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Posts Tagged ‘salah shehadeh’

Weiss’ Knickers in Knot Over Sheikh Salah

Thursday, June 30th, 2011
michael weiss fire breathing dragon

For behold, The Weiss breathed fire and smote the wicked, racist enemies of Israel

Michael Weiss, that insufferable, braying pro-Israel zealot, has his knickers in a knot over Sheikh Salah’s visit to England.  The Telegraph blogger began his crusade before Salah arrived, with a shot across the bow on June 22nd, in which he crowed about alleged anti-Semitic statements made by Salah.  Though a number of Weiss’ claims are based on the notoriously unreliable MEMRI and Jerusalem Post, at least one is based on a Haaretz report.  That paper is by no means universally reliable, it is surely a more serious source.  So let’s get this out of the way, since it will surely be Weiss’ first shot when he reads I’ve had the temerity to cross him yet again after his purported Syrian government memo claiming the intelligence services led the Naksa Day protests which led to 15 dead at the hands of the IDF.

If Salah has said the things he’s alleged to have said by Haaretz then he is a truly dim figure and anti-Semite to boot.  But I would note that there are laws against incitement in Israel and though Salah has been charged with violating those laws he’s never been convicted.  I would think if he did say any of these things it should’ve been fairly easy to convict him.  Though again, I’m not making any claims regarding whether or not he said what MEMRI and the others allege.

Further, the Israeli government has attempted to ban the Sheikh’s Islamic movement, but the Israeli Supreme Court rejected the effort.  As Ian Black asks in The Guardian:

The real question about the episode is this: if Salah is tolerated in Israel, why did the UK government object to his presence?

Further, there are several anomalies in Weiss’ coverage and in his omissions from the record.  First, he neglects to mention that Salah was nearly killed by an Israeli Border Police bullet to the head in the first Intifada in 2000.  Second, he neglects to mention that Israeli media reports there are recordings of the Shin Bet asking accused Jewish terrorist Chaim Pearlman to assassinate Salah.  Third, in Weiss’ first Telegraph post he also neglects to mention an important claim that he does make in later ones, that Salah was banned from entering Britain.  This is important because later Weiss and other pro-Israel supporters claimed that he had been banned a week before his entry into England.  This would make it appear that Salah was up to no good, possibly used fraudulent documents to gain entry, etc.  The Israeli Palestinian leader’s own attorneys claim he was never aware of such a ban and that he entered England using his Israeli passport.

Now, it’s clear that immigrations officials do stupid things all the time in the U.S., Britain and Israel.  But to allow a wanted man to enter Britain, especially an allegedly wanted Islamist—this strains credulity.  Not to mention that Heathrow immigration authorities would’ve had the plane’s passenger manifest and would’ve had early warning that he was planning to land.  Of course, Weiss and others might insinuate that he traveled under a false name or whatever.  But there is no indication this is true.

What appears to have happened was that Weiss’ report spooked the Home Office and they immediately banned Salah, who may already have entered Britain.  When he writes on June 28th that Salah “somehow” entered Britain a few days earlier, he makes it appear that his entry was based on fraud on the Sheikh’s part or incompetence on the government’s.  When in truth it was likely based on fear of being beaten over the head by Weiss and his Islamophobic cronies.

But now let’s talk a bit about Michael Weiss’ hypocrisy.  No matter how shady Salah’s alleged views about Jews may be, I bet the pro-Israel blogger never uttered a peep when Moshe Feiglin tried to enter Britain (did you, Michael?).  Then the Home Office (under a more liberal Labor government) banned Feiglin for his undesirable racist views of Arabs.  Has Weiss ever said that any Israeli racist such as Avigdor Lieberman should be banned from England?  I could list twenty or thirty of his more disgusting comments made in the Israeli Knesset and on television about his fellow Palestinian citizens.  But the former Moldovan bar bouncer and Kach party member is OK, isn’t he?

And if we want to talk about flaming racists, has Weiss ever uttered a word about Israeli Orthodox rabbis who urge that Palestinian citizens be put in concentration camps or that it’s just to murder their children lest they grow up to kill Jews.  Yes, rabbis have said those things.  Would you support their banning, Michael?  And if so, will you write to the Home Office encouraging them to do so?  I can provide the names and sources for their comments (and they’re not from the Palestinian version of MEMRI, but from mainstream Israeli press).

