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03/28/2009

Two quotes on the struggle of Jews

Filed under: Anti-Semitism, Bloggers — Meryl Yourish @ 1:00 pm

Two pieces I read last night struck me as particularly worthy of passing along to my readers.

First, Phyllis Chesler:

We must understand that anti-Semitism is an illness – a madness – something evil that is not caused by Jews. We may not be able to appease those who are afflicted with it any more than we can please Hamas or al Qaeda, but we must defend ourselves against it – in every way possible.

But we also must shed our illusions – permanently. We cannot expect that conditions will always improve, or that one country or another will always be a safe haven for Jews.

Next, Yaacov Lozowick:

They’re not good days, these ones. Sure, our descendants will dance on the graves of these hate mongers, if they can find them in the dust, unless they’re distracted by the antisemites of their own generation, but knowing your enemies will fail doesn’t make them more palatable.

One of the things I am often asked is how I can keep on writing this blog in the face of such overwhelming anti-Semitism that seems to just grow and grow and grow again. I started writing about Israel and Jewish issues in the spring of 2002. That’s seven years of reading the hate and the bile. Seven years of watching anti-Semitism go from the fringe to the mainstream. Seven years of blogging uphill, both ways. Phyllis and Yaacov and I all have the same thing, however: Faith. We have faith in the survival of the Jewish people. We have faith in God’s promise to us. In a very short time, Jews all over the world will be reading the same words: “In every generation, they rise against us. But the Holy One, Blessed be He, saves us from their hands.”

Am Yisrael chai.

Caturday

Filed under: Cats — Meryl Yourish @ 10:35 am

Time to relax with some cat pictures.

First, Miss Gracie in the sun:

Worship Gracie

Gracie spends the morning following the sun from my office to my bedroom. She is even more beautiful when highlighted by Sol.

Next, Tig in a venture onto the deck.

Tig on the deck

He really likes it out there now and wants to go out every time I open the door. (I really do have to post those movies I took of him in the snow, too.) By the way, although he is a bit chubby, the bottom two inches is all fur. His fur is much longer than Tig 2’s.

And now, let us relax the rest of the day.

03/27/2009

Iran and Hamas, partners for peace

Filed under: Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 10:00 am

In an editorial, the New York Times questions whether Binyamin Netanyahu can be trusted to make peace. There is so much wrong with “Being a partner for peace“, I could spend all day critiquing it. But one point stood out:

If Mr. Netanyahu is serious about being a partner for peace, he will not get in the way of the militant group Hamas entering a Palestinian unity government with the rival Fatah faction — as long as that government is committed to preventing terrorism and accepts past agreements between Israel and the Palestinians. He will recognize that the United States has its own interests in diplomacy with Syria, Iran and the Palestinians — and allow the Obama administration the freedom to pursue them. He also will not start a preventive war with Iran.

So that’s it, in order to prove that he’s committed to peace, according to the Times, Netanyahu must trust a terrorist organization committed in word and deed to Israel’s destruction to join a governemt with Fatah, which, at least, doesn’t openly call for Israel’s destruction. Why in there world is Hamas assumed to be a “partner for peace?” Does “qassam” mean “peace” in Arabic?

And the absurdity of the rest of the paragraph is unbelievable. Netanyahu would dictate to America? Who wrote this? Chas Freeman? And while the editors of the Times object to Israel starting a “preventive war” against Iran, they apparently don’t object to Iran launching a war of any sort against Israel.

Despite the Times portrayal of Netanyahu’s first term as Prime Minister he withdrew Israel from most of Hebron while Arafat collected foreign aid, arms, organized terror and incited his population against Israel. But somehow it’s Netanyahu who has to prove his commitment to peace?

My Right Word dismisses the editorial with:

If peace is truly the goal and not some unadulterated anti-Israel agenda, well, who cares about the sanctity of a process?

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Who struck the mighty convoy?

Filed under: Iran, Israel — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 9:00 am

Sudan is alleging that another country struck a convoy. According to the Washington Post, “foreign” planes, suspected to be American or Israeli killed hundreds of people.

Mubarak Mabrook Saleem, Sudan’s transportation minister, told the Associated Press he believed American planes were behind the bombings, which took place about a week apart in early February, and said hundreds were killed. A Foreign Ministry spokesman confirmed Saleem’s account but said there were discrepancies on casualties.

The U.S. military denied any recent airstrikes in or around Sudan.

A more recent report in the New York Times gets information from American officials claiming that it was an Israeli air strike and explains why Israel would have struck the convoy.

American officials said the airstrike took place as Israel sought to stop the flow of weapons to Gaza during the weeks it was fighting a war with Hamas there.

Two American officials who are privy to classified intelligence assessments said that Iran had been involved in the effort to smuggle weapons to Gaza. They also noted that there had been intelligence reports that an operative with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps had gone to Sudan to coordinate the effort.

(Press TV hasn’t updated its account from Wednesday and still blames the U.S.)

The Lede (at the NYT) covers the genesis of the story.

There still seems to be a measure of uncertainty. The Washington Post reports that the attacks occurred in February, the New York Times refers to January. There is also uncertainty as to the death toll.

Israel Matzav (via memeorandum) has a report from Israel Radio that may clear up the contradictions about the timing of the attacks.

Israel Radio reported this morning that there was an attack on a weapons ship off the Sudanese coast in recent months and that there were three or four strikes during January and February. The strike that was reported yesterday and confirmed by the New York Times today took place in January during Operation Cast Lead.

According to Israelly Cool, Hamas denies that the convoy was carrying arms. (Elder of Ziyon finds an implicit acknowledgment of Iranina aid for Hamas.)

The Weekly Standard has more.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

More on the Israeli war crimes in Gaza

Filed under: Gaza, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Media Bias — SnoopyTheGoon @ 8:00 am

In a way the rise of this subject was as inevitable as the next sunrise. After eight years of Qassam bombardment and the callous (and documented) use of Gazan population as one formidable human shield during the Cast Lead operation, Hamas propagandists have desperately looked for a way to raise some stink. With willing assistance of many Western media outfits and, of course, the Arab media hungrily lapping up any soundbite, the Hamas propaganda machine went into overdrive, producing numerous “documented reports” on IDF atrocities.

There is no special finesse to the process. To take one example:

The report said a working group had documented and verified reports of violations “too numerous to list.” For example, on January 15, in a town southwest of Gaza City, Israel Defense Forces soldiers ordered an 11-year-old boy to open Palestinians’ packages, presumably so that the soldiers would not be hurt if they turned out to contain explosives, the 43-page report said.

Yep. The violations are “too numerous to list” – so why bother, let’s give a (verbal) example that is just a mirror copy of a video clip of Hamas “freedom fighters” using a kid to move around under the eyes of IDF soldiers. The only difference is that there is no video recording in this case… Crude, but everything goes when you have an eager audience clamoring for more.

Of course, there is a legal side to the issue as well, and who better to judge IDF than a Jooish “UN rapporteur” Richard Falk (the 911 troofer, not to forget)? It is also inevitable that this expert on international law would find the following interpretation of this law:

Richard Falk, UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, said the Geneva Conventions required warring forces to distinguish between military targets and surrounding civilians. “If it is not possible to do so, then launching the attacks is inherently unlawful and would seem to constitute a war crime of the greatest magnitude under international law,” Falk said.

I don’t know where our professor finds the inspiration for his creative legal opinions (is it the same mind rays that cause him to look for explosives in WTC remains or the alcohol fumes that color his considerable schnozzle?). You see, Geneva conventions do not prohibit attacks when civilians are in vicinity of the military targets, they only demand that the warring forces do their best to minimize the civilian losses. In any case, the smell raising from the bovine excrement of the above quoted is awful. And it (the quote) doesn’t have a lot to do with international law, rather with Falk’s hate for Israel… but who cares?

On the other hand, there are some attempts to check and disprove some of the allegations. And Haaretz and The Guardian have indeed to answer some questions for their shoddy and tendentious “reporting”. I have no doubt that in many cases that are in the realm of hard facts, the allegations will be refuted, and they are being refuted. But many of the accusations that are based on the Hamas’ “eyewitness reports”, like the one quoted at the top of this post, will remain what they are: propaganda pieces built for the consumption by the willing, and there are no facts in the whole world to change that.

