Bane5 Posted November 16, 2012 Share Posted November 16, 2012 svetske agencije prenose da su danas rakete pale nedaleko od jerusalema sto je cak i iznenadilo neke analiticare koji su samtrali da hamas ili bilo ko drugi nece hteti da gadja 'sveti grad'. Link to comment
yolo Posted November 16, 2012 Share Posted November 16, 2012 pa jerusalim je sveti grad za arape koliko i za jevreje, to je ocekivano od idiotskog izraelskog PR-a. kao da je raketa pala direktno na oltar bazilike svete sepulkre. Link to comment
Bane5 Posted November 16, 2012 Share Posted November 16, 2012 prema repoteru na aldzaziri:"It changes the entire game", Al Jazeera's Nisreen El-Shamayleh, reporting from Jerusalem, said.“Now that all Israeli eyes were on Tel Aviv, people are even more shocked to know that rockets from Gaza can reach Jerusalem. The concern before was about the Israelis in the southern Israeli communities, close to Gaza, because that’s where rockets were able to reach. Tel Aviv and Jersualem were not a concern. Now it is shocking news for the army.” Link to comment
yolo Posted November 16, 2012 Share Posted November 16, 2012 (edited) mnogo volim izrael i ljude tamo ali kada IDF krene da divlja probude mi se osecanja za palestinu. realno, ovo je sve maciji kasalj sa arapske strane jer ce pravi seks nastati kada se prvi mucenik al akse raznese na nekom telavivskom šuku. sa druge strane, strasno je sto ce IDF sravniti gazu sa zemljom ukoliko neko zaista ima ozbiljnu i veliku vojsku ne uradi nesto protiv njih. ne postoji nijedan jezik koji moze to da promeni sem jezika sile. Edited November 16, 2012 by gazza1 Link to comment
Filipenko Posted November 16, 2012 Share Posted November 16, 2012 I prijatelj Džona Stjuarta, Abdulah II, ulazi u probleme...Jebem ti sunce, šta je to kod njih kada je budžetski deficit 5 milijardi, da su im ovi naši upravljali pa bi opet bilo 2-3 milijarde... Link to comment
Gandalf Posted November 17, 2012 Share Posted November 17, 2012 (edited) Jordan zavisi od (u pocetku britanskih, sada americkih i zalivskih) donacija, i od emigranata. pre svega od emigranata, a oni salju manje para proteklih godinu-dve.Edit: proguglaj "Jordan rentier state" Edited November 17, 2012 by Gandalf Link to comment
Gandalf Posted November 17, 2012 Share Posted November 17, 2012 (edited) http://www.thedailyb...e-for-calm.htmlShortly after the return of Gilad Shalit, I drafted a proposal to the Government of Israel and Hamas to enter into a long term ceasefire arrangement based on the assumption that, for the time being, neither side was interested in engaging in renewed warfare. The assumption was well founded and based on the experience that I gained directly in helping to arrange a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza after the terrorist attack across the Sinai border in August 2011, while the Shalit negotiations were taking place....Several weeks ago, I decided to try once again and, through my counterpart in Hamas, we both began speaking to high level officials on both sides. A few days ago I met my counterpart in Cairo and we agreed that he would draft a new proposal based on our common understanding of what was required to make it work. Yesterday morning, hours before Israel assassinated Ahmed Jaabari, my counterpart in Hamas presented the draft to Jaabari and to other Hamas leaders. Senior Hamas leaders on the outside had already seen it and had instructed him to check the reactions to it in Gaza. I was supposed to receive the draft yesterday evening to present to Israeli officials who were waiting for me to send it to them....The assassination of Jaabari was a pre-emptive strike against the possibility of a long term ceasefire. http://www.thedailyb...assination.html In July of 2002, I was an integral part of a small team working to end the second Intifada....I was intent that the ceasefire be put in place precisely at one minute after midnight on July 22 and that the press be notified of its start. My reasoning was that Israel had acted with impunity in breaking a previous ceasefire, in January, by assassinating Raed Karmi. The problem then was simple: no one in the international community even knew that a ceasefire had been agreed to. I vowed that this would not be the case now, which is why the team of which I was a part kept Israeli officials informed of our progress....By July 20, all seemed in place. Only Salah Shehadeh, the head of Hamas's military wing in Gaza, needed to give his approval—and he had informed our team, through a Fatah intermediary, that he was prepared to do so. His