Even more importantly, Weiss’ Henry Jackson Society arranged for that handsome, dashing IDF officer Doron Almog to speak via video conference to a gathering of the pro-Israel flock eager to hear the good general opine on the topic, Ending Impunity or Decreasing Accountability?: Averting Abuse of Universal Jurisdiction.  There would appear to be more than a little bit of self-interest in Almog’s appearance at such a gathering.  Almog couldn’t speak in person because there was a little matter of a warrant for his arrest for ordering the deaths of 18 Palestinian civilians including women and children when the IDF assassinated Salah Shehadeh in 2003.  And lest Weiss blame British law for the ‘nonsense’ of holding potential Israeli war criminals responsible for their actions, we should remember that it is Israeli NGOs like Yesh Gvul and Anglo-Israeli human rights lawyers like Daniel Machover, who have spearheaded these efforts.

No matter what you wish to say about Sheikh Salah, he’s never murdered a soul.  You can’t say that about Doron Almog.  What’s more, Weiss surely thinks it an outrage that such a man who ordered a bombing that killed Palestinian woman and children should be banned from Britain.  What irks me about the pro-Israel flack is that he likes to play the morality card, as if his are universal values based on justice and morality, while Arab or Muslim values are based on racism and hate.  He’ll never admit to you that there are just as many Israeli Jewish racists as Palestinian, and that many of them are welcome to visit England whenever they wish.  In fact, I’d venture to say Weiss has broken bread in his adopted country with a few of them in his role as one of Israel’s chief apologists.

He’d do a lot better if he calmed down and wrote as many posts about the audacity of Doron Almog and Moshe Feiglin entering England, as he has in the three posts which he’s filled with the spew of yellow journalism regarding Sheikh Salah.

Israeli Public Inquiry: Shehadeh Assassination Justified

Sunday, February 27th, 2011
salah shehadeh

Salah Shehadeh and the sophistries of Israel's public inquiry into his murder

In 2002, after a smaller bomb failed to murder Salah Shehadeh, then Hamas military commander in Gaza, the IAF dropped a 2,000 pound bomb on a residential apartment building killing him and his entire family: 13 civilians in all along with tens of seriously wounded.

The Israeli NGO Yesh Gvul charged the IDF officers who planned and executed the attack with violations of Israeli and international law and filed a case with the Israeli Supreme Court.  In response, the Court asked the government to create a public commission to examine the charges.  The case languished for several years while various governments dithered about naming members of the commission.  Yesh Gvul went back to court and it finally commanded the government to create the board, which Ehud Olmert did in 2008.  He originally appointed Brig. Gen. Tzvi Inbar to chair the body, to whom he added Gen. Yitzhak Eitan and senior Shabak officer, Yitzhak Dar.  After Inbar’s death, Bibi Netanyahu appointed retired Judge Tovah Sternberg-Cahan to head the board.  I’ll leave it to you to judge whether this was a truly independent and fair investigation.

It’s only taken three years, but the group has finally figured out how to successfully white-wash the crime (English version) in its final report.  The thinking is so perverse, the language so bureaucratically chilling and morally vacuous, that it’s worth quoting extensively from the Walla artcle (which also quotes the lanugage of the report):

Nine years after the assassination of Salah Shehadeh, a special commission found it unnecessary to take personal action against those [IDF officers] involved in the operation.  With that, the commission found that the murder of 13 civilians was “disproportionate and derived from an intelligence failure.”

The commission…determined that there was no legitimate suspicion of commission of a criminal act connected with the operation…It found the operation was a “legitimate preventive attack” and that killing Shehadeh was an “urgent and meaningful.”

It attributed the intelligence “failure” to ‘errors of evaluation’ and ‘mistakes of judgment’ in gathering information and distributing it to various elements involved in the operation.

Those IDF officers charged with involvement in the incident explained the “gap” by noting the need for urgent action once it was determined that Shehadeh was vulnerable to attack.  The commission responded that such reasoning “explained the failure but didn’t justify it,” whatever that means:

The intelligence failure emanated from various reasons which attached more important to killing the target and less weight to ‘endangering’  civilians as a result of this attack…This accompanying result [killing civilians] was unintentional and unexpected.  It did not derived from a disrespect for human life or [depraved] indifference to human life.  Those involved displayed a sensitivity to the issue of [harm] to those uninvolved.  Those engaged in the operation testified to the commission that had they known the severity of the outcome beforehand and with enough time to do so, they would’ve cancelled it.

