Wikileaks Cablegate: Israeli relations with India
Wikileaks Cablegate: Israeli relations with India
The latest WikiLeaks expose of classified US documents include many with an India connection.

Cable 08STATE116392, S) REPORTING AND COLLECTION NEEDS: PALESTINIAN

Reference ID: 08STATE116392

Date: 2008-10-31 15:03

Classification: SECRET//NOFORN

Origin: Secretary of State

R 311525Z OCT 08

FM SECSTATE WASHDC

TO AMEMBASSY TEL AVIV

AMCONSUL JERUSALEM

INFO AMEMBASSY AMMAN

AMEMBASSY BEIRUT

AMEMBASSY CAIRO

AMEMBASSY DAMASCUS

AMEMBASSY RIYADH

DIA WASHINGTON DC//DHI-1B/CLM//DP//

CIA WASHINGTON DC//NHTC// 0000

S E C R E T STATE 116392

NOFORN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/18/2033

TAGS: PINR KSPR ECON KPAL PREL PTER XF

SUBJECT: (S) REPORTING AND COLLECTION NEEDS: PALESTINIAN

ISSUES

REF: A. 08 STATE 001379

¶B. 08 STATE 64936

Classified By: CATHERINE BROWN, DAS, INR/IPC. REASON: 1.4(C).

¶1. (S/NF) SUMMARY: This cable provides the full text of the

new National HUMINT Collection Directive (NHCD) on

Palestinian Issues (paragraph 3-end) and encourages

Department personnel at post to assist in compiling

Palestinian biographic information (paragraph 2).

¶A. (S/NF) The NHCD results from a recent Washington review of

reporting and collection needs for Palestinian Issues and

sets forth a list of priorities intended to guide

participating USG agencies as they allocate resources and

update plans to collect information on Palestinian Issues.

The priorities may also help the Embassy manage reporting and

collection, including formulation of Mission Strategic Plans

(MSPs).

¶B. (S/NF) This NHCD is compliant with the National

Intelligence Priorities Framework (NIPF), which was

established in response to NSPD-26 of February 24, 2003. If

needed, GRPO can provide further background on the NIPF and

the use of NIPF abbreviations (shown in parentheses following

each sub-issue below) in NHCDs.

¶C. (S/NF) Important information responsive to the NHCD often

is available to non-State members of the Country Team whose

agencies participated in the review leading to the NHCD's

issuance. COMs, DCMs, and State reporting officers can

assist by coordinating with other Country Team members to

encourage relevant reporting through their own or State

Department channels.

¶2. (S/NF) State biographic reporting - including on

Palestinians:

¶A. (S/NF) The intelligence community relies on State

reporting officers for much of the biographical information

collected worldwide. Informal biographic reporting via email

and other means is vital to the community's collection

efforts and can be sent to the INR/B (Biographic) office for

dissemination to the IC. State reporting officers are

encouraged to report on noteworthy Palestinians as

information becomes available.

¶B. (S/NF) When it is available, reporting officers should

include as much of the following information as possible:

office and organizational titles; names, position titles and

other information on business cards; numbers of telephones,

cell phones, pagers and faxes; compendia of contact

information, such as telephone directories (in compact disc

or electronic format if available) and e-mail listings;

internet and intranet "handles", internet e-mail addresses,

web site identification-URLs; credit card account numbers;

frequent flyer account numbers; work schedules, and other

relevant biographical information.

¶3. (S/NF) Palestinian NHCD outline - priority issues:

¶A. Palestinian-Israeli Peace Process

1) Conflict Resolution and Palestinian Relations

with Israel (SRCC-1)

2) Final Status Issues (SRCC-1)

3) Perceptions of US Role in the Peace Process

(SRCC-1)

4) Role of Regional Neighbors (SRCC-1)

5) Role of International Community in the Peace

Process (SRCC-1)

¶B. Palestinian Leadership and Governance

1) Governance Issues (DEPS-1)

2) Security Forces' Capabilities (DEPS-1)

3) Palestinian Leadership (LEAD-1)

4) Fatah-HAMAS Relationship (LEAD-1)

5) Economic and Financial Stability (ECFS-2)

6) Civil Society and the Rule of Law (DEPS-1)

7) US, Regional, and International Foreign

Policy (FPOL-4)

¶C. Palestinian Internal Security and Control

1) Palestinian Counterterrorism Capabilities and

Response (TERR-2)

2) Role of Palestinian Authority Security

Organs/Individuals in Terrorism (TERR-2)

