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IDF confirms retaliatory strike targeting Hamas leader Haniyeh's Gaza office

Gaza airstrike
© Reuters/Suhaib Salem
Israeli airstrike in Gaza
Israeli airstrikes have hit the office of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Gaza, the IDF said. It confirms earlier Palestinian reports that the strikes, coming in response to a lone rocket fired into Israel had high-profile targets.

The bombed building, the Israel Defense Forces said, was previously targeted in a 2012 Israeli bombing campaign, codenamed 'Cloud Pillar,' and is regularly used by Hamas leadership to hold military meetings.


The strike on Haniyeh's office was initially reported on Hamas' radio network. Haniyeh himself had reportedly gone into hiding earlier on Monday, expecting an Israeli strike. In a written statement, the Hamas leader said the Palestinian people "will not surrender," and "will deter the enemy."

Comment: Press TV. 3/25/19: Hamas denies any involvement in the rocket attack on Tel Aviv
The Palestinian resistance movement Hamas has rejected Israel's claim that it launched a rocket which hit a house north of Tel Aviv and wounded seven settlers.

"No one from the resistance movements, including Hamas, has an interest in firing rockets from the Gaza Strip towards the enemy," a Hamas official, who asked not to be named, told AFP on Monday.

He added that the same message had been conveyed to Egypt, which intervened to broker a ceasefire and prevent Israel from launching another war on Gaza after tensions escalated last year.

His remarks evoked the possibility that the rocket strike may have been caused by "bad weather."

Earlier on Monday, Israeli authorities said a long-range rocket launched from the Gaza Strip had struck Mishmeret, a settlement north of Tel Aviv, wounding seven settlers.

Israel's military said the rocket was fired by Hamas from the Rafah area in the south of Gaza.

The incident had forced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to cut short his trip to Washington as he pledged to "respond with force" to the rocket attack.

The attack came a day after Israeli warplanes bombed the besieged enclave ahead of the anniversary of Gaza fence protests at the weekend.
See also: Israel launches another round of airstrikes against Gaza, in response to one rocket strike (which Hamas denies firing)


X

After weeks of protest, Algerian army calls for President Bouteflika to be declared unfit to rule

Abdelaziz Bouteflika
© Reuters/Zohra Bensemra
Algeria's President, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, in May 2017.
Algeria's army chief has called for long-term leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika to be declared unfit to rule. The statement comes after weeks of massive protests against the extension of the president's fourth term.

"We must find a way out of this crisis immediately, within the constitutional framework," Lt Gen Ahmed Gaed Salah said in a televised speech.

Upper house chairman Abdelkader Bensalah will reportedly be caretaker president for 45 days. Salah referred to Article 102 of the Algerian constitution which provides for the appointment of the parliament chairman as interim head of state, and organization of a snap election in the event that the president's health prevents him from properly executing his duties.

Algerian crowd
© REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
Algerian protest calling on President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to quit.

Bulb

MPs vote to take control of Brexit through 'indicative votes'

UK MPs Brexit vote
© HOC
MPs have voted to take control of the parliamentary timetable in an unprecedented move to try to find a majority for any Brexit option.

The prime minister was dealt a fresh blow as the government was defeated by 329 votes to 302, setting up votes on Wednesday to find out what kind of Brexit has most support among MPs.

Theresa May has said there is no guarantee she will abide by their wish.

Thirty Tory MPs voted against the government, including three ministers.

Richard Harrington, Alistair Burt and Steve Brine resigned to join the rebels, with Mr Harrington accusing the government of "playing roulette with the lives and livelihoods" of Britons.

Former industry minister Mr Harrington said: "It's absurd that now we are in a position of political impasse and... Parliament hasn't actually talked about it on the floor of the House of Commons. That's what I call a democratic deficit."

Comment: The DUP dealt an additional blow to May's Brexit deal:
Writing in The Telegraph, Sammy Wilson, the DUP's Brexit spokesperson insisted that his party would not let "the PM or the Remainer horde in Parliament to bully us into backing a toxic Brexit deal."

