Obama’s foreign policy: Pretty dumb power

Barack Obama is being reviled in Iran.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad attacked Barack Obama on Friday, saying the American president “doesn’t even know how to spell his own name properly.”

During a visit to Bushehr ahead of a scheduled rally in support of his regime, the Iranian leader said, “Obama wants to rule the world, but he can’t even control his own emotions.”

The Palestinians are pretty sure they have him by the short hairs:

Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki said Friday that if the US would veto the condemnation of settlement construction it would “prove that the US supports Israel’s illegal moves in opposition to the opinion of 130 UN member states.”

Twenty-two Arab nations are going to force a vote on settlements at the UN. Obama called Abbas yesterday to try to get him to pull the resolution. He spoke to him for 50 minutes. Abbas refused. There are, of course, no vitriolic condemnations of Abbas from the White House the way there were condemnations of Netanyahu last year during Joe Biden’s trip to Israel, as well as that 43-minute dressing-down from Hillary. On this issue, she is utterly silent.

He’s managed to unite Democrats and Republicans against him on this issue.

He’s losing Egypt. Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Egypt’s Khomeini, is back in Egypt in triumph and leading more protests against the military. al-Qaradawi is a Muslim Brotherhood member, and he isn’t at all “moderate.” And oh yeah—even the “moderates” are calling for an end to the peace treaty with Israel.

But hey, the world loves him now.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad attacked Barack Obama on Friday, saying the American president “doesn’t even know how to spell his own name properly.”

Oh. Wait.

Great job, Barry!

Posted in Iran, Israel, The One, World | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Naive Foreign Policy

So the US proposed to back a resolution basically reaffirming what it should not have affirmed in 1979 about the legitimacy of settlements, though a weaker version. The current reported proposal would only condemn “continued” settlement building, something that hardly declares Jerusalem to be Palestinian territory. The proposed resolution had no chance of getting Arab backing. It would even have condemned Palestinian efforts to obtain support for statehood or recognition of borders! Meanwhile, I think that it probably ticked off a few supporters of Israel out there!!!

This political blunder comes on the heels of what amounts to disgraceful incompetence in the foreign intelligence arena, with the DNI arguing that the Muslim Brotherhood is “a largely secular organization!” And of course, that after this administration appears to have been completely blindsided by the events in Tunisia and Egypt. Let’s not forget whole host of issues related to Iran. There are certainly many more issues that could be raised.

Why does this administration seem to be blindly blundering in the Middle East?

My own answer to this question is that this administration is full of people who feel that a certain type of foreign policy had never been given a real chance, namely reaching out to the Arab world as a friend instead of as a power. Further, that in spite of the dismal failure of this policy thus far, the administration is being urged to go “all in” by its proponents.

To answer my question specifically, people in this administration understand that traditional foreign policy has not brought them what they wish for, which is peaceful coexistence (something they actually deeply down believe is possible). In their minds, traditional foreign policy has promoted hatred of the United States as exceptional (which of course it is).

Their goal with what I would call “Naive Foreign Policy” (literally a foreign policy lacking in experience) is to experiment with alternatives to the tried and true. This is a generation whose actions throughout life have been sheltered by parents and by society. They’ve been able to experiment with drugs. They went through the sexual revolution. They treat religions like they do their cars, trading them in for new ones when they go out of style. And for all of their experiments, they have suffered very little that they can see. Thus, they see no real problem in experimenting with new foreign policies. What real harm can be done? We can always trade it in for a new model later. Worse, they believe not only in microwaving food, but in microwaving societal transformations and even global ones. They actually believe that peace is possible tomorrow, if only the necessary actions were done today.

Reason and rationality are not the basis of this foreign policy. Hope in the common humanity of their fellow men and women is the basis.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is one in which both sides violate this utopian ideal. Historical fact violates this ideal and we therefore cannot use history as the basis of our actions now. The President has not used those exact words, but he might as well have. Remember what President Obama said in his speech to the UNGA in September of 2009? I will never forget it:

The time has come to realize that the old habits, the old arguments are irrelevant to the challenges faced by our people. They lead nations to act in opposition to the very goals that they claim to pursue and to vote, often in this body, against the interests of their own people.

