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

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Archive for August, 2011

BBC Exposes Abusisi Kidnapping Story

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

Gabriel Gatehouse, a BBC foreign correspondent, has delved deeply into the Abubisi story for a major documentary report (download podcast) on his kidnapping by Israel and trial for alleged security offenses.  I’m proud to say that Gatehouse came upon the story through my own reporting on this.  Though I’m disappointed he wasn’t able to credit my work, or the fact that I secured Abusisi’s Shabak interrogation transcript for him, in the documentary.  Story of my life.

But the important thing is that Gatehouse has gone to all the places that are critical to this story and interviewed almost all the key players in Ukraine, Gaza, and Israel.  This is the sort of hard reportorial work that an Israeli journalist should’ve done long ago.  So credit to the BBC and Gatehouse for doing their jobs as journalists to uncover shady, nasty dealings by the Ukrainian and Israeli security services.

Gatehouse does a good job of probing and dismantling the Israeli narrative involving Abusisi, doing so in that deliberate, careful way good British journalists have.  He also brings new insight to the Gaza portion of this story by noting that Hamas offered strange, halting support to Abusisi throughout his ordeal.  Through his interviews with Hamas representatives, Gatehouse advances a theory I first proposed here a week or so ago, that Hamas actually wanted to punish Abusisi for having the nerve to seek to abandon both Gaza and the group’s blandishments to join its resistance efforts.  This theory is borne out by Gatehouse’s interview with Hamas’ deputy foreign minister who studiously avoids denying (or confirming) that Abusisi was involved with Hamas.  You’d think that a movement that wished to protect one of its citizens would know whether Abusisi was involved with the group or not.  I smell something not quite right.

In my post last week, I suggested that Hamas recruited Abusisi and he refused the approaches or he refused to become more involved than he already might’ve been.  In the prison interrogation transcripts, Abusisi confirms as much and documents specific threats to physically harm himself and his family if he tries to leave Gaza.  Given that Hamas did so, it’s quite easy to believe that Abusisi’s defiance in leaving for the Ukraine would’ve enraged the group leading possibly to its betrayal of him to the Israelis.

It seems quite far-fetched to believe that the Shabak would’ve known much about Abusisi or cared unless they’d been tipped off that a big fish had just gotten away from Gaza.  Though he unfortunately did not include this key part of the theoretical puzzle in the documentary, Gatehouse likely believes, and I agree, that Hamas likely tipped off the Shabak (likely through some sort of intermediary source) that not only was Abusisi a big cheese rocket scientist, but that he knew the whereabouts of Gilad Shalit.

The only problem: Abusisi knows nothing about either.  Which would mean that if Hamas gave him up, they gave up nothing; and that the Shabak has been “had.”  The only problem: a hard-working civil engineer and father of six children stands to pay for this intrigue with several decades of his life in an Israeli prison.  This is an example of the cynicism of this game played by both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  It’s a “great game” except for the individuals caught up in it who are made to pay for the machinations of both sides against the other.

One other addendum to Gatehouse’s piece.  He interviewed Haaretz’s Yossi Melman about the Abusisi case.  Melman appeared to confirm implicitly that there was no legitimate reason for kidnapping Abusisi that corresponds to any publicly announced reason by Israel or any other party.  He does concede that kidnapping Abusisi might’ve been considered in order to use him as a “bargaining chip” to gain the release of Gilad Shalit.  But this presumes that Abusisi, who was trying to flee Gaza permanently, would be a desirable person for Hamas to retrieve.  I’ve seen no evidence of this at all.

Melman also makes one important historical error when he states that Israel has only kidnapped two people from foreign soil and brought them back to Israel for trial.  He is correct when he mentions Eichmann and Mordechai Vanunu as two of those figures.  But he leaves out Alexander Israel, an IDF officer who was kidnapped in Europe in the 1950s and returned to Israel when suspected of passing on secrets to the Egyptians.  The problem was the doctor who sedated Israel on the plane, gave him a sedative overdose and killed him.  This was the same doctor who performed the same function on Mossad’s behalf in the capture of Eichmann.  I’m surprised that Melman would’ve forgotten this story.

I’m proud to say that without reporting and research first published here, this BBC documentary either would never have aired or would’ve looked substantially different that it does.  I only hope it puts pressure on Israel to drop the charges against Abusisi and end this horrible charade.  Please consider supporting my work by clicking that Paypal button in the sidebar.

J Street Taken Leave of Its Senses

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011
j street screenshot

Official J Street tweet

Either J Street has finally taken leave of its senses, it’s social networking staff contains a closet Aipac-er, or someone’s hijakced their Twitter account.  Otherwise, how to explain that J Street’s official Twitter account calls me “disgusting, racist, and crazy?”  Not to mention that the tweet in question comes to the defense of Adam Holland, a notorious pro-Israel blogger who’s taken aim previously at Israeli critics like Max Blumenthal, Stephen Sizer and me of course.  Holland, a trustworthy hasbara mouthpiece “of very little brain,” has never said a kind word ever about J Street in his blog as far as a quick Google search determined.

So how else to explain this? Has Holland or a friend hacked J Street’s twitter account?  Does J Street have a closeted staffer who’s either a friend of Holland or working for Aipac or Andrew Breitbart?

Before I wrote this post, I wanted to give J Street a chance to explain itself so I called a local Seattle staffer.  He in turn inquired of the east coast staff but could not get a response.  I want Jeremy Ben Ami to tell me whether this is J Street’s new style of political infighting.  Because if it is, now we have a better idea of who and what we’re dealing with among the so-called liberal Zionist caucus.

