Archive for January, 2007

Israeli Government Labels Montreal Mayor Anti-Semite

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni tried to make a big stir this week by announcing that global anti-Semitism was on the rise. While I’m not trying to minimize the issue or its significance, it is a long-running theme of the State of Israel to point out to Diaspora Jews how dangerous and hostile the world is for Jews outside Israel–with the intent of inducing them to make aliya. The strategy has had mixed results. A recent article in the Economist pointed out that only 120,000 American Jews had made aliya since the creation of the State in 1948. The low number shocked me I must say.

Livni made her announcement under the rubric of the Global Forum Against Anti-Semitism (I can’t seem to find a website). But along the way, it appears that the hasbara machine has stumbled once again. According to Haaretz, in the documents distributed to the press, the Forum noted that:

Montreal Mayor Stefane Gendron said in August that “Israelis are modern-day Nazis.”

To add insult to injury, the Forum spokesperson at the press conference publicly affiliated Gendron with Montreal, which by the way has a very large Jewish population.

The problem is that while Stefane Gendron may’ve made this statement, he is NOT the mayor of Montreal (that honor belongs to Gérald Tremblay) but rather of the small town of Huntingdon, Quebec. Oops. We’ve got to do a better job of keeping our anti-Semites straight.

Haaretz had a bit of egg on its face as it apologized today for its error. Will the Global Forum apologize to the real mayor of Montreal?

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Brit Tzedek Calls Israeli Foreign Ministry Report ‘Utter Falsity’

Yediot Achronot Hebrew headline from article attacking Israeli refusenik groupsHeadline of scurrilous Yediot article: “U.S. Palestinian Groups Bankroll Refuseniks” (scan courtesy Amir Terkel)

Thanks especially to Amir Terkel (and also Judith Kolokoff), I was the first news source outside Israel to report that Israel’s Los Angeles consul general, Ehud Danoch, smeared Brit Tzedek, Combatants for Peace, and Breaking the Silence, accusing their national tours of being “bankrolled by Palestinian groups.” Now, Brit Tzedek’s national leadership has answered the foreign ministry report with a letter of their own which I quote in full:

January 30, 2007

Consul General Ehud Danoch
Consul for Media and Pubic Affairs Gilad Millo
Consulate General of Israel
6380 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90048

Dear Sirs:

We write to express profound dismay about a report transmitted by your office to the Israeli Foreign Ministry and to all of Israel’s representatives in North America condemning the tour sponsored by Brit Tzedek v’Shalom featuring representatives of the Israeli-Palestinian group Combatants for Peace. As covered by YNET and Maariv, your report also called for actions against these individuals, whose military service has turned them into conscientious objectors, to stop “their negative effect on Israel’s image.”

As a supporter of Israel, Brit Tzedek v’Shlaom celebrates Israel as a vibrant democracy, whose citizens have not only diverse opinions but the right to express them publicly. That groups like Combatants for Peace and Breaking the Silence speak out against the current government’s policy of occupation, or that they might hold minority positions, does not diminish the obligation of your government to acknowledge their right to be heard.

The Israelis in these groups have dutifully served to protect Israel and the principles for which it stands. It is from their firsthand military experience that they have come to the realization shared by many Israelis, Palestinians and Americans alike, that only a diplomatically-negotiated two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will bring real peace and security to Israel,.

Like Israelis, American Jews are also overwhelmingly pro-Israel and have a wide-range of views about how to ensure the future of the Jewish homeland.

We certainly share Combatants for Peace’s concerns about the negative impact of the occupation on Israel. Yet a primary goal in our hosting the Combatants for Peace tour is to stimulate discussion in Jewish communities across our nation of the many ways to connect to and work on behalf of Israel.

As you are already aware, we are sponsoring a presentation by Combatants for Peace in Los Angeles on January 31st at the Skirball Center. We would be honored to welcome you and would also be pleased to meet with you privately to discuss how the exchange of ideas presents opportunity to strengthen the American Jewish community’s support for Israel.

Sincerely,

Marcia Freedman, President
Diane M. Cantor, Executive Director

In my opinion, the reply was entirely too polite considering the mendacity in the diplomatic report as quoted by Yediot. I don’t know how Brit Tzedek plans to pursue this matter. I hope they do. It deserves to be reported in JTA, the Forward and the Jewish Journal (L.A.’s Jewish paper) so that American Jews know about the mendacity of the L.A. foreign ministry staff. I have personally contacted editors at the Journal and Forward to inform them of the story in case they didn’t know. We’ll see what, if anything they say.

