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Posts Tagged ‘Ameer Makhoul’

Hasbaristas, Clickbombers and Other Fraudsters

Friday, March 4th, 2011

I like to be as transparent as I can in writing and running this site, which sometimes involves revealing things other bloggers in my position might not.  So this post is in that vein.  In some ways, this blog relies on the “kindness of strangers.”  I don’t personally know some of the people who pass on tips and scoops to me.  I have to rely on their past reputation if they’ve worked with me before; or the credibility of the information they’re offering if they haven’t.

For the past several months, a reader/commenter calling himself Dedi Rozenthal has posted comments regularly.  He’s riled me and other commenters up quite a bit with his right-wing comments.  But there was nothing remotely close to causing me to ban him.

However, a few weeks ago he began offering information about intelligence-related stories, which is a subject I’m very interested in.  I did some research and discovered that if this commenter is indeed Rozenthal, then he’s a retired colonel in the Israeli air force.  Frankly, I’ve never known of any colonel in the IDF offering intelligence information to a lefty blogger.  But at the start, the information, which related to corruption involving Gabi Ashkenazi, seemed quite plausible.  Since it didn’t reflect well on the IDF, I figured anyone offering the information to me within the IDF would have no reason to do so if it was false.

But then Dedi brought me a story claiming five Israeli Palestinians had been secretly detained and one of them, a minor, had died.  I reported this story too in the spirit of pikuach nefesh, because I thought lives might be in danger.  Afterward, it turned out that key details of the story couldn’t be authenticated.

Around that time, he brought me an even more ‘amazing’ story which claimed to expose the identity of the head of the Israeli intelligence unit which created Stuxnet.  There was a side story about the allegedly stunning 25 year-old woman, Noia Dar Artzi, who commanded the unit engaging in multiple affairs with subordinates, and the son of a friend who was drummed out of the unit for filing a sexual harassment complaint.  He worked up a whole life history for Dar Artzi that sounded impressive.  Though the idea of a woman of 25 commanding one of the IDF’s premier cyber-warfare units gave me pause.

Given the problems I discovered with the earlier story, I held off on publishing the Stuxnet story.  It just seemed too wild to believe given that his earlier information hadn’t panned out.  But I had to hand it to Dedi.  He knew how to spin a yarn.  And like all lovers of literature, I like a good story.

Then Dedi claimed he was coming to California and would bring with him a package containing incriminating e mails Ameer Makhoul had sent which proved he was a Hezbollah agent.  My Israeli friend even wrote me that he’d shipped off the package to me.  But I never received it and I told him so.

Then came the clincher.  Dedi started warning me about people hacking our e mails and wanted me to get a new e-mail address to write to him.  When I refused, he told me that when he’d returned to Israel someone (I think he was implying it was the American authorities or possibly Israeli) gave him the package back and told him never to do it again.

It was at that moment that Dedi lost all usefulness to whoever put him up to this charade (if anyone did).  Now, it’s possible that Dedi, or whoever he is, did this of his own initiative.  Or it’s possible he has an intelligence connection of some sort.  At any rate, his goal was clearly to discredit me and my work.  So the reason I write all this is to let you know that there may be times you get a story wrong or are fooled.  And if you do, it’s because you tried your hardest to vet it given the inherent limitations of writing a blog in the U.S. about Israeli intelligence matters.  And something got by you.

Dedi was pretty good, I’ve got to hand it to him.  Far more credible than other jokesters who in the past came to me claiming to know the date of the coming Israeli attack on Iran.  Dedi worked into his narrative death under torture, illicit sex, computer hacking and other skullduggery.  It was perfect for the age.  But ultimately he couldn’t carry it off.  Alas, poor Dedi, we thought we knew him well.

UPDATE:  There is evidence that the person/s behind this hoax is/are active in the threads of at least one other progressive blog, so I thought it worthwhile to expose the IP addresses, e mail addresses and other information about those who’ve proven to be frauds in connnection with this and earlier incidents at my blog.

‘IlanP’ used the e mail address dedirozenthal@gmail.com and IP 188.40.33.213

‘Arijay’ used the e mail address arijay82@gmail.com and IP 38.108.124.153

“Tired of Shenanigans” using this e mail address lompicotos@yahoo.com and the following IPs:

95.154.230.252
66.28.139.242
74.55.82.154

This IP has also been used by the merry little band of hoaxsters:

193.202.110.204

He/they clearly have access to an an array of e mail addresses and IPs, so the above list is by no means exhaustive.  But if you have any commenters using these IPs be forewarned.

I also wanted to let my readers know that I’ve had a Google Adsense ad tower in this blog’s sidebar (it’s not the ad tower at the top of my sidebar, which is a separate entity) since it began in 2003.  No more.  Some malicious hasbarist has click bombed my ads and Adsense has punished me with banishment.  This will no doubt give the Rotterites or other juvenile delinquents who would engage in such fraud great pleasure.  Until they realize that the small amount of income I was earning from Google Adsense will be more than offset by my readers replacing it with direct donations.  So please, show the bastards that they don’t own the web and don’t get to damage my reputation without paying a price.  I’d love to collect from you ten times what I’m losing from Adsense ad revenue.  To participate, go to the Paypal button and give as generously as you can.

If you’re a potential advertiser, you can still advertise here through the Blodads/Blogging Liberally ad network.

Amnesty International Condemns Makhoul Sentence

Monday, January 31st, 2011

An Amnesty press release:

Amnesty International Calls Jailing of Human Rights Defender in Israel “Very Disturbing”

(London) — Amnesty International urged the Israeli authorities to end their harassment of Palestinian human rights activists after a veteran Palestinian campaigner was jailed for nine years earlier today and given an additional one-year suspended sentence.

Ameer Makhoul, a longstanding Palestinian activist, was convicted on various counts of having contact with enemies of Israel and espionage after a plea bargain agreement at his trial. He was originally charged with an even more serious offense, “assisting an enemy in war”, which could have carried a life sentence, but that was dropped by the prosecution when he agreed to a plea bargain.

