The presidents wants YOU to snitch on your neighbor

Really? Attack Watch? Really?

The President's official snitch report site

The president of the United States of America is so effing insecure that he has a website dedicated to trying to “fight the smears” about him?

Really? Because it’s not like the media ever posted a daily smear on, say, President Bush or anything like that to make him look like a moron or something.

Seriously, the site is already a laughingstock. This is an utterly hilarious video about it.

My money’s on this site going down by tomorrow.

God, this man can’t get out of office soon enough for me.

Posted in Juvenile Scorn, Politics, The One | 2 Comments

Your daily news briefs

Oh, I feel SO much better now: The Iranians aren’t going to create nuclear weapons because their ethics don’t allow it. Yes, really. They say so. So all those “death to Israel” demonstrations? The calls to erase Israel from the map? The destruction of the Zionist entity? Don’t worry. It won’t be by an Iranian nuke. Because their ethics won’t let them.

Ransom paid, they’re coming home: Apparently, the right price has been reached. The hapless hikers, who have been imprisoned in a hotel for the past two years. Yes, really, read the article—you get total bushwa like this:

He said Fattal and Bauer are enjoying “very good conditions here in prison … it’s like staying in a hotel.”

A hotel where you’re regularly abused, sure. I know of people who stay in those all the time. Oh. Wait.

So, the price of the release? Half a mil each. But of course, we don’t know what the Obama administration has done behind the scenes.

This is why I keep reading Jeffrey Goldberg: He gets some things wrong, but he also gets things very right. Goldberg puts the blame on Israel’s troubles squarely where it belongs: On Israel’s enemies.

If at first you don’t succeed: The Palmer Report declared the blockade of Gaza legal. (So does international law.) But that’s not good enough for the UNHRC, which brought in five “independent” experts—just like the UNHRC is an independent body, not an anti-Israel arm of the UN—to declare the blockade illegal. Now Erdogan will claim the UN backs him on his demands for Israel to remove the blockade. Watch. And speaking of watch, I’m betting UN Watch will have an article on how much the “independent” experts have already shown they hate Israel. More later.

Disgusting: NBC profiles Mad Mahmoud. I’m betting one of the major media networks would have profiled Hitler in the 1930s if we’d had TV back then.

A bad omen for Obama: A Jewish Democrat lost the Congressional seat formerly held by Anthony “Someone hacked my Twitter account and sent naked pictures of me!” Weiner in NYC. Really. A kippa-wearing Jewish Democrat lost in New York. This is good news for those of us who hope the Republicans nominate someone who won’t scare the independents next November. The spin.

Posted in Iran, Israel, Media Bias, Middle East, Politics | 4 Comments

Tuesday morning news briefs

Yeah, but they have to have the ability to fire first: Turkey is installing new “friend or foe” software in its F-16s, the better to target IAF jets with. Isn’t it time for Barack Obama to have a talk with Turkey? Isn’t it time for NATO to tell Turkey to cut this crap out? A NATO member is regularly threatening a NATO ally with war. But of course, let’s not forget that Israeli Double Standard Time is in effect. That’s why no NATO statement on Turkey’s threats to a nation that has not threatened it—ever—are being ignored. Report after report after report. When does Turkey stop making with the rhetoric and start acting? Israel can’t afford to find out.

A break in the anti-Israel rhetoric: Romania memorializes six fallen IDF soldiers. Bravo, Romania.

If you’ve lost the Greens: One of Australia’s Green MPs came out against the boycott of Israeli products. Good on you, mate. (Of course, he’s still not pro-Israel, but at least he’s not on the side of the Nazis, I mean, the anti-Zionists targeting Jewish shops.

By the numbers: 2,600 dead in the Syrian protests against the Dorktator. Number of UNSC resolutions against Syria: Zero. Number of UNHRC commissions investigating Syria through August: Zero. Number starting this past Monday: 1. (And they passed a strongly-worded resolution, woo!) Publicity for that compared with publicity for the Goldstone Commission: Oh, please, I was just joking. Number of outrageously outraged protests against Syria worldwide: Zero. Can you say, “Israeli Double Standard Time”? I knew you could.

It’s a star! It’s an asteroid! No, it’s SUPER-EARTH: Kewl. Too bad we’re dismantling our space program, so we won’t be able to figure out how to visit Super-Earth. Okay, so it’s 35 light-years away, speed of light, carry the two… bummer. No visiting Super-Earth in my lifetime.

