Fool Flotilla threatening violence

The Free Gaza ships are on their way to their clash with the Israeli Navy. They’ve already had their communications blocked, suffered some technical mishaps that they blame on Israel (of course; who else but Jews are capable of causing everything, everywhere, to fail on command?), and the refusal of Cyprus to go along with their propaganda stunt. Oh, and they’re threatening violence.

Meanwhile the Navy is preparing to intercept the boats. One of the organizers, Dror Feiler, told Army Radio Sunday that the hundreds of pro-Palestinian activists aboard the ships will passively resist if Israeli seamen board the vessels.

“Israel has no right to invade the ships. It would be a foolish decision on its part,” another activist said.

The Israeli navy is sending in a trained squad of commandos who have already practiced boarding boats and removing people. Can’t wait to see the video on this one.

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Saturday news dump

This is huge, huge news that was dumped on the Friday of Memorial Day Weekend, so the major media outlets are mostly ignoring it.

The Obama administration threw Israel under the bus again. The NPT conference ended with all 189 countries—the U.S. included—issuing a statement that names Israel, and only Israel, when calling for a nuclear-free Middle East. It does not name Iran or Syria, two nations that were on the nuclear weapons track. It calls on Israel, and only Israel, to join the NPT, which Israel has never signed. Iran is a signatory. The document does not call on Iran to stop pursuing nuclear weapons.

The Obama adminstration’s spin on this is to “oppose” the singling out of Israel—yet the United States signed onto the document’s release, and therefore, approved of the singling out of Israel. Listen to Obama spin:

“The United States has long supported such a zone, although our view is that a comprehensive and durable peace in the region and full compliance by all regional states with their arms control and nonproliferation obligations are essential precursors for its establishment,” he said.

“We strongly oppose efforts to single out Israel, and will oppose actions that jeopardize Israel’s national security.”

Really? Then why did you allow the U.S. to sign the document? General Jim Jones, same story:

Taking the toughest line, U.S. National Security Adviser Gen. James Jones said in a statement Friday night that the United States has “serious reservations” about the 2012 conference and believes Mideast peace and full compliance by all countries in the region to their arms control and nonproliferation obligations “are essential precursors.” The compliance demand appeared to be aimed at Iran, which the U.S. believes is pursuing a nuclear weapons program despite Tehran’s claims its only goal is nuclear power.

Jones also strongly defended longtime U.S. ally Israel, which was singled out for not being a member of the NPT. He said the United States “deplores” the naming of Israel which puts prospects for the 2012 conference “in doubt.” As a cosponsor of the conference, Jones said the United States will ensure that it will only takes place “if and when all countries feel confident that they can attend.”

And yet, the United States signed onto the release of the document as is. What is this, the “Well, we really didn’t mean it” school of diplomacy?

The reaction from Israel wasn’t hard to guess: They’re telling the NPT to take a hike.

Hefetz added, “As a country that has not signed the NPT, Israel is not bound by the conference’s decision. Due to the decision’s distorted nature, Israel will not take part in its implementation.”

The subject will be coming up during next week’s Washington visit by Netanyahu. That should be a fun discussion. By the way, watch for Obama to give Bibi the Grade-A treatment in an attempt to get Jewish Democratic donors to open their purses again. Here’s hoping they’re not that stupid.

Posted in Israeli Double Standard Time, The One | Tagged , | 2 Comments

“Worsen conditions”

China’s Xinhau news service has this misleading headline:

Israel to worsen condition of Hamas prisoners

Read the article and this tells you how bad Hamas prisoners would have it:

According to the bills, prisoners in Israeli jails who were convicted for joining terrorist organizations will be barred from meeting family and receiving newspapers.

What is really going on:

In an attempt to put pressure on the Hamas leadership in Gaza to release Gilad Schalit, the Ministerial Committee for Legislation this week approved a bill that, if ratified, would take away some of the amenities enjoyed by Hamas terrorists currently incarcerated in Israeli prisons, including many captured by the IDF during December 2008-January 2009’s Operation Cast Lead. No longer would these inmates be allowed to enjoy the cultural edification of multi-channel cable TV. Nor would they be permitted to pursue a higher education through Israel’s Open University. Access to books and visits by relatives might be curtailed. Prolonged isolation of prisoners is also being considered.