But not in all the cases, and here we come to the other side of the propaganda strife. I mean the IDF brass heads sweeping responses. Here comes our Defense Minister Ehud Barak:

I have no doubt that what needs to be probed will be probed, but I also have no doubt in my heart that the IDF is the most moral army in the world.

I cannot tell how much I resent the oxymoron “moral army” that is used by our politicos so frequently. Army is an organization that has as it chief purpose state-authorized killing of humans. As such, it is quite difficult to find a more immoral line of business.

Besides being put in almost impossible (as far the number of civilian victims is concerned) situation when fighting Hamas thugs in densely populated area, besides doing their best to minimize the number of victims, as any military expert will find, IDF is a human collective designed to kill people. For that purpose members of this collective are issued deadly weaponry. And, as in any given group of humans, there are all kinds in IDF. There are nervous novices whose fingers are light on the trigger. There are tired sleep-deprived gunners that in some cases misinterpret commands transmitted over noisy radio links (clear proof of this is that most IDF losses where from “friendly fire”). And of course, there is a small percentage of trigger-happy individuals, for whom a war is an opportunity to play out their darkest desires. It will be stupid to deny – every army in the history has their share of such characters, and the “most moral” IDF is not an exception, much as it pains me to say so.

And it is not that other armies don’t make mistakes (or intentional trigger squeezing, as it happens). Two examples from today’s on-line news:

NATO-led troops shot dead two Afghan farmers who were watering their land in east Afghanistan, a police chief told Reuters on Wednesday. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has said civilian casualties are the biggest cause of tension between him and his Western backers

A missile strike believed to have been launched by a US drone aircraft killed at least four people in Pakistan’s tribal region of South Waziristan on Wednesday, intelligence officials and Taliban sources said.

But here the difference between IDF and any other army as far as the treatment by the media comes into play. Don’t expect NYT, Guardian and others to start trumpeting for a special UN rapporteur to get to Afghanistan or Pakistan in a hurry. Don’t expect any pre-recorded conclusions of “investigation committees”, pompous announcements by legal beagles and media storms.

Why, indeed? But it’s an issue for another time and another post.

P.S. Saying all that, I still cannot avoid mentioning a person that, as usual, takes the cake: the Guardian’s own Stalinist Seumas Milne, who, of all the dirty hacks, has the temerity to teach somebody about universal values, moral norms and human rights. Bleh…

Cross-posted on SimplyJews

The ad that launched EATAPETA Day: PETA’s still lying about it

Filed under: EATAPETA, Holocaust — Meryl Yourish @ 7:00 am

Six years ago, on March 15th, we celebrated our first-ever Eat a Tasty Animal for PETA Day, in response to the offensive “Holocaust on Your Plate” ad campaign by PETA.

If you haven’t heard by now, PETA has started yet another offensive ad campaign. This one really reaches bottom—they are using Holocaust terminology, quotes, and pictures to liken the “slaughter” of animals to the slaughter of the Jews by the Nazis.

I’ve already received a letter from a child of Holocaust survivors who is, of course, extraordinarily offended. But here’s the thing: PETA is known for this kind of outrageous publicity stunt—and that’s what it is, an outrageous publicity stunt—and while I am also offended and outraged, there is absolutely nothing we can do that will make PETA change their ad campaign. I’m sure they knew exactly what they were doing, have a plan in mind, and, if they withdraw the campaign, will do it according to their deadlines and their decisions.

So let’s make up our own outrageous publicity stunt. Let’s designate Saturday, March 15th, as International Eat an Animal for PETA Day. Everybody set the date on your calendar, and either go out and enjoy a great steak, or cook one at home. Or cook up some chicken or fish or anything else that PETA wouldn’t want you to eat. And let’s let PETA know how their ad campaign has affected us.

Now, Germany’s highest court has agreed with us. It’s official: PETA runs offensive ad campaigns.

Germany’s highest court has ruled that a PETA ad campaign comparing animal slaughterhouses to the Holocaust is an offense against human dignity.

The 2003 campaign used eight, 60-square-foot (5.6-sq. meter) panels depicting images of factory farms next to Jewish concentration camp inmates and the slogan “Holocaust on your plate.”

The Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe on Thursday ruled that the ad campaign was not protected under freedom of speech laws.

PETA issued a statement that sounds awfully familiar to me:

“‘Holocaust on Your Plate’ was the idea of a Jewish PETA member, was funded by a Jewish PETA member, and is supported by people who believe that the original Holocaust was an atrocity that never would have happened if members of society had realized that discrimination based on any difference between living beings is supremacism.

And here’s why it sounded so familiar: Because PETA is still lying about the ad campaign. Six years ago, they made it seem like Isaac Bashevis Singer, who had been dead for eight years, was behind the campaign.

The concept of our campaign originated with Nobel Prize-winning Yiddish author and vegetarian Isaac Bashevis Singer, who said, “In relation to [animals], all people are Nazis; for [them], it is an eternal Treblinka.” As you may know, Singer fled Europe as the Nazis were coming into power and lost most of his family in the Holocaust. He became a vegetarian as a result of what he lived through and what he saw. He spoke out in favor of vegetarianism until his death in 1991. His argument was that it doesn’t matter who the victims are-we must speak out against all atrocities and cruelties and help to stop them.

PETA also lied to get the rights or outright stole copyrighted Holocaust photos used in the campaign.

The Holocaust Council was doubly angered because it was the primary source of the Holocaust images used in the campaign. The PETA Web site offers a glimpse of the display; at the end, it said “Holocaust photos courtesy of USHMM.”

But Museum officials say they never gave permission for its images to be used in such a display. PETA’s use of them “improperly and incorrectly implies that the Museum, a federal government establishment, endorses PETA’s project,” the Council’s lawyer wrote.

On Tuesday, the animal rights group responded, insisting that use of the photographs is “consistent with the Museum’s mission statement,” and claimed that an anonymous Jewish philanthropist funds the project.

The group also said it “requested, received and paid for the use of the photographs”— a claim Museum officials vehemently deny.

Arthur Berger, communications director for the Museum, said that a representative of the group sought the materials without indicating his PETA connection or how the material would be used.

“It was clearly a misrepresentation, at minimum, of what [the photographs] would be used for, he said. “There was no indication it would be used in a comparison with animals. Once we learned of this obscene connection, we sent a cease and desist letter.”

Six years later, PETA is still lying. Well, at least they’re consistent.

Long live EATAPETA Day.

SILENCE!

Filed under: Juvenile Scorn, Terrorism — Meryl Yourish @ 6:00 am

The title and subject of this post are due to Stretch, my shooting teacher.

A would-be suicide bomber has accidentally blown himself up, killing six other militants as he was bidding them farewell to leave for his intended target, the Interior Ministry said.

“The terrorist was on his way to his destination and saying goodbye to his associates and then his suicide vest exploded,” a statement from the ministry said.

If you’re puzzled as to the reference, well, go here. (And really, if you’ve never seen Achmed the Dead Terrorist before, well… now you have.)

It’s really hard not to laugh at this story. But Reuters does manage to be the buzzkill with the rest of the article. (Don’t click the link.)

03/26/2009

But it’s anti-Zionism, not anti-Semitism. Just ask Oliphant

Filed under: Anti-Semitism — Meryl Yourish @ 11:30 am

The ADL has issued a statement on yesterday’s cartoon by Pat Oliphant. I think you should see the cartoon and judge for yourself.

Anti-semitic cartoon

Take a good, hard look at the cartoon. It’s a caricature of the Israeli flag. And yet, that doesn’t excuse the offense.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center didn’t like the cartoon, either.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center, the group founded by a famed Nazi hunter which has more than 400,000 members in the United States, says the cartoon denigrates and demonizes Israel and mimics the Nazi propaganda.

Here’s the thing: The line where criticism of Israel crosses into anti-Semitism is actually pretty clearly drawn in certain instances. Those instances include the use of Nazi imagery to depict the modern Jewish State, which came into being out of the ashes of the Holocaust, and which Holocaust survivors had a major hand in founding. In fact, next to portraying Jews in black hats, curls, and hooked noses, I’d say Nazi imagery is the major sign of anti-Semitic commentary on Israel.

