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Thursday, April 7, 2011

Three Hamas men arrested on charges of plot to capture Israeli soldier

[ 07/04/2011 - 09:58 AM ]

NAZARETH, (PIC)-- The Israeli Shin Bet security agency has arrested three Hamas men it suspects were planning to capture an Israeli soldier to bargain for Hamas's men held in Israeli prisons, Israeli Radio reported.

The Israeli army arrested the three men in January, a gag order was placed by a military court until the indictment was made on Wednesday. The Israeli occupation claims that those arrested are three activists belonging to an armed Hamas cell in the Ramallah area.

According to reports, the men aimed to use the soldier as a bargaining tool in order to see the release of Palestinians held in Israeli jails. They also allegedly planned to buy a piece of land near Ramallah and build there a house using a tunnel to hold the soldier after his capture.

The men were identified as Hamza Ibrahim Moussa Zahran, Nazar Mohammed Shanina and Jihad Hani Dib Shami.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Humanitarian Interventionism by the Numbers

Posted: April 7, 2011 by crescentandcross

by Philip Giraldi, April 07, 2011

If there was any doubt about why the United States is involved in an increasingly messy military engagement in Libya, President Barack Obama cleared the air in his speech on March 29th.  The US has no vital interest at stake but is involved in a humanitarian mission, to save innocent lives, akin to the Balkan enterprise of the 1990s.  Other evidence provided by top administration officials suggests that the ultimate intention is to replace Muammar Gadhafi, in other words regime change, similar to the military action that removed Saddam Hussein from Iraq.

Obama could have made a plausible case for removing Gadhafi based on imminent threat.  Gadhafi has been a major state supporter of terrorism, no doubt about it, and he did down both American and French commercial airliners in 1988 and 1989, resulting in major loss of life.  He also ordered his agents to bomb a club frequented by American soldiers in Berlin in 1986, killing three, and resulting in a punitive attack by US military aircraft on Tripoli.  Though the United States has come to terms with Libya and its regime it is indisputable that Gadhafi is a murderous thug and he is eminently capable of resorting to the terrorism card if he feels his interests demand it.  Now that he has been condemned by the UN and attacked by NATO, he almost certainly will again exploit his considerable financial resources to fund terrorism.  But President Barack Obama did not cite the danger posed by Gadhafi and instead chose to emphasize the humanitarian aspect of a US military intervention.

Recall for a moment that when Iraq occupied Kuwait in 1991 there were tales of Iraqi soldiers hurling infants out of incubators.  Additional atrocities were described tearfully by a young woman who turned out to be the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States.  Almost everything being reported about the bloodthirsty Iraqis turned out to be false, deliberately so, to make the case for war.  In light of the deliberate deception that has been part and parcel of every American intervention anywhere since the end of the Second World War, how can anyone believe the official narrative?  Why should anyone assume that Muammar Gadhafi will decide to slaughter his own people, particularly since he has a major interest in making the rebellion to his rule go away, an unlikely outcome if he engages in wholesale massacres.

Most Americans would accept that there will be times when our country must use its armed forces as an instrument of foreign policy, but this is not one of those moments.  Gadhafi posed no imminent threat to anyone but his own people and it is far from clear whether he was in fact poised to kill large numbers of them in some kind of paroxysm of revenge for the rebellion against his authority.  And the problem with humanitarian intervention as a concept is that it opens the door to more of the same wherever there are violations of fundamental rights.  It is perhaps necessary to step back and establish some sort of metric for intervention, but attempting to do so produces some odd results.  When should one intervene on humanitarian grounds and what are the numbers of deaths required to trigger some kind of United States response?

Many countries are not shy about massacring civilians.  The United States has itself killed tens of thousands of them in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Even accepting that Gadhafi might have killed some hundreds of Libyans, he is not exactly unique.  Protesters have recently been met by force in a number of countries in the Arab world, to include Algeria, Yemen, Bahrain, and Syria and there have been large numbers of fatalities.  How does the United States make a decision whether or not to intervene in those places to save lives?  Is the decision based on the number of deaths, the types of deaths, or, one suspects, the relationship of Washington with whoever is in charge in the respective countries?  Gadhafi was a convenient fall guy and it now appears that President Bashar Assad of Syria is possibly also being set up, but is there any chance that Washington will pull the plug on its support of the Kings of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia?

And then there are other non-Arab friends of the United States like Israel.  By any metric Israel should be attacked first to prevent massacres of civilians as it has killed thousands of Arabs in internationally recognized war crimes carried out in Lebanon and Gaza. That Israel is untouchable on humanitarian grounds raises the inevitable question about Washington’s hypocrisy.  A friendly Saudi Arabia too has demonstrated that it is more than willing to use force to maintain its autarchic rule.  It sent troops to aid neighboring Bahrain, which exacerbated the problem in that nation rather than mitigating the unrest, and has indicated that it is prepared to use force to continue its dominance in the oil producing eastern parts of the country, which are predominantly Shi’ite.  And then there are countries like Burma, where repression is so regular that it is hardly remarked upon, and the Ivory Coast, which is currently going through its own brand of bloodletting with more than 1,000 bodies discovered over the weekend.

In short, there are a whole lot of countries that are ripe for a little humanitarian intervention and even regime change in the more obdurate cases, but there are a couple of good reasons not to do so. First is the ethical consideration that interventions might be grounded in good intentions but they are generally based on inaccurate or even false information about the situation on the ground, which renders suspect the humanitarian aspect itself.  Second, whenever a humanitarian intervention takes place it often produces a bad result.  America’s assistance to the mujahedin in Afghanistan certainly did remove an occupying Russian army but it also led to the Taliban and al-Qaeda.  The often cited massacres in the Balkans in the 1990s turned out to be mostly fictional and the result of the intervention has been a Kosovar state that has become a center for drug trafficking, organ sales, and Islamic radicalism in Europe.