So barring an official J Street response I’m going to have to assume that J Street has officially lost its mind and gotten down and dirty by attacking the rest of the progressive Zionist blogosphere on behalf of Adam Holland, a very good friend of Aipac.

All I can say is that J Street should be careful which dogs it lies with as it certainly will wake up with fleas.

What’s ironic about all this is the origin of the contoversy involved my critique of an Aipac-funded Congressional junket and a further critique of Jesse Jackson Jr.’s Jerusalem Post pro-Israel/anti-Palestinian op-ed.  So if this turns out to be an official J Street tweet they’ll be attacking me for attacking Aipac, which makes a whole lot of sense…unless they wish to be considered Aipac-left or Aipac-lite.  Which is it, I wonder?

I’m not surprised at a thin-skinned liberal Zionists like Gershon Gorenberg, Alex Stein, and outright pro-Israel hacks like Adam Holland lying about me.  But to have J Street join the chorus is, well…astonishing.

To be clear, I’ve harshly criticized (and earlier, supported) J Street in the past, but I’ve never called it anything worse than irrelevant.  This tweet is a significant escalation of the ideological war between the liberal pro-Israel crowd and those to their left.  If this is the way they choose to play I relish it.  It will show J Street baring its fangs, a not so lovely image it would prefer its larger public not see.

Israel’s Channel 10 Tzinor Layla Interview on Eilat Terror Fraud

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011

Israel’s Tzinor Layla (Nightline) interviewed me this morning for their lead story about the Eilat terror attack.  They devoted three minutes to my debunking of the Israeli government claim (rapidly dissolving for those of you who read the post I published a few hours ago) that the Eilat attackers were sent by the Popular Resistance Committee from Gaza.  For those of you who are Hebrew speakers, you can watch it here.  My interview is in English, the rest is in Hebrew.  The story begins at the 1:40 mark.

In case your browser proves balky and refuses to play the video here, you can view it at Nana’s site.

Of Sycophants and Stenographers: Carrying Water for Israel’s Fraudulent Version of Eilat Terror Attack

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

Of shoes—and ships—and sealing-wax—
Of cabbages—and kings—
And why the sea is boiling hot—
And whether pigs have wings.

The Walrus and the Carpenter
Correction: Thanks to those readers who noted my error in originally attributing this verse to Jabberwocky

The journalists which Israeli military-intelligence circles are employing to cover their sins involving the Eilat terror attack and its aftermath are certainly not kings (though they might be cabbages).  And it does seem that when their sources tell them that pigs have wings, they dutifully regurgitate it to their readers without regard for credibility. They are sycophants and stenographers.

What is especially interesting though, is how the very Israeli official sources which claimed the assault was the doing of the Popular Resistance Committee and Hamas are trying to walk the horse back into the barn with new versions which ignore the worst sins of the original claims, while adding new lies, attempting to patch up the flaws of the original.

A case in point is Eli Lake’s report in today’s Washington Times which uses unnamed U.S. and Israeli intelligence sources in painting a picture that is almost totally devoid of truth or honesty.  It seems that certain circles of Israeli and U.S. intelligence here in this country have done an excellent job of coordinating their stories.  The Americans, despite the fact that there is little truth in the claims, seem to be parroting Israeli views quite diligently.

In his story, Al Qaeda Linked to Eilat Bus Ambush, note how the crime Bibi Netanyahu associated solely with Gaza and the Popular Resistance Committee slowly morphes into a crime linked to Al Qaeda:

U.S. government assessment of the incident Thursday concludes that either the Palestinian group Popular Resistance Committees or the Gaza-based Army of Islam (or Jaish al Islam), a Palestinian group sympathetic to al Qaeda, carried out the commando assault and bombing raid that emanated from the increasingly lawless Sinai Peninsula.

The “report” of course offers absolutely no proof that any Gaza entities were involved.  Nor does it mention (the truth) that no Gazans appear to have been killed in the incident.  It doesn’t mention that Israel, normally eager to release identifying information about apprehended or killed terrorists, has done neither.  But it does bring up a new group Israel hadn’t previously blamed, Army of Islam.  The fact that it has been linked to Al Qaeda allows Lake’s sources to move attention from the Gaza angle to the Al Qaeda angle.  Note how the story continues morphing in front of our very eyes:

One intelligence official who focuses on al Qaeda said an initial assessment identified a new group, al Qaeda in the Sinai Peninsula, as a key perpetrator of the attack.

This is the first time in the entire piece that Lake has written something likely truthful.  But notice in doing so, he’s prefaced it with enough information pointing fingers back at Gaza, that Israel’s fraudulent claims regarding Hamas and the PRC don’t trouble the reader’s mind.

Lake then uses hasbara mouthpiece Dore Gold to clinch the alleged Gaza-Sinai connection with even more lies:

Mr. Gold added, “These organizations [Hamas , PRC, Army of Islam, Al Qaeda] all work together, and Sinai is a place where they all meet.”

First, while Hamas and PRC do cooperate, Hamas is at war with Army of Islam and has liquidated its members whenever it could find them.  There is no evidence Hamas has cooperated with any Al Qaeda elements anywhere including the Sinai.  But what Gold has done is to link Hamas and the PRC, wrong accused by Bibi Netanyahu of responsibility for the crime, with Sinai Islamist forces which likely did commit it.  All in the service of obfuscating Israel’s earlier claim which it used to assault Gaza and kill 14 there who had nothing whatsoever to do with what happened in Eilat.