3) Intelligence Services and Security Forces

(CINT-5)

4) Illegal Activities (MONY-4)

¶D. Terrorism and Islamic Activism

1) International and Indigenous Terrorist

Activities (TERR-2)

2) Internal and External Support for Palestinian

Terrorists (TERR-2)

3) Islamic Activism (DEPS-1)

4) Threats Against American Citizens (TERR-2)

¶E. Palestinian Social Development and Infrastructure

1) Human Rights (HRWC-3)

2) Demographics (DEMG-3)

3) Water Management (ENVR-4)

4) Infectious Disease and Health (HLTH-5)

5) Civilian Infrastructure (INFR-3)

¶F. Government of Israel Plans, Policies, and Actions

1) Israeli Leadership Plans and Intentions on

the Peace Process (LEAD-1)

2) Conflict Resolution (SRCC-1)

3) Government of Israel Security Issues (SRCC-1)

4) Military Response to Palestinians and

Terrorism (FMCC-2)

5) Settlements (SRCC-1)

6) US and International Community (FPOL-3)

¶G. Information Infrastructure and Telecommunications

Systems (INFR-3)

¶4. (S/NF) Palestinian NHCD - Full text -- reporting and

collection needs under priority areas listed in paragraph 3

above:

¶A. Palestinian-Israeli Peace Process

1) Conflict Resolution and Palestinian Relations with

Israel (SRCC-1).

--Key positions, negotiating strategies, red lines, and

points of flexibility of Fatah-affiliated Palestinian

Authority elements, HAMAS, and other Palestinian parties

concerned with the peace process, conflict resolution, and

future dealings with Israel.

--Negotiating positions for Palestinian talks with Israel on

bilateral issues, particularly the extent of Palestinian

Authority control in Jerusalem, right of return of

Palestinian refugees to Israel, Israeli settlements in the

West Bank, and East Jerusalem, exchanges of territory,

borders and security, and "end of claims".

--Attitudes of the general public toward Palestinian-Israeli

talks.

--Attitudes of Palestinian security forces toward peace

negotiations with and attacks on Israel inside Israel and the

Palestinian territories.

--Details of all formal and informal channels, used by the

Palestinian leaders to discuss peace steps with Israel.

--Palestinian perceptions of and relations with Israeli

leaders and negotiating counterparts.

--Palestinian positions on negotiations with Israel regarding

water, transportation and energy infrastructure issues,

access to the Israeli economy, and safe passage between areas

of Israeli and Palestinian control.

2) Final Status Issues (SRCC-1).

--Details regarding final-status arrangements on issues of

security, borders and border crossings, and refugees.

--Information regarding final-status agreements on water,

economics, legal matters and prisoners, infrastructure and

environment, and Jerusalem (including sovereignty,

governance, and access to/control of the "Holy Basin").

3) Perceptions of US Role in the Peace Process

(SRCC-1).

--Palestinian leadership and citizen perceptions regarding

the US role and efforts to influence the Israeli-Palestinian

peace process.

--Palestinian plans, intentions and efforts to influence US

positions on the Palestinian-Israeli negotiations.

Palestinian efforts to galvanize regional and international

support to influence US positions on the Palestinian-Israeli

peace negotiations.

--Palestinian plans, intentions, objectives and activities

related to US policies and programs on the peace process

including extent of support for US and other counterterrorism

efforts.

4) Role of Regional Neighbors (SRCC-1).

--Palestinian perceptions of the policies of regional

neighbors (Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, Libya

and other Arab states and Iran) regarding a

Palestinian-Israeli peace settlement.

--Views and perceptions of regional neighbors on the impact a

Palestinian-Israeli peace settlement would have on

neighboring Palestinian populations.

--Palestinian views of other countries' plans and efforts to

support or oppose the Palestinian-Israeli peace process.

--Palestinian perceptions of plans and efforts by individual

regional neighbors to facilitate or hinder the development of

institutions needed for a free and democratic Palestinian

state.

--Palestinian views about plans and efforts of Syria or

Lebanon to resolve border disputes with Israel.

5) Role of International Community in the Peace Process

(SRCC-1).

--Palestinian perceptions about policies, plans, efforts and

support for strategies and positions on Palestinian-Israeli

issues from European Union members, especially France,

Germany, the United Kingdom, and Russia and multilateral

bodies, including the Quartet (United States, European Union,

United Nations, and Russia), the Organization of the Islamic

Conference, the Arab League, and the United Nations.

--Palestinian views on amounts and uses of international

assistance provided to the Palestinian Authority as part of

bilateral or multilateral negotiations.