It’s instructive to hear what an Israeli refusenik himself has to say about this scandalous document. Amir Terkel, who conveyed the original Hebrew version of the story to me writes:

I can speak for many of the Israeli refuseniks who I met, and am one of myself, that this actually is not a deterrent, but more a confimation that the message is going out.

This is Amir Terkel’s scan of the original Hebrew article and the sanitized English version on the Ynetnews site.

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Israeli Foreign Ministry Smears Combatant for Peace U.S. Tour as ‘Bankrolled by Palestinians’

When you’re an Israeli-Palestinian peace activist, you know you’re really rankling the powers that be when they plant outrageous smears against you in the mass media. Those of us working for Israeli-Palestinian peace already know about the vicious lies, smears and calumnies spread by the likes of David Horowitz, Alan Dershowitz, Mort Klein, and publications like Frontpagemagazine. But did you know that none other than the Israeli foreign ministry with the collusion of Yediot Achronot have joined the game? Yup. And boy, has the hasbara machine really run off the rails on this one!

Yediot reports in both Hebrew (interestingly, Yediot has not published the article online–I wonder why?) and English about an internal memo prepared by the Los Angeles consul general which accuses the current Combatants for Peace tour hosted by Brit Tzedek (see tour schedule) of being fronted by Palestinian groups. The Hebrew version is much juicier and slanderous so we’ll go there first (translation by Amir Tekel and myself):

Foreign ministry on offensive against Israeli refuseniks touring U.S.

PALESTINIAN ORGANIZATIONS IN U.S. BANKROLLING DRAFT REFUSERS

The activity of Israeli draft refusers in the U.S. against Israeli policies in the Occupied Territories is on the rise and is getting backing from Jewish and Palestinian organizations.

By Itamar Eichner

A foreign ministry report recommends acting quickly against Israeli refusnik groups active in the U.S. “Their negative impact on Israel’s image must be stopped” the report states.

The report was presented a few days ago to the foreign ministry in Jerusalem and all its representatives in North America. The Israeli consul general in L.A., Ehud Danoch and the communications and hasbara consul, Gilad Millo prepared it.

In the document, the consuls write that recently they’ve begun to witness a rising trend of Israelis, mostly reservists affiliated with the refusenik movement, who are touring campuses and Jewish communities across the U.S. and Canada and telling their hosts what is happening in the Occupied Territories from their perspective.

According to the report, tours by Breaking the Silence and Combatants for Peace are funded mainly by Jewish organizations. According the the foreign ministry, “The size of this phenomena requires proper response both in Israel and North America”. The support of American Jews for the refuseniks has become a controversial subject among Jewish organizations.

Among the Jewish groups who sponsored the events are the Union of Zionist Progressives and Brit Tzedek V’Shalom, a Jewish organization that supports removal of settlements and ending the Occupation.

According to the report, Muslim & Palestinian organizations are also among sponsors including the Islamic Council for Public Affairs and the Islamic Center of Southern California, whose leader, Maher Hatout, was quoted this summer calling Hizballah “an organized army fighting for freedom”.

The report notes that also Hillel, a Jewish student organization considered pro-Israel, recently hosted a lecture by representatives of Breaking the Silence. The document states that “for the average American student, these organizations speak in the name of Israel. The willingness by Jewish communities to host these groups and even fund them is painful. This is a phenomenon that must not be ignored. These refuseniks are cynically using their reserve soldier status and causing damage to the state of Israel.”

“It’s possible that these organizations aren’t aware that they have turned, over time, into tools in the hands of North American Muslim campus organizations and that they have crossed the line between their aspiration to be an influential force within Israel to becoming a clearly anti-Israel force causing Israel great damage in the world.”

A little demystification is in order along with a cold shower to wash off all the lies and distortions spewed in this article. First, this tour is not supported financially by “Palestinian organizations.” Just as almost any public event nowadays has multiple sponsoring organizations, so has each Brit Tzedek chapter hosting the tour reached out to local peace groups to co-sponsor their events. There are Arab groups, Jewish groups, universities, peace groups, etc. But sponsors are not hosts. Brit Tzedek is the sole producer and host of this tour. And it hasn’t taken any money from any Arab organization for the purpose of this tour.