Posted in Israeli Double Standard Time, Middle East, Turkey, World | Comments Off on Tuesday morning news briefs

Casus Belli

PM Erdogan of Turkey said, speaking of Israel’s raid on the Mavi Marmara, in an interview on Al Jazeera last week:

The attack that took place in international waters did not comply with any international law. In fact, it was grounds for war.

Other than being dimwitted, which I cannot imagine Erdogan is, the only possible way that he could argue the first portion of this is if he ignores what international law actually says. If a blockade is legal, and the UN says that it is according to the Palmer Report, than any vessel declaring intent to run the blockade is a legal target no matter where it is on the seas. See Talk Gaza Flotilla for a good analysis of the legal issues, but here is the most important:

The San Remo Manual on International Law Applicable to Armed Conflicts at Sea (12 June 1994). S67 states that “Merchant vessels flying the flag of neutral States may not be attacked unless they: (a) are believed on reasonable grounds to be carrying contraband or breaching a blockade, and after prior warning they intentionally and clearly refuse to stop, or intentionally and clearly resist visit, search or capture.

This is why the Palmer Commission found Israel’s raid legal. Israel complied with every bit of this. As for the international waters argument, clearly the Palmer Commission didn’t buy it either because it is legal to confront a ship known to be “breaching a blockade” end of story.

Thus, the casus belli. Well, a country enforcing a legal blockade acting to enforce that blockade legally can hardly be accused of a casus belli. However, a nation knowingly backing ships whose goal it is to breach a blockade certainly could be accused of one and beyond any doubt, escorting such vessels would be considered a casus belli, a cause for war.

Right now, we have many nations condemning Israel for not apologizing for acting legally, though perhaps more harshly than it could have. Perhaps. But who is condemning Turkey for threatening war? Turkey has a lot to offer and like Saudi oil, that is allowing it a free pass.

Posted in Israel, Turkey | 1 Comment

Monday briefs

Erdogan ups the ante: For a guy who doesn’t want to go to war, he sure is talking all warlike and all that. Funny how he always says this on al Jazeera, and when called on it says he was misquoted. Like when he said Turkish naval vessels would escort the next flotilla. Or how he said he would visit Gaza when he visits Egypt this month but then backed off.

Egypt, the Iran wannabe: Decision time for Egypt. Ignore international precedents and laws and allow your Islamist, genocidal mobs to try to murder Israeli embassy staff and destroy the embassy, or join the civilized world and protect them from the rabid mob? You decide. Arresting some of the mob is a good start. Not letting them into the building in the first place would have been better.

How long before Obama calls in this favor? While I don’t agree with the people who think that Obama is anti-Israel, as shown by his critical help in stopping the Egyptian mob from killing Israeli security guards, I’m sure that he won’t let this opportunity pass to then pressure Netanyahu into agreeing with something bad for Israel. Wait for it. Oh, P.S.: If you’re the titular head of a country, and your mobs are endangering other nations’ embassies, you should probably answer your phone. Asshat.

The New York Times: Always finding new ways to blame the Jews. It makes you wonder if they were writing editorials in the thirties blaming German Jews for bringing down the Nuremberg Laws on themselves. Today’s editorial? It’s Israel’s fault that Mahmoud Abbas is trying to get the UN to unilaterally declare a state. But then, coming from the paper that pays the man who said we should be ashamed for our reactions to 9/11 and that George W. Bush “cashed in on the horror” (yes, exact words, see for yourself), nothing the Times prints anymore can surprise me.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Media Bias, Middle East, The One, Turkey | Comments Off on Monday briefs

Remembering 9/11

I have nothing new to say that I didn’t already say. Except to note that this morning, on the way to religious school with the twins, I discovered that Max knew all about 9/11 and Osama bin Laden’s death, even though he won’t be ten until next month.

As I wrote above, the world changed that day.

Here in cental VA, the town in which I live sprang flags between yesterday and today along the main road. I’m sure I didn’t see them yesterday.

I love living here.

Posted in American Scene, Terrorism | Comments Off on Remembering 9/11

Caturday belly shots

Tig:

Tig and belly

Gracie:

Gracie and her belly

Posted in Cats | 2 Comments

Three years of homeownership

My friend Sarah stopped by just a little while ago with her mother-in-law, who will be taking care of the kids while Sarah and Larry are away for the weekend. I’m on synagogue and religious school duty (as in: Take children to services and school this weekend). Diane has never seen my condo, so I gave her the nickel tour and after they left, I realized—hey, I’ve been here for three years already!

