Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

'We can live in peace'...John Lennon (photo: Dafna Tal)

Mahzor

Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

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

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

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

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

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

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘hasbara’

Canadian Jewish Tourism Ad Uses Oral Sex to Promote Israeli Tourism

Sunday, February 21st, 2010


UPDATE: The video was originally hosted by Vimeo, which removed it after a complaint that it featured “explict sexual content.” Bad taste, for sure. But “explicit” content? It is instructive though, at least in a symbolic sense, that Vimeo finds such Israeli hasbara is video pornography. H/t Robin.

Dimi Reider has discovered one of the stranger of Israel’s tourism promotions.  This one is sponsored by the Canadian Council for Israel and Jewish Advocacy (CIJA) undoubtedly in close collaboration with the foreign ministry.  The video is in indescribably bad taste, portraying an attractive couple in bed with the woman telling the man she can’t possibly “do it” because it’s “too small.”  The dialogue is so lame that it simply must be quoted to be believed:


Girl: Uhhh…
Boy: What?
G: Don’t be mad…It’s just that it’s small…
B: Small?!
G: I don’t know if I can go there.
B: I consider this a spot of worship. It may be small, but it’s brought the driest places to life. Baby, this is paradise. [camera pans to show map of Israel and tourist guidebooks covering boy's crotch].
G: OK, but if I go down there for you, you have to promise you’ll down south for me next winter.

I’m simply flabbergasted that Israel would use the promise of fellatio and cunnilingus to promote itself. This also puts into proper perspective the blandishments of Birthright Israel and its former premier trip vendor, Shlomo Momo, who hold out to trip participants the possibility of great Jewish sex and meeting potential Jewish mates on their trips.

There are just way too many strange, odd places to go with this evocative video. Do you notice the phallic outline of Israel in the video’s opening image? What does it say about the creator’s fixation on the symbolic size of Israel’s, er member? Maybe Israel is compensating for this sense of sexual inferiority with its “muscular” Occupation (h/t to Ali Gharib)?

The website devised to promote this tourism campaign portrays Israel as a hipster paradise full of models, beaches, bronzed bodies, and beautiful modern metropolises. If I caught it correctly, there’s an image of a dread-locked Idan Raichel thrown in for good measure. Yes sir, Israel is nothing but sun and fun. Not a hint of politics. Not even culture, art or music. And certainly not an Arab in sight. In fact, here are some factoids of which the hasbara machine wants you to be proud:

Did you KNOW?

* On a per capita basis, Israel has the largest number of biotechnology startup companies in the world
* Israel is a world leader in water conservation and reforestation
* Arab Israelis have served as elected representatives of the Knesset (Parliament) since Israel was founded

Israel is a welcoming and inclusive country

* In 1999, an Arab woman was named as “Miss Israel”
* Israeli Arabs serve on the Israeli Supreme Court
* Israel is at the forefront of promoting equality for LGBT communities, as well as promoting women’s rights
* In 1969 Golda Meir was elected as Israel’s Prime Minister – the third elected woman leader of any other country in the world

Speaking of Israel’s technological innovation, did you get a load of those Mossad killers talking into their wrists with that cool gear that communicated with their Austrian command center? Now that’s innovation! Not to mention the cool floppy hat worn by the Mossad babe who was stalking the victim. If that isn’t fashion sense, what is? And how ’bout targeted assassinations in general? What a neat innovation Israel has perfected and given as a gift to the Palestinians and the rest of the world.

How ’bout those claims about Israeli Arabs? Holy shit, Batman! There are Arab Israelis who’ve been elected to the Knesset! I bet you thought they were all dishwashers, daily laborers and maids. No kidding. Of course, this “fact” omits the real fact that Arab political parties are excluded from governing coalitions, and rarely are individual Arab Knesset members named government ministers and so have almost no political power.

And yes, Israel is an inclusive and welcoming country if you’re a Jew. If you’re not, not so much.

Regarding Arabs sitting on the Supreme Court, this neglects the fact that the daughter of Israel’s Arab justice was treated like an Arab terrorist by the Shin Bet when she attempted to leave Israel. Israel is at the forefront of gay rights…except when crazy haredim stab gay marchers in Gay Pride parades, when haredi rabbis denounce gays as evil Sodomites, and when Tel Aviv gay community centers are attacked by crazed gunmen. As for Golda, that’s very nice except that the percentage of women in the Knesset is miserably low and women hold almost no major cabinet portfolios.

Is this any way to promote a country? You bet it ain’t. But one thing I have to say–this is yet another ‘brilliant’ manipulation brought to you by those boys, Yvette and Danny, and their most excellent adventure at the Israeli foreign ministry. At the rate they’re going, there may not be much of an Israel left to promote before too long.

This advertising campaign is part of a joint Israel rebranding effort organized by the Israeli consulate in Canada and Canadian Jewish business leaders including the Asper family and Jason Reitman, who also chairs CIJA. An earlier effort at this type of rebranding included the Toronto Film Festival’s honoring Tel Aviv’s 100th birthday in an effusion of pro-Israel glitz and hasbara that Israeli film artists and Naomi Klein objected to strenuously.