¶B. Palestinian Leadership and Governance

1) Governance Issues (DEPS-1).

--Status and relative strength of factions within the

Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and internal

decision-making processes of these factions.

--Relations between the Palestinian Authority and the PLO and

its factions.

--PLO and HAMAS finances and sources of funding.

--Evidence regarding the effectiveness of the Palestinian

Authority in governing areas under Palestinian Authority

control; status of political reform and influence of

President.

--Indications of challenges to Palestinian Authority rule.

Extent of popular loyalty to Palestinian Authority

leadership.

--Information on municipal government structures, independent

local power bases, and relationships between the Palestinian

leadership and local leaders.

--Plans and intentions of the Palestinian Authority to

consider or reject the formation of a new Palestinian

National Unity Government.

--Details on efforts of HAMAS to exert influence over

Palestinians to consolidate their support.

--Attitudes, plans, and tactics of Islamist and secular

groups to determine or affect the choice of a successor to

the current Palestinian Authority President.

--Level of Palestinian support for HAMAS elected officials.

--Palestinian perceptions of the Palestinian legislative

council and its ability to exercise power.

2) Security Forces' Capabilities (DEPS-1).

--Plans, intentions, and willingness to sustain efforts to

reform the security forces.

--Relations between the security forces and foreign security

services, especially for cooperation, training, information

sharing, and funding including efforts to target terrorist or

extremist threats to the peace process.

--Changes in the senior leadership of the Palestinian

Authority security forces, including the general intelligence

organization (Mukhabarat) and the Preventive Security

Organization (PSO).

--Leadership dynamics and power relationships among the

Palestinian Authority security forces; relations between

civilian leaders and security forces commanders.

--Level of responsiveness of security forces to civilian

control.

--Decision-making processes and rules of engagement of the

security forces in specific security situations.

--Organizational structure of the Palestinian Authority

security forces.

--Command, control, communications, and intelligence

infrastructure of Palestinian Authority security forces.

--Information on personnel strength, budget, weapons,

training, force readiness, targeting, tactics,

transportation, and logistics of the Palestinian Authority

security forces.

3) Palestinian Leadership (LEAD-1).

--Goals and strategies of Palestinian officials in the West

Bank and Gaza to insure/undermine the viability of a

democratic Palestinian state.

--Plans and intentions of Palestinian President to call

elections.

--Role of the Prime Minister.

--Identification of key advisers to the Palestinian Authority

President and Prime Minister and their respective areas of

influence.

--Decision making processes within the Palestinian Authority

leadership, including the roles of key ministries and the

views of their leaders on priority issues for the government.

--Palestinian leadership attitudes toward and perceptions of

the US.

--Status of the current Palestinian Authority president's and

prime minister's health.

--Identification of possible successors to the current

Palestinian Authority president, views of these possible

successors, and those of other Palestinian leaders outside

the government, on Palestinian-Israeli issues and information

on the relationships of these possible successors with key

Palestinian groups and Israel.

4) Fatah-HAMAS Relationship (LEAD-1).

--Fatah-affiliated Palestinian Authority leadership and HAMAS

efforts to resolve issues related to reconciliation or to

continue competition.

--HAMAS reaction to peace negotiation efforts. Relationship

between the Palestinian leadership, to include the

Presidency, and HAMAS officials in Gaza and rejectionist

elements.

--Leadership plans and efforts in Gaza and the West Bank to

unify or maintain the division between the two territories.

--Efforts by the Palestinian Authority leadership to involve

HAMAS elected officials in negotiating strategies for the

peace process.

--Details of travel plans such as routes and vehicles used by

Palestinian Authority leaders and HAMAS members.

--Biographical, financial and biometric information on key PA

and HAMAS leaders and representatives, to include the young

guard inside Gaza, the West Bank and outside.

5) Economic and Financial Stability (ECFS-2).

--Economic decision-making processes within the Palestinian

Authority government and plans and actions to implement

economic reform, liberalization, and development.

--Palestinian Authority budget allocations and funding

streams.

--Details about employment data and government plans and

efforts to increase employment.

--Plans by Palestinian officials and Palestinian businessmen

in the West Bank and Gaza for coping with economic downturns

caused by political problems.

--Data on Palestinian trade with Israel and Jordan.

--Data on the impact of border closures and

Palestinian-Israeli violence on economic development,

including on the livelihoods of Palestinians with jobs in

Israel or Jordan.

--Information on levels of financial savings by Palestinians

and their ability to withstand prolonged economic hardship.

