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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

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Eldrige Street shul

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Dove

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Daylight through the Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

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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 ‘Israel Defense Forces’

Bibi Seeks Iran War Hawk as New Air Force Commander, Chief of Staff Objects

Sunday, January 22nd, 2012
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Maj. Gen. Yochanan Locker, Bibi's hand-picked pro-war IDF air force commander candidate (Gali Tibbon/Getty)Yediot Achronot front page headline: 'Air War'

yediot screenshot yochanan locker

Yediot Achronot front page headline: 'Air War'

During the Great Depression, FDR reacted to the Republican-dominated Supreme Court’s stymieing of his New Deal proposals by packing the Court with his own hand-picked supporters.  It didn’t work out for him as he was forced to roll back the initiative as a violation of constitutional precedent.  Bibi Netanyahu, Tehran-bound in his own F-16 if he has half a chance, has an opportunity to appoint his own hand-picked candidate, Yochanan Locker, as incoming air force commander.  Locker is known to support an IDF attack on Iran.  He is also known to be favored by Defense Minister Ehud Barak, another advocate of war.

Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, known to oppose an attack, neither wants to be dictated to by the prime minister, nor saddled with a key subordinate who will subvert his own command by advocating war with Iran.  While it is common for chiefs of staff to coordinate appointments with prime ministers, it’s rare for the political echelon to cram a candidate for such a position down the throat of the supreme military commander.  Gantz rightly is gagging on this morsel being shoved down his throat.  His preferred candidate is Amir Eshel, a known opponent of an Iran strike.

There you have it.  On the cusp of war, Israel’s political and military echelon are divided, even dysfunctional about the way to go.  Even an appointment like air force commander could tip the balance in favor of war.

IDF Chief of Staff Affirms Israeli Responsibility for Iran Covert War, Assassinations

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012
rohani assassinated iranian nuclear scientist

Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, Iranian nuclear scientist assassinated by Israel and MEK (Fahrs)

Fox News reports that IDF chief of staff Benny Gantz testified in closed session to the Israeli Knesset’s foreign affairs and defense committee that Israel was engaged in sabotaging Iran’s nuclear program through a series of “unnatural” acts:

“2012 is expected to be a critical year for Iran.” He cited “the confluence of efforts to advance the nuclear program, internal leadership changes, continued international pressure and things that happen to it unnaturally.”

Yisrael HaYom’s coverage further reinforces the notion that he was referring directly to the “mysterious explosions” that have rocked Iran of late. As the FoxNews article notes, it’s no accident that the hearing occurred less than 24 hours before the latest assassination. In addition, an IDF spokesperson posted to his Facebook account the following:

Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, said: “I don’t know who settled the score with the Iranian scientist, but I certainly am not shedding a tear.”

It should be recalled that defense minister Ehud Barak chortled to the media after the last missile base explosion: “May there be many more.” These are the “giddy” effusions of a teenage boy breaking open his first chemistry set with which he hopes to create very loud booms. It’s not the response of a mature, sober-minded country. It’s the response of a country which thinks that doing something, anything is better than sitting back and waiting for a regional competitor to become strong enough to challenge it for dominance.

Israel’s go-to man in DC, Dennis Ross (who has just rejoined his old pals at the Aipac-affiliated WINEP think tank), broke out his swagger-stick in an interview with Bloomberg, the main purpose of which seemed to be to remind the Iranians that there are teeth in the American tiger.  However, I don’t think anyone finds Ross’ imprecations persuasive:

“There are consequences if you act militarily, and there’s big consequences if you don’t act,” said Ross, who…laid out a detailed argument against those who say Obama would sooner “contain” a nuclear-armed Iran than strike militarily.

The administration considers the risks of permitting a nuclear-armed Iran to be greater than the risks of military action, said Ross…

If Ross truly believes this he’s an utter fool.  It even flies in the face of everything Meir Dagan has been saying, which is that Israel can learn to live with a nuclear Iran, but it can’t live with the hell hole the region would become if his country launched a full-scale military assault against Iran.  Don’t know about you but if I had a choice between the strategic vision and intelligence background of Dagan or that of Ross, I know who I’d choose.