Don’t you just love the breathlessness of this ominous warning: “”Their negative impact on Israel’s images must be stopped.” Reminds me of J. Edgar Hoover’s warnings about the Red Menace in the 1950s and 1960s. As if IDF soldiers who’ve laid down their swords and shields pose a mortal peril to the nation. Be real. Which poses a greater danger to the nation: a prime minister, defense minister and chief of staff who waltz into a war they cannot win causing terrible loss of Israeli life while not resolving the problem they went into the war to solve; or a few hundred former soldiers who’ve decided that endless killing won’t pave the way to peace?

The Israeli hasbaraniks claim the speaking tours have become “controversial subjects.” This obscure reference is to a dispute among campus pro-Israel groups when a progressive member of the coalition sponsored a Breaking the Silence tour. Another member, the hardest of hard-right Zionist Organization of America threatened to leave the group unless the Union of Progressive Zionists was ejected. The board of the coalition voted unanimously not to eject UPZ.

The Forward also reports that the Los Angeles director of the American Jewish Congress sent a letter to the coalition resigning from the group. Then the national director rescinded the resignation, sort of. Turns out they’re not resigning now. But they may resign later. Go figure that one out. And while you’re at it figure out whether there could be any connection between L.A.’s consul general penning this bit of trash and a resignation letter sent from AJC’s L.A. office regarding the UPZ incident. That wouldn’t be a bit of collusion on their parts now would it?

But there you have it. That’s the entire “controversy.” Talk about making a mountain out of a mole hill.

The Israeli foreign ministry flacks are shocked, I say, SHOCKED that Hillel sponsored individual events for several of the tours. Of course, they neglect to mention that Hillels also sponsor right-wing nationalist events as well. Here at the University of Washington, the Hillel hosted a talk by supposed former PLO terrorist Walid Shoebat, the darling of Christian Zionists and the pro-Israeli wingnutosphere. I try not to hold it against Hillel. ‘Let a thousand flowers bloom’ to quote Reb Mao. But to try to orchestrate a campaign to vilify peace groups and prevent their use of Jewish communal spaces like Hillel for events is dastardly.

Then Danoch and friend lament: “To the average American student these organizations speak in the name of Israel.” What do they take college students for? Idiots? If I went to England and heard Cindy Sheehan speak would the average Brit believe she spoke in the name of the U.S. government? C’mon. What do you take them for? This is just more of the hysterical hasbara machine at work.

Now here’s an interesting accusation: “The willingness by Jewish communities to host these groups and even financially sponsor them is unfortunate.” I don’t have a clue what they’re talking about in claiming that “Jewish communities…financially sponsor” the tours. As far as I know, this is absolutely not so. If there were communities funding these events I’d be delighted. But alas, spurious campaigns like this one make such a possibility extremely remote.

And here’s the real capper: “These organizations [i.e. Brit Tzedek, Combatants for Peace, Breaking the Silence] don’t know that they have become a tool in the hands of Muslim groups…” That’s right. The report notes that TWO Arab groups, count ‘em two, sponsored events on these two national tours. That, ipso facto, makes said Israeli and American Jewish groups out to be a dupes of the anti-Israel Islamofascist crowd. Leaving aside what’s wrong with a legally incorporated Arab organization sponsoring an Israeli peace program, this charge is beyond outrageous. Last I checked both America and Israel were democracies. Dissent was permitted even encouraged. And if I hear one more time that ridiculous canard that Israelis are not entitled to criticize Israel outside of Israeli because of the damage it could do–I’ll scream.

So, what we have here is a campaign to drain support for peace groups within the Jewish community. They’d like to cut off all financial support coming from the organized community or even individual Jewish donors (at least that’s how I read this). Good luck. What do they take our community for? A bunch of frightened conspiracy theorists like they are?

I know if I took this passage to Elik Elhanan or Shimon Katz, the Combatants for Peace leaders speaking on the current Brit Tzedek tour, they’d laugh till their sides ached: “These refuseniks are cynically using their reserve soldier status and causing damage to the state of Israel.” How is it cynical to speak out for peace with your neighbors? What is wrong with saying you were once a soldier and now don’t believe your weapons can solve anything? How do you damage the State of Israel by saying talking is better than shooting, a peace treaty is better than a declaration of war?

