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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Archive for August, 2010

Major IDF Manuevers in Northern Israel Threaten Lebanon, Syria, Iran

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

idf military exercise

TV news video of armor moved to northern Israel during military manuevers

Israel has decided to rattle sabers after losing one of its senior officers in the tree-trimming incident on the Lebanese border. In a story that was removed from the IDF website, it published an article about the maneuvers, reporting that the army is engaged in a major exercise all the way from the central Beit Shean region to the far north, with troops and armor rolling down Highway 71.

Haaretz is also reporting a related escalation by Israel regarding armored vehicles sent to Shebaa Farms, one of the most highly disputed pieces of territory outside Jerusalem.  The Lebanese army was placed on high alert as a result.

A word of explanation before I cite Debka, a source I view as having no credibility whatsoever. Since I don’t have access yet to the original Maariv story and Debka seems to be recapitulating it, I’m going to quote Debka. It will likely be the only time I will ever do so here:

Monday night, the Israeli military unusually warned citizens and motorists they would have to put up with heavy military traffic on the northern highways leading from the center of the country to the shores of the Sea of Galilee, Upper Galilee and the Golan – in particular Route 71 linking Afulah and Bet Shean, and Routes 90 and 92 which circle the lake and reach the Galilee Panhandle. They were advised to avoid the roads leading up to the Israeli-Syrian and Israeli-Lebanese borders.

Nana has video of a TV news report showing the armor being ferried north.  The video makes clear that one of the tactical presumptions of the exercise is that Israel’s Arab population will rise up in opposition.  It is typical of the assumptions of Israeli Jews that their fellow Palestinian citizens will exhibit more hostility than they ever do.  And this plays nicely into the current level of paranoia within Israel toward the Arab minority as ginned up by the Shin Bet and other state organs.

The IDF exercise is certainly related to the border incident, and the follow-up threat by the U.S. Congress that it would cut federal funding of the Lebanese military. Today, Iran followed up on the U.S. threat by committing to fill any financial gap caused by our pull-out.

In my post about the tree-trimming incident, I warned that this could impact Israel-Iran relations, which themselves are a tinder-box. If you add Syria to the mix and the possibility of regional war, this is a place to which neither Israel nor the U.S. can want to go. The fact that the Israel lobby sycophants in Congress decided they had to rattle their sabers indicates that they are near-sighted eedjuts who can’t see beyond a millimeter in front of their faces as far as the policy implications of their braggadocio.

If this were the Knesset or the Israeli government, I would say such provocation might be deliberate since many in Israel WANT a war with Iran. But I don’t believe most of Congress (with the exception of the Ledeenites & other neocons there) want to provoke such a war. So they are merely ignorant fools, but not deliberate war provocateurs. But if there is an attack none of this will matter. Wars can just as easily be started inadvertently as deliberately.

According to an Israeli source who claims to have inside information about this operation (and which I could not independently verify), we should watch to see whether all this equipment returns to its home base or is maintained in border staging areas.  If it remains on the border, then we should begin to wonder to what possible use such equipment could be put in the event of an Israeli attack on a neighboring country.

To Obama and everyone else who has half a brain in their head (including a few in Israel I hope), I say: “Stand down.” Get the troops back in the barracks. Send the tanks home. Stop rattling sabers. If not, I will point out that most specialists in the subject believe that Nasser never intended to provoke the 1967 War. Yet his bellicose rhetoric played a role in bringing on hostilities (though of course the Israelis attacked first). There must not be military hostilities now under these circumstances.

Chances are Israel wishes to threaten the Lebanese. Haaretz reports that the IDF has already threatened to assassinate the Lebanese commander who ordered the sniper fire which killed the Israeli officer on the border. These manuevers are a follow-up to that. They also serve to remind the Syrians that Israel can do plenty of damage to them. And there can never be a downside in Israeli domestic politics from issuing menacing threats aimed at Iran. So the Highway 71 military exercise is a sort of Israeli Trifecta. Mass the troops and hopefully throw the fear of God into your three most potent neighbor/enemies.

J.J. Goldberg, Mahmoud Darwish: Brothers from Another Planet?

Sunday, August 8th, 2010
mahmoud darwish

Palestinian national poet, Mahmoud Darwish


j.j. goldberg
Forward’s former managing editor, J.J. Goldberg

Now here’s a slightly scary thought: the tired, liberal Zionist newspaper editorialist could be a brother of Palestinian national poet, Mahmoud Darwish.  Food for thought?

