Tuesday news round-up

If Israel did it, the world would be outraged: Syrian troops have entered Lebanon in pursuit of rebel troops, destroying houses and shelling as they go. Where is UNIFIL? Probably making sure they’re out of range of Hezbullah. Besides, they only watch Lebanese murder Israelis. Syrians murdering Syrians and Lebanese? Not their problem. Assad has accepted a truce. It works just like the terrorist truces with Israel. He continues to kill, and the rebels continue to die. Israeli Double Standard Time? Yeah, we got that.

Don’t worry, al Jazeera will play it and it will be on the internet forever: French TV stations are being told not to air the video of the Toulouse massacre and the murder of French Muslim soldiers. Isn’t it interesting that there was no such demand for the airing of the video of the al-Dura “death” (which has since been shown to be a fake)? Always, when videos will have negative consequences on Jews, count on them being shown. And when they vindicate Jewish positions, count on them being hidden. That’s the rule. To this day, France 2 refuses to release the full video of the supposed killing.

Oh, don’t be ridiculous, the core of the conflict is settlements: Benjamin Netanyahu said once again that if Palestinians were willing to recognize Israel as the national homeland of the Jewish people and begin actual negotations, the conflict would end quickly. See title. Also, “right of return”. Also, “1967 borders”. And don’t worry, Steven Walt and the mainstream media will tell us how Netanyahu uses this excuse as a reason not to negotiate.

Using Hitler to sell shampoo? So? The main reason for this entry is so you can click on Today’s Zaman, the English-language version, and read the comments by Turks who think it’s no big deal. Of course, these are also the people who insist there was no Armenian massacre in Turkey. Although you can read pretty much the same comments on the news sites of every other nation that features this story. Yep. Here, here (that’s HuffPo), here, and okay, this comment is really funny, this story uses Elder’s video (no bad comments, just a plug). And the New Yorker allows only funny comments, it seems. But you get the picture.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israeli Double Standard Time, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey | 2 Comments

It’s Monday, and here are the briefs

Republican ideas: More varied than Democrats. Here’s scientific proof that liberals are dumber than conservatives. (Okay, not really, but it was fun to write that, since liberals think they’re so much smarter than conservatives. This book sounds interesting enough to actually read, and the author has a website that he hopes will get people on both sides of the aisle to be more interactive and less negative. Yeah, good luck with that, bub.

That non-violent march to Jerusalem is already violent: Yeah, what a shocker. Islamists in Morocco are burning Israeli flags and chanting “A million martyrs are going to Jerusalem.” If that sounds familiar to you, well, Yasser Arafat declared that on more than one occasion. I bring up his failure to give you a preview of their failure, but let’s face it: If this march is peaceful, I will stop blogging on Israeli issues. Because there would be no more need if Islamists felt that a peaceful protest that stopped on the border and simply chanted or held signs were the appropriate way to get their feelings across. Shyeah, I laughed typing that. Because those peaceful Muslims stormed a building where an Israeli diplomat was participating in a conference. He had to be whisked secretly out a side door for his own safety.

Well, I’m shocked, how about you? Turns out the Islamists in Egypt have a bigger role in shaping the new constitution than they were supposed to have. Funny, all that talk about their moderation seemed to have died down as well. But don’t worry. It’ll crop up again, after the latest Christian-threatenings die down. And anyway, the world is far more interested in Israeli settlements than in the flight of the oldest Christian community in the Middle East. What’s that you say? The UNHRC really cares about human rights? Shyeah. That’s why they let a Hamas member testify to them. Against Israel. Of course.

Only the New York Times: A Times blogger, which has the sanction of the International Herald Tribune, quotes Ha’aretz as saying that we should be careful about calling the deliberate murder of Jewish children at a Jewish school an anti-Semitic attack (rather than a terror attack). He then goes on to insist that anti-Semitism may be rising in France, but really, it’s not all that bad. He then quotes this essay in Slate by an American Jew who says you can’t be both French and Jewish (not her attitude, the French). No, nothing will convince the liberals that Jew-hatred is endemic throughout the Muslim world, and bubbling just beneath the surface in Europe.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Religion, United Nations | 2 Comments

The AP: Not just whitewashing, being flat-out wrong

I saw this two weeks ago during the midst of the rocket attacks on Israel, but forgot to point it out in a post. What’s wrong with this paragraph?

