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Posts Tagged ‘hamas’

Hamas Leader, Meshaal, Praises Abbas’ UN Bid for Statehood

Sunday, October 2nd, 2011
khaled meshaal

Khaled Meshaal, Hamas senior leader, endorses Palestinian UN statehood bid in face of opposition from Iran's Ayatollah Khameini

Hamas’s chief leader, Khaled Meshaal delivered a major address (Farsi) at a Palestine conference in Iran yesterday which shocked many by directly contradicting the view advanced by Ayatollah Khameini, who attacked the two state solution, the PLO’s support for it, and its UN bid.  Meshaal, in contrast, praised Mahmoud Abbas for his campaign for Palestinian statehood at the United Nations.  Keep in mind that Meshaal said this in front of the highest leaders of Iran including Khamieni and Ahmedinejad, all of whom lined up in vehement opposition.  It took guts.

Because this is such an important statement and because it has not been reported at all in any English language site, I’m going to quote the article from the Iran’s Radio Farda (funded partially by the U.S. State Department, but whose reporting is considered reliable by Iranians I’ve consulted) in its entirety.  I thank Muhammad Sahimi for his translation from the Farsi and Golnaz Esfandiari for leading me to this source:

Khaled Meshal, head of the political office of Hamas in Syria said that the request of Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority, for recognition of an independent Palestinian state and full membership in the United Nations is a courageous act that must be appreciated and supported. Meshal, who was speaking in the 5th international conference in support of Palestinian Intifada in Tehran, said regarding Abbas’ request, “We cannot deny that this action has had symbolic and moral achievements.”

Meshal expressed his position while Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rejected, at the same conference, Abbas’ suggestion for an independent Palestine, which recognizes partitioning of the historical Palestine. Last week, Abbas asked the UN to recognize an independent Palestine based on the pre-1967 war borders that will consist of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem. An independent Palestine within this area has been agreed on internationally, but so far Israel and Palestinians have not been able to reach any agreement in their peace negotiations. The main reason for the disagreement is Israeli settlements in the West Bank and the problem of Palestinian refugees.

Regarding Mahmoud Abbas’ action at the UN, Ayatollah Khamenei said in his speech at the conference, “Our aim is freedom for [all of] Palestine, not part of it. Any plan that aims to partition Palestine must be completely rejected. The idea of two states that has been covered up with membership of the Palestinian government in the UN is nothing but acceding to the Zionists demands, meaning accepting a Zionist government in the Palestinian land.”

But, describing Abbas’ action, Khaled Meshal said that it has “isolated the Zionist regime and the United States, there is a good international consensus that has revealed the [true] ugly face of the U.S.policy and Israel’s position.” At the same time, Meshal said that the action has its limitation and should not be considered as an end by itself. He demanded to “first liberate Palestinian lands and then ask the United Nations Security Coucil for UN membership.” He also warned against some of the consequences of Abbas’ action.

The Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic implicitly accused the officials of Palestine Liberation Organization of treason, but Meshal praised them. Ayatollah Khamenei said [about the officials], “Lack of religious beliefs and separation from the people gradually neutralized them [the officials] and made them ineffectual. Of course, there are also decent, motivated and brave people in the Organization but, collectively, the Organization has gone a different way [than what it should have].”

“Their deviation [from the path of resistance] hurt the cause of Palestine and it is still doing so. They, similar to some treacherous Arab governments, turned their backs to the ideals of resistance which were, and still are, the only way for Palestine salvation, and hurt not only Palestine but also themselves.”

On the other hand, Khaled Meshal praised Mahmoud Abbas for asking the UN for recognition of an independent Palestine state and membership in the UN, despite the opposition by the United States, but added, “Now what?  Will we limit ourselves to this step? Yes, brother Abu Mazen [Abbas] did not give in to the U.S. pressure and persisted in his action. His courage is praise-worthy and we appreciate and support it.”