Ross uses the Bloomberg bully pulpit to shoot down the more pragmatic approach currently offered to deal with the perceived Iranian threat, which is containment along the lines of U.S. policy toward the Soviet Union during the Cold War:

While some Iran analysts have suggested an alternative to military strikes would be to “contain” a nuclear Iran, much as the U.S. managed to live with a nuclear-armed Soviet Union, Ross said the analogy doesn’t translate to the situation in the Mideast. Nations in the region, he said, lack equivalent Cold War-era “ground-rules,” lines of communication and a protected second-strike nuclear capability, which deterred a surprise attack during U.S.-Soviet tensions.

Ross’ analysis is completely ahistorical, as during the Cuban missile crisis the Russians and Americans faced the same gap in communications and the same tactical blindness by which they had no idea what the other side was thinking and might do.  The fact that we both came out of that incident without a nuclear exchange is a miracle as conceded by those who were there at the time.  Further, some might argue that the only reason we don’t have the same strategic deterrence (MAD) that we had during the Cold War is that Israel is the only country in the region with nuclear weapons.  If Iran had them too, it would create precisely the sort of calibrated and careful deliberations that both powers had to observe during the Cold War.  As to second strike: if Ross believes that Israel hasn’t developed a second strike capability he’s out of his mind.  Any sensible military power in today’s world would already have such a plan and contingencies worked out.  Though it has a less potent military force than Israel, Iran would have such a plan as well.

I do so love to hear the pro-Israel think-tankers presume that the only threat of a nuclear exchange in the Middle East would occur if Iran got the bomb:

A nuclear-armed Iran would…increase the chances of a nuclear strike resulting from miscalculation, he said

It never occurred to them that Israel might be the one to miscalculate and launch its nukes first and ask questions later.   If you look at the military history of the Middle East over the past 50 years or so, it is Israel who has gotten itself into extended military adventurism and vastly disproportionate use of force against its neighbors.  Use of a nuclear weapon, while certainly on the extreme end of the spectrum is not beyond the realm of possibility considering that Israel has seriously considered using them before.

I also find the notion that we should go to war now because there’s a virtual certainty of a nuclear exchange in the future if we don’t, to be the logic of madness:

“You don’t have any communication between the Israelis and the Iranians. You have all sorts of local triggers for conflict. Having countries act on a hair-trigger — where they can’t afford to be second to strike — the potential for a miscalculation or a nuclear war through inadvertence is simply too high,” he said.

Oh and another reason we’ve got to bomb Iran is that we’d “lose all credibility” after swearing Iran would never be allowed to get a bomb, if we allowed it to do precisely that.  This seems to be a page torn from the Testosterone foreign policy playbook.  Has it never occurred to any of these idiots that the world might actually go on if Iran got the bomb?  Even if no one wants that to happen and does everything they can to prevent it, the day after Iran gets it the sun will rise and the world will figure out a way to accommodate the new reality without bringing us to the brink of nuclear oblivion.

I detest fabulists and Apocalyse-seekers like Ross who project a mushroom cloud-future instead of looking at the current situation with clear-eyed realism.

Another element of Ross’ thinking that involves hypocrisy is the fact that our threats of attack are dead-serious, while Iran’s threats of counter-attack are mere “bluster” which no one in his right mind should take seriously:

He dismissed threats by certain Iranian officials to retaliate against oil sanctions by closing the Strait of Hormuz, through which one-fifth of the world’s oil transits, as “bluster” aimed to send a message at home and abroad, as Iranian leaders vie for power in a struggle that Ross said is as intense as any since the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic revolution.

There seems to be a strange dualistic-Iran that the hawks project: one near omnipotent Iran which has the capacity to send the Middle East up in flames if we allow it to get a bomb; and another that is a toothless paper tiger which couldn’t harm anyone even if it tried (remember Barak’s claim that not even 500 Israelis would die if Israel attacked?).  What is missing is a realistic evaluation of Iran’s strategic thinking and capabilities.  If I could drill a single idea into Ross’ thick pro-Israel skull it would be the words of Meir Dagan, who has warned that a Middle East following an attack on Iran would be one which Israelis would find terribly inhospitable, much more so than even today.  It would be a world that Israelis would not recognize, nor wish to live in.

A further example of the wrong-headed thinking involved in the Israeli approach can be seen in Ronen Bergman’s remarks in the Fox News article:

“The outcome of such assassinations are [sic] the actual neutralization of the main scientists and the intimidation of those left behind.”

