WikiLeaks: Israels secret hotline to the man tipped to replace Mubarak

KhanHaripur

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
February 8, 2011

By Tim Ross, Christopher Hope, Steven Swinford and Adrian Blomfield
The new vice-president of Egypt, Omar Suleiman, is a long-standing favourite of Israel’s who spoke daily to the Tel Aviv government via a secret “hotline” to Cairo, leaked documents disclose.
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Omar Suleiman, left, was Israel’s preferred candidate to replace President Mubarak according to secret cables released to The Daily Telegraph by WikiLeaks
Mr Suleiman, who is widely tipped to take over from Hosni Mubarak as president, was named as Israel’s preferred candidate for the job after discussions with American officials in 2008.
As a key figure working for Middle East peace, he once suggested that Israeli troops would be “welcome” to invade Egypt to stop weapons being smuggled to Hamas terrorists in neighbouring Gaza.
The details, which emerged in secret files obtained by WikiLeaks and passed to The Daily Telegraph, come after Mr Suleiman began talks with opposition groups on the future for Egypt’s government.
On Saturday, Mr Suleiman won the backing of Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, to lead the “transition” to democracy after two weeks of demonstrations calling for President Mubarak to resign.
David Cameron, the Prime Minister, spoke to Mr Suleiman yesterday and urged him to take “bold and credible steps” to show the world that Egypt is embarking on an “irreversible, urgent and real” transition.
Leaked cables from American embassies in Cairo and Tel Aviv disclose the close co-operation between Mr Suleiman and the US and Israeli governments as well as diplomats’ intense interest in likely successors to the ageing President Mubarak, 83.
The documents highlight the delicate position which the Egyptian government seeks to maintain in Middle East politics, as a leading Arab nation with a strong relationship with the US and Israel. By 2008, Mr Suleiman, who was head of the foreign intelligence service, had become Israel’s main point of contact in the Egyptian government.
David Hacham, a senior adviser from the Israeli Ministry of Defence, told the American embassy in Tel Aviv that a delegation led by Israel’s defence minister, Ehud Barak had been impressed by Mr Suleiman, whose name is spelled “Soliman” in some cables.
But Mr Hacham was “shocked” by President Mubarak’s “aged appearance and slurred speech”.
The cable, from August 2008, said: “Hacham was full of praise for Soliman, however, and noted that a ‘hot line’ set up between the MOD and Egyptian General Intelligence Service is now in daily use.
“Hacham noted that the Israelis believe Soliman is likely to serve as at least an interim President if Mubarak dies or is incapacitated.” The Tel Aviv diplomats added: “We defer to Embassy Cairo for analysis of Egyptian succession scenarios, but there is no question that Israel is most comfortable with the prospect of Omar Soliman.”
Elsewhere the documents disclose that Mr Suleiman was stung by Israeli criticism of Egypt’s inability to stop arms smugglers transporting weapons to Palestinian militants in Gaza. At one point he suggested that Israel send troops into the Egyptian border region of Philadelphi to “stop the smuggling”.
“In their moments of greatest frustration, [Egyptian Defence Minister] Tantawi and Soliman each have claimed that the IDF [Israel Defence Forces] would be ‘welcome’ to re-invade Philadelphi, if the IDF thought that would stop the smuggling,” the cable said.
The files suggest that Mr Suleiman wanted Hamas “isolated”, and thought Gaza should “go hungry but not starve”.
“We have a short time to reach peace,” he told US diplomats. “We need to wake up in the morning with no news of terrorism, no explosions, and no news of more deaths.”
Yesterday, Hosni Mubarak’s control of Egypt’s state media, a vital lynchpin of his 30-year presidency, started to slip as the country’s largest-circulation newspaper declared its support for the uprising.
Hoping to sap the momentum from street protests demanding his overthrow, the president has instructed his deputy to launch potentially protracted negotiations with secular and Islamist opposition parties. The talks continued for a second day yesterday without yielding a significant breakthrough.
But Mr Mubarak was dealt a significant setback as the state-controlled Al-Ahram, Egypt’s second oldest newspaper and one of the most famous publications in the Middle East, abandoned its long-standing slavish support for the regime.
In a front-page leading article, the newspaper hailed the “nobility” of the “revolution” and demanded the government embark on irreversible constitutional and legislative changes.

Article Source:
By Tim Ross, Christopher Hope, Steven Swinford and Adrian Blomfield
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/wikileaks/8309792/WikiLeaks-Israels-secret-hotline-to-the-man-tipped-to-replace-Mubarak.html
 
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KhanHaripur

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Israeli ex-soldier admits leaking secret papers

February 8, 2011

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http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/02/06/idINIndia-54688620110206
A former Israeli soldier pleaded guilty on Sunday to leaking classified military documents to a newspaper which later reported allegations of a policy to assassinate Palestinian militants.
Tel Aviv district court accepted a plea bargain with Anat Kamm, 24, dropping some of the original charges including harming state security, but convicted her of possessing and distributing secret information.
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Kamm had taken about 2,000 military papers during her mandatory army service and passed classified information on to a correspondent for Israel’s Haaretz daily.
The newspaper subsequently reported in 2008 that top army officers had authorised the assassination of Palestinian militants in a possible violation of Israeli law.
“She’s a young woman who at the time believed she stumbled onto (evidence of) war crimes,” Kamm’s lawyer Avigdor Feldman told Army Radio.
Kamm will be sentenced later. The offences she pleaded guilty to carry a maximum jail term of 15 years under Israeli law.
 