By portraying victims as victimizers, Oliphant is employing the anti-Semitic tactics of a Latuff, who himself uses the same themes that the German propandists used, and who is a vicious anti-Semite only too happy to contribute to Iran’s Holocaust Denial contest.

Yahoo! News is still carrying the cartoon, as are the websites of the Los Angeles Times, the Washingto Post, and Slate. Oliphant is the most widely published cartoonist in the world.

And now he has devolved into yet another anti-Semitic Israel critic who will tell us, I’m sure, that he’s not anti-Semitic. That this was merely his thoughts on the Gaza war. The goose-stepping Nazi imagery tied to the Star of David? Well, that was artistic license. Don’t be so politically correct. Don’t be so sensitive.

Watch for it.

As for Pat Oliphant: He can kiss my shapely Jew ass.

The fierce irrelevance of Roger Cohen

Filed under: Hamas, Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 11:00 am

Roger Cohen thinks that we can have peace in the Middle East, if the United States would just listen to a bunch of experts associated with the US Middle East Project. In the Fierce Urgency of Peace:

Pressure on President Obama to recast the failed American approach to Israel-Palestine is building from former senior officials whose counsel he respects.

Following up on a letter dated Nov. 6, 2008, that was handed to Obama late last year by Paul Volcker, now a senior economic adviser to the president, these foreign policy mandarins have concluded a “Bipartisan Statement on U.S. Middle East Peacemaking” that should become an essential template.

Deploring “seven years of absenteeism” under the Bush administration, they call for intense American mediation in pursuit of a two-state solution, “a more pragmatic approach toward Hamas,” and eventual U.S. leadership of a multinational force to police transitional security between Israel and Palestine.

Exactly how different this engagement would be from President Clinton’s is unclear. But despite focusing on Middle East peace, Clinton left office with Yasser Arafat leading a second “intifada” against Israel. In other words – even if one accepts the mistaken notion that the Bush administration was absent from the peace process – there’s no evidence that American engagement will bring peace.

Cohen cites Henry Siegman. Siegman’s an interesting choice of expert given that he once wrote an article claiming that Hafiz Assad wanted to make peace with Israel and that by using Hezbollah to attack Israel, Assad showed his commitment to peace.

Another of the experts that Cohen cites is James Wolfensohn. Again he’s an interesting choice, as Barry Rubin writes:

Didn’t James Wolfensohn learn from his dialogue with Hamas over those greenhouses he bought for them and they trashed to make into rockets?

Cohen can quote all the experts he likes and maybe President Obama will heed his advice. But experience shows that the approach Cohen advocates will not bring peace. Until Palestinian and Arab resistance to Israel changes, no amount of Israel concessions or American pressure will bring peace to the Middle East.

MJ Rosenberg demonstrates his discerning intellect (via memeorandum) by declaring Cohen his favorite NYT columnist:

I read today’s column in Brussels and thought, for a moment, that I was reading The Independent or The Guardian. Or Ha’aretz.

I would agree, but no one except for an anti-Israel ideologue would consider that praise.

He also noted Cohen’s brilliant analysis.

As Cohen puts it, it is time to “stop being hung up on prior Hamas recognition of Israel and watch what it does rather than what it says. If Hamas is part of, and remains part of, a Palestinian unity government that makes a peace deal with Israel, that’s workable.

What Hamas does is launch rockets against civilians. Apparently to Cohen and Rosenberg that’s a sign of their commitment to peace. If you want a proof of their intellectual irrelevance, you really don’t need to know anything else. (Unfortunately, their views may not be irrelevant politically.)

UPDATE: Israel Matzav deftly dismantles Cohen’s four point plan for Middle East peace. Daled Amos questions the assumptions and the expertise of the experts Cohen subscribes to.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Netanyahu and the Palestinian veto

Filed under: Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 10:00 am

Regarding Israel’s incoming Prime Minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, the New York Times observes:

“I think that the Palestinians should understand that they have in our government a partner for peace, for security and for rapid development of the Palestinian economy,” said Mr. Netanyahu.

He added that peace is a ”common and enduring goal for all Israelis and Israeli governments, mine included. This means I will negotiate with the Palestinian Authority for peace.”

His remarks were relayed on Israel Radio. It remained unclear what terms Mr. Netanyahu was offering for peace.

Similarly The Washington Post reports:

“I will negotiate with the Palestinian Authority for peace,” said Netanyahu, leader of the right-wing Likud party.

There was no mention of creating an independent state, a goal that has formed the basis of U.S. and Western-sponsored peace talks. President Obama reaffirmed U.S. support for the idea in comments in Washington on Tuesday, calling progress toward a Palestinian state “critical” to ending an “unsustainable” situation in which Palestinians live under Israeli-imposed restrictions and Israelis worry about their security.

But as Barry Rubin points out, Israel isn’t the main problem here.

Clearly, peace with Hamas is more important for Dahlan than peace with Israel. And make no mistake: these two alternatives are mutually exclusive.

Indeed, Dahlan is ready to do anything to cooperate with Hamas, as long as it accepts the PA and Fatah as leading partner. He explains the PA won’t ask Hamas to recognize Israel’s right to exist. Fatah isn’t bound either to any PA recognition of Israel and, “as a resistance organization,” can continue attacking Israel whenever it chooses.

Why, then, has the PA agreed to accept Israel’s existence? Dahlan says: only to get international aid money and support. If this is how Dahlan thinks, his comrades’ views are more extreme. The inescapable implication is that if the PA ever signs a peace treaty with Israel—though don’t hold your breath—and gets a Palestinian state whose capital is east Jerusalem this would not block Fatah or Hamas from continuing armed struggle.

This attitude fits perfectly with the fact that even today the PA does nothing to prepare its people for peace and compromise. The claim that a Palestinian state should and will some day encompass all of Israel is maintained by schools, sermons, leaders, and media. It is contained, too, in the demand for a “right of return”—flooding Israel with several million Palestinians—as more important than getting a state where refugees can be resettled in a country of their own.

No wonder every poll shows overwhelming Palestinian support for armed attacks on Israeli civilians and little backing for a compromise peace that would end the conflict forever.

Of course the Palestinians embrace the peace process. For them it’s meant the receiving of plenty of foreign aid, the acquistion of territory and absolutely no responsibility for creating a civil society.

From 1996 to 1999, when Netanyahu was first prime minister he signed the Hebron Accords and withdrew Israeli troops from most of that city. If anyone is aware of any reciprocal action that Arafat took during that time that increased the chance of coexistence, I’d be interested in hearing it. Even now, ten years later, the myth that Netanyahu was the main obstacle to peace persists.

It makes no difference that Netanyahu’s successor, Ehud Barak went all out to make peace, only to be rebuffed at Camp David and finally faced the Arafat organized “Aqsa intifada” starting in late 2000. It makes no difference that Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 led to the strengthening of Hamas and the deteriorating security situation for Israel’s southern residents. What we have seen over the past ten years is that no matter how committed an Israeli government or an American government is towards making peace in the Middle East, the Palestinian veto remains the main stumbling block to peace.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

HRW and the media: Israel, war crimes, ’nuff said

Filed under: Gaza, Israel, Media Bias — Meryl Yourish @ 9:00 am

In the next installation of “How can the world screw Israel even more?” we have Human Rights Watch issuing a report accusing the IDF of war crimes over white phosphorus use in Gaza.

CNN, for some reason, loses that famed objectivity by not presenting the Israeli side until the tenth paragraph, and not at all in the bullet points of the article.

But once again, the world is holding Israel to a higher standard of behavior than her enemies, and suggesting, once more, that the IDF fight with its hands tied behind its back:

The report said white phosphorus munitions weren’t illegal when deployed properly in open areas, but it determined that the IDF repeatedly used them “unlawfully over populated neighborhoods, killing and wounding civilians and damaging civilian structures, including a school, a market, a humanitarian aid warehouse and a hospital. ”

“First, the repeated use of air-burst white phosphorus in populated areas until the last days of the operation reveals a pattern or policy of conduct rather than incidental or accidental usage. Second, the IDF was well aware of the effects of white phosphorus and the dangers it poses to civilians. Third, the IDF failed to use safer available alternatives for smokescreens,” the report said.

