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Posts Tagged ‘operation cast lead’

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.

Bibi Rewrites History–and Reality

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

Bibi Netanyahu, in a Knesset speech covered by Haaretz, announced some sweeping revisions to history and Israeli-Arab reality.  For example, did you know that a Palestinian state already exists?  Sure does, according to the Beeb, who said with regard to the Arab uprisings toppling dictators right and left:

We do not know what will happen to our west, and we do not know what will happen to our east, and who can determine whether the Palestinian state – in the middle of it all – will hold on?”

This reminds me a bit of Ronald Reagan who would tell convincing stories of his war experiences in the Pacific theater during World War II, which consisted of his memories of war films in which he’d acted.  It’s so much more convenient for an Israeli prime minister to prevent the creation of a Palestinian state, and then turn around and tell his western critics that one already exists despite the fact that it may be in his mind only.

Oh, and don’t ya know that Turkey destroyed its relations with Israel solely by the attack of Prime Minister Erdogan on Shimon Peres at Davos?

Just as the de-facto peace relations that we had with one country – Iran – evaporated in a moment, just as the more official, more established relationship that even included joint military exercises and 400,000 tourists evaporated overnight when the Turkish prime minister attacked our President Peres in Davos…

There are a few small matters like the Mavi Marmara massacre and Ehud Olmert’s destruction of the Syrian-Israeli peace negotiation mediated by Erdogan, when he began Operation Cast Lead.  Those little incidents, of course, played no role in the torpedoing of Israel-Turkey relations.

Not to mention it was Shimon Peres who sputtered with rage at Davos, violating international protocol by viciously attacking Turkey and its elected national leader in a public gathering; and that this provoked Erdogan to walk out of the meeting.  And that Peres apologized afterward for his intemperance.

But hey, what’s a dose of reality among friends?  And who needs reality anyway when you can have such a delightful delusional alternate universe all for the asking?  When you’re a Likud prime minister, anything’s possible.  Next thing you know, pigs will fly and maybe even be kosher.

As I wrote in a recent post about the bloody mess unfolding in Tripoli, such mayhem is good for the Occupation business.  Proof lies no farther than Bibi’s speech to the Knesset, where he finds succor in the bloodbath, because it gives him an out as far as negotiating a peace with the Palestinians:

Netanyahu also claimed that “The entire world told us the reason for instability in the Middle East is the Israel-Palestinian conflict. We begged to differ. There is a problem here that we wish to solve, but we must take the Islamic extremists – who are spreading everywhere – into account.”

Bibi, as usual, gets his facts wrong.  The entire world hasn’t said the reason for Middle East instability lies in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  It has said that the reason for the popularity of Islamist extremism like Al Qaeda lies in the lack of resolution of the conflict.  Perhaps as a corollary, many of the toppled and toppling autocrats have looked favorably on Israel.  This may have played some role in their lack of popularity.  But these leaders have done far more damage to their reputations by harming their own citizens directly.

Of course, what really worries Bibi, and what he can’t say to his fellow Knesset delusionals, is that the rising democratization of the Arab world means that new governments will be listening to the will of the people and pursuing new foreign policy goals accordingly.  Thus, the free ride Israel enjoyed from regimes like Egypt, Turkey (pre-Erdogan)  and Jordan may be a thing of the past.  Israel henceforward may have to create support in the Arab world the old- fashioned way–by earning it.

Izzeldin Abuelaish, the Love That Conquers Hate

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011



Tonight, I heard a great man.  I witnessed brilliance.  I heard love and grace.  Love that conquers hate.  Hope that vanquishes cynicism.  Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish spoke tonight at Seattle’s Town Hall on his national tour, which will take him to around 20 American cities between this month and April. The above is a video filmed by Todd Boyle at Bellevue’s Temple Bnai Torah two days ago. Thanks to him for performing such a good deed.

On January 16, 2009 (today is three days after the second anniversary of the massacre) Dr. Abuelaish and his family were sheltering in his home from the IDF assault on Gaza.  He had just left his daughters room when an Israeli tank shell tore through his home killing his beloved eldest daughter, Bissan and two younger daughters.  His niece also died.  One of his daughters survived, just barely, along with another niece. The day after the massacre, Israel accepted a ceasefire and the war ended.

abuelaish daughters for life

Abuelaish daughters on Gaza beach


On September 16, 2008, only three months earlier his wife had died of leukemia.  With her death, Abuelaish not only lost a beloved spouse, but the mother of his children and the anchor of his family.  It was a devastating loss for all of them.