In the following sentence Lake belatedly adds information which provides him a suitable “out” should the lies he’s been fed be exposed by anyone authoritatively:

U.S. officials told The Washington Times there is no confirmation identifying the attacker conclusively.

He follows this with a theory which some American intelligence source passes off as authoritative, containing, at least, more truth than the earlier suppositions the journalist put forward:

One intelligence official who focuses on al Qaeda said the majority of all source intelligence points to al Qaeda.

And note here that there isn’t any mention of Hamas or the PRC or Gaza.  Again, a small element of truth.  But what this claim neglects is that native Egyptian elements were deeply implicated in the terror attack.  And those who carried out the assault may or may not have been influenced or allied with Al Qaeda.  But the origin of the attack was Egypt and not Gaza, and not even Al Qaeda (except insofar as Al Qaeda may be operating in the Sinai together with Egyptian Islamists).

In the following passage, Lake becomes hopelessly embroiled in the thicket of Islamist terror groups, appearing to confuse the Gazan Army of God with Sinai-based terror groups:

Over the weekend, however, as more information was gathered about the attack near Eilat, some Israeli official sources also began to acknowledge that a group known as Jaish al Islam, an extremist Muslim organization, also played a role in the attack.

If confirmed, the involvement of a new Sinai-based al Qaeda group would be yet another extremist group aligned with the goals of the terrorist group behind the Sept. 11, 2001…

Note that no Israeli source has previously blamed Army of Islam for the Eilat incident and that neither Lake nor his source offer any specific evidence to support the claim.  This is the first we hear of Army of Islam in connection to the incident.  The reason it’s been advanced is that there have been claims made over the past year or two that Army of Islam has made alliance with Sinai-based Islamists.  By introducing the red herring of Army of Islam, Israel walks the horse back to the barn.  We’re still blaming someone in Gaza for the attacks, but now we’re at least blaming a group that has some connections to the real probable perpetrators, Sinai militants.

Israeli intelligence continues trying to walk the horse that Bibi let escape from the barn back into it, by reducing the role the PRC played in the attack.  Now instead of being the authors, they are merely the scouts.  As such, Israel’s assassination of three of the PRC’s leaders can still be justified:

The intelligence official who said there are signs of a new Sinai-based group said initial assessments indicated the Popular Resistance Committees‘ role was limited to providing advance scouting of locations for the attack.

PRC was clearly involved, [but] they were not the brains or the brawn of the operation. They were the scouts,” the official said. “Because the PRC squawked after the operation, they became an immediate target. It is not an unjustifiable reaction.”

There is one major problem with this claim.  The PRC is Gaza based.  It doesn’t operate outside Gaza.  How and why would it have provided “scouting” expertise to Sinai based terrorists seeking to assault an Israeli city 100 miles from Gaza?  Wouldn’t you think the Sinai-based Egyptians planning the attack could’ve done a better job of scouting Egyptian border posts and Israeli security presence in the region where the attack took place?  How could the PRC have helped in any credible way?  No, the explanation is lame.  What it does do though, is offer Bibi a fig leaf to justify his mendacious claim of PRC authorship of the attack, which he used to justify the killings (which also killed a 2 year old boy).

Now let’s pass on to a new report from Avi Issacharoff, Haaretz’s Palestine affairs correspondent, which also adds elements of truth to the mix in the form of information that may actually be truthful but was previously withheld.  Nonetheless, the information is presented solely from the IDF perspective and its purpose is solely to exonerate the IDF of blame for the terror incident and the failure to prevent it.

Issacharoff begins with the Al Masry Al Youm report that Egypt has identified three of the terrorists as Egyptian.  What Haaretz doesn’t say, and the IDF knows, is that almost certainly ALL the attackers were Egyptian.  That is why the IDF has not released any information about them, contrary to all previous military practice after terror incidents.

His report rather nonchalantly reveals the potentially incendiary information I reported yesterday, that an IDF force entered Egyptian territory in hot pursuit of the attackers, and that the IDF engaged and killed real Egyptian military who were trying to apprehend or kill the actual terrorists.

In this passage, the Haaretz reporter actually mischaracterizes the Al Masry report:

An Egyptian security vehicle making its way to the area of the incident was also attacked, but it remains unclear who was responsible.

The Egyptian newspaper clearly indicates, as I reported yesterday, that the Israeli helicopter and the terrorists fired on the security vehicle.  At any rate, I’m certain the IDF’s helicopter proved a serious obstacle to apprehending the bad guys.

In this passage, the IDF is doing more of the walking the horse back to the barn which I described in Eli Lake’s report:

Egyptian intelligence is also aware of cooperation between members of the Popular Resistance Committees in the Gaza Strip with Islamist activists operating in the Sinai desert.

Actually, I’d never heard of such cooperation (perhaps they’re confusing Army of Islam with the PRC) and this would appear to be IDF spin made up out of whole cloth meant to justify the murder of the three top PRC leaders which Bibi crowed about within minutes of the conclusion of the Eilat attack.  In fact, an Israeli who knew the PRC’s leader wrote it was unlikely he was able to mastermind such a complicated operation.  The source told me his relatives and friends could not believe this attack was something the PRC was capable of.  Probably because it wasn’t!

