Archive for July, 2009

Biden jamming ‘reset button’

Biden jamming ‘reset button’

 

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101636&sectionid=351020602

 

Commentary: Israel of the Caucasus:

http://www.warwithoutend.co.uk/wake-up-america-your-government-is-hijacked-by-zionism/2008/09/02/commentary-israel-of-the-caucasus.php

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July 26, 2009

New Biden Criticism Surprises Russia

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/26/world/europe/26russia.html?_r=1&hpw=&pagewanted=print

MOSCOW — Just weeks after a summit meeting intended to show a thawing in relations between the United States and Russia, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. made blistering references to Russia’s failing economy, loss of face and a leadership that is “clinging to something in the past,” in an interview published on Saturday.

Speaking on the heels of his trip to Georgia and Ukraine, Mr. Biden said flatly that the Obama administration would make no deals and accept no compromises with the Kremlin in exchange for better relations.

Russia itself, he said, should find it in its own interest to repair relations.

The Kremlin immediately responded to the comments, made in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, with a demand for a clarification of the administration’s intentions toward Russia, saying essentially that it was receiving a mixed message so soon after President Obama had visited Moscow for the summit meeting.

Calling the criticism “perplexing” in light of the diplomatic overtures initiated by the United States and described as “pressing the reset button,” the chief foreign policy adviser to President Dmitri A. Medvedev told the Interfax news agency, “The question is: who is shaping the U.S. foreign policy, the president or respectable members of his team?”

The adviser, Sergei Prikhodko, said the atmosphere between the countries had improved since Mr. Obama’s visit early this month.

“If some members of Obama’s team and government do not like this atmosphere, why don’t they say so?” Interfax reported him as saying. “If they disagree with the course of their president, we just need to know this.”

In the interview, Mr. Biden set aside diplomatic finesse and offered an unflinching analysis of the state of affairs in Russia.

With falling oil prices, a corruption-ridden banking system and failing courts, Russia has seen the steepest swing from growth to recession of any major economy in the financial crisis.

Mr. Biden has a reputation for speaking volubly, and sometimes going beyond official policy. It was not immediately clear if he was sending an officially sanctioned message.

The White House did not back away from the vice president’s remarks on Saturday, but attempted to smooth over the frayed relations with Russia.

“The president and vice president believe Russia will work with us not out of weakness but out of national interest,” Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary, said in a statement on Saturday night.

“The president said in Moscow that the United States seeks a strong, peaceful and prosperous Russia — one that will be an even more effective partner in meeting common challenges, including reducing nuclear arsenals, securing vulnerable nuclear materials, contending with nuclear programs in North Korea and Iran, defeating violent extremism and advancing global security and economic growth,” Mr. Gibbs said.

Mr. Biden spoke after visits to Ukraine and Georgia intended to reassure those countries that American support for their independence would not be weakened by the administration’s efforts to improve ties with Russia.

“The reality is the Russians are where they are,” Mr. Biden told The Wall Street Journal, according to excerpts posted on the newspaper’s Web site. “They have a shrinking population base, they have a withering economy, they have a banking sector and structure that is not likely to be able to withstand the next 15 years, they’re in a situation where the world is changing before them and they’re clinging to something in the past that is not sustainable.”

Mr. Biden rejected recent Russian assertions of a restored sphere of privileged interests in the former Soviet Union, made after the war in Georgia.

In the most frank discussion yet on Russian expectations of the new diplomatic exchanges, Mr. Biden said the Russians anticipated that the United States would enter into diplomatic bargaining.

Mr. Biden said: “They think we’ll be duplicitous and say, ‘Yeah, O.K., we got it. We’ll make a deal with you on something else we need in return.’ ”

He referred to the absence of strong American criticism of Russian military operations against separatists in the republic of Chechnya. “Some argued the last administration made a deal on Chechnya in return for no response on Iraq,” he said. “We’re not going to do that. It’s not necessary to do that.”