The board specifically commended then deputy chief of staff , Gabi Ashkenazi, for opposing the killing using the operational plan that had been approved.  Even those who opposed the operation acceded to their superiors and participated in the killing.

The commission advised the IDF how to proceed in future when devising similar plans:

Proportionality is an important principle from which one derives that an attack of this sort is not legitimate if the danger of excessive harm to civilians exceeds the military value of the target.

However, it even permitted a loophole from this protocol by admitting that there may be instances in which pressures of time, place and opportunity which apply to pre-emptive strikes:

In such instances it is permitted to deviate or restrict adherence to such principles except insofar as they might damage principles of law and the precedents of the Supreme Court.

The board’s report approved the continuation of the IDF’s policy of targeted killing:

Despite the result in this case, pre-emptive attacks are a legitimate tool in the war against murderous terror as long as they adhere to the principles of justice and the ethical-moral values that serve as the foundation of Israeli and international justice.

Yesh Gvul has announced that it will appeal to the Supreme Court and ask for the appointment of an official government commission of inquiry.

A few comments on the passages above: any IDF officer who testified that army intelligence didn’t know civilians were in that apartment building or didn’t know civilians would be killed in the attack was lying.  The bomb dropped was specifically designed to destroy the entire building (as it did).  The IDF knew of Shehadeh’s every movement, and certainly monitored his stay in his own home along with the presence of any resident in the building.  To say they didn’t know who was there is simply preposterous.  I expect the military to lie.  But I don’t expect judges to accept such lies wholeheartedly.  But unfortunately this is customary in many national security cases.

But why should we be surprised?  Israel’s Occupation itself is built on a lie.  A lie which many Israelis willingly accept and benefit from in their everyday lives.  Should it surprise us that Israeli officers would lie in order to protect the honor of the IDF and the state it defends?

It’s also important to note that at the time of the assassination the leading Fatah and Hamas figures, Marwan Barghouti and Sheikh Yassine, had agreed to a formal unilateral ceasefire with Israel. The latter’s agreement to the declaration came only two hours before the assassination of Shehadeh.  Israel’s claim all along was that militants controlled the PA and any agreement that omitted them wouldn’t be worth the paper on which it was written.  To that, the Palestinians responded by enlisting the very “terror” groups needed to ensure the success of the ceasefire.  Their declaration was unilateral and unequivocal.  Newspaper articles were being prepared for publication in the Washington Post and Haaretz to herald this constructive development.

Israel’s answer was a 2,000 pound bomb on Salah Shehadeh’s home, thus destroying one of the most promising attempts of the era to negotiate peaceful terms between Israel and the Palestinians.  This is how the military-intelligence apparatus deals with opportunities for peace.  It wrecks them.  Deliberately.  And then takes whatever small amount of heat may come its way.  The heat is worth the danger of serious peace negotiations, which would rock the status quo the IDF finds so comfortable.

International law is predicated on giving an opportunity to nation states to first adjudicate violations that occur on their territory or at the hands of their representatives.  Israel’s attempt to do so has failed.  This leaves the International Criminal Court and other international bodies with no recourse but to agree to accept jurisdiction over this matter.  Israel engaged in a shameful whitewash that has excused all military personnel of any culpability.  But the world community must not let Israel’s military to escape with impunity.

Avi Dichter’s Spanish Self-Expulsion, 1492/2010

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010
avi dichter

Avi Dichter: 'Those Spaniards can't expel me, I'll expel myself first!'

One of the most traumatic events of Jewish history was the Spanish expulsion of its large Jewish community beginning in 1492 by the newly triumphant Catholic monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand.  This event marked the beginning of the infamous Inquisition, one of the darkest moments in European history.

Israeli MK, Avi Dichter faced his own self-induced expulsion from Spain recently after he was invited by a Spanish NGO to address a conference about the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.  When the Spanish justice ministry informed him that it could not guarantee him immunity from arrest for his role in the Salah Shehade murders and Operation Cast Lead, he angrily cancelled his trip, thus expelling himself from Spain before he even arrived.

But most entertaining is this ridiculous self-aggrandizing statement from Dichter quoted by Yediot Achronot, which shows that the movement for international accountability for possible Israeli war crimes is powerful and effective in that it’s getting their attention:

“This is not the first time I’ve encountered a situation that entails such a risk, entering a foreign nation and not being certain whether I would be able to leave amicably, without getting arrested. It is important to remember that this is not merely a threat to Avi Dichter; such an arrest also has the ramification of a threat to the nation itself. It’s strange that it is people from the Palestinian Authority, who operated there as part of the Palestinian security mechanisms, and have a very dubious record, can enter the country without trouble. The Spanish must assume responsibility for this matter and I am optimistic that we will extricate ourselves from this in the end.”