The “safer alternatives” don’t give out as thick a smokescreen, and would risk IDF soldiers’ lives. But that’s fine with HRW, I’m sure.

The AP at least presents the Israeli side in the lead.

Israel fired white phosphorous shells indiscriminately over densely populated areas of Gaza in what amounts to a war crime, Human Rights Watch said in a report Wednesday.

The New York-based group called on the United Nations to launch an investigation into alleged violations of the rules of war, both by Israel and Hamas, during the three-week Gaza war.

The Israeli military said Wednesday that the shells were used in line with international law.

“The claim that smoke shells were used indiscriminately, or to threaten the civilian population, is baseless,” the military said in a statement.

International law permits the use of phosphorous weapons as flares or to create smoke screens masking the movement of troops.

But that’s about the end of the AP’s balance.

Reuters has an interesting tidbit that it chose to place at the very end of their article on the topic:

The group gave no precise casualty figures, citing the difficulty of determining in every case which burn injuries were caused by white phosphorous.

In other words, once again, HRW is relying on hearsay, supposition, and lack of evidence to accuse Israel of war crimes. And we all know how reliable Palestinian witnesses are. Just ask Mohammed al-Dura’s father who, with France2, perpetrated the biggest lie of modern times against Jews.

Once more, blame Israel

Filed under: AP Media Bias, Gaza, Israel, United Nations — Meryl Yourish @ 8:41 am

It’s a one-two punch this week from the UN and Human Rights Watch.

First, the UN blames Israel for the lack of progress in Gaza. Because after all, what’s a hundred or so rockets between enemies? Why should Israel let the bombardment of her southern towns and cities stop cement, metal, fuel, and fertilizer—which could be used to make bunkers and more rockets—through the Gaza crossings?

Two months after Israel and Gaza’s Hamas rulers declared unilateral cease-fires, Undersecretary-General for Political Affairs B. Lynn Pascoe told the U.N. Security Council on Wednesday that there has also been little progress on preventing illicit arms trafficking into the coastal territory and reconciling the rival Palestinian factions.

He said the key impediment is “the intolerable situation at Gaza’s crossings.”

Israel has banned the entry of nearly all construction materials, spare parts and other industrial goods essential to rebuild the territory, Pascoe said, and the quality and quantity of food and other imports allowed into Gaza “are insufficient compared to needs.”

And where does the AP report about the number of rockets fired by Hamas and its allies that might—just might—be the reason for Israel’s reluctance to resupply Gaza? Why, in the last paragraph, of course. Where it gets lopped off in most newspapers.

In the absence of a cease-fire, Pascoe said, violence has continued with more than 100 rockets and mortars fired into Israel, and a dozen Israeli airstrikes on Gaza.

Consider this another bit of your daily dose of media bias against Israel.

For want of a press card

Filed under: Iran — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 7:00 am

I know that there are those who claim that Iran is misunderstood.

The case of Roxana Saberi though is instructive.

Iran’s PressTV first reported on her arrest on March 4. Saberi had told her father in a phone call February 10, that she had been detained after buying a bottle of wine. However an Iranian foreign ministry spokesman said that she had been arrested for working without a press card.

On March 6, apparently in reaction to Secretary of State Clinton’s very public request for information about Saberi, a prosecutor announced that an investigation had been carried out and and that she would be released within a few days.

Then on March 9, PressTV reported that Saberi’s lawyer had met with her, but that no release date was announced. The lawyer reported that Saberi was “depressed” but showed no signs of physical torture.

Most recently on March 24, PressTV reported that Saberi told her father that she was considering a hunger strike Apparently referring to the March 9 report, PressTV added:

Her lawyer had earlier reported that Roxana was depressed but in good health and that that there was no sign of physical or mental torture. He, however, added that the exact date of her release was not yet clear.

Actually on March 9, the lawyer only mentioned that she showed no sign of physical torture. Given that her father now talks about having to calm her down, that she’s depressed and considering a hunger strike, I’d suspect that there’s been some mental torture involved, if only due to the uncertainty.

On March 3, this is what State Department spokesman Gordon Duguid had to say:

MR. DUGUID: I addressed this yesterday. We have seen press reports that Ms. Saberi has been detained under a judicial order. I don’t have an official communication of that from our protecting power, but we continue to request assistance from the Iranian Government in identifying Ms. Saberi’s whereabouts. We’re working with the Swiss Embassy in Tehran to seek additional information, as I noted, about her whereabouts and circumstances.

If Ms. Saberi is being detained by Iranian authorities, we urge the Government of Iran to provide access to legal advice, a transparent judicial process, and consular access for a Swiss consular official.

Well when the supposed “crime” is reporting without a permit and nearly two months have passed without the results of the investigation being made public, “transparency” is hardly operative.

It’s also interesting that the only positive response from the Iranian government came after Secretary of State Clinton publicized Saberi’s fate. Maybe, despite the lack of relations between the United States and Iran, publicity from high ranking American officials would force Iran’s hand into freeing Ms. Saberi.

While it’s clear that Iran’s leaders weren’t much impressed by President Obama’s Nowruz speech, maybe it would still help for the administration to keep Roxana Saberi’s case out in the open. Iran seemingly responded to Secretary Clinton’s mention of the case, but hasn’t been forthcoming since.

At a website publicizing the plight of Roxana Saberi it’s mentioned that:

The Committee to Protect Journalists reports that in 2008, Iran was the sixth-leading jailer of journalists.

I don’t think that silence will aid their causes.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

03/25/2009

Shire Network News: Why, yes, yes it is

Filed under: Podcasts — Meryl Yourish @ 11:30 am

Is there a new Shire Network News out this week?

Why, yes. Yes there is.

Am I a part of it?

Why, yes. Yes I am.

Do we have the usual bunch of snark, a fascinating feature interview by Tom Paine, and my pal Doug Payton?

Why, yes. Yes we do.

Do you need an iPod to hear it?

Why, no. No you don’t. You can listen to it with Windows Media Player or another audio listening device on your computer.

Coalition coalescing

Filed under: Israel — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 11:00 am

Last week Barry Rubin suggested that Binyamin Netanyahu’s agreement with Yisrael Beiteinu that included party head Avigdor Lieberman as Foreign Minister was a ploy and that we wouldn’t know the true makeup of the Israeli government until the beginning of April. He didn’t believe that Netanyahu would agree to a narrow government or that he would really keep Lieberman as Foreign Minister. So far the first part was accurate, but with Labor joining Likud, Lieberman remains slotted as Foreign Minister.

The New York Times reports:

Likud and Labor negotiators agreed on terms of a deal on Tuesday. The agreement was somewhat vague on issues pertaining to the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, stating that the new government would devise a plan for comprehensive peace in the Middle East; that Israel was committed to all previously signed diplomatic and international agreements; and that the government would work to reach peace accords with all of Israel’s neighbors while preserving Israel’s security and vital interests.

The agreement does not contain any mention of the two-state solution as a goal for resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but as Shalom Simhon, Labor’s chief negotiator, noted, neither does it rule that out.

Labor said it wanted a continuation of the peace process with the Palestinians but did not insist on any declaration about the two-state solution in its talks with Likud. Instead, Labor focused on socioeconomic issues in the coalition talks, a priority for much of the party’s constituency.

The Washngton Post:

Led by Defense Minister Ehud Barak, a former prime minister, Labor delegates agreed that their 13 recently elected Knesset members would help Netanyahu form a majority in the Israeli parliament. The deal gives Netanyahu a bloc of at least 66 votes in the 120-member body, but even more importantly, it brings a sense of ideological diversity to a coalition that would otherwise have been narrowly drawn. Barak will remain as defense minister.

Israel Matzav (via memeorandum) points to two likely consequences of Labor joining the government. One is that Netanyahu’s economic program will likely be modified and the other is that Israel is less likely to promote expansion of Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria. He also observes that this a very good deal for Barak and Labor. (Conversely it makes Tzipi Livni look like she’s been outmaneuvered. I can’t imagine that Kadima is happy with this.)