Obviously, the Geneva Convention governing the proper treatment of prisoners would not be compromised. Prisoners would continue to have access to lawyers and medical treatment.

And as long as the International committed of Red Cross doesn’t insist on visiting Gilad Schalit as should be dictated by international law, it’s hard to see where the international community could object to Israel curtailing some extras to Hamas prisoners.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

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

Fool Flotilla delayed

Oh noes! The Flotilla of Fools can’t arrive on schedule. They’ll have to deal with the dreaded Saturday news dearth!

The flotilla sailing to Gaza has postponed its arrival in the Strip to Saturday. The ships taking part in the sail were scheduled to gather at a meeting point and head towards the Strip on Friday evening.

Greta Berlin of the Free Gaza Movement told Ynet that the arrival of the vessels to the meeting point has been delayed by several hours due to a technical problem in one of the ships.

I, for one, will be waiting breathlessly by CNN for video footage of the atrocities that will doubtless occur: Cynthia McKinney manhandled by the IDF, people thrown overboard by the fascist soldiers, forced to wait in air-conditioned tents while they’re being processed for illegal entry into Israel—wow, can’t wait!

Actually, I’ll be setting up the house for an invasion of my nephews and niece, who will be spending the night here. They’ll be far more interesting than the Free Gaza morons, doubtlessly smarter, and decidedly more fun.

Posted in Gaza, Israel Derangement Syndrome | Tagged , | 2 Comments

The poverty of Gaza

In Defying Blockade, Cargo and Passenger Vessels Head for Gaza, Isabel Kershner of the New York Times reports:

In a sarcastic e-mail message to reporters this week, Israel’s Government Press Office recommended a high-end restaurant in Gaza, the Roots Club, attaching the menu and a link to its Web site. “We have been told the beef stroganoff and cream of spinach soup are highly recommended,” the office said. The restaurant would, of course, be out of reach for most of Gaza’s 1.5 million residents. Israeli military officials put unemployment there at almost 40 percent.

International organizations active in Gaza paint a bleaker picture. A United Nations Development Program report published on Sunday determined that about three-quarters of the damage caused by Israel’s military offensive in Gaza in the winter of 2008-9 had not yet been repaired. And a report by the United Nations humanitarian coordinator blamed the blockade for “suffocating” the agricultural sector in Gaza and said that insufficient food was now a problem in more than 60 percent of households.

Yes, international organizations in Gaza paint a bleaker picture. But is it a more accurate picture. The other day I noted a Financial Times report that mentioned that there’s such a glut of luxury items in Gaza – smuggled through tunnels – that prices are falling! If Gazans are thriving without the relief organizations, the organizations have reason to deny that; they don’t want to lose their or perceived usefulness.

Additionally, it’s dishonest and unfar to portray Israel as being cruel for preventing building materials into Gaza, when Hamas would use construction materials to reinforce its military infrastructure:

With regard to the military networks: Hamas is rebuilding and strives to upgrade its military-terrorist wing (the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades). That includes replacing the weapons lost with new ones (including advanced weapons) by smuggling them in through the tunnels (despite Egypt’s intensive counter-activities). So far Hamas has smuggled in dozens of standard rockets, hundreds of mortar shells, dozens of anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles, and tens of tons of standard explosives and raw materials for the manufacture of homemade weapons. The smuggling allows Hamas to extend the range of its rockets and to improve its anti-tank and anti-aircraft capabilities. In addition, the tunnel system in the Rafah region is in use again and is a vital channel for smuggling weapons (as well as food, equipment and fuel). Weapons are being manufactured again, and military training and instruction have been renewed (although for the time being theIzz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades are keeping a lower profile than they did before Operation Cast Lead).

With regard to security systems: Hamas is particularly concerned about restoring its internal security forces, which were severely damaged by the fighting, and to strengthen its control over the Gaza Strip. Five months after the end of Operation Cast Lead, Hamas succeeded in restoring the forces’ daily functioning, as can be seen by their increased deployment and visibility. The oppression of Hamas opponents (primarily Fatah) has been renewed to ensure that they do not try to regroup. In addition, new operatives are being recruited and an emergency exercise was being held to simulate emergency deployment and dealing with an Israel attack (a lesson learned from the blow delivered by the IDF at the beginning of Operation Cast Lead). Headquarters have been assigned temporary quarters, most of them in civilian locations, to find solutions, even temporary, for the problems involved in restoring the apparatuses which were attacked.