They build up walls between us and the future that our people seek. And the time has come for those walls to come down. Together, we must build new coalitions that bridge old divides, coalitions of different faiths and creeds, of northern and south, east, west, black, white, and brown.

The choice is ours. We can be remembered as a generation that chose to drag the arguments of 20th century into the 21st, that put off hard choices, refused to look ahead, failed to keep pace because we defined ourselves by what we were against instead of what we were for. Or we can be a generation that chooses to see the shoreline beyond the rough waters ahead; that comes together to serve the common interests of human beings and finally gives meaning to the promise embedded in the nation given to this institution, the United Nations.

That is the future America wants; a future of peace and prosperity that we can only reach if we recognize that all nations have rights but all nations have responsibilities as well. That is the bargain that makes this work. That must be the guiding principle of international cooperation.

We have a foreign policy in which history is irrelevant. Anyone find that frightening?

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Obama’s final betrayal: Selling out Israel

Oil talks. Israel hasn’t got any. The Arab nations do. Though the fact that Israel is America’s truest ally in the Middle East, the fact that the IDF trained American soldiers in city combat to prepare them for Iraq, the fact that Israel shares valuable intel with America and has done so for decades—none of that matters to this administration, which has been ready to jettison Israel since the night Obama was elected.

The U.S. is going to vote with the Security Council to rebuke Israel on settlements. Because in the Middle East today, where Egypt just suffered a military coup, Iran is barreling forward towards nukes, Tunisia, Bahrain, Yemen, and Iran are undergoing their own protests for freedom, Jordan is edging towards the same, and Muammar Ghaddafi is shaking in his sandals, obviously, the most important thing to take care of in the Middle East is—settlements.

This is a huge win for the Palestinians, even if the language is utterly watered down. As of last night, this was supposedly going to be in the resolution.

The statement also condemns “all forms of violence, including rocket fire from Gaza, and stresses the need for calm and security for both peoples.”

Don’t hold your breath over it staying.

This is being spun as a sop to the Arab world. Obama can’t afford to alienate them any more, supposedly. Funny. I thought Obama was the man we elected to improve America’s image with the rest of the world. I thought he was our ambassador to Muslims, what with his living among them as a child. I thought it was George W. Bush they hated, not America.

Israel is going to feel very, very alone if this resolution goes through. You know what happens when Israel feels alone and threatened?

War.

These are dark times.

Posted in Israel Derangement Syndrome, palestinian politics, The One | Tagged , , | 7 Comments

Your Zombie self-defense post of the week

Because we all need to know how to defend ourselves from zombies.

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Wednesday news round-up

Fleeing the sinking ship: The first wave of Egyptian refugees has reached Europe.

Human rights organizations finally picking on someone besides Israel: I guess when you start hanging people whose only crime was protesting the despotic government, even HRW and Amnesty sit up and take notice. But not to worry. They’ll be back going after Israel any minute now.

Compare and contrast: Israeli courts ordered Jerusalem police to not arrest protesters. But then, when you have the only true democracy in the Middle East, that’s what your courts do: Make sure the police follow the laws. (This reminds me of the sig of an old BBSer I used to know: “Better than you.” I appropriate it from time to time when I want to piss people off. It always works.)

Why Israel needs to ramp up the Leviathan gas field: Egypt is delaying the resumption of natural gas to Israel. Faster, please.

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Addictive Thinking and Israel

Those who counsel people who are addicts and their co-dependents are very familiar with the concept of Addictive Thinking and Abraham Twerski’s well known book on the subject. The basic idea is that those who are addicted have distorted thinking. An example of this kind of thinking offered is:

A young man was procrastinating turning in his term paper for a class.

“Why don’t you finish it?”, I asked.
“It’s finished already”, he said.
“But I need to do some more work on it”, he said.
“But I thought you said it is finished”, I remarked.
“It is”, he said.

Using this thought process doesn’t necessarily mean that one is an addict, but it is found more often among addicts. This contradictory thinking is Addictive Thinking.

Now, lets look at the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. I can slightly change the words in this paragraph and you will recognize the arguments. For example:

“Why won’t the Israelis agree to a peace agreement with the Palestinians?”, I asked.
“They already did”, he said.
“But they need to stop settlement construction in order for the Palestinians to come to the negotiating table so that Israel can make peace with them”, he said.
“But I thought you said Israel already agreed to a peace agreement with the Palestinians”, I remarked.
“They did”, he said.

