Friday Syria briefs

But Karl Vick said they want to help stop the chemical weapons attacks! Ahahahaha, Karl Vick (rhymes with dick) was shown to be a moron in less than 48 hours. Two says after Vick wrote a ridiculous piece asserting that the Iranians could be convinced to get Bashar al-Assad to stop using chemical weapons, the WSJ reports that the Iranians have sent out instructions to their terrorist-in-waiting to attack U.S. embassies and other American interests in the Middle East. We’re already emptying our Beirut embassy for fear of a “spontaneous” uprising (yeah, right, spontaneous). And oh yeah–that supposed Rosh Hashanah tweet from the new Iranian president? Hoax. He never sent a nice New Year’s greeting to the world’s Jews.

And yet, no outrage from the ISM: Egypt bulldozed houses and tunnels in Gaza to create a buffer zone along the border to prevent weapons smuggling and terrorist attacks. Of course, the world yawns–because it wasn’t Israel doing the ‘dozing. Best part of the AP whitewash? The headline.

Egypt Destroys Homes for Possible Gaza Buffer Zone

They’re giving Egypt the benefit of the doubt. Israel? Well, never. A prime example of Israeli Double Standard Time.

Posted in Iran, Israel, Israeli Double Standard Time, Media Bias, Middle East, Syria | 1 Comment

L’shana tovah

A sweet, happy, and healthy new year to all of my Jewish friends, family, and readers.

And, still stealing from Lair Simon: Don’t forget to start writing 5774 on your checks.

Posted in Holidays, Jews, Religion | 3 Comments

Mideast Media Sampler 09/04/2013

An Ounce of Foresight on Oslo, 20 Years Ago

Last week, the New York Times kicked off its twentieth anniversary celebration of the Oslo Accords with an op-ed, Oslo, 20 years later by Uri Savir. I didn’t have to read far to learn the premise of of Savir’s argument. (Actually, I didn’t have to read it any of it to know the premise. This is the New York Times. Obviously, Israel was going to be substantially responsible for the failure of Oslo.) In the third paragraph, Savir wrote:

On the other hand, Oslo failed to meet the Israeli and Palestinian expectation of resolving their bitter conflict, primarily due to the election in 1996 of an anti-Oslo government in Israel led by Benjamin Netanyahu, and also Yasser Arafat’s failure to combat Palestinian terror and extremism. Nevertheless, after 20 years we can and should assess the lessons of the Oslo experience for the current peace process.

First of all these two factors should have been reversed. Netanyahu’s skepticism towards the peace process by 1996, was well founded. He never would have been elected if Arafat hadn’t failed to “combat Palestinian terror and extremism.” (In truth it was much worse than that. Arafat organized terror.)

Israel had elections scheduled for May, 1996. Since the assassination of Yitzchak Rabin, Netanyahu, the leader of the opposition had trailed Rabin’s successor,Shimon Peres in polls. He trailed until a series of terror attacks in February and March killed dozens of Israelis.

At the time, Charles Krauthammer (after mocking a Washington Post headline that declared that Israel was suffering from a “Peace that kills”) wrote:

The “peace process” is in fact nothing more than a unilateral Israeli withdrawal. The Palestinians have gotten Gaza, West Bank autonomy, huge influxes of foreign aid, international recognition, their own police force, their first free elections ever (something their Turkish, British, Egyptian and Jordanian rulers never granted them).

In return Israel has gotten what? Pats on the head from the United States. The occasional trade mission from Tunisia. And, from the Palestinians, death. This is peace?

The Labor Party’s idea was that it would give up the territories and contract out anti-terrorism to Yasser Arafat. It has not worked out that way. From the beginning it was obvious that Arafat was either unable or unwilling to control Hamas.

It was only then that Netanyahu started to lead in the polling and eventually went on to win the election two months later. It was Arafat’s perfidy that led to Netanyahu’s election. There was a cause and effect. By reversing the order, Savir distorted the truth. Had Arafat been sincere, Netanyahu would never have been elected. By putting Netanyahu’s election first, Savir is apportioning as much blame to Israel as to the Palestinians for the failure of Oslo. That is simply not true.