He is only partially right: of course this is both an attack on Avi Dichter and his political record and on the Occupation policies of the State.  No, it is not a “threat to the nation.”  That’s where the self-aggrandizement comes in.  This is a threat to the nation’s current policies.  A threat, by the way, that will largely evaporate when the nation changes those policies.  The article notes that Mohammed Dahlan was to be one of the Palestinian participants.  In this, I agree with Dichter.  Dahlan too should be in the dock at the Hague along with Dichter.

As for extricating itself from the issue as Dichter so confidently predicts, there is one way to do that: negotiate a settlement along the lines of the Saudi Initiative.  Till then, Israel and its apparatchiks like Dichter will remain entangled in this thicket of their own making.

H/t Rupa Shah

‘Yonatan Shapira, Make Me Babies’

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Enough doom and gloom.  Forget about useless proximity talks, hooligan uber-Zionists, rabid settlers, the Israel lobby foaming at the mouth over Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.  Instead enjoy some good old-fashioned foot-stomping Israeli pop music.  Oh, damn.  Here I thought I was going to give you some unalloyed fun entertainment for a change.  Even that seems impossible.  After you hear this wonderful song, you’ll also hear how even such auditory delight is fraught with political angst Israel-style (Hebrew).

At any rate, Israeli pop artist Aya Corem attended music school with Yonatan Shapira with whom she apparently shared some good times.  She wrote a whimsical song about him as her imaginary lover and showed it to him.  They laughed over the preposterousness of it all.  Shapira was flattered undoubtedly.  Never once did he believe he’d be hearing his name blaring from radios all over Israel, the subject of a raging pop hit.  Now wherever he travels he hears a song describing him as irresistibly cute and sexy, while in his heart he knows he’s been fired from his job for his political views and that he may be forced to leave the country to earn a living.

The story begins with an intrepid IDF helicopter pilot, very good at what he does, experiencing pangs of remorse when he hears that Israel has dropped a 2,000 lb. bomb on a residential apartment building in Gaza, killing not only a Hamas leader, Salah Shehadeh, but his entire family and everyone else in the building–18 civilians in all.  At this, Shapira decided he could no longer fly missions in which he might kill civilians.  In 2004, he became a refuser and joined 27 other pilots, the cream of the crop of the IDF officer corps, and wrote a public letter announcing their intent.  As with all other such refusers, the IDF sees them as dangerous to morale and prosecutes them to the fullest extent. Eventually, Shapira affiliated with Israeli peace groups like Yesh Gvul and Combatants for Peace.

In the meantime, he went to work as a commercial helicopter pilot flying flying for an Australian company that did maintenance work for an Israeli electric utility.  At first, all went well.  He was a trusted and respected pilot and employee.  He was called upon to train other pilots in some of the most dangerous types of helicopter maneuvers and maintenance work.

Then he announced he planned to attend an academic course in Europe during the summer and that he would only be available to work for a portion of the season.  The company, whose executives had expressed hostility to his political activism within the IDF before, notified him that there was no more work for him.  They claim he was the equivalent of a lazy employee who thought he deserved summers off.  When he asked for a letter of dismissal to prove he had been fired, the CEO tauntingly told him: You want a letter of dismissal, get one from Arafat!

Shapira sued the company with the help of distinguished human rights lawyer Michael Sfard.  His former employer claimed they love Shapira and that he’s a swell guy.  They just couldn’t find work for him.  Other pilots working for the company said they’d be happy to switch schedules to allow him to complete his course.  You decide who was telling the truth.

In the meantime, Yonatan Shapira just wanted to work at the job he loves.  He wanted to remain in the country he loves.  He wanted to continue his activism on behalf of peace.  But unfortunately the small-minded and petty were irked by his independence and iconoclasm.  They’d rather have a pilot who completed his IDF pilot’s course, did his job, didn’t rock the boat, bombed who he was told to bomb, came home and kissed the wife and kids afterward, etc.

