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02/28/2009

Your money-saving healthcare tip of the day

Filed under: Life — Meryl Yourish @ 4:15 pm

I got a rude awakening this month when I refilled my prescription allergy spray. It’s not one of Cigna’s recommended drugs, so the copay went up to $40. I do not wish to pay nearly $500 a year for the drug, but I have to have some kind of protection, what with living in the third-worst state for allergens in the country. So I went online to see what I could do.

I can get generics for no copay, but I’m a big fan of “If it’s not broke, don’t fix it.” Plus, the generics require twice as many applications.

I can get a different prescription for the normal copay. But again, I know this one works for me, and don’t want to change it until it stops working. I’ve found that I get used to allergy drugs and have to change off once that happens.

Or, I can use Cigna’s mail order service, and pay $40 for three months’ worth of the prescription, and refill it online after that.

Score.

So, people, if you have this kind of program—where it’s cheaper to mail-order a three-month supply of a drug you use every month—then I recommend you use it and save yourself the money. This will save me $27/month with my new plan, and $7/month over the previous healthcare plan’s costs. Any way you look at it, it’s a big help.

The world’s blindness on Hamas’ intentions

Filed under: Hamas, Israel, World — Meryl Yourish @ 12:40 pm

More and more European diplomats are insisting that Israel must talk with Hamas. The latest in the growing line is Britain’s foreign minister, who doesn’t seem to read reports like this:

Hamas official Ayman Taha in Gaza said Abbas’s comments undermine chances for reaching a unity agreement.

“We reject any pre-conditions in the formation of the unity government. Hamas will never accept a unity government that recognizes Israel,” Taha said.

The Obama administration said it was just fine to include Hamas in a Palestinian unity government. But they don’t seem to be noticing Hamas’ refusal to play by the PA rules, and lie about their intentions towards Israel:

Hamas rejected Saturday U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s remarks that a successful Palestinian reconciliation process must include recognition of Israel by Hamas.

“Hamas will not recognize Israel or the Quartet’s conditions, and Clinton’s statement is not acceptable to the Palestinian people,” said Hamas spokesman Ismail Radwan.

Well, that’s going to be a tough one for Clinton.

Jimmy Carter said Hamas can be trusted. He says they want peace. And he ignores, over and over again, Hamas’ words to the contrary.

On Thursday, fourteen peace negotiators published an open letter in the Times of London and Der Speigel, insisting that Israel needs to talk to Hamas. There is, as usual, an Israeli dove involved.

“We have learnt first-hand that there is no substitute for direct and sustained negotiations with all parties to a conflict, and rarely if ever a durable peace without them.”

Former Israeli Foreign Minister Ben-Ami told SPIEGEL ONLINE the letter was directed equally at the European Union and the United States, but also at Israel. “Israel has to start thinking outside the box. I can recall the case of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The PLO didn’t recognize Israel as a precondition, but as a result of the Olso process. The same should happen with Hamas.”

I don’t think Hamas is on message. Let me repeat that quote for you:

“Hamas will not recognize Israel or the Quartet’s conditions, and Clinton’s statement is not acceptable to the Palestinian people,” said Hamas spokesman Ismail Radwan.

Right. Talk to Hamas. Because it will achieve—well, talking. And talking to your enemies is always a good thing, according to the new conventional wisdom. Of course, conventional wisdom is quite often wrong. And always, in the case of Israel, it seems.

02/27/2009

Breaking: U.S. will not attend Durban II

Filed under: Israel Derangement Syndrome, The One, United Nations — Meryl Yourish @ 2:00 pm

Looks like Obama has come to his senses regarding the hatefest that will be Durban II. The U.S. is pulling out.

The Obama administration has decided to boycott the so-called Durban II conference out of concerns for anti-Semitism.

Multiple sources on a conference call with the White House on Friday told JTA that the Obama administration had opted not to attend any further preparatory meetings ahead of the planned U.N. conference against racism in Geneva in April.

The conference reprises the 2001 conference in Durban, South Africa that devolved into an anti-Jewish free-for-all. Canada and Israel have opted not to attend the conference, and some U.S. Jewish groups had been pressing the United States to do the same.

Preparations for a draft document so far have seen Iran leading a coterie of nations blocking inclusion of anything that might guarantee Jewish protections – including mention of the Holocaust – while inserting draconian language guarding Islam against “insult.”

Well, there goes my subject for next week’s SNN. Now I need to find a new one.

Perhaps the Saudi Lobby will make a nice substitute.

Time’s slimy, whiny, Klein

Filed under: Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 2:00 pm

via memeorandum

Joe Klein is upset that “neo-cons” are daring to question the President.

Now, many of these neocons have been gunning for Obama from the start…and have been just twitching in anticipation of the chance to paint him anti-Israel or worse. Their tendency to slime their detractors with overwrought epithets–anti-semite is the old standby–has diminished whatever power that term once held. In this case, once again, they are standing athwart America’s best interests–and Israel’s: it’s about time that the U.S. starting calling Israel on its excesses. Clinton is right, for example: Israel’s strangle-hold on the Gaza crossings gave Hamas a rationale for its rocketing of innocent Israeli civilians. And furthermore, Israel’s steady accretion of settlements on Palestinian lands gives credibility to Palestinian extremists who believe that Israel has no interest in a truly viable two-state solution.

Of course most of this is typical anti-Israel boilerplate. The Israeli siege leads to the rocket attacks. Settlements give credibility to terrorists. If Klein were right, the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza would have undermined Hamas and the withdrawal from southern Lebanon would have done the same to Hezbollah. Contrary to Klein’s beliefs, Hamas and Hezbollah were strengthened by those Israeli actions.

And does he really think that Israel’s siege is what leads to the rockets he ought to read Dan Gordon’s analysis. (h/t Elder of Ziyon.)

But if you notice, the post he links to in “twitching” is Jennifer Rubin’s Had they known. Rubin writes:

And as for those friends of Israel on the left who looked Obama in the eye and got a sense of his soul, do they join in on Marty Peretz’s mea culpa? Well, it does appear that Obama appointed someone ”who is quintessentially an insult to the patriotism of some [sic] many of his supporters.” Moreover, we have placed someone in a key national security role whose analysis was purchased by the House of Saud and whose contribution to Middle East discourse includes such gems as: “For its part, Israel no longer even pretends to seek peace with the Palestinians; it strives instead to pacify them. Palestinian retaliation against this policy is as likely to be directed against Israel’s American backers as against Israel itself.” (Remarks to the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs, May 24, 2007)

The main focus of Rubin’s post, though, is Chas Freeman, former Saudi ambassador and recipient of Saudi largess who has been appointed to a top intelligence post. This isn’t sliming the President, it’s asking a serious question about one of his appointees. Rubin presses the point further with her conclusion:

Some enterprising White House reporter might start asking whether the president had any qualms about Freeman’s views and why his financial relationship with a foreign power shouldn’t raise grave concerns about Freeman’s independence and, in turn, the president’s judgment in selecting him.

So instead of whining about sliming, maybe Klein should be doing actual reporting.

There are a few other points of Klein’s that ought to be addressed.

I’d also ask you to go back to the beginning of Klein’s screed.

Over the past few weeks, the Obama Administration has been engaged in truly shocking behavior. It is letting Israel know when the U.S. disapproves of its actions, and appointing people to the government who have not been slavish devotees of the right-wing Likud line in the past. George W. Bush never did that!

So the problem he sees is when an American administration sees itself aligned too closely to Israel. If an administration is closely aligned with Saudi Arabia, that doesn’t bother Klein at all.

Later on he addresses the administration’s shameful pandering at Durban II.

And as for conferences on racism, Israel’s supporters will have less credibility to complain about international forums where slogans like “zionism is racism” are bruted about if the anti-Arab bigot Avigdor Lieberman is included in the new Israeli government.

