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

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Posts Tagged ‘operation cast lead’

Knesset Leader Cancels Visit to Turkey Meant to Ease Tensions

Friday, October 28th, 2011
shaul mofaz

Shaul Mofaz and Israel didn't miss an opportunity to to miss an opportunity to further Israel-Turkey reconciliation

This has to be one of the more bitter ironies of today’s news: Shaul Mofaz, a senior Israeli Knesset leader, was invited by NATO to address an international security conference in Istanbul.  He was to make a pointed appeal for relieving tensions between Turkey and Israel.  He was to offer soft words and encouragement designed to create a more positive atmosphere between the two feuding nations.  Everything was prepared for his trip.  The speech was being written and vetted.

Then Israel intelligence weighed in.  They’d need a score of bodyguards, armored vehicles, hotel rooms, food.  The cost for security alone escalated to $25,000 (which seems a paltry sum to me).  Official Israel began to have second thoughts.  Just how important was this event and Mofaz’s speech?  In the end, the speech and trip were cancelled (Hebrew, with shorter English version here) and yet another opportunity to soothe the waters was lost.  As Abbas Eban used to say in a far different context: never missing an opportunity to miss an opportunity for peace.

Ironic isn’t it, that a gesture meant to bring peace between the parties was torpedoed by the very hostility it was seeking to soothe?  Mofaz couldn’t go to Ankara for fear the very enmities Israel aroused inside Turkey with its Gaza war and Mavi Marmara assault, would endanger him.  That’s of course leaving aside the looming fear that a Turkish prosecutor could submit arrest warrants for Israeli leaders who perpetrated the flotilla massacre, though that doesn’t appear to have played any role in this matter.

Israel, through it heedlessness to the sensitivities to its neighbors, through it narrow focus on short term gain, has lost site of its long-term interests and lost the ability to create new opportunities for peace and reconciliation even if it wanted to do so.  This is the tragedy of Israel’s current regional predicament.

Truthout: ‘Why I Published US Intelligence Secrets About Israel’s Anti-Iran Campaign’

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

truthout screenshotA number of readers (and even some provocateurs) were curious if, and when I would tell the story of my relationship with Shamai Leibowitz and why he leaked, and I published material from secret U.S. surveillance of Israeli diplomats who were escalating hostilities with Iran while also lobbying Pres.-elect Obama to be allowed to “finish the job” of Operation Cast Lead.  I’ve finally done so at Truthout.  It contains extensive excerpts from blog posts I wrote at the time which outline specific semi-covert interventions by Israeli diplomats in U.S. political life, which advanced Israel’s national interest (at least as portrayed by this far right government) in demonizing Iran and continuing the Gaza war.

Turkey’s Erdogan Fills Middle East Power Vacuum Left by U.S.

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

I was just listening to a Turkish professor on To the Point discuss the emergence of his country as a major regional player in the commercial, military and diplomatic affairs of the Middle East.  He mentioned that Egypt’s revolution had forced it to step back from such a role as it contemplated its future.  He also said that Israel has increasingly boxed itself into a corner and lessened its own leverage in the region, which has included deterioration of relations with both former allies (well, Egypt wasn’t exactly an ally, but you know what I mean).  This has left a vacuüm in regional politics which Erdogan has had the vision and skill to fill.  Not just that, Erdogan has had the ability to do something Pres. Obama Hasmalit not been willing or able to do.  He’s been willing to crack the whip to get the various players to sit up and take notice.  Israel has been a prime “victim” of this approach.

One critical factor that’s led to the rise of Turkey is the abandonment by the Obama administration of any sort of active, engaged role in the region.  Sure, its stalwarts will retort that the president does have an active policy.  But what he really has is a semblance of a policy, not the real thing.  As I’ve reported here, the president’s Middle East policy has foundered on lack of fortitude in reining in Israel’s appetite for settlements and the latter’s bellicosity toward its neighbors.  Obama has not been willing to do the hard things that would call the Israeli government to heel.  But Erdogan has.  And that makes all the difference in Turkey’s ascendancy and the U.S.’ decline in status in the region.