Students at 20 Canadian universities will have the pleasure of dreaming about oral sex in Israel when this tourism campaign comes to a campus near them in the coming weeks. I bet they just can’t wait.

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Israel Plants Shills at U.S. Events

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

In the annals of hasbara, some interesting developments.  First, in an attempt to shoot itself not in one foot but both, deputy foreign minister Danny Ayalon refused to allow a J Street Congressional delegation to meet with government officials.  Why?  Well, certainly because J Street is anathema to his rightist political agenda.  But Ayalon demanded that the delegation exclude Jeremy Ben Ami, the J Street leader accompanying the mission, from such meetings.

Mossad killers in tennis outfit disguise

Think about this.  Aipac brings Congressional delegations to Israel regularly.  Its staff routinely accompany members to all of their meetings on these trips.  So Ayalon wishes to throw up a wall between the “bad” J Street and the “good” Aipac.  It’s ludicrous.  Beyond that, these four members of Congress actually vote on foreign aid appropriations which are critical to Israel’s well-being.  Does Ayalon really think he can take their votes for granted?  Does he care?

What I hope will happen is that the next J Street delegation will contain 25 members and then Ayalon will be forced to meet with them or at least allow them to meet with officials under his thumb.

I’m pleased that Tzipi Livni has bucked Ayalon and met with the delegation.  As a leader of the opposition I would expect she’d welcome an opportunity to stick her finger in Ayalon’s eye.  And he’s made it oh so easy for her to do so.

Some true dufus from Israel’s UK embassy thought the accompanying tweet was cute, alluding to Shahar Peer’s tennis victory in a Dubai tournament and Israel’s alleged “hit” against a Hamas operative.  Rememeber too, that the Mossad hit men wore tennis gear to disguise their evil intent.  Next time you see overweight middle aged men with beards or mustaches in your hotel, beware.  This is what passes for wit at the MFA these days.  Keep in mind this is the very same embassy whose ambassador has been summoned by the foreign office to explain how the Mossad managed to steal the identities of five British nationals and use them to murder the Hamas leader in Dubai.  Now, that’s effrontery.  Thanks to a commenter noting this true oddity of Israeli hasbara.

Here’s more from the Israeli foreign ministry.  Apparently, they’ve been stung by the hostile reception meted out to Michael Oren at UC Irvine and Ayalon himself at Oxford on recent speaking engagements.  So how are they going to respond?  Listen to this from M.J. Rosenberg:

The Israeli daily, Ma’ariv, reported on Tuesday that the foreign ministry has devised a plan to counter the demonstrators who turn out whenever an Israeli diplomat appears on a campus.

“The Foreign Ministry intends to include groups of Israeli university students on trips of high-ranking Israelis overseas. The goal is to counter the heckling,” Ma’ariv reported.

“The students [in groups of five] will wave Israeli flags, will blow whistles and call out.”

Talk about a couple of hare-brained schemes. Once upon a time, Israeli policies were defended by people who thought they were right and spontaneously turned out. Now the government is enlisting ringers.

I’m sure that’s going to be welcomed by security personnel at campuses around the world.  As if they didn’t have enough to worry about keeping the peace at these events.  Now, they’ve got a foreign, non-student element with a built in goal of provoking hostility from students.  Have you ever heard of such an idiotic plan in your life?

I’ve already written here about the new Israeli Hasbara Ministry (yes, that’s literally what it’s called in Hebrew) headed by settler leader, Yuli Edelstein.  Of course, Bronner won’t tell you about Edelstein’s rightist background because that’s the kind of pro-Israel reporter he is.  The Hasbarists plan to enlist Israelis who travel abroad and all of world Jewry, according to Ethan Bronner, in a campaign to rebut the negative image Israel has around the world.  What will they tell those who have yet to appreciate Israel’s virtues?

One main message of the campaign is that Israel is a technically advanced and diverse society and that its government policies are not the source of regional conflict. It notes that a number of important agricultural breakthroughs have occurred here, including drip irrigation and the development of the cherry tomato.

Yes, that’s the way to dispel notions that Israel is a blood-thirsty nation that represses millions of Palestinians and engages in all out war with its neighbors: remind the world about drip irrigation and those delicious cherry tomatoes they eat every day.  Not to mention Israel’s other major export–high-tech lame-brained political assassinations.  If that doesn’t turn things around for Israel, nothing will.

What other elements of the campaign will bring the world around to Israel’s point of view?

…It also seeks to puncture what the ministry considers common myths about Israel — that it is a big and primitive country, that its food consists of little more than hummus and falafel, and that Israelis as a group do not seek peace.

Yes, tell ‘em that Israelis also eat schwarma and schnitzel and all those other wonderful foods gracing their own western kitchen tables.  That’ll do the trick.  And peace?  Of course Israelis want peace.  If only those pesky Palestinians would realize they don’t need all that land in Judea and Samaria which God promised to the Jews anyway.  Then we could have peace.

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The Zionization of Disaster Relief

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Didn’t know there was anything particularly Zionist about providing disaster relief?  You learn something new every day.  This is a story of exploiting the suffering of poor, defenseless Haitians on behalf of Israeli triumphalism.