What can I say.  Life is complicated.  Especially in Israel.  Hopefully, since the song and Haaretz article were written a few years ago and Shapira does still live in Israel, some aviation company hopefully appreciated having a pilot about whom a wonderful pop song was written.  And Yonatan Shapira went back to being the Israeli he’d like to be.  In the meantime, don’t get this get you down too much.  Enjoy the song.  I assume things worked out for Yonatan and he enjoyed the joke and the song as much as we do.

In the meantime, Shapira is an accomplished musician in his own right and has written this devestating faux lullaby, Sleep, Sleep, to imaginary Israeli children coaxed to sleep as a handsome Israeli pilot plans to drop his bombs on some unsuspecting Palestinian children (possibly):

So come to us, airplane
With a one-ton bomb
Little children will go to sleep now
Up there in the sky
Pretty-eyed pilots
It’s all so good and nice
The angels of death are approaching
Sleep tight…
So good night, Tomer
Good night, Ilan
Good night, Nati,
Good night Dan

H/ts Ron Kampeas, Dimi Reider, Ori Nir.

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Spanish Supreme Court Rejects Shehadeh War Crimes Jurisdiction

Thursday, April 15th, 2010
Salah Shehade

Salah Shehadeh, assassinated by IDF in 2002 (Image via Wikipedia)

The Israeli army has won a victory on behalf of impunity in its war against the Palestinian people with this week’s announcement that the Spanish High Court has rejected jurisdiction over the case of the assassination of Palestinian militant Salah Shehadeh and 18 civilians by the IDF in 2002.

After an appeal by Israeli human rights lawyer Michael Sfard to the Israeli Supreme Court, the State established the Inbar commiittee, ostensibly to investigate the incident and determine whether criminal charges were warranted. As insurance, anti-Occupation activists brought cases against the IDF principals in Britain and Spain.

Now it appears likely Gens. Doron Almog and Dan Halutz, the senior chain of command for the attack, may never be held accountable.  The Spanish court, in its decision pointed to the creation of the Inbar committee as proof that Israel itself was pursuing its own investigation.  Under international law, the nation in which the violation occurred is given first opportunity to prosecute the case.  If they don’t, then other states may take up the case.

The hypocrisy of the Spanish decision is noted by Sharon Weill’s International Journal of Criminal Justice article in which she described the members, structure and mandate of the Inbar committee:

…Following the recommendation of the HCJ [Israeli High Court of Justice], the state agreed to establish an objective and independent commission of inquiry investigating into the killing of Salah Shehadeh. The structure, nature and mandate of that commission would be entirely determined by the state: the very entity whose actions were to be investigated. On 23 January 2008, the commission was appointed by the Prime Minister: it was composed of three members, two of them former Military Generals and another a former official from the security services.

The commission was mandated to investigate the legality of the killing of Salah Shehadeh according to the same legal framework as a military inquiry….While all the procedures, testimonies and even the final report remain confidential, it is authorized to bring to the attention of the relevant authorities criminal recommendations. Later on, if theMilitary Advocate General finds that there is a basis to open a criminal investigation, he can do so only after consulting a Major General.

Brig. General (Res.) Zvi Inbar, formerly the Military Advocate General and the Knesset Legal Counsel was appointed head of the commission; with him were appointed as members of the commission Maj. General (Res.) Iztchak Eitan, formerly the head of the IDF Central Command and Mr Iztchak Dar, who formerly held a large number of operative positions in the General Security Service (GSS), amongst others as the Head of the Service’s Israeli and Foreign Interests Section.

In other words: the fix was in.  Proof of this is that since its creation in 2008 it has not actually investigated the incident, let alone made recommendations.  And as Prof. Weill points out the longer the period from the actual crime to its investigation the greater likelihood witnesses die or disappear and evidence is lost or compromised.  Given Israel’s reputation in these matters this certainly shouldn’t be suspected in this case.

The inactivity of the Committee hasn’t stopped both the Israeli and Spanish Supreme Courts from pointing to its existence as proof that Israel was dealing with the matter.  So here you see the weakness of international law, which allows accused nations like Israel to use smoke, mirrors and obfuscation to exploit loopholes.  In addition, often the legal systems of other nations which might eliminate such impunity refuse to do so out of lack of political will.

Israel, of course, takes maximum advantage of this situation.  Like many authoritarian regimes and serial human rights violators, it develops maximally bureaucratic responses to maintain the network of terror and impunity behind the Occupation.  Whether this involves appropriating (i.e. stealing) Palestinian private land to build settlements or undermining the principle of universal jurisdiction, such regimes become quite skilled at the game.