No doubt this is the hope of the Mossad regarding this covert war.  But the difference between a hope and a fact is something neither Bergman or the Mossad has grasped here.  I seriously doubt that Israel has murdered (notice use of the emotionally flat term “neutralization”) the “main scientists.” It has murdered the ones it could find, the ones who were most public or vulnerable. You can be sure that the key scientists are far more protected. As for intimidating anyone, does Bergman think that Israeli nuclear scientists would be “intimidated” by such a campaign against them? Not likely. They would consider it their national duty to pursue such research and risk death if it came, in order to do what is necessary to “protect” (in their view) their country, including creating a nuclear weapon if that was national policy.

Gantz, in his testimony to the Knesset, made some questionable claims. One of them, that Russia is joining other powers in expressing “regret and fear” about the secret Iranian enrichment program in Qom. The Russian statement does not appear to me to have any teeth to it. It’s a pro forma expression of concern of the same type the U.S. makes when Israel builds a new settlement. Such comments by a nation-state are a dime a dozen. And Israel would be sadly mistaken to presume Russia is now joining the U.S. is supporting sanctions or military action against Iran.

Wrong-headedness from Aipac-World is evident in this nonsense from WINEP’s Patrick Clawson, who actually sees Israel’s covert war as one that won’t arouse sympathy among Iranians for the regime:

“Sabotage and assassination is the way to go, if you can do it,” he said. “It doesn’t provoke a nationalist reaction in Iran, which could strengthen the regime. And it allows Iran to climb down if it decides the cost of pursuing a nuclear weapon is too high.”

If Iran were assassinating Israeli scientists or the Soviet Union assassinated Edward Teller or J. Robert Oppenheimer does anyone in their right mind believe it wouldn’t arouse a fierce backlash against the perpetrators? How can “analysts” like Clawson presume that Iranians will react differently than any other human being?

Scott Shane also quotes this particularly noxious Israeli intelligence-hawk wisdom:

A former senior Israeli security official, who would speak of the covert campaign only in general terms and on the condition of anonymity, said the uncertainty about who was responsible was useful. “It’s not enough to guess,” he said. “You can’t prove it, so you can’t retaliate. When it’s very, very clear who’s behind an attack, the world behaves differently.”

The former Israeli official noted that Iran carried out many assassinations of enemies, mostly Iranian opposition figures, during the 1980s and 1990s, and had been recently accused of plotting to kill the Saudi ambassador to the United States in Washington.

“In Arabic, there’s a proverb: If you are shooting, don’t complain about being shot,” he said.

Iran hasn’t used assassination as state policy in over twenty years and it only used this tactic against its own citizens. Israel has used assassination as state policy through its entire existence and has killed both its own citizens and foreign nationals. Indeed the entire history of the Zionist movement going back to the late 19th century has seen repeated incidents of assassination used as a sort of enforcer-policy to compel discipline and uproot those views seen as dangerous or deviant. Iran is not “shooting.” But Israel is indeed shooting, but expects to suffer no political fallout for the damage its weapons, both real and metaphorical, inflict.

Here’s more “wisdom” from Shane’s source:

“I think the cocktail of diplomacy, of sanctions, of covert activity might bring us something,” the former official said. “I think it’s the right policy while we still have time.”

“Might bring us something.” Imagine a nation which tramples on the sovereignty of another, kills its scientists, bombs its scientific facilities, brings down its planes from the skies, all in pursuit of a policy which just might bring some benefit. Can you hold the policymakers of such a nation in anything but contempt?

Surprisingly, even the U.S. appears to be growing concerned by Israel’s behavior:

United States appeared to reflect serious concern about the growing number of lethal attacks, which some experts believe could backfire by undercutting future negotiations and prompting Iran to redouble what the West suspects is a quest for a nuclear capacity…

…Some skeptics believe that it may harden Iran’s resolve or set a dangerous precedent for a strategy that could be used against the United States and its allies.

I find it interesting that the U.S. has rushed to distance itself from the killing, making clear that it had nothing to do with it before anyone even accused them of doing so. What’s disingenuous about this approach is that the U.S. and Israel are joined at the hip in this black ops war against Iran. They developed Stuxnet with Israel. The very same MEK terrorists sticking magnetic bombs to the car doors of Iranian scientists are the ones our government is considering giving a clean bill of health by removing them from the terror list.

We’re playing a double game here. We want to enjoy the fruit of Israel’s Chinese water torture approach to sabotaging Iran. But we want to retain plausible deniability and not be seen to get our hands dirty.