Twenty years ago (actually September 5, 1993) an op-ed, Peace in our Time? was published by the New York Times. The author argued:

But surely Israel will control security in the vacated areas? Wrong. According to the deal, the Israeli Army will be responsible for “external” security (meaning the defense of Israel’s borders), while the P.L.O. will take over “internal” security in all the areas under its control.

What will happen when terrorists attack Israelis in Jerusalem and return to nearby P.L.O. land? Or fire rockets from hills above Tel Aviv? The Israeli Army will have no right to enter the territory and root them out. This, believe it or not, is the “internal” responsibility of Yasir Arafat.

The author who predicted the outcome that Krauthammer observed was none other than Binyamin Netanyahu. Even now Israel is forced to deal with a corrupt autocrat, who is said to be a moderate. Even if Abbas is a moderate, after him there is no support for moderation. So does Israel make material concessions for promise unlikely to survive Abbas?

Israel has risked, sacrificed and lost a lot for peace. Despite that, it finds itself marginalized possibly even more than it was twenty years ago. (Read Barry Rubin’s recent Obama, Israel and the Next Three Years for some of the particulars.) Israel sees territory that it gave up or retreated from in the name of peace – Sinai, Gaza and southern Lebanon – becoming terror launching pads.

What’s dangerous about Savir’s column is that by blaming Israel – mainly or even substantially – for the failure of the past twenty years of peace processing, he obfuscates the true reason Oslo has failed: that the Palestinians have no interest in peace, but in getting concessions from Israel.

Robert Nicholson recently summarized the dynamic, Oslo Accords Unequal? You bet:

Even a cursory look at the agreements will reveal the discrepancy. Israel mostly gives, the PLO mostly takes. Israel makes concessions, the PLO makes demands. Israel surrenders extensive prerogatives of land, governance, and security. The PLO surrenders only its “right” to armed struggle and its denial of Israel’s existence. …
The PLO never succeeded in aiding the Palestinian people, curbing Islamist terrorism, or shifting Palestinian attitudes toward peace. The fact that Israel never cancelled the agreements completely—which it almost certainly has grounds to do—testifies only to Israel’s persistent, if overly optimistic, desire for peace between the river and the sea.

To believe as Savir does – and he’s not alone – is to believe that peace is possible if only more pressure is brought to bear on Israel. If one does not believe that Israel is substantially to blame for the failure, then the possibility of peace in the near future is a lot more remote. Optimism is fine, but not when it’s divorced from reality. The fact that so little has changed on the Palestinian side despite major Israeli concessions since Binyamin Netanyahu wrote his op-ed twenty years ago should serve as a wake up call to those still wedded to the Oslo delusion.

Posted in Israel | Comments Off on Mideast Media Sampler 09/04/2013

Wednesday briefs

Time supports fantasy writing now: Karl Vick (rhymes with dick), the viciously anti-Israel Mideast reporter at Time, thinks that the Mad Mullahs of Tehran could be convinced to get Assad to give up his chemical weapons. Why? Because they suffered heavily from chemical weapons attacks by Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war.

Yeah, we’re going into Syria: So has anyone decided how much we’re going to spend to show Syria what a bad boy Assad is to use chemical weapons? I seem to remember that cruise missiles cost a million dollars a pop. The fact that there will be no boots on the ground is small comfort to those who think we shouldn’t get involved. And as for that resolution–well, Obama has been putting aside the law as he fits (cf. Obamacare implementation delayed because of fear of losing the 2014 House elections). What makes the Senate think he will abide by anything Congress wants? John Kerry refuses to guarantee we won’t send troops. Also: Eric Cantor can forget about ever getting my vote again. He and Boehner are supporting Obama on this. The American public? Not so much.

Oops, did we scare you? Israel and the U.S. tested the Sparrow anti-missile ballistic missile system yesterday, freaking out the Syrians and a few other people watching. FYI, Hamas is supporting Syria and the Palestinians are against any strike, insisting that it will only help Israel. Of course.

But Jews think only of themselves: A recent study also showed that Jews who are connected to the Jewish community give more than those that are not. This gels with studies done on Christians, I believe. The more generous people in the U.S. tend to be more religious. Only four percent of Jews polled said they give solely to Jewish charities (and I personally don’t know any Jews like that). But sure, go ahead and lie about how Jews care only for their fellow Jews. It isn’t true now, and it’s never been true.