But this doesn’t mean the game is over.  It means a skirmish has been lost and activists must redouble their political and legal efforts.

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Gaza: Kill a Terrorist, Let 1,000 Terrorists ‘Bloom’

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

One of Nizar Rayyan's nine dead children removed from rubble of his home (Ismail Zaydah/Reuters)

One of Nizar Rayyan's nine dead children removed from rubble of his home (Ismail Zaydah/Reuters)


Israel has done the world the dubious “favor” of providing a textbook example of how a colonial power fuels an insurgency.  This is from today’s N.Y. Times:

The Israeli Air Force on Thursday afternoon bombed the house of Nizar Rayyan, a senior Hamas leader, killing him along with his four wives and nine of his children, four of them under the age of 18, Palestinian hospital officials said. An Israeli military spokeswoman, Maj. Avital Leibovich, described Mr. Rayyan as one of the “most extreme” figures of Hamas, which controls Gaza. The military said he had helped plan a deadly suicide bombing in Israel in 2004, had sent his own son on a suicide mission against Jewish settlers in Gaza in 2001 and was advocating renewed suicide missions against Israel in retaliation for the current offensive.

Mr. Rayyan was known in Gaza as a highly influential figure with strong links to the military wing of Hamas, particularly in northern Gaza, where he lived, and as a popular Hamas preacher who openly extolled and championed the idea of martyrdom.

The Israeli military said in a statement that there were many secondary explosions after the air attack, “proving that the house was used for storing weaponry.” It was also used as a communications center, the statement said, and a tunnel that had been dug under the house was used by Hamas operatives.

Most Hamas leaders in Gaza have been in hiding since the Israeli operation began, but Mr. Rayyan was said to have refused to leave his home on ideological grounds. In the past, he had been known to gather supporters to stand on the rooftops of other houses in Gaza that Israel had threatened to strike.

Rayyan home levelled by Israeli attack (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

Rayyan home levelled by Israeli attack (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

Before I begin discussing this, I want to concede, just for the sake of argument (though I do not know this for a fact and tend to be dubious of many similar claims made by the IDF), that Rayyan may have been the worst terrorist scum facing Israel–that he was a bloodthirsty, cutthroat assassin.  Maybe his murder will diminish the number of Israelis he himself would kill in the future.  Let us also concede that his death will provide some form of comfort to those Israelis who lost loved ones in previous attacks he engineered.

Given all those concessions, this murder is a morally bankrupt, heinous act nevertheless.  It reminds me of the murder of Salah Shehadeh, in which a 2000 lb. bomb levelled an entire Gaza apartment building and killed all the 18 residents of the building who were in it during the strike.  Undoubtedly, Dan Halutz, Doron Almog, the officers who planned and executed this act of terror will be confronted with charges before a Hague tribunal for this bombing.  There also can be no doubt that Ehud Barak, Gabi Alexander, Ehud Olmert and others will be sought for their role in today’s killings.

It is immoral in the process of killing one wanted man to knowingly wipe out his entire family of thirteen souls.  The murder of women and young children cannot justify what Israel has done.  This is, as I wrote above, a heinous act.  A bestial act, no matter what villainy Rayyan was responsible for.  It defies the norms of western civilization.  And it is of a piece with Israel’s entire “strategy” if you can call it that in this military offensive.  There are no red lines.  They’ve all been crossed.  Barak is happy for Hamas to see him as a Strangelovian psychopath prepared to go to the ends of the earth to exact revenge for the murder of Israelis.  But he doesn’t stop to think that instead, the thousands of Palestinians who will be honored to emulate Rayyan’s act of martyrdom will thirst for their own acts of psychopathic revenge.

For every Rayyan Israel kills, 1,000 will take his place.  And they will not only be mere soliders in the conflict.  Some of that 1,000 will outdo Rayyan in devising ever greater acts of revenge against Israel for this travesty.  So has it been in the past and so will it be till the ends of time or of this conflict, whichever comes first.

Israel is a country, not a terrorist group.  Therefore, even if its enemy violates every norm of international law and civilization, Israel must not stoop to the terrorists’ level.  When it does, it becomes no better than a terrorist.  This is not a new argument.  Unfortunately, Israel has forced us to invoke it time and again as it proves that it is little better than the terrorists it faces when it performs such targeted assassinations.  And once again I want to make clear that I only know about Rayyan what the IDF claims and that for the sake of argument I’m conceding the terms it is using to describe him.