Kershner also fails to acknowledge that Hamas, by now, is partly responsible for the housing crisis in Gaza.

Nidal Eid was praised by Hamas officials as an example of anti-Zionist resistance when he managed to build a house here last year despite an Israeli blockade that barred the import of any building materials. But earlier this week, his house was the first to be demolished by the Hamas government, which said it had been illegally built on public land.

Bulldozers, accompanied by Hamas forces and police officers who beat residents with sticks, razed at least 25 houses, including some concrete structures here in Rafah, the southernmost city of Gaza.

Even as Kershner reports on the poverty in Gaza, tthere is plenty of evidnece that goods are getting through. And there’s good reason for Israel to prohibit the importing of construction materials. This reminds me of Tony Blair’s sister-in-law, Lauren Booth. Two years ago she went to Gaza claiming that it was a “concentration camp.” Of course photographs of her in a fully stocked grocery store.

But Lauren Booth was an anti-Israel activist. Isn’t Isabel Kershner supposed to be reporting the news? Even the information that contradicts the popular impression that Israel is starving the residents of Gaza.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Posted in Israel | 1 Comment

Friday forgot the header briefs

A failed assassination attempt, or sheer incompetence? Mahmoud Abbas drove his own daughter to the hospital after discovering his entire guard detail was missing. A third theory: It was a warning. And you simply have to love the nerve of the Palestinian spokesliar. He says it’s all a fabrication. Uh-huh.

Noam Chomsky: Modern-day kapo. Unbelievable. He tells the spiritual leader of Hizballah, the terrorist group that threatens to destroy Israel on a regular basis, that Israel could turn aggressive any moment because Israel has a persecution complex. Moron. Hassan Nasrallah is the one who said he hoped that the Jews from around the world would gather in Israel, so he could kill them all. Where do you think he got it from? Psst—that means you, too, Noam.

Flotilla of Fools ready with their Nazi analogies: Gaza is a concentration camp, the tents that the IDF set up for processing the illegal entry into Israel waters are concentration camps, Nazi this, yadda yadda yadda. Oh, and it seems that the Nobel laureate is the Irish anti-Semite Mairead Corrigan. Cynthia McKinney is also probably on one of the ships, as I can’t think of another anti-Israel former Democratic Congresswoman. The ships are near, by the way—the cameras and live feeds have already started rolling.

He can’t win for losing: Okay, I don’t like Rahm Emanuel. But he has every right to have his son’s bar mitzvah in Jerusalem without being bothered. That being said, the guy can’t catch a break from either side.

When the Emanuels visited the market in the Muslim Quarter, they were greeted by vendors who said, “Asalam aleikum,” Arabic for “welcome and peace be upon you.” After they left, the vendors criticized Emanuel, calling him an Israeli representative in the White House who could not be trusted.

Think of the child. This is his big occasion, and a few jerks are making it incredibly difficult. I have to say, I have no problem with the police arresting the hecklers. This isn’t about Rahm. This is about his son.

Posted in Gaza, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Lebanon, Religion | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Fool Flotilla to be met with counter-protest

Awesome.

A fleet of privately owned Israeli boats will leave the Ashdod and Herzliya marinas in hopes of surprising the European activists Friday at 1 p.m.

The counter flotilla ships will be covered in “Free Gaza from Hamas” banners and boat owners will wear blood stained tee shirts, representing Hamas’s terror record. The demonstration will be funded by StandWithUs and individual donors.

The organization described their “Free Gaza from Hamas” flotilla as a “counter PR stunt.”

The Free Gaza flotilla is filled with people who have high expectations.

The strategy of the Freedom Flotilla, however, is to resist any attempts by the Israeli Navy to hijack its ships or to divide cargo ships from passenger vessels.