Another purpose of Issacharoff’s stenographic report on the IDF’s behalf, is to answer the Shabak’s angry outburst just after the attack, in which it claimed it offered the IDF a specific terror threat indicating the time and place of the attack.  In Anshel Pfeffer’s earlier report Shabak said it told the IDF the attack would come during the day but that IDF rejected the notion that terrorists would attack by day.  Note how the IDF appears to lie about the Shabak’s warning & parries the intelligence agency’s attack:

The [Shabak] intelligence warning had been an old one, and even though it was still pending, it had not become any stronger during the days before the attack.

The IDF decided, however, to step up preparedness in certain border areas, including the area where the attack took place.

The Shin Bet security service in its assessments thought any attack would come at night

Here the IDF seems to contradict itself:

One scenario posed an attack during the day, but the target was expected to be the hundreds of workers building the border fence, and not civilian vehicles.

This is possibly the most self-serving, but truthful of all the content of this article:

The attack ultimately proved contrary to the most likely scenarios.

Why doesn’t Issacharoff simply admit the IDF was wrong and failed, which is the truth?  Instead of saying that it was the terrorists’ fault the attack wasn’t foiled because they didn’t adopt the “most likely scenarios.”  Why can’t the IDF include within its operational scope the “unlikely scenarios,” such as the one the attackers ultimately used, which fooled the Israelis so badly?  I suppose it’s hard for a country so proud of its military to admit that a bunch of terrorists appear to have run rings around it.

From the IDF portrayal offered by Issacharoff, it appears the Israeli army believed (and perhaps still believes) that actual Egyptian security forces participated in the terror attack, (another incendiary claim).  This account is truly bizarre and hard to credit, and certainly raises lots of questions:

The incident involving the Egyptians occurred later in the afternoon, while the chief of staff and the defense minister held a press conference north of Eilat. An IDF force rushed to an area where there had been more shooting. Egyptian soldiers were seen holding three men at gunpoint.

When the Israeli officers asked for the captives to be handed over, an Egyptian officer claimed that they were Egyptian soldiers. At some point the troops came under fire, and a sniper killed the anti-terrorist police officer Pascal Avrahami.

IDF and Egyptian soldiers were facing each other along the border and they came under fire from one of the groups of terrorists. They were neutralized by the soldiers. The incident ended about 6 P.M.

Were they real Egyptian soldiers?  Or was the Egyptian force fooled by the uniforms into believing they were?  Whose troops came under fire?  I presume the Israelis.  Who fired at them?  The Egyptian military?  Why?

The notion that the IDF and Egyptian soldiers were in the midst of a standoff arguing about who would take the three prisoners, and came under fire in the midst of all this indicates a complete level of dysfunction.

Imagine you’re an IDF officer inside Egypt.  You have the chutzpah to demand custody of terrorists from Egyptian troops on their own soil?  The only reason the Egyptian government isn’t screaming bloody murder over this is that they’re embarrassed they allowed Sinai terrorists to attack Eilat.  Everybody has egg on their faces: Bibi lied and murdered 14 Gazans for no reason; Egypt failed to police its own territory and allowed terrorists to attack Israel.  No wonder neither government is eager to ferret out the truth and reveal it publicly.  Which is why blogs like this exist.

Sorry to be so self serving, but if you support that statement above and believe it’s important to support the crusading work and research presented here, won’t you follow the Paypal link in the sidebar and make a donation?  Anyone wishing to make a mail donation may contact me directly.

Bibi and Barak’s Terror Fraud: Egyptian News Reports Attackers Were Egyptian, Not Gazan

Monday, August 22nd, 2011

Al Masry Al Youm, an independent liberal Egyptian newspaper, reports that Egypt has identified at least three of the Eilat attackers and that they are Egyptian, and not Gazan as Israel has claimed:

Egyptian authorities have identified three of the people responsible for carrying out a terrorist attack in Israel, just north of Eilat, on Thursday, in which seven Israelis were killed, according to an Egyptian security source.

The same source added that one of the men identified is a leader of terrorist cells in Sinai, while another is a fugitive who owns an ammunition factory.

What is intriguing about this story is that it would explain many things which appeared to be discrepancies when the theory was that Gazans were involved.  First, the Israeli bus driversaid the attackers wore Egyptian army uniforms.  Now, it might be possible for Gazans to get such uniforms, but it would be much easier for Egyptians to do so.  Second, the Israelis themselves have disagreed about the authors of the crime, with Netanyahu claiming the Popular Resistance Commitee was behind it and the IDF spokesperson specifically rejecting her boss’ claim.  All of which leads one to believe that the Israelis don’t have a clue who was behind it.  Third, well over half the attackers escaped, which is highly unusual for a terror attack on Israel.  It would be much easier for Egyptian terrorists to melt back into Sinai than for Gazans to do so.  Fourth, it would be a lot easier for Egyptians to mount an attack on Eilat than for Gazans to do so considering how far the latter would have to travel to get to the Israeli city.  Fifth, Israel bombed a house containing the entire top leadership of the PRC, killing three commanders.  If the PRC was responsible for the attack it simply beggars belief for their top leaders to be sitting in the same house together when they should be going into deep hiding.  Sixth, there have been five bombings of the Egyptian pipeline bringing gas to Israel.  Clearly, there are Egyptians who, in the light of the new Egyptian leadership, are not happy with continuing good relations between Egypt and Israel and willing to engage in terror to disrupt it.