“Ameer Makhoul’s jailing is a very disturbing development and we will be studying the details of the sentencing as soon as we can,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa deputy director.

“Ameer Makhoul is well known for his human rights activism on behalf of Palestinians in Israel and those living under Israeli occupation. We fear that this may be the underlying reason for his imprisonment.”

“We are also extremely concerned by allegations that he was tortured and otherwise ill-treated following his arrest on May 6 last year in a dawn police raid on his home in Haifa, by the fact that he was not permitted to see his lawyers for 12 days after his arrest, and by the gag order that prohibited media coverage on the case during this time.”

In the United States, Amnesty International USA urged President Obama to call on Israel to end the harassment of human rights defenders.

Under the Israeli penal code, people can be charged with “espionage” even if the information passed onto an “enemy agent” is publicly known and even if there is no intent to do harm through passing on the information.

The prosecution claimed that a Jordanian civil society activist who Makhoul was in contact with was a Hizbullah agent, and that he gave this person information on the locations of a military base and General Security Services offices.

The confession on which Makhoul’s conviction and sentencing were based was admitted as evidence by the court, despite allegations that this statement was made under duress and that he was tortured during his interrogation. It also appears that the information allegedly conveyed by Makhoul was publicly available.

Makhoul’s sentencing comes at a time when human rights activists are coming under increasing pressure in Israel and being accused by some in the government and by members of the Knesset of being “anti-Israel” and unpatriotic because of their reporting on and campaigning against human rights violations in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Makhoul is the director of Ittijah, the Union of Arab Community-Based Associations, based in Haifa.

Addameer, the Palestinian prisoner support group based in Ramallah called for the PA, EU and other western representatives to demand Makhoul’s release and to raise the prisoner-victim’s plight with Israeli officials at every meeting they hold.

Makhoul Sentenced to 9 Years, Israeli Democracy Dies Yet Another Death

Sunday, January 30th, 2011
makhoul in court

Ameer Makhoul in an Israeli court

Ameer Makhoul, Israeli-Palestinian community leader, was sentenced by an Israeli court to nine years in prison for allegedly spying for Hezbollah against Israel.  The court also added an additional year to his sentence on conditional terms.  This was essentially the sentence the prosecution had requested, with the defense asking for seven years.  The court, as it almost always is in security cases, proved to be rubber stamp for the State.

Makhoul has two teen-age daughters a third of whose lives he will have missed by the time he is freed.  That’s IF he is freed as the State has a habit of extending sentences for prisoners for whom it has special distaste (cf. the recent case of Abdallah Abu Rahme).

They say in a democracy a man is innocent till proven guilty.  Well, Makhoul is innocent and wasn’t proven guilty, but he’s still going to prison.  So what does that say about Israel’s form of democracy?  A democracy perhaps for Jews (unless you’re really uppity like Jonathan Pollak or the Shministim), but for Palestinian citizens?  Not so much.

Makhoul is guilty of nothing more than having contacts outside Israel with other Arab peace and environmental activists (NOT Hezbollah agents as claimed).  He was the director of a community NGO doing his job as such people do in every democracy in the world without having their lives stolen from them for it.

In fact, what is so laughable about the charges is that the alleged spying happened in Jordan, a state with which Israel has generally cordial relations.  The notion that Hezbollah would engage in spying on Jordanian soil or that Jordanian intelligence would allow such activity is preposterous.

And just listen to the chief judge reciting the litany of Makhoul’s “crimes” and ask yourself whether a Palestinian either would have acess to any of this information of would care even if he could:

[Hezbollah] requested that he pass on to them intelligence about the residence of the Shabak chief and arrangements of the security detail at his home, along with the travel arrangements of the security details of the prime minister and defense minister.

Let me parse this for you: the Shabak and Mossad have killed Palestinians, Syrians, Lebanese, you name it, in the name of promoting Israeli security.  Hezbollah has vowed revenge for these killings (al-Mabouh, Mugniyeh most notably) and has expressly pointed to Israeli leaders as targets.  Shabak has no evidence that any Israeli Palestinian has become party to such a plot of vengeance.  But it needs to stir the pot of fear and paranoia among Israeli Jews that this COULD happen.  So it picks the most ornery, uppity Palestinian leader it can find and chooses to make an example of him.  With this it kills two birds with one stone.  It justifies its existence to the Israeli Jewish public AND it suppresses the political aspirations of Israeli Palestinians.

Whatever “evidence” was amassed by secret police or offered at trial will never be known.  This is the Israeli police state at its worst.  This is Israeli “justice.”

My readers who support the Israeli government’s draconian treatment of its Palestinian citizens will point to Makhoul’s “admission” of guilt as proof that Shabak proved its case.  Not at all.  As the victim’s attorney noted, he knew of not a single case in which a Palestinian security defendant went to trial and was acquited.  Never.  Not once.  Shabak gets its man, every time.  So Makhoul was faced with a choice of ten years or a possible life sentence if (or I should say “when”) found guilty.  So yes, discretion was the better part of valor.

I want to put those who cheer for this strange justice in Makhoul’s shoes.  If you had two daughters you loved dearly, were innocent, and knew you had virtually no chance of beating a rap, would you risk an almost certain life sentence in a vain attempt to stand up for the principle of your innocence?

Ameer Makhoul walks into an Israeli prison cell an innocent man.  Instead, J’Accuse.  I accuse Shabak of being guilty.  Guilty of destroying Israeli democracy.  Guilty of poisoning relations between Israel Jews and Palestinians.  Guilty, guilty, guilty.  Maybe some day Yuval Diskin will serve time himself for the travesties he and his agents have perpetrated in the name of security for Israel’s Jews and the country’s few “good Arabs.”