--Palestinian efforts to develop trading relationships with

non-Israeli buyers and attract foreign investment.

--Plans and efforts to seek funding from international relief

organizations.

--Palestinian plans and efforts to develop and exploit

natural gas reserves off the coast of Gaza.

--Plans to develop or expand energy infrastructure, including

petroleum and natural gas storage/distribution facilities and

electric utilities.

--Financial flows from Diaspora Palestinians and the

motivations for such investment.

--Information on close ties between business families and

politicians.

--Corrupt practices by businessmen and politicians.

--Trends in the business practices of local Palestinian

businessmen, such as changes in enterprise ownership and

control mechanisms and shifts in contract bidding methods.

--Plans and efforts to counteract Israeli closure policies.

--Palestinian perceptions regarding fulfillment of aid

pledges from Donors' Conference.

6) Civil Society and the Rule of Law (DEPS-1).

--Plans and intentions of leaders of the Palestinian

Authority to encourage political openness, protect civil

liberties, and promote fiscal transparency.

--Plans and actions of Palestinian Authority to implement

judicial and financial reforms.

--Details about the Palestinian justice system and

Palestinian attitudes towards the Palestinian Basic Law and

Sharia/Islamic law.

--Capability and commitment of Palestinian officials and

organizations to maintain order and confront threats posed by

extremist and terrorist groups, clans, and criminal

organizations.

--Details of plans and programs intended to promote and

maintain public order.

--Attitudes and influence of key Palestinian interest groups

on Palestinian plans, policies and actions aimed at promoting

the rule of law and public order.

--HAMAS and other Palestinian efforts to apply Sharia and

promote Islamic alternatives in civil society.

--Details on HAMAS' social welfare network to include

hospitals, education systems, textbooks, libraries and social

services in the Palestinian territories and their funding

sources in the region and worldwide; efforts by PIJ and other

Palestinian organizations to provide similar services and

details of their sources of funding.

--Financial systems used by HAMAS charities in Europe to move

funds to the Middle East.

--Popular attitudes towards HAMAS and other organizations

that provide social services.

--Views and attitudes of the younger generation on HAMAS and

their control of municipalities as well as their social

service programs.

--Evidence of control of the media by Fatah-affiliated

Palestinian Authority or HAMAS to influence the Palestinian

population.

--Details on development of political parties, labor unions,

and/or worker groups.

7) US, Regional, and International Foreign Policy

(FPOL-4).

--Efforts by the Palestinian Authority to gain support for

its strategies and positions on Palestinian-Israeli issues

from the US.

--Palestinian Authority's objectives and strategies on key

issues in US-Palestinian relationship and views on future of

US relations.

--Information on Palestinian Authority negotiating positions

before discussions with the US and views of Palestinian

officials after discussions with the US.

--Popular attitudes toward and perceptions of the US.

¶C. Palestinian Internal Security and Control

1) Palestinian Counterterrorism Capabilities and

Response (TERR-2).

--Palestinian counterterrorism and internal security

policies, plans, attitudes, commitment and actions in dealing

with extremists and terrorist groups, and clans.

--Actions, ability and willingness of the Palestinian

security services in the West Bank and Gaza to thwart

terrorist attacks and maintain public order.

--Palestinian plans, intentions, objectives and activities

regarding support to and cooperation with US counterterrorism

efforts.

--Cooperation between Palestinian security and intelligence

services and Israeli counterparts on terrorism, including

targeting efforts, technical operations, surveillance,

interrogation, capture and prosecution of known terrorists.

--Attitudes and influence of key Palestinian interest groups

on Palestinian counterterrorism plans, policies and actions.

--Views of Palestinian Authority President, his advisers,

Palestinian Authority security chiefs and senior Palestinian

officials toward the US and its counterterrorism policies;

perceptions of US expectations for Palestinian cooperation in

counterterrorism campaign.

2) Role of Palestinian Authority Security

Organs/Individuals in Terrorism (TERR-2).

--Ties between the security forces and Palestinian Authority

leaders and other groups, including Palestinian political

parties, militias, and rejectionist and terrorist groups.

--Participation by Palestinian Authority security forces

personnel in attacks against Israeli targets outside Israel

and the Palestinian Territories.

--Links between intelligence services and terrorist groups.

--Locations of neighborhoods controlled by rejectionist and

terrorist groups.

--Indications of cooperation between Palestinian intelligence

services and terrorist groups.

3) Intelligence Services and Security Forces (CINT-5).