That anti-Israel Arab bigot, happens to believe that Palestinians ought to have a state, is willing to cede parts of pre-1967 Israel towards that end and that those Arabs who serve in the Israeli government ought to swear an oath of loyalty. (This is in response to those Arab Israel members of Knesset who quite openly sympathize with Israel’s enemies.)

The “zionism is racism” trope means that Israel is not a legitimate state. There’s no equivalence between the Arab attempts to rewrite history and delegitimize Israel and Avigdor Lieberman’s ascendancy. Unless, of course, Klein wishes to give credence to the charge.

I would even go so far as to argue that Lieberman’s approach towards the Palestinians is a lot more liberal than is the view of the “moderate” Mahmoud Abbas’s view is towards Israel. It would require a modicum of critical thinking to reach that conclusion. Klein is more interested in hurling invective – or sliming – those he disagrees with than actually dealing with the issue at hand.

In the past two weeks the Obama administration has acquiesced to anti-Israel, Holocaust denying resolutions at the Durban II planning session, pushed for $900 million in aid to go to Gaza with no way of assuring that it doesn’t go to Hamas and has now appointed an anti-Israel former diplomat who has strong ties to Saudi Arabia to a sensitive intelligence position. These are all serious breaches of American-Israeli alliance. Unless, one believes, as apparently Klein does, that most of the problems in the Middle East stem from Israel’s existence rather than from its enemies who are still denying the right to that existence.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Obama and the Saudi Lobby

Filed under: Israel, Politics, Saudi Arabia — Meryl Yourish @ 10:00 am

In a previous post (or in a conversation I had with a friend), I wondered about how much Obama was beholden to the Saudi Lobby, and what the results of that would be.

The Saudi Lobby, of course, is the powerful, yet rarely-mentioned result of Saudi oil money spread liberally among former Federal employees, particularly diplomats and ex-administration members. Saudi money has reached as high as the presidential level. Saudi money funds the Carter Center. Jimmy Carter travels the world, blaming Israel for all the ills of the Middle East. Saudi money funds the Clinton library. The Sauds and the Bushes—well, I don’t think I need to say more. Saudi money was behind the BCCI scandal (Bert Lance, Carter administration), Marc Rich, infamous Clinton pardonee, and Clark Clifford, serving presidents from Truman to Carter). Harvard University accepted $20 million from the Saudis to establish an Islamic Studies program.

Now the Saudi Lobby has managed to insert a virulently anti-Israel former diplomat into a position to filter the National Intelligence Estimates before they get to the president. And the Saudi Lobby has inserted its teachings into American public schools.

What does the Middle East Policy Council do? We do three things. We raise politically incorrect questions for public discussion. We tend to be well ahead of the curve on raising issues. We publish views that don’t find a voice elsewhere in Middle East policy, the most often-cited journal in the field. And an edited transcript of this session will appear as the lead item in the next issue of Middle East policy.

And finally, invisible in Washington, but perhaps most significantly, we train high school teachers throughout the country – trained about 18,000 – how to teach about Arab civilization and Islam.

“How to teach”—not teaching—the exact words are “how to teach.” Translation: teaching American students what the MEPC wants them to learn. And the MEPC is now owned by Saudi money.

George Mitchell, President Obama’s new Middle East envoy, is chairman emeritus of lobbying firm DLA’s global board. DLA’s customers include Saudi Arabia.

Hillary Clinton, now Secretary of State, took a long time to declare the funding for the Clinton Library. This may be because the Saudis have donated tens of millions of dollars to her husband. But no, that won’t affect her views on the Middle East.

Who else has Obama appointed or nominated that is—or was—taking Saudi money? I think it’s time to start a tally. In fact, I think it’s time the American public was made more aware of the Saudi Lobby’s influence on our politicians and the think-tanks they rely on to shape policy.

Let’s talk lobbies, then, shall we? Walt & Mearsheimer ignored completely the Saudi money that is funneled into Washington. We continue to do this at our peril.

02/26/2009

Israel On College Campuses

Filed under: Israel — Jack @ 5:35 pm

Many Jewish college students have been struggling with the way Israel is treated on campus. It is becoming more common for adversaries of the state to hold anti-Israel demonstrations and activities on campus.

Quite a few of these activities are not friendly gatherings of students handing out flowers and suggesting that we just give peace a chance. Many are populated by rampant antisemitic commentary and false accusations about the misdeeds of Israel. Counter demonstrators routinely tell stories of being threatened, intimidation is routine.

The demonstrations rarely are balanced. You don’t attend them to hear speakers present both sides. They are hate rallies in which the speakers do their best to whip the crowd into a frenzy. They are part of a movement that is doing its best to delegitimize Israel and make it untenable to voice dissent for fear of repurcussions.

UCLA professor Judea Pearl wrote an essay that is worth reading.

“…when an e-mail from a colleague at Indiana University asked: “Being at UCLA, you must know about this symposium … pretty bad.” Attached to it was Roberta Seid’s report on the now famous “Human Rights and Gaza” symposium held a day earlier at UCLA (see “UCLA Symposium on Gaza Ignites Strong Criticism,” Jewish Journal, Feb. 11, 2009).

To refresh readers’ memory, this symposium, organized by UCLA’s Center for Near East Studies (CNES), was billed as a discussion of human rights in Gaza. Instead, the director of the center, Susan Slyomovics, invited four longtime demonizers of Israel for a panel that Seid describes as a reenactment of a “1920 Munich beer hall.” Not only did the panelists portray Hamas as a guiltless, peace-seeking, unjustly provoked organization, they also bashed Israel, her motives, her character, her birth and conception and led the excited audience into chanting “Zionism is Nazism,” “F—-, f—- Israel,” in the best tradition of rhino liturgy.”

Point of information: In the late 90’s I worked on campus at UCLA and have a few stories of my own about what was happening then. I was confronted several times by male students who suggested that it wasn’t safe for me to disagree with them. Perhaps I’ll share more about this later.

Pearl continues on and suggests that Jewish faculty members should have anticipated this and done more to try and help to steer the conversation so that it wasn’t so one sided. He writes about the many dilemmas presented by a society that tries to protect rocket launching terrorists and decries self defense.

And he discusses how it has become harder to be an outspoken Zionist for fear of the repurcussions.

“These are dilemmas that had not surfaced before the days of rockets and missiles, and we, the Jewish faculty, ought to have pioneered their study. Instead, we allowed Hamas’ sympathizers to frame the academic agenda. How can we face our students from the safety of our offices when they deal with anti-Israel abuse on a daily basis — in the cafeteria, the library and the classroom — and as alarming reports of mob violence are arriving from other campuses (San Jose State University, Spartan Daily, Feb. 9, and York University, Globe and Mail, Feb. 13)?

Burdened with guilt, I called some colleagues, but quickly realized that a few have already made the shift to a strange-sounding language, not unlike “Honk, Honk.” Some have entered the debate phase, arguing over the rhino way of life vs. the human way of life, and the majority, while still speaking in a familiar English vocabulary, are frightened beyond anything I have seen at UCLA in the 40 years that I have served on its faculty.

Colleagues told me about lecturers whose appointments were terminated, professors whose promotion committees received “incriminating” letters, and about the impossibility of revealing one’s pro-Israel convictions without losing grants, editorial board membership, or invitation to panels and conferences. And all, literally all, swore me into strict secrecy — we have entered the era of “the new Maranos.”

I am sad to say that I wasn’t surprised by any of this. It is not so long since I was producing daily updates about the War in Gaza. In return I was repeatedly attacked on the blog and via email with some of the most hateful speech I can think of. I was called a racist and a nazi. I was told that the world would be a better place if I died.

People did their best to try and intimidate me. Intimidation is a central part of their tactics. It is what they do best. If you don’t toe the party line, if you dare deviate then you are attacked from every angle. Physical threats combined with attempts to ostracize you socially and professionally.