Or let’s try this one on for size:

“How can peace be achieved?”, I asked.

“The Israelis need to make peace with the Palestinians right now because the region is stable and Israel is surrounded by friendly governments,” he responded.

“But the region is changing. What if the region becomes unstable and Israel is surrounded by unfriendly governments?”, I asked.

“Then the Israelis need to make peace with the Palestinians right now because they may not get that chance later,” he said.

“But the Israelis are worried about the West Bank becoming like Gaza”, I noted.

“So they need to make peace now to stop that from happening,” he stated.

“But if the Palestinian Authority makes the concessions necessary for the process to move forward, they will be overthrown by radicals who support Hamas and oppose the peace process”, I remarked.

“The Israelis need to be forced to make concessions so that peace may be achieved,” he concluded.

What??? This makes no sense because it is addictive thinking. There is no logic to the argument. No matter what the circumstances, the argument is that Israel must make concessions and that it is Israel’s fault that peace has not already been achieved. Pressuring Israel to make concessions now that the Palestinian Authority may not even appear to be yielding on any of the core issues for fear of facing an uprising is about as ridiculous a conception as any heretofore applied to the peace process. No possible good may come of such pressure. In fact, if a strong Palestinian Authority is necessary to achieve peace, then those seeking peace must avoid encouraging it to come to the negotiating table now in its weakened state. Additionally, with the Palestinian Authority in a weakened state and potentially being toppled in favor of a much more radical regime, Israel cannot possibly make any concessions on borders or security.

While the addictive thinkers will no doubt argue that if only Israel had made concessions earlier it would have achieved peace already, those thinking clearly will readily understand that if the Palestinian Authority was in control over the entire West Bank today, an uprising could rapidly bring Hamas to power there with an abrogation of any peace treaty along with it.

The only reasonable solution is to allow the Palestinian Authority the chance to survive the onslaught of radical sentiment by giving it the ability to avoid having to make unpopular concessions now. Those who wish to pressure Israel to make concessions in order to bring the Palestinian Authority to the negotiating table must both seek to weaken Israel without achieving peace and to strengthen Hamas in its attempts to remove the Palestinian Authority from leadership over the West Bank. Why? Because these will be the primary results if the act of urging Israel to make concessions in order to bring the two sides to the negotiating table were to be successful.

For the peace process to move forward, the region must stabilize first.

Posted in Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Tuesday, briefly

Of course we are: Israel and the U.S. are behind the latest protests in Iran. Just ask the Iranian regime. Oh, and the Iranians are calling for the execution of the opposition leaders. Now that’s democracy! Woot! I am breathlessly awaiting Obama’s condemnation of the Iranian parliament and leadership.

Hezbollah is targeting Israelis around the world: Israel raised its threat levels on foreign missions. CNN raised its rhetoric levels in the story headline.

Israel closes embassies over terror fears

One of a million subtle ways the media have to put Israel in a bad light. Those scaredy-cat Israelis! Afraid of a little suicide bombing threat!

Jordan’s in trouble, too: It is not looking good for moderation in the Middle East. And Abdullah isn’t a despot like Mubarak was. Isn’t it interesting how the only nation in the Middle East whose citizens are not trying to overthrow the government is the one that actually has free and fair democratic elections? Yeah, the one that everyone calls the illegitimate state, the apartheid state, the oppressive state… shyeah.

Shariah Law: It’s not for lovers. Malaysian love police arrested 40 unmarried couples in hotels yesterday. Yep, that sharia law is going to be awesome as more and more countries adopt it. It’s totally tolerant.

Authorities carry out raids each year on Valentine’s Day in this Muslim-majority country, after the main Islamic body issued an edict in 2005 banning Muslims from celebrating what it said was a day synonymous with vice.

By the way, the name of the raid was “Operation Valentine.” Malaysia does not heart premarital sex.

By the way two: Think the media will pick up on this the way they pick up on anything the religious Jews in Israel do? Nah, me neither.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA: Saudis to remove books deemed to promote terrorism. Oh, come on. Pull the other leg. No, seriously. My sides are hurting now.