--Plans, intentions, key focus and rivalries of senior PA

security force officials, including the General Intelligence

Organization (Mukhabarat), the Preventive Security

Organization (PSO), Military Intelligence (Istikhbarat), the

National Security Force (NSF), and the Civil Police, as well

as HAMAS's Security Support Force in the Gaza strip.

--Command, control, communications, and intelligence

infrastructure of Palestinian Authority security forces.

--Indications of counterintelligence operations conducted by

the security forces against foreign intelligence services

operating in or through Palestinian Authority areas.

--Information on signals intercept capabilities and targets,

decryption capabilities, intercept sites and collection

hardware, and intercept operation successes.

--Plans and efforts to illicitly collect classified,

sensitive, commercial proprietary, or protected technology

information from US companies or government agencies.

--Counterintelligence organization plans, efforts, and

abilities, and warning of their use against US personnel.

Details on security forces' penetrations of Palestinian

rejectionist groups including electronic penetrations.

--Technological capabilities, targets, and activities of

Palestinian security forces.

--Unit deployments and locations, infrastructure and

facilities of Palestinian Authority security forces.

--Details on processes used by Palestinian Authority security

forces to acquire weapons and equipment, either legally or

illegally.

--Intentions by Palestinian security force leaders or rogue

elements to use new capabilities against Israel or the US.

4) Illegal Activities (MONY-4).

--Indications of levels of corruption among Fatah-affiliated

Palestinian Authority and/or HAMAS leaders.

--Individuals, governments, organizations, routes, and

methods involved in arms smuggling, human

trafficking/smuggling, money laundering and corruption in

financial transactions in support of illegal activities.

--Information on illegal weapons transactions with Israelis.

--Activities of Palestinian gangs and irregular militia

forces' involvement in crime and terrorism.

¶D. Terrorism and Islamic Activism

1) International and Indigenous Terrorist Activities

(TERR-2).

--Structure and internal dynamics of HAMAS militant wing (Izz

al-Din al-Qassam Battalions), the Palestinian Islamic Jihad

(PIJ), al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the Popular Front for the

Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC), and

Popular Resistance Committees, Army of Islam, and other

terrorist groups with a presence in the Gaza Strip or the

West Bank, including leadership, membership, decision making

processes, command and control, and factions.

--Popular support for rejectionist groups.

--Tactics, techniques, and operating methods of Palestinian

terrorist groups, including tradecraft, counterintelligence

measures, recruitment activities, underground facilities,

operational tasking, and travel, infiltrations into Israel,

disinformation, denial and deception techniques, and

training.

--Plans and intentions for, and extent and details of

Lebanese Hizballah activities in Palestinian areas or within

Israel, including retaliation for the deaths of Hizballah

senior military leaders.

--Relationship between Palestinian terrorist groups and

al-Qa'ida, and indications of interest by Palestinian

terrorist groups to work with global jihadists.

--Indications of interest by Palestinian terrorist groups in

the acquisition or use of chemical, biological, or nuclear

weapons, longer range missiles, or unmanned aerial vehicles

(UAVs).

--Communications systems used by senior leaders of

Palestinian terrorist groups to direct and control

subordinates and field operatives.

--Use of Inmarsat, fax machines, cellular telephones, and

computer communications, including the Internet, to conduct

terrorist activities.

2) Internal and External Support for Palestinian

Terrorists (TERR-2).

--Evidence of Palestinian popular support for Palestinian and

other terrorist groups; Palestinian public perceptions of

rocket attacks against Israel.

--Contacts and relations between Palestinian terrorist groups

and other terrorist or rejectionist groups, especially

Lebanese Hizballah, al-Qa'ida, and elements of the Arab

population in Israel; influence of Islamic militants.

--Extent and nature of control, sponsorship, and financial

support of Palestinian terrorist groups by Iran, Syria, Saudi

Arabia, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Egypt, or other

countries.

--Plans and intentions, capabilities and motivations of

Palestinian terrorist groups and/or their state sponsors to

conduct attacks against US, Israeli, Jordanian, Palestinian,

or other western or allied targets.

--Encouragement from state sponsors to conduct attacks

against US, Israeli, Jordanian, Palestinian, or other western

or allied targets.

--Support mechanisms for Palestinian terrorist or

rejectionist groups, including identities of key individuals

and mechanisms for procuring and moving funds and weapons.

--Smuggling between Gaza and the outside world, including

routes and methodologies; information on weapons shipments

into territories via tunnels, and maritime means for

terrorist use.

