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Posts Tagged ‘doron zahavi’

IDF Torturer Doron Zahavi Wants to Sodomize Arabs and Get Medal for It

Sunday, February 5th, 2012
doron zahavi

Doron Zahavi, pixellated (Eli Attias)

Doron Zahavi, who still can be called only “Captain George” in the Israeli media, has gone public with his grievance against the IDF, which employed him to torture kidnapped Arabs who were thought to have intelligence about affairs in Lebanon or Syria, specifically Israeli prisoners of war. Among those he worked his wonders on was Mustafa Dirani, who was thought to have specific knowledge of the whereabouts of Ron Arad. Yossi Gurvitz reports ( in Hebrew) that Zahavi ordered one of his subordinates to undress and rape Dirani. Another Zahavi subordinate, who blew the whistle on the whole military torture complex he ran, says his commander sodomized Dirani with a nightstick.

The brave torturer has the effrontery to claim that the anal lacerations Dirani suffered were due to “constipation,” for which they gave him a laxative that caused him to soil himself.  The victim says he was forced to wear a diaper constantly even when it contained excrement.  And such treatment, as Gurvitz confirms and as I’ve reported here previously is SOP for the Israeli torture apparatus.

There are those who applaud the Israeli Supreme Court for outlawing torture in a landmark ruling.  But unlike the U.S. Supreme Court, the Israeli rulings appear to be only advisory and not declarative.  The security apparatus feels emboldened to act as it wishes, court ruling or no.  That’s why IDF Gen. Yair Naveh ordered Palestinian militants murdered in cold blood though they were unarmed, in direct violation of a Supreme Court ruling.  Note, that the brave justices, when offered an opportunity to review Naveh’s brazen violation of their ruling, refused to do so, in characteristically timid fashion.

mustafa dirani

Israeli prison guard offering Mustafa Dirani a hearty 'a votre sante' on his release from prison (Life)

Gurvitz notes that, like the CIA tapes of waterboarding of Al Qaeda suspects which were erased, the Dirani interrogation tapes mysteriously disappeared.  They must’ve thought where there’s no smoke there can be no fire.  If the tapes had survived the fire might have burned not just Zahavi and his boss, but a very senior IDF commander, Amos Gilad.  That’s pretty high up the food chain.  Zahavi claims Gilad was watching the interrogations in real-time.

Despite the destruction of key evidence, the IDF didn’t bargain for a disgruntled subordinate stricken by conscience for the horrible things he did there, would spill the beans and expose the whole sordid mess publicly.  That whistleblower himself has been threatened with state prosecution for perpetrating some of the alleged crimes of which he charges Zahavi.  The Israeli motto seems to be: let no good deed go unpunished.

On the strength of this claim and the notoriety that derived from it, Zahavi’s notorious Unit 504 was disbanded (only to re-emerge in recent months in all its former glory), Dirani was freed, and the IDF officer was cashiered. Though he resurfaced as the Israeli police’s chief anti-Arab enforcer for East Jerusalem. He has the title of “liaison” to the Palestinian community. But Jouad Siam knows first hand what that means. Zahavi threatened to destroy the home of the Silwan activist and to destroy the community organization he founded if he refused to inform on his fellow Palestinians.

Dirani is now suing the Israeli government for the abuse he suffered and the Israeli Supreme Court ruled the trial may go forward. Zahavi too is suing the government because it didn’t give him a medal for the dirty work he did on its behalf. He wants a tidy sum in return for keeping his mouth shut. He even says he’d take a job in Alaska (I didn’t know there were any IDF outposts there or any torture victims for him to work on) if they’d at least treated him with the respect he deserved. This reminds me of a Martin Scorsese mafia pic in which the disaffected made-guy goes to the don and whines about being cut out of the spoils and not getting what he has coming to him. Usually the guy is offed in the next reel, though I’m not sure the IDF has gotten to the point where it gets rid of its own rotten apples in that fashion.

Lest you doubt he is a rotten apple, take a peek at this:

“If this goes to court, what I told you today is just the teaser,” he threatens, “Trust me – no one really wants me to climb up to the stand. If I have to stand there and speak of Dirani, you’ll find out I have plenty more to say about how the apparatus acts when it needs to hide all sorts of things […] and everyone is a liar, which is why the country is where it is today, no deterrence, nothing. And in the end? I’m the apparatus’ scapegoat.”