Only two weeks earlier, just before the war began, he had taken his daughters to the Gaza beach for a break from the despair of twelve weeks of mourning for their mother.  At the sea, his daughters wrote their names in the sand.  Thankfully, he managed to take a picture of the three of them enjoying their time there.  It would be one of the last happy times they would have together.

Just after the second shell hit, when Dr. Abuelaish was most anguished, his youngest son, 12, said to him:

izzeldin and abdullah abuelaish

Dr. Izzeldin holds his son, Abdullah, after the death of his daughters (Ben Curtis/AP)

Daddy, don’t be sad, now my sisters are with Mommy and they are all happy together.

In his talk tonight, Dr. Abuelaish said many things that in the mouth of another speaker might’ve come across as cliches.  Coming from a man of such deep humanity as him, they came across as not only genuine, but profound and deeply moving.  He talked about hate as poison, as a fire that consumes the hater.  When a Palestinian during the Q&A asked how he could speak of love in the face of the murder the IDF rains down on the Palestinian people, the doctor made one of the most moving statements of his entire talk.  He said:

My daughters were the most important thing in my life.  My duty in life is to them and their memory.  If the Israelis would bring to me the soldier who lauched the shell that killed my family and said I could do anything I wanted to him, if I killed him would I bring back my daughters?  No.  So I thought, what can I do for my daughters?  That’s what I want to do with my life.

As a result, he has established a foundation that will provide scholarships to girls to pursue their education and realize projects that make the world a better place.  He plans to award scholarship to girls of all nations of the Middle East including Israel.  His eventual goal is to open a school in Gaza.  He sees women as the key to the future, the key to peace.  That’s natural since he’s a gynecologist and infertility specialist.  But this is not a professional matter for him.  It is personal, deeply so.

The Gaza doctor spoke of a life steeped in suffering from his birth in a Palestinian refugee camp.  Growing up, his family had so little.  Life was hard.  In the past few years, since Israel began its siege in 2006, all of Gaza suffered.

But his overriding message, one that he delivered with overwhelming conviction, was on behalf of hope, on behalf of love.  But please do not get the impression that this was touchy-feely or passive or weak.  Not at all.  He says:

Be angry. Be angry at injustice. But do not let it turn into hate.  Don’t despair.  Don’t give up hope.  Do something.  The best antidote to despair is success.

As I said, one should not confuse this with weakness.  Dr. Abuelaish is a fierce opponent of the Occupation and Israeli policy.  And the power of his opposition is only amplified by his message of love and non-violence.  This is not the love of romance.  It is the love of justice.  One that embraces active resistance to injustice.

Another important point of his talk is that Israel and Palestine must not be alien, they must not be strangers.  Rather, they are conjoined twins.  Their fate is entwined.  The justice of which he speaks is not justice for only one side.  There is no such thing.  If we save the lives of Palestinians, we are saving the lives of Israelis as well.  What is good for Palestine is good for Israel and vice versa.

There is much nonsense out there, reflected in Gershom Gorenberg’s essay in the Weekly Standard, asking where is the Palestinian Gandhi.  With the implication being that Palestinians have betrayed their cause by lapsing into hate and violence instead of rising to the best traditions of Gandhi and Martin Luther King.  I’ve always hated this notion that Palestinians owe it to themselves and the rest of the world to rise above their human impulses.  As if someone who hasn’t suffered has a right to tell someone who has how they should respond to it.  Would we allow a German to tell Jews how their ancestors should’ve acted in the face of the Holocaust?

But Izzeldin Abuelaish is a truly great figure in that tradition.  He represents the finest values of not just the Palestinian or Arab nation, but all humanity.  He was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize last year.  Unfortunately, the wrong man won (Barack Obama).

For a deeply moving profile of the Gaza doctor read Rachel Cooke’s story from the Guardian.  Hear him if he comes to a city where you live.  If not, read his book.