I’ll continue to advocate fair and balanced of criticism of all countries. Israel can and should be criticized. But when the Anti-Israel crowd continues to include epithets suggesting that Jews should go to the gas chambers and similar hate speech it is impossible to accept their claims that their criticism is not antisemitic. These types of attacks are attacks on all of us and must be opposed.

Unless we take action we are going to read more stories about intimidation at the universities. It is past time to draw a line in the sand and hold the universities accountable for activities that take place under their purview.

Crossposted on Random Thoughts-Do They Have Meaning?

Puncturing Peretz’s balloon x 3

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

First it was about Durban II:

The main reason I do this is that I gave the benefit of the doubt to the administration’s motives in sending a delegation to the preparatory sessions in Geneva where some interventions proved just how weak we are and where also on other matters on which we should have intervened we skulked into the woodwork. And was I wrong!

Then it was about the pledge of $900 million for Hamas:

But the promise that putting our donation through the Palestinian Authority–which is to say, Fatah–will guarantee that it will arrive where it is addressed may be even a bigger joke. It’s hard to judge these matters in the Arab world. Who can tell which ruling group is more corrupt than another? Still, Fatah is widely held to be the most depraved and debauched among its fraternity. That’s one of the reason’s that Fatah lost the last parliamentary elections. It’s another reason that Hamas won the bloody civil war with Fatah in Gaza.

An unnamed State Department official said that other “existing, trusted mechanisms” would be used to distribute American help. This certainly means United Nations Relief and Works Agency which has done more to keep the refugee problem alive for six decades than any agency or government in the area. And that’s what U.N.R.W.A will want to do deep into eternity.

The administration’s announcement that it’s going to add nearly $1 billion to the country’s deficit will have to be approved by the Congress. Since this money can’t be wisely spent, I hope the House and Senate keep it at home

(Apparently President Obama’s promise to hold accountable those who receive government funds doesn’t extend overseas.)

Most recently it’s been about Chas Freeman.

But Freeman’s real offense (and the president’s if he were to appoint him) is that he has questioned the loyalty and patriotism of not only Zionists and other friends of Israel, the great swath of American Jews and their Christian countrymen, who believed that the protection of Zion is at the core of our religious and secular history, from the Pilgrim fathers through Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy. And how has he offended this tradition? By publishing and peddling the unabridged John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt book, The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy, with panegyric and hysteria. If Freeman believes that this book is the truth he can’t be trusted by anyone, least of all Barack Obama. I can’t believe that Obama wants to appoint someone who is quintessentially an insult to the patriotism of some many of his supporters, me included.

Martin Peretz who gave his word that Barack Obama’s eloquence about Israel was sincere is now questioning that. He’s stunned. I hope that he will apologize for accusing those of us who were skeptical of President Obama’s commitment to Israel of bad faith or ignorance.

The NJDC that has praised the appointment of Dennis Ross as a Middle East coordinator focusing on Iran remains untroubled by these developments. If they’re not going to question these actions of the Obama administration, perhaps they, too, could at least apologize to those of us who doubted.

Finally I can’t understand why the media hasn’t even reported on the appointment of Freeman. This is an important post and he is close to two nations that don’t necessarily have America’s best interests at heart. I suppose over the weekend there will be an article in the Washington Post or New York Times reporting on the appointment of an accomplished diplomat to become the National Intelligence Coordinator and how pro-Israel groups are concerned because Freeman is viewed as being critical of Israel.

The lack of concern about Freeman from the media and from the Left shows how much they value critics of Israel. In any other circumstance an appointment of someone with Freeman’s conflicts of interest would be the subject of scrutiny. I guess his anti-Israel stands trump all else.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Welcome, Instapundit readers! Stick around, look around, and don’t forget to visit Soccer Dad’s blog.

UPDATE: After I wrote this the United States decided to withdraw from the Durban II conference. It’s a good decision, though I suspect some damage has been done.

Slackman flacks for terrorists

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

” Obviously not all Muslims are terrorists but, regrettably, the majority of the terrorists in the world are Muslims. The kidnappers of the students in Ossetia are Muslims. The kidnappers and killers of the Nepalese workers and cooks are also Muslims. Those who rape and murder in Darfour are Muslims, and their victims are Muslims as well. Those who blew up the residential complexes in Riyadh and Al-Khobar are Muslims. Those who kidnapped the two French journalists are Muslims. The two [women] who blew up the two planes [over Russia] a week ago are Muslims. Bin Laden is a Muslim and Al-Houthi [the head of a terrorist group in Yemen] is a Muslim. The majority of those who carried out suicide operations against buses, schools, houses, and buildings around the world in the last ten years are also Muslims.

“What a terrible record. Does this not say something about us, about our society and our culture? If we put all of these pictures together in one day, we will see that these pictures are difficult, embarrassing, and humiliating for us. However, instead of avoiding them and justifying them it is incumbent upon us first of all to recognize their authenticity rather than to compose eloquent articles and speeches proclaiming our innocence…

Abd Al-Rahman Al-Rashed, former editor of the London daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat, wrote in the daily under the title “The Painful Truth is that All of the Terrorists are Muslims:”

Today it’s the New York Times that defines terrorism down. In Disentangling Layers of a Loaded Term in Search of a Thread of Peace, Times reporter Michael Slackman explains that the reason we can’t have peace in the Middle East is because many of us in the West have this quaint notion that attacks that target civilians constitute terrorism.

Israelis often focus on intent in drawing a distinction between Israel and Hamas — saying their forces kill civilians only as an unfortunate consequence of war while Hamas aims attacks at civilians. “The Israeli military effort is to neutralize the forces of aggression that have been used against its civilians, and there sometimes can be collateral damage,” said Dore Gold, a former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations. “That happens in every war and every conflict.”

That argument convinces no one here, where the public is outraged that Hamas is labeled a terrorist organization by the United States, while Israel is treated as a close friend.

“If you are with the Americans, you are a legitimate fighter, you are a hero, but if you are fighting against a country supported by America then you are a terrorist,” said Abdel Bari Atwan, editor of the Palestinian newspaper Al Quds Al Arabi.

So the way Slackman presents it, since the argument “convinces no one,” it’s wrong. He doesn’t explain what the rules of war are. He just quotes an Israeli who explains them briefly, as if only Israel believes such things. (UPDATE: Actually it sounds more like the argument doesn’t convince Slackman, and he’s found a bunch of people who agree with him.)

As a counterpoint Slackman points out:

Mr. Pundak said it was useful to recall, for example, that while the United States and Israel recognized Mahmoud Abbas of the Fatah faction as the legitimate leader of the Palestinians, not long ago Fatah and its leader, Yasir Arafat, were considered terrorists. He said that like the Irish Republican Army, Fatah was ultimately induced to be more pragmatic by being brought into the political process, not by being shunned and isolated.

This is a somewhat mangled version of events. Arafat was considered a terrorist. But when he said – however insincerely – that he accepted Israel’s right to exist and forswore terror, he was accepted as a “partner for peace.” In other words Arafat – in words only – gave up terrorism in order to be accepted. And while Arafat was alive, he continued to be involved in terror, so he himself never really became “more pragmatic.” Hamas, of course, has never made a pretense of disavowing terror. I’ll give them points for honesty, but that doesn’t mean that they’re not terrorists.

(UPDATE: I should emphasize, that Arafat proves the point that it doesn’t pay to negotiate with terrorists, as he never actually gave up terrorism. He was just shielded from its consequences by being deemed essential for the peace process.)

Instead of writing an article about how many in the Arab world deny that violence targeting civilians is terror, Slackman has effectively presented this as “one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter.” This is a sloppy piece of work. But it’s hardly unexpected coming from a reporter who, in the past, gave credence to 9/11 conspiracy theories. There’s a difference between explaining a position and advocating for it. Slackman doesn’t know the difference.

Perhaps in the future he could go through the Arab world where Holocaust denial is prevalent and make the case that what really happened to the Jews is a matter of debate. The Saudi editor quoted at the beginning has a lot more integrity than a reporter for the New York Times.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Rockets every day—what cease fire?