In those three years, I’ve refinanced a full point lower (tempted to do it again, but probably not worth it), paid off my debt completely, bought bookcases, a dining room set, a new desk for the office, a bed for the guestroom (you may laugh, but I had none when I moved in and found a queen bed for $600 that everyone loves), and various small household items. I’ve joined the condo board (term ends next month, woo-hoo!), lived through several snowstorms, a hurricane and an earthquake (in one week!), started a new novel (close to 20k words and counting), had Sarah’s kids overnight at least a dozen times (and the twins will be here again tomorrow so I can take them to religious school on Sunday), and had my own Passover seders in my own home.

The guest room went from being off-limits to the cats to being Tig’s room to being open at all times but rarely visited, as I no longer have my personal laptop downstairs, and he wants to be with me whenever possible. Gracie rarely comes downstairs anymore. She’s fourteen and has something wrong with her ACL (she goes pop-pop when she walks sometimes). She doesn’t care for stairs. And she really doesn’t need to go downstairs. The upstairs bathroom, part of the master bedroom, is large enough that it has a full bath/shower, a large double-sized sink counter, and the cats’ food dishes and litter box on either end. Gracie’s favorite petting place is the bathroom sink, so whenever I go into the bathroom, she (sigh) follows me in and demands a skritch. It’s annoying when I need to brush my teeth or comb my hair, because Tigger almost always decides that he needs to see what’s happening, too. So more often than not, I’m skritching Gracie while Tig is licking her ears, or licking the water off her head as she drinks from the sink.

The best thing about having my wonderful, ten-year-old condo is that I finally have a place that I love, that is beautiful and roomy and inviting. I have a place for guests, dinners, movie nights, even parties (if I ever decide to throw one again). I love that my friends happily pack off their children for a day or an overnight stay. And apparently, my refrigerator is big enough to hold two fridges’ worth of food, as Sarah discovered after Hurricane Irene took out her power. (I live in some kind of magic electricity zone now—my neighbors tell me that they had power during Hurricane Isabel eight years ago. I was one of the 22% of Richmonders who had power.)

So, yeah—being a homeowner is great. Especially when you go back and read stories like this one.

Three years and four days after moving in, I love my condo as much as I did three years and four days ago.

Posted in Life | Comments Off on Three years of homeownership

Friday brieflings

Okay, this is just funny: Read it in full, and yes, there are bad words in it, but this is utterly hilarious. A rocker explains why he won’t let Glee cover his songs. (For the records, every time I’ve watched Glee I’ve lasted all of five minutes before nodding off. And I LOVE musicals.)

Sorkin does Olbermann: Oh, no way this one ends well. Aaron Sorkin is doing a series for HBO on a cable news program. Expect retreads of whatever that SNL clone show drama was, plus the West Wing, plus a large, healthy does of uber-left POV, and, of course, much mocking of the internets. Since I don’t have HBO, this is an extremely easy choice: Pass.

Turkey’s looking to get kicked out of NATO: Erdogan says he’s going to protect the next Gaza flotilla with Turkish warships. So basically, one of our NATO allies is threatening another of our allies. I think it’s all talk, because I don’t think Erdogan actually wants to start a shooting war over the Palestinians. No Muslim country really does, as we know they’re ready to fight to the last Palestinian, but unwilling to jump in if their own soldiers will be slaughtered. (Mad Mullahs and Jihadis not included.) Oh, the main reason I’m calling bullshit on this? There is no new flotilla planned. Right now, it’s all hot air.

Didn’t we see this bit before? Wait, didn’t Saddam Hussein keep transmitting from hiding? Because now Gadaffy is doing it. Yeah, good luck to you, dude. In fact, I hope you have the exact same luck as Saddam had. Buh-bye!

Oh, there was a presidential speech last night? Yeah, I forgot. Caught the last five minutes of it. Boy, Obama had his Stern Look on, as well as his Grownup In The Room. And nobody cared. I was more interested in the way Verizon took control of my DVR to send an emergency broadcast warning for flash floods in my area. (And I was planning on standing on the bank of the James River to watch the waters rise, too. No, not really. I was planning on going to the supermarket, but the torrential downpour changed my mind.)

