dinsdag 7 december 2010

Benny Morris over de kansen voor een Palestijnse staat

 
Benny Morris is niet erg positief over de kansen op vrede. Hij legt overtuigend uit dat het probleem niet is of Israel een bouwstop afkondigt of niet en of die ook voor Oost Jeruzalem geldt, maar het feit dat het Palestijnse leiderschap, zowel Hamas als Fatah, geen tweestatenoplossing wil:
 
The secular Palestinian leadership looks to a similar historical denouement but is more flexible on the tactics and pacing. They express a readiness for a two-state solution but envision such an outcome as intermediate and temporary. They speak of two states, a Palestinian Arab West Bank-Gaza-East Jerusalem state and another state whose population is Jewish and Arab and which they believe will eventually become majority-Arab within a generation or two through Arab procreation (Palestinian Arab birth-rates are roughly twice those of Israeli Jews) and the "return" of Palestinians with refugee status. This is why Fatah's leaders, led by Palestine National Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, flatly reject the Clintonian formula of "two states for two peoples" and refuse to recognize the "other" state, Israel, as a "Jewish state." They hope that this "other" state will also, in time, be "Arabized," thus setting the stage for the eventual merger of the two temporary states into one Palestinian Arab-majority state between the River and the Sea.
 
RP
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Bleak House
The prospects for a Palestinian state have rarely been more grim
 
By Benny Morris | Dec 2, 2010 1:00 PM

In recent years, starting with the Israeli handover of West Bank cities and the Gaza Strip to the Palestinian Authority in the mid-1990s, the Palestinians, ever-so-slowly and inefficiently, have built pre-state institutions of governance—most recently and competently under the leadership of Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. During the past few years alone, Western observers have noted substantial improvements in Palestinian taxation, infrastructure, and economic development, and in the functioning of the (American- and European-trained) security services. Indeed, under Fayyad, the West Bank is flourishing economically (around 9 percent annual growth, according to the International Monetary Fund, even if the gains are fragile) and is a largely peaceful place, with residents even paying traffic tickets, and militants of Hamas and other organizations largely inactive, with some jailed in periodic round-ups.

At the same time, Hamas, which took over the Gaza Strip in 2007 from the Palestinian National Authority, in the process throwing PA officers off of tall buildings and knee-capping others, has also demonstrated an ability to rule, in an orderly if brutal fashion.

A series of question marks hangs over these recent improvements in the governance of the West Bank: How deep do they run? And can they outlast Western financial aid and political backing and the overriding guardianship of Israeli bayonets? Will the American- and European-trained security forces, in crisis, hold their own against Hamas or fade away, like the Western-trained Iraqi and Afghani forces have when left to perform independent of their American and British instructors?

Even before we can get to such practical questions, though, there is a another more fundamental question that goes to the heart of the continuing historical struggle between two peoples for the same piece of land: What will be the geographical contours of the envisioned Palestinian state and what will be its nature? Put simply, will the envisioned state encompass all of Palestine, including the territory of the existing Jewish state, Israel, or will it include only the West Bank and Gaza Strip and, perhaps, Arab-populated East Jerusalem? And will the envisioned state be a secular, perhaps even "democratic," republic as promised by the Fatah-led PNA, which rules the West Bank, or will it be a fundamentalist, Islamic, sharia-based state, as sought by Hamas, which rules Gaza? Will one of the parties absorb or co-opt the other, or will the Palestinians maintain this political bifurcation indefinitely?

***

Which brings us to the current Israeli-Palestinian negotiating impasse. I am not talking about the tactical problem posed by continued or discontinued Israeli construction in West Bank settlements, which will probably be resolved, after some bumps and hesitations. I am speaking of a basic, strategic impasse which, unfortunately, is far more cogent and telling than the ongoing "negotiations," which are unlikely to lead to a peace treaty or even a "framework" agreement for a future peace accord. This unlikelihood stems from a set of obstacles that I see as insurmountable, given current political-ideological mindsets.

The first, the one that American and European officials never express and—if impolitely mentioned in their presence—turn away from in distaste, is that Palestinian political elites, of both the so-called "secular" and Islamist varieties, are dead set against partitioning the Land of Israel/Palestine with the Jews. They regard all of Palestine as their patrimony and believe that it will eventually be theirs. History, because of demography and the steady empowerment of the Arab and Islamic worlds and the West's growing alienation from Israel, and because of Allah's wishes, is, they believe, on their side. They do not want a permanent two-state solution, with a Palestinian Arab state co-existing alongside a (larger) Jewish state; they will not compromise on this core belief and do not believe, on moral or practical grounds, that they should.

This basic Palestinian rejectionism, amounting to a Weltanschauung, is routinely ignored or denied by most Western commentators and officials. To grant it means to admit that the Israeli-Arab conflict has no resolution apart from the complete victory of one side or the other (with the corollary of expulsion, or annihilation, by one side of the other)—which leaves leaders like President Barack Obama with nowhere realistic to go with regard to the conflict. Philosophically, acceptance of the rock-like unpliability of this reality is extremely problematic, given the ongoing military and philosophical clash between the West and various forces in the Islamic world. Perhaps the fight between America and its allies and its enemies in the Middle East and South Asia and North Africa and the banlieues of Western Europe will go on and on, until one side is vanquished?

In this connection, our age, it may turn out, resembles the classic age of appeasement, the 1930s, when the Western democracies (and the Soviet Union) were ranged against, but preferred not to confront, Nazi Germany and its allies, Fascist Italy, and expansionist Japan. During that decade, Hitler's inexorable martial, racist, and uncompromising mindset was misread by Western leaders, officials, and intellectuals—and for much the same reasons. Living in unideological societies, they could not fathom the minds and politics of their ideologically driven antagonists. The leaders and intellectuals of the Western democracies, educated and suffused with liberal and relativist values, by and large were unable to comprehend the essential "otherness" of Hitler and ended up fighting him, to the finish, after negotiation and compromise had proved useless.

***

Another problem for Westerners is that the Palestinians, by design or no, speak to them in several voices. Hamas, which may represent the majority of the Palestinian people and certainly has the unflinching support of some 40 percent of them, speaks clearly. It openly repudiates a two-state solution. Hamas leaders, to bamboozle naïve (or wicked) Westerners like Henry Siegman, occasionally express a tactical readiness for a long-term truce under terms that they know are unacceptable to any Jewish Israelis (complete Israeli withdrawal to the 1967 borders and acceptance of the refugees' "Right of Return"), but their strategic message is clear, echoing the Roman statesman Cato the Elder: "Israel must be destroyed."

The secular Palestinian leadership looks to a similar historical denouement but is more flexible on the tactics and pacing. They express a readiness for a two-state solution but envision such an outcome as intermediate and temporary. They speak of two states, a Palestinian Arab West Bank-Gaza-East Jerusalem state and another state whose population is Jewish and Arab and which they believe will eventually become majority-Arab within a generation or two through Arab procreation (Palestinian Arab birth-rates are roughly twice those of Israeli Jews) and the "return" of Palestinians with refugee status. This is why Fatah's leaders, led by Palestine National Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, flatly reject the Clintonian formula of "two states for two peoples" and refuse to recognize the "other" state, Israel, as a "Jewish state." They hope that this "other" state will also, in time, be "Arabized," thus setting the stage for the eventual merger of the two temporary states into one Palestinian Arab-majority state between the River and the Sea.

The Palestinian national movement, since its inception in the 1920s, has sought to establish a unitary Arab state in all of Palestine as defined by the British Mandate: the territory lying between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, stretching southward to the Gulf of Aqaba. This state was to contain only a small Jewish minority—as defined by the first leader of the movement, the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Muhammad Amin al Husseini, restricted to the Jews who lived in Palestine prior to World War I (or, in a variant, prior to November 2, 1917, when the British government issued the Balfour Declaration).

But the Palestinian Arabs proved unable to eject the British (in the failed 1936-1939 Revolt) or to contain or drive out the Zionists (in the 1947 War), or to establish "their" state—and were themselves "expelled" from history for more than a decade. Their return to history was signaled by the emergence of the Fatah resistance movement in the early 1960s (its founders claimed it was established by Palestinian exiles, led by Yasser Arafat, in Kuwait in 1959) and the establishment of the Palestine Liberation Organization.

The PLO was established in May 1964 in Jerusalem by resolution of Palestinian representatives from "Palestine" and the Palestinian diaspora, convoked as the Palestine National Council. That meeting of the PNC also issued the Palestinian National Charter, the national movement's "constitution." It called for the destruction of the Zionist entity and "the liberation of [all of] Palestine," designating Zionism as "evil," "racist," and "fascist," and resolved that the Palestinians, once victorious, "exercise their right of self-determination and sovereignty." The gathered dignitaries may have avoided the explicit term "statehood," in clear deference to their Jordanian hosts (who had annexed the West Bank and East Jerusalem between 1948 and 1950) and to the wishes of some of the PLO's constituent members, who supported "Arab unity," which theoretically posited the establishment of a single large pan-Arab state. But the PLO and PNC clearly strove, and strive to this day, to establish a Palestinian state.