A baby named Israel...who, if he reaches adulthood, would never be welcome in Israel (IDF)

Sol Salbe translated an eye-opening column from Yediot by an Israeli doctor who was an integral member of all Israeli international disaster response teams until recently.  Then he made the mistake of writing a mildly critical statement about Israeli disaster relief efforts.  As a result, he was relieved of his obligation for further IDF service and further participation in the disaster relief program.  The op ed is so revealing (and not yet available online in English) I’m going to quote large sections.  An explanatory note–at Israel’s Haiti field hospital, they delivered what the Israeli PR flacks called “the first baby since the earthquake.”  The medical staff urged the woman to name her baby “Israel” and she was only to eager to oblige.  Another Israeli PR coup!


Public Relations instead of saving lives

Sending portable toilets to Haiti would have been a better option, but this does not provide good photo opportunities. Israeli missions to disaster areas in the past have shown that such activity was in vain.

Yoel Donchin

I received my final exemption from the army after I published an article which said that the State of Israel acts like the proverbial Boy Scout, who insists on doing a good deed daily and helping an old lady cross the road even against her will. How ungrateful of me to publish such a column when I had participated in almost all the rescue missions to overseas disaster areas! Suddenly I am no longer suitable to take part in such heroic endeavours. But in light of the experience I gained in such missions…we have wasted our effort.

Generally speaking, we start preparing for such a mission within hours of the announcement of a natural disaster. Most often the Israeli mission team is the first one to land in the area. Like those who climb Mount Everest, it plants its flag on the highest peak available, announcing  to all and sundry that the site has been conquered. And in order to ensure that the public is aware of this sporting achievement, the mission is accompanied by media representatives, photographers, an IDF spokesman’s office squad and others.

I understood the purpose perfectly when the head of one of the delegations to a disaster zone was asked whether oxygen tanks and a number of doctors could be removed to make room for another TV network’s representatives with their equipment. (With unusual courage, the delegation head refused!)

The lesson learnt from the activities of those missions is that when there is a natural disaster, or when thousands of people are expelled from their homes by force, as happened in Kosovo, survivors may benefit from international assistance only if it responds to the region’s specific needs. Also assistance must be coordinated among the various aid agencies.

The competitive race to a disaster zone imposes a huge strain on the local health and administration authorities. Airports are clogged by transport planes unloading a lot of unnecessary but bulky equipment. Doctors and rescue organisations seek ways to utilise single carriageway roads and in fact they are a burden.   The correct way to help is to send a small advance force to gauge the dimensions of the disaster…

Would they still call that child Israel?

Three components are crucial:  shelter, water and food — these things are crucial in order to save the largest number of people. Water purification equipment, tents, basic food rations are needed. But they do lack the desired dramatic effect. If we went down that track we would miss out on seeing that child who was born with the assistance of our physicians. Most certainly, the excited mother wouldn’t give her child (who knows if he will ever reach a ripe old age?) the name Israel or that of the obstetrician or nurse. (Would he get citizenship because he was born in Israeli territory? There would be many opposed to that.) The drama is indeed classy, but its necessity is doubtful.

It being Israel, our current force contains a Kashrut supervisor, security personnel and more.

In the present disaster, which is of a more massive scale than anything we have encountered to date, the need is not so much for a field hospital but field, ie portable, toilets. There is more of a need for digging equipment to dig graves and sewage pipes.

A country which wants to provide humanitarian aid without concern for its media image should send whatever is required by the victims, and not whatever it wants to deliver. But would the evening news show the commander of the Israeli mission at the compound with 500 chemical toilets? Unlikely. It is much more media savvy to show an Israeli hospital, replete with stars of David and of course the dedicated doctors and nurses, dressed in their snazzy uniforms with an Israeli flag on the lapel.

…It is quite likely that financial assistance commensurate with Israel’s resources would be preferable to the enormous expense and complicated logistics involved in the maintenance of a medical unit in the field…

But apparently a minute of TV coverage is much more important…and in fact Israel is using disasters as [military] field training in rescue and medical care. After a fortnight, the mission will reportedly return to Israel. To be truly effective a field hospital needs to remain for two or three months, but that’s a condition that Israel cannot meet.

…It is only in the Israeli aid compound in Haiti that large signs carrying the donor country’s name hang for all to see.

Prof. Yoel Donchin is the director of the Patient Safety Unit at the Hadassah Medical Centre in Jerusalem.
Translated by Sol Salbe, who directs the Middle East News Service for the Australian Jewish Democratic Society.

If after reading this you’re feeling either slightly soiled or angry, I urge you to perform a truly constructive, selfless act in reply to Israel’s self-promotional puffery. Make a gift to American Jewish World Service or Doctors Without Borders, who are each doing acts of mercy without thought of benefit to themselves or any narrow political movement.  In fact, DWB’s flights of precious, desperately needed medical supplies have been repeatedly turned away by American forces controlling incoming air traffic, in favor of military equipment deemed needed for the occupation which seems to be taking shape there.

Somehow Israeli field hospitals and all their support equipment manage to get through this bottleneck.  Could it be?  Nah, I didn’t think so.