Joe Klein who feels that elections made a terrorist organization legitimate, calls Labor joining the coalition a “fig leaf.” Apparently, for Klein, elections make Palestinians bent on Israel’s destruction legitimate, extends no such understanding for an Israeli party committed to a two state agreement.

Shmuel Rosner, though is impressed.

Netanyahu’s mastery of politics in the last half year has been very impressive. He has outsmarted his arch-rival Tzipi Livni three times. First, in Nov. 2008, when he prevented Foreign Minister Livni from forming a coalition as PM Ehud Olmert announced his resignation – forcing new elections; second, In Feb. 2009, when he convinced Avigdor Lieberman to disappoint Livni and shatter her hopes for a Kadima-led coalition supported by Israel Beiteinu; now, in March 2009, when a last minute deal with Barak made the “right-wing narrow” coalition an unusable slogan for Livni. This is a “unity government.”

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Gone with the enemy

Filed under: Politics — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 10:00 am

While it may not be the official Obama administration policy, apparently there is no longer a “Global War on Terror.” (via memeorandum) The Washington Post reports:

In a memo e-mailed this week to Pentagon staff members, the Defense Department’s office of security review noted that “this administration prefers to avoid using the term ‘Long War’ or ‘Global War on Terror’ [GWOT.] Please use ‘Overseas Contingency Operation.’ ”

While the article suggests that this particular e-mail may have been the work of a single career civil servant, it explains:

Coincidentally or not, senior administration officials had been publicly using the phrase “overseas contingency operations” in a war context for roughly a month before the e-mail was sent.

I guess this has been coming. After all if we don’t have enemies, I guess we can’t very well have a war.

Give diplomacy a chance? Good luck with that. Sanctions might be worth a try.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Netanyahu comes through with unity government

Filed under: Israel, Media Bias — Meryl Yourish @ 9:00 am

Benjamin Netanyahu got Labor to come into a unity government, something that has far-reaching repercussions for Israel as a whole, and Likud in particular. The world gets to say “Phew! Now we don’t have to deal with a right-wing extremist government.” But Israel gets what it wants: A new and improved Bibi, and a unity government.

We must understand the following: The decision taken Tuesday night by the Labor Party committee is the decision the nation was expecting. The overwhelming majority was hoping for a unity government.

Netanyahu could have established a narrow government within a week. The old Netanyahu may have done it: He would not compromise, not give in, and rush to the president with a limping government; the most important thing would be that he became prime minister.

Yet the new Netanyahu is different. Quietly, out of a sense of responsibility, without talking much, he managed to produce a sane unity government that comprises religious and secular parties, leftists and rightists, who together can save Israel’s economy and maintain Israel’s status in the world.

Tzipi Livni is the loser in all this. She looks selfish and petulant, a woman who can’t put the needs of her nation above her own ambitions. But not nearly as petty as the AP:

Prime Minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday promised to resume peace talks with the Palestinians after he takes office, saying his government will be a “partner for peace.”

The comments were the latest sign that Netanyahu is trying to temper his image as an opponent of the peace process. The Palestinians welcomed Netanyahu’s words, but said his words must be matched by actions.

You see the new narrative? It is Israel that doesn’t want peace, not the Palestinians, who are firing rockets and shooting, stabbing, and bombing (or trying to) Israelis.

And in a show of a particularly biased piece of reporting, see if you can find what’s missing from this paragraph:

Netanyahu spoke just hours after the centrist Labor Party voted to join his coalition. The addition of Labor gives a moderate voice to what had been shaping up to be a narrow, hawkish coalition. Labor led the country for decades, and signed previous peace agreements with the Palestinians and Jordan in the 1990s.

Here’s a hint: Netanyahu himself signed the Wye River Agreement with the Palestinians, and another Likud leader—Menachem Begin—achieved the Camp David Accords.

03/24/2009

A threat countered

Filed under: Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 11:00 am

Too many of those covering Israel’s war against Hamas in December and January have used the disparity in casualties as a proof that Israel utilized disproportionate force and violated international norms. The latest tactic has been to publicize the claims of a very interested party as objective fact as proof that Israel overreacted.

Israel, however, faced a real threat. But it wasn’t just the threats that the Qassams and mortars posed – and continue to pose – to its civilian population in the south. Israel faced real threats in the battlefield. Israel’s success in countering or avoiding those threats was remarkable. Elder of Ziyon observes one such success. Apparently the Iranian anti-tank missiles – which were successful in Lebanon in 2006 – did not work so well in Gaza. The Elder comments:

The frustrated terrorists are feeling betrayed by Iran, thinking that the regime had purposefully sent them duds. I am wondering if the IDF jammed the electronics on the Iranian missiles.

Israel lost a lot of soldiers in Lebanon due to those missiles. It’s entirely possible that the IDF adjusted in order to counter the threat.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

China 1 Dalai Lama 0

Filed under: World — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 10:00 am

I’m surprised this hasn’t gotten more attention, but South Africa barred the Dalai Lama from entering, lest it run afoul of China. It’s Almost Supernatural writes:

What a disgrace. Once again third world solidarity has trumped a foreign policy based on human rights, integrity and morality. It’s quite obvious that China has pressured South Africa into refusing to issue the visa. Again we have displayed our inability to take an independent stance on world affairs. We boast about doing just the opposite, about opposing America and speaking truth to power and all that other crap, but the truth is that in almost every UN vote we have blindly followed the stance of China and Russia.

He caps it off with a quote from Nelson Mandela.

I suppose it would be gratuitous to note that Chas Freeman undoubtedly would approve of South Africa’s actions.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

The bloggers’ message

Filed under: Bloggers, Iran — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 8:00 am

Earlier I wrote about President Obama’s outreach to Iran and lamented the fact that he didn’t mention the imprisonment of Roxana Saberi in his Nowruz message to the Iranian regime.

Bret Stephens mentions a parallel concern in Will Obama listen to Iran’s bloggers?

Whether Mirsayafi’s death cows or emboldens Iran’s dissident bloggers remains to be seen. Not the least of their considerations will be the attitude of Mr. Obama, who in his videotaped address went out of his way to speak of “the Islamic Republic of Iran,” thereby giving the mullahs claim to a nation, and a civilization, they have done so much to oppress and degrade. Yes, an American president must look first, second and third to American interests. But a presidency predicated on the view that our values are our strength should not forsake those values for diplomatic expediency, much less betray our friends abroad who live, and have died, by those values.

President Obama reached out unconditionally to a brutal regime. He should have included some acknowledgment of the the regime’s nature in his message.

Unfortunately in all likelihood he encouraged the regime and not its dissidents:

But my favorite line is Obama telling the Iranians that force, military power, and terrorism won’t work for them. Oh, really? Well they’ve worked pretty well so far. They think America and the West is weak and fearful. Unless these factors stand up to Tehran, the Islamic regime will walk all over them.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Israel and Gaza

Filed under: Gaza, Hamas, Israel — Jack @ 1:45 am

The War in Gaza hasn’t really ended it has just moved into a different venue. Now we get to see it taken apart within the blogosphere and the MSM. Not to mention the report filed by the UN.

If you know nothing about the war and rely solely upon these stories and reports you receive a very skewed perspective that lacks context and context is everything. These articles do a very fine job of painting a picture of a Big Bad Israel that is intent on murder, mayhem and mischief.

The lack of context creates a very fine narrative for the sort of screenplay that movie watchers love. You have a noble underdog fighting to free themselves from the yoke of some oppressive tyrant. Pardon me for a moment, I think that I am getting a bit choked up about it.

What they neglect to mention is that the noble underdog helped to create the problem by indiscriminately firing rockets into Israel. Nor do they spend time discussing the actions of the peaceful government of Gaza. You know, the fine fellows of Hamas who like to engage in vigorous interaction with those they disagree with.

Take a look at the video and tell me what you think about people who settle their disagreements in such a peaceful manner.

You’ll forgive me for being a bit skeptical about the peaceful intentions of people who treat their fellows in such a fine fashion. But is that video really any worse than watching them use children as human shields.
It really comes as no surprise that certain groups are pushing to try Israel for war crimes or that much of this drama is taking place in the court of public opinion. In an earlier post I pointed out some of the flaws in the UN report and also gave some attention to some of the problems created by shoddy journalism.