Arab Spy Arrests, ‘Payback’ for Decades-Old Shin Bet Murder Scandal?

Sunday, August 8th, 2010
marsawah arrested

The Magdal Shams 3 brought to court

An Israeli source brings me a fascinating take on the recent arrests of two Golani Druze and an Israeli Palestinian for allegedly spying against Israel on behalf of Syria.  The Shin Bet arrested two residents of the village of Majdal Shams and one from the Triangle charging them with espionage.  The case has all the markings of the trumped-up charges for which the security services are known, especially regarding Arab victim/suspects.

Here is how Haaretz described the case:

Three residents of villages in northern Israel were indicted by a Nazareth court on Thursday on charges they allegedly spied for and passed information to agents in Syria, authorities revealed after a gag order was lifted in the case.

…Fada Sha’ar, his father Majd Sha’ar and Mahmoud Masarwah were to be charged with spying, contact with foreign agents and passing information to the enemy. They were allegedly in contact with a Syrian agent, Madhat Salah, to whom they passed information and video footage of submarine activity off the coast of Haifa.

The most serious charge to be brought against them was that they allegedly planned to kidnap from Israel a man whom they mistakenly believed to be a Syrian pilot who defected to Israel in 1989. They allegedly planned to render him unconscious and return him to Syrian hands.

…According to the charges, Madhat Salah used to live in Majdal Shams, a Druze village in northern Israel where the Sha’ar family lives, but moved to Syria. He allegedly has been friends with Mona Sha’ar since childhood. The suspects knew that Salah was working for the Syrian government and had contacts with Syrian intelligence agents. They were in touch with him starting in either 2007 or 2008, at which point they began to meet and be in contact with him and pass information that could potentially harm Israel’s security, prosecutors said.

…The defense attorneys deny that Salah has any connection to Syrian intelligence agents. They say that he worked for a branch of the Syrian government which was in charge of villages in the Golan Heights region, which is where the border between Israel and Syria is located.

My source knows Masarwah well over many years and attended some of the hearings in this case, which is how some of the following information was secured:

Mahmoud Masarweh, 62 years old, is a political activist and trade unionist from the town Baqa el Gharbeyah. He is a construction worker, has heart disease & diabetes, and spent 20 years in prison for various charges. He was active in the Trotskyite Workers’ League in the 1970s where he was an activist on behalf of poor workers all over the Tel Aviv area.

His first arrest was a young high school student before 1967. He tried to cross the border to Gaza, which was than under Egyptian control, and was caught and sentenced to 5 years in prison.

In 1972 he was arrested and jailed for 6 years with about 50 members of the “Red Front” (led by Daud Turkey and Udi Adiv). It was an attempt to form an Arab-Jewish common leftist anti-Zionist front. They were called somewhat hysterically in Israel’s media “the espionage and terrorist network” even though neither espionage equipment or implements of terror were ever found.

kav 300 attacker led away before murder

Famous image of a Kav 300 attacker led away alive before his murder at hands of Shin Bet (Alex Levac)

He is most notorious for a case of “spying” for a British newspaper published by the ‘Militant” fraction in the British Labour Party. He was working as a security guard near a recycling facility for some years. One of the benefits of this work was that he was built a marvelous collection of books that other people threw into the garbage. One day, however, he found a real treasure amid the refuse: unshredded internal documents of the GSS summarizing the internal GSS investigation into the “Bus 300 affair.”  After a terror attack, two militants were captured alive and subsequently beaten to death with a rock by a Shin Bet agent at the scene.  The scandal led to the establishment of the Landau Commission, which allegedly limited the measures of torture that may be used by the GSS interrogators. [Leonard Fein correctly adds that several senior Shin Bet officers also objected to the murders and compelled the agency's chief to order an investigation by the state attorney general.--R.S.].

Mahmoud leaked the documents to the newspaper, which published a series of articles about the case and torture in israeli jails.  As a consequence, he was arrested, tortured untill he “confessed” not only to leaking of document but also to an arson that didn’t happened.  His lawyer brought testimonies from the fire brigade that there was no arson, no attempted arson, or any evidence of any materials in the area which could be used for arson.  He was convicted of  espionage and arson, and sentenced to 10 years (the appeals court reduced his sentence to 7).  Since then, the GSS really hates him [because the documents revealed the cold-blooded execution of the terror suspects, in effect one of the first targeted assassinations!].

During the first Intifada (1988-89), Masarwah was active with another group that tried to revive Trotskyism in Palestine under the leadership of the Militant (which were at the time in the British Labor party) – and was unlucky to be this time sentenced for “spying” for the British paper. The latter forged an international campaign in his defense at the time – including some rock group issuing a special musical record in his honor.