The PLO's main ideological rival in the Palestinian arena, Hamas, preferred to avoid defining which Jews, if any, would be granted citizenship or allowed to reside in the future Palestinian state. In its founding Covenant or Constitution of 1988, Hamas, like Fatah before it, also avoided using the word "state" as the movement's goal, stressing, instead, the aim of the "liberation," through "jihad," of Palestine and the "obliteration" of Israel. Again, the idea of "unity"—this time pan-Islamic rather than merely pan-Arab—and Hamas's self-image as part of a "universalist" Muslim Brotherhood, precluded explicit endorsement of a separate Palestinian Arab state.

Still, Hamas clearly aimed and aims to establish such a state, albeit governed by sharia law rather than a secular constitution. And the main component of the PLO, the Fatah movement, headed today by Abbas, in its founding constitution from the mid-1960s, clearly affirmed the establishment of "an independent democratic state with complete sovereignty on all Palestinian lands." Since the early 1990s, the PLO—at least in its overtures toward and contacts with Western governments—has identified its goal as establishing a Palestinian state in those territories captured by Israel in 1967: the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip.

Yet the Palestinian national movement failed to prepare their people and movement for statehood. In contrast with their Zionist rivals, the Palestinians, during the years of Ottoman rule (ending in 1917 and 1918) and the subsequent British Mandate (1917 or 1918 to 1948), failed to set up representative or substantive political parties, or to establish a competent, public-service-oriented leadership cadre, institutions of self-government, and a national militia that could carry their people toward statehood when the moment ripened. This reinforced the image of a national movement bent only or mainly on destruction of the "other" rather than seeking self-realization.

***

The key to understanding Fatah objectives today lies in its leaders' stance on resolving the refugee problem. Contrary to what many Western commentators and analysts have chosen to believe, the Palestinian stress on the importance of the refugees is not a tactical matter—a way to gain further leverage in negotiations. The Palestinian leadership is unanimous and resolute in insisting that the problem's solution lies in the "Right of Return": Israel, and the world, must accept the principle of repatriation and eventually facilitate repatriation. The idea that the refugees must return to their homes has been the ethos, the be-all and end-all of Palestinian politics and policy, since 1948. No Palestinian leader can or will ever abandon this principle, on pain of assassination, and none has. (For Western journalistic consumption, Yasser Arafat once vaguely wrote that the Palestinians would take account of Israeli demographic sensibilities when it came to implementing refugee repatriation; and more recently, Abbas was reportedly willing, in his secret 2008 negotiations with then-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, to countenance less than full refugee repatriation in the initial phases of a deal. But in their public utterances during the past two years, Abbas and his colleagues have been rock-solid in their advocacy of an unrestricted "Right of Return"—and why not take them at their word?)

And this represents the second insurmountable obstacle to Israeli-Palestinian peace. The United Nations has on its rolls 4.7 million Palestinian refugees; the PLO claims that there are 7.5 million, only a small number of whom belong to the 700,000-odd Palestinians originally displaced from their homes in what became the state of Israel. Some two-thirds of the 700,000 moved or were removed to the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip; one-third ended up in Transjordan, Syria, and Lebanon. Abbas himself is a refugee from Safad, the Arab-majority eastern Galilean town that the U.N. General Assembly partition plan of November 1947 (Resolution 181) earmarked for Jewish sovereignty.

The vast majority of the current 4.7 to 7.5 million "refugees"—say nine-tenths of them—are the children, grand-children, and great-grandchildren of the originally displaced 700,000. And more than half of them live in Gaza and the West Bank. The Palestinian demand that Israel accept a mass refugee return means that, if implemented, Israel, with its 6 million Jewish and 1.5 million Arab citizens, would instantly or over a short time, become an Arab-majority state.

Paradoxically, the Palestinian demand for Israeli acceptance and implementation of the "Right of Return" is universally endorsed by Arab leaders—including those, like President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and King Abdullah II of Jordan, whose countries have peace treaties with Israel. No Arab leader has ever publicly disavowed the "Right of Return" or castigated the Palestinian insistence on it as contrary to the interests of peace.

The Saudi peace plan of 2002, endorsed repeatedly since by the Arab League, speaks of Israeli-Arab coexistence. It has been widely hailed in the West, and Israel is regularly criticized for not embarking on negotiations with the plan forming a basis of discussion. I believe that the successive Israeli prime ministers—Ariel Sharon, Ehud Olmert, and Benjamin Netanyahu—were (and are) mistaken in not following up this Arab initiative, bluff or not. But even the Saudi plan proposes that the solution to the Palestinian refugee problem be based on U.N. General Assembly Resolution 194, of December 1948, which the Arabs interpret as unequivocally endorsing the "Right of Return."

To these formidable obstacles to peace-making—the unchanging Arab desire for what amounts to Israel's disappearance and consistent advocacy of the demographic means by which this can be achieved—one may add the hardly routine challenges of differences over future Israeli-Palestinian borders, with sovereignty over Jerusalem's Old City and, in particular, its Temple Mount complex, and the fate of the Israeli settlements in the West Bank. The demilitarization of a future Palestinian West Bank-Gaza state is a further bone of contention.

It is hard to envision any circumstances under which the current Obama-initiated direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks can succeed. Politically, the two contending leaders have little room for maneuver and, at least on the Arab side, little will to concede anything. And even if, by some miracle, Abbas and Netanyahu were to reach a framework agreement or even a detailed peace treaty (a departure into the realm of total fantasy) with Abbas accepting the Jewishness of the "other" state and waiving the "Right of Return," and Netanyahu conceding Arab sovereignty over the bulk of Jerusalem's Old City, including the Temple Mount, such an agreement would fail to stick and would never be implemented. Abbas might sign off on "an end to the conflict" and "no more demands"—and most likely be assassinated by Arab extremists in consequence—but a majority of Palestinians, and certainly a large minority of them, would continue the struggle, rendering the agreement no more than a wind-blown piece of paper. Hamas, which won the 2006 Palestinian general elections, would denounce the signers as traitors and continue the fight for all of Palestine, as would many in Abbas' own Fatah party. The agreement would not end the conflict. Nor would it deter or obstruct future, continuing Palestinian claims.

***

In short, a Palestinian state will not arise out of the current round of negotiations. But it might emerge some time after their failure—and on the model of Hamas' Gaza "republic." Put simply, if faced with continuing Palestinian unwillingness to sign an end-of-conflict agreement, and with continued Israeli occupation portending the de facto emergence of a binational state or, alternately, an Israeli apartheid state with a Jewish minority lording it over a Palestinian majority (composed of Israel's Arab citizenry plus the Arab inhabitants of the semi-occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem and the unoccupied but Israeli-dependent Gaza Strip), Israel's leaders—Netanyahu or his successor—may opt for a unilateral Israeli withdrawal from the bulk of the West Bank (and, perhaps, parts of East Jerusalem).

Israel's unilateral withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, under Ariel Sharon, was relatively simple; the 7,000 settlers were removed and their homes destroyed, and the IDF evacuated the Strip without a major internal Israeli crisis.

But a unilateral withdrawal from the West Bank and East Jerusalem would be something else altogether.

Pulling out of the Arab districts of East Jerusalem, including the bulk of the Old City, without a full peace treaty, is politically inconceivable. Israel's right (and center) would never agree. And uprooting tens of thousands of Israeli settlers from the hill-country of Judea and Samaria, east of the Security Fence, would, in terms of Israeli politics, be a major national trauma. The right would fight it tooth and nail, perhaps to the point of largescale bloodshed. And Netanyahu has so far failed to demonstrate that he has the steel or popular mandate that characterized Ariel Sharon and his Cabinet.

Alternatively, the IDF and the Israeli police could in theory unilaterally withdraw to the Security Fence while leaving a minority of the settlers in situ (the majority, in the border hugging settlement blocs, such as the Etzion Bloc, would remain on the "Israeli" side of the Security Fence, which runs more or less along the old Israel-West Bank divide, and leaves only some 7 percent of the West Bank in Israeli hands). But Arab attacks on the remaining settlers, their homes or transport, would most likely trigger Israeli re-entry into the evacuated areas.