Thankfully, the Times story does quote an establishment realist who adds some sobriety as an antidote to the fantasies of the Israel lobby-analyst crowd:

“It’s important to turn around and ask how the U.S. would feel if our revenue was being cut off, our scientists were being killed and we were under cyberattack,” [Gary] Sick said. “Would we give in, or would we double down? I think we’d fight back, and Iran will, too.”

Three Settler MKs Expose IDF Movements to Settler-Rioters Who Assaulted West Bank Army Base

Sunday, January 8th, 2012
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What's the difference between a settler thug and an MK...like Uri Ariel?

It is so common for Israeli Palestinian MKs to be charged with treason, aiding the enemy, spying, etc. that Israeli Jews not only take it for granted, but accept that the charges are true without any offer of proof.  But it’s a relatively new phenomenon for Israeli Jewish MKs not just to be accused, but to boast that they gave away classified information to settler hoodlums that was used as part of an assault against a West Bank army base in which two senior officers were wounded by bricks and rocks.  Because of the assault. the IDF was prevented from demolishing an illegal outpost, which was the original goal of the settlers.  In most other democratic countries this would be considered akin to sedition.  In Israel, not so much.

It’s bad enough that MKs Zeev Elkin (chair of the ruling coalition caucus in the Knesset) and Uri Ariel admitted that they secured information directly from IDF sources about the mission of military forces that night, and passed this information on to settler activists so they would know where the IDF was liable to strike.   This allowed them to concentrate their forces to do the most damage to the IDF and its mission of evacuating the outpost.  But Nana is now reporting (Hebrew) that senior minister Benny Begin joined in this operation.  He is not just an MK, he is a member of the senior ministerial committee that deliberates on major strategic and policy initiatives (like whether Israel attacks Iran).  Begin is also the son of Menachem Begin, one of the icons of the classical Israeli Jabotinskyian right.  Begin isn’t known as a settler hothead.  So when he too joins in such acts, it carries far-reaching consequences within the Israeli centrist community.  It’s yet another sign of the triumph of ultranationalism in Israeli politicial discourse.

Do you think the Israeli police will dare investigate these MKs, whose loyalty is not to the State or its authorities, but to an unofficial vigilante rabble that is at war with the State they supposedly represent?  This reminds me a bit of the Southern members of Congress in the years leading up to the Civil War.  Their allegiance was increasingly not to the United States, but to their region.  Time after time, they betrayed their country on behalf of their fellow Southerners, which led to deep mistrust and eventual national disintegration.

Israelis and Diaspora Jews wring their hands in frustration claiming that these bad settlers spoil it for all the other good, law-abiding settlers and the rest of Israel.  It’s the old good cop-bad cop routine.  The extreme settlers are the bad cops, the average Israeli citizen is the good cop.  The argument goes: don’t throw the baby out with the bath water.  Remember that Israel is not these bad seed settlers.  If we could only control the bad guys, then all would be well.

This is horse manure.  As I argued in a recent post, the radical settlers aren’t separate from, or opposed to the State.  As far as the West Bank goes, these settlers ARE the State.  Civil and military authorities do their bidding.  Settlers exercise massive control in their domain and no one threatens it, least of all a few rock throwing Palestinians and their do-gooder international activist friends.

Israel is not disintegrating, at least not yet, because the settlers and their allies control all the levers of power that they need to maintain their movement.  Unfortunately, there is no Israeli Lincoln to offer the settlers a final ultimatum.  There is no Ben Gurion willing to face down Begin and fire on the Alta Lena in order to put down a possible insurrection.  Israel needs discipline and internal cohesion on behalf of an overarching principle like democracy.  There is none and no one to impose it.

There is, however, a rising discipline among the far right and a vision of how to impose control over social and political structures that will ensure their permanent majority.  So it becomes a question of time before Israel becomes a far-right state along the lines of Milosevic’s Serbia.  The liberals have been vanquished inside Israel.  There is no loyal opposition.  There is no coherent alternate political philosophy.  The left is not just in disarray but in full-fledged disintegration.  The right is ascendant.  It cannot end well.

My only wish would be for the settlers to secede from Israel–without the IDF to protect them from their Palestinian neighbors.  We could call it the Confederate State of Judea.  It would last for about five minutes, if that.

In a related development, the police arrested four of the activists who trashed the IDF base.  It is the first time in my recollection that anyone has been arrested for any of the price tag violence that has happened over the past few months (except possibly the arrest of Dor Oved for his death threats against Peace Now).  The only reason they were arrested was that they broke a certain social taboo.  You can kill Palestinians in cold blood, even assault your fellow Israelis.  But you cannot touch the IDF.  You cannot assault an army base.  That goes one bridge too far.