And then there is Iraq.  Iraq is a poster child for the collateral damage that goes hand in hand with interventions.  It is called mission creep, which happens every time a humanitarian mission is launched.  The neocon fantasy of a short, surgical invasion of Iraq to topple a tyrant and free the people, all paid for by oil revenue, and a quick exit turned out to be anything but.  To be sure, Saddam fell on schedule but he was succeeded by an eight year occupation and still counting, a multiple trillion dollar accounts due, hundreds of thousands of deaths, millions displaced, and a corrupt government in Baghdad that is closer to Tehran than it is to Washington.  Somalia likewise started as a UN program to feed Mogadishu and wound up as Blackhawk Down.  Libya is already beginning to look a lot like Uncle Remus’ tar baby.  Easy to take hold of but hard to release.

The Democratic Party’s undying affection for humanitarian gestures is more than regrettable.  Watching President Obama’s half smirk as he explains in the most honest and truthful terms how he is doing something wonderful for the Libyan people is reminiscent of Bill Clinton’s similar unctuously sincere performances as he ordered the bombing of Serbia.  Neither should be any more acceptable than the truly awful Bush Doctrine that gave the United States carte blanche to invade any country in the world for reasons of security.  Both Republican and Democratic doctrines should be rejected because experience suggests that they do not save lives anywhere, quite the contrary, and each unfortunate overseas adventure only represents a new burden that has to be borne with no discernible gain for the American people.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

‘How to counter Iran as regional power?’



While the world mainstream media is focussed on the current US-France-UK carpet-bombing to achieve regime-change in Libya – Israel, Saudi Arabia, the US and their top agent, former prime minister Sa’ad Hariri are laying ground-work for a regime-change in Syria, if necessary, by US coalition forces in future.

Last month, Benji Netanyahu, Saudi FM Saud al-Faysal and the West Bank ruler Mahmoud Abbas were all in Moscow to meet Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (a Crypto-Jew). According to Israel daily Yediot Aharonot, the three not only warned Medvedev of Islamic Iran as an emerging regional power – but also held a secret meeting to come up with a common plan to fight Tehran’s rising influence in Iraq, Bahrain, Egypt, Yemen, Labanon and Gaza Strip.

All three leaders agrees that if the on-going democracy movements succeed in Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Bahrain, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and other parts of the Muslim world – Tehran, most probably, will come out as the winner.

Israel on its part – doesn’t want a regime-changes in Libya or Syria. It wants them to remain in turmoil and militarily weak. While Tel Aviv supports Bashar al-Assad – it has protested Moscow’s sale of two surface-to-air rocket units armed with P-800, or ‘Yakhont’, missiles to Damascus in a deal worth 300 million dollars – citing the usual lame excuse, “it may fall in the hands of Hizbullah” in neighboring Lebanon.

Lebanon’s daily Al-Safir, on March 29, 2011 had reported that Syria sent a harsh message to the main political stream in the new Lebanese opposition Al-Mustaqbal, headed by former prime minister Sa’ad Hariri, saying that it had information on the involvement of Lebanese elements in the unrest in Der’a and Latakiya, and clarified that it would take a serious view of any harm to Syrian security. However, Al-Mustaqbal secretary-general Ahmad Al-Hariri claimed that Syrian TV’s claim harms Lebanon and said his group not be linked to events in Syria. He said that as far as Al-Mustaqbal was concerned, Syria’s and Lebanon’s stability were one and the same.

Several Arab experts believe that Sa’ad Hariri’s slogan “The toppling of the arms of the resistance”, a few months ago – was coined by Washington and Tel Aviv for a plan for regime-change in Damascus.

Zionist-regime is playing its usual ‘Islamophobia’ card for local and foreign consumption. It prefers Bashar al-Assad due to the fear that in the events of his fall, like in Lebanon, Egypt and Tunisia, the pro-Iran Islamic groups may become political ‘king-makers’. Even if that doesn’t happen – the next regime may not be able to maintain peace along Syrian-Israeli border and be more supportive of Lebanese Islamic Resistance Hizbullah for its greater national interests.

We are seeing the replay of the good-old Jewish Lobby tricks which it applied in 1930s to lure Americans into the WW II against Germany.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Gov't: Israel tempted to kill more Palestinians thanks to international silence

[ 07/04/2011 - 09:50 AM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- The Palestinian government said the international failure to punish Israel for its crimes against the Palestinians would encourage it to commit more, calling for pressuring Israeli leaders to stop their aggression against Gaza.

In a statement issued following its weekly cabinet meeting, the government appealed to the international community to assume its responsibilities and curb Israel's aggressive tendencies towards the Palestinians in Gaza.

Israel is persistent in killing civilians and bombing residential areas in Gaza, although the Palestinian factions has showed restraint and respected the national consensus on the need to retain calm in Gaza for the higher national interest, the statement read.

The statement included condemnation of South African judge Richard Goldstone for his newspaper article on Gaza war which reflected his yielding to Israeli pressures.

The government welcomed the efforts being made to send another Freedom Flotilla aid convoy in the context of international moves to break the blockade on Gaza and called on all parties concerned to facilitate the humanitarian mission of this convoy.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Finkelstein on the Arab revolts and Israel

By Issandr El Amrani April 7, 2011 at 2:21 PM
From Counterfire:
Mr Finkelstein, looking at the present situation in Gaza and the occupied territories, what hope do you have for a realistic and 'just' peace settlement – even in the next thirty years?

It all depends on whether the people in the Occupied Territories find the inner strength and courage to duplicate what's been done in neighboring Arab-Muslim states.
So far Palestinians are just watching, but from conversations I've had they appear to be hopeful. If mass demonstrations break out, Israel might be forced to withdraw to the June 1967 border. Certainly, Israel will have trouble firing on nonviolent demonstrators without looking like Gaddafi.

The present triumphant scenes in Cairo have got a lot of people in Israel worried about the Muslim Brotherhood gaining ascendancy in Egypt. A friend in Israel, a Zionist, told me that the current leadership in Egypt have begun to cut off gas supplies to Israel, an apparent act of "aggression". Do you think the Muslim Brotherhood are a force for good in supporting Palestinians, or are they counter-productive in that they will destabilise the region (to borrow a much-abused term)?