Remember the names Ehud Danuch and Gilad Miloa. They should live in infamy. And let’s ask Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni whether this is the standard of service provided by her ministry to the Los Angeles Jewish community. Doesn’t Los Angeles deserve better?

Let me make clear that I don’t expect anyone to accept the views expressed by Combatants for Peace as halacha l’Moshe mi’Sinai (God’s Word). Let us argue over them. But why lie? How does that give your side an edge up in the debate? I can only wonder whether this nadir of Israeli demagoguery marks the desperation of the current Israeli government, and its minions like AIPAC, ZOA and American Jewish Congress, to silence debate. Remember that movie slogan: “Be afraid, be very afraid.” I think they are. Times may be a-changin’.

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Air Tran and the Kulezsas: ‘Whatever Happened to Love and Understanding?’

When I first read the story of Air Trans ejecting the Kulezsa family, including their 3 year old daughter Elly, from a flight because the couldn’t get her seated by the time the crew was ready for takeoff, I was amazed. Amazed that an airline would show so little sympathy for a baby and family facing such a predicament. I wrote a blog post expressing my sympathy for the family and expected a good part of the rest of the world would agree. But somewhere along the way, this story got under people’s skin and became fodder for what I call the Reality News grist-mill, the talk radio chattering classes, and the blog armies of the know-it-all set. The Kulezsas were vilified as boors and parents pistol-whipped by their monstrous 3 year old. Elly was characterized as “spoiled brat” and far worse.

This angry response also characterized my post’s comment thread where almost everyone wagged their finger at the victim family or at me for my response to them. Here are some of the choice ones:

“bratty children”
“You’re stupid.”
“This Richard guy is a boor”
“…people like this family…Pathetic.”
“…this family…with their (uh-hmm) whining.”
“parents were…nearly as bratty as that of their child”
“these people are completely self-absorbed”
“two whiny parents”
“…parents…completely tone-deaf to anyone else”
“they’d worked themselves into such a self-righteous frenzy”
“You self righteous, hypocritical, egotistical, pompous jerk”

When I looked at the blogosphere I found almost no posts agreeing with my view. It was distressing. I wondered why other parents of young children or advocates for children weren’t standing up for this family. When I earlier had written a post about a mother thrown off a Freedom Air/Delta flight for nursing her baby, there was a torrent of goodwill for her and of hostility for the airline. I didn’t expect the same response since this incident involved different circumstances. But I expected something far different than what I saw.

I think Margery Eagan of the Boston Herald is onto something when she notes how those Reality News shows have an insatiable hunger for such “human interest” stories that involve drama and confrontation. And as in the dime store novels of old, there’s always a moral angle–a bad guy and a good one. Never any shades of grey. And when they take hold of a story, they have the clamp-down strength of a shark’s jaws. Once you’re in that meat-grinder, you’ll never get out with your reputation intact. From there, it’s only a short hop, skip and jump to eliciting the worst prejudices and judgmental notions from the know-it-alls who take their cues from these shows.

God, now I’ve insulted lots of people who think Air Tran did the world a favor by kicking off the Kulezsas. I’ll get comments about from some saying their negative reaction to Elly’s behavior has nothing to do with what they saw on cable news. Perhaps. I’m not saying everyone who thinks Elly was a spoiled brat takes their cues from Nancy Grace, Sean Hannity or Bill O’Reilly. I’m merely making a cultural observation.

Eagan’s column is so dead-on accurate in capturing the important issues for me I’d like to quote from it:

…AirTran reported it was winning the public relations war by about 90-to-1, and Googling the Kulesza name produced 14 pages of commentary, much of it vicious in its criticism of the family, as if they were terrorists, grave robbers, serial killers or worse - illegal aliens!

“Where are those Taser goons when you need them?”
“Next time bring a tranq(uilizer) gun.”
“Just shove the brat in with the luggage.”
“Can’t anybody discipline kids anymore?”

[Dianne] Williamson [who broke the original story], a Telegram columnist for 13 years, says…she’s never gotten such a lopsided response…That is, “85 percent not only support the airline, but applaud it, and the e-mails were so hostile toward the family.”

It’s incredible when you think about it, really.

…Now Julie and Gerry are national poster parents for New Age leniency - two pushovers in a pod - though we know nothing about them, really.