I noticed that the usual Stand With Us crowd waltzed into the hall led by its Pied Piper of Hamelin, David Brumer.  He may’ve even brought with him a few of the SWU’s young IDF hasbara representatives who make the rounds of schools spreading the Gospel According to Bibi. I said with disgust to my friend Assaf Oron: “Omigod, they’ll try to harrass him.”  Assaf said they wouldn’t dare.  He was right.  Brumer walked out in the middle of the talk.  I think, as Assaf suggested, even he realized that Abuelaish was outside his league.  He and SWU simply have nothing to say in the face of his message.  How can hate resonate in the presence of such a man?

Gaza Doctor Whose Family IDF Killed During Cast Lead on National Speaking Tour

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish Interview.

Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish, whose wife and three daughers were killed by an Israeli tank shell during Operation Cast Lead, is in the midst of a national speaking tour (see list for cities and dates) and promoting a new book he’s written on his life and the lessons he’s learned from the tragedy.  Though 1,400 were killed in Gaza, the doctor’s suffering was especially keenly felt as he had been a correspondent for Israeli TV reporting regularly on the assault.  Just as the TV news anchor called him, the shell hit and you can hear the wailing of Dr. Abuelaish as he realizes what’s happened.  It is some of the most heart-rending footage you will ever see or hear.  Subsequently, his story was told around the world including extensively in this blog and in the NY Times.

As a result, the doctor, who had been a gynecology specialist at an Israeli hospital and beloved by patients and staff there alike, left Gaza and moved to Toronto, where’s he raises the three other daughters who survived the attack.  The tank unit which massacred Dr. Abuelaish’s family has received no discipline of any kind.

He will be speaking at Seattle’s Town Hall on Wednesday, January 19th at 7:30PM.  He will also speak on Steve Scher’s KUOW show at 10AM on January 17th. If you live in the Pacific NW I urge you to hear a truly remarkable man, someone who has suffered enormously, but who manages to project a vision of peace that remains possible for these two peoples who have caused each other such pain.

His new book is I Shall Not Hate and is reported in this Guardian story.  If it’s half as extraordinary as the example this man has set, it is must reading.  Dr. Abuelaish’s tour began in Los Angeles on January 12th and will take him to a score of U.S. cities by April 1st.  If you have a chance see him it’s a wonderful opportunity.

Iran’s Defense Minister Denounces Israel’s Role in Asgari’s Suspected Death, IDF Warns of Iranian Revenge Attacks

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

The Kabuki-like drama of the suicide/murder of Iranian Revolutionary Guard general Ali Reza Asgari in Ayalon Prison continues to deepen.  Today, Ynetnews reports that the IDF circulated an unprecedented warning letter to all reserve officers warning them that Iranian agents might take revenge on them inside Israel or abroad.

What’s astonishing about this is that until now Israelis could always count on being immune to retaliatory domestic terror attacks from foreign enemies like Syria, Iran, Hezbollah, etc.  Israel was impregnable from that perspective.  Palestinian terror attacks have of course happened.  But they were indiscriminate, and except in very rare instances did not kill senior IDF officers or political leaders.  But now even Israel is conceding that it is not as inviolate as it previously believed.

The rationale for the warning letter makes very little sense unless you read between the lines and know about my own reporting on Asgari’smurder .  Here’s how Ynet portrays it:

Israel Defense Forces reserve officers are urged to take extra precautions following the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists: A detailed letter was sent Wednesday to a series of reserve officers, instructing them how to conduct themselves in Israel and abroad.

The officers were asked to replace the supermarket they shop in frequently and to avoid travelling on regular routes. The procedures are aimed at thwarting an attempt by terrorist organizations to target these people, some of whom are still holding key roles in the military reserve force.

The letter, signed by Brigadier-General Kobi Barak, head of operations at the General Staff, explains that the increased fear stems from recent events, including the death of Iranian nuclear scientists in Tehran last month.

Barak also mentioned the February 2008 assassination of senior Hezbollah commander Imad Mugniyah in an explosion in Damascus, after which the Shiite group’s Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah vowed to avenge his death.

He noted that last month a pro-Palestinian organization published the personal details of some 200 officers and soldiers who took part in Operation Cast Lead, claiming that they were war criminals. Some of them even had threatening letters sent to their homes.

Brigadier-General Barak called on the officers to brief their family members on the situation and pay attention to any suspicion vehicles, unusual activity or unknown people wandering near their homes. The officers were also asked to “disrupt their routine,” which Barak defined as “our weak point”. According to the document, the officers must avoid repeating activities over time, like travelling on the same traffic routes or shopping for groceries at the same place.