Last April, Israeli killed 11 Palestinians, including four civilians, after Palestinian militants fired a rocket that hit a school bus and badly wounded a 16-year-old boy.

Here’s a hint: He died of his injuries a week and a half later. Research? Why would the AP reporter do any research? Hell, even Wikipedia has the facts right. But for the AP, it’s too hard to remember things like murdered Israelis when there are Palestinian terrorists dying all over the place.

Anti-Israel media bias? No, there is none. None at all.

The boy’s name was Daniel Viflic, something else that the AP rarely does–name the Israeli victims of terror.

So. Whitewashing? Lying? Or an utter lack of research/knowledge by the AP writers and editors? You decide.

Posted in Media Bias | 1 Comment

The important things

We had a tornado watch in Richmond yesterday, so I decided to be prepared in case I heard what sounded like a freight train again and hid in the downstairs closet.

I collected a bunch of useful things, and some less useful things, in case a tornado blew my house down. Here’s what I put in or right next to the closet:

  • A flashlight
  • A hand-crank radio (with weather channel)
  • A battery-operated LED lantern
  • Sneakers
  • Pocketbook and car keys
  • Pillows
  • My brand-new Asus tablet
  • Camera
  • My rings
  • My favorite earrings

Some items on that list got on that list because I was getting the important things and went, “Oh, hey, I have pocket room for my rings and earrings!” Others got on that list because I just bought the damned tablet, no freaking way does it get destroyed in a tornado if I can help it. Work computer? Who cares? I didn’t pay for it. My tablet? Damn straight. The camera, well, it’s usually on my desk, and I figured if the house blew down I could document things and put the video on YouTube. I was going to get my Flip video camera, but I forgot it.

The inside closet is my coat closet, so there’s already a fair amount of padding. It’s under the stairs, which I’m told is a pretty sturdy area. Thankfully, I did not have to use it. But I’ve always been a big believer in an ounce of prevention, so until about midnight, I was prepared to hide out in the closet if the wind kicked up too much and I started hearing that noise again. I was thinking I should probably buy another flashlight and just keep it in the closet, in case I have no time or warning. I also need a decent pair of sturdy shoes. Time to buy hiking boots again. I don’t remember what happened to my old ones.

Things I thought about bringing but didn’t: My pistol, food (let’s not get carried away), and the cats. I figured that there was no way to get them in the event of a tornado, and they’d have to deal as best they could. They’d run under the bed or the bureau at the noise, anyway.

Probably should have brought the revolver. Better with me than blown away in a tornado, or buried under the rubble. Oh, well. Next time.

Posted in Life | 1 Comment

The AP is not even trying to hide the anti-Israel bias anymore

Get a load of this anti-Israel headline, which contains a typo. Sure, it’s a typo. Right. Because it slipped right past the layers and layers of AP fact-checkers and editors, the thing that separates the journalists from the bloggers.

Israel charged with extorting African migrants in trafficking ring

Nice. All of Israel is extorting African migrants. Really? Does that mean this is a UN investigation or something?

An Israeli man has been charged with participation in a human trafficking ring that captured and tortured African migrants in Egypt’s neighboring Sinai desert.

The indictment, announced Sunday, says the accused extorted tens of thousands of dollars from Eritrean and Sudanese migrants in Israel whose relatives were held captive in Sinai.

Oh, an Israeli man. It must just be a typo, because, really, who would blame all of Israel for the actions of one man?

Yes, it’s a typo. I know it is. But the AP’s attitude on Israel is so questionable as to make me wonder if it was deliberately left that way, or deliberately made that way. Because there’s something missing from the story on the Israeli who is being charged with extortion and kidnapping.

He’s not an Israeli Jew. He’s probably a Bedouin.

