In Washington for talks with Pres. Obama, King Abdallah of Jordan tells reporters that he is convinced that Israel and the Palestinians are each making sincere efforts to find a way to jumpstart...
The IDF patrols in Tulkarm, 2 nearby villages, and 2 villages nr. Qalqilya (briefly detaining several Palestinians for questioning) during the day; patrols in 1 village nr. Tulkarm late at night;...
Home-made bomb thrown at French MNF vehicle in Beirut; fighting between LAF and militiamen in southern suburbs continues intermittently; car bomb explodes in West Beirut,...
LAF and militiamen in southern Beirut suburbs continue sporadic fighting.
Casualties:
2 US Marines wounded; US helicopter parked near Marine camp hit by small...
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In Washington for talks with Pres. Obama, King Abdallah of Jordan tells reporters that he is convinced that Israel and the Palestinians are each making sincere efforts to find a way to jumpstart serious peace talks, but cautions there are serious obstacles to overcome and time is running out. Separately, State Dept. spokeswoman Victoria Nuland says that the U.S. knows that the 1/26/12 target date for restarting final status negotiations is “out there, [but] we do not want to see it be a rigid sort of straitjacket that chills the atmosphere.” In Israel, PM Netanyahu tells lawmakers in a closed mtg. that “the Palestinians have no interest in entering peace talks.” (WP 1/17)
IDF troops on the n. Gaza border nr. Bayt Hanun fire warning shots at Palestinians and international activists staging a nonviolent march to the border fence to protest Israel’s imposition of a no-go zone; no injuries are reported. The IDF makes a late-night incursion into al-Shuka village in s. Gaza to arrest a mbr. of the Islamic Jihad’s al-Quds Brigade. In the West Bank, the IDF patrols in Tulkarm in the morning and afternoon; conducts late-night arrest raids, house searches nr. Hebron, Nablus. (WT 1/15; PCHR 1/19; OCHA 1/20).
Hamas officials announce that the movement’s leadership has decided to evacuate their families and most personnel fr. Syria in response to the deteriorating security situation; 3 senior officials (Musa Abu Marzuq, Muhammad Naser, and Izzat Rishiq) will remain in Damascus. Meanwhile, Hamas’s former rep. in London, Mustafa Lidawi, says that Hamas leader Mishal plans to retire as politburo head (a position he has held since 1996) when the organization holds elections in the coming months to allow “a fresh leader to steer Hamas towards a new strategy,” but other Hamas officials deny he has made a final decision. (Guardian, WT, al-Watan 1/18; NYT 1/30)
The Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) formally apologizes to Israel for allowing a Hamas mbr. to take part in a dialogue in Geneva (ca. 1/14) on Israel’s treatment of Palestinian prisoners as part of a Palestinian delegation and vows that Hamas mbrs. will be barred fr. future IPU events. Israel had threatened (1/16) to withdraw fr. the IPU in protest. The IPU is a nongovernmental organization with permanent observer status at the UN. It was formed in 1889 to arbitrate conflicts but has evolved into an organization that promotes democracy and interparliamentary dialogue. (JPI 1/27; see also AFP 1/16)
Israeli hackers bring down the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency and the Abu Dhabi Securities and Exchange websites, release the email addresses and passwords of 89 Saudi university students, and steal and threaten to release the Facebook login information for 30,000 account holders in Muslim countries in retaliation for the 1/16 denial of service attacks on the TASE and El Al and the 1/6 leak of Israeli credit card information. One of the Israeli hackers, Anonymous 972, issues a statement saying “Usually we do not like to hurt innocent sites, but there is now a cyber war, and every war has victims. . . . Every time an Israeli site get[s] hacked, the same thing will happen to Saudi sites.” The Israeli hacker who claims to have the Facebook information, Hannibal Hacker, also claims that he could publish bank account details of 10 million Arabs and the credit card details of 4 million Arabs if cyberattacks on Israel continue. (ZDNet 1/19; HackRead 1/25; JPI 1/27)
The IDF patrols in Tulkarm, 2 nearby villages, and 2 villages nr. Qalqilya (briefly detaining several Palestinians for questioning) during the day; patrols in 1 village nr. Tulkarm late at night; conducts late-night arrest raids, house searches nr. Jenin. In East Jerusalem’s Sur al-Bahir neighborhood, Israeli municipal authorities demolish an extension to a Palestinian home, threatening to charge the owner $40,000 to cover the government’s cost of demolition; bulldoze a Palestinian warehouse and sheep pen. A Gaza court sentences a Palestinian to death for murder. (PCHR 1/19; OCHA 1/20)
Unidentified hackers disrupt the websites of the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE) and El Al Airlines for several hours by overloading them with access attempts. The hacker 0xOmar, who claimed responsibility for hacking more than 20,000 Israeli credit cards on 1/6/12, sent an email to Yedi’ot Aharonot on 1/15 warning that “pro-Palestinian cyberattackers called Nightmare” planned to disrupt the sites. (NYT 1/17; JPI 1/27)
Military Action:
Artillery exchanges outside Tripoli between Syrian forces and PLO loyalists; IDF reportedly preparing troops in South Lebanon for winter conditions.
Casualties:
Revised casualty figures from Beirut bombings are 191 US, 23 French killed, 75+ US, 15 French wounded, 36 French missing.
Political Responses:
Israel/ Occupied Territories: Bank shares fall 17% as Tel Aviv Stock Exchange resumes full trading.
Palestinians/ Lebanese: Lebanese organization called Islamic Holy War claims responsibility for Beirut truck bombings.
Arab Governments: Syria denies any involveFment in bombings.
US and Other Countries: Reagan says keeping Marines in Lebanon is central to US credibility on a global scale; French President visits site of bomb attack on French barracks in Beirut; commander of British land forces flies to Beirut to review security arrangements; Iran denies any involvement in bombings.
Military Action:
Home-made bomb thrown at French MNF vehicle in Beirut; fighting between LAF and militiamen in southern suburbs continues intermittently; car bomb explodes in West Beirut, no casualties.
Casualties:
1 French paratrooper wounded by bomb; 3 militiamen, 1 policeman killed, soldier and civilian injured in southern suburbs.
Political Responses:
Israel/ Occupied Territories: Tel Aviv Stock Exchange opens for limited trading for first time since October 9.
Palestinians/ Lebanese: Geneva reportedly agreed on as new site for reconciliation talks.
US and Other Countries: Reagan says Syria, aided and abetted by 7000 Soviet advisers and technicians, is contributing to the disorder and trouble in Lebanon; US shipping large quantities of ammunition and military equipment, including 68 M-48 tanks, to resupply LAF.
Military Action:
LAF and militiamen in southern Beirut suburbs continue sporadic fighting.
Casualties:
2 US Marines wounded; US helicopter parked near Marine camp hit by small arms fire.
Political Responses:
Israel/ Occupied Territories: Government closes Tel Aviv Stock Exchange indefinitely following major sell-off of bank shares as investors seek funds to purchase dollars, estimated $60m foreign currency purchased last week, value of bank stocks, estimated at $7.5b, expected to drop 15%-40%.
Palestinians/ Lebanese: Arafat calls for resumption of dialogue with Jordan at all levels; staff of WAFA bureau in Damascus reportedly joins rebellion; Jumblatt says 31 officers, 600 troops have defected from LAF to Druze forces.
Arab Governments: Syrian officials meet McFarlane, who then returns to Beirut.