I do not believe that Israel fears the Muslim Brotherhood because it is Muslim. It is just as fearful of a secularist such as el-Baradei coming to power. Israel dreads the prospect that a new government will respect the will of the people and will be committed to preserving the dignity of Egypt. This has always been Israel's biggest fear. Israel's first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, frequently said that the biggest disaster for Israel would be if an Arab Ataturk came to power and restored the spirits of the people.
You famously said that in Lebanon 'Hezbollah are the hope' (in terms of standing up to American political influence and Israeli aggression). This elicited much condemnation from the usual quarters. Can you expand on this statement – how do Hezbollah offer 'hope', and to whom?

Hezbollah demands that the ordinary principles of international law be applied to Israel as well. Israel must stop treating neighboring countries as long- or short-term parking lots. It must stop indiscriminate attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure. This is Hezbollah's message and I agree with it. When Ehud Barak recently threatened, "Maybe we'll have to occupy Lebanon again," Sayyed Nasrallah said the next day, "Maybe we''ll have to occupy the northern Galilee." What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
There's a lot more there so read the whole thing. On that last point I think Finkelstein's is too reductive of Hizbullah, which after all did conduct or tacitly back an assassination campaign in Lebanon. Just because its domestic enemies may be objectively pro-Israeli does not mean it should get away with that.
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US Delegation 'attacked & pelted' in Saida,... again

FLC

Do you get the sense that these guys are unwelcomed guests in Saida?

(AFP)- BEIRUT — (the same)US embassy officials visiting south Lebanon Thursday were attacked (again)but unhurt, by residents accusing them of being "Israeli conspirators," in the second such incident in a week, an AFP correspondent said. Around 60 supporters of leftist groups gathered outside a government office in the port city of Sidon and pelted an embassy convoy with stones as it drove by, with some shouting "Americans, Israeli conspirators, in our government offices."..... On Saturday, Lebanese youths threw stones and bottles at a US embassy group that was visiting Sidon....
Posted by G, M, Z, or B at 4:17 PM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Human Rights Watch to US, EU: Aid to PA must be conditioned

[ 07/04/2011 - 09:46 AM ]

RAMALLAH, (PIC)-- Human Rights Watch has called on the United States and European Union to set conditions before giving more aid to the Palestinian Authority, as the West Bank authority continues to use abusive and repressive practices against news reporters and other Palestinians in the West Bank.

The calls were made by Joe Stork, HRW's director in the Mideast and North Africa during a press conference he held in the West Bank city of Ramallah, where he presented a report by the NGO on abuses by the PA security agencies against journalists.

Stork recommended that the US and EU stop supporting all PA security agencies unless they take significant steps to investigate and prosecute all security officials responsible for torture. He also urged the PA to publically announce its agreement to accept the conditions.

Meanwhile, the Change and Reform bloc of the Palestinian Legislative Council has said in a fresh statement that court martials ordered by the Fatah authority in the West Bank targeting Hamas supporters threatens to render reconciliation efforts a failure.

The statement describes Fatah calls to reconcile with Hamas as a sham, saying the calls are in complete contradiction with ”the elements of unity to which [Hamas] aspires”.

”Security coordination [with the Israeli occupier] has not left the mentality of the Abbas authority,” the statement reads, demanding that the PA ”creates the climate” for reconciliation by ending political arrests and court martials against Hamas supporters.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

DEBBIE MENON : Britain opposes call to retract Goldstone Report

BY: DEBBIE MENON

Have they suddenly discovered their backbone?

By Debbie Menon

You can always take the vertebrae out of a vertebrate (the procedure is probably described as an vertebraectomy), but I doubt that one can be installed in an invertebrate.

However, if the body was once a vertebrate, and has had an incomplete vertebratectomy which may have left a vestige of a vertebrae, then it might be possible for an new one to resprout, develop and grow.

It would probably be a lengthy and painful process though, and the denizens would have to relearn how to walk upright again which might be a bit difficult after crawling and slithering about in the slime and under the rocks and fallen logs of the world where other Zionist white grubs live.

Not underestimating the powers of Zion, all of this might or very well could be just another move to get Judge Goldstone himself to request that the Report be retracted, as mentioned in the article below, which would be his final and total submission to and act of contrition and repentance, and then they could be done with him, and bury what is left of his ruined character for, politically, publicly and professionally he is a dead man walking.

He is Jewish. His entire life, his entire milieu, his entire social network and culture is in and among the world of Jewry. The defamation of character, slander, and professional threats exercised by ADL and AIPAC minions are sufficiently devastating to have a strong influence on most people who might choose to go up against Israel, but even worse would be the social ostracism and shunning by all the rest of the people in a tightly knit and group-identifying culture such as is Judaism.

Goldstone’s retraction only further exposes the devastating effect of Zionist networks over ‘anyone’ (eg:Helen Thomas/ Former President Carter) who stands up to Israel. “Apparently according to his friends, Goldstone didn’t fully understand how politically charged any criticism of Israel could be, and was blindsided by the anger and emotion the report engendered.” Read more: http://forward.com/articles/136818/#ixzz1IpEB75NR

A younger man with other interests and cultural breadth like Norman Finkelsteinpublic atleast have long become wise to such Zionist tactics and they are losing their effectiveness with the public.
 and Gilad Atzmon might survive it (although I suspect Finkelstein is suffering cultural isolation and loneliness also), but Judge Goldstone is an obvious victim. The general
Britain opposes call to retract Goldstone Report
(http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?ID=215240&R=R1&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter)
By JONNY PAUL, JPOST CORRESPONDENT
04/05/2011 12:55



Foreign Office: Judge did not seek such move or elaborate on other allegations, ‘which we believe require serious follow-up by parties.’


LONDON – The British government said on Monday that it does not support calls for a retraction of the Goldstone Report after its lead author distanced himself from the report’s main allegations.


In an opinion piece in Friday’s Washington Post, Judge Richard Goldstone indicated that Israel had not deliberately targeted civilians or committed war crimes during Operation Cast Lead two winters ago.