If he doesn’t get the Israel Prize for torture he’s going to sing all day on the stand and tell the world how dirty the IDF and security apparatus is.  Now, this could be the disgruntled ravings of an extortionist who’s bluffing; or this guy has the goods and he’s willing to tell the world just how vile and dirty the entire Israeli security system is.  I’d say the truth is somewhere in between.  My guess is that while he does have plenty of dirt, that he’s more interested in upping the price for his silence than telling all the dirty little secrets.  He’s too much a company man and probably too much a blowhard and coward to really tell it all.  But that’s just a guess.

Gurvitz’s closing paragraph is poignant and compelling:

The Dirani-George case, had it been treated properly, may have become the 300 Line affair of the 504 unit. This did not happen, simply because the public does not wish to know. In 2012 Israel (as in 1994 Israel, as in 1984 Israel) the idea that every person – even Dirani, even George – is a human being, which must not be deprived by reducing him to quivering piece of meat, lying in its own excrement, is still a radical one.

I would only add that the only reason the 300 Line affair was exposed was that a senior IDF commander was accused of a crime he didn’t commit and while the entire government apparatus closed ranks behind the lying scumbag of a Shin Bet chief who perpetrated the coverup, the military officer wouldn’t go quietly.  Also, there were a few brave media outlets which defied censorship and reported the scandal.  In the Zahavi case there are no IDF sacrificial lambs, nor is there a brave media ready to defy the censor and spill the beans.  But Gurvitz’s main claim is correct: the Israeli public doesn’t give a crap about the suffering of an Arab.  Let Dirani rot in hell would be the prevailing wisdom.

I noticed something very peculiar about Yossi’s post when it was republished at 972 Magazine.  The link to my own post which exposed the name of Doron Zahavi, which Yossi graciously included in his own blog post, was gone once it was republished at 972.  It’s fairly easy to figure out why.  The 972 editor who republished made a judgement that merely by linking to my post they might bring the wrath of the Israeli security services on them.

Now, to be clear, it is not illegal (yet) in Israel to link to a foreign source which exposes the identity of an Israeli security officer.  In fact, Zahavi is no longer in the IDF and so isn’t even protected by the traditional proffer of anonymity offered to military and intelligence officers in the media.  But 972 figured self-censorship was the better part of valor.  It’s what I call pre-emptive self-censorship.  Linking to my blog may not be illegal yet, but let’s err on the side of caution and not give the security goons an excuse to go after us.  I understand the dangers faced by the dissenting media inside Israel.  But still, if they don’t have courage, who will?  So I think it was essentially a cowardly act.

Yossi’s act of linking to me was brave such principled blogging is why he’s been interrogated by the police for his blog.  As for 972?  Not so much.

If anyone has a photo of the real Captain George, please let me know.  He deserves to have his name and image up in lights.

Let’s add to this an only tangentially related matter that another 972 writer, Dimi Reider took a nasty potshot at me that was riddled with inaccuracies in his own 972 column.  When I asked Noam Sheizaf for the right of reply in a 972 post he never answered.  So much for progressive solidarity and fairness.

UPDATE: Noam Sheizaf and Dimi Reider have replied to my criticisms above: Sheizaf says the link to my Doron Zahavi post was replaced when it was republished at 972 through an “innocent mistake” that will be corrected.  I made the assumptions I did above based on what I saw on the website.  In response to his question why I didn’t bother to contact him directly before speaking publicly about it, I reminded him of his lack of response to my last message.  We’re all human beings and base our judgments and responses on how others treat us.  Sheizaf apparently feels I’ve gored his and 972′s ox, but doesn’t seem to understand that others may feel their own ox has been gored as well.

There is another possible explanation for the disappearance of that link.  That is that Yossi republished the article with the link and someone else removed it.  Possibly someone motivated by pique at my strong response to Dimi Reider’s post.  If that’s the case, then the motives are even pettier than the reason I ascribed above.

Reider says one of my main criticisms of the innacuracy of his characterization of my claims about the drone strike resulted from a “typo” on his part.

Captain George (aka Doron Zahavi) Rides Again

Sunday, December 18th, 2011

One thing you have to say about Israeli torturers, you can’t keep a good one down. I reported here some time ago about one Doron Zahavi aka Captain George, an infamous commander of the IDF intelligence unit 504. Until my report, his real name was secret and no publication has reported it. I was delighted to bring his brutal acts into the public light and attach a real name to the torturer. Zahavi and his boys specialized in “interrogating” (i.e. torturing) foreign security suspects captured by the IDF abroad.