Viewed militarily, a unilateral pullback to the Security Fence would pose a major strategic problem. Hamas as likely as not would try to take over the West Bank: How could Israel prevent this without physically re-entering the territory? And, even without a Hamas takeover, Arab control of the territory could result in continuous rocketing by Hamas and perhaps by Fatah itself. The scene would be reminiscent of that which followed Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip, but with this difference: Where Hamas since 2005 has rocketed small border towns and villages, short-range rocketry from the West Bank would doubtless hit Israel's main population centers, such as West Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, rendering life in central Israel untenable. Moreover, how would Israel ensure that foreign troops—Iranian, for example—would not be invited by the Palestinian government, the present one or a future Islamist regime, into the West Bank, strategically threatening the Jewish state?

What remains, in the absence of a basic change of Palestinian mindset, is a bleak picture. No viable peace agreement is remotely in prospect. Neither is the emergence of a full-fledged Palestinian state. A unilateral Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank is so problematic as to be virtually unimplementable. Yet continued Israeli rule over the territory and its people, obnoxious to most Israelis and to the rest of the world, raises the prospect of a bi-national state or an apartheid state, both of which most Jews regard as anathema. That, unfortunately, is where we're at.

Benny Morris is a professor of history at Ben-Gurion University and the author, most recently, of the book One State, Two States.

Aanval van de Zionistische haaien


Complottheorieën tieren welig in de Arabische wereld, vooral over Joden en Israel. Het is natuurlijk eigenlijk diep triest dat er zo wordt gedacht over een bondgenoot, maar ergens zijn die theorieën ook wel weer vermakelijk. Je vraagt je af of mensen dit nu allemaal werkelijk geloven of het gewoon een nationale sport is geworden om Israel van zoveel mogelijk de schuld te kunnen geven.
 
RP
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Attack of the Zionist Sharks
http://elderofziyon.blogspot.com/2010/12/attack-of-zionist-sharks.html
 
 
From HuffPo's Firas Al-Atraqchi:
A German tourist was mauled to death by a shark off Egypt's Red Sea coast Sunday, but if popular rumors on the street are to be believed, it was the Israelis who did it.

The attack came days after authorities claimed they had hunted and killed a shark believed to have injured three foreign tourists in previous incidents.

A popular account has it that Israel is "dumping" hungry sharks in the Red Sea in a bid to weaken Egypt's thriving tourism industry.

One tourism company operator who owns a small fleet of mini-buses that cater to Cairo's tourist spots told me that Israel wants Egypt to lose one of its most vital economic resources so that it can toe the line on the Palestinians.

A waiter at a popular cafe went further and theorized that the deadly fires in Northern Israel were God's way of punishing the Israelis for orchestrating the shark attacks.

"Look at how God has brought Israel to its knees as it asks the world - even Egypt - for help in putting out the fires," he said.

Blaming Israel for nearly every malady is not restricted to loony street conspiracies. Political analysts blame Israel for emboldening Nile Basin countries in Africa to dispute Egypt's share of the river, fueling diplomatic tensions between Cairo and regional capitals.

And in mid-August, when a series of power blackouts lefts millions of Egyptians sweltering in the summer sun, who did they blame? Some speculated that gas exports to Israel have left Egyptian power plants "undernourished".

On December 5, the Ministry of health reported that two women had died from the H1N1 and Avian flu viruses, respectively. No word yet on whether the birds flew in from Israel.

Gemeentelijke rabbi's tegen verhuren woningen aan niet-joden


Onderstaand bericht heeft tot felle discussies op Twitter geleid, omdat het CIDI dit soort praktijken niet hard genoeg zou veroordelen (dat doen ze wel) en omdat het de vraag oproept in hoeverre dit soort ideeën door veel Joodse Israeli's worden gedeeld. Niet lang geleden bleek uit een enquete dat ruim de helft van hen het een goed idee vind als Israelische Arabieren worden aangemoedigd om te vertrekken. Ook bleken zowel Joodse Israeli's als Arabische niet graag elkaars buren te zijn. De spanningen en het wantrouwen tussen beide groepen zijn groot en lijken verder toe te nemen. Uit Arabische dorpen zoals Peki'in zijn de Joodse bewoners weggepest, en rechtse Joden gaan bewust in Arabische wijken in Jaffa wonen om te voorkomen dat dit een puur Arabische stad wordt. Enz. De wederzijdse vooroordelen zijn groot. Arabische inwoners van Israel sympathiseren soms openlijk met Hamas en Hezbollah, en noemen zich 'Palestijnen'. Ze hebben gelijke burgerrechten, maar voelen zich politiek achtergesteld en missen bepaalde privileges omdat ze niet in het leger dienen. Ze klagen over achterstelling en discriminatie op tal van terreinen.
 
De uitspraken van deze rabbijnen zijn natuurlijk walgelijk, maar in de Palestijnse gebieden staan er hoge straffen op het verkopen van grond aan Joden, en Palestijnse sheiks en mufti's laten zich over Joden ook niet bepaald positief uit. Zie voor een interessant achtergrondartikel over de positie van Arabieren in Israel: Israel and its Arab minority
 
RP
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The Jerusalem Post
40 rabbis: Jews shouldn't rent, sell homes to gentiles
By JPOST.COM STAFF
12/07/2010 10:46
http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=198353


Rabbis say measure will prevent intermarriage; MK Horowitz: "racist" municipal rabbis should be fired, investigated for incitement.

Over 40 municipal rabbis signed a petition on Tuesday quoting Shas spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, that Jews should not rent homes in Israel to gentiles.

Amongst the reasons given for the prohibition are the danger of intermarriage and the lowering of real estate prices in areas where non-Jews live. Gentiles' "different lifestyle from Jews" can endanger lives, they wrote.

If a Jew sells or rents property to a gentile, his neighbors must warn him, and if he does not change his ways, the neighbors must avoid the person, and may not conduct business with him, according to the petition. A person who rents or sells to non-Jews also may not get aliyahs in synagogue.

Amongst the municipal rabbis who signed the petition are Rabbi Yaakov Edelstein of Ramat HaSharon, Rabbi Haim Pinto of Ashdod, Rabbi Dov Lior of Kiryat Arba, Rabbi David Abuhazeira of Yavne, Rabbi David Bar-Chen of Sderot, and others.

In addition, one of the best-known National-Religious rabbis, Rabbi Shlomo Aviner, signed the letter, as did Yosef's son, Rabbi Yaakov Yosef. Haredi leader Rabbi Yosef Shalom Elyashiv and Rabbi Avigdor Neventzal of Jerusalem's Old City also signed the letter.

Another ten rabbis reportedly plan to sign the letter.

MK Nitzan Horowitz (Meretz) called on Tuesday for these to be fired.
"This is the worst kind of racism, which comes from rabbis who are paid by the state" Horowitz said on Tuesday. "All they do is encourage hatred and destroy Israeli democracy."
"These rabbis are taking advantage of their stature, which leads to incitement," he added. Horowitz also said there should be a criminal investigation of the rabbis.

maandag 6 december 2010

Arabische reacties op bosbrand Israel wisselend


Niet alle Arabieren denken er natuurlijk zo over, en gelukkig hebben verschillende Arabische landen en de Palestijnen Israel geholpen, maar de haat tegen de Joden zit bij veel Arabieren diep, zo blijkt weer eens. Ik vind het zelf een zeer hoopvol teken dat de Palestijnen, Egypte en Jordanië Israel te hulp zijn geschoten, maar kan dit ook moeilijk plaatsen gezien de continue propaganda tegen Israel en Joden in deze landen. Hetzelfde geldt voor Turkije. Als je continu de boodschap uitzendt dat Joden niet deugen en Israel een illegitieme staat is, een koloniale onderneming die niet in de regio thuishoort, dan is het logisch dat de bevolking vervolgens verbaasd is dat je zo'n land en volk te hulp schiet wanneer ze in de problemen zitten.
 
RP
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Northern blaze delights many in the Arab world




Many Arabs also strongly condemned Egypt and Jordan for agreeing to help in extinguishing the blaze, according to Arab media outlets.
 
 
Many in the Arab world seem to be happy with the big fire that has been raging in northern Israel over the past few days.

Judging from comments on the blaze from readers in several leading Arab media outlets and websites, a majority believe that God is "punishing" Israel for occupying Arab lands and killing Palestinians, especially during Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip.

Many Arabs also strongly condemned Egypt and Jordan for agreeing to help in extinguishing the blaze.

Others called on Israel's enemies, particularly Iran, Hamas and Hizbullah, to seize the opportunity and try to wipe Israel off the face of earth. Only a few readers and viewers expressed sympathy with Israel over the tragedy and loss of many lives.

Following is a sample of the comments that have appeared over the past few days in the Arab media:

"May Allah punish all Arabs who helped put down the fire.

We pray to Allah that the fire will grow and spread to oil wells in the Arab world." "O Allah, burn them [Jews] before the Day of Judgement.

O Allah, destroy them and all the enemies of Islam."