RELATED:
Editorial: Goldstone’s example
Ya’alon urges UN to retract Goldstone Report



“Justice Goldstone has not made such a call [to retract the report], and he has not elaborated on his views surrounding the various other allegations contained in the report, allegations which we firmly believe require serious follow- up by the parties to the conflict,” a Foreign Office spokesman told The Jerusalem Post on Monday night.


The British government said that while Goldstone’s acknowledgment was important, his was not the only report on the 22-day conflict.


“Allegations of breaches of International Humanitarian Law made against all parties to the Gaza conflict are not limited to the Goldstone Report and have arisen from certain other credible organizations. We firmly believe that any and all such allegations must be met with credible and independent investigations by the parties to the conflict,” the spokesman said.

Goldstone Fact Finding in Gaza
Responding to Goldstone’s claim that if he’d “known then what I know now, the Goldstone Report would have been a different document,” the spokesman said it was the report that set up a process that allowed for clarity and accountability into the conflict.
“Justice Goldstone makes clear in his recent comments that the Goldstone Report would have looked differently if it had been produced now, on the basis of fresh evidence released by a committee of independent experts, tasked to follow-up on the Goldstone Report. This latest insight into the events surrounding the Gaza conflict have come about because of the process that was set in train by his fact-finding mission.”


The Foreign Office spokesman pointed out that other than conceding that Israel had not targeted civilians deliberately, Goldstone did not elaborate on other allegations; hence Britain’s belief that these allegations be investigated independently.


“This is absolutely consistent with our longstanding policy calling for independent investigations,” he said. “Justice Goldstone does not elaborate on his views on the various other allegations made against Israel in his report and does not call for its retraction. We continue to believe that it is important these allegations are investigated independently.”


The Board of Deputies of British Jews welcomed Goldstone’s recantation, saying it accorded with the conclusions of Col. Richard Kemp, a former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, concerning IDF measures to avoid civilian casualties “even though Hamas was at the same time deliberately putting civilians in harm’s way.”


The Board added that Goldstone’s op-ed piece “reinforces Israel’s right to self-defense” and notes that “Israel, like any sovereign nation, has the right and obligation to defend itself and its citizens against attacks from abroad and within…. We would call on those who were so quick to use the report as a stick to beat Israel, now to acknowledge publicly that they were mistaken.”
What’s also  interesting is Israel’s hysterical campaign to get the report rescinded… on top of threatening the UN with “countermeasures” if they recognize an independent Palestinian state. 
(http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=375061 )

I am holding out no strong hopes that there are any “politicians” in Britain who have the guts or spine to stand up against Zionism.  And, whether the Report is or is not rescinded or retracted, officially or not, the Report and its facts have been put before the public, and nothing will change that… the “facts” and findings will stand in the public eye as the public eye perceives them, and official hokey pokey in the Höchchambers UN or any other sovereign chambers will have little to do with public opinion, for those places have lost all credibility with the general public, and only serve as faux authenticators of lies and trash, with franks and sanctions for sale or grant under intimidation, blackmail and bribe.


Debbie Menon is a freelance writer based in Dubai. Her commentary has been published widely in Print and Online publications. She can be reached at: debbiemenon@gmail.com. Her website: http://mycatbirdseat.com/

Read more

ILAN PAPPE : UN Gaza Report — Goldstone’s shameful U-turn

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IOF troops storm Awarta round up 100 mostly women

[ 07/04/2011 - 09:37 AM ]

NABLUS, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) stormed the village of Awarta southwest of Nablus on Wednesday night and rounded up around 100 of its inhabitants mostly women for questioning, local sources reported.

Eyewitnesses told the PIC that IOF soldiers in army vehicles stormed the village at night and roamed its streets before arresting tens of citizens reportedly 80 women and 20 men.

Village sources expected that the operation fell in line with repeated storming of the village ever since the Itamar attack in which five Israeli settlers of one family were slaughtered to death including children but the mystery of the murder was not solved as yet. News reports suggested that an Asian worker who was in disagreement with the head of the family over his wages might have committed the crime.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Egypt invites Mishaal, Shallah to visit Cairo

[ 06/04/2011 - 07:13 PM ] 

CAIRO, (PIC)-- Egypt is planning to invite a number of Palestinian factions and independent figures to visit Cairo in the few coming days to discuss reactivating reconciliation efforts, senior Egyptian diplomatic sources revealed on Wednesday.

They said that the invitations would start with businessman Munib Al-Masri and a delegation of the reconciliation committee that he chairs, then to the Islamic Jihad leader Ramadan Shallah, and would conclude with inviting Hamas supreme leader Khaled Mishaal to push forward the reconciliation process.

The sources said that the Egyptian effort aims at saving the reconciliation and ending the Palestinian rift in addition to discussing means of dealing with future Zionist threats.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Susan Rice: I want the Goldstone report to "disappear", but

Via FLC



(Reuters) - "Susan Rice, the U.S. envoy to the United Nations, said on Wednesday she wanted a controversial report on Israel's 2008-09 Gaza offensive to "disappear" but did not think it could be amended even though its author now says he may have been wrong. Goldstone wrote in the Washington Post that Israeli investigations of the Gaza conflict indicated civilians had not been intentionally targeted. He said his report, published about nine months after the conflict, would have been different had he known this while writing it.  
"I'm not sure it can be amended," Rice told a congressional hearing. "What we want to see is for it to disappear and no longer be a subject of discussion and debate in the Human Rights Council or the General Assembly or beyond." .... Rice told lawmakers the United States repudiated the Goldstone report as "deeply flawed" when it first emerged.... 

 1,400 Palestinians  were killed ... "
Posted by G, M, Z, or B at 10:32 PM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Bahar asks the Lords to reject law granting immunity to Israeli war criminals

[ 06/04/2011 - 07:11 PM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- Deputy Speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council Ahmed Bahar has strongly condemned the British House of Commons' approval of a law limiting the UK's power to prosecute Israeli war criminals who step foot in the country, and he has called on the House of Lords, which will review the law next, to reject it.