Finally, if any right wing readers wish to crow about Rayyan’s death–go right ahead.  But when 10 or 100 of the next suicide shadeeds dedicate their successful acts of terrorist vengeance to Rayyan’s memory, it will give me absolutely no satisfaction to say this was a chronicle of deaths foretold.  You were warned and yet in the pathology of your thought processes you believed that killing one terrorist would bring respite.  In fact, it will spawn scores more who will make you pay a severe price in blood.

Once again, lest any of my right wing readers seek to say that this gives me satisfaction in any form, that is a low lie.  It gives me no satisfaction to see my own people murdered.  Just as gives me no satisfaction to see innocent Gazan women and children murdered simply because they are related to a terrorist and live in his home.

The Gaza operation, and I will cry this to the winds until it ends, is a brutal, cold-blooded, disproportionate attack by Israel on 1.5 million Palestinians who have done nothing more than acquiesce in the rule of Hamas over them. And even if they embraced Hamas wholeheartedly, it cannot justify what Israel has done to them. The attack has not succeeded, will not succeed, and indeed cannot succeed. It was a failure before the first bomb was dropped.

There is only one sane, reasonable resolution of this conflict: Israel must lift the 18 month siege of Gaza and allow the return to normal life. Hamas must end the rocket barrages against Israeli civilians. It is simple, yet at the same time impossible because neither side appears willing to concede.

Another Failed Israeli Targeted Assassination

Wednesday, July 12th, 2006

Israel has continued its recent string of wash out targeted assassinations in Gaza with the attempted murder of Mohammed Deif and his fellow Hamas militant commanders yesterday. While meeting with the top leaders of Hamas’ military wing in a Gaza apartment house, the IDF launched missiles entirely destroying the building. Deif escaped wounded. The host of the meeting, a local Hamas leader, was killed along with his wife and five of his children. Fifteen others were injured as another Haaretz article notes:

The leadership of Izz A-Din Al-Kassam [Hamas' militant wing] were meeting in the home of Nabil Abu Salamia, an Islamic University lecturer and well-known Hamas political activist. In the early morning hours, a bomb dropped by IAF fell on the house and destroyed it, apparently hitting the bedrooms and not the rooms in which the meeting took place, allowing the military leaders to escape. They may have been in a cellar or bomb shelter in the home.

Deif, wanted since the early 90s, was apparently wounded in the back. He was operated on at Gaza’s Al-Shifa hospital and no details of his condition were released. Eyewitnesses reported Deif was unable to stand when he was taken out of the ruined structure. About six minutes after the explosion, a car full of Hamas operatives arrived on the scene to extract the injured, but the car was also hit by IAF missiles and some of its passengers injured.

The IAF strike killed seven people and wounded top Hamas commander Mohammed Deif, Palestinians said.

The seven dead were all members of the same family – two parents, including senior Gaza Hamas figure Dr. Nabil al-Salmiah, and their five children…

From the force of the blast, the three-story structure collapsed, burying people under the rubble. The family killed in the strike was on the house’s upper floor. Hamas activists said additional victims might be buried in the basement.

Could the IDF not have known there was a bomb shelter in the home in which the militants would’ve taken shelter? Can they not have known that by dropping a bomb on the building’s roof that they would incinerate the civilians sleeping in the bedroom immediately underneath the roof? This reminds me of the IDF’s successful assassination of an earlier Hamas figure, Saleh Shehadeh, in which they annihilated a multi-story apartment building in order to kill one man, while also killing 15 civilians in the process. Human rights attorneys are compiling a legal case against the IDF commander of that operation. Can such a case be far for Dan Halutz and whichever commander planned this botched operation?

In the Deif attempt, one potentially “guilty” party killed who wasn’t even a target of the raid to six civilians. A casualty ratio to be proud of! When will Israel realize that targeted assassination is a wantonly brutal operation which almost always kills or injures innocents? Probably never. They never seem to learn anything from their mistakes. At least not anything worthwhile.

So much for all the talk of a possible negotiated deal for the release of Gilad Shalit. If Israel tries to murder the commander of the group which holds him can anyone really believe that Israel plans to accede to such an agreement? Either Israel never intended to make a deal or it did but the deal went south. Either way we’re in for a terribly long, drawn out process involving Shalit and the Gaza invasion. This will end neither soon nor well.

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