And little Elly? The conventional wisdom is that America’s Biggest Brat is in urgent need of an exorcist.

Neither the Kuleszas nor their in-laws are talking anymore, at least not to me. Can you blame them? Williamson said the Kuleszas seem like a decent enough family who can totally understand why people are upset with screaming kids on airplanes. But they’re still miffed by AirTran’s elephant-gun response, not to mention their own national evisceration.

I mean, what is this about, anyway? Why this fixation with trashing…work-a-day Joes like the Kuleszas?

What’s with these supposed parenting paragons who call radio talk shows, pompous as can be, so holier than thou, and say things like, “Well I am the mother of five children and I would never tolerate such behavior” . . . “Children must learn discipline” . . . “Mothers today just can’t be bothered.”

Oh shut up, will you please? Shut up!

“I had no idea how many children are the products of wonderful upbringings and would never do anything wrong,” said Williamson, tongue firmly in cheek.

Neither did I, since I see unruly little brats with regularity. But I’m not going to start shooting.

I was just listening to Nick Spitzer’s wonderful American Routes as he played Norah Jones’ soulful cover of the Randy Newman classic I Think It’s Gonna Rain Today.” They ironic lyrics brought to mind my reaction to this whole sad story:

Human kindness it’s overflowing
And I think it’s gonna rain today.

Or to quote another great Elvis Costello lyric:

Whatever happened to peace, love and understanding?

Have we become a society of censorious, trigger finger moralists quick to find fault with others, and quick to anger when our prejudices are questioned or challenged by others? I’m afraid so–at least if this sorry incident reflects our impoverished reality.

Boston’s Channel 7 ran this interview with the Kulezsas (video stream) which is hosted at MSNBC. To give you an idea of how divorced from reality some of the hotheads are–a commenter at my earlier post tried to publish this today. After watching the video you’ll be wondering what planet she’s on (unless she watched a different TV interview from this):

I saw an interview with them on the news, and the kid was throwing a tantrum on air! And they acted like it was part and parcel of being a three-year old.

I didn’t publish this or the rest of the intolerant quote because too many commenters already had used terms like “spoiled brat.” You’ve heard it once, you’ve heard it enough.

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U.S. Condedes IDF Use of Cluster Bombs in Lebanon May’ve Violated Pact

lebanese cluster bomb victimSekneh al-Miri, 12, in intensive care in southern Lebanon after cluster bomb riddled her chest with shrapnel, nearly killing her (Lynsey Addario/NYT)

Those of you who remember my coverage of the Lebanon war will remember the stories about the IDF’s virtual carpet bombing of southern Lebanon with cluster bombs. I called them the “gift that keeps on giving” because of the numerous civilian casualties caused during and after the war by the duds which never exploded on impact. The Times reports that 30 Lebanese have died, mostly children, and 180 have been injured since the war ended. Last summer, Israeli journalists and analysts speculated that such offensive use in civilian areas violated a U.S. agreement Israel pledged to adhere to banning their use in such circumstances.

Well, quel surprise! The U.S. is just now, six months after the fact, getting around to saying: “Well, heck it looks like the IDF kinda did a bad thing there maybe:”

The Bush administration will inform Congress on Monday that Israel may have violated agreements with the United States when it fired American-supplied cluster munitions into southern Lebanon during its fight with Hezbollah last summer, the State Department said Saturday.

Notice the authoritativeness of that “may have.” Of course, what the statement means is that everyone knows that Israel is as guilty as sin of breaking the agreement. It’s just a question of whether we can sidle around it to exonerate the IDF without making the whole episode look like a charade:

Midlevel officials at the Pentagon and the State Department have argued that Israel violated American prohibitions on using cluster munitions against populated areas, according to officials who described the deliberations. But other officials in both departments contend that Israel’s use of the weapons was for self-defense and aimed at stopping the Hezbollah rocket attacks that killed 159 Israeli citizens and at worst was only a technical violation.

Any sanctions against Israel would be an extraordinary move by the Bush administration, a strong backer of Israel, and several officials said they expected little further action, if any, on the matter…

Another administration official said the investigation had caused “head-butting” involving the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs and the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs at the State Department, as well as Pentagon arms sales officials. Some officials “are trying to find a way to not have to call this a substantial violation,” the official said.