The letter advises the officers to check their cars in the morning before driving them, examine their mail and avoid accepting unexpected packages. When they are abroad, the officers are urged not to stay in hotels defense officials are not familiar with and to reserve rooms which are not located next to the elevator or staircase.

Here’s where the Kabuki comes in. It makes no sense for a letter to warn IDF officers about Iranian attacks on them in retaliation for events which happened months to years ago. And in the case of the Cast Lead veterans list, it wasn’t compiled by or distributed by Iran, nor did it threaten any IDF veteran with violence.

Even in the case of the recent assassination and severe wounding of two Iranian scientists, Iran blamed Israel but never overtly threatened to take revenge.

No, for the real reason motivating this warning I believe you have to look to the suicide/murder of Asgari reported here in the past few days. While Iran certainly would be angry with killings of its nuclear scientists, the outright murder of one of its generals and senior ministers would rankle even more since Israel kidnapped him, likely tortured him and drained him of whatever useful intelligence he might offer concerning his work as liaison to Hezbollah and more, then possibly murdered him in a dark Israeli prison.  For those who understand the outpouring of emotion and trauma that accompanied the capture and eventual death in captivity of IAF pilot Ron Arad (an event Israel believed Asgari played some role in), imagine the average Iranian feeling the same sense of national outrage.

This news, Israel fears, will truly provoke a violent reaction in Teheran. Hence the warning letter.

There are a few other interesting phenomena to note regarding the letter. Assuming Asgari was murdered, what better way to deflect blame and attention both within Israel and abroad than to warn of an imminent (trumped-up) revenge terror attack planned by Iran. There is nothing like a terror warning to make Israelis scramble into their personal and ideological bunkers. When the security apparatus engages in such domestic hasbara, it diverts the average Israeli from spending any time thinking that the Mossad, Shabak or Aman may be corrupt or homicidal, or that its flagrant, bellicose actions might threaten a war with Iran.

The warning letter is thus a form of domestic psyops designed to work on the Israeli population. It is also designed to have a similar effect internationally. If the Israeli defense establishment warns of an impending attack by Iran, the Israelis will be hoping that everyone will rally round the flag to defend little David under attack by big, bad Goliath Iran.

Perhaps most importantly, it also serves to deflate any pressure on Israel to account for Asgari.  If the former can persuade the world it is in imminent danger of attack, then no one in their right mind would charge Israel with murder and demand that it explain what happened to Asgari, how he ended up in Ayalon Prison, or how he died.  Yes, this is a rather clever piece of psyops.  I hope it won’t work.  And I hope we and the world media can keep the pressure on and press for answers.

Iran’s Press TV reports that the country’s defense minister has denounced the death of Asgari and attributed it to Israel:

Iran’s defense minister says the suspected death of Iranian prisoner Ali-Reza Asgari in an Israeli prison is another test for those who internationally advocate human rights.

If the credibility of this report is proved, the dossier on Israel’s kidnappings, assassinations and murders will become thicker, Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi said on Wednesday.

“This inhumane action is another test for the international community which advocates human rights,” he added.

Vahidi said Asgari’s abduction by Israel’s intelligence service is certain, adding that after kidnapping the Iranian national, the Israelis tried to cover up their action by spreading the rumor that he had sought asylum in a third country.

The Iranian defense minister said Iran would use all its capabilities and capacities to determine Asgari’s fate.   Vahidi said that such actions only serve to create public hatred for the US and Britain, which are the main supporters of Israel.

Unlike yesterday’s statement by a deputy foreign minister, the more senior defense minister was slightly more circumspect in allowing for the fact that my report may be wrong.  But he clearly placed enough stock in it to make the declaration he did.

It’s worth noting that Yossi Melman devotes part of today’s Haaretz column, called suggestively The Prison Service Covering for Mossad [Wrongdoing], to debunking the claim that Asgari ever came to Israel willingly as a defector or against his will.  But he goes on to scold the Mossad for being unwilling to reveal its secrets even when they do damage to Israel’s reputation.  This passage (from the English translation, which is flawed and incomplete but at least accurate in this portion) in particular struck me:

It would be better were Israel to realize that in some cases the publication of information, no matter how inconvenient and painful it might be to a government body, is preferable to concealing it and allowing an irresponsible, damaging rumor mill to grind on.