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

There’s a cease fire? Really?

A Qassam rocket fired by Palestinians in north Gaza Thursday morning exploded in the yard of a home in the western Negev town of Sderot. No injuries were reported, but a woman and her son were treated for shock, and two adjoining homes sustained minor damage.

The Color Red siren, which warns residents of incoming projectiles, sounded in Sderot and surrounding communities at around 8:30 am; the rocket fired at Sderot landed shortly thereafter, and another Qassam fired by Palestinian gunmen landed near Sderot’s industrial zone, causing no injuries or damage.

Check out Elder’s February rocket calendar to see how well the “truce” is working. So far, only 20 of the 26 days of February had rocket attacks in them. So the “shaky” truce must be working.

Oh, wait. It’s not a stable truce. That explains it.

Militants in Gaza launched rockets at southern Israel on Wednesday and Israeli planes attacked smuggling tunnels as a stable truce between the two sides remained elusive.

Militants fired two rockets early in the day and Israeli aircraft struck tunnels in the southern Gaza town of Rafah several hours later, the Israeli military said.

There were no injuries reported in either the rocket attacks or the airstrike.

But at least the AP got the order of events right this time.

So, um—what was that Gaza offensive for again? To end rocket attacks against southern Israel? Because hey, Israel—I don’t think it worked.

Update: Now firing rockets at civilians is called “low-level violence.”

Low-level violence has marred the Jan. 18 cease-fire. On Thursday, militants fired two rockets at southern Israel and Israel later sent aircraft to raid southern Gaza. Hamas said the aircraft targeted smuggling tunnels. No injuries were reported in the rocket attacks or the air strike.

Just when you think the AP can’t get any lower, you find out that yes, they can.

Update two: CNN says it’s more than 100 rockets and shells since the so-called cease-fire.

02/25/2009

Defining terrorism down

Filed under: Hamas, Israel, Terrorism — Meryl Yourish @ 4:30 pm

The British foreign secretary thinks that talking to an irridentist terrorist group that intends to destroy Israel and replace it with an Islamic caliphate is “the right thing to do.”

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said Wednesday that speaking to Hamas was “the right thing to do,” but Egypt and other parties were best suited to talking directly to the group.

In an interview with Reuters in Cairo, Miliband said Egypt was acting on behalf of the whole world in its dealings with Hamas.

“Egypt has been nominated … to speak to Hamas on behalf of the Arab League but actually on behalf of the whole world,” Miliband said. “Others speak to Hamas. That’s the right thing to do and I think we should let the Egyptians take this forward.”

These are difficult times for Israel. It’s time for Livni and Netanyahu to put aside their political differences and unite for Israel’s very survival. Because the world is proving increasingly often that it shares no strong desire to help Israel survive.

Desperately seeking obsequiousness

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

Anne Bayefsky’s ongoing coverage of the preparatory sessions for the upcoming Durban II conference have been both revealing and disappointing. Her latest has this:

Here is how the American delegates responded to a proposal they understood was incompatible with U.S. interests (“Brackets” denote withholding approval at any given moment in time.): “I hate to be the cause of unhappiness in the room . . . I have to suggest this phrase remains in brackets and I offer my sincere apologies.”

Having watched U.N. meetings for the past 25 years, I can’t remember a U.S. representative in a public session so openly obsequious, particularly in the presence of such specious human rights authorities. And yet the U.S. delegates appear happy to be there and convey the marching orders of their new commander-in-chief.

(The American bootlicking is undermining countries like Britain and Italy who are trying to change the direction of the Durban II conference.)

Unfortunately deferring to tyrants and despots has consequences beyond just the antisemitic Durban II hatefest. Barry Rubin fears that a number of situations in the world are deteriorating – in Lebanon, in Turkey and in Iran – and the United States has decided to be popular instead of strong. (h/t LGF and memeorandum)

In short, 2009 is looking like a year of massive defeat for the US and its friends in the Middle East. Meanwhile, Washington is blind to this trend, pursuing a futile attempt to conciliate its enemies, losing time and not adopting the policies desperately needed.

Instead, the US should make itself leader of a broad coalition of Arab and European states, along with Israel, to resist Islamism and Iranian ambitions.

Alas, the new administration is fooling around while the region burns.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Obama and the deficit: By the numbers

Filed under: Politics, The One — Meryl Yourish @ 10:00 am

Number of times Obama mentioned deficit: Nine.

Number of times Obama mentioned cutting the deficit: One.

Number of times Obama referred to bringing the deficit down by healthcare reform: One.

Number of times Obama referred to bringing the deficit down by “making hard choices”: One.

Number of times Obama referred to lowering the deficit by enacting the stimulus bill: Two.

Number of times Obama referred to “the deficit we inherited”: Two.

Number of times Obama referred to a “deficit of trust”: One.

Number of times Obama enumerated specific ways to cut the deficit in half by the end of his term: Zero.

Reviews of last night’s speech, via CNN:

Eighty-two percent of speech watchers say they support the economic plan Obama outlined in his prime-time address, with 17 percent opposing the proposals.

Proving you can fool all of the people all of the time. Or at least 82% of them.

Froomkin on Freeman

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

Dan Froomkin a propagandist for the Washington Post, did a profile of Chas Freeman three years ago for the Niemann Foundation. The blurb for the profile reads:

Chas Freeman is a Washington insider with a twist. A former ambassador to Saudi Arabia, he now runs a think tank dedicated to raising questions that otherwise might never get answered — or even asked — because they’re too embarrassing, awkward, or difficult.

You can read the interview if you choose. Froomkin simply tosses Freeman softballs so that the latter can criticize the Bush administration. Consider the following Q & A:

Q. Are the Saudis winning or losing their battle against terrorism?

Freeman’s view: The answer is that they’re winning. (We, of course, are not.) So what is it that they are doing right?

1. They have essentially discredited the extremist ideology in their own mosques, by driving the radical imams from the pulpits.
2. They have co-opted or seduced or induced to defect a large number of people who were terrorists or were heading in that direction, and who are now going straight.
3. They’re killing anybody who’s left.

(See also Countering terrorism – for real, NiemanWatchdog.org, January 18, 2006)

What the Saudis are doing is precisely how the British succeeded against the IRA. By contrast, we are not dealing with the issue of ideology. Worse, our actions are actually provoking and aiding recruitment. We’re killing a lot of people, but a great deal of those we are killing are not at all associated with extremists, they just happen to be in the way.

This is simply anti-Bush boilerplate. Froomkin doesn’t follow up the question. He doesn’t even ask Freeman if his positive (and overly simplistic) view of Saudi Arabia derives from the largess Saudi Arabia has directed to him.

So Froomkin while (falsely) praising Freeman for asking uncomfortable questions, fails to ask his subject anything remotely challenging.

Anyway I see that Froomkin has followed up his interview with an up-to-date puff piece on Freeman.

Froomkin links to a post at Think Progress, titled “Right Wing Outraged At Chas Freeman’s Appointment To Head National Intelligence Council.” If Froomkin or any other “journalist” were doing the job that Gabriel Schoenfeld did, the outrage would be universal. But Froomkin’s more interested in Bush and Israel bashing than he is in journalism.

Both these articles are posted on a site called Nieman Watchdog, but as far as Freeman is concerned, Froomkin is a toothless lap dog.

UPDATE: Gateway Pundit has a good refutation of Freeman’s assertions about the success of Saudi Arabia’s anti-Jihad program. Again, Froomkin wasn’t interested in doing his job as a journalist by asking Freeman uncomfortable questions. (via memeorandum)

Crossopsted on Soccer Dad.

An Obama tax question

Filed under: Miscellaneous, The One — Meryl Yourish @ 9:30 am

Does anyone know the answer to this question?

When Obama says he’s going to raise taxes on families making more than $250,000, what’s the limit for singles? No one ever mentions that, and I’m curious as to what Obama thinks is rich.