He said the approval was in response to Israeli pressure and called the move ”surrender to Zionist domination and arrogance that seeks to keep the Zionist entity above international law and moral principles and humanitarian norms and conventions”. He also tagged the approval a ”a stain on the conscience of British democracy.”

The law, he said, implies that Israeli officials that committed war crimes during the 2008-9 aggression against the Gaza Strip would escape from justice, and it would encourage them to commit more crimes against humanity in Palestine.

Bahar called on the House of Lords to reject the law, also calling upon Arab and Muslim communities in England as well as rights groups to lobby the House of Commons to retract the law.

Separately, Bahar spoke the same day as children marched on Palestinian Child Day near the PLC headquarters in Gaza, as was staged by the Gaza ministry of sports and youth.

There he called on United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to follow the situation concerning Gaza children as Israel has boosted aggression in the past two weeks killing scores including several innocent children.

The same day, Bahar received the family of Omar Awad, a Palestinian man held in the UAE, at PLC headquarters as they asked for help in having the prisoner released.

He explained that the PLC had sent a cable to the president of the UAE national council to intervene with the executive authority to release the businessman.

He was arrested two months back while returning to the West Bank after carrying out business in the UAE.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Austrian foreign minister calls for lifting siege on Gaza

[ 06/04/2011 - 03:52 PM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- Austria's foreign minister Michael Spindelegger has called for lifting the siege on the Gaza Strip that has been in force for the past four years to end the Gaza people's suffering.

Spindelegger, who arrived in Gaza Strip on Wednesday coming from Egypt, told a press conference at the UNRWA headquarters that the blockade should come to an end, adding that the people have suffered enough.

He said after meetings in the Strip that the European Union should launch an initiative to end the siege, and that the EU countries should adopt a unified stand regarding the continued suffering of the Gaza population.

The Austrian minister visited an UNRWA school in central Gaza, toured the water desalination plant in Deir Al-Balah refugee camp, and met with UNRWA officials and representatives of the private sector and public figures.

Spindelegger conferred with Egyptian officials before visiting Gaza on regional developments especially the situation in Libya and means of assisting Cairo in the current transitional period after the downfall of the former regime of Hosni Mubarak.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

EDL Anger and the "Muslamic Infidels"



The EDL Anthem







After much research, two types of "Muslamic Rayguns" were discovered




US students interrupt as Dichter takes podium

[ 06/04/2011 - 06:42 PM ]

NEW YORK, (PIC)-- Dozens of students at the Brandeis University near Boston shouted that former Shin Bet director Avi Dichter is a war criminal in English and Hebrew as the now Knesset member took the podium to give a lecture there.

According to the Israeli daily Haaretz, many of those protesters were affiliated with a student organization that works for Palestinian justice. When Dichter began talking about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, they shouted they would meet him in the International Criminal Court to be prosecuted for inhumane crimes and torture.

The demonstrators prior to that distributed false arrest warrants saying Dichter is wanted for breaking Geneva treaties and committing crimes against humanity, as he ordered that Palestinians be tortured during the 2002 Palestinian intifada when he served as director of the Israeli Shin Bet security service.

The incident referred to was the massacre he ordered against civilians in a hit operation against Salah Shahada.

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The Samouni Family Response to Goldstone's Reversal

"It Was No Mistake"

By Richard Edmondson

A couple of days ago I posted an article entitled Goldstone's Aerial Flip-Flop in which I discussed South African jurist Richard Goldstone's recantation of parts of his report (the "Goldstone report") on Israeli war crimes in Gaza. In that recantation Goldstone specifically mentioned the Samouni family, and said he now believes the Israeli attack which took the lives of some 29 members of that family was merely an accident, the result of "an Israeli commander's erroneous interpretation of a drone image," as he put it. In the video below you'll see members of the Samouni family responding to Goldstone's op-ed piece in the Washington Post, and refuting particularly the notion that the atrocity committed against them was in any way an accident or mistake.

In the past few days we have seen articles published (see here for example) suggesting that what Goldstone really did was engage in some artful mincing of words, and that his op-ed really wasn't as damaging as it appears on first reading, and certainly not the total vindication that Israeli leaders are making it out to be. This in my view totally misses the point. If Goldstone had the opportunity to hear from the people shown in this video--and I'm assuming he did--how could he bring himself to write an article, even one laced with delicate prevarication, leaving the impression that what was done to them may have been something other than deliberate? After viewing the video below, I have come to the conclusion that what Goldstone is guilty of is a betrayal. For one thing, he has in effect betrayed the Samouni family. Pay attention to the comments of young Mona Talal Samouni, which come at about 12:25 into the video. Listen carefully to what she says. The translation is a little rough, but basically the gist of it is that Goldstone, in his dealings with the family, deliberately conveyed the impression that he was in "solidarity" with them:

Says the translator: "When he came here he told them that he was in solidarity with the Samouni family and he is really appreciate to help them and to prove to the world what's really happened here, but he was lying."

It would also appear (though again the translation is a little difficult to follow) that young Mona provided Goldstone and his committee with her own written report of what she witnessed the night her family members were murdered. What has become of that report? Is it perhaps on file somewhere at the UN? I don't  know, but after reading Goldstone's op-ed piece, it seems difficult for me to believe it made much of an impression on him. Ali Abunimah, of the Electronic Intifada, has noted an escalation in violence between Israel and Palestinian resistance factions in recent weeks and has speculated on the possibility that a major new war in Gaza may be approaching. "Tragically, the biggest contributor to renewed confidence in Israel that it could once again get away with murder in Gaza, may be Judge Richard Goldstone himself," Abinumah concluded.