We heard in the Israeli media and from other sources before Abbas spoke at the UN, that Hamas officials inside Gaza denounced Abbas’s approach to the UN and instead endorsed a one-state solution.  But either this reporting was wrong, or it has been superseded, and in a major way, by a more authoritative source who not only supports the independence bid, but does so strongly and firmly.  In truth, Meshaal may differ with Abbas tactically in how or when he would have made the approach to the UN.  But this statement and the fact that it was made in Iran, in the anti-Zionist heartland, is very significant.

Not to mention that it might strengthen Abbas’ statehood bid since he will have drawn Hamas, his major rival into support for the proposal.  If the Security Council truly does want to support peace and two previously warring Palestinian political groups can endorse the same proposal, there can be no doubt that a Yes vote for statehood would advance Palestinian unity and an eventual peace agreement.

Despite the fact that Radio Farda is a U.S. sponsored media outlet, there can be little doubt that this story does not advance U.S. policy which rejects the UN statehood bid.  This makes the story all the more credible.

I doubt Meshal’s words will resonate at all in the halls of power in Tel Aviv, Washington DC, and Brussels where it should (and this fact will attest to the bankruptcy of their approach to the conflict and resolving it), but let us circulate this statement as widely as possible for the sake of those in the world who are pragmatic and believe that the Palestinians, ALL of them, can eventually come to terms with an Israeli state within 1967 borders, which in turn recognizes a Palestinian state.

Keep in mind that Israel’s far right government and its water-carriers in this country talk about “Hamastan” and the fact that Iran supplies virtually all Hamas’ missiles and weapons (without offering any proof of the claim).  Now, either Meshaal is being a fool in brooking a major patron, or Iran doesn’t provide nearly the support that is claimed, or Meshaal is one brave dude.  When you add to this that Meshaal also refused to provide Bashar Al Assad with the full-throated statement of support the latter demanded to shore up his tottering regime, you have to give the Hamas leader credit for having a backbone.  Now, if only the president of a certain western nation could copy his example.

Palestine Spring, Bibi’s Winter of Discontent

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

Mahmoud Abbas delivered his UN speech today to rapturous applause from the assembled delegates.  Bibi Netanyahu–not so much.

In one especially telling passage he likened the Palestinian demand for statehood to the Arab Spring, calling it the Palestinian Spring.  But Bibi warns in his speech that it could turn into an Iranian winter (a nuclear winter, of course).  But it is Bibi who’s suffering through winter, a winter of the world’s discontent with Israel’s intransigence.

Didi Remez offers a scan from Maariv which notes Bibi is using his tried and true method of advancing Israel’s interests on the world stage: bribery.  Just as he bribed Romania and Bulgaria to vote No on statehood by offering 1,000 Israeli work permits to each, he’s offer “foreign and military aid” to Portugal, Nigeria, and Gabon to secure their No votes.  There’s nothing like a country that argues its case solely based on merit, is there?

bibi netanyahu 2011 un speech

Bibi's UN sophistries

Bibi’s speech (full text) was full of his usual sour-dourness.  Imagine he flies all the way to New York to address the General Assembly and all he can muster is dark imprecations about the UN being a “place of darkness” for Israel and ” a theater of the absurd.”  Of course, he’s referring largely to the Zionism is Racism resolution which harkens back to the dark ages of the 1970s.  No one appears to have told Bibi that times have changed and that in today’s world Israel is rightly condemned not for Zionism, but for killing civilians and other acts which many consider violations of international law.

Among Bibi’s many sins of omission and commission are this conflation of the PA and Hamas:

President Abbas just said on this podium that the Palestinians are armed only with their hopes and dreams. Yeah, hopes, dreams and 10,000 missiles and Grad rockets supplied by Iran, not to mention the river of lethal weapons now flowing into Gaza from the Sinai, from Libya, and from elsewhere.

In fact, the PA has performed diligently in guaranteeing security in the West Bank and for Israel as well.  No missiles are launched from Fatah territory into Israel.  Yet somehow this good is transformed into bad and Fatah and Hamas are conflated as if they are one and the same.  In fact, Israel has refused to encourage any political process by which the PA might be governed democractically by either Fatah or Hamas.  In effect, Bibi has only himself to blame.