All around Israel the flames of fading autocratic regimes are raging.  Regimes whose rule was supported by the type of heavy-handed torture and running rough-shod over individual rights as exemplified by Shabak.  Will it take long before justice comes even to the gates of Jerusalem and Shabak’s prisons?

Israel and the Misrule of Law

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010
azmi bishara

Punitive 'Bishara law' criminalizing living-while-Arab

As far as its minority Palestinian citizens are concerned, there is no rule of law in Israeli society.  That’s why I use the term “misrule” in my post title.  There is no democracy for them.  As Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Kotsk used to say in a different context: “there is no justice and there is no law.”

Two shocking developments transpired today in the Knesset.  A new bill passed its first reading, named for that despicable traitor (though neither charged nor convicted) Azmi Bishara which would strip a member of all pension, salary and other financial benefits if suspected or convicted of supporting terrorism.  Let me single out the salient phrase: if suspected of supporting terror.  How the hell do you strip an elected Knesset member of a benefit provided to them by Israeli law based on a suspicion?  If this isn’t one of the more outrageous travesties to be discussed in that Hall of Jackals called the Knesset, I don’t know what is.

And the hate of Jewish members isn’t reserved for Bishara, who is erroneously described in this Ynet article as having “escaped” from Israel (he left with full knowledge of the Shabak).  A Likud member cast derision on a sitting member, Haneen Zoabi and warned her ominously that she would be next:

MK Miri Regev (Likud) answered Zoabi in the same manner she used after the Gaza flotilla: “Go to Gaza you traitor”

…”Bishara is travelling on the axis of evil between Iran, Syria and Hezbollah, he gives them instructions on how to attack us with missiles – and we need to pay him money. There is no country in the world that pays traitors a salary. Our work will not be done until the traitor who took part in the Gaza flotilla isn’t here.”

Far be it from a Knesset member to express thoughts that have any basis in reality.  At the time, there were vague claims in the Israeli media attributed to unnamed Shabak sources that Bishara had aided Hezbollah during the Lebanon war.  One of the really clever inanities they suggest is that Bishara actually scouted out targets and coordinates for Hezbollah gunners.  But there was never so much as an indictment brought against Bishara, let alone a conviction.  He is uncharged and yet this idiot gets to scream utter rubbish from the most august hall in the nation.  Of course, she can get away with this nonsense because she has parliamentary immunity, the very protection she wishes to strip from Bishara and Zoabi, and frankly all Palestinian legislators.

The bill’s sponsor even had the temerity to utter this outright lie in characterizing it:

Sanctions must be taken against every person, without religious racial and sexual or national discrimination who is suspected of breaking the law – and who does not present himself to law enforcement authorities.

What nonsense.  Every Israeli knows for whom this law is intended.  Indeed, Bishara’s name “graces” it.  And we all know who and what he is: Arab.

Though I often find myself disagreeing with Meretz, its leader made a statement that contained what was missing in the entire Knesset debate, common sense:

Meretz party chairman Chaim Oron stood out for saying: “A rapist, a murderer of children and thieves don’t get their pensions taken away. Of all the injustices in the world, the harshest must be the one carried out by Azmi Bishara?

Note, the reporter’s comment that Oron “stood out” for having an ounce of common sense and decency.  The Knesset, I’m afraid to say, has become a house of ill-repute, filled with hatred and racism.  A place in which a majority bays for blood.  Yes, I know a few readers will point out that this is just a first reading and the bill faces many obstacles before final passage.  All I can is thank God for that.  But why does it even have to come to this?

Sorry to say, I’m not done yet.  Anyone here remember taking those Civics or American History classes in high school in which you learned the basics of the constitution?  One of the fundamental rights was the right to an attorney, right?  Not in Israel.  If you’re a security suspect (that is, not even indicted, just jailed under suspicion), Shabak can routinely deprive you of the right to consult your attorney.  Sure, the prohibition has a time limit.  But it is routinely extended, unless lawyers make a big stink as they did in Ameer Makhoul‘s case, which led to him having the unusual privilege of actually meeting his attorney before his conviction.

Well, now there’s a new bill proposed by those wonderful inmates of the House of Misrule better known as the Knesset.  Not content with the Shabak’s ability to run roughshod over the few rights a Palestinian Israeli has, they want to prevent a suspect from being denied access to an attorney for A YEAR!  But it gets worse.  The Public [In]Security minister in this wacky government actually believes that allowing a suspect to meet with his attorney will aid and abet further crimes:

The bill, introduced by Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch, aims to keep lawyers from helping their clients “carry out offenses that endanger the security of the public or the state from within jail.”

In other words, the purpose of lawyers isn’t to fulfill the State’s obligation to protect the rights of the accused; rather, the purpose of lawyers is to promote criminality!  I swear, sometimes I feel as if I’m looking over the railing at the inmates of an insane asylum as they throw food, chairs, whatever at each other.  And I say this will great sorrow and no sense of glee whatsoever.  Israel is a country that is near to my heart.  But look what these imbeciles are doing to it.  To paraphrase Jeremiah: how does the nation sit alone that was once welcome among the nations?   A nation of such high hopes and dreams come crashing down amidst hate, fear and authoritarianism.

Remember that quaint concept: the rule of law?  You can kiss it goodbye.  Yoni, we hardly knew ye.

Israel’s Jim Crow

Monday, December 6th, 2010


I was listening a few days ago to a riveting radio documentary (hear the audio) about the 1950s era execution of Willie McGee, a Mississippi African-American accused of raping a white woman.  McGee’s niece, decades after his death, makes a deathbed promise to her mother, McGee’s sister, to get to the bottom of what happened.  This sends her on a search through archives, to meetings with the judge, prosecutor, attorneys, family members all the while seeking justice for her uncle.  One of my regrets is that Bella Abzug, who defended McGee, was not alive to include her recollections in this account.