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Logical

Voter (50+ posts)

مبارک جیسے ضمیر فروش بہت مل جائیں گے
یہ اسرئیل اور امریکا کی محنتوں کا ثمر ہے .. ان سانپوں کو دودھ پلا کے جوان کیا ہے آخر
 

mrcritic

Minister (2k+ posts)
Israel wants Egypt's Mubarak to hand power to Suleiman

Vita Bekker
Last Updated: Feb 9, 2011

TEL AVIV // A leaked document yesterday suggested that Israel has long favoured Omar Suleiman, the new vice-president of Egypt, to take over from Hosni Mubarak, indicating possible Israeli influence in Mr Suleiman's new appointment.
According to secret memos from US embassies in Cairo and Tel Aviv that were obtained by the whistleblower website WikiLeaks and published by the UK's Daily Telegraph newspaper, Mr Suleiman has closely co-operated with the US and Israel on the Israeli-Palestinian talks, efforts to stop arms smuggling into Hamas-ruled Gaza and Iran's nuclear ambitions.
One document from August 2008 said that a senior adviser from the Israeli defence ministry said Israelis believe Mr Suleiman, the former Egyptian intelligence chief, "is likely to serve as at least an interim president if Mubarak dies or is incapacitated".
The cable also claimed that the adviser told US officials that Israel was "most comfortable" with the prospect of Mr Suleiman becoming the next president.
The new revelations suggest the possibly strong influence that Israel and the US are having on the formation of a new government in Egypt, where protesters have demanded the removal of the 83-year-old Mr Mubarak in a two-week-old popular uprising.
Israeli officials, fearful that a change in the Egyptian regime may endanger their country's security, have become outspoken about publicly pressing for any new government in Egypt to be in lockstep with Mr Mubarak's system of rule, by playing on western fears of an Islamist takeover. Late on Monday, Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, reiterated his warning that "Islamists could take advantage of the situation to grab control of" Egypt.



Avigdor Lieberman, the ultranationalist Israeli foreign minister known for making fiery statements about Palestinians and the rest of the Arab world, indicated that the turmoil in Egypt demonstrated Arab countries' increasing weakness due to the rise of Islamists.
"We see that the Arab world is continuing to weaken," he told visiting European Union delegates on Monday evening. "At the end of the day it's clear to all of the [Arab states], including the Palestinian Authority, that the biggest danger for them is not Zionism but Hamas and jihad."
The internal documents released by WikiLeaks showed Israel has long anticipated Mr Mubarak's political exit and has not shied away from stating that it would opt for Mr Suleiman to take Egypt's helm.
The cable in August 2008 from the US Embassy in Tel Aviv said that David Hacham, the Arab affairs adviser to the Israeli defence ministry, told US officials that Israelis who met the Egyptian president that month "were shocked by Mubarak's aged appearance and slurred speech". The memo also said that Mr Hacham "was full of praise" for Mr Suleiman.
According to the document, Mr Hacham said that a "hotline" had been set up between Israel's ministry of defence and Mr Suleiman's intelligence service and was now in "daily use". Mr Hacham was quoted as saying that he sometimes speaks to Mr Suleiman's deputy several times a day. The co-ordination between Israel and top Egyptian officials such as Mr Suleiman, according to the documents, included a "common strategic interest" in stopping Iran's expansion in the Middle East and a "common view" of the threat posed by Iran's nuclear programme. Other issues that indicated a close co-operation were on the long-time efforts to prompt a prisoner swap between Israel and Hamas, the Palestinian Islamic group that rules the Gaza Strip, and on Egypt's actions to curtail arms smuggling into Gaza, the documents showed.


A cable from December 2007 from the US Embassy in Cairo showed Mr Suleiman's frustration with Israeli criticism about Egypt's inability to curtail the infiltration of weapons into Gaza. At one point, the cable said, Mr Suleiman and the Egyptian defence minister, Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, suggested that Israel was "welcome" to re-invade the so-called Philadelphia corridor that separates the Gaza Strip and Egypt to stop the smuggling.
Mr Suleiman, who has had a low public profile in Egypt until last week and who is leading talks with opposition figures behind the mass demonstrations to create a new government, has denied ambitions to succeed Mr Mubarak as president. Nevertheless, Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, last weekend endorsed Mr Suleiman for leading the transition of Mr Mubarak's eventual resignation, and he is believed have been tapped to take over the government's helm.
The candidacy of Mr Suleiman does not appear to be a popular choice for many Egyptians, some of whom view the new vice-president as too closely allied with Mr Mubarak, with whom he survived an assassination attempt in 1995 by Islamist militants during an African summit in Addis Ababa.
 

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