I think his and my ideas on that subject are not going to be the same.

Freeman’s extracurricular activities

Filed under: Israel Derangement Syndrome, Politics — Tags: — Soccerdad @ 9:00 am

Gabriel Schoenfeld gives the background of Chas Freeman the Obama administration appointee to head the National Intelligence Council.

I knew that he was bought and paid for by the Saudis as Schoenfeld points out.

As Mr. Freeman acknowledged in a 2006 interview with an outfit called the Saudi-US Relations Information Service, MEPC owes its endowment to the “generosity” of King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia. Asked in the same interview about his organization’s current mission, Mr. Freeman responded, in a revealing non sequitur, that he was “delighted that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has, after a long delay, begun to make serious public relations efforts.”

That makes the next paragraph interesting:

Among MEPC’s recent activities in the public relations realm, it has published what it calls an “unabridged” version of “The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy” by professors John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt. This controversial 2006 essay argued that American Jews have a “stranglehold” on the U.S. Congress, which they employ to tilt the U.S. toward Israel at the expense of broader American interests. Mr. Freeman has both endorsed the paper’s thesis and boasted of MEPC’s intrepid stance: “No one else in the United States has dared to publish this article, given the political penalties that the Lobby imposes on those who criticize it.”

His pride is ironic, for as Fiery Spirited Zionist points out, he’s an exemplar of the under-scrutinized Arab Lobby that operates in our country.

Still it’s hard to see the appeal of someone so tied to the ultra-conservative Saudi monarchy to a decidedly liberal politician and administration. The fear is that despite the differences in their orientation, both harbor an antipathy towards Israel.

Schoenfeld brings up an additional troubling aspect of Freeman’s past too.

On the massacre at Tiananmen Square in 1989, Mr. Freeman unabashedly sides with the Chinese government, a remarkable position for an appointee of an administration that has pledged to advance the cause of human rights. Mr. Freeman has been a participant in ChinaSec, a confidential Internet discussion group of China specialists. A copy of one of his postings was provided to me by a former member. “The truly unforgivable mistake of the Chinese authorities,” he wrote there in 2006, “was the failure to intervene on a timely basis to nip the demonstrations in the bud.” Moreover, “the Politburo’s response to the mob scene at ‘Tiananmen’ stands as a monument to overly cautious behavior on the part of the leadership, not as an example of rash action.” Indeed, continued Mr. Freeman, “I do not believe it is acceptable for any country to allow the heart of its national capital to be occupied by dissidents intent on disrupting the normal functions of government, however appealing to foreigners their propaganda may be.”

Siding with the Chinese government during the Tananmen Square massacre? Schoenfeld asks how that squares with the administration’s purported emphasis on human rights. And I’d point out the Freeman’s hypocrisy in understanding China’s suppression of a less serious threat compared to his vicious denunciations of Israel for responding to greater threats. I guess that Freeman is a very loyal. He’ll staunchly defend repression – whether in Riyadh or in Beijing – by his friends.

(Freeman’s ties to the Chinese government ought to raise concerns given Secretary of State Clinton’s recent refusal to lend support to Chinese human rights advocates.)

Schoenfeld wonders if Freeman’s appointment is one more sign that the Obama administration has problems vetting its appointees. Given the lack of scrutiny the Freeman appointment has attracted, my guess is that the administration is perfectly happy to keep taking chances as it really has paid no price for its past mistakes. Those pointing out Freeman’s conflicts will just be dismissed as “neo-cons,” regardless of the merits of the charges. The MSM is not doing its job.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Libyan leader in full Israel Derangement mode

Filed under: Israel Derangement Syndrome — Meryl Yourish @ 8:00 am

Just when you think the news is too depressing, out comes the loony Libyan to make you laugh:

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, the current African Union president, on Tuesday accused “foreign forces” including Israel of being behind the Darfur conflict.

Judges from the International Criminal Court are due to announce on March 4 whether they will issue a warrant for the arrest of Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir over allegations that he masterminded genocide in Sudan’s Darfur region. UN diplomats have told Reuters the warrant will be issued.

But Gaddafi, addressing a meeting on ways to expand cooperation between the United Nations and African Union, urged the Court to stop its proceedings against Bashir:

“Why do we have to hold President Bashir or the Sudanese government responsible when the Darfur problem was caused by outside parties, and Tel Aviv [Israel], for example, is behind the Darfur crisis?”

And here’s what he presents as evidence, although, uh, he gave no evidence other than using the word “evidence” in a sentence:

“It is not a secret. We have found evidence proving clearly that foreign forces are behind the Darfur problem and are fanning its fire,” Gaddafi said, according to the Libyan state news agency Jana.

“We discovered that some of the main leaders of the Darfur rebels have opened offices in Tel Aviv and hold meetings with the military there to add fuel to the conflict fire.”

Um, Muammar? Here’s a helpful hint: If you want to present evidence, you sort of have to have some that’s not just inside your head.

I think he needs to spend some quality time with his all-female bodyguard squad.

02/24/2009

EATAPETA Day 2009

Filed under: EATAPETA — Meryl Yourish @ 8:52 pm

Yes, I’m going to have details for EATAPETA Day 2009. That’s Eat A Tasty Animal For PETA (just to get back at them for all the annoying things they do).

I’ve been asked to start a Facebook group. That would entail my actually, you know, joining Facebook.

I really, really don’t want to. But I may have to.

The mystery of Starbuck

Filed under: Television — Meryl Yourish @ 7:52 pm

Here there be spoilers. But I’ll put them in the comments.

(more…)

Gilad – not Shalit – is out

Filed under: Israel — Soccerdad @ 10:00 am

The Washington Post reports that PM Olmert has dismissed Amos Gilad as chief negotiator on behalf of Israel for a ceasefire with Hamas.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert dismissed Israel’s top negotiator in Gaza truce talks for publicly criticizing Olmert’s demand that Palestinians hand over a captured Israeli soldier before any deal is clinched, officials said Monday.

The move threatens to disrupt the talks just weeks before Olmert is succeeded by the hawkish Binyamin Netanyahu, who wants the Gaza Strip’s Hamas rulers toppled and is considered likely to take a tougher line in the Egyptian-brokered truce negotiations.

The spin is typical for the Washington Post. Why shouldn’t Israel be tougher with the terrorists? After all, with Washington pushing to pay Hamas off for a war they started, Hamas stands to come out ahead right now.

Herb Keinon of the Jerusalem Post describes the conflict between Olmert and Gilad. It seems to be as much about politics and personalities as it is about policy. Given that a soldier’s life is at stake, it makes the shenanigans shameful. Still from my outsider’s view, I’d have to side with Olmert. Hamas should have to give up Shalit instead of continuously using him as a bargaining chip.

Hamas doesn’t like it. Good.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Oh, these Jewish…

Filed under: Israel Derangement Syndrome — SnoopyTheGoon @ 9:30 am

From the Chechen martyrs’ Kavkaz Center site:

Jewish kidnapped 7600 Palestinian children

Palestinian researcher, specializing in detainees’ affairs, Awni Farawna, stated that the Zionist gangs have kidnapped a total of 7600 Palestinian children, males and females, since the year 2000; 246 children are still behind bars, International Middle East Media Center reported.

Let’s see: 7600 – 246 = 7354. Divided by 9, it makes an average of 817 kids per year. Assuming each kid is good for 4 liters of blood, it comes to 3268 liters of blood each year. Hmm… almost sufficient for this:

Taking into account our other sources from abroad, it covers the country’s needs for every Passover.

Jewish happy. Jewish fill stomach. Jewish baaaad….

Cross-posted on SimplyJews.

The terror stimulus package

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

The New York Time reports that the Obama administration is poised to give $900 million to Gaza to rebuild. (via memeorandum)

The Obama administration intends to provide some $900 million to help rebuild Gaza after the Israeli incursion that ended last month, administration officials said Monday.

