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Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

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

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for December, 2011

Shin Bet Restricts Gag Orders, Detainee ‘Disappearances’

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

When I first began writing this blog, a question that always nagged at me was: why?  Why write a blog?  Who does it impact?  What does it change?  Now, these questions don’t bother me as much.  But if I ever needed an answer to them I’d have it now, based on an Israeli security source, who notes that the new Shin Bet chief, Yoram Cohen, has ended (according to his/her claim) the agency’s use of gag orders and “disappearances” of detainees.  The new director appears to have learned a lesson his predecessor, Yuval Diskin, did not: that when they engage in such draconian conduct, they only prove the arguments of their detractors, who say they are among the chief violators of civil liberties in Israeli society.

In other words, the oversight, as meager as it may be, by this blog and many others in Israel of the actions of the security apparatus has an impact.  According to my source (and only time will tell if s/he is right), there will be no more secret arrests of Anat Kamm or Ameer Makhoul or many others whose detentions I’ve exposed here.  Of course, it would even better were these individuals not arrested at all and instead given medals.  But that, alas, is too much to hope for at the present moment.  We have to be content with the fact that the system may have changed incrementally for the good.

Here is an example from the Hebrew press of the way the new system works.  A security arrest is made and announced the same day in the press.  Those arrested are named in the article.

Of course, an agency as set in its ways as Shabak is liable to take a long time to truly change its colors and there may be backsliding to the old ways.  For example and contrary to what the source claims, I’ve noticed cases in which arrestees still either aren’t named or their names are placed under gag order.  Recent examples, are the mosque burning in Tuba Zangariyye and the Peace Now attacks.  In both examples, detainees or suspects were not identified and I named them in both cases.  It’s possible that some of these cases involved the police rather than Shabak and the former may follow different rules.  It’s possible that Shabak is more willing to name Palestinian detainees and less willing to expose Jewish ones.  At any rate, we’ll have to observe for ourselves (and you too will, dear readers) whether they’ve changed their spots.  If they have, we should give credit.  If they haven’t, we will be here to note that as well.

Im Tirzu Participation in Bank Leumi ‘Non-Political’ $500,000 Charity Giveaway Provokes Outrage

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011
bank leumi im tirzu ad

Bank Leumi's ad as displayed in browser of Israeli reader earlier today, promoting charity giveaway

Bank Leumi has trumpeted a 2-million shekel charity giveaway (Hebrew) called “2-Million Good Reasons,” which allows their customers to direct gifts to a variety of Israeli NGOs and philanthropic organizations.  They include groups fighting hunger and promoting animal welfare, Ethiopian Jewry, the environment, youth, the physically-challenged, culture and arts, etc.  But there is one amazing group included on the list, the far-right nationalist, Im Tirzu.  I checked the other groups listed to see if any political groups were included.  There was only one even remotely so, dedicated to protecting the right to privacy.  New Israel Fund and Peace Now, of course, are not on the list.

In fact, the rules of the competition explicitly prohibit groups which have “political purposes,” which should rule out Im Tirzu.  The Bank somehow lists it as an “educational” group since its declared aim of “educating” (read, propagandizing) Israelis about Zionism might seem on its face fairly benign (at least to the average Israeli).  But most Israelis see through the disingenuousness of this claim, which is why so many customers are up in arms.

Interesting to note that Israeli readers of this blog have seen the Bank Leumi ad promoting this competition in my own sidebar (see screenshot displayed).

Today, Im Tirzu’s inclusion has become a cause celebre with articles in many newspapers and hostile comments burning up Bank Leumi’s Facebook page.  A significant number of angry customers are threatening to withdraw their accounts from the Bank.  Unfortunately, Israel does not present as many banking alternatives as the U.S.  There are, for example, no credit unions to which one can turn as the Occupy Wall Street protests urged supporters to do in protest of the role banks played in the housing and economic crisis.