So ‘mid-level’ officials, always the ones who do the heavy-lifting and are closest to the action, are convinced of Israel’s guilt. But their ‘betters’ (that would be Cheney &/or Rice and friends), the temporizers and fixers are doing their best to head ‘em off at the pass. And you can be sure that AIPAC’s getting their fingers into this pie as well since leveling sanctions against Israel would be a serious added blow to Israel in the aftermath of her abject failure in the Lebanon war.

So what, if anything, did Israel do wrong and what are the U.S. rules governing their use?

…Officials said that the agreements specified that cluster weapons could not be used in populated areas, in part because of the risk to civilians after a conflict is over if the bomblets fail to self-destruct, as they are designed to do.

The agreements said the munitions be used only against organized armies and clearly defined military targets under conditions similar to the Arab-Israeli wars of 1967 and 1973, when Israel arguably faced threats to its survival, officials said.

Since the end of last summer’s war, de-mining team have located 800 cluster-bomb strike areas, and they destroyed 95,000 bomblets, said Christopher Clark, program manager for the United Nations Mine Action Service in Lebanon.

We found them pretty much everywhere — in villages, at road junctions, in olive groves and on banana plantations,” Mr. Clark said.

Did Israel fire them on populated, civilian areas? Unequivocally yes, besides the sentence above I’ve read other accounts by experts on the ground who’ve found them in people’s homes, on their roofs, front porches, etc. In short, the bomblets fell everywhere–including where civilians, especially children congregate.

You’ll notice how both the U.S. Administration and Israel obfuscate in their reply to the charges:

Sean McCormack, the State Department spokesman, said…“It is important to remember the kind of war Hezbollah waged,” he said. “They used innocent civilians as a way to shield their fighters.”

But the U.S. protocol doesn’t say that Israel is allowed to use cluster bombs if its enemy fights from civilian areas. It says no use of the weapons in civilian areas, PERIOD.

The Israeli defense:

Before firing at rocket sites in towns and villages, the Israeli report [submitted to the U.S. to justify use of the weapons] said, the Israeli military dropped leaflets warning civilians of the attacks. The report, which has not previously been disclosed, also noted that many of the villages were deserted because civilians had fled the fighting, the officials said.

Again, the original protocol doesn’t allow Israel to use the munition on civilian areas if Israel makes an effort, however half-hearted it might be, to remove said civilians from the zone. Further, at a time when the IAF was strafing almost everything that moved on Lebanese roads killing many fleeing refugees in the process, many civilians preferred to stay put and not leave their homes. So merely leafletting a village to warn residents to flee was a cruel joke to those who cowered in fear at the thought of leaving OR staying–seeing both as equally awful choices. Don’t you just love Israel’s presumptuous claim that there were no civilians in those villages because they’d all fled. If that’s so, then how did Israel manage to kill so many civilians in so many southern Lebanese villages during the war? You’ve all heard the names like Qana before. Did Hamas truck the civilians in so that Israel could kill them and give Hezbollah a propaganda coup??

Let’s leave aside the moral or legal discussion here and ask about tactical success. Did use of cluster bombs serve any purpose in the fighting? Even there the answer is no:

Israel has told the State Department that it originally tried targeted strikes against Hezbollah rocket sites, but those proved ineffective.

Heavy use of cluster bombs was tried instead, to kill or maim Hezbollah fighters manning the launchers. Israeli commanders employed cluster weapons because they suspected that they would flee after firing their rockets. Even those attacks failed to stop the rockets barrages.

What this article omits is that at the point when the artillery units realized cluster bombs were ineffective instead of abandoning the tactic, they received orders to fire all their munitions, including the cluster bombs into the south. And instead of it being pinpoint firing on an intended target, it was almost as if the IDF was holding an artillery fire sale at southern Lebanon’s expense, saying: “Everything’s gotta go.” Lest you think I’m levelling a calumny (would that it were so), Meron Rapaport in Haaretz has done the heavy-lifting for us on this one. Here he interviews Y., a reservist in an artillery unit that fought in the war:

Y., a reservist in the same battalion, fired at least 15 cluster shells. “It was in the last days of the war,” he says. “They gave us orders to fire them. They didn’t tell us where we were firing - if it was at a village or at open terrain. We fired until the forces that requested the shelling asked us to stop.”