Someone he also counted up Hamas’ missile inventory and discovered that all “10,000″ Grad rockets have an Iranian imprint on them.  Curiously, not even his own intelligence agencies have made such a vague, unproven claim.

Bibi begins his speech on a note of sheer chutzpah claiming to reach out his hand in peace to every state which Israel has affronted through war and acts of violence including Turkey, Syria, and last but not least the Palestinians.  It reminds me of that old saying: you can’t piss on my back and tell me it’s rain.  That’s pretty much what Bibi’s doing here.

He is the ultimate chutzpan (someone showing chutzpah), saying he’s willing to go anywhere to negotiate peace with the Palestinians, even willing to meet Abbas right there in New York at the UN.  If that’s so then why did Avigdor Lieberman, Yuli Edelstein and Ron Prosor make such an ostentatious point of exiting the hall during Abbas’ speech (Hebrew here)?  And believe me, such senior officials don’t decide on their own to take such a flagrant and public action.  Their boss, the prime minister, surely knew what they planned to do and approved it.  And if he didn’t then he’s a leader who doesn’t know how to control his subordinates.

Both Bibi and Barack said in their speeches that peace cannot be won through UN resolutions.  They conveniently forget that national independence can indeed be won through such resolutions, which was how Israel won its recognition as a new state in 1947.

Israel’s PM raises the specter of “militant Islam,” that bogeyman so useful to Islamophobes and radical right-wing Israelis everywhere.  When the odds are against you you can always pull out the specter of bin Laden to shock and frighten your audience.  There is yet another noxious element to the abuse of this trope: it confuses the Palestinian struggle for nationhood with a religious holy war.  There is no religious war between Israel and Palestine.  There is a war for national independence and rights, which is not the same thing.  To claim anything else is a lie.  But a lie that is convenient to all the radical Judeans (settlers) who envision a final Gog and Magog between the religious forces of Good and Evil.

I wouldn’t mind Bibi likening “militant Islam” to a noxious reptile if he’d also do the same for militant Judaism (in the form of the settler movement):

[Our] critics continue to press Israel to make far-reaching concessions…They praise those who unwittingly feed the insatiable crocodile of militant Islam…They cast as enemies of peace those of us who insist that we must first erect a sturdy barrier to keep the crocodile out, or at the very least jam an iron bar between its gaping jaws.

As Yousef Munayyer points out, if Palestinians likened the settlers to reptiles, the latter would be the first to shrey about anti-Semitism.  Yet somehow, Bibi gets a pass.  Bibi I’ll make you a deal: you call the settlers creeping insects, crawling reptiles or other noxious treif animals and I’ll be OK with all the crocodile stuff.  Deal?

Here, Israel’s leader adds further insult to injury:

Militant Islam has already taken over Lebanon and Gaza.

This of course presumes that Hezbollah rules Lebanon, which is not the case.  Hezbollah may have veto power over the current government, but that’s not the same as ruling.  Lebanon is far too complicated a country politically and ethnically for Hezbollah or Islamism to prevail there.

Here Bibi again posits an imaginary militant Islam tearing up peace treaties:

It’s determined to tear apart the peace treaties between Israel and Egypt and between Israel and Jordan.

If those peace treaties are torn up it will only be Israel’s fault because it didn’t resolve the underlying conflict with all the frontline Arab states.  No one, as far as I know has said a word about tearing up the treaty with Jordan.  Again, this is Bibi’s delusion.

Here, Netanyahu attempts to rewrite history:

In 2000 Israel made a sweeping peace offer that met virtually all of the Palestinian demands. Arafat rejected it.

Easy for Bibi to talk about Camp David when he himself opposed, and has opposed virtually every major peace effort.  And easy for him to call it a sweeping offer when he wasn’t the Palestinian leader being asked to accept half a loaf.  The Camp David offer was simply not enough territory for Arafat to be able to accept it, and even senior U.S. negotiators like Aaron David Miller have conceded this in books they’ve written.