All this would mean, if true, that Israel was not only caught with its pants down by the attack itself, but it hasn’t been able to pull them up in the aftermath either.  I can’t recall previously seeing such disarray within the Israeli military-political echelons as a result of a terror attack.  But it would seem to indicate some serious dysfunction.

H/t to readers Mary Hughes Thompson and Chayma for the story and link.

UPDATE: I’m just as competitive as the next political blogger, and to my chagrin I wrote this post last night (18 hours ago) and then queried a few Egyptians I knew about how realiable a source Al Masry was.  Then I waited for a reply, but one never came.  Then I somehow forgot I hadn’t actually published the post.  A comment in another thread by a reader made me realize I hadn’t published this and so did so a few hours ago.  But this delay allowed me to read Yossi Gurvitz’s 972 Magazine post which goes over some of the ground here, but adds a few interesting points I either didn’t know or hadn’t considered, which further buttress the argument that Bibi and Barak are perpetrating a fraud of massive proportions.

First, Gurvitz argues that Israel always releases the names and home villages of captured or killed terrorists within hours of the attack.  For Israel, it is a way of pinning blame where Israel feels it belongs.  But in the case of this incident, not only hasn’t Israel released this information, but IDF spokesperson Avital Leibowitz, when asked for it by Gurvitz, flatly refused to provide it.  Sorry fellas, but something ain’t right here.  Israel is a creature of habit.  It follows a time honored routine in matters like this.  The fact that it’s deviating from SOP is a major “tell.”

Also, Gurvitz notes that B’Tselem has tried to identify, through Gaza sources, who the attackers might’ve been, and has failed.  In addition, any Gaza family which discovers a relative was killed in a terror attack would do the Jewish equivalent of sit shiva.  This would be a public ritual and known to everyone in Gaza.  Yet somehow mysteriously there are no such mourning tents for the dead attackers.

If those of us who smell a rat here are right, then it would appear that Barak and Bibi knew the attackers were Egyptian.  That meant that they had two choices: either commence a major row with Egypt over the attack which might lead to a regional or international escalation which Israel couldn’t afford considering it’s already feuding with Turkey.  Or Israel could blame its usual whipping boy, Gaza and Hamas.  This way it could attack the usual suspects, draw blood, and go home after declaring victory.  Israelis wouldn’t be any the wiser, and Israel wouldn’t have to upset the unsteady apple cart of relations with the new Egyptian regime.

Something ain’t right about this picture.  It is the duty of the Israeli media to start asking questions, and pronto.  We may have yet another scandal brewing here.

UPDATE I: Prof. Joel Beinin, a respected Egypt studies scholar confirms that Al Masry is an indepencent liberal newspaper with no particular axe to grind regarding this story.   He says that Al Masry’s story makes sense and might explain why Israel killed Egyptian security forces by accident.  In other words, I’ve reported earlier that the Israeli bus driver whose bus was attacked near Eilat said the attackers wore Egyptian army uniforms.  Most of these terrorists escaped back into Egypt.  Israel would’ve alerted the Egyptians to this and the latter would have pursued them.  But then you’d have legitimate Egyptian soldiers pursuing attackers wearing Egyptian military uniforms.  It stands to reason that Israeli forces also pursuing the attackers inside Egypt might’ve easily mistaken the good guys for the bad guys.

Interestingly, the killing of the Egyptian soldiers by Israel indicates that Israel violated Egyptian sovereignty in hot pursuit of the terrorists.  It’s common for Israel to do this with weak states like Lebanon, but not more formidable neighbors like Egypt.  This potentially could be a incendiary issue if it got out widely inside Egypt.

UPDATE II: Prof. Ellis Goldberg, an Egypt specialist at the University of Washington, also just confirmed the reliability of Al Masry in the context of this story.  He sent me a link to a new story in today’s Al Masry.  It describes the Israeli incursion which killed the five Egyptian security officers (not three, as the NY Times has reported):

Reliable sources said that an Israeli unit entered (Sinai) at border point 79, in pursuit of the Eilat attackers, and then fought with the Egyptian unit stationed there.  The sources said that an Israeli helicopter intervened in the clash, and fired two missiles, and then hovered vertically over the Egyptian unit and opened fire with two machine guns, killing instantly Captain Ahmed Galal–with nine shots and a number of [missile] fragments–two soldiers, and two others [who] died later.

…A vehicle belonging to the border security forces, was on its way to the scene, and was exposed to a barrage of fire launched by the Israeli force and the armed groups.

What is extraordinary about all this is that Israeli forces not only invaded Egypt to pursue these attackers, but that they engaged with legitimate Egyptian security forces (rather than the militants), and severely sabotaged the Egyptian operation to capture the killers.  This meant that in the gun battle, the Egyptian forces were not just fighting the Eilat militants, but the IDF as well.  Man, this is a screw-up of massive proportions.

It is one thing to kill terrorists who’ve attacked your citizens, this may be justified.  But in this case the IDF has killed 14 Gazans who likely had nothing to do with the Eilat assault, not even the ones Israel has identified as Gaza militants.  Just as many parts of Operation Cast Lead qualify to be investigated as war crimes, I’d say the Gaza reprisals are right up there on the scale of impunity.  Can the leader of any nation get away with attacking another that didn’t even attack it at all?  If this isn’t a war crime, what is?

The Al Masry describes the three Eilat attackers its forces killed and there can be no doubt that they are Egyptian and not Gazan:

The 3 attackers are … the actual commander of the terrorist and takfiri (militant islamists) in central Sinai, one of the inmates who escaped from Egyptian prison during the recent security chaos, and a member of the (Salafist) group “Al-Tawhid Wal-Jihad” who owns an ammunition factory that (Egyptian) security forces discovered last week.