"May Allah take revenge against them and displace them together with our corrupt [Arab] governments."

"This is the right time for Iran. If one fire has caused panic in the Zionist entity, where are Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hassan Nasrallah? And where is Syria? One rocket could set thousands of fires."

"Allah gives time, but never neglects. The Israelis are being punished for their deeds. We hope their end is nearing."

"Sounds strange that Arabs are sending aid to our enemies. Allah is punishing the Jews by making the fire. No military force or US veto can stop the fire."

"Thank God for this new Holocaust and shame on the Egyptian authorities who rushed to save the Zionists while continuing to lay siege against our brothers in the Gaza Strip."

"Thank God for burning the Jews the same way they burned our Muslim brothers in Palestine."

"To Hizbullah, Hamas and all Arabs: This is a golden opportunity to get rid of Israel. The sea and fire are in front of the Jews and weapons are behind them."

"This fire is the result of prayers from our prisoners held in occupation jails. The fire of Hell will be even stronger. May those Arabs who are helping the Jews burn with them in Hell."

"Allahu Akbar! This is an effective weapon. We call on our Palestinian brothers to set fire to all forests."

"How many prisoners did the wardens torture? Allah has answered the prayers of the oppressed."
 
 

Palestijnse reacties op bosbrand bij Haifa wisselend


Terwijl de Palestijnse brandweer te hulp is geschoten met het modernste door de EU gedoneerde materieel, noemt Hamasleider Ismail Haniyeh de brand in Israel een goddelijke straf voor Israels misdaden.
 
De Jerusalem Post meldt:
 
Firefighters and firefighting personnel from all over the world came to Israel's aid over the weekend, responding to the most devastating fire the country has ever seen. While most of the aid that arrived had to be flown in, early Sunday morning, four fire engines manned by 21 firefighters began a five-hour drive to the Carmel mountains.

Leaving the southern West Bank at 4 a.m., the Bethlehem civil defense team spent five hours driving through Israel before joining up with Israeli and international firefighters battling the deadly blaze that has destroyed over 12,000 acres (50,000 dunams) and killed at least 41 people since Thursday.

The Palestinian firetrucks are more advanced than Israel's, Channel 10 News reported. The modern firetrucks were reportedly a gift from the European Union, which contributed millions of dollars to establish a Palestinian firefighting force.

Bethlehem Civil Defense Chief Ibrahim Ayish told Palestinian news agency Ma'an that it was good to work alongside the Israeli teams, because they "know the area very well."

Arriving at nine in the morning on Sunday, Ayish said, "We were received respectfully." He added, "After all, we're dealing with a humanitarian issue which knows no borders," Ma'an reported.

"We hope that we will have a major role in fighting the fire and in the humanitarian effort on Mount Carmel," a Palestinian firefighter told Channel 10. "It's, like, peace."

When asked by Israel Radio how they felt about fighting a fire in Israel, the Palestinians responded that it was partly a humanitarian work, partly their job as firefighters, and that they believe Israel would help in the same way should the Palestinians ever find themselves in a similar situation.

Jordanian firefighters were also sent to help fight the Carmel fire on the ground.
 
 
Haaretz meldt de mooie verzoenende woorden van de zo pragmatisch geworden Hamas leider Haniyeh:
 
The de-facto Palestinian prime minister in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh said Sunday that the massive forest fires in northern Israel served as a "strike from Allah [God]."

Commenting on the fires in Israel, which killed 41 Israelis and burnt more than 50 square kilometers of forest, Hamas' Haniyeh told reporters that "those fires are divine strikes for what they [Israel] did."

The Hamas strongman made the statements as he joined emergency prayers in Gaza City to ask for rain. He expressed hope rain would fall in the Palestinian territories, which like Israel, have been struck by an unprecedented dry season.

 
RP
 

 

zaterdag 4 december 2010

Nederland schiet brandend Israel te hulp met blushelikopters

 
Nieuws ontwikkelt snel in tijden van crisis. Naar ik vernam uit welingelichte kringen waren vrienden van Israel vrijdagmiddag nog druk bezig om een oproep aan de Nederlandse regering te formuleren, toen bleek dat al was besloten om 4 blushelikopters te sturen. Nou ja, al? Vrijdagmorgen was al hulp uit zeker 5 andere landen in Israel aangekomen, en meer toegezegd. De Nederlandse bijdrage zal pas maandag aankomen; pessimisten vrezen dat ze dan nog hard nodig is...
 
Wouter
___________

 
Nederland schiet brandend Israel te hulp

vr 03-12-2010

Het Ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken komt Israel te hulp met blusapparatuur en manschappen. Dit gebeurt in samenwerking met het Ministerie van Defensie. Sinds gisteren zijn er contacten tussen de Nederlandse en Israelische regering over steun bij het bestrijden van de ernstige bosbrand die de omgeving van Haifa momenteel treft. Daarbij zijn al meer dan 40 personen omgekomen. Meer dan 20.000 personen werden geëvacueerd.

De Universiteit van Haifa is ontruimd en kan als de brand niet wordt gestopt in vlammen opgaan. Vele landen in de buurt zijn Israel al te hulp geschoten. Ook Turkije, waarmee Israel een gespannen relatie onderhoudt. Palestijnse brandweermannen helpen mee het vuur te bestrijden.

Nederland stuurt vier blushelikopters van de luchtmacht naar Israël. De ministers Uri Rosenthal (Buitenlandse Zaken) en Hans Hillen (Defensie) hebben dat vrijdag besloten.

De transporthelikopters van het type Cougar en Chinook vertrekken zaterdag naar Israël, waar ze naar verwachting maandag aankomen. Onder de helikopters worden flexibele watercontainers gehangen. De 'fire bucket' van de Cougar bevat 2.500 liter water, die van de Chinook bijna 10.000 liter. Er gaan drie Cougars en een Chinook naar Israël, aldus Defensie.

http://www.cidi.nl/Nieuwsberichten/Nederland-schiet-brandend-Israel-te-hulp.html

 

Brief van een Israelische oorlogsmisdadiger in Gaza

 
De meeste Israelische soldaten in de Gaza Oorlog deden niet meer en niet minder dan hun plicht, met als doel de Qassam-terreur uit de Gazastrook een halt toe te roepen. Daarin zijn ze grotendeels geslaagd, want nadien werd het een heel stuk rustiger in Sderot en andere Israelische plaatsen aan de Gaza grens. Mijn indruk is dat de IDF zich behoorlijk inspande om Palestijnse burgerslachtoffers te vermijden, maar dit is vrijwel niet te voorkomen in een ongelijke strijd tegen een onzichtbare vijand in een dichtbevolkt gebied. En er zijn altijd soldaten bij die minder scrupules hebben; de vraag is of daartegen afdoende maatregelen worden genomen..
 
Wouter
____________
 
 
Site exposes IDF 'war criminals'  / Shanni Gurkevitch
Website reveals details of hundreds of Israeli soldiers it claims took part in Gaza war. 'I stand by everything I did in Operation Cast Lead, and I have nothing to be ashamed of,' says First Sergeant (res.) Ziv Danieli, one of toops included on list
Full story
 
Letter from a war criminal

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3987565,00.html

Op-ed: IDF reservist who served in Gaza war writes to person behind 'list of war criminals'

Yoav Keren

Published: 11.21.10, 19:12

To be honest, I was a little insulted. I looked for myself on the list of 200 Operation Cast Lead war criminals published online last week but didn't find what I was looking for. I performed almost a month of reserve duty during the operation, yet nothing; no mention. Not even a small one.

Even a low-ranking female soldier got to enter the list of war criminals, and was even graced with a Facebook photo in civilian clothing, engaged in yoga. Not to mention those pilots; finally we could see their faces (and also their addresses and military ID numbers)

As it turns out, the Israeli who produced the list – and there is almost no doubt it's an Israeli, who is intimately familiar with the IDF – did not do a particularly thorough job. In any case, he missed me.

I served in the Gaza Division war room for 26 days and saw everything in real time. I saw how every time we had to curb Qassam fire from populated areas, officials considered it seven times and meticulously calculated the firing range and angle, as not to hurt civilians by mistake.

I also saw how, to be on the safe side, the army consulted with its legal advisor and with a representative of the Coordination and Liaison Administration who were regularly deployed in the war room.

I saw the great seriousness in addressing a water pipe that burst in Rafah, and the kind of effort invested in order to bring food into the Strip and allow ambulances to evacuate wounded Palestinians from the war zone.

I also participated in assessment sessions with the division commander; a major part of them pertained to humanitarian issues.

I walked around Sderot, which looked like a ghost town after sustaining dozens of Qassam rockets, and I also saw the Grad missiles making their way to Ashkelon without anybody being able to stop them. Believe me, it's not a heart-warming sight.