The Russian retort had its own reference to the previous administration, albeit an oblique one.

After noting the ambiguity of who was shaping policy for the administration, the president or his deputy, Mr. Prikhodko said, “We have been there already.”

Jeff Zeleny contributed reporting from Washington.

 

Israeli sources funneled US laundering team

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101647&sectionid=351020202

 

NJ corruption probe nets rabbis in money laundering ‘network’:

 

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/24/rabbis-among-44-indicted-over-new-jersey-corruption-case/

Gates to visit Israel on military issues, Iran

Gates to visit Israel on military issues, Iran

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101644&sectionid=351020202 

 

July 26, 2009

Gates, in Visit to Israel, Will Find Iran Looming

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates is to be in Jerusalem on Monday for the first time in two and a half years to meet with Israel’s prime minister and defense minister in talks that a senior American military official said would be characterized by Israel’s growing anxiety over Iran’s nuclear work.

The official, who asked not to be named under Defense Department ground rules, said that the trip was part of a regular consultation and that Mr. Gates was not traveling to Israel “to roll out a map and do contingency planning for some strike on Iran.”

Israel has made it clear that it could strike plants at the heart of Iran’s nuclear program, although it has agreed to the Obama administration’s policy of first trying to engage Iran in talks.

But the official, who was briefing reporters in advance of Mr. Gates’s trip, acknowledged that the Israelis did not think the diplomacy would work and that they were losing patience. “Are they anxious?” the official said. “Yes, they’re anxious. But we’re not having regular conversations where they’re coming in and saying, ‘Stop your engagement now, bomb Iran tomorrow.’ ”

President Obama has given Iran until late September to accept an offer of talks to give up its nuclear ambitions, and until the end of the year to show some progress on the issue.

A Middle East analyst familiar with Israeli thinking, who also asked not to be named while speaking about the topic, said that the meetings were expected to be more about coordination and reassurance that the United States stood by Israel and that it was too soon to get into discussions of any military action.

The Obama administration has sent mixed messages on its views of an Israeli strike.

Top Pentagon officials, including Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have said repeatedly that an Israeli strike on Iran would be destabilizing to the region.

But this month, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. said that the United States “cannot dictate” Israel’s decision on military action.

Two days later, Mr. Obama told CNN that the United States was “absolutely not” giving Israel its approval for a strike.

Both Israel and the United States estimate that Iran is within one to three years of developing a nuclear-weapons ability.

David Makovsky, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and the co-author of “Myths, Illusions & Peace: Finding a New Direction for America in the Middle East,” said that Israel and the United States were not at odds on Iran, at least not in the current “intermission of a play” before decisions on a strike have to be made.

“A decision was made that it is better to have close U.S.-Israel consultations in assessing the situation in Iran than having a situation where Israel feels isolated,” Mr. Makovsky said. “In the context of isolation, Israel is more likely to strike out on its own.”

On Saturday, the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard warned that Iran was prepared to counterattack. “There is nothing stopping us from targeting Israel’s nuclear sites and this will definitely happen if we are attacked,” Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari told the Arabic-language channel al-Alam, in a translation provided by The Associated Press. “Our rockets have the precision capabilities to target all the Israeli nuclear sites.”

Mr. Gates will be part of a stream of American government officials visiting Israel in the next week. Among them are James L. Jones, the national security adviser; George J. Mitchell, the special envoy for the Middle East, who arrived in Syria on Saturday; and Dennis B. Ross, the Iran expert on the National Security Council staff and Mr. Makovsky’s co-author. Senior military officials cast the timing of the trips as coincidental.

The visits come at a time of tension not only on Iran but during an unusual rift between the United States and Israel over Israeli construction in areas that the Palestinians hope to turn into a state. The Obama administration has called on Israel to suspend the construction of new housing in West Bank settlements and in East Jerusalem, but the Israelis say Mr. Obama is ignoring what they call clear understandings with the Bush administration that allowed them to build settlement housing within certain guidelines.