Idan Landau also writes an extraordinarily comprehensive blog post, Conspiracy in the South, about this in which he reaches similar conclusions to Yossi and I.  Idan puts this incident in the historic context of a number of other Israeli operations, among them the 1982 Lebanon invasion, which used equally bogus information to justify themselves.  He also equates the Israeli government’s fake account to the Bush administration’s bogus claims of WMD which led us to invade Iraq in 2003.

Idan also reinforces a post I wrote during the height of the J14 protest uproar.  I reported a story by Shalom Yerushalmi in which he warned the Israeli leadership not to engage in a military adventure that would distract the Israeli public from the very real social issues raised by the tent protests.  If we are all correct, and Bibi and Barak took advantage of the terror attack to escalate it into a major regional crisis, then Yerushalmi’s point will have been proven.  Bibi did precisely what the reporter had warned him not to do.  Masterful (unfortunately only in Hebrew).

As Gaddafi Falls, What Next?

Monday, August 22nd, 2011

As the Gaddafi regime slowly crumbles there are many questions to ask about what comes next both there and in the broader region.  What will be the nature of the government which takes over from the former dictator?  Will it be a tolerant one?  Will it be democratic or at least more inclusive than Gaddafi’s was?  Or will it be a captive Islamist regime?  I ask these questions because it is very important both for Libya and for the region that there not be bloodletting in the aftermath of the soon to be ex-ruler’s fall.  As Ban Ki Moon has said today, he should be handed over to the ICC for trial.  There should be no blood vengeance against Gaddafi, his family, or members of the former élite as tempting as it may be for those who suffered to take it out on them.

syrian resistance

Shoes for Bashar (Bulent Kilic/AFP-Getty)

The Israeli government and the anti-Islamic far-right is eager for Libya to lapse into chaos.  This would prove their certainty at the perfidy of Arabs and Muslims, their certainty that there can never be peace with them.  This will in turn reinforce the Occupation and continue the bloodshed in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

As Gaddafi falls, Tom Lehrer would be singing the lyrics to his song, Who’s Next.  Surely it is Bashar al Assad of Syria.  His opponents are legion, they are brave, they are unarmed, they are fearless.  They deserve freedom.  But they have not raised an army as the Libya resistance did.  The only way to use force to topple Assad would be if Turkey wishes to use its own army to do so, which is questionable.  Certainly, NATO will not get involved.  Barring the use of force, it may take quite a while for Assad to fall.  It would require more of the élite to desert him and even more forceful and popular resistance.

But certainly, in essence, Assad no longer rules Syria.  He has no government that rules the entire country.  There is a restless patchwork of regions and towns in varying stages of rebellion.  As soon as one rebellion comes to a boil, the army marches in, slaughters a few dozen, and then moves on to the next restive town or city.  This is certainly not governing.  So it’s only a matter of time before Assad goes, but go he will eventually.

The question becomes what sort of government will replace him?  As far as Israel is concerned, it’s even more critical that the new rulers emulate the Egyptian model by ruling in a moderate fashion that eschews violence or revenge.  It is also important that the Muslim Brotherhood not take sole control of the country, since that too would play into the hands of Israel’s extreme right.  A new regime would also likely reject Assad’s alliance with Iran, which also would be a positive development for overall peace in the region.

I recently read that Iran is furious with the Hamas leadership in Damascus because it has withheld support for Assad in his hour of need.  In return, Iran has turned off the spigot to the Palestinian Islamist group preventing it from paying salaries in Gaza this month.  Also, Assad recently attacked the Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus in a clear message to Hamas that he was unhappy with its retreat from him.   I don’t believe the Syrian dictator wanted a settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict until Israel gave him back the Golan.  So Assad was an obstacle to I-P peace.

The fall of Assad holds out hope that a new Syrian government might exert a moderating influence on Hamas leading to a potential resolution of the conflict with Israel, though I realize that this is an uncertain prospect.

Israel, in turn, should not expect Syria to be as restrained as Assad was in keeping a lid on anti-Israel sentiment within the country.  A new Syrian government, possibly in alliance with Turkey and Egypt, could exert formidable pressure on Israel to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  This can only be a good thing.

Shabak Blames IDF for Eilat Terror Attack

Saturday, August 20th, 2011

Until yesterday night, I thought I knew or understood most of the facts of the Eilat terror attack.  That changed with Anshel Pfeffer’s article in Haaretz (Hebrew) which reveals a huge fissure developing between Shabak and the IDF over the terror incident.  Israel’s intelligence service claims that it offered a very specific warning which named the date and place of the expected attack.  Pfeffer’s article, apparently based mostly on Shabak sources, says that the IDF upgraded its security presence on the southern border.  But that in significant ways it downplayed the warning and specifically refused to believe the terrorists would mount a daylight attack, and do so near an Egyptian military post on the Israel-Egypt border.

It never ceases to amaze me that in situations like this security forces which have failed miserably in preventing a terror attack have the chutzpah to make a claim like this:

A military source denied Shabak’s claims that the warning had great specificity.  He said that forces were increased in the area to the appropriate level considering the nature of the warning.  The IDF says that while Shabak does “excellent work” the level and quantity of threats emanating from the south in the aftermath of the fall of Hosni Mubarak has vastly increased.