Should a new war erupt, the very children you see in the video below will once again be in the line of fire. Goldstone, with his op-ed piece in the Washington Post, has in effect betrayed those children. But in a very real sense, it is more than a betrayal of the Samouni family only. When war crimes are whitewashed and the criminals who commit them remain free, it is a betrayal of all humanity. In saying this, I am not saying Goldstone should necessarily be judged harshly. Let he who is without sin cast the first stone, as a famous man once said. Goldstone seems to be a reasonably decent fellow who, at least initially, set out to do the right thing. In my last article, I discussed a number of pressures the Jewish judge has been under from his fellow Jews, including threats to disrupt his grandson's bar mitzvah. And that's only what we know about. Given the level of vitriol that has been expressed  publicly, quite likely much worse has been communicated in private. It is truly unfortunate, tragic even, that the judge has had to endure such things, but how does this in any way compare to the genuine tragedy of losing 29 members of your family in a brutal act of savagery committed by an invading army? And if the Samounis were targeted once, what is to prevent them being targeted again? Should something like that happen, I would not want to be in Goldstone's shoes and have to live with myself afterwards.





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Egypt FM: Gaza a priority in Egypt foreign policy

[ 06/04/2011 - 06:38 PM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- Nabil al-Arabi, who was named foreign minister after Egyptian revolution has confirmed that issues concerning Gaza are a priority to Egypt's foreign policy.

”We consider the situation in the Gaza Strip a priority for Egypt, especially since what has happened there is unacceptable in terms of human rights,” Mr. Arabi said during a joint press release with Austrian foreign minister Michael Spindelegger Tuesday night in Cairo.

”We are now working to establish a method to deal with those situations. Those committees could finalize works this weekend. We are discussing this issue with all sectors of the state in Egypt,” he said.

Arabi said that Egypt also has strong interest in Palestinian reconciliation and has contacted both Hamas and Fatah to discuss it. He added that Palestinian Authority chief Mahmoud Abbas is scheduled to visit Egypt on Wednesday to discuss all issues pending reconciling with Hamas. He had already met with a delegation from Hamas last week.

Arabi met Wednesday morning with independent figures in Palestine in a delegation headed by Dr. Yasser al-Wadia and held talks about Palestinian unity and the future of Palestinian issues in light of current developments in the Arab world.

Meanwhile, the Egyptian coalition to break the siege and rebuild Gaza was turned back by officials as it tried to get ten tons of cement into the Gaza Strip through the Rafah land port on the border with Egypt.

The coalition had clinched a deal in March with the British Aloha Palestine to import the cement to Gaza as the first formal deal to bring building materials into Gaza through Egypt. The deal came after European activists successfully got the first back of cement through the border crossing.

Based on the agreement, Aloha Palestine was responsible for transporting the goods according to Egyptian commercial laws, while the coalition's part was to place popular pressure in order to get permission for the trucks to enter.

After two weeks of stay in the El-Arish city near the border, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, to whom power was shifted in Egypt, rejected repeated requests and mediation to bring in the building supplies needed in a war torn and besieged Gaza Strip. They were forced to leave the city after incurring heavy losses.

The coalition promised after the January 25 revolution in Egypt to meet with the new Egyptian foreign miniser Arabi and the the Supreme Council to brief them on the deal and ask for ease in bringing in the goods and arranging for larger future deals that would widen horizons for the economies of Egypt and the Gaza Strip.

The Camp David accords that Egypt has signed with Israel has prohibited Egypt from using the Rafah crossing for commercial purposes.

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Abu Zuhri: Suspect in murder of Juliano Mer-Khamis affiliated with Fatah

[ 06/04/2011 - 04:17 PM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- Dr. Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, affirmed that the suspect in murdering Juliano Mer-Khamis was affiliated with Fatah and had nothing to do with Hamas as claimed by West Bank security apparatuses.

Security apparatuses loyal to de facto Palestinian president and Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas apprehended Mujahid Qaneiri on suspicion of killing Mer-Khamis, a director, actor, and the manager of the Huriyya (freedom) theater in Jenin, a few days ago.

Well informed sources told the PIC that Qaneiri is known for his affiliation with Fatah faction and its armed wing the Aqsa Brigades. The West Bank security is trying to spread rumors that Qaneiri was affiliated with Hamas to put the blame on the movement for the murder.

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It is not so easy when your name is "Goldstone"

FAD

http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSxhYMaYj4fJ748V_anjKH1xz4NtVUsJHMFXxYhVkraQME_jf1Bdw&t=1
http://www.jewishjournal.com/images/articles/large_richard-goldstone-united-nations-gaza-war-crimes.jpg


Judge Goldstone,
after writing and publishing  the UN report on Gaza,
suddenly , now,  he was reminded by Israel
that his name was :" Goldstone",
so he decided to re-write the truth,
or subsequently he would have to re-name himself.

Eng. Moustafa  Roosenbloom 
Posted by Tlaxcala at 10:11 PM
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Special committee to expedite settlement plans in east Jerusalem

[ 06/04/2011 - 03:47 PM ]

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- The Israeli interior ministry's district committee for planning and building decided to form an ad hoc committee to work on expediting the implementation of settlement plans which the government adopted in occupied Jerusalem.

According to lawyer Qais Naser, this new committee will meet weekly in order to finish the ratification of structural maps issued by the Israeli government, noting that every map contains at least 200 housing units aimed at expanding existent settlements or building new ones.

The lawyer affirmed that the Israeli government last month ordered the interior ministry to assign his district committee in Jerusalem to form immediately an ad hoc committee to activate all plans to be set by the minister of housing.

He warned that Israel's settlement activities would rise unprecedentedly in east Jerusalem if this committee was formed and handled the government's settlement plans.

Ashton criticizes Israeli settlement in OJ
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French Fraud Behind Libya War Drive

Fake ‘intellectual’ with delusions of grandeur: Bernard Henri-Lévy
by Justin Raimondo, April 06, 2011

Antiwar Forum

The Libyan war has the French, of all people, in the forefront, with President Nicolas Sarkozy’s smug, self-satisfied face mugging for the camera as French fighter jets scream in the skies over Tripoli. The French, who sat out the Iraq war with haughty disdain, are now even more eager than the Americans to get into the thick of it: Sarkozy, in trouble at home, is hoping to distract critics from France’s ever-worsening domestic economic woes and his own party’s diminishing electoral prospects, with a good old-fashioned dollop of Napoleonic tonic. France – once again thrusting into North Africa in search of its former imperial glory! It’s enough to make one nostalgic for the Ugly American.