The bank’s mealy-mouthed response was: our customers will vote on who receives funding.  In other words, if you don’t like Im Tirzu, vote for other groups and it will lose.  Which of course absconds from the main question: why is Im Tirzu on the list at all, since it’s the only overtly political group included?  Calcalist quotes the Bank attempting to qualify its rules by claiming that Im Tirzu is non-political because it is not affiliated with a political party or with the government.  That, of course, isn’t how the rules defined excluded groups.  And if it did, why not include NIF and Peace Now, which are also independent groups unaffiliated with parties or the government.  The Bank finally said simply: “They cannot be excluded.”

I am sorry to say that Calcalist reports that the Israeli far-right NGO is currently ranked 7th among all groups in the competition and would receive $10,000 if that was its final ranking.

East Jerusalem Palestinians Must Vote, If Not in PA Elections Then in Israeli Ones

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

Avi Issacharoff has penned another one of his stenographic reports that could’ve been dictated (and very well might’ve been) by the right wing political or military leadership.  In it, he claims that Hamas and the PA will demand that in the coming Palestinian elections Hamas be allowed to run in East Jerusalem as it did in the last 2006 elections.  They will do so, the reporter claims, in order to embarrass the Israeli government since they “know” the far-right Israeli government is unlikely to permit Hamas to run.  In the eyes of Issacharoff and his sources, it’s the obligation of the Palestinians to accommodate the political interests of Israeli nationalists.  Since East Jerusalem Palestinians live in territory annexed by Israel if the latter allowed Hamas to run for office there it would give the Islamist group a foot in the door to gain legitimacy both among Palestinians and within Israeli-controlled territory.

East Jerusalem Palestinians must be allowed to vote for elected PA representatives.  They must have the same choices other Palestinians in the West Bank or Gaza have.  If they don’t, then they are not fully enfranchised.  If that is so, then Israel must allow them to vote in Israeli elections and preferably make them Israeli citizens.  If neither of these alternatives happen, then Israel is an apartheid racist state which offers Jews a superior level of citizenship, Israeli Palestinians a middling level of citizenship, and East Jerusalemites almost no rights at all.

Israel has to decide which option to follow.  Refusing to allow East Jerusalemites to vote is impermissible and should be sanctioned by international bodies if it happens.

New Price Tag Mosque Burning Exposes Identity of Shin Bet’s Jewish Anti-Terror Chief

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011
price tag graffiti exposes shin bet's avigdor arieli

Caption: 'Avi Arieli--the Man!' Price tag graffiti mocks Shin Bet's Avigdor Arieli

Jewish terrorists rolled flaming tires into a West Bank mosque (Hebrew) in an attempt to burn it down.  It was the second such price tag attack on a Palestinian mosque.  They attacked the village of Burkina (or “Brukin”) near Ariel and also scrawled graffiti on its walls mocking the director of the Shin Bet’s Jewish anti-terror unit, Avigdor (Avi) Arieli (see accompanying image).  In Israeli media, the name has been blurred as intelligence officials may not be publicly identified.  Several Palestinian vehicles were incinerated in the latest arson assault.

It appears either intentionally or coincidentally, the settler arsonists were doing the work of the IDF itself as Josh Breiner reports in Walla that the army has told villagers it intends to destroy the mosque because it was allegedly built, as is all new Palestinian construction inside Israel and in the West Bank, without a permit (Israel routinely refuses to issue them).

In separate incidents, several IDF soldiers were arrested under suspicion that they were involved in price tag attacks against military vehicles and a West Bank base.  The Occupation army in the region is in many cases deeply entwined with the local settler population.

As vengeance for an earlier mosque arson in a different village, local Palestinian residents stoned Israeli cars traveling on a nearby road, accidentally killing an Israeli driver and his baby.  Clearly, these price tag attacks are intended to foment religious hatred and lead to a final confrontation between Jews and Muslims, Israelis and Palestinians.  Settlers seem to hope for a final holy war in which Jews will emerge triumphant and in sole possession of the land.

Though there have been some detentions for the latest series of price tag settler attacks, no one so far has been arrested and implicated in any specific crime except the Peace Now death threats.  The identity of that suspect, Dor Oved, is under gag order because his father is a Shin Bet officer.  Shahar Oved’s job reportedly involves working in the West Bank Arab terror unit.