Translation: we did the best we could and the fact that there was an attack wasn’t our fault.  If not their fault then whose?  The plain fact is that if the IDF had taken the warning more seriously and flooded the area with personnel there may not have been an attack.

barak & police sniper

Ehud Barak with police sniper (center) who was killed during Eilat terror attack 30 minutes after photo was taken

But another important issue needs to be considered.  If Shabak did warn the IDF and the army did expect an attack, then that would explain why a special ops veteran/junkie like Ehud Barak raced to the scene of the attack with Chief of Staff Benny Gantz.  In fact, the photo that accompanies this post shows Barak laughing along with the police special forces sniper who died during the second phase of the attack only 30 minutes after the picture was taken (thanks to an Israeli reader for supplying it from the Israeli police Facebook account).  Isn’t it odd that they are laughing after five or six Israelis have been murdered by terrorists?

So the question becomes: did the Israeli army behave with great hubris expecting they knew everything about the terror attack and precisely how to sabotage it and liquidate the terrorists?  And did something go very wrong with the IDF’s prescription?  Certainly the IDF made a grave error bringing Barak and Gantz to the site of the attack before they knew all the terrorists had been removed.  Because the army was surprised when a second attack began shortly after the big cheeses arrived.  This too indicates a major IDF f(#k-up.

Further, it is unprecedented in Israeli counter-terror operations that over one-half the attacking force would actually escape and evaporate into the landscape.  Of course, there were issues involving the Egyptian border and Israel’s unwillingness to violate Egyptian sovereignty.  But the fact that Israel could not prevent so many getting away by sealing the border indicates yet another failure.

Two questions remain: some pro-Palestinian readers here have made the offensive claim that the attack was an Israeli “black op.”  This reminds me of the 9/11 conspiracy theories, which I find wacky and beyond the Pale.  Of course, there is no argument with the fact that the tragedy is a godsend for Netanyahu.  It all but destroys the viability of the J14 social justice movement, which had become a threat to his government.  It diverts attention from Israel’s refusal to offer Hamas what it wants to release Gilad Shalit.  And it deflects from Israel’s refusal to apologize for the Mavi Marmara assault.   It also deflates the PA bid for Palestinian statehood via the UN in September.  Any one of these could be a serious threat to Netanyahu.  But with a distraction of this magnitude, he’s sittin’ pretty.  But that is a far cry from Israel actually collaborating in some way or deliberately allowing its own citizens to be killed.

That being said, what may be possible is that the IDF knew the attack would take place and wanted it to take place, but believed it could find and destroy the operation before it took place.  This obviously turned out to be a horrible miscalculation.

Another strange disjunction I reported last night is that while Bibi Netanyahu almost immediately claimed that the Popular Resistance Committee orchestrated the assault and used this claim to justify killing the group’s top leadership in an Israeli counter-terror attack; Avital Leibowitz, the IDF’s foreign media spokesperson told Lia Tarachansky that the army was NOT claiming the PRC was responsible.  She would only claim that the attack emanated from Gaza.

All of which means that Netanyahu used the Eilat attack as a pretext to gun down the PRC commanders.  In fact, it seems unlikely to me they were responsible because, as I posted a few days ago, if your terror organization is about to mount a major terror operation the one thing you do NOT do is gather your top commanders in the same place at the same time.  It only makes you a sitting duck for a revenge attack.  So I don’t believe these militants were responsible.

The NY Times is reporting that Israel made the “unprecedented” (this language emanates from the Ethan Bronner School of Pro-Israel reporting though the words were penned by Isabel Kershner, who works under his supervision) concession of expressing “regret” to Egypt for Israel’s killing of three (Haaretz reports, five) Egyptian policemen during the Israel operation in pursuit of the Eilat terrorists.  Egypt has replied that the Israeli admission is insufficient.  So that puts Israel in the same position regarding Egypt it is in regarding Turkey, where it is refusing to apologize for the murder of nine Turkish citizens on the Mavi Marmara.

But what is especially interesting is this passage from the Times report:

By removing Mr. Mubarak’s…dependably loyal government, the revolution has stripped away a bulwark of Israel’s position in the region, unleashing the Egyptian public’s pent-up anger at Israel over its treatment of the Palestinians at a time when a transitional government is scrambling to maintain its own legitimacy in the streets.

Mohamed Bassiouni, a former Egyptian ambassador to Israel, called the episode a lesson to Israel about the new politics of a more democratic Egypt, where the ruling military council and aspiring political candidates are eager to stay in step.

“It is very important, because you see public opinion in Egypt,” Mr. Bassiouni said.

He added: “The Egyptians do not accept what has happened, and it means that Israel should take care. If they continue their behavior toward the Palestinians and the peace process, it means that the situation will escalate more.”

What this means is that Israel now faces a formidable foe to its north, Turkey, and a potentially formidable foe to its south.  The days of Israeli impunity, when it could act as it wished in putting down threats to its power or hegemony are rapidly coming to an end.  This doesn’t mean that Israel will end the Occupation any time soon.  But it does mean that Israel’s field of operations is now more restricted than it has been for many years.  There is a populous Muslim democracy to the north whose government and citizens are demanding that Israel respect its interests, especially when they involve murdering their citizens.  And there is a nascent Muslim democracy to the south whose citizens are deeply connected to the fate of the Palestinians especially those of Gaza which it borders.  The times they are a changin’.