Rahat resident Yusef Alkrinoi has been indicted for belonging to an organization inolved in the kidnapping of Sudanese and Eritrean citizens in Sinai for ransom from their relatives in Israel.

Funny how the AP only counts Israeli Arabs as plain Israelis when they commit crimes. And they make sure to use “Israeli” in the headline on those stories. But no, there’s no media bias against Israel. None at all.

Posted in Israel, Media Bias | Comments Off on The AP is not even trying to hide the anti-Israel bias anymore

Gracie-in-a-box

Happy Caturday!

Gracie is now dividing her time between the box and her bed. No, she doesn’t care that it’s full of cat toys. That seems to make it more comfortable.

Gracie in her box

She’s a happy Gracie!

Posted in Cats | 2 Comments

Any experts on oil refineries out there?

A question just occurred to me while reading this Byron York piece on how Obama wants to be known as the Pipeline President:

When the president appeared in Cushing, White House image makers positioned him in front of huge stockpiles of pipe — tons and tons of pipe. Message: Obama loves pipelines. “Under my administration,” the president said, “we’ve added enough new oil and gas pipeline to encircle the Earth and then some.”

But Obama wasn’t in Cushing because he has approved so much new pipeline. He was there because he is facing bipartisan opposition, in Congress and across the country, for blocking the proposed Keystone XL pipeline that would bring about 700,000 barrels of oil from Canada to refineries in Texas every day, creating thousands of new jobs in the process. The opposition appears to be growing, and there’s good reason to believe Obama will be forced to reverse himself sometime in the next few months.

Why don’t they just built another refinery closer to Canada? Do you need the ocean or a large body of water? We have one here in Richmond on the shore of the James, so I’m guessing no to the ocean bit. Is it far less expensive to lay pipe than to build a refinery? Is it faster?

I don’t know, and I’d like to know the answers.

Posted in Politics, The One | 4 Comments

Not blogging but …

I’m writing for PJMedia and Meryl generously said I can plug my stuff.

I have a couple of new articles this week, the first was Washington Post Halfway Out of the Obama Tank?
Nah, I don’t think the Post will not endorse Obama come October, but it’s still been giving him a pretty hard time about his foreign policy.

Yesterday, No Islamists Here: Media Buries Motive on Toulouse was published.

Posted in Israel | Comments Off on Not blogging but …

The jihadi is dead, but don’t call him an Islamist

French police ended their siege of the building where the multiple murderer jihadi was hiding and attacked. The bastard jumped out the window after trying to take down more people with him. He failed at that, thankfully.

The 31-hour standoff between French authorities and Islamic-extremist Mohammed Merah ended with a series of loud explosions and dramatic gunfight. According police officials, the commotion was the beginning of a raid that left Merah dead.

Claude Guéant the French Interior Minister said the suspect was hiding in the bathroom when the elite police squad raided the apartment. After quietly sitting in the bathtub while the officers searched the apartment, the suspect came out with guns blazing and engaged the armed officers in a shootout that was unlike any they had ever encountered.

Merah then jumped out of a window still shooting while falling to his death. Two police officers were injured in the gunfight but should recover.

The L.A. Times is one of the few sources I could find that call him an Islamist at all, let alone in the lead.

I’m glad the bastard is dead. I’m sorry the police didn’t kill him 31 hours before he died–they gave him another chance to hurt people, and he took it and succeeded. And now the media get to repeat the bullshit excuse that this depraved subhuman murdered children because of Gaza and soldiers because of Afghanistan. It turns out that he was a repeat offender as a juvenile with a record of violence, but that’s no excuse when he flat-out uses Gaza and Afghanistan as his supposed reasons. Even the Palestinians are calling him a criminal and saying he shouldn’t link his murder rampage with their cause. (Well, Salam Fayyad, anyway–that’s one Palestinian, though he’s never condemned Hamas or PIJ terror.)

I’m sure we’re going to read about how he was the product of the French “suburbs”–the urban areas where the Algerian immigrants are raised. But he was a petty criminal with a grudge.

He said Merah had tried to join the military but was rejected. He said Merah was also disillusioned after a string of convictions for petty crimes and after efforts to reduce his sentences through work programs failed.