After serving another 7 years in prison, Mahmoud settled for the more “mainstream” activism in the Palestinian left through Abnaa elBalad.

He was arrested several times afterwards for short periods (tortured, interrogated, but never succeeding in framing him).  It seems now the bad guys are trying their luck one more time.”

It is a common practice of Israeli state prosecutions to create major media “exposure” of their victims at the day of indictment. The accused are brought to the court after spending a month in complete isolation and are dragged to the court room before a herd of some 20 photographers, with neither their consent nor knowledge of what they should expect [aka the "perp walk" here in the States]. If they try to speak and deny the accusations, as Mahmoud tried, they are told to stop and dragged away.

I was together in the elevator with a defense lawyer and a Galey Tzahal reporter, who asked the lawyer what he though about the case. The lawyer was circumspect and said that he didn’t have all the evidence and other documents so couldn’t very well say. Then the journalist (from quite a mainstream media outlet) interrupted him and said that he had a lot of experience in covering security trials, and from what he saw of the evidence it was clear to him that it was a case of a “mountain giving birth to a mouse.” Anyway, Mahmoud Masarweh is old and sick , and the only fear is that he’ll not last until the charges and case go away.

My Israeli source also adds this information about the other two suspects and conditions under which they were detained.  A lot of this will be familiar to readers who’s followed my reports on the interrogations of Omar Said, Ameer Makhoul and even Chaim Pearlman:

For the first 2 weeks of their detention, the arrestees were prevented from meeting their lawyers.  Only after the Supreme Court decided in the case of a Jewish settler terrorist that such an order abuses the detainee’s human rights, were these three permitted to see a lawyer.

The arrestees deny all the accusations and unlike Shin Bet claims in the Makhoul case, they didn’t “confess” during interrogation.  All three state that they were tortured in the usual GSS’ ways: they were interrogated for long hours, deprived from sleeping, cuffed to a small chair in a painful position etc….

The wife of one of the arrestees was detained “for interrogation” and was released in an agreement that the other detainees would not seek bail.

The first two arrested are a 58 year-old father, Majed E-Sha’er and his 27 year-old son, artist Fidaa from Majgal Shams in the occupied-Syrian Golan heights. The father is a known social activist in the Golan.  He was arrested for three years back in the 1970s when he was a youth, but after being released he chose to be involved in peaceful social public action.

The son Fidaa is a music graduate student who studied for his BA degree in Syria, and pursued graduate studies in France, where he used to live until the arrest.  He was arrested at Ben Gurion, while coming to visit his family during the summer. He is accused of meeting Syrian governmental officials.  To which, he replies that as he was living in Syria for five years during his studies – with the full knowledge and permission of Israeli security services.  He couldn’t avoid any connection with Syrian officials.  The alleged Syrian intelligence agent, Madhat Salah, is the official responsible for the special status and scholarships for Golan Height students, a person one can’t avoid meeting for procedural reasons.  Further, Salah is a former resident of Majdal Shams (Fidaa’s hometown), was a neighbour and is a close family friend.  Even under Israeli security law it is not illegal to meet with specific individuals in the course of everyday, necessary business as was true in this case.

So there you have it.  Another likely Shin Bet frame-up, inelegantly and unartfully contrived by the bullies-in-charge of Israel’s security.  One suspect is old, seriously ill and guilty of morally embarrassing the agency decades ago.  The other is a traditional Arab musician guilty of nothing worse than pursuing graduate studies in a country considered an enemy by the secret police, and coming home during the summer to visit his family.

The Shabak’s purpose in all this: to warn young Druze in the Golan not to travel to, visit or study in Syria; and to further pay back a pain in the secret police’s neck.  As I’ve written here, these guys’ memories are long, as are the grudges.  You never pay your debt to them.  Once you finish paying one debt by jail time they’re plotting the next time they can get you.  Further, this prosecution is an implicit swipe at Syria and its president, who has been unsuccessfully pursuing a peace offensive which Israel has studiously ignored.  It’s no accident that Syria’s foreign minister took the unusual step of directly denouncing the prosecution since he’s aware of the tendentious political agenda that lies behind it.

I suppose death might end the vendetta against Masarwah, and if they treat him as they have in the past, any one of his serious ailments could kill him.  But would the Shin Bet care?  Not likely.  Even if he died on their hands, Israel maintains a special secret court that adjudicates all offenses committed by agents.  So either the individual would get off scot-free or in the unlikely event of being punished, we would never hear about it unless it served the agency’s interests to notify us.