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Israeli Ambassador Refuses J Street Invitation

Monday, October 12th, 2009

The right-wing hasbarasphere is reporting that J Street has invited Israeli ambassador, Michael Oren to speak at the upcoming national conference in Washington, DC. and that Israel’s chief representative in this country has refused.   Not only will he not appear, but the foreign ministry has released a finger-wagging statement aimed at taking the group down a notch or two.

Oren’s rejection is extraordinary. Usually Israeli ambassadors practically troll for speaking invitations before Jewish groups. An appearance by the Israeli prime minister and ambassador is de rigueur at the annual Aipac national conference. Oren’s is the ultimate diss-kiss-off.

You remember way back when Bibi appointed Oren, the pro-Israel right trumpeted it as a brilliant move to appoint a Zionist “moderate” with impeccable academic credentials who could talk to Obama and to Jews across the political spectrum.  I didn’t buy it then.  And it looks like Oren’s bosses in Tel Aviv have dispensed with this fiction.  Now, fangs are bared.  J Street is an ally of the Obama administration and as such is the “enemy.”  The only problem with this scenario is that it presumes that American Jews will buy the notion that a Jewish group allied with a sitting president is an enemy of Israel BECAUSE it supports his policies.  This is a bit extreme even for those American Jews with almost a Pavlovian response to the notion of supporting Israel come what may.

The foreign ministry’s favorite stenographer, the Jerusalem Post, dutifully serves as conduit for the MFA reproach of J Street:

[J Street] has been reaching out to the embassy and invited Ambassador Michael Oren to speak at its first annual conference in late October. Despite early indications the embassy was looking to engage the group, Oren has yet to meet with executive director Jeremy Ben-Ami or agree to participate in the conference.

Instead, the embassy has “communicated to J Street its views on the peace process and on the best way to ensure Israel’s security,” according to embassy spokesman Yoni Peled.

The message, Peled said, is that “while recognizing the need for a free and open debate on these issues, it is important to stress concern over certain policies that could impair Israel’s interests.”

This will certainly not hurt J Street. If anything, it will point to the extremism of the current government, which refuses to recognize an American Jewish group with whom 100,000 Jews have affiliated. Israel likes to make a pretence of representing all of world Jewry. By turning down J Street, it stands exposed before the world as the ultimate partisan. And there are at least 100,000 Jews who will not fall into lockstep with the Netanyahu government’s dictum that the group is anti-Israel.

There is an unintentionally astonishing passage in the Post article which notes that J Street actually has the temerity to agree with U.S. policies when they contradict those of the Israeli government. Imagine, J Street actually has the guts to stand up to the settler government and follow a line endorsed by U.S. Jews. If you draw this out to its logical conclusion, it means that the Israel lobby groups who oppose J Street’s views on issues like Iran sanctions and the settlement freeze actually oppose U.S. policy. They have chosen Israel’s interests over America’s as defined by the sitting president.  This in turn gives the lie to the lobby’s claim that Israel’s and the U.S.’ interests are one and the same. Clearly, they are not. But someone has told neither Malcolm Hoenlein nor Tchaikovsky the news :

J Street has taken several positions at odds with the Israeli government in recent months, including arguing against the immediate imposition of additional sanctions on Iran even as Israel pushes for greater action, and backing US President Barack Obama’s call for a complete settlement freeze in the face of Israeli opposition.

The case of the disappearing tweet: Solomonia's launch of J Street Jive

The case of the disappearing tweet: Solomonia's announcement of the launch of 'J Street Jive/J Street Monitor'

The smears against J Street are rising to a fever pitch. The latest entry is an anonymous blog, J Street Jive, written by the pseudonymous Parrhesia. With the help of some readers and online research, it appears that Mr. P. hasn’t done a good job of covering his tracks. J Street Jive began life as J Street Monitor. There is only one reference to J Street Monitor online and it is a tweet by Martin Solomon, author of the hasbara blog, Solomonia, announcing the new site’s launch.   Either Solomon was announcing the launch of his own site or of a site run by a close ally. [UPDATE: I've asked Solomon and Stavis twice to confirm or deny their involvement.  They chose not to reply directly.  But they did reply indirectly and guiltily.  You'll never believe what's happened!  Martin Solomon has disappeared one of his own tweets.  Sorry, Martin but we've anticipated those shenanigans and saved a screenshot of it so that you couldn't rewrite the history of your own surreptitious involvement in this site.  And by taking down the tweet Solomon only reinforces the impression of his having a hand in this despicable blog venture.  So it appears that this week the Republican National Committee has been embarrassed into deep sixing a tweet which praised a parody of a Hitler biopic in which der Fuhrer praises Nancy Pelosi.  That puts Solomon in good company.]

Unfortunately for Parrhesia, in J Street Jive he attacks a particular person as an enemy of Israel. In my own exchange with the victim (let’s call him/her ‘V.’), the very specific details cited by Parrhesia in his post allowed V. to identify the post author as former Boston bookstore owner gone-bust, Hillel Stavis. Stavis happens to be a co-author of guess which blog? You guessed it, Solomonia. So we’ve very probably narrowed Parrhesia down to either Solomon, Stavis or some combination.

