Shire Network News
Did I forget to tell you about this week’s SNN?
You should listen to it. I talk about Jimmy Carter for my segment.
Did I forget to tell you about this week’s SNN?
You should listen to it. I talk about Jimmy Carter for my segment.
An anonymous UN spokesman is letting the truth come out with the usual anti-Israel lies.
Gaza’s main fuel distributor is holding back one million litres of fuel, UN figures showed on Monday a day after Israel claimed Hamas was stage-managing a crisis in the Palestinian territory.
But of course, this is both the AFP and the UN. Negative spin is required.
However, a UN official who requested anonymity said that the current stocks of fuel and industrial gasoline stored in Gaza are sufficient for only several days.
Followed by another factual statement.
“The general petroleum association refuses to distribute in protest of the lack of supply of fuel by Israel,” he said.
The Palestinian General Petroleum Corporation is responsible for the distribution of fuel across the Hamas-run territory, where the union of petrol station owners went on strike several days ago in protest at the fuel cuts.
So let’s try to understand this. Hamas is stealing fuel. The fuel distributor is refusing to distribute fuel, because they’re protesting—the lack of fuel.
So how long before the UN issues a statement demanding that Israel supply more fuel to the terrortories [sic]?
Palestinian officials have warned that the acute fuel shortages could close Gaza’s main power plant and reduce the impoverished territory to a standstill.
Gaza’s petrol stations have been closed for several days in protest at the insufficient supply of fuel by Israel, which has placed Gaza under a punishing lockdown since Hamas seized control of the territory last June.
The UN official said that one million litres of fuel are being held on the Palestinian side of the terminal — enough to supply Gaza with just over two days’ worth of fuel for cars and electricity generators.
“Israel cannot pump more fuel because there is no place to store it, since the general petroleum association is looking for guarantees from Israel to supply more fuel. This is a logjam,” the official said.
If you are starting to feel like Gaza is really a fictional place called Wonderland, you may be right. Except that the terrorists aren’t a pack of cards, and Israel won’t be waking up anytime soon.
The UN official also said that there was “a clear increase” in the number of trucks crossing from Israel into Gaza carrying humanitarian aid and basic supplies in March compared with the previous month.
More than 2,800 trucks filled with basic supplies — mainly food, drugs, cleaning products and construction material — entered Gaza through the four crossings with Israel in March.
Another 430 trucks carrying humanitarian aid also reached Gaza last month, he said.
He warned, however, that “there is an insufficient number of products entering Gaza.”
Got it? An increase in supplies, plenty of fuel, and more goods entering Gaza in March than February—but it’s still not enough. Because after all, Gaza is Israel’s responsibility, even though terrorists are shooting and firing rockets and mortars at any Israeli within (or out of) sight.
If Israel had any politicians with brass, they’d simply tell Egypt that Gaza was Egypt’s problem before 1967, and it’s all Egypt’s once more. But of course, Egypt never wanted Gaza back once they’d gotten rid of it.
Can’t imagine why not. One-point-whatever million jihadis and terrorists—what’s not to love?
Jimmy Carter was interviewed by Ha’aretz on Sunday, Carter uttered what may be the stupidest thing I have ever seen from a world leader:
In a democracy, I realize that you don’t need to talk to the top leader to know how the country feels. When I go to a dictatorship, I only have to talk to one person and that’s the dictator, because he speaks for all the people. But in a democracy like Israel, there is a wide range of opinions and that counterbalances the disappointment that I have in not meeting with the people shaping Israeli power now in the government.
Did he really just say that he doesn’t have to talk to people in a dictatorship because their opinions don’t count?
That explains completely how he can hobnob with dictators and think so highly of them. That explains a whole lot, actually. Either that, or the man is going senile.
Ynet reports (via memeorandum):
A new survey conducted by a Washington DC-based evangelical organization among American Christians has found that 82% of them believe they have a moral obligation to support the Jews and Israel. The poll, conducted among Catholics and Protestants alike, tested their stance on Jerusalem’s future and ways to deal with the Iranian nuclear threat.
The poll reveals a number of other common sense findings. By 32 to 24 percent those surveyed figure that a Palestinian state will be a terrorist state. 65 percent of those surveyed believe that Iran is developing nuclear weapons with which to attack Israel. And by 45 to 9 percent those surveyed said that they wouldn’t support a President who pressured Israel to concede issues that endangered its security.
And how refreshing it is to have Jews and Christians on the same side of an issue for a change. Here. Have a virtual handshake, folks.
I wonder if 82% of American Jews believe that they have a moral obligation to support Israel. Given the number of moonbats among American Jews, I doubt it.
(And yes, historically, Americans, not just Jewish Americans, favor Israel by a wide margin. Support for Israel is not just a Jewish issue, it’s an American issue.)
A report in the Washington Post confirms Israel Matzav’s fears, Jewish Liberals to Launch A Counterpoint to AIPAC
Some of the country’s most prominent Jewish liberals are forming a political action committee and lobbying group aimed at dislodging what they consider the excessive hold of neoconservatives and evangelical Christians on U.S. policy toward Israel.The group is planning to channel political contributions to favored candidates in perhaps a half-dozen campaigns this fall, the first time an organization focused on Israel has tried to play such a direct role in the political process, according to its organizers.
Organizers said they hope those efforts, coupled with a separate lobbying group that will focus on promoting an Arab-Israeli peace settlement, will fill a void left by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, and other Jewish groups that they contend have tilted to the right in recent years.
The obliviousness of these people is amazing. No American President was more invested in the kind of peacemaking they want than Bill Clinton. He shunned Binyamin Netanyahu while welcoming Yasser Arafat. And did he get a peace treaty at the end of his term?