A final irony of the case is that Ehud Yatom, the Shin Bet spook accused of actually stoving in the heads of the Kav 300 accused with a rock, upon orders from the Shin Bet chief and with the approval of Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, was pardoned for the murders. In an interview, he boasted about his role:

“I smashed their skulls,” on orders from GSS head Avraham Shalom, and “I’m proud of everything I’ve done.  Only clean, moral hands in Shin Bet (GSS) can do what is needed in a democratic state.”

Ariel Sharon rewarded him in 2001 by naming him counter-terrorism chief. Even the Supreme Court blanched at this and nixed the appointment. Apparently, they thought the idea of murdering Arabs in cold blood as a qualification for high government office was a bit much.

Tony Judt, May His Memory Be for a Blessing

Sunday, August 8th, 2010
tony judt

Tony Judt z"l 1948-2010 (John Rifkin)

Today, we have lost one of the bravest public intellectuals engaged in the Israeli-Arab conflict. I just noticed in his NY Times obituary that he was born in that seminal year, 1948, an irony that undoubtedly would not have been lost on him.

During Operation Cast Lead, he was one of the first of the “celebrity intellectuals” Jerry Haber and I approached to sign a petition we organized. He signed willingly.

I remember his famous (or notorious depending on one’s point of view) op-ed in the Times in which he advocated a one-state solution. I thought his essay at the time a bit Pollyannish, and I still maintain profound skepticism of the notion. But it reminds me of the old saying about democracy: it’s the worst form of government–except for everything else. Unfortunately, the bankruptcy of the present political situation renders the two state solution ever less credible. And Tony Judt looks smarter every day.

I first learned he was ill when I invited him to speak at an event I planned about Israel-Iran relations last December. The news came as a deep shock. I can only articulate my profound respect via the Jewish form of honoring the dead: zichrono livracha (“may his memory be for a blessing”).

Coming Soon to Shabak Dungeons Near You

Friday, August 6th, 2010

The profile of Tikun Olam published yesterday:

Ha-Ir Tel Aviv Magazine – Issue 1557, 6 August 2010 p. 42
Translated by Dena Shunra of http://hebrew.shunra.net/

Coming Soon to Shabak’s Dungeons

The blog published by Richard Silverstein – an American Jew from Seattle – is one of the few places the long arm of the State of Israel has not yet reached. That explains why he was the first to unveil the Anat Kamm case, to publish the full name of “Captain George” [Doron Zehavi], and shed light on many affairs covered by gag orders. For more information about our lives – step into the blog.

by Lital Grosman

Captain George’s New Job: Arab Affairs Consultant to the Commander of the Jerusalem District – read the headline of the news item published in Haaretz last Wednesday. ‘Captain George’ is the alias of a former interrogator [Doron Zahavi] in Intelligence Unit 504, responsible for the interrogation of Mustafa Dirani after the latter had been abducted and brought to Israel.

Years later, in a lawsuit Dirani filed against the state, that same ‘George’ was accused of having sodomized him (inserted a baton into his rectum) and that on another occasion, he had instructed another soldier to rape him. Despite his denials of the claims against him, George left the army following that case, and entered into service with the police. Since then, his name has been gone from the headlines. The trial about him has been going slowly since Dirani was returned in 2004, in the Tannenbaum prisoner swap.

But George’s comeback last week rekindled public interest in him: the day after the news item was published, a complaint surfaced, filed by the Association of Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) several months ago, relating to a threatening interrogation in his current position. However, despite the fact that this new [police] job is not done under the cover of the same darkness that characterized his previous ones, and despite the fact that the official complaint contained his full name (as did several of the comments on the Haaretz news items) – the publication of his full name was prohibited by three separate gag orders. The violation of such an order could lead to a detention cell.

Richard Silverstein, an American Jew from Seattle who writes the Tikun Olam blog and is not bound by Israeli law, stepped into this vacuüm. In a post that he published that very day he exposes George’s full name. “[T]hank God we’re not bound by any such nonsense,” writes Silverstein at the end of the post, “and [so] we offer (and here he uses the real name of Captain George) to the world in all his glory.”