I put my money on Stavis, who’s led a rather checkered career as an enforcer for Boston’s David Project. I’m featuring here a video of Stavis stalking a Jewish Voice for Peace protest. At the end of the video, Stavis threatens:

If you get too close to me I’ll put my fist through your fuckin’ mouth.

Ooh, Hillel, not nice. Apparently, our Hillel has forgotten the dictum of his Talmudic namesake, “that which you hate, don’t do to others.”

I also tracked down this rather bizarre story in which Stavis hoaxed a Boston reporter by claiming to be a “Phil Davis” complaining about the International Solidarity Movement. After the story aired on radio, listeners called in to report the informant was none other than Stavis. Needless to say, the reporter wasn’t terribly happy.

And as any good attorney will tell you, my next question is: “If you lied then, Hillel, how do we know when you’re telling the truth? And what are you concealing through your anonymity at this site?”

The above paragraph answers the question: why someone would go to the trouble of creating an anonymous smear site. The guy is clearly an obsessive with simmering hostility brewing just beneath the surface of a borderline personality. In my experience, only the sleaziest, most paranoid Jewish far-right extremists like the author of Masada2000 go to such trouble to protect their identity. Anonymity serves as a cloak allowing the author to speak in the most aberrant, anti-social terms. This is true more of M2K than J Street Jive. But lies thrive in anonymity. Truth suffers in darkness. And the putative Solomon-Stavis site thrives in such a cesspool.

tablet logoAnother of the Jewish neocons writing for what Dan Siedarski so aptly calls Tabloid, er Tablet, Michael Weiss, comes up with yet another rightist spin on the MFA’s attack on J Street:

There’s little love lost between the Netanyahu government and J Street, but by refusing to even engage with the organization, Israel is more or less delegitimizing it as a foreign ally of the Jewish state—an embarrassment that’s going to be hard to combat in J Street’s U.S. public-relations work. Imagine a pro-American group in, say, Egypt being told that the State Department won’t meet with its representatives because it puts American interests at risk.

It never crossed Michael’s mind that the group might not want to be an agent of Israeli influence (cf. “foreign ally of the Jewish state”).  Not to mention he doesn’t understand that the current government of Israel isn’t ISRAEL. It is the government of Israel and there are many legitimate perspectives on what Israel’s interests should be and what U.S. interests are, that diverge from those of Israel’s far-right ruling coalition.  Since, hasbaroids, representing American Jewish interests is not the same as representing Israel’s, J Street, thank God, is in no imminent danger–least of all from the far Jewish right.

So with enemies like Stavis and Solomon, J Street, as I wrote in a post yesterday, is golden.

J Street’s Power Inspires Enemies

Monday, October 12th, 2009

j street jive bannerGetting yourself on the cover of the NY Times Magazine can create enemies.  You know J Street is striking a nerve when the Israel lobby goes to such lengths to smear it that it creates a website specifically devoted to the group and debunking it.  Thanks to Rainer Waldman-Adkins for pointing out the emergence of a slick new hasbara site, JStreet Jive (Tracking Israel’s Jewish Defamers), written by an ironically and pseudonymously named Parhessia (“public” in Talmudic Aramaic).  Isn’t it ridiculous for the lobby to create such a site and refuse to acknowledge who’s behind it and then call the author “Public?”

Here’s the alleged mission of the smearsheet:

While the majority of J Street grass roots supporters are indeed “Pro-Israel” in the sense that they believe in the Jewish people’s need for and the right to its historic and sovereign homeland, J Street’s leadership has demonstrated a cavalier attitude towards existential threats to Israel, a hyper-critical record against Israel and a virtually uncritical policy vis a vis Palestinians and Arab states.

Accuracy and accountability will be the watchwords of JStreetJive.

…If we all want peace and security in the region, let our words reflect a commitment to the truth.

The hasbara hacks are attempting to drive a wedge between J Streets “grassroots supporters” who are supposedly innocent dupes and its leaders who are in league with the Evil One.  It’s a pathetic and quite transparent ploy.  I almost gagged on my lunch when I read the last two lines claiming the site would be accurate and truthful.  Those are in terribly short supply in rightist, pro-Israel sites like this one.  They’re often collateral damage in the quest for the perfect smear.

I’ll give a big shout out at the J Street conference to anyone who can expose any information about who might be behind the site.  Looking over the writing and production values it would appear to me this comes from a high-class operation, which leaves out most of the Israel lobby groups (whose websites are anything but that), including folks like David Horowitz and likely Daniel Pipes.  I had a thought that it might be Pajamas Media since they are both sophisticated (at least in terms of their graphics, if not their substance).  Also, the writing isn’t as typically mendacious as many of the loopy right-wing pro-Israel sites, which indicates either a real journalist involved or someone who knows how to present an argument (which is better than most of the wingnutty sites).  I’d also include Michael Goldfarb and Commentary’s Noah Pollak in that category of possible suspects.  And what about Marty Peretz, though perhaps even this might be beneath him (am I giving him too much credit?) .

Zvi Solow writes an interesting analysis which takes the possible source back to the Israeli hasbara apparatus:

It shows that the J street convention has got someone(s) in the Bibibarak government nervous.