signature on the ceasefire document was to be obtained on the evening of July 22, during a meeting between him and a senior Fatah official in Gaza City.I remember sitting on the 11th floor of the David Citadel Hotel as the clock ticked off the minutes leading to midnight on the night of July 21. I was in contact with our Fatah intermediary in Gaza by cell phone, urging him to complete his visit to Shehadeh—at times, shouting at him: "You need to move, you need to see this man." He assured me that the meeting with Shehadeh had been set, and that he was on his way, just then, to meet with him. But then, with just ten minutes to go before the ceasefire took effect, his cell phone went dead. And then, thirty minutes later, an Israeli F-16 dropped a one ton bomb on Shehadeh's home in Gaza City. Edited November 17, 2012 by Gandalf Link to comment
bigvlada Posted November 17, 2012 Share Posted November 17, 2012 pa jerusalim je sveti grad za arape koliko i za jevreje, to je ocekivano od idiotskog izraelskog PR-a. kao da je raketa pala direktno na oltar bazilike svete sepulkre.Ako nastave sa takvom praksom, nekome će pre ili kasnije pasti na pamet da jednu raketu lansira na Al Aksu. Vođenu. Link to comment
Krampa Posted November 20, 2012 Share Posted November 20, 2012 (edited) Polish man 'planned to blow up parliament' The officials showed videos which they said showed test explo sions the suspect had carried out Polish prosecutors say they have foiled a planned terror attack against the president, cabinet ministers and MPs.A 45-year-old academic researcher has been arrested on suspicion of planning to detonate four tonnes of explosives in a vehicle at the parliament building during a budget debate, they say.He has been charged with planning a terrorist attack and faces up to five years in prison if convicted.Two other men were arrested for possessing illegal firearms.The Polish citizen who has been arrested is accused of assembling a small arsenal of explosive material, weapons and remote-controlled detonators, and attempting to recruit others to his cause, says the BBC's Adam Easton in Warsaw.The suspect, who has not been identified by name, was building bombs himself and also had detonators, said prosecutor Mariusz Krason.He has confessed in part to the suspicions against him, including planning an assassination of the state leaders, Mr Krason added.The officials broadcast videos taken from the suspect's home, which they said showed test explosions he had carried out.They said the man, an explosives expert who worked at Krakow's Agricultural University, did not belong to any political group.The man's motives were described however as "nationalistic, xenophobic and anti-Semitic" in character. Edited November 20, 2012 by Krampa Link to comment
Аврам Гојић Posted November 20, 2012 Share Posted November 20, 2012 Gyu Fawkesczinski Link to comment
banecare1 Posted November 21, 2012 Share Posted November 21, 2012 novi ministar odbrane rusije je sojgu. danas smo saznali i ko je novi savetnik ministra odbrane - masha kitaeva :0.6: Link to comment
Roger Sanchez Posted November 22, 2012 Share Posted November 22, 2012 Many Spanish conservatives contend that it is Catalan nationalists, with their narrative of collective victimhood at the hands of over-bearing Madrid, who have sown divisions among Spaniards.But Jordi Pujol, the veteran nationalist politician of the transition from dictatorship to democracy who headed the restored Catalan government for 23 years, says Spanish nationalism “was always there, but it has become much more radical recently, due to sensitivity about the economic crisis and the damage to Spain’s self-image – as well as the backlash against the Catalan [secession] movement”.Another leading figure from that period who wished to remain anonymous says: “We could see a real hardening of Spanish nationalism, but I think this is more in the media and the political class than among ordinary people.”A former minister in the last Socialist government concurs, but recalls that when José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, the former prime minister, suggested the idea of nation was “arguable and argued over” he had to retreat under heavy nationalist fire.“Once this gets going, Spanish nationalism, which works with the gut more than the head, will be a force to be reckoned with,” says a leading Spanish political scientist in Madrid. “What we must avoid at all costs is being pushed into the corner where we appear to be the Serbs.” Link to comment
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