Yeah, good luck with that, bub. My money’s on the Israeli Navy. And I sure hope they go forward with this:

Another participant suggested that a collection of rockets that had been fired at the Sderot area from Gaza be put on display at Ashdod Port for the activists and foreign media to see.

I’m trying to find a list of dignitaries, but can’t. If anyone can find a list of actual names, rather than “a Nobel laureate” in some news article, let me know. I do want to know which fools, exactly, are in the Fool Flotilla.

Posted in Gaza, Israel Derangement Syndrome | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Strong but empty words

Jennifer Rubin observed last week:

At a signing ceremony for the Freedom of Press Act, it is ironic and shameful that Obama could not bring himself to identify the killers who beheaded the man who fearlessly reported on the jihadist terrorists.

Here are a few data points.

Heather Robinson recalls the plight of Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury.

However Choudhury, via e-mail from Dhaka, tells me that the government of Bangladesh continues to harass him, using tactics such as summoning him to trial and making him stand for entire days in rooms without air conditioning, only to dismiss him when no “witnesses” show up for the trial.

Most troubling, Choudhury says that, since the election of President Obama, the U.S. Embassy has stopped monitoring his case.

“Though there is a statement in the State Department’s report…the U.S. Embassy has stopped monitoring my case since Mr. Obama became the President,” he writes.

Such an absence of monitoring is especially significant and troubling in a case such as this, because in the past, the Bangladeshi government has arrested, incarcerated, and even tortured Choudhury when the powers that be felt they could get away with it, according to Dr. Richard Benkin, an American human rights activist who helped to secure Choudhury’s release from prison in 2004.

Barry Rubin catches the State Department somewhat less than enthusiastic about fighting Pakistani censorship.

In addition, it’s farcical for Crowley to characterize what is occurring in Pakistan “dialogue and debate” over such matters. This is a country where Christians are persecuted and murdered (with no Western protest, members of the Ahmadis sect are discriminated against, and is a world center of antisemitism. Often, Christians are beaten or murdered for allegedly having done something “offensive” regarding Islam. Unfortunately, in the Muslim-majority world when governments do “outreach to minority religious groups” it’s for the purpose of strangling them.

This question came within a few hours of the president signing a bill claiming to champion freedom of the press against foreign enemies of media liberty. Oh, by the way, has anyone else noticed that in signing a media freedom bill in honor of Daniel Pearl, President Obama never once mentioned that the reporter was murdered by radical Islamists in Pakistan? Here’s a good example of trying not to cause offense curtailing free speech (and the recognition of reality).

Of course, Crowley is right in saying governments should safeguard free speech. But all the meaning is drained out of this since “robust legal protections against…hate crimes” includes in most countries steps that do punish free speech. That goes for Canada, the Netherlands, and many other places. So how can you deal with this very real contradiction unless you acknowledge that the mere act of speech—unless it involves a direct threat of violence or other regular crime—is never a hate crime. By the way, isn’t that what was taken for granted in American law until a few years ago.

Finally there’s the case of Khaled abu Toameh:

The former PLO “ambassador” to Australia, Ali Kazak, believes that an Arab journalist who writes about financial corruption and theft in the Palestinian Authority is a “traitor” who should be murdered the same way as collaborators were killed by the French Resistance.

Kazak told the newspaper, The Australian: “Khaled Abu Toameh is a traitor. Traitors were also murdered by the French Resistance, in Europe; this happens everywhere.”

Asked why he calls the journalist a traitor, the former PLO representative, who lives in Australia, explained: “Palestinians are the victims. He shouldn’t write about them, he should write about the crimes of the Israelis.”

Kazak’s threat does not come as a surprise to those who are familiar with the methods used by Arab dictatorships to silence anyone who dares to demand reforms and transparency.

I don’t expect the administration to do much on this count either.

President Obama said at the ceremony mentioned by Jennifer Rubin:

All around the world there are enormously courageous journalists and bloggers who, at great risk to themselves, are trying to shine a light on the critical issues that the people of their country face; who are the frontlines against tyranny and oppression.