Bibi further advances the preposterous argument that the West Bank promises to become a terror state with missiles smuggled into the Hebron Hills to rain down on Israelis living below.  And he has the chutzpah to call this scenario “very real.”  The only thing raining down on the Hebron Hills are the bullets and blows of far-right settlers beating up Palestinian farmers and shepherds and burning their fields.

In a further insult to injury, Bibi adds another canard to the list of infractions in his speech.  He advances the lie that the PA’s UN observer called for Palestine to be “Judenrein.”  This is a flat-out lie.  What the ambassador did say was that he envisioned something that virtually every major Israeli center-right politician has said hundreds of times over–that the two peoples should be separated from each other for their own security.  He said nothing about no Jews being allowed within Palestine, but rather that the two states should be separated.  In fact, Palestinians leaders and even some religious settlers envision a future in which Jews may live within Palestine as long as they take Palestinian citizenship and accept Palestinian sovereignty.  I only wish Israel’s leaders would do the same for Palestinian refugees seeking to return to their historic homeland.

One of the most incredible fictions Netanyahu advances is the notion that his historic claim to the land is confirmed by the fact that he can read his family name in historic Israelite inscriptions:

In my office in Jerusalem, there’s a — there’s an ancient seal. It’s a signet ring of a Jewish official from the time of the Bible. The seal was found right next to the Western Wall, and it dates back 2,700 years, to the time of King Hezekiah. Now, there’s a name of the Jewish official inscribed on the ring in Hebrew. His name was Netanyahu. That’s my last name. My first name, Benjamin, dates back a thousand years earlier to Benjamin — Binyamin — the son of Jacob, who was also known as Israel. Jacob and his 12 sons roamed these same hills of Judea and Sumeria [sic] 4,000 years ago, and there’s been a continuous Jewish presence in the land ever since.

His Diaspora family name was not Netanyahu, but Miliekovski.  In other words, national identity isn’t just inherited.  It isn’t based on fact or history alone.  It can also be a construct.  There’s nothing wrong with that as the Palestinians to an extent have done just the same.  But what IS wrong with this process is if you confuse historical fact with your own personal definitions or aspirations.  Bibi’s claim to the land is a Zionist construct which he and others fill with meaning.  It is created or willed, not God-given and certainly not solely determined by history.

Bibi’s sophistries continue with this one:

So let’s meet here today in the United Nations. Who’s there to stop us? What is there to stop us? If we genuinely want peace, what is there to stop us from meeting today and beginning peace negotiations?

What’s to stop you, Bibi?  How about thousands of Israeli troops maintaining a massive Occupation along with 500,000 Israeli settlers displacing the former Palestinian landowners and residents of that land?  How about that?  This situation reminds me of the midrash of God holding Mt. Sinai over the heads of the Israelites and offering them the Torah and asking whether they accept it.  They had little choice, did they?  Well, Abbas is saying that Palestinians have free will and they won’t be railroaded by superior power into a sham deal.

Bibi asks this interesting question about Mahmoud Ahmadinejad:

Can you imagine that man who ranted here yesterday — can you imagine him armed with nuclear weapons?

A fair question perhaps.  But can the world imagine Bibi Netanyahu armed with 400 nuclear weapons?  Why is a single Iranian weapon more dangerous than Israel’s 400?  And does the world truly believe that Ahmadinejad is any less a radical troglodyte for his country’s interests than Bibi is for his?

Another telling passage from his speech:

Millions of Arabs have taken to the streets to replace tyranny with liberty, and no one would benefit more than Israel if those committed to freedom and peace would prevail.

This of course is a delusion.  Israel doesn’t welcome the Arab Spring.  It’s petrified of it.  What Israel wants is an Arab Spring that continues Israeli hegemony over the region and its interests there.  This will not happen.  So Bibi here is spouting pure sophistry.