Military officials said Mr. Gates was unlikely to wade into the settlement issue, which is generally the province of Mr. Mitchell and the State Department. Mr. Gates is to leave Israel later Monday for a meeting with King Abdullah II of Jordan.

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Iran Nuclear Arms Worst Threat to Security: Defense Sec. Gates

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/20/iran-nuclear-arms-worst-threat-to-security-defense-sec-gates/

 

 

Obama’s war signals: Iran in the crosshairs:

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/18/obama%e2%80%99s-war-signals-iran-in-the-crosshairs/

Iran: If Israel attacks us, we’ll target its nuclear facilities

Iran: If Israel attacks us, we’ll target its nuclear facilities

 

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1248277884732&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Revolutionary Guard leader: We can hit Israel’s nuclear facilities

 http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/07/25/iran.israel.nuclear/index.html

 

Iran vows ‘decisive response’ to any Israel attack

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101704&sectionid=351020101

 

Israeli attack on Iran ‘catastrophe’, says Sarkozy:

Israel moves ahead with anti-Iran plan

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101512&sectionid=351020104

 

Israeli attack on Iran ‘catastrophe’, says Sarkozy:

 

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/09/israeli-attack-on-iran-catastrophe-says-sarkozy/

US Senate votes to interfere in Iran affairs

US Senate votes to interfere in Iran affairs

 

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101572&sectionid=351020101

US senators seek softer tone on Iran:

 

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101366&sectionid=3510203

Obama’s War Signals: Iran in the crosshairs (for AIPAC & Israel of course!):

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/18/obama%e2%80%99s-war-signals-iran-in-the-crosshairs/

Clinton: US Won’t Hesitate to Use Military Against Iran (for AIPAC/Israel of course!):
 

Britons opposing Afghan war: polls

Britons opposing Afghan war: polls

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101575&sectionid=351020403

 

US public against Afghanistan, Iraq war

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/24/us-public-against-afghanistan-iraq-war/

Bush Weighed Using Military in U.S. Arrests

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/25/us/25detain.html?hp

July 25, 2009
Bush Weighed Using Military in U.S. Arrests
By MARK MAZZETTI and DAVID JOHNSTON

WASHINGTON — Top Bush administration officials in 2002 debated testing the Constitution by sending American troops into the suburbs of Buffalo to arrest a group of men suspected of plotting with Al Qaeda, according to former administration officials.

Some of the advisers to President George W. Bush, including Vice President Dick Cheney, argued that a president had the power to use the military on domestic soil to sweep up the terrorism suspects, who came to be known as the Lackawanna Six, and declare them enemy combatants.

Mr. Bush ultimately decided against the proposal to use military force.

A decision to dispatch troops into the streets to make arrests has few precedents in American history, as both the Constitution and subsequent laws restrict the military from being used to conduct domestic raids and seize property.

The Fourth Amendment bans “unreasonable” searches and seizures without probable cause. And the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 generally prohibits the military from acting in a law enforcement capacity.

In the discussions, Mr. Cheney and others cited an Oct. 23, 2001, memorandum from the Justice Department that, using a broad interpretation of presidential authority, argued that the domestic use of the military against Al Qaeda would be legal because it served a national security, rather than a law enforcement, purpose.

“The president has ample constitutional and statutory authority to deploy the military against international or foreign terrorists operating within the United States,” the memorandum said.

The memorandum — written by the lawyers John C. Yoo and Robert J. Delahunty — was directed to Alberto R. Gonzales, then the White House counsel, who had asked the department about a president’s authority to use the military to combat terrorist activities in the United States.

The memorandum was declassified in March. But the White House debate about the Lackawanna group is the first evidence that top American officials, after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, actually considered using the document to justify deploying the military into an American town to make arrests.

Most former officials interviewed for this article spoke only on the condition of anonymity because the deliberations about the case involved classified information. They agreed to talk about the internal discussions only after the memorandum was released earlier this year.

