Yourish.com

Cutting straight to the point

The difference between us and them

Posted on February 5th, 2008 at 10:00 am by Meryl Yourish.

Filed under: palestinian politics

What’s wrong with Palestinian culture:

Yellow Fatah flags flew outside the home of one of the attackers, 22-year-old Luay Laghwani, and Al Aqsa gunmen fired in the air in tribute to him. His sobbing mother, Ibtissam, held a picture of her son as a young teenager, while male relatives scolded her for crying, saying she should be proud.

What’s right with Palestinian culture:

At least this time, the bomber’s mother wept. A year ago, his parents beamed with pride that their son was the murderer of innocents.

Low hanging times

Posted on February 5th, 2008 at 9:00 am by Soccerdad.

Filed under: Israel, Media Bias

Barry Rubin has at the NY Times, especially outgoing reporter Steven Erlanger.

Speaking about restrictions, it might be worth mentioning that there are no such Israeli restrictions on the West Bank. Why is that? It is because the Palestinian Authority regime there doesn’t systematically encourage and facilitate terrorist and rocket and mortar attacks on Israel. This, then, is the central issue pertaining to the Gaza Strip, and not the apparently motiveless meanness that much media coverage makes it seem to be Israel’s reason for so acting.There are 16 paragraphs remaining in the New York Times version. Do you think that we will be told that some of the restricted goods Palestinians bought in Egypt are guns, ammunition, explosives, and material for making rockets? Of course not.

Since he’s having so much fun, I’d love to pile on. In today’s report about yesterday’s terror attack in Dimona Isabel Kershner noted:

The Israeli authorities had warned in recent days that Palestinian militants had taken advantage of the breach of the border, which occurred after Hamas blasted sections of a wall between Gaza and Egypt on Jan. 23. Egyptian forces resealed the border on Sunday.

“Had warned!” Why is this couched in any sort of a qualification? Go to page 2 of the report.

According to his mother, Mr. Aghwani left the Gaza Strip for the first time in his life on the first day that the border with Egypt was breached, shopping for her in the Egyptian border town of Rafah. He went in and out of Egypt several times over the next few days, leaving the house for the last time on Wednesday, the family said.

What Israeli officials “warned” was confirmed by the mother of one of the terrorists. There’s little doubt that during his trips back and forth to Egypt, he was recruited to carry out yesterday’s attack. By qualifying what happened as an Israeli “warning” the reporter adds an element of uncertainty that shouldn’t be in the article.

Elder of Ziyon notes what the NYT and other MSM outlets are leaving out of their stories. (Funny, when it came to giving op-ed space to Hamas biggies it was essential to our democracy to allow them a platform for their sanitized propaganda, but when it comes to telling us how the residents of Gaza really feel, they get sort of skittish.) Simply Jews takes his whacks at an NYT Israel correspondent of the past. He does have a gift of understatement doesn’t he?

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Sy’s lies

Posted on February 5th, 2008 at 8:00 am by Soccerdad.

Filed under: Israel, Media Bias, Syria

via memeorandumInvestigative reporter, Seymour “Sy” Hersh has an exclusive for the New Yorker, “A strike in the dark,” alleging that Israel didn’t really know what the nature of the facility it bombed last September in Syria was. (As is the nature of the New Yorker, the article appears in its “Fact” section, even though the nature of the essay is highly speculative.)

The only solid piece of evidence he seems to present against the idea that the structure was possibly nuclear is what he writes about the ship Al Hamed, that reportedly offloaded cement at the Syrian port of Tartous a few days before Israel bombed the Syria site.

But there is evidence that the Al Hamed could not have been carrying sensitive cargo—or any cargo—from North Korea. International shipping is carefully monitored by Lloyd’s Marine Intelligence Unit, which relies on a network of agents as well as on port logs and other records. In addition, most merchant ships are now required to operate a transponder device called an A.I.S., for automatic identification system. This device, which was on board the Al Hamed, works in a manner similar to a transponder on a commercial aircraft—beaming a constant, very high-frequency position report. (The U.S. Navy monitors international sea traffic with the aid of dedicated satellites, at a secret facility in suburban Washington.)According to Marine Intelligence Unit records, the Al Hamed, which was built in 1965, had been operating for years in the eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea, with no indication of any recent visits to North Korea. The records show that the Al Hamed arrived at Tartus on September 3rd—the ship’s fifth visit to Syria in five months. (It was one of eight ships that arrived that day; although it is possible that one of the others was carrying illicit materials, only the Al Hamed has been named in the media.) The ship’s registry was constantly changing. The Al Hamed flew the South Korean flag before switching to North Korea in November of 2005, and then to Comoros. (Ships often fly flags of convenience, registering with different countries, in many cases to avoid taxes or onerous regulations.) At the time of the bombing, according to Lloyd’s, it was flying a Comoran flag and was owned by four Syrian nationals. In earlier years, under other owners, the ship seems to have operated under Russian, Estonian, Turkish, and Honduran flags. Lloyd’s records show that the ship had apparently not passed through the Suez Canal—the main route from the Mediterranean to the Far East—since at least 1998.

This is very slick, but thanks to Captain’s Quarters, who links to a Telegraph story, that last assertion is highly suspect. The Telegraph reported:

Since leaving Tartous, one of Syria’s main ports on the Mediterranean, the ship’s trace has disappeared and it is not known whether western intelligence agencies are tracking the vessel.”I became suspicious after the first reports from Syria about the attack so I traced all traffic into Syrian ports in the days prior to the incident,” Mr Solomon said.

“There were five ships but the interesting one was the one with a connection to North Korea - the Al Hamed.”