Those are good strong words. But the President’s inaction in the face of specific threats to freedom of speech render these words empty and meaningless.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

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Thursday on my mind briefs

Whoops! No more access for Reuters in Gaza: Reuters publishes a piece critical of Hamas by way of the al Qaeda wannabes trying to set up Gazastan. Hilarity ensues. Don’t you love how the author tries desperately to not blame Hamas for its own problems while also blaming Hamas for its own problems? There’s even a bit of schadenfreude from the PA:

“Hamas raised its members in the belief that Fatah and other non-Hamas parties were secular and infidels and now Hamas is suffering from its own incitement,” Assaf said.

[snicker]

Free Gaza Movement: Hey, we’re not in this for the Jews—screw that Shalit guy! If you ever wanted proof that the “activists” who say they’re protesting human rights aren’t really protesting about human rights, well, the Shalit family just gave you some more. They approached the Free Gaza movement and offered to fully back the flotilla if they would also demand that Hamas allow Gilad Shalit to receive packages and visits from his family. The Free Gaza movement refused. Because they’re not in it because they’re pro-human rights. They’re in it because they’re anti-Israel.

One spy tale, two takes: The AP article’s angle on the Arab Israeli charged with espionage is that it’s all smoke and mirrors, and Israel is mean to its Israeli Arab minority. The charges are dismissed early on in the article as politically motivated, even though by the end of the article you learn that these aren’t the only Arab Israelis accused of spying for Hezbollah, and, what do you know, some were actually convicted. Then you go to the Ynet news piece, and the espionage charge? Just a little offer to spy for Hezbollah, encrypted computer files, the exact location of Mossad agency operations, oh, and try to get information on the security details of Israel’s Prime Minister and Defense Minister. I would also like to take the time to point out that if Ynet has the indictment, the AP can easily have it. But why let the facts spoil a good anti-Israel narrative? Watch for the AP to highlight the charges of “severe interrogation techniques” and ignore the facts above.

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Lunchtime briefs

Palestinian spokesliars strike again; media complies: According to the AP, 15 civilians were hurt an an airstrike that targeted a Hamas training camp. Amazing, how many civilians were hanging around the Hamas training camp. Why, it’s almost as if the Palestinians were lying to the AP or something. But no, reporters always investigate the facts of the story. They don’t simply repeat propaganda.

The Fool Flotilla: Israel has asked the “activists” who are attempting to land their ships in Gaza to land them in Israel and send their supplies over land, through the crossings. The “activists,” of course, refuse. The IDF is now saying that their action is a provocation. Um—duh! By the way, here are some stats:

According to data provided by the security establishment, 100 trucks enter Gaza every day. Over the past few months, these trucks have delivered, among other things, over 1,200 tons of medicines and medical equipment, 155 tons of food, 2,900 tons of clothes and footwear and close to 17 million liters (about 3.85 million gallons) of diesel oil, the army said.

But don’t let that interfere with the narrative. Gazans are starving! And homeless! And without medical supplies!

Uh-huh.

Posted in Gaza, Hamas, Israel, News Briefs | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Lies my Fatah told me

The headline reads Abbas: Second intifada was one of our worst mistakes
The first paragraph reads:

“The second intifada was one of our worst mistakes,” Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told an Egyptian television station on Wednesday. “[Late Palestinian leader Yasser] Arafat didn’t want the intifada to erupt, but he couldn’t stop it,” he added.

Which is, of course, a lie.

As a spy, Mr. Yousef wasn’t fully activated until the outbreak of the second Intifada in September 2000. A few months before at Camp David, the late PLO chief Yasser Arafat had turned down the Israeli offer of statehood on 90% of the West Bank with East Jerusalem as the capital. According to Mr. Yousef, Arafat decided he needed another uprising to win back international attention. So he sought out Hamas’s support through Sheikh Yousef, writes his son, who accompanied him to Arafat’s compound. Those meetings took place before the Palestinian authorities found a pretext for the second Intifada. It came when future Prime Minister Ariel Sharon visited the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, site of the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. Mr. Yousef’s account helps to set straight the historical record that the uprising was premeditated by Arafat.

A few paragraphs later we read:

On Wednesday, Abbas said that “peace can be achieved in no more than one week, but only if Israel is willing.” He added that the establishment of a Palestinian state has been delayed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government. “They must understand that peace is in their interest,” he declared.

Again, this is a lie.