A local white reporter remembers that during the trial, McGee was so terrified that he wet his pants at the defense table where he sat.  All the whites interviewed noted it was a foregone conclusion that he would be condemned by the all-white jury, and he was.  He was executed by a traveling electric chair that made the rounds of the rural South for just such purposes.

But was he guilty?  No, not of rape.  When the prosecutor asked him after the legal proceedings were over whether he’d had sex with the white woman, Willie replied: “Yes sir.”  But then he added: “But she wanted it just as much as me.”  So there you have it.  The American South circa 1950 could conceive of and meted out no punishment for a white man having sex with a black woman.  But it could not conceive of a black man having sex with a white woman under any condition except duress.

This was one of the most noxious manifestations of Jim Crow, a series of laws, customs and taboos which reigned for 100 years.  It prohibited African-Americans from voting, and owning land.  It sentenced them to inferior social status when using public facilities and transportation.  It offered little or no public funding for education and infrastructure.  It segregated areas in which minorities could live and enforced miscegenation.  Jim Crow, as I wrote, was codified by law, but also included numerous extralegal provisions.

Under Jim Crow, the South was a democracy for whites which offered inferior roles and rights to Blacks.  The latter’s inferiority was even codified in a founding document of the Republic, which defined a Black slave as equal for voting representation to a fraction of a white citizen.

This satisfies the definition of ethnocracy, which is how many describe Israel itself and its relations between the Jewish majority and Palestinian minority.  Since Israel has no constitution, its racism is not codified.  Many of the injustices suffered by Israeli Palestinians are not written into law.  Rather, they are enforced de facto by government practice which offer much lower funding levels for Palestinian municipalities, worse schools and infrastructure.  Communities are segregated and there is severe social stratification.  Mobility in either housing or jobs is limited.

While Israeli Palestinians can vote, their votes count less since their parties are excluded from governing coalitions, another embodiment of racism.  With Israel’s spoils-oriented parliamentary system, Israeli Palestinians hardly ever receive a cabinet ministry and so offer little in the way of patronage to their constituents.  This is a system mastered by Israeli Jewish parties like Shas, and which the non-Jewish minority will never enjoy.

National leaders of Israeli Palestinians, whether inside or outside the Knesset, are subject to constant legal persecution by the security services.  Almost every MK has been under police investigation and at least one was forced into exile while charges were pending against him which the security apparatus refused to prove at trial.  Other non-Knesset leaders are subject to even harsher treatment and long prison terms.  The charges against them are invariably trumped-up security related offenses which often the defense and always the public has no opportunity to review.

In short, Israel is the American South circa 1950.  Both the U.S. and Israel are nations birthed in injustice: for us, slavery; for Israel, the Nakba. Israel follows the South’s example in being a nation whose laws and customs perpetuate the injustice through racism and enforced inferiority.  One of the few areas in which Israel comes out ahead in comparison is that there are no traveling electric chairs for Israeli Palestinians since the country doesn’t have capital punishment (not that settlers and far-right nationalists haven’t urged an exception be made for their fellow Palestinian citizens).

While some may mistake my motives for writing what I have above, I want to make my agenda perfectly clear.

Until 1954 and even for several decades thereafter the South suffered great damage from Jim Crow.  The damage went beyond what Blacks endured.  The entire region suffered from a backwardness that was more than just moral.  Political injustice contributed to economic and social stratification.  The South had great potential which was strangled by the racism imposed on society by whites.

Look at the contemporary South, at cities like Atlanta.  They are now engines for economic, social, artistic and political progress.  The South is today a powerhouse especially compared to the 1950s.  No longer can it be called a backwater of America.

This is undoubtedly true of Israel as well.  Israel’s minorities are the weak link in the social chain.  Their communities are places where dreams go to die.  Imagine an Israel which unleashed the full potential of every member of society.  Imagine an Israel which offered educational and vocational parity to every citizen.  Israel’s apologists like to point to Israel’s economic success and say there’s nothing wrong there.  But I say success compared to what?  If you stood in downtown Atlanta (or any major Southern ctiy) in 1954 and then compared the landscape to how it appears today, you would think you were on a different planet the changes are so enormous.

Today, Willie McGee’s niece has documented the injustice committed against her uncle.  She knows he died for a crime that does not exist in contemporary America.  I long for the day when the alleged crimes of Azmi Bishara and Ameer Makhoul will be equally unimaginable.  That will be an Israel of all its citizens.  An Israel whose creative and financial muscle will be felt scores of times more strongly in the world than at present.

Daniel Gordis and the Transferists Among Us

Saturday, November 20th, 2010
daniel gordis

Rabbi Dr. Daniel Gordis, senior vice president of Likudist Shalem Center

Daniel Gordis has yichus.  He comes from the American Jewish élite.  He is a scion of the Gordis family which produced the seminal scholars, David and Robert Gordis, both major figures in Conservative Judaism (David was my Talmud teacher at Jewish Theological Seminary and someone I respected a great deal).  Daniel eventually made aliya and has gone from a centrist political outlook to Likudist over the years.  He is now a senior vice president at the Shelly Adelson-financed, Bibiphile, Shalem Center, where his colleagues are Natan Sharansky and (until he was named Israel’s ambassador to the U.S.) Michael Oren.  It is safe to say that Daniel has politically gone off the family reservation.  He is now a full-fledged Likudist apparatchik with a rabbinical degree.

Because of his Conservative pedigree he has a ready-made American Jewish audience and is a regular on the Jewish speaker circuit at synagogues, Jewish federations and the like.  His writing plays on a reputation for centrism and moderation by making it appear that his views are the height of reason and common sense.  Not so fast.

My friend Jerry Haber has written a critique of Gordis’ latest book, Saving Israel.  The book flirts with the notion that forced transfer of Israel’s Palestinian citizens may be necessary to preserve its Jewish majority and the notion of Jewish self-determination.