It was Turkey which brought together Syria and Israel for talks which may’ve led to a negotiated settlement of all outstanding differences and the return of the Golan to Syria.  This rapprochement was disrupted by Ehud Olmert’s decision to invade Gaza.  It was Turkey together with Brazil, which attempted to broker a deal to resolve the Iran nuclear issue.   It did all these things in an attempt to play a constructive role and resolve conflict.

But the flip side of leadership is also to know when tough medicine is called for in relations with a neighbor.  Sometimes honey doesn’t work and vinegar is necessary.  That’s why Turkey is forcing Israel to pay a price for its hubristic behavior whether it be Operation Cast Lead or the Mavi Marmara assault.  Erdogan also recognizes that the political currents from the Arab Spring work in his favor and not Israel’s.

Obama’s problem?  He refuses to make enemies, even the right ones: whether they be Republicans, (some) American Jews or Israelis.  Well, you can’t exercise leadership if you’re only kind, gentle and nurturing.  There are times when you need to tell people who’s boss.  Erdogan is willing to do that.  Obama isn’t.  Erdogan is willing to call Israel a “spoiled child.”  Obama calls Israel the “best friend we have.”  Erdogan is willing to tell the Arab League that supporting Palestinian statehood in the UN is “not a choice but an obligation.”  Obama contradicts his own nation’s policy in denying Palestine statehood, making him look the fool.  That’s the difference.

Obama’s hesitance reminds me of recent coverage of a presidential speech by Dmitri Medvedev, who’s running for another term against his former mentor, Vladimir Putin.  The entire nation awaited a forceful statement of his vision, an urgent call to arms revealing his political agenda.  When he had the attention of all Russia, what did he do?  He delivered a stale list of platitudes, thus showing his countrymen and women he didn’t have the heart for a fight.

This is Obama in spades.  He simply doesn’t have the heart for the trench warfare sometimes necessary to win in politics.  And that, in a nutshell is why Erdogan is a true leader with the potential of greatness, while our president is an also ran.

To be sure, Erdogan is not perfect.  Human rights in Turkey are sometimes threatened and the Kurds are not free.  But at least this is a leader aware of the weaknesses of his country and working (perhaps too slowly in some areas) to repair them.  Can we say the same about Bibi Netanyahu or even Barack Obama?

On a slightly different subject, we can see that a vote for Palestinian statehood in the General Assemby, which seems likely, could bring a huge wave of violence in the Middle East.  While Israel claims that the violence would be originated by protesting Palestinians, the IDF itself has played a huge role in escalating tensions by declaring its expectation of violence.  The world must put Israel on notice that it will not accept mass violence against Palestinians.  It will not accept a national price tag policy from the Netanyahu government as a consequence of Palestinian rejection of U.S.-Israel directives to abandon the statehood bid.  I fear this.  I fear it greatly.  It could be like the Mavi Marmara assault except on a much greater scale.  I would love to be proven wrong and hope I am.

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

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Shabak Removes Gag Order Concerning Alleged Nazareth Teen-Age Terror Cell

Sunday, April 17th, 2011

The Israeli Shabak, those crackerjack sleuths, have broken, if they are to be believed, a major Nazareth terror cell composed of three boys, aged 18-19, who’d been planning unsuccessfully for two years to create weapons to kill Israeli police and soldiers.  I’ve already reported the arrest of Ahmad Ghanem, the so-called ringleader of the group, which was under a gag order.  A few days later, likely after the full effect of gentle Shabak suasion took effect, two of Ghanem’s accomplices were also arrested under gag.

These bomb-makers were so proficient, Haaretz says, they gave up plans to build pipe bombs when they couldn’t get any to work.  Then they turned to buying guns.  But even these attempts were thwarted by the fact that the crack team of terrorists found the weapons too expensive.  We don’t even know if they could’ve purchased the weapons whether they could’ve fired them, let alone hit anything.  This wasn’t even the Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight.  It was gang that couldn’t even get a gun.  We should note that the indictment claims they met supposed arms dealers named “Ahmed” and “Mahmoud,” but that “the prosecution does not know their identities.”  In other words, you have a good portion of this alleged conspiracy based on the existence of individuals the State can’t even identify or find.