I'm no longer afraid

In short, I was there, and according to the twisted standards of the various list producers this apparently turns me into a war criminal as well.

Here's a small confession: In the wake of Operation Cast Lead, I was thinking of posting photographs from my reserve service on my Facebook page. I'm not talking about photos alongside Palestinian detainees, heaven forbid; just regular images of me sitting with the guys at the division's canteen. I didn't do it because I was afraid that one day, when I travel abroad, these photos may incriminate me.

Yet I'm no longer afraid, because I realized that I'm in good company. Not only the army chief and Southern Command chief and Air Force chief, but also anyone who serves in the IDF is by definition a war criminal apparently. And as any soldier who walks the streets in uniform may find himself in one blacklist or another, even if he serves as a cook in an Air Force munitions base, I have no reason to hide.

So for the benefit of the producer of the abovementioned list: My name is Yoav Keren, I'm a reserve major, and my personal ID number is 5030397. You can find out my address on your own. So the next time you update the list of war criminals, you can add me too. But if you use a photo from Facebook, at least make sure it's a good one.

 

Gaza expositie in moderne kunst museum Parijs om Israel zwart te maken

 
Soms heeft actievoeren wel degelijk effect, en dringt een ander geluid door bij de organisatoren van anti-Israel evenementen. Hieronder een mooi voorbeeld van een protest tegen een fototentoonstelling over Gaza waarin Israel met de nazi's werd vergeleken.
Dit bericht is al een paar weken oud, en het zou interessant zijn te weten of en hoe de expositie nadien is hervat?
 
RP
-----------
 

Paris museum suspends Israel-bashing exhibit

I mentioned on November 10th that the Museum of Modern Art in Paris was showing an "award winning" collection of photos from the Gaza Strip meant to bash Israel. Not only were the photos biased, but the very rules of the award were created for a single purpose - to compare Israel to Nazis.

Last Sunday, a group of Zionists mobilized on Facebook to create a unique counter-protest.

In the words of the leader of the group, Jean-Patrick Grumberg:

With the active support of members of the Europe-Israel group, volunteers recruited on Facebook, and members of the JDL, leaflets was distributed on Sunday 21 November, before the exhibition opened.

The flyer was a perfectly neutral, and could not be construed as an attack. Photos, taken from Palestinian sites, with this title: "Disturbing Gaza photos." Thus, we followed the logic of the show: the audience was invited to see for themselves that there is another truth, in Gaza.

My goal was to restore some balance. To inform the public, and show this side of Gaza hidden by the media. The result was well above our expectations.

The administration of the museum became trapped by its ignorance - or complicity, we will probably never know - revealed by this leaflet. The photos revealed that they became the purveyors of propaganda disguised as art exhibition, as was revealed by our photos.

Consequence: the museum's management has decided, on Sunday 21 November, to close the exhibition for a period of one week.

The team of volunteers distributing the flyers suffered - how strange - Judeophobic and Israélophobic insults: the truth revealed in the leaflets, I must admit, is a rare attack, because nothing and nobody can challenge the images - the pro-Palestinians know only too well.

The expo is not definitively closed, and we already expect the usual reactions of propaganda specialists.
This is a brilliant example of how pro-Israel activism should work.

(h/t EoL)

vrijdag 3 december 2010

Geef aan de slachtoffers van de bosbrand in Israel


RAMPSPOED IN DE CARMEL

41 doden - meer dan 5.000 hectare verwoest
meer dan 14.000 geëvacueerden

De Collectieve Israel Actie en Keren Hayesod
roepen u op om bij te dragen
aan de hulp aan de slachtoffers van de
grootste natuurramp in de geschiedenis van Israël.

Terwijl de Staat Israël de grootste natuurramp in haar geschiedenis meemaakt, heeft The Jewish Agency (partner van Keren Hayesod en de Collectieve Israel Actie) In nauw overleg met de betrokken autoriteiten besloten om onmiddellijke hulp te bieden in de vorm van:
a.. Ondersteuning van de duizenden families die zijn geëvacueerd
b.. Het organiseren van activiteiten voor duizenden geëvacueerde kinderen, die tijdens hun Chanoeka-vakantie hun huis moesten ontvluchten
c.. Onmiddellijke hulp en ondersteuning aan brandweerlieden
d.. Het opzetten van een steunfonds voor familieleden van slachtoffers

Uw bijdrage is nu hard nodig.
Geef met uw hart.

Giro 77 77 77
t.n.v. Collectieve Israel Actie
o.v.v. 'Brand in de Carmel'

Stuur aub dit bericht door aan zoveel mogelijk mensen in uw netwerk

Buitenlandse hulp van (bijna) alle kanten tegen bosbrand Israel

 
Twee berichten van de roemruchte Elder of Ziyon over de bosbrand bij Haifa, die al tientallen mensenlevens heeft gekost en niet alleen rampzalig is voor de natuurgebieden daar, maar ook Haifa zelf bedreigd en omliggende dorpen. Behalve het bos spuwt ook de Islamitische Jihad vuur, even negerend hoeveel Arabieren en Druzen in de directe omgeving van de brand wonen. Maar die worden natuurlijk graag tot onvrijwillige 'martelaars' in de strijd tegen het 'zionistische monster' verklaard.
 
Wouter
__________________
 
 
 
From YNet:
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, along with other world leaders for sending planes and firefighting equipment to Israel in order to assist the battle against the blaze consuming its northern region.

Netanyahu spoke at a special Cabinet meeting called in the wake of flailing efforts to extinguish the flames. Netanyahu also thanked other world leaders, including Bulgaria's prime minister and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who sent "a very large Russian plane, perhaps the largest of its kind in the world"

"The plane is on its way here, and will arrive in the afternoon," Netanyahu said, also thanking Egypt, Azerbaijan, Spain, Croatia, France, and Jordan for their offers. "I think this constitutes an unprecedented response to our appeal for international aid," he added.
Hurriyet Daily News (Turkey) adds:
Putting aside recent tensions to lend a hand, 10 Turkish rescue personnel and two airplanes carrying firefighting equipment arrived at the Ramat David airbase in Haifa at 10.30 a.m. Friday, Anatolia news agency reported. The planes are aiding firefighting efforts in coordination with Israeli authorities.

Israeli officials said some 100 firefighters from Bulgaria have arrived as well as forces from Jordan and Greece. Fire extinguishing planes were on their way from Britain and Cyprus as well as aid from the United States, Russia, Egypt, Spain, Azerbaijan and Romania.
Commenter Yerushalimey muses:
I wonder, if Israel was not known for sending aid to crises all over the world, if less foreign assistance would be forthcoming. Honestly, I am surprised and grateful we are receiving ANY assistance.
It is indeed one of the small slivers of good news from this disaster.

And while Palestine Press Agency says that Palestinian Authority civil defense personnel are also being sent to help, and there are reports that Jordan as sent aid as well, other Palestinian Arabs are not so thrilled at the idea of Arabs helping Israel.

Palestine Today, which is aligned with Islamic Jihad, has an op-ed slamming any Arab governments who offer to help Israel deal with this crisis.
Our advice to the kind-hearted Arab countries is to think carefully before venturing to help [the Zionist] entity, which flows into lava for day and night on our unarmed people, whether in the occupied West Bank or Gaza Strip. Here we have to tell you how happy our Palestinian people are at the killing 40 Zionist wardens burned to death.

The assistance to the entity is not a crime but treason to the blood of all the martyrs, and therefore assure them, that many lessons will be learned from this "divine fire", and the lesson that the most prominent in the demise of this entity is no more a matter of time.
 
======================
 
From JPost:
Coastal District Police Commander Roni Attia said Friday that two arson suspects were apprehended in the North, near Kiryat Bialik.

The suspects were allegedly attempting to rekindle a fire in the forest with the use of Molotov cocktails. Police are not connecting the arsonists at this stage to the massive fires in the Carmel and Atlit but rather to the fire which broke out earlier at the Tzur Shalom area of Kiryat Bialik.

Attia added that arson is suspected in a number of separate fires, including Kiryat Bialik and Kiryat Tivon.

Earlier on Friday, police found a bike, a bag, and a wig inside near a fire center in Tzur Shalom, leading them to believe that the fire was caused by an arsonist or arsonists.

Police Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told the Post that there are 3 fire centers - Tzur Shalom, the Atlit - Tirat Hacarmel area, and the Carmel hillsides. In one, Tzur Shalom, north of Haifa, "we located suspicious items pointing to arson. As for the other two major fires, it is too early and the incidents are to large in scale to know their causes at this stage." The death toll in the fires rose to 42 on Friday, according to Army Radio.
Now, who would want to do something like that?

Could it be the types of people who celebrate it?