But it is always worth noting that journalists are not fail proof and that they do make mistakes. So while the Guardian, HaAretz and others eagerly strive for a hard hitting piece let’s take a moment to consider some of these issues.

Yourish provides one example to review in Is Ha’aretz is pulling a Scott Thomas on us? and Yaacov Lozowick shares another in UK Journalists are Fools and we’ll hit the trifecta with Solomonia’s Who Makes Your News: An Outburst on Tape.

So before some of the fans of The Shack go apoplectic let’s cover a few basic points and then we’ll wrap it up.

The decision to go to war did not take place in a vacuum. No nation will ignore daily rocket attacks. It doesn’t matter how many people are killed by said rockets. There is no relevancy between the decision to defend people and how many are killed or injured by the rockets that precipitated the response.

I have never heard of a war in which civilians were not killed. It is a terrible tragedy and we can say that the victims died a senseless death. But we have to remember that it is war and that Hamas took an active role in trying to create a situation which would result in an invasion.

The problem was that they had their asses handed to them. So when they were unable to capitalize upon the war as a great military victory they switched to Plan B in which they try to delegitimize Israel’s right to defend itself.

Circling back to the topic of context I would anticipate that there are those of you who provide accusations of that being a PR trick. But the reality is that context is not a PR trick. It is the substance that is required to make an informed and honest decision. It is just too bad that so many articles seem to be lacking it.

Crossposted on Random Thoughts- Do They Have Meaning?

03/23/2009

The Battlestar Galactica series finale post

Filed under: Television — Meryl Yourish @ 12:00 pm

So, without giving away anything in case some of you out there want to someday watch it in its entirety, well, the ending sucked.

Ron Moore is obviously suffering from Gene Roddenberry-itis. Because hey, overcoming human nature isn’t a problem. All you have to do is write it, and it’s done.

While I was talking with my friend Kim from out of town, we realized that Moore really, really, REALLY believes in the concept of deus ex machina.

Dude. It was old when the Greeks used it.

And by the way, the unanswered questions weren’t solved by the deus ex machina ending.

Subsistence farming. Woo-hoo! Count me in for a life of poverty, starvation, and hardship! Yeah! All right!

Breaking the ice with Iran

Filed under: Iran — Tags: , , — Soccerdad @ 11:00 am

During the campaign Michael Totten wrote about why Barack Obama’s pledge to renew relations with Iran wouldn’t amount to anything.

Withdrawing all U.S. forces from the Middle East likewise is not going to happen. Obama may want to bug out of Iraq as quickly as humanly possible, but there isn’t even a small chance that he’ll shut down American military bases in Turkey, Kuwait, and Qatar.

Iran’s preconditions are unacceptable. Whatever preconditions Obama would have, if he had any, would almost certainly be unacceptable from the point of view of the Islamic Repubic. The interests of the U.S. and Iran are diametrically opposite, and they have been since 1979. Obama may not understand this, but at least Tehran does.

Supporting this analysis, Barry Rubin provides an amusing anecdote.

The New York Times reports that Ayatollah Khameini rejected the President’s overture.

In his most direct public assessment of Mr. Obama and prospects for better ties, Ayatollah Khamenei said there could be no change between the countries unless the Obama administration put an end to hostility toward Iran and brings “real changes” in foreign policy.

“They chant the slogan of change but no change is seen in practice,” Ayatollah Khamenei said in a speech before a crowd of tens of thousands in the northeastern holy city of Mashhad.

Still as is the case with the Middle East, the reporter throws in the requisite optimism.

Still, he left the door open to better ties with America, saying “should you change, our behavior will change, too.”

This gives tea leaf reader Roger Cohen the pretext to claim that there are tea leaves to read.

View all that as an opening gambit. Khamenei also quieted the crowd when it began its ritual “Death to America” chant and he said this: “We’re not emotional when it comes to our important matters. We make decisions by calculation.”

That’s right: the mullahs are anything but mad. Calculation will demand that Iran take Obama seriously.

This, of course, suits Cohen fine as he believes that reaching out to Iran and keeping Israel at arms length makes sense. Given that he’s been defending Iran’s tyranny, it’s impossible to conclude that he’s judged American interests accurately. More likely he’s judged Israel to be a liability, so he’s happy to have an alternative, regardless of the cost. After all, doesn’t he regard Iran’s nuclear proliferation to be at least a source of instability, if not a threat? Apparently not.

(Cohen mis-titled his essay “From Tehran to Tel Aviv” as he’s advocating a diplomatic move in the other direction.)

But John Bolton does.

While President Obama’s unanticipated Nowruz holiday greeting to Iran generated considerable press attention, his video wasn’t really this week’s big news related to the Islamic Republic. Far more important was that a senior defector — Iran’s former Deputy Minister of Defense Ali Reza Asghari — disclosed Tehran’s financing of Syria’s nuclear weapons program. That program’s centerpiece was a North Korean nuclear reactor in Syria. Israel destroyed it in September 2007.

At this point, it is impossible to ignore Iran’s active efforts to expand, improve and conceal its nuclear weapons program in Syria while it pretends to “negotiate” with Britain, France and Germany (the “EU-3″). No amount of video messages will change this reality. The question is whether this new information about Iran will sink in, or if Washington will continue to turn a blind eye toward Iran’s nuclear deceptions.

Talking with Iran, according to Bolton, will only strengthen Iran’s resolve to develop nuclear weapons.

Finally, on a somewhat related note, Tehran promised Secretary of State Clinton that it would release an Iranian-American journalist from Evin prison.

Earlier this week, the father of the Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi, told Lindsey Hilsum of Britain’s Channel 4 News that he had spoken to his daughter, who is still being held in Evin Prison. He added that waiting for her release is “a nightmare.” Ms. Hilsum reported on Channel 4’s World News blog that Reza Saberi said his daughter “didn’t sound terribly good,” when he spoke to her on a telephone in Evin Prison on Monday. “She said life in prison is psychologically challenging.” That is, as Ms. Hilsium says, obviously an understatement. Mr. Saberi added: “We told her to hang on, and not give in. The whole world is with her.”

Two weeks ago, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that the U.S. State Department had been working through intermediaries to win Ms. Saberi’s release, and an Iranian official said that Ms. Saberi would be released “within days.” Her father told Ms. Hilsum that if his daughter was not released by the start of the Iranian New Year’s celebrations this Friday evening, she is unlikely to leave Evin Prison before the end of the two-week holiday.

Why do the proponents of engagement with Iran ignore Ms. Saberi’s fate and this direct rebuff of American diplomacy? And why didn’t President Obama bring her up in his Nowruz message last week? It’s one thing to seek conciliation. It’s another to turn a blind eye to injustice.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Northern exposure

Filed under: Israel, Terrorism — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 9:00 am

Israel’s south has been somewhat quiet recently. Meryl wonders if it’s because a deal for Gilad Schalit is near.

The north was quiet over the weekend. And that was fortunate.

A 200-pound car bomb malfunctioned near a crowded mall in the Israeli port city of Haifa on Saturday night, averting what could have been one of the largest such attacks in Israel in the past several years, police said.

A bomb squad was called to the Lev Hamifratz shopping center after a small explosion, possibly a detonation charge, inside a Subaru in the mall’s parking lot, according to police.

Police found what an official said were roughly 200 pounds of explosives that had failed to detonate. The amount was enough to have caused a devastating blast at a time when the popular mall was crowded following the end of the Jewish Sabbath. The device was packed with ball bearings, according to police. There were no reported arrests as of late Sunday night.

Shmuel Rosner writes that though officials are uncertain of the group claiming responsibility for the attempt, its name should give Israel pause.

In 2006, when Israeli diplomats started talking about the possibility of Israel evacuating Shaba’a Farms, Michel Rubin rightly commented on the inadvisability of whetting Hezbollah’s appetite. And as we’ve seen this weekend, it’s an appetite backed by deadly action.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Is Ha’aretz is pulling a Scott Thomas on us?