--Contacts and relations between HAMAS militants, the

Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Popular Resistance Committees,

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General

Command (PFLP-GC), Lebanese Hizballah, Fatah al-Islam (FAI),

and other known or emergent terrorist or rejectionist groups

in the region, and elements of the Palestinian Authority.

--Attitudes and motivations of the Palestinian Authority

leadership regarding the activities of HAMAS, al-Aqsa Martyrs

Brigades and other terrorist or rejectionist groups.

--Evidence of Palestinian Authority's, or PA senior

officials' prior knowledge of, funding of, authorization of,

or participation in popular unrest, violent outbreaks, or

terrorist acts.

--Financial support to NGO's from foreign governments, to

include Venezuela and Turkey.

--Contacts and cooperation between NGOs and terrorist groups,

especially HAMAS charities and any political/humanitarian

entities suspected of passing funds to militants.

3) Islamic Activism (DEPS-1).

--Details about Islamic reformer, oppositionist and militant

(activist) leaders, organizations, adherents, and supporters,

including objectives, plans and strategies, tactics, and

efforts to achieve goals.

--Plans and efforts of internal or external Islamic activists

to affect governance in Palestinian areas.

--Islamic activist plans and efforts to develop political

parties or organize opposition to the governing authorities.

--Relations and cooperation among internal and external

Islamic activists.

--Cohesion and divisions within and among Islamic activist

groups.

--Influence of religious leaders on Islamic activist leaders,

adherents, and supporters.

--Islamic activist influence on national leadership, military

and security services, educational institutions, government

agencies, and NGOs.

--Islamic activist use of public media, including the use of

internet web forums, to achieve strategic, tactical and/or

operational objectives.

--HAMAS ownership of broadcasting stations. Government plans

and efforts to support or defeat Islamic activist efforts.

--HAMAS contacts or connections with Muslim Brotherhood in

other countries.

--Details of HAMAS connections to HAMAS external leadership

in Damascus; HAMAS financial ties to external funding offices

such as Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

4) Threats Against American Citizens (TERR-2).

--Indications of Americans (officials, tourists, or

residents) becoming targets of any terrorist groups operating

in or near Israel, West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.

--Palestinian terrorist groups' perceptions of US

vulnerabilities and their perceptions of how the United

States would respond to attacks against the homeland or US

interests overseas.

--Palestinian authorities' response to terrorist threats and

attacks against the US interests, persons or facilities.

--Policies, plans, and efforts regarding cooperation by

Palestinian or Israeli officials with the US and regional

neighbors concerning US POW/MIA accounting and recovery

efforts and capabilities to assist or cooperate in recovery

efforts.

¶E. Palestinian Social Development and Infrastructure

1) Human Rights (HRWC-3).

--Palestinian data and perception of the humanitarian impact

of Israel's closure of Gaza and lack of freedom of movement

in the West Bank due to security checkpoints, the barrier,

and other obstacles to free movement.

--Details about HAMAS and the Palestinian Authority's

facilitation of humanitarian operations in the West Bank and

Gaza.

--Information on treatment of prisoners or detainees from

opposition groups.

--Palestinian intelligence and security forces' attitudes

toward and participation in torture, and other human rights

violations.

2) Demographics (DEMG-3).

--Population data for Palestinian areas and Palestinian

Diaspora.

--Details about, and changes to, key demographic indicators,

such as birth rate, fertility rate, mortality rate, and

internal migration.

--Palestinian leadership's view of demographic trends; use of

data in consideration of two-state solution.

--Palestinian officials' efforts to deal with the 'youth

bulge' and resultant educational, training, and employment

challenges.

--Efforts by Palestinian Authority or HAMAS officials or

institutions to co-opt the youth.

3) Water Management (ENVR-4).

--Plans and intentions of Palestinian officials in West Bank

and Gaza to confront environmental issues, particularly

problems with water and waste management.

--Palestinian perceptions of efforts to mitigate the impact

of power shortages on sewer treatment and other civil

services.

--Palestinian strategies and efforts regarding water

management and protection of infrastructure against attack.

--Details about annual water use, and renewable surface and

groundwater reserves.

--Cooperation and disputes with other states regarding

regional water resources to include the aquifers.

--Details about plans and efforts to augment supplies from

non-conventional sources, such as desalination plants.

4) Infectious Disease and Health (HLTH-5).

--Information on the effects of Palestinian-Israeli violence

on public health conditions in Palestinian-controlled areas.

--Details about prevalence, and outbreaks of infectious

disease to include HIV and avian flu H5N1.

--Palestinian Authority plans and efforts to prevent and

manage outbreaks.