U.S. Engaged in Covert War Against Iran?

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

I’ve been intrigued by the question how involved the U.S. is in the black ops campaign against Iran that is being conducted largely by Israel.  I hadn’t noticed this article published two months ago by AP reporter, Douglas Birch.  In it, he delves into the question and comes up with more support for the thesis than I’d seen in previous reports:

The chief of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, Fereidoun Abbasi, told journalists at a meeting in Vienna last week that the United States was supporting an Israeli assassination campaign against his scientists.

…The U.S. has denied any role in the slayings [of three Iranian nuclear scientists].  ”We condemn any assassination or attack on a person – on an innocent person,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said after the latest killing in July. “We were not involved.”

…Yet there is little doubt that the Obama administration is pursuing a program of high-tech sabotage to disrupt Tehran’s suspected weapons-related nuclear efforts.

“I have no doubt that the U.S. and other countries were behind industrial sabotage aimed at the program of concern,” said Mark Fitzpatrick, a former State Department official who’s now at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.

…Publicly, the administration has pushed for…diplomatic isolation to pressure Iran…At the same time, former officials said, the U.S. and its allies have ramped up covert actions aimed at slowing Iran’s nuclear progress toward a bomb.  Ex-officials said the U.S. has been careful to target only those facilities suspected of playing a role in weapons work.

One former senior intelligence official said that the U.S. considered a scheme to use a burst of electromagnetic energy to knock out power to one suspected Iranian weapons-related site but rejected the plan because of the risk of causing a widespread power outage. The former official would only speak about classified matters on condition of anonymity.

The suspected sabotage campaign is widely seen as an alternative to military confrontation with Iran, which some experts say could have disastrous consequences for the Middle East.

A 2010 U.S. diplomatic memorandum published by…WikiLeaks quoted a German government official as saying that a program of “covert sabotage” against Iran, including explosions, computer hacking and engineered accidents, “would be more effective than a military strike whose effects in the region could be devastating.” The memo did not cite any specifics.

Birch goes on to note reports of Reagan era U.S. sabotage of a Russian trans-Siberian pipeline which caused a 3 megaton explosion seen from outer space.  This is all of a piece with recent developments including sabotaging of Iranian oil pipelines and military bases.

Moving on to a related subject, after the November 12th IRG missile base explosion, Channel 2′s (Israel) military reporter, Roni Daniel, participated in a wrapup of the weekly news and made the following claims.  That the blast killed not only Brig. Gen. Hassan Moggadam, the leader of the nation’s missile program, but that it killed another general, Mehdi Dashteen Zadah and a group of distinguished scientific researchers and PhDs in a series of critical fields (and here I’m quoting from the list Daniel stated on air): electro-chemistry, geophysics, mechanics and computer software simulation (imaging).  Daniel, who’s known to be a flack for the IDF and intelligence community, is quoting Ronen Solomon, who writes for Israel Defense.  So the information needs to be taken with a grain of salt.  But the specificity of some of the claims warrant further investigation.

Today a reporter working from U.S. sources, said that he’d also heard that the 17 who were mourned by Ayatollah Khamenei in a state funeral included senior military and scientific figures.  There exists a distinct possibility that the blast not only wiped out an advanced missile design being tested, but that it also wiped out a good deal of the scientific and technical expertise of the country’s missile program.  Again, not to be considered fully trustworthy until verified further.

On Diane Rehm’s weekly show, one of the guests was former CIA covert ops specialist and neocon darling Reuel Marc Gerecht.  He made the rather startling claim that Pres. Obama could engage in specific acts that were “lethal” inside Iran without requiring Congressional oversight, though he did concede that a full-on U.S. covert ops program would require it.  If Obama did request such Congressional approval there’s no doubt he’d be welcomed with open arms, which pretty much obviates the need for any such oversight to begin with.