In an early sign of how the administration plans to deal with Hamas, the militant Islamist group that controls Gaza, an official said that the aid would not go to Hamas but that it would be funneled through nongovernmental organizations.

By seeking to aid Gazans but not Hamas, the administration is following the lead of the Bush administration, which sent money to Gaza through nongovernmental organizations. In December, it said it would give $85 million to the United Nations agency that provides aid to Palestinian refugees in the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.

LGF nicely sums up the likely effect of this aid:

It will be used for humanitarian purposes, of course, so that the Hamas “government” can spend all their money on bombs, weapons, and ammunition, instead of building a decent society for their children.

JoshuaPundit raises a political question about this:

In view of this and what else is going on, it’s obvious that the Obama Administration is no longer a reliable ally of Israel. I hope the American Jews who voted for him fully understand this.

As noted yesterday, Martin Peretz one of Barack Obama’s most prominent pro-Israel supporters is starting to express doubts about the administration’s stand towards Israel. Peretz’s good feelings have been hurt again. He also points out that the accountability that the NY Times assumes doesn’t exist.

The real issue is: where will the cash go? The administration is assuring us that it will not go to Hamas, as if anyone can assure that materiel and money can be siphoned off just to the desired parties. This, frankly, is a joke…and Mrs. Clinton knows it. So should President Obama.

But the promise that putting our donation through the Palestinian Authority–which is to say, Fatah–will guarantee that it will arrive where it is addressed may be even a bigger joke. It’s hard to judge these matters in the Arab world. Who can tell which ruling group is more corrupt than another? Still, Fatah is widely held to be the most depraved and debauched among its fraternity. That’s one of the reason’s that Fatah lost the last parliamentary elections. It’s another reason that Hamas won the bloody civil war with Fatah in Gaza.

An unnamed State Department official said that other “existing, trusted mechanisms” would be used to distribute American help. This certainly means United Nations Relief and Works Agency which has done more to keep the refugee problem alive for six decades than any agency or government in the area. And that’s what U.N.R.W.A will want to do deep into eternity.

Peretz point out that this infusion of aid to Hamas still needs to be approved by Congress. Maybe it pays to contact your congresspeople and senators and ask them to oppose this terror stimulus plan.

A Washngton Post article reports that Amnesty International is urging the United States to withhold aid from Israel. At the every end the article observes:

The Amnesty statement also criticized Hamas for constant rocket fire on southern Israel.

Will Amnesty also promote withholding aid to Gaza because of that?

Just asking.

Related Elder of Ziyon, Israel Matzav, Mere Rhetoric.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

02/23/2009

Terrorist attack in Cairo: It’s Israel’s fault—of course

Filed under: AP Media Bias, Israel Derangement Syndrome — Meryl Yourish @ 10:00 am

The AP story tells you who’s really to blame when bombs go off in Cairo: Israel. And they say it in the lead, to make sure everyone knows it’s really Israel’s fault that tourists were killed by Muslim terrorists in the Egyptian capital.

A homemade bomb exploded in a 650-year-old bazaar packed with tourists Sunday, killing a French woman and wounding at least 21 people, most of them foreigners.

Within an hour, police found a second bomb and detonated it safely. Security officials said three people were in custody.

“We were serving our customers as usual, and all of a sudden there was a large sound,” said Magdy Ragab, 42, a waiter at a nearby cafe. “We saw heavy gray smoke and there were people running everywhere … Some people were injured by the stampede, not the shrapnel.”

An expert on Islamic extremism said the attack might have been a response to Israel’s deadly offensive in Gaza last month.

Yep. That’s the way of the Middle East. Whatever happens, it’s Israel’s fault.

Montasser el-Zayat, a lawyer who has represented Islamic extremists, told the Arabic news channel al-Jazeera the attack may be linked to anger over the Israeli offensive.

“The nature of the explosion looks like an act carried out by young, inexperienced amateurs whose emotions were inflamed by the events of Gaza,” said el-Zayat, who once had links with extremist groups himself.

It isn’t until near the end of the story that the AP gives you what may possibly be the real reason tourists were killed in Cairo:

Egypt fought a long war with Islamist militants in the 1990s, culminating in a massacre of more than 50 tourists in Luxor in 1997. The rebels were largely defeated, and there have been few attacks since then in the Nile valley.

But from 2004 to 2006, a string of bombings against resorts in the Sinai Peninsula killed 120 people, including in the Sinai’s main resort of Sharm el-Sheik.

Gee. Look at that. Islamic terrorists have acted in Egypt before—but hey, let’s quote al Jazeera and blame it on Israel. Because that’s what objective media do.

The credulous cohen, the more moderate mahmoud and the technical threat

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

Nichaols Kristof and Roger Cohen are the two most extreme anti-Israel columnists for the New York Times. For the past couple of weeks, Cohen has been distinguishing himself by writing propaganda for the murderous Iranian regime. Today he takes his pro-regime advertising to a new low with What Iran’s Jews say.

That may be because I’m a Jew and have seldom been treated with such consistent warmth as in Iran. Or perhaps I was impressed that the fury over Gaza, trumpeted on posters and Iranian TV, never spilled over into insults or violence toward Jews. Or perhaps it’s because I’m convinced the “Mad Mullah” caricature of Iran and likening of any compromise with it to Munich 1938 — a position popular in some American Jewish circles — is misleading and dangerous.

I know, if many Jews left Iran, it was for a reason. Hostility exists. The trumped-up charges of spying for Israel against a group of Shiraz Jews in 1999 showed the regime at its worst. Jews elect one representative to Parliament, but can vote for a Muslim if they prefer. A Muslim, however, cannot vote for a Jew.

When you are allowed a single token, that is proof positive of discrimination.

Among minorities, the Bahai — seven of whom were arrested recently on charges of spying for Israel — have suffered brutally harsh treatment.

So the Bahai suffer worse? That doesn’t mean that the Jews aren’t persecuted too. (And of course the suffering of the Bahai is much worse than Cohen acknowledges, That would contradict his assumptions of Iranian “civility” and “sophistication.”)

And one point he left out was that Iranian scientist was convicted and executed last year for spying for Israel. Given the opacity of Iran’s legal system, we have no idea if these charges were accurate or trumped up. That is the same charge the Bahai were arrested for. It’s unconscionable for Cohen to neglect this.

And his assertion elsewhere that Iranian Jews haven’t suffered as much Arab Jews, has to do with the relative openness towards Jews when the Shah was in power. Since the Iranian revolution, the position of Jews in Iran has become more precarious. I don’t know what the numbers are (and if he does, he doesn’t give a full picture) but those who could escape did, even though it meant trusting smugglers to take them across the borders into uncertain circumstances. One doesn’t do that if one isn’t threatened.

I don’t doubt that Iranian Jews now have some level of comfort there due to familiarity. But I hardly think that they are free and not persecuted.

In order to prove his point about Iranian tolerance, he interviews a few Jews. Here’s the first.

I’d visited the bright-eyed Sedighpoor, 61, the previous day at his dusty little shop. He’d sold me, with some reluctance, a bracelet of mother-of-pearl adorned with Persian miniatures. “The father buys, the son sells,” he muttered, before inviting me to the service.

Accepting, I inquired how he felt about the chants of “Death to Israel” — “Marg bar Esraeel” — that punctuate life in Iran.

“Let them say ‘Death to Israel,’ ” he said. “I’ve been in this store 43 years and never had a problem. I’ve visited my relatives in Israel, but when I see something like the attack on Gaza, I demonstrate, too, as an Iranian.”

No doubt if he interviewed a Palestinian shop owner in the Galilee he’d hear how terrible Israelis treat him. And no doubt that he’d cite that as proof by contrast that Israel is even worse than Iran. But I ask you, what would Mr. Sedighpoor’s fate be if he said, “While the Iranians make a show of tolerating us, we must all watch our steps. We mustn’t say what we really feel or we could find ourselves in jail?”