But that was not the end of the story. A few hours later two additional bloggers, Israeli ones this time, Yossi Gurvitz and Itamar Shaatiel, also published posts revealing the true name of “George”. The path from here to the publication of the full name throughout the Internet was short, which apparently displeased some unnamed people. Several hours after the publication of those posts, a denial-of-service (DoS) attack begin against the three sites…Silverstein’s blog underwent the most intense attack: it was brought down again and again, over a period of several days. As of Monday morning, reports Silverstein in a phone interview from his home, the attack has eased. He adds that despite speculations on the Internet that the attack may have been by establishment persons, he himself believes that it was carried out by readers of Ultra-Orthodox Rotter website’s Scoops forum (Silverstein’s site collapsed a few hours after someone, acting on his behalf, published a link to the post in question in that forum.)

It should be noted in this context that an attack of the type carried out against Tikun Olam does not require extraordinary technological means or knowledge. It should also be noted that Silverstein was not really upset by it. “If you write a political blog about Israel, you have to expect a certain degree of hostility,” he says. A few hours later he would find the following comment on the Rotter forum: “I am for erasing Silverstein from the world, at the hands of a Mossad assassination squad.”

The Last Journalist

Despite the fact that his blog has been in existence for seven years, until several months ago the number of his readers in Israel was small. The turning point was when Silverstein became the first to publish the full details of the Anat Kamm case. As you will remember, when Kamm was arrested on suspicion of security offenses in December 2009, a sweeping gag order was applied to the entire case, which prohibited even the publication of the fact that there was a security case to which a gag order had been applied. That’s how, for months on end, despite hints on the Internet and even graffiti asking “Where did Anat Kamm disappear?”, the details of the case were unknown.

That is, until Silverstein got into the story. “Someone in Israel contacted me, and informed me about what was going on with Anat Kamm,” he says. “He said that there was a gag order, and asked if I wanted to publish it. I believe in the principle of transparency in democracy – in Israel, too, which I see as a partial democracy today – and I think that the public in Israel has the right to know things that are blocked by censorship or by other security organizations. For this reason, I leapt at the chance to do this, although I knew that many powerful people in Israel would be angered by it.”

Details about the case were actually first published on the Indymedia website, but they were soon removed, at Kamm’s own request. On March 14th, Silverstein first published the suspicions against Kamm, the fact that she had been arrested, and her full name (incidentally, he deleted it from the news item after hearing that Kamm did not want it to be made public, but her reinstated it 48 hours later). Several days later the story made it to JTA (Jewish Telegraphic Agency), which published it, and it’s at that point the matter became a massive snowball that would not stop. Eventually, it led to an Israeli court on April 8th, instructing that the facts of the arrest could be published.

Silverstein has worked as a fundraiser for the Jewish community. He holds an M.A. in comparative literature, and his specialty is Hebrew literature. In the past he also started working on a Ph.D. on this subject, for the purpose of which he moved to Israel for two years, in order to study at the Hebrew University.  He did not complete the degree.

Doubtless, his role in the Anat Kamm case upgraded his status. The case made it clear to Silverstein that he had a start-up available: a blog which could fight against the Israeli cloak of secrecy, thanks to the fact that he was not subject to local censorship. “For years in writing the blog, most of what I did was to read Haaretz and Ynet in English and reports about Israel in the New York Times, and I’d write my opinions about what they said,” he tells us. “My blog was not original, in the sense that I would not create stories, but primarily respond to them. But now, this has changed.” Today, relying on Israeli sources who contact him, and especially one central contact person – about whom Silverstein is only prepared to say that he is “not a public person, but one who has access to a lot of information, and who wishes to lay low” – is responsible for the exposure of a long line of important cases.

The next “initiative” after the Kamm case was born of a report aired on Channel 2 TV on April 19th this year, on the eve of the Day of Remembrance [Israel’s Memorial Day]. The story was about a Mossad agent [Immanuel Sonino] killed in the line of duty about 17 years ago, whose parents wanted to memorialize him in a school in the city where they lived. “After the story aired, it was disappeared (meaning the link to the news company’s site was removed, as well as the link to it on YouTube). The reason for the disappearance was probably the possibility of identifying the Mossad agent through it, and a sensitive affair he was associated with, despite the fact that his full name was not mentioned – LG). “I saw that as scandalous, and tried to break the seal of secrecy, simply because there was no justification for it. The secrecy in this case was arbitrary and capricious: they do not permit the publication of a news story which wishes to memorialize a person, despite his parents’ explicit desire to do so. So I wrote about it.”