(h/t Israel Matzav)

UPDATE: Commenter Jed says
Update from Israeli TV:
Fire investigator says fire source was from burning garbage.
Suspicion that more fires set up by gang, 2 suspects from Daliat el Carmel arrested by police.
 

Grote bosbrand op Karmelberg toont aan dat Israel slecht voorbereid is op grote rampen


Terwijl het vuur nog in volle hevigheid woedt, is de discussie over hoe dit kon gebeuren en waarom men niet beter voorbereid was, al losgebarsten. Naast Haaretz wijst ook de Jerusalem Post erop dat de brandweer de afgelopen jaren was verwaarloosd en daar zelf al meermaals voor had gewaarschuwd.
 
Onderstaande analyse gaat verder, en wijst al concrete verantwoordelijken aan zoals de minister van binnenlandse zaken Eli Yishai. Ik vraag mij of het gepast is zo snel al schuldigen aan te wijzen of conclusies te trekken over toekomstige oorlogen, maar Israeli's zijn een ongeduldig volk met het hart op de tong.
 
Het is hartverwarmend te zien dat verschillende landen, waaronder ook Turkije, Egypte en Jordanië, hun hulp hebben aangeboden.
Zoals wel vaker wens ik Israel wat van ons natte weer toe en ons wat van dat van Israel, waar men de heetste novembermaand in 60 jaar had. Daar zouden we immers beide beter van worden.
 
RP
------------
 

Massive fire proves Israel can't afford war with Iran

Just like Israel's army in the 1973 Yom Kippur war, the emergency services were wholly unprepared to handle a shock on this scale.
 
http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/aluf-benn-massive-fire-proves-israel-can-t-afford-war-with-iran-1.328529
By Aluf Benn

The enormous blaze that broke out on the Carmel will be remembered as the Yom Kippur War of the Fire and Rescue Service, who were not prepared to counter a disaster of such magnitude.

Yesterday it turned out that Israel is not prepared for war or a mass terrorist strike that would cause many casualties in the home front. The warning of the outgoing Military Intelligence Chief, Amos Yadlin, that the next war will be a lot more difficult than past experiences, and that Tel Aviv will be a front line, was not translated into the necessary preparation by the authorities assigned the protection of the civilians.

Under such circumstances, it is best for Israel not to embark on war against Iran, which will involve thousands of missiles being fired on the home front.

After the Second Lebanon War, which exposed how pathetic the civil defense system was, reports were written, exercises were held, but everything broke down under the stress of a real emergency on the Carmel range − an area that already experienced the trauma of Hezbollah missiles.

Yesterday Israel asked for help from Cyprus and Greece, and the air force traveled to France to bring fire retardants to make up for the material that had run out. In war time, it is doubtful whether Israel will be able to rely on the generosity and largess of its neighbors.

Responsibility for the home front is currently divided among three ministries: the Home Front Command and the National Emergency Authority, who are answerable to the Defense Ministry; the police, which is part of the Ministry of Public Security; and the Fire and Rescue Command, which belongs to the Interior Ministry.

Interior Minister Eli Yishai, who is responsible for the firemen and the head of the Fire and Rescue Services, Shimon Romah, were nowhere to be found yesterday. They are obvious candidates for losing their jobs as a result of the disaster.

Each ministry has its own bureaucratic dynamic, and ability to raise funds for equipment and human resources. The firemen are at the bottom of the pile, and have for years struggled to get more resources.

A year ago the firemen went on strike and warned that the system is far from being able to provide for defending the population. According to the firemen's association, the international standards require one fireman for every 1,000 citizens, and in Israel the ratio is nearly one in 10,000. Over and over the firemen warned that they can't shoulder the responsibility they are given.

Funding authorized several weeks ago was meant to head-off criticism in a State Comptroller report on the state of the fire departments.

In similar circumstance in the past, organizations that were found lacking were later bolstered with enormous resources. This is what happened to Military Intelligence and the air force following their failures during the Yom Kippur War. This will probably also happen to the Fire and Rescue Services.

Jacht geopend op Arjan El Fassed van Electronic Intifada - GroenLinks?

 
Arjan El Fassed heeft vele petten gedragen. Hij was o.a. mede-oprichter van de Palestijnse "hasbara" website Electronic Intifada, en vervulde functies bij diverse andere Palestijnse organisaties zoals Al-Awda, dat zich inzet voor de 'terugkeer' van Palestijnse vluchtelingen naar Israel, en LAW, dat juridisch advies gaf aan de PLO; daarnaast had hij posities bij OXFAM-Novib en ICCO, en sinds de verkiezingen van juni jl. zit hij in de Tweede Kamer voor GroenLinks.
 
Opvallend is dat ICCO subsidie geeft aan Electronic Intifada (liefst eenderde van EI's budget), overigens al een aantal jaren -maar na El Fasseds tijd bij ICCO-, wat recentelijk voor enige ophef zorgt nadat de pro-Israel 'waakhond' NGO Monitor dit bij minister Uri Rosenthal heeft aangekaart, en deze zich daar 'not amused' over heeft betoond. (Of was het eigenlijk de Jerusalem Post die Rosenthal wakker schudde, dat is niet helemaal duidelijk uit de berichten?)
 
Het heeft allemaal de schijn van één grote pot onwelriekend nat, want OXFAM-Novib subsidiëert weer de propaganda van Een Ander Joods Geluid, dat ongeveer op dezelfde lijn zit als Electronic Intifada, en ICCO en OXFAM-Novib zijn samen ook 2 van de moederorganisaties van United Civilians for Peace, dat ondanks haar naam al even eenzijdig aktievoert tegen Israel. In hun aktiviteiten trekken deze clubs ook regelmatig samen op en met GroenLinks en het Palestina Komitee en Stop de Bezetting, naar wie af en toe ook wat subsidiecenten worden doorgesluist.
 
ICCO en OXFAM-Novib doen veel goed werk in ontwikkelingslanden en hebben een officiële status bij de Nederlandse overheid als medefinancieringsorganisaties, wat inhoudt dat ze flinke potten (belasting)geld krijgen van de overheid om de derde wereld mee te steunen, en ze mogen ook in Nederland wat voorlichtingswerk doen daarmee. Buiten deze geldpotten hebben ze nog wat andere inkomsten, met name van donateurs die dit goede werk willen steunen en ook van de Postcodeloterij.
 
Als de regering (lees: Rosenthal) nu gaat zeggen dat ze het subsidiegeld niet mogen gebruiken voor de politieke propaganda van Electronic Intifada, levert dat waarschijnlijk geen grote problemen op, want ICCO kan op papier wat met potjes schuiven (zoals inmiddels op hun website aangekondigd) en voila: Electronic Intifada wordt dan gewoon uit de donaties gefinancierd.
Ik vraag me alleen af of alle donateurs daar blij mee zijn, die bij ontwikkelingshulp toch eerder zullen denken aan hongerige negerkindertjes en aan Max Havelaar koffie, en niet aan opruiing tegen de enige Joodse staat.
 
De rechtse en libertaire blogosfeer richt nu haar pijlen op Arjan El Fassed, zoals De Dagelijkse Standaard, Het Vrije Volk en Keesjemaduraatje, en zit alle mogelijke oude details over zijn doen en laten op te diepen, vooral via internet. Dit wordt in één moeite door door sommigen aangegrepen om tegen de linkse kerk en de subsidiecultuur voor linkse hobbies aan te trappen, en ik kan me moeilijk aan de indruk onttrekken dat sommigen tevens uit zijn op revanche voor de recentelijk in opspraak geraakte PVV kamerleden.
 
Hoeveel van de aantijgingen en verdachtmakingen tegen El Fasseds persoon beklijven of bewezen kunnen worden, moet ik nog zien. Sommige lijken overtuigender dan andere.
Ik ontbeer de tijd voor een grondig onderzoek en dito artikel, maar ik zou liever zien dat meer op de zaak werd ingegaan, nl. wat EI, ICCO, UCP en trawanten allemaal beweren op hun websites. Ik heb wat pdf-jes bekeken over het Midden-Oosten conflict op de sites van ICCO en UCP en enkele artikelen op IE, en ik was vrij verbluft over de ontstellende en schaamteloze eenzijdigheid, vooral bij wat zich "vredes"- en "ontwikkelings"organisaties noemen....
 
Wouter
 
 

donderdag 2 december 2010

Netanjahoe positief over WikiLeaks, dan moet het wel een zionistisch complot zijn

 
Het feit dat Netanjahoe zei blij te zijn met de Wikileaks is volgens sommigen wel erg verdacht. Men had uiteraard verwacht dat de Wikileaks ook over Israel de nodige pikante zaken zouden onthullen, maar dat viel tegen. Over verschillende Arabische staten, Hezbollah en ook Fatah kwamen daarentegen wel interessante zaken aan het licht. En dat zint antizionisten natuurlijk helemaal niet. Vandaar dat een hooggeplaatste Turkse politieke leider alweer met de ouderwetse complot theorieën op de proppen komt: 'het is vast allemaal de schuld van Netanjahoe, de machtigste man op aarde, die alles en iedereen naar zijn hand kan zetten.'
 