If the insufferable Sarkozy isn’t enough to make you vow never to eat French fries again, then the man behind Sarkozy’s grandstanding, Bernard Henri-Lévy, the French “public intellectual” and renowned phony, will push you over the edge into outright Francophobia. As the New York Times reports:

“It was Mr. Lévy, by his own still undisputed account, who brought top members of the Libyan opposition — the Interim Transitional National Council — from Benghazi to Paris to meet President Nicolas Sarkozy on March 10, who suggested the unprecedented French recognition of the council as the legitimate government of Libya and who warned Mr. Sarkozy that unless he acted, ‘there will be a massacre in Benghazi, a bloodbath, and the blood of the people of Benghazi will stain the flag of France.’”

Henri-Lévy is famous for … well, it’s not exactly clear. During the 1980s, he and a few of his French commie-socialist comrades excitedly announced that Marxism – which they had previously upheld as a glorious human experiment in idealism – was a Bad Thing. What Stalin’s crimes, committed half a century earlier, hadn’t revealed, the dictates of intellectual fashion and economic opportunity readily unveiled.

Yes, the French have their neocons, too, with BHL—as he’s known – leading the pack. Like his American brethren, BHL combines political polemics with entrepreneurship and has wound up the world’s richest “philosopher,” with inherited assets of his own to which he greatly added to thanks to his political connections.

As questions are raised about the wisdom of Western intervention, the Pepe Le Pew of the War Party is perturbed, and he’s taken to the pages of the Huffington Post – home base for practically all the world’s phony “intellectuals” and empty-headed celebrities – to defend his baby:

“Ah yes. This war began less than a month ago, and already the Norpois, the leaden-footed proponents of salon diplomacy, well-versed in Munich-speak, have raised their heads again and, once over their initial astonishment, have taken up their favorite refrain: what are we doing, involved in this business?”

Leaving aside the pretentious allusion to Proust – the signature conceit of the “literary” French intellectual – notice how easily he reverts to the familiar lexicon of the neocons: “Munich-speak”? We’re not two weeks into this war, and already the War Party’s myrmidons are likening Gadhafi to Hitler! To the neocons, whatever their national origin, it’s always 1939: there’s always a Hitler somewhere in the world, and it’s our responsibility to stop him – which is why we need to spend more on the military than all other nations on earth combined. And if a target country just happens to be strategically located, or sits atop considerable oil reserves, well then who are we to look a gift horse in the mouth?

That’s a good point, however, about our “initial astonishment” at the Libyan intervention: I have to admit to being taken by surprise, because, as low as my opinion may be of President Obama, it was never that low. I never thought he would fall for Henri-Lévy’s line of guff, as regurgitated by the Three Harpies of the Libyan Apocalypse.

Well, then, what are we doing involved in this business?

“First of all, war aims. The ‘true’ aims of this war. And what if the allies had a ‘secret agenda’ and, in particular, “oil”. The imbeciles! The too-clever-for-their-own-good who, eternally seeking the hidden side of things, ultimately fail to see what is right there under their own eyes! Namely, that, oil for oil, there was one simple means to ensure control over Libyan oil, and that means was to touch nothing, to change nothing, and to go on dealing with Gadhafi, as they have for decades. Sarkozy, Cameron, Obama may be capable, like all politicians, of all the cynicism one likes. But concerning this affair, why not have the elementary honesty to recognize their share of sincerity?”

This is nonsensical. BHL may know his Proust, but he likely failed Economics 101. Go here and look at this map of foreign oil concessions in Libya, which are heavily concentrated in the rebellious eastern half of the country. Gadhafi made the British pay a huge price for their oil concessions: as British planes bomb Libyan air defenses – and a few civilians, too – does anyone think the rebels won’t give British Petroleum a better deal than Gadhafi ever would? And the French, who seem to have been largely left out of the Libyan oil rush, will certainly demand their share of the spoils.

Economics is not BHL’s strong point: you know how those French intellectuals are! Well, then, perhaps he’s better at military strategy, a favorite pastime of our neocon laptop bombardiers. On second thought, maybe not:

“Then, the length of this war. The way it has of ‘getting stuck’ in the sands of the Libyan desert, when we had hoped it would be short and sweet. Once again, grotesque. Unutterable bad faith. For–quite apart from the fact that four weeks is nothing compared to the decade of the Afghan war or the ten weeks of that of Kosovo–there is a reason, only one, that operations are lasting beyond the successful rescue of Benghazi. And this reason is the strategy of a Gadhafi who has hunkered down in the bunkers of his other cities, turning their inhabitants into human shields.”

A favorite neocon strategy: hyperbole. The opposition is not merely wrong, it is “grotesque.” These are not victims of error, but purveyors of “unutterable bad faith.” All for asking why it’s taking so long! BHL isn’t quite himself, it seems, unless he’s in a state of High Moral Dudgeon, but his passion let slip a telling detail. That he’s comparing an operation that was supposed to continue for “days, not weeks,” as the President put it, to the decade-long Afghan conflict merely confirms our worst fears about this latest adventure in world-saving: that an ambiguously defined mission, which is already expanding well beyond its original mandate, has every prospect of becoming a long term commitment.

“At that point, there are two strategies possible. Either blow up the crowd, in which case, yes, things will go swiftly (and it’s no surprise to see the butcher of Chechnya, Vladimir Putin, in the front ranks of those who think things are dragging on). Or else look out for the lives of civilians, not losing sight of the fact that the international community has provided a mandate to protect them, the civilians, and that it will take the time it will take. (To deny that, one must be drugged on quick solutions, drunk with the urge for immediacy, or, worse, irresponsible.)”

BHL never acknowledges what is apparent to even a casual observer of the Libyan events: that Gadhafi has real support in the country, especially in the area around Tripoli. After all, it isn’t just mercenaries fighting on his behalf: his fellow tribesmen and their allies, as well as Gadhafi’s personal followers and the beneficiaries of the regime, are apparently rallying to his cause. This is the reason why it hasn’t been a quick victory for the rebels. But to BHL, the “literary” intellectual, who references Proust instead of anything related to the reality of Libya, this is inadmissible because it ruins the narrative, the tall tale he’s telling himself and his audience about the demonic despot versus the virtuous rebels.