What this speech proves more than anything else is that peace is impossible given the current Israeli leadership.  There is nothing but deafness on that side.  So if Obama, the UN, the Europeans, the Quartet want peace they must bring it themselves by imposing a settlement.  But the first step in doing this is throwing a bucket of cold water in Bibi’s face, and recognizing a Palestinian state will do that.

Yediot: IDF Investigation Confirms All Eilat Attackers Were Egyptian, Not Gazan

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

Alex Fishman, Yediot Achronot’s veteran security correspondent, and one of the few Israeli journalists skeptical about the official government version of the Eilat terror attack, confirms what many of us knew all along: it was a tissue of lies.  The government reported originally that the Popular Resistance Committees of Gaza were responsible for the attack and that the attackers were affiliated with it.  Then an Egyptian newspaper reported that its military killed three of the attackers and that they were Egyptian.  That’s one of the reasons many of us doubted the official version.  Now Fishman reports that in fact, the military investigation confirms that all the militants were Egyptian.  It also raises the possibility that at least one of their member was an active duty policeman.

It was Fishman (along with myself and Idan) who asked where the bodies were and why they weren’t identified by Israel.  The reporter claimed that the IDF was playing a strange game of poker with Hamas, demanding that the latter acknowledge the dead were Gazan before Israel would release the bodies.

This explains why there were no mourning tents in Gaza and no reports there of any fighters killed by Israel.  Ehud Barak knew the knowledge that the attackers were not Gazan, as he claimed, would sink Israel’s entire plan to blame Gaza on the attack and its plan to take vengeance on it instead of the source of the attack, Egypt.

Idan and I have also reported that it is extremely suspicious that Bibi Netanyahu prohibited the Shabak chief, Yoram Cohen, from testifying before the Knesset intelligence committee on the Eilat attack.  This is an unprecedented breach of protocol on the part of the prime minister’s office.  It can only be explained by the fact that Bibi doesn’t want Cohen to expose the government to any more ridicule than it’s already facing regarding its ineptitude surrounding the Mavi Marmara attack, and the frantic extraction of Israeli diplomats frm the Cairo embassy while under assault by Cairo protestors.  The prime minister can only explain away so many lies and so much incompetence at any given time.  Defending the lies he and Ehud Barak spread about Eilat might be the straw that broke the camel’s back.

Miraculously, the IDF still claims, according to Fishman, that the PRC was the author of the attack.  Idan Ladau, who’s been one of the sharpest Israeli bloggers covering this issue has written a comprehensive rebuttal of the government’s version.  One thing that he notes, and which Amira Hass confirmed in her reporting in Haaretz, is that the Eilat attack was a very complex, sophisticated one which required tremendous logistical and organizational skill.  Anyone who knows anything about the PRC knows that their cadre receive elementary training and possess nothing but very light weapons.  They simply don’t have the skills, manpower or sophistication to pull this off.  The statement by a PRC representative below confirms this.

This report by Time reveals that not only did the PRC deny responsibility, but they continue to do so even after Israel murdered their top commanders in a drone strike:

“If the Israelis have any proof, give it,” says Ahmed Yusuf, a former Hamas official who now runs a Gaza think tank. “I met with these people for the Popular Resistance. They said, ‘We want to distance ourselves from what happened in Eilat and wondered why they were threatening us.’ ”

…”I mean, the operation was still on when they assassinated our people,” says a spokesman for the PRC who goes by the name Abu Mujahed. “The way they controlled and managed to fight for hours, it shows that whoever’s behind it has a very strong organization structure. It’s like they have a military background and experience in how to do this.”

PRC militants, he says, undergo “normal basic military training — small arms, nothing fancy.” Recruits specialize either in small arms or the swift firing of mortars and rockets into Israel. “You have to understand, we’ve only worked against the Israelis on the Gaza front,” says Abu Mujahed. “Up to now, the decision is, you only can operate within your geographical border. This has to do with our strategic thinking. It has to do with our relationship with others — Egypt and the other factions.”