RP
-----------


WikiLeaks founder: Netanyahu believes exposé will aid Mideast peace

Julian Assange tells Time: Netanyahu says leaders must speak in public like they do in private; Turkey: Israel engineered WikiLeaks release.
By Haaretz Service / Published 09:58 02.12.10
http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/wikileaks-founder-netanyahu-believes-expose-will-aid-mideast-peace-1.328380

 

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Wednesday defended his disclosure of classified U.S. documents by singling out Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as an example of a world leader who believes the publications will aid global diplomacy.

"We can see the Israeli Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu coming out with a very interesting statement that leaders should speak in public like they do in private whenever they can," Assange told Time Magazine in an interview on Wednesday, days after his online whistleblower published thousands of secret diplomatic cables.

"He believes that the result of this publication, which makes the sentiments of many privately held beliefs public, are promising a pretty good [indecipherable] will lead to some kind of increase in the peace process in the Middle East and particularly in relation to Iran," Assange said.

"I just noticed today Iran has agreed to nuclear talks. Maybe that's coincidence or maybe it's coming out of this process, but it's certainly not being canceled by this process," he added.

Also Wednesday, a senior Turkish official blamed Israel for the WikiLeaks release. Addressing reporters, Huseyin Celik, deputy leader of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's AKP party, hinted that Israel engineered the leak of hundreds of thousands of United States diplomatic cables as a plot to pressure the Turkish government.

"One has to look at which countries are pleased with these," Celik was quoted as saying. "Israel is very pleased. Israel has been making statements for days, even before the release of these documents."

"Documents were released and they immediately said, 'Israel will not suffer from this.' How did they know that?" Celik asked.

Kristinn Hrafnsson, WikiLeaks spokesman, earlier Wednesday called the publications "perfectly legal", adding that people had a right to know what officials working on their behalf were doing. He also dismissed concern that the publication of classified U.S. communications would damage cooperation between countries.

If global stability is based on deception and lies, maybe it needs a bit of a shaking up," he told Reuters Television.

WikiLeaks has shaken the diplomatic world by publishing excerpts of more than 250,000 confidential cables in partnership with five Western newspapers, including The New York Times and The Guardian in Britain.

The disclosures have angered the United States by exposing the inner workings of U.S. diplomacy, including candid assessments of world leaders.

Grote bosbrand bij Haifa leidt tot minstens 40 doden

 
Het is je met de winterse kou hier moeilijk voor te stellen, maar bij Haifa woedt een hevige bosbrand waarbij al 40 mensen zijn omgekomen. Laten we hopen dat er over deze ramp niet weer allerlei indianenverhalen de ronde gaan doen in de blogosfeer en laten we hopen dat er snel regen zal vallen in het kurkdroge Israel.
 
RP
-------------

40 dead as huge brushfire rages through Carmel Mountains
Netanyahu sends IDF forces to the scene as thousands of dunams in northern Israel burn down; bus evacuating some 50 prison guards flips over, gets caught in the flames.

 


A huge brushfire was raging across the Carmel Mountains near Haifa on Thursday afternoon, resulting in the death of some 40 people and hurting dozens of others, among them prison guards and firemen.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday instructed Defense Minister Ehud Barak to send IDF forces to the Carmel region to aid in putting out the huge brushfire.

Netanyahu also instructed Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch to send any available fire truck in Israel to the scene.

Hundreds of people were evacuated from areas around the Carmel Forest with the help of a large force of rescue workers who were called to the scene to evacuate dozens of homes and close off traffic on neighboring roads.

Thousands of dunams of natural forest were burned down and the power supply was cut off in the areas of Isfiyeh and Daliyat al-Karmel.

Prisons Service was also forced to evacuate some 500 security inmates from the Damon Prison and house them temporarily in nearby jails.

While trying to evacuate individuals from the Damon Prison, a bus with some 50 prison guards flipped over and got caught in the flames.

The villages of Isfiyeh and Beit Oron were evacuated in the early afternoon, as was the neighboring Carmel Forest Hotel and Carmel Farm, as easterly wind blew the flames across the mountain rage.

"This large fire has spread due to strong winds," Haifa District Police Deputy Superintendent Ahuva Mishne told Israel Radio. "The winds are blowing in the direction of the sea, so there is no real concern for the [nearby] villages."

WikiLeaks onthulling: Palestijnse Fatah sluit elk compromis met Israel uit

 
Een topgeheim dat nog niet tot de reguliere media in Nederland en tot het grote publiek is doorgedrongen....
 
Wouter
____________
 

Commentaar: WikiLeaks is soms niet nodig

http://www.refdag.nl/opinie/commentaar/commentaar_wikileaks_is_soms_niet_nodig_1_518667
30-11-2010 11:40

Dat er achter de schijnbaar logisch werkende internationale diplomatie een wereld van realisme –met alle daarbij behorende politiek incorrecte bejegeningen– schuilgaat, hoeft na de onthullingen van klokkenluidersclub WikiLeaks niemand meer te verbazen.

Soms heb je WikiLeaks echter helemaal niet nodig om tot die ontdekking te komen. Neem het congres van de Palestijnse Fatahpartij van afgelopen weekend. Daar werd eens te meer en onomwonden duidelijk wat nu werkelijk de standpunten van de Palestijnen zijn ten aanzien van het vredesproces met Israël.

Centraal stond de stelling dat elk compromis wordt uitgesloten. Dat is natuurlijk een bij voorbaat zeer helder –en tegelijkertijd onmogelijk– uitgangspunt in de onderhandelingen over een oplossing voor het Israëlisch-Palestijns conflict. Het maakt ook duidelijk dat de Palestijnen klaarblijkelijk niet echt in een oplossing geïnteresseerd zijn.

Het bleef dit weekeinde overigens niet bij het uiten van onverzettelijkheid. Statements waren er ook. Een greep: Erkenning van de „zogenaamde Joodse staat" is uitgesloten. By the way, aldus de verklaring van het Fatahcongres: Erkenning van welke „racistische staat dan ook die zich op religie baseert" wordt niet geaccepteerd. Het recht op terugkeer van 4 miljoen Palestijnse vluchtelingen is onaantastbaar. En de Klaagmuur is toch echt islamitisch eigendom, klonk het in Ramallah.

Eisen waren er ook. Met inachtneming van de Palestijnse onwil om een compromis te sluiten, moet Israël wél de grote nederzettingblokken op de Westelijke Jordaanover opgeven. Steden als Ma'aleh Adumim –met zo'n 50.000 inwoners– dienen te verdwijnen en de inwoners moeten worden verdreven.

Klare taal, dat moet worden gezegd. Maar ook taal die niemand –wederom ook zonder WikiLeaks– hoeft te verbazen. Eerder deze maand publiceerde de organisatie Israel Project de resultaten van een onderzoek onder Palestijnen in Gaza en op de Westelijke Jordaanoever naar de wenselijkheid van een Palestijnse staat. Twee derde van hen gaf aan dat hen uiteindelijk voor ogen staat dat geheel Palestina deel van een Palestijnse staat moet uitmaken.

Dat kan natuurlijk niet van de ene op de andere dag. En dus bleek uit de enquête dat 60 procent van de Palestijnen vindt dat „het échte doel moet zijn om met twee staten te beginnen om er vervolgens één Palestijnse staat van te maken."

En als dat niet lukt? Dan is 56 procent van de Palestijnen van mening dat „we opnieuw onze toevlucht tot gewapende strijd moeten nemen." Niet voor niets begon het Fatahcongres met een eerbetoon aan Amin al-Hindi, het brein achter de aanslag op Israëlische atleten tijdens de Olympische Spelen van 1972.

Duidelijkheid te over, zo lijkt het. En toch blijven de media zich richten op wat in het Witte Huis en in de kantoren van Benjamin Netanyahu en Mahmud Abbas wordt geroepen. Zonder zich te realiseren dat daarachter een geheel andere wereld schuilgaat. Voor dat besef zijn geen klokkenluiderssites nodig. Maar je moet het wel wíllen zien.

 

woensdag 1 december 2010

Boycot Israel campagne is moderne variant van 'Kauft nicht bei Juden'

 
De anti-Israellobby roept consequent op tot het boycotten van Israel, met het argument dat dit is om het ertoe aan te zetten de bezetting op te geven. In werkelijkheid erkennen de meeste boycotters Israels bestaansrecht niet, en is het hen om de delegitimatie van de staat te doen. De Apartheid analogie, die door vele voormalige anti-apartheidsactivisten reeds is bekritiseerd en onderuit gehaald, dient maar één doel: Israel als net zo fout en illegitiem neerzetten als het apartheidsbewind van Zuid-Afrika.
 