Add to this the sense of nervousness this Reuters report induces, when it quotes U.S. officials acknowledging “a sense of opacity” about Israel’s intentions regarding Iran.  Don’t know about you, but if you don’t know the mind of one of your closest allies who’s been rattling sabers for years about an enemy, that’s time to start scanning the skies of F-16s.  The time to lay down the law with such an ally is before they take off.  You can’t bring them back after that.  I’m not event convinced Obama has the power to rein in Israel at all until it begins running out of Cruise missiles and bunker busters.  By then a lot of damage will have been done, and I’m not talking about Iran’s nuclear plants.  I’m talking about damage to U.S. credibility, damage from Iranian counterattacks, etc.  I fear Obama will stand by looking and acting helpless, which is pretty much the way his entire foreign policy looks these days.

Iran Doomsday Clock: Four Minutes to Midnight

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011
doomsday clock

Bulletin of Atomic Scientists Doomsday clock

You remember the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists Doomsday Clock which graced its monthly cover in the 1950s?  Periodically, the organization would announce how close we were to Nuclear Midnight depending on how grave relations were between the two major nuclear powers, the Russians and U.S.

Similarly, each day developments concerning Iran move my Doomsday Clock a minute closer or farther from midnight.  Right now, my sense is they’re at about four minutes till.  Everyone has their own conception of how dire things may be.  Maybe you’re at quarter till or one minute till.  Regardless of how close to the threshold we are, most of us would agree we are somewhere very close to it.

If war comes, at least for me it will be qualitatively different from most of the wars the U.S. has pursued in my adulthood.  The Gulf War you could justify based on Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait.  Afghanistan you could justify based on 9/11.  With the Iraq War at least Bush-Cheney ginned up severe threats of WMD and Saddam seemed a genuinely evil dictator.  With Iran, if it happens, it will be different.  Iran, unlike Iraq, has not invaded any country (we can leave aside the issue of terrorism for now since an invasion is qualitatively different from supporting proxies engaged in acts of terror).  Unlike Iraq, it is ruled by strongmen-Ayatollahs, but this is nowhere near the dictatorial powers wielded in Iraq.  Iran even has vestiges of a democratic system, though it isn’t fully democratic.  Iran has a vastly more capable military force than Iraq with more sophisticated weapons.  And Iran fought and vanquished Saddam in an eight year-long war that tested the nation’s mettle in a way that neither Americans nor Israelis have been tested in decades.

There is no international consensus to attack Iran as there was in the conflicts I referenced above.  Obama and Netanyahu will have to face an intense level of opposition in the rest of the world to any strike against Iran.  And once the Iranian response is felt, that opposition promises only to grow.  As Obama enters a re-election campaign, I can’t imagine him winning if the Democratic left-liberals abandon him, as they would if he either participated in or supported an Israeli attack on Iran.  He may count on a short war which would be long behind him by Election Day.  But I can’t see how Iran turns into a short engagement given the latter’s resiliency in the face of other indomitable foes it’s faced.  I fear Obama (and certainly Israel) is making a major and disastrous miscalculation.

That’s why I think the notion of a Doomsday Clock and Nuclear Midnight is apt in the case of Iran.  Not to mention, that we’re once again arguing about nukes as we were with the Russkies in the 1950s.  Though I don’t think the issues are anywhere near the same today.  I think the issue of an Iranian bomb is not really the main issue.  I don’t think anyone truly believes the Iranians will use a nuclear weapon, though that’s what the warhawks claims to believe.  For Israel, as I’ve written here, the issues with Iran revolve around regional hegemony.  The former has never liked having charismatic Arab leaders to compete with (viz. Nasser), and always takes the first opportunity to cut such figures down to size.  Israel wants to maintain its prerogatives and will brook no opposition on that score.  No one crimps Israel’s style.

Another fear that motivates Israeli bellicosity around Iran is that with a nuclear arsenal the latter can buttress its solidarity with the Palestinians and other frontline states.  Not that Iran would threaten to use nuclear weapons.  I think the Ayatollahs are too shrewd for that.  But the mere fact that there is a regional Muslim power with a weapon acts as an unstated insurance policy for the Arab cause.  It offers a red line beyond which Israel may not go unless it wishes to provoke the ire of a nuclearized Iran.  This constraint on Israeli power is also viewed as insufferable by Tel Aviv.