A month later Silverstein again took it upon himself to shed light on a security affair which had been put into darkness, this time, while it was still in progress. The case in question was the arrest of Amir Makhoul, a writer, human rights activist, and member of the Israeli-Palestinian NGO, Ittijah, on suspicion of spying for Hizb’Allah. Tikun Olam’s attention was draw to the fact that since his arrest, on May 6th, Makhoul was isolated for 12 days, without being permitted to see an attorney, while under cover of a gag order (a short time thereafter charges were filed against him, claiming that he had been recruited to the Hizb’Allah by a Lebanese businessman residing in Jordan, Hassan Jajah by name, that he had conveyed a list of six additional potential agents, and had also received software from the Hizb’Allah for use in sending encrypted information. It was claimed that in his interrogation Makhoul admitted to having met a Hizb’Allah agent in Denmark, in 2008, and agreed to collect information about Israel. Makhoul later claimed that the “information” had been extracted under torture.)

“What I found interesting was the claim that Amir Makhoul and Omar Said (who was also arrested in the same case – LG) were allegedly recruited by a Hizb’Allah agent. I invested some research into understanding what the story was about this man, whom the Shabak claimed was an agent (Jajah – LG) and if it made sense the he was. That’s how I found out where he lives and what he does.”

That’s already proper journalism.

“Yes. I had to use the help of many people. Later I also found a declaration by the wife of the alleged agent, in an interview in a Jordanian newspaper, and I translated it [with the help of Rechavia Berman]. We even tried to persuade Jajah to do an interview, but that didn’t work out.

Related to the Prosecution

Another case, whose details have not been made clear to this day, is that of “Prisoner X” – a detainee with no name or identification. An item about his was published on the Ynet [news portal] website on June 13th, but it was removed less than a day later, due to a gag order about the subject. Silverstein wrote a post about it in which he reported the gag order and also discussed the question of the man’s identity, and the background for his arrest. That same day the KamWatch blog published a screenshot of the original news item (which Ynet confirms it had indeed removed due to the gag order.)

“I have no problem with the existence of intelligence agencies, a military, and the whole issue of maintaining secrecy,” explains Silverstein about the limitations that he is trying to pierce, “but I think they should be accountable for what they do. I do not feel that this is happening in Israel. I think they have a blank check to do pretty much whatever they want, and no one thinks that it is important for them to bring forth support for the accusations they make. I may be perceived by certain people as an enemy because I do this, but in a true democracy every person must be accountable for what they do – including spies and the intelligence community. So if the Shabak wants to claim that Amir Makhoul was recruited by Hizb’Allah, let it bring forth its arguments properly, rather than holding him in prison for two weeks, denying him access to an attorney, and extracting confessions under duress. You can talk to the public without revealing secrets. In America, in cases equivalent to the ones that I covered, a great deal more information is presented to the public.”

Do you really think that the situation in the U.S. is much better? Look at how the administration responded to solider Bradley Manning, who leaked documents to the Wikileaks site.

“True, the government is very harsh to him, but he has a certain amount of public support and he has a good attorney. I feel that in Israel, if you want to be Anat Kamm, you have to be prepared to go it alone, with no support network, and to be the target of burning hatred. It’s not that the situation in the U.S. is perfect: it is not. Obama is continuing the Bush polices in many fields, and this is especially jarring in the context of sensitive security issues, such as prosecuting whistleblowers, as in the Wikileaks case. But the difference is that in America there is a system of checks and balances. There are the president, Congress, and the Supreme Court, and they all review each other’s acts, so that even if there is a president like Bush who causes damage for eight long years, Congress can counteract possible harm to the Constitution. In Israel the army stands alone. Who can check it?”

Where do you see this being expressed?

“For example, the inflated number of gag orders and the ease with which the judiciary approves them. In other democracies, the judiciary serves as a check for the security system, and requires that it bring forth proof for its actions. This does not seem to be happening in Israel.

Another example is the first judge who heard the Anat Kamm case, Einat Ron, who had been a prosecutor with the Military Judge Advocate’s Office. That indicates that the relationship between the judiciary and the military is too close. The relationship between the media and the security apparatus is also problematic. The media quotes the latter’s version of events, often without credit and without requiring anyone to be accountable for what they say.

“There were cases of excessive closeness between media and the CIA or FBI in the U.S., too, but many more questions are asked by media about the motivations and action of the agents, not to mention the judiciary’s relationship with these organizations. Gag orders are quite rare here. In the U.S. it is well-known that agents can be fired if they exceed their authority, while in Israel, even if this happens, most likely you wouldn’t even find out about it, but rather might hear some rumor or other.”