Posted in American Scene, Hamas, Iran, Israel, Jews, Middle East, palestinian politics, Syria | Comments Off on Wednesday briefs

Mideast Media Sampler 09/03/2013

Setting Israel up for the President’s Failure

Politico reports:

The Obama administration is using a time-tested pitch to get Congress to back military strikes in Syria: It will help protect Israel.

Right. The reason the administration is so intent on lobbing a few cruise missiles at Syria is to protect Israel. Secretary of State Kerry said:

“I think the stakes of upholding the international standard of behavior that has been in place since 1925, after World War I, that only Adolf Hitler and Saddam Hussein have breached that in time of war since then, and now Assad joins them, I think to contemplate that the Congress of the United States would turn its back on Israel, on Jordan, on Turkey, on our allies in the region, turn its back on innocent Syrian people who have been slaughtered by this gas and those who yet may be subject to an attack, … I can’t contemplate that the Congress would turn its back on all of that responsibility and the fact that we would have in fact granted impunity to a ruthless dictator to continue to gas his people,” Kerry told “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace.

Similarly, on Face the Nation the Secretary of State said:

Well, of course it is critical that we go through the process of explaining to congress. But each day that goes by, Major, this case is getting stronger. I mean, today I’m at liberty to tell that you we now have samples back from first responders in east Damascus. Those samples of hair and blood have been tested, and they have reported positive for signatures of sarin. So we are now getting a stronger case each day, and I think that makes even more compelling that the congress of the United States be counted with the president in this effort so that Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, all of our friend and allies in the region, will know that the United States is acting in concert in a way that really sends a powerful message about our credibility, about our intentions to uphold international norms, and that will have an impact on other decisions down the road. And I’m very explicit about it with respect to Iran and North Korea or others. The credibility of the United States is on the line here. And I believe the congress will do the right thing.

That’s the pitch? Kerry, who is so worried about Israel’s future that he’s focused, laser-like, on negotiations with the Palestinian Authority, while Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Iraq are burning, now makes the case that if patriotism isn’t enough to motivate legislators to support the President, then fidelity to Israel should motivate them. Such sensitivity and subtlety in messaging!

https://twitter.com/Doranimated/status/374459435344601088

I’m not just inferring something from the secretary of state’s words. This is the messaging coming from the White House. The New York Times reports:

“I do not believe the Congress of the United States will turn its back on this moment,” Mr. Kerry said on the NBC News program “Meet The Press.” “The challenge of Iran, the challenges of the region, the challenge of standing up for and standing beside our ally, Israel, helping to shore up Jordan — all of these things are very, very powerful interests and I believe Congress will pass it.”

One administration official, who, like others, declined to be identified discussing White House strategy, called the American Israel Political Affairs Committee “the 800-pound gorilla in the room,” and said its allies in Congress had to be saying, “If the White House is not capable of enforcing this red line” — against catastrophic use of chemical weapons — “we’re in trouble.”

Israeli officials have been concerned by Mr. Obama’s decision, but have been mostly restrained in their public comments. Mr. Kerry talked on Sunday with Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister.

The AIPAC paragraph is kind of baffling, but it seems that the administration is complaining that even though it’s acting in Israel’s interests, those ungrateful folks at AIPAC aren’t supporting them. (If there’s one positive in this story, it’s that President Obama didn’t enlist “pro-Israel, pro-peace” J-Street to do his campaigning. They may support him, but they have no substantial support in the real pro-Israel community. What a backhanded insult!)

Similarly, Politico reports, Israel Lobby Silent on Syria:

The Israel lobby, including the high-profile American Israel Public Affairs Committee and other Jewish groups, isn’t pushing for intervention even as evidence emerged this week that the Assad regime used chemical weapons against its citizens.

The silence could be a problem for Obama, since the Jewish groups are connected across the political spectrum, wielding influence from the far right to liberal Democrats on issues critical to the Middle East — especially when it comes to the use of military force.

And while Obama has been willing to strike a foreign country without Congress’s approval — as he did in Libya — this time he not only faces a reluctant Congress, but a vocal chorus of Republican and Democratic lawmakers publicly advocating against entanglement.

The article notes a reason for the reticence. Pro-Israel activists were strongly associated with the war in Iraq and many in the mainstream media blamed the pro-Israel crowd for encouraging the war. (Left unmentioned is that Israeli leadership was skeptical about the war. Then, as now, it was more concerned with Iran.)