“He felt rejected by the periods of detention he was handed out, and for his wish to defend France in the army. Now, he is in a process of hate,” Etelin said.

And the media are still trying to push the “lone wolf” scenario.

French authorities – like others across Europe – have long been concerned about “lone-wolf” attacks by young, Internet-savvy militants who find radical beliefs online, since they are harder to find and track.

“Lone wolves are formidable adversaries,” Gueant said.

Except I’m not buying it. He was a petty thief with a record of violence and an axe to grind.

He lost his job a few months ago and spent a lot of time alone at home watching videos on the Internet including some of gruesome Islamist beheadings of hostages, according to the prosecutor.

One woman acquaintance, interviewed on television with her face concealed, said Merah had turned “weird” in recent months, carrying a sword and showing her a video of al Qaeda executions.

He blamed everyone else for his problems, and Islamism gave him the outlet for his anger. Some in the news media are finally calling him what he was: An Islamist.

An Islamic extremist who boasted of killing seven people to strike back at France died Thursday after jumping from his window, gun in hand, in a fierce shootout with police, a French minister said.

But this CBS/AP news story doesn’t so much as identify him as a Muslim:

The French Interior minister says Mohammed Merah, the prime suspect in seven murders in and around Toulouse, died Thursday morning in a jump from an apartment window after “shooting madly” at police who raided the building.

You have to drop down past the middle of the updated on CBS to even find the word “Islam,” and here’s how it’s used:

Still, it was the first time a radical Islamic motive has been ascribed to killings in France in years.

And they won’t drop the lone wolf excuse. Look for it to be big over the next few days as people try to excuse the murderous rampage of a depraved and deviant man.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Media Bias, Terrorism | Comments Off on The jihadi is dead, but don’t call him an Islamist

Kitty picture break

Because the news is atrocious this week.

Tig where he shouldn't be

And of course, Princess Gracie, this time in an uncharacteristically goofy pose:

Gracie in a silly pose

There. I can feel my blood pressure going down already.

Posted in Cats | 2 Comments

Why not for the soldiers?

You know what thought keeps cropping up when I think of the deaths caused by the French jihadi? Why did France not have a statewide search for the murderer of three soldiers in two separate attacks? They knew it was the same weapon that killed them all. They released that information during the hunt for the killer at the Jewish school.

So why didn’t the French care enough about their soldiers to launch a nationwide manhunt last week? It might have prevented the murders of three children and a rabbi.

Way to go, France. I see Inspector Clouseau is still at work there.

Posted in Terrorism, World | 2 Comments

A jihadi, not a neo-Nazi–but what’s the real difference?

French police have been in a standoff with the man they think was behind the shootings of the Jewishs school and the three soldiers. He says he’s part of al Qaeda, and this AP article does not once call the shooter a Muslim, though it identifies some of his victims as such.

A gunman claiming Al Qaeda links and suspected in the killings of three Jewish schoolchildren, a rabbi and three paratroopers barricaded himself in an apartment building Wednesday. He is surrounded by hundreds of police officers and has stopped talking to negotiators.

An early morning police raid to arrest the 24-year-old Frenchman of Algerian descent erupted into a firefight. Three police officers were wounded, Interior Minister Claude Gueant said. After hours of trying to persuade him to surrender, police evacuated the five-story building, escorting residents out by the roof and fire truck ladders.

The bolded text is code for Muslim in France. Apparently, he murdered his co-religionists because he thought they were responsible for Afghanistan. Oh, and he’s totally blaming Israel, as will many pundits. And of course, the AP carries that information in the third paragraph of the lead, making sure it won’t get cut off in the “World News” section of your local papers.

The suspect told police he belonged to Al Qaeda and wanted to take revenge for Palestinian children killed in the Middle East, Gueant said. The suspect also said he was angry about French military intervention abroad, and had spent time in Afghanistan and Pakistan, Gueant said.

So he was radicalized in jihadi camps. And this despicable piece of garbage was brainwashed that murdering children and shooting soldiers as they get money from an ATM is a proper response. But hey, there’s no threat coming from Afghanistan or Pakistan. We should just up and leave, because we killed bin Laden.