Now an explanation from the day’s news why the situation today seems so dire: first, Bibi Netanyahu yesterday gave another one of his infuriating ‘history-lesson’ speeches about how he has a rendezvous with history.  Except, instead of Churchill’s rendezvous with history, Bibi has a rendezvous with David Ben Gurion and Jewish history.  You see, the decision to attack Iran is at least as decisive in the history of Israel as Ben Gurion’s decision to declare Israeli independence.  At times like this I think back fondly on Lloyd Bentsen’s brilliant put down of  Dan Quayle.  In Israeli terms it would go like this: “I knew David Ben Gurion (or ‘BG’ in Israeli terminology), I was friends with BG, you are no BG!”

Here are some of Bibi’s words:

Great statesmen as well as friends of the Jews and of Zionism” warned Ben-Gurion that declaring a Jewish state in 1948 would bring an invasion of Arab armies and a “grave and difficult battle”, Netanyahu said.

“He understood full well the decision carried a heavy price, but he believed not making that decision had a heavier price,” Netanyahu said. “We are all here today because Ben-Gurion made the right decision at the right moment.  Today we are all in agreement it was a considered, correct and responsible decision. I want to believe we will always act with responsibility, courage and determination to make the right decisions to ensure our future and security,” Netanyahu said.

Although Netanyahu didn’t mention Iran or its nuclear program in his speech, it was quite clear that Netanyahu was using his speech to draw a comparison between himself and Ben-Gurion, and between Ben-Gurion’s decision to proclaim the foundation of the State of Israel and the decisions he, Netanyahu, is facing today to counter the Iranian nuclear threat.

How dare this two-bit tin-pot megalomaniac take the mantle of Winston Churchill or David Ben Gurion.  World War II and 1948 were indeed periods in which humanity was in the crucible of history.  Epochal decisions were made.  The decision to attack Iran, if it is made, will be nothing more than an expression of one leader and nation’s deep level of paranoia.  Such an attack will go down in history as a monumental catastrophe for all parties involved.  At least Avner Cohen can be consoled because he believes such idiocy can be redeemed by the declaration of the Middle East as a nuclear free zone.  I wish I had Avner’s optimism.  I think it might lead the region even deeper into the swamp of fratricide, if not genocide.

Besides Bibi’s “Sword of David” speech, the Telegraph reports that Ayatollah Khameini and Iran’s highest military officials have raised the readiness of the country’s armed forces to their highest level.  Presumably, leaves have been cancelled, readiness drills are underway, missiles and other advanced weapons systems are being dispersed throughout the country in order to prevent their being targeted in an attack and enabling them to survive to deal a return blow against any attacker:

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s spiritual leader, issued a directive to the heads of all the country’s military, intelligence and security organisations to take all necessary measures to protect the regime.

Gen Jaafari responded to this directive by ordering Revolutionary Guards units to redistribute Iran’s arsenal of long-range Shahab missiles to secret sites around the country where they would be safe from enemy attack and could be used to launch retaliatory attacks.

In addition, the Iranian air force has formed a number of “rapid reaction units”, which have been carrying out extensive exercises to practice a response to an enemy air attack.

The Iranian leadership fears the country is being subjected to a carefully co-ordinated attack by Western intelligence and security agencies to destroy key elements of its nuclear infrastructure.

In a related matter, the U.S. finally conceded that the drone which crashed inside Iran was, as the Iranians had claimed, its most advanced Sentinel RQ-170 stealth vehicle.  It also acknowledged that the craft was being operated by the CIA, thus confirming that its flight had nothing to do with Afghanistan, but was rather a secret spying mission inside Iran.  We did deny, though, that the Iranians shot down the plane, saying instead that there was a communications failure that caused it to crash.  This would explain why it was relatively intact when it landed.  And it would counter the Iranians claim that they succeeded in downing the plane themselves.