Jodi Rudoren and Isabel Kershner of the New York Times similarly report Obama’s Syria Decision Greeted Silently by Israel. The article notes that Israel is officially keeping silent about Syria. Perhaps the best quote in the article is here:

“The only thing that is clear is that Israel will take the heat either way,” a senior Israeli government official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of Mr. Netanyahu’s directive. “If we remain on the sidelines, it will be seen as defiant criticism of President Obama. And if we don’t, it will be seen as interference. There is nothing we can do to come out clean.”

Exactly. Given two articles in the New York Times and one in Politico asking why Israel and pro-Israel groups are quiet, one would have to think that these stenographers have gotten the message from the administration that it is unhappy that Israel isn’t showing proper appreciation for its efforts.

But, of course, I don’t think that President Obama really wanted to act against Syria, but his administration is cynically setting up Israel to be blamed for his own failure.

Why am I convinced of this? Because last week it was reported Israel, after confirming that the Assad regime was guilty, that was pushing for an American response. In fact the New York Times published an op-ed by Israeli columnist Nahum Barnea that insisted:

President Obama is moving slowly and cautiously toward some form of military action. He is not trigger-happy. Looking at the tough choices he has to make at home and abroad, it seems to me a reasonable approach.

Other leaders, including the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, criticize him, directly or indirectly, for being too cautious. Since none of them is willing or capable to take this decision, they should be more humble.

Last week, official Israel was too aggressive in demanding action; now, apparently, it’s not supportive enough. What’s changed?

(I’m using the New York Times for this analysis. Other reports suggest that Israel is indeed pushing the President. More recently, the New York Times reported that Israel’s President Shimon Peres spoke out in support of President Obama; the point of the article was to contrast Peres’ support with Netanyahu’s reticence.)

What has changed, is the President’s decision to seek Congressional approval before striking Syria. According to David Horovitz, Israel’s leadership was appalled by the President’s change of heart.

Though dutifully silent in public, Jerusalem has quickly internalized the damage already done — by the sight of an uncertain president, all too plainly wary of grappling with a regime that has gradually escalated its use of poison gas to mass murder its own people; a regime, moreover, that can do relatively little damage to the United States, and whose threats Israel’s leadership and most of its people were taking in their stride.

At the very least, Obama has given Assad more time to ensure that any eventual strike causes a minimum of damage, and to claim initial victory in facing down the United States. At the very least, too, Obama has led the Iranians to believe that presidential promises to prevent them attaining nuclear weapons need not necessarily be taken at face value.

If Israel were to be vocal it would be by this irresponsible and very public change of heart.

Really what Israel does or doesn’t do isn’t so important. What is important is what an official Syrian newspaper reported (via memeorandum):

A Syrian state-run newspaper on Sunday called President Barack Obama’s decision to seek congressional approval before taking military action against Syria “the start of the historic American retreat.”

Indeed, anyone who read this account of how President Obama changed his mind about consulting Congress would reach the same conclusion: the administration has no intention of attacking Syria.

Obama had been leaning toward attacking Syria without a congressional vote for the past week, the officials said. Obama was convinced he had the evidence to back up a strike and as a result dispatched Secretary of State John Kerry to make a passionate case for U.S. action. But only hours after Kerry called Syrian President Bashar al-Assad “a thug and a murderer” and accused his regime of using chemical weapons to kill 1,429 people, Obama changed his mind as he walked across the South Lawn with Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, the officials said. …

The plan was immediately met with robust resistance from a whiplashed Obama team who had listened to Kerry lay out the administration’s strongest case yet for action against Assad. “My friends, it matters here if nothing is done,” Kerry had argued. “It matters if the world speaks out in condemnation and then nothing happens.”

All that’s needed now is a scapegoat. With the aid of his allies in the media, President Obama is deftly preparing one.

Posted in Israel | Comments Off on Mideast Media Sampler 09/03/2013

President of the world

This bothers me so very, very much.

White House spinners have spent the last couple of days telling the press that Obama surprised even his most senior staff Friday night by deciding to seek congressional authorization. Before that, it is said, asking Congress’s approval was not even among the options being considered in the Syrian crisis.