 
RP
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'Kauft nicht bei Juden' will worsen the conflict
By DENIS MACSHANE
29/11/2010
 
The call to boycott Jewish commerce is Europe's oldest political appeal.
 
Kauft nicht bei Juden – "Don't buy from Jews" – is back. The call to boycott Jewish commerce is Europe's oldest political appeal. Once again, as the tsunami of hate against Israel rolls out from the Right and the Left, from Islamist ideologues to Europe's cultural elites, the demand is to punish the Jews. That the actions of the Israeli government are open to criticism is a fact. But what are the real arguments?

Firstly, that Israel is wrong to defy international law as an occupying force on the West Bank. But what about Turkey? It has 35,000 soldiers occupying the territory of a sovereign republic – Cyprus. Ankara has sent hundreds of thousands of settlers to colonize the ancient Greekowned lands of northern Cyprus. Turkey has been told again and again by the UN to withdraw its troops. Instead, it now also stands accused of destroying the ancient Christian churches of northern Cyprus.

Does anyone call for a boycott of Turkey, or urge companies to divest from it? No. Only the Jews are targeted.

Or take India; 500,000 Indian soldiers occupy Kashmir. According to Amnesty International, 70,000 Muslims have been killed over the past 20 years by these soldiers and security forces – a number that far exceeds the Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in the same period. But the Islamic ideologues focus on Jews, not Indians.

May we talk of the western Sahara and Morocco, or Algeria's closure of the border there, making life far worse than that of Palestinians in Ramallah or Hebron? No, better not.

Voltaire – anti-Semite that he was – should be alive today to mock the hypocrisy of the new high priests calling anathema on the heads of Jews in Israel.

Second, the desire for peace in the Middle East is a global priority. But peace requires recognition of the Jewish state of Israel. There are 40 member states of the UN which have the words "Muslim" or "Islamic" in their names. No one challenges their right to exist or defend themselves.

Israel unilaterally withdrew from Gaza. Its reward was to have the territory turned into a new launch pad for rockets intended to kill Jews.

More rockets have been fired at Israel from Gaza than V1 or V2 rockets at London in 1944. No one blamed Winston Churchill for responding with all the force he could, as cities like Hamburg or Dresden faced the wrath of the RAF. But if Israel takes the slightest action against the Jew-killers of Hamas, all the hate of the world falls on its head.

Third, it is hard to see how peace can be made with an Israel that so many seek to brand an "apartheid state."

I worked in the 1980s with the black trade union movement inside South Africa. We lay in ditches as the apartheid police patrolled townships hunting for political activists. I could not swim at the same beach as my wife, a French-Vietnamese, because of the racist laws. Muslims and Jews swim off the same Tel Aviv beaches. They can stay in the same hotels, be elected to the same parliament, and appeal to an independent judiciary for justice.

BY DEFINITION, an apartheid state has no right to exist. It cannot be a member of the UN. The campaign to call Israel an apartheid state is a campaign to make it a non-state. How can peace be made with a state whose opponents say should not exist?

In Britain, there are calls by journalists and professors to boycott the Israeli media or universities. But Israeli writers, journalists and professors are the main opponents of the counterproductive policies of their government. To boycott them is to hand even more power to the haredi and Russian nationalists who now control Right-wing politics in Israel.

By any standard, the attacks on media freedom, on women, on gays or on lawyers is 1,000 times worse in Iran or Saudi Arabia. There is no democracy in Syria or Libya, limited democracy in Jordan, and open anti-Semitism displayed by the Muslim Brotherhood movements in the Arab world. Is there any call to boycott these states, their journalists or professors? No. The call – rightly – is for engagement, contacts, debate and discussion. Many even argue for talks with Hamas, although its charter, with its strident anti- Semitic language, could have been written by a Nazi.

But talks with Jewish politicians, lawyers or intellectuals must be boycotted. This policy of making the Jewish citizens of Israel into objects of global hatred will only make the Middle East crisis worse. If it was directed evenly at all states which occupy and oppress territories, it might have some basis in morality. If the boycott, disinvestment and sanctions movement also called for sanctions against the new anti-Semitism of the extreme Right in Europe, it might make sense. The openly anti- Semitic Jobbik Party in Hungary parades in its fascist uniforms. Anti-Semitic politicians are elected to the European Parliament. The German politician Thilo Sarrazin can describe Jews as having "different genes" from other people. And now Europeans, of all people, once again cry Kauft nicht bei Juden.

Those who dislike Israeli rightwing policies must find other language than that of classical anti- Semitism. I am not Jewish. As a British MP, I work with thousands of Muslims in my constituency. I am more often in mosques than in churches. I am proud of my Muslim friends who are MPs, peers, municipal councillors or prominent as journaIists, lawyers, doctors and intellectuals. The 20 million European Muslims face new hates which must be combated. But there is no profit for them in joining the hate campaigns against Jews in Israel.

As Europeans we must reject the old language of boycott and economic campaigns against Jews. Israel, Palestine and Europe must all have a 21st century future, and not return to the hates of the past.

The writer, a former British Labor MP, also served as minister of state for Europe. He is the author of Globalizing Hatred: The New Anti-Semitism! (Weidenfeld and Nicolson).

Hamas premier zegt zich bij referendum over vredesakkoord Israel te zullen neerleggen


Dit staat morgen in alle kranten, wedden? Dit is natuurlijk veel belangrijker dan de uitspraken van Hamas leider Machmoud Zahar een paar weken geleden, waarin hij zei dat de Joden uit geheel 'Palestina' verdreven zouden worden, en hen ook waarschuwde dat ze hun langste tijd hadden gehad. Ook beweerde Zahar dat de Joden in Europa overal waren verdreven omdat zij zich zozeer misdroegen in de landen waar zij leefden, hun landgenoten bedrogen en belogen en alleen uit waren op eigen gewin. De media vonden deze uitspraken niet belangrijk, want zij passen niet in het beeld dat Hamas pragmatisch is geworden en er mee te praten valt. De uitspraken van Haniyeh passen wel in dat beeld, dus zullen gretig worden opgenomen in de kolommen en misschien vanavond al op het journaal. Als morgen andere Hamas leiders de woorden van Haniyeh tegenspreken zul je dat waarschijnlijk weer alleen op zionistische blogs aantreffen.
 
Maar is het dan geen positief nieuws? Dat valt helaas wel mee. Ten eerste heeft hij het over een referendum, en uit een onlangs gehouden enquete blijkt dat de meeste Palestijnen het hele land willen en een staat op de pre-1967 wapenstilstandslijnen slechts als een opstap daartoe zien (en daarbij is de diaspora nog niet gevraagd). Het zou goed kunnen dat dat ook de positie van Hamas is, dat zich immers altijd duidelijk tegen erkenning van Israel en vrede met Israel uitspreekt, en het hele gebied claimt. En ten derde moet het vluchtelingenprobleem wel worden opgelost, en Haniyeh heeft niet gezegd wat dat betreft tot een compromis bereid te zijn. Hamas spreekt zich consequent uit voor de 'terugkeer' van alle vijf miljoen vluchtelingen en hun nakomelingen naar Israel, en dat betekent dat er een einde komt aan de Joodse zelfbeschikking. Het is dan een kwestie van tijd voordat de naam Israel wordt aangepast, evenals vlag en volkslied.
 
RP
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'Hamas will honor Palestinian referendum on peace deal'




In rare Gaza press conference, Hamas PM says "We accept a Palestinian state on the borders of 1967, with J'lem as its capital, the release of Palestinian prisoners, and the resolution of the issue of refugees."
 
 
Hamas would accept the agreement of a Palestinian referendum on peace with Israel, Hamas Prime Minister Isamil Haniyeh was quoted as saying by Reuters on Wednesday.

"We accept a Palestinian state on the borders of 1967, with Jerusalem as its capital, the release of Palestinian prisoners, and the resolution of the issue of refugees," Haniyeh said.

Speaking at a rare press conference in Gaza, the Hamas leader said that his Islamist group would "respect the results (of a referendum) regardless of whether it differs with its ideology and principles." He specified that the referendum must include all Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and the diaspora, according to the Reuters report.

Haniyeh also denied allegations that al-Qaida operates in the coastal strip and that Palestinian terrorists had planned to carry out attacks in neighboring Egypt.

He told reporters that such allegations are lies meant to prepare the ground for future IDF attacks on Gaza, and said that he had sent a reassuring letter to Egypt's intelligence chief.