This incident calls to mind another one which rattled two earlier superpowers: the Russian downing of Francis Gary Powers’ U-2, which led to a massive escalation in tension between Russia and the U.S.  The confrontation was defused by two relatively adult, mature leaders, Kennedy and Khrushchev, who negotiated a prisoner exchange which brought Powers home.  Frankly, I doubt we have such a quality of leadership.  Today, our leaders are more likely to drag us deeper into a quagmire than extricate us from one as the two leaders did in 1962.

As in those days, everyone in Iran and the U.S. knows that we’re doing this, but to have the evidence right out in the open creates an even higher level of paranoia on both sides (but especially the Iranian).  If it weren’t for the loss of its most advanced surveillance and stealth technology, I don’t think the U.S. would mind the level of anger this will generate within Iran.  Our policymakers would say: if it gets the average Iranian riled up, it might make the Ayatollahs do something really stupid which we can exploit and use against them.

The Iranians aren’t the only ones who are paranoid and misconstruing reality.  A top state department non proliferation expert rattled sabers today:

“Iran…is becoming a pariah state,” Robert Einhorn, the U.S. State Department senior adviser for non-proliferation and arms control, told a news conference in the South Korean capital.

“The situation in Iran has become more and more worrisome. The timeline for its nuclear programme is beginning to get shorter, so it is important we take these strong steps on an urgent basis.

“If we do not, pressures will grow for much stronger actions. The U.S. favours a diplomatic solution pressure, but if we cannot achieve a diplomatic solution soon, inevitably interests will grow in a different kind of solution.

“Nudge, nudge, wink, wink.   Know what I mean?” to quote Monty Python.

Yesterday, Leon Panetta got into the act.  In a speech in which he practically pistol-whipped Israel and told it to “get back to the damn table” with the Palestinians, he made some outrageous overstatements about the Iranian threat and what we plan to do about it:

Mr. Panetta spoke to the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution…[and] identified Iran as the most significant national security threat facing the United States, allies and partners in the region.

Notable was the phrasing of a warning to Iran: that any action to block free transit of regional oil shipments and other commerce would be a “redline,” a term describing an unacceptable action that would be countered with an American response.

“No greater threat exists to the security and prosperity of the Middle East than a nuclear-armed Iran,” Mr. Panetta said, noting that a “pillar of our approach to the region is our determination to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons.”

He pledged the United States was committed to deterring Iran’s “destabilizing activities, particularly those that could threaten the free flow of commerce throughout this vital region. That is a ‘redline’ for the United States.”

American policy to shape Iranian action would use both inducements and penalties, diplomacy and economic sanctions, he said. But the Pentagon would always have military options ready for the president’s consideration, Mr. Panetta said.

“That’s a responsibility I take very seriously, because when it comes to the threat posed by Iran, the president has made it very clear that we have not taken any options off the table,” Mr. Panetta said.

There are several outrageous, but interesting aspects to this passage.  First, Panetta warns Iran that closing the Straits of Hormuz would be a casus belli in American eyes.  Of course, Iran has not threatened to do so unless IT is attacked.  So either the U.S. is deliberately distorting the scenario so it appears that Iran might engage in an act worthy of a U.S. declaration of war; or he’s warning the Iranians that if future attacks against Iran which the U.S. and Israel have planned, ever give the regime the idea that it can use closing the Straits as a tactical tool, they ought to think again.

Second, Panetta’s claim that Iran is the greatest threat to the stability and security of the region is blatantly false.  Whatever level of threat Iran may pose, Israel poses as great or greater one.  It has 200-400 nuclear weapons.  It, as Panetta himself conceded in this same speech, is a pariah in the region despised by almost everyone in ways it wasn’t as recently as a year or two ago.  Israel, contrary to Iran, has shown itself more than willing to attack and invade neighboring countries in attacks causing the deaths of thousands of civilians.  Israel, contrary to its claims, has remained unwilling to compromise in ways that might resolve the serial conflicts with any of the frontline states.