Here’s the thing: The anti-Israel angle is going to be played up. But al Qaeda is every bit as ant-Semitic as neo-Nazis, and there are more of them. Just ask Daniel Pearl. Oh, wait. You can’t. Al Qaeda killed him, after forcing him to say “I am a Jew” on tape.

In every generation, they try to destroy us. Our enemies are interchangeable.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israel, Media Bias, Terrorism | Comments Off on A jihadi, not a neo-Nazi–but what’s the real difference?

More on the French neo-Nazi murder spree

Catherine Ashton is the lowest of the low. She equated the accidental killing of civilians in Gaza, who are killed because terrorists fire their rockets near schools, hospitals, and homes, with the deliberate murder of children by French neo-Nazis. I would say she can’t sink any lower, but of course, she can, and she will. Meanwhile, the French president calls it what it is: A horrible anti-Semitic attack designed to murder Jews.

Meantime, I couldn’t help but notice the AP doing its usual dance when it comes to Jewish issues. For instance:

Monday’s attack revolted France, where school shootings and deadly attacks on Jews are extremely rare, and drew strong condemnation from Israel and the United States.

Why that phrase? Because the AP was also running an article about how rampant anti-Semitism is in France, and they had to push the narrative somewhere. You know, the one that minimizes harm to Jews or Israelis. Here’s the lead:

The number of anti-Semitic acts reported in France last year fell, but there’s still a hotline staffed 24 hours a day, seven days a week to report such incidents in the country.

Jews in France for the most part live in safety and participate freely in French public life, and most anti-Semitic acts target property and not people. But the existence of the hotline speaks to the fact that anti-Semitism often lurks just below the surface.

And here is the fourth paragraph. Note the narrative insertion. I don’t think I need to bold it.

Jewish graves — and Muslim ones — are frequently desecrated; the prime minister recently suggested that kosher slaughter was out of sync with modern times; and just last week, threatening letters were sent to two synagogues in Paris, including one that called Jews “Satan” and warned they would go to Hell.

You know what’s missing from the lead of the original story on the shootings? The words “anti-Semitic attack”. Always, the minimizing of threats to Jews. That seems to be AP style. No, check that: It’s business as usual when it comes to the world. Take another look at what’s buried in the above paragraph:

… the prime minister recently suggested that kosher slaughter was out of sync with modern times..

It’s Sarkozy pandering to the Le Pen far right who, I might add, are the neo-Nazi wing of French politics. And it’s not just him doing the pandering. (And he didn’t just “suggest that kosher slaughter was out of sync”. He said straight out that kosher and halal meats should be labeled according to the way the animals were slaughtered. It’s a slap against Jews and Muslims for the Le Pen right.)

But back to the attack: Just when you thought it couldn’t get any sicker–I won’t repeat the details that make me want to kill the attacker myself–we find out he may have had a camera around his neck to film it. He probably thinks he won’t be caught when he uploads the video to neo-Nazi sites. He will be mistaken.

I repeat: Bastards.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Media Bias, Terrorism | Comments Off on More on the French neo-Nazi murder spree

Iranian nukes, POTUS, expectations and common sense

A day doesn’t pass without all kinds of media (local and international) offering another deep insight on the subject of whether it will be wise for Israel to have a go at Iranian nuclear sites. As if it weren’t enough, about a thousand of various experts and their mom in law have already offered various detailed scenarios of IDF attack, if and when. So detailed that the officers in IDF general staff responsible for planning of the affair don’t have to strain their brains, where simply copying all these plans and combining them into a Godzilla of military planning will suffice. Here, for example, is another one of the mentioned scenarios, from CNN, that appeared as if by miracle a minute ago when I clicked on CNN site to check something unrelated.

And of course, the number of experts that deal with the aftermath of such attack is at least similar in number to that of the attack’s “planners”, if not exceeding the latter. The variety of ways our house here will be demolished by the downpour of Hamas, Hezbollah, Syrian and Iranian missiles, described in excruciating detail, almost caused me to hang a “For Sale” sign on the fence.

