RE:[DEHAI] (MEO) Piracy in the Red Sea: Saudi points towards Israel


New Message Reply About this list Date view Thread view Subject view Author view

From: Berhane Tseggai (berhanetseggai@yahoo.ca)
Date: Tue Feb 17 2009 - 02:35:12 EST


Selam Seb Dehai:

<<
Besides Saudi Arabia, eight other countries bordering the Red Sea are:
Yemen, Egypt, Jordan, Sudan, Djibouti, Eritrea, Somalia and Israel.
>>

Thanks Biniam/Swe for posting this news-analysis from which one could extract a political trivia when The HEROIC FEAT of OPERATION FENKIL is celebrated next year.

One such line could be: Which of those countries bordering the Red Sea do Walk the Talk in fighting and pointing at the main causes of piracy?
 

Whoever wants to effectively solve this problem should consult with those who have planned the OPERATION FENKIL not only for their(OP-FEN)expertise in the Red Sea military strategies but for their principled record of dealing with the political and economic causes that the so-called Somali pirates have found to resist or exploit.

Remembering the Heroine and Heroes of OPERATION FENKIL who made us the masters of our waters!!

Awet nHafash!

HawKum,
Haileab,Toronto.

vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv

From: Biniam Haile \(SWE\) (eritrea.lave@comhem.se)
Date: Mon Feb 16 2009 - 16:27:06 EST

Piracy in the Red Sea: Saudi points towards Israel
  
First Published 2008-11-25
  
Columnists fear that a plan is underway for 'internationalization' of
security in the Red Sea.
By Habib Trabelsi - PARIS
  
Not only do columnists and analysts openly accuse Israel of sponsoring
acts of piracy that multiply off Somali waters, but they also do not
hide their fears of an internationalization of security in the Red Sea,
where Israel plays a decisive role.
  
"What is happening in the Horn of Africa is not a simple case of piracy.
These acts of piracy raise various questions about the capabilities and
equipment of simple outlaws who are seeking ransoms," wrote Tuesday
(November 25) Nawaf Al-Meshal Sabhan in the Saudi daily Al-Iqtissadia.
  
"These acts triggered statements on the internationalization of the Red
Sea, in which the enemy state of Israel would be a crucial element," he
adds.
  
"Who has got an interest in such an internationalization?" Asks the
analyst, echoing "another disturbing development represented by the
decision of a shipping company (AP Moller-Maersk, the world's largest
container ship operator and supply vessel operator) to divert its huge
merchant fleet from Suez Canal and take the route via the Cape of Good
Hope."
  
"Who has got an interest in putting pressure on Egypt, by diverting
cargo ships of Suez Canal and by making Egypt lose daily income of over
$15 million?" the analysts asks again.
  
"Who is behind acts of piracy?" Was the headline of the daily
Al-Riyadh's editorialist Dr. Hashem Abdou Hashem.
  

"These repeated acts of piracy are premeditated. They are sponsored by a
State or organization, in any case by a party seeking to create tension,
concern and instability in the Red Sea in order to achieve strategic
interests," he wrote.
  
According to him, "this party seeks to convince the international
community to monitor the sea on the pretext of ensuring the safety of
navigation, ensuring energy supplies and preventing supplies of arms to
troublemakers in the region," referring particularly to the Islamist
militia "Shebab" who control much of Somalia.
  
Red Sea: "the lung of Arabia"
  
More explicitly, Jalal Aref wrote Monday in al-Youm that Arab countries
bordering the Red Sea "are now faced with four dangers: The
internationalization of security in the Red Sea with the pretext of
fighting piracy, Israel's covetousness of seeking to play a key role in
the Red Sea, the theft of Arab oil through piracy, without counting the
blow to navigation in the Suez Canal."
  
The daily Al-Iqtissadiya asked in its editorial Monday "how hackers may
have means of air defense, missiles guided by satellites, computers and
advanced navigation equipment."
  
"This means that some countries close an eye on these acts of piracy for
strategic, political and economic reasons," added the newspaper,
pointing out that "the Red Sea is the only waterway in the world where
residents are Arab dominant . and it must remain so."
  
Amin Sa'ati, a Saudi expert, demonstrated in a long article published
the same newspaper that "the security of Saudi Arabia and the Red Sea
are inseparable (.) since 30% of global crude, including the one of
Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states, pass through the Red Sea, the bulk
of our desalinated water resources comes from the Red Sea, and our
imports and exports pass largely through the Red Sea. "
  
"The Red Sea is our lung (.). The kingdom must convene a meeting of
countries bordering the sea to develop a mechanism for strategic
cooperation. But it seems that foreign forces do not want stability in
the region. Israel remains the main obstacle to such cooperation," added
the expert.
  
Besides Saudi Arabia, eight other countries bordering the Red Sea are:
Yemen, Egypt, Jordan, Sudan, Djibouti, Eritrea, Somalia and Israel.
  
Yemen: mobilize Arabs
  
Last October, Yemeni President Ali Abdallah Saleh called on Arab
countries bordering the Red Sea to "assume their responsibility" to
remove any pretext for an internationalization of security in the sea.
  
His appeal came shortly after a decision by NATO to strengthen its
military presence in the Indian Ocean against piracy off Somalia, in
coordination with the European Union (EU).
  
Saleh went to Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia for that matter. His
foreign minister, Abu Bakr al-Korbi, had claimed that Riyadh was
"conducive to cooperation among Arab countries bordering the Red Sea to
ensure the security of the sea."
  
Speaking on November 20 in Cairo at a meeting of Arab officials
bordering the Red Sea, Korbi said that the multinational naval presence
in the southern part of the Red Sea was "a danger to Arab national
security."
  
Since the diversion of Saudi supertanker, the "Star Sirius" on November
15 by pirates off Somali waters, the Saudi press has been publishing
echoes of several Arab journalists and analysts, including Egyptians,
who warn against "Israel's aims for playing a key role in the Red Sea"
and against "a US-European control of this strategic sea."
  
Israel in Islamists' line of fire
  
Israel is also condemned by Islamists on Internet sites which are full
of inflammatory articles, including one written by the former Secretary
General of Kuwaiti Salafist Movement, Sheikh Hamed Al Ali.
  
"The aims of the Zionist enemy in the Red Sea have never ceased," wrote
the Islamist cleric on his website, illustrating his long article with a
quote by a former commander of the Israeli navy regarding "a diabolical
plan" which aims to "transform the Red Sea into a Jewish lake."
  
Sheikh al-Ali also lists examples of "the Zionist military engagement in
Ethiopia," particularly "sophisticated aircraft-radars and 60 military
Zionists experts."
  
That is why Sheikh al-Ali called the mujahideen in Somalia "to eliminate
pirates whose irresponsible acts will be exploited by western hackers to
the benefit of the diabolical Zionist plan and to abort the Islamic
project in Somalia."
  
The Shebab, who called piracy an offence to Islam, threatened to attack
the pirates if they will not release the "Star Sirius."
  
http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=28928
  
  
<http://www.middle-east-online.com/pictures/big/_28928_Star_Sirius.jpg>

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

  

      __________________________________________________________________
Be smarter than spam. See how smart SpamGuard is at giving junk email the boot with the All-new Yahoo! Mail. Click on Options in Mail and switch to New Mail today or register for free at http://mail.yahoo.ca


New Message Reply About this list Date view Thread view Subject view Author view

webmaster
© Copyright DEHAI-Eritrea OnLine, 1993-2009
All rights reserved