…[David] Shearer [UN humanitarian coordinator in Lebanon] says it’s clear that most use of the cluster weapons was made in the final 72 hours of the war. “In the beginning of the war, too, there were reports on the use of cluster bombs,” he says. “But only a few. In the three last days, a tremendous amount of them were fired. It’s also hard to know where they were aimed. The dispersion of the bombs is so wide that even if the original target were outside a populated area, many bombs fell amid the houses.”

Y. and S. confirm this appraisal of events. “In the last 72 hours we fired all the munitions we had, all at the same spot,” says Y. “We didn’t even alter the direction of the gun. Friends of mine in the battalion told me they also fired everything in the last three days - ordinary shells, clusters, whatever they had.”

One wonders why, in the last 3 days of a war that was cleary winding down and in which there was little Israel could do to better its position, would Israel decide to fire all its munitions, including cluster bombs? It served no strategic or even tactical purpose since the IDF had admitted the weapons were not effective for the purpose they were used. Can anyone doubt that this was not only an immoral act (as another IDF gunner interviewed in the article says, “that’s terror”), but one that betrays the utterly bankrupt nature of the IDF’s military strategy, such as there was, for this campaign?

As a result of stories such as this:

Israel’s Channel 2 television reported in December that the military’s judge advocate general was gathering evidence for possible criminal charges against military officers who might have ordered cluster bombs fired into populated areas.

So here we have the odd situation in which the U.S. may absolve Israel of any culpability for a heinous, immoral abuse of a U.S. weapon, while Israeli military justice (a notoriously porous source of justice when it comes to punishing IDF soldiers for abuse of Palestinians or Lebanese) is considering criminal charges against its own officers for ordering cluster bombs dropped on civilians. Am I the only one who finds this passing strange? Shouldn’t it be a mark of shame if Bush lets Israel off scot free, while Israel’s military punishes the culprits?? Oh that’s right, Bush has long lost the ability (if he ever had it) to feel any shame.

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Beautiful Forest of Love and Delight

Jonah's Beautiful Forest of Love and Delight

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Peres for President, Guess Who’s for Shimon?

Haaretz headline: Olmert Backs Peres for President Given that Olmert's own poll ratings are sinking into the single digits wouldn't it have helped Peres more if Olmert had come out OPPOSING Peres' candidacy?? Having Ehud's support is a little like kissing a leper. Perhaps the kiss of death? And poor Shimon, he's run for PM and lost; he's run for President and lost to the dullard, accused rapist Katzav. Will he fare any better this time? Shimon doesn't get that people just don't care any more. He once stood for something. He was once at the center of things politically. Now, his candidacy is about as exciting as watching paint peel. Of course, the rightist alternative, ...

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Dick Cheney and Herbert Hoover, One Thing in Common

From today's Maureen Dowd column, Daffy Does Doom (TimesSelect required): Delusional is far too mild a word to describe Dick Cheney. Delusional doesn’t begin to capture the profound, transcendental one-flew-over daftness of the man. Has anyone in the history of the United States ever been so singularly wrong and misguided about such phenomenally important events and continued to insist he’s right in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary? Yes, Herbert Hoover. But the difference is that Herbert Hoover was a moderate Republican who actually cared about the people whom the Depression dispossessed. He just didn't have a clue what to do about it. Cheney doesn't even have that (being moderate or caring about the victims of ...

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Bassam Aramin Mourns: ‘I’ve Lost My Heart, My Child’

Abir Aramin: the wages of war are death...of the innocents I've written two posts about the heartbreaking death (or was it murder or negligent homicide?) of 11 year old Abir Aramin, a Palestinian schoolgirl shot dead by Israeli Border Police recently. But Gideon Levy has published a full profile of Bassam Aramin, her father and co-founder of Combatants for Peace (or as Haaretz more aptly translates, "Fighters for Peace"). In the profile, Levy offers Aramin's own account of his daughter's death in the fullest statement I've read anywhere in the media. I'm choosing to quote a large portion of the concluding section because it is so poignant, so ...

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Ry Cooder’s ‘My Name is Buddy’ to Be Released March 6th

I first met Ry Cooder's music in 1969 through my best friend in high school, Rina Slavin, who had some of the best cultural taste around. She had an amazing Skip James record and whenever I heard that high-pitched wail of a voice it sent shivers up and down my spine. Rina also owned Paradise and Lunch and it was a revelation. I'd never heard anything like it. It was love at first hearing. I've gobbled up just about everything Ry's done since as well. ...

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