Returning to the issue of sanctions, another NY Times article about their disruptive impact not just on the Iranian economy but on the world oil economy contains this prescient warning from a prominent Iranian-American analyst:

“At some point, sanctions become an act of war,” said Vali Nasr, a professor at Tufts University and an expert on Iranian affairs. “If you cut Iran out of the oil market, this is no longer economic pressure.”

What especially troubles me is that we, the U.S. are being led by the nose in this belligerency toward Iran.  This is not our fight.  Iran is not our mortal enemy.  It does not pose an existential threat to us.  Nor does it to Israel, but that’s another topic I’ve previously addressed.  Even with a nuclear weapon, Iran will pose no greater threat to world stability than Pakistan or North Korea.  The key is to manage the threat and not to eradicate it with violence.

I am not arguing that Iran is not a danger to the region.  It clearly is.  But it does not pose as great a danger, to my mind, as Israel does.  Instead of contemplating war to end the Iranian threat, we ought to be contemplating what inducements we could offer the Iranians to end their program.  Barring that, we should begin considering George Kennan’s approach of containing Iranian power, rather than going toe to toe against it.

The series of conflicts we’ve engaged in over the past decade have shown that American power is no long pre-eminent or omnipotent.  America can lose.  If a foe is persistent enough and has access to lethal-enough means, our enemies can make us bleed.  And America is growing weary of its boys dying on desert sands in faraway lands.  I don’t think Pres. Obama can make the case for going into yet another Middle East guerrilla conflict whose impact could last years.

I foresee an attack on Iran possibly turning into the type of morass which Napoleon and Hitler entered when they each decided to invade Russia.  This in turn led to them each facing a monumental defeat that led to their ultimate demise.  Iran too might be that sort of black hole for U.S. and Israeli power.  No, we wouldn’t be invading Iran in the same way they did.  But an attack on Iran would draw such a furious counterattack, that even against our will we might be drawn into a campaign of regime change.  Such a plan would require boots on the ground and an invasion.  Then we would be talking along the lines of Napoleon and Hitler’s folly.

As days like this mount up, as the threats, paranoia, and bellicosity rise, I become more and more convinced that an attack is likely.

MK Danny Danon: Latest in Racist Legislative Fashion

Monday, December 5th, 2011
danny danon

Likud's Boy Wonder: Danny Danon

If you want to check on the pulse of Israeli fashion–that is the “fashion” of Israeli racism–you can do no better than study MK Danny Danon’s legislative agenda.  I don’t usually write about individual bills since there are so many far-right imbeciles who must have their say and they come up with more nonsense than you can shake a stick at.  But for MK Danon, for whom Matan Lurey has developed an apt moniker, ‘MKKK,’ I make an exception.

His new bill would demand that any Israeli seeking any sort of government ID whether a driver’s license, passport, graduation certificate, would have to sign a loyalty oath (Hebrew).  The provision is designed to disenfranchise Palestinian Israelis who, Danon presumes, would not do so.  One of the many lunatic aspects of this bill is that non-Jewish Israelis would have no problem signing a statement expressing loyalty to Israel.  Because they are loyal to Israel.  An Israel, that is, that is democratic and offers them rights as citizens.  This fact, that his bill would not achieve his aim, undoes all the venom Danon is attempting to inject into the social discourse with this harkening back to Nuremberg-type laws.  For Palestinian Israelis to refuse to sign, it would have to include a provision demanding loyalty to “the Jewish state, that is Israel.”  Even if such a bill with such language did pass, I doubt it could pass muster in the Supreme Court.  That is, unless new legal provisions permit a politicization of the nomination process allowing the Court to swing toward the settler outlook.

As if he hadn’t done enough to raise the volume of Jewish racism in Israel, Danon also added this zinger:

Israeli Arabs disrespect the laws of the nation having far higher rates of criminality than any other ethnic group.