New information has recently emerged about the deliberations and divisions in the administration over some of the most controversial policies after the Sept. 11 attacks, like the decision to use brutal interrogation methods on Qaeda detainees.

Former officials in the administration said this debate was not as bitter as others during Mr. Bush’s first term. The discussions did not proceed far enough to put military units on alert.

Still, at least one high-level meeting was convened to debate the issue, at which several top Bush aides argued firmly against the proposal to use the military, advanced by Mr. Cheney, his legal adviser David S. Addington and some senior Defense Department officials.

Among those in opposition were Condoleezza Rice, then the national security adviser; John B. Bellinger III, the top lawyer at the National Security Council; Robert S. Mueller III, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Michael Chertoff, then the head of the Justice Department’s criminal division.

“Frankly, it was a bit of a turf war,” said one former senior administration official. “For a number of people, crossing the line of having intelligence or military activities inside the United States was not worth the risk.”

Mr. Bush ended up ordering the F.B.I. to make the arrests in Lackawanna, near Buffalo, where the agency had been monitoring a group of Yemeni Americans with suspected Qaeda ties. The five men arrested there in September 2002, and a sixth arrested nearly simultaneously in Bahrain, pleaded guilty to terrorism-related charges.

Scott L. Silliman, a Duke University law professor specializing in national security law, said an American president had not deployed the active-duty military on domestic soil in a law enforcement capacity, without specific statutory authority, since the Civil War.

Senior military officials were never consulted, former officials said. Richard B. Myers, a retired general who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a recent interview that he was unaware of the discussion.

Former officials said the 2002 debate arose partly from Justice Department concerns that there might not be enough evidence to arrest and successfully prosecute the suspects in Lackawanna. Mr. Cheney, the officials said, had argued that the administration would need a lower threshold of evidence to declare them enemy combatants and keep them in military custody.

Earlier that summer, the administration designated Jose Padilla an enemy combatant and sent him to a military brig in South Carolina. Mr. Padilla was arrested by civilian agencies on suspicion of plotting an attack using a radioactive bomb.

Those who advocated using the military to arrest the Lackawanna group had legal ammunition: the memorandum by Mr. Yoo and Mr. Delahunty.

The lawyers, in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, wrote that the Constitution, the courts and Congress had recognized a president’s authority “to take military actions, domestic as well as foreign, if he determines such actions to be necessary to respond to the terrorist attacks upon the United States on Sept. 11, 2001, and before.”

The document added that the neither the Posse Comitatus Act nor the Fourth Amendment tied a president’s hands.

Despite this guidance, some Bush aides bristled at the prospect of troops descending on an American suburb to arrest terrorism suspects.

“What would it look like to have the American military go into an American town and knock on people’s door?” said a second former official in the debate.

Chief James L. Michel of the Lackawanna police agreed. “If we had tanks rolling down the streets of our city,” Chief Michel said, “we would have had pandemonium down here.”

The Lackawanna case was the first after the Sept. 11 attacks in which American intelligence and law enforcement operatives believed they had dismantled a Qaeda cell in the United States.

In the months before the arrests, Mr. Bush was regularly briefed on the case by Mr. Mueller of the F.B.I. and George J. Tenet, the director of central intelligence. The C.I.A. had been tracking the overseas contacts of the Lackawanna group.

In a Wall Street Journal op-ed article in March, Mr. Yoo defended his 2001 memorandum and its reasoning, saying that after Sept. 11 the Bush administration faced the real prospect of Qaeda cells undertaking attacks on American soil. “The possibility of such attacks raised difficult, fundamental questions of constitutional law,” he wrote, “because they might require domestic military operations against an enemy for the first time since the Civil War.”

Eric Schmitt contributed reporting.

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Report: Bush mulled sending troops into Buffalo (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON – The Bush administration in 2002 considered sending U.S. troops into a Buffalo, N.Y., suburb to arrest a group of terror suspects in what would have been a nearly unprecedented use of military power, The New York Times reported.