Posted in Iran, Israel, Media Bias, Religion | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Monday briefs

Barry Rubin, the voice of sanity, on Egypt’s revolution:

While a wave of attempts at popular revolution will spread, that doesn’t mean they will succeed. In large part, by the way, the world is under an illusion over Egypt. Mubarak did not fall because people went into Tahrir Square, Mubarak fell because the army wanted him out, in part because it was tired of him and angry that he had not retired or prepared for the succession; in part because he was a useful scapegoat for all the regime’s sins.

Thus, the army stood aside and did not lift a finger against the protesters. Uninformed observers will say that it did not want to shoot its own people but that has never stopped the army before. More accurately, it did not want to shoot its own people on behalf of Mubarak. The people’s revolution was actually a very cleverly engineered coup.

Yet another kassam, yet another yawn by the world: There’s a new IDF Chief of Staff, and one has to wonder what he’s going to do about the current rain of rockets on southern Israel.

Another “reformer” wants to break ties with Israel: Ayman Nour, who was arrested by the Mubarak regime for trying to run against Mubarak, wants to end the peace treaty with Israel. Because it’s old. And he says that even while insisting Egypt will respect its international agreements with other nations. Why not with Israel? Oh, come on. You read this blog. What is the Israeli Exception Clause? Just add “except for Israel” to everything.

In an interview with a Lebanese radio station, Nour, who served a lengthy jail sentence during deposed president Hosni Mubarak’s era, said Egypt “is a great country and must respect its agreements. As for Camp David – this is a unique issue with unique aspects – the people will decide on this matter.

See? Egypt must respect its agreements, except for Israel. Yeah, go back to jail, loser.

The Palestinian democracy charade begins: Abbas is going to have his cabinet resign. Then he’s going to appoint them back. The creepiest thing about this? I agree with what a Hamas spokesliar said. Ew. I need to shower.

“This is silly theater,” said Hamas official Fawzi Barhoum. He accused Abbas of trying to fool people into thinking that genuine reform was underway.

Posted in Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, palestinian politics, World | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

A Tiggy valentine

This is as close as I come to a valentine greeting:

Tigger and chocolate bag

This is what happens when you OD on chocolate. Be careful tomorrow, or you’ll end up like Tig.

Posted in Cats | 5 Comments

Is the barbarism unimaginable? Maybe, but it’s all part of self-defence, a freedom-struggle, martyrdom

Kaye Wilson, a person whose personal courage is hard to describe, tells in mute tones, much of it  understatement, about the horrific experience at the hand of two petty criminals turned terrorists. They butchered her friend, Kristine Luken, they stabbed Kaye repeatedly and then they returned to finish her off, the part she doesn’t tell in this article. Only her superb self-control, her ability to keep quiet when they stabbed her again, saved her life.

Wilson was stabbed 12 times, four of her ribs were broken, along with two other bones in her chest, and she underwent surgery to repair damage to her diaphragm. She walks slowly now, with visible pain. Her dog, who was also stabbed in the attack, never leaves her side.

The four mugs above have a long history of mayhem:

Police believe that the same cell carried out the murder of 53-year-old Netta Blatt-Sorek, a resident of Zichron Ya’akov, whose body was found a year ago near the Jerusalem-area monastery of Beit Jamal last year. The militants are suspected in two cases of attempted murder, one count of rape, another of attempted rape, seven incidents of robbery, seven cases of breaking-and-entering, and for shooting at an Israeli military jeep.

Two murders, one woman mutilated, rape, robbery, and only one case of something that could be remotely classified as “resistance”. It is significant that their “freedom fight” was assisted by the legal hurdles related to the missing part of the border fence (the “wall” in the do-gooders language):

The gap in the separation fence in the Hebron Hills area, through which the terror squad uncovered Wednesday apparently entered, is the the largest gap to adjoin a residential area. The hole extends for about 12 kilometers, from southern Jerusalem to the village of Jaba, south of the Gush Etzion settlement bloc.The delay in building the fence in this area apparently stems from a petition to the High Court of Justice. But Shaul Arieli, an expert on the fence from the Council for Peace and Security, claims that were the state determined to build the fence in this area, it could do so without any problem.

But back to the question raised in the headline of this post. To answer it, let’s look and see what a man of learning, respected philosopher, Ted (Edgar Dawn Ross) Honderich has to say on the subject:

Terrorism, as in this case, can as exactly be self-defence, a freedom-struggle, martyrdom, the conclusion of an argument based on true humanity, etc.