“In November 2008… Let me finish… [Israeli prime minister Ehud] Olmert, who talked today about his proposal to Abu Mazen, offered the 1967 borders, but said: ‘We will take 6.5% of the West Bank, and give in return 5.8% from the 1948 lands, and the 0.7% will constitute the safe passage, and East Jerusalem will be the capital, but there is a problem with the Haram and with what they called the Holy Basin.’ Abu Mazen too answered with defiance, saying: ‘I am not in a marketplace or a bazaar. I came to demarcate the borders of Palestine – the June 4, 1967 borders – without detracting a single inch, and without detracting a single stone from Jerusalem, or from the holy Christian and Muslim places.’ This is why the Palestinian negotiators did not sign…”

Shocker! The Palestinian leader is a serial liar. Unfortunately, lies have been a big part of the Palestinian narrative that is so accepted internationally, even in the West. That acceptances allows the Palestinians to lie with impunity. Abbas is so caught up in a fantasy world, he would not know the truth if it introduced itself by name and shook his hand.

These lies go back to the very beginning:

The disputed territories, together with the territories that are now Israel and Jordan, were originally (in Biblical and post-Biblical times) Jewish kingdoms, and for most of the last seven centuries part of the Ottoman Empire. After the defeat and disintegration of the Ottoman Empire in the wake of the First World War, the League of Nations divided most of its former possessions in the 1922 peace conference. The Arabs were granted rights to most of the formerly Turkish-controlled lands, to an area that was 500 times larger in size than the small area reserved for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The British received an international mandate over Palestine because they undertook to establish a Jewish national home there, which the League considered as an act of “restoration” of ancient Jewish rights to the land — rights that outweighed any Arab claims based on later conquest and residence.

At first, the Arab representatives to the Versailles conference gladly accepted this division. It gave them control over vast areas lost centuries ago, without requiring them to sacrifice hundreds of thousands of soldiers, as the Allies had, to liberate these lands from Turkish dominion. They did not then consider the tiny sliver of South Syrian wasteland, known to Jews as Judea and Samaria and to the Europeans as the Holy Land, of any significance, politically or religiously, and were happy to give it up in exchange for what they so surprisingly gained. The Emir Faisal, who represented the Arabs, signed a draft agreement with the Zionist movement, welcoming the Jews back to their homeland and pledging cooperation.

So the disputed territories of the West Bank and the Gaza strip were never “Palestinian lands” — neither as national patrimony nor as private property. In fact, until the institution of the British mandate, the Holy Land never had a separate political identity or a distinct people inhabiting it. It was a neglected province of South Syria, whose few and destitute Arab inhabitants considered themselves South Syrians. As Bernard Lewis notes, “From the end of the Jewish state in antiquity to the beginning of British rule, the area now designated by the name Palestine was not a country and had no frontiers, only administrative boundaries… within a larger entity” of Syria.

Indeed, to date, 93 percent of the land in what was the British Mandate — including the lands of the West Bank — are still government-owned. They were so despoiled, malaria-infected, and sparsely populated that no private owners evinced any interest in owning them, so they were kept by the sultan and then inherited by the British mandate in safekeeping for the Jews.

Some are gross exaggerations:

Jibril Rajoub (March 30, on MAHAD TV, a local television station in Ramallah) accused Israel of carrying out a “massacre,” executing 30 Palestinians in Ramallah. The announcement was also broadcast on Al Jazeera and other stations.

The reality, of course, is different: in battles which took place on that day in Ramallah, 9 Palestinians were killed – all of them armed.

and echoed even to this day in different contexts.

Some are used to undermine Israel’s legitimacy.

The big, compelling reason people who claim to be ‘friends’ of Israel are pressuring them to give up the country’s heartland to the Arabs is the so-called demographic bomb..the idea that the Arab birthrate is rapidly overtaking the Jewish one and that Israel had better do this now or face being a minority in the area between the Jordan and the Mediterranean.

It’s a myth, as I’ve discussed before and anyone who looks at the actual numbers ought to realize it out of hand.

Barry Shaw is correct:

A fiction has been allowed to take hold. This fiction is known as the Palestinian narrative. It is the creation of a myth that has been told repeatedly so many times that it has been accepted as fact.