Vice President Dick Cheney and several other Bush advisers at the time strongly urged that the military be used to apprehend men who were suspected of plotting with al Qaida, who later became known as the Lackawanna Six, the Times reported on its Web site Friday night. It cited former administration officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The proposal advanced to at least one-high level administration meeting, before President George W. Bush decided against it.

Dispatching troops into the streets is virtually unheard of. The Constitution and various laws restrict the military from being used to conduct domestic raids and seize property.

According to the Times, Cheney and other Bush aides said an Oct. 23, 2001, Justice Department memo gave broad presidential authority that allowed Bush to use the domestic use of the military against al-Qaida if it was justified on the grounds of national security, rather than law enforcement.

Among those arguing for the military use besides Cheney were his legal adviser David S. Addington and some senior Defense Department officials, the Times reported.

Opposing the idea were Condoleezza Rice, then the national security adviser; John B. Bellinger III, the top lawyer at the National Security Council; FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III; and Michael Chertoff, then the head of the Justice Department’s criminal division.

Bush ultimately nixed the proposal and ordered the FBI to make the arrests in Lackawanna. The men were subsequently arrested and pleaded guilty to terrorism-related charges.

Scott L. Silliman, a Duke University law professor specializing in national security law, told the Times that a U.S. president had not deployed the active-duty military on domestic soil in a law enforcement capacity, without specific statutory authority, since the Civil War.

US public against Afghanistan, Iraq war

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101507&sectionid=3510203

Britons opposing Afghan war: polls

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101575&sectionid=351020403

Congress passes $106 billion to continue the wars for Israel in Iraq and Afghanistan:

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/06/25/obama-signs-106-billion-bill-to-fund-wars-for-israel-in-iraq-and-afghan/

Mullen cannot see end of Afghan war:

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/17/mullen-cannot-see-end-of-afghan-war/

“Operation in Afghanistan is rooted in Israel”:

http://america-hijacked.com/2009/07/23/operation-in-afghanistan-is-rooted-in-israel/

US invaded Iraq in accordance with the ‘A Clean Break’/war for Israel agenda of the JINSA/PNAC/AEI Neocons Richard Perle, Douglas Feith and David Wurmser via JINSA/PNAC/AEI Neocon associated Dick Cheney (access the ‘A Clean Break’ link at the upper right of http://NEOCONZIONISTTHREAT.COM )

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The US was tragically attacked at the World Trade Center in 1993 and on 9/11 because of US support for Israel’s brutal oppression of the Palestinians (look up ‘Israel as a terrorist’s motivation’ in the index of James Bamford’s ‘A Pretext for War’ book and take a look at the ‘What Motivated the 9/11 Hijackers?’ youtube linked on the upper right of http://NEOCONZIONISTTHREAT.COM ) with the US then invading Afghanistan and Iraq as a result of such!: 

http://www.warwithoutend.co.uk/zone0/viewtopic.php?t=39590

NJ corruption probe nets rabbis in money laundering ‘network’

 http://www.njjewishnews.com/njjn.com/072309/njCorruptionProbe.html

Israeli sources funneled US laundering team

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101647&sectionid=351020202

How the FBI used a rabbi’s son to crack massive U.S. corruption case

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1102683.html

Haaretz report on connection of Money laundering to Israeli religious leaders

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1102901.html

Two-Track Investigation of Political Corruption and International Money Laundering Rings Net 44 Individuals

 

 

 http://news.prnewswire.com/ViewContent.aspx?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/07-23-2009/0005065211&EDATE

Rabbis among 44 indicted over NJ corruption case

 

 

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=101490&sectionid=3510203

 

U.S. rabbis suspected of brokering sale of human kidneys

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1102457.html

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Officials lambast NJ corruption after 44 arrested

NEWARK, N.J. – Officials are decrying political corruption in New Jersey after more than 40 people, among them rabbis and elected officeholders, were arrested in an investigation in which some were accused of laundering tens of millions of dollars and of black-market trafficking of kidneys and fake Gucci handbags.