Does Cohen really believe that the Persian Jews to whom he talked were free to speak their minds? He is not only vile, he is credulous when it suits his needs.

The hypothetical Palestinian would be free to speak out because he has nothing truly to fear. The Iranian Jew who speaks to an American flack for his government, has to be circumspect.

In another op-ed today at the Times tells us that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is actually a moderate whom the Obama administration ought to reach out to.

Mr. Obama has expressed interest in engaging in dialogue with Iran, and there is no time to waste. Over the next few months he should initiate negotiations without preconditions and establish formal diplomatic ties with Iran. Mr. Ahmadinejad, for all his faults, has taken unprecedented steps to reach out to the United States. Iran’s next leader may not be able to do the same. Mr. Obama must seize the opportunity to shake the Iranian president’s outstretched hand.

As Charles Krauthammer noted the other day, President Obama’s outreach was rebuffed when Iran denied the U.S. women’s badminton team visas to travel to Tehran.

The author of the op-ed is described:

Ali Reza Eshraghi, a former newspaper editor in Iran, is a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Journalism.

I wonder how much journalism he actually practiced and how much he was merely acting as the official voice of the government or one of Iran’s permitted parties.

Finally, yesterday, there was a clear-eyed view of Tehran that explained why Iran’s satellite launch was a reason for concern. Uzi Rubin wrote in the Wall Street Journal:

To argue that the Safir is too puny to be used as an ICBM is to miss the big picture. It is the technology and talent behind the Safir that is cause for trepidation. Taken in context, the Safir demonstrates scientific and engineering proficiency coupled with global-range missile technology in the hands of a radical regime and a nuclear wannabe. Iran’s disclosed road map to space includes more capable, heavier and higher orbiting satellites. This will require heftier space launchers, the construction of which would enrich Iran’s rocket-team experience and whose building blocks could easily be used for ICBMs in due time.

Trivializing Iran’s first space launch as “largely symbolic” demonstrates a lack of appreciation of what it really symbolizes: That Iran is now poised to project power globally. If alarm bells aren’t yet ringing for the Obama administration, they should be.

So even as the NIE is disproved, the “mad mullahs” confirmed and the Iranian march towards a nuclear weapon proceeding apace, we have an American newspaper doing the regime’s work and telling us to look the other way. Ignore the tyranny. Ignore the threat.

Walter Duranty lives!

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Indy unmasks America

Filed under: Media Bias — SnoopyTheGoon @ 8:00 am

No, really, it is neither a joke nor an exaggeration, here is the full headline:

America unmasked: The images that reveal the Ku Klux Klan is alive and kicking in 2009

I’m not sure it’s my job to protect America from Independent, besides the article is ridiculing the headline so well:

Today the Klan is a mere shadow of what it used to be and there are at least 34 differently named Klan groups. “They are a fairly low-rent bunch of people, many of whom use their local organisations as a way of raising money for themselves,” says Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama.

And more:

At its peak the KKK boasted four million members and controlled the governor’s mansions and legislatures of several states. Since the 1930s the KKK has been in a state of disorganisation and today it probably has 6,000 members.

Anyway, if a British scribe decides to unmask America, who am I to argue? Unmask at will.

Just, after finishing it, maybe he could spare a few minutes for a small local issue:

BNP.

What do you think?

Cross-posted on SimplyJews.

I’m a racist, not a coward

Filed under: Miscellaneous — Meryl Yourish @ 7:00 am

I took the Project Implicit test to see if I’m a racist. And I am.

The results of your tests are outlined below:

Your data suggests a slight automatic preference for Black people over White people

Your data suggests a strong automatic preference for John McCain over Barack Obama

Depending on the magnitude of your result, your automatic associations may be described as ’slight’, ‘moderate’, ’strong’, or ‘little to no preference or difference in association’. How implicit associations affect our judgments and behaviors is not well understood and may be influenced by a number of variables. As such, the score should serve as an opportunity for self-reflection, not as a definitive assessment of your implicit thoughts or feelings. This and future research will clarify the way in which implicit thinking and feelings affects our perception, judgment, and action. If you have any questions about this study or if you would like to find out the overall results, please email feedback@projectimplicit.net.

I love the explanation. Before you take the test, they ask you who you voted for, and then if you have warm or cold thoughts towards each candidate, and whether you are “strongly” for or against a candidate. So it’s a pretty keen grasp of the obvious to tell me I have a strong automatic preference for McCain. Also, that was the last of the four tests, so by then, I’d gotten really used to hitting the K or D key.

Of course, here’s where I would normally say “Some of my best friends are black,” but that would be a lie. I have one friend who is black, and all the rest are white. But everywhere I go, I relate to people as people, regardless of race. My parents taught me that when I was a child. Standing in line at the grocery, getting gas, in the mall, at work—I’m not a coward, and this isn’t a nation of cowards. Are we completely finished with racism? Of course not. But we have a black president now. I’m thinking that in itself speaks volumes about the lack of racism in America.

02/22/2009

Oscar’s lowest moments

Filed under: Juvenile Scorn, Movies — Meryl Yourish @ 10:39 pm

If you think tonight’s show was bad, never forget this one:

Yes, that’s Rob Lowe, singing to Snow White.

And if you think that was bad, then you’ve forgotten what happened a mere two years ago:

I watched almost none of it. I felt bad for Hugh Jackman, who I love, for having to sing a horrendous opening number. Here’s a tip, Oscar writers: Only Billy Crystal can write the “let’s sing the nominated movies” in the opening number. But Sarah and I had fun mocking it.

Obama to DOD: Don’t reveal defense budget details

Filed under: Politics, The One — Meryl Yourish @ 5:51 pm

Obama is forcing DOD officials to sign a privacy agreement that will keep the details of the 2010 defense budget out of the hands of average Americans—and of course, the media.

The Obama administration has directed defense officials to sign a pledge stating they will not share 2010 budget data with individuals outside the federal government.

In an undated non-disclosure agreement obtained by Defense News, the administration tells defense officials that “strict confidentiality” must be practiced to ensure a “successful” and “proper” 2010 defense budget process.

I wasn’t aware that budget details for non-classified programs were secret. So I asked reader Mike (who sent me the article), a former federal worker, if this kind of non-disclosure agreement is standard. He says:

What makes this unusual is this is the first time such a “pledge” being asked concerning open budgeting matters. Not a real concern as the congressmen and staffers on whatever committees that over see the DoD budgets will leak every detail. Makes me wonder if the current administration’s plans for a 10% cut in DoD budget is just a beginning.

All federal employees are expected to follow normal confidentiality/secrecy procedures. Sensitive jobs require signed documents. All of us at the agency signed such (to the tune of 10 years and $100,000 fine). Lots of security agreements are put in place for any number of projects. Private industry has such employee agreements and I’m sure you have such an understanding with your employers.

Yes, I’ve signed many non-disclosure agreements. But this is about what should be a matter of public record, not classified details. In fact, it’s already in the public record:

The Pentagon and Office of Management and Budget have agreed on a fiscal 2010 defense budget top line figure of $537 billion. That level is nearly $50 billion lower than the $585 billion defense plan created during the final months of the Bush administration, and $24 billion higher than the already enacted $513 billion 2009 defense budget.

Maybe the Obama administration is not the change we’ve been waiting for. Why does he want to keep the budget details secret?

The secrecy pact comes as dozens of Bush-era Pentagon appointees remain on the job, asked to stay on by the Obama administration until replacements are confirmed to ensure continuity during wartime.

Secrecy really does seem to be the Democrat’s word of the year. Card check—no secret ballots for American workers. Defense budget—keep it secret from Americans.

The administration is requiring defense officials to promise they will not divulge the kinds of information covered in the document “to any individual not authorized to receive it.”

“Under no circumstances will I disclose such information outside the Department of Defense and other government agencies directly involved in the defense planning and resource-allocation process, such as the Office of Management and Budget,” the agreement said.