One of them was Mustafa Dirani, who Israel suspected of having held the MIA airman, Ron Arad. Zahavi subjected Dirani to the “royal treatment” which included sodomizing him with a billy club. We know this because Dirani sued the State and is attempting to hold it accountable for what its represenative did to him. One of the reasons Dirani exposed methods of torture used by Unit 504 is that the Supreme Court forced the State to allow him to proceed with his claims against it. In the process, Zahavi’s commander, a colonel whose first initial is Het, had a bout of conscience and spilled the beans. Here are some of the Zahavi’s patented methods (in Hebrew):

Het said Captain George played a role in every interrogation. “He would just come in, burst into the room, grab the suspect, shake him, get him onto the floor, punch him in the chest, yell and threaten,” Het said. Het added that George would enter with a baton, hit the suspect and threaten to insert it into his rectum if he “continued to lie or not talk.” Het also recounted an interrogation in which George allegedly stripped a suspect naked and forced him to drink tea or coffee from an ashtray full of cigarette ashes and then forced shaving cream or toothpaste into the suspect’s mouth. “I simply walked out,” Het said. Het said George dealt with almost every case involving an infiltrator into Israel from a neighboring country, including Iran, Iraq and Syria, but also in special circumstances such as the interrogation of Dirani. Het recalled an instance in which he inserted a baton into a suspect’s rectum and asked him [Het] to sit on the baton unless the suspect was willing to speak.

The Hebrew version is even more graphic. It describes further brutality by Zahavi:

He always employed brutality. I was shocked. I would sit in the room and watch [shocked]. He would come into the interrogation room, knock the detainee off the bench, jump on him, kick him, threaten that he would fuck him, or that others would fuck him and rape him. The detainees were afraid of him.

Het said that the reason Zahavi was never charged with any violation was that his superiors didn’t want to deal with investigations or committees of inquiry:

When you have dirty laundry you don’t want to wash it outside because everyone [in the unit] could be hurt by it. That’s why everyone tried to close it internally, within the family and not to take it outside.

Het continued that though everyone knew that Zahavi had gone “bad,” no one wanted to deal with it because he got results:

It didn’t matter that those results might do a grave injustice to some of the detainees because results were obtained under threat or torture. Maybe the suspect was even completely clean and had no connection whatever to the incident being investigated.

Note that Het exposes precisely the problem with CIA waterboarding and other forms of torture: you extract information from the victim, but is it good information or stuff he made up to stop the suffering? The reason this story has come back into the news is that the State has now warned Het that he may be subject to criminal prosecution for his previous testimony. On the face of it, they may be charging him with some of the crimes he admitted to participating in under Zahavi’s command. Of course, though the IDF fired Zahavi after this nastiness was exposed, it never prosecuted him.

This allowed him to rise to his level of brutality in another capacity: the Israeli police hired him to be the “liaison” with the East Jerusalem Palestinian population. Don’t you dare think of community policing when you think of what this guy does. He yells and screams at Silwan community activists and threatens them unless they offer intelligence or become spies. This is how the Zahavis of the world operate. So in this best of all possible world for torturers called Israel, Doron Zahavi lands on his feet in a cushy new job while Het, the soldier with a conscience, may end up in jail. The reason? You don’t wash the IDF’s laundry in public. If you do, they’ll come after you too. “Vengeance is mine,” saith the IDF.

Though the army closed Unit 504 after Dirani’s expose caused great embarrassment, a few months ago it brought the unit back apparently by popular demand. Now that the CIA has cut down on water boarding and other forms of torture I guess there’s high demand for the services of animals like Zahavi.

Zahavi is suing the IDF for wrongful termination. He claims that his superior officers knew everything he did and approved it. He’s likely correct and figures that they’ll settle with him rather than drag guys who may even now be cabinet ministers of members of the senior IDF command into court. Those officers may even be pressuring the State not to fight Zahavi and to prosecute Het, the source of their woes to their mind.

IDF: Wages of Terror Are Sodomy

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

The wages of sin may be death in the New Testament.  But in the IDF the wages of terror appear to be sodomy.

I don’t know why it is that the IDF finds it especially appropriate to mete our the punishments of sodomy for suspected terrorists in its hands.  We know, for example, that IDF military torturer Doron Zahavi (aka Captain George) supervised the sodomy and torture of Lebanese prisoner Mustafa Dirani because it was suspected that he was an Amal terrorist who knew something about the kidnapping of Ron Arad.