I Haven’t Been Subpoenaed Yet

When Silverstein talks about the absence of support networks to aid whistleblowers about security cases, such as in the case of Anat Kamm, he knows what he’s talking about. He has learned it the hard way. Since he started the blog about seven years ago, he has become the target of ongoing defamation, primarily by American Jews who do not like his radical opinions and his harsh criticism of Israel. “Anti-Semite” and “Jew-hater” are only some of the curses he gets in response to his posts. A week ago he even received a death threat, and that was not even on the Rotter site. “Another American blogger had a comment which mentioned my name, along with the statement that I should be killed,” he says. “I think this crossed a line. We alerted the FBI. Considering the world we live in, we can’t ignore the possibility that someone might have the capability and the means to act on this statement.”

“People are also trying to run me out me out of the Jewish community,” he says, “but I do not intend to let that happen. I want there to be room in the community for people with opinions like mine, too.”

Was that the motivation for starting the blog, in the first place?

“I’ve  always felt that the Jewish press in the U.S. has not really given attention to alternative views such as my own, and I wanted there to be a place where I could express them. Since the Israel/Palestine dispute has always interested me, and since I enjoyed writing but never worked professionally as one – when I heard about blogs in 2003, I found them very attractive. They let an individual become his own publisher. But still, I treated it as a big experiment.”

Since that time, the blog became the primary occupation in the life of Silverstein, who is married and has a nine year old son. “I consider my blog to be a full-time job,” he says, “despite the fact that this is not a job where I make a full-time salary. It is something I work at very intensively. I spend a lot of time on the blog, investigating stories. I also spend a lot of time on comments in the blog. The comments are very important to me, as this is a community of readers. I also learn a lot from them.”

There is a constant claim in the comments that you receive money from Saudi Arabia

“Then I will have to take this occasion to disappoint the commenters – no-one finances me. Quite the contrary, I would be delighted if a foundation would do so. Not to mention that blogging is not all that expensive, either.”

After your blog went in a new direction, which set off warning lights with the people in charge of keeping [Israeli] state secrets, has anyone contacted you or put any pressure on you to refrain from publishing certain things?

No one has approached me officially and there has been no attempt to discourage me or call me in for a conversation. Nothing like that. I think that they have to be very careful here, and they understand that if they try and do something, they might exceed their limits. That’s part of the delicate balance here.”

But a few minutes later, Silverstein admits that there is actually one thing which does concern him. “I have not been in Israel since I started writing the blog. I did live in Israel in the past, I studied Hebrew Literature at the Hebrew University for two years, but my son has already started asking why we don’t go visit. I wonder if when I visit Israel, my fate would be the same as that of other people who were not allowed entry, such as Noam Chomsky. I would actually like to come and discuss politics with bloggers whom I’ve had the opportunity to talk to, but not meet face to face. I’d be glad to do that sometime. I have to say that some of the bloggers who write here in the U.S. travelled to Israel and had no problems, so I don’t assume that they would necessarily treat me badly, but we both know that Israel holds a grudge, and that anything could happen.”

Attorney Shlomi Tzipori, who represents “Captain George”, said that he does not wish to respond. Spokespeople for the Jerusalem [Police] District said that they refuse to discuss the issue. Channel 2 News said about the censored report that they do not wish to respond. No response was available from the Rotter site.

This article originally appeared in Hebrew in the Ha-Ir magazine, Issue 1557, 6 August 2010 p. 42

Israeli Rightist Cyber-Vandals Take Down New Israel Fund Site in DoS Attack

Friday, August 6th, 2010

We Won't Shut Up: The democratic camp raises its head (in pride)


It appears that DoS attacks are a new weapon of choice by the Israeli far-right in its ongoing war against Israeli peace activists and human rights NGOs.  Today, the New Israel Fund announced that a new campaign it announced on behalf of free speech and Israeli democracy, Lo Nistom (“We won’t shut up”) had its website felled by a DoS attack.  This of course is a remarkably similar M.O. to the attacks which took down this blog and two Israeli blogs which exposed the identity of accused IDF tortuer, Doron Zahavi.  Also similar is the use of foreign IP addresses to sustain the attack.  In NIF’s case they originated in Australia.  In my case, they originated in Russia, Lebanon and Texas (yes, Texas).  A representative of NIF’s web host confirmed, as my web host confirmed that the complex nature of the attack indicates these were experienced hackers and not script kiddies, as many of my fellow Israeli activists had incorrectly surmised.