Jerry notes that Gordis begins chapter six of his book with this quotation:

Israel cannot be defined as a democratic state.  The only way to make Israel a democratic state is to eliminate its Jewish character.

The Future Vision of Palestinian Arabs in Israel, National Committee of the Heads of the Arab Local Authorities in Israel

There is only one problem.  While the first sentence is in the document (page 9), the second isn’t.  I’ve both browsed through the entire paper and done searches on every phrase in the second sentence and it isn’t there.  So either Gordis confused his sources and has misattributed this quotation or else he’s fabricated it.

I would never claim there are no Palestinians who believe Israel must eliminate its Jewish character to become a democratic state.  But the point is that the document and organization behind this document didn’t publish the words that Gordis put in their mouth.  And in fact, if he’d actually read the entire document he’d realize that considering other arguments that are in the document which call on Israel to recognize the religious rights of the minority, that it would make no sense for them to demand the elimination of the religious rights of the Jewish majority.

What this document does demand is that Israel deny superior rights to Jews in the state it envisions.  There is a huge difference between this and eliminating Israel’s Jewish character entirely.  Only the farthest of the far-left anti-Zionist movement demands this and Gordis has done a deep disservice to Adalah in claiming what he has.  He owes it an explanation and an apology unless he can explain what he did and why.

Menachem Klein of Bar Ilan University argues in his new book, The Shift, that efforts like Gordis’ are part and parcel of an:

Expansion of the conflict to include also the Israeli Palestinians [along with] the misreading of their vision documents by the current Jewish majority.

So what Gordis has possibly done is to engage in a political and intellectual fraud, but it is one that isn’t his alone.  But rather it is part of a deliberate distortion of the actual views of Israeli Palestinian nationalists.  The Shabak, in its campaigns to persecute Israeli Palestinian leaders like Ameer Makhoul, also fabricates a nationalist position that calls for the destruction of Israel, which is not at all what Adalah or Balad believe.

The sixth chapter of Gordis’ book also recounts in that way that ideologues have of tailoring their memories to suit their political agendas, his two years of study at Baltimore’s Episcopalian Gilman School.  He was irked as a Jewish student that the entire student body said the Lord’s Prayer every morning.  He uses this as an allegory for contemporary Israel in which he compares Palestinian Israelis to the well-tolerated Jewish students at Gilman.  His point is that no Jew should’ve expected to be fully accepted or integrated into Gilman because it was a school based in a religious tradition (much as Israel is allegedly).  Any Jew who chafed at this situation had a right to leave (as Gordis did after two years).  In other words, you can’t change a religious institution from within if you’re of a different religious tradition than the founders.  If you don’t like it you should leave.

Jerry Haber, who was a student at Gilman earlier, also notes that Jews were compelled to attend religious instruction an even more onerous requirement that Gordis doesn’t even mention.  But unlike Gordis, Haber stayed in touch with friends at Gilman and the School itself and watched its remarkable progress in ridding itself of some of the more offensive Christo-centric customs.  It did this because it genuinely wanted to welcome Jews as equal partners in the School.  You won’t see any of this in Gordis’ book because it is distinctly “off message.”

Gordis wants to posit an Israel that has a right to be Judeo-centric and a right to accord superior rights to Jewish citizens.  That is how he even flirts with the Kahanist transferist program advocated by Avigdor Lieberman and the Israeli far-right.  That a mainstream American Jewish rabbi should be speaking about transfer as if it is an unfortunate, but necessary concept that may be necessary to preserve Israel as a Jewish state indicates how far to the right Israel discourse has gone both in the U.S. and Israel.  This rabbi, who speaks favorably of the notion of forcibly expelling hundreds of thousands of Israeli citizens from their homeland, is toying with Jewish fascism.  But you wouldn’t know it by the generous accolades on his book cover from the likes of Cynthia Ozick and Natan Sharansky.

Here is some of Gordis’ writing on transfer:

Therefore, despite the great pain, these potentially agonizing solutions to an undeniable problem have to be raised… Those who seek to restore purpose to Israeli life will have to decide how to preserve Israel’s Jewish majority. For it is that majority that enables Israel to serve as such a beacon of hope for Jews. That, in turn, invariably will entail more than rhetoric. It will require abandoning the pretense that Israel is just like other countries, the charade that claims that Israel can deal with its minorities precisely as other democracies do…If Israelis genuinely believe in that purpose, they will then have to be willing to discuss what they are actually willing to do to protect the existence of the state that has saved the Jewish people.

First, it should be noted that Israel has not lost its Jewish majority and if it completes the negotiation of a Palestinian state soon, this eventuality may not happen for decades.  Second, where is it written that the only way in which Israel can be a beacon of hope to Jews is if there is a Jewish majority there?  Why can’t Israel be a beacon of hope to Jews no matter how many Jews live there as long as there is a strong, protected, vibrant Jewish life there?

Most important here is Gordis riding willingly down that slippery slope from democracy to ethnocracy and worse.  In Gordis’ view Israelis and Jews are naïve if they believe that country can be a democracy as other western nations are.  The Likudist rabbi does seem to believe that somehow Israel will still be a democracy, just one that is “different” that others democracies like the U.S. which treat their minorities on an egalitarian basis.

So, Gordis asks, what ARE you willing to do to protect the superior rights of Jews in Israel?  Transfer?  Not out of the question according to Gordis.  Though Daniel Gordis was never as far left as Benny Morris once was, it seems to me that you’re watching in Gordis the gradual transformation of a plain vanilla American Zionist into a politicized Likudist hack.  One with great yichus and a rabbinical degree to boot.  What a great catch for Shalem!