It may be my Israeli paranoia but given Bibi’s US background, his sensitivity to the US media and the makeup of his intimate group of advisers – ex-US olim, religious (i.e., Orthodox), & mitnahalim or their supporters, I’d look for traces of Mike Oren’s friends (the prominence of his persona in the blog is telling), and the neo-con financial supporters of Merkaz Shalem, Israel Hayom  etc.

That last reference was to the Shalem Center and Shelly Adelson’s Israel HaYom.  Adelson and people associated with Oren would be an interesting guess.

I’m pleased that this site’s Alexa rating is north of 14-million. No one’s reading them, as well they shouldn’t.  And even if a few of my readers do click the link above their ranking will remain well above that number.  But please don’t click more than once.

Israel’s Counter-Attack on Goldstone Report

Friday, September 18th, 2009
Israel's online media assault on Goldstone report

Israel's online media assault on Goldstone report

The Israeli foreign ministry is hauling out all the guns to counter-attack against the Goldstone UN report, which determined that both the IDF and Palestinians militants committed war crimes during the Gaza war. How do I know this? In a very direct, personal fashion. I noticed in the past hour or so a new Google ad being served in my sidebar:

Gaza.
Hamas.
Conflict.

Facts!
Click here

Israels anti-Goldstone hasbara

Israel's anti-Goldstone hasbara

Notice there is no mention of the word ‘Israel.’ This is of course done deliberately because they seek to pull in as many viewers as possible and adding the word Israel would drive away potential viewers from one camp or another. Only when you click on the ad does it take you to the Israeli foreign ministry’s Gaza fact sheet page (imagine the temerity of the Israeli foreign ministry labelling their information “facts??), whose headline lays its cards on the table and speaks truthfully for once:

Gaza Facts–the Israeli Perspective

The hasbara attack machine is in high gear.  I imagine you’ll be seeing full page ads in the N.Y. Times, op eds by the usual suspects (Abe Foxman, etc.), and hearing many lies from what Daniel Levy calls “the smear industry.”  I imagine that right now as we speak Gerald Steinberg and Danny Ayalon are desperately seeking to expose a nasty Goldstone hobby.  Perhaps (like Marc Garlasco) he collects historical artifacts of the Boer War, bespeaking a sympathy for pro-Nazi Afrikaners?

The truth of the matter is that Israel gradually, inch by inch, is losing the propaganda war.  Yes, it has an effective hasbara apparatus that has kept the opposition at bay for years.  But the sheer accumulated weight of Israel’s brutal violations of morality and law are sinking its case before the international community.  When Bibi comes to New York for the UN General Assembly meeting he’ll be greeted with the same nose-holding as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Muamar Khadafi.  Well, not by Malcolm Hoenlein, Marty Peretz or Norman Podhoretz, that’s for sure.  They’ll welcome Bibi with open arms.  The rest of us will hold our noses.

Israel Tightens Screws for War Against Iran

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
Israeli joint Red Flag exercise held this month with U.S. forces simulating joint fights against a common enemy (USAF/MSgt. Kevin J. Gruenwald

Israeli joint Red Flag exercise held this month with U.S. forces 'simulating joint fights against a common enemy' (USAF/MSgt. Kevin J. Gruenwald

There is a gradual process underway within Israeli military, intelligence and political circles which will lead to war with Iran.  The war will either be Israeli or American in origin.  I say war, because I believe that a series of attacks against Iran will set the stage for a long conflict between various sets of players in the west and Arab world.  In effect, this will become a war.

Such hostilities will not break out tomorrow or next week.  The groundwork has not yet been laid for such an attack.  That is why it is important to read the hasbara planted (and I mean this term deliberately) in Israeli and U.S. newspapers about the Iranian threat; why it is important to follow Congressional legislation introduced that would punish Iran just as the Bush administration instituted sanctions against Iraq before it invaded that country; why it is important to note the bellicose threats, rants and sloganeering coming from Israeli politicians, generals and their U.S. counterparts.  This is how war begins.

A few examples of how the Israeli government is waging a perception management campaign in this country leading up to an attack: several Israeli consular officials are urging Jewish communities locally to introduce Iran divestment initiatives.  What is especially ironic and pernicious about this notion is that the Israeli diplomats are deliberately attempting to turn on its head the international campaign to divest from U.S. companies aiding and abetting the Israeli Occupation.  It’s a classic diversionary campaign to deflect criticism of Israel’s illegal and unconscionable Occupation by raising a red herring of Iranian nuclear threat.

The Israeli consulate in at least one region is co-opting an only too wiling local Jewish community into hosting a conference featuring Israeli hawks arguing that Iran is THE most dangerous threat to world peace.  We’ve been down this road before.  We all know how this story ends–or at least how the Israeli war party wants it to end.  Which is why we are obliged say “No.”  We will not permit this to happen.

Today, Haaretz features two articles which perfectly reflect this hasbara campaign.  The articles aren’t necessarily correct analyses of current political reality.  But they are still important because they reflect what the Israeli sources for these articles WISH the reality would be:

The talks held in Israel this week by senior Obama Administration officials, which focused to a large extent on blocking Iran’s nuclear program, indicate that the Americans – influenced by the Iranian regime’s conduct toward the post-election unrest that began in early June – are for the first time showing more understanding for Israel’s view of events. The United States is more skeptical than before about the likelihood that a diplomatic dialogue, or even harsh sanctions should that option fail, will dissuade the Iranians from their goal.