My prediction?  The four will be out of jail in days, if not hours.  They’ll be celebrated by their comrades who will sing and dance and lionize them for their heroism.  The rest of Israel will yawn and go on with their lives.  Let the settlers do what they want as long as they don’t bother us here too much.  As for trial and punishment?  Not on your life.  But if (and this is a big ‘if,’ the pogromists were prosecuted for a crime, these MKs should be accessories after the fact.  Begin, Elkin and Ariel aided and abetted serious lawbreaking and injuries to senior IDF commanders.  That should count for something, even in a country in which democracy and the rule of law is going to Hell in a handbasket.  In a real democracy, a senior minister whose leaks cause harm to senior military personnel and the trashing of an army base would resign.  But Israel I guess isn’t that sort of place.  It’s a place in which such behavior is rewarded rather than castigated.

Anat Kamm’s leaks didn’t result in a single injury to a single Israeli soldier.  But Begin’s did.  But who’s been punished and who is walking free?

IDF Finally Concedes Gaza Attacks Originated in Sinai, Not Gaza

Friday, January 6th, 2012

When even the most hawkish of Israel military correspondents concede (implicitly) the IDF’s version of the Eilat terror attacks is rubbish, you know you’ve been vindicated.  You’ll recall that back in August, after the incident, Alex Fishman, Idan Landau and I all demolished the claims by the IDF that the attackers were Gazan.  We argued that the attack originated in Sinai and that Sinai Islamists organized it and carried it out.  Eli Lake, Avi Issacharoff and any number of obedient water carriers dutifully reported IDF and U.S. intelligence nonsense.  The lies spouted by the IDF were also used to justify killing the top leadership of the Popular Resistance Committees and 25 other Gaza civilians having nothing to do with the raid.

Today, the Jerusalem Post’s Yaakov Katz reports that now the IDF itself admits the attackers were from Sinai and not Gaza.  But the IDF isn’t entirely willing to give up on the charade.  They still claim that the Sinai militants were acting on behalf of Gaza elements, though of course they don’t prove or even explain why or how this could be so.  They of course must continue to allege a Gaza connection otherwise they’ll be accused of war crimes for knowingly assaulting Gaza when they knew beforehand it had nothing to do with Eilat.

One of the theories the IDF is still peddling is that the Gazans paid the Sinai Bedouin to hit Eilat.  Though the fact that three of them wore suicide vests is a bit inconvenient unless, as Idan Landau quipped in an e mail, Bedouin believe they can take the money with them to spend in heaven.

It’s getting to the point where virtually anything the IDF says you must believe the exact opposite.  It is congenitally unable to speak the truth on almost any issue.  Perhaps someone can point out to us in the threads an IDF statement that was actually true.  If so, we should celebrate it as they’re in the vast minority.

Israel Human Rights Lawyer: IDF Commander Soils Memory of Jawaher Rahme

Thursday, January 5th, 2012
jawaher abu rahme

Jawaher Abu Rahme, killed by IDF December 31, 2010 (Haaretz)

On the one year anniversary of the death of non-violent Bilin protester Jawaher Abu Rahme, her family’s Israeli human rights lawyer, Michael Sfard, reminds us of the nasty conspiracy by senior IDF commander, Maj. Gen. Avi Mizrahi, with the Israeli media to rob Abu Rahme in death of her dignity through outright lies. These lies were dutifully disseminated by reporters and right-wing hasbara blogs like Muqata, Israellycool (yes, our old friend David Lange again), and Jonathan Hoffman at the Jewish Chronicle, who claimed in blaring headlines that the Palestinian non-violent movement had created a “blood libel” against the IDF. Virtually every claim of the IDF and their media whores was disproven. Yet no newspaper except Haaretz published anything close to the truth, nor did anyone publish a correction or retraction.

Thanks to Oren Persico at 7th Eye for publishing Sfard’s J’Accuse against Mizrahi. I should point out that the publication, showing an abundance of caution, refused to name the IDF liar (though Sfard did in his remarks). But it didn’t need to, because Yossi Gurvitz did so last year in +972. Sfard’s comments are expanded upon in Blood Libel in Bilin, a full-length investigation (summary here) prepared by the NGO Keshev. It recounts the entire media coverage of the tragedy and tells a particularly ugly story. To be fair, the report singles the Palestinian media out for criticism as well. But given that the killing was perpetrated by Israel and its media is much larger and has more resources, Israel’s media is far more culpable.