It was only after it became clear to Obama that he could not win acceptance in other, preferred, circles that he chose to go to Congress. Would he have sought congressional authorization if he had won United Nations approval for a Syrian attack? Highly unlikely. Would he have sought congressional authorization if the British Parliament had voted to join Obama’s action? Also unlikely. Even approval from the Arab League might have been enough for Obama to act.

As it turned out, Obama achieved none of those goals and decided to seek congressional approval only after failing to win the international acceptance that apparently ranked higher on his list. “Mr. Obama made no secret to aides he felt uncomfortable acting without UN Security Council backing,” the Wall Street Journal reported. “Current and former officials said his decision reflected his concerns about being seen as acting unilaterally — without political cover from Congress and without the UK at his side. Arab states, for their part, have offered little public support despite their private encouragement.”

Barack Obama is President of the United States, not the president of the world. It is not his job to act when other nations feel that it is right. It is his job to act in the best interests of the U.S., even when other nations disagree.

It’s bad enough Obamacare is destroying our healthcare industry. I hope he can’t do much more in the next three years. And I really hope that Congress tells him the same think as the U.K. Parliament told David Cameron: No. Do not intervene in the Syrian civil war. As horrible as it is, we’re not going to end it, and we’re not going to make it better. The UN has peacekeepers. Have them stop raping children in Africa and go to the front lines of Syria, instead.

Yes, that was sarcasm–at least the front lines of Syria part. I know it will never happen. The UN is an organization that is good for investigating supposed Israeli war crimes, but I haven’t seen it get all up in arms over the sarin gassing of Syrian civilians. There is not the outrage from the global community the way there is when Israel goes to war with Hamas or Hezbollah. Where are UN Security Council resolutions? Blocked by China and Russia.

And just for kicks and giggles, the Palestinian Authority–the organization that receives hundreds of millions of dollars from U.S. taxpayers directly and via our financial support of the U.N.–is blaming the U.S. for the Syria uprising.

It’s a good thing we have a president who isn’t a go-it-alone, unilateralist cowboy. Boy, that Bush didn’t do anything about getting a coalition of 47 nations together for the Iraq war. Oh. Wait.

Posted in American Scene, Syria, The One | Comments Off on President of the world

When an anti-Semite turns out to be a Jew

This is a wonderful story. I read about it a while back and probably linked it, but here’s a video to get you thinking at the start of the High Holy Days. It’s a story of discovery and repentance.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Holocaust, Jews | Comments Off on When an anti-Semite turns out to be a Jew

I met a man today

This was posted by long_rifle in comments of a post from last year. I thought I’d bring it out of mothballs.

I met a person today that I NEVER thought I’d meet in person. I met him on June 22, 2011 at exactly 4:04pm eastern. I work in a gun store in MI and as I walked towards our wall of holsters I met him and asked if he needed help.

He was buying a holster for his gun and I tried to find something for him. His eyes were red, and his skin was mottled and aged. He spoke with a lite German accent and seemed the kindest person I’ve ever seen.

I met a man today… that did something no man should ever have to do. He watched his sisters die. He watched as 9 members of his family were led away to be killed. He watched thousands die. He watched en entire generation perish and can still SMILE.

I saw it on his left arm. A bold large series of numbers, with what looked like an upside down stretched triangle under it.

Immediately I touched it, I stopped thinking of personal space or being polite, I touched it. Then immediately apologized. He didn’t mind, even started to smile.

“No. I’m sorry that the world let that happen.” Then I looked at his face, I had tears in my eyes, honestly I have them now. “I’m sorry that the world is bent on letting it happen again. I’m sorry.” There was nothing else I could say. Then something you taught me came to mind. “Am Yisrael Chai”. He stopped a a few seconds and then asked me if I was Jewish and I told him no which seemed to catch him off guard a bit.

I met a man today that watched his world collapse in Auschwitz, then found redemption in General George Patten at another camp when he was liberated. Delirious with typhoid he was brought back from the brink.

And he can SMILE. I thought of my whining, and complaining. About how I wasn’t getting the pay I want. Or that I lost my house and have to live with family. I met a man that lost EVERYTHING. And he can still smile.