His third argument is just another neocon ploy: the old “straw man” strategem. BHL tells us that some people are criticizing the rebels for their “amateurism,” and then goes on for a good paragraph using this “criticism” to valorize them and make the case for arming and training them. “Indigent bastards!, they say. Good for nothings! Short hitters!” Who is the author of such slanderous epithets? Perhaps he means Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who, when asked, didn’t put very much store in the rebels’ military prowess – but so what?
“Fourth objection, the National Council of Transition. After all, what do we know of this Council of ‘nebulous’ outlines? And wasn’t France jumping the gun a bit in recognizing it? There again, it takes a lot of nerve to think so. And there’s something profoundly perverse in this way of depicting who knows what occult power–an Angkar as in Cambodia, the black box of a Libya not as free as it professes to be–and in this way of spreading doubt and insinuating, in reality, the worst. For the members of the Council are well known. Their biographies are transparent. They are either those who have earned a price on their heads in Tripoli for rallying to the cause, whose respective political itineraries are known to all, or men who are new but who speak to whomever openly. But it’s true that, to set this supposed mystery to rest, one must take the trouble to go to Benghazi….”

Emtting clouds of obfuscatory rhetoric like a squid under attack, BHL resorts to the familiar abuse of his opponents: they aren’t just “perverse,” they are “profoundly perverse.” Those ingrates “have a lot of nerve” to even ask questions about just who the UN and the NATO powers are throwing their weight behind. Because, after all, “the members of the Council are well-known.” To whom are they well-known, exactly? Well, it turns out, “to set this supposed mystery to rest one must take the trouble to go to Benghazi”!
Now that’s a dirty trick. He makes us read all the way to the end of that tortured paragraph before getting to the punchline – some “humanitarian”!

Reality, however, once again departs from BHL’s preferred narrative, because the biography of, say, Col. Khalifa Haftar, the US-supported self-proclaimed “commander” of the Libyan rebel forces, is far from “transparent” – especially regarding his capture during the war with Chad, an event which seems to have conicided with his remarkable political turnaround. The most well known rebel leaders are former officials of the Gadhafi regime, who supported him loyally for many years and only saw the light when it looked like the regime was finished – a record that may indeed be transparent, but is hardly admirable.

“And then, Al-Qaeda. Ah! Al-Qaeda. On the pretext that, among the foreign jihadis who once left to fight in Iraq were a small majority of Libyans, one concludes that there would be a majority of jihadis at the heart of today’s Free Libya. The sophism, in this case, is not only perverse, it is despicable. And it’s the same abjectness, by the way, that, fifteen years ago at Sarajevo, inferred the probable birth of a fundamentalist State in the heart of Europe–and therefore the necessity to let Bosnia in its entirety die–from the presence of a handful of Iranians in the 7th corps of the Bosnian army. In this case, the truth is simple. It is possible that a few jihadis have infiltrated Derna or Benghazi. It is probably a rule that such sleeper agents profit from the chaos of war to reinforce their position. But it is a lie, accredited for the time being only by hazy statements backed by a Gaddafism which is in dire straits and fresh out of arguments, that they have a significant role in the ranks of the insurgents.”

Getting past the name-calling – his opponents are, once again, “perverse,” and even “despicable” – the fact-free nature of BHL’s “argument” is readily apparent. To begin with, it wasn’t just the Iranians who were fighting on the side of the Bosnians and Kosovars during the Balkan wars: al-Qaeda sent a brigade to fight for the KLA during the Kosovo war, and continues to be a presence in the region. Furthermore, BHL doesn’t even mention the ample evidence that Al-Qaeda had its best recruiting success in Libya, although he does mention the town of Derna, where many fighters who fought US troops in Iraq hailed from.

Aside from this, however, to say that bin Laden’s boys do not now play a significant role in the Libyan insurgency is not to rule it out as a distinct possibility. As the only seasoned fighters, except for defecting Libyan soldiers, they are bound to acquire some renown and authority on account of their military experience. I am not one who believes, as some do, that the rebellion is the brainchild of Osama bin Laden. Yet, given the evidence, it is rational to raise the question of al-Qaeda’s influence – unless you’re a myth-maker, a spinner of ready-to-wear narratives, in which case it’s better not to ask too many questions.
“I would add,” says BHL, that

“The best way of delivering Libya into the hands of chaos would be to abandon in mid-river those we have encouraged to ford it, giving in, at the last minute, to the sirens who would convince us to save what can be saved of the Gadhafi regime. He, really, is not only a butcher of civilians, a patent hater of the West and of democratic values, the declared enemy of the Arab–and, tomorrow, the African–spring, but a world class champion, all categories included, of terrorism. More than ever, this man should beat it.”

“This man should beat it”?

Either the Huffington Post needs to get a new translator, or else BHL is going all “cool” and “trendy” on us by riffing on a Michael Jackson tune.

The author’s stylistic idiosyncrasies aside, however, his arguments are oddly familiar: now that we’ve already gotten involved, the West can’t just leave. The neocons made – and continue to make – the same argument when it comes to Iraq and Afghanistan. Heck, they sang the same song as the Vietnam war came to a bloody and chaotic close: we can’t leave our heroic allies in the lurch!

Ho Chi Minh was, no doubt, a butcher of civilians – although the US surpassed him in that regard – and also “a patent hater of the West and of democratic values,” but that war was a mistake from the beginning – just like this one. In that conflict, too, we helped one side in a civil war which had divided the country into two de facto independent states, one totalitarian and the other “free.” That war, too, started out small, with military aid and “advisers,” eventually expanding into a presence of hundreds of thousands of troops and a long drawn out conflict that ended in disaster – as this one will if we follow the course laid out by BHL and the War Party.

A word about BHL: this guy is supposed to be a “public intellectual,” but what kind of “intellectual” gets bamboozled by an obvious hoax such as this? Read and laugh at the pretensions of this champion phony.
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