Observers or Hostages?

The EU has voted to suspend direct aid to the Hamas-controlled Palestinian Authority.

How long will it be before their observers at the Rafah Crossing get kidnapped?

UPDATE:
Abbas orders his henchmen to Rafah:

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give details to the media, said the new arrangement at the Rafah crossing would go into effect on Tuesday. Rafah is the only point of entry and exit between Gaza and the outside world besides Israel.

Hamas will have to act fast if they want to grab the EU observers.

About Laurence Simon

I'm a thirty-something dataschmuck in Houston, TX. I spend my free time grilling, baking, playing with cats, and trying to invent the Tequila Sunset.
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4 Responses to Observers or Hostages?

  1. chsw says:

    Correction – what you should have written was “Hamas will have to act fast if they want to grab the EU observers first.” One word makes all the difference.

    chsw

  2. Li'l Mamzer says:

    Hamas, Fatah, Abbas, EU, I mean, really, what’s the difference?

  3. The difference is the square they occupy in the Palestinian Pizza Bingo card.

    I should plug it here.

  4. Michael Lonie says:

    This might be very interesting. If kidnapping them constitutes terrorism, and any of the EU types are French, we may see the inauguration of The Chirac Doctrine (TM). No doubt you remember that not long ago Chirac said that if any state carried out a terrorist attack on France la belle nation would respond with nuclear weapons. Go for it Hamas and Fatah, here is your chance to be real martyrs for Allah! Which Pali town do you suppose Chirac will choose?

    Yeah I know we don’t want a use of nukes and that the Frogs would never do something like, you know, decisive (note that Chirac just caved to the violent barbarians in the streets). But it makes an entertaining fantasy.

    On the matter of the barbarians, among the damage the rioters did in protesting slight amounts of economic good sense included burning 40 rare manuscripts from the Sorbonne. Chirac, faux king of France as the Fifth Republic’s constitution makes him, ought to have remembered the song Bonnie Dundee:

    “To the Lords of Convention ’twas Claverhouse spoke,
    “Ere the King’s crown go down there are crowns to be broke.”

    The longer the forces of law in France wait before breaking heads the more of them they will have to break before respect for the law is restored.

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