Here is yet more speculative hasbara:

The U.S. is well aware that Iran is progressing, and that by mid-2010, it may pass another critical milestone, that of being able to detonate a nuclear device for the first time.

Note the critical “may” in this sentence which could mean anything or nothing.  The road to war is filled with such empty phrases.  When you read this propaganda, just remember all the lies and wishful thinking that accompanied Bush administration bellowing about Iraqi WMD.  It happened once, it could happen again.

WINEP, the Mossad’s unofficial U.S. think tank, is playing its proper role as water-carrier for war:

As noted this week by Michael Singh, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, America’s message on this matter is still unfocused and confused. A senior American official comments on the Iranian nuclear threat and a possible preemptive Israeli strike almost every week, but all those statements provide no clear line on either Israel or Iran.

Isn’t it interesting that your political opponent’s policies are always unfocused, weak, confused, vacillating when they don’t agree with your own.  But as soon as Obama gets on board the good ship War, his policies will become miraculously clear, sharp and focused.

This Haaretz article furnishes further proof that Israel simply has no clue what impact it has within the Arab world.  It seems to believe it and the U.S. can play good cop-bad cop and somehow attain their goals:

Though it seems the red light on an Israeli attack still stands, the recurrent warnings by Israel’s prime and defense ministers about all options being on the table actually serve American interests: They allow Obama to wave the Israeli stick at the Iranians as part of his effort to get the Iranians to agree to a dialogue, and possibly even to concessions.

These numbskulls actually believe that seeing Israel wave the threat of nuclear warheads and F-16s at Ayatollah Khameini will create the proper setting for “dialogue and even concessions.”  What are they smokin’?  Getting Israel anywhere near this issue is like waving a red flag in front of a mean, ornery bull.  Doing so will get a matador gored but good.

The second Haaretz article outlines the Ross approach to ratcheting up the war rhetoric:

U.S. National Security Advisor James Jones, who is now in Israel to discuss Iran’s nuclear program, indicated that Tehran has until the UN General Assembly in the last week of September to respond. U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates delivered a similar message during his visit here earlier this week. If no satisfactory answer is received, the Americans said, they would work to form an international coalition to impose harsh sanctions on Iran…New sanctions would mainly aim to significantly curb Tehran’s ability to import refined petroleum products.

Jones and his team reported that a bill by Senator Joe Lieberman to curb sales of refined oil products to Iran is almost complete, and 67 senators have already signed it.

The Americans are proposing financial sanctions such as banning insurance on trade deals with Tehran, which would make it difficult for Iran to trade with other countries. They also want to impose sanctions on any company that trades with Iran and use this to pressure other countries, mainly in Asia, to resist making deals with Iran.

In the next stage, the Americans will consider even harsher sanctions, such as banning Iranian ships from docking in Western ports and, as a next step, banning Iranian airplanes from landing in Western airports.

The article closes with the rather startling announcement that National security advisor Jim Jones told the Israelis that Pres. Obama will personally travel to China in an attempt to persuade that country to end its opposition to a sanctions regime.  Frankly, I’m astonished that an American president would act as an errand boy on Israel’s behalf.  Not to mention, that he hasn’t a ghost of a chance of persuading China that it should dump Iran and facilitate a possible Middle East war.

So the next stage in Israel’s campaign is to decimate (at least it is hoped by advocates) the country’s economy and either cause the Iranian leadership to say “uncle” and give up its nuclear program; or cause the overthrow of the clerical regime.

Let’s leave aside the sheer lunacy of the thinking behind this plan and state in no uncertain terms that all progressives must unalterably oppose sanctions against Iran.  Even if we believe that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons, we must oppose sanctions because it is Israel’s road to war.  We must not allow Israel to hijack the west on behalf of this insane military adventure.  We must say “No.”  We’ve tried eight years of military adventurism in the Middle East and it didn’t work.

If there is any truth to the implications (and we have no idea of knowing that there is) in these articles that the U.S. is coming closer to the Israeli position, then we must tell the Obama administration that it is wrong.  We may be Obama’s allies on many issues.  But we cannot be on this one.  We cannot be accomplices to war.

Media Offensive Touts Bibi’s West Bank Economic Miracle

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Yesterday, I wrote about one of Ethan Bronner’s typically misleading NY Times articles, in which he touts Bibi Netanyahu’s focus on Palestinian economic opportunities, rather than political negotiations, as a means of easing pressure on Israel to finally resolve the conflict.

Rob Browne has done some terrific research and pointed me to a series of articles all echoing this sentiment.  It’s almost as if the Israelis are in the midst of a charm offensive designed to take the pressure off Bibi by focussing on making Palestinian lives slightly easier but doing nothing to solve the underlying issues that prevent peace.