There is one point of agreement between the experts: the Israeli strike will happen, and it will happen soon. This comes from overwhelming majority, save one Philip Weiss who considers it prudent to claim that Israeli strike is coming and that it will never happen at the same time. But I mentioned him only as a (living) joke, albeit one in very poor taste.

The (almost) lonely voice of reason, that of prof. Barry Rubin, who considers that Neither Israel nor the US will attack Iran in 2012 and brings several good arguments in favor of this belief, drowns in the tumult of the above mentioned majority. Aside of his arguments, there is an explanation of seemingly irrational blabbing of Israeli talking heads:

So why are Israelis talking about a potential attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities? Because that’s a good way – indeed, the only way Israel has – to pressure Western countries to work harder on the issue, to increase sanction and diplomatic efforts. If one believes that somehow pushing Tehran into slowing down or stopping its nuclear weapons’ drive is the only alternative to war, that greatly concentrates policymakers’ minds. Personally, I don’t participate–consciously or as an instrument – in disinformation campaigns, even if they are for a good cause.

Indeed, the pressure on Iran is stepped up, the recent disconnect of 30 Iranian banks from SWIFT being an excellent example of the tactics outlined by prof. Rubin working. In addition, the incessant noise of the various experts mentioned above causes no end of heartburn and headache to the Iranian intelligence, defense and other officials in charge of promoting and protecting the nuclear effort. Which is all to the good.

To sweep the question of the table: what do I personally believe in? Not that it matters, but.

  • Does Iran strive to get its hands on nuclear weapons? Check.
  • Do Iranian leaders aim to destroy Israel? Check.
  • Will various sanctions against Iran, applied by the world, force Iran into cessation of its nuclear development? Hardly. 
  • Will application of high explosives to multiple Iranian nuclear facilities make the world a better place? Check.
  • Will IDF, so instructed by our government, carry out the strike on Iran – whether this year or later? I just don’t know and, as any other member of the public, will have to wait.
  • Do I spend sleepless nights drawing arrows on the map and/or moving toy airplanes to and fro? Nope, I prefer to leave the matter to experts and have better things to do during the night.
  • Do I pine for war with Iran – or any other people? Nope.
  • Am I bothered by the feverish pitch of histrionics reached by the media on the subject? Yes, I try to switch off any appliance that attempts to bring another talking head babbling about it. Even our fridge that, unfortunately, carries an LCD panel and some buttons on its door, became somewhat of a menace to me lately. But I manage somehow.

And in any case, the main point of this post, as it was planned, is not whether the strike will happen or not. It is about the brouhaha raised in the media, especially the Israeli media, about the attitude of Barack Obama (to remind you – the current President of the United States of America) to the issue of the Iranian nukes. And about our (wrong) expectations of the POTUS.

Some people believe that Obama is a great friend of Israel. Just the other day Brian Goldfarb was quoting Jeffrey Goldberg who is quite unequivocally a believer in Obama’s unwavering stand on Iranian nukes:

One of the most useful alliances President Obama has created with a foreign leader is the one with a person he ostensibly doesn’t like very much at all. Both Barack Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu want to stop Iran from going nuclear (and yes, I’m among the people who believe Obama, for manifold reasons, some having to do with Israel, and many others not, is determined to keep Iran from crossing the nuclear threshold) and both have played key, and complementary, roles in the campaign.

Some people, on the contrary, suspect Obama of very dark designs related to Iranian nukes, Israel and whatnot, to the tune of saying that Obama Wants a Nuclear Iran.

Obama’s true education when it came to Israel is by radicals that hated Israel, and even left-wing Jews whose disdain for Israel’s right to exist is their guiding force. He truly believes that the world’s problems, and particularly the problems of the Middle East are caused by the existence of Israel. He views the Moslem world as having been put upon by the decision of the west to allow and support the reestablishment of the Jewish state.