Similarly, an Israeli rapist admitted his crime in this post from Yulie Cohen’s Blog Ishi (Hebrew) in which he described his rape of a fellow soldier at age 19, while they served in the IDF.  He was attempting to exorcise his demons and expiate his sin, and also to make a statement about how common such acts and the thought processes that lead to them are among Israeli men.

Now, Erez Efrati, a former bodyguard for IDF chief of staff Gaby Ashkenazi is falling on the mercy of an Israeli court in the appeal of his conviction for raping and attempted sodomy of a woman after a stag party.  He got eight years for the crime.  And the grounds of his appeal?  He mistook her for a terrorist.  Keep in mind that he’s outside a Tel Aviv club when this happens, not guarding the Gaza border.  Anyway, he sees this dark shadowy figure and his military training immediately kicks in and he…rapes her.  Does this tell us something about how the IDF trains its finest young men, the ones selected for coveted assignments like guarding the chief of staff?  Or does it tell us the guy is full of s(^t?

At yesterday’s hearing, Efrati claimed he had thought the complainant was a terrorist and acted in accordance with his professional training.

“I passed a shadowy figure and I felt my pulse in my throat as the figure moved to my side,” he said. “The figure entered the car and I flew at this figure, pulling the keys out of the ignition as in my military training, fearfully. I behaved as if she were a terrorist.”

That’s an interesting mental calculation on the part of some Israeli men: woman=terrorist.

At any rate, if you consider the guy claims he’s taking responsibility for his crime, why does he attempt such a ludicrous excuse for an argument?

“I take responsibility for the damage and pain I have caused,” he said. “I think about this every day, I know she experienced something terrible. Four or five months ago, I began psychological treatment as part of taking responsibility, in order to understand how I reached this state. My life was completely overturned. Her pain is what is most important, and I am trying to comprehend.”

What part of his psychological treatment included coming up with this bone-headed piece of junk defense theory?

On a related front, Dena Shunra even wonders whether Yoav Even may’ve learned his penchant for sodomy through his IDF service.  Perhaps he took one look at P’s dark form in his apartment that fateful night, mistook her for a terrorist, and the gut instincts instilled in him by his IDF training took over and he…sodomized her.

This may be a new tactic the Israeli army is developing.  In addition to F-16s and Apaches, it’s adding sodomy to its arsenal.

Supreme Court Reopens Israel’s Guantanamo

Friday, January 21st, 2011
camp 1391

Israel's notorious Camp 1391 torture prison

If you’ve ever heard Alan Dershowitz or any liberal Zionist talk about the wonderful role played by the Israeli High Court in protecting democracy and human rights in Israel, do me a favor and quote ‘em this post I’m writing.  I’m sorry to say that the Supreme Court is little more than a sham; window dressing allowing the State to say it has a supreme judicial body like other western democracies, while its Court is enfeebled and subservient to the interest of the national security state.

The Supreme Court today overturned an injunction secured by the Israeli human rights NGO, HaMoked and former MK Zahava Gal-On, which had closed a top-secret Israeli prison used for the detention and interrogation of high-value foreign prisoners (aka “enemy combatants”).  The prison, known only by its number, Unit 1391, is located within a secret Israeli military base called Camp Shlomo (after the name of a former commander of the IDF 504 intelligence unit) near Kibbutz Barkai.  Chris McGreal wrote about the detention camp here.  Dan Ephron wrote this about it in 2004:

What [Israeli historian Gad] Kroizer had discovered…was the location of an ultrasecret jail where Israel has held Arabs in total seclusion for years, barred visits by the Red Cross and allegedly tortured inmates. Known as 1391, the facility is used as an interrogation center by a storied unit of Israel’s military intelligence, whose members–all Arabic speakers–are trained to wring confessions from the toughest militants. According to Arabs who’ve been imprisoned in 1391, some of the methods are reminiscent of Abu Ghraib: nudity as a humiliation tactic, compromising photographs, sleep deprivation. In a few cases, at least, interrogators at 1391 appear to have gone beyond Israel’s own hair-splitting distinction between torture and what a state commission referred to in 1987 as “moderate physical pressure.”

secret idf prison camp 1391

Google Earth view of Israel's secret torture prison, Camp 1391, next door to Kibbutz Barkai

Let’s call it Israel’s Guantanamo as Jonathan Cook has.