Wilson argues that May's withdrawal agreement as it stands means "no Brexit" for the UK and is not averse to a long extension to article 50 of up to a year.



Chart Bar

'Now to change Europe': Italy's Salvini sets sights on EU elections after major victory in regional elections

salvini
© REUTERS / Remo Casilli/
Italy's deputy prime ministers Luigi Di Maio (L) and Matteo Salvini (R)
Italy's government coalition partners have started separate fights for May's EU elections, after recent regional elections saw a resounding victory for Matteo Salvini's right-wing coalition at the expense of the left.

The deputy prime minister's coalition scored 42 percent of the ballot in the southern region of Basilicata in local elections on Sunday, with 18.8 percent coming from Salvini's League party supporter base.

It marked the end of center-left stewardship of the mainly agricultural region for the first time since 1995.

It also saw a sharp decline in local support for the anti-establishment 5 Star Movement (M5S), whose popularity in Basilicata halved from the 44.3 percent it gained in last year's general elections, to hover just over 20 percent following last weekend's regional poll.

Comment: A 'Europe of Nations', or some sort of 'regime-changed' EU, is Europe's only chance of preventing fratricide and regional war.


Mr. Potato

Comey has 'so many questions' in wake of failed Russiagate probe, gets memed into oblivion

James Comey
© Reuters / Joshua Roberts
Former FBI Director James Comey
Robert Mueller's report, concluding that President Trump didn't collude with Russia in 2016, has hit some establishment bigwigs hard. Spare a thought for poor James Comey, lost in the woods and ridiculed on Twitter.

After two years of investigation, Special Counsel Robert Mueller gave Attorney General William Barr his final report on Friday. Summarizing the report on Sunday, Barr revealed that Mueller couldn't find the elusive 'Russian Collusion' he was tasked with unearthing, and President Donald Trump declared his own "Complete and total exoneration."

After sustaining themselves for nearly two years on a diet of pure, unrefined Russian hysteria, America's liberal pundits and Democrat politicians began to melt down. It wasn't pretty. Former FBI Director James Comey, among Trump's most vocal opponents, took a more pensive approach, going for a walk in the woods to contemplate life post-Mueller.


Bad Guys

US commercial and foreign policy: Succession of failures, or grand strategy?

grand strategy

The designers of the US Grand Strategy – Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and his advisor, Admiral Arthur Cebrowski; President Donald Trump and his commercial advisor Peter Navarro; and finally Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and his advisor Francis Fannon.
It is commonly believed in the United States that the country has no Grand Strategy since the end of the Cold War.

A Grand Strategy is a vision of the world that one seeks to impose, and that all administrations must respect. So, even if you lose in one particular theatre of war, the fight continues in others, and finally ends in triumph. At the end of the Second World War, Washington chose to follow the directives set by ambassador George Keenan in his famous diplomatic telegramme. It proposed describing an alleged Soviet expansionism in order to justify containment of the USSR. Indeed, although the USA had lost the wars in Korea and Vietnam, it finished by prevailing.

It is very rare to be able to rethink a Grand Strategy, even if there were others during that period, in particular, with Charles De Gaulle in France.

Over the last eighteen years, Washington has been able to progressively set new objectives and new tactics with which to attain them.

Comment: It's hard not to look at the repeated 'failures' of U.S. foreign policy and think that no one can be that stupid. On the one hand, people can be that stupid, but on the other, you have to ask if perhaps the U.S. policy-makers got exactly what they wanted. That would fit into the Cebrowski strategy Meyssan describes above. And given Trump's obsession with Iran and Venezuela, it seems as if he is going along with the plan. But there are still inconsistencies. See, for example:


Chess

Germany wants Europe to join China's new Silk Road (after criticizing Italy for doing the same)

european leaders and xi jinping
© AFP / ludovic Marin
The Chinese "Belt and Road" initiative is an important project, which European states would be glad to join, according to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who stressed that cooperation should be based on reciprocity from Beijing.

"We, as Europeans, want to play an active part and that must lead to certain reciprocity and we are still wrangling over that a bit," Merkel said, as quoted by Reuters.