In all of Gordis’s discussions of Israeli Palestinians there is one glaring omission that topples his whole argument like a house of cards.  Israeli Palestinians are indigenous to Israel.  As Haber notes in his own critique, they preceded Gordis and Haber who are both immigrants.  The Palestinians were there before the ancestors of most current Israeli Jews arrived.  So their tie to the land is deep and inalienable.  Gordis writes about Palestinian citizens of Israel as if they are a nuisance to be tolerated or dealt with.  Read this sample:

The differences between the plights of Israeli Arabs and Palestinian refugees is more an accident of history in 1948 than anything else [!].  Some fled, some stayed, but those who stayed did not do so out of Zionist convictions [!].  They either hoped that Arab forces would derail  the newly formed Zionist state, or thought they could better protect their property by staying.

You will read nothing in that passage or anything Gordis has written about Israeli Palestinians that acknowledges their indigenous rights.  For Gordis, there seems to be no such right at least as far as the territory on which Israel is situated stands.  I suppose he believes that Jews maintain some sort of historical bond with Israel that precedes even the relatively recent Palestinian bond.  But the truth is that I can’t trace my lineage back to ancient Israel in any way that is meaningful to me especially in the sense of feeling an ownership of the land of Israel.

Haber eloquently summarizes the Israeli Palestinian claim to being an equal partner with the nation’s Jewish citizens:

What is particularly striking about [Gordis'] account…is the utter failure to understand why most Israeli Arabs refuse to leave Israel: Their motivation is crystal clear from their writings and their statements: This land, and this state, are their homes in three ways: As natives, it is their home in a way never can be for Rabbi Gordis and myself, who were born and lived much of our lives outside of Israel.  As members of the Palestinian people, with the consciousness of having a common history and identity, this land is their homeland. And finally as Israeli citizens, it is most assuredly their homeland. For despite the best efforts of ethnic nationalists on both sides, there has evolved an Israeli identity shared by native-born Israelis, whether Jew, Arab, and immigrant children of foreign workers.

With all due respect to Rabbi Gordis, neither he nor I can ever be as Israeli as Ahmed Tibi, Emile Habibi, or Azmi Bishara. We are immigrants; they are not. Because it is their home, they want, like ethnic minorities everywhere, to participate in the governance of the state. And the more Israel defines itself as a Jewish ethnic state, the greater and more legitimate their claim for national rights and power-sharing, like ethnic minorities in multi-ethnic societies everywhere.

If Daniel Gordis wants to argue that the only way of saving Israel as he envisions it is to rid the nation of its Palestinian minority that’s a position he’s entitled to.  But he’s no longer entitled to call himself a centrist or mainstream Zionist.  He is a far right nationalist like all of his new friends at Shalem and in the Likud.  Let no American Jewish institution that books his make the mistake that they will hear from an eminently reasonable, common-sensical Israeli-American Zionist.  They will hear from someone wants his audience to think of him that way.  But he’s long gone from the liberal Zionist center where his uncles David and Robert would doubtless would feel much more comfortable.

Ameer Makhoul and Israel’s Sham Justice

Thursday, October 28th, 2010
ameer makhoul

Ameer Makhoul, during a May, 2010 legal hearing (Oded Bality/AP)

When you are a political activist facing a sentence of life to be handed down by a security state in which all the levers of power are arrayed against you; when you are a father and husband facing the prospect of never seeing your daughters till they themselves are grown, married and with children of their own; when you are a man who has faced a lifetime of oppression as a member of a largely despised Israeli minority and understands that every card is stacked against you.  When you face all of these factors in weighing your future and your options in facing “justice,” what do you do?

Do you respond as Ethel Rosenberg did?  Though the historical record now indicates that her husband was likely a spy and hence guilty of some of the charges against him (though they certainly didn’t constitute a capital crime), the record also indicates that Ethel was press-ganged by a national security apparatus which used her as leverage to extort a guilty plea from her husband.  But Ethel turned the tables on the government and didn’t play the role the government expected.  She refused to pressure her husband and was so infused with discipline and belief in the couple’s cause that neither broke and they went to their deaths for it.

If you are Ameer Makhoul, what do you do?  If you are Richard Silverstein or whoever reads these words–what do YOU do?  Do you cave in the belief that you are entitled to save yourself for the sake of family, your political work, your life?  Or do you hang tough and never give an inch?

Ameer Makhoul has made his choice.  He has signed a plea bargain admitting to a number of the charges levelled against him by the Israeli secret police (though his attorneys say that some of the original charges were removed from the final deal).  The Haaretz headline says he admitted to espionage, contact with a foreign agent, and abetting an enemy.

The national security goons will never tell you what Makhoul really did.  But I have reported here about what I know of those contacts.  Makhoul met, during a conference he attended in Amman, with Hassan Jaja, an expatriate Lebanese environmental activist and landscape designer living in Jordan.  This is the alleged Hezbollah agent to whom the Israeli Palestinian activist spilled precious state secrets.  What did he tell him?  That Haifa bay faced environmental pollution?

Imagine yourself Nancy Pelosi, who when she was Minority Leader during the Bush presidency, travels to Syria and meets with that country’s president.  The Wall Street Journal calls for your prosecution under the obscure Logan Act, which prohibits Americans from traveling abroad to conspire with an enemy state.  All this happened.  But imagine what could’ve come afterward: when Pelosi returns she finds a subpoena from the FBI investigating her for her actions.  The Republican Justice Department files suit against her and even wins a conviction accompanied by a serious jail sentence.  Imagine Nancy Pelosi spending five or tens years in federal prison, all for meeting Bashar Assad.

Fantasy, you say?  Of course.  But not for Ameer Makhoul.  He had a meeting with a man, which for any other person in the world would be an ordinary meeting over coffee involving consultation about issues of mutual concern.  But for a politically hounded Israeli Palestinian activist, this meeting becomes the grounds for stealing his liberty and throwing him into a cell for possibly the rest of his life.

Makhoul’s wife is circulating tonight a statement read on her husband’s behalf at the International Conference of the World Social Forum, which addresses these same issues:

I urge you, my brothers and sisters, to come to Haifa on the day of my trial [Thursday, October 28th 2010] so that you can see for yourselves that the Israeli court and legal system are mere manifestations of the Israeli state’s injustice. Thus, we do not seek justice in these systems, but we choose to…accuse them of being instruments of oppression, not righteousness. A Palestinian prisoner in an Israeli prison can never be found innocent.

