Wednesday, May 20, 2009

PM aid: Two-state solution childish, stupid



PM aid: Two-state solution childish, stupid

Published: 05.20.09, 17:22 / Israel News


A top official in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's entourage, upon their return from Washington, called the two-state solution "childish and stupid". The official also said Israel would continue construction in the major settlement blocks, despite US President Barack Obama's demands.

"Two states for two people is a childish and stupid solution to a much more complicated problem," the official said. (Roni Sofer)
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Iran tests medium-range missile - Excerpt from the Australian

IRANIAN President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says Iran has test-fired a new medium-range surface to surface missile.
"The defence minister (Mohammad Mostafa Najjar) told me today that we launched a Sejil-2 missile, which is a two-stage missile and it has reached the intended target," Mr Ahmadinejad said in a speech in the northern town of Semnan.

"I was told that the missile is able to go beyond the atmosphere then come back and hit its target. It works on solid fuel."

He did not specify the missile's range.

The defence minister said on November 12 that Iran had test-fired a new generation of ground-to-ground missile.

"This is a two-stage missile carrying two engines with combined solid fuel," Mr Najjar said at the time, adding that the missile was named Sejil.

State television then showed footage of the launch of the missile, which is similar in size to Iran's medium-range Shahab 3.

In the past, Iran has often boasted of developing new weapons systems only to be met with scepticism from Western defence analysts.

Mr Najjar said in November that the new missile had "a range of close to 2000 kilometres," which is similar to that of the Shahab-3 and sufficient to put Iran's regional arch foe Israel in range.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Iran's missile technology and controversial nuclear program pose an existential threat to the Jewish state greater than any it has faced since its creation in 1948.

Iran insists that its nuclear program is aimed solely at producing electricity for a growing population once its fossil fuels run out.

But Israel - which has the region's sole, if undeclared, nuclear arsenal - suspects it is cover for a drive for the bomb.

The UN Security Council has imposed three packages of sanctions against Iran after it failed to heed successive ultimatums to suspend uranium enrichment, the process which makes fuel for nuclear power stations, but in highly extended form can also produce the fissile core of an atomic bomb.

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