This is the schandeh of which Gen. Mizrahi is guilty: he told the Israeli media that Abu Rahme wasn’t at the demonstration at all and therefore couldn’t have died of tear gas inhalation. He told them that the activists delayed getting her to the hospital, which caused her death. He told them the hospital committed medical negligence by treating her for the wrong condition thereby causing her death. He said that the drugs she was given during treatment indicated she had cancer rather than gas toxicity and died of cancer instead of asphyxiation.

All these things were lies. Disgusting lies for which Mizrahi and no one in the IDF has paid a price. But Mizrahi isn’t the only bald-faced liar. Last year, I wrote a post noting that Brig. Gen. Nitzan Alon also joined in the lie-fest echoing his colleague. In fact, Alon is such a good liar he was promoted to assume Mizrahi’s former position. On a further note, Mizrahi’s troops also murdered a Palestinian grandpa in his bed just before Abu Rachme’s killing. The troops had broken into an apartment on the wrong floor and killed the 65-year-old innocent man as he lay sleeping, while they held a gun to the head of his poor wife as she sat in another room. All this is proof positive that in addition to merit, the IDF rewards its commanders for deceit, subterfuge, fakery, murder, and dishonoring the memory of their Palestinian victims. It makes me ashamed. Damn ashamed.

The Israeli military prosecutor is “investigating” the case and there will be a Supreme Court hearing in July. Without this, the army would undoubtedly sweep yet another negligent homicide under the rug. For those who object to the term “homicide” they’ll recall an IDF study from 2002 which noted that CS gas in strong enough concentrations could kill a human being, which is precisely what happened.

Another word about the role played by David Lange in this matter. He and his fellow Hasbara media mavens were willing co-conspirators with the IDF in spreading its lies. They were hoaxed, but willingly so. And they in turn perpetrated the hoax on their readers, and they too may’ve been willingly hoaxed. I don’t mind that Lange hoaxed me into exposing a fraudulent identity he’d created for himself. All that was hurt was my pride. But through his fraud in this instance he dragged Jawaher Abu Rahme’s reputation in death through the mud. That is a far worse crime. Lange will never apologize. He doesn’t have it in him. Not least because Abu Rahme, as a Palestinian isn’t fully human to him. She is the enemy and therefore anything she does, including dying, is a personal affront to Israel and its army. An affront that’s worth lying about to “expose.”

Finally, we should note that the very same CS tear gas and the projectiles that deliver them continue causing death to Palestinian protesters including one that happened last month. The fact that the IDF uses munitions and crowd control devices that kill not just once but repeatedly, makes the entire army guilty of violations of international law. These deaths are no longer accidents or unfortunate mistakes. They are, at the very least negligent homicide and at worst murder. Take your pick.

New IDF Special Forces Command to Attack Iran

Thursday, December 15th, 2011
Idf special forces iran command

Yediot headline: 'General Iran Command'

The IDF announced in the past few days that it was creating a new Special Forces command (Hebrew) that would be designed to project Israeli force far beyond its borders.  It would operate behind enemy lines and take the fight to the other side and sabotage key infrastructure and generally wreak havoc.  The Yediot headline announces, only slightly facetiously, the promotion of the new commander to “General of the Iran Command.”  Haaretz’s article (Hebrew, and a shorter version in English) also points out that this will be one of the special purposes of the new operational command.

The units in the new command would not operate in areas like Lebanon or Gaza where there are already Special Forces who could serve.  It would be designed to operate at longer distances of more than 50 miles from Israeli territory.  To give one an idea of how important the new “Deep Command” is, its military leader will report directly to the chief of staff.

The Mossad already engages in such operations, but the new command would engage in more complex operations involving numbers of personnel and military-type firepower.  It would also combine air, land and sea operations that cross operational boundaries.  That’s why Israeli reporter’s first thought is that this would be a perfect match for Iran.  My only question would be how it could operate so far from Israeli territory.  But if you think about Iran’s neighbors and the fact that American forces are based right next door in Afghanistan (where the U.S. super-drone was based which fell inside Iran last week), it’s not beyond the realm of possibility for Israeli personnel to operate secretly from territory much closer to Iran.  It might also be possible for Israeli commandos to be delivered to Iran by sea.  If it were discovered though that Israeli forces were based even secretly in a Muslim country it would be terribly embarrassing to the host nation.