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Middle East, Politics, Television, Turkey | 4 Comments

Thursday briefs (now, with turkeys!)

The difference between Israel and its neighbors: An Israeli man was indicted for throwing stones at the Egyptian embassy. The Egyptian man who scaled the Israeli embassy wall and replaced the Israeli flag with Egypt’s was hailed as a hero. And by the way, note that the AFP calls the Israeli flag “the Star of David flag”. It’s a very subtle way of delegitimizing Israel. Ah, the French. Their Jew-hatred will never end.

Help us Hillary-kenobe, you’re our only hope: You know, right now, I would vote for Hillary over Rick Perry. I don’t like Perry on too many issues, and I think if he keeps hammering social security, Rove is right: He’ll be unelectable. But I don’t like his record on the death penalty. I don’t like his record on teaching creationism in schools. It’s religion people, let’s stop pretending otherwise. But that really doesn’t matter. The way he’s going, if he’s the nominee, you can forget about the middle. And I’m part of that middle.

Turkeys from Turkey: You know, the bullshit just keeps on getting deeper and deeper. Erdogan refined his “no trade with Israel” to “no defense trade with Israel,” which hasn’t happened for the last 18 months. The war of words and threats continue, but I really can’t see Turkey actually causing an international incident with Israel. Meantime, some Israeli ministers are pointing out the obvious: Turkey’s Islamist bent began years ago, and won’t stop if Israel apologizes. The Turkish opposition isn’t mincing words:

K?l?çdaro?lu also criticized Turkish foreign policy policy, claiming that the Palmer Report, which legitimized the Gaza blockade, was a blow to the Turkish government. “This is one of the greatest defeats in the history of Turkish foreign policy.”

He added: “The Turkish government aimed to delegitimize the Gaza blockade and ultimately led to the UN’s legitimization of the blockade. Can this be regarded as successful foreign policy? Turkey has lost on all fronts: Its citizens were killed, it was defeated in the legal arena and has lost leverage in lifting the blockade which has only consolidated further.”

The best Turkey can come up with to counter? “Well, Livni supports us.” Um, no, she doesn’t.

“Despite deep disagreements with Netanyahu regarding his diplomatic conduct, I’ll keep defending IDF soldiers as they work to secure the nation,” Livni said. “There will be no rift between us on this issue. Both countries must revert back to talking with each other, not about each other.”

When one is in a deep hole, one should probably stop digging. But when one is Turkey, that won’t happen.

Posted in Israel, Middle East, Politics, Turkey | 5 Comments

The Guardian and its Israel-hate: No boundaries

Apparently, the Guardian only approves of UN reports that its staff agrees with.

Just Journalism takes apart the Guardian’s editorial that (I know, shocking) takes issue with the Palmer Report. Here’s my favorite line in the editorial itself:

It was Turkey’s decision to waive its veto that allowed Israel to join the OECD.

So let me get this straight. The fact that Turkey, one member of a 34-member economic cooperation body, did not exercise a veto to stop Israel from joining should be celebrated? No other member wanted to veto Israel’s accession. (And no other member, in point of fact, is a majority-Muslim state. That’s never pointed out when discussing the veto.) The Guardian has this exactly backwards: The fact that Turkey might have vetoed Israel’s membership is the fact that should be noted. Because here’s what the OECD is all about:

The mission of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world.

The Palestinians tried very hard to prevent Israel from joining. They failed.

Steinitz said Israel was being accepted into the club responsible for dictating the world’s financial guidelines. “There is also a political gain here. We are receiving a stamp of approval… that Israel belongs to the world’s most advanced and developed countries, and not just financially – in civil rights, a clean and independent court system, regulations, equality, and steps to eliminate discrimination,” he said.

The thing that the Palestinians, and the Israel-haters, fail to understand is that the disputed territories are not Israel. They are, someday, going to be a Palestinian state, if the Palestinians ever give up their hope to make Israel part of their “greater Palestine”. And as they are not part of Israel proper, their economy is their own, not part of Israel’s. In point of fact, 96% of the West Bank is under Palestinian control, not Israeli control. Which makes moot claims like this:

“If you include … the Palestinians living under Israeli occupation, or those working in the settlements, Israel would be one of the most unequal countries in the world, and therefore ineligible under OECD criteria,” says Hever.