“The definition of what it means to be pro-Israel has come to diverge from pursuing a peace settlement,” said Alan Solomont, a prominent Democratic Party fundraiser involved in the initiative. In recent years, he said, “We have heard the voices of neocons, and right-of-center Jewish leaders and Christian evangelicals, and the mainstream views of the American Jewish community have not been heard.”Solomont is a top fundraiser for the presidential campaign of Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), but the organizers include supporters and fundraisers for both Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.). Many prominent figures in the American Jewish left, former lawmakers and U.S. government officials, and several prominent Israeli figures, as well as activists who have raised money for the Democracy Alliance and MoveOn.org, are also involved.
A peace settlement to be pro-Israel must not endanger Israel. Israel is markedly less secure now than it was in 1993. So promoting the kind of process that Israel’s been involved in over the past 15 years is not pro-Israel. That’s because those who feel that their primary goal is to support peace, means ignoring Palestinians violations of agreements.
“The genesis of this is really the frustration on the part of a very substantial portion of the American Jewish community that despite the fact that there is broad support for a peace-oriented policy in the Middle East, there doesn’t seem to be the political will to actually carry it out,” Ben-Ami said. “We have not been effective at transmitting the message that there is political support for these positions in the American Jewish community and their allies.”
I really don’t think that it’s a substantial part of the American Jewish community. It might be a substantial part of the wealthy, liberal, American Jewish community, but qualifying it like that would make the “J-street” initiative looks rather narrow.
As far as the “political will” is concerned, it’s lacking because any mildly perceptive observer realizes that the Palestinians have used their newfound benefits (land, money, weapons) not to build a functioning society but to build a a terror infrastructure with which to attack Israel. The lack of “political will” that Ben Ami observes is simply an observation that the peace process hasn’t worked.
Take away all of the qualifications and this paragraph pretty much sums up the problem:
Some veteran Middle East experts said the new group faces the political reality that many American Jews have become disillusioned over the years with the peace process and what they consider to be the intransigence, hostility and–in some cases–terrorism of would-be Palestinian partners. While Bush early on in his administration grew skeptical of the peacemaking efforts of President Clinton, he received very little push-back from organized American Jewry.
Well it’s not just what we “consider,” it’s what we’ve observed. And frankly, President Bush was correct. The more American Presidents push for peace, the more Palestinians demand and the less Israel gets credit for its sacrifices.
Martin Indyk, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel and the director of the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, said the group “has a very steep hill to climb because peacemaking has acquired a bad reputation over the years in the Jewish community, and there is a widespread fear that U.S. intervention on behalf of peace will lead to pressure on Israel.”
Again it’s not just a “widespread fear,” it’s exactly what we’ve seen from the first Bush administration and, as noted above, from the Clinton administration too.
But here’s the kicker:
The initial efforts will be relatively modest: Ben-Ami said the group aims to try to raise at least $50,000 or more for a handful of campaigns this fall as a “test case.” But the group intends to raise its profile in future campaign cycles, and some major liberal fundraisers have already committed to the venture, including Solomont, high-tech entrepreneur Davidi Gilo and former New York City corporation counsel Victor Kovner, a supporter of Clinton’s presidential bid.
Given the high powered nature of the organizers of this group, $50,000 is pretty small change. I think it reflects that these folks represent pretty much themselves. I also think that it’s telling that no Republicans are publicly associated with this effort yet, reflecting the stronger commitment to Israel in the Republican Party at present.
Crossposted at Soccer Dad.
Jimmy Carter is being ignored by all high-level Israelis. Even the AP is noting Hamas’ long, bloody history, but Carter still insists that Hamas should be a peace partner for Israel. Uh-huh. Sure.
Isolating Hamas is counterproductive, Carter said. Hamas rules the Gaza Strip but is ostracized by Israel, the U.S. and European Union as a terrorist group.
“I think it is absolutely crucial that in the final and dreamed-about and prayed-for peace agreement for this region that Hamas be involved and Syria will be involved,” he told a business conference outside Tel Aviv.
You know what? I’m thinking that terrorists and terror-supporters don’t get to dictate terms for peace. And let’s face it, even Carter is beginning to admit that Hamas is nothing more than a group of unrepentent murderers.
“I can’t say that they will be amenable to any suggestions, but at least after I meet with them I can go back and relay what they say, as just a communicator, to the leaders of the United States,” he said.
If they’re not going to be “amenable to any suggestions,” then WTF should Israel talk to them? Why should we?
Here’s where the AP points out Hamas’ history:
The U.S., EU and Israel have blacklisted Hamas for its history of killing some 250 Israelis with suicide bomber attacks and its refusal to renounce violence and recognize the Jewish state.
And here’s where Jimmy starts snuffling and feeling sorry for himself. Your ego is showing, Jimmah.
Carter also offered to relay Hamas’ views to Israel. If the U.S. agrees to hear what Hamas says, “I hope then the Israeli government will deign to meet with me - they have so far refused,” he said.
“Deigned” to meet with him… note the way that he’s insulting the Israelis for refusing to meet with him, even though the reason for the lack is because he’s meeting with the murderers of hundreds of Israelis. Carter is so full of forgiveness for all of Israel’s enemies, and yet, he’s full of nothing but vitriol for Israel.
And there’s a new phrase he’s been tossing around. He says he wants to “bring peace to Israel, and peace and justice to Israel’s neighbors.”
What’s with the “peace and justice”? What is that supposed to mean, exactly?
Although I’m sure I don’t want to know.