Another type of mission this new unit could pursue would be something like the reconnaissance allegedly performed by Israeli forces at the Syrian nuclear site before IAF jets destroyed it in 2007.  As the IDF is known to have intercepted and destroyed purported shipments of Iranian arms in Sudan and elsewhere that were destined for Gaza, this is another role the Deep Command could perform, interdicting arms shipments while still far from Israel’s borders.  The latter is especially concerned about arms shipments to Hezbollah routed from Iran through Syria.  This too would be an operations responsibility for the new unit.

This is without doubt an escalation in the war of nerves and sabotage by Israel against Iran.  The former is already conducting a covert war killing Iranian generals and scientists and blowing up key military bases.  Now it may secure the wherewithal to mount even larger scale operations.  The drawback is that just like the Bay of Pigs invasion, in which the CIA bit off far more than it could chew, ending in a disaster that sorely embarrassed a new U.S. president, this new combat command too could attempt a mission inside Iran that could misfire badly.  Think Jimmy Carter’s abortive rescue mission of the U.S. hostages in Iran in 1979.

The new IDF deployment is also designed to spook the Iranians into believing that the ‘long arm’ of the IDF has just grown longer.  You hear this sort of testosterone-infused bragging from IDF generals, Israeli intelligence sources and their journalistic enablers all the time.  The problem is that I doubt the Iranians are spooked.  In fact, the more Israel brags about its capabilities the more likely they are to make a mistake, of which the Iranians are sure to take advantage.

IDF PR Flacks Branch Out into Tourism Promotion and Touting Nation’s Nobel Laureates

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

During the recent uproar over IDF Captain Peter Lerner’s cold-hearted Twitter #fail put-downs of the murdered Palestinian protester, Mustafa Tamimi, I spent some time reviewing his Twitter feed and that of others like Avital Leibovich and Captain Barak Raz.  Despite the fact that their lies and pimping for the IDF were to be expected since it is, after all their job to lie on behalf of their country and army, I hadn’t expected is that their PR efforts were far broader.

They view their job as promoting Israel in all its infinite variety.  If an Israeli won an international sailing competition, they’d tweet it.  Captain Lerner seems to admire Jewish comedy in particular as he retweets about Tom Lehrer.  Perhaps that #fail hashtag was another feeble attempt at Jewish wit (or snark).  I suppose also Lerner feels compelled to throw a sop to “the other side” as when he promotes the beauties of the Israeli Palestinian town of Nazareth (unless he really means to tout the higher class Jewish-only enclave, Upper Nazareth.  He also gets into the spirit of the holidays by wishing the Israeli consulate in Los Angeles “hot doughnuts, chilly nights, and cozy evenings” during Hanukah.  I tell you, if I hadn’t known Lerner was a heartless SOB who valued Palestinian lives as little more than dirt, I’d have been downright touched at his humanity.  Lerner also appears to be a cheerleader and career advisor for the foreign ministry as he wished Israel’s new ambassador (the last one was run out of town on a rail after Israel invaded Egypt to kill five Egyptian policemen) well in his new job.  He probably should’ve warned him to always know where the key to the panic room is just in case.  Lerner’s also a bit of a foreign policy wonk who takes a great interest in the goings on around the Middle East including the toppling of the ruler of Israel’s neighbors, Syria.

Lt. Col. Avital Leibovich’s specialties seems to be tourism promotion as she touts the beauty of Bethlehem during the Christmas season with a heartwarming video from the “Civil Administrator” about peace on earth and good will to man…except for Palestinians it appears.  I tell you, I never knew a Civil Administrator could be so menschlich.  Here she praises the desert beauty of Beersheva.  Leibovich’s skills are so acute she may’ve even been on the Nobel Committee which awarded Prof. Dan Shechtman the most recent Israeli Nobel Prize.  At least you might think that from her tweet congratulating him.  Israel may be the only country in the world which feels national pride when its citizens win such prizes and use them as apparent confirmation of the righteousness of the cause in oppressing the Palestinians.  But don’t ask the Lt. Col. any “political questions” because she’s not allowed to offer such opinions.  Leave aside the fact that her very job as PR flack and her Twitter feed are political statements in themselves.