What’s faintly humorous is that Maariv’s coverage of this story makes a major flourish over the secrecy of the military base, when most knowledgeable Israelis know everything I wrote above.  They just can’t write it in a newspaper or say it on TV or radio.

The prison is most notorious for the ‘hospitality’ enjoyed there by a Hezbollah operative it housed for eight years, Mustafa Dirani.  Dirani was sodomized at Unit 1391 by IDF military intelligence interrogators under the command of Doron Zahavi.  Later Dirani sued the State, won a large monetary settlement and his freedom.  His cousin, arrested with him, wasn’t so lucky.  As a result of his torture, he developed catatonic schizophrenia according to Jonathan Cooke.  Zahavi, who surely would’ve been promoted without the glare of publicity shined by the court suit, was drummed out of the IDF only to surface last year as the new Arab liaison for the Israeli police with special responsibilities to ensure the safe Judaization of East Jerusalem (though that’s not how the police describe his job).

This blog exposed Zahavi’s identity, because the country has a quaint tradition of refusing to identify anyone publicly who’s ever been an intelligence agent, even if they’re dead.  To Israelis he’s simply known as “Captain George.”  I thought that rather ridiculous and that Israel deserved to know the real name of someone who’s engaged in such heroic acts on behalf of his country.

As if all this history wasn’t bad enough, Maariv portrays the maddening legal contortions used by the justices for approving Israel’s latest torture facility.  We are supposed to feel reassured because the Court placed “meaningful” limits on use of the facility.  It is now only to be used to house foreign prisoners (no Israelis or Palestinians) and only for the limited period of a few days (Dirani was imprisoned there for eight years).  Prisoners will be entitled to visits from their attorneys and international organizations “except insofar as this shall be limited by the needs of the investigation according to the conditions of the law” (a loophole wide enough to drive a Mack truck through).  In order to detain a prisoner there, the IDF will have to notify the government’s legal advisor of his identity.  The judges also directed visitation rights for government and parliamentary delegations “under certain circumstances” (unspecified, natch).  These visiting bodies will have authority over the conditions under which detainees are held and ensure they are compatible with the law.  Only members of the Knesset intelligence subcommittee will be entitled to participate in these visits (and certainly no one from Zahava Gal On’s party, Meretz).

The justices wrote without a hint of irony:

“We believe that this will provide an appropriate balance enabling parliamentary visits without undermining security considerations which provide the reason for guarding the secrecy of the facility.”

The Court chief justice, Dorit Beinisch, emphasized that the examples provided by the complainants of secret prisons in Eastern Europe to which prisoners were brought through secret rendition were “a very great distance from the matter before it.”  She rejected the claim by HaMoked that the secrecy of the location of the prison violated international law saying that the holding of prisoners in detention there would fall under the rules of Israeli and international law.

While the complainants criticized the physical conditions under which the prisoners would be held and the methods of interrogation which would be used, the State claimed that conditions of detentions would be compatible with the law.  The government also rejected the claim that forbidden forms of interrogation would be utilized (saying this with a straight face after the Dirani affair beggars belief) except for the fact that prisoners would be blindfolded when transferred there.

The government claimed that the secrecy of Unit 1391 would not detract from the prisoners’ rights (except when they’re being tortured or deprived of attorney-client visits during those times when “conditions of the investigation” simply didn’t permit them).  The State offered to notify family of the detainee/victim of their detention, but would not provide the location of the facility.  Instead it would offer an “address” to which family could turn with its requests.  The authorities argued that providing such notice to the attorney would fulfill its obligations.

At a time when the U.S. has abandoned extraordinary rendition and drastically reduced the prisoner population at Guantanamo in an attempt to close it, it’s rather extraordinary that Israel’s Supreme Court is backpedaling on human rights and reopening one of Israel’s most notorious torture chambers.  Further, unlike Guantanamo which at least has a known physical address, no Israeli officially knows where the Unit 1391 prison is.

Saying that members of the parliamentary intelligence committee would provide sufficient oversight to ensure protection of the rights of the prisoners is like saying that the House intelligence committee provided sufficient oversight over CIA participation in waterboarding and extraordinary rendition.  Again, it simply beggars belief.  This from the “Only Democracy in the Middle East.”