I guess now, partaking of the wisdom of higher learning, you, the reader, will be able to imagine the barbarism.

Of course, knowing some of you, I guess that a stray thought about our professor getting stabbed 12 times, with some of his ribs broken, along with some other bones, while on a walk around, say, Quebec (by a French separatist) or in, say, Northern Ireland, by a zealous Catholic insurgent…

But perish the thought. You see, neither a French brave nor an Irish zealot will do this.

So, imagine…

Cross-posted on SimplyJews

Posted in Israel, Terrorism | 7 Comments

The media pass along lies of Turkey’s inquiry as truth

When the Israeli Turkel Committee’s report came out exonerating the IDF in the Mavi Marmara incident, the AP included a breakdown of who served on the committee. Reuters mentioned the video footage that showed “activists” attacking Israeli soldiers in an article critical of the use of paintball guns (which is actually very objective).

Television footage showed the activists attacking marines with clubs, iron bars and at least one knife.

The Deutsche-Press Agenter takes the time to expand upon the commission, its reliance on video evidence, but not until after the obligatory anti-Israel five-paragraph lead. The AFP, of course, slants anti-Israel, quoting liberally from the Turks.

The Irish Times presented a very fair and objective piece. NPR used the AP story to present a fair picture that showed the breakdown of the Turkel Committee. The Independent embedded a video in its story (which also detailed the makeup of the Committee and its investigation), although of course the article is slanted as anti-Israel as they could make it. Even the Hindustan Times managed to publish an article that pointed out the international observers on the investigation, placed there to blunt attacks on the committee’s credibility.

Now compare this to the AP report of the Turkish investigation into the Mavi Marmara incident. There is no information whatsoever on the makeup of the committee. There is no mention of the makeup of the Turkish investigation, except to note that the foreign minister—who is quoted throughout the article—was on the committee. Interestingly, none of the Turkel Committee members spoke to the press. The AP story repeates the Turkish accusations uncritically, even when they are known to be untrue and contradicted by video evidence. Just look at this lead paragraph:

A Turkish committee investigating Israel’s deadly raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla has refuted Israeli claims that its soldiers acted in self-defense, saying at least two activists were killed before commandos boarded the ship and another died “execution-style” as he lay injured.

Note the language in bold. Israel’s contentions are “claims.” The word’s implied meaning is that they are not true. Of course, what Turkey “says” is taken at face value. There should be a refutation of the lie that Israel killed two “activists” before boarding the ship, but there is none.

On a side note, once again, there is a major PR fail by Israel.

In Jerusalem, Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said he could not comment on the Turkish findings because he had not seen the report.

Palmor said Israel had submitted its own report to the U.N. and was waiting to hear “what lessons could be learned so this doesn’t happen again.”

Instead of the above, the Ministry should have been ready with its own talking points based on the Turkel Committe’s report. The tone of the AP article would be very different if it looked like, say, this (boldface is made up by me as an example of what could have been said):

In Jerusalem, Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said he could not comment on the Turkish findings because he had not seen the report. But he reiterated that the Turkel Committee had exonerated the IDF commandoes, saying they had acted in self-defense after being attacked by activists onboard the ship.

As an example, when the Turkel report came out, Turkey’s Islamist president made sure that he put on a big enough fuss to get picked up in his own article by the AP. The Islamists are running circles around Israel in the PR war. Let me put it this way: If words were weapons, Israel would have been defeated in the mid-70s, when the Palestinians ramped up the PR war and Israel continued to not understand how valuable the sound-bite is on television.

When the AP does finally quote the Turkel report, it does so in the last three paragraphs of the article, after repeating uncritically the ridiculous claims of the Turkish report. This one is my favorite made-up accusation:

Another activist, Cevdet Kiliclar, was killed with laser-guided weapons while taking photographs, the report said.

Always the innocent bystander excuse. None of the “activists” above decks that night were innocent. The IDF released a slew of video evidence showing the activists preparing to attack, and then attacking them. But for the AP, there’s no such thing as asking for evidence. And remember, they actually declined to accept the videos from the IDF, saying they had no way of knowing if the videos had been tampered with (which is absolutely false; videographers have excellent methods of determining the validity of a video).