For any who aren’t familiar with Palestinian militant groups, they’re not shy about claiming responsibility for terror attacks against Israelis, especially ones in which there are shahids, martyrs for the Palestinian resistance.  Yet still the PRC refuses to conform to the Israeli narrative.

Landau also reveals that SITE, a website monitoring jihadi activity, claims a different terror group claimed responsibility (paid membership required) for the Eilat killings:

A group calling itself “Jama’a Ansar Beit al-Maqdis” (Ansar Jerusalem, or Supporters of Jerusalem), claimed responsibility for the August 18, 2011, multi-stage attacks in Eilat, Israel, in which eight Israelis were killed.

No Israeli media have reported this fact nor seriously challenged the government version that the PRC was responsible.

Landau, who has a delicious ironic sense of humor, credits a group of us “crazy, deluded” bloggers for pursuing this story and not allowing the government to maintain its tissue of lies unchallenged.  Note that this is almost precisely the language used by Haaretz’s Avi Issacharoff, in deriding my own version of events.  So far, Landau’s and my version is holding up pretty well.  Issacharoff’s, not so well.

Landau writes a damning critique of Israel’s behavior after the attack:

Israel knew that the terrorists were not from Gaza and did not receive their orders from Gaza.  Even further, Israel dragged Hamas into an escalation of conflict against the latter’s wishes.  Israel knowingly lied to its citizens about the origin of the attack and the purpose of its targeted killings [of five PRC leaders and a one year old baby] in Gaza.

The real reasons for the lie: a) the government of Israel and its security apparatus wanted to drag the Palestinians into a cycle of blood vengeance just before the UN statehood vote, thereby strengthening the militant elements on the other side [i.e. Hamas, PRC at the expense of Fatah] and to frustrate the options for [non-violent] popular resistance, because every militant killed in Gaza further inflames their colleagues; b) to take the wind out of the sails of the J14 social protest movement and divert the anger of the Israeli public outward [toward Gaza];  and c) to frustrate those demanding drastic reductions in the military budget, part of the platform of the social justice movement.

The IDF investigation further reveals that the only Israeli soldier to be killed in the attack was actually killed after dark by Egyptian forces hunting the terrorists and that the five Egyptian security forces killed were shot in return fire from Israeli forces.  It sounds like the situation was a holy mess.  Any legitimate investigation would want to figure out how to avoid this slaughter so that both sides could be shooting at the bad guys instead of killing each other.

IDF: Palestinian Kindergarten ‘Terror Center’

Thursday, September 8th, 2011
abu tor school closed by idf

Budding Hamas terrorists learning terror at young age (Emil Salman)

A year ago or so the IDF shuttered a West Bank charity for orphaned children because it was supposedly funded by Hamas.  Today, the IDF has once again done itself proud by punishing children for the alleged sins of their elders:

Sixty-four kindergarten children in the Abu Tor neighborhood of Jerusalem are sitting at home though their classes were due to begin Sunday. The police commissioner sealed their building for security reasons.

The building had previously been rented by the Jerusalem municipality for the Ahmed Samech school, which was moved elsewhere, and the Najat kindergarten classes, which had operated elsewhere, were slated to open in the building instead.

But at the end of last week, the hinges on the building’s door were welded shut, and a closure order posted.

“After I became convinced that the building in Abu Tor was destined to be used for Hamas activities, I am ordering it shut until October 4, 2011,” read the order, signed by Insp. Gen. Yohanan Danino.

They’ve decided that an East Jerusalem kindergarten run by a Palestinian NGO, which is duly, legally registered with the Interior Ministry, is a terror front for Hamas.  Which leaves 65 children without a school.  That’s not unusual for East Jerusalem since the municipality provides almost no services for its Palestinians residents, which includes almost no public schools.  That’s why this news hits especially hard.

The Jerusalem Police have resorted to the usual suspects, “confidential sources,” to decide that the NGO running the school is a Hamas front:

The Jerusalem Police, citing classified intelligence, said that “the site was meant to serve as a place of terror activity. The Najat movement is headed by known Hamas operatives, and the police commissioner ordered the location closed.”