Israeli Military Breaks Into Silwan Home, Beats Up Brother of Murdered Resident

Thursday, September 30th, 2010
israeli border police during silwan assault

Israeli Border Police near site of yesterday's assault on Sirhan home

Not content merely to have murdered Samar Sirhan last week at the hands of a trigger happy settler security guard, Israel’s hallowed Border Police added insult to injury by breaking into the Sirhan home yesterday morning at 2:30AM where they promptly severely beat several of his brothers and arrested one of them who required nine stitches for his injuries.

What possible pretext can these heartless goons have for exacerbating the suffering of this family?  Clearly, all Israel including its Jewish residents knows the killing was murder.  They’ve seen the live video of the shooting scene.  They know the guard and police story don’t wash.  They know the family is pressing for justice.  This is a naked projection of brutal power to cow the family into submission.

Hey, does everyone here remember the Jerusalem police’s newly appointed “Arab liaison,” Doron Zahavi aka “Captain George?”  The one notorious for arranging for the sodomization of Mustafa Dirani when he helped run an IDF military intelligence detention center a few years ago?  This is the kind of excellent community liaison work for which Zahavi can doubtless take credit.  I believe this is called “pacification,” Israel style.

Here is Joseph Dana’s account of police brutishness during recent disturbances in Silwan following Sirhan’s murder:

Recently, I was on the ground and witnessed soldiers urinating and defecating on the roofs of private Palestinian homes, throwing bottles (water and beer) on to Palestinians pedestrians on the street and breaking windows left and right.From the ground [live] I tweeted:

Soldiers are trashing roof tops with urine and feces in Silwan. We are cleaning up and putting the waste in front of the settler house”

“The police have no shame at all. They have broken a window now and poked their heads into the house demanding coffee”

“They are also throwing bottles from roofs on to the main streets.”

If you are a Jew and supporter of Israel’s current government and policies, how much longer can behavior like this go on in your name?  Will you say, ‘Enough?’  Ever?

Jerusalem’s Police Chief Enraged by Exposure of ‘Captain George’

Saturday, September 11th, 2010
doron zahavi captain george

Doron Zahavi aka the notorious 'Captain George' (Haaretz)

Part of speaking truth to Israeli power is regularly rankling the Shabak, Mossad and even an Israeli police chief once in a while.  The more I rankle the better I’m doing my job as a blogger and supporter of Israeli democracy.  It seems I’ve enraged Jerusalem police chief, Maj. Gen. Aharon Franco, in my exposure of the true identity of the vicious thug known as Captain George, who was secretly named chief liaison to the city’s Arab community.

In an interview reported by Maariv and Haaretz, the reporter for the former wrote:

The wrath of the regional police chief extends to the exposure of the appointment [of Captain George], which was supposed to be secret.  His real name is also prohibited from publication [in Israel]…Today, after publication of his name, this only endangers him.

One has to wonder: why would Franco not want Israel to know that Doron Zahavi fills that role?  Because he was accused quite credibly by a Lebanese prisoner of sodomizing him and because Zahavi was drummed out of IDF military intelligence as a result, while his infamous detention facility (Abu Graibh, anyone?) was closed.  Or perhaps because a Jerusalem Palestinian who comes across him might take umbrage at his record of torturing Arabs?

The police chief blithely calls Zahavi the “right man in the right place” and sings his praises.  Among those who applied for the job, Franco says:

He [Zahavi] was the most professional by far.  Since his appointment relations with the Arab sector are the best that is possible.  He initiates meetings, aids in the donation of school books, and when their is a dispute in the villages, before the situation escalates, he enters into discussion with the elders…He is also the key actor in coordinating bus transportation for the Arab sector during Ramadan…

This passage is dripping in the condescension characteristic of Israeli Jews toward Palestinians.  You want to know what kind of “meetings” Zahavi “initiates?”  Here’s a representative sample.  You want to know why the city police are donating school books to Palestinian educational institutions?  Because the city funds practically nothing in the Palestinian community including education.  And as for Zahavi’s coordination of bus transportation, all I can say is, I bet he makes them run on time like a certain other historical figure known for racist views toward a different minority group.  And if he can’t get one of those elders to suppress one of those typical hot-headed spats which Arabs are known for well, he’ll just shove him in a cell and work him over a bit.  That’ll make him more amenable.