This is, once again, not just media bias. This is also Israel’s problem. Israel needs to ramp up its PR department at the Foreign Ministry, at the IDF, at every office and institution so it can begin to change the anti-Israel bent of so many media stories. Or it can just stand by and watch the delegitimization of Israel, aided and abetted by the anti-Israel media.

Posted in AP Media Bias, Israel, Media Bias, Turkey | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

There arose in Egypt…???

“Pharaoh is gone.” Mubarak is no longer the leader of Egypt. The military is going to hold down the fort and will most certainly end the emergency laws in place for the past 30 years as soon as circumstances allow. When might circumstances allow? Pardon my asking.

There was no doubt that in order to end the protests in Tahrir Square, Mubarak had to officially step down and Suleiman, his Vice President, could not be immediately named his successor. There was no doubt that the military had to step in. But if anyone says that they lack doubt as to what the future holds, either days, weeks, months or years, they are either not telling the truth or are deluded into believing that they are.

The military will rule indefinitely. Might military rule end with an election in September? Will there even be an election in September? Who will be allowed to run if there is? Will the military follow the commands of the Muslim Brotherhood should they be allowed to run and to win?

What has happened today with Mubarak’s resignation is that uncertainty has come to rule the region. If Mubarak in Egypt, then certainly the King of  Jordan and no few other leaders are in jeopardy. In a region ruled by dictators long friendly with us, America has now taken a stand against them. To state that this has potentially profound consequences for American foreign policy would be a dramatic understatement.

Today is a day of joy and freedom. Pharaoh is gone. Today is also a day of fear and trepidation. We hope that the new leader will be one who forgets not Joseph or at least is one who doesn’t want to drive his people into the sea.

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Friday Egypt briefs

He’s in! He’s out! He’s in! He’s out! Does anyone know what’s going on in Egypt? Beats me, but you know who really doesn’t know what’s going on in Egypt? Our incredibly smart president, the one who everyone said was going to restore America’s image in the world, make our allies realize how great we are, and our enemies quake in fear. Shyeah. Good one, Barack. They’re still laughing in Mubarak’s house. Yep. The 3 a.m. phone call came, and it went unanswered.

Say, you know who does know what’s going on in Egypt? Barry Rubin. What he wrote before Mubarak’s speech:

A. Mubarak stays on. The army stays behind him and is ready to suppress disorders if necessary. He makes some reforms and concessions but does not give way.

[…] Looks like its Option A.

Too bad the media keep on saying Barry’s a “jaundiced” hawk. If they’d listen to him, they’d know what’s going on. But then, our Director of National Intelligence is telling Obama that the Muslim Brotherhood is “largely secular,” the CIA director is getting intel by watching CNN, and it sure seems like the Three Stooges are in charge of U.S. foreign policy these days. (If you really want to get scared and depressed, read Barry’s latest column.)

Iranian Irony: The tone-deafness of the Mad Mullahs and Mad Mahmoud astonishes me. They’re proclaiming a new Middle East even while the dictator of Egypt remains (and still calls the shots), and are utterly oblivious to the fact that the people of Egypt are doing exactly what the people of Iran did last year. Don’t think the Iranians aren’t noticing that Barry’s finally supporting the protesters. Oh, wait. The Iranians figured that out. They arrested the head of the opposition again. Our best-case scenario: The Iranians try again, and this time, Obama supports them. Only with arms and money. Oh, never mind. I was on Bizarro World for a moment. Sheer fantasy.

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So…What if?

Let us for a moment ask, “What if the Muslim Brotherhood comes to control Egypt?” Let us in addition argue that this would not be in the form of an Iran-esque theocracy, but a Turkish style Islamist democracy. I wrote an article for We Are For Israel on this question earlier. This is not an inconsequential question.

Egypt could be expected to aid flotillas into Gaza and to make it much easier for arms shipments and other deliveries to enter Gaza. Israel would then likely need to retake the Gaza border with Egypt and/or would need to place more troops on that border than ever before. Israel would additionally need to dramatically increase its military strength all along the Egyptian border because Egyptian troops would not be trusted to prevent incursion by militants, even if they could be trusted not to participate or directly aid in the incursions. Obviously, all previous agreements between Israel and Egypt would be in question either officially or unofficially.