“I can’t forget it. I can’t ever forgive it. But I have to live my life.”…

66 years he told me. It’s been 66 years. I guessed when asked, that he was 84, he told me he was 82. I’ve met WWI vets, WWII vets, Vietnam vets. And two men whom earned the Congressional Metal of Honor. I’m felt awe, fear, shock, respect and sense of meeting someone that stood as something I could NEVER be.

I’ve never felt it all at once.

I met a man today that put my life in proper context. I met a man today that I feel I owe more then to my own family.

I’m not a Jew. But NEVER again. I told him that as we parted.

And I mean it. I’ve always meant it. But now… It’s something else something deeper.

I met a man today, and I’ll never forget him. I never asked his name. But I’ll never forget those numbers.

Deny the Holocaust in front of me, and it’ll be the last time you lie around your teeth.

Meryl I’m sorry. I know the world is coming full circle, and hating Jews is becoming the norm again. But I won’t let it happen here. I can’t afford to fly to Israel to protect it. But I’ll die before I allow it to spread here.

I may not be much. But I will not sit by as people are rounded up and branded. I’m sorry. As much a a member of humanity can be. Meryl. I might not be able to stop it.

But I’ll put up a hell of a fight. Not for me. For the man that was unarmed and watched as his family was murdered in front of him, and even now arms himself at 82 to make sure he doesn’t have to watch again.

Am Yisrael Chai.

Posted in Guns, Holocaust | Comments Off on I met a man today

Caturday

Found this while looking through some older pictures on my camera. Tig likes to play from under the blanket. I got this close-up during out session. That’s my boy.

Tig under the quilt

Posted in Cats | Comments Off on Caturday

Friday night kitties

It’s a holiday weekend. My brain is on vacation. So I give you kitty pics.

First, Gracie: If I fits, I sits.
Gracie in a box top

Now, for Tig, who is recovered (mostly) from his surgery and renal problems. His front paw was shaved for the IV, and he has what we call “monkey butt” from his bottom being shaved, but it’s no longer all pink. His orange fur has begun the slow process of growing back.

Tig, recovering

He’s almost completely back to normal. I woke up yesterday with a Tig on my legs, and as soon as he saw I was up he climbed onto my chest and administered kisses and purrs. He’s yowling to let me know when he’s going to jump on the kitty condo, and demanding to be let into the garage (since I no longer let him outdoors). It’s lovely having my boy back. Miss Gracie missed him too, though she won’t admit it.

Posted in Cats | 3 Comments

Thursday briefs, Syria edition

Oh, he’ll totally listen to THEM: Apparently, European politicians are telling Bashar al-Assad not to attack Israel if the West attacks Syria. I’m sure he’ll give them as much consideration as he did the people he launched sarin-filled shells at.

Speaking of attacking Israel for no reason: The JPost has an editorial on that very topic. This time, Israel isn’t going to lie back and think of England while the bombs fall. This time, if Syria fires at Israel, Israel is going to fire back. Hard. That’s one of the things that pissed me off more than anything in the first Iraq war. Saddam Hussein got away with firing missiles at Israel as a response to being attacked by the U.S. and its allies. The Patriot missiles were utterly useless, but the Arabs managed to cow George Bush into thinking they’d break from the coalition (and we didn’t need them at all, the Saudi pilots did absolutely NOTHING in the war and took credit for downing planes that the American fighters destroyed). And Israelis died.

On the night of 17/18 January, 1991, Coalition air forces attacked Iraq. In response, Iraq fired salvos of ground-to-ground missiles into Israel. Over a period of more than 1 month, approximately 38 Iraqi versions of Scud missiles fell (33 El Hussein missiles and 5 El Tijara missiles) in 19 missile attacks. These missiles mainly hit the greater Tel Aviv region and Haifa, although western Samaria and the Dimona area were also hit by missiles. Directly, these attacks caused 2 civilian deaths, although indirectly, they caused the following casualties: 4 heart attacks, 7 deaths as a result of incorrect use of biological/chemical warfare kits, 208 injured, 225 cases of unnecessary injection of atropine. Damage to general property consisted of 1,302 houses, 6142 apartments, 23 public buildings, 200 shops and 50 cars.

Not this time. Of course, Assad knows how strong Israel is. Some analysts think there’s no way he’s going to attack Israel, or have Hezbullah do it for him. (That’s a premium link; I just caught a summary on an RSS feed.) Here’s a Lebanese paper saying that Israel will not come under attack. And here’s Barry Rubin, showing why Obama’s attack on Syria is absolutely worthless.