It makes you wonder why the IDF would feel it needed to employ spokespeople who delved in tourism promotion, touting of the nation’s IQ, and promoting observance of the Jewish holidays.  Don’t know about you, but I always thought that soldiers fought and defended their country and should leave extraneous subjects to others.  Can you imagine a U.S. military spokesperson tweeting to a Bulgarian about how gorgeous a Rocky Mountain sunset is?  There seems to be a great deal of confusion within the IDF about its purpose.  It has ranged far outside defending the country from military threat and bled over into PR flackery and hasbara puffery.

I suppose it’s possible that Israel’s national army, like that of China or Egypt plans to branch out into numerous profit-making enterprises which could be used, in these parlous economic times, to subsidize all those mega-billion arms system purchases and R&D.  That may explain some of the diverse interests of the IDF’s spokesrepresentatives.

Finally, all of the IDF’s PR flacks seem to have majored in basic elementary math as they count fastidiously every rocket fired by every Palestinian militant which lands harmlessly in open fields.  You’d be hard-pressed though to find even a whisper about routine killings of Palestinian civilians by the IDF and Border Police.

Israel Once Again Murders Unarmed Palestinian Protester

Saturday, December 10th, 2011
mustafa tamimi killing

Mustafa Tamimi a moment before being fatally struck by tear gas canister, left-hand red circle (Haim Scwarczenberg)

Mustafa Tamimi, a 28 year old resident of Nabi Saleh, was fatally shot in the head at close range by a tear gas canister fired by an IDF soldier from the rear of a patrol vehicle. You can see the moment just before Mustafa was hit in this photo.  The original caption for the photo offered by the Popular Struggle Coordination Committee says it was fired from 30 feet.  Using the high velocity weapon they use, it is quite easy to kill someone from that distance.  Not to mention that the purpose of the firing of this weapon in this circumstance had nothing to do with crowd control as tear gas is normally used.  Rather in aiming the shot at the protesters head, it was a deliberate act of murder:

In complete disregard to the army’s own open fire regulations, soldiers often shoot tear-gas projectiles directly at groups of protesters or individuals. Rubber-coated bullets are indiscriminately shot at protesters from short distances on a regular basis. The Israeli army also resumed the use of high velocity tear-gas projectiles in Nabi Saleh, despite the fact that they have been declared banned for use, after causing the death of Bassem Abu Rahmah in the neighboring village of Bil’in, in April 2009, and the critical injury of American protester Tristan Anderson in Ni’ilin in March of the same year.

Here is a bit of history behind the demonstrations in this particular village:

Late in 2009, settlers began gradually taking over Ein al-Qaws (the Bow Spring), which rests on lands belonging to Bashir Tamimi, the head of the Nabi Saleh village council. The settlers, abetted by the army, erected a shed over the spring, renamed it Maayan Meir, after a late settler, and began driving away Palestinians who came to use the spring by force – at times throwing stones or even pointing guns at them, threatening to shoot.

While residents of Nabi Saleh have already endured decades of continuous land grab and expulsion to allow for the ever continuing expansion of the Halamish settlement, the takeover of the spring served as the last straw that lead to the beginning of the village’s grassroots protest campaign of weekly demonstrations in demand for the return of their lands.

Mustafa Tamimi  seconds after he was shot by the IDF

Mustafa Tamimi seconds after he was shot by IDF

An IDF PR flack is tweeting that Tamimi’s murder was justified because he allegedly had a slingshot in his pocket.  This is Goliath firing a high-velocity lethal projectile at David, who, if the IDF is to be believed (always a risky proposition) didn’t even have his slingshot in his hand, but rather in his pocket.  This is the most egregious hilul I can imagine: blaming the victim for his own death.  This horse’s ass of an IDF captain (no less–they must promote them for being cold-hearted assholes) also notes that Tamimi was arrested in 2010.  Imagine that, he was one of the tens of thousands the IDF arrest every year for the terrible crime of protesting against the theft of their lands by settlers aided and abetted by the IDF.  The IDF also prevented the dead man’s sister and father from visiting him in the hospital before he died.

Tamimi is the 20th Palestinian to be killed in the past eight years in such non-violent protests according to B’Tselem.

I hate to say it but this murder and Captain Barak Raz’s heartless response indicate that Israel, at least if its actions in this tragedy are representative, is losing the battle not just for its soul, but for its existence.  A nation that murders in cold blood gradually loses its reason for being.  Perhaps not in the eyes of its Jewish citizens, but almost certainly in the eyes of the world.  And Israel simply cannot afford to find itself on the opposite side of every nation in the world.  It will thanks to murders like this.