One wonders what the nature of the classified material was?  Perhaps a child’s drawing of an F-16 dropping a bomb on Gaza?  Or a child singing about his love for Palestine?  Or perhaps the poor children were caught being trained to produce suicide vests for their elders?

After all, the IDF is only acting on the divine teachings of Torat Hamelech, which tells us that it is permissible to kill Palestinian children because they will grow up to become terrorists who kill Jews.  In that spirit, closing down the kindergarten seems only fitting, as it will without doubt become a breeding ground for terror.

Wikileaks: IDF Intel Chief Regales U.S. Congress Member, Embassy Staff With Plans for Targeted Assassinations

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

In case anyone wants an idea of how damaging the Wikileaks cables can be to U.S. interests, they have only to read the one I posted about last night in which Rep. Robert Wexler and two senior U.S. embassy representatives were regaled by IDF intelligence chief, Amos Yadlin, with the army’s plans to liquidate Hamas leaders through targeted assassinations:

Hamas’ control of Gaza provides an opportunity. Since the terrorists are now the government, Israel knows which terrorist is sitting in what office and where their homes are. They have come out of hiding and into the open, so the IDF can identify and find them. Yadlin warned that if the shelling of Israeli communities from Gaza continues, Israel can “use this card” against Hamas. It will “change the paradigm,” he concluded.

S) Comment. While Yadlin did not use the phrase “targeted assassinations,” it was clear from the context that he is advocating this approach…

robert wexler & bibi netanyahu

Robert Wexler with Israel's leading peace activist

Perhaps someone should be asking Bob Wexler, now the president of the Abraham Center for Middle East Peace, and Secretary Clinton whether it’s their policy to sit peacefully while foreign military officers discuss actions which might violate international law and be considered war crimes?  Oh I forgot, we do the same thing to Pakistanis and Afghans.  I guess we don’t have a problem with the practice unless it’s our own personnel who are targeted.

Wexler, by the way, was Obama’s main squeeze in the Jewish community during the last election campaign. I attended the first J Street national conference and heard Wexler give one of the snooziest speeches I’ve heard in years. Amazing how people can drone on and say nothing in the process. Wexler’s current boss is S. Daniel Abraham, he of Slimfast wealth and fame. One of Abraham’s claims to fame is that he stuffed shoeboxes full of cash into the hands of Ehud Olmert during his stays at 5-star New York hotels. We learned all this thanks to the escapades of Rabbi Morris Talansky, Olmert’s U.S. bag man.

You can tell how much a contribution Wexler is making to Middle East peace given this photo of him cuddling with Bibi Netanyahu.

I found this fascinating tidbit in today’s NY Times story on the recent Wikileaks cable dump:

Representative Candice S. Miller, Republican of Michigan, issued a statement saying, “The latest release of stolen American secrets by the organization WikiLeaks once again proves that they are a terrorist operation.”

Now that’s interesting: since when is it an act of terrorism to reveal that U.S. elected officials and State Department officials sat and listened primly while an IDF general told them it planned to engage in acts of terror against the Hamas leadership?  Methinks Rep. Miller ought to look in the mirror if she wants to see the faces of those who do nothing when told about planned acts of terror.

New Channel 10 News Interview on Abusisi

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011


Thanks to the producers of the Israeli TV news show, Tzinor Layla, for offering me another interview opportunity.  This time I spoke (the segment is in Hebrew, my interview in English) about Gabriel Gatehouse’s excellent BBC documentary on Dirar Abusisi. I advanced my theory, buttressed by much of Gatehouse’s original interviews with Hamas leadership and Abusisi’s statements in the interrogation transcript, that Abusisi abandoned Gaza to get out of Hamas’ clutches.  And that the Islamist group, to get revenge on him, made up a story out of whole cloth about his rocket engineering exploits and knowledge of Gilad Shalit’s whereabouts.  Mossad in turn swallowed the bait whole and the rest is history.