[Snort]: Yeah, the Syrians are going to use kamikaze pilot tactics against any Western attack. Because their air force is so modern and up to date. They need to stop watching reruns of WWII movies.

Posted in Israel, Lebanon, Middle East, Syria | Comments Off on Thursday briefs, Syria edition

A tale of two riots

The AP is doing what it does best: Refusing to blame the Palestinians for their part in the deaths of Palestinians due to riot.

Check out this CBS/AP headline, in REALLY BIG TYPE on the page:

Israel forces kill 3 Palestinians, including U.N. worker, in West Bank refugee camp, delaying peace talks
Palestinian officials said they called off a planned round of peace talks Monday after Israeli soldiers killed three Palestinians — including a United Nations aid worker — during clashes following an arrest raid in the West Bank.

Note that the lead paragraph tells you almost nothing about how the deaths occurred. Perhaps none of the AP writers could take the time out to watch the video at this link.

Here’s what the JPost had to say:

A large scale Palestinian attack against security forces in Kalandiya early Monday in which rioters shot at army jeeps, hurled washing machines and large concrete blocks from the rooftops left three Palestinians dead from Israeli gunfire.

Note that they threw WASHING MACHINES off roofs. But there’s a lot more.

Some 300 Palestinians circled the soldiers and hurled concrete slabs at them.

The IDF attempted to disperse the rioters with nonlethal crowd-control measures.

One soldier on a rooftop identified a Palestinian on an adjacent rooftop about to hurl a concrete block on soldiers under him, and shot him in the hand using 0.22 caliber ammunition, the source said.

But according to the AP, the soldiers were firing randomly into the crowd. They have Palestinian “eyewitnesses”. I wonder if they were among the 500 encircling the soldiers and trying to kill them.

According to the U.N. official, who spoke to CBSNews.com on the condition of anonymity to discuss the on-going investigation, there was “absolutely no question” that Zayed wasn’t involved in any violence when he turned a corner on his way to work and a bullet went straight through his chest.

“As soon as he appeared in eye-shot of the IDF patrol, they literally shot him in the chest,” said the official, calling it “hugely significant that an unarmed worker who was showing no involvement in any violence at all was shot dead.”

The official said the incident “illustrates the overwhelming and disproportionate use of force” routinely employed by Israeli security forces in the occupied Palestinian territories.

According to eyewitnesses interviewed by UNRWA, the Israeli forces “opened fire randomly” on Palestinians in the camp during the melee, even shooting indiscriminately into the windows of homes that opened during the clashes.

When they asked the IDF for their side, here’s what was printed:

Asked by CBS News about the allegations on Tuesday, an Israeli military source would say only that the defense forces own review “suggests that all three of the individuals that died from injuries were actively engaged in the violent riot against IDF forces as they apprehended a terrorist.”

Note how the writer denigrates the IDF response, which is actually pretty damning to the Palestinians that were killed and utterly refutes the “eyewitness” testimony repeated second-hand by a UNRWA worker. And is the UNRWA worker a Palestinian as well? Why, of course the reporter can’t say, because that was part of the anonymity deal. Would they have al Qaeda commenting anonymously on a strike on al Qaeda terrorists? Probably not. Wouldn’t lay odds, though. But you see the anti-Israel bias in this article.

Take a look at this video. You’ll see what happened. It was so much more than the media ever tell.

Posted in Israel, Media Bias, Terrorism | Comments Off on A tale of two riots

I’ve had better days

But at least this one didn’t need a visit to the emergency room.

I’ll try to get back to posting soon.

This time it’s not Tig. He’s fine.

Posted in Life | Comments Off on I’ve had better days

Tigger update

The good news: The vets are very pleased with the results. They took the stitches out without having to sedate Tig. They keep using the word “sweet” to describe him. Yes, he is a sweet cat.

The bad news: Cone has to stay on until Wednesday.

Oh, well. It’s only two more days.

Posted in Cats | 1 Comment

Mideast Media Sampler 08/25/2013

When is a Red Line not a Red Line? When there’s no Precedent for it.