The Palestinian Authority faces the possibility that its greatest supporter, Egypt, would suddenly become a supporter of its arch enemy, Hamas. The PA has been holding “We love Mubarak” rallies throughout the West Bank. Suddenly the PA’s best ally will be Israel. *I guess that I shouldn’t say this publicly because the PA would then be accused of being traitors to the Arab cause. Israel must be a hated enemy and the cause of all evil.

Jordan would have its best allies (Egypt and America) fomenting rebellion within its borders. It is almost a certainty that Jordan’s rhetoric regarding Israel in the months ahead will be much more hostile than it has previously been. This will be so as to avoid being accused of being a friend of Israel. Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority’s leadership all have applied for and received Jordanian citizenship. This, just in case Jordan turns into a Palestinian state after all.

Saudi Arabia would face a highly hostile Egypt battling for hegemony in the region that will attempt to foment Islamist rebellion in the kingdom at every turn. Worse, for the King and his family, is the clear indication that the United States would abandon its close ally at the drop of a hat in favor of a hostile democratic rebellion within its borders.

So, looking at what is actually happening in Egypt, is it any wonder that the Saudis have told the Obama Administration where to place its proverbial oil rig? Is it any wonder that the Saudis have come to the aid of Mubarak, threatening to replace any aid that America would deny, and likely will or are coming to the aid of the leaders in Jordan and Yemen as well? Is it any wonder that America is no longer seen as a friend and supporter, but now as a potential threat for emboldening revolt? It is indeed a wonder that among Egypt’s best friends, among the Palestinian Authority’s best friends, among the Saudi’s best friends, is Israel!

We now look at a Middle East in which the peoples and nations that were/are at war with Israel find common cause with it against Iran, against Political Islam, and against America’s foment of insurrection.

It is indeed a strange new world.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, palestinian politics, Saudi Arabia, World | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

The Palestinian PR machine

A few days ago, IDF soldiers helped a Palestinian woman give birth, and saved her baby’s life as well. The mainstream media ignored it.

Yesterday, an Israeli woman went into labor and had her baby in a Palestinian hospital. The wire services are all over it.

What’s the difference between the two stories? Well, first of all, the IDF saving a baby goes against the narrative. Secondly, the Israeli PR machine is practically nonexistent, while the Palestinian PR machine is always there, always ready with a quote, and constantly feeds stories to the media. And lastly, well, the media have a problem with Israel, as the anti-Israel slant of most news stories shows.

Just look at the subhead on the CBS news AP feed: “Israeli Woman’s Birth In Palestinian Hospital Warmly Welcomed With Official Visits, Flowers.” The narrative? The friendly Palestinians are ready to be good neighbors with Israel. Why, Mahmoud Abbas even sent flowers to the woman. And told the hospital not to charge her.

Now, the story about the Palestinian woman whose baby was saved by the IDF? You can’t find it outside the Israeli and Jewish media. It’s in JTA, the JPost, Ynet, and a few other spots. So whose fault is it that this story didn’t get carried?

Israel’s. Where is the PR from the IDF about soldiers saving a baby’s life? Where are the news releases and pictures of cute babies? Why is there not a constant flow of good news to counter the bad news that the media pounds us with? Hasbara is not working.

This is an argument that you’ve seen throughout the JBlogosphere, and it’s one that Israelis need to finally have among themselves. Years ago, the Israeli ambassador to the U.S. was visiting my synagogue, and a fellow congregant and I were trying to impress upon him how Israel was losing the PR war. He kept repeating the figures of the polls that show Americans support Israel, always, over the Palestinians. Not the point. The point is that Israel is constantly demonized, and the Palestinians are constantly whitewashed. Take this story, for example. The media show how friendly Abbas is, sending flowers and comping the hospital bill, but that same media did not take much notice ofwords like these:

“We have frankly said, and always will say: If there is an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital, we won’t agree to the presence of one Israeli in it,” Abbas told reporters in Ramallah.

You had to go to the Israeli press for that quote. I can’t find it anywhere else.

There’s one last angle of this story that doesn’t get very much play: The woman in question converted to Islam, and married a Muslim. That made a world of difference in how she was treated. Just ask Gaza’s Christians. Or the Israelis who make a wrong turn in the West Bank and have to be rescued by the Palestinian security forces.

Posted in Israel, Media Bias | Tagged , | 4 Comments