Even Melman the skeptic is claiming there is a hidden truth here the Mossad refuses to reveal because it will injure its reputation.  Reading between the lines, Melman seems to be saying that someone died at the hands of the Mossad, but that it wasn’t Asgari.  This certainly raises many more questions than it answers.  Stay tuned…

NOTE: Apparently, some international news agencies have picked up my reporting through its republication in the Eurasia Review.  Unfortunately, ER did not properly link to, or credit this blog as the original source of the story.  As a result it is not being properly credited in some media circles.

Horowitz’s Seattle Bus Ad: Taking Leave of His Senses

Friday, December 24th, 2010
horowitz bus ad

David Horowitz's proposed Seattle bus ad: lies and the lying liars who tell them

One of my readers has provided the graphic for the ad David Horowitz proposed displaying on Seattle Metro buses.  And I think finally the man has truly taken leave of his senses.  Let’s leave aside the fact that there have been no bus bombings in Israel for years.  But who in their right mind claims that Palestinian terror is financed by the U.S. taxpayer?

While I’ve disagreed with the over the top rhetoric of the Mideast Awareness Campaign in claiming outright Gaza war crimes (before they’ve been proven in a court like the ICC), it is an incontrovertible fact that Israel uses its $3 billion yearly military aid package to purchase sophisticated weaponry routinely used in wars like Lebanon and Gaza.  So American taxpayers do, in that sense, participate directly or indirectly in the oppression of the Occupation.

But to claim that we also support or finance Palestinian terror is simply way out there in some sort of Islamophobic nether world.  This is precisely the point I made in yesterday’s post about why we need more, not less speech.  Horowitz’s add SHOULD be displayed on Seattle buses.  I want everyone to see what an idiot he is.  I want him to make a fool of himself.  This is the marketplace of ideas and the way you determine what ideas are useful and what ideas are worthless.

And to make one point clear, I have no problem with the notion that there have been acts committed by Palestinians which may constitute war crimes.  So let’s let the ICC determine this issue.  Let’s bring both parties to the Hague and determine their guilt or innocence.

Cast Lead Veterans Receive Hate Mail

Sunday, November 28th, 2010
ben zion gruber idf commander accused of war crimes

Col. (res.) Ben Zion Gruber, IDF commander accused of war crimes

cast lead hate mail

Message sent a Cast Lead veteran

The recent internet publication of a list of the names, photos, ID numbers, and addresses of 200 IDF veterans of Operation Cast Lead enabled activists, apparently from Spain, to send what Yediot Achronot calls “hate mail” to the homes of a score or more of the officers.  Apparently, one of the reasons it is labelled hate mail is that at least one of the envelopes contained the photo of a girl killed by the IDF (if I recall correctly this image was from the 2006 Lebanon war) along with the caption: “How will you explain this to God?”

This development is causing a certain level of consternation within the military and intelligence communities, which are used to being treated with great deference within Israeli society.  They are wondering what further surprises may await them in the international arena.

The officer who received the envelope containing the photo of the dead child was Col. (res.) Ben Zion (“Bentzi”) Gruber, a deputy armored division commander and number 32 on the Dirty 200 list.  He lives in the settlement of Efrata.  Gruber’s wife was in shock when she opened the letter:

It’s an unpleasant feeling [to receive such mail].  I’m very troubled that there are elements in our midst [the IDF] which collect such material, including ID numbers and exact addresses.  It’s necessary to act against them.

I’m at peace with what I did in Gaza.  We acted according to the principles of international law.  The ethical code was designed precisely for us so we wouldn’t kill anyone who was innocent.

A senior IDF officer living in a settlement tells us that he lives according to international law.  What’s wrong with this picture?

Since Cast Lead, Yediot marvels that Gruber has given more than 150 lectures about the moral purity of operations during this massacre and the IDF’s adherence to its “ethical code.”  The senior officer said he’d grown accustomed to signs displayed at such talks bearing the words “Wanted.”  But he said that the hate mail is much harder to bear:

I’m about the leave for the U.S. to give a series of lectures.  This is something you can’t ignore.  It’s very troubling.

A senior IDF officer said about the hate mail and publication of the Cast Lead list:

The publication calling IDF officers “war criminals” is utterly out of bounds.  It’s even seventy times more troubling that their homes and family members have to receive garbage like this.  We must do everything to honor these officers and limit the impact of this incident.

How ya gonna put the genie back in the bottle?