So I’m not even sure what these kids did that was illegal.  They went on a website & supposedly read about creating pipe bombs, tried to do it and failed, then switched tactics to buying weapons and failed at that too.  Sounds like an open and shut case to me.  Throw ‘em in jail and throw away the key.

It should be noted that now they will go to an Israeli prison where they will meet Palestinian prisoners who will be able to teach them how to commit the acts they failed at so miserably before.  In case anyone doubts the impact of Israeli terror on Israeli Palestinians, it should be noted that these children decided to form their alleged terror cell in the aftermath of Operation Cast Lead.

Here is the Ghanem charge sheet (in Hebrew).

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The ‘Herem’ of Judge Goldstone

Sunday, April 10th, 2011
richard goldstone

Richard Goldstone: the Haggadah's 'Wicked Son'

Last year, Judge Richard Goldstone revealed that he would not attend his grandson’s South African bar mitzvah because pro-Israel community leaders had let it be known that they would picket the synagogue during the celebration and generally make his life miserable.  There was a general uproar over this threatening behavior with a number of South African Jews (though not the community’s top leaders) criticizing it in the media including the New York Times.  A short time later, Goldstone announced that he would attend the festivities after all and it appeared that the community had backed down and that the judge’s honor had been vindicated.

What we didn’t realize, and which The Forward recently reported, is that there seems to have been a secret quid pro quo by which the community demanded that it meet with Goldstone privately as the price for quiet during the bar mitzvah celebration.  Judge Goldstone attended a community pow-wow with rabbis and the communal political leadership.  Until now, no one knew what was discussed and what was said to Goldstone.  Now, I can report on at least one of the speeches he was forced to endure.  It is a masterpiece of Jewish guilt.  Baruch Spinoza was subjected to no less during the proceedings of the Amsterdam Jewish community which led to his excommunication (herem).  In fact, the source who provided it to me called it a piece psychological manipulation, in other words part of a communal propaganda offensive designed to intimidate Goldstone into the position he recently adopted in his Washington Post op-ed, in which he uncharacteristically withdrew several key claims of the UN report which he helped author.  The performance in that piece was dreary beyond belief and has to be a low in an otherwise distinguished legal career.

Perhaps the most radical philosophical turnaround in the op-ed is that before, he emphatically rejected the notion that the IDF and State could adequately and fairly investigate their own possible misdeeds.  Now, he claims that Israel has done precisely that.  And makes this claim in the face of evidence which shows that the investigations have been half-hearted and resulted in no significant meting out of punishment or even discipline.

No one can say whether there was an explicit quid pro quo involved in his penning this column.  But it can be no accident that Israel’s Interior Minister, Eli Yishai, has invited Goldstone for a triumphal return to Israel and that the latter has accepted.  It may also not be an accident that he published his apologia in one of Israel’s favorite American newspapers, one which consistently, forcefully advocates Israel’s interests in its editorial pages.

Here is the address of a South African Sephardic rabbi, Laurence (Doron) Perez, to Goldstone during the May, 2010 meeting:

Justice Goldstone -

I am sure that you have had the opportunity many times both as a father and grandfather to be present with your family at the Pesach Seder. I am also sure that you are familiar with the basic narrative of the Haggadah which, as we know, describes the story of Jewish slavery, freedom and redemption. I would like to draw your attention to the famous paragraph about the four sons – the wise one, the wayward [ed. a deliberate distortion of the Hebrew, in which he is called "the wicked son"] one, the simple one and the one who does not know how to ask.  I would like to reflect for a moment on the narrative regarding the wayward son which I believe to be relevant to our discussion today.

The Haggadah states as follows

“The wayward son asks – What is this service to you? (Exodus 12;26). By saying “you” he excludes himself. And since he excludes himself from the peoplehood of Israel (KIal Yisrael), he has denied a fundamental principle of our faith (Kofer be-Ikar). You in turn should blunt his teeth (give a sharp and blunt answer) and say to him – because of what Hashem did for me when I left Egypt, I do this  (Exodus 13;8) – implying for me but not for him.  If he (the wayward son) had been there (in Egypt), he would not have been redeemed?”