--Statistical information on the incidence of chronic and

infectious disease among various population groups (Gaza,

West Bank, Bedouin, urban, agricultural areas, and so forth).

--Details about location and level of contaminants in air,

water, food, and soil, including threat to health from

accidental or intentional release of toxic industrial

chemicals.

--Military and civilian medical capabilities and

infrastructure.

--Details about HAMAS and other Palestinian groups' medical

assistance to Palestinians.

5) Civilian Infrastructure (INFR-3).

--Information on location and condition of power plants,

roads, hospitals, waste treatment facilities and financial

institutions in the Palestinian areas.

--Information on Palestinian access to fuel for power plants.

--Palestinian perceptions of efforts to deal with impact of

power shortages and efforts to mitigate power shortages on

sewer treatment and other civil services.

¶F. Government of Israel Plans, Policies, and Actions

1) Israeli Leadership Plans and Intentions on the Peace

Process (LEAD-1).

--Government of Israel (GOI) leadership's negotiating

positions, strategies, and goals in interactions with the

Fatah-affiliated Palestinian Authority officials, with

supporters or elements affiliated with HAMAS, and with other

Palestinian parties concerned with the peace process.

--Israeli leaders' perceptions of and relations with

Palestinian leaders and negotiating counterparts. Evidence

of informal channels, either sanctioned or unsanctioned by

the Israeli leadership, to discuss peace steps with

Palestinian leaders.

--Israeli leadership views and intentions regarding the

impact of their negotiations with Syria on their negotiations

with the Palestinians.

--Israel's decision-making process for launching military

operations and determining retaliation for terrorist attacks.

--Israeli leaders' involvement in decisions on response to

terrorist attacks.

--Israeli leadership intentions and strategy toward managing

the US relationship; views of prime minister and advisors

toward the US and its counterterrorism policies. Israeli

thoughts and views on impact of Israeli domestic politics,

including changes in GOI leadership, on GOI approach to and

conduct of the peace process and negotiations.

2) Conflict Resolution (SRCC-1).

--Negotiating positions for Israeli talks with Palestinians

on bilateral issues, particularly the extent of Israeli

control of Jerusalem, right of return of Palestinian refugees

to Israel, Israeli settlements in the West Bank and east

Jerusalem, exchanges of territory, and "end of claims".

--GOI views and positions on final-status issues; water

rights, transportation and energy infrastructure issues,

access to the Israeli economy, security, and safe passage

between areas of Israeli and Palestinian control, legal

matters and prisoners, and Jerusalem (including sovereignty,

governance, and access to/control of the "Holy Basin").

--Attitudes of the Israeli public, including Israeli Arabs,

toward Israeli-Palestinian talks. Efforts by opposition

parties or members of the ruling coalition to influence

government positions on the peace process.

--Attitudes of Israeli security forces toward peace

negotiations with Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank.

Current plans and intentions regarding Palestinian access and

movement, in particular, access and movement with economic

consequences, e.g. movement of produce, access to fields, and

movement of commercial goods between Palestinian villages.

3) Government of Israel Security Issues (SRCC-1).

--Government of Israel (GOI) views and assessments of

military strengths and vulnerabilities.

--Perceptions of threats posed by Palestinian rejectionists,

including the potential for conflict with their state

sponsors, Syria and Iran, and Lebanon.

--GOI negotiating positions, strategies, and goals in

interactions with Syria, and Lebanon, especially on final

status issues.

--Israeli views of an Egyptian or Jordanian role in the

context of final status issues.

--Israeli views on a future regional security pact.

--GOI plans, intentions and reactions to Palestinian

intentions to develop Gaza off-shore natural gas reserves.

GOI plans and actions to continue construction of security

fence including views on boundaries, funding constraints, and

external influences on decision-making.

--GOI plans and actions to implement agreements with

Palestinians on bilateral security measures and to implement

unilateral security measures over Israeli- and

Palestinian-controlled areas.

--Views and actions on prisoner swaps/releases; information

on Israel's treatment of Palestinian prisoners or detainees,

including interrogation methods.

--Information on and motivations for any increased Israeli

population emigration from Israel.

4) Military Response to Palestinians and Terrorism

(FMCC-2).

--Details on Israel Defense Forces (IDF) operations underway

or planned against the HAMAS-controlled Palestinian militants

in Gaza, terrorists, or terrorist infrastructure, including

targeted assassinations and tactics/techniques used by ground

and air units.

--Israeli efforts to counter short-range rockets and mortars.