They target us, the 1948 Palestinians, and our relations with our Palestinian brothers and sisters in the West Bank, in the Gaza Strip and in exile, as well as our relations with the Arab world. For according to the myths of Israeli security, these are considered to be “relations with the enemy.” However, our enemy is not and will never be any people or national, religions or ethnic group. As much as they would like to accuse us as such, the Jews are not our enemy.

Or, as the Talmud would have it: leyt din, v’leyt dayan (“there is no judge and no justice”)

You will undoubtedly hear a floodgate of self-congratulation from apologists for Israel’s oppression of the Palestinians trumpeting Makhoul’s “confession” and “admission of guilt” (according to Israeli headlines).  But you and I and every reasonable person knows what happened here.  Makhoul chose a tactical retreat in order to preserve what he could of his liberty.

What evidence do I have of this?  Look at the history of similar Shin Bet prosecutions.  They are known for targeting effective political leaders and hounding them into prison or exile.  They did this as early as the 1960s when they drove Mahmoud Darwish into exile.  A more recent victim was Amzi Bishara, whom the Shin Bet drove from the country.  In 2004, they arrested Mohammed Kana’neh, giving no reason for doing so.  Eventually, he too accepted a plea deal involving a 30-month sentence which, on appeal, was lengthened by another two years.  Yes, under Israeli justice, when the defense appeals they ADD to your sentence if you’re a Palestinian security suspect.

The Shabak has a very narrow repertory and very little imagination.  The list of crimes of Palestinian security suspects is long, but remains the same no matter the name of the suspect.  In the old days, perhaps you met with a radical leader of the PLO.  Today, you meet with Hezbollah.  So yes, there are a few modifications over time to account for changes in political fashion.  But the broad outlines remain virtually the same.

Returning to Makhoul’s plea bargain, the prosecution is seeking a ten-year sentence in connection with the reduced charges.  The defense is lobbying for a seven-year term.  Seven years instead of life.  That’s a tough calculation to make.  But can anyone fault a condemned man for choosing a lesser sentence so that he can live to fight another day?

The Haaretz story as much as alludes to my own perspective on the plea deal and the reasons Makhoul agreed to it:

Makhoul’s lawyer said that notwithstanding the plea bargain, his client did not pass on classified information to an enemy agent, and that all of the information was already known.

Makhoul said in court yesterday that the story “is not yet finished.”

Makhoul said that although many of the charges that were brought against him were irrelevant, he decided to accept the plea bargain after consulting with his lawyers and with his family.

If you read Hebrew and don’t mind reading an article that is liable to make you ill, you can read Dan Margalit’s smug, self-satisfied pimping for Israel secret police and its role in this case.  Margalit brags that Makhoul was allegedly made to eat crow and rescind every charge he made against the Shin Bet (no torture, no mistreatment).  The Bibiton bought-and-paid-for reporter also rubs the noses of the Israel-Palestinian activist solidarity community (that would be you and me) who championed Makhoul’s innocence.  ”Look at ‘em, now,” Margalit seems to be saying.  ”Boy, they’ll have to eat crow after this.”

I detest the man, as I wrote to the Israeli friend who sent me this piece of garbage.  The Talmud talks about those who sin unintentionally and those who do so intentionally.  For unintentional sin, the punishment is much lighter than for intentional sin.  Margalit’s sins of bolstering the evil of the Israeli crimes against Palestinians are not unintentional. His are fully intentional.  Unfortunately, only history can mete out punishment for the Margalits of the Israeli power elite.  The wages of his sin will be future irrelevancy when history eventually rights the wrongs and clears the record of Israeli injustice and Occupation.

We may have a long time to wait for the liberation of political prisoners like Ameer Makhoul and the ending of Israel’s massive system of injustice.  But we and the Palestinians will win this fight.  And Israel will be the better for it.  Not weakened or destroyed as the apologists have it.  Justice when it finally comes in a national conflict does not ultimately harm either victim or perpetrator.  It heals both (cf. South Africa, Northern Ireland, Kosovo).  And it will do so in this case as well.  Of that you can be sure.

If I were Hamas, I would add a new name to the prisoner list of those they are seeking to free in exchange for Gilad Shalit: Ameer Makhoul.

Free Ameer Makhoul

Monday, October 4th, 2010

free ameer makhoulAfter breaking the Shabak gag order on his case, I helped found an international working group to support the imprisoned Israeli Palestinian nationalist activist, Ameer Makhoul (though I haven’t taken an active role in it lately). Now called the Committee for the Defense of Ameer Makhoul, it is entering a more public phase as the Shabak and Israeli justice system begins to kick into high gear after months of stops and starts.  This case is very important for those supporting what remains of Israeli democracy and Palestinian human rights.  Ameer Makhoul is no more guilty of spying for Hezbollah on Israel than you or I are.  This is a trumped case brought by a security apparatus engaged in campaign to stamp out independent Israeli Palestinian political voices.

What follows is the public appeal of the Committee.  What is most important is that you read through to the end and join me in making a contribution to support Ameer’s case.

Ameer Makhoul Trial Enters New Phase

Call for Support

Recent Developments

The campaign to free Ameer Makhoul, a Palestinian citizen of Israel and political and human rights activist falsely accused of espionage, has achieved significant advances. Makhoul’s attorneys…undermined the prosecution’s core allegations against him on September 16th in the Haifa District Court. State Prosecutors admitted that no evidence of espionage had been found in any of the computers and cellular phones seized from Makhoul’s home and office. Nor was any evidence of espionage found, they admitted, in the transcripts of thirty thousand wiretapped telephone conversations.