The comment comes shortly after talks with French President Emmanuel Macron, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and Chinese President Xi Jinping, who is currently paying a state visit to France.

Comment: Macron - in the days before Xi's arrival - was warning that 'China is trying to divide Europe'. When Xi got to Paris, they inked a deal for 300 Airbus planes - the European company's largest ever order.

They can say all they want about China, but they can't resist the powerful tidal force it is exerting on the world order.


Stop

Hamas says agreement reached on mutual ceasefire with Israel

Israel Hamas
© Flickr / Israel Defense Forces
Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhum said Monday that the movement has reached an agreement on a mutual ceasefire with Israel.

"Egypt's efforts to cease fire between the occupation forces and resistance factions have turned to be successful", Barhum said in a statement.

A senior Palestinian official told Reuters Monday on condition of anonymity that Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire brokered by Egypt. The truce went into effect at 22:00 local time (20:00 GMT), according to Reuters.

However, following the reported truce agreement, air-raid sirens went off across the southern part of Israel, the IDF said late on Monday. There was no immediate information about any damage caused by rockets in Israel following the rocket alarm, Reuters reported.


Bad Guys

US to keep 400 troops in Syria for 'undetermined amount of time'

US armed forces
© CC0 / Staff Sgt. Jacob Connor / 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne)
The remaining 400 US troops will stay in Syria to carry out clearing operations for an unidentified period of time, Special Representative for Syria Engagement James Jeffrey said in a press briefing on Monday.

"Our forces will stay on in very limited numbers in northeast and At Tanf to continue our clearing operations and stability operations against ISIS[Daesh] for a period of time not to be determined at this point", Jeffrey told reporters.

Last week, US President Donald Trump confirmed that a total of 400 US troops will remain in Syria.

White House spokesperson Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters on Friday that the territorial caliphate of the Daesh terror group has been completely eliminated in Syria.

Comment: Also from Sputnik:
Last week, US President Donald Trump said that the US would leave 400 troops in Syria with 200 of them deployed closer to Israel.

US Special Envoy for Syria James Jeffrey said Monday that the fight against Daesh in Syria wasn't over, adding that the US would leave a limited number of its troops there.

"This is not the end of the fight against ISIS. That will go on, but it will be a different kind of fight. ISIS has lost much of its capability to project terrorist power and to have a recruiting base in an area that it controls," Jeffrey told reporters during a press briefing.
Jeffrey neglected to mention to reporters that the efforts of Syria and Russia have decimated ISIS and forced the US to 'mostly' leave the country.


Bad Guys

Pompeo's visit to Lebanon doesn't go over so well - Hezbollah's Nasrallah to respond soon

pompeo berri beirut
© JIM YOUNG/AFP/Getty Images
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (L) meets with Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri (R) in Beirut on March 22, 2019
The visit of the US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Lebanon went over badly among supporters of Hezbollah, mainly in the Christian and Shiite communities, and was welcomed by their political opponents. Concluding his visit to the Lebanese Foreign Ministry, Pompeo used the words "Hezbollah" 22 times and "Iran" 13 times in an eight minute speech. After one introductory minute the remaining seven minutes were devoted to Hezbollah and Iran. Would the US Secretary of State have had anything to say at all if not for Hezbollah? The entire visit would have been meaningless.

Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah will respond publicly on Tuesday the 26that 17:00 local time. Nasrallah will respond both to Pompeo's speech and to President Donald Trump's "gift" to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Syria's Golan Heights, occupied since 1967 by Israel. Hezbollah considers the behaviour and statements of the US guest "arrogant and inaccurate". The group was pleased with the conduct of Lebanese officials, notably President Michel Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berry and Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil (all Hezbollah's allies), who met Pompeo during his visit to the country last week.

What could Sayyed Nasrallah say?

Well-informed sources said the entire Pompeo speech was misleading and confused. Pompeo misrepresented the real objectives of the US in Lebanon when he professed the desire "to see Lebanon prosper and in peace".