Filed under: Gaza, Israel, Media Bias — Meryl Yourish @ 8:00 am

Remember Scott Thomas? The New Republic’s crack reporter who wrote about supposed atrocities in Iraq? The one who was utterly disgraced and proven to be a liar?

This Melanie Phillips article on Ha’aretz’s claims of IDF abuse in Gaza makes me think of nothing so much as the Scott Thomas affair.

Of course Hague was careful to say the truth of this evidence was not yet known. But there is no evidence. So far, there is simply nothing to prove or disprove from these reports of the soldiers’ discussion carried in Ha’aretz last week, here and here — just innuendo, rumour and hearsay, demonstrably (read the second account) wrenched out of context and refracted through the patent prejudice of the soldiers’ instructor Danny Zamir, an ultra-leftist who had previously been jailed for refusing to guard settlers at a religious ceremony and who said of the soldiers who spoke at the meeting in question that they reflected an atmosphere inside the army of ‘contempt for, and forcefulness against, the Palestinians.’

Phillips does a pretty good job of getting to the core of the matter, and that core is that Ha’aretz has dubious sources being reported by someone with a known agenda. Yes, that sounds very familiar, indeed.

There are precisely two charges of gratuitous killing of Palestinian civilians under allegedly explicit orders to do so. One is what even Ha’aretz made clear was an accidental killing, when two women misunderstood the evacuation route the Israeli soldiers had given them and walked into a sniper’s gunsights as a result. Moreover, the soldier who said this has subsequently admitted he didn’t see this incident – he wasn’t even in Gaza at the time – and had merely reported rumour and hearsay.

The second charge is based on a supposedly real incident in which, when an elderly woman came close to an IDF unit, an officer ordered that they shoot her because she was approaching the line and might have been a suicide bomber. The soldier relating this story did not say whether or not the woman in this story actually was shot. Indeed, since he says ‘from the description of what happened’ it would appear this was merely hearsay once again.

This was not, of course, a problem for the New York Times, which put the story on page one. And Ha’aretz keeps on rolling out what it says is misconduct.

Further testimonies emerged this weekend of army units adopting lax rules of engagement during Operation Cast Lead. The reports followed Thursday’s publication in Haaretz of soldiers’ accounts of ethical violations in the Gaza offensive.

On Saturday, Channel 10 showed a documentary that included a security briefing by a company commander on the eve of the Gaza invasion.

“We’re going to war,” he told his soldiers. “We’re not doing routine security work or anything like that. I want aggressiveness – if there’s someone suspicious on the upper floor of a house, we’ll shell it. If we have suspicions about a house, we’ll take it down.”

“There will be no hesitation,” the commander continued. “If it’s us or them, it’ll be them. If someone approaches us unarmed, shoot in the air. If he keeps going, that man is dead. Nobody will deliberate – let the mistakes be over their lives, not ours.”

Excuse me, but where is the testimony here? How is that a war crime? Where is even the accusation that this is a war crime? I’m sorry, but publishing the text of a commander’s speech to the IDF that their lives are more important than Palestinians in a war zone is just not reaching the level of violating the Geneva Conventions by, say, dressing up as IDF soldiers to attack the IDF.

It seems to me that if Ha’aretz is going to accuse the IDF of misconduct, they could at least give evidence of misconduct. Because all I’m seeing here is a more modern version of this:

“From time to time there will be some complaints that we are pushing our people too hard. I don’t give a good Goddamn about such complaints. I believe in the old and sound rule that an ounce of sweat will save a gallon of blood. The harder WE push, the more Germans we will kill. The more Germans we kill, the fewer of our men will be killed. Pushing means fewer casualties. I want you all to remember that.”

That was General George S. Patton’s speech to the Third Army—the most printable part of it.

So in spite of all the brouhaha over these supposed testimonies (it would seem to me that if you’re repeating something you heard, then you’re simply passing along hearsay, not testimony), there is no actual evidence of misconduct. There isn’t any fire. There isn’t even any smoke.

And yet, the anti-Israel media is picking up this story right and left.

Did any stories of Hamas’s human rights violations make the front page of the New York Times? Or perhaps this war crime—the one where Hamas threw a Fatah member off a 15-story building?

Did I really have to ask?

Of course those weren’t on the front page. Because Israel didn’t commit them.

Your unbiased media in action.

03/22/2009

The Jewish/Israeli Blog Carnival is Live

Filed under: Israel — Jack @ 2:38 pm

The latest edition of Haveil Havalim, the Best of the Jewish/Israeli Blogosphere blog carnival is now live at What War Zone.

Go Check it out.

A mysterious quiet falls over southern Israel

Filed under: Gaza, Hamas, Terrorism — Meryl Yourish @ 11:18 am

There have been no rockets or mortars fired from Gaza since last Saturday. The question is: Why?

Has Hamas come to some kind of secret agreement in order to get their prisoners released? Was this one of the conditions that Ehud Olmert put into the negotiations?

Why has Hamas suddenly stopped the rocketeers after allowing them to fire thirteen out of the previous fourteen days? Only five days in February were rocket-free, and they weren’t sequential.

What’s going on? Who told them to stop firing the rockets, and why?

Major newspaper seems fated to cast Israel in the worst possible light

Filed under: Israel, Israeli Double Standard Time, Media Bias — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 10:00 am

I suppose that the article Israeli Coalition Appears Fated to Clash With U.S. isn’t nearly as bad as the title. Still it’s got some problems. For example, early on the reporter, Howard Schneider writes:

A leading contender to become defense minister once characterized the two-state solution that forms the basis of U.S. and international policy toward Israel and the Palestinians as “a story the Western world tells with Western eyes.”

At the end he identifies the candidate:

A top contender for defense minister, Moshe Yaalon, has opposed territorial concessions to the Palestinians for security reasons. As military chief of staff under then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, he opposed the Gaza withdrawal and lost his job.

And how exactly did the withdrawal from Gaza work out? Well elsewhere Schneider described it like this:

Israel dismantled settlements and withdrew from the Gaza Strip in 2005, but the move did not bring the expected quiet. Rockets and mortars fall regularly into Israeli towns. The Islamist group Hamas won the 2006 Palestinian parliamentary elections and, about a year later, forced the rival Fatah faction out of Gaza.

“Fall regularly?!?!” Does he mean like manna from heaven? For crying out loud, rockets and mortars don’t fall passively, they are fired by people with murderous intent. No matter how Schneider tries to softpedal it, the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza did damage Israel’s security. It made things less peaceful. And yet he describes Gen. Yaalon’s hesitation to withdraw from territory as a liability!

And the biggest problem according to Schneider is the Prime Minster apparent.

Israel’s next government seems tailor-made for conflict with an administration in Washington that supports a Palestinian state and is expected to push for progress on drawing its borders. Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu is himself a skeptic when it comes to Palestinian statehood and has referred to U.S.-backed peace talks as a waste of time.

Of course with the recent revelations that Fatah the main constituent organization of the Palestinian Authority – as well as purported “moderates” – doesn’t accept Israel’s right to exist (though this isn’t really news) or that Fatah continues to incite against Israel don’t make it onto Schneider’s radar. Also Fatah seems more inclined to reconcile with Hamas – in a move that will make peace with Israel impossible – than to come to an agreement with Israel. As Barry Rubin writes:

Despite this, the relationship between Hamas and Fatah remain quite complex. It seems bizarre that Hamas set off a civil war, murdered Fatah men in cold blood, and kicked the group out of Gaza yet still most of Fatah is ready to forgive it. There is a strong likelihood that if given the choice, Fatah leaders—though not necessarily Abbas himself—would prefer conciliation with Hamas, which would make any peace with Israel impossible—to making a diplomatic deal with Israel and getting a Palestinian state.
From Israel’s standpoint, of course, how can it negotiate any comprehensive solution with the PA when it cannot deliver half of the territory, people, and armed men who are supposed to be bound by such an agreement? Moreover, the possibility that either Hamas will overthrow Fatah at some future point or even that the two will join together in a new war against Israel rather puts a damper on Israeli willingness to make concessions.