Now, I understand not revealing budget details that are classified. But this doesn’t look like it’s a standard non-disclosure agreement. This looks like it’s an agreement to not disclose any budget details, period. Can any of my readers tell me if this is a standard procedure in the DoD?

And if not: President Obama—aren’t Americans entitled to know what’s in the defense budget for 2010? What are you afraid we’ll discover?

Obama administration is fine with terrorists

Filed under: Hamas, Israel, Politics, Terrorism — Meryl Yourish @ 12:41 pm

The PA says that the Obama administration says it’s just fine and dandy to include Hamas in the PA government.

The Obama administration has given the Palestinian Authority a “green light” to talk to Hamas about forming a Palestinian unity government, a PA official in Ramallah said over the weekend.

The official said that Washington had also given Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak the go-ahead to resume his efforts to achieve reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah.

“The new administration has a different policy than that of [former US president] George W. Bush,” the official told The Jerusalem Post. “The administration of President Barack Obama believes that a Hamas-Fatah government is good for stability.”

Well, there’s no way this can go bad.

On the other hand, the PA has been known to lie. So I’ll give this one the benefit of the doubt until I see another source. Besides Omri, that is. (Not really holding my breath over this one… I’m quite sure it’s true in essence, if not in fact.)

Of course, the best news about this is that Hamas and the PA have failed at every single attempt at unity, what with Hamas openly wanting an Islamic state, and the PA mostly wanting money and paying lip service to Islamism.

Hardline for me, but not for thee

Filed under: Hamas, Israeli Double Standard Time — Meryl Yourish @ 11:00 am

The worldwide festival of hypocrisy over the Israeli election is utterly flabbergasting. The same Arab nations that keep calling on Israel to deal with terrorists like Hamas and Hezbullah are now insisting that a Likud government will lead the Middle East into nothing but trouble and war.

The Palestinians and Arab countries fear the establishment of an Israeli government which will not include the Kadima party, senior Palestinian Authority officials told Ynet on Sunday after discussing the matter with many sources in the Arab world.

Arab newspapers are also warning of Likud Chairman Benjamin Netanyahu’s “government of war”, which will not put the peace process at the top of its priorities.

Hezbullah regularly utters threats against Israel, and against Jews the world over, and yet, the Arab world doesn’t seem to have a problem with the group sitting pretty in the government of Lebanon.

Hamas absolutely doesn’t have the peace process at the top of its priorities.

A Qassam rocket exploded Sunday morning in an open area near the border fence in the Sha’ar Hanegev Regional Council. There were no reports of injuries or damage.

Palestinian gunmen have continued firing rockets from Gaza even after the three-week Israeli offensive in the Strip, despite the talks for a renewed truce between Israel and Hamas.

On Saturday night, a rocket hit southern Ashkelon at around 10:20 pm after an air raid siren sounded in the city’s southern industrial zone. There were no injuries and no damage was caused.

Friday saw some 10 mortar shells fired at the western Negev communities. Some of them landed on Palestinian territory. Military sources estimated that the barrage was the first stage of a combined terror attack, which failed. An IDF force operating near the Kissufim crossing fired back at the gunmen.

And yet, you aren’t hearing worldwide condemnations of Hamas. In fact, you’re hearing worldwide insistence that Israel deal with Hamas, as well as worldwide capitulation by the cravens who are dealing with Hamas.

European nations have opened a direct dialogue with Hamas as the US intensifies the search for Middle East peace under Barack Obama.

In the first meeting of its kind, two French senators travelled to Damascus two weeks ago to meet the leader of the Palestinian Islamist faction, Khaled Meshal, The Independent has learned. Two British MPs met three weeks ago in Beirut with the Hamas representative in Lebanon, Usamah Hamdan. “Far more people are talking to Hamas than anyone might think,” said a senior European diplomat. “It is the beginning of something new – although we are not negotiating.”

Mr Hamdan said yesterday that since the end of last year, MPs from Sweden, the Netherlands and three other western European nations, which he declined to identify, had consulted with Hamas representatives.

“They believe they made a mistake by blacklisting Hamas,” he said, referring to the EU decision in 2003 to add the political wing of the movement to its list of terrorist organisations. “Now they know they have to talk to Hamas.”

They have to talk to Hamas, but the Europeans don’t want to deal with Likud. Why is that, I wonder? How is it that they’re willing to open negotiations with a murderous group of terrorists who have declared their intent to destroy Israel, yet the EU would rather not deal with the democratically-elected leader of the party that gave back the Sinai to Egypt back when nobody ever thought Israel would give back an inch of land? The logic of the world escapes me. Kadima is the party that led Israel into two wars in the last two years, but the Likud is the party that everyone says is the party of war.

Back to the Arab world:

According to the source, the Arab world understands that a right-wing government means diplomatic paralysis, and this may bring an end to the Arab peace initiative and increase the chances for another wave of violence in the region.

Really? Diplomatic paralysis? You mean like the negotiations on Gilad Shalit that Hamas has been conducting for three years?

As always, Israeli Double Standard Time is in full view, but only those not affected by it are able to see it for what it truly is. The staggering hypocrisy of the world regarding Israel continues.

Freeman: a Saudi investment about to pay off?

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

Mere Rhetoric has an excellent roundup and analysis of the possible appointment of Chas Freeman to be the chairman of the National Intelligence Council.

Ed Lasky provides more background.

Now the Obama Mideast Monitor is reporting that the appointment is not final.

Did they look into his sources of income and that of his Middle East Policy Council (formerly the Arab American Affairs Council, founded by Richard H. Curtiss, who also founded the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs), activities of which are funded directly by Saudi Arabia?

(For an idea of what the MEPC is like, here’s a list of its resident experts. Needless to say, one of those experts, Helena Cobban is ecstatic.)

But the funding of Freeman’s work by Saudi Arabia should come as no surprise. The Saudis know how to take care of their friends.

The number of ex-U.S. ambassadors to Riyadh who now push a pro-Saudi line is startling Walter L. Cutler runs the Meridian International Center, which has been heavily supported by the Saudis. Richard Murphy wields influence as a pro-Saudi voice at the Council on Foreign Relations The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an influential and independent, nonpartisan foreign policy membership organization founded in 1921 and based at 58 East 68th Street (corner Park Avenue) in New York City, with an additional office in Washington, D.C.
Chas W. Freeman Jr. now runs the robustly pro-Arab Middle East Policy Council, and heads a firm that sets up joint international business ventures. And lower-level diplomats with Riyadh experience on their resumes can be found throughout U.S. foreign-policy circles.

(The principled Hume Horan was an apparent exception.)

And Freeman isn’t exactly shy about his Saudi paymasters.

Freeman: About a year and a half ago the board of MEPC took a hard look at the future. We concluded that we probably couldn’t continue our work and we couldn’t survive on the basis of a continuing flow of small and medium size donations. The only way we could ensure our survival and the continuation of our work over the long run was through the establishment of an endowment.

Thanks to the generosity of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia we have managed to accumulate an endowment that would be sufficient to allow us to close down in an orderly fashion over the course of a year if we had to do that. By close down, I mean to try to find a home for the three programs that we conduct — the forums, the journal and the teacher training program.

So we are very much now focused on trying to build an endowment to ensure complete continuity of our programs through all time. We probably require $12-$15 million and we are trying very hard to find donors who are willing to contribute to that.

(According to the interview, this Saudi funded organization trains high school teachers for American schools.)

Ambassador Freeman, as could be expected of someone sympathetic to Saudi Arabia is anti-Israel as this 2000 op-ed in the New York Times demonstrates.

At least since Freeman’s term in Saudi Arabia ended he has been well financed by them. Now he may well be appointed to a position of influence in the administration. Is the Saudi investment about to pay off big time?

Exit question: Will any of Israel’s critics suggest that Freeman is more loyal to Saudi Arabia than to the United States?

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

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