The 44 arrests Thursday were a remarkable number even for New Jersey, where more than 130 public officials have pleaded guilty or have been convicted of corruption since 2001.

“New Jersey’s corruption problem is one of the worst, if not the worst, in the nation,” said Ed Kahrer, who heads the FBI‘s white-collar and public corruption division. “Corruption is a cancer that is destroying the core values of this state.”

Gov. Jon Corzine said: “The scale of corruption we’re seeing as this unfolds is simply outrageous and cannot be tolerated.”

The arrests were headline news in Israel on Friday morning, with the front pages of all three of the country’s mass-circulation dailies featuring pictures of bearded ultra-Orthodox Jews being led away by law enforcement officials.

Micky Rosenfeld, a spokesman for Israel’s national police force, said Friday that Israeli police were not involved in the investigation. He would not comment further.

Federal prosecutors in the U.S. said the investigation focused on a money laundering network that operated between Brooklyn, N.Y.; Deal, N.J.; and Israel. The network is alleged to have laundered tens of millions of dollars through Jewish charities controlled by rabbis in New York and New Jersey.

Prosecutors then used an informant in that investigation to help them go after corrupt politicians. The informant — a real estate developer charged with bank fraud three years ago — posed as a crooked businessman and paid a string of public officials tens of thousands of dollars in bribes to get approvals for buildings and other projects in New Jersey, authorities said.

Among the 44 people arrested were the mayors of Hoboken, Ridgefield and Secaucus, Jersey City‘s deputy mayor, and two state assemblymen. A member of the governor’s cabinet resigned after agents searched his home, though he was not arrested. All but one of the officeholders are Democrats.

Also, five rabbis from New York and New Jersey — two of whom lead congregations in Deal — were accused of laundering millions of dollars, some of it from the sale of counterfeit goods and bankruptcy fraud, authorities said.

Others arrested included building and fire inspectors, city planning officials and utilities officials, all of them accused of using their positions to further the corruption.

The politicians arrested were not accused of any involvement in the money laundering or the trafficking in human organs and counterfeit handbags.

Hours after FBI agents seized documents from his home and office, New Jersey Community Affairs Commissioner Joseph Doria resigned. Federal officials would not say whether he would be charged. Doria did not return calls for comment.

Authorities did not identify the informant, described in court papers as a person “charged in a federal criminal complaint with bank fraud in or about May 2006.” But the date matches up with an investigation that led to charges against Solomon Dwek, the son of a Deal rabbi.

The younger Dwek was charged at the time in connection with a bounced $25 million check he deposited in a bank’s drive-through window. He has denied the charges. Dwek’s lawyer did not immediately return a call for comment Thursday.

Most of the defendants facing corruption charges were released on bail. The money laundering defendants faced bail between $300,000 and $3 million, and most were ordered to submit to electronic monitoring.

Among those ensnared by the informant was Hoboken Mayor Peter Cammarano III, prosecutors said. The 32-year-old Cammarano, who won a runoff election last month, was accused of accepting money from the developer at a Hoboken diner.

“There’s the people who were with us, and that’s you guys,” the complaint quotes Cammarano saying. “There’s the people who climbed on board in the runoff. They can get in line. … And then there are the people who were against us the whole way. … They get ground into powder.”

Cammarano was accused of accepting $25,000 in cash bribes. His attorney Joseph Hayden said his client is “innocent of these charges. He intends to fight them with all his strength until he proves his innocence.”

___

Associated Press Writers Angela Delli Santi and Beth DeFalco in Trenton, N.J.; Wayne Parry in Deal, N.J.; Samantha Henry and Victor Epstein in Newark, N.J.; Larry Neumeister in New York and Matti Friedman in Jerusalem contributed to this report.