that conservative Interior Minister Prince Nayef, at a relatively youthful 76, could take over running the affairs of state some time in the near future.

Diplomats say Sultan, who is also defense minister and has major health problems of his own, has been much less active during his convalescence in Morocco.

Abdullah appointed his half-brother Nayef second deputy prime minister in 2009 in a move that analysts say will secure the leadership in the event of serious health problems afflicting the king and crown prince and improve Nayef's chances of one day being king.

Diplomats in Riyadh say Western governments concerned about the fate of social and economic reforms promoted by Abdullah have reservations about the ascent of Nayef, seen as a religious and social traditionalist.

Nayef long denied that the September 11, 2001, attacks were carried out by Saudis or al Qaeda, suggesting they were carried out by supporters of Israel. He is seen as close to the powerful and hardline Saudi clerical establishment blamed by Washington for encouraging an ideology that promotes bigotry and fanaticism.

GLOBAL CONCERN

King Abdullah, who came to power in 2005, is the sixth leader of Saudi Arabia, whose political stability is of regional and global concern. It controls more than a fifth of the world's crude oil reserves, is a vital U.S. ally in the region, a major holder of dollar assets and home to the biggest Arab bourse.

As home to Islam's holiest sites, as well as birthplace of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Saudi Arabia is key to global efforts to fight Islamic militancy.

Washington wants Riyadh to continue social and economic reforms promoted by Abdullah that were seen as crucial after a group composed of mainly Saudis carried out the September 11 attacks of 2001.
But confusion still swirls over the real state of health of both Abdullah and Sultan and what will happen to Abdullah's policies.

Diplomats say there has been uncertainty about Abdullah's health since he canceled a visit to France in July.
A series of official announcements over the past week on the king's health reflect a desire to reassure Washington that the ruling family's grasp of affairs remains firm in tense times.
The hasty return of Sultan from a three-month break in Morocco was more low-key than his return last year from treatment for unspecified health problems. Then the half-brother to Abdullah, only a few years his junior, was met with a Bedouin sword dance.

Saudi state television showed Sultan at Riyadh airport, where he was greeted by senior princes of the Saudi royal family, which may soon face the test of managing an orderly transfer of power. Abdullah was not present at the event.

The princes at the top of the hierarchy in the absolute monarchy are all in their 70s and 80s and the Al Saud family, in power since the kingdom was founded in 1932, will remain a gerontocracy unless it soon promotes younger princes.

While official media seek to present family unity, tensions remain between the senior princes over who will run the country and over securing positions for their sons in the future political architecture of the absolute monarchy.

Rulers have so far all been sons of founder Abdul-Aziz Ibn Saud and many of the country's 18 million people want to see power pass to a new generation. (*)