This paragraph is most telling as to who the wayward Jewish son is and, further, what our response to him should be. The Haggadah describes the wayward son as the one who sets himself apart from Jewish peoplehood and places himself outside the mainstream Jewish community. His question “what is this service to you” implies that the service does not obligate him in any way. Issues of Jewish identity: – our collective fate, destiny and responsibilities are seen as something which have no bearing on his world view. So much so, that the Haggadah uses the sharp terminology since he has excluded himself from the Jewish people, he has denied a fundamental tenet of Jewish faith.

Again, as I wrote above, the rabbi is essentially warning Goldstone that his participation in the Gaza war investigation and the findings he endorsed in it, have caused him to be driven him from the Tabernacle, leaving him to wander in the desert bereft of his fellow Jews.  They in turn told him that due to his abandonment of them, they have ostracized him.

The rabbi continues in a vein that accuses Goldstone of concern only for the suffering of the Palestinian people and of his disregard for the suffering of Israelis that led up to Operation Cast Lead.  Perez tells Goldstone that when Jewish suffering conflicts with Palestinian suffering there is only ONE legitimate choice:

Remarkably, what emanates so succinctly from the Haggadah is the supreme importance of Jewish peoplehood. The community ethic is a core component of Jewish identity. One cannot call oneself a good Jew if one distances oneself from the lot of one’s People and community.

This explains a bewildering question regarding the wayward son – why is he at the Pesach table in the first place? After all, if he is so wicked, why does he want to be part of the Jewish experience? The answer is clear – he does want to have a connection to his Judaism – but he wants this to be without any commitment to and embracing of a collective Jewish fate and destiny. But the Haggadah teaches us that he cannot claim to be a good Jew, whilst at the same time separating himself from the pain and suffering of his own People. Of course, every good Jew must be sensitive to the suffering of all human beings. All are created in the image of G-d. This is without question a core Jewish value. But how can this possibly override the suffering of his own family, community and People? Kindness and charity must never end in the home, but they must most certainly begin there! Indeed, this is a fundamental principle of Jewish faith – the inextricable link between Jewish faith and the People of Israel.

…The answer given to the wayward son in the Haggadah is also most telling. We blunt his sharp criticism by highlighting the following important point – “Had you been in Egypt you would not have been redeemed” i.e. the wayward son needs to decide what side of Jewish History he is on. If his worldview does not contain this deep sense of Jewish peoplehood, then he has missed the point of Jewish identity. Our Sages tell us that many Jews chose not to leave Egypt but rather lost themselves during the plague of darkness. These individual Jews could not come to terms with Moses’ vision of redemption from Egyptian society: to journey to the homeland of their forefathers and to exercise their divine, religious, historical and moral right to self-determination in their G-d given Land. Those who left Egypt committed to this vision of Jewish destiny. Those who chose to rather stay behind in Egypt did not accept this narrative of Jewish history.

In the following passage, Rabbi Perez goes even farther and accuses Goldstone of being almost a traitor to his race by siding with the Palestinians.  Goldstone has, in effect, turned his back on a millennium of Jewish suffering through his advocacy of the UN human rights report.  He sentences Goldstone to oblivion for his actions:

Remaining behind in Egypt and perhaps even prioritizing the suffering of the Egyptians over the tears and pain of over 100 years of slavery and death of their own People at the hand of the Egyptians sidelined them from future Jewish destiny. Instead of becoming influential protagonists of Jewish history, they became a peripheral footnote.

Below, Perez commits a major bit of intellectual mendacity by claiming that Jewish interests and universal justice are consonant when everything he has said above denies it.  Unless of course the rabbi is arguing that the rights of Palestinians, such as they are, are not covered by the terms universal justice or human rights.

In conclusion – there need not be any contradiction between striving for human rights and universal justice and at the same time being loyal to one’s Faith, People and Land. One can be a champion of human rights and at the same time believe in the unbreakable link between the Jewish faith, Land and People of Israel.