The falsehoods have been regurgitated endlessly in the media as to become the standard mantra. The message has become the rallying cry around which support groups are formed. Immense budgets are given to forward part of the agenda that is contained in the narrative. Activists take to the podium, the media, the unviersities, and to the streets. Any voice that challenges the veracity of the campaign is muted, ignored, suppressed, and even impeded with violence.

The accepted narrative is used to criticise, condemn, delegitimise, and even question the validity of the other side.

I represent the other side. I now say enough! Enough of the lies! It is time to fight back! It is time to expose the lies. It is time to expose the truth. Let’s rip the narrative to pieces, bit by bit.

And rip it to pieces, is exactly what Mr. Shaw does. Read it.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

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Peter’s perverse principle

I haven’t weighed in on Peter Beinart’s silly essay in the New York Review of Books. Shmuel Rosner though, asked Beinart a few questions. Beinart’s answers show that he’s ignorant of what Israel is. In particular, Beinart, in one of his responses says:

I don’t think they’re irrelevant. You’re obviously right that the failure of the Oslo process moved Israeli politics to the right. (Although it always bugs me when people who clearly opposed Barak’s willingness to give back most of the West Bank turn around and use Arafat’s rejection of that offer as a reason to oppose land for peace, when they were palpably against it in the first place). But Arafat hasn’t been around for a while now (thank goodness). Instead, you have in Abbas, and particularly Fayyad, far better Palestinian leaders in the West Bank. And yet settlement growth continues essentially unabated (even this year, despite the supposed partial “ban”) and this Israeli government is clearly hostile to the notion of a Palestinian state (despite Netanyahu’s mouthing of the words under US pressure, which Tzipi Livni rightly declared a sham). I can understand the disillusionment in Israel after Camp David and Taba, but it seems wildly counterproductive to use that disillusionment as a reason to foreclose the possibility that a new, better, Palestinian leadership might accept the kind of parameters that Arafat rejected.

Maybe Israel moved a little to the right in the last election. But, as I’ve written many times, Israel’s political landscape is significantly to the left of where it was even 15 years ago. The Palestinians despite the territory and legitimacy they’ve been granted still deny the right for Israel to be a Jewish state. And yes, that’s true even of the so-called moderates whom Beinart lauds.

Gil Troy had an excellent response to Beinart:

Increasingly, championing Israel was deemed “conservative.” The timing was particularly ironic, amid Israel’s Gaza withdrawal, then Ehud Olmert’s centrist government offering the Palestinians generous concessions. Clearly, as a modern capitalist consumerist society Israel is not the socialist workers’ paradise David Ben-Gurion imagined. Israel remains vexed – and tarred – by the continuing Palestinian conflict. Israel’s current governing right-wing coalition includes some parties that have taken appalling anti-democratic positions. And Israel occasionally does stupid things, such as banning Noam Chomsky from the West Bank (then rescinding the ban).

Still, this wave of articles paints Israel not as leaning rightward but as abandoning democracy. These shrill attacks ignore the many counter-balancing forces – and Netanyahu’s own centrist shifts. Avigdor Lieberman is an unpopular, straitjacketed foreign minister, often bypassed. Still, he attracts more attention than moderates like the urbane, cosmopolitan Deputy Prime Minister Dan Meridor.

In neo-conning Israel critics overlook Arab illiberalism. Peter Beinart correctly notes that many young Jews resent hearing about Palestinian terrorism, incitement and intransigence. Casting the Arabs as the victims and Israel as the aggressor constitutes one of the greatest con jobs in modern politics.

Beinart confuses liberalism with virtue. Beinart refuses to credit to Israel for any concessions Israel made – often with devastating results. These results were often at odds with what Beinart and his ilk predicted. If in 1990 you had said “Over the next 20 years Israel will withdraw from major Palestinian population areas, including all of Gaza and after all of these withdrawals the Palestinians will still promote terror and deny Jewish statehood and the world will still blame Israel for failing to make peace” the likely response even from someone like Beinart would have been, “If Israel would do all that, terrorism would stop and if it didn’t stop the world would be sympathetic to Israel.”