I wouldn’t argue with the two points of view expressed above. After all, Obama stated quite forcefully that he is not going to abide a situation where US will have to deal with containment of nuclear Iran. On the face of it, this is as clear-cut declaration of intentions as anyone would hope to get from a leader of the superpower. Short of the said leader directing the Chief of Staff to sit down with the reporters and discuss the planning of Iran campaign in minute details.

But, on the other hand, Obama is a politician and, as his brilliant election campaign four years ago has shown, a consummate fantasist. Anyone who believes a politician must have his brain examined, I submit. More so when this anyone believes the word of a foreign politician – and I don’t even believe a single word coming from the face of our own Bibi, so why should I take what Obama says as a given?

This is why I had a problem with the headline of Isi Leibler’s article Can Obama be trusted?  Because any serious discussion of such a critical issue as Iranian nukes that starts with the question of trust or lack thereof, is inherently flawed. To start with, some of us here in Israel tend to forget that we are talking about the head of another state. It shouldn’t be beyond anyone’s comprehension that the POTUS has his own list of problems to resolve and his own set of priorities to follow. Whether helping out Israel in its hour of need happens to a) match one or more of these priorities and b) isn’t contrary to the American interest is not always that clear, unless we are pushing the discourse into the realm of friendship, tradition (not that old, stemming barely from 1967 or thereabout and not always that firm,  let’s not delude ourselves) and moral imperatives. Friendship, tradition and moral imperatives don’t happen to belong to the list of criteria that comprise sensible realpolitik, unfortunately (or fortunately, who knows?).

Indeed, we should not forget that the POTUS – any POTUS – is first of all and above all the leader of United States, as such accountable to the Congress and to the people who have elected him to the post. Whether this or another act is matching American interests, is for him and his people to decide, and a POTUS who acts against these interests could, even should be charged with dereliction of duty and punished accordingly.

Isi Leibler, thankfully, does arrive to a right conclusion, in spite of the article as a whole dealing with doubts about Obama’s position. After all is said, he states:

We would like to believe that the US would support us if we became engaged in a military conflict with the Iranians. However, notwithstanding the improved atmosphere in Washington, when one observes the indifference of the civilized world, including the Obama Administration, towards the current slaughter in Syria and recollects how, despite firm undertakings, the US and others failed to support Israel prior to the 1967 Six Day War, we require little persuasion to be convinced that ultimately we must rely on ourselves.

We must rely on ourselves. And this is the main conclusion we should get out of the media storm. Stop expecting miraculous assistance (from the terrestrial entities, at least). Stop whining. Stop looking around for expressions of moral (or other) support. Just do what needs to be done when it needs to be done, because no one else would – or should – do it for you.

And, if you are religious, do that other thing, too. Cannot hurt.

P.S. As for the detailed scenarios of the IDF action, created by the uncounted armchair generals: keep them coming. I bet IDF general staff is grateful for the assistance.

Cross-posted on SimplyJews

Posted in Iran, Israel, Politics | Comments Off on Iranian nukes, POTUS, expectations and common sense

In every generation, they come after the Jews

Some sick bastard killed three children and a rabbi at a French Jewish school. French authorities think the killings are related to the murder of French soldiers on two occasions in the last ten days.

The AP thinks it’s cute to use the headline “Shooter on scooter kills rabbi and 3 children.”

It may be related to the war in Afghanistan, but of course, officials are close-mouthed about that right now. What do Jewish children have to do with that war? Nothing. Unless you’re, say, a member of al Qaeda and hate all Jews.

Two other fatal shootings in the vicinity of Toulouse in recent days targeted French soldiers.

In the first, a soldier was shot and killed in on March 11 as he met a man who pretended to be interesting in buying the soldier’s motorcycle.

Four days later, two other soldiers were killed and a third was badly injured as they took money from an automatic teller in Montauban, about 30 miles to the north.

Police said the same weapon, probably a Colt .45 semiautomatic pistol of the kind once used by U.S. armed forces, was used in both shootings.

This gave rise to speculation that the killer may be motivated by French participation in the Afghan war. But authorities were careful not to assign any motive, saying they had few facts at their disposal.

Bastards.

Posted in Jews, Terrorism, World | 1 Comment