Sheikh Jarrah Protestors Defy Censors, ‘Out’ Doron Zahavi

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

I’m grieved that some of my readers today have been telling me they can’t access my site.  My host tells me it’s because the new DNS hasn’t fully propagated itself and that takes up to 48 hours.  But I’m not sure why some readers should have access to the site and then lose it.  I hope over the next 24 hours that these problems will lessen.  But please let me know via the Contact link here, Facebook or private e mail if your access fails.

I wanted to thank all the readers who’ve made donations to defray the added server hosting costs I’ll be incurring due to upgrading my server and security.  I continue to accept such gifts to cover the new $600 per year hosting fee.

Today, Yossi Gurvitz, who I’m going to start calling one of the “Zahavi Three” (to note our mutual victimization by DOS attacks), informed me of something truly wonderful that proves the amazing power of blogs to stir political action.  At last Friday’s weekly Sheikh Jarrah protest, Israeli demonstrators shouted the following:

Doron Zahavi, do not worry, we’ll soon be seeing you at the Hague.

It sounds much better–and rhymes–in Hebrew.  If anyone has any YouTube video of this chant, please let me know. UPDATE: Thanks to reader, Meir for offering the link. The commentary about Zahavi begins at 1:20 into the video.

What all this means is that a confidential source informed me that Captain George, a notorious accused torturer and rapist, is Doron Zahavi.  I published this information along with two other Israeli bloggers.  We were attacked and within days hundreds of demonstrators were defying Israeli censorship and shouting Zahavi’s name to East Jerusalem’s rooftops.  My only regret is that I was half a world away and couldn’t be there to hear those shouts.  But the fact that I am half a world away and played a key role in enabling this is a miracle of technology.  Further, the fact that an American Jewish blogger and Israeli bloggers could unite in this project delights me no end.  While others may have their own definition of Zionism–mine is precisely this.  That the Diaspora and Israel unite in the search for justice in the State of Israel.  And this is why I started this blog seven years ago.  For precisely this type of situation.  This is what blogs, at least good blogs, are for.

Tikun Olam Suffers DOS Attack After Exposing Former IDF Torturer

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

The gremlins were very unhappy with Yossi Gurvitz, Itamar Sheltiel and me yesterday for exposing the identity of Doron Zahavi as the military intelligence agent alleged to have tortured Mustafa Dirani and threatened East Jeruslem Palestinians in his new role as Arab affairs liaison to the Jerusalem police.  An Israeli colleague posted a link to my post at the right-wing Rotter forum last night and at 5:30AM this morning a sustained DOS attack began on my site.  Yossi’s and Itamar’s blogs were also attacked as well after they joined me in identifying Zahavi.

Apparently, Zahavi has a lot of Rotter supporters in Israel.  One guy at that forum yesterday even tried to make a joke out of the alleged act of sodomy-rape performed on Dirani.  So a DOS attack is certainly not beyond nice folks like that.

So please know if you attempted to visit my site and got an error page ignore whatever verbiage you read there.  This was a DOS attack.  I’ve taken security precautions to avoid future attacks.  But of course when you do that the gremlins escalate their efforts and attacks could happen in future, especially if I again gore the ox of the Israeli secret police and their fellow goons.

It probably didn’t help things in terms of making friends with them that Yossi called me Israel’s answer to Wikileaks.  Though it makes me enormously proud that he did so.

This new security will raise my server hosting costs by four five times.  So I’m asking you, my loyal readers to step up and help me defray these costs for the sake of freedom of the press and in the face of attacks by the secret police and/or those who imagine they’re helping them.  Please use the Paypal button in my right hand sidebar to make as generous a gift as you can.  Make a one-time or better yet regular monthly contribution to help sustain these new monthly costs I’m incurring.  Keep my voice heard loud and clear and send a message to the hackers that we won’t back down and won’t be intimidated.

UPDATE: The DOS attack was renewed this afternoon and the site down again for several more hours, and my site is back up and has been upgraded security-wise.  If any readers have problems accessing it please contact me.

UPDATE II: At 10:30PM July 30th, and after some major screw-ups concerning my host’s migration of my site to a new, more secure server, the site appears to be up and functioning again.  I apologize to you, my faithful readers and to the weird error messages you received when you couldn’t access the site.  You aren’t a spammer and weren’t being singled out for punishment or anything else.

And by the way, if the Rotter boys think they’ve silenced us they’ve got another thing coming.  Tomorrow, I hope to have further information exposing Doron Zahavi, the nature of which I don’t want to discuss until I’m ready to publish.

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