Makhoul’s lawyers further secured a ruling from the Nazareth District Court, September 14th, upholding Makhoul’s right to direct and confidential access to counsel. Makhoul’s right to counsel as a citizen of Israel had been routinely violated by prison authorities, who had been officially and conspicuously wire-tapping his conversations, conducted across glass barriers via telephone, with his lawyers.

Background

Sixteen members of Israel Security Agency commonly known in English as the Shin Bet abducted Mr. Makhoul from his home at 3:00 am on May 6th, 2010. They searched his home and office, seizing personal items belonging to Makhoul and his family, as well as office equipment, documents and databases.  Makhoul was detained incommunicado. A sweeping “gag order” was placed on the case forbidding publication by Israeli media of any information relating to the interrogation and the arrest. For twelve days he was subjected to torturous  interrogation techniques including excessively prolonged sleep deprivation—a technique Makhoul’s interrogators have openly stated they used. When Makhoul complained of being in excruciating pain, the Shin Bet interrogators cuffed his legs to a chair with shortened legs and threatened that he would be permanently crippled from the interrogation.

Three weeks after his detention, Makhoul was charged with espionage, assistance to the enemy in a time of war, contact with a foreign agent, and other trumped up security charges. When he finally appeared in open court, Makhoul categorically denied the relevance of all charges against him.

On June 14th, State Prosecutors announced their possessing of   ’Secret Evidence’ against Makhoul. That evidence, they stated, would not be disclosed to his legal defense team for security reasons. Meanwhile, Makhoul’s repeated requests for a medical exam and blood test by an independent doctor from the Association of Physicians for Human Rights were continually postponed. Makhoul was unable to discuss these matters with his lawyers without having his conversations wiretapped.

Public Committee for the Defense of Ameer Makhoul Established

The Committee for the Defense of Ameer Makhoul was established in a public meeting held at the headquarters of the Galilee Society for Health Research and Services in Shafa Amr on September 8th. Participating in the meeting were 47 representatives of grassroots networks and professional associations, as well as concerned Jewish and Arab public figures. At this meeting, the Committee and those it represents assumed collective responsibility for the defense of Ameer Makhoul. It took such a step for the following reasons.

Ameer Makhoul was not arrested as an individual. He was not arrested due to any serious contention that he conducted illegal activities–let alone espionage. Makhoul was arrested to send a message to Palestinian citizens of Israel. That message was formulated by extreme right wing parties in the current Israeli government. They are targeting Makhoul because he is a legal, legitimate, and effective voice of a politically disadvantaged group –Israel’s Palestinian Arab citizens.

Makhoul has been a voice of this disadvantaged group of Israeli citizens in numerous public meetings around the world. He is internationally recognized as a human rights defender and as a member of international coalitions and networks of international and regional organizations. In his capacities as Chairman of the Public Committee for the Protection of Political Freedoms in Israel  and as General Director of Ittijah –a network of Arab NGOs in Israel with consultative status in the United Nations Economic and Social Council —Makhoul regularly encounters and talks to citizens of foreign countries—including Arab countries. Simply talking to another Arab does not constitute espionage in the legal framework of Israel or any other country. But contacting an Arab colleague seems to be the core of the espionage charges against Makhoul.

In 2009, the Shin Bet promised Ameer Makhoul that they would “tailor a file for this disappearance and prolonged separation from his family” if he would not tone down his political and human rights activism. They were incensed by his legal, outspoken statements against Israel’s 2009 invasion of Gaza and his repeated reference to Israel’s use of phosphorus bombs against civilian populations in Gaza –including a majority of children. Spurious charges of espionage, the use of illegal interrogation techniques, and fabricated claims of evidence that evaporate in the open air seem to fulfill that threat to disappear Makhoul. Amnesty International has called his arrest and continued detention “pure harassment designed to hinder his human rights work.”

The Tasks at Hand for All of Us

The Committee for the Defense of Ameer Makhoul faces two urgent tasks. But first, we want to note what has already been achieved—despite all of the obstacles. A gag order against discussion of Makhoul’s case crumbled – thanks to appeals by the defense, community protest and solidarity and Israeli and foreign bloggers who ignored the order and opened the way to public pressure. The legal team has won important victories. Illegal practices of prison authorities that violated citizens’ right to counsel have been waylaid.

The obstacle presented by state prosecutors’ invocation of “secret evidence” to silence activists remains to be challenged and ultimately undermined. The incrimination of talking to foreigners must be challenged as well.  Already, it has become a tiny bit harder, we hope, for Israel to lock up intellectuals and activists under vague charges of “contact with a foreign agent” in the global village of the internet era.

Now, we have urgent and specific tasks at hand. The Committee for the Defense of Ameer Makhoul is working to mobilize legal and medical international observers for the trial of Ameer Makhoul and to raise funds to cover lawyer fees and related expenses for Makhoul’s defense. We have launched local publicity and fundraising campaigns to achieve those goals. We need your help to make our efforts even more effective.

We reach out to the friends of Ameer and supporters of his work on behalf of Palestinian citizens of Israel and human rights victims everywhere. At this critical moment, we ask for your direct involvement in the campaign for his freedom. Ameer’s trial is scheduled to proceed Tuesday October 5th.  The time is now for you to get involved.

All interested individuals and groups are invited to contact the Chairman of the Committee for the Defense of Ameer Makhoul: Dr. Hatim Kanaaneh, Phone- 972-(0)522-414 126.  email: kanaaneh at hotmail dot com

Checks can be made out to The Committee for Defense of Ameer Makhoul

Account details for direct bank transfers are as follows:

Arab Israel Bank- ltd.
Bank no.: 34.
Branch no.: 001 Haifa.
Beneficiary Name: The Committee for Defense of Ameer Makhoul- Haifa.
Account Humber  IBAN= IL 890340010000000818780  (8187/80)
Swift Code: Lumiilittlv- 794 Branch

Online Donations through Pay pal can be made here:

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