Israel Derangement Syndrome knows no bounds, either. Here is the crux of the matter; what the OECD is all about, and why Israel absolutely belongs in this organization:

Drawing on facts and real-life experience, we recommend policies designed to make the lives of ordinary people better. We work with business, through the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, and with labour, through the Trade Union Advisory Committee. We have active contacts as well with other civil society organisations. The common thread of our work is a shared commitment to market economies backed by democratic institutions and focused on the wellbeing of all citizens. Along the way, we also set out to make life harder for the terrorists, tax dodgers, crooked businessmen and others whose actions undermine a fair and open society.

Turkey is the state that doesn’t belong in the OECD. Not that the Guardian editors would agree with that. In fact, they’re even supportive of Turkey taking Israel to the ICJ.

Israel will be able to do so no longer. Where the Mavi Marmara went, Turkey will follow by challenging the Gaza blockade in the international court of justice. And rightly so. The Palmer panel’s finding went against every statement the UN secretary general has made about Gaza, the Goldstone report and a report by the UN human rights council in September. If, as Palmer found, the siege is legal in international law, the occupation is too. This must be challenged in court.

Most analysts think that if Turkey does follow through with the ICJ, it’s going to be rebuffed out of hand, as a UN commission has already found that the blockade is legal. But never forget that when the rulings go in favor of Israel, the haters always reject them and insist on a do-over, just to make things right with their world. Just Journalism also points out that in citing the reports above, the Guardian ignores the anti-Israel bias of both the reports and the committees that authorized them. But that’s how it works in Israel-Hater World. Only official reports condemning Israel can be right; in everything else, the fix is in.

The Guardian long ago crossed the line from criticism of Israel to outright hatred. That’s why I rarely even mention it. Everyone knows it is staffed with rabid Jew-haters who use the cover word “Zionists” and think it excuses their bigotry.

Not here it doesn’t, you Jew-hating sons of bitches. Here, we call for the Yourish.com mantra on Jew-haters: Anti-Semites of the world, just die already. We won’t mind at all.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Media Bias, Turkey | 1 Comment

Back to work briefs

Turkey continues its anti-Israel agenda: Erdogan totally has Arab street creds now; he’s suspended all trade ties with Israel. Say, Erdie, you do realize that means the Israeli UAVs you bought aren’t going to be maintained, don’t you? Good luck with those PKK terrorists! Hope the Chinese have stolen enough American/Israeli technology to fill the bill!

Robert Gates seems to be a tad unhappy with Israel: Gates called Israel “an ungrateful ally” and further said the Obama administration gets nothing in return for the aid to Israel. That is patently untrue; U.S. Marines are training in Israel for door-to-door city combat. However, rather than launch a defensive defense of Bibi (to be repetitive and redundant): This is not good. Robert Gates should not be slamming Israel. It wasn’t good when James Baker did it; it’s not good now. And boy, aren’t the Israel haters going to make hay over this.

Speaking of ungrateful allies: The U.S. is spying on Israel—from the Israeli embassy.

World hypocrisy watch: The UN is complaining about Syria’s civilians under fire by the army. Will there be any action? Stay tuned.

Well, that sure goes against the narrative: More than three-fourths of those arrested in the London riots had criminal records. Really? No fooling? You mean it wasn’t a crime of the impoverished underclass fighting against the haves, struggling not to be a have-not anymore? Shyeah. If you keep up with the London papers, you know that the Brits rarely give criminals jailtime, do send to prison those homeowners who strike back at burglars in their homes, and give murderers the chance to get out of jail after little time served to murder again. Don’t blame the police. Blame the British system that insists that criminals be coddled instead of punished.

Posted in Israel, Politics, Turkey, World | 1 Comment

Labor Day briefs

Oh, shut up about so-called Israeli racism: The New York Times is running a front-page story on how Libyans are rounding up black-skinned Africans (and dark-skinned Libyans from the south) because they’re—wait for it—black. And all black men, apparently, were soldiers in Ghaddafi’s army. At least, until they’re cleared by the “investigator.” In the meantime, they have to stay by the hundreds in filthy, sweltering, concrete jails with no amenities, learning how to say “Allahu Akbar” and other Islamist slogans. Who are the real racists in the Middle East? Here’s a hint: It’s not the Jews.