Adam Holland: Negro’s Greatest Friend

Saturday, August 20th, 2011

After I wrote the post Whorin’ and Schnorrin’, I noticed that a British Christian pro-Israel blogger, Adam Holland, unleashed a broadside against it.  I’m always prepared for attacks against my work and my views.  But I prefer attacks that at least possess a semblance of coherence.  Holland’s was beyond asinine.  Now before I continue, keep in mind this guy is British and not Jewish.  UPDATE: A reader claims Holland is Jewish and American.  Since Holland has no About page in his blog I couldn’t verify anything about his background.  But he has been on the warpath against Anglican cleric Stephen Sizer for quite some time and written for the British blog, Harry’s Place, which was why I assumed he was British.  If he is American, then his sloppiness and ignorance of his own country’s dialects is even more egregious.

My sin apparently, according to Holland, was that by dropping the “g” in “whoring” and “schnorring” I was mimicing the African-American dialect.  Huh?  First, someone tell me how a Brit knows anything about any American dialect, let alone African-American.  Second, how does the Yiddish word “schnorring” become a racist epithet?  Third, will someone tell this jackass to read my damn post, where he would discover that I derived the phrase from “If I’m lyin’ I’m cryin’,” which is an American southern-country phrase (not African-American at all).  In fact, ALL Americans drop their g’s, not just African-Americans.  Does Holland offer any proof that phrases in which g’s are dropped is solely a trait of African-American dialect?  Of course not.  Why let mere linguist proof or evidence get in the way of a good smear?  A commenter at Harry’s Place suitably mocked Holland’s “excess sensitivity:”

Maybe I’m just a dumb limey, but it sounds like a shocking excess of sensitivity to me. We huntin’, shootin’ and fishin’ gents find all this fuckin’ incredible.

Finally, note this passage from a story in yesterday’s NY Times about the linguistic similarities between Texans George Bush and Rick Perry:

Mr. Bush and Mr. Perry have more than a few surface-level similarities: the cowboy boots, the swagger…They share a…down-home way of speakin’ that’s heavy on the dropped g’s. (On the campaign trail last week, Mr. Perry frequently warned against “over-taxin’, over-regulatin’ and over-litigatin.’ ”).

So either that makes Rick Perry and George Bush African-Americans or perhaps racists if they’re making fun of Jesse Jackson, which is it Holland?

Fourth, the term “whorin’ and schnorrin’” referred to ALL 81 Congress members who Aipac brought to Israel.  Of course, Holland is too lazy to note that I wrote an earlier post attacking the junket in which I criticized all who joined it, not just the African-Americans.  And in the Whorin’ and Schnorrin’ post I continued that criticism of all participants.  So Holland lies when he writes:

Richard Silverstein has published a racially charged attack on Jesse Jackson, Jr. and several other African-American congressmen currently visiting Israel.

It just so happens that only one, Jesse Jackson, wrote an op ed defending Israel and his “fact finding trip.”  Hence my criticism of him in my post.

Holland continues his selective misreading of my post claiming I criticized Jackson for not meeting with Hamas.  In truth, I criticized the fact that both Jackson and the 80 other Representatives on the junket would not meet with the leaders of the J14 social justice movement, Israeli Palestinians, and Hamas.  He conveniently omits the first two groups since it’s a lot easier to tar someone when you can focus only on Hamas.

I laughed when I read Holland accuse me of saying that the Israeli bombardment of occupied Palestine is worse than Jim Crow.  Shall we compare how many African Americans died during the 1950s and 1960s civil rights struggles to how many Palestinian civilians have died during the decades of Occupation?

Holland’s reading of Jackson’s JPost op-ed is equally selective.  He writes:

Jackson’s position takes the interests of both sides into consideration…

Not true.  In fact, the op-ed falsely criticizes the Palestinians for not embracing non-violence when many have, in places like Naalin and Bilin in Separation Wall protests.  Also, Jackson offers not a single criticism of Israel in his piece.  So he only takes the interests of ONE side into consideration.

Holland lingers somewhere in Cloud Cuckoo land in making this claim as well:

…He [Jackson] actually elicited an unconditional proposal on their part to discuss those compromises with the Palestinian leadership.

Equally nonsensical.  What Jackson elicited was an offer by Netanyahu to travel to Ramallah.   That’s it.  No mention of what he would do or say in Ramallah.  What did Bibi actually offer Jackson?  An “unconditional proposal to discuss compromises with the Palestinians?”  Nonsense.  Anyone with eyes in their head who’s read what Bibi’s offered the Palestinians knows it’s gornisht.  Nada, Zip. Zilch.  Why would any Palestinian want to see him in Ramallah?

Now, it appears that my ‘good friends’ at Harry’s Place, ever vigilant on behalf of the rights of the Black Man, has joined the charge, republishing Holland’s rant about my supposed racism.  It’s one thing when an obscure pro-Israel Brit takes issue with you.  But when his friends at Harry’s Place republish this nonsense, a response is necessary.

If you didn’t know much about Harry’s Place, you’d think with their defense of Jesse Jackson Jr’s Aipac-dictated pro-Israel nonsense, that they and Adam Holland were the Black Man’s greatest friend.  But I dare anyone to do a little Google research on Harry’s Place or Holland’s blog. How many posts has anyone written there about African-American rights?  Now, let’s compare that to the posts and references I’ve made in this blog.  Since when do Harry’s Place and Adam Holland, which only defend the Black Man when it’s in Israel’s interests, become the arbiter of African-American rights and interests?

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