Among his claims is that these Israeli citizens have voiced support for those “calling for the destruction of the State of Israel.”  Of course, he doesn’t say which Israelis did this, what they said, which group they allegedly supported, nor did he offer any support for the claim that the group mentioned supported the destruction of Israel.  Danny has a wee small problem with evidence.  He’s much better at the smear than at offering facts.

Another Likud ‘solon,’ Ofir Akunis, made the brilliant observation, in defending the Knesset’s draconian set of anti-democracy bills, that Joe McCarthy “was right in every word, the fact is -there were Soviet agents.”  This is the same distinguished advocate for free speech and democratic values who co-sponsored the bill which would outlaw foreign funding for Israeli NGOs.  In fact, in this interview he was arguing that Israeli NGOs. by accepting foreign money, are agents of foreign powers.  That makes the United Nations and European Union the equivalent of 1950s-era Communist subversives.  If you follow this argument to its proper insane conclusion you could argue that any American Jewish group that received any funding from Israel or an Israeli organization was an agent of a foreign power (i.e. Israel).  Is that really where you want to take this argument??

You have to wonder what planet these people are living on.  Akunis attempted to dig himself out of the hole he was in by claiming after the fact that McCarthy was only right in the sense that he pointed out Communists in the U.S. government.  You see, there’s a problem with idiots like this attempting to expound on subjects they know nothing about.  I’d rather him blather on about Israeli history.  At least he’d have half a chance of being accurate once in a while.  About U.S. history he’s hopeless.  McCarthy didn’t uncover a single Communist, though he sure as hell tried hard enough and ruined enough careers in the process.

H/t @OriNir_APN.

U.S. Continues Deadly Game: Drone Beast Busted Over Iran

Sunday, December 4th, 2011
rq 170 stealth drone

U.S. Air Force's RQ-170 stealth drone

The deadly game the U.S. and Israel are playing with Iran continued today with news that a U.S. advanced technology stealth drone had fallen or been downed (depending on who you talk to) inside Iran.  The Iranians claim the vehicle was the U.S.’ most advanced Sentinel stealth drone also known as the Beast of Kandahar.  This plane was likely unarmed and had a solely surveillance mission.  The U.S. is not only interested in spying on Iran’s nuclear program, it is seeking proof of the extent of the damage in Isfahan to the uranium enrichment plant there from an explosion last week.  Since the Beast was used to surveill Osama bin Laden’s compound in the week’s before his assassination, the craft might also be tracking individuals or spying on military/government compounds as well.

The U.S. says the drone had a malfunction and that operators lost contact with it, which caused it to enter into Iranian airspace and crash.  The Iranian claim that it shot down the plane seems contradicted by the accompanying claim that there was little damage to the craft that was recovered.  Whatever the truth of the story, the Iranians may now have access to a fairly complete version of the most advanced aerial surveillance technology in the U.S. arsenal.  As the NY Times notes, negotiations are probably underway as we speak with Russian or Chinese representatives who would be dying to have a crack at it so that they can steal the technology and incorporate it into their own designs.  Not to mention they will be able to develop systems to counter the drone and its capabilities.  So if Hezbollah can’t now bring the plane down, it may be able to shortly.

Bloggers on the left, some of whom have been taking potshots at me as a dupe of Israeli intelligence for my reporting on Israeli acts of sabotage against Iran and Hezbollah, have claimed that the Iranians may’ve discovered ways to jam ground communications with the drones, thus enabling them to cause them to crash.  Hezbollah has also leaked such stories to the Lebanese press attempting to explain an Israeli drone that crashed a few weeks ago in southern Lebanon.  The theory might be that if Iran has developed such technology it may’ve shared it with Hezbollah.  The only problem is that Hezbollah has not taken credit for downing the Israeli drone and Iran doesn’t say it jammed the U.S. drone, but that it shot it down.

I’m doubtful that Iran shot the Sentinel down for the reason I mentioned above, and as it has made similar claims regularly over the past few years which the U.S. has disputed.  If the Iranians have figured out how to fool the drone’s communications systems I still haven’t seen any evidence of it.  But I remain open to the possibility if anyone can offer any.

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