--IDF preparations to conduct increased operations against

Palestinian targets in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and

Lebanon.

--Impact of Israeli efforts against rocket attacks on Israeli

views of security.

--IDF preparations to conduct combat operations against

Hizballah or Syrian targets along Israel's northern border or

inside Lebanon or Syria.

--IDF units, equipment, maintenance levels, training, morale,

and operational readiness.

--IDF tactics, techniques and procedures for conducting

conventional and unconventional counterinsurgency and

counterterrorist operations.

--Israeli assessment of the impact of reserve duty in the

territories on IDF readiness.

5) Settlements (SRCC-1).

--Evidence of Government of Israel support for or opposition

to actions to limit and/or reduce settlement and outpost

growth and construction.

--Information on leaders of the Israeli settlement

establishment, including Golan settlers, their ideology,

motivations and who they claim to represent.

--Divisions among the various settlement groups.

--Details on settlement-related budgets and subsidies.

Settlers' relationship with the Israeli political and

military establishment including their lobbying and

settlement methods.

--Golan settlers' views of any potential peace agreement with

Syria.

--Support for settlers within Israeli society.

--Indications of Israeli extremist groups becoming more

active.

--Perceptions of US demands or requirements of Israeli

government regarding, security fences and settlements.

6) US and International Community (FPOL-3).

--Israeli perceptions of US peace process approach;

indications of critical or hostile reaction to US policies

and views of Israeli leadership after discussions with the

US.

--Attitudes of key political and military officials

concerning the state of the relationship with the US.

--Plans to influence views and positions of academics,

journalists, and business, religious and professional

organizations towards the US and the US-Israeli relationship.

--Views of and responses to role of the Quartet.

--Israeli plans and intentions to support US positions in the

UN and other international fora.

--Israeli support for US Iraq/Iran policies and US policies

and attitudes toward other Middle Eastern countries, and

European Union countries; relations with Russia, China,

Turkey, Pakistan and India.

¶G. Information Infrastructure and Telecommunications Systems

(INFR-3).

--Current specifications, vulnerabilities, capabilities, and

planned upgrades to national telecommunications

infrastructure, networks, and technologies used by government

and military authorities, intelligence and security services,

and the public sector.

--Details about command, control, and communications systems

and facilities.

--National leadership use of and dependencies on a dedicated

telecommunications infrastructure.

--Details about national and regional telecommunications

policies, programs, regulations, and training.

--Information about current and planned upgrades to public

sector communications systems and technologies used by

government, military personnel, and the civil sector,

including cellular phone networks, mobile satellite phones,

very small aperture terminals (VSAT), trunked and mobile

radios, pagers, prepaid calling cards, firewalls, encryption,

international connectivity, use of electronic data

interchange, and cable and fiber networks.

--Information about wireless infrastructure, cellular

communications capabilities and makes and models of cellular

phones and their operating systems, to include second

generation and third generation systems.

--Details about the use of satellites for telecommunication

purposes, including planned system upgrades.

--Details about internet and intranet use and infrastructure,

including government oversight.

--Details about foreign and domestic telecommunications

service providers and vendors.

--Plans and efforts to acquire US export-controlled

telecommunications equipment and technology.

--Plans and efforts to export or transfer state-of-the art

telecommunications equipment and technology.

--Details about information repositories associated with

radio frequency identification (RFID)-enabled systems used

for passports, government badges, and transportation systems.

--Official and personal phone numbers, fax numbers, and

e-mail addresses of principal civilian and military leaders.

RICE

Reproduced from cablegate.wikileaks.org


List of India-related documents from the first batch of 226 documents released by WikiLeaks

(India-specific portions highlighted in bold)

- To avoid hurting Pakistan, Turkey didn't invite India

- Bahrain's King Hamad on India's role in Afghanistan

- UN Security Council expansion and India

- Indo-Pak relations and Musharraf

- Pakistan's obsession with India

- India critical of sanctions on Iran

- Saudi Arabia expanding relations with India

- 'Little to fear about India having nuclear weapons'

- Iran could follow India's path in going nuclear

- Differing opinions of US and India

- India benefitting from international security

- Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty and India

- Nuclear facility safeguards in India

- Israel-India strategic partnership

- Non-proliferation and India

- Indo-US trade relations and foreign aid

- Sanctions and German business interests in India

- Some Indian-origin people supplying equipment to Iran

- Germany on US-EU position towards India

- Israeli relations with India

- Reliance Industries oil and gas exploration

- US-Indian economic cooperation and Indo-Pak relations

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