He said he cross-referred to other maritime databases to establish the ship was not a regular visitor to the Mediterranean but had come through the Suez Canal in late June. (emphasis mine)

It had registered itself for the Suez transit as a South Korean vessel but Mr Solomon said this was standard procedure for North Korean ships seeking to avoid international constraints on North Korea.

Mr. Solomon, is Ronen Solomon, an Israeli who tracked the movements of the ship, Al Hamed until he lost track of it sometime after it left Tartous. In other words, any possibly incriminating evidence that might have been aboard the ship was gone. Also, Solomon established, contrary to Hersh, that the ship had indeed passed through the Suez.

But even without this contradiction, Hersh’s report doesn’t seem to support his basic claim. For one thing he makes much of the Israeli silence after the bombing, but he doesn’t even bring up the fact that North Korea protested the Israeli raid. He acknowledges the presence of North Korean workers but dismisses the importance of their presence in Syria, attributing it to a military agreement between the two countries.

In fact that’s how Hersh builds his case. He emphasizes the sources who agree with his conclusion and dismisses those who disagree.

Here’s another bit from Hersh.

It is unclear to what extent the Bush Administration was involved in the Israeli attack. The most detailed report of coöperation was made in mid-October by ABC News. Citing a senior U.S. official, the network reported that Israel had shared intelligence with the United States and received satellite help and targeting information in response. At one point, it was reported, the Bush Administration considered attacking Syria itself, but rejected that option. The implication was that the Israeli intelligence about the nuclear threat had been vetted by the U.S., and had been found to be convincing.

Indeed there was an ABC report in mid-October that includes all of the information that Hersh included. But it included an even bigger bombshell.

A senior U.S. official told ABC News the Israelis first discovered a suspected Syrian nuclear facility early in the summer, and the Mossad  Israel’s intelligence agency  managed to either co-opt one of the facility’s workers or to insert a spy posing as an employee.As a result, the Israelis obtained many detailed pictures of the facility from the ground.

The official said the suspected nuclear facility was approximately 100 miles from the Iraqi border, deep in the desert along the Euphrates River. It was a place, the official said, “where no one would ever go unless you had a reason to go there.”

But the hardest evidence of all was the photographs.

The official described the pictures as showing a big cylindrical structure, with very thick walls all well-reinforced. The photos show rebar hanging out of the cement used to reinforce the structure, which was still under construction.

There was also a secondary structure and a pump station, with trucks around it. But there was no fissionable material found because the facility was not yet operating.

The official said there was a larger structure just north of a small pump station; a nuclear reactor would need a constant source of water to keep it cool.

The official said the facility was a North Korean design in its construction, the technology present and the ability to put it all together.

It was North Korean “expertise,” said the official, meaning the Syrians must have had “human” help from North Korea.

Now how did Hersh miss this? This is a claim that Israel knew that the building was a reactor of North Korean design because they had pictures taken by a spy in the facility. Did Hersh just go to page 2 of the ABC report and skip the first page?

I can’t speak to the veracity of this report, I have no way of judging it. Hersh doesn’t even address it! It would be one thing if the report of the Israeli spy appeared in some other source that Hersh cited, but this claim that directly contradicts his conjecture appears in the very same article that he cites and he doesn’t even challenge it.

One of the biggest problems with this story, is that he builds up Dr. David Albright, an independent expert who believes the building bombed by the Israelis was indeed the beginning of a nuclear facility. Only once does Hersh challenge Albright, except to parse a later statement of Albright’s and conclude that Albright wasn’t as certain about his identification of the facility.

The challenge comes from the IAEA, who seemed like they’d have trouble identifying the noses on their respective faces and led by a man who considers Assad his “brother.” I can’t say that the credibility or independence of the IAEA ranks higher with me than Albright does.

I know that Hersh is hailed as an investigative reporter. But in this case he doesn’t seem to have come up with any big scoop. Instead he selectively used sources to emphasize his conclusions. Sure there was some investigation involved, but for all his work there’s not much of conclusion there. I could have speculated just as effectively as he did. Is there such a thing as a speculative reporter?

Noah Pollak was skeptical about Hersh’s big scoop, with good reason

Crossposted at Soccer Dad.

Heroes and murderers

Posted on February 5th, 2008 at 7:00 am by Meryl Yourish.

Filed under: Israel, Terrorism

The hero of yesterday’s suicide attack was definitely Chief Inspector Kobi Mor.

“When I arrived at the area, one of the people told me that there was a terrorist there who was still alive. I pulled out my gun and saw him reaching towards the explosive belt. I fired at the terrorist, along with another sapper who fired at him.

“The terrorist’s hand dropped and began twitching. I thought he was dying, but two minutes later he raised his hand again. I went into a kneeling position and fired four more shots at his head.”

Senior police commanders who arrived at the scene of the attack praised the police officer’s actions, which they said prevented a more serious attack.

Mor is an officer in the new Magen unit that has been tasked with combating the drug trade between Israel and Egypt. He received a report from a unit intelligence officer about the attack in Dimona: “I made a U-turn and headed towards Dimona. I called all teams from the unit to the town of Dimona.

Israeli TV showed video of the discovery and shooting of the second bomber, but this is the most I can find. There’s nothing gruesome or violent, and they stopped the tape and put in a still of Inspector Mor shooting instead of showing the terrorist reacting to having his body filled with lead, instead of his victims.

Hero. The word was made for people like Kobi Mor. The death toll would have been far higher if not for him. The terrorist was surrounded by paramedics, police officers, and soldiers.

They promoted Kor almost on the spot.