This all means that the Mossad operation and subsequent prosecution is a sham based on a lie.  And in order to save face, Mossad can’t end the lie, but rather has to perpetrate a new lie by prosecuting Abusisi. A horrible miscarriage of justice.

What is new and interesting about this interview is that the reporter Bar Shem-Ur spoke with Veronika Romanova, Abusisi’s wife and asked her point blank:

Are you afraid of Hamas?

To which she replied:

It’s difficult to answer this question “yes” or “no.”

Does this sound like the wife of Hamas’ “main man,” its foremost rocket engineer, ‘provost’ of its military academy? Or someone in fear for her security and her family’s in the face of Hamas?

Wikileaks: IDF Intelligence Chief Boasts Assassinating Hamas Leaders Will ‘Change Paradigm’ Two Weeks Before Cast Lead

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Former U.S Rep. Robert Wexler may be a liberal pro-Israel sycophant, but thank God he visited IDF intelligence chief two weeks before Operation Cast Lead began along with a U.S. embassy staffer.  Otherwise, we wouldn’t have this rich portrait of Israeli thinking just prior to the Israeli assault on Gaza.  The cable was written on December 8, 2008 and the war commenced on December 27th.  In the cable, Amos Yadlin‘s comments are paraphrased:

Yadlin…advocates taking a “much tougher” approach to Gaza.

Hamas’ control of Gaza provides an opportunity. Since the terrorists are now the government, Israel knows which terrorist is sitting in what office and where their homes are. They have come out of hiding and into the open, so the IDF can identify and find them. Yadlin warned that if the shelling of Israeli communities from Gaza continues, Israel can “use this card” against Hamas. It will “change the paradigm,” he concluded.

While Yadlin did not use the phrase “targeted assassinations,” it was clear from the context that he is advocating this approach to countering the threat from Hamas.

It should be remembered that Israel did assassinate several of Hamas’ top political leaders and cabinet members during the massacre along with 1,100 civilians, among them 300 children. But funny thing, it didn’t “change the paradigm.”  I also find it astonishing that an IDF general briefing a U.S. Congress member accompanied by a U.S. embassy representative would boast, even implicitly, that it plans to assassinate Hamas leaders.  That apparently didn’t ring any alarm bells for that good liberal Zionist, Rep. Wexler.  I guess there are good assassinations and bad ones.  Bad: Kennedy brothers, MLK.  Good: anyone from Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran, Syria, etc.

What seems strange to me is that Yadlin candidly informs Wexler that the Palestinians are only fourth on Israel’s threat index behind Iran, Syria and Hezbollah. If that’s the case, and I have no reason to doubt it, then why was it dragged into a war with its fourth most dangerous threat? To me, this indicates that Israel has no strategic thinking. It allows itself to be pushed and pulled by whatever is the most pressing threat of the moment. A rocket falls in Sderot? This is the existential threat of the day and must be addressed as if all Israel depended on eliminating it.

The IDF intelligence chief also betrays typical Israeli thinking by warning that the conflict cannot be resolved by directly addressing the major issues through final status negotiations:

If the parties attempt to move straight to resolving the conflict, the attempt will collapse and result in violence as in the start of the Second Intifada after the 2000 Camp David summit.

I’ve always thought of this argument as some sort of weird magical thinking. There is an assumption that the highest priority for life in the Middle East must be avoiding violence at all costs, rather than resolving the dispute between the two peoples so that there is no longer any reason for violence.

Wexler, who led Jewish outreach on behalf of the Obama campaign, left Congress afterward and now heads the Abraham Fund. You can get an idea of Wexler’s hopelessly tepid views in this cable by nothing that he clearly favors Bibi Netanyahu’s “economic” approach to “resolving” the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, an approach I’ve skewered here before. This is a bastion of the American Jewish liberal Zionist leadership.

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

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Here the IDF seems to contradict itself:

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

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

The attack ultimately proved contrary to the most likely scenarios.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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