Schneider is probably accurately portraying the Obama administration’s interest in having an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians. And he’s identified a likely source of contention between a Netanyahu government and the Americans. But the Israeli reticence towards further concessions or negotiations is well founded. It’s a shame that the administration (and Schneider) are dismissive about Netanyahu’s concerns.

Shmuel Rosner reports:

Netanyahu might think that his refusal to utter the term “Two State Solution” is ideologically justified and logically sound. He might think that Tzipi Livni’s attempt to argue that this was the reason for which she’s refused to join his coalition is lame. No matter what he thinks, Washington – official Washington – doesn’t like this revisionist position. One official told me it was just “childish”. When Netanyahu comes for a visit, he might be asked to make a choice. The price for press availability with President Obama will be a commitment to say the words “two”, “state” and “solution” in the same sentence.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

When page A6 says something

Filed under: Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Media Bias — Tags: , — Soccerdad @ 8:00 am

When allegations of the IDF’s conduct first emerged, Yaacov Lozowick observed:

Haaretz has just launched a series (so they say) of articles in which soldiers who fought in Gaza tell of wrongdoings. I’m linking to the first article here, and may link to the next. As war crimes go, these stories published so far are not particularly horrendous; they tell of lax orders and lack of care, not of an intention to kill civilians, but let’s see what the next installments tell. I expect Haaretz will publish the whammies in their weekend (=Friday) edition.

Friday has come and gone and Yaacov hasn’t yet followed up. But Ethan Bronner of the New York Times has.

On Friday, Ethan Bronner of the New York Times reported on allegations of misconduct on the part of the IDF during the recent war against Hamas. (I previously blogged about it here.) For the most part he did little reporting on his own. He mostly repeated the information that appeared in the Ha’aretz article. In one case he apparently interviewed someone new.

Amir Marmor, a 33-year-old history graduate student in Jerusalem and a military reservist, said in an interview with The New York Times that he was stunned to discover the way civilian casualties were discussed in training discussions before his tank unit entered Gaza in January. “Shoot and don’t worry about the consequences,” was the message from the top commanders, he said. Speaking of a lieutenant colonel who briefed the troops, Mr. Marmor said, “His whole demeanor was extremely gung ho. This is very, very different from my usual experience. I have been doing reserve duty for 12 years, and it was always an issue how to avoid causing civilian injuries. He said in this operation we are not taking any chances. Morality aside, we have to do our job. We will cry about it later.”

Bronner gives no idea where he came upon Mr. Marmor. Was he one of those who was profiled by Ha’aretz? I doubt that Bronner came upon him randomly. But Marmor’s account serves to add credibility to the charges in Ha’aretz.

Before that Bronner also reported something else.

It was clear that Mr. Zamir felt that his concerns, which he had raised earlier in a letter to the military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, had not been taken seriously and that was why he published the testimonies.

I’m not going to comment on Zamir’s allegation until later, so just file it away.

Before we go to the followup, I just want to point out the fine print at the bottom of the article.

A version of this article appeared in print on March 20, 2009, on page A1 of the New York edition.

In one of his followups, More Allegations Surface in Israeli Accounts of Gaza War

The account, in the left-leaning Haaretz newspaper, expanded on shorter excerpts printed Thursday in Haaretz and Maariv, a center-right newspaper, and came from a taped conversation among Gaza war veterans at an institute that prepares soldiers before their service. After the materials were published, the military advocate general began an investigation into the allegations.

The director of the institute where the discussion occurred, Dany Zamir, published the accounts in his newsletter and leaked them to the newspapers to draw attention to what he considered to be troubling revelations. Mr. Zamir is known to be on the left of Israel’s political spectrum.

He is quoted in the excerpts as saying to the soldiers who spoke: “I think it would be important for parents to sit here and hear this discussion. I think it would be an instructive discussion, and also very dismaying and depressing. You are describing an army with very low norms of value, that’s the truth.”

There is a lot here to comment on, but first of all describing Mr. Zamir “be(ing) on the left” is a bit of an understatement. Here’s what Herb Keinon wrote in a must read analysis for the Jerusalem Post.

Zamir, in an interview on Israel Radio on Thursday, said that the soldiers from Operation Cast Lead who spoke at the meeting reflected an atmosphere inside the army of “contempt for, and forcefulness against, the Palestinians.”

Zamir himself appears in a 2004 book titled Refusnik, Israel’s Soldiers of Conscience, compiled and edited by Peretz Kidron, with a forward by Susan Sontag. The book, which earned commendation from no less a personage than Noam Chomsky, includes a section by Zamir, described as “an officer in the reserves from Kibbutz Ayelet Hashahar who was sentenced to 28 days for refusal to serve in Nablus and now heads the Kibbutz Movement’s preparatory seminary for youngsters ahead of their induction in the army.”

“With stupid resolve and the smugness of the all-knowing, primitive preachers and unbridled nationalists are leading and misleading us to calamity, while Pompeii is preoccupied with watching boxing matches and with banquets in advance of the disaster,” he wrote.

This is an extreme left-wing position for an Israeli. (Contrast Bronner’s delicacy here with the Times’ penchant for referring to an Israeli party that believes in territorial compromise as being “far-right.”) And perhaps it’s the reason that that the Chief of Staff was apparently unimpressed by Zamir’s allegations at first. Zamir, though, knew that there were local and foreign media who would happily publicize his allegations without scrutinizing their source.

But Keinon concludes:

That was what Zamir wrote in 1990, reprinted in 2004. The testimonies of the soldiers that he brought to the public’s attention seem to corroborate – what a coincidence – his thesis.

Exactly, Zamir has a pretty big axe to grind with Israeli society. And yet his own beliefs didn’t become part of the story at all. Bronner didn’t investigate whether the allegations were true or if they were the result of some understandable confusion during combat, he just looked for sources to corroborate Zamir’s thesis that the misconduct was a result of some flaw in Israel’s national soul.

But there’s something that’s very telling here. This followup claims that the second day of Ha’aretz coverage was more complete. But if you look at the bottom the article you see the following words:

A version of this article appeared in print on March 21, 2009, on page A6 of the New York edition.

So the more complete article is buried in the first section of the paper but the initial article was front page news. I think that Bronner’s acknowledgment of Zamir’s political leanings, plus the less prominent position suggest that Bronner and/or his editors realized that this story may not be as damning as Ha’aretz does. If the followup was really more complete, it should also have been on page A1.

Anyway, Zamir has provided Bronner with the fodder for another article about the influence of religion in Israeli society. I’m not going to address it, however My Right Word has made a few observations about a related story. Elder of Ziyon deconstructs the Bronner article head on.

I don’t know the truth about the allegations, but neither, apparently does Ethan Bronner. And yet he accepts them as the premises for three articles.

Others who have commented on the issue include Barry Rubin (at Augean Stables), Daled Amos. Meanwhile Random Thoughts and Elder of Ziyon take on Richard Falk.

Crossposted on Yourish.

03/21/2009

1,000 days in hell

Filed under: Hamas, Terrorism — Meryl Yourish @ 9:34 pm

Imagine that you are being held captive by your enemies. You don’t know where you are. You don’t know what day it is. You don’t know what month it is. You don’t know if your mother and father are alive or dead. You don’t, in fact, know anything outside the fact that you are being held captive by your enemies.

Now imagine that times a thousand, and you begin to get what it feels like to be Gilad Shalit—assuming, of course, that he’s still alive. There is no proof that he is, and much experience to the contrary, including threats by his kidnappers to kill him.

At a certain point, the kidnapped soldier’s father, Noam, who had remained silent throughout the ceremony, reached out and touched the sign.

“This number speaks for itself. I think that all of Israel needs to stop for a minute and think about Gilad in captivity in Gaza,” he said to participants in the ceremony.

Tal Danor, who hung the sign, told Ynet that “it’s a sad and really unpleasant feeling. We hoped we wouldn’t reach 1,000. I hope we won’t have to change a lot more numbers.”

They are no closer to getting Gilad Shalit’s release—or remains—than they were a thousand days ago.

The AP managed five whole paragraphs on the story before merging it into an article about the Palestinians. Typical.

One thousand days. And the world doesn’t blame the monsters who kidnapped Shalit. They blame Israel for refusing to release enough murderers to satisfy Hamas.

One thousand days.

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