Instead Beinart decided that no concession is ever enough unless it makes the Palestinians happy giving the irredentists veto power over peace. The irony with Beinart’s view is that it is decidedly illiberal.

UPDATE: Abraham Miller at Pajamas Media:

Beinart is simply Walt and Mearsheimer circumcised. Beinart’s conclusion about the Jewish establishment astonishes those of us who constantly run up against the actual Jewish establishment, whose vision of Zionism is to the left of even his.

Indeed, the real failure of the Jewish establishment has been its embrace of and commitment to something even more extreme than Beinart’s naïve progressive vision.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Posted in Israel, Israeli Double Standard Time | Tagged | 6 Comments

Briefly, Just Another Day edition

Another day, another mortar attack.

Another day, another bombing attack from Gaza.

Another day, another arrest of more Palestinian terrorists—in the West Bank.

Another day, another threat by a leader of Israel’s neighbor to make peace or else.

Another day, another pretense that Lebanon is not once again a satellite of Iran.

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The messaging or the strategy?

In a meeting with fifteen Rabbis last week, White House shief of staff Rahm Emanuel said that the administration “screwed up the messaging.” Part of me wants to buy that, but I’m very skeptical. I’d have been a lot more reassured had Emanual said, “we screwed up our strategy.”

For one thing as Jennifer Rubin notes, the Rabbis chosen to meet with the President were known for being favorably disposed towards him.

As to the build-up, Moline lets on that no one predisposed to say nasty things about Obama was invited, nor was anyone who didn’t vote for him. (”We also wanted people who had not engaged in the kinds of behaviors I mentioned in my introduction, which is to say people who had been positively predisposed to President Obama once the election was over, but found themselves troubled by what had transpired over the subsequent year.”)

But was the purpose, as Rubin alleges, simply to ensure a positive reception? Or did the President feel that if Rabbis known to be sympathetic were bothered by the administration’s policies, that there was real work to be done?

Then there are Herb Keinon’s observations.

The truth, however, is that beyond the “message problem” there are indeed fundamental conceptual differences between how the Israel and the US view regional reality.
. . .
The differences are there, and they are real. What has changed now is that the administration has decided, in large part because of electoral considerations, that rather than playing these differences up, as it has done up until now, they will now keep them in the background … at least until the midterm congressional elections in November.

After that, it will be time again for the Netanyahu government to duck and look for cover, until the US presidential primary season heats up in the fall of 2011. Then electoral considerations will again become paramount in Washington, and Israel will again catch an American reprieve.

The only real reason to change approaches now would seem to be electoral considerations.

The Obama administration has been very open about its courting of Muslims. But the administration’s outreach to the Rabbis or even to Democratic legislators hasn’t made the pages of either the New York Times or Washington Post.

Based on the timing, President Obama’s own record and the administration’s relative quiet about the outreach to the Jewish community, it would appear that the Jewish outreach or “charm offensive” is more cynical than sincere. I think that Rahm Emanuel was right about the “messaging.” The administration doesn’t believe that it was wrong in its approach to the Middle East – including blowing up a bureaucratic snafu into an international incident – it’s mostly concerned that that approach will be “misunderstood” as being anti-Israel or, at least, unfair to Israel. The truth is that it would be no misunderstanding.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

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Dreary Monday briefs

Another ship of fools heads to Israel: Yes, time to try to break the “siege” of Gaza again and get really angry when the IDF boards the ship and turns it around. But this time, they’re prepared! They’re having IDF-Boards-Our-Ship drills in Greece. No word on whether or not the pretend IDF soldiers are wearing swastikas. Also no word on whether unemployed British politician and scumbag, George Galloway, will be aboard. Bets, anyone?

Seriously, does anyone believe this crap? The Syrian FM says Syria won’t be Israel’s “policeman” and stop arms smuggling into Lebanon. Um, hey, moron: We know you’re doing the smuggling. Everyone knows it. Let’s stop pretending.

So how’s that Syrian outreach working our for you, Barry? Bashar Assad insults the U.S. again, and I’m wondering if the Obama administration is going to push forward with appointing a new diplomat to Syria anyway. Can’t wait to hear about the results of Obama’s chat with Hariri next week. They’re not even trying to hide their contempt for us anymore.

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