Ehud Olmert, proving why he’s no longer PM: Olmert took a little time out from his legal problems to talk about the current Palestinian leadership, thus proving he’s no wiser now than when he was in office, trying to give away the farm:

He then added: “Gentlemen, there will not be a Palestinian leadership who wants peace more than the current leadership. Peace on terms that may be difficult and painful to most of us, peace that will involve concessions, the thought of which shocks us all, but they want peace.”

Yeah, they want peace as much as Yasser Arafat wanted peace. Which is to say, not at all. Arafat’s “peace of the brave” was really the “peace of the grave”—where he wanted all Israelis. Anyone who says otherwise is kidding himself.

The Iranian bomb gets closer and closer: Wonderful. Iran is increasing enrichment, after having moved their machinery underground. Because that’s what all peace-loving countries do with their peaceful nuclear power plants: Fortify them against attack.

One of Mubarak’s many crimes? Selling gas to Jews: Once again, let’s hear how the Egyptians aren’t going to be an issue. One of the charges against Mubarak is that he sold gas to “the Israeli enemy” for less than market prices. Seriously? They couldn’t find enough actual crimes against, you know, Egyptians? They had to add this one? But of course, because it will enable them to flog the scapegoat issue, and that’s what the world has always done: Scapegoat the Jews. I would worry about the current Middle East environment for Israel, but then I read Barry Rubin’s analysis, and I give a big sigh of relief.

Now, go celebrate your day off, my fellow Americans, and remember to thank the unions of yesteryear for the day. My father the teamster would be spinning in his grave, but I believe the time of unions is over. We have labor laws, the EOC, and many, many regulations that keep workplaces safe and fair. We don’t need the thugs of the SEIU and others threatening people who disagree with them.

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

Iran irked by errors in Qurans from China

This news item didn’t make the first pages of main newspapers and could have passed unnoticed:

Iranian publishers are complaining that cost-saving plans to print Qurans in China are yielding embarrassing results: A slew of typos. The head of Iran’s Quran oversight office says some of the Chinese-printed versions of Islam’s holy book are littered with spelling errors.

It is only thanks to our Signals Department’s vigilance that the Elders received this news and acted quickly, intercepting a letter from above mentioned head of Iran’s Quran oversight office to the manager of the Chinese publishing house where the erroneous holy books were printed. Here are some excerpts.
Continue reading

Posted in Iran, Satire, World | Comments Off on Iran irked by errors in Qurans from China

Netanyahu: No apology, Turkeys

Benjamin Netanyahu finally spoke to journalists about not apologizing to Turkey for killing nine Jihadis who were trying to kill Israeli soldiers. The AP article is almost unbiased, save for the adjective in the lead:

PM: Israel needn’t apologize for self-defense
Israel’s leader defiantly refused on Sunday to apologize to Turkey for a deadly Israeli raid on a Turkish-led flotilla bent on breaching Israel’s Gaza Strip blockade – an incident that has battered a relationship once seen as a cornerstone of regional stability.

In his first public remarks since Turkey announced Friday that it would expel the Israeli ambassador over the affair, Benjamin Netanyahu expressed Israel’s regret for the loss of lives in the May 2010 raid and said he hoped to mend ties with Turkey, formerly Israel’s closest ally in a Muslim world largely hostile to its existence.

Ankara had wanted Israel to apologize for the deaths and lift the embargo on Gaza, a Palestinian territory run by Hamas militants with a long history of deadly violence against Israel.

You would think that Turkish intransigence might get a mention, what with Erdogan’s opposition saying that he’s an idiot for focusing on the apology, but hey, this is the AP. This is the best you’re gonna get:

The decision to expel the Israeli envoy from Turkey on Friday followed the leaking of a U.N. report on the bloodshed. The report, accepted by Israel and rejected by Turkey, defended the embargo on Gaza and said violent activists on board the blockade-busting Mavi Marmara had attacked the raiding naval commandos.

But it also accused Israel of using disproportionate force against the activists and called the deaths of eight Turks and one Turkish-American “unreasonable.”

I suppose we should be thankful that the positive aspects of the Palmer Report were actually quoted in the article. But then, I guess the editor who okayed Amy Tiebel’s report isn’t the anti-Semitic jackass who manages to slip through as much anti-Israel calumny as possible before having his editions overwritten. (Yes, I’m looking at you, jackass.) All in all, for the AP, it’s a fairly balanced piece.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Turkey | Comments Off on Netanyahu: No apology, Turkeys