Isn’t it a delicious irony that an NGO campaign on behalf of free speech is assaulted by forces of darkness who desire speech only for themselves and their kind, but who would deny it to NIF.  To this I say, we are all New Israel Fund.  An attack on one is an attack on all.  They will not shut our mouths.  They will not silence our voices.  We will have the last word concerning peace and justice and the resolution of the Israeli Palestinian conflict.  Their voice is poison.  It will die aborning in their throats when real peace is someday at hand.

What will the Israeli police do about this attack?  Nothing.  What they always do in the face of far-right provocation.

Newsweek’s Zacharia Returns ADL Award, Rendering Foxman ‘Speechless’

Friday, August 6th, 2010
bloomberg defends islamic cultural center

Mayor Bloomberg deftly seals fate of Islamic cultural center by appropriating America's symbol of tolerance (Seth Wenig/AP)

In the realm of the impossible is the following statement from Abe Foxman upon learning that Fareed Zacharia, noted Newsweek columnist and Muslim-American, would be returning an ADL award and honorarium in protest of the ADL’s position opposing the Cordoba House Muslim Cultural Center near Ground Zero:

“I am not only saddened but stunned and somewhat speechless by your decision to return the ADL Hubert H. Humphrey First Amendment Freedoms Prize, you accepted in 2005,” ADL National Director Abraham Foxman said in a letter to Zakaria. “As someone I greatly respect for engaging in discussion and dialogue with an open mind I would have expected you to reach out to me before coming to judgment.”

Foxman added that the League “did not oppose the right for an Islamic Center or a mosque to be built” but rather “[made] an appeal based solely on the issues of location and sensitivity.”

“Somewhat speechless?”  Abe Foxman?  Not on your life.  He’s just nonplussed that as a master PR tactician, Zacharia has upstaged and embarrassed him.  The leader I’ve called a “Jewish dinosaur” made political calculations that the Center could be killed and that he’d score points with Republican neocons by joining their crusade.  But when Mayor Bloomberg and even New York Orthodox rabbis took him to task, he was left looking mighty foolish, not to mention like the Islamophobe he is.

Foxman is chagrined Zacharia didn’t “reach out” to him before returning the award–did Foxman reach out to Zacharia before insulting him and his co-religionists by taking his stand on behalf of bigotry?  In claiming he supports the Center, just not the location, Foxman is trying to have it both ways.  As Center supporters like Mayor Bloomberg have made clear, the location of the new building is part of the critical strength of its mission to bridge differences and encourage dialogue among religious traditions.  Sure you could put the project in the middle of the East River or Governor’s Island so as not to offend anyone, but what would be the message you’d be imparting?  That we respect Muslims as long as they don’t rock the boat and get in our way.  As long as they retire someplace out-of-the-way they’re OK.

Israel Humiliates U.S. University President Visiting to Oppose BDS

Friday, August 6th, 2010
donna shalala

Donna Shalala, former U.S. cabinet secretary and distinguished university president. As far as Israel is concerned: A-Rab.

This is the type of Alice in Wonderland universe in which Israel currently exists.  Donna Shalala, former Health and Human Services secretary under Bill Clinton and currently president of the University of Miami, participated in an American Jewish Congress anti-BDS dog and pony show in Israel recently.  On leaving Israel, she was stopped at Ben Gurion Airport by security goons who had not received word that she was supposed to have VIP status and not be harrassed as usually happens to other travelers with Arab names like hers.

This incident is rich in irony of course.  But the real kicker and the one that shows the psychological power of denial at work in Israeli officialdom is this:

An IAA [Israel Airport Authority] spokesperson reported in response: “This incident is unknown to us. We performed a thorough check. There was no contact made with us or any other body. No unusual events were registered at Ben Gurion Airport, and we have no idea about this incident, which, from our perspective, never happened.”

Of course there were no “unusual events” registered because it is entirely usual for the security goons to routinely harrass travelers such as Shalala.  You’d think that even if they didn’t have her on a VIP list that just hearing her recount her job title and the tour she had just participated in in Israel would be enough to make the numbskull who questioned her realize his or her mistake.  And why would Israel care about someone LEAVING Israel?  I can understand possibly exercising caution about someone entering the country.  But leaving??  This seems utterly gratuitous harrassment.  Sorry to say it seems to be SOP as far as Israel’s security apparatus is concerned.

I don’t suppose anyone in the Israeli government might want to apologize to her, given that she was there to support their BDS hasbara efforts, misguided as these might be??  Guys, this was your friend, someone who was singing from the hasbara handbook and this is the way you treat her?  Imagine how they treat people they know are the bad ‘uns.

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