” It was quiet in Washington—it had been a summer busy with dispatches on the golf game of President Obama, and on the new first puppy, Sunny, the Portuguese water dog, the newest addition to the White House. Bashar al-Assad had taken the full measure of powers beyond.” The Shame of Syria by Fouad Ajami

According to the latest reports (via memeorandum) David Cameron of Britian is following up on France’s determination to consider military action against Syria.

Mr Cameron is said to have been left sickened by images of children killed by the chemical weapons.

One charity yesterday said at least 355 people had died and 10 times that number were treated for poisoning.

Britain and France have blamed the Assad regime for the chemical attack.

(The charity in question, is Doctors without Borders. While the number of dead is significantly less than the 1300 or more claimed by the Syrian opposition, this number only represents what Doctors without Borders could confirm.)

If Bashar Assad has crossed a red line for Britain and France, did he cross one for the United States too?

Mark Landler and Michael Gordon of the New York Times report Air War in Kosovo Seen as Precedent in Possible Response to Syria Chemical Attack:

A senior administration official said the Kosovo precedent was one of many subjects discussed in continuing White House meetings on the crisis in Syria. Officials are also debating whether a military strike would have unintended consequences, destabilize neighbors like Lebanon, or lead to even greater flows of refugees into Jordan, Turkey and Egypt.

“It’s a step too far to say we’re drawing up legal justifications for an action, given that the president hasn’t made a decision,” said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the deliberations. “But Kosovo, of course, is a precedent of something that is perhaps similar.”

In the Mediterranean, the Navy’s regional commander postponed a scheduled port call in Naples, Italy, for a destroyer so that the ship would remain with a second destroyer in striking distance of Syria during the crisis. Pentagon officials said the decision did not reflect any specific orders from Washington, but both destroyers had on board Tomahawk cruise missiles, long-range weapons that probably would be among the first launched against targets in Syria should the president decide to take military action.

(Jack Goldsmith argues that the Kosovo intervention was not meant as a precedent.)

The question is whether President Obama is looking for a reason to back up his “red line” comment of a year ago, or he is he simply trying to look deliberative?

Fred Kaplan of Slate argues for the former.

If he decides to use force, it’s the only position he could reasonably take. Given the threat, the humanitarian crisis, America’s standing in the region, and the importance of preserving international norms against the use of weapons of mass destruction, the best option might be to destroy huge chunks of the Syrian military, throw Assad’s regime off balance, and let those on the ground settle the aftermath.

On the other hand, former naval intelligence officer, J. E. Dyer sees the administration as posturing.

One, the deepest point of Syria is about 380 statute miles (600km) from the coast, but almost everything we might want to attack, to affect the Assad regime’s prosecution of the war, is less than 100 miles (160km) from the coast. The Tomahawk cruise missile, in the variant likely to be used (TLAM-C Block III), has a range of 1000 statute miles (1,600km). The less-likely TLAM-D has a range of 800 statute miles (1,250km). So U.S. Navy warships don’t have to get closer to Syria than the open waters of the central or east-central Mediterranean Sea.

This, in turn, means that no public explanations would ever be necessary – our warships are often in the central Mediterranean – and that the explanations are therefore being given, as verbosely as possible, for a reason. Presumably, it is to highlight, with fanfare, the fact that Obama is contemplating using cruise missiles against Assad. And that, presumably, is meant to warn and/or deter Assad.

Lately the administration sounds like it’s taking a harder stance.

With good reason.

Even now, however, the idea of military intervention is politically unpopular.

Though usually an interventionist, Obama booster, Thomas Friedman, isn’t bothered by the President’s inaction. In Foreign Policy by Whisper and Nudge, Friedman concludes:

Obama knows all of this. He just can’t say it. But it does explain why his foreign policy is mostly “nudging” and whispering. It is not very satisfying, not very much fun and won’t make much history, but it’s probably the best we can do or afford right now. And it’s certainly all that most Americans want.

I have no idea how well-connected into the administration Friedman is, but this sounds like an apology in advance for inaction. Though some legislators see military action as likely, (qualified by Sen. Bob Corker’s “in a surgical way” i.e. more symbolic than substantive) I’m still unconvinced that the administration is inclined to act.

While I won’t deny that there are no good choices here, still, last year the President set out red lines. If he’s not adhering to them, he is undercutting America’s ability to project its power.

Posted in Israel | Comments Off on Mideast Media Sampler 08/25/2013