The Times features this AP story which it misleadingly titles, West Bank Plan Bears Fruit, but Much More Needed. In reality, the article details the complaints by Palestinian businessmen about key industrial components which are arbitrarily refused by the IDF for “security” purposes. The only thing about the article that is pro-Bibi is the first paragraph which lays out the Israeli leader’s views of his own policy:

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he wants to make ”economic peace” with the Palestinians, and the first fruits are already being seen in eased Israeli restrictions that are stoking a retail and entertainment boom in the West Bank.

But the paragraph immediately following hammers home a major theme of the story:

But where it counts — industry, exports, investments — Netanyahu still has a way to go.

In this passage too, the unreasonableness of the Israeli position is evident:

Israel…puts its security above all else, remembering the trauma of Palestinian bombers from the West Bank blowing themselves up in Israeli cities. There has been no such bombing in 2 1/2 years, but Israel still doesn’t feel safe.

Unfortunately, the reporter doesn’t ask the obvious question: why? Perhaps if Israelis don’t feel safe after 2 1/2 years of quiet they will never feel safe and never be willing to negotiate a political resolution–the only sure way to end the conflict.

In explaining why Israel compels Palestinians to go through a torturous ordeal to import materials for manufacturing, the IDF spokesperson reveals, once again, the capriciousness of Israeli security requirements:

Irit Ben-Abba, an Israeli Foreign Ministry official dealing with the West Bank economy, said change isn’t possible just yet. ”We would very much like to be in a door-to-door system,” she told reporters, but ”security at this particular moment does not allow this.”

That last sentence means precisely nothing. Of course “security does not allow this.” In other words, we in the IDF can make Palestinian businessmen’s lives a living hell. We’re not accountable to anyone. We don’t have to explain ourselves to anyone. We don’t have to give you a reason for our onerous regulations other than “security requires it.”

Tony Blair: Bibi's handmaiden in birthing the West Bank miracle (PBS)

Tony Blair: Bibi's handmaiden in birthing the West Bank economic 'miracle' (PBS)

The Conference of President’s Daily Alert, the hasbaraniks’ Bible, touts this story probably because of its headline. I doubt the staff who put the Alert together bothered to read the rest of it, which doesn’t flatter their pro-Occupation point of view.

Bill Moyer’s former PBS show, NOW, gets in on the “economic miracle” act by touting the supposed rennaissance in Jenin. The copy promoting the show is absolutely breathless in promoting Tony Blair’s work in bringing shiny new economic development to the West Bank:

Once one of the most dangerous and violent cities in the West Bank, Jenin was the scene of frequent battles between the Israeli military and Palestinian fighters, and the hometown of more than two dozen suicide bombers.

Today, however, there’s been a huge turnaround. Jenin is now the center of an international effort to build a safe and economically prosperous Palestinian state from the ground up. On Jenin’s streets today, there’s a brand new professional security force loyal to the Palestinian Authority and funded in part by the United States. But can the modest success in Jenin be replicated throughout the West Bank, or will the effort collapse under the intense political pressure from all sides?

Next week’s show should tell you a great deal about how it’s quality has eroded since Moyer left:

Next week NOW on PBS reports from inside the Israeli Defense Force to get the Israeli perspective on peace in the Middle East.

From the looks of it, NOW’s producer has just gotten back from one of those all-expenses-paid Israel junkets put together by the Israel lobby.

In one of those strange coincidences that prove the media is nothing but a big echo chamber, it appears that NPR beat Bronner to the punch in writing about the supposed economic revival of Nablus. The two separate articles appear to follow virtually the same story line and adopt the same thrust praising Israel for its willingness to ease up on Palestinians and allow their economy to resuscitate.

In the midst of the cheerleading, reporter Peter Kenyon does manage to interview someone who sees things clearly:

…For veteran Palestinian activists such as Hussam Khader, who works on behalf of refugees, there is a certain resentment that simple pleasures of daily life that many people take for granted come to Nablus in the guise of a gift from Israel.

“Israel tried to show the international community there is a ‘good occupation.’ But for us, occupation is occupation. Without real independence in an independent state, the occupation will continue as an occupation,” he says.

But for now, Palestinians are taking advantage of today’s freedoms while keeping a worried eye on what the future may hold.

Israel Policy Forum’s The Pulse even manages to quote Bibi’s favorite shmate, Yisrael HaYom in touting economic miracles on the West Bank. Must you, IPF, quote a newspaper owned by Sheldon Adelson??

Middle East Progress features an article touting a project sponsored by Clinton’s Global Initiative Fund, which would provide insurance to Palestinian entrepreneurs if their business was adversely impacted by political/military turmoil related to the conflict. While perhaps a useful stopgap measure, it seems a palliative compared to what is really needed–a real peace that would free up the economies on both sides to run wide open.

Israel definitely wants the world to know that the IMF projects economic growth of 7% in the Palestinian economy. But considering the battering that this economy has taken over the years and Israel’s ongoing efforts to prevent development, 7% doesn’t appear so miraculous a number.

A similar Jerusalem Post article fits into the hasbara mode even more neatly.

In short, there are no substitutes for peace.  And peace will not come from opening new movie theaters or department stores.  It will come only after the hard compromises are made on both sides.  Till then, the economic miracle meme is only slightly more substantial than fluff.