Our Rabbis taught us never to give up on any fellow Jew – even when misguided.  After all, it is his actions we assess and never the person himself. We hope and pray that you undo the unfortunate and enormous damage that your report has done to the Jewish people in general and to the State of Israel and her heroic and moral defenders in particular.

Justice Goldstone – the simple question that we all need to ask ourselves is; which side of Jewish history are we on?

What is truly tragic about Judge Goldstone’s turnaround is that he has now embraced his people, but turned his back on an entire career of advocacy on behalf of peoples afflicted by genocide and egregious violations of human and national rights.  Unlike Rabbi Perez and Judge Goldstone, I do believe that universal human rights and Jewish values are not antithetical.  And unlike them, I do not believe that Israel’s behavior in maintaining the Occupation meets standards of Jewish or universal human rights.  You can have it both ways, but only if you understand that Israeli values are not necessarily kosher Jewish values in this case.

Many of us Jews who have political, philosophical or ethical beliefs that diverge from the so-called consensus have experienced this sort of herem.  I call it the Spinoza Society to denote those honored Jews who break from the pack to stand for values that should the mainstream but often aren’t.  Unfortunately, Judge Goldstone craves the acceptance of the Jewish greybeards and mandarins.  Others of us have known what it is like to have to endure this sort of treatment in order to uphold our own Jewish values.  Thankfully, many of us haven’t felt the need to cave to the pressure.  Perhaps we have less at stake than he does.  But I’d like to think that a man as eminent as Judge Goldstone should’ve done a better job of upholding these values, even in the face of the relentless pressure he undoubtedly faced.

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Is It War?

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

A report ten hours ago from Assaf Kinzer which I just read on Facebook:

‎| ***** BREAKING NEWS *****

Israeli troops have now invaded northern Gaza, and are currently going from house to house. The sky is buzzing with armed Drones who have been in the air for hours, accompanied by Apache helicopters. The situation in Gaza is very tense, and the people are fearing the worst tonight.

Assaf is watching reports from Gaza TV.  This Haaretz report only mentions Israeli air attacks but doesn’t refer to the far more disturbing development involving the commitment of ground troops and essentially an invasion.

This latest violence proves, to me, something I have said many times here, that there is no peace without Gaza, no peace without Hamas.  You can pretend as long as you want that Abbas and the PA are Israel’s partners (that is, on the good days when Israel deigns to call them that).  But there can be no real Palestinian partner who turns his back on Hamas and Gaza.  And this rule holds true for the great powers like the EU and U.S.  Ignore Hamas at your peril.  If you wish unending bloodshed, continue with this benighted policy.  If you want peace, talk to Hamas.

Death by Soccer

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011
gaza attacks kill 9

Wounded child brought to Gaza hospital after IDF massacre (Reuters)

You better not be a child and play soccer if you live in Gaza.  Otherwise, the IDF will punish you with death.  A group of five members of the Abu Hilu family including Muhammad Jihad Al-Hilu, 11, Yasser Ahed Al-Hilu, 16, Muhammad Saber Harara, 20, Yasser Hamer Al-Hilu, 50 and an unidentified fifth victim were enjoying a game of soccer outside their home when an Israeli tank shell slammed into it.

Whose fault?  Why, Hamas of course since the IDF’s lying spokesperson, instead of admitting a mistake, said the tank had been firing at militants.  Of course, it was the latter’s fault for the deaths since clearly militants play soccer while they’re firing missiles and shooting at the IDF.

In response to a shower of 50 missiles on Israel fired by Gaza militants, Bibi Netanyahu had said earlier he would do whatever was necessary to protect Israel’s population.  By which he meant he would be only too happy to shed the blood of Gaza’s children if that’s what the militants wanted.  Tzipi Livni, Israel’s great white liberal hope had an even better idea.  Start another Gaza war and repeat Operation Cast Lead.  It went so well the first time, after all, only killing 300 Gaza children out of the 1,100 civilians killed in that ugly massacre.

A total of nine Gazans’ were killed by IDF fire today, five of them civilians.  Hey, IDF those are righteous numbers.  You only killed 60% civilians in today’s death toll.  A record to be proud of I’m sure. H/t to reader Deir Yassin.

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